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A

WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

representing tiie industrial and commercial interests of the united states.

VOL. 9.

NEW YORK, DECEMBER 4, 1869.

Foreign Bills.

Rider &
73

Bankers and Brokers.

Martin

Cortis,

STOCK

8AML. THOMPSON’S NEPHEW.

Sight Drafts on A. S. Petrie & Co., London, Royal Bank
Ireland, Dublin; Bank of Scotland, Edinburgh.
Liverpool. Also on Germany,

MARTIN,

bought and sold

on

commission.

Accounts of Banks

Interest allowed

and

Individuals solicited and
deposits.

on

Wm. B.

Litchfield,
Charles H. Dana,
E. B.

Lewts A. Stimson,

Walter E. Colt

Litchfield, Special,

BUCKINGHAM. JR.

Late with

1

Jay Cooke dt Co |

J. M

jn.

London.
CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAVEL
LER8 IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE
Lanoasteb & Co.
Richmond.

Brown, Lancaster & Co.,

and

Gold

on

favorable terms.

R BFSKSKOS9 •*

C. B. Blair,
on

Banking Ass. N. Y.
Pres. Merchants’ Nat, Bank Chicago.

Citizens Bank of Louisiana
Capital aud Reserved Fund........$2,300,000,

AGENCY,

Memphis, B’k.

Albert Hachfield & Co., A. D. Selleck, 37 Pine St, N.Y
Draw

BROKERS,

Dealers In Government, State.
County, City, Rail
Road and other desirable Investment
Securities.
P. O. Box 3,516.

24 Pine

Baltimore.

Frank & Gans,

BROKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK,

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities

ed

ALBERT K. HACHFIELD.

Cashier City B’k, Memphis.
j. j. murphy,
Special, Pres’t

28 BROAD

J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mech.

Stocks, Bonds and Gold, executed
commission. Interest allowed on deposits.
s. U. KIRK,
U. o.
AiKA,

4

Bought and Sold • xclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and individuals receiv¬

St., New York.

Orders in

[Successors to Bowles, Dbeyet & Co.]
No. IS Rue de la Paix, Paris.
76 State Street, Boston,
19 William Street, New York
Bills on Paris and tiie Union Bank of

Cashier.

f. L. Brownell & Bro.,

Brown,

DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES,

No. 6 Wall

State and Canada.

BANKERS 4c

&

Okin C. Frost,

Correspondents:
Central Nat. Bank, New York; lay Cooke &
Co.:
N. Y. State JSat. Bank, Albany, w.Y.
Special attention paid to collections in New York

BROWN,

BANKERS,

62 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
28 STATE STREET, BOSTON.

Watertown, N. Y.
G. F. Paddock,
) PronriPtm-q
Merritt ANDRU9, J ^r0prIel013*.

Late of A. 11. Brown d Co.

Buckingham

BARING BROTHERS A COMPANY.

.

WM. L. MONTAGUS

E. S. MUNROE & CO.

& STIMSON,

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No. 18 William St.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Cold

G.

Bowies Brothers & Co.,

JAS. H. 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.

GEO. I’, PADDOCK & tOUIS BANK.

issue

AGENTS FOR

Co.,

New York, November 3,1869.
E. S. MUNROE.

mott, Special.

LITCHFIELD, DANA

Ward,

Munroe &

ENOS RUNYON,
w. b.

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS.,

S. G. & G. C.

S.

19 New Street.

Coupons bought at Market Rates. Collections made
in all parts of the l nited States and Canadas.
Accounts solicited and Interest allowed on Deposits.

BANKERS,

CREDIT,
For the use of Travelers abroad and In the United
States, available in all the principal cities of the
world; also,
COMMERCIAL CREDITS.
For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good
Hope
West Indies South America, and the United State

OF

ST., NEW YORK,

Dealers; in Governments and Specie. Stocks and
bought and sold on Commission, Government

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,
OF

E.

Bonds

A. F. B.

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS

OFFICE
.

BROKERS,

40 WALL

*

C. Grimshaw & Co.,
France and Sweden.

Runyon,

W. B. Mott A Co.,

Successors to

of

Bankers and Brokers.

Successors to

BROADWAY, NEW YORK

Bankers furnished with Sterling Bills of Exchsnge,
sod through passage tickets from Europe to all arts
el the United St '
Itates

&

NO. 232

London Joint Stock

Marcuard, Andre & Co
Baring, Brothers & Co,
Fould & Co,
London,
Paris
In sums to points suiting buyers of
Sterling or Francs.

Street, New York.

530“ Southern Bank Notes and Securities have
special attention. Gold hearing bonds a

our

E. G. PEARL.

specialty.

A.

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN U. S,

C. Kaufman,

14 WALL STREET.

CHARLESTON,

D. F. JETT

Pearl
BANKERS
64

STOCK AND BOND BROKER,

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,

on

Bank,

Co.,

AND

Government Securities,

S.

C.

BROKERS,

BROADWAY & 19 NEW ST., NEW YORK.

Gold, Ptocks and Bonds

every description bought and sold on
Southern Securities a specialty.

of

Commission.

Southern Securities of
every

McKim, Brothers

&

Co.,

No, 4T Wall
Street, New York,

bankers
dealers

In

and

brokers,

GOVERNMENT

description, viz.: Un¬
Notes, State, City and Railroad Stocks,
Coupons bought and sold on commission.

current Bank

SECURITIES

onr£S!f!i?iB<Jnd* V*** Gold bought and Sold exclusively
oa
Commission. Interest

Bonds and

Orders solicited and satisfaction guaranteed.
current issued weekly and
exchanged

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

Prices

BANKERS AND BROKERS

regularly with

Banking Houses.

Refers by permission to Chas. T.
Lowndes,
President Bank of Charleston and Agent

Esq.,
Liverpool,

London and Globe Insurance Co.

No. 32 Broad

ALL UNITED STATES

MERCHANTS, BANKERS a
others, and allow Interest on daily balances, si Sject

to

utlet,

M. K. Jesup & Company, Utley
bankers
Negotiate

Bonds and Loam for
Railroad Cos.,

Contract for

C«rs0(5e01 8teel
»ud

locomotives,

undertake
easiness connected
wltk; Rati ways




NO.

11

WALL

DOUGHERTY.

Dougherty,

BANKERS AND

and

merchants,
12 PINE STREET,

GEO. W.

&

BROKERS,

STREET,

NEW

Governments, Gold, and all classes

Bonds

*

Sight Draft.

;

Hake collections
and
©1

on

promptly execute orders for the purchase
■

Gold,

State,

.

favoradle terms,
■-

.

or sae
-

Federal, and Railroad

Securities,

:

Orders

BROTHER,

Commission Merchants at
Norfolk,

tion given to purchase of Cotton.

YORK.

of Stocks and

bought and sold on commission.
promptly and carefnlly executed.

W. D. REYNOLDS 4c

SECURITIES,

Solicit accounts from

allowed on Deposit Accounts

wm. b.

Street, New York.

Buy aud Sell at Market Rates

Va. Special atten¬

Henry
STOCK

4c

Sancton,

GOLD

BROKER
~

NO. 24 NEW STREET. NEW YORK,
SWX 12.

THE

706
B&nl

Financial.

Financial.

Banking House of

ers.

BAJN&INu
°r

BANKERS,

Jay Cooke 6c Co.,
Kiiv

PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK,
Dealers in U.S. Bonds and Members of Stock and Gold

lorb, Philadelphia and

Exchanges in both Cities.

Uushinstoiit

No.

We

WALL

20

STREET,

NEW

YORK

Bay, Sell and Exchange at most liberal rates, all
LOVERNiHENT

€. J. HABBRO Sc

BONDS*

JAMES W. TUCKER Sc

ALEXANDER SMITH

&

TRAVELERS,
AVAILABLE^IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE

CO.,

.

WALL

STREET,

Morton,

FOR

COUPONS,

BUY AND SELL ON COMMISSION

STOCKS, BONDS AND

IBCUiAll

of

GOLD*

Credit

MAKING LIBERAL ADVANCES.

TRAVELLERS,

Interest

Sixty Days on PARIS, Sterling
Sight or Sixty Days, on

THE CITY BANK
Messrs. ROBERT BENSON & CO.

Henry H. Ward.

|

LONDON.

Wm. G. Ward.

James Robb, King 8c Co.,

Chas. H. Ward.

STREET, NEW YORK.

UNION BANK OF LONDON.
Deposits in Gold and Currency received and inte*
rest allowed ou balances
exceeding $1,000.

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬

ELLERS.

STREET, NEW YORK,

Issue Certificates of Deposit
bearing four cent in
tere6t, payable on demand or at fixed periods.
Negotiate Loans.
Execute promptly orders lor the
purchase and sale
of Gold, Government aud other

Securities

pr<

Make collections
and Canada.

o. j.

Soi tlonaleum byand girls earn nearly as much th
uslne^s. Bovs devoting their whole time to

valuabl sample, which will do to
com
menee work on, and a
copy of The Peoples Llterar
Companion-one of ttm largest and b st f«m 1
newspapers published—all sent free by mall. Reac
er, If you wantipermaociit, profitable
*
address
C. ALLEN A CO,, work,
Augusta, Maine

on

PAJ

TRANSFERRED 01
in the bneiness heretofore
conduct
Fev i ork undexthefrm nanle of a.
WOLF A C

!£^rkJi2?J^»J»odn,whoae

fa^est In
pool house will cease from and after this our Llv«
date. ]S
Benjamin w 11 alone Mgn >n liquidation, and hereafi
eonducc the business la New York
under his
made for his account.
A *ROS

own fU

WOLF,

ABRAHAM

).

ditions

us upon

the

may

be

same con¬

Currency Accounts.
Bailroad, State, City and other
Corporate Loans negotiated.
Collections made everywhere in
ns

United

States, Canada and

Europe.
Dividends and

Coupons collected.

Warren Kidder 8c Co.,
JANKERS,

_

NO. 4 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
Orders for Stocks Bonds and Gold promptly po¬
uted. FOUR PER CENT INTEREST ALLu V\ ED

depot.* subject to6hcik at slgat.

in

Extremely Low Prices
AT

HoWnUNG, { Uverp0

Union Adams 8c Co.
.

on com-

FOR
8c
B

Patent Merln > Drawers.
Scarlet Cashmere Shirts.

INKERS,

Scarlet Cashmere Drawers,
loth and Ruck Gloves.

34 BROAD STREET.

S

ocks, Stale Ronds,

GENTLEMEN

Patent Merino Shirts.

Cammack,

<

Gold and Federal

Scarfs and 'J les.

Securities,
BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION.

Particular Attention pall to invest"*
meats in Sonikern State
Bonds.
—■

1

■

■

--

■■■

■'■■■

■

Tapscott, Bros.
86

—

8c Co.

SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK.

.

1RWPECTFULLY SOLICIT FROM THE
FRIFN]
* continuance of their
deuce.—No. Id oseadway, New York, Nfavors and cc
ovember 118
LEWts BENJAMIN




Banking Accounts

opened with

Addison Cammack

a

.

sion.

all parts of the United States

Osborn.

Osborn

i

mea.
That all who see thl< notice mav send
the:
addret* and test the
business, we make this unpara
leled offer: To such as are not well
satisfied, we wl
send f l to psr for the trouble of
writing Full psu

-

Coupons, and execute orders for the
purchase and sale of Gold and all
first-class Securities, on commis¬

per cent per annum, credited monthly.

TO THE WORKING CLASS.—We are now
prepare
to tarnish All classes with c
nstant
home, the whole of the time or for the employment i
s,>are moment
Ba*lnein new. light and
profl 'able. Persons of elthe
sex easliv earn rom 50c to
$5 per evening, and a

W“,Interest
In

at cur¬

prices, also Coin and

(Brown Brothers & Co.’s Building,)
Receive money on denosit, subject to check at
sight
allowing interest on daily balances at the rate cf fou

Miscellaneous

titulars,

buy, sell and exchange all

John J. Cisco 8c Son,
NO. 59 WALL

54 William Street.

Dealers,
approved collaterals,

Dry Goods.
BANKERS,

James G. King’s Sons,

on

market

rent

Co,,

Established 1820.
Orders in Stocks. Bonds. Gold aud Government Se¬
curities promptly filled at usual rates.
Foreign Ex*
change negotiated. Draw Bil s on the

No* 56 Wall Street.

date,

to our

issues of Government Bonds

the

Deposits.

BANKERS,
54 WALL

STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND
SOLD
AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

on

Ward 8c

Accounts received aud interest allowed on 6ame.
8tocks and Bond* nought and sold at the Ne« York
Stock Exchange. UALLKOAD LOANS NEGOTIATED

EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.
8IGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW

times,

Gold

especial

or

Bills at

SECURITIES

GOLD

fixed

at marke t rates of interest.

AND IN

GOLD AND

at

or

•

all Southern Points.

Letters
DRAW at Sight

Street, New York,

GOVERNMENT

RAILWAY
1

Co.,

DEALERS IN ALL ISSUES OF

Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Exchange,

on

Co.

BANKERS,

DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO SIGHT DRAF
And Four Per Cent interest allowed on
Daily
Balances.

Collections made

8c

8c

Nos. 16 St 18 Nassau

YORK.

Securities
have
attention.

Bliss

Vermilye

Particular attention paid to the purchase and sale

r

at all

We

BROKER,
NEW

Advances made

ISSUED BY

MEMBER N. Y. STOCK EXCHANGE,

AND

also,

demand

on

bearing interest at current rate, and
available in all parts of the United
States.

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,

Worthington,

BANKER

able

CREDIT

FOR

DEPOSITS received and interest allowed at best
CnrreaS Rates.
GOVERNMENT and STATE SECURITIES, GOLD,
RAILROAD BONDS, STOCKS, etc., bought and
Sold on Commission.
ADVANCES made upon approved Securities.
COLLECTIONS made, and Loans Negotiated.

N.

LETTERS OF

with National Banks.

Certificates of Deposit issued, pay¬

AND

BANKERS,
No. 40 Wall Street* New York.

Southern

check at

Circular Notes

JAY COOKE A CO.

14

Europe.

as

C1RCFLAR

Daily

Currency or Gold.
depositing witli us can
sight in the same manner

•

LOANS, receive Deposits, subject io Check, allowing
i merest, and transaet a general Banking Business.

all

on

Persons

AND OTHER PRINCIPAL CITIES ;

WE NEGOTIATE RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL

allowed

Balances of

CO., Paris.

And Letters of Credit available throughout

Stocks^ Bonds and Gold

W.

Interest

SON, London.

». METZLER S. SOHN & CO.Frankf ort

and Bonds of LAKE SUPERIOR AND M1SSISSII P
RAILROAD COMPANY, and execute orders lor pur

WILLIAM

*

Receive Accounts of Banks and Bankers on liberal
terms.
ISSUE BILLS OiT EXCHANGE ON

issue* ot

chase and sale of

[December 4 1869

Smith, Randolph 8c Co.,

and Bn >

er*

CHRONICLE

Issue Sight Drafts and
Exchange payable In all
parts of Great Britain aad Ireland.
Credits on W. TAPSCO'fT &
CO., Liverpool. Ad

ranees made on

consignments. Orders for Govern
ment Stocks. Road* and ILQfthandkta
executed. ' * -

FOR YOUTH.
'

hlrts and Col’ars.

Kid and Buck Gloves,
l atent Merino
h rts.
I’atem Merino Drawers,

rardigan Jackets.
Woolen Hosiery.

No.

637

Broadway.

THE

December 4,1869]

CHRONICLE.

Bonds for Sale.

Financial.
SIEVEM PER CENT

BANKING HOUSE OF

*

First

HENRY CLEWS & CO.

Convertible

Sinking Fund

Gold Bonds

BUILDINGS,

TREASURY

Mortgage

*

OF THE

NO* 32 WILL STREET.

Danville, Urbana, ftSloomlnsTton and
Pekin Railroad
canRal Of the country seeking investment in approved securities, which
t bonds t>. pay their interest punctually, is incr asme to such an extent t1 at we

mimluB

'Th*

nnvpmme

GelleTi™ the

frim our

demand

have been com-

OFilLLINOIS,

make the supply! g ox this growing want one oi the leading

customers to

features of our hu8ineB8.een dlrected for 80rae time pa8t

to the investigation of the investment value of first
American lailroad property, especially with reference to the Western Maes.
?hJnnnreceriented growth of surplus capital seeking safe investments, since the advent oi peace, has siimufatpri tEe enterprise of our i eop e and encouraged the build ng of new railroads, which are meeting « ith
«nrpM8 tnan calculated upon by those who built them.
No better assurance of the sa ety of * estern
inroad bonds need be adduced than the lact that there is not, at present, one running railroad intuat
In. h which is not punctually paying its interest.
86
We have accordingly selected the Fir-t Mortgage Bonds of productive railroads as a class of security
mortpaee

Company

are as certain as

Principal auu interest Payable in uroia at the Far¬
mers’ Loan and Trust Company, New York.
Coupons payable First of April and
\

bonds on productive

October

.n

natural wants of th* production and commerce of the country, and the safety of wbuch has
a well-peopled, thriving and
wealthy sec-ion of the country, calculated to supply the railroad with sufficient business jrom the beginning
based upon the

been
to

investment «-a e anu remunerative. * itn this view, the Great West, feeding the *■ astern t ites
the Pacific tares on the other (nowin daily communication through ihe Baciflc Railroad),
iudgrnent, a safe fielu for the employment of capita' in ra lroads.
•
Among the many new enterprises offered to our firm, we have chosen, after careful

make the

side and

nn

one

la

in our

1

Free of Government Tax

^^“^Jen caref^lVo^etec^only the bonds of such roads as run through

investigation, the

Total Issue

ISSUED BY THR

BUUGTON, CEDAR RAPIDS AND MINNESOTA RAILWAY COMPANY,
Principal payable in Gold in fifty years; Interest payable in Gold in New York or London;
of United States taxation; being a First Mortgage Convertible f-inking Lund Bond, secured by
the Railroad, Branches, Depot Grounds, Rolling St>ck, tquipment and Francuises of the Company. A flrstcla s investment, yielding in currency nearly ten per cent p< r annum.
In the matter of pledging the reputation of our firm for the investments offered by us for sale, we
aDDrecia e fully the exient of obligation which we assume, not only to ourselv s, but to the public, *nthe
case of First mortgage Sinking fund bonds, our judgment on them, as a perfectly safe ancl profitable invest¬
ment. is confirmed by the following strong letter from the experienced and eminently successful managers
of the rennsyiyania Railroad Company ;

$2,000,000

Capital Stock*

SEVEN PER CENT GOLD BONDS

-

93,000,000

The Bonds are a first mortgage on the railway, its
rolling stock, depots, machine shops, lands, and the
entire property of the Company

Length and Topography.

free

„

_

PENNSYLVANIA

RAILROAD COMPANY,

length, the only East
connecting the Cities of Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin on the line of the old
i migrant Road. This section has been
justly named
the Garden of the West, and is noted for its large
agricultural and manufacturing products, also for its
valuable mines of coal.

PRESIDENT’3 OFFICE, PHILADELPHIA. May 11th, 1869.
Messrs. Hsnby Clews

The road is 117 5-100 milts in

and West line

& Co., 32 Wall Street:

Valuable Connections.

Gentlemen—In answer to your request of the

17th ult., for our opinion as to the condition and prospects

Rapids and Minnesota Railway, the character of the country tn rough which it passes,
of the enterprise, we would state, that b fore a cepting the trust imposed upon us
irst Mortgage Bonds of this company, we had fully satisfied ourselves as to the practicability of the

of the Burlington,!, edar
and the probable success

by the

t

enterpriser

flourishing cities on the Northern Mississippi River, and runs in a
North-westerly direction up the great rich i edar Valley, connecii 'g at plomL ent points along the line with
six different railroads, now iu active operation, nearly all of which mustbe, more or less, tributary or feeders
oad starts at

he

to this

t o

one

of the

The local business will make

the line a t IRST CLASS PAYING ROAD.

m ns",

td.

In addition the

as MASY VALUABLE CONNEC¬
TIONS EAST AND WEST AS ANY ROAD now In

operation. The line has lately been consolidated with
the Indianapolis and Danville Road, makiog over 200
miles under

one

Company provide for a large through

business, having

one

management.

At

to the
Hut as de fr >m this, the p ipulous >ton ution of th *.
tiveness and weaith, give sufficient guaranty oi a good
for success.
*

country amng the line of this hoad, its great produc¬
local business, wnich, f r any road, is tue uest reliance

good Index of the prosperity and wealth of the country through whi"h this Road passes, may be found
reports over a million and a quarter dollars subscribed and expenued by indivi¬
in pushiag on one hundred and sixty milts of the work, and it is also a strong

A

In the fact that the com any
duals residing along the line

proof of the local popularity and necessity for the Road.
Yours

Jndianapolis it connects with the Pennsylvania
Central, Baltimore and Ohio, also with several other
lines at Danville, with the Toledo, Wabash and W est,
ern, and at Pekin with Peoria, making a new through
direct route to Illinois, connecting Philadelphia. New
York, Boa-on and Baltimore with Peoria, Keokuk,
Burlington, Omaha and the far West.

respectfully,
J. EDGAR THOMPSON,
]
President of the Pennsylvania RR. Co. j

Completion of tbe Road.
Trustees.

The road is being rapidly constructed, all graded

CHARLES L. FROST, W
Pres’t Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw RR. Co.

and

bridged, the track laying at the rate of one mile
day, all the iron and a large amount of rolling
stock provided.
The whole road WILL BE COM¬
per

PLETED BEFORE THE 1ST OF JANUARY NEXT.
As

evidence of the resources and Immense traffic of the section of country through which this Road
runs, we present the following Official Statement of the surplus Agricultural Products shipped from the State
o//oica by the different railroads therein, during the year euding April 80,1869, just issued by the Secretary
oi

an

State;

Number of Horses
Number of Cattle,
Number of ^ogs
Number of Sheep
Dres-ed Hogs, pounds,
1 ard and Pont, pounds,

*

52,733

The stocks of several of the

i_

ii

Prising exhibit of surplus products.

Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Minnesota Railroad also rum through the Rich and growing State of
ttrEOmS!?" 1 e*erence to the map of the • nited -tat s wLl show that this Road passes through the most
7nithvu!tin& an* growing portion qf the West, and forms one of the great trunk lines in direct communication
Chicago and St. Louis, being to the latt *r city 90 miles fi om Northern Iowa and all portions of
.

and Southern

Iowa*01*than

auy other roftd now kuilt or projected, and also the nearest route irom Central
a

increasing traffic is waitln r for it, and needs railroad common cation The Buyer qf these Bonds is
whiry,°r.£JZ*iar<inte?1’ bV « great business already in existence, and has not to run any of the contingencies
nKThfl v?, attfn& upon the opening of roads into new and unsettled country.
m

OilUBWUdlOn

thpee Ronds for the present at 95 and accrued

EIGHTEEN

name

principal lines of Illinoif

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 clanse a valuable option.
*
We have PERSONALLY EXAMINED THE ROAD,
and consider the bonds a CHOICE SECURITY; we
therefore take pleasure in rec unmending them to is*
vestors as SAFE, PROFITABLE AND BEL ABLE.
A

large portion of the loan has already been sold.
We are authorized to offer them for the

present at

Interest in o urrency, the Company re
serving the right to advance the price without notice.
At this price THEY PAY TES PERCENT in currency
-nearly FIFTY PER CENT MORE THAN THE
SAME AMOUNT INVESTED IN GOVERNMENTS
Gold and all marketable securities received in eg.
change at highest market rates. Bonds forwarded by
express free of charge.
95 and accrued

m

interest. We recommend them to the cartful
*** Officers of financial institutions, who desire to change their Government Bonds,
vieiZ nhi„lg*'pr:ce(lJi!tVe*tment*i fora*ecitritu which presents every element qf safety, and at the same time
•s a higher rate
of interest.' we shall be pleased to furnish pamphlets and full particulars on application.
HENRY CLEWS & CO.,
Financial Agents for the Company.




THAN

are

324,753

lm-trn,Bllrffhgtqn, Cedar Rapids and Minnesota Railroad is required by the wants of that section, where

LESS

of the owner if desired.

i
Preceding Official Statement Is made up almost exclusively of the shipments Eastward, and does not
i
amount of Produce shipped Fas ward from Dubuque or McGregor, which would swell the to>als
nttoii’1111the shipments Westward by the railroads were given, they would swell Immensely this sur-

mol

average

holder, at any time, and may be registered in the

10,983,101

specified, pounds,

bonds

THOUSAND DOLLARS PER MILE, are CONVERTI¬
BLE INTO STOCK AT PAR, at the option of the

13,418,776
7,5'2.5 9
2,866,196
9,196,613
2,2 0,60?
35,476,854
1,808,047
27.6CH.7 7

il. pounds,.
.
Wheat, bushels,
Corn, bushels
Uther Grains, pounds
Other Grains, bushels,
Other Agric iltur.il Products, pounds.
Flour and other Agri ultural i roducts, pounds,

Animal products not otherwise

The

1 623
80 287
61 ,357

.

u o

.

•

Profit of tbe Investment.

TURNER

BROTHERS,
'

BANKERS, No. II

Naasau-st., New York

.

708

-*

THE CHRONICLE.

A

LOAN

OF

•PAYABLE
WITH

INTEREST

$1,500,000,

IN
AT

[December 4, 1869.

GOLD,

THE

RATE

OF

./

EIGHT PER CENT PER ANNUM IN
PAYABLE

SEMI-ANNUALLY

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

BE

GOLD,
DESIRED,

STATES TAKES,

AUGUST, 1869, AND PAYABLE
NEW

IN

GOLD, IN THE

YORE.

representatives of the ST. JOSEPH and DENVER

FIRST

MAY

-

;

CITY RAILROAD

MORTGAGE

COMPANY, have the honor

BONDS

OF THE

ST. JOSEPH AND DENVER CITY RAILROAD
Od their line of

Railway which connects St. Joseph with Fort Kearney by rail, amounting to #1,500,000.
.

i

■

■■

-

rights

franchises, equipments, rolling-stock (engines, cars, coaches,
Ac.), machine-shops, depots, lands, and all kinds of property
belonging to the Company in Doniphan, Brown, Nemaba and Mar¬

shall Counties, in the State of Kansas, a distance of 111 miles,
which i3 mortgaged to secure the bondholders at the rate of #13,608
per mile, on a COMPLETED RAILROAD.
THEY HAVE THE FC7BTHER SECURITY

by the terms ©f the Trust Deed, whereby the Farmers’ Loan and

Trust Company, as Trustees, are made tne sole and absolute custo¬
dians of the bonds before they are issued, and are not
permitted to
deliver their or their proceeds until they have
proper evidence that
the road is graded, tied, ironed, and ready for tbc
rolling-stock, and
then only at the rate of $12,010 per mile for so
many miles as shall
be thus completed. This is arranged iu sections of tive miles.
Bonds, to be va’id, must be countersigned by the Farmeis' Loan
and Trust Company.
PASTIES PURCHASING ANY OF THESE BONDS

have
finds

safe and

All that

can

be issned.

<»•»

These bonds are second 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 railroid,
of way,

COMPANY,

February in each

year, in New York, London, or Frankfort-on-the
Main, at the option of the holder, and at the following equivalents:
POE SIX MONTHS INTEREST ON

At New York
'
At London
At Frankfort-on-the-Main

$1,000

BONDS.

$40, gold

£84s4d
llO flor

On the #500 bonds one-half of these amounts
interest is payable free of United States taxes.
The

respectively.

The

principal is payable in New York, in gold, Aug. 15, 1899,

THE COMPANY HAVE AN
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL
OF $10,000,000

—to which

neirly #2,000,000 has already been subscribed, and ia
being expended on the road, and in addition to this the Company
have a grant from the United States Government at
Washington of
1,600,000

acres

of land, ten miles in width—on either side of the
these lands are of a superior order and

line—(it is conceded that
among the best in the
an

asset of the

country)—which, at #2 50

per

acre,

forms

Company in the value of $4,000,000.
The Company, with its entire
property, valued at #6,000,000,
free from
debt, asks thi3 loan of $1,500,0110.
We oGfer these bonds at the low
PRICE OF 97 1-2

guaranty that the money they have invested and accrued interest in
currency, with the reserved right to advance
an equivalent in value in a
completed railroad, costing to build the price without DOtice.
and equip more than double the .amount
they have invested, ail of
Governments and other securities received in
whieh is pledged to pay the principal and interest of the bonds
payment, without
they commission, at their market value. Bonds sent
have purchased.
by express, or
packages received in payment, will be free of charge.
THE SECURITY IS UNDOUBTED !
Pamphlets, map3 am information furnished on application.
Parties desiring safe and lucrative investments should lose co
The 81. Joseph and Denver City Railroad is
mainly the extension
of the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad, with all its extended con¬ time in investigating these securities, as the loan is being rapidly
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
lines converging at Sl Joseph and connecting
W. P.
&
immediately with the
St. Joseph and Denver City Railroad,
traversing through Eastern
COMMERCIAL AGENTS,
Kansas tp 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.
THE SHORTEST ROUTE KNOWN TO CALIFORNIA
AND THE “ PACIFIC STATES.”
a

sure

CONVERSE

THE TINE

CO.,

TANNER & CO.,

FISCAL AGENTS,
Joseph is in complete and successful opera¬
49 WALL
tion, and the line to Marysville is being rapidly completed.
STREET, NEW YORK.
Tbe line from Marysville to Fort
Kearney is also being rapidly
pushed forward.
A Branch Road is being built from the St.
Having had all the papers and documents
Joseph and Denver
City Railroad at Severance to the Kansas Pacific Railroad, giving examined by competent counsel, and prounced relating to this loau
complete and suffi¬
at ones a direct route to Denver
cient, and having personally examined the same, which we find
City.
THE BONDS
regular and perfect, and having our own engineers examine the
road and property, whose
are Hu denominations of 41,000 and
$5,000. They are Coupon utmost confidence and reports are satisfactory, we do, with the
satisfaction, recommend the EIGHT PER
bonds, but may be registered in the owner’s name at the Farmers’ CENT
FIRST MORTGAGE GOLD BONDS OF THE
Loan and Trust Company, and
by the surrender of the Coupons ST. JOSEPH AND DENVER CITY RAILROAD COM¬
cun be converted into a
Registered bond, with interest payable to PANY as a SAFE, SUhE AND PROFITABLE
INVEST¬
the registered owner.
MENT, wortby<he attention of capitalists, investors and others.
41 miles west from St.

THE COUPONS*

or

tb« tater&t, if ;made payable




on

the I5tb days of August and

W. P.

CONVERSE & CO.,
TANNER $6 CO.

r

v

i

m

ommerriaj & fftmant:
fctftte, (tammial itajs, §aihrmj Pmiitov, mft gn^tumtt gmmutl.
A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

,

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS Of THE UNITED

NO. 232.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 186a

YOL. a

STATES^

erty of its industrial population, devastated and laid waste
industries, and put back the progress of the oountry for a whole century. Now, although there is little dan¬

CONTENT8.

its fairest
THE CHRONICLE.

709
.
Agents of National Banks
718
710 LatestMonetary and Commercial
711
English News
718 ger

Relief from Fiscal Burdens

Floating Capital and New Loans

Review of ihe Month

The Debt Statement for D ecem •

718

her

in

Changes

the

Commercial and Miscellaneous
News

Redeeming

THE BANKERS GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR.

Honey Market, Railway Stocks,
U. S. Securities, Gold Market,
Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks, Philadelphia Banks

I Sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange
| Railway News
Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
I Railroad, Canal and Miscellane-

stupendous
bad fiscal
legislation, still minor evils, to a considerable extent, have
been produced by some of our taxes. And where these fis¬

our popular government, such
715 disasters should be let loose upon the country by

M9

that under

public opinion de¬
mands that the pruning knife of fiscal reform must, with a
National Banks, etc
715 j
ons Bond List
722-8
Southern Securities
718 J
firm hand, be applied. THE COMMERCIAL TIMES.
But there are other reasons why a dimunition of the
Commercial Epitome
724 I Groceries
728
Cotton
725 Dry Goods
780
The aggregate
Tobacco
726 j Prices Current
735 pressure on internal revenue is demanded.
Breadstuffs
727 1
amount yielded by these taxes is regarded as more than the
country can really afford. The custom duties yielded last
®!)c CljronuU.
year nearly 182 millions, and the internal revenue 159 mil¬
The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur lions. There is a large class of persons who are in favor of
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine
reducing the internal revenue to about 120 millions, or even
with the latest news up to midnight of Friday.
lower, keeping up by a revenne tariff the aggregate of the
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
customs duties, so as to secure the prompt payment of the
For Thb Commercial
Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier
to oity subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)
interest on the public debt, and the redeeming a consider¬
ForOneYear
$10 00
For Six Months
6 00
able sum of the principal of the debt every year. By rigid
7 he Chbomclx will be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued by letter.
Postage is 20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-offlce.
economy in every department of the administration, by
WILLIAM
DANA,
[ WILLIAM B. DANA & OO., Publishers,
JOHN e. FLOYD, jb. f
79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK.
turning a deaf ear to all projects for making grants to new
Post Offiob Box 4,592.
railroads, or subsidizing steamship companies, or buying up
1^“ Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Post useless real estate from foreign governments, we shall be
Office Money Orders.
able, it is supposed, to get along very well with 180 mil¬
720

721

cal evils remain

on

the statute book,

and

.

B.

lions from cus-toms and 120 millions from

BELIEF FROM FISCAL BURDENS.

But there is

a

third

reason

internal

revenue.

urged by those who are in

The December statement o f the debt shows us that we favor of a repeal or remission of some of the internal revenue
have in the Treasury almost 77 million dollars of bonds, of taxes. It consist in the fact that to lower taxes does not
which 20 millions belong to the sinking fund, while the re¬ always lessen their productiveness. This was seen last
mainder are held to await the action of Congress. The fact year in the working of the spirit tax, which yielded 30 mil¬

by taxation during lions at the reduced rate of 50 cents a gallon, against 13 mil¬
and suggestive. It lions the previous year, when the tax was $2 a gallon. The
the work of paying full report of the internal revenue collections for last year
off its public
debt, and it indicates the extent of the fiscal is well worthy of examination in this point of view. It is
resources and industrial
strength which can bear so heavy a semi officially published as follows :
Articles.
1869.
1888.
drain upon its means, and can still carry forward with more
On
irlts
$45,026,401 74
$14,290,750 98
28 430,707 57
14,947,107 58
energy and activity than ever, innumerable railway and other On tobacco
Fermented liquors
5,685,NJi W
6,0*9,879 64
Banks
8,885,616 62
.1,866,745 55
projects, which are absorbing capital to a degree seldom Gross and bankers
receipts
6,800,998 82
6,280,069 84
Sales
8,906,839 0s
4,887,*00 S3
equalled in this country heretofore. Now, however, a gene Other
special taxes
8,801,454 67
16.364,547 28
ral desire
84,791,865 84
41,455,598 SS
appears to be springing up on almost every hand Income
Legacies
1,244,887 01
1,518,3*7 64
for a diminution of the
Articles in
882,860 78
1,134,889 98
pressure of taxation.
Great as has Passports schedule
28,280 00
29,458 00
been the amount of the taxes repealed during the last two Gas
2,116,005 84
1,902,081 62
877 068 79
Penalties
1,255 881 59
that

large a surplus has been raised
the past ten months is
very gratifying
shows that this country is in earnest in
so

s

....

years, it is notorious that much remains to be done before Not otherwise mentioned
Stamps
our internal revenue
system can be pronounced adapted to Total collections.....
Total tax refunded
the fiscal wants of the
country, or free from mischievous Net collections....
This report fully
imperfections. It has been truly said that a bad tax is more

mischievous, and inflicts greater evils on a people, in time
than a disastrous campaign in time of war. Spain,

of peace,

by

a

foolish and




monstrous tax system,

increased
rates

1,^4,978 98

.....

6,080 37

16.4Sa.T10 01

14,653,1^2 02

160,039,844 29
860,885 12
169,679,109 17

bears out what has been said about the
productiveness whioh sometimes follows reduced

of taxation.

It is needless to cite the details.

confiscated the prop¬ history is full of illustrations of the same truth.

Fiscal

What is

THE

JO
useful is to

CHRONICLE.

fourth reason for reversing
our internal tax system.
We refer to the necessity for
repealing petty, inquisitorial, unproductive taxes, which
make a government unpopular and cause needless annoy¬
ance to private citizens.
One of the taxes most resented
and objected to, because of its inquisitorial character, is
more

point out

so

far

as

to

The Chronicle has not ventured to go
recommend that it should be given up when

it

expires next year.' It produced thirty-four millions last
year against forty-one millions the year before.
If-this
large sum could be dispensed with, we should be glad.
But other inquisitorial and offensive taxes there are which
have no indispensable character of productiveness about
them.
The articlesjin schedule A, and several of the
,special taxes, might be dispensed with, anjl we should
scarcely lose any appreciable amount of revenue ; "-for
they cost oftentimes to the people far more than they
bring in to the Treasury. The abuses^of the tax on gas
and on the fares upon the* street railroads have been
frequently pointed out, and the time certainly has come
for

reform.

a

Among those who do not appreciate the changed condition

a

the income-tax.

[December 4, 1869.

of the country in this respect, the many new loans which have
been offered, and are being offered, have caused serious
appre.
hension with regard to the ultimate effect of this movement

Experience has certaiuly
transformation of floating capital
fixed and permanentiforms is likely to produce trouble in
into
the money market and consequent disaster in the whole
financial machinery. The violent panic of 1847, which was
so
severely felt in the United States and in England, was at’
tributed chiefly to this cause. Prof. Perry, in remarking upon
it, states the subject very clearly as follows: “ While credits
continued about as they were, or were slightly increased by
railroad speculations, the capital in the loan markets, which
had supported these credits from time to time and on which
they depended, was largely and somewhat suddenly drawn off
to be put into the fom of fixed capital.
All great public
works, such as railroads, canals, and so on, take more or less
money out of the loan market and convert it into fixed capital,
and thus make it unavailable for future lending, This hap¬
pened in 1847. Railroad building was then at its height.
upon the business of the
shown that the too rapid

country.

We have space to notice but one more of the numerous The continued demand on the loan market by these .railroad
reasons for
revising our Internal Revenue system. Some of calls diminished the loanable fund to such an extent that they
its

arrangements demoralize the tax-payer. We put too
much temptation to false oaths before the minds of our
citizens. Except, we believe, in Holland, a generation or two
ago, no modern government has ever taken «o bold a step
as to
put almost every man of its more intelligent adult
population under an oath in order that it may raise from
them

fragmentary part of its taxation and prevent them
defrauding it of its legal revenue. By all means let
us do
away ^with the multiplicity of oaths. No supposed
advantages' of any revenue arrangement will compensate
for the fearful
perils which in a Republic like ours must
inevitably spring from causes which demoralize the citizen,
degrade the public opinion of right and wrong, and outrage
a

from

flie

of the human m;nd for the solemn assevera¬
oath. * The English Government for almost a

reverence

tion

of

an

^quarter of a century has derived considerable revenue from
an income tax, but it has never resorted to the
expedient of

putting the taxpayers -under oath, much less has

it resorted

to the

clumsy contrivance of attempting to prevent false
iwearing by publishing, or conniving at the publishing, of
the income returns in the
newspapers. Congress, of course,
will take no rash
steps in regard to our fiscal system, but
we have said
enough to show that a well-considered judicious
reform in regard to our internal revenue is not
only ex¬
pedient but desirable, and imperatively demanded by pub¬
lic opinion and by an
enlightened regard to the best
interests of the nation.

FLOATING CAPITAL iU NEW LOANS.

Nothing more clearly indicates the change which has been
slowly taking place in the^ minds of the people as to their
capabilities, financially, than the large amount of loans put
upon our market during the past four years. Previous to
the Var if money was to be raised by a railroad or by a city
or town, in most cases an
agent was at once dispatched to
Europe to negotiate the bonds. The idea that our own
market could absorb any considerable quantity of such securi¬
ties was not entertained. Other conclusions, however,
were
forced out of «s during the early days of the war
by the refusal
of Europe to take our bonds. We were thus compelled to
look to ourselves. As a result our
Five-Twenty loan was
offered, and It proved such a success the same policy was
continued during the war, and even when the war ended*
instead of going back to the cAd plan, we pursued the
one of
supplying our wants from our own markets,'
I




who had been accustomed to

rely on it in carrying forward
capital had become temporarily
or
permanently unavailable, found it impossible to command
that perpetual renewal of credit which had previously enabled
them to struggle on.” The present period is said by some to
resemble in many respects that described above as preceding
the crisis of 1847, The amount of capital invested in secu¬
rities of one kind and another during the past five years has
been very large and apparently much in excess of our legiti¬
mate savings or accumulation of capital.
From the month of May, 1865, to July, 1869, a period of
about four years, we may safely say that $500,000,000 of
their business, and whose own

railroads aod canal securities have been issued in the United
States in one form or another. A part of vthese have been
issued to individuals who subscribed for certain

proportions of
capital from motives of interest as oiyners of property adjacent
to the proposed lines, and a large proportion of company ob*
ligations have also been issued to cities, towns, and counties
in exchange for the corporate bonds of the latter, which were
more negotiable in the market
For the purpose of showing
the real extent of this movement during the four years named,
we have prepared the following! table, which gives, as accu¬
rately as the nature of the case allows, the increase in the
funded debt of railroad companies in the period above named:
BKUTBITISS K1O0TLA.TXD FROM JULY,

Increase in U. S. bonds from

May, 1885 to .June 1,1*1). 76,(M0,SOI
Alb*i y A S'Jfqi bauna..
2,000,000
,

1885, TO JULY, 1869.
1,000,000
6,000,0(10

Memphis A r haile* ton
Milwaukee & St. t atil
Mobile & Montgomery

1,31111,000

130.0U0

lcgh nny Valley
4,000,000 Montgomery A r.ufala
Pay ae Noque* A Marquette
250,d 0 Mor* ft A hstex
A

'

Atl ntic & at. L

2,000,000

Bo?ton H. A 8

13,040,000

Buffi.o, Bradford A P ttab., * 680 000
Buff* o, Curry A Pitttb
700.WO

ashville A

i

8,<00,0 0

600,000

ecatur

6 i

Newark A New York
Newbnrg A New Y< rk
N. Y. AO-we^o Midlai d...
New L moon Northern
North Mftaonii....
Nort * PeDua

,O00

250.000

3,0 0,000
230,000
800,000
6,000,000
Bur., Oed*r Bap A Mfnneao
6W*WP
27*,000
Bar. A Mftoari River
6,250,OCO
125,<0C >
Caltf join Pacific
2,3 0,000 North 8bore. L T
I,000,0U)
Camden A A
4,<00,000 No* them Cntrd
Camden A • ur. Co
805,000 Oil * reek A All* gby. Biver. 8,170,0(0
Ceoar Fata A Minoe#o*a... 1,700,< 00
200,0(0
rage Valley.,
60(1.000
Central Branch U. Pacific... 8,mow Oawt-go A Rome.
Buffalo A Erie

Central Pacific of Cal.... *..
Cha leeb n A Savannah....
( harlotte A 8. Carolina....

26,000,000

Chicago, Cin A Louisville..

400,000

'

605,01<0

350,1-00

Chicago, Iowa ANebia»o.n. 1,100(00
Chicago A Norwoat.
4,«u0,000

7«

gin, Bain. A Dayton

Cleveland A Pitft nrg.
Cleveland P4u#.A Asbtab.
Columbia A Augrieta

Columbia#, <,fci<:..A Ijirf G«n.

Pater O" A Newark...
Pemberton A Hightstown..

Penn-yl aula

....

r

2,5)0,000
3,000,(00

......

Pitt* burg A Connelsvllle...
Port liuron A Lake Jlicb..,
Htli.Ft WaVife A*foic...
Pock ford, R.I. A St JLou a

600,000
160,000

J,000,(00
600,(00
‘

9,000,(60
671,000

home, Waterfc A Ogdeneb.
st J* aeph A * ouoc, Bluff#.
Br. Louis A Iron Mountain.

3,000,1*0
8,( 00,(“00

;8t. Lout*, JacksonA Chic*,
-t. Louis A 8 Joseph.
2,'00,000 , 8t. Lon a. Vand. A T.Haute

4,60 .000

400.000

'tt

.

...

2, (.00 000
l,0n0, 00

3,000,000
260,00O bt Paui A Pacific
276,000
l«60MfQG0 Hheo yg n A Fond du Lac.
1,700,000
1.; 00.000 ' Sioux City A > aciflc.
760,000
uanviJle, U/b., *L A Pekin. 2,000,000 Soutf side, L.I

CouuibDs A HocsingVal..
rv>i,meting ih la »* a % * »> a a
Camber and A Penoa..
....

D iroit v Milwaukee.......

Dubuque A Sioux Ci y.

...

Dibuque A Southwestern

B#at Tenn. A be©
Eastern Maas.,...

►

r,6<’0,'00

onthwest Pacific, Mo

2,0(0.000

: i,400.' oo
1,000,(00 Southern Miuoesota
ftfttfouO Toledo, Peoria A V* arsaw.. 8,50000
•
oledo, Wab. « Western... 8,800.'00

600,000 Union Pacific....

26,0.0,000

THE

December 4,1869.]

Pittsburg

flint A pere Parquet
Grand Rapids Ai Indiana....,
Grand River YaUey.
Inri. Cinn A Ufayet e......

Ind. ( rawford A
Jackson, Lansing

anville..
& Sa.'.. .

1,500,000

Lawrence,

Western Union

200,000
1,900,000
2,100,C00
2,500,000
2,800,000

L^uilv.^lnn. & Lexington
Louisviile & Nashville
Cinn

Telegraph..

Total Company
Add U. 8. Bonds

7<M>40,801

Total

..$325,944,245

only that debt is included which
was issued de novo, and not such as was issued in exchange for
other obligations previously outstanding. It is possible that
In the above statement,

cases the amount of obligations negotiated may
be overstated, but, as a whole, the figures are below rather
than above the actual amount issued.
in

particular

We have made

ground for apprehension or mistrust.
of indicating the price at which new loans
are
negotiated, we give below a statement of the several
loans now or recently
offered in New York.

account here of the increase in

no

For the purpose

NEW LOAN* OFFERED IN NEW

2,600,000

Bonds...$240,308,444

711

furnishes

230,000

860,000

Pa.

movement

6,000,000

Morrie Canal.

400,000

Lackawanna

Marietta &

Lehigh Coal & Nav

800.000

tion Ph'la • •
Keokuk & «t. Pan'
Jan

Lehigh &

Union Pacific, Central Br... 1,600,00®
UnT n Pacific, E. Div., i ow
Bans s Pacific900,000
11,478,000
1,000,000
1,520,500 West Wisconsin
1,000,000
200,000 West Jersey
1,0 0,000 Western Maryland
1,000,000
4,000,000
1,000,000 western Union
1,6' 0,000
1/00,000 Deb A Hudson Canal

i,oro,ooo
A N. American.. 4,8<4,444

European
Erie
Erie &

CHRONICLE.

Name.

Fate.

N.Y. A Oswego Mid., Ac. 7g’d
L'nrifiauH Stare
7
Louisville & Nashv. R.R, 7
Kareqa Pacific RR
7 g’d
Central R R. of Iowa.... 7 g'd
Mac? upin Co., Itl
10
Danville, Urbr.ni Ac.,RR 7 g’d
Bur ,Ced.,Rap. A Min.RR 7 g’d
Southern Cen.RR.ofNY 7
St. .fceeph City
7

L uisville City
7
Mercer & Grundy Co.Mo. 8
t hie. DaD. A Vincen.
RR 7
St. Louis City, special tax

bonds

Price.
par

Agent,

20,001 p.m.Q. Onnybe A Co.

70

5 0.000

85

8,( OO.UOO

A. D. Se leek.
J K. a iexand

96 6,500.000
par
95
95

87*
75
90
76
95

A Co.

Howes A Macy.
Turner Bra*.
16,000 p.m.Heiry Clew.* A Co.
1.600,000
V^rmilye A Co.
490 (t00
Utley A Dougherty.
Wm. Alex. Smith A Co.
200,000
4' 0 OK)
Johnson A Day.

2,000 000

2,500,000

82*
96 4

225,0^0
600,000
75,000
250,000

80
80
80
500,000
80
800,000
90 2, S0 >, 000
90 to 95 2,000,000
75 1,500.000
v

*r

M. K. J^snp A Co.
16,000 p.m.W. B. Suattuck.

95

g’d

6
Lake Super. A Miss. RR 7
g’d
Hackensack A N. Y. RR 7
Louisiana State
8
Savannah & Charleston
7
Rochester City water w’k» 6 g’d
We tern Pacific
6 g’d

YORK.

Amount.

W.

Bailey, L_ng A Co.

Jameson, Smith AC.
Jay Ccoke A Co.
Carpenter A Richards.
M. Morgan’s Sons.

Conflict, Tennfngs A Co.
Uticy A Dougherty.

capital
F*sk A Hat h.
Chicago City Park Loan 7
American Exch. Bank
recently N. O. Utv
7
J. A W. Seligman A Co.
St. Jo-eph & DenvarCity 8 g’d
Tanner A Co.
97* 1,50*,000
organized, as a detailed statement of stock outstanding could Selma, Marion & M
8 g’d
320,000
Henry Clews A Co.
hardly be given with accuracy. It may be assumed, however,
that about one half only of the funds for railroad construction
REVIEW OF THE MONTH.
are raised from the negotiation of company bonds, the balance
November has been characterized
by a steady, quiet courge of
being obtained from stock subscriptions or from the aid given
business in Wall st eet. The
money market has been more settled
by States, cities, counties, &c., involving the issue of their than was
expected.
own obligations, and thus placing the same amount of securiAlthough the month is usually one of special activity ia the pork
ties upon the market, differing merely as to fhe parties ulti¬ trade of the
West, no considerable amounts of currency were sent
mately responsible. As we find, then, that the bonded debt to that section until the third and fourth weeks, when the remit¬
of railroad and other companies negotiated in the peiiod tance's to the West and South combined
aggregated probably c’.oee
named is $250,000,000, the total amount of obligations of upon $5,000,000. This drain was met without much inconvenience
these descriptions issued, and taken by the people in one form to the banks, and produced little effect upon the general tone of the
market. It is indeed somewhat remarkab’e
or another, must have been at least $500,000,000.
that, with such a com¬
During the
paratively light supply of legil tenders in the banks, these with¬
same time, also, the funded debt of the United
States, includ¬ drawals should have
produced so little effect; the explanation being
ing the issues of Pacific Railroad Bonds, and without regard
perhaps r.ff rdec, first, in the partial re urn of money from the East;
to the cash in the Treasury, was increased
$76,640,801 be next, in the liberal disbursements of the Sub-Tr
asnry ; and further
no

stock, either of old corporations or of those

tween the first of June 1865

the total amount of

.

more

apd first of June 1869,

securities

making

in

the moderateness of the advances
upon stocks, the price* of
which have ruled below the average
The rate of interest on call
lo .ns has ranged between 5 and 7 per cent; but at the close of the
month a hardening tendency was
apparent, and 7 per cent quite
general. In discounts there has been a gradual improvement of
tone but with little al’evi tion of rates.
In the absence of

negotiated in the country
during that time about $576,000,000.
At these totals, showing such large
absorption of floating
capital, constituted the only fact affecting the question, the
failures,
situation would indeed justify much of the
apprehension the uneasiness engendered by the excessive
pressure in October has
felt among certain classes.
But there are very many evi. gradually disappeared, and, with the
exception of paper coming
dent and important considerations
a modification fiom tho?e brunches ot trade which have snff red fr* m a late fall in
requiring
new

of the conclusion thus drawn.

Of course, so far as the ab
sorption of these bonds and other evidences of debt repre¬
sent a mere change
of securities, no harm need be antici¬
pated; the same may be said also if much of this money
has been borrowed from
Europe indirectly
-

York, rather than directly through London

through New

;

and

on

exami¬

nation such will be found to be the true facts of
the
The amounts of
city,

case.

county and town obligations issued for
purposes, and which have been paid off during the four
years, is very considerable. In this State alone these securi¬
war

ties

have

decreased
hundred millions of

have, during the

many millions.
So, too, several
United States and railroad bonds

period, been taken by Europe, and
in return
European capital has been poured in here. This
has, to be sure, come to us in the shape of goods and raw
material, but is none the less capital, much of which, we
have turned into
money, and thus increased our ability to
absorb bonds. We borrow of
Europe; but as we do it
through Now York, the commissions are saved to the
oountry. Again, the Government has lately been a
heavy
purchaser of its own securities, reaching
up to the first
°f
December, about 75 millions, and this has given the
people the means for other investments to an equal amount.
These facts, together with the
further one that probably not
over 80
per cent, of the par value of the securities named
above has been realized
upon them, shows that this bond




same

prices, there ha9 been

fair degree of confidence in credits. As
come in
slowly, and merchants have had to
give unusually liberal credits to traders io that section, t’ere has
been a very.heavy supply of paper, and it is to this cause man
ly
that 11)3 high rates must be attributed.
During the latter half of
the month the deman 'a for discounts from the
pork sections came
in competition with locd piper, and
stopped a declining tendency
in rates which was becoming apparent. For the fiist half of
the
month p.ime double name paper ranged at 10 to 15
per cent, and
subsequently at 9 to 12 per c nt, while for siugle name of like
giade the range has been 12 to 24 per c^nt.
The causes which we have
previously noted as tending to r str'ct
sp(culation still continue to operate, especially in the stock market
a
western collections have

In United States bonds, the transactions for November show a
de-.
dine of near y forty-five per dnfc
compared with the same month
last year. In that c’ass of securities, however, there h s been
con¬
siderable investment business, but rather in the
way of selling than

buying.

The government purchased $11,000,060; and yet prices
to 4 per cenb In gold value, however, bonds
were worth more at the close than at the
opening of the month ; for
the price of gold declined from 128f on the first, to
121f on the
3(Mb, and at London Sixty-two’s advanced If. The decliae io gold,
by rendering the interest upon currency investments mare valuable,
has caused a large amount ol stock to be
exchanged for railroad
and other bonds, and the expectation that Congress
may adopt some
measures for funding the six
per cent, debt, at a lower rate of inter*
eat9 has also induced free sales by the same class of holders; the
purchases of the government, however, have abaorb?d the supply of
bonds coming from this source.
have declined 2|

712

2

THE CHRONICLE.
BONDS

SOLD

AT THK

Classes.
U. 8. bonds
State & city bonds

692

N. T.

STOCK EXCHANGE BOARD.

1868.

$23,065,S00

$13,185,850

5,416,000

1,181,70C

4,829,500
1,296,700

$29,663,600
225,184,690

$19,312,050
292,546,659

Company bonds
Total—November.

Since January 1

Dec.

Inc.

1869.

$9,c80,050
686,500
115.000

$10,351,550

....

(December 4, isgj).

Improv’nt44
Telegraph44
Steamship44

11,200

2,200

26,151
48,926
45,874
1,718,627

705J228

Expr’ss&c44
Total—November
Si( ce January 1

;,o6

11,639
22,888

Kos

18,191

21,18

M

18,619,672 10,582,994
The followioer table will f-how the opening,

highest, lowest and
daily cIo3iDg prices of the principal Government securities closing prices ol all the railway and miscellaneous securities>o'd
at the New York Stock Exchange Board in the month of Novem¬ at the New York Stock Exchange during the mouths of
October
ber, as represented by the latest sale officially reported, are shown and November, 1869 :
$67,361,9G9

The

in the

-October —

following statement:
PRICKS

Day ol

OP GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

r-6’8, 1881.Coup. Reg.
119* 119%
117%

month.

3.

117%
!«•••••••••

•

•

117%
118%

1

1862.

1

H7%

13t
15•

117%

1866,

new.

116

115%
115%
115%

ii2%

113%
113%

115%
115%

113%

115%

113

115%

115%
115%
11*%
115%

113%
113%
113%
113%

116
116

116
116

116

115%
115%

30

115%
115%

115%
117%

118

115%
1!6%
115%
115%
114%

117

115%

117%
115%

.

118%
113%
113%
113%
113%
112%
113

•

112%
112%
112%

•

•

•

113%
113%

*68.

C’pn.

116%
316%

108

115%
115%

107%
107%
,

iic
116

115%

115%
115%
115%

,

.

,,,,

107%
107%
107%
107%
107%
107%
107%

107%
107%

115%

115%

.

116%
115%

.

,

t

•

*

4

•

107%
103

.....

113

113%

115%

116

116

113%
113%

114

115%
115%

115%
115%
115%

116%
115%
115%

112%

113%
113%
112%
112%

115%
114%

113%

112%
112%

110%

111

111

113%
113%

114
114

115

114%

111%

116
116

115

.

’67.
116%

113%
(Holiday).
113% 113% 116%
113% 115% 116
.....

114

115%

5*8,10-40.

115%

115%
115%
115%
115%
115%
115%
115%

117%

117%

4*

—,

114

115%

19»
20i.
22t
28
241
25

-6’s, (5-20 yrs.)Coupon
H3%
112%

115%

16
*
17
181

YORK.

1864

115%
117%
117%

NEW

116
115
115

117%
117%

AT

Railroad Stocks—
Alton & Terre wont
Haut

H3%
112%

116

Lowest

116’

112%

110%

111

Closing

115

112%

111

111%

114%
113%

116%
116%
113%
113%

116%
113%
113%

107%
107%
107%
107%

1C6%
107

116%
116%

108
108

Date.

Date.

“

113%
113%

106%
107

Cons Am. securities.
for U.S. IU.C. 1 Erie
mon. 5-20s sh’s. |sh’8.

pret

do
do
do

& Northwest’n 71%
do oref.
84%
* Rock Island. 109%
Columb.,Chic. &Ind. C. 26%
Cleve. & Pittsburg
95
do Col.,Cin. &Ind.. 74%
Del., Lack & Western.. 110

Dubuque & Sioux city

108
83%

..

Erie

do preferred
58
Harlem
135
Hannibal & St Joseph . 110
do
do pref. HI
Hudson River
161%
Ilinois Central
137
Joiiet & Chicago
92%"
Lake Sho. & Mich. Sooth 85
Mar. & Cincin.,lst
20

Michigan Central

122
Milwaukee &St. Paul.. 68%
do

uo

Morris & Essex
New Jersey
do
scrip
do
Central

81%

pref.

Monday....
Tuesday...
Wednesday

Thursday...
Friday
Saturday
Monday....
Tuesday...
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday......
Saturday...
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday.
Thursday...
...

..

...

...

Friday

...„

Saturday

..

AM*

Monday
22
21% Tuesday
23
20% Wednesday.. .24
25
20% Thursday
21
P*iiday
2K
Siturday ....27
21
Mo day
..29
20% Tuesday
cO
.

....

..

20

93%
93%
93%
94

93%
93%
9*%
93%

83%
83%
83%
83%
83%
83%
84%
84%

99% 20%
99% 20%
99% 20%
99% 21%
99% 21
99% 20%
99% 21*
99
21%

87

....

93%
94

%
93%

20

20%
20%
20%

Low

20 y

Last,

) ©

83

97%
84% 99%
2
1%
84% 99

92% 74%
94

Rng

1%
93%

84%

9%
84%

92%
99.%
7%
99

20

21%
1%
21%

17%
23%
11%
21%

indicated by ibe
Exchange have
amounted to only 705,238 shares for the month,
ogiinst 1.713,627
shares in November, 1868. This depression is tne more
singular
from the fact that the earnioga of the roids have been, in the
main,
satisfactory, and that the coudition of the money market has favored
the carrying'of stocks—conditions which it
might be supposed would
have induced an activ i speculatira for
higher prices It is very
evident, however, that the cessation of the “ watering” mania has
taken away tLe special
inducements]to speculation which have influ¬
enced the market for the last two
years; aud as the capital of nearly
all the roads represented on the Stock
Exchange has been largely
increased, and the fall in the prices of produce laises a probability
that railway companies may fiad it
necessary to reduce the rates oy
freight, there is a very genera! disposition to postpone specu'atiocs
for a rise, until it becomes more
apparent how the net earning are
likely to squire with the increased capital ; and yet, as the roads
are at present
earning good dividends, and prices of stocks are
moderate, there is no immediate inducement to operate for lower
prices; in this position of affairs there is very obvious cause for the
extreme moderation of business. In prices there has been consider¬
able irregularity, but, oa the average, quotations are lower at the
close than at the opening. The Vanderbilt stocks have been
espe¬
cially weak, New York Cental having declioed from from 192£ to
1691 ; Hudson River from 172£ to 154, and Harlem from 141 $ to
129, from which it is to be inferred that the completion of Mr. Van¬
derbilt's consolidation scheme has been followed
Bby aa extensive
realizing by the larger holders of stock.
STOCKS 80LD AT THE NEW

Classes.
Bank shares
Railroad 44
Coal
44

J&nirg




44

146%

152

145

159%

16^
163
69
84
103

165

147

17%

P3%

103%
26%
86%

no

2»%

22

104

86%

78
111
110

73%

59%

149%

78
111

64

112

129%
105%

111

103

174%

156%

139

132

92%

18
119

83%
88%

•

•

97

•

....

140
131
....

2S%
70
240

137%

140

131

do
dopiet.
Miscellaneous—

67%

79%
87%
120
112
95

193%
•

•

.

,

....

26
70
210

Del. & Hud. Canal
Pacific Mail
Boston Water Power
Brunswick City Land..
Canton
..

,

40
29
260
124

68%
13

.,

9%

69%
14%
9%

220

est. Union

120

56%
13

14

9%

1869.

2,845

1,203
629,486
8,455
16,225

1,539,212
11,669

28,750

Increase.

Dec.

1,141
90.*,776
8,214

13,525

141
108

»X
90S

95%
105

*X
105

....

63%

55"

75

75

58
75

28”

26

26

120
61

lio
51

'

60
8

52%

37

12
36

105

104

105

16

...

122
63
....

9
52
8

8

16%
14%
86%

®"

9

52%

86%

103%

81

36

SO

52%
60%

58%

35
67

34
58

60

52%
49%

58%

68%

26%

17

20%

15%
13%
34%

51

8

16%
15%
36%
103%

16%

60%

8

15

19

m
m
34%

36%

82

59

55

53%
20%

61%

67
51

16%

1«X

of the

gold premium his been steadily downward,
128£ on the 1st to 12l£]on the 30th. The decline bas been
partially due to the large supply ou the market, consequent upon
the lightness of the exports of specie for the
pist 11 month®. The
chief cause, however, is in the large sales of coin by the Treasury,
the effect of which, after having been staved off
by speculation and
doubts as to the persistence of Secretary Boutwell in his policy, i«
at last having its force.
The total amount of coia advertised by
the Treasury for sale during the month was $11,000,030, the last
instalment of $L,000,000, offered oa the 30tb, was not sold, Mr.
Boutwell declining~to sell below 122, while the bids raDged between
120.63 and 121.20. The exports of specie for the month were
quite nominal. The receipts on customs duties amounted to $9,19 ),801, against $7,638,888 in November, 1868.
course

from

COURSE OF GOLD AT NHW YORK.
to

Jr*

s

Date.

a,

O

Monday.

.

...

Tuesday....

aa

<u

*

3

1 128% 123%

I3
w

*

o

T

to

to

a

‘3

©

V

ct

e.

Date.

o

o

5

O

Q

128% 128% Tuesday

126% 128%
125%
124%
124%
128%
121%
121%

2 128
126%
127% 128 127% Wednesday..
Wednesday. 8 127% 127 127% 137
125%
Thursday....
Thursday. . 4 126% 126% 127% 126% Friday
124%
125
Friday ..... 5 126% 126% 127% 127% Saturday.....
Saturday... 6 127% 126% 127% 126% Monday
123
8 126% 126% 126% 126% Tuesday
Monday
122
Tuesday .... 9 127% 126% 127% 127%
Wednesday. ,10 126% 126% 197% 127% Nov., 1869...
128%
44
Thursday... 11 127 126% 127 126%
1868..
133%
44'
12 126% 126%
Friday
1867..
140%
44
Saturday .. , 13 126% 126% 127 1127
1866..
146%
44
15 126% 126% 127%
Monday
1865..
145%
44
16 127% 127%
Tuesday
1864
238%
127%jl27%
44
146
Wednesday.. 17 197% 126% 127% 1127
1868..
44
Thursday..., 18 (ThraVskiving Day).
3862..
129%
44
19 126% 1126% 1126% 1126%
100
1861..
Friday
20 126% 1126% 1126% 1126%
Saturday.
22 126%
Monday
S’ce Jau 1,1869.1184%
1126%
.

.

.

.

.

.

126%
126%

m2

125% 124%

124%

125

128

mi
192

122% m

.

wxins

.

1868.

87
74

85

99%

....

1127

YORK STOCK EXCHANGE BOARD.

207%

.

59%

«%

18
15

-18

The

24%
69

88

122

Express—
American M. Union.
Adams

132
108

69

...

59%

36%

Telegraph.

t8

27*

230
122

16%

pref.

w
120
112

138% 140

105
.

30

40

12

do

196

ito
163

75

27%

64

9%

10ty

63%

64
78

53
9

Mariposa

74

27%

96%
.

87
120
112
88

83%

85

197%

40

46V

ite

119% 181
6-% «7V
48% »x
-

87

141
141
108

207%

.

86%
18%

96

105

26%

1(«
*7 X

192%

69

....

76%

88
1 0
412

98%

96
82
139
132
108
26

•

180%

55

84%

192%

96%

67
80

21
121
71

67%

80
88

93

78

91%

119%

120

12*
107

74 V

....

91%
20

97

40
27
220
120

do

108
37
42

106
154

140

197%

trj*

172%

93%

197%

af

109

85%

197%
69%

21J

172%

83%

...

TO

74%
101%

173
139

....

26
70
100

185*

21%

1°8%

92%
91%

74v

102^

141%

•

1*5
180

109
30
53

pH*

83%

107
107

85%

Rome, W. & Ogdensb’g

111

100

117%
171%

•

28
86
78

61

18
122

65%
79%
88%

106%

65jg

141%

61%

20
124
70

89

29%

-

I*
ft}
1iSU

1W% 148%

143%
108%
109%

92%

94%

9%

75%

109

30
54

58

11

*6
78
111

29%

25

53

28

108%

109
108

34%

69%

83%

104

The dulness in the stock market is
sufficiently
fact that the sales of all kinds of stocks at the

1(5
147

84

195
.

29

83%

107%

.

29
68
It

85%

107
173
.

82
59

165
73%

120

do
& H R. C etk
do
scrip
do
& N. Haven, 128
do
do
scrip 130
Norwich & Worcester..
Ohio & Mississippi ....
27%
do
do
pref... 70
240

—November-

Clos. Open. High. Liw ouT

136%
159%
69%

117%

—

20% Lowest
20% Highest
20% Range
20% Last

80
56
17

60
13
140
147

Boston, Hartford & Erie *
Chicago & Alton
116
do
do pref.... 144
Chicago, Burl. & Quincy 166

1

(Holi day.)
93% 83
97%
98
9(% 83
83
93%
98%
93% 8<% 98%
(Hoi day).
V3% 81% 98%
93% 83%' 98
93% 83% 98%
93% 83% 98%
91% 83% 98%
93% 83% 98%
93% 83% 98%
93% 83% 98%
93% 83% 99%
93% 81% 99%
I 93% 83% 99%
1 93% 83% 99*

38

so
56
18

.

COURSE OP CONSOLS AND AMERICAN SECURITIES AT LONDON.

Cons Am. securities.
for U. S. m.c. Erie
mon. 5-20e sh’s.
shs.

44

Open. High. Low.

1126%

1126%

121% 128% 1»K

185V
137% 141% 138
188% 149% 141%
145% 148% 147%
132 f 187

210
148
129
100

260
154

280

148%

188% 199

100« 100

121%162%1MM

December 4,
Foreign

the market

rate

•

exchange has ruled steady at $@f

below the specie ship.

FOREIGN EXCHANGE (60 DAYS) AT NEW YORK,
Paris.
Amsterdam. Bremen. Hamburg.
Berlin
centimes
cents for • cents for cents for cents fo
for dollar.
florin.
rixdaler. M. banco.
thalers
518% 3517% 40%@40% 73%@78% 35%@35% 7JX§71H
Sw$<a5l6% 40%@40% 78%@7*% 35%@35% 71%@71%

Donuu

.

2^461,131089 8$-

Deorease of debt during the past month.
Decrease of debt since March 1, 1869

7,571/454 18
$71,908,524 78 •

-

Bonds Issued to the Pacific Railroad Companies. Inters**

;

payable In Lawful Money.
Interest

COURSE or
i

$2,453 559,715 13

Debt, less amount in the Treasury
Debt, leas amount In the Treasury on the 1st ultimo

having been well suppled with both southern

*nd local'bills, while a moderate amount of bond bills have been
marketed.

713

CHRONICLE.

THE

1869.J

Interest

Interest

Pa‘d by

_

_

Union Pacific Co
Kansas Pacific, latS U.P.
E. D... *
81oui City and Pacific..

Balance of

repaid by lnte’tpsld
ransp’tion by United
of mails,Ac.
yet paid.
States.
States.
$27,075,000 00 $676,842 82 $2,081,869 89$1,105,941 51 $975,928 88

^erned

Character of Issue.

r.ntrai

Central Pacific

1,628,320 00

2,362,000 00

22,009,000 00

Union
Pacific,assignees ot At¬
chison A Pike’s P'k..

831,813 09

6,803 000 00 157,575 CO

631,224 99
16 2?

96.508 69

40,703 00

588,816 83 )
53,064 22
549,639 86 1,180,899 75 J

203.588 10
96,491 42

qj nu

y4*',5C 48

1,624,999 10

5,290 79

200,517 47
46,606 08

Central Branch
617%@51o%

78%@78% 35%@35% 71%@71%
40%@40% 78%@78% 35%@35% 71% @71%
40%@40% 78 ¥@78% 35%@35% 71%@71%
mmw 78%@7s% 35%@36
iimn*
40%@40% 78%@78% 35%@3G
71%@71%
71%@7l%
40%@40% 78%@73% 35%@36
71%@71%
40*@40% 7S%@78% 35%@36
71%@71%
40%@40% 78%@78% 35%@36
71%@71%

517%@516% 40?4@40% '

5l7%l£l6%

8"*iKtl09
'SIioo

B17jJ@61«K

bisxmw

518%@517%

09

!”*}mX|i09% 618%@*17%
S IS 618%@517%
S% 518%@517%
JliilUO ©109? 518%@517% 4°>i@40X^7rf^@73^ 35%@36
Ja’,;in9 @109% 518%@517% 40%@40% 78%@78% 35^@36
2*v}2 S109J 618%@517% 40%@40% 78%@78% 35%@36
g -}S Si09%- 518%@5 7% 40%@40% 78%@78%- 35%@36
•••

S-109
2*

518%@517%
618%@517%
518%@517%
« ■‘wmSKwX
"®@109 518 *@517%
«
108%@109
518%@517%
MlQ8K@;09
518%@517%
109 @109% 518%@517%
@109%

40%@40%
40%@40%
40%@40%
40%@40%
40%@40%
40%@40%
40%@40%

7l%@71%
71%@71%
71%@71%
71%@71%

78%@T8% 35%@36

the changes in the Redeeming Agents of National *
Bisks for the week endiug Dec. 2, 1869.
These weekly changed
are furnished by, and published in accordance with an arrangement made *
with the Comptroller of the Currency.
The

I

71%@71%
71%@71%

70%@71%
518%@513% 41 @41% 7S%@79% 35%@36% 71%@72

appears from the books
close of business on the last

5’i

fiof 1881

6,8.0ree.Warl’81.Kedeemable 20vears from July 1,1861.
I’i of 18§1
.'.At pleaB. after 20 years from J une 30, ’61
6*1,5-208....
20 years from May, 1,1862*
.....

After June 30,1881

«’s of 1881

6’s
I's
yg
8’s

5-20’s
520’s
5-20’s
5-20’s

Interest.

$416,666
146,291
460,375
23/ 25
4,732,940
2,573,858

67
67
00
00
00
00
1,875,000 00
2,432 091 25
19,412 50
627,806 50
1,016,636 25
8,324,973 75
9,489,753 75
1,063.483 75

3,882,500 00
125,561,900 00

..20years from NovemDcr i, ibos20 years from November 1,1865*
20 years from July 1,1865*
20 years from July 1,1867*

6’1,5-20’s

203,327,250
332,998,950
379,590,150
42,539,350

20 years from July 1,1868*
in coin
payment

00
00
00
00

$2,107,938,000 00 $33,202,914 09

Aggregate of debt bearing interest
Coupons due, not presented for

8,067,572 00

$41,270,486|P9

Total interest

Debt bearing Interest In Lawful Money.
I'l,Certificates..On demand (interest estimated)
$47,195,000 00 $913,900 00
I’l, Navy pen. fd.Interest only applic. to pay. of pensions
14,000,000 00
175,000 00
$61,195,000 00 $1,118,900 00
Aggregate of debt bearing interest in lawful money.

Debt on which Interest has
I’l, Bonds
i’s, Bonds

ceased since^matuiTty.
$6,000 00

Matured December 31,1862
Matured December 31,1867

292,852
12,000
2,521,150
182,160

120 <0
195 00

1,124 20
14,503 13

00
00
00
00

485,219 37
7,564 65

822,950 00

Stillwater

approved in vlve of The Cent al

Bank:..,

...

i

National Bank of New York

(Sngliol) Nemo

Catest fHcmetarp anti Commercial

720 00

Amt. outstand
$113,258 50
356,000,000 00

Fractional currency
Certificates for gold deposited

° ,-00,004 00

)

36,862,940 00

$431,861,763 lg

Aggregate of debt bearing no interest

Coin—Bonds at 5 p. cent.
Bonds at 6 p. cent.

Amount

Interest

Outstanding.
$221,589,300 00
1,886,848,700 00

$2,107,938,000 00 $41,270,486 09

Total debt bearing interest in coin
Dnr biasing Interest in Lawful Monkv—
Certificates at 3 per cent
.'
Navy pension fund, at 3 per cent

$47,195,0)0 00

14,000,000 00

Total debt hearing Interest In lawfal money
Dxbt on which Int. uas ceased since maturity...
DECT BBABtNG NO INTBBBST— * •
Demand and legal tender notes
Postal and fractional curiency
Certificates of gold deposited:

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
NOV. 19.

ON LONDON
/-

'

EXCHANGE ON LONDO?*.
LATEST

Amsterdam...

3 months.

Antwerp

lamburg
Paris
Paris
Vienna
Berlin
Frankfort
Cadiz
Lisbon
Milan

@11.18%
2o.37%@25 42%
13.10% @13.16%
25.32% @25.37%
25.15 @25.22*
short.
3 months, 12 67%@12.72%
6.27 @ 6.27%
1.20%@ 1.20%
48%@ 49
90 days
51%@ 52
3months. 26.85 @26 !
@
1
11 18

short.

....

Genoa

NOV. 19.
it

1$

44

Nov. 19.

short.
sho't.
short.
short.

3

11.90
25.20

13. 7%@
25.17 @
124.35
6.23

moB
44

44

44

Nov. 3.

short.
90 days.

@
@

119%.
6G.G5

tk

Naples

109

Nov. 19. 60 days.

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

-'ov.

Pernambuco..
60

days,

4*6
4*’

5%(Z

% p. c. dis.
1 e ll%@%d
Is ll%ra%<*
U 11 %@%<*

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct
Oct.

15%
19%

19. OOdays.
44

Oct
8.
Oct. 11.

Valparaiso....

Singapore
Hong Kong...
Ceylon

BATE.

TIME.

DATE.

BATE.

TIME.

ON-

Bombay
Madras
Calcutta

8ydney

15.
2\

1

44
•

,

19%

60 days.
limos.
44

18.

44

16.

it

28.,

.

48. 6
4s. 6

d.@4s.6X<t

@.@4*.6%tf

par to % p c.

die.

Is. 11 13-1&L
1^. il%d.

$61,195,000 00

1,118,900 00

4,292,026 64

558,508 88

$356,113,253 50
38,3 5,564 68
36.862,940 00

30 days.

% p. c. dis.

%i

19."

44

27.

Sept-12.

33

days.

-

is.

n*<*.

% P- c.

pm.

Correspondent.)
London, Saturday, Nov, *10, 1869.

| From onr own

$558,506 8g

64

.

Recapitulation

RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND
AT LATEST DATES. -

30,037 68

Authorizing acts.
Character of issue.
July 17,1861 and Feb. 12.1862
.Demand notes
Feb. 25 & July 11, ’62, A Mar. 8, ’63 .U. S. legal-tender notes

bsaking Interest in

2,641 50
12,100 00
3,072 35

30,800 00

Aggr’te of debfc.’on which int. has ceased since matur.
$4,292,026
Debt bearing no interest.

D*bt

849 00

103,614 to
2,400 00
3,250 CO

and July 15,1868

March 8,1863 and June 30,1864
March 8,1863

$360 00

14,150 00
58,700 00
242,000 00

Matured July 1,1868 (9 months’ Inter.).
5’s, Texas indem.Matured December 31,1864
Var., Tr*y notes.Matured at various dates
5®5K'0,Tr’yn’e8.Matured March 1, 1859
f«,T. reaa. notes.Matured April and May, 1863
7310’s,3years...Matured August 19 and October 1.1864
6’s, 1A 2 years.. .Matured from Jan. 7 to April 1,18o6 ...
6’s, Certir. of ind.Matured at various dates in 1866
C's, Comp. int. n.Matured June to, 1867, and May 15,1868
4,5A6’s.Temp. l.Matured October 15,1866
7310’s,3years...Matured August 15, 1867, and June 15

I’s,Bonds

Yor£.

approved in place of - The Ocean;

...

National Bank of New York.
The Importers and Traders Nation*!
Bank oi New York, approve t in
pi ce of The First Nationa Bank of
New York.
The State National i he Third National Bank (f Chicago,
Bank....
approved in addition to the Nat onal
Pa<k »<arik of New York.
The First National Bank of New York,
The First National

Minnesota.

Accrued

Outstanding.
$20,000,000 do
7,022,000 00
18,415,000 00
945,000 00
189.317.600 00
514.771.600 00
75,OX),000 00
194,567,300 00

After 15 years from January 1,1859....
After 10 years from January 1,1861
After December 31,1880 ................

*>? Bonds

Yank

d

In Coin.

When Payable.

Bonds

The First National The Ninth National Bank of New

eniisylvania.
Coiry ......

Minneapolis.

day of November, 1869 :
Amount

ffiSS!'

A

REDEEMING AGENT.

NAME OF BANK.

Minueeota

and Treasurer’s returns at the

Debt bearing Interest

are

I be First National
Pennsylvania.
Susqu h’a Depot Bank

DECEMBER.
following is the official statement of the public debt,

aa

following

LOCATION.

71%@71%
71%@71%

THE DEBT STATEMENT. FOR

The

205,808 26
46,606 03

CHANGES IN THE REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANKS1. '

8w!.108%@109% 518%@516% 40%@40% 78%@79 ' 35%@36
1868*; 109 @109%

40,000 00
18,375 64

62,625 320 001,536,205 04 4,984,122 51 1,836,730 04 3.148,092 50

Total Issued

71% @71%

85% @36
35%@30
35% @36

78%@?9

1,600,000 00
1,648,000 00

71%@71%

35%@36
35%@36
35%@36

78%@79
78%@79
78%@79
78_%@79
78%@79

Western Pacific

market has been extremely dull during * the present
week, and less firmness has been apparent in the. rates of discount.
The improvement in trade has not bden sufficiently great to affect
materially the position of the money market, and as money is still one
half per cent, cheaper in Paris than in London, any tendency to a rise
on this side receives an immediate check.
Such a state of things it
certain to exist so long as money continues abundant at Paris, and so
long as the borrower can obtain the accommodation he requires oa
such easy terms. That the comparative high rate3 of distant in Ger¬
many are exerting much influence oa the position of the Bank o/
France is by no means evident.
For some weeks past the supply of
bullion held by that establishment has been diminish ng, bat this week
there has been an increase of nearly £800,000, and there is still Avery
The money

large supply on hand. The year is now so far advanced that any
material increase in the demand for money for commercial purposes
/ Total
;
$2,605,286,789^82 $42,947^92^7 seems out of the question. There may and, no doubt, will be the cus¬
Total debt, prin. A int., to date, Including coupons due not presen*
ted for i-aymen
$2,648,234,682 79 tomary demand at the close bf the year, but the inquiry which then
AEOUNT rjf TUE TBhASUBY—
Total debt

hearing

no

$431,861,763 18

interest

•

prevails is <f no importance, and being temporary and provisional,
still has but little influence with the bank authorities. The trade of
accr’d int. thereon.
next year, however, seems likely to open under more favorable aus¬
$104,674,947 56
pices, and if the hopes now entertained of a considerable increase in
any time after 5 years from the date here
the yield of cotton in the United States and India are realized, a furany time after 10 years from the date here
tber increase of confidence is looked forward to.
It is satisfactory to
$105,999,949 77

Coin

Currency
Sinking land in U.

S. coin Ini’st b’ds, and
other U. S. coin int. b’ds purchased, and

TOtal
These bonds

are

redeemable at

given and payable after 20 years.
1 These bonds

are

edeemable at

Ifren and payable after 40 years.




accr’d int. thereon.

11,80 .',765 79
2*1,416 026 0)
56 436,206 00

[December 4, 1869.

THE CHRONICLE.

714

Spanish Dollars (Carolus)
per oz.
u0ne
is talked of, for all Europe is now at Five frauc pieces.
per oz last price
4 11* c*
Quicksilver, £6 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent.
peace, and no kingdom can be said to desire to check its progress by
In the Stock Exchange business has been quiet, but the
provoking enmity with its neighbor. On the other hand, enterprise is
markets
reviving, and many of the continental nations perceive the necessity of have not been wanting in firmnes', for nearly all classes of securities
augmenting their resources and their natural but, as yet, hidden have improved in value during the week. The general public, how-'
wealth, by improved means of internal communication. Russia and ever, are not operating to any great extent, and the markets are thereTurkey continue to discuss the question of new railways, and it is now fore chiefly in the hands of speculators. There has bees a much
said that further proposals will be made in the course of the coming better inquiry for Spanish stocks, the impression being that
provision
year for causiog money to render the existing system more com¬ has been made for paying the coupon due on the 1st January next.
plete. Telegraphs and railways seem to be chiefly in vogue now, but Consols have been as high as 94, and the market closes inherently
so far the former have predominated.
There are, however, many pro¬ gcod. Five-Twenty Bonds are rather higher in price, but Erie Railway
posals to be made for the construction of new railways in the colonies Shares have been depressed. Illinois Central Railway Shares have
and elsewhere, of which more will be heard in the course of a few
been nearly 100. The following were the highest and lowest
quota¬
weeks.
tions of consols and the principal American Securities on each
day of
Rather a large amount of Australian and Indian paper has matured the week:
.Nov. 20.
during the present week, but the demand for discount has not been
Monday. Tuesday. Wed’ay. Thu’ay Fri’ay. bat’day
very active. The supply of money is still very considerable, and as Console
93*-93* 9-5X-9S* 93*-94 93*55*
93*-98*
there is a demand, both on the part of home and foreign capitalists, for (J. 8.5-20’e, 1882.... 33*-8S* 83 *-83* 83*-83* 38*-S8* 83*-83* 83*-83*
82 -83
U. 8. 5-208, 18*54.
81*-82* 8i *-82* 82 -83
82*-... 82*six months’ bills, the rates of discount have had a drooping tendency. U. S. 6-20e, 1885
82*-82* 82*-.... S2*-82* W*-...;
83X-83* 81

notice that

no

such thing as war

—

—

,

_

..

It ia

now

place in the official minimum, and the result is that an advance of only one
per cent, has been established
For a short period, indeed, the bond
rate ascended to
per cent., but that was due to exceptional causes,
and to a false judgment on the actual position of affairs.
At the pre
eent time, the official minimum ia only 3 per cent., and the demand for
money, considering the period of the year, is below the average.
A
slight upward movement may take place duriog the closing weeks of
the year, but at present it is rather doubtful if the inquiry will be of
tmh a permanent character as to justify an advance in the rates of
dircount. The quotations for money are now as under:
1863.
1869.
Per cent. Per cent.
Bank minimum....

4 months, ba’k bills 3 @...
6 months’ ba’k bills 3 @...
4 and 6 trade bills.. 3* @4

.

are the rates
banks and discount bouses for

following

’69.
2

l*

2

’63.

Disc’t houses, 7 days notice, 1*
do
14
do
2

Considerable attention will be dev >ted to the extension of

railway

communications in India next year. All fresh lines will m future be
constructed by the Government, and, as you are aware, the cotton
districts will first engage attention. In those cases, however, in which
branch lines

be constructed from

existing lines, they will be offered
to the companies, and the Government will guarantee 6 per cent, on
the outlay ; any profit above that being equally divided between the
can

Government and the shareholders.

There is much dissatisfaction

re¬

garding the constitution of the India Council, and an agi ation has been
commenced for urging upon Parliament the necessity of a better repre¬
sentation of the various classes interested in Iadian

..

83*-83* 83N-83 * 83*-83* 83X-84 83%-84
77*-77* 77*-77* 77*-78* 77*-78*

8.10-408, 1904.... 77*-78

Atlantic & G’t West.
consol’d mort.b’ds 25
Erie

Shares($100).. 20

U'.lnois shares

($100) 99

-27

26

ra*:8!*

-27 26
-25* 25*-26
26*-26*
-20* 20 -20* 20*-.... 20*20*20*-20H
99 -99* 99*-99* 99*-.... 99*-100
98*-....
26

...

-

...

...

...

satisfactory to notice that work is being resumed in many mills
Lancashire, which have been closed for some months past. A repert

It is
in

from Manchester states:
The market has been steady to-day, but quite without buoyancy, and the feeling
has been scarcely so hopeful as it was on Wednesday.
Producers have done a fair
business throughout the week, and the Bales which they have made enable them to

'

resist any further downward tendency of prices, and in some cases even to realist
better rates than they were able to command in the early part of the week. For
some time there has been a tolerably steady and continuous demand for China,

which, although the prices paid by merchants were far from satisfactory to pro¬
ducers, has prevented more depression than there would have been if suoh a de¬
mand had not existed.
Since the beginning of the month many mills which wen

2*@3
3 @3*
3*@4*

of interest allowed by the joint stock
deposits :

1*

’68.

Joint stock banks
Discount houses, at call

IJ.

1868. *
1S89.
Per cent. Per cent.

2*@... 3 @
Open-market rates:
80 and 6U days' bills 2*@ . ■ 2*@...
8months, bills
2*@2* 2*@...
The

U. S. 6-21'b, 1887..

twelve months since the first movement from 2 per cent, took

wholly

or partially closed have resumed full time, which has
and exaggerated impression that there waa a decided

given rise to an er¬
revival in the trade of
the improvement being so slight that

roneous

the district.
Such is by no means the case,
mill owners have set tneir machinery at work

without expectation of profit, but
trusting that, taking alL things present and future into consideration, they may lose
less by working than by standing altogether.
On Wednesday reports were current that the receipts of cotton at the American
ports for the first few days since Friday last were smaller than those of last week,
and some slight impetus to the Livarpo 1 market was given, or attempted to be
given, in c nsequence. Since Wednesday, however, doubts have been thrown
upon the accuracy of these statements, as the wires are said to be out of order, and
up to this afternoon no confirmation has arrived of any falling off in the receipts,
sufficient to require consideration.
The price of doth, in comparison with cotton, ii
still relatively cheap, and there is ample ro mf r a decline in the latter without file
manufactured article giving way further. So long, however, as cotton remains so
much scarcer than it used to be in proportion to the consumption prior to the Ameri¬
can war, the grower of the plant must have the advantage over the spinner and
.manufacturer.

The

following figures show the imports and exports of cotton
Kingdom from Sept. 1 to Nov. 18 :

into and from the United

Imports.
American
Braz lien
Fast Indian.

Egyptian.^-

Exp’ts

bales 86,035

27,964

111,279
609,785

16,406
146,754

21,165

Imports. Exp’ts
24,131 " 4,604

Miscellaneous

1,406

Total.

812,3.5

197,134

Notwithstanding the more favorable accounts from India and the
comparative firmness of money in Germany seems, as stated United States, respecting the crop, cotton has been held with firmness*
above, to have but little influence at Paris. This week the supply of and prices have risen £d. to £ J. per lb. The sales to the trade have
reserve has increased, and the Paris market is still very
easy. In Ger¬ been large.
Annexed is a statement showing the exports of cotton
many the late advance in the quotations is. maintained. The following from Madras and Tinnevilly during the first nine months of the year;
are the quotations for money at the leading commercial circles:
XROM MADRAS.
commerce.

The

-B’k rate—»

<-B’krate—»/-Op. m’kt->
1368.1869.

Paris
Vienna
Berlin.....
Frankfort.
...

1868.

1869.

2*

2%

IX

4
4

6

4

2
6

5

2*-3

4X

Turin
Brussels
Madrid

4

8

4

6

2*

4X

Hamburg

8*
Amst’rd'm 2%

5
..

...

fit.

.

Petb7g.

2%
5

1868.

6

2*-3
23%
6*

—

7

There has been but little variation in the rates of

2*
6

6

-

bales.

4*
8

do
do

do
do

are

from Messrs. Pixley A Cc.’a

circular:
OOLD

d.

a.

peroz. standard,

77

9

do

77
77
75
78

9

@@77

*.

Bar Gold

do
do

fine....
Refinable

do

Spanish Doubloons.

United States gold coin

do

...

t price

per oz.
South American Doubloons... do

last price

Nous hers.

—

d
_

9*

11* ©•

0
9
—»

@76

@74

@r—

0
0
—

SILVXB.
f.

Bar Silver Tine.......peroz. standard firm.
do
do containing 6 grs.goid..
do
Fine Cake Silver
per oz.
Mexican Dollars
per oz., firm




6
6
6
4

d.
1

,

@

0.
—

G*@n*@~

d.
—

—

—

1,990

116.933

2,925

129,773

5,491

5,861
2,211

1,804

103,643

1,249

3.215

18*i5
1864

Total exports of 1869, from May 1,
do
do 1868, from Jane 1,
do
do 1867, from June 1,
do
do 1866, from June 1,
do
do 1865rfrom Jane 1,

Total.
bata.

1,1C8

961

98,186
161,417
117,828
173.933

165,068

6,903

955

18,133

2,516

Great
Britain.

Else¬
where.
bales.
400

Total
baits.

66,530

3,550

60,060

60,227
t8,071

8,950

64,170

*68, to Apr. 30, ’69 99,189

14,373

118,58*
67,083
59,423
102,404
86,0*8

whole, the tendency is rather favorable to this country.
do
do
1863.
Ia the demand for gold for export there is no activity, and the ap¬
FROM TlKNiVZLT,
pearance of the market indicates that were any arrival* to take place
the greater portion would be retained here and sent into the Bank. No
large arrival, however, can take place until this day fortnight. Silver Export in September, 1869
is scarce, and as a demand for India has sprung up, fine burs are rather Pr.viously this season (since May 1, 1809).:
firmer in price. There has been a revival of the inquiry for dollars Total this season
Total same period 1866
for China, and as very few dollars are here, the price is very firm.

following quotations for bullion

ba!es.

1,058

Total exports of 1868
do
do
18-j7
1866
do
do

foreign exchange.

bales.

2,848

From Jan. 1 to Sept 30 1869
Against same period 1868

On the

The

Else-

Britain, France, where,

1869.

5

!*

Great

-Op. m’kt—

1868.1869.

’67,
’66,
’65,
’64,

to
to
to
to

bdlcs

3,697*

May 81, ’6 s 65,620
May 81, *67 58,827
May 81,’66.161,804
May 81, *65 86,134

412
696
600
893

4,090

58,070

outpoits being well supplied with foreign produce, there is still
great want of activity .in the trade for wheat, and a further deelfo®
has taken place in the quotations. This week English produce has
fallen in value Is. to 2b., and foreign about Is. per quarter. Millers
ccntinue to operate with much caution, and evince no disposition to
run into stock, even at the existing low prices.
The following state*
ment shows the imports and exports of cereal produce into and from
the United Kingdom, for last week and since September 1:
The

a

POB TUB

WEEK ENDING

,

Ots..
Beane.

SINCE THE

46

1 8# 18#
14
14
46 0
46 0

1
1
46

1

3
0

1

1
46

Frt.

Th.

Wed.
31 0 0

Tu.
31 0 0

Mon.
31 0 0

Sat.

31 15 0

Linseed oil.. per ton...

•

81 0 0

31 0 0

•

780,553

506

2,051
3,940

2,916,340
764,979

8,753

125

Sugar( No. 12 Dch std)
per 112 fl>
Sperm oil..... ....

the average prices of English wheat

following figures show
barley, and oats in England and
The

Wbaie oil

Wales, for the week ending November

compared with the four 1868.
previous years:
1S67.
18C9

,

70s. Id.
42
7
26
1

52s. Od.
46
9
28
0

£i0 17 0 £10 17 0 £10 17 0 £10 17 0
0 59 6
0 60 6
0 59 6
0 59 6

0 £10 17 0
0 69 6

0

39 6
91 0 0
40 10 0

89 6
91 0 0
40 10 0

91
41

0 89 6
86 0 0
83 10 0

89 6
0 0
41 0 0

89 6
0 0
41 0 0

39 6
0 0
0 0

91

91

NEWS.

COMMEKC1AL AND MISCELLANEOUS

1865.

1866.
56s. 7d.

46s.lld.
33
22

3
6

45
23

Mon.

Sat.
Lins’d cake(obl)p.tn£lO 17
Linseed (Calcutta) .. 0 60

16,578
2,971

„©8i

f »

....

1,503,383
248,406

::::: i.’esmst

468. lid.

277

80,783
68,089
269,935
90,473

♦ •

24

185,869

Wheat
Barley

9#

1

6
0

Clover seed

5,750
2,395

2,023,181

12,’

(American). .p 112 lbs.

P#

London Produce and Oil Markets.—Calcutta Linseed was quiet
during the week and declined to 59s 6d,but became firmer at the close
483,910
270
532 and reacted to 60s 6.1. Sugar has been steady. Oils ruled quiet
111,841
but
COHMENCSMENT OP THE SEASON (SEPT. 1).
steady during the week but to-day sud fenly declined to £86 for sperm
6,317,509 119,759
cwt. 10,378,623
69,973
15,927 ani to £38 10s for whale.
1 336,700
2,031,279
2,222
Fri.
Thn.
Wed.
Tues.
•

•

Flour.

Tallow

6 765
858

214,306
147,336

.

904
63

26,828

Peas.-

,

Imports. Exports
859
893,879

192,635

189,899
25,636

4\

1863-69'

,

Imports. Exports.
789
944,039

.CWt.

1
1
46

white) .p. 8 lbs.
spirits....per8 lbs

Petroleum (std

NOVEMBER 13.
1869-70

715

CHRONICLE.

THE

December 4, 1869.]

[.vuoitr*

7
9

show

Exforis

and

increase in both

an

the Week.—The imports this week
dry goods, and in general merchandise, the
*oa

total being $4,182,697, against $3,148,851 last week, and $4,152,960
following return shows the present position of the Bank of Engthe previous week. The exports are $4,078,197 this week, against
laod, the bank rate of discount,the price of Consols, the average quota¬
4,08?,188 last week, and $3,890,927 the previous week. The exports
tion for Eogiiah wheat, the price of middling upland cotton, and of No.
of cotton the past week were 10,002 bales, against 12,645 bales last
40 mole yam, fair, second quality, compared with the four previous
week.
The following are the imports at New York for week ending
1869.
1868.
years:
1867.
1866.
1865.
(for dry goods) November 26, and for the week ending (for general
£
£
£
£
£
merchandise) November 27 :
Circulation, including21,074,103 23,528,425 24,505,213 24,094,425 28,731,150

The

.

Bank p >st bills
public depopits

12,878,983
deposits
Government securities 9,741,100
Other

19,004,565
6,531,072
14,465,032

Other securities
Reserve
Coin and Dullion
Bank rate

89#

90#

94#

46s. lid.

56s. 7d.
14d.

70s. Id.

I9#d.

Mid.Upland cotton...
40 mule yarn, fair 2d
quality

The

shown in the

$2,401,701
221,674,146

222,782,6.4

$4,182, €97
264,263,064

.$265,965,871

$<24,078,747

$228,103,117

$268,445,761

Total for the week..

C.

Since Jan. 1

Is. 8d.

Cable.

been reported by submarine telegraph as

Mon.

93 #

93#
93#

for account...

98#

93#
93#

U. 8.6’s (6 20’8) 1862..
Illinois Central shares.

83%

84#

Erie Raiiway shares ..
Atl. AG. W. (consols).

20#

99#
31#

99#
21#

26

*7

“

99#

25#

21
27

Red Winter...,:....

(Jalifornia white) 44

Cora(w.mx’d)p. 480 lbs n’ w
“

-

44

Barley (Canadian), per bush

Osta

(Am. A Can.) per 45 lbs
Psm,.(Canadian) pr5041bs

d.

d.

22

0
6

0

29

d.

21
8
8
9

6
4
9
6

22 0
8 4
8 10
9 6

29

0

29

3
40

s.

8
9
9

8*6

6

slight

39

VVtMWViVUVJ

Urd (American)
Cheese (fine)
•

85

20#

26#

0
7
6

closing firm for

d.
21 0
s.

8
9
9

6
0
7

29

9

Thn.
d.

s.

22

0
6
1
9
9

8

9
9
29

Fri.
d.
22 0
8 1
9 2
9 11
30 0
s.

3
89

0

n

0

8 “6
39 0

8**6
39

0

Mon.
s. d.
86 0
111 6
67 6
74 6
68

0

Wed.
Tues.
8. d.
s. d.
86 0 •108 6
111 6
111 6
67 6
67 6
76 6
75 6
68 0
68 0

Thu.
s.

108
111
67
75
68

d.
6
6
6
6
0

Eoslntaaa Wllm.).per 112 lbs

Bp turpentine




44

“

Bat.
a. d.
5 6
14 0
27 8

Mon.
•.

6

14
88

d.
6
0

0

Tues.
s. d.
6 6
14 0
28 0

Wed.
s. d.
6 6
14 0
28 0

Thu.
s. d.
6 6
14 0
28 0

».

d.

58
14 0
28 0

2,069,264
5,7*7,886
101,089
8,82',524
2,284,290
4,7*7,837
6,711,696
1,335,861
7,438,003
1,679,966
4,849,515
666,175
1,822,911
3,163,779
3,402,0 6
1,349,671

6.268.805
927,864

7,048,86'J
1,275,890
2,491,106
649,976

1,297,428

British Guiana
Brazil
Others. American ports
All other ports .......

3,142,824

4.182.518

1,904,311

following will show the exports of specie from
York for the week ending Nov. 2?, 1869 :
The

the port of New
1,\00

Foreign silver
Nov. 27—Str. City of Wa«h-

Am-

erica. Pa a—
American gold....
For fct. Thomas—
American silver...

irgton, L’pool—

$6,700

24,819

Gold bars
For HamburgFore gu f liver—

1,200

31,200

Silver bars
British gold

825

1.—Str.
Hammonia,
Paris-

9,760

Lafayette,
Nov. 37-Str.
HavreSilver bars..
‘
For PartsAmerican silver...

Main, Bremen—
Total for the week

81,000
6,600

—

Nov. 26—8t

$161,704

80,184,636

Previously reported
Same time in

s.

Fri.

3,616,763

66,029
2.620,013
2,086,941
4.237,179

1867.
1866.
1865

.$69,123,685
.

.

.

.

.

45 060.999

68,668,448
27,814,593
45,516,335
42,424,162

.

per ton.

15,846.178

8,138,784

Venezuela

South

8,351,276
4,637,683

2,753,774

Otner Wee t Indies
Mexico
New Granada—

Nov. 23.—Str.

1868.

3,895,248

Hayti

89 0

Liverpool Produce Market.—This market has generally ruled quiet,
a little firmness has been
apparent in spirits of turpentine and the
price advanced to 28s. Petroleum has been a shade lower* although
at the dose some firmness was shown. Linseed oil has declined to £31

$72,284,823

19,483,009

Other Southern Europe..
East Indies
,
China aud Japan
Australia
Britisn N A Coloniee ..
Cuba

*3*6

Fri.
d.
107 0
111 6
67 6
76 6
63 0

Same time

6.972.805
5,<44,400

Spain

99#

Since Jan. 1,

1869.
$97,960,510

New.

.do Pine Pale...

$181,214,573

Holland and Belgium..
Germany
Other Northern Europe,

,

Sat.
s. d.
804 lbs 86 0
>804lbs 111 6
,112 lbs 67 6
it
tt
74 6
tt
tt
68 0

$152,871,364

Great Britain...
France

Liverpool Provisions Market.—There has been some activity in
beef, new prime mess having sold up to 108s 6d, closing at 107s 6d per
tierce of 804 lbs. Lard has been buc *
the price reaching at one
period 76s, but later reacted a fraction, closing at 75s 6d. Other
0

$115,050,821

'

old

44

177,186,376

To

90#-#

90#-#

s.

s.

“

148,602,157

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

92#
92#

27

partially from the lowest point of the late depression,
all description.
Wed.
Toes.
Mon.
Sat.

*‘

171,903,037

171,093,613

$4,078,197

of

Liverpool Cotton Market.—See special report of cotton.
Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—There has been a better feeling
manifested in the market for [Breadstuffs and prices have recovered

Flour, (Western)..,.p. bbl
Wheat mo.2 MU. Red) p. ctl

18S9.

$4,269,207

$175,333,922

Since Jan 1

Fri.

92#
81#
99#
20#

84#
99#

93#

89#-#

89#-#

1868

$3,957,203

The value of exports

6’s (1862) at Frankfort were—

daily closing quotations for U. S.

The

ftrankloit

a

Thn.

x92#
x92#

ol#

•

firm, and

Wed.

Tues.

Sat.

Consols for money.....

1867.

$3,480,835

For tile week

the week for the issue of 1862. Raiiway
for Illinois Central, but rather weak for Erie.
been

YORK FOR THE WEEK.

1866.

Previously reported....

at Frankfort have

bonds
advance established.

will be found the importaofdry

week later.
EXPORTS FROM NEW

Stock Market.—CodsoIs have been steadily
held at about the rates of last week, closing at 92£ for money and 9‘2f
for account. United States bonds have ruled firm all the week realiz

States

one

$5,320,491

following is a statement of the exports (exclusive ofspecie)from
the port of Nev York to foreign ports, for the weekending Nov, 80:

London Money and

United

.

4,075,950

The

following summary :

iog an advance of 1£ on
shares have ruled steady

^

report of the dry-goods trade

our

goods for

in the markets of London and Liver¬

daily c’osing quotations

pool for the past week, Lave

$2,927,681
Previously reported... 263,039,191

Dry goods

General merchandise

In

English .HarKet Reporte—Per

$1,168,847
3,018,t-60

*1,244.543

$703,761
1,703.940

ll#d.

Is. l#d.

Is. #d.

1869.

186S.

1867.

1866.

93#

10#d.

YORK FOR THE WEEK.

$902,839
2,0;4,8»i

46s. lid

Od.

52s.

8#d.

Is. 6d.

3#d.

2s.

3 p.

2# P- c.
94#

2 p. c.

4 p.C.

6 p. c.

Consols
Price of wheat

FOREIGN IMPOSTS AT NEW

4 000,972
5,030,529
18,762,567 17,910,189
17,439,849
12,670,718 12,319,203 15,301,437 13,811,953
19,184,781 16,680,990 16,873,882 16,086,206
9,s67,559 10,253,046
9,808,599 13,836,313
17,752,914 22.236.223 IS.356,659 18.405,156

6,053,907
19,053,633

5,830,843

6,144,0fi8

.

.

as

65,763.909
8,343,237

Curacoa—

Chanoey
Aspluwall—

Sliver

Gold
Gold dust

1856

.

...

26,579,877
1854

1858.,

1852

Gold
Nov. 26—Baik

22—Brig Emma Dean,

Gold
Nor, 24—Str Henry

24,191,186

42,046,886

follows:

Nov.

Same time in
1859
1853
1857

$8,687

600
L. Frances,

Savanilla—
Gold
Silver

3,900 Nov. 27—Bk Pallas, Belize—
1,482
600

,

Silver.,..,
Gold

US7
174
1,161
5,802

THE

716
■

CHRONICLE.
■■■■—■

-*v

—-

■

■■

-

■

»

[December 4, 1869.

.

i

-

Not. 97—Str Tybee, Porto
Plata—
8ilTer

Not. 24-Str Silesia, HavreGold

Not. 95—Sehr p. Q. Davis,
Pin—
Total ror he week

<&l)e Bankers’ <©a?ette.

700

...

~$24,963

V.

Fbiday

14,845,789

Previously reported
Total since January
Same time 1868
Same time 1867....
Same time 1866

1,1869

$14,870,753
6,528,237
8,038,223
9,264,692

.

.

held really a
larger amo-nt ol legal tenders than was shown in the Clear¬
ing House average; and as last week’s average was
consequently
a falling one, the stock of
legal tenders at the close was
probably
much below what was shown in the return..
Really, therefore the
banks commenced business this week |with a reduced
amount of
legal tenders. '1 his circumstance, connected with the la ge
pay¬
ments, on uecount of city t»xes, into the Chamb.rluhi’s office
on
much

National Tkcasukt.—The following forma present a summary of cer
tain

weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custt

m

House.

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

^
44

20.909.500
20,301.600
20.014,500
20.714.500
20,041,000
19,881,000
19,518,000

11::::::
*1
98

“

Sept.

4

44

18.1”.

“

342,892,000
347,893,000

25
2
9

Oct.
«
••

842,500,000
r

-

862,931,150
363,620,000
362,933,000
367,774,000

362,01*?,000

'

ihe 30th ult., was made the occasion of

23
44
80
Nov. 6
Nov. 20

stringency on call loans
which as high a- 7 per cant in gold
362,013, 60
362,060,250 to be paid by brokers.
At .he
361,909,750
359,860,650 steadier, and ri oney on call is fairly

19,508,000
19,408,000

27

19,358,000

'1 his week the West

2.—-National bank currency issued (weekly and aggregate), in return
for balls destroyed and mutilated bills returned (weekly an J aggregate)
#-Notes issued for ret’d.—*
Current week. Aggregate.

ending.

Aug. 7...
44

14...
21...
28...

44
44

8epL 4...

...

41

18...
25...
Oct. 2..
44
9...

.

.

44

44

i

16...
S3...
80...

44
44

146,770
124,800

...

2*2,936

•

•

...

...

..

15.282,694

200.650
163,800

15:486,241

16,892^800

195,750
228.650
124,43(1
309,452
108,900
152,050

164,040
231,460
155,170

112,140

Weekending.

M

14
a

11
18
25

u

u
,

M

M

Nov.

92.600
loti.600
187,300
153,630
270,050

17

194,260
17,279,430
17,482,f,00
17,697,280

17,809,350

rom

the

Iso the

16,807,224
17,OHO,374
37,309,024
17,43 ,474
17,742,926
17,851.826

18,003,8.6

Received.

three days, darin*
and 1-10 per cent per day had
close, however, the market is
active at 7 per cent currency.
or

demand for currency has been
nominal
The remittances between the 15th and

rn

so

far satisSed that
Cvnt ab.

rules

draw currency.

L

have supplied the immediate wants of
shipments of currency to the South
section that there New York
Exchange
the

ve

agues at which it wou’d pay to

rge amounts o!

pork

paper,

however,

are

daily

The

activity in discounts of pork paper has naturally somewhat

interfered with local discounts, and arrested the return of
fee

an

easier

ing.

Tiieic iJ, however, much less complaint of 8tiingeocy»
although|rates remain at the* late high figure?, viz 9@12 per cent
,

226.700
419.200

prime double name paper, and 12@20 per cent on prime s'mgle
This evening there are rumors of the suspension of a
pro¬
minent dry goods commission house, hut we are unable to trace
them to any authentic source.
The following comparison will show the .condition of the Asso¬
ciated Banks at the date of the last weekly average,
compared with
the corresponding dates of the last two years:

879,614

421,100
492,197

Loans

643,000
316,204

350,990
424,000

136,808
370,682

301,500

175,000

89,600
249,200

109,000
396,406
538,764
878.500

1,432,970
323,000

227 400

196,40n
264,700
176,950
180,800

his shelves.
The card of Messrs. Buckingham A Brown, Bankers and Brokers,
at No. $ Wall street, will be found on the first
page of this paper,
This firm has
recently been formed
on

—

by M<. T. Buckingham, Jr., late
Jay Cooke A Co., and Mr. J. M. Brown, late of A, H. Brown A




for two

on

couraging railroad enterprises and bringing forward a new supply of
corporate bonds. This tendency is of sufficient importance to have
induced some of the principal bankers and dealers in Qorernment
bonds to undertake the negotiation of such new loans as present a fair
daim upon public confidence. Messrs. Henry Clews A Co., one of the
most prominent city banking booses and who, during the war, took
a
foremost position among the negotiators of the Government loans hare
directed their attention to this new class of investments, and have
already marketed large amounts of the bonds of different companies.
It it of tbeutmost importance to investors that they should have an
assurance m the standing and character
of the firm negotiating the
loan, that all the statements made in regard to it are correct and
aeenrats.
From a proepec'us appearing in another column, it wiil be
teen that
Henry Clews A Co. now offer the 7 per cent, gold bearing
Sinking Fuad bonds of the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Minnesota
Bail way Company, a road traTersing a well developed
and prosperous
•ectioo of the West, and which appears to be called for
by the grow¬
ing commerce of the country through which it rune. Full particulars
respecting these securities are given on page 3.
t — the Western News Company of Chicago recently issued a hand¬
some little volume of the
"Essays upon Political Economy" of M. Fred¬
eric Bastaat, tbs distinguished French writer
upon that subject.
We
regret that want of space forbids our giving an extended review of
these * stays, although this would
hardly be necessary to introduce the
book fo American readers. There U
probably no author whose general
views upon topics of political
economy are more acceptable to our own
writers and thinkers upon tbs
subject, than Bastiat’s. Every person
who is at all interested in
public affairs should have a copy of this
volume

Co., Zanesville, Ohio.

have

299,777,643

299,737,613

New Railway Leant.—We have already alluded to the effect of
the withdrawal of bonds from the market by the Government, as en¬

with

withlrawal of private
with the result of

purposes ;

arriving from the Wos’, which the bmks are discounting ; aid the
credits this goiDg to the account of the Western banks are
likely
to result, iu a lew day , in the early renewal of
shipments of cur¬
299,73^745 rency to that s ctio >. Indeed, it is generally anticipated by the
299,725,665 banks li ving Western connections, that money will continue to
299.774,375
299;621,7i3 flow westward until near the close of December.

213.824

778,700

27

*99,746,751
299,761.839
' 299,720.380
299,794,310
21*9.7:37,660
299,742,230
299,710,130
299,763,410
299,318,715
299,635,785

Distributed. Destroy’d

9
16
28

80..
6

in

Currency Bureaa by U. S.
amount destroyed:

937,447
893,287

20
u

175 500

15,486,240
15,747.644
15.923,144
16,015,744
16,196.244
16,383.544
16,637,174

2

Oct.
u

7

*8

U

97.600

Notes

Aggregate. Circulation

141,200

8.—Fractional currency receded
Treasurer and distributed weekly;

u

nrrentweek.

15,126.028
15,337,975
15,337,975
15,492,015
15,769,385
15,846,565
15,970,855
16,212.435
16,400,370
16,527,600

••••«««

•

Nov. 6...
44
13...
44
20...
44
27... ...

Aug.
*.

•Mutilated notes burned.-^

a

compar d with 1 si we_k\
27th of November appear to
the Western backs; and tire

with the amount in circulation at date:
Week

speculative

decided

a

861.732.950
381.132.950

19,273,000
19,273,000
19,558,000

44

44

865,964,400
3f >3,435,350

funds fiom the inuiket for

16

Evi^ninG^December j."'

Tiik Money Makket.—The last bunk statement
shoAei favor,
ably as computed with that of the precedi g we,k. At the
closeof
the week ending Novembe 19th, however, the banks

name.

Nov. 27, 1869.

Nov. 28, 186H.

$252,600,000

Specie

$254,300,0)0
15,700,000

£9,600,000
48,100.000

Legal Tender

Nov. 30,1887.
$247 80e,000

16,500,000
5-',100,000

62.400,000

Total lawful money

$77,700,cOO
$78,100 00)
$68,600,000
217,700,000
221,600,0 0
209,700,000
United States Securities.— The bond market has continued

Liabilities

weak, in sympathy with the decline in gold ; and, at the close, prices
1@1£ per cent below our last quotations Deale s report con¬

rule

tinued free sales

by investors, without coriceponding purchases from
surplus of supply from this source, however is
absorbed by the purchases cf the government and by moderate
shipments to the foreign markets ; so that the amount being carried
by dealers is not above the average—indeed, it is perhaps below;
fo', with a steady declining tendency, dealers are careful to carry
but a slight supply. The foreigu markets have been strong, the
Sixty-Two bond* having advanced at London to S4i$85Although the market price of bonds4fcas decline J 4@5 per cent
within the last few weeks they have appreciated, in gold valne,
about
per cent within that period. The rise in the gold valae
of bonds, however, has not been proportionate to the decline in
god. 'Ihe Treasury bought $2,000,000 bonds on Wednesd.y,
subject to the approval of Congress, and 81,000,000 on Thursday
for the linking Fund.
The proposals of the government for the
purchase of bonds in D.cember, or for[the following several amounts
at the dates specified :
the

same

c’ass.

The

December 1
“
2
“
8
“
15

$1,000,000

$2,0)0,000 | December 16
1,000.000
2,000,0 0 |
210 ‘,000

T< tat

“

22

2,000,000

*•

29
30.

2,009,000
1,000,000

“

$13,000,000

.

The

following are the closing prices of leading government
securities, compared with preceding weeks :
8.6’S, 1881 COUP
U.fL 5-$0*s, 1862coup....
U. 8. 5-20’s, 1864
«
U.

Dec. 8.
116

Oct. 29 Nov. 5. Nov. 12 Nov. 19. Nov. 26.
118*
118 ‘
117*
111*
117*

1192s*

115*

117*

118*

115*
112*

115*!
J18*

114
112

'

113*
110*

.

THE

December 4,1869.]
"
U. 8.5-20*8,1865
...
n. 8.- 5 20’s, 186#, July cpn
U 8.5-20*8,1861, coup
U- 8.5-20’s, 1868,

U.SHMO’s.
pacific Size*

“

"

....
.

..

...

}}*X
116%

116
*16%

115%
107%
107%

118%

115%
115%

1}W

Ilf

116 *
116%
116
107%
107%

118%

107%
107%

aif%

116

m%

114%
114%
114%

116

107%

118%
118%
118%
107%
107%

107%
107%

107%

U7

CHHONJLGLE.

Parchase3 of bowls by the Government during the past week were

Milw & St Paul.
“

44

69%

67%
80
64

prt

Tal.. Wab. & w’n
N Y Cen. A Had R

70
88%
62

69

68%
881

69

60

84%

66%

m

64

consolidated.*.,
do scrip
*

8*

Ex-dividend.

The Gold Market.—The announcement of

the purpose of the
Wednesday, $2,000,000, the total offered being $5,282,500;
Secretary of the Treasury to sell $11,000,000 of coin io December
Thursday $1,000,0^0, the total offered being
h d the effect of breaking down the price on Monday to 12l|. It was
The bonds purchased were as follows:
Dec 1 Dec 2
Dec. 1.
Dec. 2 caculated that this
supply, with the receipts from California wou’d
10*8 of1869, reg... $487,700 ‘ $73,250
1869, coa
1,000
fally equ ti the withdrawal for customs duties duaing the month,
1864, reg... 81,720
61,0 0
and that consequently the supply in the banks on January l, 1870,
1884, con,
456,600
398,000
M.::: 40,666
1865, reg... 80,000
28,000
woul 1 be about the same a9 at thejelose of November,J83 ‘,000,000.
::
1866, con
^ 2m
Total Bonds now held by the Treasury, $77,844,000, as follows : Coming upon this stock there would be payable on January 1
about $32,000,000 of coin interest, making a ksupply within the
B-20’b of 1862, reg
$9,189,660 6- 20’s of 1865, new, reg.... $4,627,350
1862, cou
67.600
1865, new, cou
22,446,300 control of t1 e market at the
beginning of the year c f more than
1864, reg
3,746,800
1^67, reg...
4,551,500
1864, con
6,481,800
1S67, cou
19,601,400 $60,0 ;0,000. The prospect of this enormous supply demoralized the
1S6 », reg
3,172,000 }
1868, reg
341,000
1SU5, coil
1,505,600
1868, con
2,196,000 market, and a decline to 115 was genera’ly.expected. On Thursday,
State iioNDs—In this class of securities the principal feature howev r, Sec. Boutwell very unexpectedly refused, under his pro¬
has b ca the North Carolina bonds, on which there was a heavy posals to sell on that day $1,000,000 coin, to accept any bids below
decline early in the week, principally under speculative influences. 122; and as all the bids were below that figure, all were rejected.
It appears that a resolution was introduced into the Seftate of that This reversed the downward tendency of the market, and the price
has since ranged between 122£ and 123$.
State repudiating all usp cial tax ” bonds selling below 60. This
It is taken for granted
forc'd the price down to 26 for both the’new and “ special tax’’ that the Secretary has fixed a minimum price, and upon this ther®
bonds, but as the resolution was promptly defeated by a votaof 28 is a disposition to buy quite freely for a rise. The carrying rate
to 8, the price reacted to 33 for both classes of bond*. Tennessees has ranged at 5 per cent per annum to l-16th per cent per day.
The following table wi I show the course of the gold premium
were heavy and lower, but the rest of the list generally
steady :
.The following are the closing pric s of State bonds compared each day of the past week :
Quotations.——*
with la't we k :
Total
/—Balance*.—.
Open- Low- Hige- Closf
est.
est.
ins.
Clear nss.
Gold. Currency
mg.
oo

and

$3,600,45o!

on

"
“

’Ig*

“

.

“
“

*

“

“

“

“

“

.

“

44

44

“

<—

Nov126.Dec. 3. }

North Carolina Sixes, x.c

Railroad

56%
51%
40%
30
£3
48
53

Nov. 26.Dcc. 3.

Louisiana Sixca
66
Louisiatft, Sixes, lev- e .... 59
Louisiana Sigh s, levee... 75

53
45

32%
32%

43%

•

•

•

65%
57%
75

Alabama Eights
93%
Ge rgia Sevens
92%
Missour Sixes
91
j outh Carolina Sixes, n’w.
65%

•

....

93%
93
90

Saturday, Nov. 27.... 125
Monday,
“
29
123

Tuesday,

14

30.... Iv2 *

Wedu’day, Dec 1.... 122%
Thursday, 44
2 ... 122%

Friday,

44

3.... 122%

Current week

125

123%
121%
121%

$628,118 $791,915

123% $14,786,000
122
21,655.000
122% 40,887,009
129
49.997,(00
122% 25,774,000
122% 2i,648.0j0

1,0'4,78431,842,826

122%

125
128
122%
122%
122%
122%

121

...

125

133%

176,697^000

4496,294 7,871,139

121

122%

Miscellaneous Stocks.—The week

888,584 1,152,818

1,161,106 1,492,314
1,170.507 1,445,279
93,246 1,1 (6.987

126% 124% 126% 124% 49,517,000 2,761,642 8,881,565
opened with Previous week
Jan. 1’69. to date... 134% 121
162% 123%
a decided weakness in stocks, the result of a vigorous
speculative
Foreign Exchange.—The market haa/been well
^supplied with
effort to break prices, accompanied with a locking up of
currency. bills, and rates have declined from 109^ to 108{ for
prime 60 days
Pric s yielded 3$7£ per cent; but at the decline, the
operators bankers’ tterliog.
November 12. November 19. November 26
December 8.
producing it not only covered a large line of •* short” contracts, but
108%® 108% 108%® 108%
108%® 108%
108%©108%
also bought largely for a rise, and quotations have since, on on London Comm’l.
109 ® 109%
do bkrB’fnu
108%@109
108%® 109
ine%®l>8%
do shrt. 109%© 199%
do
103%© 109%
109%® 109% 109%® 109%
average, recovered to about the point from wh ch they fell. Speiu
Paris, long
5.18%®5.17% 6.18%©rl7% 6.l8%<ft5.17% 5.18%®5.17%
latiou is more active than for some weeks past, but is without defin
do short
5.15%®#. 15
5.15% ©5.15
.5.16%@5.15
5.15% ©5.15
Antwerp
6.18%®5.18% 5.18%@5.18% 5.18%®5.17% 5.18% ®517%
ite purpose, the
5 18%©5.18%
5.18%®5.18%
5.18%® 5.17% 5.18%®5.17%
policy being 1 ss to press e iher an extreme rise or Swiss
86 ® 36%
36%® 86
85%® 86
Hamburg
35%@ 86
an extreme fall, than
to produce fluctuations within a moderat ■ Amsterdam
40%® 40%
40%® 40%
40%® 40%
SIS*
40%® 40%
40%® 40%
range of pi ices. The chief fluctuations have been in the Vander¬ Frankfort........ 40 & ® 40%
Bremen
79%® 79%
78%® 78%
78%® 79
78%® 78%
bilt stocks. Pacific Mail also has fluctuated
7i%© 71%
71%® 71%
71%® 71%
71%® 71%
widely, seding down Berlin
The transactions for the week at the Custom House aod 8ubfrom 53f to 46f, and subsequently recovering to 51$ to-day. The
Treuaury have been as follows :
stock is at the moment
very strong, owing to the through rafe for
Custom
-Sub-Treasury.House.
Receipts.
freight on the Pacific Railroad having been advance! t > $8 per I K)
<
Payment*.Currency.
Receipts.
Gold.
Gold.
Currency.
pounds, which, being nearly double the late rales, will enable the Nov. 28... $800,COO 00 $1,281,613 91 $1,607,201 76 $2,287,610 19
$601 499 04
29.
678.174 99
729,692 9»
338,090 00
890,944 64
162,654 81
8
ejm3hip Company to increase it3 earnings on the Isthmus route.
452,723 74
114,297 41
o0..
406,000 00
687,423 63
812,283 68
180,730 17
193,894 65
83^,718 42
461,425 00
Lake Shore has fluctuated between 83} and 88J. New York Cen¬ Dec. 1... 295,000 00
315,786 88
2..,
2,235,628 98
347,000 00
443,269 6 )
100,956 93
tral and Hudson River
299 357 96
3
1,267,077 82
292,143 44
128,771 49
277,000 00
has.ranged at 85@89|. No; thwestern, after
selliug nt 76, sold down to 70Ji but has since reacted to 74J Rock
Total. $2,463,00) 00 $3,902,783 00 8,112,255 CO $2,974,880*43
$5,958,822 49
Balance, Nov.26
80,919,0*7 17 4,932,802 95
Island is especially strong, but anparently on ppeeulativc
move¬
$84,821,810 17 8,045,057 85
ments, having advanced from 103$ to 107f. New York Central
Payments during week 2,974,880 43 5,958,832 49
and Hudson River stocks
ceased, on November 30th. to be cal’e l Balance Dec. 3
$81,816,929 74 $2,085,235 46
927,902 57
separat'ly as such, the consolidated New York Central and Hudson Inceasa
[2,846,567 49
River stock beirg now called in lieu. The following has been the Decrease
Nkw York City Banks.—The following statement ehowi the
range of quotation1 for the leading shares during lie week :
Pacific Mail
76
70% condition of the Associated Banks of New York City tor *he week
53%
46% Northwestern
N. Y. Cen. & Hd. It. con
do
83
89%
preferred... 89% 65% e iding at the commencement of business on November 27, 1869:
do
do
Rock Island
71
107% 103%
scrip.. 7tf%
and

_

...

.

,

,

44

44

44

.

Erie

W»yne

27

S ort

97%
83%
24%

28%
99%
88%

St. »aul
do

Michigan Southern.
prefe.red...
Ohio & Mississippi
26
The following were the closing quotations of the
compared with those of the six preceding weeks :
Cumberland Coal
Quicksilver
Canton Co
tf&rip osa pref....
Pacific Mail
Now York Central
Brie
Hudson River....

Reading....

Mich. 8outhern..

Michigan

Central

CJev. and Pittsd.
Northwestern....
_

preferred

;rt Wavne

ois Central..




52%
1«%
60%

187%
3i%
171%

62%
16%
58%
192%
29%
173

96%
93%

92

1*2%

122

100

86% *
70%
84%

71

83%
106%

1W%

85

85

185

188%
*6%

26%

50%
14%

5'%
15%

59

75

181«
23%
157%
97%
90%
120
•

•

•

•

70%
85%
103%
85%
186
27

ieo%
28
157

96%
88%
120

67%
81

69

84

regal «r board

Oct. 22. Oct 29. Nov. 6 Nov. 12. Nov. 19. Nov. 26.
26
28
27%
26%
26%
27%
14
13
13%
14%
12%
14%
62

Dec. 3.

183%

28
16 *%

97%
88%
120

155
99

SIP
120

-

15*
51%
....

2>%
98%

120%
82%

75%
88%

74%

103%

102%

104%

107%

86
187
26

86

86%

81

138%

136%
16%

133%

85

26%

Manhattan
Merchants'
Mechauics
Union
America
Phceuix
Fulton
Chemical

82%

7U

New York

City

82%
70%
85%

83%

Bank*.

14%
49%

16

62%
175%
28%

Loans and

25%

52

15%
54%

-AVXHAQM AMOUNT OF-

86%

88

88%

25%

Tradesmen’s.,

American Exchange
Commerce

Broadway
Ocean

Mercantile

Net

Legal

Deposits. Tenders,
$3,000,000 f8.2'8,c*51 $6,116,^90 $933^ 8 $5,868.2S3 $1627.HI 9
' 2,050.000
3,000,000

2,000,000

1,500,000
3,000,000

I.SOO.jOO

1,000,000

1,000,000*
600,000
900 000

Merchants'Exchange.... 1,235,000
National
1,500,000
Butchers'.
Mechanics and Traders’.
Greenwich
Leather Manuf. National
Seventh Ward, National.
State of Now York

Circula-

Capital. Discounts. Specie,

•

800,000
600,000
200,000

600,00k
500,000

5,522,033

551J33B

10.157

$392,105

833,867

6,516.48*

88T.848
588^95
491,816

$.170,449
4 506,071

1,774.651

4,063 579

2,338,850
893,459
479^44
2.619^80
1,363.189

4,844,151

1481,918

5,670,720
4 892375
6.871,797
2.965 17$
1,894,515

1^00.

a.®#

1.950

536,090
769,081

6,(93,697

54.3M)
3CH.T69
710.481

3400.954

147468

452490

8,259.420

855447

2,315,600

54,300

491400
261400

1,951^500
1,080,768

80,051

195.730

2,778^85
1,187,528

2,000,000, 4,539,790
5,000,000 9.652400
10,000,000 23.069,157
'
1,000,

tion.

8^86,540
2,600,174
3,813,027

1,159,367
1^71,001

......

1

3,998

261,412
176,890
463,966
*77.421
951514 54*,0»
123455 i 00, 00
371447
*0,406
631460
858442

92400

154,711

798465
4814*7

&6M99

715444

628,449
1,693484
493473
945.000
908,955
&59.P81

3413,443

8476499

1,402.941
14174S)
4.650413
2.2 4439

1499.993

144400
1,100,910
777,98$

296472

1,57(417

5(0,903
2^,097

687 2*8
322.864
3834> 0

14*5746X

131.4(5

70* ,616

3,941461
6.157490
5,954,192
7.71*44*

1,177.926
1

238,7*5
3,990.281
2,009,979

1,028.832

2.711,698

im
!45l5S
«“as m

♦

83430
260.001
5454-9

4784U
181.789

North American
Hanover

2.1F6.SU6
600.000
1.626,000
4,000,000 9,954.591
400,000 (| 1,122.085

Irving
Metropolitan
Citizens
N»Mau

4,129
291.466

2,080,555
1,075,128

194.031

1,406.000

1,333,192 2,186,675

5,285,264
1,080,297

140,544
116,081
16,500

2,588,801

1,000,000
1,000,000

1,000.000

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

2,8!2,744
2,590.044

Continental
Commonwealth
Oriental
Marine
Atlantic

2,000,000

3,788.859
2,666,417

300,000
400,000

3,979

1.388,157

70.091

34,670
20,657
155,287
83,308
10,490
171,290
22,603

3.957,810
2.904,948

750.000

131.657

61,112
1-7,483

1.649.113

Market
Bt. Nicholas.
Shoe and Leather
Corn Exchange

20.638

.

1,485,280

1.078,7.«
800,000
1,500.000 7.915.9G9
12,906,225
Park
2,000.000
500,000
1,243,441
Mechanics’ Banking Ass.
779,246
300,000
Grocers’
1,123.784
400.000
North River
...
908,654
350,000
East River
500.000
1.161,377
Manufacturers & Mer—
Fourth National
5,000,000 16,241.524
Central National
3,000,000 11,089,051
Second National
300,000 1,336,902
Ninth National
1,000,000 4,652,910
First National
500,000 3,739.4 .*0
Third National
1,000,000 4.189,104
New York N. Exchange*
300,000 1,081,957
Tenth National
1,000.000 1.910.6* 0
840,498
250,000
Bowery National
Bull s Head
200,000 1,674,206
National Currency*
100,000
590*299
200,000
Stuyv ssant
440.431
200.000
Sieve ith Ward
928,937
Eighth National
250,000
682,347
American National
500,00C
574,102
Germania

403,962

Importers and Traders’..

Total
*

98,735
502.S83

2.015
11.808
28.905
11,072
14011
283,5 0
677
9.286
1,159.955 2,957,469

1,017.946
2,065.809
1,603,0U
2.162.186
2,24u,912
1.050.68S

North America

259,000
733,3:33

Western

195.520

2,031/91
2/164.371

613,109
834,265
537,0'5

Manufacturers’

Consolidation

206.765

City....

223,919

3,6'0,638
2.496,5'.1

Commonwealth
Corn Exchange....

1,160,695

242.370
635,948

317,701
795.4 .'3

3.614,013

645.883

84,659

248.733

6IC.481

211.521

96.800
11.143

913.5 0

470.100

217.900

225.001

k0.364

5,562

6,753

630,817
1,716,182

...

3S8.729

Eighth

9,139
29,100

250,000
449,265

5,881
600

659,043
(2 i ,670
550,355

220,321

.......

Total

The

following

are

July

8. 258,368,471 23^520,267

July

10. 255,424,942

July
July

17. 257,003,289
24 259,641,889
.

7

Legal

^on*«»o

34,217 073

30,266,912 34,277,945
81,055,450 84,173,437
30,079,424 34,H0.‘98
26,003,925

.

.

Oct.
Oct.

oS.

Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

9 250,749,974 21,513,526
16. 248,637,984 20,399,070 31,217.114
28. 249/95,073 19,399,7.1 84,204,43.
80 250,948,833 21,926 046 34, 36,249
-6 252,799,450 25,219,060 3U88.6-.3
13 251,160,557 26,755,693 34 212 86.
20 253.068,008 27 929,071
20. 252,673,474 29,657,895 34,155,888
.

.

.

34,231,^22

.

Boston Banks.—Below

Banks.
Atlantic
Atlas
Blacks tone

Loans.
Capital.
1750,000 $1,530,655
2,551,751
1,500,000
1,500,000
3,18”, 263
1,000,000 1,861,645
500,000
1,467,190
1,000,000
2,129,152
1,000,000
1,889,3(1
1,000,000 2,4; 0,272

Boston

Boylston

Colnmbian
Continental
Eliot

Everett
200,000
Fanenit Hall.... 1,000,000
Freeman’s
600,000
Globe
1,000.000
Hamilton
750,000
Howard
1,000,000
Market
800,000

Massachusetts..

800,000
Maverick
400,000
Merchants’
3,(XX),000
Mount Vernon..
200,000
New England... 1,000,000
North
1,000,000
Old Boston
900,000
...

527,593
2,554.23 1

1,416,943
2,232,008
1,422,544
1,743,468
1,452,746
1,822,305
904,928

6,570,833
602,789
2,284,3*6
2,271,474
1,830,207

Sbawmut
1 000,000
Shoe A Leather. 1,000,000

2,183,920

2,000,000
1.500,000

3,163.6*9

600,000

1,089,961
3,104,849
1,869,906
3,519,216

State

Suffolk
Traders*
Tremont
,

2,000,000
750,000
First
1,000.000
Second (Granite) 1,600,000

Washington....

Third

300,000

2.295,260

3,278,744

4,426,0S4
855.434

4,578.119
M

B’kofthe

City
Eagle

*1WV^VVW

Repub. 1,500,000
1,000,000

1,000,000
1,000,000
Hide A Leather. 1,600,000
Revere
2,000.000
•Security
200,000
Union
1,000,000

Exchange

Webster
Total

1,530,000

51,095,661
48,455,121

Same

as

I

1

44

•*

I

>

1

431,315
206,497
398,000
3 6,000
1,203.000
892,7(X)

1

J
j

new

44
“

1,015,0(0

256,913
138,000
I#,1 VO

591,033

0,6(0
322.000
472,000

2,340,012
2,645,930

1

are as

Increase

Increase

.Decrease.

—

70

I Tennessee

ii

8

1 ew

44

registered stock, old
“
4*
186'
44
“ 1867

„

pref st’I

J.OUI-IANA

44

605,106
212,833

1,200,242

232,786
126,57 1

487,910

454,536

684,699

342.712

202,056
150,534
382,842
70,826
256,857

1,168,608

795,866

798,000

Loans

Dec.

Specie

$595,282

Inc.

121,790

}

50
46

A Ten

"

3cnth.
44

1st
2ft

.

“

Missiseippi 1st
44

44

•

51
47

.

-

7*2
69
75
Tl

“

87
83

2d
3d
2d

71
80
50

CO

follows

55
80
79
54
76
45
64

60
65

68
82
5
•

72 i

Legaltender notes
Deposits

Inc
Inc.

Circulation

Inc..

.

183,915
277,598
23,1.65

following is the average condition

84
89

“

“

82
81
56
78
50
67
95
62
70
70
84
60
75

“

North Eastern let mtg.
“
2d
4
44
end. by Si ate
Columbia and Augusta 1st m
East. Tenn A Georgia fs
“

95

of the Philadelnhia Banks for the week
ber 29,1869 :

“

44

44

“

“

stock

..

6s

“

.

424
85

20
•

64

75
71
82
70
72
66
72
61
70
80
74
72
83

..

“

4th, 8s
Virginia“Central Ists, 6s

2uds, 6s

..

3da, 6b

“

4th, 8s

“

76
74
81
72
74
68

fur d. int. 8a
Rich. A Lanv. Is) cons’dCs.
*

“

lsts 8s

Southside, 1st mtg. 8s
“

2d

4*

m

guart’d6e..

3d m. 68
4th m. 8b

44

Norfolk A

Petersburg 1 m 8b
“

“

7b

Etichm. it Petersb. lstm 7b
44
44
2d m. 6b
44
44
8d m. 8b
14
44

*»

.

»*

44

•

1/

“

77
75
85

•

,

.

jA

...

.

70

73
84

824
674
30
80

824
824
85
....

•

....

conv.70 774
4
6* 70 75

...

1

w

78

82*

....

.

95

Poto. 6s.
Fre’kab’g A 44
“

..

65

.

69
70
79
60
60
26
25
80
78
83

Piedmout bra’h

“

.

56

80
76

62

endorsed

“

44

34

m

2dB 6s....
44
8ds 8s
“
4ths8s
Orange A Alex. & Man. l3fs
Va. A Tenn lsts 6s
“
2ds 6s
4
Sds 6s

82
75
68

.

stocks...

(24

VIRGINIA.

&9

76
“

59

60
82
74
4U
8d
15

2nds, 7e

44

44

86
90

..

44

55

Memphis aud Ohio 10s

....

preceding Monday, Novem¬

75
£2

..

by State Tenn.

44

97
103
97
etock
115 118
Southwestern R C., 1st mtg
91
94
“
stock
96
94
I Mac^n and We-tern s’k
115 1 20
I Macon A Aueusta bonds
75
77
“
44
end bonds 87* 90
4
44
stock
25
30
“
A Brunsw'k end b. 7a. 75
764
I Macon A Bruuswick stock
(
90
95
Muscogee bonds
.

42
«tM

Virginia 6s, end

44

65* 664

53

57
75
19

79

Memp. A Charleston lets, 7a

7s.

endorsed
stocks..

48

TENNE88EE.

-

jI Selma andGreat North. lstsm
Mobile A Meridian 1st m. 8s

“

62}

55
72
7s.. 7b
st’ek S9
6s.., 82
6a... 72

44

Orange A Alex., 1 sts 6s,.

80

“

60

Memphis A L. Rock lets, 8s

m..

.

80

South Carolina Railroad 6s..

“

:

224

CAROLINA.

guaranteed by State S. C.

624

....

are as

70
90

65
85

Sparten-burg and Union 7s,
guar’d by state S. C
474
424

798,650 I Sel., Rome A Dalt. 1st m. 7s
GEORGIA.
396,803
95
130,000 I Georgia RR. 1st mtg
stock
100
646,415
95
494,180 I Central RR. 1st mtg. 7s
“

25,361,854

m 7».
Chari. A Rutlierf.

COUTH

50
•»,

Cbai leston and Savannah Gs.

14

m.

.

“
“

Charlotte A S Carolina 7s
Greenville and C lambia 6a,
guar, by State 8. Carolina.

30
17.

Alabama & Tenn. 1st

“

“

75

324

Montg. KW, 1st

•

6

624

89
80

4*

65

25

stock

•

North Carolina 8s
stock

52*

44

“

80
71

79
70
5
eo

Manchester 1 pfd7s
“

“

58

&

*7|
55
to

44
“

Wilmington A Weldon 7s g’
44

85
80
60
60

15

NORTH CAROLINA.

..

30

e

in. 7s

58}

12
74
:8
4b

»*

75

52,

b

m.

2d
3d

“

“

57

44

72

...

44

44

“

797,900 I Mobi

..

1

mtg. 7
2d
stock

44

14

....

...

Mississippi Cent. 1st
44

49

124

,

....

‘*

last week.

Capital

44

7s

m

....

44
44

2d

•

5s

Atilt

T-)
35

53* V. Orleans A Jackeon lsts,Ri:
45 | 46 I
“
44
cert, 8s
44
44
4k
stock.
42*
N. Or. Jack’n A Opel.lsts, 8s
50
44
44
54
2ds, 8s

.

new

“

“

M'SSISSIPPI AND

65

Virginia ex-conpon bonds..

Street.

‘tanta A West Point stocl

69

coupons
bonds

44

44

“

1

61

New

“

1

1

“

852,645
835,620

544

bi

77
43 i
33

67

...

310,714

$281,001
51(,0 5

.

.

bonds, end. by savannah
Pensacola & Georg a 1st m 7t

.

69,739
83,812

411,50)
175,«0

Savannah, Albany.A Gu’fT.

-

443,410

*4i,&0
£» /HO

1

...

registe’d s’ch

“

4,844

7 8,1X0

5

A rents, 9

57£

6s, new

41

I
I

3

1

32,

...

821.957

21*,* 0
450.(0.
218.105

Legal Tenders...

j....

43)

b’ds

‘

2,052,765

£61.1 $0

549,000
1,927.000
3,427,000
175,000
424,000

....

0

.

8s. Lev e

14
new
South 44
Carr ina 6s, 0 d

2
2

6

-67
57

6s, Levee

2

7

05

bonds

44

North Can lina, ex-coup

4
8
4 I
2

..

...

695,134

270,mil

1,26',000
1.416,000
3/151,000

110,000
1 9,000
227,000
628,000
495,000

.

•

595,000
178/05

732,245

165,571

6,525

!

..

f ouisinna 6*, tx-coupons..

j

5

.

old

6s, rew.
7s, old
7*=, new

r

3

bio Ash
93
60
73
80
81
80
85 | 87
93

5s

-eorsia 6s,

1
7

4

1,787,599
4,150.837 114,561
2,753,449
6,00)
1,627,127
17,816
37,909
1,837,016
3,232,366 126,067
2,9.* 8,560
63,141
3,793,050 35,105

Philadelphia Banes.—Tho

•

213,*05

0

901,Hf 7
777.741
805,780

250 216

$232,117 I Deposits
46,375 I Circulation

.

5
44
48,1S1,890 6
City Secnrlt e».
of the Bo.-ton I
1
give, a statement
I Alexandria 6s
Atlanta, Ga, 8s, bonds
Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds
Charleston, S. C.,6s, stock..
Specie L. T. Notes. Deposits. Circula I Columbia, 8. C , 6s
$441,76 i I Columbus, 44 6s, bo .ds
$12,798 $107,568 $448,975
191,413
670,544
797,44’ f I ^redrlcksbnrg 6s
2,438
15,214
243,0: >0 1,193,977
793,431 j I Lynchburg 6s~....
173,957
7,443
533,7' 0
596,20. I Macon Gs. bonds
If 8,700 - 6sl,936
675
447,84: 1 I Memphis 6s bonds, old
4*
3 4,167
6s, “ new
3,902
549,286
7:*0,9T 1
113 367
619.294
Memphis 6s, end. by Menop.
39,633
570,79!
142,313
817,609
99/46
792,m j
and Charleston Railroad..
3,188
43,000
lOO.Otf I Memphis 6s, end. by Memp
347,102
A Little Rock & state
20,638
437,107 1,106,403
585,64:
16,5'4
104,537
504,111
Memphis past due coupons..
354,71*
“
scrip,
13,346
227,286 1,105,774
355,765 1
123,736
713,784
11,3:30
242,1W | Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds
8s,
44
6,415
149,000
334,272
441,56£
15.945
109,783
4'3,4«4
353/ 94 j LNashvillc 6s
New Orleans 6s bonds
196,3t >7
840,320
393.011
86,616
lbs
“
2,928
138,325
288,195
246,19C
258,444 1,098,844 3,403.449
1,841,50C I Norfolk 6s
75,742
337,381
■'eter.-burg 6s
177,76391,884
746,976
799,075 I Richmond b's
14,838
210,500
627,484
27,724
789,72C I Savannah 7s, bonds
450,307
964,133
361,971 I Wiliningtou, N. C.,6s
88,039
44
“
8s
*33.831
188,400
598 188
20,083
238,979
838,790
359,632 I Railroad Securities.
ALABAMA.
4oiei9
862,575
396,000
997,t 89
68.945
738,784
335,740
751,635 I Montg’ry A West P. 1st, 8s..
end
106,143
249,076
179.259
34,466
414,982
113,262
889,305
~00,335 I Montgomery and Enialla 1st
107,600
732,959
595.268
8s, gold bonds, endorsed by
18,625
State of Alabama
471,408 1,232,<K f,
14,868
799,190
2 '3,741
608,716 2,138.713
793,3(0 I Mobile and Ohio,sterling
44
44
72.506
449,826
35,132
8s, iut
174,692
597,617
904,991
2mtg, 8s
16,304
984,591
8s income.
24.550
294,756
437,114
698,129

The deviations from last weeks returns




Increase

M«ie steurilles.
Ifcbama 8s

183,597,395

47,350,000 103,279,5041,837,098 11,579,605 36,676,549

Not received.

•01,548

51,611,9-’4 651,713 13,192,138

Increase,

“

0

£
6
5

183,734 190

I

1

62,79*2,834 /
55,S29,7*>2 £
5',487,857 7
51,259,197 f
50 025,081 f
E4,209,OSS 7
52,017,588 t
53,229,5 4 £
5',<37,604 £

183,754,306

959,C00 *2,502,0

•

450,660

62’\6«#

SOUTHERN SECURITIES.

e

175,798,919
18G,828,832 52,177,881
182,961,840 49.957,590

258 988

.

177,890

3,3)3,038
984,783

37i/H»0

,

we

29.1869.

—

179,214,675
178,612,916

J*,l<8.925

.

•

.

•

1

*79?,4‘

Deposits. Tenders.
179,9:9,467 46,737,263
183,197,239 4-,702.728 (
188,431,701 61.859,706 7
193,622,2(0 54.271,862 £
196,416,413 56.101,627 6
200,220,008 66,056^34 f
198,952,711 54,730,089 £
19*2,021,546 53,070,'*31 £

33,947,98a
Aug. 14. 266,505,365 24,1*4,499 33,992,257
Aug. 21. 262,711133 21,594,510 84.0:8,104
Ane 2S. 261,012,109 19,469,102 33,999,742 188,754 539
Sept. 4. 262,549,839 17*461,722
83,960,0^5 191,101,086
Sept. 11. 26.3,864,533 14,942,066 33,964,196 188,821,324
Sept. 18 26'i,496,024 14,538,109 83,9.2 ,o9 185,390,1*0
180,230,793
Sept. 25 263,441,828 13.968,481
Oct.
2 255,239,649 15,902.849 3l,lb9,409 183.124,508
264.879,357

.

: 16,055,150

957,428
»il,943

386,305

.

.

•

Quotations by J. ITI. Welt h

July 81. 260,530,225 27,871,933 34,068.677
AU?.

.

.

47«,70r
461,000
219,425

0.10773

the totals for a series of weeks pnsi

Specie.

•

2,715.000
1,000 000 1/62,000
300,000
618,000

..

Loans

24,201

.

Circula-

Loans.

..

Specie.

Inc

•

The devUtion? from last week’s returns
Capital

29,687.89684,155,838 183,597,3f)5 43.1S1.S93
P

:,1 :t

750,000

...

Republic.
Exchange

67.287
227,244
251.5- 6
67,730
54,000

29 ,000

-

ni*o

1.778,000
1,324,000

217.(30

•

...

.

Central
Rank of

873,056

4,9^6

•

....

'•.J74.00J

469/100

....

863.576

362,813
1,(3 \ 122

5,631

1,000,000 3,312,000 32.000
5,002
200,000 1,263.333
300,000 1/69,417
400/ 00 1,163,717
3,900
300.00!)
982,872
1,2 0
500,000 1,670,000
30 ,00 ) 1,243,000 51,000
1,000,000 3,775,000
300,00() 1,002,000
6)7,532
200,009
467,000
150,000
727.000 10,359
250,000
798,000
275,000

Tradesmen’s

Union
First
Thiid
Four h
Sixth
Seventh

....

•

$1.000,0.0

2,971815

1,214,618 3,152.618
660,000 3,404,000
441,000 UR2,000

9,6Oir

820.890

250,000

B’k of Commerce..

156,832

811.812

270,000

...

Girard

490.255
164.941

287.771

251,235 1,900 000

810,000 2,249,000
800,000 2,309,000
600,000 "
250,0' ‘0 1,887,100
250,000 1,142,442
500,000 1,32'*,435
400,000 1/92,1* 1
570,150 l,v.7,0<H)

Kensington
Penn Township...

315.490

9^,755

2,000,000 4,782,247 26,932

Southwark

508.151
208.311

725,055

1,000,000 4,149,788 65,776

...

Farmers’ * Mach..
Commercial
Mechanics*

201,393
576,349
414.830
710,800

7.67 UKK)

Capital.
Loan?. Specie. L. Tend. Deposits.
$1,600,000 $4,027,001 $ 187,( 00 $894,000 $3,526,000'

Philadelphia

Same as last week.

Circulation....

*

■

Total net

Banks.

307,211

],*2,300

Tile deviations from the returns of previous week nro.i
Loans
Dec $1,618 893 Dopoalts
lac.
Inc. 1,536,627 Legal Tenders..— Inc.
Bpe«;le

—

274,056

■425,000
1.551,833

12.605,039
8,77 7,-351
1,097.611
8.905,270
4,16>,606

274.481

S3.970.200 252,678,474

..

4,9^9
340,000

250,(X?

1.468,453
1.373,238

1,726.386 1,023,000 16.242.016
307,567
9.227
1,274.433

’

Manufacture & Builders

1

556,241
752.061
895,300
5,954
558.023
231.127

[December 4, lb69,

CHRONICLE

THE

718

.

December 4,

719

THE CHRONICLE.

1869.]

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
iJEPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPOSTED OFFICIALLY ON n»nn n.-ir
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF <14.mf.ml ‘>F THB WEEK
8 AJXU NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THB SAME. WEEK.
SECURITIES.

ENDING FRIDAY, DEC. 8, TOGETHER

•

- ..

....

SECURITIES.

STOCKS AND

Tdde

Satuir. Mod

(•)

National s

—

do
do
do

do

do

dc
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

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

—

do

do
do

do
do

Alabama
do

„

8s

5s, 10-40s ...coupon
l
i.
5s, Xd-^Qe.registered
e
i
State:

—
—

106*< 107

1 8*i

105*

—

—

/

61*

...

5b...

'

95

do 1919

Indiana 5s

*'

Kentucky 6s
Louisiana 6s

-

.

•-

Louisiana 6s Levee Bonds ....
do
8s Levee Bonds. ..
Michigan 6s, 1878
Missouri 8s,.. — •• ■ - • • —•

sr

91

_

...

27*

.

Third Avenue

—

46*

31*
32

32*

33

45,0 0
782,000
132,001
3,000

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

52*

Commonwealth
Commerce

Continental

.

IS

100
100

-

a

If ftrk

67

Manhattan
Mechanics
W erchants Exchange
Nassau
Nimh
North River
Ocean
Park
Seventh ward
State of New York

Teuth
Union

50

143
140

—

—

50

100

—

-

LOS

—

1120

50
—

——

! 135

50

Gas.— Citizens

Pacific Mail
Union Navigation

Repress.—Adams

100 52*

100

100 57*

500
American and M. Union.100 35*
Merchants1 Union
100
United States
100 53

M

100




—

—

51
36

97*

57*

36*

■

2,229
11,603

»

55

1,500

91* 91

£0

90* 91*

92

81,000

Sinking Fund

Income

do
do
do
do

Interest b’nds
1st mort

89*

—

——-

consolid’ted

87* 87*

exten. bonds

5,000

11/00

—

16,(00

96

78
——

do

do

75

74*

74*

—

75*

75«

95*

—

98

5,000

74*

107,000

98

92*

—

2d m.

15,000

96

8,000
8,0 6
8,000
4,000

—

—

2d mortgage, 1879
3d mortgage, 1888
4th mortgage, 1880..

55

85

-

91

-

7,000

-

4,000

,5
—

i

div. bonds—

34*

34*

i:
—

35*

3-0

—

35

do
Pacific 7s, guar,
Fo

47*

61

49*

61

60

57

35

85*

53* 52
18
16* 16

66*
35*

—

36*
9*

48* 49*
16
18*

1

—-

—

6,0t0

1

-

Cincinnati 1st.
Michigan Southern, SinkingFund.
do
do
2d mort.,7s...
Milwaukee and St. Paul. 1st mort..

01*

i

—
—

6,000

—...

117

94~~

95

94
90

94

90
90
88

—

—

89*

87
96

—

94*

16 000

80

2,000
14,d00
21.000

88*
101*

68

...

4,000
97

9,000
600

~

84

\ooo
,

92

—

6,000

—

—

15/00

89

88

1,000

,

98

—

—

97

74/00

97

—

92*
82*

—

"'

consol, bds

-

--

by State of Mo,
4,177 Peninsular, 1st Mortgage ...
100
Pittsb’g,Ft. Wayne & Chic., 1st m.
do
2d mort. 94* 94*
do
do
f,0J3
do
do
do
3d mort. 91
1,930 St. Louis, Alton A Terre H, lstm. 80
79

—

51*

87*
98* 68*

86*

“15

Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage
—

—

—

.

87*
93* 95*

8,760
50
62

55

do
do
7 8-10 conv
do
do
8s 1st mort
do
do l8tIowa... —
300
Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage...
do
do
2d mortgage...
do
do
construction...
do
do
6s convertible .
950 New York Central 6s, 1883
6s sub bonds.
do
do
do
do
7s, 1876
100
N. Y. & New Haven 6s
New Jersey Central new
,
do
do
1 st

-

7*
100
15* 15*
100 16* 16* 15* 14* 23
n*
13* 18
14* 14
100

Qulcseil ver
IforsHaneptM—Bankcr* A Bro. Ass
Union Trust

200
87* 56*

6,(00

92

100

9,500
12/00

100

95

l'U
98

98
A—

»

—

—

American....

Wells, Fargo &Co
Mining.—Manposa Gold
Mariposapreferred

26*
20

—

50
50
Improvement.—Boat.Wat. Pow.100
Brunswick City Land——
Canton
161
: ....100
Cary
Telegraph.—Western Union... .100 34*
5 f>eamship.-Atlantic Mail
100
Wilbg Barre

f4*

69
203

25*

25

52

70

LOS

Miscellaneous Stocks :
Coil.—American
25

Pennsylvania

25*

24*

5534 55* 65

Marietta &

60

75

-100

Central
100
Cumberland
100
Delaware and Hudson.. .100

12

Mariposa Trustee 10s certiflca'es..
Michigan Central 8s, new, 1882....

—
—

100
100
_.10C

e,

140

141

Northwest.,Sinking Fond

Lake Shore,

75

88*
78*

140

[Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869
do
2d mort, (S. F.), *86
Illinois Central bonds

—

50
50

88

.

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72

100

83*

6th mortgage.
97 Galena & Chicago, 1st .
Great Western, 1st mortgage, 1888.
Great Western, 2d mortgage
Han. & St. Jos., 1st convertible..

104

104* 104

50
25

! Egoil

68*

do

—

50

Ashburton

do
do
do

68

122

-

109

12C*

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868

108

——

Metropolitan

82,720

1st mortgage..

do
do

do

100 107* 107*
100
122* 122*
100
100
50
100

121
120* 121 120
67* 66* 67*
68
83*
6 83* 82* 82
87* 87*
87
88
i 173* 169*
87* 88*
S8* 87
78*
76* 74

i

Dubuque & Sioux City 1st
Delaw’e, Lackawan. & West, 1st m

135

,100

Irving

109*

110

no

85*

85*

95*
and Pac,7 percent.. 9534
hicago & Rock Island, 1st

(

—

110

815
505

83*

56*

88

732

8 000

132*

I

Cin., Hum. & Dayton, 1st
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 3d mort..
do
4th mortgage..
do
Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund
Col., Chi. & Ind. Central 1st.......

—

109

•,132k(

21,000 Chicago, R. I.

A

—

100

Exchange

Fourth
Gallatin
Hanover

do
do

10,000

—

92* 92* 93

92* 92*

Jersey City Water Loan
Kings County 6s,

New York 5s, 1870
do
6s, 1887
Bank Stocks:
American Exchange
Bank of America
Bank of New York
Central
;

Chicago and Alton,

237,000 Chic &
3,0 0

x48

6SjPark Loan

do

—

-

Municipal S
Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan

703
-

Chicago,Burl’ton A Quincy, 8 p. c
94,0:0 Chicago & Milwaukee, 1st mort..

*56* <54* -53* r53* *53* >53*
49* 47* 45
50* 50* 50
—

10h

106ki

20*

60

Buffalo and State T ine Ponds
Buffalo. N. Y & Brie, 1st
Central Pacific gold bonds .......

42,000

67*

yirgmlaSs, (old)

4,600

Railroad Ronds:

43*
31*

40*

—

67*

650

126

133

1,756

27

27k( 27*

129

1 11/80

—

107* 104*r 105
106
104* 105

155
182

100

2,625

105)»

20

5,00( Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100
do
do
do preflO
2,000

101*

1875.. ... South Carolina 6s, old
South Carolina 6s, new
Tennessee 5s....
6s (old)
do
do
6s, (new)

Ohio 6s,

do
do

_

-

8,665

82

-

V

108k<

107
130

7,460

63,000 Rome,Watertown &Ogdensburg —
4J,000 St.Louis, Alton & Terre Hau^e.lOO
do
do pref.100
do

90
—

.

6s, (new)

90

89*

New York 6s, 1877
do
68,1873
99*
do
68,1874..,
109*
)
do
7s, State B’yB’ds(coup)
\
do
do
do
(reg.) 42 41
41*
North Carolina,6s
29
2s*
)
'< 6s (new, enec’l tax) gk 30
do
10
d0

58

68

99

91k

6s,(Han. & St. Jos. RR.)

do

58*

69

.

66
68

50

80k
27*

15,405

74

46*

100

Michigan Central

272

21ki «1

105

1C5

27*

New York and New Haven
100 141
do
do
scrip. —
New Jersey
— 108
Norwich A Worcester.
—
26
Ohio and Mississippi
100
do
do
pref
100
2,000
100 68
89,000 Panama
Pitts., F’fc Wayne&Chic. guar. —
50
Readine..

sSoife”11
do 1877
do

do

1

28

Milwaukee and St. Paul
100
do
do
pref... 100
Morris & Essex
60
100
2,000 New York Central.
N. Y. Central & Hudson River.. —
do
do
do
6«rip.. —

f0

do

-

—

Marietta and Cincinnati, lstpret
do
2d pref
do

7,0C0

93*

94

23,000 Long Island

r

-

250

161

-

r 22

80
167
109

100
Illinois Central.
Joliet & Chicago
100
i
65,000 Lake Shore and Mich. South.... — 88*

.

-

—

107*i

-

2,150

1

21*

400
5,745

145

-

75k( 74k ; tij4 78k( 78)i
88ki 89
88*i 87k
K 105kf 105k 104)i 105> i 107

*
K

Brio
100
do pref
60
Hannibal and f=t. Joseph
100 108
61,C00 Hannibal and St. Joseph pref.. 100
Harlem..
...
.
50 181
157
Hudson River
100

-

——

-

—

50
14,050 Delaware, Lackawana and West 50
42,800 Dubuque & Sioux City
lr0

!

'

Columbus C. & Ind. Cent
Cleveland and Pittsburg

2,470,700:

I-S-I

6s, 5.20s (1868) coup —
d
6s, 5.20s do regisd
<
6s, Oregon War 1881
do. (1 y'rly) 107*( 107*
i6s,
\
6s, Currency..
i.
5s, 1871
coupon. —
:
i.
6s, 1871 ..registered.
l
i.
5s, 1874
coupon. —
l
i.
5s, 1874. .registered.
t
i. 107* 106* 1C7

-

Pac..l00
442.500 Cleveland,Col.Cin.and Ind....100

-

>

149

22,5(1U Chicago. Rock Island and

-

—

(new)..... •••••• • •
Canal Bonds, 1860

n

Corn

—

do

12,200 Chicago and Northwestern
100
do
do
pref.100
256.500

-

6s, 5.20s (’65n.)cpn
d
6s, 5.20s do regietd
i ns*
P ll43ii H8*i H3*\ H3*f 118*
<6s, 5.20s (1867) coup
’-09*
d — 113*
6s, 5.20s do regisd
-113
( (13*
P 114k 113*

7b

(llinois

-

-

100

preferred..,.100
68,700 Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO
23,500 Chicago and Great Eastern.... ..100

-

California, 7s..
Connecticut 6s
Georgia 6s. —•
do

«

do

2G5,00d

113

112*; 1123
'io*( —

100

!fO.

10
89

-

Upi 88 87)i 88
149>i 148>t 146)< 145
149
148k( 149)^
150
158
162>i 151

K

WMk’«Sale«.

Fri

w# i. Thars.

Tdm

•

10

-

—

4,000 Chicago and Alton...,

-

—

_
-

1157i 116

—

-

110>i 1103i no*
til
(’64) coupon
no?,i no*
no*
6s, 5.20s do registd
111* 1103i 111*< ni*
m 1123jfill
6s, 5.20s ('65)coupon
no*
dll2
Ul)ii
6s, 5.20s do regist'd
113
-118
113*
m
-113*i

6s, 5-20s

do
io
do

115

-

Mob

ir.

Railroad Stocks:
Boston, Hartford A Erie
1116,500 Central oi New Jersey

122*i 124*

122*i 122

Coin (Gold Boom.) 1233ii 122
i.
<
United States 6s, 1881
coupon. 117>i<1153(
1163,
id
6s, 1881 ..registered
do
do
m 114
112? i
6s, 5-20s('62)covpon
do
do
(
Id
do
6s, 5-20s do registd I113i(im 4
do
m
110)
American Gold

Week’eSalea!

frl.

Thai ■

•

STOCKS AND

do
do

8,166

do

do

do
do

—

2d, prefl

income

Louis A Iron Mountain, 1st m..
1,416 Toledo A Wabash, 1st mort.,ext.. 88* 81
do
do
2d mortgage,
1,350
do
equipment...
do
600
do
do
corn, •'ov
8,200
6.275 Toledo, Peoria A Warsaw,lst,E.D.
84*
T'nion Pacific, 1st mort
...
—

——

i Western Union 71»...

o;

—

-

5,000

92*

9,COO

79

6,000
14,000
13,000

--

St

—

92*

—j

——

bl
88

—

81

88

—

r

79*

82*
84

86*

——-

——-

10,0.0
16,000

—

—-

1

84*
84

1

2,0uQ

720

CHRONICLE.

THE

constructed of iron.

$he Railway Jttonitor.
EXPLANATION OF

THE STOCK AND BOND

>1869.
.This rate of endorsement

to continue
ft>r

was

subsequent section of twenty miles until the foad was completed
By an act approved September 22, 1867. this law was so amended

every
“

to increase the rate of

as

TABLES.

indorsement

$16,000

to

per

mih».

v..

$i,S00 000

U also

The Table of Railroad, Canal and Other Stocks, provided that indorsements should be made for each section of fiTe
miles completed after the first twenty, and eo much of the
on the next
page, comprises all Companies of which the stock is sold in any of the
former law
principal cities-(except merely local corporations), or upon which dividends are paid. as related to bridges was repealed.
Un er the law, as thus amended
Quotations are always given of the per cent value, whatever the par of the stock may
’
his. The figures just after the name of the company indicate the date of the CHRON¬ indorsements up to the present time have been made a9 follows:
1.

ICLE in which a report ot. the Company was last published.
A
leased road*} in the dividend column x—extra; s=stock or scrip.

2. The

Tables

For ihe Al-bama &

star (*) indicates

Montgom ry & Enfaula Rail ead
For the Selma, Marion & Memphis Uailroai

Railroad* Canal and Other Honda
occupy in all, four pages, two of which will he published in each number. In
these pages the bonds of
Companies which have been consolidated are sometimes
given under the name of Consolidated Corporation. The date given in brackets
immediately alter the name of each Company, indicates the time at which the state¬
ment of its-finances was made.
In the “Interest Column” the abbreviations are as
lollows : J. 9c j.=®January and July; F. & A-=February and August; M. & S.=
March and September; A. & 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

March.

.

>

of

'

Chattanooga Railroad

For the

480 000

320,000
$2,60q.000

‘‘These roads

responsibility.
completed at
promptly paid
prevent loss to

in the bands of

gentlemen of capacity, energy and
There is eyeiy reason to believe that they will be
an early day, that the interest on the bonds will be
as it falls due, and that everything else will be done to
the State on account of the indorsement.”
are

*

3. 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.
5* No reliable prices of Insurance Stocks

Detroit Aid to

the request
nize

possibly be made.

Railroad Earnings for the latest Week Reported.—
Road.
Week.
1869.
Dec.
1863.
Inc.
Chic go and Alton
....33 Nov.. .$102,368 $115,587 $.... $13,219

.Chicago and Northwestern

..

Chicago Rock Island and Fac..
Cleveland and Pittsburgh

.«

Lake Sbcre and Mich. Southern.

..

Marietta and < incincatl

Michigan C entral

814,755 275,711
111,806 108,231
46,107
229,275
29,697

90,847

..

Milwaukee and 8t. Paul

.

Toledo, Wabash and Western...

..

178.500
79,613

39,043
3,575
44.71T
1,389
250,873
21,598
31,448
1,751
89,025
1,822
144,159 84,341
71.776
7,837
«

•

•

•

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

our

city,

whom

among

we

recog.

many of our heaviest business men, Mayor Wheaton has ordered a
sp cial election, to be held oil January 10, for the purpose of
deciding
whether municipal aid to the extent of three hundred thousand
dollars
shall be granted Xo the Detroit and Howell Railroad
Company. The
condition? upon which the loan is asked are that the shops of the com.
piny shall be permanently located in our city ; that the aid shall be in
the form of coupon bonds, payable semi annually at the rate of 7
per
cent; that one-third of the bonds shall be delivered to the company
upon the completion of the road from Detroit to Plymouth, one third
when it is completed to Howell, and the remainder when it is com¬
pleted to Lansmg ; and finally that the company shall execute a second
mortgage on the road and its property to secure the payment of the
interest on the bonds accruing after ten years, and to secure the full
payment of the principal at the maturity of the bonds, the first
moitgage not to-exceed $18,000 for each mile of its track.”

-

can

Railroads.—The Detroit Tribune
says: “At

of ninety-four electors of

•

'

e • • •

The Chesapeake and Ohio
Raljlroa^,.—Richmond, Va., Not
European and North American Railway —The
Bangor,
23.—rThe stockholders of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, last Oldtown and Milford Railroad
Company have sold their road, better

night, raified

with C. P.

a contract

Huntington, W. H. Aspinwall,Plinv

known

the Venzie Railroad, running from Bangor to Milford, thirteen
length, to G. H. Jewett and Xoah Woods, acting in behalf of
the European and North American Company. The price is not made
public. The sale takes effect on the 1st of December. This is one of
the oldest railroads in the country, and will be discontinued as soon ae
tracks can be laid from the European and North American Railroad to
points accommodated by the Venzie R^ad.

Fisk, and their associates, of New York, for the completion of the road.
The gentlemen named and their associates in the contract were
elected
directors for the ensuing year, with Joseph R. Anderson and General
Wickham.. _The contracting parties ae to finish the road or get
nothing
for their labor.
It is stated that Mr. Huntington will be
President, to
reside in New York, end General Wickham, the
present President, will

be

as

mi;es in

Vice-Pr#sidenJf

to reside on the line of the road.
®®ll^®Ads.—The following extract from the late meseage of theTtovernorof Alabama shows the operation of the law of that

—Mayor Cole, of St. Louis, has vetoed the ordinance of the Common
selling the city Pacific Railroad stock to January and Gibson
for $250,000 in bonds of the new railroad
through St. Louis county.
This transaction is distinct from that of the
County Court, which sold
half a million of the county’s—not the city's—stock for $260,00
* in
cash to Hudson E. Bridge, who leads a
party in the Pacific directory
opposed to January aod Gibson.
Council

Sta^e granting aid to railroads;
“
Bjranact of the General Assembly, approved February 19, 1867,
it wasjnade the duty of the Governor, on the
part of the State, to
endorse tlia first mortgage bor:ds of railroad companies, when certain
conditions were- complied with. Before such endorsements could be
obtained,Twenty mites of road bad to be built and equipped. Then,
—Ihe St. Louis and Southeastern
Railway Company has executed
the Governor was to endorse for $12,00)
per mile for the road proper, a mortgage for $2,250,000 to George
Opdyke and Philo C. Calhoun, of
and ati additional amount for bridges, viz.;
sixty dollars per lineal foot New York. It is promised that work shall commence on this road at
for bridges made of wood, and one hundred
per foot for such as were
Shawnettown next spring.— Western Railroad Gazette.
'
.

,

MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.
--Central ■Pacific—in gold—.
1867.

1868.

(94 m.)
$38,169

■

(850m.)

"

1

-

690 m.)

$64,453- .212,604

61.881

86,937—
81,396
96,481
106,835
164,729
259,590
251,832
262,770
296,422
386,562
842,743

60,029
81,156
95,828
121,702
174,812

-

181,297
200,550
312,109
138,166

75,871

—Chicago and Alton.

-

-1869..

-

S 219,982.

1867.

1391,308
>485,048
568,270
55fs0ia.
532,651
511,854.

-

.

-

6 9,788

.

622,000
»

f*»

•

• ♦

1,421,525 $2,300,767
1867.

1868.

"

828,901

l

613,330

(280 m.)

(431 m.)

1869.

$276,116
275,139
267,094
279,121
303,342

*

'

1

u

-

■

j

1887.

<735 m.)

$819,765
240,766
281,146
816,368
401,892

1868.

-

.Nov

4,508,642

$369,228
~

881,902
883,507
436,412

565,718
458,190

869,858
865,404
850,664

428.897

751 739

£1,024,045

522,688

1,101.778 $1,037,468
©766,617 S 556,917
S488,825 § 468,879

5,683,609




918,088

6,517,64 5

..

1868.

(251m.)
$94,136

(251 m.)

(390m.)
204.112

180,840
■

236.435

~

-

193:939

-

239,522
247,661

1211450

203,696

661,793

791,772
1,207,496
1,249,950

••

121,217

Nov...
Dec....

142,823
132,387
123,383

Tear..

1,258,713

•Ohio A Mississippi

1,294,095

r-St. La Alton AT. Haute.-*
~

3869.

1867.

(825 m.) (340 m.) (84am.)
(340 m .)
(210 m.)
$451,180.; $242,793 $211,978 $180,366.. Jan....
149,658
830,233
219,064 1 231,851
216,080...Feb..,
149,842
420,774
279,647
266,905
221.459...mar...
174,162 ,
460,287 284,729
252,149
214,409..April.. 168,169
630,844
282,989
204,619
218.639.. .may..
171,786
678,800
340,135
217,082
223.236.. June..
156,065
686,342 234,633
194,455 rv 192,864 July...
172,988
525,363 322,521
287,667
220,788 1
724,514
866,872
807,122.
219,160
1,Q39,81L 879,
288,329
838,044..Oct.... 280,840
274,688
\\..v.ypr<iV,... 204.095
272,068
283,861
Deo
171,499
.

-

.

,

.

,

•SBS-ASfc:

.

'

'

......

95,924
108,418
126,656
121,519
125,065
119,169
121,408

106,594
114,716

1,239,735 ...Sep....
1,279,602 ...Oct....

-

108,461
95,416

96,535

.July...

838,777 ...Ana

108.558; mar....
109.526.. April..

90,526

_

• • • *

Tear..

9,207 930

1868.

1869.

111,037
118,648

230,061
2,918,347

may.
June..

1868

(829 m.)
304,097
283,669
875,210

(329 m.
$843,*'

862,783

933,952
184,977
818,021
398,998
464,778
506,295

804,115
826,880
415,768
869,625
325,501
821,013
392,942
456,974
611820
410,825

Dec...;

330,873
4,373,071

(329 m.)
$384,119
391,636
386,527
411,814
403,646
366,628
829,960

890,671

4,570,014

.-..Tear-

853,669
473,546
490.738

Toledo, Wab. A Western.-' —Union Pacific1867:
1869,
1868.

.

,

.

1,938,862

341,783
320,025
293,615

262,798

l

412,933

.

157.379

’287,451
298,296

109.502.. July...
129.389.. Ang....
140.473.. Sep...,.
132.869.. Oct
Nov....

(210 m.)
(2J0 m ). (521 m.)
$127,694 $182,632
$287,674
133,892
127,817
200,798
>' 175,960
149,165
970,680
156,888 - 171,868
817,052
180,545 r 157,897
829,078
140,408 ' 154,132
804,810
143,986 1 144,164
809,591
204,696 •186,889.
864,728
196,436 ? 202,238
882,996
210,473
205,760
406,766
'I74;6w
851,759
_

253,367

1867.

$98,510.-. Jan
91,660.. Feb...

72,768

may...

259.408

218,347
271,425

Michigan Central.—1869.

1869

(251 m.)

98,482

84,652

June.-.

3,964,039

-

i860.

(390m.)
242,205
236,160
243,509

4,797,461

$92,433
81,599

78,976

April.

655 046

8,459,819

4,858,611

1867.

Jan

424,5*9

§433,434

Marietta and Cincinnati-

<

1869.

(864 m.)

*

(877,058

1,001,892

..Tear ..|11,712,248 13,429,534

740,949

1868.1:

1,442,274

1,210,387 1,135,334

..

.Dec....

(864 m.)

1867.

■5

*

mar...

.

1868.

...

-

.608,780
695,355

1869.

dev. Col. Cin.AI-^

1869.

*

.,

(890 m.)*

1868.

-

Feb..,

^Milwaukee A St. Paul

-1867.

_

1868.

790,828
915,030
894,934

“1869.

(1,152 m.) (1,152 m.) (1,157m.) (410 m.)
(454 m.) (520-94 m.)
$339,762. Jan...
696,147 $724,890 $871,218 $292,047 $308,587 $-351,767
304,827. .Feb...
574,664
2$4
807,478
224,621
297,464
819,441
: 893,648 .mar...
757,134
850,192 1,149,258
272,454
276,431
645,789
331,148 April.
774,280 1,094,597 1,092,378
801,952
268,369
362,900
345.556. .JRIay..
895,712 1,206,796 1,269,934
297,625
316,708
419,009
891,685. June.
898,357 1,167,544 1,258,284
276,681
378,436 (508,000
353,738. .July...
880,324 1,091,466 1,167,155
297,612
341,885 Jk440,300
5QJ,666? Aug.. 1,063,236 1,251,940 1,032,813 f444,024
668,380 * 480,900
501,258. .Sept.. 1,451,284 1,518,483 1,821,139 g'566,403 £558,386 ,2579,000
463,108. .Oct.... 1,641,056 1,570,066 1,414,231 §699,548 S591,209 1581,000

658 782

-

1868.

.

7,817,620

727,809 i

1867

-Lake Shore A Mich. South.-

(708 m.)
$681,656

901,630
685,400
681,040

7,16(^991

-Chicago A Northwestern-v-Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific -

1869.

335,510
342,357 f 384,564
354,244 A404.012
415,982 g 558,100
®
408,999
486,196
426,752 £2603.745
359,103 | 409,568
330,169 1361,700

3,892,361

Illinois Central.-

(708 m.) (708 m.)
$647,119
$587,442
524,871 j 636,165
417,071
444,443
440,271
518,800
477,007 1 672,551
616,494 j ■ 626,248
625,242 J 649,714
709,826 * 763,779
788,580 ! 889,966

1868.

(280 m.)
$243,787
-157,832
285,961
282,165

1869.

<1053 m.)

(521m.) (521m.)
$278,712
265,186

257,799
286,825
260,529
293 844

Jan....
266 187;. Feb....

$284,192

F 852,704..mar....

311,639. .April..

312.529..may...

268J 83
484.208

348,800—June..
810.800.. Jaiy. .V
450,246 .An*....

450.208

470.720.. Sept....

807,948

429,893
833J79
899,488

5,768,820

4,013,90a

422.888..0.t....
laffOV..
..Dec.....
.

......

.-...

Tear• it

591,420
706,002
623,659

617,585

755,084
878.617

December

721

CHRONICLE.

THE

4,1869.]

BAILBOAD, CANAL, AND;MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
labseriberf will confer • great flavor by giflotf ns immediate notice of any error discovered in
.

v^panies.

COMPANIES.
a

ceding page.

50 2/241,250 Jan. &
Allegheny Valiev .
...100 3.691.200
Atlantic and Gulf. .......
2,494,900 Jan. &
Atlan. & St. Lawrence* (w.
1.282.200 Jan. A
Atlanta and West Point. Sept.
733,700 Jan. A
....

•.
’

100
100
100

and Ohio
Washington Branch*
Parkersburg Branch

50
2
4

50

jjostonand*Albany;!:!!!!!7!!!!! 100 14,9341100
Boston, Con. A Montreal .pref. .100
’800,000

Quarterly. Oct*.,**’69
July,

100 18,989,800
’69
500 2,169,000 Jan. A July. July, ’69
Jan.
July
100 4,550,000 Jan. A July. July, ’69
July,
100 8,360,000 JuneA Dec June, ’69
A
950,000
Buffalo, New York and Erie*.. .100
Burlington and Missouri River .100 1,235,000
do
do
pref. 100 380,000 Feb. A Ang. Feb., ’69
Camden and Amboy
100 5,000,000
Camden and Atlantic
50 877,100
do
731,200
do preferred.. 50
July, ’69
60 801,906 Jan. A July.
Cape Cod
Catawissa*
50 1,159,500 May A Nov Nov., ’69
do
50 2,200,000
preferred
Cedar Raplde and Missouri* —100 5,432,000
May A Nov. May,’ *’69
do
do pref
June A Dec. June, ’69
Central Georgia & Banking Co.. 100 4,666,800 Jan.
100 15,000,000 JuneA July. Jan., ’69
Central of New Jersey
Dec.,
Central Ohio
50 2,500,000 June A Dec. June, ’68
’09
do
t
^referred.
50
500,000 Jan. A Dec. July, ’69
Cheshire, preferred
100 2,085,925 Mar. A July. Sept.,’69
A Sept.
Chicago and Alton. Mar.27.... 100 5,141,800 Mar. A Sept Sept.,’69
do*
do preferred—100 2,425,400 Mar- A
Sept. Sept., ’69
Chic., Burling. A.Quincy. Aug. 7.100 18,825,0B>
Chicago and Great Eastern
100 4,890,000 Jan. A July. July,' ’’69
Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*..100 1,000,000
Chicago and Milwaukee*
100 2,227,000 June A Dec. Dec., 9
Chicago and Northwest. Aug. 21.100 14,590,161 June A Dec. Dec., >
do
'
do
pref....100 18,159,097
9
Chic., Rock Is. A Pac. June 12. .100 14,000,000 April A Oct. ^ct.,
)
April A Oct. Oct.,
-

2,400,000

Delaware*
50 891,206 Jan. A July.
Delaware, Lackaw. A Western . 50 14,100,600 Jan. A July.
452,350
Detroit and Milwaukee. June 27.100
do
do
pref.... 50 2,095,000
2,142,250 Jan. A July.
Dubuque and Sioux City*
100
do
do
pref... 100 1,988,170 Jan. A July.
Eastern (Mass.)
100 3,883,300 Jan. A July.
East Tenn. Georgia, Oct. 9
100 1/290,067
East Tennessee and Virginia... .100 1,902,000
May A
Elmira and Williamsport*
50 500,000 Jan. A Nov
July
500,000
do
pref.. 50
do
Erie. April 17
100 70,000,000 Feb. A Aug

100 8.536.900
50

100

Georgia. May 29

1

962,990

3*

Huntingdon and Broad Top*— 50
do
do pref. 50
Illinois Central. Mar. 27
100
Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette.. 50
Jeffersonville, Mad. & In..Oct 30100
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50
Lake Sho.A Mich, South. Apl. 21.100
do

do

5
4

,

Long Island

-

,,

„

-

....

•

115*

•

•

80

.

58

58
....

108*
5
4

Sept.

•

50 1,983,563
25 8/229,594

50 1,633,350
.....100 15,000,000
100 4,999,400
Lehigh Coal and Navigation— 50 8,739,800
728,100
MonongahelaNavigation Co.... 50
Morris (consolidated)
100 1,025,000
1,175,000
do
preferred
100 4,300,000
Pennsylvania
50
Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,908,207
do
50 2,888,977
pref.
Susquehanna A Tide-Water
50 2,002,746
Union, preferred
50 2,907,850
West Branch and Susquehanna. 50 1,100,000
Miscellaneous.
Coal.—American
25 1,500,000
Ashburton
50 2,500,000
500,000
Butler
25
Delaware Division*
Delaware and Hudson
Delaware and Raritan

240

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill
Wilkesbarre

Jersey City and

100

Williamsburg

50

....

98
60

71*
....

....

8
3
120

5

....

t|t

.

*

-

*

-

3
120
5
120*
14*.
68* 68*
7 A 10s 83* 83*
4
106* 107
....

....

....

"4

Aug., ’69
July, ’69

"i* lib" 115"

3* 87* 87*
5

....

4
3
5
4
4

•

•.

•

*

•

•

•

•

'•

•

•

•

....

104

«

9

r

....

r

^ *

13*

.

5
,3
4-

.

....

8*

*2

ii"

74

5s.

76

% l§*
104
25*

86
12
24

87*
8

gold

• •

•

•

5

*69

3*

Oct., ’69

....

July, ’69

34"
8*

Feb., ’69

•

•

.

•

ST

May,’ ’69

54

July, ’69
Aug., ’69
July, ’69

90’: l66**

57

V.'&

July,' ’’69
ll-fis

Jan., 70

0 a 0 •

54*

8* 72

May, *69
July, ’69
Dec., ’69
Jan.,

55*
75

4

97** 98* *

2

56*

57

83

84*

*8*
4

76* 76*

’69
’69

’69
*67

do

90
26
to

*69 lb®’.*
*

Feb. A

Trust, certif.

io"

6

ii"
29
20

Jan. A July. Jan., ’65
42

3

Mar. A Sept. Max.,

June A Dec. Dec., ’68 60cts.
Jan. A July. July, ’69

24* 25*

230
43

145
160

240

May,
July,

2,824,000 Jan. A duly.

240

149

52* 55
13* 15
8*

July, ’66
2

35“

V*

72
56
36
49
18

In

Sept., ’69

P
80

86*
49*
18*
27

1*

Dec-, ’67

50 %

50*

5

July, ’69
July, ’69
A ug., ’69
July, ’69
July, ’69

4
10

300

4

5
8

15*

100 10,000,000

60* ’

60*

Nov.,’69
Aug., ’66
Aug., ’69
July, ’69
Aug., ’69
July, ’69
July, ’69

100 8,698.400
..

92
80
61

24
12

*6*

Aug. Feb., ’67

121

67" 68"

100 2,886,600

Quicksilver. Apl. 27

N. Y. &

120

5

....

Mining.—Mariposa Gold
Mariposa Gold, pref
do

88~ 89~

4
5
5
3

Feb. A Aug. Feb., ’67

Wells, Fargo & Co
100 10,000,000
Steamship— Atlantic Mail
100 4,000,000 Quarterly.
Pacific Mail
100 20,000,000 Quarterly.
Trust.—Farmers’ Loan A Trust. 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July.
National Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. A July.
New York Life and Trust.. .100 1,000,000 Feb. A Aug.
Union Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. A July.
100 1,500,000 Jan. A July.
United States Trust

40

15*
45

gold 13*

j

Feb., ’65

BROOKLYN CITY PASSENGER RAILROADS.
A Auctioneer, 48 Pine Street

Quotations by A. H. Nicolay, Stock Broker
PAR

STOCK.

Fulton Ferry. 100

LAST DIVIDENDS

PAID.

900,000

100 200,000
100 2,100,000
100 1,500/»0
100 400,000
254.600

100
Brooklyn and Rockaway Beach... 100

53

196

January, 1870

100 1,000,000
Forty-second St. A Grand St. Ferry 100 748,000
Grand Street A Newtown (B’klyri) 100 170,OOO
Ninth Avenue

Van Brunt Street

80*

8*

85

80*

45
65
90

165

Nov. ’69, •emi-an’l..

180

5* 106
70

80

tflflfl

100 106,700

(Brooklyn)

Metropolitan (Brooklyn)
Second Avenue
SixthAvenue"

60*'
205

144.600

100 262/200
Rivers 100 1,066/200
100 500,000
Dry Dock, East B’dway A Battery 100 1/200,000

Hudson Avenue

BID. ASK

~4<r ~45~

Bushwlck (Brooklyn)
Central Park, North A East
Coney Island (Brooklyn)

25* Third Avenue
70

June, ’69

Aug.,
Aug.,
Aug.,
May A Nov. May,
Jan. A July. July,
Feb. A Aug.
Feb. A Aug. Feb.,

86* 87* Eighth Avenue

2

118

141*
104* 105
141

8

100 6,000,000 Quarterly. Nov., ’69

Bleecker street and

89

r

’69
*89
TO

Telegraph—West.Union. Sep.25.100 41,063,100 Jan. A July. July, ’69
2?> 8.000 COO Quarterly. July. ’69
100 10,000,000 Quarterly. April,*68
Express.—Adams
Jan., ’70
Amer. Merchants’ Union.... 100 18,000,000

NAME OF ROAD.

121

««<•

6
4

»* 99”
117
32
11

Pacific A Atlantic

....

....

56*

22

Oct.,
July,
June,
July,

Feb. A Aug.
Feb. A Aug.
Feb. A Ang.

4,000,000

II

76* 78* Broadway (Brooklyn)
Broadway and Seventh Avenue ..
133
132
Brooklyn City
Brooklyn City and Newtown
140
Brooklyn, Prospect Park A Flatb.
135

~3

.

Power

-

88*

3*

Feh.. ’69

Boston Water

....

70

65

4
4
4
5

July, ’69
July, ’68
Pec., ’69
Nov., V

•

.

16

United States

20* 21

3s.

50

New York

Improvement— C anton

June A Dec

3,400,000 May A Nov,
1,250,000 Feb. A Aug.
2,000,000 Feb. A Aug.
1,200,000 Jan. A July.
1,000,000 Feb. A Aug.
386,000 Jan. A July.
4,000,000 Jan. A July.
2,800,000
1,000,000 May A Nov.
750,000 Jan. A July.
781,250

Brunswick City
Cary Improvement

97
59

71

a?'.'

’69

50

Metropolitan

(.

2

’69
’69
*69

50

Hoboken... 20

Manhattan

....

3
4

’69

20

....

Dec., ’67
July, ’69
May. ’69

Aug.,
July,
July,
July,
July,

25

....

2

5s.
5
5
4

Aug., ’69
Oct., ’69
July, ’69

204
107

July. July, ’69

1,000,000

10
100
100

■;

Gas —Brooklyn
Citizens (Brooklyn)
Harlem

85* 86

4*

Jan. A

56

Quarterly. Aug., ’69
50 8/200,000 Jan. A
July. Jan., ’69
50 1,250,000

Wyoming Valley..

....

106*
2* 106
9-5
3* 97
4* 85* 86*

..

100 2,000,000
100 5,000,000

Central
Cumberland

.

25
66

5

Sept.,’66

Jan., ’69
Jan., ’69
July, ’69

•

8
14

23
65

4
5

Sept., ’66

June, ’69
July, ’69

.

•

•

•

132*

5
4
5

Nov. ",’69

.

4
10

3*

100 2.363.700 Jan. A July.. Jply, ’*9

Mar.&!...‘foo

•

130*

5
4

Ogdensburg.A J*. Champ. Bep,4.100 8,049,100 Annually.
1.994.900 April A Oct. Ct., ’49
Ohio and Mississippi.
19/522,900
do
pref.
100 8.844.400 Juno A Dec. [Dec. ’(A
Oil Creek and Allegheny River.150 4*259*450 Quarterly, (vat ’•SI




•

7*

898,980
155,000 May A Nov.

50 3,150,000

•

27* 27*
45
46*

4

Feb. A Aug. Aug*.,*’69
996,000 Mar. A Sept. Sept.,’68
Oct., ’69
45,0 0,000

..100 7,700,000

iT“

....

3*

1

6,250,000

21,491,450
22,829,000
6/500,000 Jan. A July.
Jan.
do
50 1,500,000 Jan. A July.
do pref.
A July.
New York and New Haven..... .100 9,000,000
New York, Prev. and Boston . ..100 2,000,000 Jan. A July.
800/500
Norfolk and Petersburg, pref.. .100
137/500 Jan. A July.
do
do
guar, .100
North Carolina. Oct. 2...
100 4,000,000
Northern of New Hampshire.... 100 3,068,400 June A Dec.
Northern Central. May 10
50 4.798.900 Quarterly.
do8p.c.,pref..

105*

”2* 60"

i

Jan. A
Jan. A

gemphis and Charleston. Sep. 25.25

North Pennsylvania
Norwich ana Worcester *

....

....

1,335,000
35,000,000 Feb. A Aug.

..

do

•

4

1,463,775

..

106*

*4*

Jan., ’69
July, ’69

■

100 1,550,000

Chesapeake and Delaware
Chesapeake and Ohio

.

23

...

1,700,000
1,000,000
9,387,000
1,000,000 May A Nov.
1,497,700 Jan. A July.
2/250,000 June A Dec.
2,860,000 Jan. A July.
2,941,791

Cameron

100 1.611.500
Marietta & Cin., 1st prf. Aug. 21. 50 8,130,719 Mar. A Sept.
do
do
2d pref.. 50 4,460,368 Mar. A Sept.
2,029,778
do
do
common
Manchester and Lawrence
100 1,000,000 May A Nov
5,312,725 June A Dec.
ichlgan Central. July 24
100 11,197,348 Jan. A July.
Milwaukee and St. Paul. May 29.100 7,151,069 Jan. A July.
do
do
pref ...100 8,188/272 January.
Mine Hill A Schuylkill I&ven*. 50 3,775,600 Jan. A July.
Mississippi Central*,,,.
100 2,918,785
Mobi e A vi ontg. pref. Aug. 14.. .. 1.788.700
Mobile and Ohio
100 4/269,820
Montgomery and West Point.. .100 1,644,104 June A Dec.
Morris and Essex*
50 4,823/500 Jan. A July.
720,000 May A Nov.
Nashua and Cowell
100
Nashv. & Chattanooga. Sep. U..100 2,056/544
100 1.818.900 Feb. A Ang.
Naugatdck. Mar. 20
500,000 Jan. A July.
100
NewBedford and Taunton
New Haven A Northampton ... .100 1,500,000 Jan. A July.

North Missouri

.

105* 106*

Maine Central

..

•

•

105

3*

1

Nov.,
July,
Feb.,
Dec.,

1,988,150 Jan. A July.
2/TOO, 000

100

5

Aug. Aug., ’69

1,314,130

100
100
.100

200

Canal.

3* 108* 110*

July,
July,
July,

July.
848,315
Loufev., Cin. A Lex., prf. Sep. 11.100
July.
50 1,621736
do
common
Louisville and Nashville
100 8.681.500 Feb. A Ang
Louisville, New Alb. A Chicago.100 2,800,000
Macon and Western
100 2,000,000 June & Dec. June, ’69

Northeast. (S.Carolina). Mayi.

Worcester and Nashua

89

io'

533,500 Feb. A Aug. Feb.,
50 8.739.800 May A Nov. May,
Quarterly. Oct.,
50 16,058,150 June A Dec. June,
50 3.572.400
2,646,100 Jan. A July. July, ’69

New Jersey
100
100
New London Northern
N. Y. central A Hudson River.. 100
do
do
certificates. .100
do
do old inter, certif. J00
New York and Harlem. Apl. 8.. 50

Wilmington and Weldon

.

130

....

21

494,380
190,750 Jan. A July.
25,277/270 Feb. A Aug
6,185,897 Mar. A Sept
2,000,000 Jan. A July Jan.,

50
50 3,000,000

•

....

•••

.

•

7s

,,,,

3
5

July,

guar.100

Lehigh and Susquehanna
Lehigh Valley

Little Miami
;
Little Schuylkill*

22
•

A

55" 56*’
6

’69
Nov., *69

555/500 Jan. A July. July,* ’69
do
pref..... 100
(N. Carolina)
100 2/227,000 Jan. A July. Jan., ’64
Wilmington and Manchester... .100 1,147,018
do
Western

84*

88

8

1
1

100 14,367,950
100 17,894,695
100 1,822,000

Grand Trunk (Can.)
Great Western (Can.)
Hannibal and St. Joseph

do
pref....100 5,078,000
Hartford * N.Haven, Oct.23...100 8,300,000 Quarterly.
Housatonic, preferred—•
100 2,000,000

j

•

Jan. &

do

f

)
1

Virginia and Tennessee

«...

....

83

2* 21*
3*
75*
5
3*

7
)
1

July
4,156,000 Jan. A July

100 3,540,000

Fitchburg

Utica and Black River
Vermont and Canada*
Vermont and Massachusetts...

....

....

15s.

)

50 1.316.900 April A Oct.

do preferred
Erie and Pittsburg

.”77!

**3* 74~ 75~

)

100

100

3

May A Nov. Nov., ’69

Columbus, Chic. & Ind. CentralMOO
Columbus and Xenia*.
50 1.786.800 Dec. A June
Concord
- •?
50 1,500,000 May A Nov.
Concord and Portsmouth
100 350,000 Jan. A July. Aug.,
Feb. A Aug.
Connecticut & Passumpsic, pref.100 2,084,200
1,700,000 Jan. A July. July,

Aug.’
Oct*.;

3,939,900 Feb.

..

s«* 97

July, *69

Feb. A Aug.

50 5,819,275
100 1,365,600

South Carolina
South Side (P. A L.)
South West. Georgia.*

Sep. 11.100
Syracuse, Bingli’ton A N. York.100
Terre Haute and Indianapolis
50
73 * 73* Toledo, Peoria A Warsaw
4
100
do
do 1st pref.100
5
do
38* 88*
do
do
do 2d pref.100
3* 107* 107*
78
77
5-8.
100
Toledo, Wabash & Western
do
do
do pref.100

"S'

May A Nov.
Quarterly.
11,100,000 Quarterly. Oct.,

Michigan*

145
149* 152

145

5
5

""""

Feb. A Aug.

Jan. A July

l*

... ^

Connecticut River
Cumberland Valley

ei

.100 4,943,420
100 2,063,656
50 482,400
100 3,5-69,00< ■

...

lx

’69
May A Nov. Nov.,’69

Boston, Hartford and Erie
Boston and Lowell
Boston and Maine. Sept. 18
Boston and Providence

Dayton and

Bid. Ask

Rate

Date.

Panama..
100 7,000,000 Quarterly.
3*
Pennsylvania. Mar. 6
50 38,840,762 May A Nov.
4
123
123* Philadelphia and Erie*
50 6,004/200 Jan. A July.
2,400,000 Jan. A July.
5
do
do pref
46
Philadelphia and Read. Feb. 27. 50 26/280,350 Jan. A July.
100 11,099,120 Feb. A Aug.
Philadelphia and Trenton*
l4i j Philadel., Germant. ANorrist’n* 50 1/587,700 April A Oct.
3
Philadel., Wilming. A Baltimore 50 9,084,800 Jan. A July.
9* io* Pittsburg and Connellsville
50 1,793,926
’4* 131*
Pittsburg, Cincin. A St. Louis... 50 2,423,000
5
do
do
do
pref. 50 8,000.0 0
142*
134
5
Pitts., Ft.W. A C. guar*. Aug. 21.100 19,665,000 Quarterly.
581.100 Jan. A July.
Portland and Kennebec (new)..100
3*
Portland, Saco & Ports. Sep. 18.100 1,500,000 June A Dec.
Providence and Worcester
100 1,900,000 Jan. A July.
Raritan and Delaware Bay*
119* 120
100 2,530,700
Rensselaer and Saratoga con .. .100 8,000,000 April A Oct.
Richmond and Danville
100 4,000,000
847.100
Richmond and Petersburg
100
30
28
Rome, Watert. A Ogdensburg . .100 2,500,000 Jan. A July.
71
70
Rutland
..........100
Feb. A Aug.
do
preferred
.100
St. Louis, Alton A Terre Haute. 100 2,300,000
3*
do
5
do
do pref.100 2,040,000 Annually.
88* S9
St. Louis, Jacksonv. A Chicago*.100 1,469,429
901,341
59* Sandusky, Mansfield A Newark.100
8
Schuylkill Valley*
50 676,050 Jan. A July.
869,450 Feb. A Aug.
84
Shamokin Valley A Pottsville* . 50
2
5
145* 146* Shore Line Railway.
.....100 635,200 Jan. A July.

Jan. & July

Cincinnati, xr—3,500,000
Hamilton & Dayton.100
382,600
Cincinnati, Richm. A Chicago* .100
Cincinnati, Sand. & Cleveland.. 50 2,989,090
do
do
do pref. 50 893,073
50 1,676,345
Cincinnati and Zanesville
Clev., Col., Cin. & Ind. May 15. .100 10,460,900
Cleveland and Mahoning* ...... 50 2,056/750
Cleveland andPittspurg. Mar 27 50 6,852,591

52

59*

July.

July. July, ’69
July. July, ’69
July. July, ’69
18,151,962 April & Oct. Oct., ’69
1,650,000 April & Oct. Oct., ’69

18.100

Savannah*

Augusta and

Last paid.

Periods.

ing.

PAR

Colony and Newport
Orange and Alexandria
Oswego and Syracuse
Pacific (of Mi souri)
Old

PAR

Railroads.

Baltimore

Out¬
stand¬

see

PRICE.

DIVIDEND.

Stock

full explanation of this table,
Railway Monitor, on the pre¬
ceding page.

For

FoTafull explanation of this table,
aee Railway Monitor, on tbe pre¬

our Tables*

—

-

(Brooklyn)....

100
100
100
100

194,000

100

75,000

797,820
April. *61. Quarterly
881,700 Nov.’69, flemi-au 1..
750,000 Nov.
*60, quarterly.
100 1,170,000
i«.......

67
120
190

73

THE

722

CHRONICLE.

[December 4, 1869.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
great favor by giving us immediate notice of any error discovered in
Pages 1 and 2 of Ronds will be published next week.

a

COMPANIES, AND CHaR *0Oat-

For a full explanation of this
Table see “ Railroad Monitor”
on a preceding page.

j
—

6

J. & D. N. London
A.&O. New York

800,000

7

J. & J.

8
8

A.&O. New York
a
J. & J.

1889
1887

6

M.&
F.&
M.&
M.&
F.&
•J. &

N. New York
A.
it
N.
N.
it
A.
il
D.

18S8
1876
1883
1883
1876
1887

7
6

162,000

’68):j

6

195,000
2,900.000

7

44

il

7

Mortgage of 1853

1890

New York

7
6

M.& N. New Yorki 1873
44
F. & A.
1893

6

A.&O. New York

7

J. & Ja

250,000 i
100,00(i i

6
7

250,000 ;

6

i-

1st

I
i

Extension
New Bonds

Norfolk <fc Petersburg (Oct. 1, ’68):!
1st Mortgage
!
1st Mortgage
j
Funding Mortgage
i

00

85*
85*
98

87* 88

489,(00 i

!

7

1894

7

!

13)9
J. & J. New York
it
•T. & J.
t i
J. & J.

8
8

1877
1877
1872

North, Carolina (Sept, ’69>:

Mortgage Bonds (various)
Bonds

uue >n

i

!

1867

!

i

Northeastern (March 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Funded Interest (certificates)

;

I

.|

North Missouri (Jan. 1, !69):

700,000 !
115,000
228,056 1i
i

Mortgage of 1865
i 6,000,000!!
2d Mortgage of 1363
i 4,000,000;
3 » '-orttage f r $5,000,0'0
!j
301),to I
North Pennsylvania (Nov. 1, ’68;:;
1st Mortgage
ii 2,590,000
Chattel Mortgage
360,000
!
2d Mortgage
’
276.500
Funding Scrip
i
327,339
1st

*

!
!

Northern Central (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (Baltimore guar.) ..

i

2d Mortgage (sinking fund)..
i
3d Mortgage (sinking fund).... i
1st Mortgage (Y. & (J. RR.)
!
2d Mortgage (Y. & C. RR.)
3d Mortgage (Y. & C. RR
i

1,500.000 j
1,8C'

M.& N.
M.&S.

8
8

Shops N.C.

’72 ’78
1867

7
7
7

M.& S. Charlest’n
44
M.& S.
44
J. & J.

1369
1868
1875

„

(

J. & J. New York

7

A. & O.
A.&O

18951888
1888

7

J. & J.
A. & O.

6
10

44

Sew Yor.»

Philadel.

1880
1887

44

“

7

....

1

“

*

....

Consolidated Mortgage

Funded Interest
Portland dk Bochester
let Mortgage

Hi <
84 *

44

952,000

Company Bonds of 1854

120,600

6

A.&O.

1st

400,000

7

1st

J.& J. New York:

400,000

6
7
7

J.& J.
J. & J.
F.& A.

Consolidated Mortgage, gold
Northern, N. H. (Apr. 1, ’69):

..

Northern New Jersey (Oct. 1, ’68):

Mortgage (guaranteed)

Norwich £ Worcester (Dec. 1. ’68):
1st Mort. (Mass, loan) s’k’gfund
Construction Bonds
Steamboat Mortgage
Ogdensb. <b\L. Cham. (S ov. 1, ’69):

Equipment Bonds (tax free)....
(July 15, ’69):
1st Mortgage (E. Div.)
1st Mortgage (W. Div.)
2d Mortgage (W. Div.)
Income Mortgage (W. Div.)
Consol. Mort. for $6,000,000
Consol. Mort. sterling
Oil Creek dk Allegh. P. (Nov.1/68):
1st Mortgage
Old Colony £ Newport (Dec.1,’63;:
Company Bonds
Company Bonds

{

II

.

25,(XX)
500,000

121.500
1

1

Ohio £ Mississippi

...

Company Bonds

Orange,

2.050,000
850,OOO
516.000

221,500
1,780,000
101,861
1

3,170,000

Income

i
7

....

6
8

8
7
6

200,000 10

Boston.

Boston.
<4

it

’70-*79

Philadel.

1872
1872
1874
1882
1898
1898

Boston.

M & N.
J. & J.
M.& N.
M.& S.
J.& J.
J. & J.

New York

“

“

j

65
92

18..
1877
1875
1876

....

93*

82" 33"
79

80

....

94"

-

44

Richmond
Alexand’a
New York
r«

J. & J. New York

1873
1875
1873
1880
1882

M.& N. New York ’70-’80
44
M.& N.
1885

1916
1891

F.& A. New York
44
J. & J.

18S8
1880

7
7
7

A. & O.
A. & O.
F. & A.

1870

7

....

(Jan. 1, ’69):

1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Paterson dk Ramapo (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Pemberton dk Hightst'n (Jan.1,’69):

44

44

....

New York

6

Mortgage, endorsed

....

New York

6
6

6
6

.

5

6

Richm., Fr. dk Potomac (Oct.1,’67):

J. & J.
A. & O.
A.& O.

Philadel

Q.-J-

London.
Philadel.

A. & O

Harrisb’ig

1880
1875
1875
1910
1890

Q’t’ly.

Philadel.

98* 100
95*

’69-’71

94

’68):

Rock/.. R. I. dk St. Louis (Jan.1’69):
1st Mort- (gold) convert, free ..
Rock Isl. dk Peoria (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
Rome, Wat. & Ogdensb. (Jan.1,’69):
Sink. F’d Mort. (Wat. & Rome).
Guaranteed (Pots. & Watert’n)
Sink. Fund Mort. (general) —
Rutland dk Burlington (Jan.1,’69):
1st M. (conv. into Rut. pref. st’k)
2d M. (conv. into Rut. com. st’k)
Sacramento Valley (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage (gold)

Mortgage (gold)

St.L.,Vand. £ T.Haute (Jan. 1/69):
1st M. 6kg fd (guar.) for $1,900,000
2d M. skg fd (guar.) for $2,600,000

Philadel.

>

Mort., sterling
lst'Mort., West, l’e, for $6,000,000
2d M.,W. line (land) for$,3000,000
St. Paul dk Sioux City (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. for $16,000 per mile

18..

J. & J. New York

2d Mortgage
1st Mortgage (Tallahasse RR.).
Peoria dk Bureau Val. (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed

8
7
8

Peoria Pek.dk JacksonvJJ&n.l,’69):

Mortgage

7

lerkiomen (Nov. 1, ’68):
lsr Mortgage
Perth Amboy dk WoodbJJan. 1/69):

6

1st

6

it

#

f

t

t

1

1

Funded Coupons
Savannah dt Charleston

J. & J. New York

....

1st

Philadel.

1st

7

A.&O.
A. & O.

6

A.&O.
J. & J.

7

1st

it
44

it

A.&O.
J. & J.
J. & J.
J. & J.
J. & J.
J. & J.
A.& O.
A. & O.

Philadel.

885,000
1,000,000
945,000

6
6
6

J. & J.
A.&O.

Philadel.

A.&O.

6,208.000
3,000 OOP
775,000

7
6
7

F.& A.

7
6
6

J. & J. Baltimore.

1,000,000
400,000

Mortgage

1877
1881
1901

1885

93

2d
3d

....

....

44

44

London.
44

1870
1871
1880
1886
1880

Bid.
98
....

89~

97
90

....

’72-*77 LOO
Philadel. 1893
44

«...
....

1893

44

1884

’Tl-’Te
1887

44

Philadel.
....

....

44
J & J.
F.& A. New York
.

1900
«

-T

»

•

88
•

91
•

•••

83
70

••»

85
71

....

1898
1886
1889

88

60

75

76

1912
1912
1912
1912
1912
1912
1812
1812
1912
1912
1912
1912
1912
1876
1874

100
HO
100
100
100
100

100
IOO
ltd
IOO
1«0
10 >
93
96.
93
03
93
9!
90

J. & J. New York
44
F.& A.
41
M. & S.
44
A. & O.
44
M.& N.
44
J. & D.
44
J. & J.

2,000,000
153,000
500,000

7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
8

....

....

225,000
525,000

10
10

J.&'J. San Franc.
44
J. & J.

1894
1894

....

....

New York

18..

....

Boston.
Boston.
Boston.

1883
1895
1873

Portland.

18..

875,000
875,(XX)
875,000
875,000
875,000
875,000
860,000
860,000
860,000
860,000
860,000
860,000

7

^

F. & A.

M. & s.
A. & O.
M.& N.
J. & D.
A. & O.
M.& N.
M.& S.

....

a.&:o.

44
44
44
44
41
44

44

229,200
300,000
91,871

6
6
6

350,000

6

100,000
50,000

8
8

M.& S. Provid’ce.
44
J. & D.

1,000,000
250,000
296,000

7
7
7

M. & S. New York
44
M.& S.
41
M. & S.

1888
1888
1876

650,000
350,000

7
7

M.& S.
J. & D.

150,000

500,000

7
7
7
7

J. & J. New York 1873
4 4r
J. & J.
$ OO
44
M. & S.
1886
44
M.& N.
1890

600,000
161,600
1,298,000
408.500
160,000

6
6
6
6
6

J. &
J. &
M.&
M.&
F.&

92X
92
92 \

92V
88

j

1871
1877

A. & O.

A.&O.
....

....;
i

-

-

r

.1
....

....

....

'

450,000
400,000

Philadel.
44

J. New York
44
J.
44
N.
N. Richmond
44
A.

1882
1884

’87-*88
’75-’76
’75-’90
’75-’9Q

....

....

....

ftf.'
•

“

*

.

*

.

.

.

....

....

....

...

....

6

172,800

7

J. & J. London.
J. & J. Richmond

13,500
180.500
175,000

6
7
8

J. & J. New Yo’-k
J. & D. N. Y. & B.
M.& S. Philadel.

....

9,000,000

7

F.& A. N.Y.orLon

1919

....

....

....

....

....

*««•

....

«•••

....

....

7

....

New York

1875
1870

....

7
7
7 *

M.& S. New York 1880
44
J. & D.
’69-’74
44
J. & D.
1891

7
7

F. * A.
F. & A.

Boston.
“

1868
1863

10
10

J. & J. New York
F.& A. Sacram’to

1875
1881

10
10
7

M.& S.
M. & S.

<4

44
....

1893

1882

•

....

....

• •• •

....

....

,,

1MI

....

....

1893

Boston.

• •

•

•

•

•

•

....

....

....

....

....

....

1

780,000

1

1894
1894

92* 92*
9 <* 92*

1894
1894

77

F.& A. New York

1892

80

81

A.&O. New York
44
J. & J.

1894

80

....

6

M.& N. New York

1893

7
7

1

1899

7
7

1,000,000

F.& A. N.Y.orL’n
J. & J. New York
44
A.&O.

7

4,000,000

8
7
7
7
7
7

1,500,000

J. & J. New York
41
J. & J.

1897
18..

8
7
7
7
7

M.& S. New York
44
J. & J.

1892
1892
1892
18..

F.& A.
M.& N.

44

M.& N.

it

J.& D.
J. & J.
J. & J.
....

it

44
44

London.

1894

1898

.

77
....

....

....

....

....

....

•

.. •

....

•

•

•

•••

....

•

•

1

•

fc

«

*

•

•

18..

New York

7i*

....

....

....

....

44

7

J. & J. New York

1896

7
7

J. * J. New York

1875

J. & J. Sew York

1889

7

100,000

J. & J.

Philadel.

1873

New York

1880
1870

J. & J.

M

1875

...

....

•

V

....

....

•

•

* •

:

.

....

....

(Jan. 1, ’69):
7
7

3d Mortgage
Selma dk Meridian (Apr. 1, ’68):

Philadel.

6

Mortgage.

Seaboard £ Roanoke

New York

J. & J.

6
6
6
6
5
7
6
7

Schuylkill dk Sustueh. (Nov. 1/68)
1st Mortgage

Philadel.

7

1

Sandusky,M.dbNew'rk (Julyl,*69)
1st Mortgage

J. & J. New York

PRICE.

Prim paya

rr

..

44
....

...

paid.

St.Paul dk F*ic.,lBtDiv.(Apr.l,’69)
1st Mort. (10m.) tax free....
1st Mort. (St. P.to Watab,80m.)
2d Mort. (land grant)
General Mort., Tor $2,020,000..
General

2,697,0001

«

67,778

Sterling Bonds

Convertible Bonds
Richm. dk Petersburg (Oct. 1,
1st Mort., convertible
2d Mort., coupon and reg
3d Mort. of 1865. coupon

1st

Pennsylvania (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

1875
1872

New York

7

Where

paid.

,

7

London.

2d Mortgage.,
1st Mort. (Sara. & Whitehall)..
1st Mort, (Troy, Salem & Rutl’d)
Richmond dk Danville (Oct. 1, ’68):
State Sinking Fund Loan
Bond guaranteed by State
Consol. Mortgage, coupon
Consol. Mortgage, reg
Roanoke Valley RR. Bonds —

2d Mortgage (gold)
St. Joseph dt, C. Bluffs (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (80 m. in Mo.)
1st Mort. (52 m. in Iowa)
2d Mort. (52 m. in Iowa)
St. Joseph dk Denv<r City :
1st Mortgage (gold)ltax free...
St. L.. Alt. dt T. Haute (July 1, *69):
1st Mort. (series A) sink, fund
1st Mort. (series B) sink, fund.,
2d Mort. (series C)
2d Mort. (series D)
2d Mort. (income)
St. Louis dk Iron Mt. (July 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
St. L.j Jacks, dk Chic. (Jan. 1, ’69).
1st Mort. (guar.) $15,000 per m.7
2d Mort. (guar.) $5,000 per mile.
St. Louis dk St. Joseph (Apr. 1, ’69):

1888

M.& N. New York
4#
F. & A.

6

1st Mortgage, sterling
1st Mortgage, sterling
2d Mortgage, sterling

Mortgage, guaranteed
Philadel. £Bcdt. Cent. (Nov.1,’68):
1st Mortgage ...
Philadelphia dk Erie (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mort. (Sunbury & Erie RK.)
1st General Mortgage
2d General Mortgage
Sd General Mortgage

100

Mortgage

2d Mortgage
Baritan dk Bela. Bay (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund.,
2d Mortgage

Equipment, convertible
Beading dk Columbia (Nov. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
:0i* Rensselaer £ Saratoga (Oct.1,’69):
1st Mortgage

1877 1
1877
1870

44

7
7

(Penn. RR.)
(renn. RR.)
2d Mort. (Penn. RR.), sterling
General Mort. (Phil, to Pittsb.).
State works purchase
Short Bond.; (debentures)
Pennsylvania dk N. Y. (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Pensacola dk Georgia (Apr. 1, ’67):
1st Mortgage

84

1874

7
6

Pacific of Missouri (Mar. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage (gold)
Mortgage Construction Bonds.
Panama (Jan. 1, ’69):




44

1900
1870
1871
1877
1900

-

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

1st

!

“

F.& A.
A. & O.
M. & S.

6

Oswego dt Syracuse (Oct. 1, ’68):

1st

f

6

Mortgage

Paterson dk Newark

“

44

6

Alex.dkManas.(Oct.l,'6&):

87V

“

J.& J. New York
J. & J.
ll
J. & J.
il
A. & O.
44
J. & J.
44
J. & J.

7

1st Mort. (O. & A. RR.)
2d Mort. extension (O. & A.)...
3d Mort. extension (O. & A.)...
4th Mort. extension (O. & A.)...
1st Mort. (O., A. & M. RR)
Va. State Loan (34 y’rs) s’k’g Fd

Oswego dkRome (Oct. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed

J. & J.

7
7
7
7
7
7

.•.

Osage Valley (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage (5-20 years)

8

J.
O.
N.
J.
J.
J.

(Jan. 1, ’69):

Pt'ov., War. dk Bristol (Dec. 1, ’68):

87

Q.-J- Baltimore.
J. &
A. &
M.&
J. &
J. &
J. &

1st Mortgage, convertible
Loan of 1866
Loan of 1867
Pittftb..Cin. dkSt. Louis (?ep., ’69):.
1st Mortgage
1st M S'.tuoenv. & Ind. reorg.
Col. & Newark Div. Bonds

1st Mortgage (gold)
Port Huron dk L. Mich. (Mar.1,’69):
1st Mort. (gold) for $16,000 per m
Portland dk Kennebec (Jan. l, ’69):
1st Mortgage extended

I

6
6
6
6
6
6

1,22

When

+3

...

97

1875

44

6

a

477.500

PittsburgdkConnellsv. (Nov.1,’68):
1st Mort. (new) for $4,000,000
Baltimore Loan (now 2d lien).
1st Mort.jTurtle Cr. Div.)
Pittsb., Ft Tv. & Chic. (Jan.l, ’69):
1st Mortgage (series A)
1st Mortgage (series B)
1st Mortgage (series C)
1st Mortgage (series D)
1st Mortgage (series E)
1st Mortgage (series F)
:...
2d Mortgage (series G)
2d Mortgage (series H)
2d Mortgage (series I)
2d Mortgage (series K)
2d Mortgage (series L)
2d Mortgage (series M)
3d Mortgage
Bridge (O. & P. RR.) Mortgage
Equipment Bonds or 1869
Placerville dk Sacram. (Jan. 1,’69):
1st Mortgage

F.& A. New York; ’73-’78
“
4 1881
J. & J.
il
M.& N.
1883

Consolidated Mort. of 1863
ew Yoi'k dk N. Haven (Apr. 1, ’69):

Mortgage
K. Y. dt Oswego Midland :
1st Mort. (gold) *20,JOO p. mile.
Few York,Prov.t£Bost.(Sep.1/68;:
1st Mortgage
;
Improvement
j

98

'

CC Q)

Or*

401,600
106,000
2,497,800
171.500
182,400
228,000

Phila., WUm. dk Balt. (Nov. 1, ’68):

18..

York <fc Harlem (Oct. 1, '68;:

1st

•

1886$

«-

INTEREST.

-

2,255,000

Loan of 1849
Loan of 1861
Loans of ’43, ’44, ’48 and ’49
Loan of 1857, convertible
Loan of 1836, sterling
Loan of 1836, sterling
Loan id’ 1868
Loan of 1868

1872

.T. & J. New York
*4
A.&O.

*■«

ISSUED.!Amount

Railroads :
Philadelphia dk Bead. (Dec. 1,’68):

1871
1885

<4

8
8

(funding) for $1,000,000
Neio York Central (Oct. 1, ’68):
Premium Sinking Fund
j 5,946,689
Sinking Fund (assumed debts).' 1,514,000
592.000
Subscription (assumed stocks).;

ew

S3

7

2d Mort.

—.

paid.

TER OF SECURITIES

OutFor a full explanation of this standing
Table see “ Railroad Monitor"
on a preceding page.

Where

paid.

60 .non;
300.00U

N. Orl., J. dk Gt. North. (Dec. 1/68):
1st Mort. for $3,(XX),000
j
2d Mort. for $1,500,000
i
N. OrL, Opelo.dk Gt W. (Jan.l,’69):j
1st Mort., construction
j

New York <fc Flushing (Oct. 1,
1st Mortgage

When

Rate.

Railroads :
New London North. (Jan. 1, ’69):
Mortgage Bonds

Real Estate
Convertible (till Aug. 1, *69)

Tables.

COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬
PRICK.

INTEREST.

TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount

1st Mort., extension
Convertible Bonds

our

'

Subscribers will confer

Mortgage
Mortgage

.....

Mortgage

Selma, Motion dk Memphis :
1st Moit. (gold) guar, by Ala...

4*

....

330,000

8

New York
Selma.
New York

J. & J. New York

....

...

....

•

....

....

....
....

•

•

.....

1839
•

....

xpl
gobscilben

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
will confer a great flavor by giving us Immediate notice 6f any error discovered In our
Pages 1 and 2 of Bonds will be published

CHARAC¬
SECURITIES ISSUED

COMPANIES, AND

TER OF

rnr

a

Table
on a

,

full

see

6

Wher

ca

«

preceding page.

paid.

535

7

. ....

.

guarantee

Special Mort. (Appomattok RR)
(Jan. 1, ’69):

Company Bonds

563.500
377,010

353.500
41,000
30,000
1,500,000

Mortgage

..

2d Mort. (Gt, W’t’n of’59.181 m.)

Equipment Bonds(T.A W.,75 m.)
Consol. Mortgirae (500 m.)conv.
T>'oij dk Boston (Oct. 1, ’68):

Land Grant Bonds for $10,000,(fo0
Union Pacific, Cent. Br. (Jan.1,’69):
1st Mort. (gold), tax free
2d Mort. (government subsidy)
Union Pacific, E. Div. (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (gold), 140 m
1st Mort. (gold), 253.94 m
2d Mort. (government subsidy)
1st Mort. (Leavenworth Br.) ...
Land Grant Mort. for $500,000
..

Income B’ds (gen.) $10,000 p. m.
Union Pacific, S. Br. (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (gold), $25,000 p. m....
UUca dk Black River (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
Vermont Central (June 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage (consol.)
2d Mortgage (consol.)

Equip. Loans of ’66 and '67
do
ao
1869

189S

1-

|

1898 j ... •j

<4

1 A. A O
J. A J

....

i

!...

.

(4

;’73-N

A J

a

I

’88-’91

J. A J

tt

IM.AS

|

1892

tt

...

i

! J.

F. A A

!

...

! 1871

New York

*

.j 1899

...

New York I ....

7

800,000
300,000
317,000
175,000

8
6
6
6
6
6
6

J.
J.
J.
J.
J.
J.
J.

8

J. A J. New York

i

A
A
A
A
A
A
A

....

i

1880

Boston.

....

1887

1st

J. New York ’84-’90
J. Petersb’g. ’84-’90
14
’96-’00
J.
J. New York 1887
J. Petersb’g. ’70-’75
i’62-’72
J.
If
’65-’68
J.
1888

Boston.

1898

....

Macon.

’77-’80

1st

6

8

399.000

....

Var.

::::

6
6
6

200,000

6

1,720,000

7

1,800,000
1,300,000

900,000 7
7
2,500,000
1,000,000 10
45,000 7
1,455,000 7
500,000 7
300,000 7
7
1,000,000
1,500,000 7
2,500,000 7
600,000 7

2,700,000

Mort., 4th class

New York

1896
1894
1886

! F.A
F. A

A. New York
it
A.
44
A. A O.
<«
F.A A.
“
F.A A.
a
M.A N.
•t
F.A A.
n
M.A N.
tt
M.A N.
a
M.A N.

!

M.A N.

tt

Q.-J.

I

“

1

1890
1890
1871
1865
1888
1890
1882
1878
1871
1893
1883
1907
1887
1885
1875
1882

J. A J. New York
ii

7
6
6

r. A J. New York; 1873
“
1878
J. A J.

-

7

1,600,000

6

1,600,000

6

2,240,000
4,063,000
6,303,000
600,000
361,000
4,275,000

6
6
6
7
7

T. A J.
T. A J.
L&O.

44
<<

N.Y.AB’tni
“
<<
■

I. A J. New
c1. A J.
.

York!

1

95-’99
95-’99
1889

jlMmo.rte»for*r'°S5'000
™r«»W»n.l,’69j:
Mort., guaranteed

"totcftuter dk Phila. (Nov. 1, ’68):
i? Mortgage, convertible
-w
Mortgage, registered

Mort/.!! ”!.!!!!

Shore Hud. Riv. (Oct. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
West Wisconsin
(May 1, ’69):
1st Mort. sterling for £800,000...
Ala. (Jan. 1, ’69):
..

.

Mortgage, guar

Maryland (Jan. 1, ’69):
lit Mort,, endors. by Baltimore

Mort., endors. by Baltimore,

79*
30^
88
87M 88
195

(

1st

1st

79%

1st

C
1st

....

|

7

**

77X

^

1 'sew York

18..

200,000

7

0r. a J. 2 sTew0 York

7
7
8
8

J .AI).
.1 A D.
* LA N.

1886
1891
'6-’77
1889

114.00Q
293,200

6

.

A i.A N

J

.

A J.

Boston.
Boston.
44
1

37
99
»

•

850,0)0
154,000
J.
J.
J.
J.

J. New York
<»
J.
<1
J.
tt
J.

90

511,400

F.A A. New York

400,000
562.500

J. A J.
A. A O.

.

238,000

M. A S.
J. & J.

Philadel.

988.500

New York

88,600
J. A J.

J. A J. Baltimore, 1890
“
l 1890
J. A J.
«
i 1890
J. A J.

j

J. A J. New York

7

J. A J.

191,90 J

7

J

1874

....

Philadel.

18..

....

...

...

1877

}'

Philadel.

1874

t

J. A J. Brooklyn.

1878

j
...

J. A J. New York

18..

J. A J. New York

1890

....

l,5Qp,000

T. A J. New York

18S0

....

7

A. A O.

Troy.

1872
1887

Newark.

J. A J
J. A J.
J. A J.

; J.

A
A
|
i A. A
1 M.A

44
4

€

D. New York
“

A.

44

O.
N.

M

....

i

1881
1880
1883

i
....

1877
1876
1885
1888

^

1....
; 95

j

....

1

...

....

.

i

i

7

J. A J.

Utica.

7

J. A J.

Albany.

!ioo

i
1

1872

7

J. A J.

rhiladel.

1869

6

J. A J

M

1st

1st

Philadel.

•

.

•

....

•

....

*•?*

6

J A J

6

J. A J.

Philadel.

500,000
1,51X1.000

7
7
7

m. a s. New York
M.A N.
J A J

6

2,000.000
4,375,000
1

1

O-—J.
Q.-J.

5

fi9Q 500

non nm

,

95

1SS6

1870
1890
1885

Baltimore.
London.
Baltimore.

,tt.

1878

80

1870
1877
1884

....

•

r. a j.
f.AJ.

Philadel.

r. a j.

Philadel.

7

.

7

,

6
6
6
6
6

.AD.
JI.AD.

6
6

Jr.A J.
J A J.

743,654

57,000

’69):

,

14

..

January 1,1878

Mortgage

Mortgage

Wyoming Valley (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage —

•

....

.

1878

....

....

1865
1873

....

S3* 34%
81
86
94
81

82

1887
18..

87

88

FerseyCity

1876
1885

84
64

A J.

Philadel.

18..

* f. A S.

Philadel.

1872
1882
1870

1884
1897
1897
1877

Q.-J.
^.-F.
.

^ttsburg.

.

782,250
267,010

6
7

JLAO.
/LAO.

601,000

6

.1

1,761,213
S,980,670
362,500

6
6
6

j

1,000,000
325,000

6
6
6

London.
.1 A J.
J .AJ. 1Baltimore.
J A J.

3,CXX),000

6

&r.A n.

749,000

sinking fund

•

....

127.000

Union (Nov. 1, ’68)

97

95

ltX)

7

5,000,000
1,201,850

Pref. Interest Bonds

6

Yar.

600,000

6

J

2,000,000

7

J A J. >lew York

7

J A J. Elaltimore.

1885

17,000
507,500

7
7

J A J. brew York
■
F A A.

7

,000,000

7

York
J A D. >Few “
J A J.

1879
1879

800,000

T
7

“
1 fS9
M .A N.
M A N. afew Tortc \ 1875

85
65

1879
1881

60,000

....

....

1886

29,000

86^
94%
81%

-

*

1,250,000

.

A J.
5I.A N.

44

.

80
56

.

.

1885
1878
1894

53

.

Philadel.

1883

6

Philadel.

1878

Philadel.

58

1878

A J.

54
-

%
l

r
...

Miscellaneous:
82

83

Bonds (guar,

Co.(Jan.l’69):

by C. RR. of N. J.)

Consolidated Coal (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, convertible
Cumberland Coal (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage

Pennsylvania Coal: Mortg.B’ds.

Quicksilver (Jan. 1. ’69)

|

400,000
800,000

J. A J.

2,000;000

Loan of

A. A O. New York! 1888

200,000

7

18..

New York

....

69,856

Mortgage
Improvement
Smq. <£ Tide Water (Nov. 1, ’68):
Maryland Loan

1884

500,000

1873

72% i 78

Railroadt

2d

18..

London.

18..

A. A O. New York
M.A N.

87,500
5,606,122

Amer. Dock dk Imp.
1883
1896

44

J. A J. New York

Pennsylvania (Nov. 1, ’68):

1873
1878

44

7
7
7

18..

7

Mortgage

West Branch dk Susq. (Nov. 1, ’68);

Philadel.

M.A S

New York

800,000

.
..

Guaranteed Bonds
Schuylkill Navigation (Nov.l, ’68):
1st Mortgage

1875

494,000

J. A J

• a •

2 089 400

“S’,
Mortgage

Boat Loan,

1872
1884
1900
1865

A
&
&
&

7
7

1878

100,000

•

1890

1,273,500

J. A J

M
•

1890
1890
1890

Fhiladel.

7

L

....

I860
1860
1859

A. & O. New York
Boston.
A. & O.
A. AO. New York

722.AX)

.

...

1883

Boston.

M.A N

7
7
7
7

Mortgage

77%^

.

1875

7

.

131,000

Loan of 1873.

.

Brooklyn

A. AO

200,000

Bonds for interest

77
32

Brooklyn

7

:

1878

3,000,000
1,500,000
1,000,000

85

7

1, ’68):

See Camden A Amboy

18

....

78

100,000

.

5rie of Pennsylvania (Nov. 1
IE
1st Mortgage

..

f

6

1884

1872

J. A J

250,000;

Coupon Bonds

71

15

75

315, CK 0

Registered Bonds (taxfree)...
Registered Bonds (tax free)..,
Delaware dk RaHtan (Jan. 1, ’69)
D

82
79

«

•1

TO

J. A D

B

....

65

....

1830

7

150,0001

Stealing

I
•

.•4
i

100,000
1(0,000
100,000

Guaranteed
Loan
Ponds having next preference.
Delaware Division (Nov. 1,
£
1st

„

4

•

350,(XX)
200,000

Maryland Loan, sinking fund

84tf

....

80

•

....

Canal

.

....

J

6
6
6

Mortgage

....

....

....

i

New York

7

T

....

.1

167,000

Mortgage

tVatervliet (Oct.
1st Mortgage

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

91
50
89

(gold)
(gold)

91% Rochester City water Works: ...
Mortgage bonds (gold)
TY. Union TeUfph: »;M«, jxv

S*

.

i

.

New Yorl

165,700

/

.

J. A J

200,000
60,000

r

76

1

•

i

2Hroy dk Lansingburg (Oct. 1,
1st Mortgage
(7iica, Clin.dcBingh’ton (Oct.l

79>*
75
79

•

1

1881
1886
1896

700,000

?*

.

1873

7

..

•

1886
1886
1886

350,000

(Oct. 1, ’68):
Plain Bonds (tax free*

81
81

56

44

44

7

....! : rbird Avenue

....1

“

“

203,000

Consolidated convertible.
idatei
Hxth Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69):

84
70

833*

New Yorl£

218,00C

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage.
3d Mortgage,

87 K

1895
1895

1r. A A. New Yorkj 1895
1896
r. A D.
1
44
95-’97
'. A J.
it
1S96
Jd.A N.
» 71-’76
3d.A S.
1916
Jf’el,’71

London.
J. A J
MAN
J. A J New Yorl

^

i

Philadel.

6
7
7

.

626,000

linth Avenue ('
1st Mortgage
\v'n<Yt rta st* iVnin/
nge
1st Mortgage (Broad street)..,
1st Mortgage (O. A N.)
2d Mortgage (O. A N.)

i

A. A O.
M.A N.
M. A S.

6
6

....

1876

F.& A. New York
44
J. A D.
14
A. A O.

7

D
D
D
N

SOO.OOC

!!

1st Mortgage
Metropolitan (C
1st Mortgage

i:

jNew Yorl£ 1897

200,CXX

Mortgage

Iestomv'le,M.dk

....

990,000
778,000
119,000

(euiargrecl) Mortgage

.

44

J. A
J. A
J. A
M.A

i

1st Mortgage
j larlem Br.,M.c
1st Mortgage

1875
1880

Boston.

A. AO. New York

7
7
7

386,000

nrglida dc Tennessee (Oct. 1, ’69):

....

7

1st Mortgage
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

Vicksburg £Merid. (Mar. 1, ’69):
Consol. Mort., 1st class
Consol. Mort., 2d class
Consol. Mort., 3d class.

J. A J.
F. A A.

7
7
7
7

.

.

....

....

1878

r

694,00

)):
C.£Newtown (Oct.1,’69):

Mortgage

j81

'

Mortgage

Real Estate Mortgages
....

Philadel.

....

7
7
7

1,600,000

521,000

Mortgage, sinking fund
Vermont Valley (Jan. 1, ’69):

New York

7

1st

Mortgage, unendorsed

1st

1874

80

1888

300,00(

4

1886

J. A J. New York

7

J. A J

)

700,txx

):
’)'yD'k,Ej3'dicaydkBat.(Oc.l,'88)
1st Mortgage
Eighth Avenue (Oct. 1, ’68):
r 1st Mortgage

....

J. A J

68,201 )

1st Mortgage
CentralP.fN.dkE. River (Oct.l,’88)-.
i):
1st Mortgage
1):
Isi. dk Brooklyn (Oct. 1,’68)
Coney

....

*

Philadel

6
8.;

576,88 7
197,77’7

5):
...

—

1896

,!New Yor

....

i

|

Mortgage

rooklyn

<

..

18..

725,(XX1
146,001)
528,0013
80,0013

1st Mortgage

....

J. A J

1,000,(XX9

Tooklyn City (Oct. 1, ’68):
1st

7

150,00

Wil., Chari,dcRutherf'dd an.1,’69):
9):
1st Mort., endors. by N. Car
Wilming.dk Manchester!Pct.l,’ 8).
1st Mortgage, 1st prefT.
1st Mort., 2d pref. (conv.),..
1st Mort.,3d pref.
2d Mortgage
Wilmington dk Read. (Nov. 1,’68):
1st Mortgage
Wilmington dk Weldon (Oct. 1, ’68):
8):
1st Mortgage, sterling
Sterling Bonds
Sinking Fund Bonds of 1867....;
Street Passenger R.R.
r.
Bleecker St.dk Fulton F’.(Oct.l,’68):
3):
1st Mortgage
3);
Broadway dk 1th Are. (Oct. 1, ’68);
.

....

1

l.

i

J

9m

1899

Philadel

A. A C >.

F.A A

250,00

1890

..

New Yor k

6

.

...

|

,.l

M.A b r. New Yor k

7

5

:

A

i

6

4,000,000

1

•

2
.

J. A J

1,800,000

...

...

(

1874
1 1876

Augusta.
it

S ,New York

Vermont dk Mass. (Dec. 1, ’68):




.

O

50 J.000

w

M

1

*4

! M. A

Troy Union (Oct. 1, ’68):
1st Mort., guaranteed
500,000
2d Mort., guaranteed
360,000
Union Pacific (June 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (gold), tax free
25,998,000
2d Mort. (government subsidy) 25,998,000

1st

New YorlCl

I A- A

300,000
300,000
650,000
325,000

ortgage
2d Mortgage
8d Mortgage
Convertible Bonds

l«t

.

6

150,000

500,000
250,000

’69):

....

west

J. A J

8

528,000

To!., Peoria dc Warsaio(Jan.1,’69):
1st Mortgage (W. Div.)
1st Mortgage (E. Div.)
2d Mortgage(W. Div.)
Tol., Wab. £ Western (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (Tol. & Ill., 75 m.)
1st M. (L. Erie, W.& St.L.,167 m.)
1st Mort. (Gt. Wtn, W. D.,100m.)
1st Mort. (Gt. W’t’n, E. D., 81 ra.)
1st Mort. (Gt. W’t’n of’59,181m.)
1st Mort. (Quin. & Tol., 34 m.)..
let Mort. (Ill. & S. Iowa, 41 ra.).
2d Mort. (Tol. & Wab., 75 ra.)
2d Mort. (Wab. A W’t’n, 167 m.)

Loan of 1896, 1st

1872

Philadel

London. |’71-’8£
Charlest’n |’71-’85
’69-’75

|J. A J

7
6
7
7

350,000

Mortgage
Syrac., Bingh. dkN. Y. (Oct. 1, ’68):

1st

!:.

•

-

1st

8d

J. & D
J. & D

5
5
7
6

200,000

Sussex (Jan. 1,’69):

Consol.

.

300,000

’68):

Sterling Mountain (Oct. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
Summit Branch (Nov. 1, 68):

1st

.

j

2,012,944
262.500

20,000 pm
Mortgage, 10-20 years.
Mo. (Jan.l,’69):
Southw. Fa

1st Mortgage
Sullivan (Jan. 1.
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

A. & O
J. & J

6
6

300,000

1st

1st Mort, (gold) $25,000 per mile
mi
Southwestern, Ga. (Aug. 1, ’69):

PRIOR.

m

Where
paid.

|

paid

6

2,800.00

let Mortgage (gold)
est. Pennsylvania (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
■Western Union (Jan. 1, ’69):
st Mortg ge
Whitehall dr, Plattsb. (Feb. 1, ’69)
»:
1st Mortgage
9):
Wicomico dc Pocomoke (Jan.l,’69):
1st Mortgage
.:.
...

...

|

300,00 0

Co

n

'Wheti |

Railroads:

I

Southet'n Minnesota

Muscogee RR Ronds
Staten Island (Oct. 1,
1st Mortgage

.

standinf!

preceding page.

2d Mort., end. by Wash.
Vestem Pacific:

—J

1

7
6

(Oct. 1, ’68):

M. (1st pref.) for $709,000
Consol. M. (2d pref.) for $651,000
Consol. M. (3d pref.) for $540,000
Va. State Loan (suspended)....

2d Mort., Petersburg
3d Mortgage

j

New Yorl
1872
sew Yorld-1861
1831
“

750,000

I. (Oct. 1, ’68):

Ah Side,Va.
Consol.

F.&A

.

bis
>r”

“ Ra

see

j

!

250,000

Sterling loan, £59,062 11«. 6d—
Domestic Bonds (H).
Domestic Bonds (G).
Domestic Bonds (I)..
Domestic Bonds (K).
Domestic Bonds (special) —.
Southern Central, N. Y—.......
South dk N. Alabama (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st
end. by Ala., $16,000 p. m
South Shore (Dec. 1, ’68):

Soutreside,

J. A J
A. & 0

on a

K

J

.

7

Mortgage

Soutfl?Carolina L4Kj912 ’69):
(Jan. L
Sterling loan,
10.5.

J. A J

Table

OD

•H

1

7
3

& Tenn. Rivers).

.

X

(2^

1

1st Mortgage

Us

INTEREST.

ID. Amoun’

T3

Where

paid.

44

‘‘Railroad Monitor”

$5,000,000, tax free
(Nov.1,’68):
guaranteed......
Sheboygan dkF. dtiLac (Jan.l, 69).
Sioux
Pacific (Jan. i, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mort. (governra. subsidy)..
Somerset dk Kennebec (Jan. 1,69)

Tables*

-

Shamokin Y.dkPottsv.
tst

PRICE.

g.2

Railroads:

1

nextlweek.

i

•

.

INTEREST.

explanation of this

2d Mott. (Ala.
Gen. Mort. for

723

CHRONICLE.

THE

December 4, 1869 ]

4,684,100

.

....

94

n

...

...

.

3.

■

,

...

«

t14

«

'

.

...

•

....

m

(Si)

e

>

;

<4.0mmercial Simts.

COM MERCI A t
m

EPITOME.
Friday Night, December 8.

*

.

Since Tuesday last when the Government refused to accept
bids for gold underJ-22, the markets have assumed a steadier

aspect, and there is

a

circles.

Export* of Loading Articles from New York.

fromOu^oM House returns,ghom
tin export# of leading article# of commerce from the
port of Nee
Yor-r since January 1, 1869. The export of each article to the
everal port* for the pant week can be obtained by
deducting the
amount in the last number of the Cbrojhcl* from that here

generally improved tone in trade

The

following is a statement of the stocks of leading articles
of foreign and domestic merchandise at dates given :
1869
Dec. 1.

13.141

105,403
107,851

24,354
5,519
11,822
15,870
86,413
S,636
14,245
62,829
101,791
207,543

668

674

11,096

12,843

Beef, tierces and barrels...
Pork, barrels
Tobacco, foreign bales
Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads
Coffee, Rio, bags
Coffee, other, bags
Coffee, Java, mats
Sugar, hogsheads
Sugar, boxes

12,653
12,065

18,818
68,173
8,801
43,391
77,412

Welaco.^tLhds
Molasses, hogsheads

Molasses, barrels
Hides, No
Cotton, bales
Rosin, Darrels
Crude turpentine, barrels.

•

•

•

•

•

•

*

| 2
g
O

40,015
86,R0
•

•

•

ft,

C«f

®

.F
©

53,500
28,000

8,510

7,590

21,600
70,813

ia-ss® .§iS|gi«
cf©
o ^ © <

230

9,250
13,800
153,500
5,373
18,400
18,537

7,900
12,209
135,000
4,075

J3

• Cfo'

26,337
10,000

400

800

P eot-

©
S

®

2
o

*!
s
©

1,300

»

•

tO

H

J. © O
© © © *5
f-4

c»

;l"8S
•w

C*

-

-

•

,

•

00 00 ^ r-*

•

•

_»

© y-iO*
y-t

r-©
-*r

•

•
•

•

©oo

ss

©©<

ao ©

■CH V

^

•
•

l— 00

-i*

T~*

.

^

O y*--G •#

yfyf!

H
•

T-I

ri M rt

•

r? CO

•

JO

.

S3
©

io Tj< ©

•

00

•

© ©

■w-y

r-< ©

CM

© r- »l- 35 T-t T* t- © j-« ® 3

t- »6 © ©

eo © © oo »o ■’TW

.

*

^ ©

2 S

«

r-t ■

m

r~,,cV^ 0*

•

©

•

© IO SC r-< © C

©

■

© C— T-t

•

50-<

H

*

co

S'

© « r-.-© © ©

.eg©
TT1

*0 ,-t © © rO o o
© »-•
TO
ffl H

•

" —7 7S

fe
.

H

a

ao
©

~y

to

huoi
©

to

© t- T-< ©

!

--

r-f(

'

S ii

•t-<M©C3<-©in©-C,©lQ©t-^l0O'2«t- © CO Tj< •-( © t)
■*

*2
^

t-<

t © © X ©
: to
©* o»
I
to c*

—<

TO

'2
w

:8S8^S;8S

:53 :g : :

:S!2
•

^^

.£2 :g?£!2

TO^t-TO'flt!

ct«

;

00 ■

©f

eo

1

t-T

©f^f
©*t-7

0^© i-7
0g©-r7

r

| 4• I SI
g
o©

:•

o

S A O qp-co
^
00-00
«
►: O

:SS?S2 :§|gg||

:
•

•
•

‘

5*
t-^ibS
t-©

«

.-1

© t-“

.

;c

*-t

t-7

n

.

©

gg ;g

•

8li:§:

©

■

©

»-»©

2

:

••••••••••*•

******

r-iO

•

OMt*
•TOCCK2

•

•

*

*

*

Breadstuffe—
Flour .bbls.
Wheat .hue.
Corn
Oats

Bye

Balt

Barley

Grass seed.
Flax seed
Beaus
Eeas
C. meal .bbls
..

“

bags

Buckwh’t A
B.WJ'r pkg

Cottoa. Dales.

Jan. 1.

:*SBS
IrOfafri
10

CO

lag;.*
n

cf

;sr|i
*©n^o
•

©

follows:

8,731

7,323

Spirits

tine

119,738 i 8,235,1181 2 D***3
923 797:23,313.144 12.391,663,
“■*
f~‘n 99<>
167,232 10*56,91)1,18,743 jwwt
725*99 8 34^89,10*34.656
8*<J0
32»,849J 733,054
19.087
557,3o3j 055*10
362,491 2,248,5 0 2,098,456
1.284
22.686
10,1 9
76*99
48,710,
10 >,826:
7,374
54, •U',
: 16.637
377535'
77,387
2422
83,630
21.960!
2.993
197,535
248,430

1,120
23,8:0

Roein
Tar
Pitch
Oil cake, pkgs....

Oil, lard
Oil, petroleum...>
Peanuts, bags.. .!
ProvisiousB utter,

frultjpkg

Grease .pkgs.

Hemp., bales.
Hides ....No.

Hops,, .bales.

Leather .sides

Eggs.
Pork

Beef, pkgs
Lard, pkgs
596.3 W1
Lard, kegs
21.754 Ltice, pkgs
14 883.

16,898
601.8 2
27,50.

1,698

11418!

Starch

27,48-8

34,057

Stearine.

8.584
3 619
8 ■’ ,493

898>i|

43
77

13.791

7'6

2,177
9,638
118,626
65,173 2,599,907

2*02

'

MrolMore^j
tarpoM

•jWl

i',r.

tlna.Jjbl’




pkgs....

Cheese
Cutmeati.......

651
738

Dr’d

turpen¬

1831

24,503

Su^ar, hhds and

513,997 Talbow, pkgs
57.720 Tobacco, pkgs,..
298,449 Tobacco, hhds..,
7,245 Whiskey, bbls....
Wool, bales
18438] Dressed bogs No.
Rice, mutch bma

18,714; ' 10*01

2513
11,381

l/li9

85

r-H

63.6 >9

59401

8,990

1*76

72,234

55

•TO

,

1.091

2,744
1,7 4
4*22
1.142
1.270
210

73.719
194 660
75 996
71 <H7
61

71*04
215*88
109*79
128011

1*88

15*54

22,791
81*97

107*9
70466

166,404.
58*94

m

4§*58
40*51
#93*17
14*20
215

|§

■

mrm
•*
*^ss

: •:8S
1-11;

•

ss

!22f«2SK

2fI*l:i§Sf

l®Ss

il

g

e

*»to

•

H*

s' s ass iiiUHMii iiiii eiisiii

‘SWr:3888S7i
::; j I i :24; ?:!

10,771

2,256

:SSgS gfS|
-e»a

.g

|

:2SSSS8 •.5 •:
i-tonH
1-

*

12,286
180407

9,166

H

*6

-g

77*00
13*78

15.727
17,99!
275*07

;| :| :8§9 *|,rs 5‘sJ83
iSg"! :iM
I w

•0 ’ ’

78,958
8,471
609,094
45,131

16*96 624.716 473,458
80*86 1432.63' 1,103*67

*

T-t

V

35,158
8*66

188*21?!;’
**£

'2S

:|2 :8e££ :; :3 :t* :g28
■«lt : «=-z
: ®.-

1 >2,865

73.451

-1.

-.i

If S»1 i
as® s

*68

52i,929
8*93
102.698
10.04;)
769 218

8,726

Same

(time

w

©» Tft
Tjt
© <35 -^t © ©«
TO©
©

^

TO

290;

*

»Q

rl

receipts of domestic produce fjr the week and since Jan. 1

Ashes...pkgs.

;PSS:*
nrJ1

10

aT

‘

TO

•rf

)

|

®

kcq u

1*,

Since
week. Jan. 1.

*’

©t SO

Receipts of Domestic Produce for tue Week and since

This

.:

-SSSSSSMSSSSS :II:

r-7 ’ of to

*

►»

hardly worth quoting for Hog products
for future delivery there has been great
activity and speculative excitement. New Mess Pork for
January and February delivery has advanced to $32.12@
$32.25; prime steam Lard, same delivery, 19£@19£; and
Cumberland Bacon, same delivery, 14}c.@15c. The old
stock of Mess Beef has been mostly closed out at $5. But
ter is unsettled.
Cheese nearly nominal at 15@17£c.

Same
time ’68.

•

’to

voyages.
Provisions are
on the spot, but

Since

•

3^ ;

«!

:|s^,oa0slsI§iSsSSlEist'^:
eioS t-Tt*t~riy*9iiito
of5
«

«3?»oto

•

This
week.

So

h

*

Hops have been weak under excessive receipts which have

as

.

n

,TO©©05t-II

time in 1868. hare been

•

tH

m

also firmer.

same

S©

+?> ’

©

co

£? 22 ^ ^ 5
G* I

»o
>n
,rH0O©
.

5

lower, with considerable sales of strained
Rosin at $2.12£@$2.15, for export.
Metals show a large movement in Pig Iron, based on
better advices from abroad—about 1,500 tons Scotch
changed hands, part at $34, ex ship. Copper and Tin are

The

rf C

•

y-i

A

stores have been

and for the

,

G* O C
ttoco

•«-h©2©

.

n

early in the week, has recovered
active. Oils remain quiet. Naval

Jau»

:

tn

o

23c., gold, for prime dry Buenos
Skins and Leather steady. Petroleum, which de¬
at

speculative views. Whiskey active, $1.04, tax
paid. Tallow declined to 10Jc.
Freights have been moderately active at 5d. for Wheaf
and id. for Cotton to Liverpool, by steam. Petroleum
charters were brisk early in the week, but closed quiet, aud
some medium sized
vessels arc content to accept long

•©

CQ t- ©

»r>

■rf«Vrt

si y-itneo
w

75

unsettled

-r-t

•©©©©

.

•

§ 5 »S.
co § S®

10,750

600
659

•

50 Tj<

«8

®

;

m\

*»

23,700
65,660
14,057
7,7-0
14,756

13,000

•50 y>

lr<H

23,900

4,000

not

<

V

I

I

•

3,100

200

_32|c., but is

eg •

tM®

clined to 3le. for refined
to

’*-7

**H

..

to t- CO CN fc-

ai

85,000

550

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

Ayres.

>

2,200

5,700

«©f

.

imhmoCm,

500

4,810
8,52)

* *

5 s a
o <

650

193

> y-i

'*H

«

’“t!2SSSS2»ap.
3

-S2S ■ gi
■<*r4 ©

tS © TO 5!^

•

oso

©

•

13,125

•

SSg :.
^

^

44,796

11,085

Hides have been active

33&©§si§SlS3SU-..

-

161,283
46,396
13,000

85,000

Spirits turpentine, barrels

Hemp, bales

®

40,912

200
1.800

Jute, bales

e2©ao?®©©©TO©©©©i

_

17*86
11,383
18,790

113,000
18,000
60,100

Rice, K.L, bags
Rice, Carolina, casks
Gunny Cloth, bales
Gunny Bags, bales
Linseed, bags
Saltpetre, bags

given.

1868.
Dec. 1.

<

^ ov.
> m 1.

Manila

(December 4, 1869.

THE (JHRONlLLE

724

•

•

•

•

•

: ts

<

«§*•§ * ifics’a i*
:fSS .goocai lift
®

•

"Mh

•

V

gO

v <

V

I

:
:
: :

:.'S

;|S

'•’%%

4

'

'

% '

1869.]

December 4,

THJB CHRONICLE.

:

T"

I<«aAIbx Articles.

Imports of

BEOE1PTS

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show
t ie forei gn imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port
or the last week, since /an. 1,1869, and for the corresponding period
fbe

io 1868:

Hew Orleans
Mobile
Charleston
Savannah
Texas
Mew York.........

EXPOBTXD 8INCK SEPT. 1 TO—

PORTS.

in packages when not otherwise specified.]

tTk® qaaatity Is given

the

week.

\

■

.

•

1869.

China. Glass and
Earthenware—
China
*;V‘“
Earthenware...
Glass

401
m

Glass plate.....
Battens..

5,385

Coeos,bags
Coffee, bags......
Cotton-bales...*
Drots.Sc.—

1,441
260
270

Peruvian

Blea powders..
Brimstone, tons

*

56
9

Cochineal
Cream Tartar..

608

Gums, crude....

'2ii

indigo

Madder

Oils,

essence....

Oil, Olive
Opium

515

3331

18-5
48
5
2.9
6

Gum, Arabic...

5,640
264

544

44,712

41,801
1,0 5
118,698
39.766
35,889

7t8

35,254
88,*8 7
1,860

Flax

843
26
126

Gunny cloth
Hair

ioi

5,733
5 634
7.884

4,751

108,901

is

1,488
16,784
36,688
3305

Hemp, bales
Hides, Sc—
Bristles

284

Hides, dressed.
mdia rubber
Ivory,...,...
Jeweler/, *e—

76 613

-

2387
1,098

90
46

Linseed..
Molasses

8,719

603.497
10452202 5,529,660
158 510

244,843

14,128 1,113,737 804,978
223,634 8,996,882 4,189,913
1,015
91,516
52,389
1,455

360,771

3S3.675

45,790

839 815

541,885

854
995
1

815,963
43,825
2,177

729,203
43,813
1315

3,052
4,525
1,082

110,784
173,190

Glgars
Corks

Fancy goods....
Fish

Fruits, &c—
Lemons

83 089

95,55.)
20,718

48,005

13,896 1777,783 I5983U
267
124,731 171,866
55,419 1,986.625 1,343,998
46,665 708,833 489373

494,657 424386
751,173 540,133
5,853
Nuts
21,130 623320 681,162
11.714
Raisins
16367 731,860 1,412 002
7329 Hides undressed 266,144 9,606306 6389304
1,6*4

21,180
84,710

Oranges

.

1*7,763 Rice
1,307

241,986

8pices, &c—
Cassia

8,525

Ginger
Pepper
2,045 Saltpetre

.

2334
1077

507,677

161,720

178,700[

814,6cQ

180,278

150

177.939

49,685

1,026

WoodsCork
Fustic

2.656
6,444
1,341

Logwood
Mahogany

40 522

231.764

29.498

571 836

*63*'

Wines
Wool, bales
-

3,159
4351 Articles report’d
12,597
by value-

9,320

77,468

Soda, bl-carb...
Soda, sal
Soda, ash

•

F67.113

8,228
5,143
671,882
402,443

-

Gambler
‘

5,559

Steel

Tin, boxes.....
Tin slabs, lbs..

4,125
4,797

i:i,808

Lead, pies
Spelter, lbs....

124,506
17,597
Rags
929,824 1,046,846 Sugar, bhds.tce
& bbls
1,151
2,361
Sugars, boxes &
19,931
12,002
bags
26.123
29,531 Tpg
8,882 Tobacco
19,348
6,158
5,058 Waste
1,674 Wines, &c—
1,788
20,942
47344
Champag’e.bks

139

107

.Iron, KR bars.

.

6.587
6,5 a
122.863
19,310

8300

1,958

Coal, tons

Bark,

17,419

69

Hardware

47471
356,061
23,788

.

Same
time
1868.

238,282
14,467

185,814
167318
73,023
559.500
86.087

136,951
120,761
218,230
104.174

COTTON.
Friday, P. M., December 3, 1869.

Bj special telegrams received by us to night from each of the
louthern ports we are in possession of the returns showing the
receipts, exports, &c., of cotton tor the week ending this evening,
December 3.

From the

figures thus obtained it appears that the
receipts for the seven days have reached 103,054 bales (against
18,284* bales last week, 81,818 bales the previous week, and 94,108
kales three weeks since), making the aggregate since September
1,1869, up to this date, 901,664 bales, against 712,923 bales for the
i&me period in 1868,
being an increase this season over last season
of 188,741 bales. The details of the
receipts for this week (as per
telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1868 are as follows:
total

worth Carolina...

Virginia

Other ports
,

1868.

263378
93,239
92,786
177,166
51,482
14,469
4,476
22345
70374
8375

265397
67,724
55,280

Vsw Orleans
Mobile
Charleston
1ft Yin n ah

bales.

11

Texas

Tennessee, Ac

1869.

32,701
13,553
9,249
19325
8,992
6,827

1868.

Rec’d this week at—

1869.

39,000 Florida
bales.
1316
9,068 North Carolina
2,878
7,802 Virginia
8,413
14,154
Total receipts
5,274
103,064
Increase tills year
7,903

2,178
2,325
5,197
92,481
10373

*The telegram from New Orleans, last week, gave the receipts at that port
2,519
small, and we have therefore added that amount to last week’s total,
making it 68,284 bales.

The exports for the week ending this evening reach a total of
76416 bales, of which 55,387 were to Great Britain and 20,729 bales
tQ the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports, as made
up
this evening, are now 280,619 bales. Below we
give the exports
end stocks for the
week, and also for the corresponding week of
Isst season, as
telegraphed to us from the various ports to-night:
.
.

Exported to—

S.

G.Brit
16,982

9,7025,988
6350
4,198
12,167

Charleston
lavaaath
Other ports.

.Tout..
Total sinoe

55,887
Sept.l... 289333

From the

Contln't

25,456
13,434
7,176

8,732
1,188
3,321
2,544
1,470

?

26,056

9,671
4,198
14,711
1,470

8,474

20.729
164.729

Total this Same w'k
week.
1868.

11,908
1,340
14,229
1,822

76,116
454,262

55,355
338,844

foregoing statement it will be

seen that,

Stock.
1869.

‘
1868.

104,733
42,658
14340
42,240
35342 -*
25,000

*8$
m
17,018
30,228
12,991

16,186
280,619

33,639
2,713
260

1,000
1355

*

5,564

*i*6l0

18,055

STOCK.
Total. NOETH.
POETS.

149,426
28333
20,997
42,803

33,503
6,487
57,123

7,890

12312

107,900

‘i‘,610

’

6,i43

945

*1321

ifi J

81,719

21,948
68301

7,088

222331
.

80,150

63,165

365346

278,714

273,481

155,439

....

637,690

61,087
2,452
1311
9336

foreign

SHIP*

W’TSTO

95,916

41,629

282,984

232,871

229318

The market the past week has been quite variable and
irregular.
More favorable advices from Liverpool and Manchester resulted in
increased activity oft Saturday last, with prices

higher. Offer¬
liberal at the advance, but holders showed no disposition
to sell below quotations,
Monday gold took another turn down¬
wards, touching 1214, and as a consequence the market was unset¬
tled and prices £c off, and nominal at the decline. Better advices
from Liverpool on Tuesday, with a more settled
feeling in gold at
about 122, led to a renewal of activity. > This
activity and buoy¬
ancy was continued on Wednesday, and prices improved to the
extent of 4c under a good demand for export and also on the
part
of speculators to cover short contracts which
expired with the
month.Thursday the market fell off both in tone and price, heavy
receipts at the ports giving? promise of a considerably increased
total for the week, and this feeling was continued
to-day, the
close to-night being dull at 254c. For forward
delivery there
has been increased activity at full prices. Sales of this
description
reach a total for the week of 13,475 bales (all low
middling,
or on the basis of low
middling, except as hereinafter stated),
of which 925 bales were for November, 225 at 25c., 300 at
24fc.,
100 at 24fc., 100 on private terms, and 200 November 29 at 24
15-16 ; 3,175 bales for Dec., 500 (average middling) at 25, 600 at
24$, 800 at 24f, 525 at 244, 400 at 24f, 100 at 244c, and 250 on pri¬
vate terms; 1,400 bales for January, 100 at
24$, 100 at 24$, 750 at
244,150 at 24f, and 300 at 244c ; 3,125 bales for March, 2,575 at 25,
800 at 24|, 100 at 254, and 150 on private terms; 500 balsa for
April, 100 at 25, 200 at 254, 200
254; also 1,000 bales present
delivery, free on board at New Orleans, at 23f; 500 bales do. do. a£
244, 200 bales do December at 23f, 250 bales do do on private terms,
450 bales free on board at Texas, 150 each month December, Janu¬
ary and February at 244, 500 do Charleston for December at 23f,
and 300 do Savannah for March at 244The total sales for imme¬
diate delivery this week foot up 19,187 bales
(including 3,378
bales to arrive), of which 5,540 hales were taken
by ^spinners,
2,060 bales on speculation, 8,739 bales for export, 2,848 bales in
transit, and the following are the closing quotations:
ings

were

Upland and
Florida.

Ordinary

per

Good Ordinary
Low Middling'

lb.

Middling

Below

we

Mobile.

23X@....
24X0....
24X0....

23X0....
24X0....
24X0....
25XO-...

New
Orleans.
24

Texas.

O....

got*....

25So....

25X0....

§21::::

give the total sales of cotton and price of middling
day of the past week:

;

239,847

Saturday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday.. I

Total
sales.

Upland and
Florida.

4,617
1,553
3,653
4,088
2,234
3,042

1868.

bales too

Week ending Dec. 8.

6,035
S4381

5,822
14,039
42,627
12382

••••

a

.

45,537
21,346

798,W0

Total last year..

BECEIPT8.

Mtc’d this week at—

107,666

54,700
23,167
19,526
31,967

Other

at this market each

—c

BXCEIPTS.

1869.

Total this year

Metals, &c—
Cutlery...

10,854

.

261
2-9
60

Glassware

Since
the
Jan. 1,
week.
1869.

1866.

12380
56,413
479,680

593

For

Same
time

Since
Jan. l,

For

Great
Britain. France

25X0...*
25X0.:::
25X0....
25X0....

25XO-...

25)fo....

i

Mobile.

New
Orleans.

»xo....
25X0....
35X0
25X0....
25X0....
25XO-...

25X0....
25X0....
25XO-...
25XO-...
25X0....
25X0...

Texas.
28

g.

8*1::::

Receipts.—The receipts, as made up to-night, show the effects
the rivers, the total for the week being

of the late rains upon

103,054 bales against 88,284 bales last week, and 81,818 bales two
making the aggregate sinoe the 1st of September
901,664 bales against 712,923 bales last year and 551,455 bales for
the same period of 1867. We thus see that,
compared with 1868,
weeks Bince,

there is

an

with 1867

increase this

an

increase of

season

of about 25 per cent, and

compared

60 per cent.

As the means of trans¬
portation in the South are improving each year the movement thus
far may not be a safe index of the total
crop, and yet it will be
over

noticed that this increase is obtained while the
White and other rivers have been so low as to

Red, Wachit^
keep the Mobile

and New Orleans arrivals below the figure
they would otherwise
have reached. For instance, it is generally admitted that New

Orleans will contribute at least 100,000 bales more this
year than
last year, and yet thus far the arrivals there are a little less
than
during the same period of 1868. If, however, this ratio of receipts
over last year is to be kept
up the course of the port arrivals each

compared with month to the end of the

year would be about aa follows. We give
there is an increase in the the movement also for the two
previous seasons.
•sports this week of20,761 bales, while the stocks to-night are 40,779
hales more than
,-BeoeipU, •m-’UK
they were at this time a year ago. The following
Mouth;
Total.
asSNSt* ****&'
ii our usual table
jmber
...145,785
145,785
showing the movement of cotton at all the ports
ber
989,719
495.4Tam am as
froat Sept. i, to November 26, the latest mail dates. We do not
iftl,455
)ec6mpof
,715
include our telegrams to-night, as we cannot insure the
accuracy
SSStoSo
°r obtain
the detail neoessary,

the

corresponding week of last




season,

\am

•.,

by telegraph.

.

25X0....

May

99,000
92,000
16,000
18,000

Jane

July
August

Corrections
22,000
Overland
258,611
Southern consumption.
....

Total crop

2,006,362

10.112

2,102,713
2,120,428

13,709
15,823
8,911
49,325
271,711

2,080,114

2,092,601

17,715
258,611

2,152,514
2,166,223
2,182,048
2,190,957
2,240,282

61,378

79,349
73,752
12,487

2.511.720
2.603.720
2.619.720
2.632.720
2.654.720
2,913,331
100,000

2,379,039

-

2,511,993

80,000

82,000

2,459,039

3,018,331

December 4, 1869.

CHRONICLE.

TflE

726

2,593,993

Golconda, 8,179....Cornet,2,435...
skips J; A. Thompson, 4,178.. Mongol, 2,957..)*p’r

GettPburg, 3,187
To Havre, per
et°amers
1 mm,

Hiveraide, 3,902....Santiago de Cnbi, 1,906

per bark

750

i*aa,

.

**
*** rjdjj

To Bremen, per ship S orento, 4,867.;. bark Victoria, 2,043,
’ «
To mmbnrg, per steamer Bavarit, 2,810..
To Barcelona, per brigs Columbus, 451
Eecurso, 103....per bark
Hernan Cortez, 1,3<7
j
To Malaga, per bri« Recurso, 480
’
To Genoa, per bark Patmos, 1,672
i
Mobile—To rrem n, per brig F. J. Merryman, 833

,aiU
"
2*

”
give the above not for the purpose of indicating an opinion
"
simply for the purpose of showing Charleston—'To Liverpool, per ship Ellen Southard, 26 Sea Island and
receipts and the total crop in case
2,648 Upland
...the present ratio of increase is kept up through the season. Our Savannah—To Liv. rpool, per steamer St. Tboma«, 105 Sea Island and
1,851 Upland .,per snips Island Home, 13 Sea Island and 2 139
readers, too, will be able, with the help of the above table, to follow
Uplands
Ivinboe, 3,443 Uplands—per barks OswiDgo, 8t Sea
the movement each month, and as the season progresses draw their
Island and 1,986 Uplands....Thomas Cochran, 1,927 Uplands
We

to the extent of the crop, but
what must be the course of the
as

conclusions as to the final result.
Exports.—The exports are again

anada, 1,094
To Havre, per bark
•

own

large, being 55,387 bales to
Liverpool, 8,000 bales to France, and 12,729 bales to the Continent.
Uncleared engagements are also large, so that we may look for a

continued liberal movement to Great Britain and the Continent

during the next few weeks.

Charta, 525..

335,000

bales.

Stock in Liverpool
Stock in London
Stock in Glasgow
Stock in Havre
Stock in Marseilles...
Stock in Bremen
Stock rest of Continent
Afloat for Great Britain

1867.

868,000
126,700

431,000
107,100
2,900
66,400
12,600

98,500

550

300

48,700
4,300
7,100)
10,000 J
254,000
45.990
239,847
40.991

83,200
8,000
2,950

12,000
292,000
78,250'
280,619
61,242

The

Afloat for Havre

Stock in United States ports
Stock in inland towns

particulars of these shipments, arranged in our usual form,

follows

Mobile
Charleston.
2,674
S’lvinn h... ,1X640
Tex a
1,480
Norfolk
1,6.0

66,361

1,249,260

6,910

•

.

.

.

9,454

.

•

•

•

*

....

....

.

1,931

2,710

833

8,674
14,234
2,835

....

•

..

10,00 j
38,045

1,009

.

.

....

15,727

*

....

....

.

.

924

....

....

....

TotaL

no.

430-

1,672

1,981

....

1,355

....

Total.,

2,310

883

...

Saler

....

....

1,594

.

ga.

356

....

..

Mala-

bu'g

men.

....

...

.

.

BarceIona. Genoa.
730
400

Ham-

Bre-

.

8,785

are

:

pool. Havre.
440
New York
7,152
N-w Orleanf .11,049 13,693

253,164

1,146,178

1,247,061

Total

•71,283

Liver-

80,000
271,000

##

Total.

as

1868.

i 40^

jW

bark Iris, 1VT 6
Noutolk—To Liverpool, per ship Lilian, 1,610

seasons:
1869.

\tlanta, 82 Sea Idam and 1,612 Uplands
.*** jn™
1,000 Uplands'.
Gregory, 955....per brig Magna ‘

To Bremen, per

Cotton.—The following table shows

op

i

12 640

.....

To Genoa, per brig M. i o ilse Miller,
Texas—To 1 ivet pool per bark Uanson

ths
quantity of cotton in sight at this date of each of the three past
Visible Supply

« fi74

1,610

....

480

4,402

924

71,233

figures indicate an increase in the cotton in sight to-night of
Gold has fluctuated the past
Gold, Exchange and Freights
106,883 bales compared with the same date of 1868, and a deficit week between 121 and 125, and the close to-night was
122^.
of 2,199 bales, compared with 1867.
Foreign exchange closed rather weak, under continued free sup¬
The exports of cotton this week from New York show a decrease
ply of bills. The latest transactions were effected on a basis of
from last week, the total reaching 10,002 bales, against 12 645 bales la t
108|@108| for London bankers, long; 109f@109^ for short, and
week. Below we give our table showing the exports of cotton from
108i<5}108£ for commercial. Freights closed at ±c. by steam to
New York, and their direction for each of the last fou* weeks; also
Liverpool.
the total exports and direction since September 1, 1S69 ; and in the
By Telegraph from Liverpool—
last column the total for the same period of the previous year:
Liverpool, December 3, 4-30 P. M.—The market opened buoyant this morning,
ISrport* of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1869 but became easier laier in the day, and closed dull at a Jshade lower prices, bales
of the day have been 10,000 bales, 3.000 of which were taken for speculation and
These

same

WEEK ENDING

EXPORTED TO

5iOV.
9.

Other British Ports....

Nov.
23.

Nov.

13,745

Liverpool

6,439

16.

*

*

*

to

Nov.
30.

>>rev.
year.

date

69,056

59,373

440

•

....

81281

5,561

9,943

3

....

....

•

Total French

export. The sales of the week nave been 128,000 bales, of which 17.000 wer«
taken for export and 28,000 on speculation. The stock in port is estimated at
835,000 bales, of which 19,000 are American.
The receipts cl the week have
been 40,000 bales, of which 13,000 are American. The stock at sea, bound to this

port, is estimated at 292,000 bales,

of which 139,000 are American.

For the convenience of our readers we give the following, showing the sales sna
showl
stocks at and afloat for Liverpool each ol the last four weeks:

317

7,152

9,437

....

....

7,152

....

664

Havre

84,125
156

9,437

*

6,480

Total to Gt. Britain. 18,756
Other French ports

time

,

11

..

Total

6o4

....

•

•

440

•

•

9,913

5,564

128,000
17,000
28,000
8-5,000
19,000
292,000

Stock of American-..
Total afloat
American afloat

470

Hamburg
Other ports
'

•

781

1,^75

Bremen and Hanover

Trade Report—The market for yarns
Th« following table will show the

8,949

10,136

7,452

7,974

16,401

18,110

•

•

1.654

1,654

1,634

10,002

12,645

7,925

107.900

BOSTON.

This
Since
week. Sept. 1.

Since

This

week. Septl.

week.

1,297

NeW Orleans.
Texas
Savannah
Mobile
Florida
South Carolina.
North Carolina..

584

This

.

24,053
10,235

....

North’m Ports.

287

4,597

19,097

Total this year 22,610

2*9,033

22.203

203,537

1,834
8,787

Virginia

-

j

-

60

775

623

•

•

•

•

6)587

201

461

*860

Tennessee, &c.
Foreign

4,580

This

ce

*

1,860 11,071
1,489 15.459
8:8
4,675

502
645

Sir

8*, 407

*520

53

267

535

|

1,936;
7.

.

1

152

3,190

....

23
871

*5ci

2)i75

1,207 37,657

1,994

12,211

3,007

4,2271 40.114

895

9.318

1,796

• • • •

1

Shipping News.—The exports

of cotton from the United States the

latest mail returns, have reached 71,233 bales. So
far as the Southern ports are concerned, these are the same exports
reported by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle last Fri¬
day, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are the exports for
past week, a* per

back.

With regard to New York, we include the manifest-

to Tuesday night, to make the figures correspond with the offi¬
cial week.
Below we give a list of the vessels in which these ship¬
ments from all ports, both North and Sooth, have been made:
Total bales
Exported this week from—
np

Liverpool, per steamers Russia, 267—Manhattan, 2,371
....Tarito, 768.... Roxana, 174.... City of Wat hington, 701. ...Eng¬
land, 2,871
To Havre, per steamer Lafayette, 440
To Bremen, per steamer Main, $56
To Hamburg, per steamer Silesia, 400
.y.i;..
To Salerno, per brig Minnie ▲. Smith, 924

New York—To

t

To Genoa, per

bark Lizzie Cummins, 206 “-brig Neponset, 525

NxwOrleans—To Liverpool, p«D»teamer Fire Queen, 2,248....ships




31,000

3(1,000
88,000

and fabrics at Manchester is quiet but
Tues.

Wednea.

Tburs.

*•

“

Uplands....
Orleans

12

ii*<an*
@12^ 12 ®12%

Up. to arrive

12

32
:

©12* 12^3....

12K3..J

:

TOBACCO.
Friday, P. M., Tecember

There is

a

further decrease in the exports

3,1869.

of crude tobacco

week, the total from all the ports reaching
hhds., 147 cases, 2,083 bales, 1159 ceroons, and
against 1,378 hhds, 280 cases, 1,849 bales, and
this

only 533
187 pkgs
188 pkgs,

days. Of these exports for this week
165 hhds., 47 cases 1,335 bales, 1,159 ceroons, and 155 pkgs
70
were from New York; 145 hhds from
New Orleans; 228
7*,261
hhds 75 cases, 748 bales and 27 pkgs from Boston. The
4)823 direction of the shipments of hhds. was as follows: To
1,599
13,510 Bremen, 23;
to Genoa, 145; to Africa, 120; to other
140
3,655 foreign, 125; and the balance to different ports.
During
6
the same period the exports of manufactured tobacco reached
31,064
90,494 lbs., of which 70,186 lbs. were to Melbourne. The
20,837
full particulars of the shipments from all the ports were asy

Since

Septl. week, j Sept 1.
-

356

6,614

64,816
4,736
2,466
48,906
17,367
34,697
2,356

4,245

BALTIMORE.

PHILADELPHIA

NEW TORE.

-

20,000
24,000
398,000

daily closing prices for the week.

88,726

following are the receipts of cotton at New York, Boston, Phili
delphia and Ballim; *e for the last week, and since September 1, 1869 :
RECEIPTS PBOM-

“

1,300

••••

The

only

888,000
25,000
290,009
115,000

,

972
328

....

..

...

....

15,501

1,654

•

•

....

....

Grand Total

PriceMidd.
“

others

Spain, etc

756

3,208

781

1,745

.

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c
Ail

two tfeeks

11,000
7,000
420,000
29,000
285,000
100,000

5)600

Mon.

Satur.

Nov. 6.
106,000

....

Total to N. Europe

Total

2,308

....

66,000
10,000

139,000

firm.

356
40 J

900

Nov. 19.
75,000

Nov. 26.

Dec. 3.
Total sales
bales lor export
Sales on speculation.
Total stock

for tbe

previous

seven

follows:

ri
ManTd.

Hhda.

Hhds. Cases. Bales. Ceroons. Stems. Pkgs. lb*.
165
47
1,335
1,150 ....
155 90.4M

Exp’d this week Irom
New York
Ba)timore......
Boston

«.«...•#•*

75

..

.

....

».

••••

27

743

-

145

Portland
San Francisco....
Total
Total last week
Total previous week

....

828

Philadelphia
New Orleans

....

»
'

25

533

147

1,878

280

—

2,0of

1,849

.L*-

....

1,159

....

....

....

••••

187

1«8 126,348

634
....
446 188
3,021
168
7,152
440
Below we give our usual table showing the total export
856
400
924 of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and
780 direction, since November 1,1869;

their

1869.J

December 4,

THE CHRONICLE.

■MMrti of Tol>«ceo from
per

the United State* since Horen
Cer’s Stems,

Great

_

Cases. Bales. A tcs.

Hhds.

To

530

Britain

145

Pkes. Manfd
A hxs.

lbs.

161,911
7,838

■

3,610

719

Ueldnm

hhds.

131

1,239

Germany

The direction of the

1% 1869t
-

1,159

153

S

1,075

prance

"ii

58
199

‘339

••

&o

8pain, Qibralt.

Mediterranean
Austria

.

the other ports,
P

283

2,678

•••

Africa,*^....

41
48
25

^est Indies

as

follows:

Boston—To Honolulu, 75 'aBes, 10baf b^xes. ...To
Surinam, 2 hMs....
To Halifax
d Charlottetown. 9 hhds
To the Provinces, 17 half
boaes
.To Other Foreign, 125 hhds, 198 half do , and 748 baleB.
From San Francisco—To Tah ta, Senses....To Callao, 20 cases.
From New Orleans—To Liverpo 1, 1 box
To Belize! Honduras, 1 hhd..^.
To Bremen, 29 hhds
To Genoa, 15 hhds and 4 boxes.
om

*

The exports in this table to European ports are made
up from
ifests. verified and corrected by aD inspection of the cargo. ‘

61

China, India, Ac
Australia, Ac
B.N.Am. Prov....
Sooth America

foreign exports for the week, from

has been

.

32C

Holland
Denmark
Italy

727

1S5
124
68

Bast Indies

BREADSTUFFS.

40,098

39

152
302

man¬

26^533

Friday, December 3, 1869, P. M.

30,841

The market for Breadstuff's the past

week has ruled compa¬
ratively steady, favored by the check to the decline in gold,
10
AH others
better accounts from abroad, an easier
money market, and
the approximate close of the Erie Canal, and the termination
6,679
1,110
Total since Nov 1
e,151 1,159
473
641
366,912
of supplies through that channel.
The following table indicates the ports from which the
Flour has come forward freely ; the
receipts to day were
above exports have been shipped :
42,000 bbls., and there has not been much demand latterly
Tcs. & Stems Bxs. A
Lbs.
Hhds.
either for speculation or the trade.
Cases. Bales.
From
cer’s.
hhds. pkes. Manfd.
There has been some
717
2,475
New York
2,908
i02
1,159
250,904 business for
7
export, but not enough to give tone to the
Baltimore
2,2<i9
473
1,157
25,514
186
3
Boston
152
market.
The steady rise which took place in the
early part
Philadelphia
of the week appears to have culminated on
371
1
New Orleans
Wednesday;
5i
San Francisco
since then, without material decline, the turn has been in
Virginia
favor of the buyer.
Portland
Holders, however, do not press sales ;
the receipts are expected to become much smaller at
Total since Nov 1.
5,679
1,110
473
641
6,151
1,159
once,
366,912
and confidence is general that
prices are not likely to go any
The receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and sine<
lower.
The surplus of receipts is, therefore, sent to
store,
Nov. 1 have been as follows:
and it is indicative of the
light stocks that rates of storage
RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK 8IN0E NOVEMBER 1. 1S* 9.
are one-half of those
ruling last December.
The close was
.—This week—,
*

Mexico

1

Honolulu, Ac

3

1,U4

—

.

,

4

.

.

mm

•

•

*

......

•

•

.

....

....

From
,

-‘iitimore
.

.

Ohio, &c

....

,

,

4

•

•

•

•

•

*

.

.

.

,

....

.

..

....

....

.

pkgs.
1,03
.

.

.

•

„

....

•

...

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

«

-

•

•

....

.

>

*

....

.

.

•

revised

857

Ill

649
42

...

1,40S

144
114
25
929

73

1,101

7,214
73
924
140

....

6,948

11,212

8,351

generally

irregular,

are

quiet and weak.

Wheat has arrived less freelv, and the intense cold of
last night terminated the
navigation of the Erie Canal
for
the
season.
Quotations from abroad show a
marked advance and gold,
though lower, is more steady.

There has, however, been little further advance in
prices
in addition to that noted last week.
The higher quo¬
tations from

Liverpool

are not

considerable orders. The
out freer
offerings from

as

yet accompanied by any

improvement in prices has brought
receivers, whose financial burdens

heavy. Private accounts from Great Britain say that her
large stocks are now im course of reduction, and that ulti¬
mately during the winter months large orders for our wheat
may be expected. There is a moderate steady demand from
The following are different Continental ports. At today’s market shippers
took^j 45,000 bushels, No. 2 Spring, at Si 30£@1 31; but

quotations:

Light..

Common lugs

lugs

•

....

....

The market for Tobacco the past week has been
quiet.
•In Kentucky Leaf the demand has been confined
mainly
to the home trade, and the sales for the week do not exceed
350 hhds.
The stock on the 1st inst. was reduced to
15,870
hhds. Accounts from the new crop continue
unfavorable;
one old broker
says the specimens of frosted tobacco which
have been received are the worst he has ever seen.
Stocks
on sale contain but little low and medium
grades, and

assortments

•

T’lsin.Nov.l—
hhds.
pkg?

93
25

.

275
98

other

...

,

Previously—,
pkgs
6,179

hhds.
126

...

72

““"Total

•

‘

hhds.
18
21
^

•

.

.

New Orleans....

.

•

....

....

,

...

,

«

....

....

Vixm-a

.

«

•

....

..

#

Heavy Weit’n, &c.

8*@ 8#c.
8#@ 9*

are

little else was done.
Corn has been without the
strong

speculative support
previously noticed, and although stocks and offerings are
10# @11
11* @11#
good leal...
11*@1I
12 @12#
light, the demand has not been sufficient to maintain the
Fine leaf
12*@12#
12#@13#
late advance. Oats have not been much wanted
Sections
:
13 @14
14 @15
by the
Seed Leaf Tobacco has also been
trade, while receipts have been liberal, prices therefore
very quiet.
The only show some
sales we have to note are 34 cases
State, at 15c; 52 sustained at reaction from the highest point, and are barely
the close by a speculative demand. Rye con¬
cases Ohio,
14c; and 36 cases Connecticut, 18c. The fol¬
tinues very scarce. Canada Peas declined to $1.10 in bond.
lowing are quotations for new crop: Connecticut wrappers,
good to prime, 50@75c; do, medium, 35@45c; do, ordinary, Barley has ruled quite dull, but holders have refused to
28@30c; do seconds, 25@32c; do fillers, 12@18c; New give way in prices, and at the close there is rather more
York running lots, 18@25; do
<■
wrappers, 28@50c; Ohio movement, with a steadier tone :
wrappers, 25@55c; Pennsylvania wrappers, 25@60c; do
The following Are closing
quotations :
fillers, 12@13; New York fillers, 10@12£.
FlourWheat.Spring,perbusu. $1 15@ 1 36
Red Winter
Spanish Tobacco is rather quiet, and the sales for the Superfine
# bbl. $4 70@ 5 10
1 20@ 1 85
Extra State
5 60@ 5 75
Amber do
1 36@ 1 89
week have been limited to 30 bales
Extra Western, com¬
Havana, 24c gold, in
White....
1 45@ 1 60
1 60@
bond; 150 do, 95c@$l 05 currency, duty paid ; 58 bales, Double Extra Western 6 20@ 5 50 White California
Corn,Western Mix’d,new 1 09@ 1 12
Yara, II Cut, private terms.
and St. Louis
6 75@ 8 50
Yellow new...
1 12@;i 15
Southern supers
White
6 £0@ 6 10
-Manufactured Tobacco, between old and new stock, is un¬
@ 1 15
Southern, extra and
1 05@ 1 18
Rye
settled ; exporters are
family
6 40@ 8 75 Oats
waiting for prices to become estab63@ 66
California
.

9*@ 9#c

Medinm leaf

,w-

mon

new

...,@

The

following are the

for the past
\
*

exports of tobacco from New Yoik

week:

•

;

<EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM NEW YORK.*
i

Manfd

Glasgow
:
Bremen ..1....L

Hamburg
geaot

Hdbourne
Cuba

1
80

......

‘

..

I

Indies
.

i
2
%

i
ca

TtJ
fow
r

Granada.....

’*.7.7,7. V

Total,




1.305

..

120

•

•

•

•

American Colonies.

Guiana

15
•

•

•

••••

4
4

•

1,159

70,186

••••

12^624

•

•.

•-

&

•

•

•

•

•

»

-

,

*5
•••

•

•

•I •

•

••••

•

•

•

•

•

936

•

•

•

•

•••»

• • •

«•••

•

165
2

••lei

47

•

166

as

follows:

YORK.
,

.1868.

.

Since
Jan. 1.

For the
week.

,

Since
Jan. 1.

Bye, bush
Barley, Ac., bush

FROM NEW YORK

13,016,285

439,203

18,620,860

8,183,560

Com, bush

114,640
8,450
1,839,5^0

10,519,625
314,960
3,001,040

Wheat, bush

• •••

To

1,159

1 03@ 1 80
20@ 1 40
l 10@ 1 80

800,175

110,370
882,605

2,661,686
239,530

757,955
2,721,116
10,853,890

FOR THE WEEK AND SINCE JAN.

].

•••

26

1,886

NEW

3,130,675
186,570

Com meal, bbls

FOREIGN EXPORTS

\

•

1

1S69.
For the
week.

Oats, bush

•

V.Y.

*

AT

Flocr, bb's

»••

•••

.

50@ 5 85 Peas, Canada....
75@ 6 25

RECEIPTS

2,214

10
•

Barley

Malt

4,534

....

.£

gntiah West

fine
Com Meal

The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been

"

'

....

Rye Flour, fine and super

90,494

Flour, C. meal, Wheat, Rye,
bbls.

€tt. Brit. week.... 23,684
Since Jan. 1
.622,991

bbls.

bush.

245,940
8516,739,374

busb.

Barley. Oats,

Com

bush,

bush

bush.

....

—.

....

17,0001,887,802

v*&.

805

N. A. Col. week..\ 6,215
Since Jan. 1
208,088

•

West Ind. week..
.

10,159

818,484

•

•• •

60,988

•

gold. Sugars alone have been seriously affected, although
gold is the basis of transactions in all.

•

•

♦

• •

« •

•

252,504
48,468 2,12?
1351,699 :128,42417,453,703 151,476
929,032 179,949 5,409,013 152,993

«

•

•

•

•

44,584

•

2,80®

290

•

S9,397

8,391

•

78
90

The trade with the Western and inland markets remains
an imclive condition.
Orders are scarce, and of light*

150,3a1

540

....

....

7,410

c

.

•

....

36
201

1.057

.

•

•

•

•

2?,9J6

49,168
81,599

account, while the difficulty in making collections is still
very great, and seems likely to exist until better prices can
ye obtained for the great harvests of the West.

a—
.

136,207

.

807,242

61,918

787,874

«...

803,424

i

10

•••

11,349

7,202
3.847

50

7

29,310
31,201
26,459

170,330

.

Boston.......

628,978

81,081

Among the matters ot interest to the trade is the pro¬
by Congress, at their next session, of the
now heavy duties imposed on
all importations of Spices,
This is now agitated with some promise of favorable action*
Raw Sugars have been unsettled, and are decidedly lower*
There is a shade of improvement to day in the tone of the
market, but no quotable advance, and nominal quotations
are
lower than those given in our last. Refined
posed reduction

following tables, prepared for the Chronicle by Mr. E. H.
Walker, of the New York Produce Exchange, show the grain in si£ht
and the movement of breadstuff* to the latest mail dates :
The

IN

NEW YORK AND BROOKLYN WAREHOUSES.

STORE IN

1868.
Nov. 28.

2,974,189

1,623,652
1,823,8*2
3,121,614
461,085

947,933
832,620
133,3)4
31,700
10,185
65,209

2,230,745
2,489,102
250,625

5,951,299
5,045,210
Including about 120,001 bushels Californm.

1,106,681

Oats, bash
....

262.553

39,611
11,862

...

70,905

Malr,
Total crrain. hash
*

1807.
Nov. 29.

2.910,853

181 69.
,
Nov. 20.
Nov. 27.

RSCRIPTS

367,881

73,493

LAKE PORTS FOR THE WEEK

AT

Flour*
bbls.

(1% lbs.)
43,C87

*

At

Chicago

(60 lbs )
248,111
559,727
37,371
40,039

Milwaukee

39.866

Toledo

23,701
26,775
30,<061

Detroit
Cleveland

..

.

7,312,414

ENDING NOV.

bush.

bush.

(56 lbs.) (82 lb*.) (48 lbs )
29,4^1
136,909 147,006
4,280
9,118
6,822
14,560
20,500 31,783
1,947
2,900
7,823
34,220
24,2 0
16,600

59.COO

Molasses has been kept up
through the week principally by public sales, and prices
show considerable firmness.
In foreign the limited sales
have been to the trade at former prices.
The stock of Teas now here has been so fully looked over

Rye.
bush.
i 6 lbs.)

26,055

2,845
1,74'

3’, 150 and the better invoices sold out, th it what remains con¬
33,790 tain but few lots of fine Teas, and buyers are awaiting the

944,243

177.882

208,647

104,711

118,959 11,040,650
77,417 501,792
Correspond’gnweek.
’67. 78,710
634,878
•66. 89,129
547,789
4*
’65. 84,827
981,603

133,053
3^7,964

191,014

ISO, 950

19,391

173,776

56,000
43,993
61,024
67,579

23,307
17,787
4-,283
29,499

Totals.

......

Previous week

-.

123,499

....

A
68.

«<

Comparative Receipts at

inclusive, for four years

the

9ame

:
1869.

4,715,036

Flour
Wheat
Corn

4

f.....

42,926,135
29,558,057
12,993,014

.

Oats

77,315 540

81,827,995

Oats

Barley

Mye

before purchasing to

are

as

follows

any extent.

:

At N. York.
this Week.
112 050
640

import).

4,890
7.838

1866.

1867-

1868.

2,139,987

2,071,673

1,987,779

24,308,474
12 795,631
6,830,744
1,648.491
791,550

Wheat
Coro

The totals

Tea (indirect

1,873,892

Flour

crop

Tea

Nov. 27, inclusive, for four years
1869.

-

heads.

1,659,729

82,698,661

88,765,124

And fr-m August 1st to

new

vessels, from

12,408,637
2,174,8^6
v,301,959

13,963,32 >
2,828,188

18,674,266
2,570,095
1.639,744

1,336,573

Total

arrival of the

Imports of the week have been only moderate. Two Tea
Ilong Kong, have arrived with small lots of
259,267
black Tea. One cargo of Rio Coffee has come in, and also
ports, from January 1 to Nov. 27 one of Ceylon, with sundry lots of other sorts. Receipts of
Sugar and Molasses are moderate—included in them are
I860
1867.
1868
36,243 b:igs of Sugar, and 1,148 bbls. New Orleans Mola?se3.
3,829,932
3,8G8,603
3,491,788
The imports at New York for the week, and at the several
30 023,413
27,222,287
28,506,983
37,717,228 ports since January 1, are given below under their respective
30,377,318
29,791,043
266,116
93,008
180,199

487,213

192,161

2,050.745

Barley
Bye

.

much notice from buyers.
The activity-of domestic

27.

Barley

Oats.
bush.

Corn.

Wheat.
bush.

-

19,724
68,155

8/293,406

Sugars have also been dull and drooping throughout the
week, and have declined equally with the raw material.
Coffee has been firm, and prices are fully sustained for
all grades, although the medium qualities still fail to attract

191,302

70,707

..

[December 4, 1869.

CHRONICLE.

THE

728

’21,641,439

23,290,519

16,096,598

10,641,965
12,803,028
2.156,265
1,418,981

11,953,879

10,349,922
1,289,85‘i
1,096,203

14,477,810
4,130,421
1,573,486
1,142,790

46,364,890

48,161,678

47,980,379

37,421,105

.boxes.

Sugar.
Sugar....
Molasses.
.

1,808
1,678
36,243
1,138

bbls.

•

•

•

r-

Total at all ports
From Jan 1 to da*e->
1868.
1869.

41,079,614
35,282
1,117,646
305,590

38,249,690
40,352
1,061 400

677.977

466,0(1

545,590
795,122
350,976

654,774
400,903
4**1,880

367.857

..

....

•

TEA.

here is light, and there bai been in
for this kind than any other, end
piice3 are firm and even somewhat improved. For other descrip¬
Eastward Movement from Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo and Clev«
tions the mark-1 has been dull, and previous rates, though nomi¬
land, including rail shipments from the former three places f.r week
nally sustained, are not very tine. The stock of old teas has been
ending Nov. 27, 1869:
reduced to lots of undesirable quality, which offer little attraction to
Rye,
Oats,
Barley,
Corn,
Flour, Wheat,
bash
bush.
bust*.
bush.
buyers, who are accordingly boldine off for the anival of new has.
bbls.
bush.
18,117
35,767 Shaugh ie circulars under date of Oct. 20, have been received by
Week ending Nov. 27
.100,710 990,450 101,432 105,104
11,116
29,808
Previous week
122,864 852,818 267,311 304,212
moil tince our last, coming through in 40 days. They repr<sent the
20,504
34,728
Cor. week, 1868
74,326 571,696 241,838 200,702
1,020 tea supply this year as likely to f.il short of that of last, to the
2,317
V
1887...
87,735 227,682 498,773 104,618
extent possibly of 20 per cent., though this is regarded as an
Comparative Shipments from same ports, including rail, (excepting
exaggerated estimate.
The Ping Suey cr- p is ascc-rtainevl to be
Cleveland) from the opening of navigation to and including Nov. 27, for 10 per ceDt. short. The sales of the week include 1,200 half chests
f our years:
of greens, including a small invoice of new sold b< fore a nival, and
1869.
1868.
1867.
1866.
Total

grain,

basin Is....

The s-toek of fine green teas
consequence a better r etnand

..

.

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Oats, bush

-

Barley, bush

...

Rye, bush

Total grain, bash
GRAIN

2,510,626

2,162,785

33,837,178
20,818.296
8,307,439
259,453
430,152

21/44,787
25,858,435
13,624 155
803,810
884,275

55,879,522

IN

SIGHT**

NOV.

2 .027,665

9,351,7,-5
1,407,035

3,566,609

438,736

1,760,256

Oats,
bush

Corn,
bush.

893,018 1,106,68 L
86,0u0
} 149,855
403,041
516,809

.

Tea.—Supplies of
notwithstanding
the season’s sup¬

1,081,293

Messrs. Olyphant & Co/s Circu’ar Reports of
Blacks coutiuues to come forward fairly freely, but
the diminishing prospects of any large falling off in

27, 1869.

Wheat,
bush.
la store at New York
In store at Buffalo
In store at Chicago
In store at Milwaukee
Afloat on lakes for Buffalo

Oolongs
Imports have included 53,400 pounds of Black, jer
H. Upfaau,"
from Hong Kong, and 68,6)0 pounds of Black per “A W. Stevens,
from eame port. By European steamers the receipts are 640 packages.
Hong Kong, October 18, 1869.

19011,744

61,815,012

800 do. of

1,733,770

63,652,518

Flour, bbls..................

Barley
bush

262,553
46,206
291,758

plies, the demand for Congou has continued, and quite large settlements

demand for Black
ft

have taken pla'e. A temporary diminution in the
leafs led to some reduction in values at Shanghai and Hank w, but
Foochow holders have in most cases succeeded in maintaining priow.
Green Teas have been freely taken for both 3 gland and

America, and

purchases of Oolongs for the latter country have been con inued at
and Oswego 833,006
338.541
The receipts of O looogs are much
425,927 Foochow and resumed at Amoy.
118,58 3'
Afloat on N. Y. canals fcr tide water *.
769,301
under those to same date last year, and a general opinion prevails that
Rail shipments from Chicago and M l18,117 th*
62,214
82,723
Waukee for week
58,244
expert will be considerably less than lor some yeaio past, but tbe
present activity may lead to the bringing forward of some considerably
Total in store and iu transit Nov. 27. .8,064,152 1,766.598 1,997.377 1,014,561
Nov. 20..8,232,653 1,993,481 1,894,356 1,187,230
parcels. Export to the United Kingdom to date, 94,614,128 JP8*
Nov. 13. .7,439,513 2,246,2 0 1.893,644 1,350,358
against 109,958,186 to this date last year.
;? 4
Nov. 6..7,582,772 2,630,212 1,886,479 1,473,179
The following table shows the shipments of Tea from Chiua $od
Oct. 30..7,787,812 8,437,372 2,230,600 1,459.250
Oct. 23. .7,516,550 3,876,551 2,055,405 1,099,101
Japan to the United States from June 1 to October 18 1869 r and im¬
portations into the United States (not includiog S in lrancieco), iroflt
• Exclusive of
Shipments from the interior of this State anl including
January 1 to date, in 1868 and 1869.
79,172 bueh of Rye and 79,973 bush of Peas, thippea from Buffalo and Oswego.
IMPORTS PROM CHDIAA JA¬
SHIPMENTS PROM CHINA A JAPAN
“

“

“

“

“

*909

SGOO

“

“

63',000

“

•

PROM JUNE

GROCERIES.
Friday Evening, December 3, 1869.

The markets for Groceries have not

felt

so

might have been anticipated the fluctuations in




J/69, TO O T 18/69.
1868

1869.

severely

as

the price of

Black

Green,...

Japan
Total

1869.

C.B.

.

surd JA* V

-

3,144,624
2.667,177
2,635,786

8,509,828
8,278,291
1,680,419

8,368,033

PAN INTO

13,134.142
17,6*5,045 *
ia,irvh?4

8,437,587

40;967,464

<>:

’
,

33,249,590

THE CHRONICLE.

December 4, 1869,]
fh# indirect

729

17,961 last year.

* *

•

•

•

N.O.
Bbls.

2,559

•

COFFEE.

firm market fcr the ordinary and prime grades
of Brazil Coffee, with an active demand and basinets. Notwith¬
standing tie fall in gold in the earlier part of the week prices have
been fully supported throughout and close str ng.
For the middle
dualities tbeie bas not been much inquiry. The Rio telegram,
nnder date of November 8, received and published on Tuesday,
exhibits no great change in the condition of that market The
onOtation for coffee is 100 reis higher, and the effect of the telegram
has been on the wbo’e to improve the market here. Among the
tales is a further one of the Sanies coffee, resbipped from Ham¬
burg. There has been tut little dore in East or West India
Cifees, t ut the stocks here * re too small to allow any decline in
pikes. 1 he sales ccmpr se 7,959 bags of Rio, 589 do. of Santos,

150

There has been a

trd 675 of Laguayra.
Imports of Rio for the week have included only one cargo, per “ Stel¬
la,” of 8,708 bags, in addition to which tbe steamer Bellona’ brought
in ] 187 bags of Santos.
Of other sorts the arrivals have been “ Mary
A. Johnston,” from Ceylon, with 4,161 bags ; “ A. P. Patterson” with
j ins bags of Laguayra, and 1,984 bags of sundries by several vessels.
’The stock of Rio Dec. 2, and imports sioce Jan. 1, are as follows:
New
In Bags.
York.
ftock..
88,413
Saute date1868. 154,188

P. Rico. Demerara. Other.
♦Hhds.
♦Hhds.
♦Hhds.
425

Cuba.
♦Hhds.

importations since Jan. 1 now reach 84,642 pVgs, against

Phila-

BaltiNew Savan. &
Orleans. Mobile,
more. Orleans. Mobile.

.

2,060

Imports at the several portfe since January 1 have been
Total imports since Jan. 1 at New York
“
“
“
“
Portland
44

“

“

Boston.....

“

‘

44

“

44

“

*•

“

Philadelphia
Baltimore
New Orleans

44

‘

f‘

Total
♦

a

all

800
....

as

follows

:

♦Hhds
1869.
1868.
145.489
169,784
29,966
65,977

..

“

49,234

B5,U4

91,267

77,487

23,089

12,061

23,801
18,199

350,976

ports

401,486

Including tierces and barrels reduced to hhds.
8PICKS.

There has been more activity in the market at a rather easier
scale of prices than that prevailing last week. Pimento has im¬

proved £c. Cloves and Nutmegs are lower. Pepper is steady.
500 bags of Singapore sold yesterday at 25£c. gold,
duty paid.
Other Spicis do not show much change, but the tendency is to less
firm rates.

FRUITS.

Gal-

In

Total.

veston.

8,243

1,222

8,718

foreign dried Fruit the trade has been affected by the fluctua¬
9,000
23,600
3,140
122,353 tions in the
price of gold, and prices area shade lower. There has
2,700
6,000
196,039
1,700
80,010
2,800 1,117,646 been less inquiry also, purchasers apparently feeling disposed to
95,441
80,008.
8,200
297,413
Imports
688,788
5,800 1,051,400 await the settlement of values before
in 1868. 706,299
71,469
16,562
13,738
287,544
buying to any extent. Valen¬
Of other sorts the stock at New York, Dec. 2 and the imports at the cia Raisins are lower. Currants, under recent liberal receipts, are
general ports since Jan. 1 were as follows:
afo easier.
Other Frnits show no quotable change.
Domestic
/—Ne'V York—x Boston Philadel. Balt. N. Orle’s
£
Dried Fruit is quiet. Southern Apples retain their superiority in
In tags.
Stock. Import, import, import. Import, import.
♦45,762 ♦25,192
Jrn
+660
quantity and quality in tbe market, and are most sought for. 100
1,109
♦4,884
13,866
Singapore.
barrels were shipped this week to Germany. In Blackberries there
948
21,260
Ceylon
4,161
is but little doing. Peaches, peeled and unpeeled, are unchanged
52,229
Maracaibo
1,*58
1,044
23,309
18*,762
and inactive. In foreign green Fruits the sales at auction of Medi¬
Laguayra
8,768
64,859
Pt.Domingo
*
terranean have supplied tbe market fully with this description, and
1,163
1,*254
Other
4,106
20,174
1^668 1^246
prices are low. Messina Lemons selling at $3 50@4 00 per box ;
49.417
Total
1,246
805,690 Pal rmo do $3
11,019
231,927
21,125
1,575
25@3 50 per box, and Valencia Oranges $2 50 per
207
867,8 7
game *63.
47,849
39,781
22,778
295,664
1,379
Id West Indian Oranges, which is the only kind of Frnit in
box
Includes mats, &c., red need to bass.
t Also 14,245 mats.
which there i9 anything doiDg, are selling at $7 per barrel, and
Barracoa at $6 50. Green Apples are in ample supply, and sold at
SUGAR.
The rapid decline in gold, on Monday last, complet ly unsettled $3 75@4 00 per barrel*
We annex ruling quotations in first hands:
tbe market, and left ideas of values in a state of confusion from
Tea,
which they have hardly 3 et emerged, nor has the market rallied Duty: 25 cents per fi>.
ai.h the subsequent recuperation and greater steadiness in gold,
-—Duty paid•Duty raid—.
do
doExf. toflu’st 68 ® 88
Hyson, Common to fair... 78 ® 85
though tbeie is some little improvement noticeable in tne tone oi
do
Uncol. Japan, Com.to fair.. 80 ® 85
Superior to fine.... 90 ®1 60
effaiis at the close. Quotations ar^
do
do
Ex fine to finest... 1 <5 ®1 30
lower than at our last
Sup’rtofine. 85 ® 90
Ex f. to flnestl 05 @1 20
do
Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair... 72 ® 78
report, and even more on tbe better grades of raw Sugars.
do
Super, to fine.. 82 @1 05
Oolong, Common to fair.,
65 ® 70
The stock, in first hands, shows a gradu 1 diminution, except in
do
do
Exnnetoflnest.1 20 ®1 45
Superior to fine... 75 ® 85
do
Ex fine to finest.. 1 00 ®1 60
bags, which l ave been increased by tbe tree arrival of Dcinarara Ganp. & Imp., Com.to fair 85 @1 00
do
Souo & Cong., Com. tofair 80 ® 85
Snp. to fine 1 00 <g>i 25
Sugars to ov« r 200,000 bags.
do do Ex. to finest 1 30
do
Suphrtoflne. 90 ® 95
ft ports from New Orleans present a less encouraging account of H. Sk. & Tw’kay U to fair. 65 @1 80
do
Ex f.tofineetl 16 ®1 85
@ 70
,C,
do
do Sup. to fine 72 ® 80
the present crop, and a considerable efficiency in the yield over that
Coffee.
of last year is anticipated.
Duty: When imported direct in Am rican or equalized vessels from the
Und r the unsettled scale of prices the demand has been very
place of its growth or production; also, tbe growth of countries this side tbe
limited, and no efforts of any con equencebave t een made by Import¬ Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized ves delphia.

«

....

0

—

♦

ers

to effect sales—so that the total of the week’s business is small.

Refined Sugars h^ve been.

heavy and declining throughout, and
though a little more active to-day, still show a drooping tendency,
and clo?e weak at f c lower prices than a week ago. The sabs in
Raw Sugars embrace 1,702 hhds of Cuba, 829 do Porto Rico, 148
do of Demerara, 751 boxes of Havana, and 5,920 bigs.
Imports for ih* week at New York, a_d stock
were as

band December 2

Cuba, P. Rico, Other, Brazil, M’nila,&c
♦hhds.
♦hhds.
&gs
bge.
248
8«,243

Cuba,
bxs.

Imports this week
Stock on hand
Suns time 1868
*

on

follows:

H

Imports

1867

♦hhds.

1,803
10 ?,766

36,460
88,877

at the several ports
,

since Jan.
Boxes

1869.

.

39,852
17,3 0
1 have been

as

♦Hhds
1868.
1869.

<

1868.

1869.

Imp’s since Jan 1, at New York 369,846 226,772 321,376 324,236 185,786 424.986
“
“
Portland..
11,426
8,858 18,886
9,902
“
44
Boston.... 34,886 65,749
67,432
70,733 12,600 161,145
44
Philadel.. 83,575 56,623
69,664
72,298 49,650
44
Baltimore. 49,:-.86 32,302
67,401
63,683 10,955
N. Orleans 81,476 65.809
9,815
12,398
44

*

....

do

44

do
do
do

..

6

®

*

577,977 466,041

Including tierces and barrels reduced

545,690 554,774 208,991 588,181

do
do
do

do 10 to 12 114®
do 18 to 15 Ilf®

ty the domestic stock which is coming forward quite freely and has

hitherto been put upon the market mostly by public sale. Prices
have been well supported this weik and tbe later saks indicate an
improvement. The report from New Orleans of a diminished

Sid from the estimates heretofore made ofmarket. sent crop may
influence
etreoglbening the tbe pr The stock of
in

foreign remains light, but contains very little molasses of sufficiently
•good quality to interfere with the demand for the native, and
transactions are not important. The sales have included 210 hhds
of Cuba, 215 do. of
Barbadoes, 80 do. of Porto Rico, 66 do. of

Domerara,

and 2,503 bbls. of New Orleans.
The receipts of the week at New York, and the
w4r 2, were as follows :




stock

on

hand Decern-

124

..

® 16}

14}®

..

® 13}
181® 13}

13}® 13}

Molassesi
Duty : 8 cents $ gallon.
H ew Orleans (new)... # gall. 70 ® 82
do Clayed.
Porto Rico
50 ® 77
Barbadoes...

40 ® 46
45 ® 60

Cuba Muscovado, refining... 43 ® 55

Spices.
Duty: mace, 40 oents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 20;
pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 oents 18 fi>
Ctn
<«/>!W
D.
Cassia Batavia.gold,
41 ®
42
Pepper, in bond...(gold)
amn

A f

na

Ginger, race and Af(gold)
Mace
(gold)

The attention of buyers continues to be aim st wholly engro.'Fed

114

Bards
White sugars, A
do
do
B
do
do
extra C
Yellow sugars

.do 16 to 16 13 ® 18f4r

Cassia, inmats-, gold # lb

to hhds.

JMOliASSES.

▼e some

8}

9}tft 10}

....

Total

104% Ilf
10}® 10}

pr. to choice
do
ill® 12* Brazil,bags...;
oentrifugalhhds <febxe 9|® 12} Manila, bags

flav’a, Box,D.S.Nos. 7 to 9. 10}® 10}

Brazil, Manila
bags. bags.

12}
20
18
10
16

Sugar.
Duty : On raw or brown sngar, not above No. 12 Du^ch standard, 8; on
wt ite or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined,
8%; above 15 and not over 20, 4; on refined, 5; and on Melado 2)4 cents per lb
do
do
uo 19 to 20 14}® 14}
Cuba, inf. to 00m refining.. 10 @ 104
white
do fair to good
do
dc
13}® 14}
do. ... 10}® Ilf
do prme
Porto Rico, refining grades. 10}® 14
Hi® ..
do
do fair to good grocery.. 11}® 11}
grocery grades . 11}® 12}
do Melado
do molasses

44,466
17,903
follows:

18b9.

. _

do

207,543

62,614

sets, 5 cents per lb.; all other, 10 per cent ad valorum in addition.
Native Ceyiou
do.Prime,antypaid ...goid 111® 12
gold t7|®
o
Maracaibo
good
gold 16}®
gold 10}® 11
do fain.
gold 16}®
gold 9}® 10
Laguayra....
<lo ordinary
St. Domingo, in bond -gold .. &
~*gold 84® 9
Java, mats an J bags
gold 15 ®
gold 23 ® 231 Jamaica

do6** casesPenang * 1

A A

43®
11}®

44
11}

..

® 1 25 l

05 ®

i*io

Pepper, Singapore
do Sumatra,
Pimento, Jamaica.(gold)
do in bond...(°DOld)
Cloves...
...(gold)

Fruit.
Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and

■

,

peppei

10}®
25®
25®
18 ®
S}®
25}®

and

10}
25}
18}
4
26

„

Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds, •
Almonds, 6; other ants,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1}; Filberts and
Walnuts, 3 oents # 9>; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Frnits,

9 oent ad val.
Raisins,beealessnwVmat
do

Layer, new.# box
do Valencia.old# lb
do

do; new

Currants, new

# 2>

Citron, Leghorn

Prunes, Turkish

®8 50
4 35® ..
16®..
18 ® ..
14 ® 14}
® 36

...

12

Dates

Almonds, Langucdoo

do
Piovenee
do
Sicily, Soft Shell
do
Shelled, Spanish
Sardines
# hr. box

® 12

28 ®

20

® 23

tI6
40

..

® 81

# <1*. hA*

Sardines

17}® 18}

do New
Brazil Nuts

pe:r

lb

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

Apples, Southern..# 2>
siloed

do
do
Blaokberries.

.

Peaches, pared new
Peaches, unpared
4

..

® 15

..

9 9>

Figs,8myrn»

® 15

18 ®

..

15 ® 16
.. ® 14
® M

8 ® 9}

10 ® 11
18®..

18 ® 20
8|® 11

730

THE CHRONICLE.
THE DRY GOODS TRADE.
Friday, P. M„ November 26, 1869.

£ Business is still

limited almost
local purchases.

entirely to orders received by
Prices remain nominally un¬
changed, except in prints. The general tone pervading the n arket
is one of dullness but not of
despondency. Cotton is quoted at
25$c, for middling against 25c. last Friday. Commercial Paper is
in rather better
request, and less difficulty i3 experienced in obtain¬
ing discounts of the: best class of notes
The leading features of the trade are stated in the
preceding
points, and further than these there is little of importance to
notice, except the break in prints which occurred on Wednesday
contrary to the expectations of many, standards being marked
down
mail and small

$ cent a yard. The result of this action doe3 not seem to
have been particularly favorable
in increasing the demand for
these goods, as there is
hardly more buying at the reduced prices
than there was before.
In takiog a comprehensive view of the

[December 4,1889.

12, Merrimac D 12$, do pink and purple 15, do W
18$, Oriental*111
Pacific 12$, Richmond’s
11$, Simpson Mourning 12, Sprague’s
nn,i
and pink 18$, do blue
13$, do shirtings 18$, Wamsutta
^ ^*8
8$.
Print Cloths still
keep in the background. Speculators have
do
nothing, while printers have taken only such small
quantities as Sr*
actual wants justified ; ti e market is
thus renlered dull
and
Prices are nominally
quoted at 7$c for standard 64 clothweak*
an!
from 6c@7$ for other grades
as to qulity.
The Providence Journal
last week, states, with
of
regard to that market, that it U
The following are the sales:
Quiet
2,100 pieces 62x52,
pieces 66x60, standard, 6$c; 7,000 pieces 56x60, standar 6$c- 5ooi
I, 6fc • 4000
56x60, 6$c, light, 6$c ; 6,600 pieces 54x64,
seconds, 7$c; 1,000’nieces
64x64, 7fc ; 3,000 pieces 64x64, extra, 7 9-16c
; 10,000 pieces
64x64
extra, 7fc ; 21,000 pieces 64x64, extra, 7$c ;
4,000 pieces 64x64, com*
mon, 7-fc,
Total, 68,000 pieces. ' Most of the above
goods were sold
on

thirty day8.

Ginghams.—The

season is
nearly over, with little doing.
Allamance
plaid, 18$ ; Amoskeag, 17 ; Bates, 17 ; Caledonia, 18$;
Clyde,11; Earlston, 22$@25; Glasgow, 16; Gloucester, 14$;
jobbers market there is
Hadley,
perhaps but one circumstance which is positively unfavorable—and Hartford, 13 ; Lancaster, 17; Lancashire, 15; Pequa,14; Hampden, 16*
12$; Pars Mills’
Hat is the low price of
grain now ru ing, which can hardly fail to 14 : Quaker City, 14 ; Roanoke, 12$ ; Union, 13.
’
Muslin Delaines rem in at the same
depress the agricultural population of the West, and may prejudice
prices, but with a com paracollections to a certain extent.
lively small business, as the demand for winter is about over.
Hamilton
20 ; Tycoon
The exports of dry
goods for the past week, and since Jan¬ Pacific, 20; Reps, 27$ ; Lowell, 20 ; Manchester, 20; do all wool, 401!
do Armures, 20; do plain, 21 ; do Robe de
uary 1, 1869, and the total for the same time in 1868 anc
plain Oriental, 20 ; do Anilines,22$; do Serges, 2 ’$; do C, 22$; do
1860 are shown in the following table:
Alpacas, 22$•
do do 6-4, 26 ; Percales 4-4,
31; Perkin Lustres, 18.
-FROM NEW YORK.
Canton Flannels are as active as
FI iOM BOSTON.
anything else, but this is merely
Domestics.
Dry Goods.
Domestics.
an
equivocal statement. Brown—Amoskeag A A 32, do A
Exports to
Val.
pkgs.
Yal.
packages.
24, Ellerton
pkgs. N 27, do O
Hayli,
40
24, do P 21$, Great Falls F 28, Laconia 18$.
$6,353
$
BleachedLiverpool
23
Amoskeag A 26, do B 25, Ellerton W H 12, do N 30, Great Falls
9,249
Glasgow
F
7
2,088
25, Naurnkeag F 19.
Havre
3
6,538
Other Cotton Goods are dull and
Cuba...
2
483
inactive, without any noticeable
British West Indies
1
change in price. There is no particular class of
110
Brazil
goods which demand
69
10,708
special notice.
Oher Am’ Parts.
80
Woolen Goods present no new
Hor.olu
feature, the same general dullness
16
British Provinces
noted for previous weeks still
15
exists, only, if anything, intensified.'
Shawls are somewhat restricted iu
Total for week.
40
inquiry, and the falling off iu the
$6,353
105
111
$29,142
demand has caused a decline in
Since Jan. 1, 1869 ..19,875
2,131,069
price on most grades in stock, while
5,004
1,023,829
6,407 new
Same time 1868.. ..23,077
1,422,250
production is held at former rates. Quite a number of drives are
4,738
1,4S7,321
7,651
I860.. .81,087
33,643 being offered in the market now, at quite low figures,
which, iu the
icauiug «i
vi uv/uivotiv
majority of instances, are successful. Agei:ts also are disposed to press
manufacture, our prices quoted being those of the leading sales, probably wishing to carry as little st ck as possible to the
,

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

-

.

•

•

#

,

,

#

•

•

•

• •

•

,

•

»

•

«

•

•

....

....

...

•

....

•

....

•

•

•

*

•

•

•

»

•

•

•

....

’

...

“

“

.

....

if

v

t*uuva

a

uivuiaio

....

•

6

•

vi

jobbers:

Brown Sheetings and Shirtings
as last week.* Standard fine
browns

ensuing

are
are

in about the
very scarce,

same

and

condition
held

are

season.

Imported Dress Goods are in a dubious
state; no
jobbers hands causes a like state of proceedings from

inquiry from

importers. Such
styles on orders; these

few g

ods a3 are moving are in choice scarce
firmly in consequence, while a slightly firmer feeling is apparent
In medium grades.
mostly are for standard goods.^ It should also be remarked that com¬
Low grades are offered at concessions, with
few takers, however.
Agents are firm in their idea of an paratively Urge amounts are going into the auction houses, and in the
generality of cases reliz j fully as much as can be expected,
improvement in rates, and are li tie disposed to
taking into
any extensive consideration the lateness of the
transactions at present prices.
season and other
Agawam F 36 —, Amoskeag A 86 It
prejudicial cause?.
appears from recent disclosures at tha Custom House that
16$, Atlantic A 36 16$, do H 36 15, do P 36 12$ do L 36
numerous
14, Appleton
A 86 16, Augusta
86 14$, do 30 18, Broadway 86 12$, Bedford R frauds, in the importation of textile fabrics as well as in other goo Is,
have been goi; g on for some
809$, Boott H 27 11, do 0 34 12, do S 40 14$, do W 45
19, Com- mentioned the names of two or time, and in connection with them are
monwealth' O 27 8, Grafton A 27
three of our hitherto-considered first8$, Graniteville A A 36 15$, do EE 36 class
houses.
We sincerely hope that the
14$, Great Falls M 36 12$,doS 33 11$, Indian Head 36
investigations now pending
16$, do 30 13, In¬ may clear them of
dian Orchard A 40 15, doC86
any complicity; but as the case stands it looks
13$, do BB 36 12, do W34 11$, doNN86 rather
dubious. The specifications are, we believe, in the
14$, Laconia O 39 14$,do B 37 14, do E 36 12$,Lawrence A 36 ]
undervalua¬
2$, do C tion of goods, and
86 15, do F 86 13, do G 34
invoicing oifferent goods from those actually received.
12$,doH27 11, do LL 36-12$, LymaD 0 36 14,
The Auction Rooms have
do E 86 15$, Massachusetts BB 36
presented an animated business, large
13, doJ 30 12, Medford 86 14, Nashua
fine 38 14, do 36 15$, do E 40 18, Newmarket A
quantities of old styles and remnants being offered as the season draws
12$, Pacific extra 86 16$, to a close. The
do H 86 16, do L 86
offerings for the week were varied, attractive, and
18$, Pepperell 7-4 —, do 8-4 35, do 9-4 40, do
10-4 45, do 11-4 —,
Pepperell E fine 39 16$, do R 86 14, do 0 33 quite as extensive as at any previous time. There seems some com¬
petition among holders of goods to see which shall first get
18, do N 80 12$, do G 30 13, Pocasset F 80
9$, do K 36 13$, do Canoe aod
catalogued,
40 16$, Saranac fine O 83
very few goods are passed if anything like
14, do R 36 16$, do E 39
respectable offers are
17$, Sigourney 36 made. The decline in
10$, Stark A 86 15, Swift River 36 12, Tiger 27
gold and the expectation that Congress will take
9, Tremont M 38 11. some action
Blrachkd Sheetings and Shirtings
affecting trade causes considerable pressing of sales. The
have been in
very limited retailers have
demand. Some little busine-s is
generally bought very sparingly, and as goods were
doiDg in fine standards, but, taken as wanted for actual
a whole, the week has been
a
consumption, and they are in attendance upm the
very dull oDe io this special class of goods. auctions in
Stocks are by no means
large numbers.
large, but it is impossible to even force sales at a
considerable concession. In the absence of
any demand quotations are
nominal and unchanged.
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY U00DS AT THE PORT OF NEW
Amoskeag 46 19, do 42 17$, do 54 24,
American A 36 12$,
The importations of
Androscoggin L 36 16$, Auburn 86 —, Attadry goods at tins port for the week endiDg Dec.
waugan XX 36 12$, do X 36 10, Atlantic Cambric 36
24. Ballou A 3, 1869, and the corresponding weeks of 1867 and 1868, have been eb
Son 86 14$, do 31 11$, Bartletts f6
16$, do 33 14, do 3113$, Bates XX follows:
86 17$, doB 33
ENTERED TOR CONSUMPTION FOB
14, Blackstone 86 16, do D 37 13$. Boott B 36
THE WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER
26,1869.
15, do C
88 18$, do E 36
1867.
1868.
12$, do H 28 11$, do O 80 12$, do R 2S
1869.——i
10, do
W 45 19, Clarks 86 20,
Pkgs. Value.
Value
Pkgs.
Pkgs. Valce.
Dwight 40 21, Ellerton 10-1 60, Forest- Manufactures oi wool... 255
$82,513
331
359
$110,399
dale 36 16, Fruit of the Loom 36
$125,6-5
do
cotton.. 276
17, Globe 27 8, Gold Medal 36 14$,
293
83,537
290
73,926
69,813
do
Greens M’fgCo36 12, do 31
silk...., 116
96,190
247
600
10$, Great Falls Q 36 16$. do J 83—, do S
187,373
81C,996
do
flax
261
81 12, do A 82 14,
59,190
834
12 ,v50
609
121,096
HilPa Semp. Idem 86 16, do 88
14$, Hope 86 14$, Miscellaneous dry goods. 294
261
88,889
James 86 14$, do 33 13$, do
70,186
504
102,897
81—, Lawrence B 36 15, Lonsdale 36
16$
MasonvilleSH 17,Newmarket O 36
Total
1,202 $404,702
1,966
14, New York Mills 86 22$, Pepper¬
$667,834
2,262 $730,437
ell 6-4 32$, do 8-*4 40, do 9-4
45, do 10-4 o0. Rosebuds 86 15$, Red WITHDRAWN FBOM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE MARKET DUBU>«
Bank 86 11$,d# 33 10$, Slater J.
THE SAME PEBIOD.
A W. 36 —, Tuscarora86
18, Utica 6-4 Manufactures of wool... 134
231
$47,582
261
82$, do 6-4 87$. do 9-4 62$, do 10-4
$75,463
183,996
do
cotton.. 171
67$, Waltham X 33 —, do 42 18.
44.665
92
71
81,487
25,127
do 6-4 82$,do 8-4 40, do 9-4
do
silk
40
45, do 10-4 60, Wamsutta 46
31
3H,903
39
43,484
48,640
28, do 40$
do
flax
do 86 20,
772
186
103,378
11.313
2<6
Washington 88 9$.
46,290
Miscellaneous dry goods 3^5
BeoWn Drills are still rather
94
14,085
18683
216
12,536
dull. We hear of a small lot moved
for export, but otherwise the market is
Total
:.... 1,242
334
$246,013
872
quiet. Amoskeag 17, Grauite- Add ent’d for
$208,086
$2^8,743
▼ille D 16, Hamilton 17, Laconia
consu’pt’n 1,202
404,702
1,966
667,834
730,4,7
17, Pepperell 17, Stark A 17, do H 14.
2,262
Prints have fairly
given way in price, and decline a on Wednes
Total th’wn ipon maket2,444
$651,315
2,6C0 $776,920
Jay
3,134 $969,180
$ cent on all leadiog makes. It does rot
ENTERED FOB WAREHOUSING DURING
appear that this action
THE SAMS PERIOD.
will have the desired effect of
Manufactures of wool...
88
437
$14,933
stimulating the demand, although the
486
$140,335
$182,643
do
cotton..
present
23
prices are undeniably low.
245
10,619
209
66,676
77,187
A short time,
do
silk
however,
20
13,855
89
may develap an increased
74
71,756
86,161
business.
do
flax
100
Leading printers have
22,9 1
8*5
diverted their attention from dark
142,412
164,094
1,128
work to
21
4,946
114
17,629
72,051
light spring color.
4,655
Allens*

Y0R&7

,

,

,

•

,

'

*

.

11$, American*l2, Amoskeag —, Arnolds
10$, Conestoga 12,
12, Freeman 10$, Gloucester
12, Hamilton 12$, Home
8$, Lancaster 11$, London mourning 11$,
Mallory 12, Manchester

Dtmneirs




2024
,3,202
Total entered at the portl,404
1,404

$67,184
404,,02

$471,886

1,690
196

8,666

$413,674

667,834

$981,608

6^552 $557^20
2,262

75)0,4.17

8,314 $1,287,607

.

OFFICE OF TBS

Pacific Mutual Insurance
AWT.'
l*s*'

JENKINS, VAILL & John S. &
Eben Wright &

PEABODY,

COMP

Now York, January 13th. 1809.
The following Statement of th i affairs of the Com
ngntf ig published in confnrmlty with the requirements

January 1,1868
$119,049 43
Jan. 1, to »'ec. 31,
524,448 47

Premiums received from
1868 inclusive....

Total amount

of Marine Premiums.-.

CEPT ON

COTTONS AND WOOLENS,

.$643.497 90

CARGO AND FREIGHT FOR THE
VOYAGE.

Bl*k« have been taken open Time
or upon Hulls of Vessels.
Premiums marked off as Earned, daring the
period as above........
$539,034 44
Paid for Losses and Expenses, less .-avines,
&c., during the same period;
251,484 90
Return Premiums.
46,862 74
TheCompany bo* the following asset
$71,949 81
C/.shin bank and on hand
No

—

Of Several

Shirtings, Flannels, Rob Roys, Casslmeres.Repellanta
Cottonades, Domestics, Boys’ Checks, Sulloways,
Shaker Flannels.

AMERICAN SILKS.

Hosiery.

MANUFACTURED BY

'

and Other stocks... 552,048 59
stacks drawirg interest 188,700 CO

United .states
Loans on

$813,294 31

Premium notes and bills receivable
Subscription notes iu advance of premiums
lie-insurance and other claims due the
Company, estimated at

254,572 95
76,000 QJ

Six Percent, Interest,
outstanding Certificates of Profits will bo paid
t > the hold T9 thereof, or their legal represent itives,
on mil alter Tuesday the 2d day of February next.
the

on

The

Sewing Silk,
Trains and Organzlnee,
INE ORGANZINE3 FOt. SILK
MERES.

whole of the

MIXTURE.CASSI-

Silk Warp Poplins,
Silk Dress Goods,
Belt Ribbons.
BILKS FOR SPECIAL

PURPOSES TO ORDER.

will be redeemed and paid ifi cash, to the holders
tiieioof, or their legal representatives, on an t afte’

CHENEY Sc MILLIKEN,

produced at tbo tiaie of payment and cancelled.

Dividend in Script of FORTY Per Cent is declared
o i ihc net amount of Earned Premi sms for tho year
ending December 31st, 18 ^, for which Certificates will
be is ue l on and after Tuesday, the sixth day of April
A

Union, Arlington, Oxford, Mt. Vernon, Beaver Cree
BB, CC, Thorndike, C. Haymaker, Palmer, Boa
ton, Northfleld, Pawnee, Farmers’ and Mechanics
Ticks.

_

102 Franklin

Street, New York.

4 Otis

Street, Boston.

LEONARD BAKER Sc CO.,
210 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia

CHASE, STEWART Sc CO.,

10 and 12 German Street,

Baltimore.

W. M.

:

BLKA, AND BBOWN.

Brown and Bleached Goods.
Thorndike H. B. & C. Brown and Bleached Sheetings,
Hingham, Farmers’ AA and Swilt River Brown Sheet¬

ings, 40*in. Reeky Mountain

Manufacturers and

Ephraim L. Corning ."
A. 8. Barnes,

Egbert Starr,
ATWesson,
John A. Hadden
William Leconey,
Tohn A. Bartow,
JOHN K.

COT TONS AIL DUCK
And all kinds of

FELTING DUCK. CAR

COTTON CANVAS,

AWNING STRIPES.”
Also, Agents

Banting Company.

always iu stock

all Widths and Colors

E. A.
J. Spbnobb Ttjnneb.

„

H. D. Polhbmus, Specia

J. F. Mitchell,

C. B. &

COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

87

Ac 89

Leonard Street, New York.

MANUFACTURERS

AGENTS

For the Sale oi

MYERSjPresldent,

WILLIAM LECONEY, Vice-President.
THOMAS-HALE, Secretary.

SHOE THREADS,
LINEN THREADS,
CARPET THREAD8.

WOOLENS.

AND

COTTONS

8EWI' G MACHINE THREADS,

■I

>

QILLNE1T TWINES. FISH LINES,

TWINES, FLAX, ETC.

Miscellaneous.

Barbour

Removal.
Cotton

Hare removed from 59 Broad Street, to

VYe are

Co.'i

STREET.

&

NEEDLES,

Fishing Tackle.
HO. 1 WARREN STREET, NEAR BROADWAY.

GOODS,

©

John Dwight & Co.,
SALERATUS,
SUPER CARS. SODA,

Shirts,

160 BROADWAY, NEW

YORK.

Vf. 1] Old Slip,

the

ftCM

Pig Iron,

of No.

American

&

Bar

Foreign

Iron,

Including all the usual sixes and shapes of
ULSTER IRON,




BROTHERS Sc

atora to

ROPE
*

CO.,

EgleftoL, Battell ft Co.,

168 SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK

Borneo

and

Domestic Bagging,
BALE

In lots to suit purchasers,

EGLESTON

HENDERSON BROTHERS,
No. 7 Rowling Green, New York.

Gunny,

Sc

IRON TIES,

FOR SALE BY

*

J. B. Carter & Co.,
Street.
144 Water

Plaoe.

Companies.

STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S

To California &

CARRYING THE UNITED

1

YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE.
In lots to salt purchasers. Apply to

EXTRA QUALITIES OF

of Exchange

China,

SM^^^^^Tonchlngat Mexican Porte

IN

r

BROADWAY NEW YORK,

THROUGH LINE

New York,

approved Brands
Scotch

58

PACIFIC Mail

SCOTCH PIG IRON,
All

Wool,

Broker,

Steamship

MANUFACTURERS OF

MANUFACTURERS OF '

No

Cor

Miscellaneous.

HATTERS, AND GENTS’ FURNISH-

Fine

prepared to make cash advances upon
on the spot or in transit.

Wool

Fish Hooks and

Co.,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

CHRISTY DAVIS,

NEW YORK.

Beebe

NO. 50

MANUFACTURERS OF

DRILLED-EYED

Shipman,

WOOL BROKERS,

Church Street, New York
WORKS. PATERSON, NE W JERSEY

Duck,

Noi, 13 ic 15 USPMARD

Mills &

Brothers,

Thos. H. Bate &

E. J. Shipman

Abm. Mills

99 Chambers Street, Corner

POLHEMUS Sc CO.,

THEODORS

COVER¬

ING, BAGGING, RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES
&C. “ONTARIO’
SEAMLb8S BAGS,
“

Llspenard Street.
Bbinoxxbhoff,
Theodor* Polhxxus.

Wm. Hegeman,
James R. Taylor,
Adam T. Bruce,
Albert B. Strange,
A. Augustus Low,
’Dean F. Fenner,
Emil Beineman,
Jehial Read,
Jonn R. Waller.

rrz

Dealers in

13 & 15

F.C.Southwick,

Richards,

Duck, Bear, Raven’s Duck

TheodorePolhemus&Co.

A full supply

Alex. M. Earle,
Oliver K. F ing.
Wm. T. Blodgett
C. H. Lndington,
J. L. 8mallwood,
Thomas Eakin,

B.W. Bull,
Horace B. Claflln,

A.C

Thorndike. B.C., Otis CC, Mount Yer
non, Columbas, Eagle,
Warren FF Fine Sheetings.

United States

John K. Myers,
A. C, Richards,
G. Er. H Gillespie
C. E. Mllnor,
Martin Bates,
Moses A. Hoppock

_

AAA, BB, Duck AA.B.. Thorndike
Swift River, Palmer, New England. -•»

order of tho Board.
T&UbTfi ES

_

Cordis ACE,

next.
i.y

Denims.
Otis BB, Warren A.B.D.X.

Hrown

Columbian XXX,

A GENTS:

EDWARD II. ARNOLD Sc SON,

be

_

Cordis Awning,

Pongee Handkerchiefs,

outstanding Certificates of the Comp*ny of tlie issue of 1864,
Tuesday, the 2d day of February next, from which
date interest thereon will cease
The Certificates to

„

D, O, E, G

Stripe*. •

Foulards and Florentines,

24,457 07

Blue Denims.
Columbian Heavy, Otis AXA.BB, CC,
A A,

Machine Twist,

.....$1,168,324 33

Total assets

Bulloways

Otis Co., Pepper and Gilmanton Mills'
Shaker Socks, Ac., ftc.

Brothers.

Cheney

"T

Belknap Mills,

Company,

Columbian Mfg Company, Grafton Mills,
^ "** Z
Warren Cotton Mills,
Sumner Falls Mills, !i
Boston Buck Company,
Gllmanton Hosiery Mills,
Cordis Mills,
Pepper Hosiery Mills,
Thorndike Company,
Otis Hosiery Mills,
And Arlington Mills,
Fancy Dress Good4,34 and 64 Ronbaix Cloth. Imper
lal Chines, Alpacas, Reps Coburgs, ftc.,fto.
B'Jknap a Grafton

Ml Agaata for the sale of

HAS I9SUED NO POLICIES, EX

THIS COMPANY

Otis

JKV GOODS COMMISSION MXRCHABfA

Section 12 of its charter:

Outstanding Premiums

AGENTS FOR THE

STREET,

46 LEONARD

Co.,

92 a 94 Franklin Street. New York,
14o Devonshire Street. Boston.

HOWARD BUILDING, 178 BROADWAYS

'

of

Dry Goods.

Dry Goods.

Railroad*. V.'
^

731

THE .CHRONICLE.

December 4, 4869.]

-J

STATES MAILS.

Month.

On the 5th and 21st of Each
Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal street
at 12 o’clock noon, as above (except when those dates

preceding Saturday)

fall on Sunday, and then on the
for ASPINWALL, connecting via Panama
with one of the Company’s Steamships tjo ra
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at

Railway
MANZANILLO*
Also, connecting at Panama with steamers ro
8GUTH PACIFIC AND CENTRAL AMERICAN
PORTS
One hundred pounds baggage allowed each adult.
Baggage-masters accompany baggage throng*, ana
attend to ladies and children without male protec¬
tors. Baggage received on the dock the day berore
sailing, from steamboats, railroads, and passengers
who prefer to send them down early. An experienced
surgeon on board. Medicine and attendance free.
For passage tickets or inrther information apply to
the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot •
Canal street, North River, New

York.

P. R. BABY« Agent,

732

THE
Financial.

New York, October 1st, 1889.
$
.WAITER NT. BUKIVSUETIKES
this tiny from our New York and London firms.
MOETON, BLISS & CO.

M*l

MB. WALTER WATSON (late Agent for the Bank
ot British North America, New York), is this day ad¬
mitted a partner in our firm. New York, October

.

70 State
Bills of

Bank, )
London, October 1st, 1869. )
The Hon. JOHN BOSE (late Minister of Finance for
tha Dominion ot Canada) joins our firms this day,
which will be continued under the style of MORTON,
Bartholomew House

108

Street, Boston.

Credits issued on

Tlie Cltv

Hank,

{-LONDON.

Dealers in

)

Street.

VPARIS*

AND

GOLD, SILVER

and all

kinds oi

GOVERNMENT BONDS.

Marcuard, Andre ACo.,)
Circular Notes available for Travelers in all parts of

Europe and the East.

COLLECTIONS MADE stall
accessible

points and remitted for on day of payment.

L. F. MORTON, BURNS & CO.

Ever

&

ett

28 State

BANKERS

Co.,

No. 53 WILLIAM STREET, NEW TORE.

AUGUSTINE

on

ON

P. Hayden.

HEARD

St

consignments of approved mer

SALS',

Jos. Hutcheson.

W. B. Hayden

Hayden, Hutcheson &Co
BANKERS,
13

NO.

Southern

AND PARIS

CO.,

chandize.

Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper.
Collect? >usboth inline! and foreign promptly made.
Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated.

LONDON
FOB

OF CHINA AND JAPAN.

Advances made

CHECKS

Street, Boston,

AGENTS FOR

Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds
Stocks. Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable
Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Dralt
or Check.
Advances made on approved securities.

West Fourth

CINCINNATI, OHIO. :

)

Robert Benson Sc Co., )
HI unroe Sc Co.

ROSE A CO.

SOUTTER & Co.,

110

Sc

Exchange, and Commercial and Travelers’
and

MORTON, BLISS & CO.

Western Bankers.

Page, Richardson & Go., Gilmore, Dunlap & Co..
BANKERS,
n t•*

1st, 1869.

m

[December 4,1369

Boston Bankers.

Omens or Moktow, Bubs & Co.,7

/

CHRONIGLE.

S.

HIGH

STREET,

COLUMBUS, OHIO,

Bankers.

Do

a

General

Banking, Collection, and Exohan»eBusiness.

William s&Guion,
71 Wall Street,

Onion Sc Co.,

New York,

Alex.

NATIONAL

Freedman’s

f’etrle Sc Co..

Liverpool.

London.

Advances made on consignments to our Correspon¬
dents, and orders for the purchase of Merchandise,
Stocks and Bonds, executed by Cable or Mail.
Travelers’ and Commercial Credits issued, available
n all parts of Europe
&c.

Savings Bank

BANKERS.
New York,

Central

Office

at

BROAD ST.

85 BRUHL.

BBAtt

BRANCHES AT

Ehis, Nashville, Chattanooga. Louisville. St. Luuls
larcinsburg, New York ana Washington.

Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold exclusively
commission.

Accounts of Banks and Bankers received. Collec¬
tions made in the United States, British Provinces and

Europe.

Bills of Exchange drawn on London, Paris. &c.
E. J. Farmer & Co.,
C. J. Hatch & Co..
Cleveland, O.
Milwaukee, Wis.

Collections promptly made.

are lor the Colored people.
Deposits are now $1,250,000
D. L. EATON, Actuary.
J. W. ALVORD, Pres’t.
JAY COOKE & CO., New York Correspondent.

Edward C.

Anderson, Jr.

BANKER, FACTOR AND

Southern an d miscellaneous Securities
No. 41 PINE STRcET, NEW YORK.

Memphis, Tenn.

Merchant,

nali, Ga.

is now

Government Securities, Coin. Gold Dust and Bullion
bought and sold at current rates. Special attention

fiven to collections Pres. Chab.the West
H. Bbitton, throughout K. Dick

No. 30 SOUTH STREET,

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.

Sam’l A.

STOCK

Wall Street. New York.

Gaylord & Co.,

and

Bond

Broker*,

NO. 823 NORTH THIRD STREET,
SAINT LOUIS MO.

W. M. F.

Hewson,

BROKER,

Morton, Galt & Co.,
BANKERS,
150 West Main Street.

LouisviHfl, Ky., dealers in

Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Government i onds
all

,

Local Securities. Give prompt attention to
collections and orders for investment of funds.

S. McClean &

Co.,

BANKERS.

BROKER

PITTSBURGH

PA.

AND

Gold

Co.,

Stock

and

J. L. Levy,

STREET, NEW YORK,

Brothers &

i

EX¬

No. 1113 main Street. Richmond, Va.

BROKERS,

Geo. P. Payson, Wm. S. Alexander, jr.
York Stock Exchange.

on

Office No. 21 West Third 8treet, Cincinnati, Ohio
Refer to: All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs LOCKWOOD & Co.rNew York.

Co.,

Payson,
and

$3,410,300

reorganized as a National Bank
prepared to do a general banking business.

STOCK

Exchange Dealer,
28

CARONDELET

STREET,

NEW ORLEANS.

52

Capital paid in

Collections promptly remitted for
Orders solicited lor the purchase oi baie6 of Produce
and Seruritles. Prompt attention guaranteed.
New York Correspondents: Lawrence Bbos. A; Co.

No. 23 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.

Of the New

Blake

ESTABLISHED 1837.

Special attention given to consignments of Cotton.
Gold, Stocks, Bonds and Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, bought and sold.

LANCASTER, BROWN Sc CO

Government Securities. Stocks, Bonds
Bought and sold on commission.

STATE

in St. Louis.

axes

BROWN. LANCASTER Sc CO..

In connection with the Manhattan Savings Bank

Otis D.Swan,

avail

BANKERS
A \D STOCK
AND
CHANGE BROKERS.

DEALERS IN

50 WALL

Also

London and Paris for Sale.

Edward P. Curtis Cashier

Lancaster &

Levy & Borg,

BANKERS AND

on

NATIONAL BANK OF THE
OF MISSOURI.

BROKERS,

AND 5 & 7 NEW STREET.

Swan &

Drafts

These Banks

Farmer, Hatch & Co.,

«

all the principal cities

(Ga.), Savannah, Macon, Jacksonville, Tallanasse,

Commission

on

on

This Bank, having

the principal -cities of Germany. Switzerland,
jigl&nd, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, belglum, Russia, Italy, Spain, Denmark, &c.
liiue Letters of Credit for travelers,
available in all parts of Europe.

78 BROADWAY

LOUIS, MISSOURI.

Buy and Sell Exchange

of the United States and Canadas.

Baltimore, Norfolk, Richmond, New Berne, Wil¬
mington^ Raleigh, Charleston, Beaufort, Augusta,

Co.,

BANKERS,
ST.

Washington, D, C«,

IN SUN1S TO SUIT

BANKERS Sc

Benoist &

The

Leipzig, Saxony,

AND

L. A.

CHARTERED BY CONGRESS IN 1865,

Mobile, Huntsville, New Orleans, Vicksburg, Mem-

Knauth, Nachod &Kuhne

**

General Prrtner
Partner in Commendum

J. L. Levy.
E. J. Hast.

Collections made

on

all points.

Second National Bank,
Capital

TITUSVILLE, PENN.,
$200,000

Deposited with U. 8. Treasurer o secure Circulation
and Deposits 500,000.
G. C. HYDE, Cashier.
CHAS. HYDE Pres*t.

AND

28

STATE

STREET,

EXCHANGE
And

ON

BOSTON,

LONDON.

Sterling Credits,

Marquand, Hill & Co.,
BANKERS

DEALERS IN COMMSRCIAL PAPER.
Sell Massachusetts and New York State
Buy

37 WALL

bought and sold strictly

Bonds, and Gold,

on Commission.

John P.

TkRADLEY’S Patent SHUTTEB WOEKER.—The.
undersigned respectfully r. quest Capitalists and

X>

Manufacturers to call upon them at once and
examine
and test the above NEW and most EFFICIENT and

PRACTICAL Improvements.
It opens, closes and
lock* the Window Blind from the Inside, is most
with TENANT8, LANDLORDS and
POPULAR
BUTLDEB6. Apply immediately to
W. S McAXJSTEB A CO., 178
Broadway, N. Y.
a

,




Weith,

Mabquand,

Late J. M. Weith & Co.,

George H. B. Hill

Business Paper Negotiated.

Henry
Banker and

Geo. Arknts

J. M. Weith & A rents,

STREET,

Stocks, Bonds and Gold, bought and Sold

mission.

For Sale.

BROKERS,

J. M.

New York.

Stocks.
Government Securities, Stocks

AND

on

DEALBR8 IN SOUTHERN AN D MIS¬
CELLANEOUS SECURITIES,

com

Meigs,

Broker, No. 27 Wall St.,

Member oi New York Stock Exchange,
(Formerly cashier of the Metropolitan Bank, and late
of the firm of H. Meigs, Jr., & Smith).
Offers his services for the purchase and sale of
ernment and all other Stocks, Bonds and Gold *
Interest allowed on deposits
"
Investments carefully attended to.

No.

NEW STREET.

t

Loans Negotiated.

Lounsbery & Fanshawe,
BANKERS A BROKERS,
No

8

WALL

STREET, NEW

YOU K.

Government Securities,
Geld and Foreign Exchange*
RIO CAR

P. L0VN6B2KY,

CWTLLIAM

8. FANSHAWE

THE

December 4,1869]

CHRONICLE.
Financial.

Bonds for Sa’e.

Miscellaneous.

A SEVEV PER CENT GOLD

v

73S

LOAN.

A.

CHICAGO

$6,500,000.

park loan.
EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANK, the BONDS author,
ized to be Issued by the various acta of the Legisla¬
ture of Illinois relating thereto.
These Bonds are
iwued to provide means to pay for the lands to be
embraced within the Park to be erected.

considered to he

one ol

Frankfort, London,

or

GOLD, ,&c.
manner.

Wm, &

the best loans In tho market

58

Provision is made for raisins money

M. K, JE8UP A

AND TO THE NEGOTIATION OF

for the payment of Interest upon the
bonds as it shall mature, by the tenor of which the

In each year

County Clerk of^Cook County, In which county Chi¬

application.

Louisville & Nashville
RAILROAD,

First

STREET, N. Y.
30

Wm. A. Stxphxnb
G. Fbanois Opdyke.

and said towns are situate, Is required upon the
certificate of these Commissioners, to levy upon the

property in SOUTH CHICAGO, HYDE PARK and
IAKV for such sums as shall be required for Interest

BANKING HOUSE OF

NO.

for the

25

NASSAU

The

STREET,

BONDS,

cost

of

the

road

and

equipment

haa been

many

years, and la doing a large and steadily
business. The net earniDgs for the year

Increasing
ending Jane
SOth, 18C8, were $691,891 40, and the earnings for the
eight months ending August, 1869, were $885,819 61

cent per annum.

CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT issued, bearing Four

than lor the corresponding months ol
1808.
To obtain funds for purchasing other lines which
will add largely to the value of its entire
more

or after

COLLECTIONS made on all accessible points in the
United States, Canada and Europe.
Dividends
and Coupons also
collected, and all most promptly

and to retire the present Indebtedness of
at maturity, the Company has executed a

accounted for.

promptly executed, for the

CENT

The bonded debt is but $2,864,000.
Its
stock pays eight per cent dividends, and the
Company
has never failed to meet all liabilities at
maturity.
The road has been in successful
operation

DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms,
Bunks,
Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at
sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Foub per

ORDERS

PER

$15,286,000.

(Corner of Cedar street.)

Ser cent Interest, payable on demand,
jqq d&ti68

7

Mortgage

Kentucky, is, with its branches, S3T miles In length.

Geo. Opdyke & Co.,

linking Fund

YEAR

The railroad connecting Louisville and N ashvllle,

„

purposes.

LOANS,

PLACE, N. Y,

Gbobgb Otdyke,

cago

Com¬

Also, continue to receive money on deposit, subject
to instant draft, and allow interest on
dally balances.

COMPLY,

12 PINE

on

mission,

DABNET, MORGAN Sc CO.,
63 EXCHANGE

BROKERS,

STREET,

Continue to give their attention to the

The bonds for the pres
sold in currency at 96, with accrued interest.
on

WALL

Purchase and sale of Stocks

New York, and will be free

Circulars, maps, and pamphlets sent

upward is, by the terms of the Acts reterred to,
Irrevocably pledged to their payment.
and

Jno. O’Brien,

BANKERS AND

from Government taxation.
ent are

STREET.

No. 12 WALL STREET.

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

tlgnous thereto, amounting In the aggregate, accord¬
ing to the assessment for the year 1869 to $146,000,000

redemption of the principal of said bonds, at
the rate of ten per cent In each year, is also provided
for by the assessment provided by the Acts of the Leg¬
islature, of the cost of the property not benefited and
Improved thereby. Amp e provisions are also made
for the use of these bonds in payment of asses -ments
for such benefits. As preliminary to the offer of these
bonds, and In order that no doubt might be suggested
upon the Acts of the Legislature above referred
tO(
and the powers of the Commissioners, the various
questions arising nnaer them were submitted to and
have been passed upon by the Supreme Court of the
State of Illinois, the tribunal of last resort In ques.
tlona affecting the construction of these Acts, and the
validity and efficacy of their various provisions, par¬
ticularly In relation to assessments and levies, have
bten affirmed and placed beyond question.

BROAD

BANKERS

The loan has thirty years to run,
principal and in_
terest payable in gold, seml-annnally, seveu
per cent.
The coupons will be payable semi-annnally in
either

of HYDE PARK and LAKE, which are con-

Dyck,

AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIE

EVEN BETTER IN SOME RESPECTS THAN

franchise of the Park, consist¬
ing of some Eight Hundred Acres of land lying with¬
in and adjacent to the CITY OP CHICAGO.
The
properly of South Chicago consisting cl the business
portion, and wealthiest as well as rapidly Increasing
Bart of the CITY OF CHICAGO, and that of the

Van

Hatch, Foote & Co.,

operation, and will
open the trade of the Rocky Mountain country, and
connect It with the great markets of the East. It Is

the property and

A

30

$6,500,000.
This loan is secured In the most effectual
It represents a road in profitable

They are made a lien

towns

NO

has granted Three Millions of Acres of the finest
lands in Kansas and Colorado, which are
mortgaged
for the security of a loan of

undersigned Commissioners to superintend the
Erection of the SOSTH PARK OP CHICAGO. In the
fltate of Illinois, offer for Sale, at THE AMERICAN

B.

STOCK, BOND AND GOLD BROKER,

< The Kansas Pacific Railway
now In successful oper¬
ation from Kansas City to Sheridan,
proposes to build
an extension to Denver, Colorado.
The Government

The

upon

V.

property,

$2,964,000

mortgage to
Alexander, of the city

•James Punnett and Junius B.
of New York, as Trustees, upon Its entire
lines of

purchase and

•ale of Gold; also, Government and other
Securi¬
ties, on commission.

INFORMATION furnished, and purchases or exchanges of Securities made for Investors.
GOTIATIONS of Loans, and Foreign Exchange
effected.

road, with all Its rolling stock, property, franchise
and income, to secure the
prompt payment of Its bonds
for eight million dollars. These bonds are
for one
thousand dollars

each, payable thirty years from
April, 1868, and bear seven per cent Interest.
The coupons are payable
April and October, at the
Bank of America In New York.
1st of

The Bonds

Lockwood

to be issued

by these Commissioners are limited to
$2,010,0.0, and will be ol the tenor following, viz.:

$200,000 to mature In 6 y’rs
$200,000 “
“
1 '

g,000 to maturein 2 y’rs
,000 “
,000 “
,000 “

*•
••

8
4

“
"

“5

“

-

toon nm

*•

••

a

£600,000 "

M

10

They will hear Interest at the rate of seven per eent
per annum, payable seml-annnally, principal and
interest to be payable at the American
These Bonds
the takers

are

offered at rates which will yield to

8 1-2 to 9 For Cent
per

DEALERS

of

desired, may be obtained.

COMMISSIONERS:
John M. Wilson,
Giobob W- Gags,
*:

'

.

L. B.

.

Paul Cobnbll.

'

.

Chicago, November 4,1869.

1

No. 14 WALL STREET.

R. T. Wilson &

Co.,

WILSON, CALLAWAY
Bankers and Commission
No. 44 BROAD

Sc

Merchants,

SUfda

•

*."*•*<• -‘£

Gibson, Beadleston & Co,
BANKERS,

ADVANCES made on all marketable securities.
CERTIFICATES ot Deposit issued bearing Interest.

COLLECTIONS made at all points of the UNION
Tears
bonds Juits been sold and BRITISH PROVINCES.
LOANS negotiated on FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
Ctreular was Is- PRODUCE, m store end afloat. We invite particular
-S'?. s ikltW •
.•
,
*

Ktentlon 10 this hranch.of ow. b*Hue»* in whlchjwe

.

"

v

^




'

L

/V >*

3

? • *

as

are now double the entire Interest
assume.

in all respects a first-class

s r

.

HelwwwRe

security.
Company to Issue, at

pres¬

ent, only a small portion of Its Bonds secured under
this mortgage, which we are now
authorized to sell,
In lots to suit purchasers, at
ninety and accrued in
terest.
J. B.

ALEXANDER A CO.,
No. 19 Nassau st., N.Y

JGHN J. CISCO A SON
No. 59 Wall st., N.

September 5th, 1869.

STREET, NEW ZORC,

Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchants
Bankers and others allowed 4 per eent on
deposits
The moBt liberal advances made on Cotton,
Tobbacco
Ac., consigned to onrselves or to our correspondent
Messrs. K. GILLIAT A CO., Liverpoo

^

Ye*r«, Thru

mortgage upon the present
Dollars, and

over Fifteen Million

The mortgage will be for an
unusually small pro¬
portion of the value or income of the property, and
we therefore unqualifiedly recommend
these bonds to

CO.,

Not*—Purchasers of the Bonds may be accom-1
moisted by payment of ten
STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
per cent upon the
FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bought and sold
amount taken, and
payment of balance by install-'' on the moBt favorable terms.
ments within
sixty days by an adjustment of in¬ orINTEREST allowed on deposits either in Currency
Gold, subject to check at sight, the same as with
terest at seven per cent. ’* ' ^
the City Banks.
•’* * ''

**•

earnings

obligation It would

first

It Is the purpose of the

No. 50 EXCHANGE PLACE.

*n or the Two
and Eight Tear,

are a

$200,000
City of Louisville 7 Per Cent Bondi,
having20
on

years to run, interest payable seml-annnally.
the first dayB ot April and
October, at the

BANK OF

Sidway,

Chauncey T. Bowbv,

r:

whose net

Investors

of

Illinois, upon the same, and such further Information
relating
as may be

AND

Interest? allowed upon
deposits of Gold and Cm»
rency. sutyect to Check at Sight. Gold
loaned ^
Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terma.

the

Legislature of Illinois, providing for the erection
inch Park, the
decisions of the Supreme Court

thereto,

GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES.

These bonds

road, which has cost

LATE

tho Amxbioan Exchamg*
National Bank, In tbs
City of New York, where copies of the acts of

,

IN

OTHER

Annum,

according to the length of the Bond, upon their In¬
vestments, a schedule of which rates may be nad at

\

Co.,

No. 94 BROADWAY <fe No. 6 WALL
STREET.

Exchange

National Bank in the Chy of New York.

&

BANKERS,

in this
A

AMERICA,

city.

special tax has been levied to meet the intereston
these Bonds, and the
sinking fund of the city amounts
to about $20j,006 per annum.
The City of LouisviUe has

obligations

promptly

and

always met Its financial

regularly.

Its present

from taxation alone Is upward of
$1,800,000.
With its
comparatively small debt, and the conserva¬
tive policy which has always marked the
of its finances, these Bonds constitute onemanagement
of the safest
and most desirable investments now
offered in this
market.
revenue

Tie Bonds can be registered at the transfer
agency,
the Farmers’ Loan and Trust
Company. New-York at
the option of the holder.

Any farther particulars

at

our

office.

can be

had

on

application
*

^

WILLIAM ALEXANDER SMITH & CO.,
No. 40 WALL-ST.

[Decamber 4

CHRONICLE.

THE

734

1

•-

BANKING HOUSE OF

Luther

Fire Insurance

Kountze,

62

NO.

.

Deposits received from Banks and Individuals,»'
sight, and Interest allowed thereof

ect to check at

FOUR PER CEN f per annum.
Collections made throughout the United States,
British Provinces and Europe.
Governments Securities bought and sold.

b

t

Comp’y, Mutual

HARTFORD, CONN.

the

.

Cash

.

AMERICAN

Cask

BANKERS.

I

Issue Clicular Letters of Credit for

parts of Europe, etc., etc.

Travellers in all

Exchange on Paris,

Cask

Stoker, Taylor & Co.,

stock, city bunk and other stock*... $7,877,486 *
Loans secured by stocks and other*
wise
’.......

INSURANCE.

YORK.

Sight and Time BiIIb on LONDON, LIVERPOOL,
EDINBURGH and
DUBLIN, PARIS, BREMEN,
HAMBURG.
BERLIN,
FRANKFORT- _>N-T RE¬
MAIN, VIENNA, etc.

STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD
COMMISSION.
COLLECTIONS made In all parts of Europe.

On

North

American

Insurance
OFFICE

Fire

Interest, and sundry notes and claims
due the Company, estimated at.... %
293,630 fti
Prrmiumnotes and bills receivable2,953,267 68
Cash in bank
v.
ri sVf*.« 7. /.
405,648 88

Co.,

..

'c:*r

BROADWAY,

114

BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE
AVENUE.

DeFreitas
Rathborne,

&

Cash

Government Secnrit’es,

Gold, Stocks and Bonds,
bonght and sold exclusively on Commission at the
New York Stock Exchange.
Cashier

1868, *745,911 93.
The outstanding

Insures Property against Loss or Damage by Fire at
he usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of the

or at its various
cities in the Urited States.

thereof, or their legal representatives, op an!
Tuesday tke Second of Februalf
next, from which date all interest thereon wf»
cease.
The certificates to be produced at the tin i
of payment and canceled.
alter

JAMES W. OTIS. President.
R. W. BLEECKElt, Vice Pres

Mechanics

Importers ofNorway t Sr edes Iron,including (
UB, AJB, SF, and other brands, which

A Dividend of Forty
Per Cent Is
declared on tke net earned premium

Queen Fire Insurance,Co

of the Company, for tke year ending 3 let
December 1868, for which certificates will bi

AND LONDON.
Authorized Capital
..£2,090,000 Stg.
Subscribed Capital
'
1,893,226
Paid ih» Capital and Surplus
$1,432,840
OF V IVERPOOL

SONS,

I

j

y
street, New York
and 133 and 135 Federal street, Boston.
They have also In stock their usual supply of every
description of bar and Sheet Steel.
offer for sale at 91 and 93 John

issued

Special Fund of $200 000

and after Tuesday, the Sixth ot

Pascal Iron

Works, Philadelphia.

annfactnrers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded

J. H. CHAPMAN,

ADLARD, M nager

William H. Ross, Secretary.

Secretary*
teustxxs:

North British

PAID UP CAPITAL AND ACCUMULATED FUN. I

OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES:

$14,044,635 31 IN GOLD.

15 GOLD STREET, NEW YORK.

BALDWIN

LOCOMOTIVE

WORKS.

OF

M. Baird &

Lowell Holbrook,

Robert B. Minton.
Gordon W. Burnham
Frederick Chaunocf
R. L. Taylor,

Royal Phelps,
Caleb Barstow,
A P. Pi Hot,

Geo 8. Stephenson,
William H. Webb,
Paul Spoflbrd, - -

Lewis Curtis,
Charles H. Russell,'

UNITED STATES BRANCH OFFICE,

50 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK.
EZRA WHITE, Manager.
CHAS. E. WHITE, Assistant Manager.

Co.,

All work accurately lifted to gauges and thorough¬

ly interchangeable.

Finish and Efficiency
MATTHEW BAIRD.

Plan, Material, Workmanship.
fully guaranteed.

OBO. BURMHlM.

INSURANCE

FIRE

COMP AN v

Sec’y.

Gxo. L. Ch.lSB, Pres’t.

INSURANCE
OF HARTFORD, CONN.

PHOENIX

FOUNDRY, FORGE AND WHITE

FIRE

Pig Iron

On hand and for sale by the CUMBERLAND COAL
AND IRON CO. 90 Broadway, cor Wall St.




9

Capital and Surplus $1,400 000.
D. W. C. Skiltok,

Coke

tofeClG.

CO.,
;

Losses promptly

Sec’y. ‘

NO

&

SON*, Agents*

,

CHARGES DENNIS,

tn current money.

50 WILLIAM STREET.

Samuel L*
De Forest

JOHN D. JONES, Prsfidrat

H. Kellogg, Pres

adjusted by the Agents here, andpald

EZRA WHITE

Robert O. Ferguses*
Samuel G. Ward,
William

Wm.

Sturgis,
Henry £• Bogert.
Mm

W* H. H. MOORE,

26 Vics-Piwfi.

*

I

,

Francis Skiddy,
Charles P. Bnrdett,

James Bryce,

Capital and Surplus *2,000 000.
Cso. M. Coit,

Sheppard Gandy,

Dodge,

Daniel S.Mffier.

OF HARTFORD, CONN.

CHAS T. PARKY

■

David Lane.

Hartford

PHILADELPHIA.

Benj. Babcock,

Pickersgill,

R. Warren Weston,

EDINBURGH.

William E.
*

C. A. Hand,
James Low, ■
B. J. Howland,

Henry Coit,
Wm. C.

Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street
Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

Joseph GailUrd, Jr,

VT. X. H. Moore,

Mercantile Insurance Co
AND

'

J. D. Jones,
Charles Dennis,

AND

LONDON

April

By order of tke Board,

Depositedin the Insurance Department at Albany.
’■nited States Branch, No. 117-Broadway, N. Y
GEORGE

on

next

THE

Morris, Tasker & Co.,

c€

paid to the hold

era

Agencies in the principal

Company,

certificates of tbe Issue

1865 will be redeemed and

F H. Carter, Secretary.
I Griswold, General Agent.

WM. JESSOP Sc

cent interest on the outstand¬

Six per

ing certificates of profits wiH be paid
to the holders thereof or their legal representative
on and after Tuesday the Second o'
February next,

Capital and Surplus, July 1st,

National Bark.

Norway and Swedes Iron

ft3,660,8^1 88

THIRD

$500,000 00
245^911 93

Capital.

Surplus

Broad St.

Bankers and Brokers, 17

I terest allowed on Deposits.
Keter to WM. H. COX, Esq,

Cash

—

Total amount of assets

INCORPORATED 1823.

White,

2,214,100 68
210,000 C8

Real estate and bonds and mortgagee

NEW

STREET,

NASSAU

*

United States and State of New York

BANKERS.
21

has the following as¬

The Company

sets, vie.:

IAS. A. ALEXANDER, Agent.
FIRE

$1,883,380 61

expenses

....$324 34d 6o

-

<

Reports of premiums and

$20 >,00© 00

Capital

Assets

policies have been issued upon

1868. to 81stDecember, 1868... $6,807,97* *
Losses paid during the
same period
$8 081,080 49

PROVIDENCE, R. I.

OF

premiums.... $9,845,972 11

ary,

COMPANY,

SURtNCE

STREET, NEW YORK.

NO. 8 WALL

2,568,00* 81

...

Premiums marked off from 1st Janu-

American

John Munroe & Co.,

1868

risks; nor upon fire risks die- 1
connected with marine risks.

PARIS,

NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE,

Policies not marked off

life

$200,000 00
$392,425 52

Capital

on

Total amount of marine

No

i

$8,782,969 8*

.

1st Janaary,

Washington

Assets

January, 1863, to 81st Dec*

Premiums

INSURANCE COMPANY,
OF PROVIDENCE, R. I.

& Co.,

Munroe

submit the following statement of its

1868.....

*901,687 11

Providence

...

on

from 1st

CO.,

*500,000 00

Capital

Assets

Government
and Gold Exchanges, In person, and transact a Gen
eral Banking. Exchange, and Brokerage Business.
Execute orders at the New York Stock,

Co.,

the 81st December, 1868 : Premiums received on Marine Bisks,
affairs

FIRE A MARINE INSURANCE
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

Street, New York.

No. 4 Walt

t.

The Trmtees, in conformity to the Charter of th*

Springfield

& Son,

Hardy

Insurance

•

^

C mpany,

C.

^

NEW YORK, JANUARY *0,1869.

U

$3,000,000 00
$5,150,931 71

Cask Capital
Assets..

fu

j

iEtna Insurance

-

Atlantic

NEW YORK.

52 Wall Street. New York*

1

ODlOBOFTfll

Agency,

STREET.

WALL

"

Inguraaoe

Insurance.

MiseeUaneous.

H.

,

———■—1———■S—W—WPW———_

J. D. HEWLETT,

Sd TlOffW^*

Oil lemon
Oil peppermint, pure
Oil vitriol....!.

prices current.

3 45

B

tf 100 ft 7 37%@ 7 62%

sort

2 50

SO
State firkins, prime
40
State, firkins
55
State, half-firkins, choice. 42
State, half-firkins, ordin’y 30

Western,fair
Penn.,

dairy, good

CEMENT-

46 @

...

25 @ 27
20 @ —
....

Dry cod
Pickled scale
Pickled cod

(hond) (gold) ?! ft 14%@ 15%
do
27%@ 28
Guayaquil do
do .... 10%@ 11
St.Domlngodo do
8%@ ....
COFFEE.—See special report.
COPPER"
Sheathing,new
?! lb ....@ 82
Bolts
@ 33
Caracas

....

20 @ 21

35

27

@

22 @ 22%

American ingot
CORKS—

DRUGS AND DYES—
Alcohol, 95 per cent
Aloes, Cape
V lb

@
©

GROCERIES—see special
GUNNY BAGS— »

70
40

@

8%@
50 @

i..

Annato, good to prime .
Antimony, reg. of...gold

12%@
13 @
25 @
2%@;

Argols, crude
Argols, refined

gold
Arsenic, powdered. “

40

Balsam c tpivi
Balsam tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark petayo

Berries, Persian....gold
Bicarb, soda, N’castle“ 8
Bi chromate potash
2
Bleaching powder
Borax, refined
Brimstone,cru. ?Uon gld45
Brimstone, Am. roll ?!ft
Brimstone, flor sulphur.
crude
Camphor,
(in
bond)
gold

cochineal, Hondur..golf
Cochineal, Mexican. “
Copperas, American
Cream tartar, pr
.gold
Cubebs, East India
..

Cutch

Epsom salts

60

lb for

Italian
Manila
Sisal...;

•

•

-

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

^

70

.-

38

Gumgedda

gold

Gum aaraar

Gum myrrh, East India..
Gum myrrh, Turkey....
Gum

Senegal
Gum tragacanth, sorts..
Gum
tragacanth, w.

,

40

55

55

•

•

•

12
90
80
2

65

•....

facdye
L corice

4
14

paste, Calabria.
Licorice paste, Sicily...
ce puste»fcp., solid
Licorice paste, Greek...
Dutch
gold

Licor

-----

-

---

....

83
70

Madder Fr. EXF.F. »

Manna, large flake

Manna, small flake.
Mustard seed, Cal....
Mustard seed, Trieste...

—

31

U
...

@
©
©

2 00©
95 ©

7%@
16

©

Nutgalls,blue,Aleppo.: 22%@
..currency « 60 ®
aQi8,
“

GG
GG cassia

Oil

bergamot




5 50

89
39
25

gg
•«

....

12%
16%
....

8
:...
....

3 65

@3 12%
© 5 75-

13
17
20
19

14
15

cur.

“

gold.
“

@
@
@

@
@

15
19
16

17%
14
18
21

20

15 @ 16
—@
12 @

13

12>4@
11)4®

“
“
“
“
“
“

13%
12%

14
12

@
@

15
13

gold. 11 © 1\%
“
“
“

11%®

11
10
10

cur.

@
@

@

12
n%

11
11

11 © liH

23)4© 24%

Sierra Leone
cash
Gambia and Bissau

18
89
SO

Zanzibar

24

©

19

@
@
©

40
33
25

East India Stock—
Calcut.

city sit. ?! lb gold 15 © 16

13)4© 14
13%

Calcutta, dead green.;..
Calcutta.buffalo....?! lb
Manilla & Bat. buff..?! lb
HONEY—

13 @
10 @

Cuba(dutyp’d)gold?!gall

©

HOPS—
Cro'"> of 1868
?! lb
do 1869 (good to prime)
Bavarian

HORNS—
Ox, Rio Grande

Oz( American

?! C.

11
....

5 @ 10
18 © 28
©
>

net.8 50

Bar

Pipe and sheet

“

Oak, slaughter, heavy

40
38

le
“

light.
rough slaughter....
Heml’k, B. A., &c., heavy
“

“

“

middle
e.

“

.

“

poor

@

42
42
45
45
45
81
31
31
28
31
31
28
80
80
40
28

@
@
@
@
@
©
@
@

1.

Rockland, common.?? b
Rockland, heavy

.

@
@
@
@
©
@
@

30
30
26
29
29
85
25
20

e

LIME—

46

26%@

7-

’.

@
@

38
S8
40
42
38
28
30
80

.

,

r.
“

@

8 50 @....
,-cash, ?ift->

LEATHER-

...

.

2S
1 50
1 75

.@
•@

LUMBER—
7
t.
6®
Bird’s-eye maple, logs ?! ft.
Black walnut
f M. ft. 75 00@ 85 00
Bl’k walnut, logs ?i sup. ft.
8@ 9
Bl’k wain, figur’d & blist’d
22@ 1 25
Yel. pine tim., Gco.,?!M.ft. 32 00® 33 00
White oak, logs, ?! cub. ft. 45 00® 45 50

"White oak, plank, V M. ft. 50 00® 55 00
Pop. &W.WM, b’ds & pl’ks 45 00® 45 50
Cherry boards and plank 70 00® 80 00
.

45 00@ 60 00

Oak and ash

Maple and birch
White pine box boards
Wh. pine merch. box b’ds.
Clear pine

30
23
27
60

...

00@ 45 00
00@ 27 00
00@ 80 00
00® 70 00

?! M.2 75

Laths

Hemlock...3x4,per piece
...4x6,
.bds,
Spruce
bds,
plkl)4in.
“

@

@

“

....@

22@
23®
31@
35®
18®

“

do, 2 in.

“

....

3?100lb4 75 ©

Cut, 4cl.@60d
Clinch
Horse shoe, fd

...

,,.@8 00

oq

....

@

....

6 25

26 @

(6d.)..?! lb

27
18

Yellow metal
Zinc
NAVAL STORES-

Turpentine, soft..?! 280 lb
Tar, N. County
?i bbl.
Tar, AVilmington
Pitch, city
Spirits turpentine.?1 gall.
Rosin, common... ?! 2S0 ft
“

“
“
“
“

30

38 @ 40

Copper

@
@

—

®3 80
@2 50
@2 80
@2 CO
44 @ 45
1 90 @

3 75
2 40
2 75
2 50

strained
No. 2
No. 1

2 ‘X)
2 25
2 50

pale

4 00
6 00 @8 00

extra

pale

OAKUM
OIL CAKE—

Residnnm

?Tbbl.5 75

....

31

© 6 00

PROVISION 8—

Pork, mess
?! bbl.82 25 «83 75
Pork, prime mess
27 50 ©30 50
Pork, prime
2> 75 ©24 00
Beef, plain mess
5 00 @13 PO
Beef, extra mess
10 00 @17 X
Beef hams
SO 00 ©33 00

Hams
Shoulders
Lard
RICE—
Carolina

17

©

12

?i &

©

18%@

..

12%
20

?! 100 ft 7 25 © 7 62%
Rangoon, dressed. .gold 5 50 © 5 75
In bond
.2 87%@ 8 25

SA LT—
Turks Islands ..?! bush.
Cadiz

45
42

©
©

....

44

Liverpool,gr’nd.?! sack .... © 1 fi
Liv’p’lfine,Ashton’s,g’d
© 2 50
Liv’n’l fine. Worthingt’s 2 85 @ 2 40

?! 1b

8

10

Linseed, city
?! gall.
AVhale, crude Northern.,
Whale,bleached
Sperm, crude
Sperm, winter bleached.
Lard oil, prime
Red oil, city dist., Elain
Red oil, saponified

1

1
1

1

@

11

@

....

90 © 92
f‘2%@ 95
05 @ ...
65 @....
80 @—
45 @1 57%
85

@
@

90

@
@

Bank
Straits

Paraffine, 28 & 30 gr. lubr.

45

73
77

@

48

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,
No. 1, in oil.
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 fn oil.?! n>

10%@
10%@
10%@

11
11

@

12%®
8
9

....

8%

@

12
11
16

@

io%@

®
2%
10
@
@ 1 25
9
@
@
35
@
@ ..
95
@
90
@

Vermillion,Tiemans Cal¬
ifornia, ?!. ft
Vermillion, Amer., com.

©
©
w

90
22
*~

@

.

.

..

.

...

«•

(N. C.) ?! cwt. 2 25 @ 2 75

Carmine, Tieman’s..?! ttl3 00

Plumbago

China clay
Chalk
Chalk, block

@16 00
®
6

?! ton.28 00 @29 00

?! ft
?! ton.28 00

Barytes, American.. ?! ft

PETROLEUM—

Crude, 40©47 gray.?! gall.
Crude, in bulk
Refined in bond, prime L.
S. to W. (110©115 test)
fitaadarrM hJt,a

15%©
11%@
4%©

....

?! lb

11%@

....

1%
@24 00
©
2%

©

24 @
18%@

24%
19

Lins’dCalc’a.Bost’n, g’d 2
Lins’d Calc’a, N. Y’k, “ 2 20

Tsatlee, No. 2, 4 & 5..?! ft.
Tsat ee,re-rld,No. 1,2,&3
Tsatlee, usual
Taysaams, usual, No. 1 & 2
**
aysaam, No. 3 and4
Taysaams, re-rld, No 1,2.3
Canton,re-rld,fair to ex ao
Japan, medium to 6uper’r.

32

©

82%

*@ 2 22%,

8 ?5@10 00
9 25©10 50
© 7 25
8 50© 9 00
7 00@ 7 25
8 00© 9 50
7 25© 9 00

8 00® 11 25

SPFlTFR—

Plates, for’n ?R 100 ?R .gold 6 00 @6 25
?R ft
9 @ 12
Plates, domestic
SPICES—See special report.
.

SPIRITS—

,—?! gall.—
5 5f®18 00
5 50® 17 00
5 50@18 00
5 50@10 00

Brandy—
Otard, Dupuy & Co..gold.
Pinet, Ca8tilfon& Co “
Hennessy
“
Marett & Co

“

Leger Freres
Other foreign brands
Rum—Jam., 4th proof.

“

5 50@10 00

“
“
“
“

6
4
3
3

C0@ 18
50® 4
Croix,3d proof...
50@ 3
Gin, different brands
00® 5
Domestic liquor*—Cash.
Brandy, gin & pure sp’ts inb 1 10® 1
Rum, pure
1 10® 1
AVbiskey
1 04® 1
St.

.

STEEL—

?! ft

18 @
9 @
11%@
12%©
14 ©
10%@

American blister
American cast
Tool.
American spring....
“
American machinery “
American German..
“
SUGAR—See special report.
TALLOW—

@
10

15
15
05

22

a*

15

16
16
19

<g)
@
©

a

10%@

11

10

American, primp, country
and city..?! ft
TEAS—See special report.
TIN—
Banca
Straits

00
75
75
50

•

-

English, cast
English, spring
English blister
English machinery
English German

?> ft,gold

S5%@

“

is

36

33%
31%
Plates, char. I. C..?i box 8 12%@ 8 37%
Plates, I. C. coke
6 75 @ 7 37%
Plates, Terne charcoal..
@ 6 00
Plates, Terne coke
7 75 @ 8 25
TOBACCO—See special report.
English

83%@
3'%@

s“

__

....

WINES—
Madeira

?! gall.

3 50© 7
1 25© 9
2 00@ 8
85® 1
gold

Sherry

Burgundy port..
Red,

-

1

“

Span. & Sicily... “

Marseilles Madeira...
Marseilles port

“

Malaga, dry
Malaga, sweet

“
“

“

Claret
Claret

1
1
35

?! cask “
?! doz. “
WOOLAmer., Saxony fleece.?! ft

2 60© 9 00
55

..

46
53
40
42
35
so
26
22
21
SO

California, fine, unwashed
California, medium, “
California, common,”
South Am.,
South Am.,
South Am.,
South Am.,

“

merino, “
mestiza, “
creole, “
Cord’a, wash.

©
©
©
@
@
©
@
@
@
@
@
@
©
@

18
27
34
SO
17
SO
28
20

Texas, fine.

?! 1b

•

•

•

•

58
50
50
62

44
45

40

27

Cape G. Hope, unwashed..

ZINC—
Sheet

©
@
©
©
@
©
©

50
45

Amer:, full blood merino.
Amer., % and \ merino
Amer., native « % merino
Amer., combing domestic

Valparaiso,

00
00

50
25
25© 8 50
00@1 26
90© 1 00
70©
85
80© 1 00
00© 1 25
10© 1 25
0e©60 00

“

Sicily, Madeira...

S8
28
24
24
88
88
21
31
36

45.
20

Bo¬
at

11%@ 12

FREIGHTS—
/—8TBAM.

,

To Liverpool: s. d.
s.d.
Cotton
?» lb
0%@
Flour
?! bbl
©
H. goods . ?! ton 20 0 @30 0
Oil
50 0 ©
—

C’n,b&b.?*bu

@—

5 0

?>tce.
Beef
?! bbl.
Pork
To Havre:’
Cotton

2 6©
2 0 @4

Tallow

d.

s.

g-16
@2 0

©

—

Wheat. .b. & b.

Tobacco.'.

SAIL.——,
s. d.

,

20 6 ©26 0
@
....

©

by sail.

85

@
©

..

0 ....©....
$ c.:
$ e.

?! lb
\® .... ?! hhd. 8 00 @ 10 00
?! lb
%
©
,

....

Lard
• * A
*Measurement goods ?! ton 10 00©
...
Petroleum...
5 O'© 6 00
To Melbourne, ?! foot.
25
27%
To San Francisco, by Clipper
Measurement goods ?! ft 0 zl © 0 40

£

Heavy goods

V ft

Nalls
?! ket. 0 45
Petroleum..?! c. of 10 gall. 0 45

%©
\
©0 30

R’roadlron.?!tonof2»i0lb >....

....©

....
....

© 4 00
00 © 5 00
(X) @ 2 <0
42 © 2 44
17%® ....

Canary
fl bush. 4
Hemp for< ign
2
Lins’d Am. rough.?! bus. 2

13

....

13
2
8
L 00
8
! ,*
Paris white. No. 1
* 75
15
Chrome, yellow, dry
15
Whiting, Amer.. ?! 100 ft 1.10
i0
90
Vermilnon,China...?! lb
90
88
Vermillion, Trieste
88

Venet. red

?! ft

Lisbon

Olive, Mars’es, qts (cur¬
rency) ?! case 5 00 @6 00
?! gall. 1 42%®1 45
Olive, in casks
lb

gold

pure

Timothy,reaped.?!hush. 3 75

@3 50
@5 00

OILS—

I?

Refincd,

Crude
.a
Nitrate soda
SEEDClover

Port

“

Palm

saltRetr^-

@2 15
@ i 40

City thin, obi., in bbls.?! ton.42 00® ....
in bags
51 00®
West, thin, obl’g, in bags.. .47 00@48 00

—

11)4® 12)4

Minas

,

@

18>4@

City sl’ter trim. & cured
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio gr. kip?! Ibgld

8 50
@ 2 75

S8%@
24 @
20 @

16>4@

Pernambuco
Bahia
Matamoras
Maracaibo
Savanilla
Wet Salted Hides—
Buenos Ayres..?!lb
Rio Grande
California
Para
New Orleans

46

75
45

18 @ 19
18 @ 19
18)4® 19%

“
“

Maranham

....

60 ©

19

“

Dry Salted Hides—
Cfhili
Payta

15

@
@

17%@
@

“ 6 30 @6 87%

“

18

“
“
“
“

Texas
Western

„

39

30 @

6

21
18
18

@
@

Curacoa
Port au Platt

6%

©

“
“

20
17

RioHache

....

n^key . . Fr. gold 1 12%@ 1 S7%
Hyd. potash,
and
rv£g
gold 3 50 @3 70
Iodine, resublimed
@
Ipecacuanha. Brazil
Ipecacuanha, Rrard
Jaiap,
Jalap, in bond
g
gold

...

23
22 @ 22%
21%® 22%
21%® 2\%

“
“
“
“
“
“
“

English

....

11^

Dry Hides—
Buenos Ayres..?!lb gold 22)4®

Porto Cabello
Maracaibo
Truxillo
Bahia

....

@
©

©
@
@

11>4@
8 @
45(@

gold

Tampico
Bogota

•

•

_

14)4®

Montevideo
Rio Grande
Orinoco
California
San Juan
Matamoras
Vera Cruz

•

•

•

....

86® 1 08

HIDES—

_

•

....

250 00@25 > 00
gold.880 00®390 00
?! lb

6 30

NAILS—

65 © 70

Russia, clean

@6 55

“

—
—

100

shipping

©

gold.6 35 @6 40

Spanish

....

21

HEMP—
American dressed..?! ton.270 00@320 00
American undressed
@

Jute

23
@
79
@
@ 5l 0)
20
@

30
80
28
6

6 50®

?! 100 lb

Galena

50
20
strips, 2x4
per M. ft. 18 00@ 21 00
MOLASSES—See special report.

....

HAY —
North River, in bales ?!

„

’jura benzoin
Gum kowrie

16 @ 17

4 50@

LEAD—

Naptha, refln., 68-73
Sgrar. 10%©

....

,

gold 27 © Z!%
“ 27 @
Hog,Western,unwash.cur. 8 @ 10

10
:3%
60
Flowers, benzoin..?! oz. 30
Gambier
gold 3 75 @ 3 81
Gamboge
1 12 @ 1 15
75
Ginseng, Western
70 @
35
Ginseng, Southern
@
Gum Arabic, picked....
50 @ 85
Gum Arabic, sorts
29 ®
29%

•

report.

6 00@
5 50®

Tampico

@
@
@
31
@
@ 4 85

© 21

Rio Grande, mix’d,?* !b
Buenos Ayres, mixed.

2%

4X®

•

Exrtact logwood
Fennell seed

@35 00
42%®
S2%®
6 00@ 8 00

HAIR—

47%

@
@
•@
@
@
@
@
.@
@
@
@

—

Sporting, in 1 tb canis’trs.?! tb

45
&
27 (a* 31
3 87%
i-l1/*®
14%@
85 @3(0
85 @
00 ® 46 00
3X®

11
80

—

@

16 0"@17 00
10 00©
28 50@25 00

Meal
Deer

17%@

Coriander seed

—

•—@

Kentucky rifle

85
13

@ 1 25
@ 4 ;0

21
78
Camphor, refined
Cantnarides
1 90
19
Carb. ammonia, in bulk.
3 60
Cardamoms, Malabar... 3 60
Castor oil
32
Chamomile flowers, ?! ft
35
85
Chlorate potash ....gold
30
80
Caustic soda
“

Carraway seed

@

Shipping and mining...

3H

@

3 50

—

Blasting (B).... V 25 lb keg. 4 00®

19

75
r~

@

Assafoetiaa

—

20 @

—

Rods, %@3-16 inch
100 00@155 00
Hoop
125 00@180 00
Nail,rod
....?» lb
8>4@ 9%
Sheet, Russia
1034© 11%
Sheet, sing., doub. & treb.
5)i@ 7
Rails, Eng. (gold)..?! ton. 56 50© 57 00
Rails, American
76 00@ 77 00

..

GUNPOWDER—

2 25 @ 2 37
17 ©

..

26 50@27 00

Calcutta, light & li’vy, p. c.
GUNNY' CLOTH-

120 00@180 00
120 00@145 00
120 00© ....
120 00@

Scroll
Ovals and half round
Band
Horse shoe

“

@

Calcuttastandard....yard

Aloes, Socotrine
Alum

@1 70
@ 50

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

62

28 00®

Western, g’d to prime.?! Tb 20
FRUITS—See special report.

Bar, refined, Eng. A Amer. 85 00© ....
Pig, American Forge
36 00©
34 50© 86 00
Pig, Scotch, No. 1

72

—

...

39 00@ 40 00
37 00© 88 00

Pig, American, No. 1
Pig, American, No. 2

...

5(0®
6 00®....

?< bbl.
?! bbl.

FLAX—

@ 70

regular, quarts, ?! gro. 55
superfine
1 40
regular, pints
35
Mineral
50
Phial
12
COTTON—See special report.
1st
do
1st

...

?! quint. 6 50® 7 50

...

Sheathing, yel. metal,new ....© 27
Bolts, yellow metal
@ 27
Yellow metal nails

60 00@

Mackerel, No. 1, shore
Mackerel, No. 1, Halifax
\
Mackerel, No. 1, Bay
Mackerel, No. 3,
Mackerel, No. 2,Halifax
Mac’rel, No. 3, 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
?! bbl.
Herring, pickled

....

Sheathing, &c., old

11
45
12*

00® ...
00® .
U0@ ..
15 00® 16 00
—@16 00
34 00® 36 00
28 CO® ..
30 00® ..
29 00@ .
16 00@ 17 00
17 00@ i8 00

cur.

IRON—

German

gold 25 00® ..
Sapanwood, Manila ..cur. 35 C0@ 40 00

COCOA-

@

®
@
@
@

00@

?! ton.150
“ .30
gold 17
“ 17

Limawood
Bar wood

....

Liverpool gas cannel
13 O'1® ....
Liverpool nouse cannel... 17 00@18 00
Anthracite,?! ton of2,000 lb 9 50@10 00

38

12%@

Fustic, Cuba. “
Fustic, Tampico.
Fustic, Jamaica
Fustic, Savanilla
“
Fustic, Maracaibo
“
Logwood, Laguna
“
Logwood, Campeachy “
Logwood, Honduras. “
Logwood, Tabasco... “
Logwood, St. Domin.gold
Logwood, Jamaica

—

Braziers’

dry

ex.

DY'E YVOODS—
Camwood
.gold,

_

Maracaibo do

?!ft.

© 2 87%
@ 29
@ 2 50
© 9 50

51 @
10 %@
44 @

Ravens, light
?! pee.15 00
Ravens, heavy
17 00
Scotch, G’ck, NO. 1, ?! yd ....
“
Cotton, No. 1

....

56 @

Rosendale
?! ft 2 00©
COAL—
Newcastle gas,2,2401b .... 12 00®

acid\chrystal)

..

DUCK—

15 @ 16
11%@ 14
10 @ 12

Refined sperm, city

©

.

gold
Tapioca
Verdigris, dry &
Vitriol, blue

1«%@ 17%

?! ft
Sperm, patent
Stearic
14 ounce.
Adamantine.... 14ounce.

44%

Tartaric

16 @ 17

fANDLES-

50

38

@

....

17 @ 1p%

Skimmed

25 @
20 ©

Shell lac
Soda ash

Cheese-—

Factory prime
?! ft
Factory fair
Farm (fairies, prime
Farm dairies, fair
Farm dairies, common ...

35

Senna, Alexandria
Senna, East India

55
45
39
46
So

26 @ 30
88 @ 40
36 @ 38

dairy, prime.......

11%

1 70© 1 75
....@
30
11 @ 12

(80 p. c.) .gold 2 25
Sugar leaa, W’e
“
28
Sulp. quinine, Am., ?! oz 2 25
Sulphate morphine, “
9 35

84 @ 85

Western,prime.....

8

...

Seneca root

38 © 43
80 @ 87

Welsh tubs, prime
Welsh i ubs, ordinary

Penn.,

@
®
@
@
©

@

20 @
It ©

Sarsaparilla,H.,g’d,inb’d
Sarsaparilla, Mex.
“

CHEESE—

^Creamery pails.

...

1 76 @ 3 00
50 © 77

Salaeratus
Sal ammoniac, ref. gold.
Sal soda, New’le, ref. g’d

BBShar.d::::::::*“«S26-6o
fronts
40 00® 42 00

Philadelphia
BUTTER AND

84)4©

Sago, pearled

yellow...?* ft 88 @
BRto Grande shin..?! ton
® ....
BREADSTUFFS—See special report.

© 8 00

@10 5J
@
21
85 © 90

Suicksilver
hubarb, China

American

@860

...2:0 © 3 OU

Opium, Turkey... .gold
Oxalic acid ...?.
Phosphorus
Prussiate potash,Amer.
1st

735

THE CHRONICLE.

December 4,1869 ]

Coal

© 0 60

©

--.10 » ©12 V

736

CHRONICLE.

THE
Dry Goods.

Iron and Railroad

N.B.FALCONER& CO
STAPLE

AND

NEW

Iron and Railroad

Gilead A.

CO.,

BOSTON,

House, opposite
of

England.
LONDON, E. C.

PHIL A.,
208 So. 4th stree

Old

Rails,
Bessemer Rails, &c.

TYRES,

HOUSE IN LONDON:

NAYLOR,

Llspenard.

BENZON

A

U. S. BONDS AND AMERICAN RAILWAY
SECU¬
RITIES NEGOTIATED.

CO.,

34 Old. Broad Street,

Correspondents la America *

who give special attention to orders for

Messrs. Jay Cookk & Co., New

York, Messrs, j^r
Washington, Messrs E. W. Claes*
co., Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgab Thomson, Phiia.
delphla

Railroad Iron,

Miscellaneous.
as well as

For Boston Daily.

Cooke & Co.,

Old Rails, Scrap Iron and Metals.

Novelty

Iron

•

Railroad Iron,

Cast Steel Frogs, and all other Steel Material for
Railway Use.

Umbrella Alpacas and Glngb&mq, Ac.,
NO. 917 CHURCH STREET,

Bank

.

RAILS,
CAST STEEL

Materials.

Smith,

Bartholomew

80 State street.

CAST STEEL

VELVETEENS,

Between Walker and

YORK,

99 John street.

FANCY

British Dress Goods,
VELVETS,

Materials.

NAYLOR &

IMPORTERS OP

{December 4, i8<$

S.

Works,

W.

Hopkins London,
& Co.,
street,

5 8 Old Br>ad

AND

METROPOLITAN STEAMSHIP CO.’S

Nos. 77 A 83 Liberty Street,

OUTSIDE LINE OF

Corner Broadway, New York.

Neptune Steamers,

69

AND

Buildings.

Railroad

COMPRISING

NEPTUNE, NfiRGUS and GLAIJCIS,
2,000 Tons Each,
SAILINGS TUESDA

.

S.THURSDAYS & SAT ORDAYS
AND

P. landlord
1,000 Tons Each,

SAILING ON INTERMEDIATE DAYS.

From PIER 11

N.

R., at i P. M.

Connecting at Boston with Fitchburg, Boston and
Lowell, Boston and Maine and Eastern Railroad, and
In 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 for
Whariarge In Boston. *
WM. P. CLYDE,
Genl. Supt. and Agent, Pier 11 N.R.
H. M. WHITNEY, Agent, Central Battery Wharfs,

RaiLroad Iron
AND

Street, New & ork.

Aslaad, Wm P. C ydeand

Railroad Iron,
Street Rails and
Light
Rails for Mines.

T

Canada to

Lawrence & Sons,

superior facilities for executint

Railroad Iron.
We

alwaj s m a position to fhrnlsh ail sixes, oat
terns and weight of rail for both steam
and horse
roads, and in any quantities desired either for IMMlt
DIATK OR REMOTE aelivery, at anr
port In the
United States 01 Canada and always at the
very lowest
current market prices.
We are also prepared to sop*

spikes.

are

ply

Thomas

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

Bessemer Steel

J. Pope & Bro.

292 fBAKL

Rails,

of American and Foreign manufacture,
rolled to any
desired pattern and weight fqr linlal
yard and of
*PP roved lengths
Contracts for both IRON AND
STi
EEL RAILS will be made payable in United States

METALS.

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC USE.
182 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK

our

SnHfiffifi* *“ 4“crt,,U0“^

.

He nry

Companies.

We beg to call the attention of
Managers of BaB>
ways and Contractors tlireughout the United States
and

AGENTS FOP. THE CELEBRATED

BURDON

EQUIPMENTS.

Railroad

OLD RAILS AND SCRAP PURCHAS¬
ED AND SOLD.

Boston.

Bonds,

For Railroad Companies and Contractors In coaoec
tion with the purchase and aptfe of both
Foreign and
American

Janas k Jitrljfiflii,
18 William

Broadway,

71

New York,
Negotiate In Europe and America every desoriptlon o
TOWN, COUNTY, CITY, STATE,

Palm and Ornamental Iron Works of ail kinds for

.

A

STREET, NEAR BKEKMAN STREET
NEW YORK

monthly

ScHNITZER,

33 CENTRAL

IRON.

Wm. D.

WHARF, BOSTON.

Gums

“

7

3 WATER

“

Opium and Persian Berries.
Canary and Hemp Seed,

Figs, Raisins, Boxwood,
Otto Roses, Ac

Spies,

GENERAL SHIPPING AND COMMISSION

McGowan,

OF

68

South

SUTERIOR

QUALITY,

WITH OK WITHOUT BUCKLES,

SALE

(Formerly with Messrs Moses Taylor & Co.)

Cheapest and Best.

HOUSE,
STREET,

for execution at a fixed price In
Sterling or on com
mission at the current market
price abroad whan the
order is received in London; shipments to be mads
pt stated periods to ports In America and at the low¬
est possible rates of freights. Address

S. W.

Hopkins

6c Co.,

69 A- VI Broadway, Wow York.

WIRE

D. LITTLEJOHN A CO.,
245 Pearl Street.

DON

58 OLD BROAD

CHEAP.

Street, New York,

ADVANCES MADE ON APPROVED SHIPMENTS
Merchandise to my friends in Sonth America. British
and Spanish West Indies, Great Britain, India and
Australia.

LOB

ST., PITTSBURGH, PA,

MERCHANT,
No.

OLD RAILS IN TRADE FOR NEW
furnished, receiving the difference in cash, and allow¬
ing the highest market price for their Old Rails, and.
If necessary, receiving the latter after the
delivery 01
the New Kails.
Orders for Foreign Ralls, both Steel and
Iron, win
be taken for trs^\amlssion by Mall orthrough the cable
to
onr

Iron Cotton Ties

FOR

.Francis

IRON

IRON BROKER.

Offer for sale

Liquorice Sticks and Paste.
Wools of every descriptions.

yearly requirements of STEEL OR IRON

'

IRON.

T.

or

RAILS, taking their

MEDITERRANEAN GOODS.

ROPE.

STEEL, CHARCOAL and B. B., of the very best
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 BROAD WAV.

BUTLER’S PATENT COTTON TIES,

Iron Cotton Ties,

FOR BALING COTTON.
This Tie is made of the best Belgian Iron, and re¬
vived the highest premium at the Louisiana State

Insurance.

Fair, for strength and simplicity.
For sale very cheap.

COTTON
M A NUT ACT U BID

QUIN A ARNOLD, Agent*,
43 BROAD STREET.

The Liverpool& Lon¬
don & Globe Ins. Co.

AffetsGold,% 17,690,390

Affetsmthe

m



William St.

Patent Nut & Bolt
(LIMITED).

Iron Cotton Ties.
The undersigned, Sole Agents in New
sale and distribution of the

Birmingham,

to suit

York, for the

ARROW TIE AND SELF-FASTENING
WROUGHT IRON BUCKLE TIES.

on

Co.,

hand, and for sale In quantities

Apply to
.WILLIAMS A GUI ON.

purchasers.

1

71 Wall st.

For Baling Cotton,
BEARD’ 4 PATENT IROT LOOK AND

U. States 2,000,000
45

TIBS
Bt TVS

SELF-ADJUSTING TIBS,
SWENSON, PERKINS * CO.,
80 BEAYER STREET.

Unsurpassed for Strength and Sapidity of Adjust

meat.

BEARD 4
457

BRO,,
BROADWAY.

•