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§a»toi’

§iiitomjj Pmutoi, amt Insurance fmmutt

A

WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER^

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL
INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

VOL. 10.

NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 19, 1870.

Banbura and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

Lockwood & Co.,

First-Class

c*

Morton, Bliss

&

Co.,

ISSUE

CIRCULAR NOTES.

94 BROADWAY.

issued and paid free of
Commission) and letters of
Credit for ;

Continue the Banking and Commission
] business In

ALSO,

RAILWAY, GOVERNMENT,

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
Available in all parts of the world

MORTON, ROSE

CO.,

&

LEONARD.

W. C. SHELDON.

Have for Sale

12 WALL

No. 10 Wall Street.

STOCKS, BONDS

Buy and sell Government, State. Railroad and other
desirable securities,
making liberal advances on
same, all*w Interest on deposits, deal in commercial

&

BANKERS

CULlKU l'IONS made

8 Per Cent First

bought and sold

all parts oi the UNITED

10 Per Cent Bonds of
Monroe
ary and July.

LITCHFIELD,

DANA & STIMSON,
BANKERS AND
BROKERS,

No. 18 William St.
Government Securities,
Stocks, Bonds

and

bought and sold

on commission.
Accounts of Banks and

Co.,

Charles H.

BANKERS,

(Formerly, Welling, Coffin

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU
STS.,

All of which
confidence.

For the

of Travelers abroad and in
the United
in all the
principal cities of the

use

States, available

world; also,
COMMERCIAL CREDITS,

For use in Europe,
east of the Cape of Good Hope
West Indies South America, and
the United State

39 WALL

Southern and Miscellaneous
Securities

6 BROAD STREET.

Paper,

C.

No. 41 PINE

In connection
Memphis, Tenn.
,

STREET,

&

Co.,

30 PINE

W. N- HAWKS

Sc

in all parts of

and

Government

Seen

Broker;, 17




CASTLEMAN

Castleman,

Stock Brokers and Real
Estate Agents

COLUMBUS,

GEO.

Government Securities, Gold, Stocks, &c. Bonds
description, bought and sold ou commission

of every

Europe.

GKO. L. HOLMES.

ALEX.

-

Gans,

MACBETH.

Macbeth,
BROKERS,

STOCK AND BOND

Key box 4.

CHARLESTON,

S. C.

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN
U. S.

14 WALL

SECURITIES,

Citizens Bank of Louisiana

STREET.

Capital and Reserved Fund

Broad St*

ltles. Gold, Stocks and
oought and sold
exclusively on Commission Bonds,
at the
new York stoc
Exchange.
1 terest allowed
on Deposi n. ’
Reter to WM. H.
COX, E i«>, Cashier?.. Mechanics
National Bank.

LAND WAR¬

H.

Holmes &

GOVERNMENT

Rathborne,
Bankers

YORK.

Savings Bank

DeFreitas

STREET. N. Y.

Dealers In STOCKS,
BONDS, and
RANTS.

Hawks &
NEW

Woodman,

BANKERS,

BONDS and GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD

Frank &

White,

G.

COMMISSION.

COLLECTIONS made

STREET, NEW YORK.

with the Manhattan

STOCKS,

&

NEW YORK.

Stoker, Taylor

on

recommend with the utmost

Particular attention given to ths
purchase and sale
of Southara Saaurities.

Governments. Stocks. Bonds,
Loans negotiated STRICTLY" on Gold, Sterling, and
References—Messrs. Jay Cooke,Commission.
&c.

NASSAU

we can

County, Missouri, Janu¬

Manning &- DeForest,

STREET,

Sight and Time Bills on LONDON,
LIVERPOOL,
EDINBURGH and DUBLIN, PARIS,
BREMEN,
HAMBURG,
BERLIN,
FRAN
KFORT-ON-THElfAIW VTfi'NTKr A

DEALERS IN

County, Missouri, May

No. (9 Wall
Street, New York

BANKERS.

Borg,

Joseph and
August.

TANNER & iO..

Co., Philadelphia.)

JAUNOKY COURT.

21

Levy &

St.

and

Gold

Welling,

&

Broker In Mercantile

£ SB U 35

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR
LETTERS
OF CREDIT,

February

10 Per Cent Bonds oi Marion
and November.

Special.

&

Mortgage Gold Bonds

Denver City li. it. co.,

on

Individuals solicited and
interest allowed on deposits.
Wm. B. Litchfield,
Lewts A. Sttmson,
Charles H. Dana.
Walter E. Colton.
E. B.
Litchfield,

No. 12 WALL STREET.

Gold Bonds St. Louis and

Co., May and November.

Southern Securities.

Co.,

GOLD, &c.

Line of Investment Securities of
the

6 Per Cent First
Mortgage
St. Joseph KR.

STREEV, N. Y.

on

a

STREET, NEW YORK

liigliest order. Among them,

BROKERS,

and GOLD

STATES and CANADAS.
Special attention given to

,

in government secukitie

A

commission only,

paper, furnish to travellers and others Letters
of Cre¬
dit current In tne
principal cities in

Duncan, Sherman

CO.,

HOWELL-

NO. 49 WALL

BANKERS

Europe.

W. IT.

Vincent & Co.,

BANKERS,

AND:DKALER3

H. W. VINCENT.

Conover,

I.'FOSTER.

W.

CONOVER, JR.

Leonard, Sheldon&Foster

Hatch, Foote

&

BANKERS*
W. H.

LONDON.
W. B.

TANNER

And other Securities.

’

on

Securities.

NEW YORK,

TRAVELLERS,

NO. 245.

$2,500,000,

AGENCY

A-

V.

B.

Van

STOCK, BOND AND

;no.

GOLD

30,BROAD

Dyck,

BROKER,

STREET.

A. D.

SELLECK, 3TPIne8*,N.»
Draw

London Joint Stock Bank,
Baring, Brothers & Co,
In

sums

oh

Marcuard. Andre & C
Fould & co,

London,
Pabib
to points suiting buyers of Sterling or
Frauos.

Financial.

Financial,

Bowles Brothers Sc Co.,

MIDLAND BONDS.

Banker* and Brokers.
BANKING HOUSE

[February 19, 1870,

CHRONICLE.

THE

126

or

Dbktbt & Co.]

Successors to Bowles,

Jay Cooke 8c Co.,
1%

We

WALL

20

No.

ushington.

YORK

6TKEET, 1* E W

Buy, Bell and Exchange

ssaes

and

York, Philadelphia

New

at most liberal rates, all

ol

subscriptions to the CHRONI¬

McKim, Brothers Sc Co.,

RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL
LOANS, receive Deposits, subject to Check, allowing
nterest, and transact a general Banking Business.
WE NEGOTIATE

JAY COOKE & CO.

IN

DEALERS

ON THE

MORTGAGE

FIRST

Railroad

GOVERNMENT

New York

in

SECURITIES

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

NEW

THE

AND

YORK

&

ALEXANDER SMITH

CO.,

BA

BANKERS,

New York.
received and interest allowed at best

No. 40 Wall Street,
DEPOSITS
Current Rate*.

SECURITIES

force is now

progressing rapidly and will be completed as soon

as

practicable.

SAFETY OF THE BONDS.

GOLD COUPONS,
is no railroad bond offered upon

There

Watertown, N. Y.

BUY AND SELL ON

RAILWAY

rr°PrieiorB*

MAKING LIBERAL

in New York

BROADWAY, NEW YORK
Successors to

NEPHEW.

Exchange,

to all arts

Sight Drafts on A. S. Petrie* Co., London,

Royal Bank

ot Ireland, Dublin ; Bank of Scotland, Edinburgh.
C. Grimshaw & Co., Liverpool. Also on Germany,

Sweden.

S. G. 8c G. C. Ward,
AGENTS

COMPANY.

NEW YORK,
jJ8 STATE STREET, BOSTON.
WM. A.
OTDTKK.
G. Francis Opdyke.

STEPHENS

BANKING HOUSE OP

Wm. G. Ward.

Chas. II. Ward.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Orders In Stocks. Bonds.
curities promptly filled at

Gold and Government Se¬

usual rates. Foreign Ex¬

negotiated. Draw BiPs on the
'UNION BANK OF LONDON.
Deposits In Gold and Currency received and inte¬
rest allowed on balances exceeding $1,000.

change

John J. Cisco 8c Son,
BANKERS.

is such, that it must command
large through and local traffic from the moment it 1b
opened. The route from New York to Buff alo will be

shortened 70 miles, and to Oswego
2. THE COST

sarily furnished by
is used from the
latter is

NO.

25

NASSAU

AMERICAN

(Corner of Cedar Btreet.)

DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms, Banks
Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at

sight, and interest allowed at

the rate of Four per

c<*nt per annum.

CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Issued,

Ser
xedcent
dates.
Interest,

bearing Four

p'yable on demand, or after

COLLECTIONS made on ill accessible points In the
United States, Canada and Europe.
Dividends
and Coupons also collected, and all moBt promptly
accounted for,
ORDERS promptly executed, for
sale of Gold; also, Government
ties, on commission.

the purchase and

and other Securi¬

INFORMATION furnished, and purchases or ex¬

changes of Securities made for Investors.
GOTIATlONS of Loans, and Foreign Exchange
effected.

Issue Ciicular Letters of
arts of Europe, etc., etc.

86 SOUTH

Credits on
vances

BANKING HOUSE OF

Luther

Kountze,

Credit for Travellers in all

Exchange on Paris,

S. Income

about

cent In gold, free of U.
is equal to
PER CENT A YEAR. No rational per¬
expect a SAFE INVESTMENT, WITHIN

could

STATE to be offered on more

Ad

made on consignments. Orders for Govern
and Merchandize executed.

H.

C.

PIardv

No. 4 Wall

Sc Son,

Street, New York.

THE BONDS.

nominations of
in

York, on

Banking, Exchange, and Brokerage Business,

issued in de¬

$1,000; bear Seven PerCent Interes

gold, free of Income

ed, with

Tax; are Coupon or Register

Interest, payable semi-annually in Ne
the first of May and first of November.

Price : Par and

accrued In terest.

Pamphlets, Circulars, &c., may be had on

applica

tlon.

Exeeute orders at the New York Stock, Government
and Gold Exchanges, in person, and transact a Gen
sral

liberal

than these.

Thebonds have 25 years to run ; are

and Ireland.

W. TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool.

INTEREST.

tax, and this with gold at 129

OUR OWN
terms

ment Stocks, Bonds

Deposits received from Banks ana Individuals, sub




exceed this sum.

son

NEW YORK.

STREET, NEW YORK.

52 Wall Street. New York,
ect to check at sight, aud interest allowed thereon at
FOUR PER CENT per annum.
Collections made throughout the United States, the
British Provinces and Europe.
Governments Securities bought and sold,

alter the whole line is
moderate calculations the
EARNINGS OF A SINGLE MORTH would

only $560,000 per annum

These bonds pay seven per

Sight Drafts and Exchange payable in all

parts of Great Britain

thus

completed. On the most

Tapscott, Bros. 8c Co.
Issue

Coast, 400 miles In length, will

and the Atlantic

this

of Railway between the Lakes

THE RATE OF

John Munroe 8c Co.,
NO. 8 WALL STREET,

TOTAL INTEREST LIABILITY of

4. THE

great through route

BANKERS,

SCRIBE, PARIS,

NO. 7 RUE

railroad running
prompt¬

York City are good, and interest Is

ly paid on them.

far

Sc Co.,

Munroe

RUNNING ORDER.

already been paid In on stock

mortgage bonds on every

be

of the United States

MILE OF

subscriptions.

mission.
Make collections on all parts
and Canada.

Co.,

STREET,

sale of Bonds, since the Issue of tlie

positively limlteG to $20,000 PER

out of New

for Hie purchase and sale
other Securities on com¬

of that amount is neces¬

stock subscription before a dollar

OVER $0,000,000 have

8. The

YORK,

45 miles.

OF BUILDING THE ROAD Is about

$40,000 per mile, and $20,000

(Brown Brothers & Co.’s Building,)
Receive money on deposit, subject to check at sight
allowing interest on daily balances at the rate ofiou
per cent per annum, credited monthly.
Issue Certificates of Deposit bearing four cent in
terest, payable on demand or at fixed periods.
Negotiate Loans.
Execute promptly orders
of Gold, Government and

MIDLAND

STATE to the nearest

port on the great Lakes,

ROAD BUILT AND IN

WALL STREET, NEW

the Northern part

a

BANKERS,
54 WALL

COUNTIES OF NEW YORK

average

Geo. Opdyke 8c

TnE ROAD, stretching

City of New York, across

Jersey and the rich and populous

oi New

Ward Sc Co.,

NO. 59

WALL STREET,

KOBGK

Deposit*.

Interest on

TOR

BARING BROTHERS &

the

ADVANCES.

Established 1820.,

Bankers furnished with Sterling Bills of
and through passage tickets from Europe
ot the Unitea States.

France and

this; in proof of which assertion

as

1. THE LOCATION OF

Rider Sc Cortis,
SAML. THOMPSON’S

SECURITY and a HIGH

INTEREST

from the

Henry H. Ward.

73

RATE OF

of PERFECT

Cooke & Co.

Special attention paid to collections

State and Canada.

STOCKS, RONDS AND

the New

clearly combines the element,

York market which so

following simple facts are presented:

Correspondents:

Central Nat. Bank, New York; -lay
N. Y. State Nat. bank, Albany, N.Y.

COMMISSION

GOLD,

°RIN C‘ £B0,8<T’
Cashier.

G. F. Paddock,
) PrODrletors
Mkbkitt Andbus, j

A large
which

running daily.

working on the balance of the line,

is

AND IN

Sc COM’YS BANK.

from

The line is completed 150 miles

Oswego, aud regular trains

DEALERS IN ALL ISSUES OF

GOliD AND
QEO. F. PADDOCK

nearly straight,

City of Oswego ou Lake Ontario, a distance

of 4«0 miles.

Street, New York,

GOVERNMENT

to the

0

NKERS,

No*. 16 A 18 Nassau

_

GOVERNMENT and STATE SECURITIES, GOLD,
RAILROAD BONDS, STOCKS, etc., bought aud
Bold on Commission.
ADVANCES made upon approved Securities.
COLLECTIONS made, and Loans Negotiated.

Co.,

8c

Vermilye

OSWEGO

MIDLAND RAILROAD,
extends from New York Citv, In a line

WILLIAM

OF A

RONDS

State,

BROKERS,

AND

ANKERS

TAX,

FREE OF GOVERNMENT

New York.

No. 47 Wall Street,

Gold.'

Cent Gold,

Per

Seven

CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAVEL
LERS IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE

and Bonds of LAKE SUPERIOR AND MISSISSIFF
RAILROAD COMPANY, and execute orders for pur
chase and sale of

Stocks, Bonds and

York

Bank of

Bills on Paris and the Union
London.

Agents foi receiving
CLE in Paris.

BONDS,

GOVERNMENT

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

GEO. OPDYKE & CO.,
I

Bankers 25iNassau street.

February 19,1870]

THE

CHRONICLE.

Insurance.

Insurance

OFFICE OF THE

OFFICE OF THE

N

Mutual Insurance Co.,
The Trustees, In conformity to the charter of the

Company, subml^the following Statement of its affairs
the 81st December, 1889:

1st

on

No. 61 William Street.

on.

New York, January 20,1870.
The Trustees submit the following statement of the
affairs of the Company in

quirements of the Charter:

conformity with the

Outstanding Premiums to Decemoer 31,1868

Policies not marked off 1st

2,538,001 23

January, 1869

$8,628,639 05

Total amount of Marine Premiums

$332,095 30

No Policies have been Issued upon
Life Risks, nor
on Fire Risks,
disconnected with Marine Risks.
Earned Premiums to January 1,1810

$257,037 75

Losses and

The

No Policies have been issued upon Life

Expenses

$118,167 23
11,522 80

nor upon

Fire Risks disconnected

ank, City and other.Stocks
oans on Stocks, and Cash duo

$6,472,915 41

Losses paid during the

and

Expenses

87,907 25

Salvage, Reinsurance, Insurance Scrip, Ac¬
crued Interest, and other Claims due the
Company

Returns of Premiums

88,379 08

Company has the following Assets, viz.:
$7,856,290 00

Loans secured by Stocks and otherwise... 8,148,400 00

Mortgages,....

Company, estimated at

207,568 81

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable

2,513,452 60

'.

Cash in Bank

533,797 53

Total amount of Assets

SIX PER CENT interest on the
outstanding Certifi¬
cates of Profits will be paid
on and after TUESDAY,
the 8th day of
February, 1870.

FORTY PER CENT

$14,469,508 94

DIVIDEND, and the United

Taxes, is declared on the Net Earned Premiums
led thereto, for
theyeir ending 31st December,

210,000 00

Interest and sundry Notes and Claims due
the

as

earned from Jan-

nary 1st to December 31st, 1869
Less Return Premiums.

$1,082,311 00
79,649 93

.k....$1,002,661 07

Stockholders

for

$91,724 50

equiv¬
alent for the Scrip Dividends
of Mutual

as an

Companies

$119,818 65

Company

were as foil >ws

on

the 31st December,

:

U nited States,State,Bank and other Stocks
loans on Stocks and other Securities
Cash on hand and in Banks, and with For¬

$104,826 25
53,589 28

eign Bankers

United States and State of New York Stock,

Real Estate and Bond* and

$1,371,795 36

Premiums marked off

1S69,

$1,237,630 49

City, Bank and other Stock

Total Premiums

The Assets of the

$767,825 81
The

conformity with the requirements of its Charter :
Premiums outstanding December 31st, 1368..
$$41,683 83
Premiums received daring the year 1869....
1.039,111 53

Cash paid to Dealers

Pfemium Notes and Bills receivable

$2,302,245 46

York, January 20,1870.
following Statement of the affairs of the
Company, on the 31st December, 1869, is published la

Cash paid to
Interest

15,838 62
92,000 00
27,885 30

Cash in Banks

New

The

Paid during same period:
Losses, Expenses, Commissions
and Reinsurance, less
Salvages$7l8,144 12

:

$631,539 48

same

period

Company
Real Estate,Bonds and Mortgages

Co.,

3 5 Wall Street*

NeUEarned Premiums

$330,473 36
165,293 20

the

Premiums marked off from 1st January,

1869, to Slit December, 1869

Company have the following Assets

United States Stocks

with Marine Risks,

re¬

$78,896 71
258,198 59

Total

Returned Premiums

Risks,

No

Premiums received since

Marine Risks, from

HEROANTILE

Insurance Co., Mutual Insurance

Mutual

January, 1869, to 31st December, 18G9.$6,090,637 83

Premiums

York

E; w

NEW YORK, January 26, 1870.

Premiums received

Insurance.
OFFICE OF THE

ATLANTIC

on

127

1869, for which certificates may be issued on and after
he d day of April next.
THE OUTSTANDING CERTIFICATES OF PROITS of the issue of I860, will be redeemed and
pa’d
to the holders
thereof, or their legal representatives,
on and after
TUESDAY, the 8th clay of February
ext, from which date all interest thereon will cease.
Tlie Certificates to be presented at the time of

Interest

86,850 82

Investments due, but not col¬

on

lected

4,822 00

Bills receivable and Premiums due and
collectable

Security Notes
Scrip, Salvages and other Claims due

499.531 44
300,000 CO

the

C mpany

77,810 IS

$1,427,880 02
The Board of Trustees have resolved to
pay to the
Stockholders ai INTEREST DIVIDEND of THREE
AND ONE HALF (3%) PER CENT., free of Govern¬
ment

Tax,

on

and after TUESDAY, February 1st.

pay.

Six per cent interest on the outstanding certificates
oi

profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their

legal representatives, on

ment and canceled.

W. P.

and after Tuesday, the

The outstanding certificates of the issue of 1866 will
bo redeemed and paid to

the holders thereof, or their

legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, the First

on

will cease.

time of

which date all interest there¬

The certificates to be produced at the

payment and cancelled.

Upon certificates

Stewart Brown,
Arthur

Leary,

Henry Meyer,

Edw..rd H. 1£. Lyman,
E. V. Ihe'iaud,
Franc.s Hathaway,

Francis skiddy,
Chas. i amson,

John H.

Lloyd Aspinwall,
E.P.Fabri,

A dividend of FORTY Per Cent Is declared on the

net earned premiums of the Company, for the year

Earle,

Henry C. Hulhert,

Jacobs. VVetmore.

JOHN H.
llIEO. ii.

payment ol interest and redemption will be in

gold.

:

Gustave H. Kissel,
Gerhard -Janssen,

George Moke,

payable in London, at the Banking House of
DENN1STOUN, CROSS & CO.

Met si s,

Bankers and Brokers.

By order of the Board,

Gibson, Beadleston & Go,
BANKERS,

TRUSTEES:

Charles Dennis,
W. H. H. Moore,

Henry Colt,
Wm. C. Plckersgill,

Joseph Gailllard, Jr.
C. A. Hand,
James Low,
B. J. Howland,
Benj. Babcock,

Lewis Curtis,
Charles H. Russell,
Lowell Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,

Frederick

Caleb Barstow,
A. P. PiUot,
William E. Dodge,

David Lane,
James Byrce,
Daniel S. Miller,
Wm. Sturgis,

Henry K. Bogert,
Dennis verkins,




Chauncey,

K. L.

Taylor,
Geo.'S. Stephenson,
William H.

Webb,
Sheppard Gandy,
Francis Sklddy,
Charles P. Burdett,
Robt. C. Fergusson,
Samuel G. W ard,

William E. Bunker,
Samuel L. Mltchill,
James G.

el L.

DeForest,

Robert L. Stuart.
J. D. JONES, President.
CHARLES DENNIS, Vice-Pres’t.
W.H.H. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres’t.

J. D. HEWLETT. 8d Vice-Pres’t

Edward Me. rift,

Daniel I. Willets,
L. Edgerton.

Ham,

Bryce Gray,
N. L. McCr ady,

William Neb on.
Harold Doilner,
Jos. Willets,

Henry B.

unhardt,

>\

John S. Williams,
Charles Dimon.
Paul N.Spofford,
James Douglas.

Jr.,

ELLWOOD WALTER president, AurHl). G. MONTGOMERY, Jr.. Vice-Pres’t.
At ANSON w. HEUEMAN, 2d Vice-Presid’t.

Despard, Secretary.

Fire Insurance
NO.

62

WALL

Agency,

STREET.

iEtna Insurance

INCORPORATED 1819.
Cash Capital
$3,000,000 OO
Assets..

$5,549,504 97

STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD
bought and sold
on the most favorable terms.
INTEREST allowed on deposits either
]n Currency
or Gold, sublect to check at
sight, the same as with
the

City Banks.

ADVANCES made on all marketable securities.
CERTIFICATES of Deposit issued bearing interest.
COLLECTIONS made at all points of the UNION
and BRITISH PROVINCES.
LOANS negotiated on FOREIGN AND
DOMESTIC
PRODUCE, in store and afloat. We invite particular
attention to this branch of our business, in
which we
have unusual facilities ’

TfcgS- CHICAGO AMI ALTON RAIL-

ROAD COMPANY, SECRETARY’S
Chicago, Ills., January 26, 1870. r

OFFICE,

NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.
The Stockholders of the

Comp’y,

HARTFORD, CONN.

NO. 50 EXCHANGE PLACE.

Robt. B. Minturn,
Gordon W. Burnham,

Royal Phelps,

1

Geo. W. Hennings,
Henry Eyre,
Joseph Slagg,

NEW YORK.

be issued on and alter Tuesday, the Fifth of April next

J. D. Jones,

Sam

C. J.
For the convenience of its customers, this
Company
have made arrangements to issue Policies and Certifi¬
cates

A. Foster niggins.
Francis Hatmiway,
Aaron L. Reid,
John D. Wood,

William Wait,
James D. Fish,
Ellwood Walter,
I). Colden Murray,
Townsend Scudder,

LYELL, President,
BLEECKER, Jr., Vice-Pres’t.

ending 31st December, 1869, for which certificates will

J *H, CHAPMAN, Secretary.

James Freehand, '
Samuel Willets.
Robert L. Taylor,
Wil lam T. Frost,

Henry Oelrichs,
James R. Smith,
George Mosle,

Stephen Johnson,

which were issued (in red scrip) for gold premiums,
such

HANSFORD, Secretary.

TRUSTEES

First of February next.

of February next, from

TRUSTEES.

By order of the Board,

Springfield
F1RIS & MARINE

INCORPORATED
Cash Capital
Assets

INSURANCE
OF

Company, Messrs. M. K. Jessup & Company, No. 12

Pine st., New York, on the first day of March
next, to
holders registered as such at the closing of transfer
books.
The Transfer Books will be closed on the 10th of
February next, and reopened for transfers on the 2d
of March next.
WM. M. LARRABEE, Secretary.

184 9.

t500ji00 OO
$936 2 46 05

.

Providence

Washington
COMPANY,

PROVIDENCE, R. I.

ORGANIZED

179 9.

Cash Capital

$200,000 OO

Assets....

Chicago and Alton Railroad

Company are hereby notified that a Cash Dividend of
FIVE (5) PER CENT., lree of government
tax, has
this day been declared on the Preferred and Common
Stock of the Company, out of the earnings
of the last
six raontns, payable at the office of the agents of the

INSURANCE CO.,

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

$392,425

52

American
IVSURANCE
OF

COMPANY,

PROVIDENCE, R. I.

ORGANIZED

Cash Capital
Assets
—

183 1.

$20^,000
$372,219

JTAS, A« ALEXANDER, A Rent.

OO
38

128

T^E CHRONICLE.

[February 19,1870.

Financial.

Miscellaneous.

Offices To

OFFICE OF FISK & HATCH,
BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMERNMENT
NO.

5

NASSAU

and

SECURITIES,

BANKERS, BROKERS, MERCHANTS.
LAWYERS, RAILWAY, INSURANCE, AND

STREET, NEW YORK,

MORTGAGE
OF

Ch ESAPEAKE

OTHER COMPANIES,

THE CI1ESAPEAKE

AND

OHIO

In

Buildings

38, 39, 40, 42. 57, €4. 66, €9, 71, 73,
78 and 8 0

BROADWAY,
5, 7, 1 7, 19, 34, 36, 49, 53 New st.

Nos.
Nos.

4, 6, 11, 17, 19, 21 6c 38 Broad s(.
Exchange Place.

Nos. 65 and 57

ALL NEAR WALL STREET.

And Nos. 4 and 19 Wail Street.

RONDS

THE

OHIO

AND

Ventilation, suitable for

BANKS,

Fhbruary 15, 1870.
The remarkable success which attended our negotiation of the Loans of the CENTRAL PACIFIC
RAILROAD COMPANY and the WESTERN PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY,
and the popularity and
credit which these Loans have maintained In the markets, both in this country and
Europe, have shown that
the First Mor gage Bonds of wisely located and honorably
managed Railroads are promptly recognized and
readily taken as the most suitable, safe, and advantageous form of Investment, yielding a more liberal
income than can hereafter be derived from Governmert Bonds, and available to take their
place.
Assured that, in the selection and negotiation of superior Railroad Loans, we are
meeting a great public
want, and rendering a valuable service—both to the holders of Capital and to those great National works of
internal improvement whose inirinsic merit and substantial character entitle them to the use of
Capital and
the confidence of investors—we now oiler with special confldence and satisfaction the

FIRST

Let,

With all the Modern Improvements, Splendid Light

APPLY AT THE OFFICE OF

RAILROAD

RAILROAD, connecting lhe Atlantic

COMPANY.

Edward

coast and the

Matthews,

Nos. 4 and 6 Brood Street.

magnificent
Chesapeake Bay with the Ohio River at a point of reliable navigation, and
thus, with the
entire Railroad system and water transportation of the great
West and Southwest, FORMS THE ADDI¬
TIONAL EAST AND WEST'TKUNK^LINE, so
imperatively demanded ior the accommodation of the
immense and rapidly growing transportation betw een the Atlantic seaboard
and Europe on the one
hand,
and the great producing regions of the Ohio and
Mississippi Valleys on the other.
harbors of the

1CN

PER

CENT

BONDS

OF

THE

IMPORTANCE OF THIS ROAD AS A NEW OUTLET FROM THE WE3T TO
THE SEA
magnifies it into one of national consequence, nnd insures to it an extensive through traflie from the
day ot
its completion ; while, iu the development of the extensive
agricultural and mineral resources of Yirgii la
and West Virginia, it possesses, along its own line, the elements of a
large and profitable local business.
Thus the great interests, both general and local, which demand the
completion of the CHESAPEAKE
AND OHIO RAILROAD to tl»e Ohio River, afl'ord the sui est
guarantee of its success and value, and
Reuder it the Most. Important and *ub«tantinl Railroad

Enterprise

row

Monroe

in

Interest

payable semi-annually in the
city of New York, free of lax.

Its

superiority as an East and Wi st route, and the promise of an immense and
profitable trade await
ingits completion, have drawn to it the attention and co-operation of
prominentCapitalists and Railroad men
of this City, of sound judgment and known
integrity, whose connection with it, together with that of eminent
citizens and business men of Virginia and West
Virginia, insures an energetic, honorable, and successful

Principal payable from 13

management.
The Road Is completed and in operation from I ichmond to the
celebrated White Sulphur Springs ot
West Virginia, 227 miles, and there remain but 200 miles
(now partially constructed) to be completed, to
carry it to the proposed terminus on the Ohio River, at,
or near, the mouth of the Big Sandy River, 150 miles
above Cincinnati and 350 miles below Pittsburg.
are now

Chesapeake

projected

orable

to

fav¬

with

pamphlets relating thereto.

may be held in that form ; er
of the owner, with the
coupons remaining payable to bearer
transferable only on the books of the
Company, unless

TANNER &

name

TO.,

Bankers, 49 Wall Street,

reanigned to

er
The coupons may be detached and
transferable only on the books of the

cancelled, the Bond made a PERMANENT REGISTERED
BOND,
Company, and the interest made payable only to the
registered owner

attorney.

on

terms, recommend them

Coupon Bonds, payable te hearer, and

bearer;

$300,000

confidence, and will furnish circulars and

$1,000, $500, and $100.
attached, the principal being then

than

We offer these bonds for sale

Equal to the Entire Amount ortho
mortgage.

his

counties less

Debt

eight million dollars ($8,000,000).

The details of the Loan have been arranged with
special reference of the waats ef all clarses of inves¬
tors, and combiHe the various features of convenience,
safety, and protection against loss or fraud.
The Bonda are in denominations of

in the

Issued in

each, with taxable wealth from five

Value, in Completed Road and Work Done,

or

city of New York.

of these

Its valuable franchise and superior
advantages will place the CHESAPEAKE-AND OHIO RAILROAD
COMPANY among the richest and most powerful and
trustworthy corporations of the country :
And there Exists a Present

as

to 20 years

strict accordance with the laws.

in progress through Ohio and Kentucky to this
point, wlr'ch will connect the
and Ohio with the Entire Railroad Systems cf
the Went »nd
and Southwest, and with the Pacific
Railroad.

They will be issued

the

in

or

The Bond may be registered

Marion

Counties, Missouri.

Proiresi in this Country.

Lines

and

New York.

The three classes OF BONDS will be known
1.

2.
3.
and should ho

respectively as :
Coupon Bonds payable te Rearer.”

$100,000

Registered Ronds with Coupons attach d ”
“ Registers*! Rond* with
Coupons detached.”

ElfJIIT

OF

so designated
by Corr^apondonte in specifying the class of Bonds desired.
They have THIRTY YEARS to run from January 15,1870, with interest

at six per cent
per annum from
PRINCIPAL AND INTERE T PAYABLE IN
COLD IN TilS CITY OF NEW
YORK.
'lhe interest is payable in May and
November, that it may take the place of that of the earlier
issues of
Five-Twenties, and suit the convenience of our friends who already li< Id Central
and Western pacific
with interest payable in
Bonds,
January and July, and who may desire, in
making additional invesiments, to have
their interest receivable at different seasons of
the year.
*
The Lottn 18 secured by a
mortgage upon the entire Line of Road from Richmond to
the Ohio River,
with the equipment and all other
property and appurtenances connected ther with.
A Sinking Fund ot'

City

November 1,18*59.

$100,000.

PER

ANNUM IS PROVIDED FOR THE RICDEMP1 ION
OF TIIE BONDS, TO TAKE
EFFECT ONF
YEAR AFTER TIIE COMPLETION OF THE ROAD.

of

The mortgage is for $15,000,000. of which
$2,000,000 will be reserved
outstanding Bonds of the VIRGINIA CENTRAL RAILROAD

PEAKE AND OHIO.

1

HHteOfthe remaining

perfect and improve
traflie.

and held in trust for the

COMPANY,

$13,000,000

a sufficient amount will be sold to
the portion now in operation, and

7 lie present
A Loan so

price is PO and accrued interest.
amply secured, so careiully guarded, and

so certain

whole for

hereafter to command

to the Ohio River
a

a

large and active

prominent nlace

a™d^uichkl^absorte8dCUritie9 ^ market8’ both of u,is Country and Europe, will beat once

St.

of

State of

RONDS

THK

Paul,

Minnesota,

Interest. Payable Semi-Annually in the City of New
York. Feb. 1st and Aug. 1st, Principal Payable

February 1st, 1890.

The whole debt of the City of St. Paul, includipg
the above issue, is but $780,000.
The assessed value of tbe taxable property of the
city, June 1,1888, on a basis of iorty per cent of its

real, was $8,299,975.
*

The city has increased since the date of tills assess
ment at ieast 40 per cent in wealth and population.
The city is authorized, by act of the legislature of
the s'ate of Minnesota, to issue $100,000 bonds, for the

of building engine houses and paying the
floating debt of the citv.
Attention is called to the following extract from

purpose

redemption

now merged in the CHFsa

complete the Road

thoroughly equip the

CENT

PER

appreciated

Very respectfully.

enure

the

City Charter:
(chapter 5, section 1.)
The present bonded or permanent funded debt of
the city shall not be increased, nor shall any new
bonds of lhe city be Issued, except for existing debts,
or in liquidation or exchange for bonds heretofore
issued, nor shall the city loan her credit, become a
“

stockholder in, or make contribution or donation to
any private company, or corporation, until the same
shall have been voted for and approved by two-thirds
of all the legal voters voting at a regular annual city

election.”

FISK &

HATCH, Bankers.

The above bonds are offered for sale

signed as agents of the city.

by the under¬

Price 90 and Interest from Feb. 1st.
be

furPni8te^hnIppraln.9mPhlCt8 C°ntalninS “ r-ticulars,statistical details, maps, &c

,

which will

*** We buy ond Sell Government Bonds, and receive the
accounts of Banks,
Bankers,
orporalions, and others, subject to check at
sight, and allow interest on daily balances.




Litchfield, Dana
Stimpson,

and

.BANKERS, NO.IIW.L'LM STREET.

fertte, fcmuwkl $imrss,
A

jpmiiiov, ami insurance gournat.

WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

MEPUESENTLNG TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND
COMMERCIAL INTERESTS Ol< THE UNITED

VOL. 10.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1870.
CONTENTS.

The Financial
Retention of

bourh.......
Kiilr-ai

Policy

.

Currency at

...

Earnings lor January.."

Internal Revenue Returns for Six

Months..,

....

Report of the-Central Railroad
&

231

Money

|

I

Banking Company,Georgia.

EnglishNews

Commercial and Miscellaneous

231 |
News
THE BANKERS GAZETTE
AND RAILWAY MONITOR.
Market, Railway Stocks,
sale Prices N. Y. Stock
Exchange

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

National Banks, etc
Southern Securities

Commercial Epitome,

Cotton
Tobacco

.....

Railway News
Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.

236
238

City Bond List

Railroad, Canal and Miscellane¬
ous

Bond List

THE COMMERCIAL TIMES.
245 I Groceries
246 i Dry Goods....
248 I Prices Current
248 1

Breads tuffs

NO. 243.

agitation inflicts on the financial prosperity of
is far more considerable. However this may be
in regard to the funding
measures, there is no doubt that the
agitation of the currency bill has had some such effects as
these. Indeed, this circumstance has long ago led the most
shrewd observers to the conclusion that Congress will really
do nothing either for the refunding of the debt, or for the
enlarging the issues of bank notes, or for the making of any
vital change in the greenback system. If this could be assured,
the country

the South Carolina
Railroad Company
2301 Changes in
the Redeeming
230 |
Agents of National B>mkB
1
LatestMonetary and Commercial

|

STATES*

the constant

THE CHRONICLE.
229 I Report of

the

•

231
232
232
236

239
240

241

242

we

243-4

should have

business, for

we

one

of the elements

a

resuscitation

of

should be rid of the uncertainty and instability
public confidence, and a settled

the destruction of

249

which

260
2j5

firm foundation would be laid for

are

for

an

revival of industrial and commercial

active and prosperous

vitality.

There is another

point to which we must not fail to advert.
proposed repeal of taxation. Internal taxes
Tus Commercial and Financial
Chronicle is issued evert/ Satur
to the amount of some thirty millions of dollars are to be
day morning by the 'publishers of Hunt's Merchants'
Magazine
with the latest news
taken off, and if the remitted taxes are
up to midnight of Friday.
wisely selected, an
impulse
can
scarcely
fail
to
be
imparted
to business. At
TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTIOK—PAYABLE IN
ADVANCE.
For Thk Commercial
Financial Chronicle, delivered
any rate, the languor which the excessive pressure of our
by carrier
to city subscribers, ana mailed to all
others,
(exclusive of postage,)
fiscal system has caused may he expected
ForOne Year
gradually to disap¬
$10 00
For Six Months
5
00
’Jtie Chromclk will be sent to subscribers
pear.
There
is
no
danger
that
our
credit
will suffer in for¬
until ordered discontinued by letter.
Postagei$20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his oton
post-office.
william b. DANA,
eign countries by the impatience of excessive taxation which
f
WILLIAM B. DANA A OO., Publishers,
JOHN e. FLOYD, jb.
f
79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK.
is beginning to appear among our people.
On th9 contrary,
Post Office Box 4,592.
the foundations of our credit will really be
strengthened by
n^Parls Bowles Bpos. & Co., Bankers, are agents for receiving subscriptions
the strengthaning of the foundations of our national
prosper¬
Remittances should
ity
stimulus
and
the
imparted
by
a
repeal
the
taxes
which
of
invariably be made by drafts or Post
Ofjioe Money Orders.
injured our productive power.

®I)C CljronicU.

We refer to the

and

In those

THE FINANCIAL POLICY.

directions, then, the financial situation

is

assuming

hopefnl aspect.- First, the funding of the debt is not
Washington have frequently been circulated likelyr to be prosecuted to the injury of our monetary
during several days past as to a change in our financial machinery, which is built up upon our bonds, and suffers
policy. It is said that no further attempts will be made to periuibation when these bonds are disturbed. Secondly, the
pass any of the funding bills, but that
they will all lapse. currency of the country, which is the debt-paying machinery
As Mr. Bout well has
expressed so strong a desire to have of our commercial and industrial system, is not to be invaded
some
funding measure adopted, in the hope to relieve the py any rash and crude innovations; and, [thirdly, certain
Treasury of part of the burden of annual interest, a number taxes, which press heavily upon the nation’s productive
of well-informed persons refuse to believe
that these funding cowers and hamper our industrial progress, are to be removed.
bills which have been elaborate 1 with so
much care and Some of the more galling fetters are to be stricken off from
labor will be allowed to die without some further
efforts to commerce and trade, so that health and active life may
extricate them. There can be no
doubt, however, that these permeate the body politic.
measures are far from
As to the taxes which it would be the best policy to
popular, and the discussion of them
repeal,
has caused [a good deal of
perturbation in financial we will offer no opinion here except to lay down the general
circles.
The fact has been
brought to light that a principles, that the industry of our people should be as free
disturbance of the monetary
machinery of the country is as possible from the unquestionable and vexatious interference
produced by the perpetual agitation for disintegrating and of revenue’officials, and that acts of unproductive
consump¬
refundingthe public debt. At great cost the bonds were funded tion rather than processes of useful production should be
in their present form,
and however convenient and desirable it singled out for taxation. Tried by these principles, most of
a

more

Rumors from

might be in many respects to have the debt funded otherwise our internal revenue taxes would be found to be
open to
than it is, still the
saving by a lower ra<e of interest would objection. Perhaps few of them could survive the investi¬
amount only to a few millions a
year, while the loss which gation, except the whiskey and tobacco tax, and a few oth



THE

230

[February 19,1870.

CHRONICLE.

yield the most to the pnblic treasury, rigid economy of expenditures* Thus the South, from having
it is capable of being rendered by a been extravagant and luxurious, has acquired a habit of
few changes as tolerable as anj internal revenue tax which economy bordering upon parsimony. In a determined effort
could be substituted for it, and its
tention would enable us to recover lost fortune and position, nothing is more natural
to repeal a multitude of other imposts which are much more than to resort to hoarding, especially where there are few
mischievous.
I opportunities at hand for investing the funds profitably.
While it is unfortunate for the South, and the country at
RETENTION OF CURRENCY AT THE SOUTH.
' I large, that such an amount of capital should be held abso
The reports of the hoarding of currency in the Southern lutely out of use, yet the economy to which its accumulation
States to a large amount, appear ,to have a good claim upon is due stands in striking contrast to the prevailing extravagance
belief. They are confirmed by the testimony of citizens from of other sections of the country. The whole social and busithat section best qualified for judging upon the matter ; thev ness habits of the North have been vitiated by the inflation
are rendered probable from the fact that, while the
profits of of the currency/ Instead of economising so as to compensate
late cotton crops have been very large, yet there are few banks for the losses of the war, the people have run into the wildest
in those States for receiving the surplus ; while it is a well extravagance of expenditures.
We have demanded handascertained fact that of the many millions sent from this city somer dwellings, more costly furniture, a more stylish equifor moving the last two cotton crops, the amounts returned page* an 1 a larger suite of servants. The merchant has
here have been quite nominal, and, thus far, the same is true become accustomed to the payment of rents in many cases
of the present crop. It is the opinion of those well informed approaching the amount of his capital ;
and to the
on Southern affairs, as well as of prominent bankers in that
payment of salaries which in former times would have
section, that the amount of currency—including United States been deemed a respectable profit upon bis business,
notes, bank notes and specie—retained there, within the last These things are the natural offspring of inflation, while
four years, closely approximates $100,000,000. While hesi- the present sluggishness of business in the North is the
tating to accept fully this estimate, we are well aware there inevitable after effect; and yet we find some of our legislators
are reasons for believing that it does
not very greatly exceed seeking to force upon us another deluge of paper money. We
the truth.
believe our people are beginning to see that the temporary
It would be a manifest error, however, to suppose that the excitement produced by excessive issues of currencey is full of
whole of this money is actually hoarded. At the close of evil in its consequences; and those who are thus seeking poputhe war the supply in the South was almost entirely confined larity through a further inflation will soon learn that they are
to the Confederate currency depreciated very near the
point not on the right road. What the North needs at the present
of worthlessness.
As the people became occupied with in. moment is economy—voluntary if it may be, but forced if it
dustry, and labor had to be regularly paid for, a necessity cannot otherwise be obtained. The South is amassing wealth ;
arose for a large amount of
currency, and the demand has the North has been for a long time recklessly squandering it ;
steadily increased as trade and agriculture has improved, and if these diverse processes are long continued, the relative
The large colored population, being no longer fed and clothed positions of the sections, so far as respects the power and
by the planter with goods obtained on credit and paid for in varied influences associated with wealth must be, in a meaeure
cotton, but hired on wages which they individually expend, at least, changed. The evidence, therefore, now apparent in
now handle a large amount of currency in the
aggregate. In the North of a disposition to lessen business and personal
fact, nearly the whole business of the South has been changed expenses is full of promise,
from a system of credit and barter into one of exchanges of
RAILROAD EARNINGS FOR JANUARY.
commodities effected through a circulating medium. This
transition requires an increased supply of currency, and must
P™c^Pa^ ^ne9 of Railway show a decrease
be regarded as accounting, to a considerable extent, for the «^anuarY earning9 fhis Year compared with
same
of 1869. The decline is of more importance from the fact
absorption noticed above.
But, after making due allowance for this active use of the
^
genera^ than from any extraordinary
detained circulation, it nevertheless remains that a large ence *n
Garn*n£3 reported.
causes
amount of the savings of the South are held in the form of natura^ tenc* *owar(*s Pro(Iucing the result here
hoarded currency. Considering the scattered distribution of were commente(I uPon at some length in our remarks upon
the population, and their consequent isolation from banking
earn*nSs
an^ the prospect 18/0
facilities, it appears to be a necessity that their savings should ^ie Chronicle
January 22. An important
to
to a considerable extent, b€ thus hoarded away.
But, apar[ cons*dered *n regard to
from this, the late experiences of the South have
now
naturally Prominen^ hnes> is fhe increase
produced a tendency in that direction. At the close of the ^em‘ ^ie Chicago, R°ck Island , and
now
The Milwaukee
war, that section was in a state of utter prostration and °Perai;es ^08 miles against 520 last year.
poverty, with no alternatives but work and economy, or Lal Paoific 690 miles against 350 last year, and the St. Louis
starvation.
With a promptness which does them infinite and Iron Mountain 60 miles more than in 1869.
credit, the planting classes eschewed all their former habits
If the earnings do not fall off materially from th;se of the
of luxury and ease, and, instead of repining at their fate, gave previous year the roads may generally be considered quite
themselves up to hard industry and rigid economy. The ProsPerolia i anc^ mos^ °/ ^be
would
probably
be earn¬
J
W»vr_ that
°
wrkvf.L
a
the
earn*
worth their nnrpAnf.
current rmr»es—rtrnviriAfl
prices—provided
always,
that
the
results of the cotton crop, though for the two last years
ings are applied according
to the best interests of stockholders.
EARNINGS IN JANUARY.
ample enough to afford a partial return to former enjoyments,
Dec
Inc.
1869.
1870,
of the taxes which

As to the income tax,

*

in theii
month

the

differ-

which

The several

noticed,

published in
point be
the traffic of several of the most
of mileage
operated by
Pacific Road
for

.

.

well

_

$293,978

Marietta & Cincinnati.

luxury and refinement; but the Southern trader has still con- pac°flcof Mo*!!^P!'’’.*
fined his purchases to the classes of goods called for by



a|lSSu,iiwan*x”r«aHanu
0

892.092

1,006,998

90,177
837,992
896,171

98,517
8S4,119
454,590

213,101
196 787

119,721

200,879
102,760
'

$343,161

731,283
862,800
654,687
931,783

152,392
m,

333,319
657,439

$49,203
160,809

$
•

•

•

•

29,409
.....

•

•

•

•

•

.....

180,366
194,112

93,330
16,421
6,767

132,622

19,770

2^852
75,215
8,340
46,137
68,418

THE CHRONICLE

February 19, 1870.]

INTERNAL REVENUE RETURNS FOR SIX MONTHS.

Douglass, Acting Commissioner
of the Internal Revenue Department, the following interest¬
ing Statement, showing the summary of monthly collections
of internal revenue in the United States, for the first six
months of the fiscal years, ending June 30th, 1869 and 1870.
We have received from Mr.

July to Dec.,

Articles and Occupations.

1868.

SPIRITS.

$14,521,603 41

Spirits, distilled from whatever nnterials

Spirits di*-tilled, in bond July 20,1863

Wine made in immitation of champagne,
Distilleries, per diem, tax on

1,391,889 18

620 85
229,425 63
735,211 59
239,074 26
1,287,6-27 41
624,650 49

&c...,.

Distillers’ special tax
Rectifiers and compounded of liquors

Dealers, retail liquor
Dealers, wholesale liquor
Manufacturers of etila, and stills and worms
manufactured
Stamps, distillery warehouse, for rectified spirits,

&C.T&C

..

.

810,375 65
2,496,665 69
482,772 24
1,532,539 20
1,004,905 70

3,541 18

5,015 86

87,917 75

883,383 00

TOBACCO.

Cigars, cheroo's, and cigarettes
Manufacturers of cigars..:
Tobacco, chcwiDg, &c., and snuff
Tobacco, smoking, til stems; fine cut shorts, &c.
Stamps for tobacco, or snuff, intended for export,

Fermented liquor*, tax of
Brewers’special tax

6,283,373 95

9,928,677 64
2,806,902 66

44,006 66

1,065,297 92
1,972 25

28,446 25

97,231,60
870,620 61
16,628 72

$9,991,224 33

$15,675,033 93

3,005,500 58
82,810 53

2,937,160 26
84,222 15

Liquors....$3,088,311 11

$3,021,382 41

LIQUORS.
$1 per barrel on.......

Total collections from Fomented

2,882,519 99

48,460 14
335,694 15
19,618 06

Total collections from Tobacco
FERMENTED

2,220,402 49
16,405 37

Dealers in leaf tobacco
Dealers in manufactured tobacco
Manufacturers of tobacco

GROSS RECEIPTS.

Canals, ferries, ships, barges, &c., and steam¬
boats,
Express companies
Insurance companies
Railroads, stage coaches, &c
..
All other collections from gross

227,491 25
330,299 65

287,850 64
200,091 45

598,013 40
620,530 67
1,788,168 04 -*-2,017,592 08
272,672 99
396,654 35

receipts

$3,216,675 35

$3,522,719 19

194,394 30

213,734 71

$1,0C0 (from individuals')
8,706,913 28
Bank dividends, nrofits, &c
1,912,005 22
Railroad companies’ dividends, and undistributed

10,907,043 60
1,811,303 60

Total collections from Gross Receipts
SALES.

Brokers’

Dealers’
Manufacturers of articles not otherwise

ally taxed..
All other collections from sales
Total collections from sales
INCOME.

Income

over

1,272,092.03

profits

1,445,751 83

13,053,614 74

15,689,578 08

capital,

1,339,065 26

3,671,365 99
646,220 17

,

484,054 44
3 J 1,627 98

Successions
Artie es in Schedulo A

13,040 00

Passports
Gas
Sources not otherwise herein enumerated
manufiictnres now exempt from tax

24th

After the 1st day of

day of June last.

4th. From and after the 1st day of December, 1869, the Central
Railroad and Banking Company ot Georgia is to pay to the
Southwcs'ern Railroad Company dividends which shall bear to the
dividends declared and paid to its Stockholders at the rate of eight
to ten—that is to say, eight dollars to each share of Southwestern
Railroad stock for every ten dollars declared and paid to each share
of its own stock ; and no semi-annual dividend to the Stockholders
of the Southwestern Railroad Company shall be les3 than at the
rate of swen per centum per annum on the par value of their
5tb. Should any additional dividend or division of assets or
accumulations be declared, paid or made, then such dividends,
divisions of as5ets or accumulations shall be made in the same pro¬

stock.

portion of tight to ten. All dividends to be paid to the

4,173,276 28
e23,603 25

618,373 56
853,379 01

11,321 60

853,116 24

934,322 72

(chiefly

1,079,851 98

491,227 34

241,649 72

Stamps, other than those for spirits, tobacco and
fermented liquors

7,148,692 CO

7,525,505 79

Salaries of United States officers and employees.,

353,917 95

810,1*29 26
498,146 09

$68,730,160 07 $83,750,976 16
the above neriod in the fiscal year 1970, over the corresponding
period in the preceding fiscal year, $16,020,816 09, or 21 8-10 per cent. The
receipts from July to December, 1869, will be increased by the returns irom
twelve districts not yet received, estimated at $310,000.
Grand total
Total gain for

jnt

pay the current expenses incident to the working and manag^m
of the Southwestern Railroad, and all debts and bouds, including
the bonds of the Muscogee Railroad, and interest on said bonds at
the tinier and places speciSed therein.

7th. The Central Riilroad and
to

are

annul the contract of lease, and enter upon
no

lea-e had

ever

its property as though

been made.

ning in great part at the great centres North,
their rapidly increasing volume, the maintenance

public.

and indicating by
of this Line’s hold

upon the confidence of the general
The operating expenses of the year are $734 425 53
53 13-100 per cent of earnings.
The Net Earnings, from what has been shown, stand as

and are

46 87-100 per cent of Gross.

$647,In comparison with

the year 1868, there is a difference of $50,226 98
REPORT OF TM'CENTRAL RAILROAD AND BANKING COMPANY
year.
UF GEORGIA.
The disposition of this balance is accounted for
statement, as follows:
The Earnings of the Road for the year ending on the 30.h

$2,247,919 78

ultimo have been
And of the Bank to the same date

.

For Road and Bank

7 7,280 42

2,325,200 20

Expenses of all kinds for Road....

Expenses of all kinds for Bank

$1,823,210 02
20,231 78

Leav ng net
Of this sum there has been expended and ap¬

Bonds’

Leaving

...

provided for the following:

Leiving a balance of $186,666
indebtedness.

ba’ance of

183’815
50,693 64

55,603 00

69, which has gone to the reduction of

To

981,012 96
$745 44

Roadway, Track, Structures, Depots, &c

Lands...,.
Locomotives

JSallroad Company%

$7,733,996 49

435,378 26
812,973 66
438,253 00

Supply of Materials
Commissary Stores !

58,921 08
1,808 20

Cash

25,736 54

Agents

Post office

general

,

Cars

a

Restoration of property,

Statement, Showing the Condition of tike South Carolina
December 81 st.% 1869.
Dr.

124,000 00
—

36

$240,112 01

Looking to the completion of other lines, which may not only
become competitors for the business heretofore passing over your
Road; but seeking to carry it from our port, the Board have, under
an Act of the Legislature
of the State of Georgia, approved the




Making

34

00
$426,773 70

including cost of New Rail Iron alter deducting sales of old,
($89,607 74)
•••*
*
Cars bni't at the Company’s Shops, 2 flret class and 6 second class
passenger, 42 box. 2 platf jrm, and 6 stock cars
Sett ement of Confederate Claims, &c., deducting sun ry credits..

Dividend in June, 6 per cent
233,340 00
Government Tax on same
11,667 00
Dividend this day, 5 per cent
...
293,340 CO
Government Tax on same
11,667 00
Rent A. & s. Railroad
73,010 00
RentE.B. Railroad
14,000 00
Paid for Bank in Liquidation
14,630 07
Paid for Depot J ots and Right of Way to New Depot
in the City of Macon
134,404 75
Paid for Steamboats Julia St. Clair audBaudy Moore,
56,964 14
Paid for Contingent Expenses
19,050 00
,

$647,741 47
315,910 13

and Stock killed

Leaving Net Income of
$831,831
previous balances of Stock-1 of Materials, 19,947
Payment under the contract with the City of Augusta, and the
Char otte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad Company
! 75,000

Which has

$54,950 00

Appropriated for Rails

in the Auditor’s

Net

931,758 40

propriated the following amounts:
on

earnings as stated
Deduct Interest, Damages,

in favor of this

Add thereto reduction of

1,343,441 80

FOR

Tbs Earnings of the year are stated to have been from all sources
$1 382,167, and are in exqess of 1868, $87,205 11. They also con¬
siderably exceed the earnings of any year since the war—a fact full
of encouragement to the owners ot the property.
A cause of satisfaction is found in the nature of that increase*
It is derived principally from freights moving to the West, begin¬

741' 47, and are

Interest

Stockholders

of the Southwestern Railroad Company at Macon and Savannah,
free from tax to the Stockholders.
6th. The Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia to

REPORT OF TO SOUTH CAROLINA RAILROAD COMPANY,
1,789,221 07
v. THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 81, 1869.

...

Penalties, &c

and after

December, 1869, the commencement and termination of the fiscal
year of the Southwestern Railroad to be the same as that of the
Central, and to that end a dividend of two dollars and fifty cents
per share is to be paid to the Stockholders of the Southwestern
Railroad up to 30th November, 1869

1,525,479 65

1,162,604 21

Special taxes not elsewhere enumerated
Legacies

to be

Banking Company of Georgia
keep the road bed, station houses, engines, cars, and every¬
1,928,070 83
2,134,9i6 96
appertaining
to the interest of the Southwestern Railroad in
thing
specific¬
1,728,049 17
2,028,906 02 as good condition as when received, and any failure or neglect to
8 ,179 14
92,207 61
pay any interest on bonds,.or bonds at maturity, or failure to pay
$3,930,693 44 $4,469,835 30 dividends within six months after the same may be due, then the
Southwestern Railroad Company has the right, at its option, to

All other collec ions f.om income
Total collections from income
Banks and bankers (special tax, tax on
circulation and deposits

22d day of January, 1852, leased the Southwestern Railroad upon
the following terms and conditions, viz :
1st. The lease to continue during the entire corporate existence
of the Southwestern Railroad Company.
2d. Xhe Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia to
exercise all rights, privileges and control over the Southwestern

Railroad, except as to the organization of that Company, which is
kept up by the election of a President, Directors, Secretary
and Treasurer, as heretofore; the expenses necessary to keep up
July to Dace this organization to be paid by the Central Railroad and Banking
1369.
Company ot Georgia.
3d. Possession and control of the Southwestern Railroad by the
$17,377,664 17
Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia to take effect
272 99
from
the

$19,124,461 75 $24,098,499 50

Total collections from Spirits

231

department

97,936 89

14,657 21

$8,981,830 69

232

THE

CHRONICLE.

[February 19, 1870.

Bonds Receivable, Columbia and Augusta,
Railroad Company
75,( 00 00
Sundries
19,961 00

months of the Company’s First Direct Mortgage Bonds for the
exchange of past due 5 per cent Sterlings. That measure may be
.94,961 (JO
regarded as accomplished.
Mr. Furman reports ti e acceptance of
Bills Receivable.
5,446 43
the necessary number of assents, qualified only by the very proper
238,739 57
Stocks
443,212 60 condition that the necessary legislation be hid to relieve the Com¬
Investments m First Mortgage Bonas an* Certificates of in¬
pany from the State lien originally imposed to protect the O d
debtedness of Gieenville uud Columbia Railroad
57,398 03
Compiny.
Southwestern Railroad Bank
501,447 t0 Guarantees. This Legislation has been applied for as comprehended
in the Act hereto appended, has the sanction of the Governor, and
$10,222,127 79 I js
Cr.
expected to be in the possession of the Board at an early day,
By Stork
$5,819,275 00 when it will be transmitted, and the Exchange of Bonds be conBonds Payable.
Sterling

sumated.

$2,342,832 44
1 701,519 60

Domestic

4,047,851 44
295,664 39

Bills Payab’e
Transient Creditors
Less Transient Debtors

CHANGES IN TILE REDEEMING

115,263 38
.

The

85,426 42

.

the changes in the Redeeming Agents of National
ending Feb. 18, 1870. These weekly changes
are furnished
by, and published in accordance with an arrangement made
with the Comptroller of the Currency.

59,836 96

explicitly,

the Financial

expresses

con¬

the close of the year, and when the heavy
losses, and still heavier obligations they have had to meet, are
remembered, it will excite tae liveliest gratilication amongst the

LOCATION.

Stockholders.

..

$1,704,519 00
1,585,296 06

$119,222 94

place of the Merchants’ Nat’l Bank

.

13,651 25

Making together

) 27,403 31

Producing the result as above stated
Bi Is Payable on 31st December,
1869, stands at.
Bills Payable on 31st
December, 1868, stood at

$462,651 25

of New York
The First National T e Commercial National Bank of
Bank
Cleveland, approved in place of the
Second National bank of Cle» eland.
Tin Lowell Nat’l The Ninth National Bank of N. Vork,

Ohio.
Oberlin.

Michigan.

Lowell..

Bank...

approv d in place of the First Nat’l
Bank of New Yotk.
The Firet National Tne First National Bank of Detroit,
Bank
approved in place ol the Second Na-.
tional Bank of Detroit.
The G randy Connty The First National Bank of Washing¬
National Bank...
ton, D. C., approved in addition to
the Chemical National Bank ot New
York and the Fourth National Bank
of Chicago.
The First National The Importers’ and Traders’ National
Bank
Bank of New York and the Union
Na ional Bank of Chicago, approved
in addition to the hirst National
Bank of Milwaukee.

Michigan.

$343,428 31

Rointo..

$119,222 94
295,664 39
88,060 60

an increase of

NEGOTIATIONS

.

Kentucky.
Lexington.
$149,000 00

Second. A reduciion of past due and unmatured Bonds-,
316,025 00
Reduction tf Interest on Bast due Bonds

Uniontown..

Tennessee.
Ntshville

Illinois.
morris.

$207,603 79

WITH

THE

COLUMBIA AND

AUGUSTA RAILROAD.

Iowa.

McGregor..,

In the progress of litigation with that
Company, with reasonab'e
assurances ot success, it became
necessary to call upon the City of

Augusta to perform her obligations under

a

REDEEMING AGENT.

The First National The Third National Bank of New York
Bank
approved in addition to the First
National Bank of Philadelphia.
The Fmt National The Tradesmen’s National Bank of
Bank
Pittsburg, approved in addition to
the Ninth Nat. Bank of New York.
The Fourth Nat’l Tne Fourth National Bank of New
Bank
York, approved in place of the
Chemical Nat. Bank of New York.
The Lexington City The Bank of New York Nat. Bunking
National Bank...
Association, NewYoik, approved in

..

Pennsylv inia.
......

Past due Bonds to December 3lst,

on

Carlisle..i

Bonds Payable,” and

Increase in 1869
This increase is the result of:
Firtt, I-tucs of New Boida on
account of the Southwestern Railroad Bank
445,000 00
To retire Past due Bonds and
Coupons and for Invest¬
ments in Greenville and Columbia Rairoad
Bonds.
4,000 00

ShowiDg

NAME OT BANK.

Pennsylvania.

The movement of the
principal accounts, “
“
Bills Payable,” are thus
indicated;
Domestic Bond Debt, December 31st,
1869, stands at
Domestic Bond Debt, December 31=t,
1868, stood at

Add Interest
i860

are

Btcks for the week

$10,222,127 79

This paper briefly, yet
dition of the Company at

following

AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANKS.

contract made wills

.

except upon payment to the South Carolina Railroad of the Sub¬
scription to the Macon and Augusia Railroad. This subscription RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON
AT LATEST DATES.
was based
upon agreements of such a nature, and these agreements
were mainly relied on
by the Board in the arrangement of the liti¬
EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
EXCHANGE ON LONDON
FEB. 4.
gation. But to our surprise we were not only met with
refusals,
but with counter demands, if we declined the
LATEST
proposals jointly
ON—
TIME.
submitted by the Charlotte, Columbia and
RATE.
DATE.
TIME.
RATS.
Augusta Railroad, and
the City ot Augusta, to conform to old and
Amsterdam...
short.
4.
1190 @ —
Feb.
short.
11.18*@11.1S*
forgotten conditions of Antwerp
3 months. 12.1
25.20 @ —
@12. IX
ehort.
Agreements made with precteding administrations, condiiions which Hamburg
13. 7*@ —
short.
13.10X@13.103*
*

it

it

had

never

been en'orced.

and care.
The Board

could

not

These conditions involved the sacrifice of

hesitate.

Paris
Paris
Vienna...
Berlin
Frankfort
Cadiz
Lisbon
Milan
Genoa

,

W

J

~

v/l

THE

SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD

BANK-

The Stockholders of the Road have from time to time
been kept
advised of the demands made
by the holders of the Bills of the
Southwestern Railroad Bank for payment. These demands
have
b:en persistently resisted, and
every reasonable effort made to avoid
a
responsibility oppressive in its character and attended with doubts
which utterly excluded a

26.35

short.

@25.40
25.1?*@25.25

Smonths. 12 65
44

it
....

Naples

this Company’s Bridge accross the Savannah River. In
part con¬
sideration of which, the Columbia and Au.usta
Railroad was to
pay in its bonds the sum ol $75,01)0.

44

it

New York....
Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro

it

90

days.

@12.70

6.26*@ 6.‘27X
1.20*@ 1.20^4
49 @49*

51*@ 52*
3months. 26.87*@26.42*
“
@
“
it
“
“
@
—

—

it

3

mos

44

44

44

ehort.
90 days.

Jan. 17.
Feb. 4.

44

25.18

@

—

—

123.45

6.23*
119*
60.10

51*@52*

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Feb. 4.- 60 days.
Dec. 24. 90 days.

—

--

—

—

Feb

—

—

--

Lee.

—

—

60

days.

4s

it

Ceylon

tt

Bombay

it

Madras

tt

Calcutta

44

30

5Xd

1 p. c. dis.
Is 1 17-16@1 lli
U 11 7-16 d.

11*®*

U

days.

3.

60

* p.c dis.

days
4»

Dec. 29.
Dec. 27.

—

Valparaiso....

Sydney

short.

—

it

Bahia

Pernambuco..
Singapore
Hong Kong...

it

44
tt

3.

Dec. 29.
Jan. 18. 6
Jan. 10.

44

mos.

Dec. 28.
Jan. 27.

4.

»4

Jan. 31.
Oct. 12.

44

Jan.

30

days.

108*
1 p. c. pm.

11*
19*

20@20*
4(i*@46*
20
4s. 6*rf.
4s. C\d.
Par.
1 s. 11 7-8d.
U. 11 3-4 d.
U. 11 %d.
1 p. c. pm.

ready acknowledgement of our obligation.
Nevertheless, it has always been the opinion of the Board that a
I From our own Correspondent, j
just and judicious compromise of those claims should be sought in
the true interests of the
London, Saturday, Feb. 4,1870.
Company, and to that end the Directors
have not failed always to direct their earnest attention.
Litigation
The success which has attended the introduction of the Russian and
however, in t is connection assumed an aspect during the
summer, I Chilian loans has been the chief
subject of comment during the present
which, m conjunction with Legislative enactments referring to
%,
Banka in suspension, admonished the Boa, d of the
danger of delays Week' As regard9 the RuB8ian loaD’ the aPPhcat,on8 m EuroPe haTe
They therefore hesitated no longer to accept the offers of compromise aPProximatei £100,000,000, and by some are said even to have exsubmitted to them, and proceeded at
once with arrangements lor I ceeded that amount, though the amount asked for was onlj £l?,000,the settlement of the
outstanding circulation of the Bank. In that I 000. It must not, however, be inferred that all of the
applications
direction they have proceeded, until now, but a small sum
remains have been of a bona fide character. In
fact, the loan was expected to
unarranged. The settlements were made chiefly in the six and seven
per cent, Bonds of the Company. The Bank, as shown in the prove so great a success that even bona fide applicants asked for more
than they were
Auditors statements, is indented to the
prepared to accept. Messrs. Rothschild have been
Road in the sum of
$501,447.
greatly perplexed about these numerous applications, and have not yet
THE FOREIGN DEBT.
been able to send out the letters of allotment. It is
expected, how
Little is left to the Board to
say, beyond the announcement of the J ever» ^at they will be posted on Monday evening. To certain parties*
fact of the return of the Hon. C. M. Furman
from London, where I and to late applicants, whether
speculative or bona fidet the contractors
he has be n in charge of the
negotiation for the past eighteen j appear to have given some offence
by returning theircbecks, with the




.

_

„

,

,

.

,

..

_

•

,

..

A.

.

ebruary 19, 1870.]

THE
.

■

.

f

CHRONICLE.
l ?Ja
>'

..I.I

regret that they are unable to make an allotment. The scrip of the
largely dealt in at 2§ to 2*- premium.
As I stated last week this loan was for £12,000,000 of stock, at
the premium of 80. It bears five per cent interest per annum,
anp
will yield to the investor at the price of issue
per cent. The
last instalment is payable on the 6th of October next.
The princi
pal will be reimbursed, at par, in eighty-one years, by annual draw]
ings, which are to take place on the 1st of February in each year,
commencing with 1871. Russian securities have, for a long period,
been considered a safe investment.
During the whole of that
arduous and distressing time, when Russia was at war with Tur¬
key and Western Europe, the interest due upon the money she had
borrowed in England and elsewhere, was
punctually paid. Hence,
soon after the war had
terminated, the Government of Russia was
able to negotiate a three
per cent loan in this country on favorable
terms, and has since obtained large sums of money at a moderate
rate of interest.
It is satisfactory, also, to find that Russia has
devoted the proceeds of the last loans to most useful and
necessary
purposes, viz., to the construction of railways and to the improve¬
ment of internal communications. That a better and a wiser
object
could be found for the
employment of money can scarcely be con¬
ceived, since the advantages that complete system of railways will
confer as an aid to the
developmeni of the agricultural and mineral
resources of the
country, cannot be overestimated. Cheap means
of transportation are a great aid to success in such a
widely-spread
country, more especially as grain producing countries, which pos¬
sess those facilities are
progressing so fast that otherwise her posi¬
tion, as a grain exporting country, would be jeopardized. In the
course of a few
years the western provinces of the empire will
enjoy all the conveniencies of a network of railways, sufficiently
complete, considering the state of population of the country.
Respecting the Chilian loan, of which I gave a brief notice last
week, the success has been equally satisfactory. The sum of
£1,000,000 was asked for, and between £7,000,000 and £8,000.000
was applied for.
The subscription list was closed as soon as the
return post from the country was delivered at the office of the
con'
tractors—Messrs. Morgan & Co. The scrip has been
1-* premium,
but it has since receeded to | to 1
premium.
That there will be some excitement in the
telegraph world for
s ome time to come is
very evident. The Telegraph Construction
and Maintenance Company are
constructing cables which shall
effect telegraphic communication with India,
China, and Australia,
by an eastward route, while there is every probability that the
India Rubber, Gutta Percha and
Telegraph Company will arrive
at the same destinations by a westward route.
The Telegraph
Construction Company has made, is making, or will make the fol¬
lowing cables : The Falmouth, Gibraltar and Malta ; the Mediter¬
ranean Extension ; the British Indian
Submarine; the British
India Extension ; the China Submarine, and the British Australia.
The India Rubber Company is making the West Indian and Panama
and the Panama and South Pacific
Company ; and the roport of
the directors, just issued, states that the contract for another cable
will be signed in a few days. The works of this
Company have
been greatly enlarged in order to provide for an
increasing busi¬
loan has been

—Im-ian,;*.
■

■'.tzm—

ness,

and it

seems to me

Company will be to the

obvious that the West India and Panama
western system what the Falmouth, Gib

raltar and Malta is to the eastward system. It will
probably be
found that the West Indian and Panama line will be
extended, as
has already been arranged, down the western coast of South
America to New Zealand, Australia, and India, and on to

Japan and
through San Francisco.
There is yet another company to be introduced, to which I made
reference some weeks since. It is of French
origin, and is to
embrace the principal ports of the South Atlantic. From the
coasts of France and Lisbon it will
proceed to Mogadore, Sierra
Leone, the Canaries, Rio, Guiana and West India Islands. The
Fren ch have been talking about this
company for about six years,
but at the rate it is progressing the West Indian and Panama
Company will have their cable laid down before the prospectus of
the French company is issued. *■
China

With

regard to the money market,

g'E

g;

r

233

-

uniform rate of

one
shilling for the transmision of messages of
twenty words in the United Kingdom has come into
operation*
and many other facilities have been
granted, more especially to
the newspaper press. There
may be many mishaps at first, but
the change is favorably considered in most
quarters. Next week
increase of ease is anticipated in the rates of
discount, inasmuch as
a large amount of
money will have been released, and there is not
likely to be so much pressure for accommodation. The belief in
an
improving money market, however, continues to gain ground,
but, at the same time, the upward movement is expected to be
very
gradual. Annexed are the quotations for money :

186S.
1869.
Per cent. Per cent.
Bank minimum.... 3 @... 3
@./
Open-market rates:
30 and 60 days’ bills 2#@2#
2#@...
3

months, bills

The
houses

2%®;!%

ates of interest

l

1868.
1869.
Per cent. Per cent.
4 months, ba’k bills
3#@3# 3 @8*
6 months’ ba’k hills
3#@3# 3 @3#
4 and 6 trade bills..
3#@4
3# @4

2#@3

allowed

by the joint stock banka

and discouu t

under:

are aa

’68.
2
2

Joint stock banks
Discount houses, at call

’69.

’68.
Disc’t houses, 7 days notice,
2*
do
14
do
2#

2
2

’69.

2*

2%

There is very little ; change to notice in the
rates on the Con¬
Quietness is the more prominent feature, but there is an
impression that when the Ollivie.r Ministry shall have carried out
tinent.

the necessary

reforms it has undertaken, more confidence will be
shown, and the unnaturally large supply of money in the Bank of
France be diminished. The
following are the quotations at the
leading Continental cities :
At Paris
Vienna

....

•

B’krate—* r-Op. m’kt—.
1868.1869.
1868.
1869.
2# 2#
2
1#
4

5

4

5

4

5
4

2#-3

2#

A met’rd’in 2#

5

2

4#
3#

..

Berlin

.

,

Frankfort

.

l#-2

r—

B’k rate—,

1868. 1869.

m

Turin
6
Brussels.. 2#
Madrid
5

5

5

Hamburg

—

St.

Money being dearer here than

.

1868.

5

—

Petb’g. 7

2#-3

2#
5

—

l#
6#

6#

1869.
5

—-

2#

...

r—Op. m’kt—,

3

T

in Paris, the Paris

exchange is
country. Large supplies of gold
were sent away in the
early part of the week, hut the export de¬
mand for that commodity has diminished
during the last few days.
There has been a large arrival of Mexican dollars from
New
York this week, the Union and the Holsatia
having brought about
£330,000.
There is, however, a good demand for the China
market, and it is not improbable that the whole amount will be
absorbed in that department.
Silver is rather dull, and is chiefly
inquired for on Continental account. The following prices of
rather

bullion

more

are

favorable to this

from the circular of Messrs.

Blake:

Pixley, Abell, Langley &

GOLD
s.

BarGold

peroz. standard.
do
line
do
do
Reflnable
do
Spanish Doubloons
per oz.
,
Sonth American Doubloons... do
last price
United States gold coin
/ do
None here.

d.

s.

d

77
78

9# @- —
9# @77 10#
0
@

73

9

-

@
-

@74

3

@

SILVEB.

v

Bar Silver Fine

per oz.

do
do containing 5
Fine Cake Silver
Mexican Dollars

77

d.
‘# @

standard......

grs.gold..

do

pcr.'oz

Spanish Dollars (Carolus)

per oz.

Five franc pieces

--

per oz.

Quicksilver, £6 17s.

per

bottle; discount 3

d.

3#
6# &
n# @

per oz.

—

s.

—

none

here.

none

here.

per cent.

The stock markets have been rather

quiet, more especially as the
approached. Welch lead mines, which
have lately been so very active, have somewhat receded in value
during
the last few day9, but the quotations are still high. A
large business
has also been transacted in Pacific mining shares, at
prices varying
from 1 t:> 2 premium.
Consols have altered to a very trifling extent.
The shares of telegraph companies and of cable
manufacturing comj
panies have been largely dealt in, and, as regards the latter, higher
prices have been obtained. American Government securities are firm
and are rather higher in price.
Erie Railway shares, on the announce,
ment that a sufficient number of shares had been sent in and
registered
in the names of Messrs. Raphael and Heath to give the committee a
preponderating voting power, were very firm in the early part of the
week ; but they have since become weaker. Illinois Central
Railway
shares are very firm. Annexed are the highest and lowest prices of
Consols and of the principal American a- curities on each day ©f the
close of the week has been

one of the leading features
increase of ease, and it is also re. week: '
by the Bank of France shows a
Feb. 4.
Monday. Tuesday. Wed’ay. Thu’ay Fri’ay. Sat’day.
further increase of about $400,000. I have
long contended that Consols
92#-92# 92#-92# 9 2#-92# 92#-92# 92 #-92# 92#-92#
while money is so abundant at Paris, the
upward movement on U. 8.6-20’S, 1882.... 87 -87# S6#-87# 87 -87# 86#-87 87#-87# 87#-87#
S5 -87
85 -87
85 -87
U. 8. 5-20s, 1884.
85 -87
86 -87
85 -87
this side must be checked ; and,
consequently, it is but natural to U. S. 6-20s,
S6#-S6% 3«#-B6#
S6#-87
S6#-87
1885
-86# 86%-87#
infer that an incieasing
86 -86# S5#-.... 85#-.,.. 86 —80# 86 -86# 88 -86#
supply at Paris must be indicative of U. S. 6-SOa, 1887..
U.S. KMOs, 1904.... ....-84# 34#-.... 84#-84# 84#-84# 84 #-85
8l#-85
greater ease here. This week has been an important week. The
26
25 #-27# 26#-26#
-26# 26#-.... 26#-26# 26X-27 #
telegraphs have been taken over by the. government, and, of Erie Shares
C$100)., 19#-20# 29#-21# 20#-20# 20 -20# 20 •' -20# 20 -20#
course, a large amount of money has been disbursed.
103#-./ 103#-# 103#-... 103*-.... 104#-.. 104*-105J
To-day the

of the present week is a slight
markable that the bullion held




..

..

?

40 mule yarn,

bring about

£

Circulation, including—

Hank p et bills
21,425,561 23,474,606
Public deposits
4,549,904 5,047,437
Other deposits ....
12,344,200 18,267,595
Government securities *.&t»5,4S3 13,111,668
Other securities
18,857,681 18,716,418
Reserve
6,6*0,793 11,000,023
Coin and million
13,056,993
3 p c.
Bank rate
8 p. c.
90#
80#
Consols
62s. 6d.
Price of wheat
45s. lOd.
14#d.
Mid. Upland cotton...
J9#d.
40 mule yarn, fair 2d
Is. 7#d.

24,327,678 24,3ll,27S
4,570,925
4,100,382
20,919,243 17,735,765
14,068.246 14,026,710
10,443,7^6 16.996,526
9,689,515
13,075,854
21,755,234 18,511,205

23.742,378
6,227.489
21,100,910
13.831,49-1
20,649,432

11,216,312
19,506,732

93#
7-s. 6d.

•

....

•

•

ll#d.

ls.,3>;d.

ll#d.

92#
42s. 8d.

•

Is.

3#d.

of firmness was given to the com trade
by the return of f.osty weather, tut as there was a return of mild
weather on Sunday, the trade opened this week with a veiy flat ap¬
pearance; and as the isuppli* a of produce on hand here are large
millers showed no disposition to purchase an excess of their actual re_
quirements. Hence, much heaviness prevailed ; and, as regards all
secondary descriptions of produce, the quotations receded to the ex¬
tent of Is. per quarter.
The statement of imports, so far a9 wheat and
flour are concerned, is remarkable.
As regards wheat, the imports
since September have been as much as 9,000,000 cwt. more than in
the corresponding period of last season, while in flour there is an in¬
crease of about 1,50 5,0 0 cwt.
No wonder,therefore, that the trade for
bread-making products is in a depressed condition. In our imports of
Last week

corn

a

certain degree

there is

an

increase of 3,700,000 cwt ; in oats, of 2,200,000

cwt.; but bailey shows a falling off of
500,000 cwt. The dimunition in the two

1,400,000 cst.,and b*ana of
latter is to be accounted for

by the circumstance that the imports had been stimulafed last season
by the high prices consequent upon deficient crops. The losses upon
those importations are well known.
The following table shows the
movement for the week and since September:
FOP.

TIIE WEEK ENDING
.

JANUARY

18611-70

29.
,

*

c

Wheat.

Barley

t.,

.

144,267
141,262
31,966
27,700
310,660

...

O.i ts
Feas

Beans

Indian
Flour

corn

SINCE TIIE

Outs.,...
Peas....
JBeans

...

With regard to

4,761
2,342

6,20i
175
i0
295

21,614,068
3,499,120
5,215,391
888,978
9,416,736
3,233,980

,

942

(SETT. 1).
12,871,463
4,902,715
8,0*3,327
694,572
1,385,965

5,676

5,711,668

350

8,139

1,690,453

18,423

COMMENCEMENT OF THE SEASON
cwt.

1868-69

Imports. Exports
1,013,340
1,300
434,338
1,62)
106,733
927
21,373
101
61,998
429
333,398
172
105,132
789

imports. 3ix ports.

114,991
8,512
31,684
6,758

.

the iron trade, it is stated that, on the

wasjhroughout a
good attendance of both home and continental buyers. Oo the opening
day prices showed no material change from last November rates, which
was
chiefly owing to the indifferent assortment the catalogues of that
day offered ; but on the following day, as well as subsequently, when
there was a good choice of excellent wooia, the biddings gained in
spirit, and gradually improving rates were obtained, resulting in an
advance of £d. to Id. on middle white, and also on grey wools, and
from £d. to ^d. on middle and low yellow.
Of Persian the quantity
was
again very limited, and the demand being but languid, there is no
change in value to report. The total quantity brought forward at the
series was only 12,410 bales, and of these 1,286 bales, consisting of
second-hand parcels, were withdrawn. Of the various kinds of foreign
wools rather more than one-third of the quantity offered was disposed
of at prices showing, on the whole, increased, firmness, and in some
cases—such as Egyptian and Oporto—a slight advance upon the rates
obtained at the last November sales.
Peruvian, Mogadore, Russian
and Turkey did not meet with much competition, and had chiefly to
be wilhdrawn.
Of fine River Plate wools very little wa9 brought for
ward, and 656 biles Santiago, Cordova and San Luis scarcely one-half
found buyers. A parcel of huperior scoured Chili was well competed
for, but the unwashed Lima were neglected, and mostly withdrawn.

daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬
pool for the past week, have been l ’•ported by submavme telegraph a3
shown in the following summary

Money and Stock Market.—Consols have not altered ma¬
terially during the week. United States Five-Twenty bonds closed
firm at 88£ for the issue ol 1852.
Railroad shares have generally
been firm, although closing quiet.
United States bonds at Frankfort
closed strong at 93f@93! for the old issue.

3,023

change has taken place in the position of the trade, though
home buyers still, in some instances, entertain ^anguine hopes
that they will be able to re-enforce the reduction of prices to what
they were before the advance; still it may be perceived that a
readier disposition to enter into engagements is making way
amongst them, their stocks, as a rule, having been reduced to the
lowest point, and purchases must be made to meet current require,
ments.
The announcement of the authorisation of a new network
railways in Russia is one of considerable importance, for in the
past Welsh makers have not failed to secure a fair proportion of
the engagements emanating from that empire ; and it may well?
therefore, be concluded that large supplies will be obtained from
their establishments for the construction of those new railways.
of

fact, the advices from most of the foreign markets indicate a
considerable addition shortly to the inquiries for railway iron
The best brand cold-blast pigs are selling freely at current prices’
Cotton has been quieter this week, and a slight decline in prices
has taken place.
The following relates to the state of trade at
Manchester:

.

London

56,9-17
39,410
5,499

whole

Cable*

The

133,838
-

attention, aud there

fiaffllsli market Report*—Per

Sat.

Mon.

Toes.

w

Thu.

Fri.

92#
92#
87#

92#
92#
87#

92#

92#
92#
87#

92#
92#

92#

109 #

110#
21#
28#

The

92#
87#
110

110

111

little

In

business.

East India wools attracted most

3 p. C.

3 p. c.
93
51s. 5d.

2 p. c.

2s. 6d.

quality

1870.
£

1869.
£

1868.
£

1867.

1866.
£

some

Liverpool wool sales have been brought to a close. The sup
plies offered consisted of 12,410 bales from Bombay and Kurrachee
6,558 ballots Peru, 1,182 bales Lima and Chill; ’,165 bales Oporto and
Castello Branco ; 1,137 bales Spanish and Frontier ; 1,164 bales Donsko
and Crimea: 1,088 bales Angora, Turkey and Smyrna; 1,033 bales
Egyptian ; 998 bales Mogadore ; 656 bales Santiago, San Luis and
Cordova ; 931 Erglish and foreign skin wool, and 889 sundries, making
a total of 29,166 bales.
Messrs. Ronald & Son report that, as usual*
The

fair, second quality, compared with the four previous

years :

and those generally at decidedly lower prices than pro¬
to entertain, but a decided concession in prices would

made few offers this week,
ducers have beon willing

following statement shows the present position of the Bank of Eng¬
land, the bank rate of discount, the price of Consols, the average quota¬
tion for English wheat, the price of middling upland cotton, and of No.
The

Indian

(February 19, 1870.

THE CHRONICLE.

234

so#

20#

so#

20#

28

30

27#

29

28

93#

92#

92*;

92#@#

92#

.

88#
Ho#
21#

(1862) at Frankfort were—

daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s

Frankloit

92#

88

93#@#

Liverpool Colton Market.—See special report of cotton.

Liverpool flrenasru/fs Market.—The market has exhibited con¬
prices have not varied materially.

siderable steadiness, and

p. bbl 20
Flour, (Western)
Wheat (No.2 Mil. Red) p. ctl 7
“

“

6
6

6

8

Rr-d winter

Mon.
8. d.
20 6
7 6
8 6
9 0
27 0

(Jalifornia white) “90
6

Corn(W.mx’d)p. 48oI!>sn’w 2b
“
“
“

old

....

5* ’6

0
5

Barley (Canadian), per bush 5
(Am. & Can.) per 45 lbs 2
Peas..(Canadian) pr504 lbs 34

Oats

2

34

0

5
0

Tues.
8. d.
20 0
7 8
8 6
1
9
27 0
5
2

‘o

34

0

5

Wed.
8. d.
20 6
7
8
9

8
6
1*

27

0

5
2
34

‘o
5
0

Thu.
d.
20 6
7 8

s.

8
9

27

6
1
0

5* *6
2
34

5
0

Fri.
dl.
20 G

s.

7 6
8 6
9 1
27 0

*5
o
me

0
5

34 0

Liverpool Provisions Market.—The different articles under this
generally experienced a better feeling during the week, and
quotations, in one or two instances, show a slight advance.
head have

Sat.
».

d.

Beef(ex.pr. mess) p. 804 lbs 102 0
Pork(Etn. pr.mess) o304 lbs 95 0
Bacon

(Cnmb.cni)

p.

112 lbs 56 6

Mon.
s. d.
102 0
95 0
66

6

Tues.
s. d.
302 0
95 0
66 6
67 0
73 0

Wed.
s. d.
102 0
95 0
57 0

Thu.
d.
102 0
95 0
67 0
67 0
73 0
s.

Fri.
d.

s.

103
95
57
67

6
o
o

O
67 0
67 0
Considering what a small business lias been going on in this market for the last Lard (American)
“
“
67 0
73 0
73
ten days, prices have been unusually steady.
72 6
This has arisen not alone from the Cheese (.line)
“
“
72 0
contracts which producers had on hand, but from a general feeling of confidence
that something like present values are likely to be maintained for some time.
The
l.iverpool Produce Market.
large and steady business which has been transacted here for the last two moaths,
aud the increased consumption of cotton and production of goods, have produced
report in this market, prices are
Thn.
Fr:.
Wed.
Mon.
Tues.
the impression that a really legitimate demand has set in from foreign markets.Sat.
8. d
b. d.
b. d.
s. d.
s. d.
The opinion may be correct, or it may turn out to be fallacious; in the meantime,
s. d.
5 0
5 0
5 0
5 0
5 0
5 0
however, the result is the same. Producers are firmer, even in the absence of busi¬
Rosin (com Wilm) .per 112 lbs
14 0 14 0
14 0
14 0
14 0
14 0
ness, than is usually the case; credit is better; and confidence more general all
“
do
Fine Pale...
30 0
80 0 30 0
80 .0
30 0
round.
30 0
Spinners are doing better than they have done for some time, although Sp turpentine
“
their profits are nothing to boast of, and have very probably been exaggerated.
1 11# 1 11# 111# 1 11# 1 11# 1 11#
Petroleum (std white) .p. 8 lbs.
1 7
1 7
1 7
1 7 * 1 7
The best feature in the present position of the trade is that the Manchester market
1 7
spirits....per8 lbs
44 6 44 3
44 6
44 6
44 3
is fully as strong as that of Liverpool, so that should a decline in the price of cotton
44 3
Tallow (American). .p 112 lbs.
take place, the position of spinners and manufacturers will not be worse than it is
Fri,
Wed.
Tn.
TJh.
Mon.
Sat.
at present.
The business done this week has been extremely small. The large Linseed oil ..per ton... 82 0 0
0 81 10 0 81 10 0 81 10 0 31 10 0
32
0
supplies of cotton arriving at the American ports have confirmed the impression
that the higher estimates of the crop will eventually turn out to be oorrect.
London Produce and OH Market$.—These markets have ruled quiet
The
reports of the East India crop are not so good, and have a counteracting effect,
otherwise the cotton market might be weaker than it really is. Buyers here have without noticeable change.




.

—There has been nothing of interest to
steady.

Mon.
Tnes.
Wed.
Thu.
£ 9 12 0 £ 9 12 0 £ 9 12 0 £ 9 12 0
0 58 9
0 59 0
0 59 6
0 59 6

Sat.
Lins’d c’ke(obl)p.tn£ 9 10 0
Linseed (Calcutta)

0 58 6

..

8ugar(No. 12 Dch std)
per 112 S>
0 39 0
Sperm oil
89 00
Wbaie oil

89

39 0
0 0
89 0 0

Clover seed (Am’cin)O

39 0
0 0
89 0 0

89

0 0

89

39 0
0 0
0 0

89
39

89
39

Fri.
£9 12 0
0 58 9
0 39 0
89 0 0
39 0 0

39 0
0 0
0 0

59 0

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
Imports

Exports

Week.—The

imports this week
show a considerable decrease both in dry goods and in general mer¬
chandise, the total beiDg $4 634,199 against $6,875,485 last week and
6,838,518 the previous week.
The exports are $2,247,559 this week,
against $3,461,230, last week, and $3,822,470 the previous - week.
The exports of cotton the past week were 4,914 bales, against 6,847
bales last week.
The following are the imports at New York for
week ending (for dry goods) February 11, and for the week ending (for
general merchandise) Februiry 12 :
and

for

the

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

c

1867.

Dry goods

Total lor the week..

_

Previously reported...
Since Jan. 1

In

our

1868.

$1,699,687"

General merchandise..

1869.

'

$1,$78,902

1870.

4,073,066

2,758,918

$2,057,681
1,S87,065

$5,772,153

24,802,7c5

$4,037,820
18,552,617

$3,944,747
25,212,362

♦4,534,199
26,670,820

$30,664,938

$22,590,437

$29,137,10)

$31,205,019

$2,387,938
2,148,7 1

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

goods for one week later.
The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive ofspecie)from
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the weekending Feb. 15:
EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

1867.

1868.

1869.

$3,297,9-:4
20,430,591

$3,6>6,417
19,256,893

$3,228,065
17,437,506

$23,728,425

$22,943,310

$20,665,571

For the week

Previously reported
Since Jan. 1

1870.

$2,247,559
18,136,556

$20,381,115
countries (exclusive

The value of

exports from this port to different
of specie) since January 1, compared with the corresponding time of
last year, is shown in the following table :
Since Jan. 1,

To

1879.

France
Holland and

Belgium

Germany
i
Other Northern Europe..
..

$10,647,821

720,378

529,843

790,071
1,936,683

686,803
2,053,208
129,919
851,0 7
920,666

22.399

153,7s 4

Other Southern Europe
East Indies
China and Japan
Australia
Britisn N A Colonies
Cuba

302 288

33,763

270,902

252,681

656,997
157,283
1,218,702
201,532

374,082

631,366

129,281
146,439

52,445
220,2“ 5
539,571

923.838
...

541,318
454,282
: 61,729

668.689

221,056

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

York for the week ending Feb. 12. 1870
9—Schr. Fannie A. Bai¬

ley, Arroyo—
American silver...

$10,000

9—Schr. J. M. Mcra es,

Feb.

372,175

1.8h7,8U
265,527

Venezuela
British Guiana
Brazil
Other S. American ports
All other norts

F».b.

139,931
317,683

268,411
212,108

Hayti

The

Same time
1869.

$10,472,135

Spain

Other Weetlndies
Mexico
New Granada

Maracaibo—
American gold....

:

Feb. 12—Sir.
Rhein, Sraithampron—
Gold bars
For Bremen-

Foreign silver....

For London—
Mexican dollars..
Silver bars

IS 000

Feb. 10—Str.

Eagle, Havana—
Spa ishdoub.oons 52S,500

Total for the

w

eek

Previously reported
Total since Jan. 1,1870
Same time in

$1,211,332
.

u

.

1865

.

.

8,793,388
3,46 >,816 1
3,568,168
3,817,103
7,841,503
5.510,329

.

1861.

The
as

4,079,802
177,067

1,200
44.900

125,643

$3,614,414

Same time in
I860
1859

$1,03 ’,569
3,274,209

1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853
1852..

7,722,738
2,613,818
663,447

783,698

imports of specie at this port during the past week Lave been

follows:

Feb.

13,478

$741,721
2,932,693

.

-

7—Str.

Tripoli, Liver-

wall—
Gold
Silver
Feb. 12—Str. jvorro
Havana—
Same imel869
Same lime 186S
Same time 1867. *

Silver
Silver.
F b 12—Str.
Westphalia,
_

pool—
Gold
Feb. 10—Str. Alaska, As-

$47,901

_

_

Gold

8,000
22,646

Total for the week

Previously reported.-

157,390
$241,382
2,030,238

Total lince Jan. 1, 1870... ,$2,271,620

600,794
132,616
155,514

following forms present a summary of cer¬
weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom House.

1.—Securities held by the U. S. Treasurerin trust for National bank.
For Circulation.

16

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

33.....

Nov.

6....t

80




842,459,950
343,459,950
342,455,950
342,553,250

For U. S.
•

Deposits.

Total.

19,273,000

861.782.960

19,378,000

361.133.960
363,013,960

19,568,000
19,508,000

342,501,750

-

3.—Fractionl

gee* 4
P«?c. 11..
-fee.
18
Jan.
8

342,506,850
342,499,050

~

842,633,050

342,426,050
342,425,060
342,303,350

Jan.

15
Jan. 22
Jan. 29
Feb. 6
Feb. 12

19,408,000
19,358,000
19,358,000
19,291,(00
19,181,500
19,041,000
18,991,000
18.941,000

340,502,650

-

342,313,350
342,310,350

;

361,909,750
859,860,650
861,864,350
361,790,050
361,714,550
361.466,050
,361,416.050

*

361,244,350
361,034,350
260.8S1,850
860,803,350

18,721,000

l*,57l,000
18,496,000

342,807,350

bank currency

issued (weekly and aggregate), in return
destroyed and mutilated bills returned (weekly and aggregate)

for bills

with the amount in circulation at date:
Week

Notes issned for ret’d.—* ^-Mutilated notesburned.-> Notes in
Current week. Aggregate. Current week. Aggregate. Circulation
2<'2,935
16,400,370
153,630
16,527,174
299,318,715

ending.
Get.

2

°ct. 9
Oct. 16
Oct. 23

107,250

Oct. 30
Nov. 6
Nov. 13

Nov.20....
Nov.27
D C. 1
l»ec. 18
Jan. 8
Jan. 15
Jan 22
Jan. 24
Feb 5
Feb. 12

16,527,b00

.

164,040
231,460
155,170
153,07»
2i'4,7- 0
112,110

16.892,800
17124,260

...

17,279,430
1 7,697,230
,

17,809,3.70
18,122,150

143,7 0

18,265.920

238,840
* 16,110
216,680

18 6*^9,090

19',660
188,270

288,350 T

18,905,200

19,121,880
19,312,540
19,500,810
19,789,160

currency

Treasurer and distributed
2
9
16
23

Oct.

30

Nov.
Nov.

17,0 0,374
^309,024

299,732,745
299,725,655
299.774,875

Dec.
Dec.
Jan.

11
18
8
15
22
29
5
12

f"!?,43 <,474

299,777,543
299,737,613
299,744,272
299,741,792

18,003,876
18,307,457
18,433,707

18,907,907
19,075,137
19,294,(27
19,480,1*27
19,748,877
20,066,252

317,375

299,680,957
299,750,837
299,745,610

299,765,170
299,692,381

299,563,356

received from the Currency Bureao by U. S.
weekly ; also the amount destroyed:
Received.

.'

995,000
.'

1,247,100
1,132,700
1,379,900
1,210,600
1,289,300
1,007,000
256,477
658,500

4.

777.10,)
723,100

,

60i,650
743,481

...*.
..

Missouri IRailway

299^621,713

17,742,926
3 7,851.S26

26s,750

20..
27

Jan.
Jan.
» eb.
Feb.

195.750

6

Nov.
Dec.

Jun.

299,635,785

126,250
182,950
167,230
218,890
186,100

Weekending.

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

16,807,224

228,650
1*24,430.
309,452
1 08,900
152,050
176,251

17,432,500

...

.

270,050
-

Progress In

758,000
666,000

Distributed. Destroy’d
893,287
176,950
878,500
180,800
778,700
226,700
1,432,970
419,200

323,1)00

4*21,100
492,190
860,990
424,000
446,307
450,000
461,200
688,000
631,100

879,614

643,000
316,204
261,291
545,000
692,100

617,618
583,425
639.672

559,100

460,539

573,000

665,233
247,6)0

608 400

726,142

718,800

1869.—The

552,300

Governor

of

Minsou i, in his Annual Message,

congratulates the State that “ in the
history of railroads in Missouri, no yeir in the past will bear favorable
comparison with 1869.”
In the four years preceding, 568 miles were built ; in 1869 alone the
amount

was

360£ miles.

In January, 1S69, lines aggregating

609^

miles were under construction ; at the close of the yesr. the aggregate
—in addition to the 360£ miles completed—amounted to 1,035
miles,
while work was preparing on several projected lines.
Among import¬
ant extensions referred to are the following :
The South Pacific, to run from St. Louis to the Southwest corner of
the State to be continued to the Pacific, is being constructed with

great eneigy, which has already reached the inviting region of which
Lebanon, Laclede county, is to be a commercial centre, and “ looks

restlessly Southwest upon that great mineral an 1 agricultural and
grazing region into the very heart of which it will fully penetrate by
uext4th day of July, when it will have reached Springfield, the future
commercial and manufacturing importance of which I could not by
words enlarge,”
The St. Louis & Iron Mountain, which has added 60 miles in 1869, is
in operation 210 mi'es South from St. Louis, and opens up to enter¬
prise valuable mines and some of the best timbered regions of the
State, and, by striking the Mississippi River at Commerce, offers a St.
Louis or a S >uthern market.
The St. Louis, Chillicothe & Omaha has added 26

miles; the Mi5Valley, 48; Lexington & Sedalia. 36 ; Lexington & St. Louis, 36 ;
St. Loui9 <fc St. Joseph, 40 ; Alexandria &, Nebraska City, 45. A road
is contemplated from St. Louis through Franklin county to run on
the South side of the CLage River to Fort Scott, Kansas; also another
from Kansas City by way of Springfield to Memphis Tennessee ; two
from Jefferson City, one Soathwest and the other West along the 03age
Valley, and one li\m Ste. Genevieve, on the Mississippi River, West
souri

to Lebanon.

As to the prospects of these enterprises, Gov. McClurg has no doubt
that they will be continued, although the State is not at present in a
condition to aid them. It is added while railroals cause the more

rapid development of resources, at the
causes the building of roads.
Stock-Brokers Margins.—The

same
case

time their development*
of Markham

vs.

Jaudon

decided

National Treasury.—The
tain

235

Nov. 37...

-

6,145

Hamburg—

pin-

Castle,

2.—National

THE CHRONICLE.

February 19, 1870 ]

362,060,260

by the Court of Appeals in this State, a few weeks ago, is an
important one to stock-brokers and their customers. It was a test
case, selected by the Stock Exchange, and heard as a preferred appeal
by special order of the Court of Appeals, in advance of its regular
place on the calendar.
The Court of Appeals decides :
1. That when a broker buys stock for a customer and agreees to pay
for it and carry it on receiving a deposit of a margin of money or stock,
he holds the stock so purchased as a pledge for the repayment of the
money he advances, and cannot sell it, even if the value of the stock
falls so as to exhaust the margin, without giving notice of the time and
place of the sale.
2. That evidence cf the custom or usage of brokers cannot he
received to change these rights and relations of the parties to such
transaction.

8. That a broker who sells out his customer's stock after his

margin

\ r i

THE

236

but without giving him notice of the time and place of the
sale, is liable to the customer for the highest price of the stock down
to the time of the trial, because the customer owns the stock, and the
act of the broker is a wrongful conversion.

of December
organization which
to
Fisk

Chesapeake & Ohio Ratlroad.-In the Chronicle;
11, 1869, an article was published giving at some length
this road, and of its fine prospects under the new
has been formed.
At the present moment'we have only space
notice the loan which has been placed upon the market by Messrs.
& Hatch, the well known bankers, and very successful
of the Central Pacific and Western Pacific Railroad loans. The atten¬
tion of all our readers is called to the advertisement, on page lour

the history of

financial agents

of

who

and also to the fact that the gentlemen in New York
interested in this enterp;ise; are among the wealthiest and most

this paper,
are

capitalists of

our

city, including the names

of Mr. A. A.
In a

Low, Mr. Wm. H. Aepinwall, C. P. Huntington, and others.
future number we shall have occasion to speak of this company and
loan more in detail.
A new

Danking house, under the

its

style of Farnhara, Gilbert & Co.,
be quite

notice at No. 8 Wall street.
The name of the firm will
familiar to our readers as lately one of the best known
in Leonard street.
Several cf the most prominent and
bankers of Wall street left the dry goods business to enter
we

dry goods houses
successful

fidld, and there is every reason to
Gilbert & Co.

an

equal

upon

this

anticipate for Messrs. Farnham,

®a?etu.

i&lje Sankera’

DIVIDENDS.
The following Dividends have been declared

during the past week:

When
Per
Cent. P’able.

Miscellaneous.

$2

Adams Express

1

Clinton Oil
Railroads.

$5
$2

Granite
Middieboro’ & Taunton

Books Closed.

i

Mar.

1.

February 13.

afforded indica¬
of the market was likely to be, tempo¬

The Money Market.—The last bank statement

growing

ease

quite free buyers of bonds to-day. The market, how¬
has responded very freely to this movement, partly becau se

have been
ever,

operating for lower prices, and
partly because gold has declined to an extent equivalent to the rise
in bonds abroad- The announcements that the House is opposed to
the adoption of any funding measure this session, and th t the Com¬
mittee of Ways and Means are almost unanimous in favor of re¬
ducing the tariff $20,000,000, and the internal taxes $30,000,000,
have not materially affected the bond market. The reduction of
revenue would, to a certain extent, curtail the purchases of bonds
by the Treasury, thereby modifying an important stimulus to prices ;
but, against this, must be set off the consideration that a voluntary
reduction of $50,000,000 in the taxation of the country would at
the same time enhance the credit of the government and increase
the surplus earnings of the people seeking investment.
The post¬
ponement of funding, as it would be made with the motive of being
able to borrow lower at a later period, would also have a favorable
bearing upon the public credit.
some

of the domestic dealers are

closely with those of last Friday
government has not been a purchaser of bonds this week.
The following are the closing prices of leading government
securities, compared with preceding weeks :
At the

close, prices compare

Jan. 14. -Jan. 21.

8.6’s, 1881 coup
U. S. 5-20’s, 1862coup....
U. S. 5-20’s, 1864
“
u.

U. S.5-20’s,1865
“
U. S. 6 20’e, 1865, July cpn
U S.5-20’s, 1867, coup . ...
U-S. 5-20’s, 1808, “
.
..
U. S.10-40’6.
“ .. .
Pacific Sixes

117*

117*

315*

115

115*
115*

114*

113*
114*

313*
113*

114

113*
112*

112*
io.<*

114*

110

Jan. 28. Feb. 4. Feb. 11
113
117*
118*
115
114*
115*
114
114*
116*
114*
154*
115*
113*
113*
115*
114
113*
114*
114
113*
114*
112*
112*
112*
111*
111*
111*

Feb. 18.
in*
115

114*

114*
113*

113*
112*
HI*

Bonds.—Speculation in this class of securities has been
prices have shown no marked change. The maip
dealings have been in Tennessee’s,.North Carolina’s, Virginia’s and
Louisiana’s, the last named having noticeably declined, until, at the
close, the old bonds were sold down to 71, Levee Sixes to to C9J,
and Levee Eights to 82. Eaily in the week there was an unusually
active business in New Tennessee’s, and under speculative in¬
fluences the price rose rom 5( f to 55, assisted by a report from
Nashville that a bill had been introduced into the State Legislature
to sell out the interest of the State in the defaulting railroads, and
that the resolution would probably be adopted. Up n the positive
denial of this repoit the price receded to 49L the closing price to¬
night. The Yirginia’s have scarcely maintained] the buoyancy of
last week, the North Carolina’s having been steady, and the Mis¬
souri’s strong. The other issues have been dull and neglected.
The following are the closing prices of State Bonds compared
State

Mar. 15. Feb. 28 to Mar. 16
Feb. 21. Feb. 18 to Feb. 22

Friday Evening,

tions that the

[February 19, 1870.

The

success.

Company.

*

CHRONICLE.

is gone,

substantial

J 7 '

rarily at least, arrested. In the deposits there was a decrease of
$1,546,000, and in the legal tenders a Joss of $1,445,000, while the
loans stood $1,350,000 higher. This appears to have arisen from
the suspension of receipts from the interior, attended with some
moderate remittances, and also from the withdrawal of money into
the 8ub-Treasury. The supetfluity of national currency also has
ceased. These facts indicate that the climax of ease has been

tame, though

reached; but, at the same time, there is no very obvious change in
with last week :
market, (and none in rates. The* banks are not
Feb. ll.Feb.18
§ Feb. ll.Feb. 18
70
73*
Louisiana Sixes.
56
57*
offering surplus balances at low rates quite 'so freely,^although
69*
72*
49* Louisian*. Sixes, levee
60*
they are stiil leaving money on call with the dealers in Govern¬
81*
45* Louisiana Eights, levee... 85
45*
94
95
25* Alabama Eights
25*
ments, at 4 per cent. The brokers, in order to provide against the
92
92
25* Ge' rgia Sevens
25*
90*
90*
62
62* Missouri Sixes
contingency of a more active market iu the Spring, are contract¬
80
South Carolina Sixes, n’w. 82
65* 66
ing loans on stocks for 2 to 4 moLths, and generally find it easy to
Railroad and Miscellaneous Stocks.—The week opened with
do so at 7 per cent, which indicates a prevailing anticipation of a
a buoyant feeling in stocks, under which prices advanced 1£@4 per
steady market.
The large amount of specie in the banks, by swelling the lawful cent, with -large transactions. The movement, however, lacked
outside support, and under the efforts of the cliques to realize, prices
money reserves, has a tendency to encourage an easy feelingfamong
lenders; and as there is no expectation of any important ex¬ have fallen off yesterday and to-day, the market closing dull and
and rather weak.
The chief activity has been iu the Western
port of specie during the spring, this consideration naturally influ¬
stocks, Rock Island, Pacific Mail, RtadiDg, Pittsburg and St. Paul.
ences estimates of the future course of the market.
On call loans the general rate has been 0 per cent at bank, and Erie has shown more business, partly from the increased earnings of
56fc6 ner cent ou the street; on Government collaterals the rate the road, and partly from buying, based upon the contemplated
proceedings of the legal representative of the English stockholders.
has been uniformly 5 per ceut.
In the discount market there is a steady feeling, with light trans¬ Pacific Mail advanced to 44upon a report that the directors con¬
actions. Among the up-town banks there is more demand for template applying for authority to reduce the stock 50 per cent in
the tone of the

....

accommodation ; but as yet no large amounts of paper have reached
Wall street. The occurrence o( two failures in the dry goods trade
has iuduced

temporary caution respecting that class of paper.
prime acceptances the rate has beeu 6@8 per ceut, and ou the
best grades of notes 7@8 per cent.
a

amount.

following were the closing quotations of the regular
compared with those of the six preceding weeks :
The

On

United States Bonds.-—The bond market remains quiet and

heavy, i he loreign markets have exhibited more firmness, prices
having advanced at4 London aud Frankfort f@l per cent within
the week. The foreign bankers appear to anticipate, from the
tenor of their advices, a renewed demand for
bonds, and their
expectation is apparently warranted by the[growing ease in money
on the Continent.
Upon direct orders from Europe, and also upon1
speculation based on the foregoing prospects, the German bankers




Cumberland Coal

8,nicksilver
Co
anton

Mariposa pref....

Pacific Mail
Erie

Michigan Central

Clev. and Pitts d.

Northwestern....
,

“

42*
22*
94*
88*
117*
91*

95

Reading

.

Dee. 31. Jan. 14 Jan. 21. Jau. 28. Feb. 4. Feb. 11 Feb. 18.
86
33*
32*
34*
31*
27*
25*
14
15
13*
13*
15*
13*
15*
59
53
56
57*
50
59*
64*
16
20*
20*
20*
16*
18*
17*

43*
24*

Lake Shore

^referred

Bock Islanu
Fort Wav ne
Illinois Central

Ohio & Miss

_

.,

board

88*
117*
87*
72*
85*
105*
88

136*
25*

94*
84*
117

39*
23*

41*

93*
84*

96*
65*

117*

118*

91

91

83*

72*
88*

71*
09*

105*
88

103*
87*

112*

140

337

74

',

41*
23*

25*

25*

88*
136*
25*

25

41
25

97*
88*
128*

93*
72*

99

89*

116*
89*

'90*
119*
92*

137

145

26*

73*

m

42*
26*
97*
87*
121

101

72*

89*
120

90*

1422
31*

February 19,1870.J,
Milw & St. Paul.
14

44

prl

To!., Wab. & W’n
NYOen. AHudR
consolidated.*..
do

74#
86#

74
87

51

62

92#
87#

scrip

CHRONICLE.

THE
72#
86#
52#

92#
87#

72#

87#

74#
83#

65#
79#

Hamburg

52

46#

47

47#

Amsterdam

95#

92#
87#

92

G

Swiss

72#
86#

97#
94*

97

97 #

95#

95#

The

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

7

28.
4
11

tfc

..

18..

it

404
283
347
312
4*57
722

...

...

.

it

186

...

25..
2..
9..

..

...

Dec.
it

ii

23..

it

30..
6..

Jan.
it

13..

..

..

..

Tele¬ Steam¬

•

•

1,044
20.. ..1,254
it
27..
1,365
3
Feb.
..1,702
tt
10..
1,939
ti
17..
775
..

it

..

.

..

.

•

<fec.

6.920

5,420
3,337

4,6S4
4,375

0,4-6

4,200

4,551
4.595
7 193

4,969
5,003

15,174
5,650
7,946
7,412

r

Total.
205,149
113,413
100,909
124,400
118,063
91,695

6.130
3,742
3,133
4,103
3,128
4,400 253,866
8,161 401,638
6,385 720,818
3,828 344,235
2,500 296,102
4,645 367,374
3,285 150,10
3,255 200,258
6,638 131,278
4,537 115,969
6,470 177.601

3,114

•

•

Exp’ss.

ship.

•

211
105
305

..

•

•

1,151

..

Im-

Coal. Mining. pro’t. graph.
4,650
400 2,305
184,192 1,106
200 2,955
97,695 615
2,300
2,300
85,482 1,336
4,527
610
107,407
900 2,970
4,700
617
200 2,299
102,635
3,100
4-29
700 2,190
15,246
2,500
919
500 2,960
236,838
2,700
3(0 4,177
372,060 1,050 10,075
683,693 1,863 11,130
100 2,36
530
324,742
800 4,575
3,900
280.333
815
3,300
1,850
400
2.170
350,440
2,000
120 640 2,793
750 3,147
5,200
4.90)
172,119 6,877
3,000 1,930
100,997 5,391
5,650
2,000 3,062
82,739 1,622 1-2,350 2,850 5,485
148,717 1,015
8,745
3,900 1,940
157,955 2,435
3,220
1,290 1,493

143

...

14.

it

Rail¬
road.

Bank.

ending—

Nov.

6,240
6,020

9,175

177,684

....

Bremen
Berlin

..

Government

ending—

“

“

1,6-24,000

25
2

Dec.
“

Company
City Bonds. Bonds.
1,526,000
367,500
1,623,500
265,000
1.331,000
313,000

3,510,000

18

“

State &

Bonds.

7
14
28
4
11

“

2,603,650

999,000

2,613,50)
2,291,550

987,090
F07,5' 0
1.499,0u0
1,68'.',000
587,0J0

9

“

23
30
6
13

“

Jan.
44

4*

20

“

27
0
10
17

Feb.
44
“

3,069,5 ’()
1,426,400

457,4(10
233,100
293,600
373,600
488,000
414 500

324,090
317,0 0
345,000

6' >5,0 >0

3,299,209
5,370,700

988,000
2,050,8

4,497,100

2,237,050
1,893.400

2,901.500

2,305,000

2.230,500

5,115.100
5,396,509
4,432,900
6,789,600
3,945,750
3,894,100
3,472,650
o,S84,950
7.207,8(10
; 3,9S0,500

2,34<400
4,522,800

611,500

1,531.500
1,884,0)0
2,6)0,500

-

Total
amount.

8,033,000
6 203,U>)
10,827,150
5,925,970
4,715,000
5,301,500

676,509

642,500
1,037,500
920,100
766,000

The Gold Market.-—The weakness of the

gold market has been
apparent this week, the price to-day declining to 119
A
strong-speculative movement has set in, in favor of lower prices.
mere

To-day, the “short” interest has apparently be<n largely increased,
Indication

being the fact that on loans of gold the rate has full; n
from 6 per cent “lor carrying” to “flat.” The ease in the Conti¬
nental is oney markets, and the renewed demand f >r bonds for
ship¬
ment, have materially helped the weakness of the market; and the
continued Jan-e shipments of cotton have operated in the same
direction. The Government sold 31,000,000 yesterday, the amount
bid for being $1,99
The following table wi 1 show the course of the
gold premium
each day of the past week :
one

-Quotations.-

N

Open- Low- Hicrn- Cloe-

ing.
12..
14..

).

Monday,
Tuesday,
Wedn’day,
Thursday,
Friday,

“

“
“

15..
16..
17
18..

“

.

“

120#
119#
IB'#

..

..

..

..

..

..

est.

est.

119#

120

119#
119#
119#

119#

119#

119

119

120#
119#
lvO
120

•

•

• •

..

£....

Jan. 1

date.

..

..

1

Total
Clear

119#
119#
119#

40,070,000
29.829,000
32,0 0,000
21,076,000
22, V1,0/0
47,354,000

119#
1:9#

Balance^.

,

ing.

119#

119#
119#
1

ni/s.

,

Gold.

Currency.
1,954,906 2,361,837
1,445,361 1,747, 03
1,285,814 1,557,103
1,041,231 1 231,434
773,315 932,0*6
1,299,207 1,572.515

Treasury have been

follows

as

Feb.

12..
14..
15..
16..
17..
IS*.

Total

Receipts.
$130,000 00

$479,210 00

66 2,COO 00

872,300 00

860,000
568,000
691,000
766,090

867,993 39
640,012 63
766,5<'6 93
802,500 00

Gold.

00
00
00
00

120#
120#

T- '.'t £5

119#

119#

121#

120#

120#

119

123#

119#

ending February 12

Specie in banks Feb.

bullion at

New

York, for the

5

“

“

and

:

Treasure received from California

by Bi earner

$38,997,246
*

overland

,

Imports of specie from foreign ports
Coin iuterestpaid out
Treasury sales of gold
Total reported supply
Withdrawn f m export

$3,9C0.000 00 $4,428,553 00
73,319,813 93

.

Paym’ts during week.

$82,428
125.503

241,382
521,894

1,000,000— 1,970,707
$741,721
2,497,118— 3,238,889

Specie in banks Feb. 12

38,072,184

Total withdrawn and in banks
over reported supply

$41,311,023

Excess of withdrawals

Foreign

Exchange—Has been rather

4...

irregular, but,

813,070

on

the

whole, firmer. There has been active demand for tomorrow's
sUamer, and the market closes steady at the following rates:
London Comm’l.

bkrs’/^
do shr't.
Paris, long

Antwerp




40# @
40#@
79 @
70# @
a

41
40%
79#

71#

ad Sub

-Sub-Treasury.—Paymenta.Currency.
$697,953 25

433,766 94
462,637 26
839,715 55
264,634 06

46,100 23
75,895 23
79.S75 53
53,832 09

156,238 07

1, 426,016 07

1,041,145 19

325,537 19

3,722.042 41 $3,454,876 03
6,407,292 16

$1,971,949 42

330.366 30

243,167 62
217 982 06

$80,743,385 98 10,210,334 57
3,454,876 03
1,971,240 42

Balance Feb. IS
Increase
Decrease

17,293,509 95’ 8,248,085 15
973,676 97
:
1,751,792 99

New York City Banks.—The.

following statement shows the
City for +he week
of business on February 12, 1870:

commencement

-AVERAGE AMOUNT OF-

Loans and

CiroulaNet
Legal
Canital.
tion.
Specie.
Denosits. Tenders,
$3,000,000 3
$8,137,447 $928,103 $7,451,670 $1,371,575
Manhattan
2,050,000 5,868,780
1,001.004
4.727.419
10,147
1,052,713
Merchants’
3,000,000 6,134.624
2,382/11
890.938
6.481,758
2,162,025
Mechanics
2,000,000 5,326,120
799/ OH
573,226
4.314.023
926.551
Union
1,500.000
4,4 (6,401
(■06.412
3.2
483,147
5,109
634,382
America
3,000,000 6.6.38,025 2,789,628
1.180
7,824,420
2.580,989
Phoenix..
1,H00,^00
4,150,866
977.1(3
2 903.178
274.055
529,0C0
City
1,000,000
4,302.046
240 000
1,9)13.793
3,551,113
Tradesmen’s
1,000,000 3,037,416
70 098
1,673,168
562.775
716,092
Fulton
600,000
1,805,415
346.736
1,704,631
677.254
Chemical
300 000
6.143.870
735.998
5,190,186 1,855.531
Merchants’ Exchange
1,235,000 3 162,841
14.'.746
449.88)
2,789.159
847,583
National
1 500,000
3,221.008
448.700
411.700
1.187,914
483,894
Butchers’
800,000 2.203.900
260.100
72,900
612.500
1,796,800
Mechanics and Traders’.
600,000
1.951.434
29,156
195,720
1.250.551
318.704
Greenwich
200.000
1.101.119
2.969
800,541
133,678
Leather Manuf. National
600,000
3,031,760
515,492
264.768
730.506
2,101.676
Seventh Ward, National.
500,000
1,343.849
933.012
140.801
174,977
246,661
State of New York
2,000,000 4,512 618
895.54)
479,000
4.203.784
1,592.567
American Exchange
5,000,000 9,619,141
927.1P0
1,172.850
5,651.012
1.623.916
Commerce
10,000,000 22.052,18'! 1,295.289 5,822.715
6.870.339
5,588.698
1,000,000
Broadway
7,475.914
‘00,000
91,031
6.134.34!
1,649,909
Ocean
1.000,000
2,584 577
Mercantile
1,000,000 3,784.891
176,427
968.166
480,015
3,144,933
Pacific
422,700 2,190,382
42,269
4,792
1,808,857
443,505
2,000,000
4.299,211
Republic
2,357,972
851,115
5.060,545
1,215,135
Chatham
450,000 2.482,520
219,749
599.026
129.805
2,827,669
412.500
1,263.582
50.226
People’s
5.99?
1,131.315
354,214
North American
1,000,000
2,510,233
98,167
405.166
4.100
2,185,349
Hanover
1,000,000
2,266.181
846,776
291,553
1,479,603
819,978
500.000
1,923,000
Irving
*..i
15,700
192,336
490,000
1,783,000
4,000,000 11,671,274
Metropolitan
6,655.495
675,371
.

New York

...

Citizens
Nassau
1
Market
St. Nicholas..
Shoe and Leather
Corn Exchange...

January 23.
108#® 10S#
108#® 109
109#®
....

5.18#@1.17#
5.15#@5.15
5.18# @5,17#

February 4. February 11.
108#® 108# 108#® 108#
108#® 109
108#® 109
10!)#® 109# 109#® 109#
6.18#®5.17# 5.1S#®5.17#
5.15#@5.15
5.15#@5.15

5.18#@5,17# 5.18# @5.17#

February 18.
103#® 108%
108#® 109
109#® 109#

5.17#®5.18#
5.15 @5.15#
5.17#@5.18#

400,000
1,000.000
1,000.000
1,000.000
1,500.000
1,000,000
2,000,000
750.000

....

Continental

Commonwealth
Oriental

300,000

Marine
Atlantic

400,000

300,000

•••••••

Importers and Traders’..
Park

Mechanics’ Banking Ass.
Grocers’
Nortli Biver
East River
Manufacturers & Mer....
Fourth National

Central National
Second National
Ninth National
First National
Third National
New York N. Exchange*
Tenth National
Bowerv National
Ball

s

Head

..

Stuyvesant

Eleve ith Ward

1,500.000

2,000.000
500,000
300.000

400.000

350,000
500.000

L491.149

2,131,528
2,962.99)
2.802 023
3.9)3,800
2.883,2)5
3.854.391
2/53.558
1,61 i 876
1.553.010
1,051,605
10.225.572
15,617,091
1,082.946
747,700
1,219.696
1.006,722
1,386.946

5,000,000 18,518,431
3,000,000 11,319,769
1.518/89
300,000
1,000,000 5,719,649
500,000 4,211,444
1,000,000 4,240.678
300,000
1,000.000
250,000

200,000
.00,000

-

1,202.967
1,818.30
882,619
1,692,668
361,765

200,000
250.000

4-05,169
802,433

500,00G

6 It,069

659.531
362,378

The deviations from the returns of
Loans...,

Inc. $1,350,533

-

Specie...

Dec.

Circulation

Inc.

The

following

are

Loans.
Oct.
2
Oct.
9
Oct. 16
Oct. 23
Oct. 30
Nov. 6

Nov. 13.
Nov. 20.
Nov.
Dec,
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

27.

4.
11.
18.
24.
21.

Jan. 8.
Jan, 15.
Jan. 22.
Jan. 29.
Feb. 5.
Feb. 12.

99.704
71.876
224.910
188,543
156,881
42,239
199.125

154,690
10,075
175.010

41,880
717,503
1,738,3-3

130,131
3.979
540,725
747,368
878.947
5.920
511.511

228,793
4,841
300,000
98,857
500,500
898,000

91.180
25.861
23.523
11.301

11,007
283,5(0

3.877

677

8)2,2s7
2.015

1.747.811 2,916.972
393,913 1/88.250
270.000
1,080
275,208
808.279
914,953
835,443
799,770
788,756
15,505 268,281
75,300 910,000
3.045
225,000
5,505
6,509
502

2.707
28.812
6,950

250,000

448,795

1,233,717
1,9.3,405
1.912.948

843 889

1,418,412

580,706
733.300
215,000
691,000
862,954

2,476/00
1,468,465

2,266,736
2,869,153
1,252,452
1,338.020

714,912
10.010.476
19,367,960
1,363,977
609,602
1,014,165
637,189
1.059,100
15,681,682
11,006.411
1.289,249
5,472,814

5,081,000
4,084,126
744,826
411,000
812,367
1,786.209
380.519
398,502

253,062
417.142

209 345

480,350
106,976
1,7:2.017

4,547,814
734,946
259,852
165.555

225,386
207.000
8,191.813

3,416,440
394.855

1,450,467
910,542
889,634
222,794
257.300

261,846
82,277
81.015

557,960
705.371
617,063

229,289
805,678
96,840

837,805

53,000

83.970,200 205,864,652 38,072,18423,703,572 213,192,740 56,603,00

40,967,953

Withdrawn for customs

do short

41

40#@ 41
79#@ 79#
71#@ 71#

Currency.
Gold.
$290,242 53 $2,158,013 71

Balance.Feb.il

Total

do
do

41
41
79#
71#

5 17#@5.18#
36 @ 86#

36#

:

Receipts.--

Eighth National
American National
Germania
Manul'actur s & Builders

1

119

General movement of coin
week

86 @
40 #@

36.

The transactions for the week at the Custom House

Banks.

Week

Nov.

@ 41#
@ 79#
71#@ 71#

..

following is a summary of the amount of Government bonds
ending at the
and City securities, and
railroad and other bonds
at Stock
Exchange for the past and several previous weeks:

“

41
79

..

State

Oct.

35#@
40#@
40# @
79 @
71#@

condition of the Associated Banks of New York

The

sold

@ 36#

Custom
House.

Week

It

36

..

Franklort

weeks:

Oct.

237

.

.

.

.

.

.

255,230,649
250,749,974
248,537,984
249,395,073
250,948,833
252,799,450
251,180,557
253,068,008
252,673,474
253,235,996

9.‘5,t)62
-

Deposits
Legal Tenders

15,902,849
21,513,526
20,399.070
19,399,701
21,926 046
25,219,066
26,755,693
27.929,071
29,687,895
30,633,539
29,716 362
30,068,095

are as

follows

:

Dec. $1,546 439
Dec. 1,445,884

42,90'J

the totals for

Specie.

previous week

-

a series

Circulation.

31,169,409
34,178,925
31,217,114
34,204,435
34,136,249
34,188,663
34.212,867

of weeks past:
Leg
Legal

Aggregate

Deposits. Tendlers. Clearings.
183,124,508 54,209,OSS 792,893,772
179,214,675 52,017,583 628,380,852
178,642.936 53,229,594 534,300,2611
175,798,919 5 \('37,604 581,510.262
180,828,882 52,177,881 540,450,647
182,961,840 49,957,590 689,884,67^
183,754,306 51,095,661 570,859,29.3

34,231,922 183,784 190
34,155,838 183,597,395
84,140,463 182,690,140
34,123,117 182,179,798
252,729,955
34.102,303 181,073,455
25S,834,9!4
251,096.000 28,419,977 34,127,837 177,165,5S6
2-0.406,387 31,161.908 34,150,887 179,129,394
253,475,453 35,664,8:0 34,’32,280 190,169,262
259,101, 106 37,510,467 83,966,823 202,396,881
259,592,756 39,454,008 33,806,721 397,479,823
260,324,271 40,475,714 33,746,481 210,150,913
8,997,246 33,746,481 214,739,170
264*514,119

49,455,121 481,759,55s
48,181,890' 561*183,865
45,989,274 676,011,888

46,884,429
44,312,273
44,493,992
45,034,603
48,587,731
62,248 475
54,619,433
66,782,168
58,348,384

540,459,317
665,500,604

411,221,447
399,355,370
593,170,114

696,733,68

680,665,911
549,133,551
541,240,205

83,703,572 313,192,740 56,60I»000 610,842,824

[February 19, 1&70.

CHRONICLE.

THE

238

ruary

14, 1870 :

The

Inc. $305,986 Deposits

C4

Philadelphia
North America ...
Farmers’ <fc Mech..

Commercial
Mechanics’
Bank N. Liberties
Southwark

Kensington
Penn Township...
Western
Manufacturers’....
ii’k of Commerce..
Girard
Tradesmen's
Consolidation

Specie

8,090,000 4,965,921 52,201
2,300
310,000 2,253,000
800,000 2,370,000 32,661
500,000 2,319,000
250,000 1,338,70 I 12J04
4,926
250,000 1,129,259
500,000 1,368,543
400,000 i,304,134 68’, 935
570,150 1,561,600

City

...

Eighth
Central
Bank of

200,000

569,000

384,000
5!) 7,000

~

393,900
296,000
250,410
455,932

-

300,000
800,000

500,000
80 ,900

445,03i

650,827
2,276,000
1,040,755

212,560
591,000
178.047

794,338
890,237

270.000

882,187
1,278,000
1,474,000
1,134,000 3,195,000
298.000
937,955
It 0,757
618,276
242.000
93,000

211,280
450,003

739,000

11,619

435,544
242,029

28,800
977,515 10,000
1,748,000
2,500
1,328,000 221,000

476,629
290,471
40S,000
247,000

..

.

700,000
831,000

17,000

2,541,000
1,000,000 1,948,000

50/100
3,975

250.000

275,000

,

15,755,150 51,373,2901,090/ 55 13

Total

176,320

959,873

81.000

1,000,000 3,602,000
300,000 1,033,0.0
611,865
200,000
473,000
150,000

220.613

971,494
1,489,220

154.000

435,000

213,000
603,000
472,000

584,000
1,866,000
1,206,000

105,289,208

652,197

I2,707,0u4

lOM*®

g

i-Sg-23

5;S|o
103,410,l.Sg.Wl

11,376,043

1.7.'.\."

Nov*
Nov!

Dec'

105:871,804

37

pjg-

359,736

3

797,000
254,693

Feb. 14

.

Decrease.

Specie

Increase

.

135,000
219,000
239,000
598,0('o

Banks lor

a

series of weeks
Loans.

Date.
Oct.
oct.

4
11

13:
Oct.
25
Oct.
Nov.
1.......
8
Nov.
Nov. 15
Nov. 22
Nov. 29
Dec. 13
Dec. 20
Dec. 27
3
Jan.
Jan. 10
Jan. 17
Jan. 24
Jan. 31
Feb. 7
Feb. 14
...

51,709,653
51,823.563
51,373,295

Banks.

12.426,346

38 434.667

13,173,949
12,157,379
12,670,198
12,992,812
12,994,924

38,278.993

651,773
1,1<2,225
1,146,221
1,101,307

Columbian
Continental
Eliot

Everett
..

Freeman’s
Globe
Hamilton

600,000
1,000,000
750,000
Howard
1,000,000
Market
800,000
Massachusetts..
800,000
Maverick
400,000
Merchants’
3,000,000
...

Mount Vernon..
New England,..

200,000

1,000,000
1,000,000

North
Old Boston
Sbawmut
Shoe & Leather.
State.....
Suffolk
Traders’

900,000

1.000,000
1,000,000
2,000,000
1.500,000

Second (Granite)
Third
B’kof Commerce
^’kofN. Amer.

600,000
2,000,000
750,000
1,000,000
1,600,000
300,000
2,000,000
1,000,000

B’k of Iiedemp’n
B’kof the Repub.

1,000,000
1,500,000

Tremont

Washington....

First

10,598,934
10,607,344

10,599,394
10,596,755
10,597,973
10,592,939
10,595,186
10,602,197
10,601,653
10,599,650
10,596,311

38,877,139

39,855,431

10.583,506

13,327,515

39,004,792

10,577,215

995,468
957,510

13,752,537

30,530,011

10,573.46b

13,711,8') 7

39,512,149

1,090,955

13,339,610

38,834,794

10,558,081
10,573,385

38,990,001

we

City

1,000,000

Eagle

1,000,000

Exchange

1,000,000

Hide & Leather. 1,500.000
Revere
2,000,000

200,000

1,000,000
1,530,000

6s

6s, new
7s, old
“
7s, new
I ouisiana 6s, ex-coupons..
“
new bonds

90
92
71
69

“

6s, Levee

41

8s, Levte

...

4‘

69$

....

82

b’ds

North Care lina, ex-coup
new

South Carolina 6s, o dr..
44

6s, new..

44

registe’d s’ck
Tennessee cx coupons, 6s...
new bonds, 6s....
44

44

5s

Viiginia ex-coupon bonds...
44

i;ew

44

registered slock, old

44.

'

44

1866

444

44

44

Loans.

L. T. Notes

$70,775
32,694

.

Deposits. Circula
$4 4 2,88
$447,322
600,292

1867

220.833
179,285
158,457
812.833
133,010

1,384,898

65.810

27,857

967,291
381,721

797,905

S 92,050

956,482

577,07,
353,29q

669,994
703,286
579,674
820,020

1 496.672

32.814

102,479

604,216

2,395,935

27,642

1,486.184
1,861,158

43.814
64,333

266,425
66,930

1,251,749
676.130

95,000

1,564,6 9

52,556

474,101
534,532

\

961,736

’876,780

6,729,526
019,706
2,375,427

60,186
21,928
363,923

1,927,218

49,409
132,31 9
119,465
127,306

2.502,751

80,316
147,549

3,903,433

138.813

2,189,388

3,391.525 253,879
38,163
1,130,237

79,417
242,614
107.605
624,280
52,744

313,323
184,000
486,977

111.605
112,666
276,300
208,347
128.964

31,602

529,896
98,667
262,984
480,366
86,743

4,556.027 252,613
65,587
1,913,261
5,381,286 820,876
2,893,794 100,00)
1 734,253
2J,926
31,774
1,987,435
3,537,784 806,573
g 135,464
9d,204
3,782,742 79.140
’576,439 49.140
2,515,304 161,419
2,952,379 81,458

451,666
238,302
440,3F4
114,500
210,740
214,550
104,169
187,906
237,192
24,916
156,547
353,429

3,206,862

151,330

30/169
1.930,78»
4,069,-'56 210,909
4,947,749 341,536

’888,551

j

City

1/ 79,378
284.131

2,551,908
394,303
818,753
653,369

1,078,052
646,783

99.7^

858,20$
242,21$

444,10$
352,66$
392.28$

243,243

1,815,97>

177.702
793,264
790,980
864,214

596,450

918,517

359,231

1,020.012
674,299
360,948
937,246
674.575
1,129,441
2,431,433
550.576
1,828,521
533.S35

999.587

1,530,669
708,913
50e,293
877,714

1,271,917
934,970
1,755,799

747,767
177,403
691,538
695.702
789,170
767,133
174,412
956,918
696.500
795,000
790,000
435.501
342,517

797,545

990,647

794,268
89G,528
129,6 0
546,186

1,270,340

492,273

429,359

47,350,000 109,997,0274,884,147 9,886,266 89,918,414

25,212,618

The deviations from last weeks returns are as follows:

44

44

81
91

72
70

70*
82,

44

46*

44

44

2d
44
stock
& Ten •. 1st m. 7s
“
2i4
“

44

...

“

26*
37* South. Mississippi 1st m. 7s.
2d
44 '
80*
44
34
8'*
57
V. Orleans <fc Jackson lsts,8s
-4
cert, 8s
49* 49|
44

& Little Rock & btate

...

Memphis past due coupons..
scrip,
Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds....
44

8s,

44

.

...

Nashville 6s
New Orleans 6s bonds
lus
44
Norlolk6s
",

44

44

43

stock..

62* 62! N. Or. Jack’ll &44 Opel.1sts,Ss
2ds, 8s
66* m

80
.80
54
65

78
69
75

5?*
51

65
55
75
76
54
71
45

bu
62
55

87
84
56
70
82
71

78
55
52
67

80
78
56
74

50

7s, bonds
Wilmington, N. 44C.,6s
8s

NORTH CAROLINA.

Montg’ry & West 4 P. 1st, 8s..
4

end

Montgomery and Euialla 1st
8s, gold bonds, endorsed by

State of Alabama
Mobile and Ohio, sterling
44

44

...

Si* 83
87* 90

44

95
72

8s income.

Georgia RR. 1st mtg

20* 22
80
53

...

95
96

Central RR. 1st mtg. 7s
stock

Southwestern RR., 1st mtg
44
stock.........!
Macon and Western stock
Macon & Augusta bonds ...
...

44

end

44

stock....

91
94
108
78

82
75
58

& Brunsw’k end b. 7e
Macon & Brunswick stock

44

63

61
83
25

85

78

82

62

68

55

60

59
72
76

62

CAROLINA.

Charlotte & S Carolina 7b
Greenville and C lumbia 7s,
guar, by State 8. Carolina.

Sparten burg and Union 7s,
guar’d by etate S. C

guaranteed by State S. C..

South Carolina Railroad 6s..
44
44
7s..
44
44
st’ek
North Eastern 1st m tg. s...
44
2d
4
6s...
44
stock
Columbia and Augusta 1st in

EastTenu

& Georgia 6s....

44

Virginia 6s, end

73
80
39

38

62

80
72
7

75
8
SI

80'

90

95*

44

44

44

44

stocks...

State Tenn.

GO

stock..

40
37

Memphis and Ohio 10s
44

18

6b

14

44

60*

62*

endorsed

85

j

I

6’-*
63

76
42
40
25

67*,
,

65

VIRGINIA.
44

2ds6s...

44

SdsSs...
4ths8s...

44

81 72 1
82 i 83

75
68
61
70

Va. & Tenn lBts 6s
44
2ds 6s
43ds6s
44

4th, 8s

£0
74

Virginia44Central lsts, 6s..
2nds, 6s

44

3ds, 6s...

44

4th, 8s...

72
83

fund. int. 8s
Rich. & fanv. lsi cor.s’d 6s.
44

Piedmont bra’h

4*

lsts 8s

Southside, 1st mtg. 8s
44

2d

“

m.

guart’d 6s..

3d m. 6s.
4th m. 8s

Norfolk &

Petersburg 1

m

44

44

44

44

44
44

44

8s
7s

Bichm. & Petersb. lstm

7s

2d m. 6s
3dm. 8s

44

44

Htnf-kfl

.!

59

by
Memp. & Charleston lsts, 7s 84
2nds, 7s 75

44

endorsed.:.

Gulf 7s boD ds
44

'

SOUTH

96

25
76

..

4*

100
107
99
116
94

90
30
80

bonds, 87*

44

**

—

65
73

82*
77
75
85

44

stock

4

14
2d m 7s.
44
('harl. & Rutherf.
North Carolina 8s
*•
'
stock

69|;
66* Orange & Alex. A Man. lsts 69|! 70

GEORGIA.

44

44

44

44

99
73

Sel., Rome &Dalt. 1st m. 7s.

44

2d
3d

44

.

Orange & Alex., lsts 6s,

66
40

8s, int
2 mtg, 8s

44
44
stock.....
Mobile & Montg. RR, 1st m..
Mobile & Great North, lstsm
Selma and Meridian 1st m. 8s
Alabama & Tenn. 1st m. 7s.

44

92

44

Memphis & L. Rock lsts, 8s.

ALABAMA.

44

6

62*

90
Wilmington <fc Weldon 7s g’
Manchester 1 pfd 7s 60

44

Railroad Securities.

44

80

TENNESSEE.

95
62
70
70
85
60
73

Savannah

44

81
76
5
60

C’bai leston arid Savannah Gs,

."etersburg 6s

44

62*
50

44

61
60
54

Richmond 6s

44

75*
53
15
76

44

44

44

44

74*
52
12
75
60
46

44

.

Ga, 8s, bonds.......
Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds
Charleston, S. C., 6s, stock..
Columbia, S. C , 6s..*
Columbus, 44 7s, bonds .....
Fredricksburg 6s
Lynchburg 6s
Macon 7s, bonds
Memphis 6s bonds, old
6s, 44 new
Memphis 6s, end. by Memp.
and Charleston Rail road..

12*

LOUISIANA.

MISSISSIPPI AND

‘ Mississippi Out. 1st mtg. 7*

87
80
80
56
42

75
40

44

44

44

Atlawt a,

2dm 7s.

74
35

pref st’k
92* At'anta & West Point slock

Secnrlt es.

445,137

792,87^
570.672

46
26

Alexandria 6s

Memphis6s, end. by Memp

794.18$
782,63-7
589,82,

Bii Ask

44

Atlantic




80

44

Mnscogee
bonds
44
44
Total

.

.

Georgia Gs, old

44

Street, and

S. C.

Savannah, Albany .& Gull7s
bonds, end. by Savannah..
62* 0°*
60
Pensacola & Georg-a 1st m7s
78

4*

Specie.
$750,000 *
$1,612,812 $89,737
1,500,000
2.824,312 117,005
71.313
1,500,000 3,369,897
l,0i!0,000
1,901/Erf 34.314
500,000 1,459,383 40,624
26,402
1,000,000 2,210,424
86,640
1,000,000
1,999,737
1,000,000
2,631,912 229,937
51,453
200,000
561,457
47,023
1,000,000 2,478, *52

Boylston

“

10,593,280
10,568,681
10,586.029

37,692,300

25,212,614

liid I As tv
95
94

securities.

Alabama 8s

give a statement of the Boston
returned to the Clearing Mouse, Monday, Feb*

Capital.

Atlantic
Atlas
Blackstone
Boston

Security..

37,024,082
36,782,298
37,965,411
38,781,734
38,438,961
38,251,230
38,827,217

51,602,662 1,290.096
51,472,570 1,353,919
52,090.611 1,258,772
51,635,095 1,063,406

National Banks, as
14, 1870.

Union
Webster

37.102,575

12,380,187
12,438,801
13,104,244
13,278,567
13,175,462
12,911,135
13,193,138

605,398

51,379,807
51,011.9*4
52,176,138
52,206/53
52,312,970

Boston Banks.—Below

Faneuil Hall..

12,820,307

284,568
315,925
527,685
573,475

51,731,495

Male

677,355
4,7<i4

Deposits. Circulation.
38,485,284

25.298.365
25,191,545
25,255 813
25,20O,0h4
25,160,663

39,918,414

Kaufman, Cliarlesto:t,

A. C.

Philadelphia

265.111

354,845

51.532,214
51,969,081

Legal Tend.
13,385,S5S

25,4.85,719
25,280,893

40,636,016
40,903,823

IVelth & Areius, 9 New

Quotations by J. M.

:

Specie.
177,303

52,105.010
51.597,924
51 657,364
51,701,059

25,321,736
25,283,237

SOUTHERN SECURITIES.

693,2f0

Decrease.

The annexed statement shows the condition of the

25,338,729
25,361,854
25.355.364

41.693,558

10,962,101

10,992,962
10,433,107
9,386,266

s?

36,398,951

42.377,002

10,794,881

4,834,147

25,336,220

133,600

Decrease. $409,257
Increase.

10,941,125

209,997,0*7

•

25,329,981

36.007,305

£6,676,549
37,342,225
37,017,267
37,359 591
38,235,792
40,007,225
41,177,610

11,698,768
11,374,559

2,600,319

25,321,519

35,310.064
36.896,518

11,389,748

IKiSSow

S? * *.*.

218,000

3:9,610 38,834,794 10,573,385

I Legal Tenders...
$455,217 I Deposits
133,415 | Circulation

Capital

U,3!9,'86
11,711,185
11.666,147
11,535 128
11,395,690
11,579,605
11,671,407
11,721.019

*°cv-1—:: iSm’mo i»»
?04 8WS? KSn?

The deviation? from last week’s returns are as follows :

Loans

11,913,893

104,084,433
104.506,997

8
15
22

Nov

218,090

2S4.275

1,347,482
1,155,923

Sfv

Deposits. Circulation
25,321,464
36,88;',894
25,388,694
31,891,701
25,313 491
34,446,‘■08
25,212,034
34,877,071

Tenders.

4

oft:

478.612
457,00$

-

n

Oct

625,00“

964.363

Specie.

Loans.

716,58.6

3,898,239
1,316,800
1,147,000
1,752,000
1,187,1-0

303,000

3,339,000

750,000

Republic.

1,410,316

815,415

250,000
1,000,000

400,000 1,227,019

Commonwealth
Corn Exchange....
Union
First
Thiid
Founh
Sixth
Seventh...

L. Tend,

,

ol weeks past

comparative totals for a series

following are

Legal

Deposits. Circulat’n
$1,000,00®
$3,667,000
$1,500,090 $4,837,0001133,000 $1,253,000
770,00$
1,000,000 4,187,870 f;5,9 ?4 1,156,347 3,061,130
Loans.

Capital.

51,949

Inc.

Circulation

160,853

Dec.

Total net

Banka.

Tec. 1,046,841
Dec. 9S5,409

Legaltender notes

Capital

Banks.—The following is the average condition Loans...
8pecie
of the Philadelphia Banks for the week preceding Monday, Feb¬
Philadelphia

Fre’ksb’g
& 44Poto. 6s.
44
44

44

conv.7s
-4
6s
.

& York R 1st 8s..
78* 77* Richmond
4*
«»
44

84

86

2d

68
70
76
75
60
25
25
80
78
83

70
72
78
80

67*
30
30

82*
82*
85

95*
77*
70

75

February 19,1870.]

THE

CHRONICLE.

239

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK

EXCHANGE,

4EPRB8BNTBD BY THE LAST SALB REPORTED OFFICIALLY OH EACH DAY OF THB WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, FEB. 18, TOGETHER
WITH THB AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBBR OF SHARES BOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THB SAMB WEEK.
Satnr.l Hon

STOCKS AND SECURITIE8.

.

Taea.

Wed.

Chare

Fri.

WMk’iStlw

STOCKS AND SECURITIES.

iio%

American Gold Coin (Gold Room.) n»xr
119% 119% 119 119%
National:
United States 6s. 1881
coupon MX 117% 117% 118 # 117% 115%
do
do

6s, 1881 .registered
6s, 6-20s(’62)coupon 114% 114% 114%
6s, 5-20s do regxstd
6b, 5-20s (’64)coupon 114* 113% 114%
6s, 5.20b do registd
114
1H%
6s, 5.20s(’65coupon
113% 114%
113% 112% 113%
6s, 5.20b do registd
6s, 5.20s (1867) coup 1 8% 113% 118%
6s, 5.20s do regisd
6s, 5.208 (1868) coup 114 113%
6s, 5.20s do regisd
6s, Oregon War 1881
6s,
do. (ky'rly)
111% 111%
6s, Currency
coupon,
5s, 1871

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

do
do
io
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

.

—

115

—

115

115

—

114

113%
114

t;;i

113% 113%
—

1

3%

do

112

preferred... .100
J0,00i; Chicago, Burlington and QuiucylOO

66,000

—

—

Erie
do pref

100

50

90%

120

74%
19
99

105
no
25

42%

State:

Alabama 8s ’
5s
do

94%

— •

94%

63

California, 7s
Connecticut. 6s.
do
War loan

:20

—

-

100

100

99%

—

8%

Georgia 6s

74%

74%

"9

—

29,500 Long Island
—
Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st pret 50
do
do
2d pref 50
6,000
100 123
1,000 Michigan Central
100
3,000 Milwaukee and St. Paul..
88%
12,00
do
do
pref... 100 86%
Morris & Essex
50
9,000 N. Y. Central & Hudson E ver.. — 97%
95%
do
22,000
do
do
scrip..
14(1
New York and New Haven
100 140
do
do
scrip.
116%
New Jersey.
Norwich A Worcester
29%
45,000 Ohio and Mississippi
!0»‘
do
do
pref
100
81,000 Panama
100
92
25,000 Pitts., F’t WayneACliic. guar. —
98%
Reading
50
187,0(0 Rome,Watertown AOgdensburg
33
1,<00 St.Louis, Alton & Terre llau‘e.100
64
do
do
do pref.100
41
,,

—

98
71

72

74

71

85%

72
85

91

91%

91%

'

6s (new, spec’l tax
6s, (new)

69%

84

az

91%

91%
91%

—

—

45

47%

46%

46%

46%

26%

26%

26%

26%

26%

2 i

88%

S7%

82%

81

67

57%

—

87

2,000 Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100 47
do
do preflO
do
69.600
Railroad Ronds:
American Dock Imp 7»
164,01 Buffalo, N. Y & Erie, 1st
96%
Cential Pacific gold bonus

87

—

56%
50%

62%

66%

92

—

49%

49%

66

66%

93

93

23,(FO
19,500

——

49%
66*

)
)
)
)
)

—

"

119

112

20
56
5

—

—

....

)

117%

—

)

Importers and Traders.

—

26

—

io->%

88% ,18%

122

—

74% i67%
.S8% *81 %
,'86% 86%
97% 91%
95% 95%

30

1,213
200

—

—

147% 147
150%
142
142% 141
89% 88% 88

3,700

—

14

—

—

1,275
19,520

8%
121% 121%
67% 69% 65%
81% 80% 79%

610

—

86%
98%
96%
—

Park

—

—

82

—

.

___

—

Id >
...lfl

165

161%

-

107

—

1(1

3,895
4,565

87

87

98%

97%

2,621
9,646

96%

95%

5,134
47

—

—~ —

’

—

—

107

107

119

4 )

b
1

)
)
)
)

40

—

—

100

35

34%

35

121%

120% 121

12»

—

—

Navigation.
Repress.—Adams

Manposapreferred

Jtim'mUaneous—Bankers ♦ Bro.

6t%

170

92%
98%
—

—

106

—

—

—

30%
08%

30% :3o%

118

91%
98%
32%

32%

32%

—

62

62
43

—

—

62

7,100
650
85

—

170% 110%
92
92
i 91%
98% 97% 96%

—

—

—

47%

47%

2,286
35,480
1,750
700
800

—

42%

|47%

1,777

_____.

96%

96%

102

96% 96%
—

—

3,0(0

—

—

—

96

76,000
7,000

—

111
—

—

—

96%

1,000

—

'

93%

—

93%
98

98%

105

—

21,000

—

98
—

—

94

225

—

)

»

—

\ 59

16%

—

17

17

—

[)

58%

nf

l

35% 34%
42

U

1

[>

63

.41% 42%

48%

dp

20, < 00
1,000

—

500

—

(>

36% 86%

—

38

—

s

50% 51% 51%
20
20%
20% 20%
9%
9%
—
20% 20% 21% 20%
18% 14% 12* 13% 13%
—■
113

ll

—

60%

...

—

..i

i

—■

145

■

■■■«—

■

—

—

S5

82

——

—

8*%'

60

81%

61%

—

100

322,000
61,000
3,000

97
95

95

19,000

6,000

2,000

—

—

78

105% 105
78% 80
103 1*8

10,000

20,000
8,000

—

102
59%
—

5,000
3,000
9,000

89

82%

83

49

102

96%
91

96
95

—

—

—

91%

15,000
97
97
—

14,000
9,000
6,000

—

92

89%

5,(CO

100% 100% 100%

14,500

89%

Pittsb’g.Ft. Wayne & Chic., 1st m.
do
do

do
do

2d mort.
3d mort.

do
do

do

do

income.

Mountain, 1st m.
Toledo A Wabash, 1st mort., ext..

99

99

80

.

.

_

80

800

do

1,200

do
do

do
do

2d mortgage

do

rons. con

970
do
do
W. D
50 Union Pacific, let mort
2 Wtsuin Union 7’s

96% 96

3.000

81

10,(00
5,000

105

6,000
16,600

—

106

—

82

—

75%

•_

97%

97%

■■■

82
94

82%

■

»■"—

13 COO

—

3.000

—

2,000

83

2,000
3,500

92
—

,

~

77%

1,0C0

—

73

86% 86% 66%
87

—

—

■

1,000
2,000

—

76

equipment...

2,060 Toledo, Peoria A Warsaw,tst,E.D.

96

8,000

—

—

673 St Louis A Iron

90'

81%

5,000

7s, 1876

6,406 Qu:nc y & Toledo, 1st
si. Louis, Alton & Terre H, lstm.
do
do
do
2d, pref
1,475

37%

—

do

43% 42%

l*

0
0
9
0
9

do

—

—

89%

do
2d “
do
do
do
7 3-10 conv
do
do
8s 1st mort
do
-do 1st Iowa... —
Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage... 100%
do
do
2d mortgage...
New York Central6s, 1883.

1,493

62% 62%

62%

do

34% 34%

1

68

80%
60%

78%

—

....

58

75

—

—

Michigan Central 8s, new, 1882....
Mariposa Trus'ee *0b, certificates..
Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund. 102

do

American and M. Unioi
Merchants1 Union

30%

29%
68%

—

do
6s, 1887
1«5 N. Y. & New Haven 6s
100 New Jersey Central new
North Missouri, 1st
Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage
7 0
do
consol, bds
do
Pacific 7s, guar, by State of Mo
60i! Peninsular RR, 1st..

2,0-0

...

Union

mortgage,
6th mortgage

do

85%

)

Telegraph.—W
Steamship.—At

117%

—

—

99% 100

—

4th

2d mort.,7s...
100 Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1 stmort..
52

—

—

107

—

miscellaneous Stocks:

Canton.

140

—

—

Wilks Barre.
#<m.—Citiz ms

—

—

Western, 2d mortgage
108
Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869.
10
do
2d mort, (S. F.), ’85
do
3d mort,.
520
89%
Lake Shore, div. bonds
Long Dock bonds.A

..

101

do

Great

124%

)

Cumberland

—

Delaw’e, Lackawan. A West, 2dm.
Detroit, Mon. & To’edo
Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
93%
do 2d mortgage, 1879
do 3d mortgage, 1883

do
Galena & Chicago, 1st ex
10 Great Western, 1st mortgage, 1888.

.

100

—

124

Ashburton....

—

•

275

~

—

...

1st mortgage...
Income

do
2d
Delaware & Lick. Weslern 1st...

—

98% 98%
)10/% 10 % 102% 102% 102%

North America
horth Kiver

do
do

do

)




6,452
’910
1,665
2,310

—

—

1

sau

do
do

—

Chicago, R. I. and Pac,7 percent.. 98%
hicago & Rock Island, 1st
Cleve Pilts. & Ashtabula, old
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 3d mort.
do
4th mortgage.. 75
do
Cleveland and Toledo, Sink1 g Fund
77
4.00) Col., Chi. & Ind. Centralist
4,000

-

1

Manufacturers & Merchants.
Merchants.....

Chicagoand Alton,SinklDgFund,

1,304,0 0 Chic & Northwest,.,Sinking Fnnd.
190,000
do
do
Interest b’nds
27,500
do
do
let mort
do
do
coneolid’ted

No.

.

Quicksilver

7 6

0,971

,

—

—

Gall tin
Hanover

Cary

8,460

74 If

Chicago,Burl ton & Quincy, 8 p. c.

93

:

Commonwealth
Commerce

Teii'h
Tra lesm^ns

—

143

39,000 Chicago & Milwaukee, 1st mort..

—

62%

1

American Exchange
Bank of America

Shoe and Leather
State of New York

—

hird Avenue

:u9

45%

51% 52%
62% 62%

...

Ninth

8,835
11,475

107% 107% 105

—

—

Tennessee 5s
do
6s (old) exo
do
6s, (new)
Vlrgmlafis, (old) ex c
do
6s, (new)
do
6s, (reg.)

municipal :
Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan.
do
6SjP«rk Loan
Jersey City Water Loan
Kings County 6s,

70

108% 108%

Ohio 6s, 1886
do
6«, 1875
S'luth Carolina 6s, old

Na

200

41

—

|St. Louis & Iron Mountain

!

NcHthOaroIina,6s

Continental..

—

159

74%
74%
20% 20% 20% 21
20%
99% 101% 102% 102% 102
105
105% 105% 105%
109% 109% 109% no 110
26% 26% 25% 26% 26%

—

Illinois Central
100 145
106,500 Lake Shore and Mich. South.... — 83%

—

—

New York 5s, 1870
do
6s, 1876
Rank .Stocks

92%

—

—

•do
6s,(Han. & St. Job RR.)
New York 6s, 1ST7
do
6s,lb.O
do
5s, 1874
do
7s,htate*, yB’ds(coup )
do
do
do
(reg.

do

92

2,550

-

Missouri6s,

ao

92

92

7s (new)
do
Illinois Canal Bond8, I860
do 6s conpon, ’77
do
do 1979
Indiana 5s
Louisiana 6s
do
new—
Louisiana 6s Levee Bonds
do
8s Lev'e Bonds
Michigan 6s, 1878

158

74%

—

—

99%

158

73% 78%
90%
91% 90% 89%
122% 122% t22% 122 121%

108
35,000 Hannibal and St. Joseph
107%
100
Hannibal and St. Joseph pref ..100
147
Harlem
00 149%
do pref
—

112% 112% 112% 112%

—

Chicago and Great Eastern
100
Chicago and Northwestern.... .100 73% 78% 73% 74%

do
118,5CG
do
“
pref.100
36,000 Chicago, Rock Island and Pac. .100
153,000 Cin., Ham. & Dayton;
75
5,000 Cleveland, Col. CId. and Ind.. ..100
1,460,000 Columbus C. A Ind. Cent
—
29,000 Cleveland and Pittsburg
50
65,500 Delaware, Lackawana and West 50
Dubuque & Sioux City
1< 0

111%

109% 109%

2,400
2,075

do

_
——

Week’eSal

—

112%

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

Fri.

7%
6%
7% So
6%
6%
$86,000 Central ol New Jersey
100 !>9% 99% 99% 99% 99%
Chicago and Alton ex div. Axp.100 113% 115 116% 116% U6% 116
103,000

—

Wed. Than*

Railroad Stocks:

—

114)4 114% 114%
114%
113% 113% 113%

Mon* Taea.

Boston, Hartford A Erie

114%
114% 114%

—

Saiur.

78

86% 86%

2,000
80,000

3,000

[February 19, 1*70.

CHRONICLE.

THE

240

Earnings of the

Jltonitor.

(ftfje Ratluiay

Great New York Lines for 1809.—From
the Legislature of Railway Companies for the

the annual returns to

following analysis :

IRIK RAIL WAT 00.
EXPLANATION OF THE STOCK AND BOND TABLES.
Captal
stock
$78,636,910
1. Tlie Table of Railroad, Canal and Ollier
Stocks, Funded debt....
23,398,800
on the next page, comprises all Companies of which the stock is sold in any of the
principal cities (except merely local corporations), or upon which dividends are paid.
Total.
$101,935,710
Quotations are always given of the per cent value, whatever the par of the stock may Cost of road and equip¬
be.
The figures just after the name of the company indicate the date of the CHKONment
65,181,959

A star (*) indicates
Earning 8.
scrip.
Passengers
3,429,629
2. The Tables of Railroad, Canal and Other Bonds
13,016,803
occupy in all, four pages, two of which will be published in each number.
In Freight
Other sources
245,067
these pages the bonds of Companies which have been consolidated are sometimes
given under the name of Consolidated Corporation.
The date given in brackets
Total
$1^721,509
immediately after the name of each Company, indicates the time at which the state¬ Expenses.$13,718,085 43
In the “Interest Column” the abbreviations are as Interest.. 1,703,
ment of its finances was made.
;78 00
lollows
J. Sc J.=January and July ; F. Sc A-=February and August; M. Sc S.= Kents
824,020 00
March and September; A. Sc O.
April and October; M. Sc N.=May and Novem¬
16,245,878
ber; J. Sc D.=June and December. Q.— J.=Quarterly, beginning with January;
Q.—F.=Quarterly, beginning w tli Februa
Q. M.=Quarterly, beginning with
475,621

ICI.E in which a report of the Company was last published.
leased roads; in the dividend column x=extra; s=stock or

M arch.

Floating debt

00

Coat of road

00

of Southern Securities are

5. Quotations
Table.
ti. No reliable prices

Capital stock

Funded debt
Interest certificates...*

Earnings.
Fasseneeis

18

interesting infoimation in regard to lands in Kansas, now of¬
fered for sale or soon to be placed in market, along lines of roads in
operation or being built.
The Land Department of the Kansas Pacific Railroad, which runs
the entire length of the S:ate from east to west, up the valleys of the
Kansas and Smoky Hill Hivers, is located at Lawrence.
The company
have 2,0 )C,000 acres to sell at from $1 to $5 per acre.
At Atchison are the headquarters of the Laud Department of the
Central Branch Pacific Road, which runs west ICO miles from Atchison
Journal

40

lnt.

see

Earnings, Fre’ght, $213,667
Passage
183,113
Mai s Sc Expenses,
17,088

76

(.350 rn.)
212,604
218,982
891,303
485,048

(690 m.)

(280 m.)
$276,116
275,139

267,094
279,121

f 568,270

303 342

| 556,080

f784,564

A 404,012

'.532,657
£511,854
g6 9,788

g

558,100

486,196

«

579,642
| 535 366

«

503.745

V409,568

[301,700

[410,000

(431 in.)
$339,762
304,827
393,648
331,148
345,556
391.665
353,736
501.666
501,258
46 5,103
403,691
348,995

(431 in.)

$293,978 ..Jan....
Feb....

4,508,642 4,689,706
1869.

1868.

1869.

1870.

(708 m.) (708 m.) (708 m.) (7(58 m.)
$647,119 $587,442 $681,656 $054,587
524,871

417,071
440,271
477,007
616,494
525,242
709,326
738,530
823,901
727,800
613,330

536,165
444,443
518,800
572,551
626,24S
549,714

...

Dec....

1,001,986

.Year..

13,429,534

(864 m.)
$1,000,997

(864 m.)
$931,7o2 ..Jan

.

Feb..
Mar..

558.782

608,730
595,355

April.
May..

655.046

June.
J uly..

740,949
661,793
790,328

838,717
1,239,735

Aug

Oct...,

735.935

1,279,602
1,124,745
1,048,272

7,160,991 7,817,6208,763,991

12,926,000

763,779
589,966
901,630
699,532
681,040

915,020
894.934
825,055

-Milwaukee & St. Panl.1868.

(850 m.)

$869,228
821,202

883,507
436,412
565,718
458,190
423,897
522,683
''71024,045

£1037,463

8 556,917
® 468,879

1869.

*

Ohio &
1868.

(825 m.) (936 m.) (340 m.)
$451,1:30. $396,171 $211,973
231,351
830,233
265,905
420,774
460,287
252,149
630,844
204,619
217,082
678,800
194,455
586,342
525,363
287,557
724,514
807,122
283,329
1,039,811
801,163
274,636
233,861
96,550

6,517 646 7,250,700




1870.

8,964,039

.

Sep...
Nov...
Dec...
.Year.

(340 m.) (340 m.)
$180,366 $!96,7S7 ..Jan...
216,080
Feb...
221,459
Mar...
214,409
218,639
223,236
192,364

275,220
292,808
828,044
298,027
254,896

2,915,547

...

..

.

(251 m.)
$92,433
81.599

and

April.
May.,
..June.

July..
Aug...

SepT...

Oct
NOV...
Dee...

,.Year..

$1,458 73

“

..$121,680 59
404,846 09

1868....

Gain
DiVidead of

$16,833 10

-

July, 4 per
$34,300 00

cent

Cb.

Sheet, January 1, 1370.

$858,5( 0 00

Stock
72 Capital
Second class Stock

145,000 00

Six per cent Bonds, 1885...
Seven per cent Bonds, Con¬

3S/04 98
11,037 97

1,294,095

4,797,461

1869

1870.

(251 m.)
$98,510
91,660

(251 m.)
90,177

vertible
291,500
Seven j.er cent Bonds, 1871, 00,000
Due New Lonl, Sav. Sank,
87,500
Dividends No. 9,11,12, 13,

90

0>
(.0

768 00

14, 15, unpaid
Due connec ing Roads, a.
other accounts.
Profit and Losse

d

43,991 97
37,722 74

$1,774,982 71

3,11’,963

5,274,6)9

—MichiganI860.
Central.

1868

(829 m.)

(329 m.)
$343,890

$384,119
886,527
411,814
403,646

326,880
415,758
369,625
825,501
821,013
392,942
456,974

'

366,628
829,950

853,569
473,546

511,820

490.772

410,825

109,629

890,671

1,390,822

4,670,014

4,749,163

1869.

(210 m.)
$132,622

133,392

127,817
175,950
171,868
157,397
154,182
144,164
186,889

202,233
205,750
189,351

157,379

160,085

1,923,862

2,004,952

Hante.-> .—Toledo, Wab.1869.
& Western
1870.
1870.

(210 m.)
$152,392

1868.

(521 m.)
$278,712
265,186
257,799
.286,825
260,529
293 844

288,683

484.208
450.208
429,898

823,279
899,488

(521 m.)

(521 m.)

—Union Pacific1869,

(1053 m.)

$284,192
265.137

852,704
311,882
312,529
848,890
810,800
450,246

691,420
706,602
628,659

617,58$

470,720

755,084

422,888
840,000
400JMX)

878.617

4,013,200 4,269,418

1870.

(329 m.)
837,992

320,636

304,115

448,419
874.542

(210 m.)
$127,594
149,165
155,388
130,545
140,408
148,986
204,596
196,486
210,473
174,500

3UO,oOO 00

RAILROADS.

103,558
10<),526
111,037
118,648
109,502
129,388
140,473
132,869
131,019

98,482
108,461
95,416
95,924
108,413
126,556
121,519
125,065
119,169 '
121,403

1868.

1870.

08-$958,2-0 30

Surplus.

69,970 67

13,415,421

St. L, Alton & T.

Mississippi.—*

1869.

27,907 73

Northwestern—>r-Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific-&I
1869. Col. Cin.1870.
1870. r-Clev.
1869.
1870.
1868.
1869.
(390 m.)
m ) (390 m.)
(608
(1,157m.) “(1,157m.) (454 m.) (520-94 m.) $362,800 $204,112
$871,218
$731,283 $308,587 $351,767
180,840
319,441
827,254
297,464
239,522
1,149,258
276,431
645,789
247,661
801,952
8412,900
1,092,378
241 456
316,708
419,000
1,269,934
269.408
1,258,284
378,436 (508,000
258,367
1,167,155
841,885 J.440,300
841,783
1,032,813
568,380 g 480,900
820,025
1,321,139
^668,886
579,00!)
293,615
.......
1,414,231
5691,209 g581,000
271,555
1,144,029
g 424,5s9 Y475,600
242,621
867,731
«433,434 [387,700

1868.

1870.

$959,745 03

Dividends...,. 589,473

12,726 0J

Marietta and Cincinnati

-Lake Shore & M S.-^

-Illinois Central.
1867.

(1,152m.)
$724,890
807,478
850,192

....

NetearniDgs
$340,904 89

$1,774,982 71

1,094,597
1 211,149
1,180,932
1,076,673
1,541,056
1,507,479
1,570,066
1,107,083

Oct
Nov

1,817,145 72

Iut. revenue..

02

10,915 31

Property

Material on hand
Sundry
Accounts
Notesdue..
Cash

Mar....

July...
..Aug...,
Sept...

$2,776,890 75

Interest

145,455 06

Bonds, cancelled,
Wood Land

April.".
May...
June..

;

Total..

33

come

1868.

1809.

420,678 39

ces

Transportation expenses

70

Balance

Dr.

-Chicago &

Chicago and Alton.—
1870.

$1,097,070 20
0,258,542 16

Passengers

,..$3;i6,869, 38

Expenses....

MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL
1868.

.

Earnings.

7,810 80
421,680 59

Rentas...

City—where filings for pre-emption and homestead settlement
can be made, and all necessary information obtained relative to govern¬
ment lands in Kansas.
There are about 40,000,000 acres of govern¬
ment land in Kansas, of which upwards of 20,000,000 acres have not as
yet oeen surveyed.

187U.

ment

$12,185,9c 0 10
equip¬
10,184,902 C9

ending December 31
1869.
Earnings, 1869...

Holt

1809.

Total

New;iiOn«F'n.Northern Railroad Company,
For the year

Junction

6,085,9,\0 (0

$16,120,800 0J

Capital

Humboldt, Topeka and

HARLEM.

$7,000,000 CO

Cost of road and

HUDSON RIVER.

terms.

-Central Pacific—goli^

NEW YOhK AND

$1,003,993 iy

Construction fi cconnt....$1,486,022
Second Mortgage and In¬

three land offices in the State—at

$49,389 00

Deficiency

$6,531,131 21

Topeka is the Land Department of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa
Fe Road.
The road is completed some 40 miles south from Topeka.
This company have very desirable lands for sale upon reasonable
are

$1,610,192 33

9,055,485 18 Fright
Other sou

Surplus

Southern Kansap.

There

Inlereet. i... $350 829 33
Dividends... 1,259,363 00

91

$894,729 87
Dividends...2,418,780 00
Div.onscrip.1,935,524 00
Kent s
60,000 00
Int. reveuite 107,421 77
Sink’g fund. 111,182 S8-$5,527,138

At

57,375 80

eveuue.

4,923,655 41
$1,560,802 53

$15,686,610 39

Net
Interest

by October next will be finished to the southern boundary of the State,
thus affording prospectors and explorers an excellent opportunity to

i

43

900,564 26

Total

completed 50 miles south from Lawrence, and

$6,484,457 94

Expenses.
Tram poit’n.$3,710 967 51
Roadway,&c 1,095,312 10

4,228,470 24
10,457,581 89

Report of tlie

rJhe Galveston Road is

605,715 54

Total

34

23,036,000 00

Expenses

to the Blue River.

3,608,804 33

Other sources

76

11,398,425 89

'

Passengers
Freight,

condense from the Lawrence

$2,269,93S 07

Freight

$28,795,000 00

Other sources

Railroad hands in ‘Kansas.—We

19,919,531 42

ment

01

Earnings.

of Insurance Stocks can possibly be made.

$20,831,187 00
and equip¬

$63,229,4>5 89 Capital stock
37,603,696 87 Funded debt

Total....
Cost of road

given in a separate

1,167 00

Total

CENTBAL.

NEW. YORK

4,309,320 00

Funded debt

00

:

3. The Table of United Slates and State Securities will be
published monthly, on the last Saturday of the month.
4. '*he Table of City Ronds will be published on the third Saturday
of each month.
The abbreviations used in this table are the same as those in the
tables of railroad bonds mentioned above.
The Sinking Fund or assets held by
each city are given on the same line with the name.

New York Tribune makes the

ending September 80,1869, the

year

1870.

(1053 m)

241

February Id, 1870.]
RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Subscribers will confer a great favor
COMPANIES.
For

Out¬
stand¬

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

ing.

Railroads.

Last

50 2,241,250

3,691,200
2,494,900

1,232,200
.100
738, <00

Augusta and Savannah*

100 1,650,000

Washington Branch*

50

Parkersburg Branch

16,411,600
800,000

25,000,000

2,215,000

500

4,550,000

100

3,360,000

100

950,000
1,235,000

Buffalo, New York and Erie*... 100
Burlington and Missouri River .100
do
do
pref. 100
Camden and Amboy
100

380,000

5,000,000
731,200

60

,

<21,926

1,159,500

50
Catawissa*
do
preferred
50
Cedar Rapids and Missouri* ... .100
do
do pref.. ..
Central Georgia & Banking Co..100
Central of New Jersey
100
50
Central Ohio
do
preferred
50
Charlotte, C<»1. <fc Aug
—

Jan. & July.
Jan. & July.
June & Dec.

Chicago and Alton. Mar. 27
100
do
do preferred....100
Chic., Burling. & Quincy. Aug. 7.100
Chicago, Iowa ana Nebraska*. .100
Chicago and Northwest. Aug. 21.100
do
do
pref. ...100
Chic., Rock Is.& Pac. June 12..100
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100
Cincinnati, Richm. & Chicago* .100
Cincinnati, Sand. & Cleveland.. 50
do
do
do pref. 50
Cincinnati and Zanesville

50

Clev., Col., Cin.&Ind.

May 15..100
Cleveland and Mahoning*
50
Cleveland and Pittsburg. Mar 27 50
Columbus, Chic. & Ind. Central*.100
Columbus and Xenia*
Concord
Concord and Portsmouth
Connecticut & Passnmpsic,
Connecticut River
Cumberland Valley

50
50
100

pref.100
100
50

100

Dayton and Michigan*

50

Delaware*

Delaware, Lackaw. & Western 50
Detroit and Milwaukee. June 27.100
do
do
pref
50
.

100
Dubuque and Sioux City*
do
do
pref. ..100
Eastern (Mass.)
100
Eusr, Pennsylvania
50
East Tenn. Georgia, Ocr. 9
100
East Tennessee and Virginia... .100
Elmira and Williamsport*
50
do
do
pref.. 50
100

Jan. 29

Jan”’70

i

...

127

154%

Jan” ’TO

135%

Jan., TO
Jan., ’70
Dec.,’69

•

•

do

pref.

do

do

pref. 50

)
)

Sep. 18.100

>

do

147%

.

2,200,000
5,‘132,000

••••

„—^

400,000

5,145,000

•

27*

80*

70 %

71
.

’69
’69
’69
’69
June & Dec. Dec,, ’69
& July.
Mar. & Sept.
Mar. & Sept.
Mar- & Sept.
Jan. & July.
June & Dec.
June & Dec.

2.425.400
16.590,000
1,000 000
14,590,161
18,159,097
16,000,000 April & Oct.
3,500,000 April & Oct.
382,600
2,989,090
393,073 May & Nov.
1,676,315
10,460,900 Feb. & Aug.
2,056,750 May & Nov.
7,241,475 Quarterly.
11,100,000 Quarterly.
1.786.800 Dec. & June
1,500,000 May & Nov.
350,000 Jan. & July.
2,084.200 Feb. & Aug.
1,700,000 Jan. & July.
1.316.900 April & Oct.
2,400,00
891,206 Jan. & July.
15.927.500 Jan. & July.
452,350
2,095,000
2,142,250 Tan. & July
1,988,170 Jau. & July.
4,033,000 Jan. & July.
1,309,200 Jan. & July.
1,290,067
1,902,000
500,000 May & Nov.
500,000 Jan. & July.
70,000,000 Feb. & Aug.
8.536.900
999,75()
3,540,000 Jan. & July.
4,156,000 Jan. & July.

..

.

19,522,900

Jan.,
Mar.,
Mar., *70
Sept., ’69
Jan., ’70
Dec., ’69
Dec., ’69
ct., ’69
Oct., ’69

i

4
8
3

99*
•

•

•

Quarterly.

)

T

1

T

”3*

....

5
5
5
5
4
5

.

.

.

.

115
156

82

•

Nov. ,’69

74%

do

do

-

Jan., TO

20 %

l 99
i

:oi%

Jan,

i

-

••

do
do
fab as
do

}
*

do

pref

•

•

•

i

*6**
40

141
25
65

100

)

105%

100
100
l.... 50
>.... 50

:

iis

do

preferred

i.

pref.

preferred

Ashburton

101%
106%

Butler

03

42%

42%

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

Jan. & July.

Jan.7 TO

June & Dec.

3 & 30s

.

a

•

.

loo

47%
72%

3
4
2

63

102%

4

Aug., ’69
Jan., TO
Jan., TO
Jan., TO
July, ’69

Jan., ’70

*3*

4
4
5

Feb. & Aug.
Feb. & Aug.

3

50

«

:i
#

k

....

....

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

50

*

•

•

”6*
#

t

5

Mar. &

Sept. Mar., ’69

3

•

•

120

65%

66

90
30
64

*

92

i4*‘

is

16%

34
22
34

...

6

t

t

•

90”
....

5

Feb., TO

Williamsburg

Jan. &

32
....

...

50
10%.

...;

*5*

July. July, ’69

Dec., ’69

R

Quarterly. Nov., ’69

5
5

Nov.,’69
Aug., ’66
Fen., TO
.Jan., TO

5

Cary Improvement...
noi XTr, 1
«

July. Jan., ’69

....

....

;;;;

77
84%

225
70

55
•

ex

* # ® ^

....

5
5
5
5

*

f

....

....

*

*

*

*

*

.

.

*

*

*

**5*
5

July, ’66

a

....

58

58 V

16%

17%
9

*

I

Jan. & July.

77

Quarterly.
Quarterly.

.

Amer. Merchants’ Union
United States

100

Wells, Fargo & Co

100

100

Quarterly.

.Tan.*,* TO
July, ’69
Mar., TO
Jan., TO

2*

Nov., ’69

2%

•

4,000,000 Quarterly.

&

.

•

•

Dec., ’67

1
Trust,

72

2
3

62 *

63%

37%
51%

38

2%
8
5
4
10
4
5
•

•

20%

21

26

42%

42%
•

t

•

^

r

.

•

«
*

....

10%

•

....

....

..

51%

20%

9%
2,836,6<K)
20%
100 8,693,400
certif.
48%
2,324,000 Jan. & July.
Feb., ’6515 gold 13%
100 10,000,000
•

Mariposa Gold, pref/.

35**

2% 63

•

Pacific Mail
100 20,000,(KK> Quarterly. Sept.,’69
ust—Farmers’ Loan & Trust.
1,000,000 Jan. & July. Jan,, TO
National Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. & July. Jan., TO
New York Life and Trust.. .100 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’69
Union Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. & July. .Tan., TO
United States Trust
100 1,500,000 Jan. & July. Jan., ’70

do

40

33k

,,

Feb., TO
July. Jan., ’70
July. Dec., ’69 6

731,250
.100 4,000,000

Boston Water Power.
Brunswick City

do

35

Dec., ’69 85ctS.

May & Nov. Nov., ’69
750,(KK) Jan. & July. Jan., TO

50

I/in/vi/Tin

20
9

... ,

120

5
5
3
3
*

•#

Jan. &
Jan. &

.100

X

7013 70%

21
50
14

iis” iis” [
65

Quotations by A. II. NIcolay, Stock Broker & Auctioneer, 43 Pine Street

70

117% 113
97%
95%

146**

NAME OF ROAD.

97%

140

-

95% B
147

‘

....

B
B

140% B
80

....

....

....

112

B

B
B
c
C
D
E

88
14

16

13%

14% G

72%
70

109
31

S*

20

New York

82%

93**

25
50

Metropolitan

6
4

1W 4,943,420 Jan. $ July. J«B., TO

•

*

•

July. Jan., ’65

May & Nov,
FCb. & Aug.
Feb. & Aug.
Jan. & July.
Feb, & Aug.

Jersey City and Hoboken... 20

Manhattan

....

5s.
5
8
4

*

"

...

”4*

Jan. &

Jan. &

100

Harlem

115

49

2,000,000

100

Wyoming Valley
is.—Brook!vn
Citizens (Brooklyn)

icsk 109”

s%

2

•

’*5*

Feb. & Aug. Feb., TO
Feb. & Aug. Keb., TO
Feb. & Aug. Feb., TO

June & Dec.

50
50
10

Quicksilver. Apl. 27

*4*

-

....

100

Wilkesbarre

87** 87* *
5
4
3
5
4
4

*

*

8% 71%

.

1

25

Cameron
Central
Consolidated Md
Cumberland

143
28
66

92"

50

50
25

114
82

19
8

*

‘*3*

Feb. & Aug. Feb., ’67
Feb. & Aug. Feb., ’67

50

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill

!!!!
Dec., ’67
July, ’69
May. ’69

’69

1

...100

al—American

....

...

Oct

83%

61

Miscellaneous,

....

TO
’69

80

4^%

May & Nov. May, ’67
Jan. & July. Jan., TO

Branch and Susquehanna.

103

*5* 129**
Nov.,’69
40
44
3
June,’69
121 %
5
Jan., ’70
66
65%
3
&
Is
Feb., ’70
Feb., ’70 7&3s. 79% 80
103
4
Jan., ’70

’70

45

82%

ii-lss

*

•...

TO

6

July. Jan., TO

July. July, ’69
Jau. & July. Jan., ’W

)

50

83** 88%

4
3
5

80

•

"4

TO

) Jan. <fe

100

Carolina)

....

a*.

July, ’68
Dec., ’69
Nov., ’69

Feb.*,*

May & Nov. May, ’69
July. Jan., TO
June & Dec. D-*c.,’6«
Jan. & July. Jan., ’69

•

58

:C6
106

as*.*

Feb., *’70
July, ’69
OCt., ’69

5

) Jan. &

22

58
.

Feb.,”’70

Feb., TO
Jan., ’70

•

Caual.

26

80

77.

»

>
)

pref.100

do

do

20J*

60
82
26 V

-3

130%

’70

Sept.
Sept.

1*

Jan., TO

»

47%

Jan., ’68
Feb., TO
Sept., ’67
Jail., ’66

Feb.,
Jail.,
Jan.,
Oct.,

Jan. &

100

Jan., TO

TO

Feb. & Aug.

!

Jan., ’70
Jan., ’7a

Jan.

7

May, ’69

July. Jan., TO

)

do 1st pref.100
do 2d pref.100

do

Aug., ’69
Aug., TO

„

8%

....

f

....

•

*

do
do
>led
do

74%

i6

117%

Nov., ’69
Jan., ’7»i
Feb., ’66
Dec., ’69

’70

«

• •

....

apolis.. 50

9J

109^ 110

’70
’70
’70
TO

Jan.

•

.....

L York. 100

73%

....

io

’70
’67
’70
’69
TO
’6(4

f

Aug. Feb. ’69

Annually.

)

Sep. 11.100

....

Feb.,
May,
Jan.,
Dec.,
Jan.,
Aug.,

„

>

....

'

112

S

140

Jan,.

Jan.*,

:

*6* 106”

) Jan. &

!!!•
87
20

•

106
40
12
25
92

Jan. & July. Jan., TO

)

94
116

1U0

uct., ’69

•

104%

*8%

J

pref.100

•

97

115%

l* K* *

Jan. & July. Jan.7 TO
) Feb. & Aug. Feb., TO

4ioi% 102**
<

•

.

114
150

"

Jan., ’70
Oct., ’67
Dec., ’69
Nov., ’69
Jan., TO
Feb., TO
Jan., TO

Jan.,
Jan.,
Jan.,
Jan.,

•

36
11
22
%£>

)

!!!.*
<

•

April & Oct. ■Oct., ’69

)
) Feb. &
)

100

•

83

3

Feb., ’70

•

96%

3

89%
3> i *21% 121%
5-s.

preferred

•

115%
159

73k

**3%

Quarterly.

do
•

•

....

)

1D0
50
•

»

4
5
5
5
4

....

)

do

•

”3*
Nov., ’69

•

* .

Jan. & July. July, ’69
June & Dec. Dec., ’69 3 gold ill
5
Jan. & July. Jan., TO

ter .....100

77
•

Dec.’,’ *69

3 344 400 June & Dec.

4&92450

„

•

....

lid’ ’ 115%

May & Nov. Nov., ’69

May & Nov. May,
June & Dec. Dec.,
4,666,800 Jan.
Jan.,
15,000,000 June && July.
Dec. Dec.,
2,425,000
.

I

•

i70% 170%
118% 114
57% 57%

6
5

50
)

•

59

57

3

138% 139
i

July. July, ’69

...




do

•

....

*4*

Aug. Aug., ’69

Quarterly. Jan., TO
May & Nov. Nov., ’69
) Jan. & July.
) Jan. & July. Jan., ’70
) Jan. & July. Jan., ’70
) Feb. & Aug. Feb., TO
) April & Oct. Oct., ’69
) Jan. & July. Jan., ’70

7k
•

..

Old Colony and Newport

Rate.

)

Jan. &

.

m

100

1

) Feb. &

If) 5

4
7

Feb. & Aug. Feb., ’70

-

100

i

....

3,300,000 Quarterly.
scrip....190 8,000,000
Housatonic, preferredr
UK) 2,000,(KK) Jan. & July
494,380
Huntingdon and Broad Top*
50
190,750 Jan. & July.
do
do
pref. 50
1(K) 25,278,800 Feb. & Aug.
Illinois Central. Mar. 27
Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette.. 50 6,185,897 Mar. & Sent.
Jeffersonville, Mad. & In.,Oct 30100 2,000,000 Jan. & July.
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 1,335,000
Lake Sho.& Mich. South. Apl. 21.100 35,000,000 Feb. & Aug.
533.500 Feb. & Aug.
do
do guar.100
Lehigh and Susquehanna....
50 8.739.800 May & Nov
Lehigh Valley
50 17,716,400 Quarterly.
Little Miami
50 3.572.400 June & Dec.
Little Schuylkill*
50 2.646.100 Jan. & July.
Long Island
50 3,000,000 Jan! &
July.
848,315
Louisv., Cin. & Lex., prf. Sep. 11. 00
do
common
50 1,621.786 Tan. & July.
100 8.681.500 Feb. & Aug.
Louisville and Nashville
Louisville, New Alb. & Chicago. 00 2,800,000
100 2,000,000 Jan. & July
Macon and Western
Maine Central
100 1.611.500
Marietta & Cin., 1st prf. Aug.21.150 8,130,719 Mar. & Sept
do
do
2d pref. .150 4,460,368 Mar. & Sept.
do
do
common
2,029,778
and
Lawrence
Manchester
100 1,000,000 May & Nov.
June & Dec.
5,312,725
Memphis and Charleston. Sep. 25.25
Michigan Central. July 24
100 12.329.700 Jan. & July.
Milwaukee arid St. Paul. May 29.100 7,665,104 Jan. & July.
do
do
pref ...UK) 9,744,2'8 January.
Mine Hill & Schuylkill Ilaven* 50 3,856,450 Jan. & July.
100 2,9-48,785
-Mississippi Central*
Mobile & Montg. pref. Aug. 14..
1.738.700
Mobile andOhfo
100 4,269,820
Montgomery and West Point.. .100 1,6-44,104 June & Dec.
Morris and Essex*
50 7.880.100 Jan. & July.
100
Nashua and Lowell
720,000 May & Nov.
Nashv. & Chattanooga. Sep. 11..100 2,056,544
Naugatuck. Mar. 20
100 1.818.900 Feb. & Aug.
New Bedford and Taunton
100
500,000 Tan. & July.
New Haven & Northampton
.100 1,500,000 Jan. & July.
Feb. & Aug.
New Jersey
6,250,000
100
100 1,003,500 Jan. & July.
New London Northern
N. Y. Central & Hudson River. 100 15,0.0,000 April & Oct.
do
do
certificates..100 21,491,450 April & Oct.
do
do old inter, certif. .100 22,829,000
and
New York
Harlem. Anl. 3.. 50 5,500,000 Jan. & July.
do
do
pref.
50 1,500,000 Jan. & July.
New York and New Haven
100 9,000,000 Jan. & July.
New York, Prov. and Boston.. .100 2,000,000 Jan. & July.
300.500
Norfolk and Petersburg, pref...100
do
do
137.500 Jan. & July.
guar. .100
North Carolina. Oct. 2
...100 4,000,000
Northern of New Hampshire....100 3,068,400 June & Dec.
Northern Central. May 10
50 4.798.900 Quarterly.
Northeast. (S. Carolina). Mayl.
898,960
do
155,000 May * Nov.
do8p.c.,pret
North Missouri
100 7,700,000
North Pennsylvania....
50 3,150,000
Norwich ana Worcester*..
100 2,363,700] Jan. & July,
Ogdensburg & L. Champ. Sep. 4.100 S,077,000 Annually.
dc do
prel.100 1,994,900 April & Oct.

RiVer!

128* *

....

do

do
nref
Oil Creek and Allegheny*

Bid. Ask

-

Date.

100
50

....

July. Jan., ’7'»
May & Nov. Nov., ’69
Jan. & July.
Jan. & July.
Jan. & July.
June & Dec.

Oswego and Syracuse
Pacific (of Missouri)

'

46

Jan. &

Hartford A N. Haven, Ocr. 23...100

Ohio and Mississippi. Mar. 30....100

Last paid.
Periods.

ing.

Mar. 6.

4

100
50
Fitchburg
100
Georgia. May 29
100
Hannibal and St. Joseph
100 1,822,000
do
do
pref.... 100 5,078,000
do preferred
Erie and Pittsburg

59** ei”

Jan., ’70
Jan., ’70

Dec., ’69
UCt., ’6:'
April & Oct. Oct., ’69

100 2,085,925 Jan.

Cheshire, preferred

Railway Monitor, on the pre¬
ceding page.

3, <,100

Camden and Atlantic
50
do
do
preferred.. 50

Cape Cod

July.

....

100
Boston, Con. & Montreal .pref. .100
Boston, Hartford and Erie
100
Boston and Lowell
Boston and Maine. Sept. 18
Boston and Providence

Jan. &

600,000 Quarterly.

100

Berkshire
Boston and Albany

Out¬
stand¬

see

Orange and Alexandria

50

45

18,151,962 April & Oct.

100

Baltimore and Ohio

Forafull explanation of this table,

Ask.

Rate

PRICE.

DIVIDEND.

Stock

PAR

Atlantic and Gulf
100
Atlan. & St. Lawrence* <)cr. if..100
Atlanta and West Point. Sept. 18.100

do

paid.

Periods.
Date.

COMPANIES.

PAR

Allegheny Valley

Erie.

PRICE.

DIVIDEND.

Stock

Bee

by giving; ns immediate notice of any error discovered in onr Tables.

68%
79%

....

....

H)
71
....

B
M
N
s

31% Sj

70
80‘

05%

T

V

PAR

STOCK.

100
100
100

900,000
200,000

LAST DIVIDENDS PAID.

BID. ASK

40

2,100,000 December, i869
1,500.000
400,000 January, 1870

”8*

....

55*
ISO

45

60* *
195

80*

254.600

144.600
262,200
1,065,200
500,000
1,200,000 Feb
1,000,000

....

80
*

,

TO, quarterly.

748,000 Nov. ’89,semi-an’l..

2% 90*
5%

170,000
106.700
194,000
797,320

881.700 April.’61. Quarterly
750,000 Nov.’69, »erui-Hn 1..
1,170,000 Nov. ’60, quarterly.
100
75,000

2
5

I

S6
65
95

165
105

180

70

80

68
123

80

195

*

•••

[February 19, 1870.

THE CHRONICLE

242

CITY BOND LIST.
For An explanation of this Table see
Railroad Monitor ” previously.
“

Alexandria, Fa., Sep., ’69

($918,356)..

’67, registered st’k for KR &c.
Coupon bonds
Augusta, Ga., April, ’69 ($1,143,750):
’36 to

Bonds for various purposes

($24,017,724): —
St’k due at pleasure after July, 1890
Loan, Pitts & Connell6ville RR....

Baltimore, Jan. 1, ’69
Water loan

Consolidated bounty loan

do

Exempt

Public Park (Druid
Park improvement

Hill)

5,000,000 Loan (Balt. & Ohio RR)...
New

City Hall

Consolidated loan
Court House loan
Endorsements for N, W. Va. RR...
York & Cnm.RR
do
do
West. Md. RR..
do
do
do

Bangor, Me.,

do

Union RR

$2,528,700:

Citv debt proper.

1854, Penobscot & Kennebec RR...
1869, European & N. American RR
1869, Bangor & Piscataqua RR....,
Boston (May, 1869) ($16,959 500):
’52 to ’68, various Trust Funds

standing

Princi-1.

INTEREST.

Amount
out¬
Per

When

wher

Oe’t

paid.

paid.

J. & J.
J. & J.
Assets.
J. & J.
S. F.$

Alex.

782,856

135.500

1,143,750

Q.—J.

7,005,809
1.900,000
4,631,145
2,211,068
413,053
555,566
185,703

pal

till *88
“
’88
$1,248 .810
vari’us
Aug.

22,017 ,259....
1890
’70-’95
1875
1893
1893
1890

J.&J.

188p

36,000
891,646
137,414
836.500
500,000

Water
do

....

....

....

....

Ce’t

do ’59

100,000

Wha f

property, ’68
City purposes r68
S pecial tax bon s, *69

....

RR

bonds, endorsed by Louisville.

1

....

,J. & J.
J. & J.
J. & J.

500,000
112,000

P’

’73-’85
1886

Balt.

....

....

1890

,700.*.'...

Assets.

J. & J.
A.&O.
J. & J.
A.&O.
S. F.

328,700
600,000
1,000,000
600,000

’70 to’85
Bos.
1874
1894
1899

6
6

to M. & Ch. RR
to M. & Little Rock RR
to Miss. & Tenn. RR
to M. & O. RR
Various bonds. 10 per cent
Bonds
Bonds
Bonds
Bonds

87*
....

....

Bos.

6

)

6

)

6
10

t

....

6
6
6
6
6
6

)

)
)
)
1
1

I 3id.

1 isk

71
i4
71
72
71
70
70

7575
74
73
71
71

75

....

.

,

.

„

71

72

81
71

72“

41

6

Old bonds, vvious purposes
,y*y
dem’nd
N^w bonds,
do
Pa fine bonds
’78-’79
583,205
4*
Mar. 3, ’53, Renewal city debt
ioi*
*
102
5
’70-’87
4,172,500
Paving bonds
52 to ’63, city purposes
’81-’87
do
do
893.500 5
’62 to ’63, recruiting funds
5
’85-’86
do
do
411,000
Sept. 29, ’63, bounty to volunteers.
ICO
6
’74-’78
1,928,(XX)
Coupons past due
’64 to ’66, city purposes
6
dem’nd
I
2,718.675
’66 to ’69. various city purposes..
’70-’85
874,000
Recruiting loan Act, ’61 .,
Roxbury debt assumed
’70-’7l
688,000
’46 * ’49, water scrip bonds
Lon.
’72-’73
1,949,711
City
debt ABC (pay. an’ly till ’91).
’46 & ’49,
do
do
sterling.
Bos.
5
’77-’79
do
do DEF (pay. an’ly till ’86).
39-4,000
June ’58, city notes (new main ac) .
6
’75-’77
Bonds to Mob. & Gt. North RR—
8)6,000
1865, water loan (dies. Hill Reso.).
6
dem’nd
Montgomery, A (a.,Sep.’69( $518,000):
do
do
do .. 1,290,000
dem’nd
Bonds of i868, N. & S. Ala. RR
450,000 6
1868 Boston Highlands
iT/i
f
1
XTnir ^AQ
•
S. F.
10
Brooklyn, Jan. 1870 ($27,227,42'):
‘t>‘
J. & J.
’70-’75
debt
j
Consolidated
$650/XX)
85,000
applied
City Hall loan of ’46, ’49 & ’50
do
’7l-’79
J. & J.
do
yearly to int’-st
516,000 6
Various bonds issued ’51 to ’59
do ) and principal.
J. & J
’72-’75
do
242,000 6
Williamsburgh debts, ’55 & ’57
7
M.&N.
1891
debt
Railroad
213,000
Local improvement of 1861
9 2“
93
J. & J
’81-’99
do
do
6,935,000 6
Water loan, '56 to ’59
92 *
6
J. & J
’69 to’81 91
do
do
370,000
Bonds for citv purposes, ’61 to ’67..
J. & J
’85-’94
do
do
552,(XX) 7
Soldiers aid fund of 1865
26'' 9i
1921
do
do
1,217,(XX) G J. & J
Prospect Park loan, 1864
6
J.
1915
&
J
Old
2,4*5,000
city
debt
:
do
do
do
6
1916
J. & J.
New loan for $5,000,(XX)
159,000
do
do
do
(2d ser.)..
6
J. & J
’70 to’95
260,000
Fourth avenue improvement, 1861.
•T. & J.
’71 to’90 166 *4
Water stock of ’40 and ’41
222,000 7
Bushwick av. improve. ’65 & ’67—
6
J.
&
J.
’71 to’90
Croton water stock of ’45 and ’51..
319,000
South 7th street, ’65 & ’66
—
6
J.
&
J.
do
’70-’86
do
do of’52
150,(XX)
Gowanus Canal, 1866
J. & J.
’70-’7 7
do
do of’60.
do
173,000 6
Other city bonds, 1867
Water stock of ’49, ’54 and ’63
5,50',000
Various issues m 1869
$893,
Assets
158.
do
do of ’54 and ’57
Charleston. S.C., Nov. ’69 ($5,197,000);
55
56
’69-’98
Croton Reservoir bonds of 1864
Q, J. Ciiar.
5,135.000
City stock
44
’69to’9S
J & .J
do
Aqueduct bonds of 1864 ....
51,500
do bonds(coupon)
$429, 03S. F.
New Aqueduct stock, 1865
Chicago, Nov. ’69 ($12,040,500) :
6
’74to’82
J. & J
B’dingloan st’k, No 3& No 4,’50-’53.
1,030.000
Water loan
’82to’91
7
Central Park fund stock ’53-’57
do
do
2,: 20,(XX)
1880
6
do
do
do
do
do
87,000
Sewerage bonds
97 X
’8()to’94 67
7
do
do
do
do 1857
2 423,(X 0
do
do
’90to’94
Cen. P’k imp. fund stock ’57 & ’59..
River improvement loan
1,420,000 7
6
’73to’i5
do
do 1860
do do do
187 OOC
Municipal bonds
94
96
’73toV6
do
do do
do
do 1865
7
2,773.000
do
do
95
’T2
to’79
7
A.
Cen.
P’k
additional
fund
stock 1859
&O.
2,000,000
South Park loan,
Real estate bonds ’60 and ’63
Cincinnati, ($1,507,000)
1870
6
M.&N.
57,000
Floating debt fund stock ’60
Purchase of Park frontC. IIall,’50.D
1371
5
A.& O’
Docks and slips stock ’51 and ’52..
100,(XX)
Funding float’ng debt, ’45
C
1872
6
Public education stock ’53.
J.
&
J.
50,000
Bounties to Volunteers
S
1876
6
Market stock ’65
J.
&
J.
71,000
Bounties to Volunteers
T
1878
do
do
’68
150,(XX) 7 3-01 J. & D.
Eggleston Avenue sewer, ’63 ...B2
1880
6
F. & A.
91,000
Loan to Cin, & Hills. RR/50& ’51.F
City Cemetery stock ’69....1881
6
Vol. Soldiers F. A. fund bonds ’63.
J. &. J.
do Eaton & Ham. RR, ’50 & ’51.G
146,000
6
1881
do
do
do
do
do do.
J. & J.
98,000
do Covington & Lex. RR,’51. .H
1882
do
do
do
do
do do.
J. & J.
do < >hio & Mississippi RR, ’42..I
589,000 6
6
1884
J. & D.
|
Tax relief bonds 1869.;
do Marietta & Cin. RR, ’64—M
119,000
1885
6
M. &N.
Lunatic Asylum stock 1869
25,000
Common School purposes, ’45.... A
6
VI.
&N.
1885
ifc Y. County, (17,000,000) :
14,000
V
Bounties to Volunteers. ’65
5
1885
M.
Court House stock, No. 1 and 2
&N.
69,000
Funding floating debt, ’35 ..
6
1885
M. &N.
Assessment fund stock
211,000
Purchase of wharf prop’ty,’55-’56N
do
do
5
1885
do
M. &N.
40,000
Common School purposes, ’34
6
1885
Sol. subs, bounty Red. bonds
J. & D.
97,000
Loan to Little Miami RR, ’44
A
1886
6
S.
M.
&
Sol.
48.000
bounty fund bonds
Real estate for Workhouse, ’66...-Y
1886
Sol. subs, and Red. bonds..
A. & o.
37,0*0 6
Erection of a Workhous* ’66... Y2
1888
6
Sol.
M.
&
S.
37,000
bounty fund bonds, No. 3
Orph. Asyl. grounds foa Park,’58.0
162 103
1888
Sol. bounty fund Red. bonds, No. 2
250,000 73-10 J. & D.
Erection of a Workhouse, ’68 ....X
1888
Riot damages Red. bonds
Waterwork purposes, ’68
150,i-00 73-10 F.& A.
C2
\m
do
do
indem. bonds, 1 & 2.
Common School purposes, ’60-’61.P
99,000 6 J. & J.
1890
M.& N.
Purchase of wharf prop’ty,’55-’56.N
221,000 6
Repayment of taxes
1890
M.& N.
Peoria, III., Nov. ’69 ($919,000) :
20,000 6
Epis. Bury’g Gr’nds for Park, ’60. .Q
6
1895
A. & O.
School bonds
199.500
Exten. & Imp. of Waterworks, ’47. C
6
A.&O.
1895
War bounty bonds
;
od
do
’49. D
98,000
6
1*95
A.&O.
Railroad bonds
100,000
do
do
’50.E
do
6
M.
1897
'
do
&N.
147.500
Funding floating debt, ’47
A2
1897
Water works bonds
M. &N.
27,000 6
Loan to White Water Canal, ’47..A
102
103
1897
do
do
do
500,000 73-10 J. & D.
Erection of a new Hospital ’67... .S
102
103
1898
Philadelphia, Jan. 1, ’69 ($36,737,735):
Erection of a new Hospi'al ’68... S2
250,000 73-10 M. &N.
1900
6
J.
&
J.
Bonds
maturing from 1870 to 1885..
80,000
Funding floating debt, ’53-’5+
L
6
190)
J. & D
do
75.000
do
do
do
do
Exten. & Imp. oiW aterworks ’58.K
6
1900
A. & O.
Bonds maturing from 1886 to 1890..
do
100,000
do
’51. h
1908
Bonds maturing from 1890 to 18/7..
M. & S.
100,000 6
Orph. Asyl. Gr’nds for Park, ’58..0
6-15 year
7
sem-an
Workhouse bonds, 1869
Pittsburgh, Sept. ’69 ($3,160,000)
i899
M.
&
S.
Water extension loan (coupon)....
7
30
100,000
Sewerage bonds, 1869
3 ,883
S. F.
Funded debt bonds and certifl-)
Cleveland, O., Ap. 1, ’69 ($1,581,100):
J. & J.
’79-’81
cates, coup, and registered
500,000
Water Works loan
)
J. & J.
>78-’79
do
do
50,000
Compromise RR. bonds (coupon).
1876
&
D.
J.
125,000
Portland, April 1, ’69 ($4,711,900)
Funded debt bonds
’77-’80
J. & J.
Loan to At. & St. Law. ItR
166,000
do
do
’71-’79
do to Port. & Rochester RR
Vari.
155,000
School Loan
’81-’82
F.& A.
Bonds to b’ding loan com’sioners.
200,000
do
lnstal.
Vari.
345,000
'...
Main Sewer bonds, var., issues..
Municipal debt.
) 00
Assets.
San Ft'ancisco, June ’69 ($4,709,100) :.
Columbia, S. CV. Sept., ’69 ($367,000):.
70
6
’76
to’9c
J.
&
J.
Bonds
of
115.500
1851,
(gold)
1855, Water Works
1887
73
do
* 1855, coup, (gold)
159,000 6 J. & J.
1866, Fd’gbds.conv. Jan. ’70 into 7’s
0 00
do
Assets.
1858, coup,
do
Columbus, Ga., Sept.,’69 ($395,000 :
78
82
’70-’77
J.
Sav.
& J.
School bds ’60-’61, coup, (gold)
120,000 Y
’56, Mo. A Girard RR loan, coup..
73
82
’73
to’82
7
A.&O.
S.
Fr.
St.
&
Jose
169,300
RR., coup, (gold).
’66, Funding bonds, coupon
’70 to’89 78
82
’55 to ’69. otner bonds, coupon
106.500 7 J. & J.
Judgment bonds ’63, do
do .
4 6
S. F.
Central Pac. RR. ’64,
do
do
Detroit, Mich., Jan. ’70 ($1,287,909):..
Vari.
t ’70 to’79 99
l66“
Western Pac.RR.’65,
234,783 ■7'
do
do
Bonds, various purposes
Vari.
’81 to’8£
School bonds ’66-’67,
do
do
do
250,000 7
do
do
l66
7
ioi*
*
J.
&
J.
Water Work bonds guar, by city..
750,000
Judgment bonds ’67, do
do .
1889
7
J.
&
D.
Savannah,
($2,048,740):.
Ga.,
Oct.
’69
250,000
City Hall bonds, 1869\
0 vearly
S. F.
Bonds to Southw. RR) assumed by
Indianapolis, Nov. ’69 ($225,000)
Bds to Aug.& Sav.RR > other part's
War bonds 1868
p
1870
ibb‘,000 io' A.& O.
1889
Bds to At. & Gulf RR.) but in litig.
Bds to RR’s, ’69, Sinking Fund
April.
110,000 6
3
75
S.
F.
Various city bonds (before war)..
Jersey, City, May 1, ’69 ($2,424,429):..
Vari. J. C ’89 &’9C
do
do (since war)....
do
662,000 '7'
1884
6
A.&O.
295,000
Funding bonds of 1866
92
Water loan bonds
St. Joseph, Mo., Nov. ’69 ($490,000)
1,418,000 6
4 50
Assets.
Bds to St. Jos. & Den. C. RR. 10-20.
Leavenworth, May 1,1869 ($494,176) :..
1880
J. & J.
Bonds to Mo. Riv. RR
St. Louis, Nov. ’69 ($12,642,000) :
250,000 ■7
’70 to’79
Railroad bonds
For public works.
76/00 10
’70 to’75
Bonds for city purposes
do
do
218,000 7
9 ,548
S. F.
Water bonds of June. 1867 (gold)..
LouisviUe, Ky., Oct. 69 ($6,933,747):.
1882
For Jeffersonville RR stock ’52.
’50,000 *6 A.&O.
Water, wharf ftnd harbor bonds....
1883
6
J. & J.
74
75
Park bonds, 1868 (gold)
School Houses, ’53 & ’54
93,000
6
1883
A.&O.
do
do
(currency)
477,000
74*
Subscription to stock, ’58
1884
«4
15
Straders wharf, ’54
170,000 6 M.&S.
Sewer bonds, 1869 (special tax)

270,759

pal

aue.

•

....

1

....

jraid.

.

6
6

Bonds Va. & Tenn. RR
Stock for Va. & Tenn. RR..
Bonds RR. funded interest.

....

\ yher

paid,

1887
41
M.&N.
1889
Vari. ] L,oui. 75 &’85
4*
Vari.
85 &*86
It
1896
Vari.
I
1897
\.&o.
<4
1897
<\& A.
II
M.&N.
1887
1897
J. & J. S’. Y.
1898
M.&N. joui.
Y.
A.&O. s'.
1898
Vari.
L.oui. 73 to’88
Vari.
1898
&o. ST. Y.
1889
<1
Vari.
82. to’93
S.F.&c £597,5 33
J. & J. Lync hbuig.
44
J. & J.
4 I
J. & J.
*4
J. & J.
Assets.
,000
J. & J.
’82-’84
44
’85 to’87
J. & J.
II
’85-’86
J. & J.
14
1884
J. & J.
Vari. Vari. Vari.
II
’67 to’88
J. & J.
J. & J. N. Y. ’97-’98
II
’72-’73
J. & J.
J. & J. N.Y. ’77-’78
41
J. & J.
’82-’83
II
J. & J.
1898

’6"

’

When

M.&N. 1sT.Y.

6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
7
6
6
7
6

672,000
279,000

works, ’57

Rowan’s, *, wharf ’68.
Elizabeth and P. RR, ’68

....

....

standing Per

Various city purposes, ’65-’66
For improvement of streets, ’66....
do
do
do
’66....
do
do
do
’67....
For school houses ’67
Water stock ’67

9i“
....

previously.

Bounty fund, ’65

....

84”

....

’70 to’15
U8»
1885

5,000,000

Railroad Monitor ”

PRICE.

■,Princi-

out¬
*•

Ask

....

INTERB8T.

Amount
F

Bid.

due.

Balt.

PBICE.

....

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74

76*

09"

rri

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....

....

....

....

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....

....

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fc

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53

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....

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l

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....

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J. & D.
Assets.
J. & J.
J. & .1.
J. & J,
Assets.
J. & J.
S
F.
J. & J.
M.& N.
Vari.
J. & J.
A .& O.
M.&N.
M & S.
J. & J.
J. & D.
M & S.
s
F.
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5

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5

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N.
N.
N.
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7
A.& O.
6&7 J. & J.
4-5 J & J.
S.F.&c
Vari.
6
J & J.
6
J
& D.
6
Vari.
6
S. F.
M.& N.
10
J & J.
6
6
J. & J.
J & J.
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ft

1876
1879
1879

ft
If

....

....

....

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75”
....

....

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....

....

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05

....

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50" 53"
72*.

72*

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95"

....

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....

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95

98

100

101
....

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98
95

95
93
•

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99

99

101

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94

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163"

102*

....

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102*

162

102* 105

N.Y. ’75 to’92
’70to’71

....

14

44

1887
’73 to’76
’8 Y’90
’80 &’81
’95 to’97
1891
’77 &’79
188 >

41
41
14
44
44
41
41
41

’70 &’71

....

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N.Y. ’78 to’88
Peo*- ’70 to’75
N. Y.
44
44
44

1872
’73 to’88
1888
’77 to’81

....

....

....

•

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•

•

44

II

’70 to’85
’70to’85
’86-’90

41

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7
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Vari.
A.& O.
J. & J.
M.&N
A.&O.
A.&O.
Assets.
M.&N
F & A
J. & D
V ari.
J & J.
J. & .1.
Assets.
F .&A
S. F.
Vari.

Pitts
Pt.rh
&N.Y
N.Y.

....

.

....

97*

.

.

ICO

10!

85

95

1913

55

’.Oto’7"
1887
44
Var.
Port ’70to’8i

$1,298 ,234

1871
1875
1888
1870
’77-’78
18«3
1894
1895
1881
1887

44
41
II

70*
..M

a

95*

1869
1888
....

’72 to’82

1886
1886
00
$600/
1889
N.Y
.

T

/.

$40 0C
N Y.
41

’VS:

Vari.

6
6

J & D.

44

1897

Vari.

44

Vari.

6
6
6

F &A.
Vari.
F & A.

44

1898
Vari.

Vari.

.

4>

iT

•

1889

97
....

....

•

•

•

•

100

.

...

•

...

....

166"

98

56*
'.00

87*

90
90
90
90
90
90

92“

(2

85

82
82

85
85

92
92
92
92
92
....

1870

6

.

„

.

$1,311 ,000

.

.

’93-’94
’59-’99

44

II

•

l66* l66*

Bos.

44

•

’90-’97

$3,365 .650

S.Fr
N.Y.
S.Fr
N.Y.
S.Fr

•

....

•

$11,91 6,488....
Phil

....

....

.

.

.

.

7
X)
X) 10
Oi 6

74

1892
1874
1874
1874
1874
1874
1873
1894

N.Y. ’70 & ’80
41
1890
II
1890
II
1883
li
’75 & ’79
14'
1875
II
1907
It
1907
II
1884
41
’70 & ’73
44
1898
14
1887
14
1898
II
1387
41
1876
41
1895
44
1874
44
1873
1
1-78
II
till 1876
41
1873
44
1894
It
1897
It
1888
ft
’70 to’72

M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
S F.
Vari.
M.& S.
M.&S.
Vari.
J. & D.
M.&N.
S.'F.
J & J.
J & J.
J & J.
J & J.

6
7
6
6
6
6
7
7
6
6
7

X)

(6

°°i&r
1892

N.Y.

s

iS

....

54"

$16,22 1,782....

—F.
-F.
-F.
-F.
-F.
() —F.
c; -F.
*—F.
*—F.
>—F.
*—F.
F
—F.

5

6]
10

$650,0

-F.

.

....

N.Y& Ml 891
$536.0 (X)
1891
Mobi
1886
II
1885
$566,0 00
1888
N.Y.

....

t|it

r

*

-

»

.t

....

....

.

.

.

.

75
....

82
96
80
85
to

....

83
97

82*
97
88

THE CHRONICLE.

February 19,1870.]

248

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
wiii

*

by giving u» Immediate notice of any error

confer a great favor

Page* 3 and 4 of

COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬

COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬
TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount

thh

on a

6

standing

e3

«

preceding page.

Itailroads :
Alabama d Chattan. (Oct. 691:
18,000,000
1st Mort. (gold) guar, by Ala
Albaitt/ d Susquehan. (Oct.l, Ob).
1,000,000
1st Mortgage
1,000,000
Albany City Loan.........
802,000
2d Mortgage, for $2,000,000
Alex., Loud, d Hamp. (Oct. 1, j 69:
77,000
1st Mortgage, for $8,000,000)

Allegheny
Valley (Feb. 1, ’69):
1st
Mortgage

funding)
Androscoggin (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage (Bath Loan)......
2d Mortgage (for

Atlantic dc. Gt. West. (Jan. 1,
1st Mort.., skg fund (Pa.)

Branch)..

)
(

425,000

)

Consolidated Mort. (1st series). 118,947,500
7,000,000
Consolidated Mort. (2d series).
8,701,806
Income Mort
Atlantic dc Gulf (Jan. 1, ’69):
2,000,000
Consolidated Mort., free
Allan.dSt.Lawrence (JnneSO, ’69):
1,340,800
1st Mort. (Port. Loan) skg fund.
614,500
2d Mort. of April 1,1851

Sterl, Bds of Oct. 1, ’64 (5-20 yrs
Sterl. Bds of Nov. 1, ’53, £100,(X
Baltimore dr Ohio (Oct. 1, ’66):
Loan of 1834
Loan of 1855, skg fund.
Loan of 1850
Loan of 185;)
Baltimore Loan of 1855
2d Mort. (N. W. Va. RR.)
3d Mort. (N. W. Va. RR.)

753,931
863,250
579,500

1,710,500
5,000,000

of ’53.
of ’55.
JSay de Noq. dr Marquet. (Feb. ’70):

Income Bonds of Oct. 1, 1865 —
Income Bonds of April 1,1866...
BelvUlerc Delaware (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. of 1852 (guar. C. & A.).
2d Mort. of 1854
3d Mort., of 1857
Blue JUdge of S. Car. (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort.. for $2,500,000 :
Boston
Albany (Feb., ’70):
Albany Loan (Alb.& W.Stkbge)
Mass. Sterl. Loans (West’n RR.)
Dollar Bonds (Western RR) —

■

885^500

484,000

Bast., Clint, dFltchb'g(T)ec.\, ’68):
1st Mort. (Agric. Br. RR.) of’6-4.
Boston, Clinton & Fltchburar..
Dost., Con. <(• .1fontr'l (Apr. 1,’69):
1st Mort. (71 m.)
2d M. (71 m. & lst22*m.) conv...
2d M. (71m. & 2d 22* in.) conv...
Sinking Fund Bonds
Dost., Hart, dr Erie (Dec. 1, ’68):
1st Mort. (old)
1st Mort. (new)
'.
1st Mort. (new) guar, by Erie...
Mass. L. (sec. by $4.OOO.O0Olst M.)
Boston dr Lowe.ll (Feb., ’70):
Convertible Bonds of 1853

481,500
155,000

paid.

paid.

Princpal payble.

J. & J. New York
it
M.&N.
A. & O.

1893
1895
1885

7

M,& N. Wash’ton.

1898

6

•

J. & J. New York
....

....

A. & O.

Portland.

O.
London.
ii
O.
O. New York
O. London.
ii
D.
a
O.
O. New York

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

7
7
7
7

[q

7

>7
7
5
7

London.

J.

ii

O.

....

...

/

....

4

....

Q.-J.
J.
J.
A.
J.
J.
J.

J.
J.
O.
J.
J.
J.

&
&
&
&
&
&

Baltimore.
it
ii

it
a
it
it

1867
1875
1880
1885
1890
1873
1885

745,000

1877
1885
1887

204,000

7

J. & J. Charlest’n

1884

500,000
1,619,520
73,500

6
5
6

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

London.
Boston.

’70-1-6
’69-’71
1875

400,000

6

260,500

7

J. & J.
J. & J.

Boston.
Boston.

1884
1890

201.000

7
6
7
6

F.
J.
J.
J.

55,000

366,000
Scrip Certificates
200,000
Mortgage (whart purchase)
Brunswick dr Albany :
1st Nat. (sold) euar. bv St. Ga. 15,000p.m
Buff..Brad, dr Pittsb. (Oct. 1, ’68):
580,000
1st Mortgage
Buff., Corry dr Pittsb. (Nov. 1, ’68):
700,000
1st Mortgage
Buffalo dr Brie (Nov. 1, ’69):
400,000
Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.).
100,000
Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.).
200,000
Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.).
300,000
Comp. B’ds (Erie & N’the’et RR)
Comp. B’ds (Buff. & Erie RR.).. 2,700,000
Buffalo, N. Y. d Erie (Oct. 1, ’69):
2,000,000
1st Mortgage
380,000
2d Mortgage
Burl., C. B.dr MitinesoJJuly 1, ’69):
6,000,000
1st M. (gold) conv. skg fu, tax fr
Burl.
Missouri R. (Jan. ’70):
5,000,000
1st Mort. (land & railroad)
200,000
Bonds conv. into pref st’k (1st s.
600,000
Bonds conv. into pref. st’k (2ds)
1,200,000
Bonds conv. into pref. st’k (3d s)
1,000,000
Income Bds conv. t'» com.stock
900,000
lsr, » ort.conv. on br. (37 miles)
Calif yrnia Pacific (Jan. 1, ’69):
2,250,000
1st Mort. (gold)
Camden dr Amboy (Jan. 1, ’69):
323,220
Dollar Loan for $800,000
675,000
Dollar Loan for $675.000
1,700,000
Dollar Loan for $1,700,000
867,000
Loan
Dollar
for $2,500,000
4,665,940
Consol. Mort. Loan for $5,000,000
1,632,290
Sterling Loan, £337,250
Sterling Loan (new) .£396,000.... 1,846,000
Camden d Atlantic (Jan. 1, ’69) :
490,000
1st Mortgage
500,000
2d Mortgage
Camden dBurlinq. Co.)Jan. 1,’69):
305,000
1st Mort. (for $350,000)
Catawissa (Nov. 1, ’68):
236,500
1st Mortgage
Cedar Fulls dr Minneso. (J an.1,’69):
294,000
1st MortJC.F. to Waverly,14m.)
1,407,000
1st Mort.( W. to Minn.Line,67 m.)
Cedar Rap. drMissou. R. (J an.1,’69):
3,586,000
1st Mort. (land grant)
Cent. Br.of V. Ihiciflc (Jan. 1/69):
1,600,000
1st Mort. (Atch.&Pike sP.RR.)
1,600,000
2d Mort. (U. S. loan)
Central of Georgia (Dec. 1, ’68):
786,000
1st Mortgage
—

85
80

S’H
85

-

&
&
&
&

Boston.
it

Albany.

A. New York
J.
Boston.
J. New York
Boston.
J.
Boston.
S.
ii
J.
J. New York
Boston.
J.

7
7
7
7

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

6
3
6

J. & J.

;jan’v.
A.& O.

Boston.
ii

ii

2d

,

Central of Iowa:
1st Mort. (gold) tax

free

Central of New Jersey (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

Mortgage (new)

Central Ohio (Jan. 1, ’69);
1st Mortgage
*
Cent. Pacific of Ca liforj Jai
1st Mort. (gold)
Subord. Lien Calif. St. aid (g’d)
Conv. B’ds
ds ((
(conv. into U.S.b ds)
2d Mort. (U. S. loan)..
Char tent, dr Savannah (Oct. 1. ’69).
1st Mort. (guar, by S. Carolina)
Charlotte Col. dr Aug. (Uct. 1, ’69):

Jsi Mortgage




—

....

2d Mort. (Franklort), gold
Trust Mortgage Bonds

GO

Chicago dr Northwest. (June 1,’69):
Preferred Skg Fund (on 193-m.)
Interest Bonus (fund, coupons)
1st Mortgage (general)

92k
94
95

95k

91X

93"

84

87*

88
82
79

tr

-

Mississippi River Bridge Bonds

Elgin ana State RR. Bonds
1st Mortgage (Peninsula RR.)..
Cons. Skg F’d B’ds, conv. ’till ’70
Equipment Bonds
Equipment Bonds
1st Mort. (Beloit & Madison RR)
Chicago, R. I.dr Pncificf Apr. 1,’69):
1st Mort. (C. &R. I. RR.)...

(C., R. I. & P. RR.)

3d MorV (S. fund,$25,(XXryearly)
Cincinnati dr Indiana (Jan.l, ’69):
1st MorU-asre
2d Mortgage, guaranteed
Cincinnati dcMaftinsv. (Jan.l,’69):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed

1865
1870
1870
1889

Cincin., Richm.d C’ftte.(Apr. 1,’69):
42 K

1st
2d

43'

1st Mort.
1st Mort.

(Sand., Day.& Cin. RR)
(Cine., San.& Clev.RR)
Cincinnati dr Zanesv. (July 1, ’68):

1873
1873
1879

1st Mortgage

Clev., CoL^Cin. d Did. (Jan. 1. ’69):
1st M. (W, C. & C. RR) $25,000 ayr
1st Mort. (Bell. & Ind. RR.)
1st M. (Ind., P’b’g & Clev. RR).
2d M. (Ind., P’b’g & Clev. RR.).
Cleveland d Mahon. (Sept 1, *69);
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
1st Mort. (Hubbard Branch)
Cleveland d Pittsburg (Jan. 1, ’69):
2d Mort., for $1,200,000
3d Mort., for $2,000,000
4th Mort., for $1,200,000

1919

75

85

7

J. & J. New York

18..

75

85

7
7
7
7
7

J. & D. New York
it
M.& N.
ii
J. & J.
ii
M. & S.
44
A.&O.

1870
1873
1882
1886
1898

7
7

J. & D. New York
44
M.& N.

1877
1872

7

M.& N. New York

1919

7
7
7
8
8
8

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

O. New York
44
J.
it
J.
4 4
J.
44
O
ii
J.

1893
1870
1875
1878
1879
1894

7

J. & J. New York

1889

6
6
6
6
6
6
6

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

1870
1875
1883
1889
1889
1880
1894

7
7

J. & J.
A. & O.

Camden.

6

F.& A.

Philadel. ’69-’97

7

F.& A.

Philadel.

87

7
7

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

1885
1887

7

A. & O. New York

1916

6
6

M.& N. New York

J. & J.

1895
1895

7

M.& S. New York

1875

16,000 pm

7

J. & J. New York

1889

900,000
600,000
1,500,000

7
7

F.& A. New York
44
M.& N.

7

F.& A.

1870
1875
1890

2,500,000

6

M.& S. Baltimore.

1890

J. New York ’95-*99
44
1885
J.
44
1884
J.
44
’95-*99
J.

26,010,000
1,500,000
1,500,000
26,010,000

6
7
7
6

J. &
J.&
J. &
J. &

505,000

6

M.&S. Charlest’n

1,200,000

7

J. & J. New York 1895

1877

Cohs.

Skg F’d Mort.for $5,000,000
Col., Chic, d Ind. Cent. (Apr. 1,’69):

92

2d Mort. (Col. & Ind. Cent. RR.)
Income B’ds (Col. & Ind. C. RR.)
Constrn. B’ds (Chic.& Gt. E.RR)

84

87*

....

•

•

•

•

Income B’ds (Chic. & Gt. E. RR)
Union & Loeansn’t. 1st Mort...
Cons.lst M.SkgF’d for $15,000,000
Consol. 2d Mort. for $5,000,000...
Colum. d Hocking V. (Sept 1, ’6.0;
1st

Mortgage

Columbus d Xenia (Dec. 1, ’68):
1st

....

Mortgage

Connecticut River (Feb., ’70):
102

93^
86

83%93*

....

87
85
94

1873
1880

1882

Mortgage, guaranteed
Mortgage

Cincin., Sand.dr Cleve. (July 1,’68):
1st Mort. (Sand. & Jnd. RR.)

50

1886

44

RR.)
RR.)

Chicago & Southwestern :
IstMfreetgd'muar byCRI&P.cnr
Chillicothe dr Brunsw. (July 1,’69):
1st Mortgage
Cincin., Ham. dr Dayt. (Apr. 1,‘69)
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

J. & J. New York

44

Extension Bonds.
1st Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un.
2d Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un.

1st Mort.

1884
1899
1899
1899

When

Where

paid.

paid.

-

85

87

1st Mortgage, sinking fund...
Connec. d Passum. R. (Aug. 1,’69):

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Notes (Counon) tax free

Connecting (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Cumber land dPennsyl.(FtX)., ’70):
1st Mortgage
2d Mort. (skg fund, $20,000 ay’r)
Cumberland Valley (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
-..
2d Mortgage

Danv., Urb.,Bl.dPekin(Ju\yl,’69):
1st Mort. (gold) conv., S.F., free
Dayton d Michigan (Apr. 1, ’69):
IstMort., skg fund, $30,000 a y’r.
2d Mortgage
3d Mortgage

97

Toledo

10’*
100
96

....

96

....

J. & J. New York

lOO.nOO
2U6.UU

& J.

983.UI

J. & J.

.mono

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

210,000

Princpal payble.

ts

X

Bid.

00

<

99
85’.

96*

....

Depot Bonds—

Dayton d Union (July 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
—..
2d Mortgage
Income Mortgage
Dayton d Western (Dec. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
1st Mortgage
Delaware (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage bonds
i...
State Loan Bonds
Guaranteed Bonds
Extension Mortgage Bonds
Del.,Lack, d WesternHflov. 1 ’68):
1st Mort. (Lack. & Western RR.)

.

44

«4

.

44

13S0
1872

ltt.

18W
1876
’93-*94

1918

....

*T0-’80 90

6

J. & J.

Boston.

•

•

►

M.& N

New York

1877

....

«

•

•

M.& N

Philadel.

1872

....

...

500,000

10

500,000

7

356,000
2,400,000
1,100,000

7
7
7

M.& N New York
44
J. & J.

2,977,000
150,000
941,000
400,000

8
8

7

J. & J. New York
44
J. & J.
“July. Frankfort.
M.& S. New York

1883
1883
1890
1890

7

J. & J. New York

1887

7

A.&O

New York

1909

7

J. & J. New York

1881

7
7
7

M.& N New York
44
Var.
44
J. & J.

1874
1874
1898

New York

1885
1883
1885
1885
1882
1875
1884
1878
1898
1915
1874
1871
1888

4*

1.249.500
755,000
3.591.500
484,000
1,919,000
1,029,000
200,000
189,000
1,010,000
4,016,000
101,000
1,375,000
363,000
1,397,000
7,376,000

.

7
7
7
7
7
7
7
6
7
7
7
10
7
7
7

A.&O.

F.& A

44

44
44
44

44
44

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

Q.-F.

44
44
44

ii
it
44

J. & J.

44

J. & J. New York
44

M. & N New York

1877
1893

103

yi*

1883

1870
1896
•

# r„

....

...

•

...

•

•

•

....

91

....

95*

...

ICO

>8
95

95

82}4

...

97
98

...

90

99*

...

....

...

lfO
98

•••

9S
...

....

500,000

J. & D. New York

1889

1,250,000
5i ip ,000
282,000

M.& N New York
44
J. & J.
J. & J. New York

1880
1885
1877

88
83
90

!-5
92

5< 0,(H)0
1,000,000

J. & D.
J. & J. New York

1877

81
78

82
80

400,000

J. & J. New York

1895

560,000
65,000

J. & J. New York
44
J. & J.

1895
1889

350,000
997,000

976,000

M. & S. New York
44
F.& A.
44
J. & D.

1877
1900
1890

1,300,000

M.& N. New York

1893

400,000

740,000
379,000
341,000
730,000
491,‘200

121,000
1,130,000
1,595,000
1,106,489
876,000

821,000
1,243,000
400,000
800,000

2,000,000

923,000

A.&O.

44

T77TA. New York
M.& S.
J. & J.

ii

ii

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

18..
18..
18..
18..
1905
1908
1909

A.&O. New York

1897

44

M.& S. New York

250,000

M.& S.

Boston.

500,000
295,000

J. & D.

Boston.

J. & D.

1,000,000

M.&S.

it

Philadel.

875,000
769,000

M. & S. New York
ii
M.& N.

161,000
109.500

A.& O.
A.& O.

Philadel.
44

....

...

•

•

...

.

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

...

•

...

•

•

.

•

•

>

•

94

•

•

•

•

77
•

.

...

•

....

•

•

88

....

•

•

100

•

•

•

...

74

•

....

•

.

.

.

•

.

•

•

.

-

•

.

61

82
G2

....

95

81*

92

1876

•

•

•

....

1900

....

...

95

90
90

100

•

•

••

•

’76-’77

•

.

•

...

....

1906

642,000
70(1,000
169.500

140,000
135,000
252,445

J.&D.
J.& D.

M.& S. New York
44

41

463,000
275,000

J. & J. New York
44
J. & J.

500,000
170,000
100,000

J.
J.
J.
J.

Philadel.
44
44

44

85
80
78
83

82
78
76
80

1879
1879
1879

•

•

•

•

....

80
72

1875

89

90

1878
1875

....

1875

15

f

1875

■

1875

....

1886

|§§,

..

.

99
•

*
•

86

M.& N. New York
44
M.& N.
a
J. & J.

1875
1875

•
.

2,500,000
1,000,000
628,525

a

80

1905
1906

2d Mortgage
1st Funded Coupons

44

100
1(H)

78
70

1871
1875
1881

M.& N.
6 & 7 M.& N.

.

•

....

2,783,000

877,115

.

.

•

96

1904
1908

,

.

•

....

1891
1888

.

....

1878

A.& O.

1,611,639

...

73

....

1890

J. & J. New York 1881
441884
M.& S.
•4
1888
A.&O.
M.&S. New York ’81-’94

J.
J.
J.
J.

...

.

f

90

2,000,000

&
&
&
&

67

....

1870

1873
1875
1892
1900

...

....

1873
1876
1873

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

...

fO

..

J. & D. New York ’69-’85
44
’70-’99
J. & J.
44
1870
J.& J.

248,000

100,000

....

J. & J. New York
ii
A.&O.
ii
M.& S.

(condlt’ly)

...

85

564,000
1,111,000
1,683,000

2d Funded Coupons
Bonds of June 80, *66

...

‘

in

1st Mort.
2d Mort.

skg f d(East. Ext. RR.)
(D., L. & West.) free..
Detroit <t Milwaukee (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, convertible

...

1,800

Chicago, Cin.dc. Louise, id an. 1,’69):
1st Mortgage
1,000,000
:
Chic.,Danv. d Vincen. (Apr. 1,’69):
1st Mort. (gold) sinking fund... 18,000 p m
Chicago, Ioica dr Neb. (Jan. 1, ’69);
1st Mort., guaranteed
942,600
Chicago dr Milwaukee (J une 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (C. & M. RR., 45 miles)
897,000
2d Mort. (M. & C. RR., 40 miles)
182,000
1st Mort. (C. & M. RR., 85 miles)
1,098,000

62

7

44

Mort., income

Chicago, Bur. dr Quin. (May 1, ’69):
1st (Trust) Mort
1st (Trust) Mort., convertible.

—

6

1st Mort., sinking fund
Chester Valley (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage

Chicago £Alton (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mort., sinking fund pref.
1st Mortgage

1870
1871

J. & D. New York
M.& S. Princeton.
44
F. & A.

3,000,000

Company Bonds of’70,’75 & ’80.

5

6
6
6
6
6
6
6

(Va. Central RR.)...

lstM.(Ch.& O.RR.) for $10,000,000
Cheshire (Dec. 1, ’68):

1890

6
6
6

600,000

State Loan

....

Var.
Port.&N.Y ’68-’70
1871
A.& O. Portland.
1884
A. & O.
London.
4*
1878
M.&N.

6
6
6
6

standing

Railroads:

1877
1879
1876
1884
1882
1882
1881
1883
1895

1,000,000

14,000,000
8,000,000

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

Chesai eam dr Ohio (Uct. 1, ’68):
ml M. (Va. v i i RR.) guar, by St.
tfd Mort. iV:». Cemnd UR.)
3d Mori. ( Va. Central RR.)
Tncoirm Mo • t Va. Cent. RR.).

1890

A. & O.
A. & O.

496j000

s

....

J. & J. New York

7

1896

8
8

150,000
200,000

jAskd

•d

Chester dr Ch. Br.Junc.io9.xi. 1,’69):

76,000
49,000
499,500

Out¬

1889

7
6
7

f7

3,908,100

Where

PRICE.

REST.

TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount

—

4,000,000 7.8
400,000 7

7,144,400

When

J. & J. New York

8

69):.

1st Mort., skg fund (N. Y.)—
1st Mort., skg fund (Ohio)... .
1st Mort., skg fund (Buff, ext.)
1st Mort. (Franklin
2d Mort. (Penn.)....
2d Mort. (N. Y.)
2d Mort. (Ohio)

PRICE.

INTEREST.

Out¬

For a full explanation of
Table see “ Railroad Monitor,

discovered In onr Tables.

Bonds will be published next week.

•

•

•

•

100
••

•

•

74

«

...

...

•

•

•

•

• • •

•

•

•••

....

THE

244

CHRONICLE.

[February 19, 1870.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
by giving us Immediate notice of any error discovered In
Pages 3 and of 4 Bonds will be published next week.

Subscribers will confer a great favor

COMPANIES, AND CHARAC- |
TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED!Amount

INTEREST.

Out¬

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

'

Railroads:
Sterling (Oak. & Otta. RR.) B’ds
Dollar (Oak. & Otta. RR.) B’ds.
1st Mori. (petr. & Pontiac RR.).
2d Mort. (De+ » & Pontiac UR.).
Dm Moines Valley (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
Income Mortgage

Dubuqe A Sioux City (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage (1st division)
Construct. Bonds (2d division).

Sinking Fund Bonds, conv
Dubuque dr Southwest.(Jan. 1,’69):
1st Mortgage
1st

Mortgage, preferred

Dutchess A Columbia (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st

Mortgage

Eastern (Dec. 1, ’68):
Mass. State Loan, 1st

Sterling, convertible
Dollar, convertible

lien

East Pennsylvania (Feb., ’70):

Mortgage, sinking fund
East Tenn. A Georgia (July 1, ’69):
1st

Tennessee State Loans

150,867
51,000
250,000

250,000
2,310,000
462,000

1st Mort.

Flint A Pere Marquet.

Mortgage
Fredei'icksburg A Gordonsville
1st Mort. S. F tax free (g"ld).
Ft. W., Jack. A Saginaw (May 1,’G9):
,

<$15,000 p. in.)

New Bonds

Or. Rapids A Indiana (J an.l, ’09):
1st Mortgage
Grand River Valley (May 1, ’6S):
1st Mort. (guar.) for $1,000,000..
«•

State of S. Car..
Harrisb. A Lancaster (Nov. 1, ’08):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Hartford A N. llaven (Feb., ’70):

Mortgage

Hannibal A St. Joseph (Jan.l8,’G9):
Land Grant Mortgage
Convertible

Eight per cent Loan

1,500,000

7

275,000

5
5
6
6
6

Hempfield (Nov. 1, ’68):

Slortgage

Housatonic

(Jan. 1, ’69):

1st Mortgage,
2d Mortgage

sinking fund....

Houston A Texas Cent. (Jan.l *69):
1st Mort. L. G., s’k’g fd (goli).
Hudson River (Jan. ’10):
2d Mortgage, sinking fund
Sd mortgage
Huntlngd: A D. 7bpJ/iC.(Nov.l,’G8):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Mine Mortgage
..

Consolidated Mortgage
Illinois Central (Jan. 1, ’70):
Construction
Construction
Redemption, 1st & 2d series...

Redemption, 3d series, sterling
Jndlanap., Cine.A Laf.(Jan.1,’69):
1st Mortgage
1st Mort. (Ind. & Cine.)

Indian. Crawf.ADane. (May 1 ,’09)

1st Mortgage (gold)
lndianap. A Vincennes(Yc\}.\,'(&j:

1st Mortgage guar
Iowa FallsASioux «w(Jan.l,’69):
1st Mortgage, $16,000 per mile
Iowa River (May 1, ’69):
1st M. (Eldora RR.) $16,000 p. m
Iowa Southern (Jan. 1, ’69):

Mortgage, $20,000
lronton (Dee. 1, ’OS):
-

1st

per

41

J. & J. New York

Q.-J.
J.&
F.&
J. &
M.&

J.
A.
J.
S.

Boston.
London.
Boston.
44

44

6
6
7

J. & J.. New York
J. & J.
44
J & J

178,000

1,000,000
570,600
3,000,000
4,000,000
6,000,000
4,4-41,000
926,500

4,844,444

1,613,000

Is Mortgage

Jeff., Mad. AIndianap. (Jan.l ,’69)

1st Mort. (Ind. & Mad. RR.)...
2d Mort. (Jeffersonville RR)..
l«tMort. (J., M. & Ind. RR)....
Louisville (endorsed) Bonds
Joliet A Chicago (July 1, ’69):
1st Mort., sinking fund guar....
Joliet A N. Indiana (July 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Junction, Cmc.&Tnd.”(Julyi,’G9)

...

Mortgage

6
6
7
5

Pliiladel.

44

J &
J. &
J. &
A. &

J New York
41
J.
J. Pliiladel.
O.

*1

1877
1884

1908
’69-’74
1872
1874
1876
1888
1888
1892
1880
1876
1898
1896
1880
2862

7
7
7
7
7
7
6

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

1877
1879
1883
1880
1888
1891
1875

7
7
7

J.& J. New York

1882
1890
1893

A. & O.
J. & J.

14
41

-

.

.

•

PRICE.

INTEREST.

Rate.

When

Where

paid.

paid.

800,010

6

A.& O.

Pliiladel.

6,500,000

7

M.& N. New York

Princpal payble.

Askd

2

s

89
9d

90

Kentucky Central (Jan. 1, ’69):

...

1st Mort (Cov. & Lex.),
Mort. (Cov. & Lex.)
Mort. (Cov. & Lex.)
Keokuk A St. Paul (Jan. 1,

....

...

...

..

.

....

....

....

....

.,

•

•

•

....

•

....

....

•

...

78
•

.

.

.

99M

.

....

•

....

.

....

80
•

6

J.& J. N.Y.&Lon.

1899

332,000

J. & J. New York

150,000

7
7
7

1889
1889
1881

1,520,500

7

1,000,000

n

722,000

M.& N.
F. & A.

II

•

Vp.-w York

•

93
60

....

....

....

...

....

82

*

*

3S9.500
20 >,000

477,000

7

J. & J. New York

1886

8

J. & J. New York

1886

1,000,000
737.500

7
7

J. & J. New York 1886
J. & J. Charlest’n ’81-’8G

700,000

6

J. & J.

927,000

6

J. & J. New York

Pliiladel.

H83
1873

A.&O New York
J. & J.

1881
1883

1,000.000
500,000
1.200.00C

7
7
8
10
8
10

J.&J

1872

481,000
1.574.500

7
7

J. & J. Provide’ce
J. & J, Hartford.

1,900,000
800,000

Mortgage

Louisville Loan
Louisville A Nashville (Sept.1,’69):
1st Mort. (main stem)
Louisville Loan (main stem)..
Louisville Loan (Leb. Br.)

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

77
....

....

78
.

1G8

.

1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.

1st

Mort.,

guar,

by Georgia

Maine Central (June 1, ’69):
$1,100,000 Loan (A. & K. RR.)...
1st Mort. (P. & K. RR.)
2d Mort.-(P. & K. RR.)
$400,000Loan (Maine Central)..
Marietta A Cincinnati (Jan 1,’69):
1st
1st

Mortgage, dollar
Mortgage, sterling
2d Mortgage
1st Mort. (Scioto & Hock. RR.).
Icmphis A Charleston(July 1 ,’69):
1st Mortgage, convertible
2d Mortgage..
Tenn. State Loan
Icmphis A Little Rock (Jan.l,’69):
1st Mort. (on road and land)

Phil ad el.

18..

191,000
100,000

J. & J.

Brid^ep’rt

1877
1885

F.& A.

2,600,000

J. & J. New York

1891

2,000,000
183,000

J. & 1). New York
H
M.& N.

1?85

1st Mort Convertible
1st Mort Sterling, convertible..

1875

106
101
81
60

887,045
3.187.500
332,000
2,500.006!
2,500,000

A.&
A.&
A. &
A.&

O. New York
O. N.Y.& Lon
O. New York
O.
London.

1875
1875
1890
1875

110

2,500,000
500,000

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

18..
1888

70
82

1,500,000

New York

1888

107

••

Mineral Point (Jan.
1st Mortgage

New York

272,000

J. & J. New York
J.&D. New York
Pliiladel.

1908

111

72
83

Mississippi A Tenn. (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
Consolidated Mortgage
Missouri R.,FtS.A GulflJan.l,’70)
1st Mortgage for $5^000,000.....
Missouri

1st

Mortgage (gold)
(June 1, ’68):

1906

18..

BOX

M.& N. New York
44
A. & O.
«<
A. & O.
II
A.&0.

1881
1873

441,000

J. & J. New York

1882 r.

Mortgage, sterling

800,000

J. & J. New York

1874

1,200,000

1893

1883

(Newcastle Br.)..
Junction, “ Pliila.” (Jam, *70): -

250,000

guar., tag free..

500,000

A.& Q. Pliiladel.

$

by State of Ala

Mortgage (new)

Morris A Essex (Jan. 1, ’69)
1st
91

79^
74

92
80

75

Mortgage, sinking fun(

2d Mortgage
jL»b

lviurt.j uhuutbcu. uy leini..*

Nashville

1885

7
7

A. &
M.&
M.&
F.&

O. New York
14
N.
41
N.

1879

A.

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

J. New York
41
J.
II
O.
II
J.
II
O.

53

<x

Decatur (Oct. 1, ’68):

1st Mort. (State loans)
2d Mortgage
Income (Tenn. & Ala.)

60

1874

Naugatuck, (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mort.

l

7
7
7
7
7
7
7

7

II

J. & J. New York

ri

« • *

•

•

•

•

•

•

• • •

....

....

....

•

••

•

•

t

.

.

....

....

....

1886

300,000

Pliiladel.

1897

1,089,000
8,350,000
134,500

6
6
6

M.& N.
J. & D.

Philadel.

1873
1898

1,489,000

G

M.& N. New York

795,500

7

A.& O.

500,000

6
7

J. & J. New York
M.& N.
M.& N.

cF

II

97

93
....

....

•

•

•

.

92

....

99X

100

92 X
89

85
....

....

90
....

...

97

•

•

•

93X
95X

90

1883

85

86

1877

99

....

II

•

....

II

li

.

•

93X

New York

F.& A.

.

•

....

•

80

....

Philadel.

.

•

•

1896

F.& A.

II

.

98

•

1885
1877
1876
1874
1880
1892
1885
1886

1

G

....

....

....

1875
1890
1893
1899

•

....

....

•

•

•

•

.

.

....

•

• •••

1,500,000

7

2,116,000

7

J. & J. New York

m

83 X

88,000

6
G

J. & J. New York ’70-’78
II
J. & J.
1881

81
79

85
80

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

92
76 X
74
93
91
89
75 X

6
6
7
7
7
6
7

J. New Y'ork
II
O.
14
N.
N. Louisville.
41
J.
41
N.
II
O.
O. New York

140,000

7

J. & J. New Y'ork

1,095,600
621,000
300,000

807,700

6
6
6
6

F.& A.
A.&O.
F.& A.
J. & D.

2,149.500
1,050,000
2,500,000

7
7
7

300,000
1,293,000
1,000,000

’69-’77
’86-’87
1886
’70-’75
1870
’80-’85
1893
1898

Boston.

"lO-^l

41.

*

*

....

M.& N. New Y'ork
J.& J.
44
J. & J.

1880
1885

®

1890

....

1,300,000

8

M.&N. New Y'ork

1890

900,000

7

1,600,000
577,000

8
8
8
6

A.&O. New York
A.&O.
M.& S.
London.
II
M. & S.

1882
1882
1869
1872

121

7
7
8
7
7
8
7.3
7

J. & J. New Y'ork

1893
1884
1874
1897

92
84

II

....

•

•

•

—

1898
1898
1873
1891

New York

....

F.& A. New Y'ork
II
F. & A.
M. & S.
J. & J.
-

*

-

-

320,000

10

1,350,000

M.& N. New York
II
F. & A.
li
J. & J.

1873
1876

1,278,980

7
8
G

600,000

7

A.& O. New York

1876

1,105,700

8

J. & J.

10

J. & J.

1,0G0,COO

7

417,500

7
8'

(8

4,593,000 (6
886,900 8
556,000 10
.697,900 8

...

.

....

....

...

it

•

....
*

....

....

..

....

.

«•

•.

•

•

•

• •.

....

•

•

li*

92 X
•

•• •

....

88

....

Memphis. ’si-w
Boston.

F.& A. New York
....

1892

....

M.& N. New York

•

*

•

f

f

1C3X
89
^

t

t

-

....

....

••

•

• •

•

....

•

.

.

1888

.

....

....

....

M. & S. New York

1886

100,000
306,90C

J. & J. New York
li
J. & J.
II
J. & J.

1871
1876
1881

5,000,000
8,000,000

7

7

M.& N. New York 1914 too
46
F.& A.
1891
92

1,569,000

6

J. & J. New York

2,465,176

6
6

•

•

M

....

J. & J. New York ’90-*92
41
1887
Nashville. 1870

....

....

J. & J.

600,000

-7

J. & J. New York

l ist Mortgage

250,000

7

MM

Bridgep’t.

1876
18..

New York! 18..

C*

•

•

....

....

....

...

....

•

•

•

•

•••

•

•

•

•

....

•

•

*’*.

...

101

....

A. & O.
A.& O.

7

.

....

....

205,000 10
166,000

....

....

.

8

1890

....

....

....

•

M.& N. N.Y.&Mob 1882
M.& N. London.
1882
Var.' N.Y.&Mob ’61-’67
li
M.& N.
1876
II
M.& N.
1882

....

89^

•

....

1899

18..

....

....

8
8
8

500,000

....

72

480,000

719,500

....

....

70

■

•

7

....

!

*

201,000

1,997,000

87

1897

II

....

....

7
7
G

II

....

-

....

7

A.&O.
M.& N.
J. & J.

92
90
76

....

1891
1891
1896
1896

II

11*
95

....

A. Baltimore.
A. London.
N. Baltimore.
41
N.

....

78X

87X

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

“

94

.

1881

Bangor.

....

....

1897

’90-’91
1874
1870

Boston.

Mortgage

1st

85* 8?

(convertible)

n

92

II

T

&

7

1,200,000
)

Income
Income

75

612.000

800,000

1,’69)

Montgomery A Eufala (Oct., ’69):

18..

1906
1882

...

Mortgage

Income Bonds
Income Bonds
Interest Bonds

500,000
397,000
1,961,000
150,000

Valley:

Mobile A Montgomery (May
1st Mortgage
Mobile A Ohio (Apr. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage, sterling

84

1888

1878

"

Mobile A Girard

18..

1887

1, ’69):

Tenn. State Loan

'1st M.

J. & J, New York
46
M.& S

2,000,000
6,728,000
2,693,000
924,000
500,000
1,000,000
1,000,000

793,000
3,730,000
270,000
3,455,000
736,000
246,000

Mississippi Central (Sep. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

so”

1st

F.& A. New York

1893

1,390,000

1st Mort. (Minn. Central)
1st Mort. (P. du C.,235 miles),
2d Mort. (P. du C.. 235 miles!
Milwaukee Cityy

1st

1,700,000

J. & J. New York

5,425,000

Milwaukee and Western
1870
1875
1872
1893

150,000

7

500,000

1st Mortgage (870 miles)...
2d Mortgage (310 miles) ...
1st Mort. (E. Div., Palmer)

O. ‘Phil ad cl.
A.
N.
O.

367.500

500,000

467,489

A. &
F.&
M.&
A. &

416.000

Hi

1,817,937

...

1876

J. & J.

9m nm

2,200,000

Arkansas State Loan

500,000

200,000

T

96

90

1883
1885

41

1875
1880
1885
1890

849,000
225,000
267,000
27,500
88,000
333,000

Michigan Central (Dec., ’69):
1st Mort Convertible, sink i

1876

II

....

1,424,000 '7

(Bards'own Br.)
(Leb. Br. Exten.)
Louisville Loan (Leb. Br. Ext.)
Consol. 1st Mort. for $8,000,000..
Macon A Brunswick (Jan. 1, ’69):

’

J. & J. New York
II
A. & O.
II
M.& S.
II
M.& N.

100,000

(Memphis Br.)

*

7
7
7
7

175,000
150,000

Mortgage

*

900,000
500,000
400,000

8GO.OOO

Louisv., Cin. A Lexing. (J u 1 y 1 ,’68):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
LouisvilleA Frank fort (July 1 ,’69):

....

*

1879

....

.

....

....

A.& O. New York

1,500,000

1st Mort. (II. Point extension)..
1st Mort. (Glen Cove Branch)..
1st Mortgage, new

‘

....

1899

....

••I

•tom

8

2,015,000
1,000,000

....

83

1st

*

•

1,000,000

%VVjVA/V

Lehigh A Lackawan. (Nov. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage, tax free
99
100
Lehigh Valley (Feb., ’70):
95
93 V,
1st Mort. (exchange, for new)..
92
94
1st (new) Mort. (tax free)
8SX 86
1st Mort. (Hazleton RR.)
80
82
Little Miami (Dec. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
Little. Schuylkill (Jan., ’70):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
84
85
Long Island (Oct. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage

~

J. & J. New Y'ork 1889
J. & J.
’;o-’;s

2d Mortgage
1st Mortgage (extension)
2d Mortgage (extension)
Income
Lake Erie A Louisville (July 1,’69):
1st Mortgage
Lake Shore & Mich. Southern :
New Bonds, 1869
1st Mort. S. fund M. S. & N. I...
2d Mortgage M. S
1st Mort. (D..M.&T. RR.)
1st Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.)
2d Mort. (C.,P. & A. RR.)
3d Mort. (C.,P. & A.RR.)
1st Mort.(C.& Tol.RR.) s’k’gTd
2d Mort. (C. & Tol. RR.)
Dividend Bonds
Lake Sup. A
1st Mort. (gold) for $1,500,000...
1st

7
7

237,000

Laurence (Nov. 1, ’68):

....

98
62

92X

8
7
7

794,000

Mississippiulyl,’69):

...»

18..

M.& N.

198 nm

’70):
1st Mort., s’k’g fund, convert...
Lackawan.A Bloomsb.( Ft b., 70):
1st Mortgage

93
.

1900

...

....

J &J. New York
II
M .& S.
64
J. & J.

2d Mortgage
1st Mortgage




1878
1886

1,000.000

1,495,000
400,000

Irav.BTy(Jan.l,'’69)

Mortgage,

1873!
1873

gold.

150,000

life

Askd

Bid.

2,000,000

Mortgage

1st

II

1,467,277

mile..

J rmestown A Frank tin (No v.l ,’68)

E

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

M.& S.

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

Jack.,Lans.A

II

7

.

1st

F. & A.

495,900

860,000

Ten per cent Loan
1st Mort. (Quincy & Palmy.RR..
1st Mort. (Kan. C. & Cam. RR.))
dart., Prov. A Fishkill (Jan.1,’69):
1st Mort. (It. I., 26.32 m.)
1st Mort. (Conn., 96.04 m.)
1st

Var.

li

1895
1895

Cohm&ia(Oct.i,’68):

1st Mortgage
Bonds guar, by

1st

II

J. & J. New York
44
J. & J.

.

Georgia— Bonds (April 1, ’69)....

Greenville

TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount
Out¬
For a full explanation of this
Table see “ Railroad Monitor” standing
on a preceding
page.

(Jan. 1, ’69):

1st

1st Mort., guar.

M.® N.

7
7

800.400
162,700

(Rockville extension)

8
7

M.& N. New York

450,000
100,000

186.400

lstM,Bang.toWinn,(BangLien)
Evansv. ACrawfordsv.O let.1,’69):
1st Mortgage of 1852(Ev. & 111.)
1st Mortgage of 1854 (Ev. & C.).

6
7
7
8

J. & J. New York
J. & J.
44
M.& N.

2,199,000

free of State > ax.
European A N. Amer. Jan. ’70 ..
Land Grant
ouds (tax five) )
1st M. Winn.to N.B.Line,G0m. >
2d M. Bang ir to Winn., 53 in..)
European A N. Amei'. (Jan. 1, ’69):

OMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬

PRICE.

Princ payal

7
7
7

Tennessee State Loans
Tenn. State Endorsed Bonds...
Elm. A WiVmsp't. (Jan 1, ’69) 1st m
5 per cent Bonds
Erie Railway (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage, convertible
Sd Mortgage

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Consol. Mort.,

paid.

660,000
900,000

300,000

Mortgage (old)
Mortgage (new)
East Tenn. A Virginia (July 1,'’68):

Sterling convertible, £800,000...
Erie A Pittsburg (Feb. 1, ’70;:

Where.

paid.

1883
1894
1888

640,000
136.400

4th Mortgage, convertible
5th Mortgage, convertible
Buffalo Branch Bonds

When

Tables*

Railroadss

420,000
739,200
214,000
500,000

Essex Railroad Bonds
New Mortgage

Rate.

CG QJ

our

...»

,,
...

•

•

....

THE

January 19, 1870,]

245

CHRONICLE.

New York.

Export* of l<eadlnff Article* from

&f)e Commercial Unites.

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show
exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New
York since January 1, 1870.
The export of. each article to th*
8everal ports for the past toeek can be obtained by deducting the
amount in the last number of the Chronicle from that here given.
The

he

COMMERCIAL

EPITOME.
Friday Night,

There has been

February 18.

complaint of dulness in the past
week, than we have heard for some time; and yet a very fair
amount of business has been done, while prices, if lower for
two or three staples, are better for others.
The drop of one
per cent in gold has been much felt, because unexpected ; and
it has been followed by a disposition to anticipate a decline
to 115 in the spring months.
Cotton has declined materially ; BreadstufFs, though rather
firmer, in Flour and Wheat, close dull. Tobacco has been
quiet. In Groceries, we notice a further large business in Rio,
White Sugar and Molasses, at some decline, are more active.
Hides have been firm, though quiet; Leather is barely steady,
and Skins drooping.
Naval Stores which had been dull and irregular for some
days, were doing better to-day, with sales 5,000 bbls. Strained
Rosin, $2.20@$2.25, and 400 bbls. Spirits Turpentine, 47£@
more

In Oils, liberal transactions in Crude,

48c.

Whale, Crude

Sperm, and Linseed Oils, transpired early in the week; but
latterly we have only to note 200 bbls. of prime winter
pressed Lard Oil at 81.30, a considerable decline. Petroleum
lias been fairly active, but at constantly yielding prices.
East India goods are firm, but not so active as last week;
we
may note, however, in this connection, sales of more than
half the stock of Jute Butts, at 3f@4c. gold.
Metals
remain quiet for all descriptions.
Whiskey having declined
to 97c. has recovered to 99c.
Tallow has been fairly active
for export. Hops continue firm, but the receipt of new hops

•
.
•

on

.Til
■ O
r-t
■

fair business done in charters for Petroleum and

Naval Stores to the Continent.
Receipt* of Domestic Produce for tlie Week and since
Jan* 1*

The receipts of domestic produce for the week and
and for the same time in 1869. have been as follows:
-

This
week.

■

Since
Jan. 1.

226

1,190

1,257

86.422
102,624

274,191
403,500
169,558

255,532
575,651
818,518

268,665

199,507

Ashes... pkgs.

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

42,205
55,716

S49

Rye

7,9! 2
13,763

71,766
81,296

22
128

4,633

654
1.352
32,635

785

IS 618

1,430
11,430

8,472
90,506

Cotton.bales.

17,768

Copper..bbls.
n

42

120,220

Dr’d fruit.pkg
Grease .pkgs.
Hemp ..bales.
Hides ....No.

*782

Malt

Barley
Grass seed.
Flax seed
Beans

..

Feas.. i
C.meal.bbls
“

bags

Buckwh’t &

B.W.fl‘r pkg

2.082

plates.

44
14

,




5,657
•

-

768
204

1,331

44.161
6.427

57,554

435,432

13,836

Hops...bales.
Leather .sides
Lead ....pigs.
Molasses nhds
& bbls.
Naval StoresCr. turpentlne..bbl

569,
369

*

«!*

«

.

„

1,897
521

11,080
943

This
week.

Same
time ’69.

Spirits .turpen¬
tine
Rosin

since Jan. 1
Since
Same
Jan.l. time *69

1,590
19.977

Tar

1,848

Pitch
Oil cake, pkgs....

170
883
27

983 Oil, lard....?..
55,477 Oil, petroleum... 14,297
4,094 Peanuts, bags..
2,344
4,798 Provisions—
34
Butter, pkgs.... 10,985
Cheese
27,292
5,398
Cutmeats
4,700
61561
4,868
10,012
Eggs
Pork
8,825
93,846
Beef, pkgs
5,351
10,191
Lard, pkgs
6,705
276
158,870
hard, kegs
542
933 Rice, pkgs
..

.

94

3,464
1,350
825

Starch
Stearine

3,284)

8,149
69,952
6,531
1,125

P,029
75,823
5,508

7.817

8,051

196

810

755

57,712
15,590

82,514
21,933

73,247
31,656

24,897
15,155
86,015
25,634

28,021
4,479
3,483

65,861
12J512

23,574
20,294
20,669
29,912
20,409
725

4,696
20,216

746
28S

19,758
1,623
107

11

624

3,849

1,756
9,200
2,912

Su^ar, hhds and

42,322 TaUow, piegs
10,887 Tobacco, pkgs...
325,148 Tobacco, hhds...
897 Whiskey, bbls....
Wool, bales
12,924 Dressed hogs No.
Rice, rnuech busn

•

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hand.

latterly shown a stronger tone, and for hog
products a slight advance has been established yesterday and
to-day; Mess Pork closing at $26.75@$27; Prime Mess
closing at $23.50; prime steam Lard, 15£c.@15£c.; Cum’berland Bacon, 13£@ 13Jc.; Short-rib, do. 14f.
The
legitimate demand for export and consumption has improved.
Butter, for an exception, is very flat. Cheese, firm.
Wool has met with a fair demand for all grades, and prices
show some improvement.
Freights have ruled extremely dull, and rates at the close
are
wholly unsettled. To Liverpool, by steam, Cotton £d.,
and shippers bid 3d. for Wheat, with 4d. asked. To London,
about 6,000 bbls. Flour by sail this week, Is. 4£d.
There
a

<©05

•

sT

Provisions have

has been

'.
•
.

*0552

◄

,

do not admit of much reduction in stocks

.|A

.£5*5

.

7.052

1,044

905

336

1,029

5,633

32,582

20,549

2,537
9,613

11,570
58,161

4,710
47,687

1,665

23,590

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Imports off

[February 19, 1870.

CHRONICLE.

THE

246

Leading Articles*

RECEIPT*
firvnp.

Tbe

in 1869:

[The'quantity is given

in packages when not

Since
Jan. l,

For
the
week.

1870.

Earthenware—

Earthenware...
Glass
Glassware
Glass plate

Si
153
130
768,
774

Metals, &c—
Cutlery

Buttons*.

Coal, tons

Cocoa, bags
Coffee', bags
Cotton bales.....

4,531

5S1

3 699

3,481
54,191

776

2,490
8,183
106,009
96

13

Bark, Peruvian

821

152

Gum, Arabic...
Indigo

136

8

86
391
989
292
44

15

Madder
Oils, essence....

....

....

14
20

1,221

l.ToO

11,114
5,371
2,158

Oil, Olive

Opium
Soda, bl-carb...
Soda, sal
Soda, ash

1,169

Flax
Furs

265
322

221

80

258
657
529

39

651

193

9,337

....

Gunny clotii
Hair

Hemp, bales
Hides, &c—
Bristles

Hides, dressed.

61

Ivory
Jewelery, &c—
Jewelry
Watches
Linseed
Molasses

W asl

232

Wines, &c—
Champag’e.bks

5,850
4

296

1,471
1,176
42
663
234

8S.930
114,393

156

15 L

14,885
13 ('88

15.922
8.905

6,869

3,499

114.667

5,646

$87,843 $108,432

„

4,010

Lemons

9.503

31,851

10,276

156
705

(Iranges
Nuts."

10,0'0

157.65:

101 846

408

Fancy goods

16,050 Fish
2,97; Fruits, &c—

2.V36
1,659
18,291

111

2!1
■1,85'*
6,022

7

119

50;

3,109':

24,282

7,317
199,725
107,052

4.854

392

899,150 2,415 892
12,' 60
20,591
41,219
93,240

71,235
96,421
4,870

t

Corks

135
82 159

300
128
55 360

16,400

17,181

3 089
2 .'1,301

75.390

65.S03

2,417

Raisins
Hides undressed
Rice

140,819
52:332 4i9,y00
168,217 1,157,3-<4 1,472:517
10,479
1,190
25.477

Spices. &c—

20,609
5/346
3,s34
86,29 i

40.754
5,586

1,034

8,394
8,244

14,791

Logwood

6 013

56.782

Mahogany

1,218

71,143
9,224

Cassia

Ginger
Pepper

Salt

pef.re

Woods—
Cork
Fustic

81,023
10/784
11 641

19,800

COTTON.

By special telegrams received by us tonight from the
in possession of the returns showing the
receipts, exports, &c., of cotton tor the week ending this evening
February 18. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the
total receipts for the seven days have reached 96,424 bales {against
98,544 bales last week, 104,G01 bales the previous week, and 104,772
bales three weeks since), making the aggregate since September 1?
1869, up to this date, 2,032,786 bales, against 1,600,981 bales for the
same period in 1868-9, being an increase this season over last season
of 431,805 bales.
The details of the receipts for this week (as per
telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1869 are as follows :

New Orleans, bales
Mobile
Charleston
Texas (est.)
Tennessee, &c

47,409
9.121

5,298
9,979
9,000
7,067

1869.

1870.

Rec’d this week at—

25,659 Florida
7,449! North Carolina
6,295 Virginia
13,056
4,668
9,466

Total this year

.

1,936,362

Total last jrear..

....

891

650

1,889
5,770

1,112
6,023

96,424
22,046

74,378

bales.

Total receipts
Increase this year

1869.

New Orleans
Mobile
Charleston
Savannah
Texas (est.)
New York
Other ports
Total
Total since Sept. 1...

20,159
2,863
7,282
6,216
4,500
5,763

12,198
1,263
1,851

2,6oi

500

47/283
734,700

17,813
368,440

week.

1869.

32,357

28,331
3,125
1,758
12,938
1,022
14,218
1,191

287,177
69,277

62,583
797,876

546,727

2,863
8,545
8,067
4,500
7,764
500

64,596

1,102,510

1870.

18,608

63,110
45,000
83,555
30,000

1869.

the

or

obtain the detail necessary,




1*587
8,948
20,000

687,708

162,769

189,719 1,040,196

580,080

542,683

464,551

142,832

139,297

608,054

446,716

746,68o

of the week,

excitement;
For forward
delivery the falling off in price has been more decided, prices clos¬
ing this evening about l@l*c off from last Friday.
The
total sales of this description reach 18,375 hales (all low middling,
or on the basis of low middling except as in hereinafter stated),
of which 750 bales were for February, 100 at 24|, 100 at 24-*,
250 at 23f, and 300 at 23-*; 4,350 bales for March, 1,000 at 24£, 1,000
at 24f, 500 at 24*, 100 at 24f, 100 at 24 7-16, 100 at 24 5-16,100 at
24*, 100 at 23 15-16, 350 at 24, 300 at 24*. and 200 at 23* ; 6,000
bales for April, 1,300 at 24*, 100 at 24f, 200 at 24|, 100 at 24*. 100
at 24 9-16, 700 at 24, 400 at 24*, 300 at 24*, 700 at 23*, 1,300 at
23*, 200 at 23*, 200 at 23 13-16, 200 at 23|, and 200. on private
terms ; 4,350 bales for May, 1,400 at 25, 300 at 24*, 200 at 24 15 10,
900 at 24f, 400 at 24*, 450 at 24 1-16, 200 at 24*, 300 at 24, 100 at
24*, and 100 on private terms; 2,400 hales for June, 200 at 25f,
100 at 25*, 100 at 25*, 400 at 24f, 350 at 24*, 150 at 25, 100 at 24*,
100 at 24*, 100 at 24, and20 at 23* ; 300 bales for July, 100 at 25*,
and 200 on private terms ; 200 bales
25 for December, at 20 ; 1,300 bales

for August,
free

on

on

private terms;

board at New Orleans,

private terms. The total sales for immediate delivery this
9,975 bales (including 446 bales to arrive), of which
3,222 bales were taken by spinners, 576 bales onspeculation, 5,777
bales for export, 400 bales in transit, and the following are the
closing quotations:

by telegraph.

New
Orleans.

Upland and
Florida.

Ordinary
Good Ordinary

per

lb.

Middling
Middling

Liow

Below

we

21%@...
22%@...
23*4®...
24%@...

Mobile.

Texas.

22*®....

22
23

24

24%®..

21 %@....
22 X®....

21 %@....

23%®....
24%®....

@....

@...
®

...

25%®...

24%®....

give the total sales of cotton and price of Uplands
day of the past week :

at this market each

Total
sales.

i Ordinary.

Tuesday

1,060
1,650
1,300

Wednesday
Thursday

1,451
2,033

Friday

2,481

Stocks of Cotton at

Good

Low

Ora inary.

Middling..

22%@...
22%@...
22%®...

23%®....

22

23

22%@....

514%®....
24%®....
24%@24%
*4%@....
23%@....

22%®....

23%®....

@...

2l%@...
21%@...

23 %@....

23%@....
@....

Middling.
25%®....
25%®...
25 @25%
24%@...
24%®..
24%®....
-

.

Interior Towns.—Below we give the

figures received to-night, showing the stocks of cotton at the inte¬
ports at the close of business to-day, and add those for last
week and the corresponding periods of last year for comparison :

Total
The

li ili

419,545

foregoing statement it will be seen that, compared with
corresponding week of last season, there is an increase in the ex.
ports this week of 2,013 bales, while the stocks to-night are 127,182
bales more than they were at this time a year ago. The following
is our usual table showing the movement of cotton at all the ports
from Sept. 1, to February 11, the latest mail dates. We do not
include our telegrams to-night, as we cannot insure ths accuracy
From the

'

16,258

the decline has been more marked than at any period
and at one portion of the day there was considerable
but the close was a triffle more steady at the decline.

.

G.Brit

6,245
20,333

5,094
43,287
135,918

who

for the week ending this evening reach a total og
64,596 bales, of which 47,283 were to Great Britain and 17,313 bales
to the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports, as made up
Aucrusta, Ga
this evening, are now 546,727 bales. Below we give the export8 Columbus, Ga
Macon, Ga
and stocks for the week, and also for the corresponding week of
Montgomery, Ala
last season, as telegraphed to us from the various ports to-night:
Selma, Ala.
Memphis, Tenn
Stock.
Exported to—
Nashville, Tenn
Total this Same w’k
Contin’t

1,537,449

6,245
4,075

79,559

*

rior

The exports

Week ending Feb. 18.

....

'”'50

operating for a rise anticipated, has culminated this week in
a decided turn to lower rates.
Holders appear finally to have lost
heart, and towards the close offered stocks much more liberally ;
often at prices below quotations. On Saturday, Monday and Tues¬
day, however, and even Wednesday, although there had been a
decline of about *c in the four days, with very little doing, there
appeared to be but little disposition to force the market. To-day

Saturday
Monday

RECEIPTS.

1870.

151,511

58,471

207,707

*"*50

226,380
65/132
24,593
75,681
40,703

86,613
27,841
102,604
146,178
82,545

107,644
53,642
148,330

on

Southern ports we are

Kec’d this week at—

Virginia
Other ports..

12,274
58,999
106,108
48,498

8,614

5,225
7,370
7,075
37,582

487 774

week foot up

Friday, P. M., February IS, lb70.

BXOXIPT8.

161,511

1,545

103,658
12,556

were

33,076
8,439

1,174!

53
30

Articles report’d
by value—
5
Cigars

59,185

115,247
10,409
1,825
25,129

84,679
46,592
115,881
49,851

STOCK

PORTS

58.870

5,713

388
212

218,874

NORTH.

71.918

2,949

Wines
Wool, bales

611,149
171,769
141,303
268,063
95,104

Total.

The continued; dulness of the past three weeks, during which
the receipts at the ports have been much larger than those

19,0.6

2,253

709,904
228,032
177,016
864,353
140,297
66,869
15,497
44,922

Other

foreign

39,354

701,4'5

e

New Orleans
Mobile
Charleston
Savannah
Texas
New York
Florida
worth Carolina...

France

12,841

10,654

795
22

1868.

433
592

416.990

1,563

Great

Britain.

1869.

87,961

8IIIP-

m’tsto

513
795

467

& bbls

223

Same
timo
1869.

9J.020

Sugars, boxes &

32

mdla rubber

7,293

Tin, boxes
Tin slabs, lbs..
5,883
8,469 Rags
162,705 Sugar, hhds, tcs

bags

Cochineal
Cream Tartar..
Gambler.
Gums, crude

2

2.*ia

8s

Tea
Tobacco

881
604
374

2,533
11,702

Steel..,

'

1,5%

2.10U

56

88

Lead, pigs
Spelter, lbs

2.785
1,688

ooa

Brimstone, tons

55
.....

Iron, KK bars.

1,139

Blea powders..

...

Hardware

1,474

Drugs, &c.—
....

1870.,

week.

987

67,430
1,921
1,307

the

>

>

ieo
179
654

Since
Jan. 1,

For

Same
lime
1869.

China, Glass and
China

otherwise specified.]

1 TO

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT.
1

PORTS.

foliowijg table, compiled from Custom House returns, show

(heforei^n imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this po.t
or the last week, since Jan. 1, 1870, and for the corresponding period

OWDftl

1870.

1869

>

,

Feb. 18.

Feb. 1».

Feb 18

Feb. 11.

23,617
17,500
16,663
13,000
7,857
28,092
4,400

22,795
15,000
17,165
12,925
7,835
29,491
4,346

19,400
10,300
10,187
10,000
7,377
22,860
4,584

19,200
16,906
11,763
10,879
7,248
21,365

111,129

109,557

90,708

92,324

-

4,963

foregoing shows the interior stocks have increased during
1,500 bales, and that they are now 20,421 bales in

the week about

period of last year.
Prices and the Crop.—The continued large receipts have
finally begun to have an effect on prices, and this week the quota¬
tion has fallen below 25 cents. These large arrivals during this
month appear to he a surprise to some who were looking for a con¬
siderable improvement in rates during the early months of this
year. We took occasion, however, in our cotton report of December
18, to warn our readers against participating in the speculative
movement then so active, feeling confident that when the full ex
tent of the crop became evident the result could not bej doubtful
Those who held to a contrary opinion have been compelled during
the past two weeks to settle their contracts, made about that time,
excess

of the

same

February 19,1870.]

THE

247

CHRONICLE.

Afloat for Great Britain (American).
217,000
125,000
thirty dollars per bale. Our only object
Afloat for Havre (American and BrazU)...
42,134
83,995
Total Indian Cotton afloat tor Europe
was to induce holders to part with their cotton at the
97,556
164,042
ruling price*
Stock in United States ports
546,727
419,545
Stock in inland towns
and secure the large profit offered before stocks accumulated, and»
111,129
90,708
in fact, prevent an accumulation of stocks, so as to keep prices
Total...
1,535,104
1,802,880
These figures indicate an increase in the cotton in sight to-night of
more within their own control.
That opportunity has, however,
232,224
bales compared with the same date of 1869.
now passed, and we must expect to suffer the consequences of the
The exports of cotton this week from New York show a decrease over
last few months. But the greatest danger of such an effort to
last week, the total reaching 4,914 bales, against 6,347 bales last
bolster up prices is always in the reaction, when rates are apt to week. Below we
give oar table showing the experts of cotton from
go below their true level. We see it now in wheat, and we shall New York, and their direction for each of the last four weeks; also
see it this summer in coal.
But with cotton the game is still, in a the total exports and direction since September 1, 1869; and in the
ast column the total for the same period of the previous year:
measure, in our own hands, on account of the small stocks in
Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,18«9
Europe, if we accept the position, and let our cotton go, instead of
Sam*
WEEK ENDING
Total
tim®
holding on to it for an imaginery rise which can never take place.
to
EXPORTED TO
prev
Feb.
But as to the extent of this crop, there may be danger now of
Feb.
Feb.
Jan.
date
year.
15.
8.
1.
25.
our over-estimating it.
On the 4th of December we indicated that,
4,425 160,180 126,295
Liverpool
4,680’ 8,856 > 4,e48
leaving out Southern consumption, the crop would likely reach Other
S81
British Ports
2,402
|
2,913,000 bales. Again on the 18th of the same month we pre¬
Total to Gt. Britain. 4,680
8,856
4,425 161,511 128,661
4,548
sented some reasons for believing that the total would be about
601
Havre...
8,611 13,731
1,295
3,000,000 bales, and that this figure would be generally accepted Other
8
French ports
when the Southwestern rivers became navigable.
All this was
Total French
601
8,614 18,711
1,295
said simply to induce planters to dispose of their stock at the then
489
840
18,221
23,068
1,053
1,348
high prices, and we are pleased to know that many have done so. Bremen and Hanover
307
289
14,970 14,122
1,609
Hamburg
We see no reason now for materially changing our figures, although OOTer ports
298
466
71
2,582
we are aware that a larger total is becoming popular among some.
489
Total to N. Europe.
35.778 87,418
3,147
1,808
3,028
Consumption.—Our own consumption this year, North and
2,498
Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c
828
1*809
“si
South, will be less than in 1868-9, because of the lighter fabrics
produced in many of the largest mills, however fully employed
61
Total Spain, etc......
9,826
1,809
|
may be the spindles. Out of the last crop we retained for use and
Grand Total
7.7S3 1 11,884
6,347
4,914 207,707 182.68 6
addition to stock not more than 950,000 bales. If we add liberally
The following are the receipts of cotton at New York, Boston, Phila*
to stocks this season, we cannot need to retain more than 1,000,000
del phi a and BiiHime re for the last week, and since September 1, 1869 :
bales. Assuming a total product of 3,000,000 bales, there will be
2,000,000 bales for export.
This will afford to Great Britain
BALTIMORE.
PHILADELPHIA
NEW YORK.
B08TON.
RECEIPTS prom1,490,000 bales, and to other countries 510,000 bales, against
This
Since
Since
This
This
Since
This
Since
week. Sept. 1. week.
990,000 and 470,000 bales respectively last year, an increase to
Septl. week. Septl. week. Sept 1.
Great Britain of 500,000 bales, of which increase 210,000 bales New Orleans.
70
1.864
46,975
2,860
24,129
3,485
617
25,109
have already gone. Out of the remaining 290,000 bales, and the Texas
Savannah
*627 12*448
12,i84
1,684 112.262
11,728
excess of stock now there and afloat, England can increase her
Mobile
275
11,592
3,575
746
consumption, for ten months, 5,000 bales per week beyond the Florida
5,231
5*9^7
*7io 11.748
South Carolina.
1,460
81,631
2^912
present rate, making it larger than ever before, and still add more North Carolina..
627
7
41
2,584

at

net loss of from ten to

a

t

840219.TCripoalm,nde

--

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

-V

rw

—■»

•

•

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

• •

....

than

150,000 bales to her stock, Dec. 31, without

any

addition of

from other producing countries.
This, of course, supposes our crop of 1870 will be as early as that
of 1869.
Surely there is abundant reason, so far as supply is con¬
cerned, for the largest consumption in England that her trade can
sustain, and our planters ought to be well satisfied with the
liberal prices which consumers everywhere seem willing to pay.
Receipts, Etc.—The present increase in the estimates of the
crop seem to be based on the following facts :
1. The excess in the receipts, compared with last year, shows
since December a progressive ratio, and from the beginning of the
season, taking periods of five weeks, the increase has been as
supply beyond that of last

follows:

October
1
November 5
December 10

52 per cent
29 per cent
16 per cent

year

30 per cent
28 per cent .

|

J

ceipts :
3. Picking, being favored by good weather, has not ceased, and
is as yet quite general in the fertile regions of the South, where
crops are heavy in proportion to labor; high prices pay well the
extra cost of Winter picking, and forbid the abandonment of any
cotton in the fields:

receipts at the Atlantic ports continue large beyond any
expectation. There, if anywhere, the early and large movement
of the crop, with ample labor and transportation, and high prices,
should have resulted in a more rapid falling off by this time, if the
production had not exceeded all estimates for that section.
5. The large piles of Cotton at all the landings on the South¬
western rivers tributary to the Mississippi, which seem to be re¬
plenished from the plantations so rapidly that all the boats
actively employed cannot, even with good navigation, reduce them
materially by freighting to New Orleans.
These are facts of recent development, which are at present
urged in favor of the increased estimates of the crop.
4. The

Visible Supply of Cotton.—The

following table shows the
quantity of cotton in sight at this date of each of the two past
seasons:

1869. 00

1870.
Stock in Liverpool
Stock in London
Stock in Glasgow
Stock in Havre
Stock in Marseilles

Stock rest of Continent




93

Tennessee, &c.
Foreign

5,222

7.2,122

1,524

Total this
Total last,

year! 16,861

year.!

23,342

1,367 26,441

92

2,191

85,184

5

232

13,918

*773

96

669

•

*

*

902

26,944
144

*840 14,909

11,696

8

*

1

465 340

3,790 117,741

1,400

32,962

2,459 67,883

443,072

13,553.134 417

2.102

23,776

2 967

50,603

Shipping News.—The

exports of cotton from the United States th®
past week, as per latest mail returns, have reached 60,590 bales. S°
far as the Southern ports are concerned, these are the same export-

reported by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle last Fri¬
day, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are the exports for
two weeks back.
With regard to New York, we include the manifestonly
up
to
Tuesday
night, to make the figures correspond with the offi¬
") Averaging 27 per cent above cial week. Below we
give a list of the vessels in which these ship¬
| same period last season. ments from all
both
ports,
North and South, have been made:
>■ Opening large, falling to

the minimum in December,
then rising again.
During the last four weeks the average is about 100,000 bales
per week. Should they equal 70,000 bales for the next five weeks
and 50,000 for the following five, they will exceed the same periods
last year 76 and 67 per cent respectively, and show an average of
33 1-3 per cent, without any further increase after May 1.
2. The continued maintenance of the stocks at the inland depots
indicate that the plantations are supplying the full weekly re¬
January 14
February 19

North’rn Ports.

84,459
71,429
3,871

1,569

Virginia

bales. 816,000
91,088
850
-

277,0.6

119,LU

4,4
50,7^0

70,020
5,200

32,000

4,450
.

10,00°

Exported this week from—
Total bales*
Liverpool, per steamers Nebraska, 1,639... Pennsyl¬
vania, 771.... City of Washington, 969....E.na, 373 ..Nemesis,
372
4,425
To Bremen, per steamer Rhein. 4S9
•.
489

New York—To

.

New O.LEANS-ToLiverpoo', perships Britannia, 1,209..

Undau ted,

2,160.. .P.gassus, 3,524....Tennys >n. 3,800
....per barks Nyphon. 1,980 . .Fortuna, 1,200....Habra Moses,.
1,451 ..Magdala, 2,304
F. Secor, 39b.. ..Pequot, 3,305..
25,645
To Havre, per ship Richard lit
8,357
3,357
To Barcelona, per bark Chancellor, 909 .-...■
-.
909
To Vera Cruz, per brigs Olientale, 375... .John E nest, 475
per
barks Teresa, 1,070.. .Contro de Exportation, 500....per ship
Margaret, 949...
3,351
Mobile—To Liverpool, per shp$ J. B. Lincoln, 4,749... .Lancaster,
4.223.. ..Zimi 2,649
11,611
To Barce or a, per bark Boa, 861
p *r brig Lola, 3.0...
1,191
Charleston—To Liverpool, per s.earner Arragon. 555 Sea Island and
.

.

998

,

Upland

1,553

....

Galveston—To Liverpool, per barks Iron Age, 1,857

ship Elsinore. 1,804

—

Eva, 916—per

perbiig Peggy, 561

Baltimore—To Li\erpool, per ship F. B. Cutting, 430
To Bremen, per steamer Baltimore, 2,491

.

5,188
430
2,491

Total
60,590
The particulars of these shipments, arranged in onr usual form, are
as follows:
Liverpool. Havre. Bremen. Barcelona. VeraCroz. Total.
489
NewYok
4.425
4,914
New Orleans....
25,645
3,357
....
909
3,351
83,262
Mobile....
11,611
1,191
12,802
Charleston
1,553
....
,,
....
—
1,653
Galveston
6,158
....
5,188
430
Baltimore
2,491
—
—
8,921
....

...

....

...

Total

48,802

3,357

2,980

2,100

8,851

60,590

Gold, Exchange, and Freights.—Gold has fluctuate 1 the past week
between 1)9' and 12G£, and the close to-night was 119£.
Foreign Ex¬
change closed firm at the following rates: London Bankers long, 108£
@109 ; London Bankers short 109^^109f, and London commercial,
I08f@l08£. Freights c’oaed at £1. by steam, and 8-16d. by sail,
to Liverpool; f@£c. by steam, and Jc. by sail to Havre; |d. by
steam and fc. by sail to Hamburg, and fc. by steam, Jc. by sail to
Bremen.

[February 19,1870.

THE CHRONICLE.

248

Pennsylvania and Ohio mixed lots, private terms, and 37
Slate wrappers, crop of 1867, at 27c.
Spanish Tobacco has been in fair demand and firm; sales
embrace 31 bales Yara II cut/ at 50c. gold, in bond; 300
bales Havana, at 90c to $1.05 currency, duty paid. ;
Manufactured Tobbacco is selling very fairly at full prices.
The following are the exports of tobacco from New Yoik
for the pa3t week :

TOBACCO.
Friday, P. M., February 18,1870.

cases

decrease in the exports of crude tobacco

this
week, the total from all the ports reaching 346 hhds., 637
cases, 600 bales, 10 ceroons, and 7 hhds, against 589 hhds, 247
cases, and 563 bales for the previous seven days.
Of these
exports for this week 210 hhds., 527 cases, 580 bales, and 10
ceroons were from New York ; 74 hhds. and 7 do. stems from
Baltimoie; 62 hhds., 80 cases, and 20 bales from Boston, and
29 cases from San Francisco. The direction of the shipments ol
hhds. was as follows: To Liverpool, 21; to Bremen, 230
and 7 do, stems ; to other foreign, 62 ; and the balance to
different ports. During the same period the exports of man¬
ufactured tobacco reached 95,006 lbs., of which 64,151 lbs.
were to Liverpool. * The full particulars of the shipments from
There is

a

all the ports were as

Hhds. Cases.

210
74
62

Baltimore
Boston

£80

527
1
80

10

27
7
91

7
20

....

8,481

Philadelphia
New Orleans
Portland
San Francisco

....

Total
Total last week
Total previous week
we

give

of Tobacco from

637
247

600
563

312

107

262

10

7

75

1
5

210

1

.

95.006
86,694

166

19,751

usual table showing the total export
all the ports of the United States, and their
our

•

399

38

527

580

The direction of the foreign exports
the other ports, has been as follows:

•

• » •

•

•

•

•

•

•

*27

1,632
8,350

37

91,525

for the week, from

From Baltimore—To Bremen, 58 hhds. and 7 do. stems..To Pernambuco, 7
boxes mauufactured..To Demerura, 1 case..To Liverpool, 16 hhds.
From Boston—To Hayti, 40 half hales To other foreign, 49 hhds., 26 half

do., 80 cases, and 91 boxes.

From Philadelphia—To Kingston, 3,481 lbs.
From San Francisco—To Yokahama, 2L cases.

125
110

♦ •

•

’

British Guiana

5

346
589

4,922

•

•

500
542

New Gramda
Argenti no Republic

....

29

•

63

Total

....

64,151
11,970

•

•

Bristol
Bremen

91,525

Mani’d
lbs.

10

V^estIndies.

Hayti

Man’d

....

•

,

..

Hamburg
British
Cuba

Hhds. Cases. Bales.&T’rcos. Stems. Pkgs. lbs..

Exp'd this week from
New York

Bales. Pkgs.

Liverpool.
T.nriflnn

follows:
Ceroons. Hhds.

Below

EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM NEW YORK.

.To China, 8 cases..To Japan,

cases.

BREADSTUFFS.
Friday, February 18,1870, P. M.

week has been unusually variable,

Thie market the past

and closes unsettled.
Flour slightly improved

early in the week, on a revival of
export demand, several thousand bbls. being taken for
Exports of Tobacco from the United States since Novetu- London mainly at $5.20 to $5.30 for extra state.
There
her 1, 1869.
was also a
fair
trade
demand,
and
prices
are
per
pretty
10c.
Cer’s Stems, Pkgs. Mant’
bbl.
lbs.
A
tcs.
hhds.
&
bxs.
Bales.
Hhds.
Cases.
To
higher than last Friday. The receipts contiuue limited,
631
190
116
86
606,725 and the
Great Britain
1,522
exports nearly equal thereto. A competent authority
40i
64
602
128,005
9,276 2,045
4,477
Germany
44
3,787 estimates the stock of Flour, and in this market, at fully
Helginm
EC4
Holland
2,385
200,000 bbls. less than one year ago ; and there are indica¬
Denmark
13
11
3.297
tions that stocks of Flour in other leading markets are
Italy
121
7
France
1,620
303
540
712
30,903 comparatively.small. But for the past two days, with nothing
Spain, Gibralt. &c....
Mediterranean
in the foreign accounts to encourage shippers, and the weather
664
Austria
1
134
26
238
5,772 unfavorable to trade, the market has been dull, and the
Africa, Ac—
116
9,600
China, India, Ao
226,552 improvement early in the week, has been barely maintained.
Australia, Ac
439
113
87
124
22,674
B. N. Am. Prov
235
987
132
2,688
98,482 Notwithstanding comparative ease in the money market,
South America
721
697
292
West Indies.
220,795 maturing acceptances cause some pressure to sell.
1,669
East Indies
Wheat advanced in sympathy with Liverpool, but not to
19
5,797
Mexico
10
96
2
the same extent. Shippers did not appear to have any con¬
Honolulu, Ac
201
90
793
407
16,536
All Others
siderable orders, and millers were the most liberal buyers.
905
Total since Nov 1.... 16,515
16,439 2,131
4,S27 1,365,093 They
3,570
appeared to want full supplies of Wheat, buying largely
The following table indicates the ports from which the of the better grades of Amber Winter, and of White. To¬
day’s market was very dull, and most of the advance early in
above exports have been shipped:
the week was lost.
No. 2 Spring, afloat, closing nominal at
Tcs. & Stems Bxs. A
Lbs.
From
Hhds.
Cases.
Bales,
cer’s.
hhds. pkgs. Manfd
$1.16 to $1.21, for common Chicago to prime Milwaukee,
New York
5,9S9
2,565
2,131
3,768 1,297,680
2,844
Baltimore
7,798
18g| 12,874
7
87,063 a slight advance asked for ocean freights, operating against
905
Boston
638
535
1,000
1,037
4,600 the
buyer for shipment.
26,250
Philadelphia
10
Corn has been fairly active, but increased supplies, both
New Orleans
6
2,190
1
6
direction, since November 1, 1869:

. -

....

•

.

.

....

.

....

....

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

•

•

.

.

.

....

.

....

....

....

....

•

.

•

‘

.

.

•

•

.

.

.

.

....

.

.

.

.

....

.

.

.

....

.

.

.

.

,

.

....

mm m

•

•••

.

» .

•

....

.

•

•

•

•

.

.

.

....

....

....

.

.

.

.

.

.

,

.

.

.

.

.

,

....

....

•

•

.

.

.

.

.

....

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

•

•

•

•

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

«

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

f

.

.

.

....

....

*

•

t

•

•

•

.

.

•

.

•

.

.

.

.

.

.

....

.

.

.

,

.

.

.

.

.

.

....

.

.

.

.

.

...

.

....

....

*

.

.

....

....

■

....

....

....

....

....

San Francisco

*

172

....

from the South and West, have caused some weakness and

irregularity in prices, especially as the receipts of new are put
2,365,09g upon the market and told without much reserve. The busi¬
ness of to-day was mainly restricted to new Western mixed,
The receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since
at 80@90c., and Jersey-and Delaware yellow at 96c@$l.
Nov. 1 have been as follows:
Oats have had but a moderate sale; prices, however, show
RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER 1. 1869.
much firmness. It is difficult, to move full cargoes Western
.—This week—,
.—Previously—*
,-TTsin.Nov.l— in store.
Rye continues almost nominal. Barley and barley
From
hhds.
pkgs.
hhds.
pkgs
hhds.
pkgs
684
Virginia
6
868
17,695
692
18,533 malt, dull and nominally unchanged. Canada peas very quiet.
Baltimore
65
268
192
268
257
The following ^reclosing quotations:
New Orleans
64
64
142
142

Portland

Total since Nov 1.

..

16,515

3,570

16,439

2,131

905

4,827

..

Ohio, Ac

184

2,425

93
11

Other.

Total

190

....

1,042

3,443

2,170
319

20,488

2,609
„

....

3,633

2,268
370

il/jfy

The market has been inactive for Tobacco the past week,
and prices nearly nominal.
Of Kentucky Tobacco, the sales of the week are limited
to 350

hhds., of which 50 hhds. for export, and 300 to

facturers and cutters.

Prices

manu¬

nearly nominal. Very high
prices are being paid at the West, owing to fact that the late
crop was materially injured by frost.
But shippers for
Europe cannot as yet meet their advances, and but little is
done for export. Probably the struggle between shippers
and speculators may be prolonged.
Seed Leaf shows a little more business, but is still quiet,
and prices somewhat unsettled. The sales for the week
embrace 309 cases Ohio fillers and binders, 13c. to 15c.; 152
cases Connecticut, crop of 1866,on private terms; 100 cases



are

Wheat,Sprlng,perbus’n.f;l 10® 1 25

Flour-

Red Winter
Amber do
Extra. State
5 20® 5 40
White
Extra Western, com¬
mon to good........
5 10® 5 35 White California
Corn,Western Mix’d,....
Double Extra Western
Yellow. Southern new.
and St. Louis...... 5 50® 8 45
Southern supers....... 5 15® & 65
White, b j. them,new..

Superfine

1 25® 1 28

.# bbl. $4 75® 5 00

1 80® 1 32

1 40® 1 65
1 50® 1 55

80® 1 05
96® 1 00
92® 1 05

-

Southern,
family

extra

and

5 75® 8 50
....®

California

Kye Flour, fine and superfine.

Corn

Meal

The movement in

88®

Rye

;
....

Barley....;

.

95

62
85® 1 18
95® 1 20
54®-

Oats
....

Malt.
.
.
. ' >
4 20® 4 75 Peas, Canada
4 40® 4 80

1 00® 1 25

breadstuff* at this market has been

follows:

as

‘

RECEIPTS AT
,

Floor, bbls

8,815

Corn meal, bbls....

Wheat, bush.......
Corn, bush

Rye, bush
Barley, Ac., bush..
Oats, bush

G9,490

.

98,OSS ’

.

110
.

.

NEW

YORK.

—1869.
—,
Since
For the
Jan. 1.
week.
25,170
266,100

14,615
85,040

69,655
552,670
898,065
1,060
152,935

138,910

1870,
For the:
Since
Jan. 1.
week.

.

81,155
7,555

244,590

82,025
84,705
18,065

841,045
167,910
1,200
126,380

26,670

214,790

•

•

•

•

4P,690

February 19,1870 ]
FOREIGN EXPORTS

THE

FROM NEW

TORE

FOR THE WEEK AND SINCE JAN.

Flour, C. meal, Wheat, Rye,

To

bbls.
15,704

Gt. Brit, week
Since Jan. 1

bbls.

IV. A. €5©I. week..
Since Jan. 1

25

621

bush.

•

•

4,996

•

•

•

•

—

•

803

•

•

••••

••••

••••

••••

2,983

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

....

....

.

•

•

•

•

130,822

•

•

1,292
10,802
lo, 013

50

....

•

600,972

495

•

•

•

8,243
44,211

2,477
•

•

following tables, prepared for the Chronicle by Mr. E. H.
alker, of the New York Produce Exchange, show the grain in
sight

and the movement of breadstulfs
IN

STORE

IN

NEW

YORK AND BROOKLYN

1870.
Feb. 12.

Wheat, bust

Oats, bush

1870.
Feb. 5.

1,176,163
818,566

Rye, 1

1,199,672
322,125
62,112

41,999
16,842
84,918

Peas,

Malr,

Total grain, buBh

1868.
Feb. 17.

2.512,694
1,397,380
2,226,019

1,718,696

2,041,423

86,214
5,117,100

149,147
75.416

57,0*1
64,701

’

....

6,618,106

6,401,016

Including 56,000

At N. York,

bushels of California, and exclusive of about
400,000 bushels
afloat in caual boats.
RKOKIPT8 AT LAKE PORTS FOR THE
WEEK ENDING FEB.

Flour*

Wheat,

bbls.
(196 lbs.)

At

Chicago
Toledo
Detroit

.

Totals
Previous week

69,123

Correspond’g week,
44

69

.

*68
’6?.

44

68,564
79.313"

44,675
74,001

same

313,241

629,995
195,914

Wheat
Corn

bush.

2.288.135

1,289,737

Oats

785,106

Barley
Rye

.

Total

36,380
45,216

152,198
116,294
84,380

26,104
23,814
20,276

1869-70.

Wheat
Corn
Oat*

1869.

1 868.

770,119

359,595

2,990,108
8,711,546
2,1«1,653
158,267
202,378

1,498,587

697,854
8,176,894

Barley

490,873
1,377,506
1,308,811
697,3?2
205,192
124,105

7,190,062

Total grain, bushels....
55,590,824

Comparative

1868-69.

1867-68.

3,314,881

2,664,185

Shipments of flour

1,743,535

1,655,176
1,233,984

60,700,365

57,978,900

42,002,366

and

grain from
Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, and Cleveland, from JaD.
inclusive, for four years :
1870.

Flour, bbls

1866-67.

2,663,532

1869.

'

the
1

ports

of

to Feb.

12,

1868.

516,675

1867.

•
....

• • • •

681,808

1,10,107
414,360

123,165
143,080

....

Total grain, bush
SHIPMENTS FROM

•

•

2,862^470

1,613,313

•

•

bbls.
58,601
67,160

Week ending Feb. 5
Previons week
Cor. week, 1869

81,219

In store and afloat at New York

1 n store at

Buffalo

82,147

bash.

204,788
178,461

24,493
40,069

163,757

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

12.

Wheat.
bush.
3,213,977

In store at
Chicago ..
3,372,726
In store at Milwaukee
2,286,000
Iu store at Toledo
389,893
In store at Detroit
98,855
In store at
Oswego
600 000
In store at 8t. Louis
103,565
Rail shipments from
Chicago and Mil¬
waukee & Toledo for week
82,147

Total in store and in transit Feb.
44
12.10,684,701
44
“

44
“

•

-

“

“

41

“




63,076

Barley,
bush.

14,088
6,751

10,993

By*.

bush.
8,887

7,190

25,751

Corn.
hush.

524,822
87,790

585,296
2,164

86,389
4,979

110,000
49,822

204,738

1,609,000
1,543,858
.1,465,124
1,367,429
1,518,192

Oats.
bush.

Barley.

1,176,163
142,000

813,566
79,107
278,689
13,056

980,370
47,180

71,194
16,863

bush.

41,244

12,552

1,500

80,600

12,072

8,760

24,493

14,088

2,471,885 797,662
2,462,902 825,520
2,417,243
928,841
2.421,141 1,065,138
2,884,459 1,038,260
Jan. 8.11,841,488 1,576,859
2,432,290 856,861
Feb.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

5.10.688,731
29.10,920,554
29.10,683,841
15.10,544,169

bags.

lihds.

5,606
4,832

8,260,720
3,795
199,175
68,139
4M,716
21,597

133 S&6

2,761

116,554
22,441

30,513

TEA.

Without any very
general activity in
one or two sales of some
importance

invoices, there have been

reported
the week,
though made in part previously and before arrival.during
The proposed
reduction in duties enervates the market
somewhat, buyers holding
off in anticipation of lower
prices, and when sal, s are made endeavor¬
ing to secure in many instauces a proportionate concession in
rates.
An auction sale of
green teas held on
Wednesday
resulted
in
securing satisfactory prices for all the goods sold, and
gave
evidence
of a firm market fer this

description. The line trade has been more
usually active in the distribution of the cargoes of the
iEtna,
Mary Lee, George Becker, Cedric, and others, some of the re-sales
embracing several thousands of packages. Prices are
steady for
green teas, for Oolongs firm, and
Japans steady and advancing—
this descripti n
meeting just now with an active demand. From
than

are

4,9l>0 half chests of greens and 16,056 do

Yokohama, about 825,( 00 lbs, of Japans, and “ Queen
Foochow, 631,220 lbs. of black.

of the

Seas,’

COFFEE.

The market for Brazil Coffee has been
very firm throughout the
week, and in fair and ordinary grades
are £c better.
prices
S»nce
our last report, the
telegram from Rio, under date of January 22d»
has been received,
advising of a decided increase iu the sales of
Coffee for, aod shipments to the United
Slates, but with an advance
in price and ia the rate of

exchange, the stocks are
light here to fully sustain the market meanwhile, and nosufficiently
unfavor¬
able effect Las been yet felt. Java Coffee has
rallied
from
the decline noticed in oar last, and is held at anpartially
advance. In West
Indian we notice only the sale of an invoice of
Maracaibo. The
sales include 13,224 bags of Rio
; 1,089 do. of Santos ; 2,141 do.
of Maracaibo, and 113 do. Costa Rica.
Imports of Rio for the week include the following cargoes : “
Way¬
farer,” 8,800 bags, “Svanen,” 4,626 bags, “Nicoline,”
6,400, and
Dora,” 8,800 bags. Of other sorts only 845
bags of sundries have
come to hand.
The stock of Rio Feb. 17,and the

w IN SIGHT. " >

688,038

44

Oats,

bush.

GRAIN

Sugar
Molasses

New

Corn,

bush.

103,177
161,587

hhd8.

from

1870:
Wheat,

boxes.

345

6,502,218
3,735
194,391
32,696
42,774
30,192

u

•

SAME POETS POE WEEK
ENDING FEB.

Flour,

bags.

17,426

Total at all ports
since Jan. 1.
1870.
1869.

Oolongs. “ Mikado,” from Shangbae, 723.982 greens and
87,252
lbs Japan1*;
“Willy Rickmers,” from Shanghae,871,919 lbs of Greens
Imports of the week include the following cargoes, viz.: 14
Whittridge,* from Foochow, 864,708 lbs. of black ; “Cedric,” Mary
from

3,712,966

18,105,772
16,159,607
5,060,118
1,373,286
1,805,583

11,729,805

bags
Dags

first hands the sales

'

25,573,627
17,781,306

15,930,570
14,213,589
2,408,916

Rye

Barley, bush

1867.

4,445.971
928,954
229,362
84,553

26,405,755

14

Kye, bush

10,907
16,300

August 1st, 1869, to and including February 1? ,1870:

Flour

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Oats, bush

12,870
14,988
19,264

ports, for four years, from Jan. 1

8,255,052

And from

1,440

850

100,234
110,203

..

1,125

4,103

450

266,222
520,900

1870.

Flour

6,250

4,200
2,216

21,900

189,823

12:

Barley. Rye.

16,021

4

15,025

449,732
401,844
369,123
186,956

Comparative Receipts at the
to Feb.

13,281
116,420

Ibs.l,720,928
pkgs.

Coffee, Rio.
Coffee, other
Sugar
Sugar

12, 1870.

Oats,
bush.

this Week.

Tea
Tea (indirect import)

bush.' bush.
(56 lbs.) (32 lbs.) (48 lbs) (5616s.)
166,615
77,847
25,677
9,705

(60 lbs.)
S6,747
199,290
8,424* 175,086
7,404
21,281
9,098
22,225
7,450
81,850

Milwaukee

Cleveland

Corn.
bush.

bush.

liberal, including three

coffee, and more liberal
receipts of Sugar and Molasses than last week. A
table of
the exports of
Sugar and Molasses, from all the
principal
ports of Cuba, in the years 1869 and
1868,
is
given
below,
and will be found of much
interest.
The imports at New York for the
week, and at the several
ports since Jan. 1, are given below. The totals are
as follows :

1,419,134

142.500
217,111

1862.

unembarrased from this source.
Imports of the week have been more
cargoes of tea, 17,436
bags of Rio

:

1869.
Feb. 13.

10,3(2

4,977,*267
4,977,287

since

WAREHOUSES.

2,813,977* 2,90^,638
524,822
534,003

Corn, bush.

*

to the latest mail dates

restricting operations.
steadily downward, reaching
price than it has touched
Money, however, has been easy and operations

The course of
gold has been
in its lowest
quotations a lower

The
W

February 18, 1870.

week, closing this evening, has been one of fair
in Groceries,
activity
though the business has been transacted in
some
branches at a
declining
scale of figures; demand has been for
the most part, for the
satisfaction of the
legitimate wants of
the trade, and devoid of
speculation. The uncertainty which
prevails as to Congressional action upon the
subject of duties
and taxation affects this trade
as it does all
others, and aots
with force in

2,’73

4,284
25,956

«...

•

Friday Evening.

The

18,371

1,650

•

9
83

•

•

1,600
4,019

#

9

GROCERIES.

....

....

•

••••

28,906

•

•

•

•

249

1

Cora
bush

bush.

•. • •

•

•

Since Jan. 1
50,491
9,449
Total exp’t, week 27.734
1,639
90,782
Since Jan. 1,1870. 223,637
12,381 1,303,039
Same time, 1869.. 143,889 28.406
1,051,426
Since Jan. 1 fromBoston
397
14,040
1H.890
Philadelphia,
2,985
7,841

Baltimore

bush.
•

1,168,553

676

....

lYe«tInd. week..

bush.

Barley. Oats. *

88,032

118,991

CHRONICLE.

In Bags.
York.
Stock..
40,713
Same date 1869. 90,236
.....

Phila-

imports since Jan. 1, are as follows:

Baltl-

delphia.

.

Imports
•4

New Savan. & GalOrleans. Mobile.
Mobile, veston. Total
17,300
2,000
6,500
66,515
80,000
5,500
2,500
180,736
51,338
88,410
10,800
3,045
194,893
35,666
19,084
7,784
199,171
more.

•

92,697
129,641
4,200
Of other sorts the stock at New
York, Feb.
several ports since Jan. 1 were as follows:
in 1869.

New York—, Boston Philadel. Balt. N. Orle’s
8tock. Import, import, import, import,

In bags.
Java

tl,200

Singapore

Ceylon

*...

Maracaibo

Laguayra

..

Total
Same >69
*

*7,164

*3,118

3,917

10,755

2,880

2,871
5,443
8,233

9,997
35,055

22,012
51,361

ft

840
82
7.604

13,755

Includes mats. Ac., red need to bags.

2,500

3,118

«

import.

2,000

St.Domingo

Other

17, and the imports at the

32

523

11
l

82,696
68,139

t Also 11,112 matt.

SUGAR.

There has been a fa r trade
at lees firm^prices, the market

Jin raw sugare daring] thejweek, bat
closing ic. lower on^tbe refining and

-5

grocery grades of Cuba.
middle of the week, when

Refiners purchased very little until the

they replenished their stocks with more
they obtained at the reduced quotations, but
their demand the market has relapsed into
quiet, and closes weak ut the lower rate then established. We
notice that the exports of sugars from Havana and Matanzas have
been this year largely in excess of those of last (say 17,00J boxes
and 2,000 hhds.,) still leaving the stocks at both ports much heavier
than at the same pe’iod a year ago, say 114.000 boxes and 7,000
hhds. surplus. The week closes with a day of marked activity in
new crop sugars, the sale embracing 2,100 hhds., at prices which
have been fully up to our quotations.
With a gradual decline in
prices, refined sugars have been in very good demand during the
week, uud have sold readily. The sales comprise 5.934 hh ;s. of
Cuba, 437 do. of Porto Rico, 221 do. of Dcmerara, 2,800 bags,
9,368 boxes, and 838 hhds. of MelaJo.
Imports for thj week at New York, a .d stock on hand February 17

liberal supplies, which
with the ce sation of

follows:

were as

5,606

“

8,826

1868

—Eoxes1869.
1870.

Jan441, at New York 25,909 26,433
Imp’a
since
44
“
1,636
6,202
4,242
4,785

Boston....

44

44

“

44

44

44

♦

Philadel..
Baltimore.
N. Orleans

44

“

2,041
2,637
6,328
6,162

1869.

ls70.

20,817
2,424
2,036
4,869

15,093

46

30

1,974

42,774 43,656

Including tierces and barrels

reduced to hhds.

Exports of sugar and molasses from the ten
from 1st January to 31st December, 1869 :

,1,303,331

Havana....
Matanzas..

1,340,159
339,778
46,669
8,078

324,761

,

51,012

.

9,966

1859.

1868.

35,049
86,322

82,905

94,851
43,515

248

2,800
1,401

4,813
1,179

3,282

9,388

22,182
41,769
97,223
18,671

.1,701,871

1,751,310

511,822

(♦) Nuevitas..

St. Ja»o

Trinidad
Cienfuesos....
Guantanamo..

,

year

70,903
110,504
53,202
20,744
46,776
41,994

71,632

295
298
653

20

Remedios......

24,829

1870.

27,000
4,610

49,185

*

26,521
9,470

25,295
121,421
116,166
39,832
19,125
14,228

269

149

97,834

16,143
47,199

15,039
47,003

17,283

1.477

941

507,029

880,078

899,249

from Nuevitas.

Imports this week
Stock

on

2,611

15,496

hand
44

.

same

time 1869... 10,534

Imports at the several ports

85 © 95
©1 35

Bx f. to finestl 10

imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the

— .

No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on

clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined,
3X; above 15 and not over 20, 4; on refined. 5; and on Melado 2% cents per lb
do'
do
do 19 to20 13|© 13*
Cuba, inf. to com refining.. 9|© 9*
do
do
white .... 13 © 14
do fairtogood
do ... 9t© 10*
do pr mo
do fairtogood grocery..
do pr. to choice
do
..
do centrifugalhhds &bxs
do Melado
do molasses

flav’a, Box, D.S. Nos. 7 to 9.
do
do
do

do
do
do

.

Porto Rico, refining grades. 9*© 10*
10*© ..
do
grocery grades . 10|© 12
10*© 10*

9* © 10*
9 © 9|

10i© 11* Brazil, hags
9*© 12 Manila, bags
5*© 8
9 (ft 10*

9&© 10*

do 10 to 12 10*© 10*
do 18 to 15 11*© Ilf
do 16 to 18 12*© 13

14*© 14*

Hards

White sugars, A
13*©
do
B
do
18*©
do
do
extra C...~. 13 ©
Yellow sugars
12J©

13*

13*
..

12*

Ulolasies.
Duty: Scents # gallon.
New Orleans (new)...# gall.60 © 78
Porto Rico, old
40 © 55
Cuba Muacovadojefi’ng new 40 © 42
Duty

:

mace,

do Clayed new.«■*.
Barbadoes new

38 © 40

Old crop

26 © 45

30 © 50

Cuba

Spices.
40 cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 20;

pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents # lb.
Cassia Batavia.gold, #fl>
Pepper, in bond...(gold)
43©
45
43©
44
Pepper, Singapore
Cassia, in mats -gold #B>
do Sumatra.:
Ginger,raoe and Af(gold)
111© 11*
Pimento, Jamaica.(gold)
Mace
(gold) 1 20 © 1 25
do in bond...(gold)
Nutmegs, casks
98 © 1 00
Cloves...-.
(gold)
cases Penang. 1 00 © 1 05
do

peppei

11©

and
..

©

26

o*©
©

4
26

25*©
18 ©
..

Fruit.

Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Sholled Almondp,
Almonds,6; otherimts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filberts and
Walnuts, 3 centsy# m\Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits,
# cent ad val. /
Sardines
# qr.box
17*© 17*
Kalslns,tteeaieerenw#mat 8 25© ..
do Layer,new.# box 4 40©4 45
Figs, Smyrna
# lb
.. © 14
do New
per lb
©20
..
do Valencia.old # lb
16*© 17
BrazilNuts.
11©
do
do
new
17 ©
13 © 13*
Currants, new
# ft 13i© 14 Filberts,Sioily
Duty:

improvement in the market for foreign.

Cuba.
♦Hhds.

Snp’rtofine.

white or

The

lethargy noticed for e< me time past pervades the trade, and,
with the increasing stock, matters grow worse. ’ The sales
are of small amount, and
made to the trade exclusively. We
notice among them one of new crop Porto Rico made yesterday at
56c. Doom Stic has met wilh a very light demand, and prices have
been lower and weak. The sales compiise 134 hhds Dcmerara;
80 do. of Porto Rico, and 667 of New Orleans- '
The receipts of the week a; New York, and the stock on hand Feb. 17
follows:

do

Sugar.

same

were as

do

65
70

Duty : On raw or brown sugar, not above

MOLASSES.

Tlure has been no

75

place of its growth or production; also, the growth of countries this side the
Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized ves¬
sels, 5 cents per lb.; all other, 10 per cent ad valorum in addition.
..gold 17*© 19*
do Prime,autypaii ...gold 12 © 121 Native Ceylon
gold 16*© 18*
do good.
gold 31 © 14 Maracaibo
do fair
...gold 10*© 10* Laguayra...
gold 16*© 18
do ordinary
.-gold 9*© 9| St. Domingo, in bond-gold 9*© 9*
....gold 15 © 16*
Java, mats and bags....gold 20 © 21* Jamaica

—Hhds —
1868.
1869.

33,555
114,088
111,026
36,350
19,971

do
Ex fine to finest —1 10 ©1 20
Souo & Cong., Com. tofair 70 © 80

10

25

Coflfee*
Duty: When

-MOLASSES—s

-Hhds.

Ex f. to finestl 06 ©1 15

Oolong, Common to fair.70 © 73
do
Superior to fine... 77© 80

80 © 85

Gunp. & Imp., Com.to fair 90 ©1
do
Sup. to fine 1 15 ©1
do do Ex.Ltoflneat.l 40 ©1
H. Sk. &Tw’kay,C,to fair. 60©
do
do Sup. to fine 65 ©

principal ports of Cuba,

-EUGAB.-

-Boxes.
1868.
1*69.

70© 76

85

fair.. 80 © 85

Sup’rto fine. 90 © 95

do
do

Exflnetofinest.l 15 ©1 25

do

21,597 48,710 85,176

80,192

Total

Unool. Japan, Com.to

95

Ex fine to finest ...1 2'> ©1 35

Y’gHyson, Com. to fair ...
do
Super.to fine..

doExf. tofin’st 70 ©

do

.

1870.

8,2o0

85©

r-Duty paid-

New Crop.

.—Duty paid75 © -80

Superior to fine....

do
do

13,900

2,357
2,143

ruling quotations in first hands

Hyson, Common to fair...

Brazil, Manila
bags. bags.

♦Hhds

annex

Tea,

560

,

do lemons, #3<g)#3 50; Havana oranges at $9 per

;

Duty: 25 cents per fl>.
New Crop.

10,478

since Jan. 1 1869

Imports at the several ports

44

We

242,373

46,490
14,593
8,034

82,151
4,726

Stock on hand
Same time 1869

#3@#3 50

bbl.: Porto Kico at the same, Carthagena cocoanuts #58 per M.
Domestic green fruit i3 steady. The stock here now is nearly one
half composed of Russett’s, and, as usual at this season, fine selec¬
tions of other kinds are more scarce, and commanding better prices.

♦hhds.

bxs.

Imports this week

at

Cuba, P. Rico, Other, Brazil, M’nila,&c
♦hhds.’
♦hhds.
bgs.
bgs.
4,426
231
175

Cuba,

44

[February 19, 1870.

THE CHRONICLE.

250

P. Rico. Deraerara. Other.
♦Hhds.
♦Hhds.
♦Hhds.
80
70
....

V.

598
483

.

N. O.
Bbls.

..

..

37 © 38

Citron, Leghorn

14©

Prunes,Turkish new

9 © 9*

Dates

© 26

Almonds, Languedoc
do
do
do

Piovence

20 ©

Sicily,SoftShell
Shelled, Spanish

16 © 18
85 © 38

# hi. box

Sardines

..

© 30

Walnuts, Bordeaux, new.

Macaroni, Italian

11 © 12
16 © 18

Dried Fruit—

Apples, Southern..# lb
do
do
Blackberries

.

sliced

8 © 11

18 ©

..

12*© 13

20 © 21*
9 © 11

Peaches, pared new
Peaches, nnpared

1,865

t

-y

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.

8,000
600

8,470
1,641

since Jan. 1 have been as follows :

♦Hhds-

1870.

1869.

16,550

16,773
2,180
1,851

Friday, P. M., February 18, 1870.

The market has been more animated

in certain departments

during the past week. -The principal interest has centred in
prints, which have been quite active in two of the largest job¬
Philadelphia
668
Baltimore
3,188
New Orleans
1.284
1,329 bing houses, through the offering of certain lines at rates below
the market prices. The effect of these “ drives,” as they are
22,441
Total ut ail ports
v.... 30,573
called, is usually injurious to the general trade, and they are
Including tierces and barrels reduced to hhds.
much disapproved of by the majority of houses. It is a proverb,
SPICES.
There has been a quiet jobbing trade, without any speculative however, that “all is fair in war,” and as the sharp competi¬
movement.
Our quotations stand unchanged, with the single tion of business is certainly a species of warfare, it does not
exception of Pimento, which is a fraction lower.

Total imports since

1 at New York
Jan.
“
Boston

4

44

44

44

44

44

44

44

44

44

44

14

44

44

4*

.

3,771
5,780

—

♦

appear

FRUITS. f

that merchants should be limited in

other rules than

toward8
quotation3 assuming, of

The tendency of the market for foreign dried has been
lower figures
Raisins are quiet, and we mark down our
for new layers; the balance of our list, when changed, is moved in
the same direction.
Sardines form the exception to this; prices for
these are higher at the place of export, and the market here is firm
and advancing in sympathy. In domestic dried the noticeable
feature has been an active and somewhat sudden demand for fine

pared
peaches, which has arisen within the last three days ; prices
have advanced from 19 to

are

their action by any

those which serve their own interest,

course,

that the principles of honorable dealing

strictly observed.

Cotton is £ cent lower

than last Friday, chiefly in conse¬

Southernjports. The

quence of the continued large receipts at
decline is noticeable as indicating the tendency
In

20c., 20£, 21 and 21^0., at which sales the

**

of the market.

around
operations of importers by the peculiar situation of the
foreign dress goods much uncertainty is thrown

^

^",,o ’b*ib«—*~“i

Other kinds are quiet, I Pn_?e
wl“ ^e maintained,
Tbe°*exports of dry goods for the past week, and
Foreign green fruit is
selling more readily, and at rather better prices, Messina oranges uary 1, 1870, and the total for the same time in
selling at #3 50@#4, and lemons at $3@$3 50; Palermo oranges 1860 are shown in the following table:

buds by frost, owing to the open winter.
and for blackberries prices have fallen off.




always

since Jan.

1860 and

r

ROM BOSTON

-FROM NSW YORK.

,

«

Hayti

•

Br. Provinces....
New Granada....

787

6

....

.

r

-

-

8

5,178
.

Brazil

.

.

.

9,852

Tefal for week.
Since Jan. 1,1870
Same time 1'869...
“

“

“

“

41

44

We

•

•

.

.

....

.

•

•

.

•

.

•

.

•

....

....

660

Venezuela.
London.

44

....

•

.

$666

lilt

*

,

-

•

•••

*

9,067

Br. Honduras.

“

•

-

Val.

packages.

Val.

pkgs.

$80,816

Cuba

Domestics

Dry Goods,

Domestics.

Exports to

1868..
1867..
1866..

,,.
...

..

..

..

611
38

1860...

annex a

manufacture,

•

few

our

•

•«

•

•

•

8

$6S3
105,072
43,934
245,657
254,881
53,875

637
265
134

74,081
5,884

•

413
120

239,486
166,546
*

•

....

233,180

2,207

pkgs.
•

•••

....

80
....

9
....

....

....

....

$106,260

813

1,811
2,077

251

THE CHRONICLE

February 19, 1870]

Africa

5

•

• •

•

•

•

30
....

69
405
158

2,020
122
83

5,113

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

20 ; do Robe dc O, 22*; do plain Oriental, 18 ; do Anilines, 22*; do
Serges, 21 ; do Alpacas, 22*; do do 6-4, 22*; Percales 4 4, 27* ; Pekin
Lustres, 18.
Cotton Flannels quiet, little trade doing, and rates more or less
nominal. Biown—Arlington —, Amoskeag A A 32, do A 24, do B 28,
Ellerton N 27, do O 24, do P 21* Great Falls F 28, Laconia —.
Bleached—Amoskeag A 25, do B —, Ellerton W H 12, do N 80, Great
Falls F 25, Naumkeag F 16.
Other Cotton Goods have been firm, and are in better demand.
Prices of some brands have been advanced in special cases to even up

prices.
do 10 24, do 8 19,

Checks.—Caledonia 70 27*, do 50 26, do 12 26*,

do 11 22*, do 16 27*, Cumberland 14*, Jos Greers, 55 16*, do 65 18*,
Kennebeck 25, Lanark, No. 2, 12*—1S, Medford 13, Mech’s No. A 1 29,
do 85 18, Miners 10 24, do 50 25, do 8 19, Park No. 60 19, do 70 22,
do 80 24, do 90 27*, do 100 80, Pequa No. 1,200 18*, do 1,600 20, do
2,000 25, do 2,800 27*, Star Mills 12 18, do 18 20, do 20 22, Union No.
20 25, do 50 27*, do 18 22*, Watts No 80 16.

Tickings.—Albany 10*, American 14*, Amoskeag A C A 85,
do B 22, do C 20, do D 18, Blackstone River 17, Conestoga
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings have been more active, during the extra 32 25, do do 36 80, Cordis A A.A 30, do BB 17, Hamilton 25,
past seven days, and prices have been fully maintained with a still further Lewiston A 36 34, do A 32 80, do A 30 26*, do B 30 24*, Mecs. &
upward tendency.- The mills are mostly running on short time, no W’km'a 29, Pearl River 32, Pemberton AA 26, do E 17*, Swift River
increase having been made. This restricts production materially, and 17, Thorndike A 16, Whittendon A 22*, Willow Brook No. I 28, York
' .
keeps stocks in hand quite limited. Jobbers have moved a considerable 80 26, do 32 32*.
amount of their goods the pa9t week, which facilitates immensely the
Stripes.--Albany 10*, Algoden 16*, American 14-15, Amoskeag
transactions from first hands, which have been quite important.
21-22, Boston 12*, Hamilton 22, Haymaker 14*—15, Sheridan A 13*,
The market closes very firm, and moderately active.
Amoe- do G 14, Uncasville A 16, do B 16*, Whittenton AA 22*, do BB 17,
keag A 86 16*, Arctic B 86 14*, Atlantic A 86 17, H 86 16*. do C 16, York 25.
do P 86 13, do L 36 14, do V 83 18*, do N 80 12*, Appleton
Denims.—Amoskeag 80, Bedford 15*, Beaver Cr. CC —, Columbian
A 86 16*, Augusta 36 15, do 80 18, Broadway 86 13, Bedford It heavy 28, Haymaker Bro. 17*, Manchester 20, Otis AXA 26, do BB 25,
809£, Boott H 27 11, do 0 84 12, do S 40 14*, do W 45 19, Com¬ do CC 21, York 30.
Corset Jeans.—Amoskeag 14*, Androscoggin 13, Bates 12*, Everetts
monwealth 0 27 8, Graiton A 27 9, Graniteville AA 86 16, do EE 36
16, Great Falls M 36 18, do S 88 11 *, Indian Head 36 16*, do 80 13*, In¬ 15*, Indian Orchard Imp. 18*, Laconia 15, Naumkeag —, Newmarket
dian Orchard A 40 15, doC36 13*, do BB 36 12, do W 3411*, iloNN36 —, Washington satteen 17.
Cambrics —Amoskeag 9, Portland 7*, Pequot 10, Victory H 8*, do
15, Laconia O 89 —, do B 87 14, do E 86 13, Lawrence A 36 18, do C
36 —, do F 86 13, do G 34 12, do H 27 11, do LL 36 12*, Lyman 0 36 14$, A 9*, Washington 9*.
Cotton Bags.—American $40 00, Androscoggin $40 00, Arkwright
d) E 86 16, MassachusettsBB 86 18*, do J 80 12, Medford 86 15, Nashua
file 88 14*,do36 16,do E 40 17*,Newmarket A13, Pacific extra 86 16*, A $40 00 Great Falls A $42 00, Lewiston $41 00, Stark A $45 00, do
do H 86 16, do L 36 14, Pepperell 7-4 35, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do C 3 bush $60 00, Union $27 50.
Cotton Yarns and Batts.—Best Georgia Cotton Yarns No. 6 to 12
10-4 50, do 11-4 55, Pepperell E fine 89 15, do R 86 14, do O 33
88,
best South Carolina small skeins 38.
13, do N3012, do G 80 18, Pocasset F 80 10, do K 86 13*, do Canoe
Woolen Goods have experienced quite an active business during
40 16*, Saranac fine 0 38 14, do R 36 16, do E 39 17*, Sigourney 86
the week under review. Clothiers and jobbers have been in the market
10*, Stark A 8e 16*, Swift River 36 12, Tiger 27 8*.
in considerable force, and have operated quite freely, the trade now
Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are much improved inactivity,
presenting a very favorable aspect.
and all leading grades are now in good request, although the demand
Cloths have moved freely in desirable grades, while the same cannot
is not fully up to anticipations even yet.
Quite a large amc unt of be said of others. Thetrade
is a little backward in this particular line,
goods have been placed by both commission merchants and jobbers but indications tend to a
speedy resumption of activity. Rates are
during the week ; the jobbers replenishing, to obtain the benefit of
held up to askings.
present rates, as fast as they moved their goods.
Prices on all firmly
Cassimeres are much improved in activity. Fine grades are in good
standards are fully maintained, with, as in the case of brown goods, an
and considerable quantities of low-priced aud medium goods
upward tendency. An animated distribution is expected before the request,
are being moved, although at heavy reductions from last Fall’s prices.
close of the existing week. Amoskeag 46 19, do 42 18, do 54 24, do A 36
Fine
16*, American A 36 12*, Androscoggin L 36 16*, Auburn 86 —, Atta- is notheavy goods range firm and in good demand. The stock in hand
very large, and this fact serves to harden rates materially.
waugan XX 36 12*, do X 36 10J, Atlantic Cambric 36 24, Ballou <fc
Imported Dress Goods rule about in the same condition as the
Son 86 16, do 81 12, Bartletts 86 14*, do 83 14, do 3118*, Bates XX
previous week. Buyers appear loth to operate on a falling gold market,
86 17, do B 33 14,Blackstone 36 16*, do D 37 18*. Boott B 36 15, do C
and the past seven days business has not met the importers’ anticipa¬
88 18*, do E 36 12*, do H 28 11*, do O 30 12*, do R 2S 10, do
tions.
Buyers are canvassing the market pretty thoroughly, but confine
W 45 19, Clarks 86 29, Dwight 40 21, Ellerton 10-4 45, Forest
their operations to small transactions in special effects which may
dale 86 16*, Fruit of the Loom 36 17, Globe 27 8, Gold Medal 86 14*,
Green*. M’fgCo 86 12, do 31 10, Great Falls Q 86 16*,do J 38—,doS have captivated their fancy.
Staple Fabrics, as Alpacas, etc., are moving with a fair amount *
81 12*, do A 82 14*, Hill’s Semp. Idem 36 16, do 88 14*, Hope 36 15,
of activity, and the season bids fair to be a very successful one as far
James 86 15, do 33 13*, do 81—, Lawrence B 36 16, Lonsdale 86 17,
as they are concerned.
The exhibit of seasonable styles of goods far
MasonvilleSfi 17,Newmarket C 86 14, New York Mills 86 22*, Pepper¬
ell 6-4 82*, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do 10*4 60, Rosebuds 86 3 6, Red surpasses any previous season’s experience, and ff the trade does not
bear out anticipations it will be from no fault of the importers.
Bank 36 12, do 33 10*, Slater J. & W. 86 —, Tuscarora36 18,Utica 5-4
82*, do 6-4 37*. do 9-4 62*, do 10-4 67*. Waltham X 33 18*, do 42 18,
do 6-4 80, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do 10-4 50, Wamsutta 46 28, do 40*
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY U00DS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK,
25, do 36 20, Washington 88 9*.
The importations of dry goods at tins port for the week ending Feb.
Print Cloths are quite dull, and holders find it difficult to main¬
tain rates.
There io very little speculative demand, and the inquiry for 17,1870, and the corresponding weeks of 1869 and 1870, have been as
printing is by no means up to expectations ; 64 by 64 cloth is reported follows;
ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOB THB WBEK ENDING FEBRUARY 17, 1870.
quiet at 7* cents. The Providence Journal reports the print cloth
market of that city as dull.
1869.
1870.
1868.
,
Prints have improved slightly since our last review, although the
Value
Value.
Pkgs. Value.
Pkgs.
Pkgs.
888
$875,473
business is not large even yet. Two leading jobbing houses have been
1,507 $691,113
$691,112
.1,771
$539,276
469,014
do
1,362
366,571
383,679
1,502
.1,340
offering drives considerably below quotations, the effect of which has
410
967
675
895,984
silk....
do
695,379
616,645
been to increase business in those particular lines, while it has injured
617
153,665
866
3.8,996
do
flax....
2,718
243,405
506
to a certain extent the trade at large.
147,294
254,893
8,544
i.l,0C5
313,215
Prices rule firm and steady, and
buyers appear to have confidence in the stability of present rates.
3,783 $1,437,987
10,228 $2,419,459
.4,947 I >1,996,120
American 12-12*, Dunnell’s 12-12*, Hamilton 12*, Home —, Hope 8*,
Lancaster 12, London mourning 10*—11, Mallory 11*, Manchester WITHDRAWN FBOM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE MARKET LURING
THB SAME PERIOD.
12, Merrimac D 12*, do pink and purple 14, do W 18*, Oriental 12,
680
670
$274,687
$206,714
Manufactures
of
wool...
719
$299,120
Pacific 12*, Richmond’s 12*, Simpson Mourn’g 11*, Sprague’s purple
645
4S8
169,311
do
132,898
cotton.. 786
207,825
and pink 12*, do blue 12*, do shirtings 12*, Wamsutta 8$.
154
93
186,553
107,601
do
silk
139
177,057
Drills are moving more freely, for home trade, and some few
1,088
572
209,347
126,836
do
flax
886 * 219,583
20,846
1,577
76,233
transactions are reported for export.
4,555
75,248
Amoskeag 17, Graniteville D 16, Miscellaneous drygoods. 1,461
Hamilton 17, Laconia 17, Pepperell 17, Stark A 17, do. H 14*.
4.144 $860,743
6,3S3 $710,487
Total..3,991 $978,810
Ginghams are in quite good demand for certain makes, while some Add ent’d for ccnou’pt’n4,947 1,996,120
3,783 1,437,987
10,228 2,419,459
brands are lagging a little. Rates are firmly maintained. Allamance
7,927 $2,298,730
plaid, 18*; Amoskeag, 17; Caledonia, 14*; Clyde, 11; Earlston, 22*@25; Totalth’wn upon m’rk’t.8,938 $2,974,960 16,611 $3,129,946
ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAMS PERIOD.
Glasgow, 16 ; Gloucester, 14*; Hadley, 14 ; Hampden, 16; Hartford,
671
13*; Lancaster, 17; Lancashire, 15; Pequa, 12*; Park Mills, 14 ; Manufactures of wool... 525 $210,059
232,768
1,180 $431,949
490'
142,323
cotton.. 381
do
Quaker City, 14; Roanoke, 12*; Union, 18*.
106,422
678
182,845
S3
104,710
do
allk
153
149
286,204 '
340,785
Muslin Delaines are in fair request lor seasonable styles, and a
240
62,836
flax
320
do
87,87C
693
178,301
considerable amount of the goods have been distributed ; the demand Miscellaneous
180
11,889
dry goods. 223
2.175
42,166
74,568
for the season is reported as rather back ward however.. The display
1,528 $654,586
Total
of spring styles is excellent, and should
..1JX)2 $664,123
4,881 $976,046
be sufficient to in¬
8,783 1,437,9S7
Add ent d for consu’pt’n.4,947 1,966,120
10,228 2,419,429
augurate a lively trade. Hamilton, 20; Tycoon Reps, 27* ; Lowell, 20;
Manchester,20; do all wool,42*; Pacific, 20 ; do Armures, 20; do plain Total entered at the port 6,549 $2,660,243 15,109 $8,395,505 5,806.$1,992,57$
obbers:




do A 27,

,

.

.

,

252

THE
Financial.

CHRONICLE.

[February 19, 187CP

Dry Goods.

Dry Goods.

John C. Graham & Co., JENKINS, VAILL &
8ELH4, ALABAMA,
John S. &
Buyers
For

a

Cotton

of

Eben Wright &

PEABODY,

140 Devonshire

46 LBON4BD STREET,

State

Alabama.

of

MXBCHAFIS.

OOODft COMMISSION

CITY

BANK.

COTTONS AND WOOLEN*,

of Selma.
Capital

ft 100,000

-----

ISBELL, of Talladega, President.
ARMSTRONG, C ashier.

AMERICAN SILKS.

LOVE, Assistant Cashier.

N.Y.Correspondent-Importers and Traders
Bank.

THOS. K.

FERGUSON,

Brothers.

Sewing Mlh,
'Iiavis and

SELMA, ALABAMA,
to Collections.

Refers to Henry Clews & Co., 82 Wall street,
N,Y.

Organalneft,

inf: organzines fo., silk mixture cassiMERES.

Florentines,
Pongee Hand kerchiefs,
Silk Warp Poplins,
Silk Dress

SILKS FOR SPECIAL

on

all

Dailj

Goods,

SON,

MILLIKEN,
4 Otis

Balances of

Currency or Gold.
Persons depositing with ns can
check at sight in the same manner
as

LEONARD BAKER A
210 Chestnut

with National Banks.

CO.,
Street, Philadelphia

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

Advances made to our Dealers,
at all times, on approved
collaterals,

J. F. Mitchell,

S7

A

S9 Leonard Street, New

MANUFACTURERS

issues of Government Bonds at
rent market prices, also Coin

COTTON8

AND

COTTON S AIL DUCK
COTTON

CANVAS, FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER
ING, BAGGING,RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES

A

“ONTARIO’
SEAMLfeSS BAGS,
“
AWNING STRIPES.”.

Also, Agents
United State* Bunting Company.
full supply all Widths and Colors always in stock
13 6c 15 Lispenard Street.

e.

Addison Cammaok

j. Osborn.

&

Cammack,

BANKERS,
34 BROAD STREET.

Stocks, State Bonds* Gold and Fcdei al
Securities,
BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION.

Attention

paid to invest

ments in Southern State Ronds.

OTIS CO.,
Second National Bank,

commis¬

TITUSVILLE, PENN.,
LOWELL] HOSIERY COMPANY^I

Capital

Banking Accounts may be
opened with us upon the same con¬
ditions ns Currency Accounts.
Cotton
Bailroad, State, City and other
Corporate Loans negotiated.
Collections made everywhere in
the United States, Canada and

ft200,0€0

-----

Deposited with U. S. Treasurer o secure Circulation
and

Gold

Deposits 500,000.
CHAS. HYDE Pres’t.

G. C. HYDE, Cashier.

Steamship Companies.
PACIFIC Mail STEAMSHIP

COMPANY’S

THROUGH LINE

Hosiery,

Europe.

To California &

China,

Touching at Mexican Porta

Dividends and

Coupons collected.
H. Bate & Co.,

iFor

Spring, 1870.

BRIL LED-EYED

Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal street
at 12 o’clock noon, as above (except when those dates
fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday)
for ASP1N WALL, connecting via Panama Railway

NEEDLES,

Fishing Tackle*

with one ol the Company’s Steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at MANZANILLO^
Also, connecting at Panama with steamero fo
SOU'l’H PACIFIC AND CENTRAL AMERICAN

HO. 7 WARREN STREET, NEAR BROADWAL
NEW YORK.

Banker and

Meigs,

f. S. & E.

Wright & Co.,

Broker, No. 27 Wall St.,

Member ot Near York Stock

Exchange,
(Formerly cashier of the Metropolitan Bank, and
of
the firm of H. Meigs, Jr., A Smith).
Offers his services for the purchase and sale of
eminent and all other Stocks, Bonds and Gold
Interest allowed on deposits
'

Investments carefully attended to

AND

On the 5th and 21 at of Each Month*

Fifth Hooks and

Henry

QKk1

CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS.

MANUFACTURERS OF




Manufacturers and Dealers In

Particular

and

sion.

u

Brinckerhoff, Turner &
Polhemus,

WOOLENS.

purchase and sale of Gold and all

Thos.

¬

Osborn

F.or the Sale oi

cur¬

Coupons, and execute orders for the
on

Thorndike H. B. & C. Brown and Bleached Sheetings,

York

AGENTS

interest.

Securities,

Otis CC, Mount Ver
non, Columbus, Eagle,
Warren FF Fine Sheeting*.

Hingham, Farmers* AA and Switt River Brown Sheet
ings, 40-in. Reeky Mountain Duck, Bear, Raven’s Duck

COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

buy, sell and exchange all

first-class

Stripe*.
Awning, Thorndike. B.C..

And all kinds ol

10 and 12 German Street, Baltimore.

C. B. &

bearing interest at

We

Cordis

&C.

Certificates o>f Deposit issued, pay¬
able on demand or at fixed date,

at market rates of

Blue Denim*.

,

Columbian Heavy, Otis AXA,
BB, CC, D, O, K. G
Union, Arlington, Oxford. Mt. Vernon, Beaver Cree
^■A, BB, CC, Thorndike, C. Haymaker, Palmer, Bos
ton, Nortlifield, Pawnee, Farmers’ and Mechanics
•«rown Denim*.
Columbian XXX, Otis BB, Warren A.B.D.X.
TPic
Cordis ACE, AAA, BB, Duck AA.B., Thorndike A.C
Swift River, Palmer, New England.

Street, Boston.

CHASE, STEWART A CO.,
j

Sulloways

PURPOSES TO ORDER.

AGENTS:

CHENEY A

Mills’

BLEA. AND BROWN.

102 Franklin Street, New York.

allowed

Hosiery.

Pcppef and Gilmanton

Brown and Bleached Good*.

Beit Ribbons.

EDWARD II. ARNOLD A

32 WALL STREET.

Interest

Shaker Flannels.

Otis Co.,

Poulards and

Banking House of

Henry Clews&Co,

^

Shaker Socks, &c., &c.

Machine Twist,

7

BANKER,

Special attention

Pepper Hosiery Mills,
Company,
Otis Hosiery Mills,
And Arlington Mills,
F anev Dress Good
1,3-1 and 64 Koubaix Cloth, Imper
lal Chines,
Alpacas, Reps Cohnrgs, &c.,&c.
Belknap Ac Grafton
Shirtings, F lannels, Rob Roys, Carssimeres.Ropellants
Cottonades, Domestics, Boys’ Checks, Sulloways,

„

ChENEY

Belknap Mills,

Cordis Mills,
1 horndike

MANUFACTURED BY

National

AGENTS FOR THE

Company,

„

Of Several MM*.

JAS.

WM. P.
JNu. W.

Otis

Nciv York,
Street. Boston.

Columbian Mfs
Mfg Company, Grafton Mills,
Warren Cotton Mills,
Sutuner Falls Mills,
Boston Buck
Company,
Gilmanton Hosiery Mills,

of

Sole Agents toe the sale

THE

Co.,

92 *94 Franklin Street,

Commission.

late

BELLING AGENTS.

One hundred pounds baggage allowed each adult
Baggage-masters accompany baggage through, ana
attend to ladies and children without male protec¬
tors. Baggage received on the dock the day before
sailing, from steamboats, railroads, and passengers
who prefer to send them down early. An experienced
surgeon on hoard. Medicine and attendance free.
For passage ticl ets or lurther information apply to
the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot o
Canal street, North River, New York.

F. R. BABY,

Agei»*|

February 19, 1870.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Financial.

Insurance.

Eight Per Cent Gold

OFFICE

OP THE ISSUE OP

$1,500,000,

Loan and Trust Com¬

pany of New York. The mortgage which secures these

$13,500

per

mile;

covers a

completed road for every bond issued, and is a first
and only mortgage.
This line connecting St. Joseph
with Fort
Kearney will make a short and through
route to
California.

lowest estimate at
First Mortgage Bonis

at the'

4,rOO.OOO
1,500.000

Total

$15,500 000
Length of road, 271 miles; price, 97} and accrued

interest.

Can be obtained from the
undersigned. Also,
pamphlets, maps, and information relating thereto.
These bonds being so well secured and
yielding a large

income,

desirable
tive investments.

to

are

parties seeking safe and lucra¬

W. P. CONVERSE & CO..
ommercial

cal

Agents, 54 Pine Street, New York.

TANNER & CO.,
Agents, 49 Wall Street, New York.

R. T.

Wilson

&

Co.,

Government

BANKER
14

WALL

AND

to

SIGHT DRAF

And Four Per Cent interest allowed on

Balances.

Secnrttfe*

have
attention.

231,561 05

of Credit for

Available in

all parts of
Europe and
&c.
Draw BILLS in sums to SUIT America,
on

♦

'

}

HOTTING HER Sc CO., Paris.
Bank, Robt. Benson

&

Co., London.

The British Linen Co.
Bank, and its various
ranches, Scotland.
ADVANCES made on consignments, &c.
STOCKS and BONDS bought and sold at
New York
ock Exchange.

Martin Bates,

OFFICE

114

BROADWAY,

BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE
AVENUE.

THIRD

INCORPORATED 1823.
Cash Capital

$500,000

GO
245,911 93

Surplus

:

H. C.

A. S. Barnes,

A

Cash

Capital and Surplus, July 1st,

1868, $745,911 93.
Insures

Property against Loss

he usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses

Southwick,

or
Company,
the

cities in

or

Damage by Fire at

paid at the office of the
at its various Agencies in the principal

United States.

Adam T. Bruce,
Albert B. Strange,

Egbert Starr,

JAMES W. OTIS, President.
BLEECKER, Vice Pres

R. W.

A.

Augustus Low,
Dean K. Feuner,

F H. Carter, Secretary.
F. Griswold, General Agent.

Emil Heineuian,
Jelual Read,
John 12. Waller.

Oliver K. King.

JOHN K. MY_EUS. President,
WILLIAM LECONEY, Vice-President

THE

THOMAS HALE, Secretary.

North British

Dividend. Mercantile Insurance Co

37TH

OF

LONDON

WASHINGTON

Insurance

Company,

BROAIDWAY.

^Capital ----Assets, Feb.51, »TO
Unpaid Lone§
-

the

the Ftr»t of April next, from which
date Interest thereon will cease.

SATTERLEE, President,

HENRY” WESTON, Vice-President.

WM. K. LOTHROP, Secretary.
WM. A. SCOTT, Asst-Secretary,

CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT
FOR

TRAVELERS,

South

Georgia & Florida

RAILROAD

AVAILABLE IN ALL PARTS OP EUROPE
ALSO,

First Mortgage

7

COMPANY’S

Per

Cent

M. K.

Co.

IT. K. JESSUP Sc

COMPANY,

NO. 12 PINE STREET.

J esup & Company,

RANKERS AND
12 PINE

MERCHANTS,

STREET,

Negotiate

Ronds and Loans for Railroad

Cos.,

Contract for
iron

or

Cars, etc.

Steel Ralls,

Locomotives,

nd undertake
all business connected with

M.

Weith,

Railway*
Uko. abents

J. M. Weith & Arents,
Late J.M. Weith*

Co.,

DEALERS IN SOUTHERN AND MIS¬

CELLANEOUS
No.

SECURITIES,

NEW STREET.

Loans Negotiated*

Lounsbeiy & Fanshawe,
RANKERS Sl

.

ISSUED BY

Manager

} Associate Managers.

Ronds,

Endorsed by THE STATE OF GEORGIA, and both
Principal and Interest guarantied by THE AT LAN TIC
AND GULF RAILROAD COMPANY by which the
former road has been leased. It Is 58 miles in length
and the entire issue of the Bonds is but <500,000.
For sale by

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,

OFFICE,

STREET, NEW YORK.

EZRA WHITE. Manager,
SAM. P. BLAGDEN. Ass t

.

AND

&

UNITED STATES BRANCH

$05,697 92
4,300 00

on

EDINBURGH*

$14,044,635 31 IN GOLD.

$400,000 00

Scrip of 1863 will be redeemed

AND

PAID UP CAPITAL AND ACCUMULATED
FUNDS

50 WILXIAM

A Dividend of (8) EIGHT PER CENT is this day
declared, payable on demand in cash to Stockholders.
Also, an Interest Dividend of (6) SIX PER CENT on
outstanding Scrip, payable First of April in cash.
Also, a Scrip Dividend of (50) FIFTY PER CENT on
the earned premiums ot Policies entitled to partici¬
pate in the profits for the year ending January 31st,
1870. The Scrip will be ready for delivery on and alter
the First of April next.
The remaining (50) Fifty per Cent of

Circular Notes




American Fire
Insurance Co.,

Wm. Hegeman,
James R. Taylor,

A. Wesson.
John A. Hadden
John A. Bartow.

GEO. C.

Morton, Bliss

North

New York, February 7, 1870.

STREET,

Letters

„

INSURANCE*

j

fa«h

Travellers,

The City

FIRE

William Leconey,
Alex. M. Earle,
Win. T. Blodgett
C. H. Ludington,
J. L. Smallwood,
TFomas Eakin,

Moses A. Hoppock
B. W. Bull,
Horace B. Clatlin,
W. M. Richards,

172

BANKERS,

■

No. 50 William Street*

20,142 <7

$1,166,129 23

John K. Myers,
A. C, Richards,
G. L. 11 Gillespie,.
C. E. Mllnor,

especial

James Robb, King & Co.,
Circular

BLAGDEN, Abs’c-Manager.

CHA^WHl!ITS,**\ Associate Managers.

46,000 00

fash

Issue

EZRA WniTE, Manager,

SAM. P.

$865 725 41

SIX PER CENT INTEREST on
the outstanding
Certiiieates of Profits will be
paid to the holders
thereof, or their legal
representatives, ou and alter
'A U EsDAY, the 1st d»y of
February.
The wliote of the 011 1
STANDING CERTIFICATES
OF THE COMPAN Y, OF THE ISSUE
OF
redeemed and paid in cash to the holders lb65, will be
thereof, or
their legal
representatives, on and after TUESDAY-,
the 1st day of
February, from which date interest
thereon will cease. The
Certificates to be produced
at the time of payment and
cancelled.
A Dividend in ocrin of THIKT
Y-FIVE PER CENT,
free of Government Tax, is declared on
the net amount
of Famed. Premiums for rhe
year ending December
3lst. 1869, ior which certificates
will be issued on and
after T UESDAY ,tlie 5th
day of April next.

Daily

ali Southern Points.

WALL

Kellogg, Pres L

current money.

,

TRUSTEES

H.

AND

BROKER,

DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT

56

Skilton, Sec’y.

Losses promptly adjusted by the
Agents here, andpaid
in

EXCHANGE,

STREET, NEW YORK.

on

D. W. C.

66,697 03

Company has the following

Total Assets

HARTFORD, CONN.

Capital and Surplus $1,400,000*

324,344 50

Premium Notes & Bills Receivable
Subscription Notes in advance of
Premiums
Reinsurance and other ClaiuiB due
the company, estimated at

Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Exchange,

Collections made

period

$86,015 51
5s3,009 90
Drawing interest. 196,700 00

Particular attention paid to the purchase and sale

Southern

s one
eimuins

Cash in Bank
United States and other Stocks....
Loans ou stocks

Merchants,

Worthington,

OF

Assets:

STREET, NEW YORK,

MEMBER N. Y. STOCK

FIRE INSURANCE COME
ANY

Expenses, less Savings,

&e., during the

Return Pi

Securities, Stocks, Bonds

N.

Phoenix

$608,830 22

Paid lor Losses and

and Gold
bouebt and sold on the mosMlberal terms. Merchants
Bankers and others allowed 4 per c ent on
deposits
The most liberal advances made on Cotton, Tobbacco
&r.., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondent
Messrs. K. GILLIAV & CO., Liverpoo

W.

$715,751 26

Policies, except on Cargo
Freight for the Voyage.
No Risks have been taken
upon Time
or upon nulls of
Vessels.
Premiums worked off as
Earned, during the
period as above
and

WILSON, CALLAWAY Sc CO.,
No. 44 BROAD

-

GEORGE
William H. Ross, Secretary.ADLARD, Manager

.611,290 80

Total amount of Marine Premiums
This Company has issued no

LATE

Rankers an<l Commission

$1,432,640

Insurance Department at
Albany.
United States Bsanch, No.
117 Broadway, N. Y

Outstanding Premiums, January 1,

Stock of.$1 0,000,000

1,600,(00 acres, valued

£2,000,000 Star.
1,893,226

Special Fund of $200 OOO
Deposltea in the

7869$104,463 46
Premiums received from
January
1 to December
31,1869, inclusive

The

Congress

of

OF LIVERPOOL AND
LONDON*

Section 12 of its charter:

in denominations of
$1,000 and $500, coupon or regis¬
tered, with interest at EIGHT PER CENT
per annum,
payable 15th February and August, in Gold, free of
Uuited States Taxes, in New York or
Europe. The
bonds have thirty years to
run, payable in New York,

The Company have a
capital
And a Grant of Land from

Queen Fire Insurance Co
Authorized Capital
Subscribed Capital
Paid up Capital and
Surplus

N uw York,
January 13,1870.
tSTTHE FOLLOWING STATEMENT
OF THE
oi the Compauyr U
published in conformity
with the requirements of

Joseph and Denver City RR. Co,

bonds is at the rate of

THE

afluirs

BY THE

Trustees, Farmers’

Insurance.

COMPANY.
BUILDING, 176 BROADWAY.

HOWARD

in Gold.

OP

Pacific Mutual Insurance

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS

Sf.

253

No

8

WALL

Government

BROKERS,

STREET, NEW

Geld and Foreign
B10SIX

K.

Securities,

p. LOUNtBXBY•

Exchange

WILLIAM S. FAKI1UWI

[February 19,1870.

THE CHRONICLE.

254
_

Martin

-

'■

-

.

Runyon,

&

Successors to

BROKERS,

ST.t NEW YORK,
Dealers In Governments and Specie.
Stocks and
Bonds bought and sold on Commission, Government
Coupons bought at Market Rates.
Collections made
In all parts of the l nited States and Canadas.
Accounts solicited and interest allowed on Deposits.
k. F. B. MARTIN,
ENOS BUNYON.
w. b. mott, Special.
40 WALL

Tlie City

Bank,

AND

LONDON.

,1

AND

CINCINNATI, OHIO.
GOLD, SILVER and all kinds

GOVERNMENT BONDS.

rat'J

in all parts of

accessibiJ

MADE at all

COLLECTIONS

Europe and the East.

points and remitted for on day of payment.

& Co.,

ett

ON

P. Hayden.

CO.,

OF CHINA AND JAPAN.

Advances made on consignments
chandize.

of approved mer

Hayden, Hutcheson 8tCo
BANKERS,'
13

S.

STREET,

IIIGII

COLUMBUS, OHIO,

Bankers.

Southern

Do

a

General

Banking, Collection, agd
Business.

NATIONAL

Williams&Guion, Freedman’s
Gulon Sc

Alex. S. Petrie Sc Co.,

Co.,

Liverpool.

London.

'

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
Advances made on

n

all parts

of Europe, &c.

Savings Bank

Exchaji®

STATE

NATIONAL BANK OF THE
OF MISSOURI.

in St. Louis.

CHARTERED BY CONGRESS IN 1865,

New York.

63 Wail Street,

PARI

W. B. Hayden

Jos. Hutcheson.

NO.

securities.
Special facilities foi negotiating Commercial Paper.
Collect'ins both inlind and foreign promptly made.
Foreign and Dome itic Loans Negotiated.

AND

LONDON
FOR 8ALE"

HEARD &

AUGUSTINE

subject to Sight Drait

CHECKS

Street, Boston,

AGENTS FOR

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

West Fourth Street,

U 108 Sc 110

Dealers in

I- *UI8.

Marcu&rd, Andre Sc Co,
Circular Notes available for Travelers

28 State

STREET, NEW YORK.

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

J

Robert Benson Sc Co,
Munroe Sc Co.

BANKERS,
NO. 53 WILLIAM

Street, Boston.
and Travelers

Bills of Exchange, and Commercial
Credits issued on

Ever

Co.,

SoUTTER &

Gilmore, Dunlap & Co.,
Page, Richardson
Co.,
&
BANKERS,
TO State

W. B. Mott Sc Co.,
STOCK

Western Bankers.

Boston Bankers.

Financial.
.

ESTABLISHED 1837.

Centra

Office

at

Washington, D, C.,
Capital paid In

BRANCHES AT

Baltimore, Norfolk, Richmond, New Berne, Wil
Charleston, Beaufort, Augusta,

mington, Raleigh,

(Ga.j, Savannah, Macon, Jacksonville, Tallalta'-se,

Mobile. Huntsville, New Orleans, Vicksburg, Mem¬

phis, Nashville, Chattanooga, Louisville, St. Louis
Martinsburg„New York and Washington.
Collections promptly made.
These Banks are for the Colored people.

83,410,300

...

Bank, having reorganized as a National Bank
Is now prepared to do a general banking business.
Government Securities, Coin, Gold Dust and Bullion
bought and sold at current rates. Special attention
given to collections throughout tlie West
James H. Britton, Pres. Ciias. K. Dick on
8
This

Edward P. Curtis Cashier

Deposits are now $1,250,000.
EATON, Actuary.
J. W. ALVOKD, Pres t.
JAY COOKE & CO., New York Correspondent.
Tlie

Knauth,Nachod&Kuhne

D. L.

Sam’l A.
Stock

BANKERS,
New

York,

Leipzig, Saxony,

AND

85 BRITIIL.

BR JAD ST.

DRAW IN SUMS TO SUIT

principal cities of Germany. Switzerland,
ngland, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, Bel¬
gium, Russia, Italy, fepain, Denmark, &c.
Iasuo Letters of < redi* for f iavilers,
ttvailabie'i/ii all parts of Europe.
the

Farmer, Hatch 8t Co.,
BANKERS Sc

BROKERS,

Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold exclusively
on

SAINT LOUIS

commission.

Accounts of Banks and Bankers received. Collec¬
tions made in the United States, British Provinces and

CHARLESTON,

Milwaukee, Wis.

Cleveland, O.

S.

W. M.

C.

BAN RERS

AND

BROKERS,

37 WALL STREET.
New York.

Banking Houses.
Refers by permission to Chas. T. Lowndes, Esq.,
President Bank of Charleston and Agent Liverpool,
London and Globe Insuiance Co.

N ational

Stocks. Bonds and Gold, bought and
mission. Business Paper Negotiated.

Edward C. Anderson,
BAN it

Jr.

Lit, FACTOR AND

Commission

Merchant,

Special attention given to consignments of Cotton.
Gold, Stocks, Bonds and Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, bought and sold.
Collections promptly remitted for
Orders solicited forihe purchased Mies of Produce
and Securities. Prompt attention guaranteed.
New York Correspondents: Lawrence Bros. & Co.

Sola on com

Lancaster

8c

AND
AND STOCK
CHANGE BROKERS,

GEO. W. DOUGHERTY.

UTLEY,

8c

Utley

Dougherty,

BANKERS AND BROKERS
NO.

11

STREET,

WALL

NEW

YORK

No. 1113 Main

No. 2

S

52

Wall Street* New York*

Street, Rieliniond, Va.

STREET, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.

J. L. Levy,

T*0

EXCHANGE
And

DEALERS

ON

BOSTON,

LONDON.

Sterling Credits,

IN

COMMERCIAL

PAPER.

Sell Massachusetts and New York State
St cks.

Government Securities, Stocks

bought and sold strictly on




BROKER

CK

AND

Bonds, and Gold

Commission.|

ins'ruction of the Board of Directors of
said Association, hereto subscribed my

^

elation, at Philadelphia aforesaid, the
day and year above written.

name,

:5 cent,:
rln.rev.:
:

Exchange Dealer,
STREET,
25

WHEREOF, I have, by

S al <
of the (
Bank. <

and affixed the seal ot said Asso-

BENJAMIN ROWLAND, Jr.,
President

stamp :

:can

t’ld:

NOTICE.
The National Exchange Bank of Philadelphia loca¬
ted at Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, is
closing up its affairs. All note holders and other
creditors of said Ass nation are therefore hereby
notified to pres nt the n t s and other claims against
the Association for payment at the National Bank of
the Republic of Philadelphia.

BENJAMIN ROWLAND,Jr.fPresident.'

Dated, January 15,1870.

CAROxNDELET

G. BUCKINGHAM, JR.

NEW ORLEANS.

STREET,

STATE

Bank of the Republic of Philadel
phia on Jauuary 15th, 1870.
with the National

NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.

AND

as

delphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, duly uotified
and held pursuant to law and tne Artic'es of Associa¬
tion of said Bank, at the office ol said Association, at
Philadelphia aforesaid, on tne eighth day of January,
1870, it was voted by the Shareholder of saidAssociaib n, owning more than two-tliirds of its stock,
that said As oeiatioago into liquidation and be closed
for the purpose of cons didating, uniting and merging

LANCASTER, BROWN Sc CO„

promptly and carefully executed.

Co.,

redemption therso!,” approved June 3,186i, that, at a
meeting of the Stockholders of the NATIONAL EXcn VNGE BANK of Philadelphia, locate.! at t’hila-

EX¬

FROWN, LANCASTER Sc CO.,
NO. 30 SOUTH

Piladelpiiia, January 15th, 1870.

IN TESTIMONY

Governments, Gold, and all classes of Stocks and
Bonds bought and sold on commission.
Orders

Blake Brothers 8c

Exchange Bank

To the Comptroller of the Currency, Washington, D.C
Sir—It is hereby certified, in pursuance of Section
42 of the Acloi Congress entitled “ An Act to provide
a National Currency secured by a pledge of Umtcd
st-.tes Bon is, and to provide for the circulation and

Co.,

BANKERS
WM. B.

STOCK RftOKER,

OF PHILADELPHIA.

Gkjrge H. B. Hill

John P. Marquand,

F. Hfwson,

Office No. 21 West Third Street, Cincinnati, Ohio
Refer to: All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs. LOCK
WOOD & CO., New Y'ork.

Savannah, Ga.

Marquand, Hill 8c Co.,

MO.

description, viz.: Unand Railroad Stocks,
Bonds and Coupons bought and sold on commission.
Orders solicited and satisiaction guaranteed. Prices
current issued weekly and exchanged regularly with
Southern Securities of every
current Bank Notes, State, City

Europe.

Bills of Exchange drawn on London, Paris, &c.
£. J. Farmer A Co.,
C. J. Hatch & Co..

Broker#,

STOCK AND BOND BROKER.

AND 5 & 7 NEW STREET.

78 BROADWAY

Bond

NO. 323 NORTH THIRD STREET,

C. Kaufman,

A.

Gaylord 8c Co.,

and

J. L. Levy.
E. J. Hast.

General Pertner
Partner In Commendum

folleotfon* made on oil point*.

Henry Sancton,
STOCK
NO.

Sc

GOLB

BROKER

4 NEW STREET, NE
BOOM

12,

YORK.

Late with Jay Cooke

I

J. M

BROWN.
ce

dc Co | Late of A. If. Brown

Buckingham

8c

Brown,

BANKERS,
DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

No. 6 Wall

Orders*11

St., New York.

Stocks, Bonds and

Co.

uold#

executed

commissi011* Interest allowed on feposlts.

THE CHRONICLE.

February 19,1870.]

255

——

1

PEICES CUBRENT.

1 he Duties on Foreign Imports were pub¬
lished in the CRRomcm of August 14.

Pot, 1st sort

@

....

Butter—

45 ©

©
©

37

State, firkins

34

State, half-firkins, choice.
State, half-firkins, ordin’y
Welsh tubs, prime
Welsh tubs, ordinary
Western, prime
Western, fair
Penn., dairy, prime
Penn., dairy, good

40
28
37
84

.....

©
©
©
@
@
@
©
©

25
18
35
30

48
38
36
42
33
89
86
23
22
37
35

V lb

©
@

17
16

16 @
it>
14k@
11M@

...

11

CANDLES—
Refined sperm, city

©
®
©

40

?! ft 50

Sperm, patent

25

14 ounce.
Stearic
Adamantine.... 14 ounce.
CEMENTRosendale
$ ft
COAL-

©
©

18

....©

25

....

©

Guayaquil do
do
,
..@
do
©
St.Domingo do
'OFFEE—See special report.
....

$ lb

....©

Bolts
Braziers'

@

@

18 ©
—@
@

Sheathing, &c., old
Sheathing, yel. metal,new
Bolts, yellow metal

@

20k@
11 gro.

16k
17%

8*
12

@
@

12

....

....

Dry cod
Pickled scale
Pickled cod
Desiccated cod

32
88
33
19
26
26
22
2L

-

•

Assafoetiaa
Balsam

capivi

Balsam tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark petayo

13%@
2»

@

2%@

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

29

2%

45
31

2%
33

Camphor,refined....

Sk@
4%@

21 @
74 ©

© 2

2 10
Cantnarides
Carb. ammonia, in bulk.
17

23

is'

©
©

19 @

Carrawayseed

Coriander seed

12

Cochineal, Hondur..gold
Cochineal,Mexican. “
Copperas, American
Cream tartar, pr
.gold
Cubebs, East India

72 ©

..

©

20"
13

80"
2

6

'6 %

©
@

10*

10

Flowers,benzoin..?! oz.
Gambler ....gold..?! u>.
Gamboge
Ginseng, Western
Ginseng, Southern
Gum Arabic, nicked....
Gum Arabic, sorts

80 @
4 @
92 %@
70 @
@
50 @
28%©
70 ©

©

29

©

13 ©
35

2Sk

©

Fennell seed

Gum benzoin
Gumkowrie
Gum gedda
gold
Gum damar
Gum myrrh, East India..
Gum myrrh, Turkey....
Gum Senegal
Gum tragacantli, sorts..
Gum
tragacanth, w.

29

@
48%@.
28 @

Cutch

@

55 @
55 ©

.©
65 @

&
&
75
35
85
29
S3
14 %
40

S3
70

ilakey
gold 90 © 1 25
Hyd. potash, Fr. and
Eng
gold 88 50 @ 3 70
@ 8 50
Iodine, reBublimcd
@ 1 75
Ipecacuanha, Brazil.... 1 70
Jalap, in bond
gold 60 @ 75
80
©
45
Lac dye
38 ©
Licorice paste, Calabria.
24 ©
25
Licorice paste, Sicily...
20 ©
29
Licorice paste, Bp., solid
81 ©
Licorice paste, Gr
Greek...
11
©
12%
Madder, Dutch—.. .gold
Madder. Fr. EXF.F7 “
.&
16%
2
Manna, large flake
2 00 ©
1
Manna, small flake
1 10 © 1 12
8 ©
Mustard seed, Cal....
11
18 @
Mustard seed, Trieste...
Nutgalls, blue, Aleppo.. 22%© ....
....

'

‘




....

.

.

.

Russia, clean
Italian
Manila
Sisal

28 00®28 50
26 75@27 00
16 00© ....
@

....

©

—

16 0ri@17 00
9 50@10 CO
23 00©24 00
@34 00
35 © ....
25 © —
5 75© 7 50

.

....

• • • •

15K©

16

21

....

27K

©

....

—

....©

14%

10ik@

—

“

6K

22%@ 22k

"
“

San Juan
Matamoras
Vera Cruz

“
“
“
“

20K©
17 @
18 @
19K@

21
18

Tampico
Bogota

“
“

19%@
19K©

20
20
19
16

Maracaibo
Truxillo
Bahia
Rio Hache
Curacoa
Port au Platt
Texas
Western

Dry Salted Hides—
Maracaibo

“
“
“
“
“
“
“
“
“

17
15
19
16
16
14
17
18
18

©
@
@

@
©
©
@
©
©
@
©
@

22 %

21K

Maranham

“

“
“
“
“
“
‘4

Bahia
Chili
Sandwich Island..
Wet Salted Hides—
Buenos Ayres.. ?! ft gold.
“
Rio Grande
California.;
“
Para
“
cur.
New Orleans

n"
18
15

17K

30
2*

29K

Brandy—
,-?! gall.—
Otard, Dupuy & Co..gold. 5 5T@13 CO
5 50©17 06
Pinet, Ca8tilIon& Co
5 50@18 00
Hennessy
“

7

00

9

20

(X)

45 00© 60 00

,l

“

...4x6,

“

...bds,

“

“
“

do

2 in.

18©

“

strips, 2x4

per

50
20

M. ft. 18 00© 21 00

report.

?! 100 ft4 60
6 10

@6 25

32 ©

Zinc
NAVAL STORES—

Turpentine, soft ..?* 280 ft
?! bbl.
Tar, N. County
Tar, Wilmington
Pitch, city
Spirits turpentine.?! gall.
Rosin, common...?! 280 ft
strained
No. 2
No. 1

4 OO
2 50
3 00
2 59
47
2 10
2 15
2 80

14
14
16
13
13
15
13

@
@
©
©

11 k©
12 ©
11 @
11 ®
10 @
10 @

16

12

12K
UK

19

40
SO

22

©
©
©
©

15 @

18K@

12%©
1C @

20

40K

33
24

8*
13
11

Cuba(dutyp’d)gold?!gall.l 15 @125
HOPS—

6 © 10

15 © 26
©

"

LegerFrcres

“

5 50© 10 00
5 50@10 00

“

4

“
“
“

4 50@ 4 75
3 50© 8 75
8 00© 5 25

STEEL—

English, cast
English, spring
English blister
English machinery
English German .."

American, prime, country
and city..?! ft
TEAS—Sec special report.

—
....

TOBACCO—See

© ...
© ...
©....
@2 25

52K@....

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
el.,French,
French, dry
d
.Ochre, yel.,
Ochre," “ground, In oil
Spanish bro., dry.?! 100 ft
Span. bro.,gr’d in oil.?! n>
Paris white. No. 1
2.
Chrome, yellow, dry —

Whiting, Amer..?! 100 ft
Vermillion, China...?! ft

Vermillion, Trieste
Vermillion,Tiemans Cal¬
ifornia, ?! ft
Vermillion, Amer.. com.
Venet. red

# cwt. 2
(N. C.) V

Carmine, Tieman’s..?! ft 13
Plumbago.China clay

Chalk
Chalk, block

12

©

....

....

10%©
13
2
8
00
8

©
©
©
@
©

25
9
3"
85

2k®
15
90
90
88
90
22
25
25

‘

@
©

*95

@

90

©

95
27

@

,

„

....

©

©
@
@
©
@
©

No. 1, pulled

25

©

California, fine, unwashed
California, medium, “
California, common,“

80
SO
26
21
27
20
28
8
37
15
SO
SO

“

South Am., merino, “
South Am., mestiza,“
South Am..cordova,wash.

Cape G. Hope, unwashed..
East India, washed.
Texas, fine
Texas, medium.
ZINC—
Sheet

.?> ft

_

Cotton
Tobacco.*
Tallow

2X

....

©....
@....

-

©
@
@

82
28

,

d.
3-11

s.

•

m •

•...

•

3

6©....

•

•

•

,

,

•

•

©

• • • •

&

«...

ft c.
ft
?i ft
k®
,

••
•

c.

....

?! hhd. 8 00 © 10 OO
9 ft
Lard
*
Measurement goods fl ton 10 00©
Petroleum
5 0C@ 5 06
To Melbourne, ?! foot.
&
25
To San Fbancisco, by Clipper
t
Measurement goods ?!
7%® 25
%®
Heavy goods
ft
Nails....:
?! keg. 0 20 '© 0 25'
Petroleum..?! c.of 10gall. 0 20 ©
25
R’road iron-. ?) ton ofiKOft
© ••••
6
00
9
©
CoaP*,
00
*t‘ T ■*
^4 '.V, v* i v« g-j
4 f

*

i

•

•

•••

6©....

sail.

40
18
82

•,.,

§ -a

•

16

@
©
©

SAIL.

....

_

©
@
@

d
5-82 @
1 6 ©
©
©
©
©

,

6

©

s.

ton 12 6 @20 0

Wheat..b. &b.
Beef
?! tee. 2
Pork
V bbl. 1
■
To IIavke
by

50
58
45
44
30
32
S2
28
23
30
20
83
34

io%® 10%

..

40 0

60
58
50

@
©

25

C’n,b &b.?i bu

@34 00

Crude,40@47gray.?! gall. 21K®
Crude, in oulk
15k®

“
“
“
“
“

55
47
46
47
58
40
40

H. goods.?!
Oil

?! ft .... ©
1%
?! ton.20 00 @21 00

Barytes, American..?! ft
PETHOIJEUM-

1 00
8ft
1 60
1 2fl
1 26
85 0f@60 DO
2 60© 9 00

Amer., Saxony fleece.?! ft
Amer., lull blood merino.
Amer., % and V merino
Amer., native & % merino
Amer., c ombing domestic
Extra, piuuM

....

@ 2 75
00 @16 00

?! ton.33 00

90©
70©
80@
1 00©
1 10©

**

FREIGHTS— ,—steam.s.d.
To Liverpool : s. d.
Cotton
?! ft
©
Flour ....I* bbl 1 3 @18

-

85© 1 25
2 25© 3 50
1 00@1 2ft

“
“

..

7K
12
11
16

©

....?! cask
?! doz.

Valparaiso,

10K®

9

gold
“

Claret
Claret
WOOL-

10K

7 ©

8 50© 7 00
1 25© 9 00
2 00© 8 50

Marseilles Madeira...
Marseilles port

10 K

10M©

10%

...

■

Sicily, Madeira
Red, Snail. & Sicily...

©....

10K©

©

?! gall.

Lisbon

....

Parafline,25 gr.lubr

13

Sherry

-

S2K@ 85
70 @
75 @ 78

12

@
©

Port

Olive, Mars’es, qts (cur¬
rency) ?! case 5 00 @6 00
40 @1 15
Olive, in casks.... ?i gall.
Palm
?! ft
10K@
96 © 100
?! gall.
Linseed —...:
80
@....
crude
Whale,
Northern..
$2K@ 85
Whale, bleached winter..
55 @1 57K
Sperm, crude —
75 ©....
Sperm, winter bleached.
35 @....
Lard oil, prime winter...
83

©

special report.

Madeira

OILS—

Red oil, western, Elain ..
Red oil, saponified.......
Bank
Straits

®
©

9
12

10

WINES-

Malaga, dry
Malaga, sweet

pale

13
18

Plates, I. C. coke
7 00 @ 7 50
Plates, Terne charcoal.. 5 75 @ 6 00
Plates, 7'erne eoke
7 37%@ 7 87%

@4 25
@2 75
@3 25

City thin,obl.,inbbls.?!
ton.39 00© —
“
in bags
46 00@46 50
West, thin, obl’g, in bags.. .42 00© ....

extra

16 © 20
7 @ 10
11 © 18
M
11
15
18

?! ft

American machinery “
American German..
“
10
SUGAR—See special report.
TALLOW—

Burgundy port

OAKUM
OIL CAKE—

75@18 00

in b 1 10© 1 15
1 10© 1 15
9S@ 99

American blister..........
American cast
Tool.
American spring....
“

2 50
4 00

in oil.

@
©
©

Marett &Co

@2 60
@3 50
@5 00
6 OO @8 00
7K© 10K
?! ft

pale

“

34
^ 1b, gold
33%©
“
32 ©
82%
29 k@
30
English.....
“
Plates, char. I. C..?! box 8 25 "@ 8 50

....

22 ©
13 @

‘

TIN—
Banca
Straits

23 @ 29

Pd (Cd.)..^ ft

Copper
Yellow metal...

“

©4 62K

‘

.

50
25
20

22©
23©
31©
35@

‘

Other foreign brands
Rum—Jam., 4f li proof.
St. Croix, 3d proof...
Gin, diflerent brands
Domestic liquors—Cash.
Brandy, gin & pure sp’ts
Rum, pure
Whiskey

2 85

....©

“

bds,
Spruce.
plklKin.

00
00
00
00

45
27
30
70

8 50@ 9 00

SPIRITS—
*"

Maple and birch
30 00©
White pine box boards ... 23 00@
Wli. pine merch. box b’ds. 27 00©
Clear pine
60 00®
Laths.
Latlis
?! M.2 80 ©
Hemlock...Sx4, per piece. ....©

25

8 75@10 25
9 00@19 00
8 50© 9 00
6 50© 7 50

.

50
00
Pop.&W.WM,b’ds & pl’ks 45 00© 45 50
Cherry hoards and plank . 70 00© 80 00
Oak and ash

13%
75
30
35
25

Platcs, for’n ?i 100 ?! .gold 5 87%@6 12%
10 @ 12
Plates, domestic
1R ft
SPICES—See special report.

LUMBER—

6©
Bird’s-eye maple, logs ?! ft.
Black walnut
?! M. ft. 75 00© 85
Bl’k walnut, logs ?! sup. ft.
8@
Black walnut crotches...
15©
Yel. pine tim., Geo.,iPM.ft. 32 00© 33
White oak, logs, ?! cub. ft. 45 00® 45
White oak, plank, ?! M. ft. 50 00© 55

©

10%
....

SPELTER-

1 40©
1 75©

Rockland, common. ?! bbl.
Rockland, heavy

13

....

Baineen, Nos. 1. 2,3
9 25@10 25
Canton,re-rld,fair to ex do 6 75@ 8 50
Japan, common to super’r. 7 25©10

LIME—

Litharge, city
?! ft
Lead, red, citv
Lead, white, Amer.,pure

HONEY—

Crop of 1868
?» ft
do 1869 (good to prime)
Bavarian

rough
good damaged...
poor
“

“

30%

PAINTS—

m
City sl’ter trim. & cured
10K
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio gr. kip ?! ft gld 25 ©
Minas
Sierra Leone
cash
Gambia and Bissau
Zanzibar
East India Stock—
Calcut. city sit. ?! ft gold
Calcutta, dead green....
Calcutta, buffalo.... ?! ft
Manilla & Bat. buff.. V ft

light....

?! ft

Tsatlee.No. 1,2,8.4 & 5.?!ft
Tsatiee,re-rld,No. 1,2, &3
Taysaams,
No. 1&2
Taysaain, Nos. 3, 4 and 5..
Taysaams,re-rhi, No 1,2,3

28K@ V9
27 @ 2s
28 @ 429
28 © 29
37 @ 40
25 © 28 K
20 © 23

middle.

“
11

©

SILK—

29 ©
27 @
@

5

f!hnsh. 4 50 @4
Flax
?! bush. 2 25 @ 2
Hemn. foreign
1 95 @ 2
Lins’d in N. Y....V bus. 2 22%© 2
1 ir.seed, Cal. (bags) (In
Boston)
....gold 2 22%® 2

29

29

gold

Timothy

—

gold. 13%@

Pernambuco
Matamoras
Savanilla

middle

light..
Orinoco, heavy ..
“

“

©

15%®
10%®

ft

.

SEED
Clover

“

22
22
21

Porto Cabello

.

“

“

Clinch
Horse shoe,

250 00©

5%@

“

©

pure

Crude
Nitrate soda

46
41
42
45
45
40
30

©
©
@

86 ©
29K©

light...
California, heavy.

Cut, 4d.@60d

ton.265 00@313 00

gold

flight..
middle.

“

Refined,

@....

88
88
88
40
42

“

“

....

NAILS—

S5 © 90

Dry Hides—
Buenos Ayres.. ?! 1b gold

“

“

“

gold.265 00@275 00

Jute
HIDES—

....

-cash, ?f ft'
40 @ 46

middle....

MOLASSES—See special

?! 100

7%©

89 ®
40
85 ©
86
Liverpool, gr’nd.?! sack 1 45 @ 1 50
Liv’pMfine,Ashton’s,g’d
@2 50
Worthingt’s 2 25 ©

8 00 ©....

....

rough slaughter
Heml’k.B. A.,&c.,heavy
“

“

16%

?! 100 ft 6 25

Turks Islands ..?! hush.
Cadiz

@6 37 K

6 15

“

“

“

—

20K©

?» ft

—©

net.9 00

“

—

....

....

SALT—

“ 6 20 @6 62 K

“

....

HAY—

North River, in bales
lb for shipping
HEMP—
American dressed..?!
American undressed

“

.

14 50
15 50

....

.

gold.6 15 @6 25

Spanish

'•

Hog,Western,unwasli.cur. 8 © 10

California

....©

Epsom salts.
Exrtact logwood

—

5 50©
6 50©....
24@

RioGrande, mix’d,?! » gold 27K@
Buenos Ayres, mixed.
“ 27 ©

Orinoco

@
@

Chamomile flowers, ?! ib
31
Jhlorate potash—gold
23
Jaustic soda
4 70

86 00

Snorting, in 1 ft canis’trs.?! ft 36@ 1 06

Montevideo
Rio Grande

©

29

—

Blasting (B)
?! 25 Ib keg. 4 00©
Shipping and mining
4 50©
Kentucky rifle
6 50©
Meal
6 00©
Deer
5 50©

Tampico

Cardamoms, Malabar... 8 60 @
Castor oil

—

....

....

?! 100 ft

Galena

'

20 00
20 00

©
©

@7 00
Rangoon, dressed .gold 5 50 @ 5 87%
In bond
3 00 © 3 25

LEAD-

idle
middle

....

....

11K@
14k®

Carolina

....

Rods, %@3-16 inch
90 00@140 00
Hoop
110 00©155 00
Nail, rod
¥ lb
8 © 8K
11 @ 12
Sheet, Russia
Sheet, sing., doub. & treh.
5%@ 7
Rails, Eng. (gold).. ?! ton. 57 00© ....
Rails, American
76 00© 77 00

“

....

....

@22 00
@18 00
@l7 00
30 00 ©31 00
?t ft
14 ©
14%

Beef liams
Hams
Shoulders

105 00@1SQ 00
106 00@ ....
105 00©

Ovals and half round
Band
Horseshoe

light
crop, heavy.

1GK@ 19

GUNNY CLOTHCalcutta standard... .yard
GUNPOWDER—

0TOBXPBIOXB.

.-X

Pipe and sheet

special report.

Calcutta, light & h’vy, p. c.

Brimstone,cru.^tongkl47 5> ©
Brimstone, Am. roll $lb
Brimstone, flor sulphur.
crude
(in
Camphor,
gold
bond)

Mackerel, No. 1, shore
Mackerel, No. 1, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2,
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
Herring, pickled
?! bbl.

GROCERIES—see
GUNNY BAGS-

©
47%
©
.@ 1 25
3 50 @ 4 ro

Berries, Persian
gold 27
Bicarb.soda,N’castle" 3 85
Bi chromate potash
14
Bleaching powder
2k@
Borax, refined
32 ©

bbl.
ft bbl.
1! ft

V

t:<

TjJt.a

?) bbl.27 00
Pork, mess
Pork,prime
Pork, prime mess
21 50
Beef, plain mess
10 00
Beef, extra mess
14 00

Bar, Swedes, ordln.sizes..120 00®130 00
Bar,Eng. & Amer., refined >-2 50© 85 00
Bar, Eng. & Amer.,com’n. 80 00@
Scroll.;.
110 00@145 00

Bar

?! quint. 5 50@ 7 50

$

,

“

60 00©

cur.

•

Kt<mdnrd

PROVISIONS—

33 00© 84 00
30 00© 81 00
32 00@ 34 00
82 50© ....

Pig,|American,No.2
^Pig# American Forge.....
Pig, Scotch. No. 1...
Bar, refined, Eng. & Amer.

Oak, slaughter, heavy

gold 25 00@

N. River, g’d to prime.?! ft
FRUITS—See special report.

45
75

©
@
@
©

60

“

34 00© 85 00

Pig, American, No. 1

LEATHER—

@
@
@
@

.....
....©
80K®
Naptha, refin., 68-73 gray. 11%® Ilk
Residuum
?!bhl 4 00 ® 4 25
'

IRON—

English

FLAX-

70
40

......

German

PTCLT

26
13
11

•

©

51
11
45
11

@
10%@
42K@
10K©

Sapanwood, Manila ..cur. 80 CO© 35 00

DRUGS AND DYESAlcoliol, 95 per cent
1 98 ©;! 00
16 ©
Aloes, Cape
?! lb
75
.©
Aloes, Socotrine
8 @
Alum
3%
50 ©
90
Annato, good to prime .
17

.

Limawood
Barwood

s’d, Up’d $ ton 24 00 © 26 00
s’d, S. Is. IP ton 26 00 @ 27 00

•

45
40
29

?) ton. 150 00©
Fustic, Cuba. “
“ . 30 00©
Fustic, Tampico
gold 20 00©
Fustic, Jamaica
“ 18 00@
Fustic, Savanilla
“ 18 00©
Fustic,Maracaibo.... “ 20 00©
Logwood, Laguna.... “ 34 00©
Logwood, Campeachy “
—@
Logwood, Honduras. “ 25 00©
Logwood, Tabasco..; “ 30 00©
Logwood, St. Domin.gold 14 00@
Logwood, Jamaica
@

....

COTTON—See special report.
COTTON SEED—

•

@
©
©

37

Cotton. No. 1
DYE WOODS—
Camwood ....gold,

....

55 © 70
1 40 @1 70
35 @ 50
50

,

Ravens, light
?! pce.15 00
Ravens, heavy
17 00
Scotch, G’ck, No. 1, ?! yd 72

18

'OPPER—

Antimony, reg. or...gold
Argols, crude
Argols, refined
gold
Arsenic, powdered. “

25
20

...

38

DUCK-

....

Cotton
Cotton

Senna, Alexandria
Senna, East India

....

Tartaric acia (chrystal)

*

Yellow metal nails
American ingot
CORKS—
1st regular, quarts,
do superfine
1st regular, pints
Mineral....
Phial

11

ft
gold
Tapioca
Verdigris, dry & ex. dry
Vitriol, blue
.

2 25© 2 50

COCOA—
Caracas (bond) (gold) $ lb
Maracaibo do
do

....

8

Sarsaparilla,H.,g’d,inb’d
Sarsaparilla, Mex. 4 “

©
....
@
....
@
@ 3 00
©
8%
@
©
UK
@ 1 70
.©
30
12
@
40
@
80
@

.gold 2 25
28 ©
Sugar lean, W'e .... “
22K
Sulp. quinine, Am., ?> oz 2 20 @
Sulphate morphine, “
9 00 © 9 25

NewcaBtle gas,2,2401b .... 9 50©
Liverpool gas cannel
12 00@
15 00©
Liverpool n<
house cannel
Anthracite,?! ton of2,000 lb 5 00© 6 00

Sheathing,now

1 70
50

Shell lac
Soda ash (80 p. c.)

Cheese—

Farm dairies, fair
Farm dairies, common
Skimmed

80
82

Seneca root

Creamery pails
State firkins, prime

S10 2175

....

SalaeratUB
20
Sal ammoniac, ref. gold.
11
Sal soda, New*le,ref.g’d 1 60

BUTTER AND CHEESE-

Factory fair
Farm dairies,
s, prime

50

Refined in bond, prime L.
S. to W. (110@115 teat)

_

7 00©
4 00A5 00

.» C.

“

Sago, pearled

40 00® 42 00

Factory prime

62%® ....
00 © 3 50

-

Suicksilver
hubarb, China

BREADSTUFFS—See special report.
BRICKS—
Common hard
$ M 8 50© 9 50
Crotons
18 00© 20 00

Philadelphia fronts

fWi
3 25 © 3 37*

Phosphorus
Prussiate potash, Amer.

38

37 ©

8n

-

?»100 ft 7 25 © 7 50

BEESWAXAmerican yellow ...V ft
*
BONES—
Rio Grande Bhln..V ton

8 50

Oil lemon
Oil peppermint, pure ... 2
Oil vitriol (60 to
degs) 8
rke
gold.10
Oxalic acid

ASHES—

HORNS—

Oil anis ........currency

•••

256

THE

Iron and Railroad Materials.
OBAOTTOBT TIBBAXD,
XK1UOX FOOT*,

40

BROIDWAT,

3teel

NAYLOR &

& Co.,

NEW

YORK,

NEW YORK,

PHILA,,

TYRES,

Frogs, and all other Steel Material for
Railway Use.

NAYLOR,

Rails,

Sc

Co.,

CO.,

give special attention to orders for

as

well

Old Kails, Scrap Iron and Metals.

as

Norway and Swedes Iron

PHILADELPHIA.
All wort

accurately fitted to gauges and thorough¬
ly Interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship,
Finish and Efficiency
iully guaranteed.
GBO. BUBSHiM.

OHA8

All the approved Brands of No.
Scotcli Pis Iron9

WM. JESSOP Sc

I

IN

YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE.
purchasers. Apply to
HENDERSON BROTHERS,
No. 7 Bowline Green, New York.

NO.

Morris, Tasker & Co.,
Works, Philadelphia.

Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded

Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street

Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ T00I9, &c.

FOR

LIVERPOOL,
(Via
Queenstown,)

THE
LIVERPOOL AND
GREAT
WESTERN
STEAM CoMPanY will dispatch one of iheir firstclass full-power iron screw

steamships from

15 GOLD

J. Pope & Bro.

WEDNESDAY,

METALS.

follows:
at 7}£A M.
at 2 P.M.
at 8 A.M.
at noon.
at 3 P.M.
at noon.

Cabin passage, $80 gold.
Steerage passage, (Office No. 29 Broadway) f30 currency.
For freight or cabin passage apply to
WILLIAMS & GUION, No. 63 Wall-st.

292 PEARL

METROPOLITAN STEAMSHIP

8TREKT, NEAR BEEKMAN STREETNEW YORK

IRON.

IRON.

COMPRISING

NEPTUNE, NEREU* and GLAUCCS,
2,000 Tons Etch,

Old
Bessemer

Rails,
Rails, See.

U. S. BONDS AND AMERICAN RAILWAY SECU¬
RITIES NEGOTIATED.

Messrs. Jay Cookk & Co., New York, Messrs. Jay
Cooks ft Co., Washington, Metsrs E. W. Clarks
ft Co., Fhlladelphia, Mr. J. Edgab Thomson. Phila¬

Wm. D.

IRON

McGowan,

7 3

WATER ST.,

Drains k fitrljfielii,
18 William

PITTSBURGH, PA.

Iron Cotton Ties.
The undersigned, Sole Agents n New
sale and distribution of the

Neptune Steamers,

Railroad Iron,

delphia

tO >S

OUTSIDE LINE OF

BROADWAY.

Correspond cuts lit America:

IRON BROKER.

For Boston Daily.

71

Gilead A. Smith,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Thomas

Hopkins & Co.,

Bartholomew House, opposite Bank
of Ensland.
LONDON, E. 4.1.

OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES:

CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS.

STREET,

for execution at a fixed price In
Sterling or on com
mission at the current market price
abroad when the
order is received in London; shipments to be made
at stated periods to ports in America and at the low
est possible rates of
freights, .address

S. W.

description of bar and Sheet Steel.

anufactnrers of

HOU8E,

53 OLD BROAD

offer for sale at 91 and 93 John street. New York
and 133 and 135 Federal street, Boston.
They have also In stock their usual supply of every

Pascal Iron

IDAHO, Captain Cutting
Jan. 19,
NEVADA, Captain Greeu
Jan. 26,
COLORADO, Captain Williams
Feb. 2,
NEBRASKA, Captain Girard
Feb. 9,
MANHATTAN, Captain Forsyth... l* eb. 16,
MINNESOTA, Captain Price
Feb. 23,

orders for Foreign Rails, will be taken for transmis¬
sion by Mail or through the cable to our

LONDON

Importers of Norway ft S\* edes Iron, Including
UB, A£B, SF, and other brands, which they

Miscellaneous.

as

We are always In a position to furnish all
sizes, pat¬
terns and weight of rail for both steam and
horse
roads, and In any quantities desired el'her for IMME¬
DIATE OR REMOTE delivery, at
any port in the
United States or Canada and
always at the very low*
est current market prices.
Contracts will be made
payable In United States currency for American, and
In either
currency or gold (at the option of the buyer)
for Foreign, and when
desired, we will contract to
supply roads with their monthly or yearly require¬
ments.

SONS,

In lots to suit

PIER NO.48 NORTH RIVER, EVERY

Railroad Iron.

T. PARRY

SCOTCH PIG IRON.
q

Canada to our superior facilities for executing
orders at manufacturers prices, lor all
descriptions of
both AMERICAN and FOREIGN

Street,T

Railroad Iron,

WORKS.

We beg to call the attention of Managers of Rail¬
ways ana Contractors throughout Ihe United States
and

<4-

RAILWAY EQUIPMENTS.

&

BENZ ON

34 Old Broad
who

LOCOMOTIVE

COMPANIES.

RAILS,

HOUSE IN LONDON:

AND

MATTHKW BAIRD.

To Railroad

208 So. 4th stree

OAST STEEL
Cast Steel

Old

M. Baird

80 State street.

OAST STEEL

Iron and Railroad Materials

CO.,

BOSTON,

99 John street.

Rails,
Iron Rails,

BALDWIN

[Febrnaiy 19,1870.

Iron and Railroad Material*.

ALCX. P. PISKB.
XDWiXO FOOTS

Vibbard, Foote

CHRONICLE.

York, for the

Street, New York.

Railroad Iron,
Street Rails and Light
Rails for Mines.

T

ARROW TIE AND SELF-FASTENING
WROUGHT IKON fiUfKLF TIES.

OLD RAILS AND SCRAP PURCHAS¬

Manufactured by J. J. McCOMB, Liverpool, respect¬
fully solicit orders for delivery in New York or other
ports iu the United States, or at Liverpool.

AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED

SWENSON. PERKINS Sc CO.,

BAILING TUESDA. S.THURSDAYS & SATURDAYS

-

80 I EAVER STK

ED AND SOLD.

BURDEN

SPIKES.

ET.

AND

Asland, Wm. P. Clyde and P.
1,000 Tons Each,

vandford

Wm. D.

N. R., at

5

P. M.

Millar,

IMPORTER ANI) DEALER IN

SAILING ON INTERMEDIATE DAYS.

From PIER 11

R.

Railroad

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 throagb rates given to and fro a all points on the
above Roads and their connections. No
charge lor
Whartarge in Boston.

Steamboat

&

Supplies.
H,

SAVANNA

This Tie Is made of the best Belgian Iron, and re¬
ceived the highest premium at the Louisiana State

Fair, for strength and simplicity.
For sale very cheap.

G A.

QUIN Sc ARNOLD, Agents,

John Dwight & Co.,

Boston.

MANUFACTURERS OF

AJfetsGoldM 7,6 90,390
Ajffets in the
U. States 2,000,000
'

4*>

William St




FOR BALING COTTON.

48 BROAD STREET.

WM. P. CLYDE,
Genl. Snpt. and Agent, Pier 11 N.R.
H. M. WHITNEY, Agent, Central Battery
Wharfs,

The Liverpool& Lon¬
don & Globe Ins. Co.

Cheapest and Best.
BUTLER’S PATENT COTTON TIE

8ALERATUS,

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

SUPER CARD. SODA,
K. 11 Old

AC.,

Slip, New York,

Abm. Mills

FOR EXPORT AND DOHE8TIC USE.
192 FRONT 8TREET, NEW YORK

E. J. Shipka

Mills &
WOOL

NO. 50

Henry Lawrence & Sons,

Shipman,

BROKERS,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

For Baling

SELF-ADJUSTING TIES,
Unsurpassed for. Strength and BppicUty of Adjust
ment.
...

We

prepared to make cash advances upon Wool
!■■■£
on the spot or In transit.

ere

Cotton,

BEARD’S PATENT IRON LOCK AND

...

•

>.

^i,

BEABb * BRO.,
MT BROAD WAT.