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»THH ammerna| imito’ fectltf, (BJaimucmat A itaiUwy panitot, anti Insurance |ournai WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES, VOL. 9. NEW YORK, JULY 17, 1869. Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Marquand, Hill & Co., BANKERS AND 3 1 WALL STREET, Marquand, Gedrqe H. B. Hill, Stocks, Bonds and Gold, bought and Sold mission. B lsiimss Paper Nego iated. ST. 52 Brothers 8c Co., New \rork. STATE STREET, BOSTON, EXCHANGE ON LO «DON, And DEALERS W. N. COMMERCIAL PAPER. Stock's, Government Securities, Stocks Bonds, and Gold, bought and sold strictly on Commission. CitizensBankoF Louisiana Capital and Reserved Fund 14 WALL AND 12,500,000, STREET, NEW YORK. on BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. No. 12 WALL STREET. Securities have attention. Collections made on especial Gkorgk Othyke, Wm. A. Stephens G. Francis Opdykk. BANKING HOUSE OP Geo. Opdykf. 8c NASSAU Co., No. 47 Wall AND BROKERS GOVERNMENT IN SECURITIES Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold exclusively on Commission. Interest allowed on Depout accounts Bowles Brothers 8c Co., [Successors to Bowles, Brevet & Co.] No. 12 Rue de la Paix, Paris. 7G State Street, Boston, 19 William Street, New York on Paris and the Union Bank of LANCASTER, 23 Securities. BROWN Nassau cent per annum. CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Issued, bearing Four per cent Interest, payable on demand, or after tlxed dates COLLECTIONS made on all accessible points In the United States, Canada and Europe. Dividends and Coupons also collected, and all most promptly accounted for, ORDERS promptly executed, for the purchase and sale of Gold; also, Government and other Securi¬ commission. INFORMATION furnished, and purchases changes of Securities made for Investors. or ex¬ NEGOTIATIONS of Loans, and Foreign Exchange effected. Milwaukee, vvis. Southern and vilacellaneou* Securities No. 41 PINE STR. ET, NEW YO K In connection with the Manhattan Savings Bank, Memphis, 'I eon. E. G. PEARL. D. T. JETT. Pearl 8y Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, ST., NEW YORK. Securities Gold, ?tocks and Bonds of every description bought and soid on Southern Securities a specialty. Henry Commission. Meigs, Baolur ard nroUer, No. 27 Wall St., Member ot New York Stock Exchange, (.Formerly Ci shier of the Metropolitan BankTand late of the firm of H. \ieigs, Jr., & Smith). Offers his services tor the purchase and sale of Gov¬ ernment and nil other Stocks, Bonds and Gold, Interest allowed on deposits Iu vestmen s ea: efully attended to. Tanner 8c Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 49 Wall atreet, N. Y., DEALERS IN CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAVEL LICKS IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE. Lancaster & Co., Brown, Lancaster & Co., Richmond. Baltimore. Southern - Levy 8c Borg, Street, New York. * CO,, Street, AMERICAN AND FOREIGN GOLD, AND SPECIE OF ALL KINDS, Which they have on hand for Immediate delivery. United states Government Securities. Foreign and Domestic exchange. Particular attention given to Collections at all points in the United States, Canada and Europe. Remittances made, Loans negotiated and made on securities and business paper, interest allowed on Deposits, subject to draft at sight. Order, executed at the Gold and Stock Exchange with promptness. Contracts in Gold and Stocks carried on the most favorable terms. OFFER FOR SALE: Chesapeake and Ohio 1st mtg, 7 p. c. bonds, princi¬ BANKING HOUSE OF pal and interest in gold, at 95 and interest. Peters urg Kailioad 1st mtg. 8 p. c. bonds $G,000 i er mile), at 92M and Interest. South Si ie Railroad 1st mtg. 8 p. c. bonds Richmond and York River 1st (mtg. $7,000 per mile), at 85. (mtg. (mtg. mtg. 8 p. c. bonds Piedmont Rll. 1st mtg. 8 p. c. (mtg. $10,000 per mile), at 90. Norfolk an 1 Petersburg RR, 2d mtg. 8 p. c. bonds (mtg. $14,000 per mile, including 1st mtg.). at 82><j. Columbia and Augusta KU. 1st mtg. 7 p. c. bonds (mtg. $12,000 per mile), at 80. RR. 1st mtg. 6 p. c. (mtg. $14,000 per mile), at 78. DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms, Banks, Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Four per on Bills of Exchange drawn on London, Paris. &c. E. J. Farmer jz Co., C. J. Hatch & Co., Government Richmond and Danville STREET, (Corner of Cedar street.) ties, Europe. 61 BROADWAY & 19 NEW ali Southern Points. fGjODn per mile), -t 85. 25 on commission. Accounts of Banks and Bankers received. Collec¬ tions made in the United States, British Provinces and Bal ances. Southern Bank, Hatch, Foote 8c Co., NO. AND 5 & 7 NEW STREET. Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold exclusively London. Marcuard, Andre & Co, Baring, Brothers & Co, Fould & Co, London, Paris, in sums to points suiting buyers of Sterling or Francs. - 78 BROADWAY , BROKERS, HEALERS IN BROKER, DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT to SIGHT DRAFT And Four Per Cent interest allowed on Daily Bill* SELLECK, 37 Pine S», N,V. Draw Loans Negotiated. Particular attention paid to the purchase and sale of Stock*. Boml#, Gold and Excoange. AGENCY, London Joint Stock BANKERS & Worthington, BANKER DEALERS Buy and Sell Massachusetts and New York State A. D. Farmer, Hatch 8c Co MEMBER N. Y. STOCK EXCHANGE, BANKERS Sterling Credits, IN and McKim, Brothers 8c Co., AND 23 C0M DEPOSITS received and interest allowed at best CurrBnt I£yites GOVERNMENT and STATE SECURITIES, GOLD, RAILROAD BO s'DS, STOCKS, oic.. bought and Sold on Commission. ADVANCES made upon approved Securities. 85 BRUHL. Wall Street. & Cleveland, O. DRAW IN SUIilS TO SUIT On the principal cities of Germany. Switzerland, England, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, delglum, Russia, Italy, Spain, Denmark, &o. Issue Letters of Credit fo»Travelers, available In all parts of Europe. Blake SMITH BANKERS, coin- BANKERS, York, Leipzig, Saxo ay, AND 51 BROAD ALEXANDER COLLECTIONS made, on Knauth,Nachod &Kuhne New WILLIAM Bankers and Brokers, No. 40 Wall Streep New Vork. BROKERS, New York. John P. NO. 212 W. P. Van Dkukskn, Swan & Payson Chicago. New York. W.P.VanDeursen BANKERS and 10G LASALLE ST bonds 8cCo., BROKERS, UNION BANK BUILDING). CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, Buy and sell STOCKS, GOVERNMENT SECURI¬ TIES and GOLD, on Margins—or for inve lors at NEW YORK RATES. GOLD DRAFTS ON NEW YORK 1 OR SALE. Luther Kountze, 52 "Wall Street. New Y^ork, Deposits received from Banks and Individuals, sub ject to check at sight, and interest allowed thereon at FOUR PER CEN L per annum. Collections made throughout the United States, the British Provinces and Europe. Governments securities bought and sold. John J. Cisco 8c Son, BANKERS, NO. 59 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, (Brown Brothers & Co.’s Building,) Receive money on denosit, subject to check at sight, allowing interest on oally balances at the rate cf four pt r cent jper annum, credited monthly. e Issue Certificates cf Deposit bearing four cent in¬ terest, payable on demand or at fixed periods. Negotiate Loans. E xecute promptly order* for the purchase and sale of Gold, Government and other Securities on com¬ mission. Make collections on all parts of the United States and Canada. .. „ OFFICE OF THE Fire Insurance Comp’y, Street, New Yotk, CASH CAPITAL SURPLUS. July 1,1869 NET ASSETS $300,000 00 GERMANIA Fire Insurance 24S.127 30 548,127 30 DEBT-SEVENS (7a) of 1885. 175 No. Company By direction of the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury, the Treasury will make the lollowlng pur¬ chases of Bonds and sales of Gold, viz.: BROADWAY. NEW YORK, July 7th, 1SG9. £2?” THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS day declared CITY DEBT-SEVENS (7s) OF 1SSG. CITY DEBT-SEVENS (7s) OF 1837. a HAVE THIS Semi-Annual Dividend of Five (5) CITY DEBT-SEVENS (7s) OF 1SS8. PURCHASES OF BONDS AND SALES OF GOLD. A Semi-annual Dividend of SIX PER CENT, frep of tax, is payable on demand. WM. R. MACDIARMLD, Secretary. e Fer Cent. the Capital Ssock, free from Government Tax, pay¬ able on demand at the office of the Company. HUGO fc HUM ANN, Secretary. on INTEREST MAY AND NOVEMBER. FOR SALE Geo. NO. K. INTEREST ON National Bank of TnK Commonwealth, ? New York, July 1, 18o9. ) Sistare, NASSAU 24 A Dividend of Five (5) Per Cent, free ot all taxes, STREET, CITY STO< KS.-THE will be paid to the Stockholders of this Bank, MONDAY, Uth July. By order of the Board of Directors. GEORGE ELLIS, Cashier. ) V ) Comptroller. Land Grant OFFICE OF THE DELAWARE and Hudson Canal Company, No. 7 Nassau St.. (Continental Ban* Building,) New York, June 24,1869.—SIXTY-NINTH DIVIDEND—The Board of Managers of this Company, have this day declared the regular semi-annual Dividend of FIVE PER ('-ENT, Iree of government tax, payable to the stock¬ holders or their legal representatives, on and after the 2d day of August next, at the National Bank of Commerce in New York. Transfer books will be closed from July 16 to Aug. CHARLES P. IIARTT, Treasurer. niYIDEND NOTICE.—A STOCKHOLDders’ Dividend of Ten per Cent, fr^e of tax, lias day been declared, payable on demand. ALSO, A Scrip Dividend of Sixty per Cent, free of tax, to policy holders entitled to participate in the profits of the Company, fur which certUicates will be issued Aug., 16,1869. AT SO, Six per Cent, Interest on the o«1 standing Scrip. WM. W, IIENSHAW, Secretary. Office of the Sun Mutual Insurance Company, ) No. 52 Wall Street, } New- York, June 28,1S69. ) AN Per Cent Dividend of Three and this Company, Interest the capital stock ol One-half (Cyz) on for the six months endine 30th of Jane, has been de dared this day. payable to the stockholders, at the office of the Company, on and after July first (1st) eminent tax. Sinki’g Fund Houston & Texas Cen¬ Office of the Illinois Cevtral Railro^ d Co., ? New York, July 3,1869. $ A DIVIDEND OF FIVE PER CENT declared by free of Government tax, has been IN CASH, the Illinois Central Railroad Company, payable on the 2d day of August next to the holders of full paid shares registered at the close of the I7th day of July instant, after which date and until the Gtli day of August the transfer books will he closed. THOMAS E. WALKER, Treasurer. tral July 22. August 5. BANK OF Principal and Interest Pai able New York, in earned more taxes, payable July 6, 1869. 'ilia transfer books will be closed from this date until the sth of July proximo C. F. TIMPSON, Cashier. r . River Couuty. Second—One hundred and fifty miles, embracing the second division, commencing at Paris aud extending west to Palo Pinto Count}’. Specifica¬ tions, profiles, maps and plans can be examined after the 15th of August, 1869, at the Engineer’s office at New York or Jefferson. Proposals must conform to the specification, which will be furnished upon applica¬ tion at either of the above places after August 1, 1869. Evidence of ability to complete contracts will be re¬ quired and a per centage retained of estimates until each section of five miles is finished. Work upon the first division must be completed by March 1, 1870: the second division must be finished by October 1, 1870. Every facility will be furnished those washing to in¬ spect the ground on the line of the road, by applica¬ tion in person at the Engineers office iu Jefferson. J. M. DANIEL, Engineer-in-chief, Memphis, El Paso and Pacific Railroad Company. Safes. its Bonds. ROBB, KiNG & C(>„ 56 Wall st., We Offer Marvin New l^ork. CO„ 41 Cedar st., New York. Chrome Iron s Spherica Sale for A LIMITED AMOUNT OF City of Liuisville, 7 Fer Cent Ronds HAVING TWENTY YEARS TO RUN, interest pay¬ able Semi-annually, on the first day of April and October, at the BANK OF AMERICA, In this City* A Special Tax has been levied to meet the interest upon th< se Bonds, and the Sinking Fund for retiring the indebtedness of ilie City amounts to about two hundred thousand dollars per annum. The compara¬ tively small debt".and the conservative policy which has alwa\ s marked the management of the finances of the flourishing City of Louisville, make these Bonds one of the safest ami most desirable invest¬ ment securities now ofl’ered in the market. Any fur¬ ther particulars can be had on application at our office. WILLIAM ALEXANDER 40 The Tradesmen’s National Bank, > New York, June 2i, 1869. 5 Dividend of Six Per Cent will be paid on and alter 1HURSDAY, July 1, free of tax. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Texas, commencing eight miles east and extending miles west of the town of Clarkesville in Red seven than double the amount necessary to pay the interest and Sinking Fund upon For further information apply to The Transfer Bo jks will he closed 23d instant at 3 on the morning of July 6. W. H. SANFORD, Cashier. THE Board ofofDirectors have (Jet t,day declaredall a Dividend Four (I) per this iree from masonry, bridging, ballasting, cross-ties aud track laying of the following portions of said railroad ; First The last fifteen miles on the first division of one hundred and fifty miles, between Jefferson and Paris, Sneppard Knapp, Esq., ana William Walter Phelps, Esq., are Trustees under the mortgage. The Railway as built and projected passes through the most fertile and thickly populated portion ot the State of Texas, and during the past three years has P.M., and reopened Continental National Bank, ) New York, June 26, 1869. ) SEALED PROPOSALS will be received at the above office until September 1, 1809, when contracts will be awarded for the grubbiDg and clearing, grad ATION. J. S. KENNEDY & day declared a SEmIAN.\UAL DIVIDEND OF SIX (6) PEK CENT,tree of ^a;£tP7ya^®,on first Monday of July next. The Transfer Books will be closed until July 9, prox GEO. I. SENE Y, Cashier. June 8, 1869. ing, per mile. NO BONDS ARE ISSUED EXCEPT UPON ROAD COMPLETED,'EQUIPPED AND IN OPEIl- JAMES nCSf0 METROPOLITAN NATIONAL BANE, No, 1(» Broadway, New York, June 22, 1869.— of wtV*imT77«e.directors this the METROPOLITAN NATlONALBANKhave Office of the Chief Engineer Memphis, El Paso and Pacific Railroad Company, 66 EXCHANGE PLACE. The undersigned offer to persons desiring a safe and profitable investment, a limited amount of the above Bonds at 90 percent and accrued interest in currency. The Bonds are secured by a Sinking Fund of 2 per cent per annum, and the mortgage now covers ONE HUNDRED AND t IFTY-FIVE MILES OF A THOROUGHLY BUILT AND FULLY EQUIPPED RAILROAD IN ACTIVE OPERATION, extending from Houston, Texas, in a northerly direction towards the Red ltivcr, where it is intended to connect with the Railroads now building from Lawrence, Kansas City and St. Louis, with a branch road to Austin twenty-live miles of which is now in operation. It also covers valuable prairie ami timber-lands, to the amount of 6,400 acres for each mile of road built. The day declared a dividend of FIVE (5) PER CENT, free of all taxes, out ot the earning^ of the past six months payable on and after J uly 1. THE MARKET NATIONAL BANK.—THE Board of Directors have this day de Jared a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE (5) PER CENT, free 01 government tax, payable to stockholders on and alter the 1st day ot July next; until which time the trans¬ fer books will be closed. A. GILBERT, Cashier. Memphis, El Paso and Pacific Railway Co. Railway Comp’y* the City ol New York, New York, June 22, 1869.—The Board of Directors of this Bank nave this One million • Bonds issued and to be issued are limited to $20,000 JOHN P. NICHOLS, Secretary. NATIONAL SALRS OF GOLD. TO RAILROAD CONTRACTORS Gold in Netv York. this CENTRAL purchases of three millions each, July 14th, 21st 28th, are to be held for the future action of Con¬ gress. The purchases of one million each on tie 15th and 29th are for the Sinking Fund. DANIEL BUTTERFIELD, Assistant Treasurer U. S. SEVEN PER CENT BONDS OF THE Long Island Insurance Compeny, ) No. 151 Montague st., Brooklyn, No. 48 Wall st., New York, July 8, 1869.) nKTSF* THE' The and FIRST MORTGAGE RICHARD B. CONNOLLY. 1869, iree of 11—Three millions 6 per cent. do 15—One million 21—Three millions do 28—Three millions co 29—One million do Particulars of the rules governing the purchases and sales, may be liad by application to the Deputy Assis¬ tant Treasurer, at this office!. Notices Financial Chamberlain of the City, at his office in the new Court-house. The transfer hooks will be closed 2, inclusive. PURCHASES OF BONDS. July July July July July One million interest on the Bonds and Stocks of the Corpora¬ tion of the City of New-York. due Auir.. 1, i860, will be paid MONDAY, Aug., 2, by Peter B. Sweeny, Esq , Saturday, July 3,1869. Department of Finance, Comptroller's Office, New York, June 25, 1869. Treasury. New York, July 12tli, 1869. LAMAR No., 50 Wall Dividend. United States Seventeenth Dividend. 24TH Financial Kotices. Dividends. Dividends. C'TY [July 17,1869 THE CHRONICLE. 6(5 WALL SMITH & CO., STREET. Burglar Safe Will resist 1 Burglar Implements for anv lengtho'. time. Please send for Catalogue Marvin & No. 721 Chestnut st, M CCE. RAN & F ANKERS, Pittsburgh, Fa. CO., Co., PRINCIPAL WAREHOUSES-*„ No. 265 Broadway, New York. No. IOS Bank And for Philadelphia. st, Cleveland, Ohio. sale by our agents In the principal cities throughout the United States. July 17, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE. Dry Goods. American THE BEST Dry Goods. Silks.. Grain os Miscellaneous. Christy Davis, John S. & QUALITY OP Black, G r 67 Minufic'uredin this Country offered for Sale by. €, A. AUFFMORDT & CO., Eben Wright & 131 & 133 DUANE STREET. JENKINS, VAILL & PURCHASING WOOL No. AGENTS FOR THE Otis * Co., 92 a 94 Franklin Street, Now York 14j Devonshire Street, Boston Company, Columbian BROKER 58, BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Belknap Mills, Cor. of Mfg Company, Grafton Mills, Exchange Place. Warren Cotton Mills, Boston Buck Company, Sumner Falls Mills, Gilmanton Hosiery Mills, Cordis Mills, Pepper Hosiery Mills, Thorndike Company, Otis Hosiery Mills, And Arlington Mills, Fancy Dress Good-l, 3-4 and 6-4 Roubaix Cloth, Impel* ial Chines, Alpacas, Reps Coburgs, &c., &c. B el knap Ac Grafton Shirtings, Flannels, Rob Roys, Cassimeres.Repellants Cottonades, Domestics, Boys’ Checks, Sulloways, Insurance. „ PEABODY, 40 LEONARD STREET, ST GOODS COMMISSION MERCHAKTl/ WOOLENS, Co., Pepper and Gilmanton Mills’ Sulloways Shaker Socks, «&c., &c. Blue Denims. Columbian Heavy, Otis AXA, BB, CC. D, O. E, G, Union, Arlington, Oxford, Mt. Vernon, Beaver Creek AA, Bit, CC, Thorndike, C. Haymaker, Palmer, Bos ton, Northilcld, Pawnee, Farmers’ and Mechanics’ tirown Of Several MU. MANUFACTURED BY Net Denims. Henry M. Taber Theo. W. Riley, Columbus, Eagle, S. Wa»ren FI’ Fine sheetings. 1?a^ns and Organzlnes, MIXTUREsCASSI- Brown and Bleached Goods. Thorndike H. B. & C. Brown and Bleached Sheetings Hingham, Farmers’ AA andSwitt River Brown Sheet ings, 40-in. Rocky Mountain Duck, Bear,Raven’s Duck MERES. James E. Removal. ’ Mooee, Secretary. Silk Dress SILKS FOR SPECIAL THEODORE POLIIEMU3 Sc Goode, Belt Ribbons. PURPOSES TO ORDER. A GENTS : HOWARD K. A RNOLD Sc 102 Franklin SON, 52 WALL CO., Philadelphia CHASE, STEWART Sc CO., 10 and 12 German Street, Baltimore. Cash Capital and Assets, Jan. 1,1869, - - $1,031,167 1 Amount ot Losses paid since Organiza¬ TheodorePolhemus&Co. tion of the COT TON S AIL DUCK COTTON CANVAS, FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER. ING, BAGGING,RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES &C. “ONTARIO’ SEAMLfcSS BAGS, “ AWNING STRIPES.” J. Byrd & Co., Win. To el, Tnomas J. Slaughter, Joseph Gaillard. Jr. Alex. M. Lawrence, Isaac Bell, Elliot C. Cowdin, Percy R. Pyne, Beblan, •oseph V. Onatlvia Edward S. Jaffray, William Oothout, Ernest Caylus. Frederick Chauncey, Geo. L. Kingsland, James F. Penniman, Frederic Sturges, Louis De Henry Foster Hitch, Flias Ponvert, Simon De Visscr, Wm. R. Preston, Isaac A. Crane, A. Yznaga Del Valle, John S. Wright, m. Von Sachs, PARASOLS, Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN STREET NEW YORK. - CARPET THREADS. SEWING MACHINE THREADS, GILL NETT TWINES. FISH LINES, TWINES, FLAX, ETC. Barbour C. B. & 87 Brothers, Sc S9 Leonard WORKS, PATERSON, NE W JERSEY Thos. H. Bate & MANUFACTURERS DKILLES-EIEO Co., . Street, New Ycrk. For the Sale COTTONS AND Gas Machines. AGENTS oi EMPIRE STATE WOOLENS. PACIFIC Fish Hooke and Fishing Tackle. STREET, NEAR BROADWAY. Mail STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE To California & NEW YORK. China, For TouchlngatOTexican Porta John Dwight & Co., CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS. Oil MANUFACTURERS OF SUtER CARB. SODA, &C., ft'c. ll Old Slip, New York, TABLES (EXCLUSIVELY), Of Ever/ Style and * Quality, at Greatly Reduced Prices. ' HEERDT, Manufacturer, 150 WOOSTER STREET, 3KTWBEN PRINCE AND ’nCVSTON NEW Y© Gas Works FOR LIGHTING CHURCHES, HALLS, ETC. NASH Sc State CATE, Agents, Rights for sale. 29 Cortland St. 1st, 11th and 21 at of Each Month. SALERATUS, WOT, the Lighting Private Dwellings* Bay State AND ,, Machine Gas Steamship Companies. OF NEEDLES, X TENSION Anson G. P. Stokes. JOHN P. PAULISON, President, ISAAC H WALKER, Vice-President. JOHN P. NICHOLS, Secretary. MERCHANTS. M AN UFACTURE Ii S 99 Chambers Street, Corner Church Street, New York Philip Dater, J. F. Mitchell, COMMISSION 4,507,402 87 TRUSTEES Moses II. Grinnell, John P. Paulison, Isaac H. Walker, J0011 E. Devlin, William H.Maoy, Fred C. Foster, Richardson T. Wilson, John H. Macy, Manufacturers ot 7 27,124,594 73 lieu of Scrip Dividends. . UMBRELLAS AND -------- Insures against Marine and Inland Navigation Risks at Low Rates and on Favorable Terms. No Fire Risks taken disconnected from Marine. Dealers have the option of participating in the Pro fits, or receiving an abatement from Premiums, in And all kinds of Geo. Company Amount of Profits declared and paid in Cash do. do. do. do. Manufacturers and Dealers in Also, Agents United States Bunting Company, A full supply all Widths and Colors always in stock 13 A 15 Lispenard Street. E. A. Brinckeriioff, Theodore Polhemus. J. Spencer Tunner. II. D. Polukmus, Special LINEN THREADS, STREET. Incorporated May 22, 1841. NOS. 13 A 15 LISPENARD STREET. Street, Boston. 210 Chestnut Street, SHOE THREADS, Insurance COMPANY, DUCK, Street, New York. 4 Otis LEONARD BARER Sc COTTON Mutual Sun CO., Have removed from 59 Broad Street, to UILLU1EN, 'NO. 7 WARREN Stephen Hyatt. REESE, Presidents Florentine*, Pongee Handkerchiefs, Silk Warp Poplins, IIRNEV Sc Joseph Grafton, Amos Robbins, Jno. W. Mersereau D. I. Eigenbrodt. William Remsen, Jacob Reese, L. B. Ward, D. Lydi£ Suydam, Frod. Schuchardt, JACOB INE OUGANZINES FOE SILK Foulards and Henry S. Leverich. Robert Schell, Wm. H. Terry, Cambreleng, Joseph Foulke, Cyrus H. Loutrel, BLEA. AND BROWN. SeHing Silk, 223,282 Board of Directors: Stripes. Machine Twist* 4150,000 Assets, Dec. 186S advantages offered by this Company are fully EQUAL TO any now offered by other reliable compa¬ nies, comprising a liberal commission to brokers, placing entire lines of insurance, with its customary rebate, to assured and prompt settlement of losses. Cordis Awning, Thorndike, B.C., Otis CC, Mount Ver Brothers. BROADWAY. The Cordis ACE. AAA; BB, Duck AA.B., Thorndike A.C Swift River, Palmer, New England. non, 92 Cash Capital Columbian XXX, Otis BB, Warren A.B.D.X. AMERICAN SILKS. Cheney OFFICE NO. Hosiery. Otis Hope Fire Insurance COMPANY, Shaker Flannels. Bole Agenti lor the tele of COTTONS AND The STS* T 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 ASPiN WALL, connecting via Panama Railway with one of the Company’s Steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPl LCO. Departure of 1st connect at Panama with steamers for SOUTH PACIFIC and CENTRAL AMERICAN PORTS. Those of the 1st touch at MANZANILLO. One hundred pounds baggage allowed each adult. Baggage-masters accompany baggage through, and 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 themdown early. An experienced surgeon on board. Medicine and attendance free. For passage tickets or lurther information apply the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot Canal street North River, New York. F* R. BABY, Agent* THE SPRINGFIELD Gas Machine, FOR LIGTIIING COUNTRY RESIDENCES MANUFACTORIES. AND The e celebrated MACHINES are sold by GILBERT & BARKER, General Agents, No. Cro8by-st., N. Y. & CoANo.554.) 90 (Broadway entrance through Covel : ILLUSTRATED CIRCULARS, giving full descrip, tions of the MACHINE, and also testimonials from, and reference to, some hundred persons who have used them for a number of years, can be had upon application, or will be mailed upon request. [July 17,1869. THE CHRONICLE. 68 ©stern Bankers. Boston Bankers. Insurance. Page, Richardson & Co., Gilmore, Dunlap & Go., 70 Bills of RANKERS, State Street, Boston, 108 (MARINE) West Fourth Street. 110 Sc INSURANCE Exchange, and Commercial and Travelers’ Credits issued on The City Robert Benson Sc CINCINNATI, OHIO. NO. 35 WALL 1 Bank, {-LONDON. and GOLD, SILVER and all kinds ol Dealers in Co., ) ) {-PARIS. and GOVERNMENT BONDS. Marcuard, Andre Sc Co.,) Circular Notes available for Travelers in all COLLECTIONS HADE at all accessible parts of Europe and the East. points and remitted ior on day of payment. ett 28 State & Co., CHECKS LONDON ON Street, Boston, AND PARIS HEARD Sc P. CO.. Advances made on consignments of approved mer chandize. Dupee, Beck 8c Sayles, BROKERS, STOCK JAMBS A. DUPff STREET, BOSTON. JAMBS BECK. . HKXRY 8AYLB8. Philadelphia Bankers. 8c Austin 313 Embich, President. op Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gold, and SUver Coin and Government Securities. Collections promptly made on all accessible points. New York Correspondents. National Park Bank, Henry Clews & Co., Nat. Broadway Bank. Kidd, Pie ce & Co., TRUSTEES: Isaac Harter 8c Sons, CHAS. H. OBERGE William tion* of Banks. Bankers and Herchants. COMMERCIAL PAYMENT, BY THE UnionBanking Company Sts., MUSSELMAN, President. MOODY, Cashier. NATIONAL C. J. Despard, 3. Secretary. COMPANY. Office* No. 175 Broadway. BRANCH OFFICES: No. 357 Bowery, New Vork. No. 377 Fulton Street, Brooklyn Capital BANK . Liabilities . Chicago. $500,000 00 925,150 92 45,000 00 Issued Payable In Gold, Desired. If RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President. JOHN EDW KAHL, Vice-President. HUGO SCHUMANN, Secretary. $500,GOO Capital H. F. M. D. PHILADELPHIA. Nelson, Jr., Policies of Henry R. Kunhardt John S. Williams, Charles Dlmon, Paul N. Spoflord, Assets, July 1, 1868, THE COLLECTED AND REMITTED FOR ON DAY OF * Edward Merritt, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Jos. Willets. ELLWOOD WALTER, President. ARCH. G. MONTGOMERY, Jr.,Vice-Pres. ALANSON W. HEGEMAN, 2d Vice-Pres. Cash NOTES, DRAFTS, &C., &C. Reid, Henry Eyre, Joseph Slagg, Bryce Gray, N. L. McCready, 1854.) Special Attention given to the collec¬ Philadelphia. Francis Hathaway, Aaron L. Germania Fire Insurance CANTON, OHIO. (ESTABLISHED Geo. W. Hennings, A. Foster Higgings, James Freeland, S»muel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, Cornelius Grinnell, James D. Fish, Ell wood Walter, D. Colden Murray, Harold Dollner, G. D. Harter. M. D. Harter. BANKING HOUSE OF Oberge, N.E. Cor. 4th Sc Chestnut This Company takes Marine and Inland Navigation Risks on Merchandise, Freight and Hulls of vessels. On the payment of Premiums a Rebate or Discount on the current rates is made in cash, as an equivalent for the Scrip Dividends of a Mutual Company. The amount of such Rebate oeing fixed according to the character of the business, gives to dealers a more just apportionment of profits than by the mutual system ; and being made in cash, on payment of the Pre¬ Isaao Harter. Commission Stock Brokers. E. *. Bankers. Bankers. Importers & Traders National Bank. STREET, PHILADELPHIA. N. C. „ Wooster, Ohio. WALNUT J. BELL AUSTIN. 1,500,000 S. R. Bonewitz, Cashier. COMMERCIAL BANK THE OF CHINA AND JAPAN. NO. 22 STATE $1,000,000 Capital miums, is more than equivalent to the cash yalur of the average Scrip Dividends of Mutual Companies. Policies issued, making loss payable in Gold in tills City, or in Sterling at the Office of the Company’s Bankers iu Liverpool, if desired. FOR 8AJL8 1GENTS FOR AUGUSTINE COMPANY, STREET, NEW YORK. Assets in unroe Sc Co. Ever Mutual Mercantile Eamks, President. Wm. H. Ferry, Vice-Pres. Buchanan, Cashier. Geo. L. Otis, Assist. Cash. DIRECTORS. ./Etna F. Eames—Director of National City Bank of Ottawa ill. N’All other Banking Business in Philadelphia trusted to us will receive our prompt attention. Southern in* i’erry—Director of First National Bank ol Utica, N. Y., and Chicago & Northwestern RR. Co. Wm. H. Albert Keep—Director of Michigan Southern and N orthern Indiana KR. Co. and of Henry and Albert Alfred Cowles—Secretary and Treasurer and Director of Chicago Tribune Co. P. R. Westfall, pf Merchants, Farmers and Mechanics Washington. INGTON. H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.,) President. WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial Agent of the United States. Wm. H. Kretsinger, lumber merchant. S. W. Ransom, manufacturer of boots and Bacon Wheeler (retired). Assets Jan. NEW YORK AGENCY NO. terms, and give especial atten¬ Full information with regard to Government Loans at all times cheerfully furnished. L. A. Lancaster 8c Co., STOCK AND shoes. Street, Richmond, Va. —^ LANCASTER, BROWN Sc CO., No. 23 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. BOB’T T. BROOK! R.VH. Maury 8c Co., BANKERS & BROKERS, No. 1014 MAIN ST. RICHMOND, VA Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Ban) Notei State, City and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c ocuiglit ana sold on commission. fST* Deposits received and Collections made on al accessible po<nts in the United States. JF. I. Correspondent, YERMILYE A CO. 28 CA RONDELET ST. N. ORLEANS. r aimers.-J. L. Levy ; E.Salomon,formerly of 1L J. Hart & Co. Tartners In Commendum.—E. J. Hart; Day dSaiomon, of New York. ^olltctlons made oa $5,150,931 71 1,1869 289,553 98 * 11 . olnts.l Policies Issued Payable In GOLD when Desired, JAS. A. LOUIS, MISSOURI. FIRE on London and Paris for Sale. Jos. Hutcheson. ALEXANDER, Agent. NO. 13 S. HIGH American Fire Insurance Co., OFFICE STREET, Cash $500,000 00 245,911 93 Capital and Surplus, July 1st, 1868, 8745,911 93. Capital Bank, TITUSVILLE, PENN., Capital 8200,000 Deposited with U. S. Treasurer o secure Circulation and Deposits 500,000. G. C. HYDE, Cashier. CHAS. HYDE, Pres’t. OF THIRD OF THE STATE ..... Surplus Cash NATIONAL BANK BROADWAY, INCORPORATED 1823. General Banking. Collection, and Exchange Business. Second National 114 BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE AVENUE. COLUMBUS, OHIO, Do INSURANCE. North W. B. Hayden. Hayden,BANKERS, Hutcheson 8cCo Insures Property against Loss or he usual rates. Policies Issued and Losses paid Damage by Fire at at the office of the Company, or at its various Agencies in the principal cities In the United States. JAMES W. OTIS, President. R. W. BLEECKER, Vice Pres F H. Carter, Secretary. T. Griswold, General Agent. MISSOURI. in St. Louis. Bankers and Brokers. ESTABLISHED 1837. J. L. Levy 8c Salomon, STOCK BROKERS AND EXCHANGE DEALERS, General Co., Bny and Sell Exchange on all the principal cities of the United States and Canadas. Also P. Hayden. BOOKERS. JAS. L. MAURY. Benoist 8c ST. STREET, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. BOB'T B. MAURY STREET. Liabilities EX¬ BROWN, LANCASTER Sc CO., No. 30 SOUTH WALL BANKERS, Drafts a ill 62 , Business connected with the several Department of the Government. -No. 1113 in $3,000,000* CASH CAPITAL FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. Government Securities A\D CHANGE 1819. INCORPORATED Savings Bank. Henry W. King, of Henry W. King & Co. N. O. Williams, of Fitch, Williams & Co. H. Z. Culver, of Culver, Page & Co. Henry H. Taylor, Farm Machinery Warehouse. E. F. Pulsile of E. F. Pulsiler & Co. Webuy and Sell all classes of BANKERS Company, OF HARTFORD. Keep. .bankers. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF WASH¬ of the most favorable tion to Insurance REMOVAL. Capital paid In ... 83,410,300 J. M. Weith & Co., Bank, having reorganized as a National Bank, prepared to do a general banking business. Government Securities, Coin, Gold Dust and Bullion bought and sold at current rates. Special attention SOUTHERN AND MISCELLANEOUS SECURITIES Siven to collections throughourthe west, and will This Is now amss H. Britton, Pres. Chas. K. Dick on Edward P. Curtis Cashier« * s DEALERS IN Have Removed to No. 9 New Street, continue the business under the style of J. M. WEITH * ARENT8. i auto’ (Stomwermt 4 gailnratj Ponitov, and feuranc* goimtal WEEKLY NEWSPAPER. REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OR THE UNITED STATES. YOL. 9. SATURDAY, JULY IT, 1869. of Providence is CONTENT8. giving NO. 212. the promise of a rich harvest. Our probably receive from this an impulse THE CHRONICLE. which will be increased by the fact that for a The Money Ma-ket. C9 I Changes year or more in the' Redeeming The Centra! National Bank De{ Atrt nts of National Banks 73 falcation great depression has prevailed. Such are some of the indica¬ 70 Latest Monetary and Commercial The Coming Chinese 70 | English News 73 tions of The PublicDebt and Finances of general confidence, the revival of which is an indisI Commercial and Miscellaneous New Hampshire 71 | News 75 pensible condition of financial ease. It is true that the THE BANKERS GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR. speculators who have of late manipulated the money market Money Market, Railway Stocks, Sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange 80 declare that it can be “controlled,” and they U. S. Securities, Gold Market, 81 Railway News do no small, Foreign Exchange, New York 82 Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. mischief to business by City Banks. Philadelphia Banks Railroad, Canal and Miscellanecreating the fear of trouble ahead National Banks, etc 76 Bond l ist 83 But these men well know that National, State and City SecuriSouthern Securities 84 they can do nothing so long tie3 List...... 79 Insurance and Mining Journal.. 84 as they cannot close the floodgates of the National Treasury THE COMMERCIAL TIMES. or cause currency to be locked up there and withdrawn from Commercial Epitome 85 | Groceries 89 Cotton 86 j Dry Goods So long as capital is ac¬ 91 the channels of the circulation. Tobacco 8^ I Prices Current 91-5 ' Breadstuffs 89 | cumulating here, if confidence prevails to lend that capital, if the currency is not depleted by Government locking up greenbacks—then the money market may reasonably be ex¬ The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued evert/ Satur pected to work easily. day morning by the 'publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, But how will it be when, in September and October, the with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. fall trade calls for currency and draws off capital from this centre? Almost everybody is asking this question, and for TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. the moment the popular opinion is that we shall have a For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier very to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) active money market in the ForOne Year $10 00 coming fall. As this opinion For Six Months 6 00 The Chromclk will be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued may tend to check the inordinate speculation which is spring¬ by letter. Postage is 20 cents 'per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. ing up, we shall not try for the present to refute it. The willtam b. DANA, \ WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publisher*, john o. floyd, jb. ) 79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK. money market has been more completely in the hands of Post Office Box 4,592. speculators during the last six months than ever before in this Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Po?/ country. In no European country would such high rates for Office Money Orders, money be tolerated as we have recorded of late. The evil is notin our want of capital but from defects in our machinery 'ME MONEY MARKET. for circulating it—defects for which our national banks are, Two questions are agitating Wall street about the to a considerable extent, blamed. money There is no doubt that market. One is practical, the other speculative. The before long some remedy for the evil will be found and prac tical question is as to the propriety of giving power to the applied. The money market troubles will no doubt give rise Treasury to make money tight or easy at will. As to the to very exciting discussions in the next session of Congress. future movements of the rate of interest, it seems to be One of the most striking peculiarities of the recent strin¬ agreed on all hands that we shall have easy rates of interest, or at gency in money is that it has produced no fall in the prices of least a good supply of loans at 6 to 7 per cent, for some time stocks. Securities of almost all kinds have risen, as money to come. The reasons for this opinion are many. First, the has risen, and the speculators in stocks have been able to pay accumulation of loanable canital in the financial centres is high rates for money because of this rise in their securities. One set of speculators have thus helped the other. large and increasing. Secondly, the confidence to lend that Money¬ capital is good. There is no apprehension of any grave jobbing has helped stock-jobbing and v/ce versa. But com¬ financial dangers ahead. This is proved by the cheery confi merce meanwhile has languished and business men have failed dence with which almost everybody in Wall street is pre¬ to get the usual accommodation from the banks which these dicting that we shall payoff fifty millions of our national banks were chartered to give. They were so busy helping debt this year. When the shrewdest observers declare that' the speculators that they had no funds ror more legitimate the national taxation is likely to produce fifty millions of dol¬ borrowers. The indications are, as we have said, that the lars more than the national expenditure, there is at least rea¬ manoevours of the money jobbing cliques are over for the son to believe that these gentlemen do not look for any present. And whatever becomes of the prosecutions for severe revulsion. On the contrary, the anticipation indicates usury under the law of May 1837, there is little doubt that that a prosperous year is probable. There are indeed many the trouble is over for the present. As to the Treasury and its power on the money market, things which would tend to confirm this view. The bounty internal .. one . ®l)c CljrouuU. j commerce will us THE CHRONICLE. 70 we cannot late. deny that it has been most judiciously exerted of lators To it wo are indebted for the out flow of twenty mil It mil¬ lions currency which has given relief to the loan market. is true, however, that the previous locking up of thirty lions of currency brought on the trouble and gave the specu¬ to be [July 17. 1869. other way, if the other officers of the bank do their duty.' detected in the directors and The chief effects of this prohibition would be felt by such men as Sanford, who are self respecting, frugal, honest, but anxious to be rich, and tempted by the success of others, to try to draw a prize in the Wall street lottery. When such a man is tottering on some they would have been powerless. If the Treasury did harm by locking up currency the brink of his first breach of trust and shrinks with the sen¬ too rapidly, it has done good by letting loose that currency sitiveness of a half-awakened, half-paralyzed conscience from again and returning it to the channels of the circulation. As taking the fatal plunge, let him have at least this one chance to the expediency of depositing this secret and omnipotent to rescue himself. Let him have the knowledge that if dis¬ lators the conditions without which covered he will be ignominiously discharged from his place impossible to get another. But it may be said that the brokers, through whom these evil should be corrected and the exercise of all such powers bank officers must do their surreptitious speculation, would should be guarded and kept free from corruption by greater keep the matter so secret that the risk of detection would be almost annihilated. This is not so certain. By a law of the publicity. last session of Congress, the broker who ^is a party to such THE CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK DEFALCATION. defalcations as this of Sanford’s, is liable to severe penalties, A better proof could not be given of the judicious choice and it is not possible that perfect secrecy could be preserved which has been made of officers for our new National Banks in any such transactions. Somehow or other the affair would than the very rare occurrence among them of defalcation and leak out, and the delinquent would be all the time in danger. breach of trust. One of these painful and exceptional In such matters it is of great importance to raise barriers instances has recently been detected and has .awakened against the first offence. When a bank cashier or a bank almost equal surprise and sympathy. William H. Sanford, clerk has once gone wrong, it is easy to repeat the offence the Cashier of the Central National Bank in this city, was, it Besides, the first breach of trust involves usually a small seems, one of the sufferers in the recent Mariposa speculation amount, easily replaced, though perhaps urgently wanted. which terminated so disastrously for the holders of the shares Yet if yielded to, the temptation will grow by that it feeds on. who had supposed that this highly speculative stock had till like a canker, it destroys and ruins. Sanford would ceased to be the foot-ball of Wall street, and had taken a not now be a fugitive from justice after blasting his permanent place among the solid securities whose value would own prospects and ruining his family, had he resisted be steadily but slowly and surely appreciated with the the first temptation, which involved probably a trivial improvement of the property it represents. The particulars sum. Public opinion will support our banks - in the of the disaster which befel this stock are fresh in the memo¬ enforcement of the penalty of dismissal which we have sug¬ ries of our readers and weie detailed by us at the time. It gested 'as the proper punishment for a bank officer or clerk • is sufficient for us now to say that Mr. Sanford, like multi¬ who is found guilty of the crime of speculating. And except tudes of other victims, thought the decline was temporary, some such safeguard is given, the banks must not be surprised, and did not wake up to the real state of the case until the if they are looked upon by some of their stockholders and final crash had come and had left him the loser of one hun¬ dealers with anxiety not altogether devoid of distrust and control the money market on the officers of the Treasury, there can be but one opinion. It is an anamalous policy and should be. got rid of as soon as possible, or at least its chief over dred thousand dollars. To keep his account good with his brokers he seems to have placed in their hands securities of which the bank was the depository and which belonged to various customers of the institution, chiefly to persons and banks outside of the city. Goaded almost to madness by the discovery that his loss was irretrievable, this miserable delin¬ quent, placed as he was in peril of the most severe punish¬ ment from the laws of his country, obtained leave of absence from the bank, and, before his crime was found out, put himself beyond the reach of pursuit, and is now supposed to be in France or South America. The unhappy family are left quite destitute, and no trace seems to have been left by which he could be followed and brought back to justice. Such are the chief facts of this painful case which has inflicted a loss on a banking institution of the very highest credit, and has swept away a part of the surplus which belonged to the stockholders, involving not only a crime and will find it fear. There is other point one which demands -notice. Mr. were all in the most perfect Sanford’s accounts with.the bank order. The books of ’ the institution showed not the least indication that anything defaulter to amount an was wrong.; And still he was a half'of which would have been*■' one regarded by him as an ample fortune. For aught we know, similar losses' might have taken place before, but were retrieved in time to prevent discovery. Now it will be impos¬ sible to persuade the public that there is not something radi¬ cally defective in this loose way of keeping bank accounts. If a bank officer can show a clean record on his books after with 8100,000 of funds belonging to his customers, it is high time that some more effective checks were devised for keeping such violent temptations away from fallible men. It will be well if this defalcation in the Central Bank, which is one of the best managed institutions in the which has blasted the career of a man heretofore stainless city, should draw the public attention to this matter, and and respected, but has also grieved and shocked beyond mea¬ should cause some better guarantee that the records and sure his wide circle of friends and has plunged his family into books of the bank should give such an account of the funds in the depths of poverty. There are two or three lessons of a the hands of the officers that defalcations may be more easily general nature which we should not omit to deduce from the detected and more effectively prevented. he has made away event. CHINESE. THE COMING necessity of enforcing on all our bank off! cers the strictest The immigration from Europe has been in a westward line prohibition of speculation. Let the directors of every national bank adopt a rule that any officer or clerk and millions have come from that line of population to discovered speculating in the stock market, either with his occupy the virgin soil of the United States. These millions own money or not, shall be instantly dismissed without being now seem likely to be supplemented by other millions coining allowed to resign. Such a rule might, it is true, be evaded, from the West and meeting the great tide that has already But the tnen who would evade it are just the sort of specu¬ poured in upon us. The planting of Americau interests on The first is the July 17, 1869.] the Pacific coast and tlio once arrested the attention THE CHRONICLE discovery of gold in California at sluggish thought of Asia and turned the of China to this and write their our 71s language. They are anxious to acquire language, and they send their children to the State own Many years ago the Schools. Chinese began to come, slowly at first and then in larger num¬ The cost of Chinese labor is one of its great recommenda¬ bers, until a few days ago a single steamer landed 1,200 at tions. The Chinaman will live, and save, and thrive on the San Francisco ; and only week before last, the Chinese starvation wages of other laborers. They can work for onemerchants of San Francisco, on the occasion of meeting the third the cost of European labor, so that gold mines which Congressional Committeo of Ways and Means, urged upon yields $7 per ton can be made productive where white labor them the importance of doubling the subsidy to the Pacific halts when the result is less than $20 per ton. But it is as the Mail Steamship Company so that it might engage in a bi¬ railway “navvy” that the Chinaman has made his mark. monthly service in order to accommodate the growing busi¬ The builders of the Ceutral Pacific Railroad hesitated long ness between China and the Pacific coast of the United before they employed him. lie turned up less earth at a State?. There are,at least, 200,000 Chinamen in this shovel full than the Irishman did, but he turned country up more They have spread all over California, their outposts are car¬ shovel fulls in a day. He knew nothing of strikes. He never ried even East of the Mississippi. Last week 500 went down indulged in sprees or thirsted for a “row.” A California the great river in quest of a new home in Louisiana. The railway contractor, who has worked laborers of many nation¬ population of China is variously estimated at from 400 to alities says, that these Asiatic laborers are the most servicea¬ 500 millions. It is only within six years that the Chinese ble and least troublesome of any to be found on the Pacific emigration has gained large proportions. Persecuted and slope. They are promptly on the ground to begin work the evil entreated they have been, but this has not kept them moment they hear the signal, and labor steadily till notified back. Harsh laws and a harsh public opinion Lave met that the working hours are ended. They will, ere long, turn them, but they have borne all and quietly asserted their right the sod and build the embankment, on other line?, across to labor. That they are needed, the immense acres of un¬ the continent, and upon the numerous roads which are to be cultivated land that we have, give proof. That they are constructed in the Southern States. They will yet be familiar frugal, industrious, teachable, patient and intelligent, even faces in New England factory towns. their enemies concede. The political and religious relations of this incoming When the Chinese came to California and encountered Chinese population are foreign to our consideration of the the hostility that met them, they found it necessary to organ¬ subject. We look at the question in its bearings upon popu¬ ize themselves into companies for mutual protection. There lation and in the grand results to be effected in the industrial are six of these in San Francisco, directed bv Chinese mer- development of the country. Railways and canals, wharves chants of standing and influence. Each company represents and docks, public buildings are to be constructed. Farms a district in China, and emigrants join the company which are to be cultivated. The hundreds of millions of acres now covers the place from which they come. The companies waiting culture are to be made productive. Is it not the procure labor for their members and take care of them in part of wisdom to execute these enterprises at a cost for labor sickness and when unemployed. They advance money to of one-third that which is now paid? Great projects languish bring out emigrants, and then take the stipulation of the because of the cost of execution, and here come to us natur¬ emigrant for the speedy repayment of the sum advanced. ally and easily the willing hands and the eager wills. They This is briefly the system on which the false come just hist enough to admit of their charge of a sort assimulation with the of peonage or slavery has been based. The Chinese various masses of people that compose our quickly population, and made themselves popular as house servants. They are neat, which are rapidly acquiring homogenity. They can live in orderly, skillful, inclined to remain in a place, have no “fol¬ any part of the land, hut they tend rather to the Southern lowers” and are not troubled with a desire to attend religious portion of the Union as more nearly allied to the climatic services, either before breakfast or after dark. The ladies ad¬ influences to which they have been habituated. There is a mire them so much as servants that they will be likely to movement now in progress at the South to tempt Chinese change the public sentiment of California in regard to their emigration thither. It meets with a singular unanimity o civil and political relations. Already housekeepers at the approval. It is regarded as the means and the hope of a ne\y East, wearied and vexed with the inadequate service rendered and higher prosperity than has ever yet visited those States by our household dependents, turn with longing eyes to the productive and prosperous as they have been. To the conven Chinese as auspicious of a better and brighter day in the do tion which represents this movement, a report has been made mestic economies. Once shown how to do a thing, and why, that emigrants in lots of 50 or upwards can be brought from Chinamen need no further instruction. Chinese art and la¬ California for $50 each in gold, and from Hong Kong to San bor are the perfection of imitativeness. They not only labor Francisco for from $S0 to $100 in gold. A Chinese con¬ in houses, but they are book-binders and printers, setting- tractor who has brought 30,000 laborers to the Pacific Coast, type readily in a language they cannot read; they are care says that they are paid in California 90c to $1.10 in gold, ful and extraordinarily skilled tailors; they manipulate the per day, that they will come from San FrancLco to Memphis tools of the designer and the carver; they handle the most and work for $20 a month, while if brought out fresh from delicate labor-saving machines with address and intellioence. China, they may be had for from $10 to $12 a month. He The Pioneer Woollen Mills were once burned because they remarked, however, that at these low wages they were likely employed Chinese labor; now they work in the same mills to abandon their situations for higher wages, unless security unquestioned. In gangs of street laborers they were mobbed was exacted of them. Chinese companies organized in the a year ago; now they work in San Francisco streets without South, with those* those in California might arrange the the protection of the police. Quiet, peaceful and persistent proper security. But of this movement we shall speak they have disarmed much opposition. Under State enact¬ again. ments they have paid a license tax of four dollars a mouth for the privilege of working in the mines, besides other taxes THE PUBLIC DEBT AND FINANCES OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. The public debt of New Hampshire has been created they have paid. Once the Legislature imposed on them a special police tax of $5 a month, but the Supreme Court pro- solely for war purposes, and on the 1st day of June, 1869, nouuoed it unconstitutional. country. Nearly all of the Chinese read amounted to (bonds $2,849,200, and notes $321,810) $3,« (•July 17, 1869. THE CHRONICLE. 72 purposes. There is very little delin¬ 171,010. Tbe State also holds trust funds to the amount of $42,925 22. The following statement describes the quency in this State, the whole sum of the taxes of 1865-67 kinds levied for State delinquent on June 1, 1869, having been only $1,181 54, an inffnitessimal per centage on the amount levied. and bonded debt: ’8 $705,200 The following is a synopsis of the revenue and disburse¬ Authorized by Act of July 3, 186!. Tsssued $1,000,000, in ments of the State Treasury for the year ending May 31 100s, 500s and 1,000s. Coupons January 1 and July 1, and 1869: principal July 1, 1866-1875 inclusive, the annual payment Revenue.—Cash June 1, 1808, $18,684 72; taxes of averaging about $100,000. Up to date $294,800 has been paid, and $100,000 became due July 1,1869. All these bonds 1866, $6 25; taxes of 1867, $1,035 63; taxes of 1868, bear date July 1, 1869. Payable at Boston or Concord. $623,840 63; savings bank tax, $99,017 58; railroad tax, Six per cent Loan of 1862 $294,000 $215,615 00; civil commissions, $630 00; copyright of vol. 46 N. H. Reports, $100 00; tax on foreign insurance Authorized by Act of July 9, 1862. Issued $300,000 in companies, $100 00; rent of store-house,' $300 00; war 500sand 1,000s. Coupons January l and July 1, and princi¬ claims, $42,158 21 ; interest, $4,785 65 ; loans, (school pal July 1, 1876-1878 inclusive. These bonds also bear date fund $25,050 00, notes $427,660 00, and bonds $242,July 1, 1861, the act authorizing them being supplemental to 500 00) $695,160 00. Total,*$1,702,333 67. that of July 3, 1861. Payable, interest and principal, at Disbursements.—Executive department $3,918 80; Secre¬ Boston or Concord. tary’s Department, $3,853 29 ; Treasurer’s Department^ Six per cent Loan of 1864 $600,000 $3,657 98; Adjutant-General’s Department, $9,550 74; De¬ Authorized by Act of August 19, 1864, and bonds dated partment of Public Instruction, $3,604 40 ; Legislative De¬ September 1, 1864. Issued $600,000 in 1,000s. Coupons partment, $47 362 57; supreme judicial court, $11,541 52 ; March 1 and September 1, and principal—$450,000 Sep¬ probate courts, $7,685 65; State library, $1,549 69; com¬ tember 1,1884, and $150,000 September 1,1889. Paya¬ piling provincial papers, $3,501 40 ; State bouse, $2,757 22 ; ble at Boston or Concord. N.H. Asylum for Insane, 28,888 39 ; education of the blind, Six per cent Loan of 1866 $3,674 84; education of the deaf and dumb, $2,012 50; . . . . .$1,250,000 reform school, $12,182 92; State Prison, $10,374 25; vol¬ Authorized by Act of July 7, 1866. Issued in 100s, 500s and 1,000s. Coupons April 1 and October 1, and prin¬ unteer militia, $35,759 77; military expenses, $6,049 29 ; Six per cent Loan o/* 1861 f . of $250,000 annually, October 1, 1870-1874, inclusive, both payable at Boston or Concord. The act as above, and a supplemental act of June, 1868, authorized the issue of $1,800,000, so that there remained in the Treasury June 1, 1869, $550,000 subject to issue, and which will pro¬ bably be used in taking up the short loans which mature at various dates prior to January 1, 1870. These are in the shape of notes bearing interest (6 per cent $28,810, and 7 Under the law of 1868 the per cent $293,000) $321,810. Treasurer has also the authority to hire all the money that will be needed for the temporary use of the State, so that no further legislation will be necessary. Of the State’s claims against the United States for expen¬ ditures for war purposes, amounting to $1,032,527 45, there has been allowed and paid $1,000,618 06, leaving a balance cipal in suras still disallowed of $31,908 39. $2,600; miscellaneous, $5,928 11; sav¬ ings’ bank tax * $99,917 58; railroad -tax * $100,138 61; interest, $225,436 02.; payment of bonds, $850,100 and ot notes, $139,254. Total, $1,627,299 54. Cash, May 31, 1869, $75,034 13.. Deducting the receipts from bonds and notes, ($695,160), the revenue amounted to $1,007,173 67, and the payments White Mountain roads, ($989,354), the disbursements amounted $637,945 54, which last named sum paid the ordinary expenses of the State, the distributions to towns, and interest of bonds and notes to the bonds and notes on The condition of outstanding. the Treasury June 1, 1869, is shown in the following statement: O ASSETS. LIABILITIES. Bond 3 Notes Trusts- -Fisk Legacy “ Kimba 1 k‘ $2,849,200 00 32!,810 00 8,952 74 .... Cash in Treasury ». Taxes, delinquent Net income ol State prs’n 6,75149 $75 037 13 1,18154 867 22 $77,082 89 1,009 44 population of New Hampshire in 1860 was 326,073, Surplus revenue—p’cipal intea’t 1,236 51 Deficiency bsing indebtednets June 1, 1869 3,136,879 33 25,000 00 which was 11.74 per cent increase from the next previous School fund Total $3,213,962 22 Total $3,213,962 22 decennial census, or 1.17 per cent per annum. The popu¬ lation is now estimated by the State Treasurer at 350,000, The liabilities, less assets, June 1, 1868, were $3,487,411 in nine years of 23,92 7, or 7.34 per cent. 97, and June 1, 1869, $3,136,879 33, showing a reduction showing an increase This estimate is based on a reduced rate of increase, and is of liabilities in the year of $350,632 64. probably nearly correct, the retardation to the extent shown In New Hampshire the township system is carried out to being due to the withdrawal of large bodies of troops from its full extent and there appears to be very little cohesion of civil life from 1861 to 1865. The war debt, as above ex¬ the one with the other, the counties being merely so many hibited, divided among the existing population is thus only court divisions. The towns, indeed, are so many little repub¬ $9 06 per capita. lics, managing their own affairs and disbursing their own The value of taxable property in 1868 was (real estate revenues. It thus happens that if desirous of acquiring a •$69,344,903, and personal property $79,720,387) 149,065,knowledge of the exact measure of their burdens and abilities 290. Compared with the war debt of the State this amounts we must canvas the affairs of each town within itself, and so to one of debt to every $47 09, or 2.12 per cent of valua¬ the returns of each are published separately by the State tion. The valuation of 1858 was $84,758,619, the increase Treasury Department. It is impossible, however, to transfer in ten years having been $65,306,671, or 78.23 per cent. these, from 230 towns, to the Chronicle, and hence we The valuation of 1868 has probably been based on a nearer cluster them in counties, naming the number ot towns in¬ approximation to market rates than that of 1858, and hence the cluded in each, the amount of their debts and assets, the enormous addition to the sum total. The valuation of 1868 highest and lowest rate of taxation in the towns of the gives $425 90 to each inhabitant. counties named, and the highest and lowest tax on each poll The rate of taxation in New Hampshire is 4 per 1,000 on therein. The following is the county summary : The “ “ ... the valuation. will hence be Tbe amount levied for the service of l869-’70 $596,261 16. This rate covers taxes of all * Divided to the several towns of the State. July 17, 1869.] No. of towns. THE CHRONICLE Total debt. Available /—Taxp. $100—,,—Taxp poll—, 73 Tire opinions which I have heretofore repeatedly expressed with regard to the growing crops, are this week endorsed in a letter written Sti afford 3 80 1 40 S6 4 88 2 05 BelkDap by Mr. Mechi, who has for many yea^s had a model farm in the county 2 52 1 91 3 78 1 91 98 45,950 12 Carroll 4 17 2 08 3 12 5 55 09 60,067 07 of Essex. His letter agrees so entirely with all that I have been able Merrimack... 129 385 26 2 83 1 01 4 24 1 95 1,220,291 03 30 to ascertain Hillsborough. 2 45 1 43 3 68 2 14 1,228,575 54 146,649 58 upon the subject, that I am led to give an extract from it Cheshire. ...22 3 1C* 1 25 1 S3 4 66 536,964 14 41,799 18 He says that “notwithstanding cold nights and an absence of sun, Sullivan.. 15 2 14 1 25 44,226 85 3 22 1 87* 458,218 40 Grnfcou 38 5 28 1 30 1 95 7 91 1,043,390 41 154,010 24 which will delay our harvest three weeks as Coos compared with the 4 (iO 1 84 1 76 6 90 308,124 36 59,163 43 unusually early cne of last year, we have evidence that the gross total Total .2:0 $7,714,446 34 $895,004 54 $5 28 $1 01 $7 91 $1 76 production of food vaniranl and vegetable) will .probably exceed con¬ The highest taxed town in the State is Thornton, in Grafton siderably that of last year. Wheat may be less in quantity, quality County, and the next highest, Gosport, in Rockingham and weight, but peas, beans, oats, potatoes and perhaps barley, will be County ; and the lowest taxed town is Cambridge, in Coos in excess, especially peas and beans. La=t year there was a ruinous County. The net reduction in town debts during the years deficiency of meat-making products. The 224 million acres of perma¬ nent pasture (one-half the agricultural area cf the United 18G8-G9 was $77,G22 04, the increase Kingdom) having been $151,7G4 yielded a wretchedly deficient crop, and caused a heavy national loss, OG, and the decrease $229,38G 10. Almost the v. hole of while nearly 10 million acres of root and green crops and artificial these debts have been incurred for permanent improvements, grasses fell sadly short of an average crop. Hence our small supply which have tended to the rapid development of industry and and high price of home-grown meat, <fcc. The large area of cottage wealth in the State. and general garden was also very deficient in yield. This year all this is reversed, and we are blessed with the promise of abundant CHANGES IN THE REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANKS* grass and other vegetable product*, which must have a happy influ¬ ence on the quantity and price of home growu meat, milk, butter The following are the changes in the Redeeming Agents of National cheese and vegetables. Supposing that we lose a trifle on our whea t B^nks for the week ending These weekly changes area—between three and four million July 15, 1SG9. acres—great will be our gain on re furnished by, and published in accordance with an arrangement made the 40 million acres of other products. Harvest in Essex will proba¬ with the Comptroller of the Currency. bly commence about the 1st of August in the early districts, and become general towards the 10th. LOCATION. NAME OP BANK. REDEEMING AGENT. Heavy and deep soils have the best of it this year, which is always a happy event for the country at Massachusetts. The First National The First National Back o New York, Gloucester Bank of Gloucesapproved in addition to Ihe First large.” ter..„Q National Bank of Boston. The wheat plant is still in bloom, and although the prospect vaties Connecticut. The Thames Na¬ The Mechanics National Bank of New Norwich tional Kan's of York, approved in addition to The considerably in diffeient locations, it Ut on the whole, good, and some Norwich National Bank of Redemption, Bos¬ ton. good wheat will undoubtedly be secured. There will, however, be a Connecticut. The First National The Leather Manufacturers National Bank of Stoning¬ Stonington greater variety of quality than last year, bat if we secure a fair aver¬ Bank of New York, approved in place ton of i he Central National Bunk ot New age crop a most satisfactory result will have been attained. An aver¬ York. Indi na. The First National The Ocean Nat ional B' nk of New York, age yield wi 1 prevent wheat from getting dearer, because our prospec¬ Bank of HuntingHuntington approved in place of The Third Na¬ tive ton imports are likely to be large; while the yield of spring corn tional Bank of New York. Indiana. The First National The First National Bank of New York, and of roots, which was so deficient last year, will, as we have hereto Kokomo Bank of Kokomo. approved in addiliou to The Central fore stated, be heavy. Bread is likely, therefore, to re nain cheap, National Bank of Cincinnati. Illinois. The First National The second National Bank of St. Louis, while wheat, which has been so dear, promises, as Mr. Mechi states, Bank of'■SpringSpringfield approved in addition to The Ninth Counties. Rockingham. ...38 $1,328,901 657,039 495,880 442,060 assets. $179,515 36 44,247 50 54 II. L. $5 CO H. $7 20 $1 33 L. $2 00 .. ... . . ... .... .. .... field iCatest National Bank of New York, and The Third National Bank of Chicago. ............. jnoiutarj) ant> dommmial (frnfllisf) Nrtos KATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON AT JLATEST OATES. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— JULY 2. to be obtainable on easier terms before the year cl Our imports of wheat last week were decidedly larger than for past, but the total importation for the season is still about 8,600,000 cwt. less than in 1867-’68. The statement relating to the imports and exports of wheat and flour into and from the United King¬ dom is subjoined : some weeks EXCHANGE ON LONDON. WHEAT. TIME. Amsterdam... Antwerp Hamburg..... tt < 44 Naples New York.... Jamaica Havana 4 4 49 ©49X 90 days. 51%© 52 3months. 20.50 @26.55 “ © “ 44 “ © “ — 44 44 3 mos. short. June 24. 90 flays. 44 June 23. 44 — Valparaiso — — 60 days. 4 4 44 Ceylon Bombay 44 Madras Calcutta 44 ti 30 days. 4s 4 (l 4s id 2 p. c. dis. Is 11 d@.... 18 11 Of® ... Is 11 (/©...-; X P- c. dis. | From our own 25.20 @ — — — — S3X P- 53%. 44 44 44 12.. 19.. 26.. Sept. 1 to May 29. Week ending June 5. 44 44 44 June 14. June 3. June 9 44 44 6 mos. 44 * 44 May 29. June 29. 44 May 20. 44 44 June c'O. April 21. 30 days. tt tt 15 p. c. pm .. 18% 689,057 567,421 126,795 289,337 1,521 476,046 6,324 3,8S8 6,089 619,857 143,293 2,932,553 16,079 40,727 1,831 26,540 3,107 54,546 25,957 23,637 47,079 310 689 727 390 744 615 2,742,215 3,045,305 44,284 31,396 1 80 248 12 19.. 26.. 2,518,598 44,865 46,311 47,895 The 46 18% is. 7%d.® 4s. 7%of.® cwt. 560,547 .. .... Total 18% following are the average prices of English wheat, barley and Englaud and Wales for the week ending June 23, compared with four previous years : oats in — — the 1% p. c. din Is. 11 9-1 Gd. Is 11 Ud. Is. 11 9 16(7. 1X p. c. pn Wh at Bar ey Oats.. is indicated by the 1SG9. 40 4 1868. G7 5 1807. 64 10 1866. 51 0 1865. 41 6 32 7 39 1 35 3 34 0 27 6 29 0 39 0 28 0 26 0 23 2 Pixley, Abell Langley, the bullion brokers of this city, they have admitted a3 partner Mr. Francis Barron Blake, of the firm of Blake Brothers & Co., of Boston and New York. The firm is now called Pixley, Abell, Langley &, Blake, and it is pro¬ posed to carry on, in addition to the bullion business, a mercantile, banking and commission business with the United States. The Board of Trade returns for May and the five months ending May 31 has been published this week. Contrary to expectation the statement is of a favorable character. The many complaints heard of late respecting the state of trade foreshadowed a different result. In fact, either the Board of Trade returns are wanting in veracity, or else the reports from the manufacturing districts misrepiesent the actual condition of affairs. There is no doubt that business is slack, and it is unquestionable that it has been shorn of the speculation which has inflated it for so many years past. It must, however, be contended that a steady legitimate trade is doing, and that ou recent tra sactions Messrs. have announced that Correspondent.] considerable (his year ap » it 109% ti X P- c. pm prices have been rather firm. The transactions have, however, been restricted to real wants speculation being stilj dormant. Taken as a whole, indeed, bu inesa, although quiet, is fair • but has been wholly shorn of the speculation which has inflated it of late years. The d fficulty of obtaining advances except cn good secu rity, and the extreme caution shown by the banks, are keeping* trade within its legitimate bounds, and had it not been for the foreign loans brought forward this year and for the readiness with which Five-twen¬ ties have been purchase i in Europe, the increase in our foreign trade official statement tt 1 44 136,875 603,456 4,673 FLOUR. 1 in most instances so 44 u — 60 days. 90 days. 60 days. 1868-9. 20,674,976 232,572 Total Notwithstanding the unfavorable weather, a moderate amount of activity has prevailed in the various commercial markets this week would not have been 44 tt . — , 1S67-8. cwt. 21,799,726 44 6.24% Exports . , 1868-9. cwt 27,776,560 755,817 120.37 50.25 London, Saturday, July 3, 1S69. an Sept. 1 to May 29. Week ending June 5.. 44 May. 17. — — Oix® 25.22X© 13. 9X® . June 8. June 12. — 12 — _ _ 1867-8. cwt* RATE. 3 mos. 25.20 le 3 mos 124.70 44 June 9. — Pernambuco.. Sydney shOit. short. short. July 2. Rio de Janeiro Bahia Singapore Hong Kong... short. July 2. — — July 2. 44 6.28%@ 6.28% 1.21%© 1.21% 44 .... TIME. 44 13.llX@13.12 ©25.40 25.35 short. 25.29 ©25.25 3months. 12.67X@i2.72X Berlin Frankfort Cadiz Lisbon Milan Genoa DATE. short. 12. iv @12. 1% 3montbs. •25.42X@25 47 X 44 Paris Paris Vienna RATE. Imports , LATEST ON— ses. m B ■ | k B Ij B ftj I Bi Bi B; |i I I I I I; f I I E [July 17,1869. THE CHRONICLE. 74 and other material being obtained from this district. Continental margin of profit and but little loss. I am inclined inquiries have not increased to any mater al extent, but as the Belgian to indorse the Board of Trade returns, and for the reison that the and French houses are reported to be full of engagements additional goo Is’tralfiic on tha principal lines in the manufacturing districts has contracts are looked forward to on continental account. naturally increased this year, the receipts on the London and North Now that the haif yeat has been passed, the demand for money has "western being especially large. Now the London and Northwestern, become very quiet, and a reduction to 3 per cent is looked forward to which is undoubtedly the best and perhaps the most important of our before long. In the open market, indeed, choice paper is taken as low railways, embraces a large portion of the Midland counties and of Lan. as 3£, and, in some instances, 3 per cent, so that with fine weather, an casbire. As it approaches London, or rather just on the Northern skirt of the metropolis, there is a branch which leads to the commercial docks increase of ease may quite naturally be expected. The demand for at the east end of London, so that a large amount of goods is sent by it money for commercial purposes is very quiet, and at present the financial establishments of Europe seem to hava but little necessity to from Lancashire, Yorkshire and Staffordshire for shipment to the East, to the Continent and elsewhere. On the average the increase on this borrow largely. There is, however, the prospect that some fresh line alone is about £3,000 per week a9 compared with last year. It foieign loans will be introduced before long, Portugal and Turkey is, however, remarkable that the passenger traffic has diminished, having already concluded their arrangements for raising further suras. which may partly be accounted for from the fact that the telegraph i8 The following are the prices of money, compared with those of last more freely made use of than before. In May the exports of British year : 1868. 1869. 1868. 1869. and Irish produce and manufactures were valued at £16,316,540, Per cent. Per cent. Per cent. Per cent. 4 months, ba’k bills 2 @2% 3%@3% 3# against £14,670,0-55 in 1868, and £15,936,864 in 1867 ; while in the Bank minimum.... 2 6 months’ ba’k. bills 2%@2% 3i$r@3% five months ending May 30 they amounted to £74,744,620, against Open-market rates: 30and 60 days’ bills 1%@— 3%@4 3%@3% 4 and 6 trade bills.. 2%@3 1%@— 3%@3% £70,668,103 in 1868, and £15,936,864 in 1867. For the month, there- 3 mouths, bills The rates of interest allowed by the joiot stock banks and discount fore, there is an increase of about £1,640,000, and for the five months of rather more than £4,00i»,000, as compared with last year. houses are : The ’68. ’69. ’68. ’69. oomputed real value of our principal imports in April was only £17,- Joint stock banks 1 2% Disc’t houses, 7 days notice 1% 2% there haa been a fair * . ji 858,517, against £21,969,564 in 1868; and in the four months |I £66,949,136, against £68,416,563 in 1868. It follows, consequently % ii taken || i; [ I [ [ exports have increased, a considerable falling off has place in the extent of our imports. With regard to our exports, that while our there is an increase of £120,000 in apparel; of £53,000 in earthenware and porcelain ; of £100,000 in haberdashery and millinery ; of £212,000 in hardware and cutlery ; of £40,000 in saddlery and harness ; of £231,000 in machinery ; of £1,615,000 in iron of all kinds; of £203,000 in tin-plates ; of £100,000 in oilseed ; of £21,000 in silk manufac' tures; of £.00,000 in woolen cloth; of £170,000 in carpets and druggets, of £1,870,000 in worsted stuffs. On the other hand, ther^ is the exports of woolen yarn in linen yarn, and £1,000,000 in cotton yarn. a diminution of £644,000 in The decrease in ; of £l30,00o Discount houses, at call 1 do 2% do 14 1% . The Continent,, the money market has continued quiet. changes during the week have Been unimportant: the On B’krate— 1868. 1869. At Paris Vienna Berlin.... Frankfort. .... • . .. . 1869. 2% 2% l%-% 4 4 4 4 2%-3 l%-2 2% TnriH Brussels Madrid 2% 4 4 3% 3% 3% 3% 2% Amst’rd’ra 2X The ^B’k rate^* r-Op. m’kt-* 1868.1869. 1868. 1869. Op. m’kt—» 1868. foreign exchanges are 2% 5 .. ... Hamburg. 3 5 2% 2X 6 — — — — — 1% 4% 0% 3X St. Petkg. 7 rather lower, but not to — — 2%-3 2%-3 any 4% important extent. Silver remains firm, but the demand for Gold for export is quite trifling. The following quotations Langley and Blake’s circular : are from Messrs. Pixley, Abell, GOLD imports has been caused chiefly by a reduction 6. d. d. s. 9 77 Gold @~ .peroz. standard. |! of £4,000,000 in the value of the wheat received from foreign parts Bardo fine 9 77 do last price. (ft77 11 do Refinable do last price. Coffee shows a falling off of £200,000, and cotton of £1,900,000. (ftOn 0 6 76 nominal. @77 per oz. Spanish Doubloons I! the other hand, wool shows an increase of nearly £2,000,000. 0 9 do 73 South American Doubloons @74 do 76 do ....‘. 2% @The experts of railroad iron in May were 87,392 tons, against United States gold coin SILVER. ! 54,838 tons; and in the five months, 320,745 toDs against 233,769 s. d. s. d. tons last year. per oz. standard nearest. 5 OX @ — — To Russia they have amounted to 62,714 tons, against Bar Silver Fine do containing 5 grs.gold.. do 6 do 0% @ — — 12,230 tons; to 1 Sweden, 2,890 tons, against 413 tons; to Illyria Fine Cake Silver per oz. 5 4% @— — Mexican Dollars peroz. 4 11% @ — — !I Croatia, and Dalmatia, 12,975 tons, against 3,810 tons ; to the United Spanish Dollars (Carolus).' peroz. — — none here. States, 141,6S4 tons, against 112,608 tons ; to Peru, 9,306 tons, against Five frauc pieces.; 4 11% 1 st piice. do Quicksilver £6 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent. 770 tons ; to British North America, 12,992 tons, against 5,616 tons ; The Consol market has been very quiet, and a great want of busi¬ to Australia, 9,901 tons, against 4,678 tons. The shipments to India ness has been apparent in all departments of the Stock Exchangehave declined from 42,818 tons in 1868 to 3 *,132 tons in 1369. There has, however, been a fair degree of firmness, several foreign The cotton trade has been very active this week, the sales having securities and Five Twenty bonds having realised higher quotations. reached 102,200 bales, of which the trade have taken 72,230 bales. The stock in Liverpool is only 332,420 bales, against 603,180 bales The folk wing were the highest and lowest pi ices of Consols, and the last year ; but there being a considerable supply of produce afloat, principal American securities on each day of the week : the visible supply is now 1,199,351 Jhalee, against 1,357,279 bales in June 26. Monday. Tuesday. Wed’ay. Thu’ay Fri’ay. Sat’day. Hence in the visible supply, there is a deficiency of about 1868. 92-%-92% 92kT-92% 92%-92% 9254,-92% 92%-92% 92%-92% 168,700 bales, which may be looked upon as a rather serious matter U. S. 5-20’s, 1882.... S0%-80% 80%-80% 78%-...’ 80% 81'" 80%-b0% 81 -81% U. 8. 5-20s, 18-^5. 78%-78% 78%-78% 78%-7tf% 79 -79% 78%-78% 78%when it is borne in mind that the American crop will be late, and also 74 -76 76 -78 74 -76 74 -76 74 -76 74 -76 IT. S. 5-208, 1874 that the shipments from India are likely to be small during the. U. S. 5-208, 1887 76%-76% 76%-.... 76% 76% 76%-.... 76%-76% 77%-7 7% U. 8. 5-208, 1904.. 71%-72% 72%-.... 71%-72% 71%-.... 72 -72% 71%-72 present month. Messrs. Smith, Edwards (to., in a circular just issued Atlantic <fe G’t West. - our — — — . — . , „ t ... ... .. remark : prospects of our market are at present of the most alarming- kind to the con the excessive deficiency of supply becomes each month more apparent, and the difficulty of tiding- over the interval between this and the arrival of next season’s crop is more obvious. Judeed, we fear it cannot be denied that the trade have to contend with the most trying- emergency since the close of the American The 25 -26 consol’d mort.b’ds 25 -26 25%-.. . 25 -26 25%-25% 25 -26 Erie Shares ($100).. 19%-19% 19%-19% 19% -19% 19%-19% 19%-20 19%-19% 94 -94% 94%-95% 94%-95% 95 -95% 95%-.... Illinois shares ($100) 94%- Burner; war. The latest advices from India ing the growing In crop report rather more favorably respect¬ of cotton. the wool trade there has been 'a moderate amount of activity ; but there is still much caution being observed. Goods suited to the requirements of the autumn and winter are beginning to attract attention. years: trade is rather quiet; continues good. tracts for early 1866. £ 1865. £ 1868. £ 1867. £ Circulation, including— Bank p st bills 22,717,616 26,497,624 24 824,076 Public deposits 6,800,251 9,356,727 9,348,667 Other deposits 14,443,335 19,939,607 18,868,210 ^ Government securities 10,899,878 10,778,123 12,830,773 Other securities 23,229,578 80,749,551 20,456,251 T?f»aprve 8,502,294 4,0(55,080 13,142,095' Coin and Dullion 16,073,259 14,876,949 22,495,855 10 p. c. 3 p. c. Bank rate 2% p. C. Consols 94% 90% 87% . but the demand for railway bars Buyers of rails evince some anxiety to place con delivery, but it is evident that if they attain their object higher prices must be paid for summer delivery ; and all the great ironmasters are of opinion that prices will advance in the early part of the new quarter. Large quantities continue to be sent to the American and Russian markets, and ships are also wanted at the local ports to convey iron to Peru, with which country trade of late has improved, and as the railway system is only in its infancy on the south¬ west coast of America, makers are in hopes of large quantities of rails The iron following statement shows the present position of the Bank of Eriglanl, the Bank rate of discount, the price of Consols, the average price of English wheat, the price of Middling Upland cotton and of No. 40 mule yarn, fair second quality, compared with the four previous The .. . Price of wheat Mid. Upland cotton... 40 mule yarn, fair 2d quality The 41s. 6d. 19 %d. Is. lOd. 51s. Od. 64s. lOd. 14d. 10%d. Is. 9d. Is. 5d. „ 1869. £ 25,224,056 7,021,048 21,497,262 13,214,894 20,451,631 12,979,636 22,751,221 23,844,651 2 p. c. 95% 67 s. 5d. ll%d. Is. 2%d. 8,762,376 19,149,726 14,154,373 20,652,000 11,387,671 19,780,776 3% p. c. 92% 46s. 4d. 12%d. Is. 3%d. following relates to the state of trade at Manchester : steady confident feeling has existed in this market throughout A very the week, vailed. and considerable animation without any excitement has pre¬ Prices have continued to advance, and are now decidedly July 17,1869.] higher than they THE CHRONICLE. were on Tuesday, but the advance asked has had a decided effect in curtailing business to-day. Consi taring how large a business has been done, and the rather extensive contracts which spin¬ ners end manufacturers have entered into, there has been less excite The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) July 9, and tor the week ending (for general merchandise) July 10 : ment than might have been expected, and than would probably have occurred, had it not been for the unpleasant knowledge that little or no profit to producers will be tie result of all the sales which have been made. Although prices have been steadily advancing, both spinners and manufacture s have been ready and willing se lers when ever they could get au advance at all commensurate with that which has taken place in cotton. There seems to have been a general desire on their part to get well in order, so long as the demand lasted. The business done in June was large, and it is generally understood that the consnmption of cotton has increased since Whitsuntide. The arriva's in Liverpool have Veen delayed, and naturatly enough prices have rapiJly advanced. This led to a la ge business here, but as the shipments to foreign markets continue to be extensive, it seems proble¬ matical whether the advance obtained here will be supported abroad. Some important buyers, adopting these views, have abstained from any large opeiathms. Although, as is usually the case in an advanc ing market, confidence in p»ices is general at preseut, a change ol opinion might occur any day, and prices be influenced accordingly. The daily ctasing quotations in the markets of London and Liver pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as shown in the following summary : London Money and Stock Market.—Consols have ruled about steady the past week. United States bonds have ruled firm and a slight advance has been established in the quotation Railroad Shares have been better, and the close to-night is somewhat higher than a week ago. U S. bonds at Frankfort have sympathized with the Loudon market, and close a little higher than a-week ago. Consols for money “ for account... U. S. 6’s (5 20’s) 1862.. Illinois Central shares. Erie Railway shares All. & Q. W. (consols). .. The Mon. Tnes. 93# 93# 81# 95# 18# .... 93# Thn. 93 -# 93# 93,14 82 93},' 81# mi 95# 18# 93# 93#-%[ 81# 95# 18# 25# 93# Wed, 95# 18# 23# 82 93 24 daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1802) Franktoit 86% 86,#-7 86% Fri. 93 # xll 19# io# at Frankfort 86#-7 87#-# were > last week, and although there with less firmness than a week ago. as ( Jalifornia white) “ 6 5 24 9 10 26 29 24 9 10 26 29 old 28 (Am. & Can.) per45 lbs Teas.. (Canadian) pr 504 lbs 3 38 3.8 “ “ “ Barley (Canadian), per bush Oats Liverpool Provisions Pork and B icon 10 7 *6 3 a * ac¬ s. “ “ “ “ 64 3ecf(er. pr. mess) p. 304 lbs Pork(Etn. pr.me88)o200 lbs (Cumb.cut) p. 112 lbs Lard (American) Cheese (tine) 0 Mon. s. d. 90 0 99 0 Tues. Oil 10, Fine Rneio $5,412,576 132,536,818 $4,363,244 124,596,599 *4,170,212 162,366,978 Since Jan. 1,...;,,.*165,15if,£’67 $137,940,424 $123,959,843 $166,537,190 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the importsof dry goods for one week later. ^ The following is a statement of the In 62 71 64 10 27 29 3* 62 0 62 0 0 71 63 0 0 71 62 very 90 99 0 0 0 0 6 Since Jan Refined Petroleum has lost Fri d. 90 0 99 0 62 0 70 0 62 6 d. 0 s. 70 62 0 0 little change to notice Rosin (com Wilm ).per 113 lbs do Fine Pale... “ Sp turpentine “ Petroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs. “ 4 15 27 A. spirits....per8 lbs lbs. • 0 45 Tallow (American)..p 112 Clover seed. 6# 7 0 d. 4 16 2» 1 0 9 0 32 00 0 0 6# 7 0 45 * Sat. Linseed oil ..per ton... 6. 9 0 0 Mon. 3 > 00 io d. 9 16 0 27 0 B. 4 and Linseed 1 0 45 6# 7 0 Th Wed. 4 16 dl. 9 0 27 0 s. 1 0 45 8. 7 0 u. 4 16 27 6# Linseed Cakes steady. Sftt. 1 0 45 Lins’dcake(obl)p.tn£10 02 Linsee-t (Calcutta) .. 0 61 112 0) Sperm oil ....- . Wbale oil ... 39 9 92 0 0 40 0 0 d. 4 9 16 0 27 0 1 6 0 7 45 3 0 0 6 7 0 Exports for the Tu. Wed." :32 00 0 32 00 0 Til.* 32 10 0 Fri. 32 10 0 a decrease in both 2,087,805 1,545,278 3,257,138 49,163 1,957,429 2.298,081 3,792,099 1,117,694 4,780,000 994,770 1,902,883 564,033 4,*87,008 86t i,658 403,476 3:34,184 695,618 Venezuela British Guiana Brazil Others. American ports All other ports 362,662 785.2 8 1,7 0,343 1,718,589 2,29H,1 9 1.548,171 2,023,200 686,797 following will show the exporta of specie from the port of New for thn week ending July 10, 1869 : July 6—St. Ilammonia, Paiis, Mexican gold $27,200 Gold bars f liver bars > oreign coin. . . 7—"t Ftthkee, Bermuda, ... ... Silver bu’lion American gold... $21,302 Ju’y 10—Aiasha, Aspinwal', 75,500 23,9'0 34,000 American siber 10—St. Pereire, H»vre, American go:d.... Gold bars Silver bars . ’ “ Anuricau silver.. 27 7—St. Russia, Liverpool, Gold bars 64,000 8—St Columbia, Havana, Arneiicau silver.. 2,500 8—St Deutschland, London, Mexi au dollars.. 39,6:35 Total for the week. “ 55,773 1,719,966 1,307,833 2.184,021 2,611,500 , Other Weft Indies Mexico New Granada 2,0*2, ^76 1,2:35,290 1 , Hayti The 4,467,529 2,547,167 8,112,134 i,002,012 1,075,551 10,622,213 Hast Indies China and Japan Australia Britisu N A Colonies Cuba “ . 88,437 200,009 123,800 $908,734 16,541,446 .. Sametimein 1868 1867 1866 1865 1«o4 1863 1862. 1861 1860 10,u0J 18,600 10—City of Paris, Liverpool, British gold 4,877 Ameiieau g< Id.... 50,000 Gold bars 124,956 Previously reported $16,450,180 | Sametime in .$55,425 173 I 1859 31,213,'*58 ; 1858 49,368,1:38 1 1857 $38,807,637 ... 18,8!4,060 I 1856 3-»,056,129 I 1855 ... 21,446,5l7jl854 33,04S,327|l858.... ... 3,25 >,226 I 1852 13,705,216 23,783,886 17,974,871 18,268,362 17,534,979 10,945,465 13,758,715 I imports of specie at this port during the past week have been The 24,482 517 foUowa: as July 8—Sclv. Gersh Banker, Para, Silver 8—St. H Chauncey, Total for the week “ Silver. $1,934 Aepw’l, $326 Gold.. 900 , Previously reported $3,i60 A E,“ 9,504,678 Total since J»m. 1 1869 Same time, 1868 3,953,413 National Treasury.—The 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 banks tain For Circulation. Date. Aorif 342,693,800 nj;:;;; 1 2 i 39 9 92 0 0 40 0 0 89 9 92 0 0 40 0 0 39 9 92 0 0 40 0 0 0 39 9 92 0 0 40 0 0 June Week.—The imports this week 30,558,350 i 373 149,150 30 255 350 372,£92,159 30,155,3.50 80,055,850 29,31:0,350 372 905,166 372,802,840 372.198.150 .. 842,891 200 28,786,3:9 28,316,350 27,538,850 26,144,350 24,907,350 23,704,500 342,891,200 342,832,210 342,892,600 842,918,(500 342,871,100 12 19 26 3 10 376.168.650 873.678.650 373.252.150 30,455,350 < 5 Total. Deposits. 32,428,350 30,875,350 342,69<,800 342,736,800 342,749,800 312,717,496 342,80?,800 8. 15 Tues. Wed. Tb. Fri £10 02 0 £10 02 0 £10 02 0 £10 02 0 0 61 6 0 02 0 0 62 0 0 62 0 For TJ. S. 342,74'',300 342,798,3 0 17 24 A1A 3 May dry goods and in general merchandise, the tota* being $,4,170,212 against $4,842,469 last week, and $5,204,934 the previous week. The exports are $8,718,122 this week, against $4,431,637 last week, and $3,684,936 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 418 bales, against 990 bales last week show 3,723,730 2,7S2,07l ‘ * COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. and $46,890,826 Belgium Germany ! Other Northern Europe Spain Other Sou them Europe... July Imports $49,951,640 29 39 9 92 0 0 4) 0 0 Same time 1868. Holland and s. 9 Sngar(No. 12 Dch std) per Since Jan. 1. 1869. France Fri. Oils without change. Mon. 0 £10 05 0 0 61 6 6 S8,b41,395 1, To Great Britain... London Produce and Oil Markets.—Calcutta Linseed has advanced to 62s. 1889. $3,713,122 92.029,526 specie) for the past week, and since January 1, compared with the corresponding time of last year, is shown in the following table : change. Tu.‘ 1868. $2,317,411 $113,255,966 $104,178,867 $90,958,806 $95,742,648 The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive “ Other articles remain with* Mon 1867. $3,325,599 1U0,85:,268 Total since Jan. 1, 1869 0 0 62 has advanced Is Tallow 3d 1866. $4,076,857 109,119,109 Previously reported.... “ Beef( Tim 90 99 exports (exclusive of specie) from foreign porta, for the week ending July 13 : to For the week 38 3 s. 90 99 of New York EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. *3 38 8. d. 0 Sat. 8. d. our the port 9 3 10 7 27 9 29 0 Wed. d. ft 0 8. Liverpool Produce Market.—There is in this market. $6,500,355 Previously reported... 158,G57,512> d. 23 6 continue at last week’s Bacon 3,082,774 i'olul for the week s. 24 9 0 Market.—This market continues quiet Sat.s. d. 90 0 99 0 62 0 71 0 3,713,520 $1,11 ", 046 3,060 1C6 Fri. d. s. quotations. Lard aud Cheese dull, Lard having lost Is and Cheese Is 6d in the week. rule out d. 1869. $1,230,470 York Thu. 3 38 9 10 27 23 Corn(W.mx’d)p. 480 lbs n’ w Wed d. s. 24 9 Tues. d. 1868. $1,6'9,066 “ 3 38 s. 1867. $2,740,603 3,759,747 material decline they close no Mon. Sat. d. 24 s. Flour, (Western) p. bbl Wheat (No.2 Mil. Ited)p. ctl is 1866. Dry goods 'General merchandise.. 87#(&# Liverpool Cotton Market.—See special report ol cotton. Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—Breadstuflj have not ruled tive FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. of Eaffilsli market Iteporta— Fer Cable. Sat. 93 76 371,677,552 371,207,5ft 370,421,050 369.636.950 367.825.950 366,6c 5,600 * 2.—National bank currency for bills issued (weekly and aggregate), in retun. destroyed and mutilated bills returned (weekly and aggregate), with the amount in circuation at date Week ending. Jane 5 “ 12 “19 “ 26 r-N otes issued for ret’d.—v Current week. 199,820 97,190 260,950 124,000 : . ■ .—Mutilated notes burned.—* Notes in Aggregate. Current week. Aggregate. Circulation 13,662,088 123,0(10 299,842,182 ; 13,870,327 13,861,858 13,859,048 160.200 187,350 14,168,527 14,25>0,877 14,343,94o 299,748,034 299,858,694 176,250 14,467,127 299,793,445 299,740,605 14,644,377 299,7S0,495 14,746,077 101,700 14,596,948 132,692 10 177,250 14,464,358 120,410 July 8 44 8.—Fractional currency received from the Currency Bureaa by weekly; also the amount destroyed: U. S. Treasurer and distributed Received. Distributed. Destroy’d 495,000 295,208 - 574,780 Week ending. April 8 44 44 406,000. 503,150 571,800 536,000 500,900 607.000 None None None None 320,183 296,800 634,496 431,860 438,900 None None 117,576 220.669 390',400 None 294,000 26 None 95,100 3 None 183,990 *305,380 May 1 44 44 - 44 « June 44 44 8 15 22 29 5 12 Ju’y . 10 Treasure ....... .... .............. ....... 19^, 44 44 476,230 228.000 None 10 17 24. 44 July 17,1869. THE CHRONICLE. 76 from 2S2,421 318,600 144,1:0 None . 656,500 354,200 278,700 California.—The steamship Henry Chauncey, from Aspinwall, arrived at this port July 11, with treasure for the following consignees: $800 00 H. W. Geard Lanman & K< mp 326 00 272 00 $900 00 1,940 CO 23,539 18 Isaacs & Asch. Fisk & Hatch. Order by the Department against sales of gold. There has been disappointment at the non-receipt of currency from the West. The grain movement has continued active and large amounts have been seLt East which has prevented the forwarding of curlency by the Western banks. The gain of the banks has thus been drawn almost exclusively from the Sub Treasury ; and the Improve¬ ment in their condition being consequently below what was expect¬ ed, there is apparent in some quarte s a sirong desire to renew efforts to artificially tighten the marked For the moment the odium thrown upon operations of that character, by the indictment of several bankers f r violations of the usury laws, has a tendency to discourage such expedients. The discount market has been quiet, though rather more active The banks are not prepared to t ke any consider¬ than last week able amount of paper and private lenders are not in the market. Prime names range at 8 @10 per cent. United States Securities—The bond market has been unusu¬ received some ally, active and prices generally higher. The large purchases of bonds by the Treasury have been productive of a good deal of spe¬ culative activity, which has run in the direction of higher prices. The arrivals of treasure from San Francisco since the commence¬ The advance in prices consequent upon the large purchases of the ment of the year, are shown in the following statemeh: Since Jan. 1. Date. Steamship. date. At $589,765 government has of course druwn a certain amount of bonds upon Jan. 6 ; Rising Star $589,765 802,932 the market; but this additional supp’y has barely equalled the 213,167 14 H. Chauncey. 1,335,351 532,419 Arizona 21 1,808,523 amount which has gone into the Treasury. Prices range generally 473,172 28 Alaska 2,546,026 737,503 Jeb. 6 Rising Star 3,401,913 higher than a week ago, both in the borne and foreign markets. 855,887 9 Constitution 247,356 3,649,269 The 13 Henry Chauncey extraordinary quotations for Five twenties, especially of the 270,364 3.919.633 21 .Ariz<-na ...... 4,023,633 later issues, have induced some changing of securities. 104,000 Ten-forties ... 28. .Alaska. 4,408,999 385,366 March 7 Rising Star... 4,760,292 and Currency Sixes not having advanced in proportion to other 351,293 16 Henry Chauncey. 4.863.552 24 Ocean Queen 103,260 5,214,171 securities, there has been a certain au ount of selling of other bonds 250,619 April 1 Alaska. 5,436,467 to 222,296 9.. Rising btar employ the proceeds in the lower-priced stock. Iu many 5.968.553 532,0S6 21 Arizona 6,654,320 insta1 ces insurance companies, banks and savings institutions arc 685,767 May 1 * Alaska 7,013,643 ?59,323 9.. H. Chauncey.... 7,604,511 able to realize 8@7£ per cent profit upon the cost of their bonds 590,868 25 Rising Star 184,459 7,788,970 30 Alarka Currency Sixes; and these 7,864,128 by exchanging Five-twenties for 75,212 June 9,.... Henry Chauncey. 7.986.633 122,505 24 Arizona excharges would be more numerous but for an idea'that the large 67,537 8,054,170 Alaska July 1 8,081,947 purchases 27,777 11 H. Chauncey of the government may induce a further rise in the former. The following are the closing prices of leading government New Advertisements.*—We call a; tent ion to the advertisement of George K. Sistare, of 24 Nassau street, who offers rity debt (7’s) of securities, compared with preceding weeks : 1886, -6, -1 and -’8 for sale. June 11. June 18. June 25. July 2. July 9. July 16. 120# 117# •:i7# 121# 121 121# 1.6’s, 1881 coup ' —The Long Island Insurance Company have declared a dividend. 122 123# 121# 122 122 122# U. S. 5-20’s, 1862coup.... 121# 118# 117 117# —The Lamar Insurance Company have declared thar 24th semi¬ U. S. 5-20’b, 1864 116# 116# 44 121# 119# MarcialA Co $27,777 18 Total . 44 44 44 44 44 . 44 «..< ' “ ‘ 44 44 “ 44 44 44 “ annual dividend. and Hudson Canal Company, of —The dividend of the Delaware August 2, is payable at the National Bank of Commerce in New York. Bankers’ Dividends have been declared during the past WHEN PER NAME OV COMPANY. pay’ble CENT. U.S.10-40’8, 44 .... 11S# 118 119# 119# 119# 119# 119# 119# 108# 108# 118# 116# 116# 116# 117# 117# 117# 108# 108# 120# 120# 120# no# active during the week, particularly on Tennessees, which have fluctuated quite State Bonds have been <®a?ette. North DIVIDENDS, The following: 118# 119# 119# 119# 108# U. S.5-20’8,1865 44 U. S. 6 20’8,1865, July cpn U S. 5-20’s, 1867, coup . ... U* S. 5-20’e, 1868, 44 ... week: BOOKS CLOSED. and Carolinas widely, though both have been pressed for sale by reason of the unsatisfactory condition of the States’ finances. Botli States have. Issued large amounts of bonds in aid of projected railroads. Iu North Carolina a suit has been instituted, involving the validity of portion of the new bonds authorized by the Legislature, and sim;sails, it.is reported, are to be brought in Tennessee. Whatever may be the results of these suits, it has the effect of discouraging holders. Virginias have been steady at 57©57£ for old, and 61@61£ for new. All the list of Southern bond3 has been strong, and South Carolina Sixes, new, have advanced one per cent to 67 a Insurance. Western (Buffalo)..... Commonwealth Fire 5 6 Resolute Fire I #nnr Fiffl Wwrp.hftnti* Firemen’s Trust 10 5 (Brooklyn)... 5 5 10 5 Railroad. Clev., CoL, Cin. and Ind Canal. • 3# 5 9. 8 3. 12. 12. 9. 13. 12. 12. 12. lar - - . Williamsburg City Fire July July July July July July July July July July 5 6 — — i quotations comp .red with last July 9. July 16 82 Aug. 2. July 15 week: Ang. 2. July 16 Tennessee Sixes, x c Tennessee Sixes, new North Carolira Sixes, old. North Carolina Sixes, x.c 53 46# Virginia Sixes, old Viiginia Sixe?, new 57 61 Friday, July 16, 1869, P. M.' beginning of the week there was a renewal of the efforts to make money stringent, some bankers hiding their fu da out of the market while mean3 were employed for biddiog up the rate of interest. The effect, however, was brief, a few transactions being made at 7 per cent gold, after which the market relapsed into a condition of comparative ease. The last bank statement reflected a very material change in the condition of the banks. While there was further contraction on the loans of $2,900,000, the deposits showed an increase of $3,200,0'0, the legal tenders a gain of $2,000,000 and the specie line an increase of $6,700,000. These changes show a very large addition to the surp’us of lawful money reserve, and have had the effect of producing % much easier position of the banks. The Treasury has contributed tiward an easier condition of the market during the week. Its The Money Market.—At the following are the closing Ju’y 9. July 16 The — 1 Louisiana Sixe 4 Louisian* Sixes, lcv^e 68# 66# 62# Louisiana Eights, levee. 55# Alabama Fives 56# | Alabama Eights 45# | Georgia Sixes 57# Ge rgia Sevens..; 61# | Missouri Sixes 68 65 | .. South Carolina Sixes, n’w. 83# .... 92 92” 90 87 <*6# 83 67 stock market the late heavy prices has been followed by a general caution among op ra- Railroad Mi cellaneous Stocks.—The whole dull. As usual after a crisis and continues on the fall in .... 63 56# has been incapacitated through their losses for taking ri=ks. The only feature of interest has been a very active tors, while money Vanderbilt st icks. We say spoculative, for there is no investment demand for them at current prices. jn both New York Centr *1 and Hudson River the operations have been very large, arising mainly from the speculative position of the stock, and apparently not connected with any conclusive arraogements respecting the terms of consolidation of the two roads havings purchases of bonds on Wednesday and Thursday involved the dis- as far as known, been yet agreed upon. New York Central has bursement of $4,750,000 of currency. I^ext week about $3,500,- sold as high as 214 and Hudson River up to 185f. Of cours3 the *ill be disbursed in the same way, wbijn $1,3'J0,0Q0 will be 1 general market sympathised in tone with the special firmness of speculative movement in the July 17, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE. these stocks, and prices close 1®3 per cent above our last quota* tions. The range of prices on the leading stocks during the week has been follows: New York Central, 195$@214; Hudson River, 163f @185|; Lake Shore, 104$ x. d. to 109f with dividend ; as Rock Island, lie$@ll9; 82i@9PJ. St. Paul, 74$@78$; Pacific Mail, following were the closing quotations of the regular board compared with those of the six preceding weeks : Jun 4.t 35 Cumberland Coal §quicksilver anton Co 11 83 Mariposa pref.... Erie 34# 32# 15 63# 17# 62# 16# 84# 190# 29# 29 159 Hudson River.... Jun, 25. July 2. 15 49 82# 192# Pacific Mail New York Central Jnn. 18. in. 15 V 66# 186# 30 158# Mich. Southern.. 114 Michigan Central 106# 130 132 132 99 Clev. and Pittsb. 101# 92% Northwestern.... “ preferred 158# 144 .. “ 157 143 - 31# 77# 89# 76# pri Tol., Wab. & W’n 89# 196# 30# 28 163# 98 15 109# 128 105 128 108 131 83# 82# 96# 96# 118# 101# 80# 94# 116# 153# so# 116# 119# 157# 155# 141 83 95 143 151 143 32# 144 82 77 87 74 32# 76# 83# 70# 74 280# 93# 106# x.d.93 72# 85# 81# 211 29 164# 109# 99 153 143 32 33# 75# 61# 14# 131# 101# x.d.94# 120# 117# 122 30# 15 62 15 106# 97# 95# 90# x.d.80# 104 Rock Islanu Fort Wayne Illinois Central Ohio & Miss Milw & St. Paul. “ 93 31# 90# 195# 62# 17# 86# 194# 29# 164# 98# 89# July 9. July 16. 33 1561 15 15 155# 97# 103# Reading 87 75 86 76# 86# 73# 73 73 weeks: Feb. Bank. 4.. 11.. 18.. 41 44 44 44 11.. 44 44 April tt • 4 18.. 25. 1.. 8.. 15.. 4 <Coal. 440 243,766 2,149 653 119,110 612 784 582 566 516 644 410 415 835 742 175,234 136,369 .. .. 25.. March 4.. Railroad. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 22.. 29. ...1,039 (09 6. 13. 20 458 27. 977 3. 418 10. 500 17. 461 337 24. 1. 75 8 225 15. 627 ... 44 May ... 44 44 ... 44 246,607 198,605 ... June ... 4k 231,882 134,323 121,609 ... 44 ... 44 ... Jily . 44 ... 44 - ... The 16,681 6,400 3,200 25,403 9,900 7,350 2,350 13,575 3,200 5,400 902 22,165 13,450 700 544 80,697 28,766 900 405 8,423 18,050 4,950 1,445 21,740 23,200 1,950 705 29,519 10,750 1,800 235 15,290 7,150 1,000 575 11,006 11,550 1,650 175 8,566 8,769 3,600 1,052 15,692 14,950 3,400 332 15,4(53 32,100 1,500 410 6,971 15,190 1,850 369 6,300 1,100 51 3,580 1,700 5,240 4 900 1 102 1,450 5,800 2,425 10,105 2,800 3,8(55 1,686 11,505 3,150 4,499 310 S,490 1,000 5,260 • 255 115 10 110 123,1*16 110,810 113,195 following is ImTele- Steam- Exp’ss. Mining. pro’t. graph. ship. &c. Total. 13,175 5,546 • 900 800 400 100 1,000 7,485 11,543 218,212 9.271 14,549 21,255 8,916 16,296 14,334 9,923 7,130 5,125 7,929 6,615 190,589 12,615 258,237 10,209 188,516 8,604 250,421 8,970 263,774 3,450 at 5,055 4.147 9,906 6,450 5,770 7,222 9,564 273,402 235,49* 276,88> 170,859 132,271 146,027 130,332 139,81 of the amount of Government bond City securities, and railroad and other bonds Regular Board for the past and several previous weeks: Government Friday. March It State & Bonds. IS It 25 1 April tt tt tt tt May tt tt tt 8 15 22 29 4,476,450 4,230,700 ' 6 ... 13 20 27 June tt t« tt July tt tt . 3,901,500 6,608,003 6,818,600 4,254,400 10 17 24 1 8 4,132,500 15 9,243 250 2,246,100 2,653,603 3,521,000 The Gold Market. - Company City Bonds. 1,067,000 4 11 tt > 1,308,500 775,325 768,500 677,000 941,100 517,500 1,622,000 1,541 100 1,736,509 1,174,500 807,000 957,800 1,337,500 1,261,750 1,522,000 1,102,50) 1,888,000 1,311,000 1,725,500 .. Bonds. amount. 774,500 10,967,500 546,000 415,500 8,461/00 7,886,500 5,056,100 3/,000 215,500 290,003 229,200 762,( 00 615,675’ 932,800 3,157,000 5,374,600 5,2243,150 . 198.349 7 3 2. COO 766, OCX) 465,500 491,500 429,000 237,500 251,000 225,000 319,000 6,614,700 7,174,275 6,570,806 7,980,849 8.387,600 5.978,200 7,198,000 5,885,750 4,197,000 4,053,600 5,460,000 6,887,200 11,320,750 Go’d has been dull and neglected, so far 385,426 ... $23,520,267 30,266,912 $6,746,645 6,361,219 — Foreign Exchange—Has been fairly active and firm, commer¬ having been scarce and drawers unwilling to draw, except at rates covering shipments of specie. At the close there was a better supply, and rates Were quoted a shade easier. The following are the closing quotations of the different classes of foreign bills, compared with preceding weeks : June 25. July 2. July 9. ® 109# 109#® 109# Ing 109#® 109# 109#® 110 do do shrt. 110#@110# 110#® 110# 110#® 110# Paris, long 5.17#®5.15# 5.16#®5.15 - 5.15 @5.14# do short 5.15 ®5.13# 5.13#@5.12# 5.12#®5.11# Antwerp 5.20 @5.18# 5.17#®5.16# 5.16#@5 15 Swiss 5.20 ®5.18# 5.17#@5.16# 5.16#®5.15 Hamburg 85#® 35# 85#@ 35# 35#© 86 Amsterdam 40#® 40# 40#® 40# 40#® 40# Frankfort * 40#® 40# 40#® 40# 40#® 40# Bremen 78#® 78# 78#® 78# 79 ® 79# Berlin 71 ® 71# 71 @ 71# 71#® 71# 109 ®I09# 109#®109 # biers’ 109 July 16. 109#©109# 110 ®110# 110#®110# 6.1S#®5.13# 5.11#©5.10# 5.15- ©5.13# 5.15 ©5.18# , 85#© 40#® 40#© 79 ® 71#© 86 40# 40# 79# 71# The transactions for the week at the Custom House aod Sub- Treasury have been as follows : Custom House. July Receipts. $365,483 74 6 7 8... “ 518,889 26 565,942 66 289,152 19264,701 22 Total Balance in $2,004,169 C7 Deduct payments -Sub-Treasu Payments. $1,274,233 89 2,468,104 44 9,207,469 58 2,418,478 09 2,425,949 83 $17,794,235 83 Sub-Treasury morning of J uly.6 sceipts. $19,458,7:8 60 2,067,525 8,761,225 8,486,884 1,183,067 55 21 86 85 $84,957,442 47 80,046,493 87 $115,008,935 84 17,794,235 83 during the week Balance on Saturday evening Increase during the week $97,209,699 51 17,168,205 64 Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $2,128,760. Included receipts of customs are $85,000 in gold and $1,919,169 in gold certificates. The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury a series of weeks : in the Weeks Custom Ending Total .... 2,999,734 cial bills 10 193,59o $3,386,000 $908,734 2,091,000 .... Withdrawals unaccounted for “ 20 3,160 8,832,160 Increase of ^specie in banks* Excess of reported supply unaccounted for 480,761 231,076 327,723 620,986 409,409 686,809 6,146 4,642 $ on market. Reported supply in excess of withdrawals Specie in banks on Saturday, July 3 Specie in banks on Saturday, July 10 5.061 a summary Weekending supply thrown 9 and notes, State and sold new Withdrawn for export Withdrawn for customs “ 6/98 16,865 13,445 5,633 for the week following for¬ Treasure receipte from California Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports Com interest paid from U. S. Treasury in New York. 183,031 10,665 7,0S1 12,740 8,270 1,762 Saturday, July 10, on bullion at this port was as shown in the : 5,977 16,550 1,261 3,3(50 4,5S5 1,00 295,785 234,516 7,676 6,548 6,240 15,118 • 1,900 3,200 9,675 5,655 10,456 899 177/84 139,674 177,818 207,115 138,420 429,249 193,817 258,731 542,773 368,820 671,000 171,292 mula do following statement shows the volume of transactions in shares, at book the Stock Boards for the past and several previous Week ending London Comm’l. The ending— The movement of coin and Reported The 77k House. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. April April April April May M»y May May Sub-Treasury * —» Payments. Receipts. Balances. 6.. 2,169,645 13.. 20.. 27.. 6 13 5,657,096 7,863,368 3,339,143 85.87y.989 7,996,110 2,899,816 4,674,472 8,461,940 8,221,692 10,157,005 7,089,420 88,040,934 90,455,882 88,541,598 . . 20*. 27.. 3.. 10.. 17.. 21.. May 1.. 8.. 15.. 22.. 29.. June June June June 5.. 12.. 19.. 26.. July 3.. 3,588,0S9 3,257,013 2,569,769 2,993,002 2,537 835 2,868,793 2,718,338 2,391,842 2,671,828 2,150,455 2,525,718 2,541,536 1,816,036 2,029,992 2,015,068 2,042,1337 1,942,910 1,850,877 1*616,557 10,250,601 5,366,277 5,260,937 15,891,946 4,246,920 5.373,388 9,6 1,064 17,063,636 19 833 572 7 849,953 6,280, &35 21,805,496 7,364,241 7,123,598 10,860,102 10,506,125 22,119,483 17,794,235 6,547,652 ,604,387 11,118,1388 11,321,643 6,208,779 8,081,928 7,101,850 5,610,469 8,344,663 10,393,150 21,115,463 9,145,255 7,342,817 12,071,978 11,051,404 10,053,205 12,829,095 13,838,425 14.356,867 86,924,288 87,787,075 93,742,441 94,690,283 86,880,266 89,7a5,196 89,972,277 88,655,873 81,985,389 83 267,280 84,562,582 85,624,565 75,891,046 79,578,210 82.507,817 84,476,809 87,809,109 80,046,493 Changes in Balances. Inc Inc. Inc. Dec* Dec. Inc. Inc. Iuc. 2,^6,265 2,16’,945 2,414,945 1,914,288 1,617,809 862,778 5,955,366 Inc. 947,848 1,810,012 *,854,930 ’237,086 Dec. Inc. Dec. 1,316,401 Dec. 6,670,481 Inc. Inc. Inc. Dec. Inc. Inc. Inc. Inc. 1,281,894 1,295,302 1,061,982 9,733,511 8,687,168 2,929,127 Dec. July 10.. 2,004,169 34,957,441 97,209,699 Inc. New York City Banks.—The following statement 1,968,992 3,332,305 7,762,616 17,163,205 shows the regards speculation. The premium opened strong, unde? an impression that the week’s shipments of specie wou'd be liberal, condition of the Associated Banks of New York City for the weik and the price touched 137$; there has been, however, a partial dis¬ coding at the commencement of business on July 10, 1869: AVBKAGX AMOUNT OY appointment of this expectation, and at the cloze the price is 13of. Loans and CirculaNet Legal Banks. It is not easy to explain the speculative languor of the Capital. Discounts. Specie. tion. Deposits Tenders, market( New York $3,000,000 $8,634,943 $6,956,473 $929,185 $6,498,277 $1,716,838 2,050,000 '5;92(>;847 754 791 mow 10,257 a ™ oir. 710,549 4,350,716 except upon the supposition that the larger holders are willing that Manhattan Merchants’ 3,000,000 6,358,545 2,855,613 8S2.223 6,894,502 1,974,771 Mechanics 2,000,000 5,454,610 the tone of things should be such as to tempt “ short” sales 670,034 558,343 3,997,540 149,615 untij Union 1,500,000 3,820,462 427,606 2,202.804 461.249 490,102 America 8,000,000. 6,860,317 2,416,458 the period for an active export movement sets in. The “ 1,680 6,657,763 2,039,129 carry¬ Phoenix I,800,o00 3,829,(’>89 517,115 518,033 523,615 2,621,538 City 1,000,000 4,212,244 1,136,983 >154,000 3,085,807 ing” rate has ranged at 5@10 per cent. Tradesmen’s 1,000,000 3,099,096 71,083 755,105 1,622,532 576,121 600,000 2,205,067 212,641 The fluctuations in the gold market, and the business at the Gold Fulton 494.657 1,681,742 Chemical S00 000 6,332.562 562,890 4,529,062 1,007,784 Merchants’Exchange.... 1,235,000 3,222,612 53,282 449,314 Board during the week closing with Friday, are shown in the fol 2,397,777 787,780 National 1.500,000 3,203,992 288^76 489,237 1,233,025 287,821 Butchers’ 800,000 2,392.600 54,200 262,400 1,710,400 452,808 lowing thble Mechanics and Traders’. 600,000 2,105,003 41,356 195,720 1,478,712 881,414 as aon aj? ' - ....... . —■> Quotations. Open-Low-High- Clos¬ Saturday, July 10 Monday, “ 12.. “ 13 Tuesday, Wedn’day, “ 14. Thursday," ‘ 15.. 16 Friday, . . ing. 135# 136# 137# 187# est, est. 135# 135# 136# 137# 136# 137# 137 137# 137 136# 137 136# 135# 136# Current week 135# 135# 137# Previous wook 137 134# 137# Jan, 1 ’69, to date..,, 134ft 180ft 144ft ....... ing. 135# 137# 137# 137# 136# 135# Total , Balances , clearings. Gold. Currency. 76,336,000 $2,967,343 $4,110.244 38,9''5,000 2,648,737 3,676,838 83,8:33,000 2,693,990 3,791,056 83,2 0,000 2,522.854 3,496,965 47,071,000 2,158,089 3,005,19S 45,115,000 1,740,896 2,374,160 135# 374,690,000 14,736,909 20,484,461 136 569,880,000 17,835, 49 22,840,808 186ft ,<<<•••« ,»««•••• Greenwich Leather Manuf. National 8eventli Ward, National. State of New York American Exchange Commerce Broadway Ocean Mercantile Pacific Republic Chatham People’s North American Hanover 200,000 1,063,919 600,000 2,746,201 500,000 1,395,045 2,000,000 4,410,462 5,000,000 9,657,721 10,000,000 23,810,172 1,000,000 5,251,803 1,000,000 2,980,821 1,000,000 3,352,598 422,700 1,812,494 2,000,000 4,602 262 450,000 2,127,306 412,500 1,428,928 1,000,000 2,005.836 1,000,000 3.119,630 3,132 472,827 267,822 84,422 178,824 776,436 410,000 774,092 981,0S6 1,309,450 5,936,175 49,078 900,000 96,202 738,590 254,221 481,327 11,103 131/03 1,183,109 847,862 114,448 131,298 31,020 5,997 177,111 4,26« 255,312 291,220 869,293 1,084,261 844,332 3,262,180 4,703,702 6,722,299 3.651,764 1,598,470 2,913,738 1,434,942 8,486,186 2,319,126 131,117 678.075 233,177 776,009 1.086,886 4,136.571 1,310,585 484,137 c 787,155 460.886 547.658 1,201,022 576,594 129,430 1,661,721 862,200 1,1*8,403 275.803 THE CHRONICLE. 78 Irving Metropolitan 500.000 Cltlzeus Na*«an 400,000 1,000.000 10.830.204 1,477- 624 1,306,021 Market 1,000.000 1,000.000 1,500,000 1.000,000 2,000,000 191,169 5.000 1,322,9 ’6 2,117.073 132,445 39,177 60.040 3,980 575,458 172,083 51.103 750,315 914.4 0 51,539 40,212 6,0 6 555,517 214,107 235,187 36,517 5 0 <*> 11,038 212.620 360,00) 1,535,000 4,000,000 St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange Continental Commonwealth 2,638,433 3.975,000 2.755.698 3.919.971 2,600,581 1,436,801 750.000 Oriental Marine Atlantic 300,000 400,000 1.4^5.105 300,000 1,500,000 Manufacturers & Mer.... Fourth National Central National Second National Ninth National First National Third National New York N. Exchange. Tenth National New York Gold Exch’ge Bull’s Head.. National Currency 1.145.13L 831,920 400,000 850,000 500.000 Grocers’ North River East River 12,839,329 500,000 300,000 Park Mechanics’ Banking Ass. 1,082.331 1-72,990 1,287,892 15,871,588 5,000,000 3,000,000 300,000 1,000,000 500,000 1,OiTO ,000 Eleve ith Ward report, Loans The . . are 617 4,275,i5t 3.183.9.9 131.600 913,70) 1,173,100 2,050,866 1,100,207 8,416 44,290 225,COO 6,921 90,0* 0 V April April April April May May May May May 3. 10 17 24 1. 8. 15 22 29 . . . . June 5 June 12. June 19. June 26. . Jnly 3 Joly 10 , . 261,933,675 257,480,227 255,184.882 257.458,074 260.435,160 208,486,372 269,498,897 270.275.952 274,935.461 275,919,609 271,9-3.735 265,341.900 20.0,431,732 258,308,471 255,424,942 170 3,351 2.064,549 2,830.134 1,018,390 1,533 928 2,233,808 1 8 3.004 800,000 Maverick 400,000 Merchants’ 3,000,000 Mount Vernon.. 200,000 New England... 1,000,000 587.244 Specie. $0,4(5 72,235 • « • Clearmes 837,823,692 810,656/5.' 772,365 294 752,905,700 703.76-,319 901.171,671 860,720,8x0 70S,747,855 781,616,4x3 700,281,02) 850,000.610 8:10,224,022 702,170,741 8 IT-,703 30 070,540,291 2.107,511 3,855/09 3,506,546 600.000 1,042,561 3,335,805 1/52,856 3,562.175 4,246,4(H) .... 01,004 200.179 36,8 8 153,128 121.764 98,500 62, 09 221,579 05,8 5 710,8 9 03,407 341,842 21',600 461.543 18 1.063 22',997 46/43 : 203,456 03,7:6 668,500 1,211,885 637,275 1,311,606 698, 96 • 336,648 4H/J76 828 510 257,795 2,067,582 31--V31 6',5,713 496,399 1,143,844 606,603 838,197 1,029,823 (.06,347 294,327 944 170 078.136 150,808 41,606 200,646 150,240 £86/ 66 5* i, H 2 87,562 530.98!) 105,0' 8 27,123 280,109 318,133 1,137,515 916,; 00 4,7 8/188 1,892,207 4,550,481 2 810,231 1,758,283 1.922,466 3,4 4,860 119,720 2,279,028 05,9 9 3.001.869 47,393 135,135 2,473,193 2,000,936 304 300 1 0,148 5146,9!( 757,652 586,862 730,205 275,500 175,217 50,200 59,000 1,000,000 2,000,000 1.500,000 .... 23,583 51,579 299,826 89,555 266,772 287,597 520,300 212.800 166,287 103,454 215,562 1 *9,202 250,031 208,357 935.947 1 018,200 535,667 854,355 082,194 528, m 7s3,377 1,083.721 71)9,0.13 1,549,2 7 1,COS,141 250,098 521,501 £4.5'. i7 2.605 57.714 020,649 3D,6 0 (25.105 30,497 49,1.% 625,£90 45,600,000 102,633,948 3,140,676 Philadelphia Banks 9,595.063 31,851.745 447.173 795,267 794,540 589,1lv 356.424 357,155 250,( 00 445.914 352,* 81 395,811 245,765 1,830,000 1.7,14 788,988 792.2*4 364,222 597.084 300,006 Decreae*. $790,706 174.442 986,737 691,395 799,000 798.600 452,659 345,956 799,1*.;-, 791,803 39 *,45r 647,080 492,333 99.805 130,00 25,335,701 Banks for 1,419 1,401.010 - • .... l,9:-0,000 1,259,000 655,000 417,500 175,0U0 follows are as : Legal Tenders... Deposits series of weeks: a Loans. Dale. May 17 May May 24.. 31. June June lime June 7.. 14. 21.. 28. 5 July July Specie. 2i0,107 52,1( 8.'520 . . 12.. 14,000,305 15,087,008 15,48-,047 15,378,388 15,178,332 109,310 152,151 148,705 180,084 SO ',021 485,203 53,124,800 53,841),003 53,001 172 63,‘.*3 <,521 53,140,755 Deposits. Circulation. 10 6:4,012 40,002,712 Legal Tend. 174,115 Is5,257 52,2)0,874 52,820,357 41 031,410 42,347,319 42,30i ,330 10,621,932 10,617.8' 4 42«*l(j(»,001 41,517,710 14,507,327 14,031.449 13,415,493 STO C K 10,0'8,24 8 10,018.506 10,610,800 42,005,077 1-3 14 072 Capital. Companies. (Marked thiiB * arc not o National.) 10,022,704 10,018,846 10,018,275 41,321,537 40,140,407 L 1 5 T. 225,620 179,025 6,610 g Fkidat. Dividend. Amount. Bid Last Paid. Periods. Ask. Ait/2 100 3,000,000 Jan. and Juty... 600,000 Jan. and J uly... 100 American Exchange, lot) 5,000,000 May and Nov.. 300,(KM) .Jan. and July Atlantic 75 500,000 Jan. and July... Atlantic (Brooklyn). 50 250,000 Jan. and July.. Bowery 100 Broadway 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July... 300,000 Feb. and Aug.. Brooklyn 50 200,000!. .Quarterly Bull’s Head* 50 8(X)/XX)Man. and July . Butchers & Drovers 25 Central 100 3,000,000Wan. and July 200,000'Jan. and July .. Central (Brooklyn). 50 450,000 Jan. and July.. Chatham 25 300,000 100 Chemical 400,000 Jan. and July... Citizens’ 25 America* American .. and 750,000 Jan. and 100 100 2,000, (KM Jan. and 100 1,000,(MX Feb. and 100 10,000,001 Commerce Commonwealth Continental Corn Exchange* .... 100 Currency 30 Dry Dock. 50 East River 100 Eighlh EleventliWard*.... 25 100 100 Fifth First Ffrst(Brooklyn).... 100 Fulton Gold Exch; nge Greenwich* Grocers’ 25 50 100 Hanover Importers & Trad... 100 Trying v 50 LeatherManufact’rs. 50 Long Isl. (Brook.) .. 60 Manhattan* 50 30 100 100 100 25 Marine Market Mechanics’ 100 ... Merchants’ Merchants’ Exeb.. i Metropolitan Nassau*... Nassau (Brooklyn) National (Gallatin) 60 60 loo 100 100 50 100 100 New York New York County.. New York Exchange 100 100 Ninth North America*.... 100 Jan. '69 Jan.’69 July ’69 12 4 Feb. ’69 6 July ’69 l.A Ju y i ‘69 July ’69 5 110 Ju y f ’69 6 Mar. 1 5 July '69 10 5 5 5 . 123 117 4 5 .5 Jan. ’69 Jan. ’69 20 100 3# 4 July !69 4 Juh ’69 luly ’69 Ju y '69 A pi. ’09 July ‘69.... July... July'69 ..4 5 5 200,000 May and Nov.. May '69 300.000 Tan. and July... July ’69 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’69 1,500,0(H) Jan. and July.. July '69 600,000 Jan. and July.. Ju y '69. 600,000 Feb. and Aug. .’00.... 400,001 Feb. and Aug... .’09.... 2,050, (XX Feb.and Aug... ’09.... 252,0CK Ian. and July.. 600, (MX Jan. and July... Ju*y ‘00.... ’09 400,00( Jan.and July... ’69 l,000,0d( Ian. and July... ’O').... 2,000,001 Ian. and July... ’09 600,0(H Jan. and July... 600,004 May and Nov,.. Mav ’6*.... ’69... 600,00* May and Nov... ’O'.).... 1,000,(XX May and Nov... ’6').... 3,000,0(K Jan. and -iuly.. ’69 1,235,(XX Jan. and July... ’69.... 4,000,0(X Tan. and July... '69 1,000,(XX May and Nov ’69 300,00( Jan. and July... 1.500, (XX Aprilurid Oct... A pi. 69 3,000,00( Jan. and July... July 69., 200,001 Jan. and July... J»n. ’69 300,(XX Jan. and July... Jnn. 69 1,000,(XX Tan. and July. July ’69 10 !) 6 4 104 100 100 100 100 ... Stuyvesant* ..... Tradesmen’s. Union ..... Williamsburg City*. | 107# 5 8 138* 4 5 4 . ..^ .... ... 138 ....( ... 140 ....£ ...A ..(, • • . 08 .00 . r, 35 .b b ...5 ...5 ... • . . ... ...5 5 .. ... • . • • • • 127 !3(> 118 ..5 1.7 ... 6 4 . .. • ... . • • • ...5 112 ..5 130 ..8 ..6 • . • • . . i3S . • ...6 .... , . 08 lit . 1,000,(KH Ian. and Ju y... Jan. 69 no# ...4 . 1,800,0(X Jan. and July... . 1.500,(XX 200, (XX Ian. and Tan. and July.. Jan. July.. Jan. . . 100 ICO 21 .... ...t 122 2<) 120 no 111 ...f 133# ’69 ’60 2,000,000 May and Nov... May ’00 . r Ju y '60 ’69 2,000,(XX Feb. and Aug... 69 100 1,000,(XX Feb. and Aug... 100 600,000 Tan. and July.. Jan. ’69 60 100 300,000 Jan. and July.. St. Nicholas’ Seventh Ward Second Shoe & Leather.... Sixth *.. State of New York.. 124 133* . Phoenix 111 !56 Juiy '69 • Peoples’* 116 103 .5 .4 400,(XX Jan. and July... July ’69.... ..-A 07 50 1,000,(XX Jan. and July... Jan ’69 ’60 ...b 150 50 300,oor Feb.and Aug... f ’60 50 422,7(X Feb. and Aug.. If 9 100 2,000,000 Jan.and July... Jmy ’6'> t 25 412,504 Jan. and July... July ’60 Ocean Oriental* Pacific Park* . .A July. Ju y ’69 July... Juiy ’69 July... Jan. ’69 Aug... Feb. ’69 100,000 420,(KH •Jan. and July.. 350,000 Jan. and July... 250,000 Jan. and July... 200,0(N Jan. and July 150,000 Jan. and July, ;. 600,000 ..Quarterly 500,00< Jan. and J uly... iij>; 4 M y '69 July '69 50 North River* Tenth. Third ,.4 100 5,000,(XH Jan.and 600,000 May and Nov... Mhv ’69 30 600,(Hit Jan. and July.. July ’69 Fourth Mercantile 41 July ’69 Jan. ’67. May 100 1,000,000 Jan. and Nov... Ma ’69 50 300,00( Jan. and July.... July ’69 City City (Brooklyn) Republic . 998,643995,551 • . 50 25 ... Loans Mech. Bank. A sen... Meehan. & Trader'}’. 790,300 preceding Monday, July 300,000 218,872 429 019 • Decrease. $615,056 Decrease. I,lt0,oiu Specie Increase 181,072 Circulation Decrease. 571 The annexed statement shows the condition of the Philadelphia Capital.. 50 Total net 4,926 3,000 • last week. as Mechanice’(Brook.). Capital. Loans. Specie. L. Tend Dv-pos. Circulat’n Philadelphia $1,600,000 $5,' 40,000 185,000 $1,128,000 $3.4i8,000 $1,000,000 North America 1,000,000 4,186,830 65,756 1,(*76.910 3,072,272 784,000 Farmers’ & Mech.. 2,009,000 5,086,427 26.723 1,329,295 3,8!4,331 717,545 Commercial 810,000 2,257,300 16,000 496,000 1,139,000 626,0(H) Mechanics’ 477,074 457,000 1,2* 2,000 800,000 2,376,000 Bank N. Liberties 857,000 2,284,0 0 500,000 2,311,000 462,000 Southwark 250,000 1,50 i,l*‘:0 17,127 4*3,800 1,374,200 220,810 Western report—same 795.915 Banks. 250,000 1,155,537 1,393,687 400,000 1,397,018 • • • The deviations from last week’s returns Manufacturers’ ■ Manufac. & Merck.*. : 500,000 • • 10,055,150 63,140,755 485,293 13,415,493 40,140,497 10,018,275 .. 998,703 700,0 it; 178,650 690,918 698,328 TticTfollowiEijfls the”a'veragecondi'tioi of *he PhiladelDhia Banks for the week Kensington Total • 133,000 135,000 219,000 240,000 598,000 322,000 528,000 bll,000 208,000 .... 221,000 797, COO 250,730 575,0C0 117,000 190,000 257,000 613,000 377,000 .... • 359,1' 6 212,240 450,000 Aggregate 041,357 742,007 158,877 27,085 70,703 30.9* 0 410,891 45,2. 8 30,997 PeHn Township... Republic Exchange* BA J K Deposits, $133,410 $416,771 424,630 795,461 1,319,419 791,256 118,000 38,242 1.9.-1,218 1,000,000 l,5;*c,(XH) 200,000 200.000 273,435 238,400 • 2,199,159 2.000.000 $130,940 73,028 42,704 08,009 900,000 1,000,000 1.000,000 Leather. 1,000,000 12,1869 $3,207,772 1,905,165 L. T. Notes. 36,837 1 COO. 000 Eagle Exchange . 183,197,239 48,702,728 24 749 2/05,279 2,-'04,164 B’kof Commerce 2,000,000 **’k of N. Amer. 1,000,000 21 kof Redemp’n 1,000,000 B’kof the Repub. 1,.’00,000 City 1,000.000 .. 193,S80,905 60,859,258 180,2!4.110 49,012,488 181,774,095 18,103,920 179,929,407 40,737,203 2,054 86,005 34,4*7 5,591,07-' 1,000,000 2,000,000 750,000 First 1,000.000 Second (Granite) 1,600,000 Third 300,000 Total. 199,392,449 56,501,356 199,414,809 57,838,298 203,055,000 57,810,573 199,124,042 63,289,429 0.085 87,746 Washington Everett 1h3,94-,505 66,495,722 193, 93,137 65,’.09,573 41.100 847/86 ... Security. 175,325,789 48,490,359 171,495,580 48,044,732 172,203,494 51,(01,288 177.310,080 53,077,898 1,468,570 1,432,294 1,7' 3,730 800.000 Hido & Revere Union. Webster 40,859 26.811 48,000 Legal 1,434.679 2,301,7*’6 1,440,566 750.000 Old Boston Shawmut Thoe & Leather. State Suffolk Traders’ Tremont " 210,128 Deposits. Tenders. 2,430,810 2,570,8 4 750,000 ^rth 271,310 55 -.495 In:. lm*.. Deposits Legal Tenders ... 270.000 091.000 370.8)0 102 000 .... 407,000 150,000 707,000 250,000 832,000 275,000 750,000 2,731.000 1,000 000 1,982,000 300.000 898,000 Eighth Central Bank of .... .... 200,000 052,126 700,340 821,028 702,509 220,005 203,000 1,255,000 286.0(H) 1,442,000 1,232,000 3,448,000 3,C00 l/m.ooo-:120,309 3,027,000 1.051,7*7 570,000 300,000 684,047 2,411,(XX) 250,080 4110,022 1,770,000 1,000,000 Third Four h Sixth Seventh No 042,131 300,000 5(10,000 30 ,00!) ... 4,528 10,500 1,083,369 1,205 525 4(XM.'00 First * 801.«5.* 215.719 597 410 106.000 we Loans. 1,000,000 Massachusetts.. 558,274 67,589 3.80,709 8,513 760,8! 6 City 1,113,• 57 give a statement of the Boston returned to the Clearing Mouse, Monday, Juh 1,000,000 Blackstone 1,000,000 Boston 1,0('0,0( 0 Bovleton 500,000 Columbian 1,000,000 Continental 1,000,000 Eliot 1,000,000 Faneuil Hall.... 1,000,000 Freeman’s 600,000 Globe Hamilton Howa-d Market 274,8X4 4,092,966 3,26-,57 9 4'j3,781 previous week erv as follow?; tion. $750,000 $1,641,120 Atlas 058.077 1,906,791 2i6,0 0 4 15,233 250,127 30,260,91231,277,915 183,197,239 48,702,728 10,737.889 34,-lG,9l6 8,794 543 34,109.800 7.811,779 34,‘36,709 8,850.360 34,000,581 9,207.035 33,972,058 16,081,489 33.9-6,1*0 15,37',709 33.977.794 15,42*104 83,927.386 17,871,230 33,9:0 805 19.051.133 83.982,995 19/53 580 34,144,791 19.025,444 31.19/829 20,257,140 34.214,785 23 520,207 34,217 913 30,200,912 34,277,915 Capita-. Atlantic 2,431,7 .6 191,902 ZOO,000 the totals for a series of weeks pasi : Boston Banks.—Below Banks. 554,7 9 359,172 121.752 359,610 260,310 250,(00 4 19,200 630 425.596 $2,043,520 6,740,1745 59,072 Specie. National Bauks, as 12. 1869. 4.387,0;2 . 4 Circula- Loans. 227,316 261,150 171,373 1,835,208 2,719,690 week. Dec Tnc Ino following 924,425 666,8 )0 978,740 11*052 363/21 784,816 268,8:3 The deviationsfrom the returns of Specie Circulation 6 i 2,990 283.500 263,842 same as last 567,831 691.01,0 1,2 IS. 973 1.103.900 09 l,o 19 7,387.057 18,830,956 1.037,199 8S0.2 .’6 321.459 4.382 83.9;0,200 255,421,912 Total.. 2. ns,912 458,365 7t)8,00° 31.000 449,2-37 210,029 588,000 179,743 937,000 330,000 257,002 7C2,000 3137,138 .... - Corn Exchange.... Union t 12,-90,213 9,537,717 1.110.9 7 5,610 570,150 1,518,000 250,000 877,737 1,000,000 3,400,000 200,000 1,384.007 Girard/ Tradesmen's Consolidation Commonwealth 621,779 2,928,9-3 121,305 1,795, (ICO 270,000 275.020 826,200 829,327 1,826,131 208,1 "4 459,60 * 512,283 915,247 713.* 54 Manufacturers’..., B’k of Commerce.. 215,00° 508,96s 2.250,102 54,250 22,405 i;,879 7,638 343,50* .349,78- 1,187,989 2 717.600 200,000 250.000 501,000 ‘American National Germania Manufacture & Builders 304,437 8.272 61.702 1,27'!,00® 1,537.793 1.806.900 1,028,693 2,185.800 1,133,035 1.111.088 200,000 -■'00,000 250,000 200,000 Rlehth National 501.225 387,628 1,360,84 l 1,021,0- 0 10,888,889 1,591,507 5,138,-26 3,563,101 4,049,748 300,000 1,000.000 500,000 Bowery National Stuyvisant 98.005 45,021 1,012,825 9,508,145 2,000.000 Importers and Traders’.. No 3,014.873 492,00- 1,309,000 5,311,254 [July 17, 1869. • • • • 112 .... 112 200 000 100 1,000,(XX Jan. 100 1,000, (XX Jan. 40 1,000.00c Jan. 50 1,600.00* May 50 600,JOT ran. and and ana July... July... July July... July apd Nov... and Jnly. ’69 ’00 ’09 09 ’68 .... ... .... . .... ..A ...5 ...0 .5 . 03 96 • t • • t • • t » » « 130 July 17,1869.] THE CHRONICLE. NATIONAL, STATE AND CITY Subscribers will confer 79 SECURITIES LIST great favor by giving us immediate notice of any error discovered in a our Tables, - ■ Marked tliUB * in default for Interest are INTEREST. Amount DENOMINATION. National (Junel, 1869). Bearing Coin Interest— Loan of ’til (act Tune 30, ’61), reg. an do ’61 ( do do ), cpn. Oreg.War (act Mar. 2, ’61), yearly do ( do do ),1 year, Loans (acts July 1,’61 & Mar. 3, ’63), reg. Outstanding. Rate- I f 18,415,000 | Jan. & 1 V 264,317,400 Jan. & July do do do do cpn.J Loan: 5-20’s (act Feb. 25/62), r6?. ) do ( do do ), cpn. f 514,771,600 Loan : 5-20’s(act Mar. 3, ’64), reg. I do (do F"ne3j’64), cpn. Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar. 3, ’65), reg. do ( do do ), cpn. Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar.3,’65N),r«(7. do ( do do ), cpn. Loan : 5-20’s (act Mar. 3, ’65),ra7. do (do do ) cpn. Loan : 5-20’s (act Mar. 3,’65)ra7, do (do do )cpn Loan of’58 (act June 14,’58), reg. do ( do do ), cpn. Loan of’60 (act June22,’60), reg. do ( do do ), cpn. \ j \ May & Nov do 129,413,800 May & Nov 203,327,250 May & Nov do do I j 332,993,950 ) Jan. & July do Jan. & July do Jan. & July do do f 370,534,450 I 42,539,350 j I f I j Jan. & July do July. Jnly 945,000 f Pay able. 20,000,000 i 7,022,000 Jan. & July do Loan: 10-406s(act Mar.3/63),ra7. I 194,567,300 do ( do do ),cpn. f Mar.&Sept. Pacific Kit. «’ds(J ul.l’62&Jul.2,’64 Three per cent. Legal Tender cer¬ tificates (act of Mar. 2, ’67) Navy Pension Fund.... Jan. & July Bearing Currency Interest— ... 53,638,320 da do do 168,000 do do ) New Bonds. Arkansas (Julyl, ’68) $1,509,000: State Bonds* (Real Estate Bank) do do * (State Bank) California(Ju ly 1 ,’63) $ 4,695,500: Civil Bonds do Bounty Bou do do do do do do do 10 or 20y’r (Jet ,’61) lOor 20y’r (Nov., ’63] 2-> years (May,’64) lOor 20y’r . do per act March 12,1866... & AtlanticRR. Bonds. do do Atlantic & Gulf RR. Bonds do . Illinois (Oct. 15, ’68) Ill. & Mich. Canal $5,999,003: 6’ds...coupon do ..regi t'd no do stcrl’g.cowj; sterl’g reg Internal Improvement Interest Bonds of 1847 {new)... Interest stocK of 1857.., R Jund-^d Stock bonds . Normal University bonds Thornton Loan bonds 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 . to Nonh. Bank of Ky Bond for Military Purposes Bonds 5 per cent , L< uisiana(Nov. 1/63)$6,771,309: Bonds loaned for RR Stocks, etc do do for Levees do do Levees (act 1867) do (funding coupons) 1866. State Bonds ... proper Charity Hospital Grounds Levee Bonds Maine (Jan. 1, ’69)]$5,053,500: Civil Loan Bonds, 1355-61 War Loan of 1861 Maryland(S’p 30,’63)$11,719,1 JO: Bonds to RR’s. & (s do erling).. "d Jan. & July 176 000 o, May & Nov. in*,500 Jan. & July do 1,519,000 75,0 K) . Feb.& 19,000 Jan. & MASSACHUS.(Jan.l,’69)$26,807,420 State Almshouse Loan do State House Loan Lunatic Hospital. do 8,400 79 *,>21 507 966 1,635,953 var ous. • 553,200 739,500 99,475 419,»00 160,000 2,092,000 1,000,000 2,414,000 491,800 681,500 86,0.1' o Jan. & July do do do do 996,149 131,311 896,000 1 os,< :oo July M r. & Sep. Jan. &Juy Jan. & July May & Nov Jan. &c., Loan Lunatic Hospital (West. General Statutes Loan Mass.) koan, funding Public Dei>t. f,. fto tiO ' do »>** Various. do -(JO Two Million Loan War Loan Bonds War Bounty Bonds. Ste Marie Canal Bonds Minnesota (Nov. 30, 6-OS-SOU,000: 1,729,000 596,5001 41-’71 Jan & July 62-’90 do 1*87 do ’82-’90 do 81-’87 do ’SI-’85 Jan. & July ’70-’84 do ’86-’96 do '97 ’02 1,002,900 593,400 475,000 2,832,500 5,281,110 99‘ do do do Feb. & Aug. June & Dec J.,A ,J.&0. 1889 ’89-’90 1805 1865 1K90 1S70 \S9-’9 do do 2 '4.000 May & Nov. 1872 Apr. & Oct. ’73-’74 do ’73-’74 Jan. & July 1874 June & Dec 1877 Jan, & July 1870 June & Bce ’«9-:72 ’fVjdo 776,000 881,000 69% 66 RH'n., Jan. & July 8’eb. & Aug 98’ 98 T.,A...T.&0 &July 798,SO* 3,2S6/i00 8-5,73:' .... •••• • • • * * * * Jan. .. 65 66% Tan. & July do do 62 63 56* 56% 1,706,-:(H Funded interest (new bonds) State Bonds (debt proper) do do > ( do do do ( do do 25,9O3,0uf 2,172,00* 4,577,956 etc Bonds endorsed for RR’s., etc.. Apr. & Oct Jul} Long. 57* 58 Jul} Long Long 61* 61% do do 239,16» ) 1,398,64( Vermont ( eb., ’6'>) $*,427,000 : War Loan Bonds,coupon../.... do do reg Virginia (Nov. 1 ’68) $39,601,083: Dollar Bonds (old), coupon do do (old), registered | 1 Jan. & do Tan. & on do 1 Jan. & 167,£0* o,’.34,50 1,-00,0<X « Y ) Sold. & A. PWiidi*, Nos 1,5 bo £ F, Ji bonbg... ona orw 399. SOI 399,301 3.341,0' 2.033,201 •',966,00' 1 do do Mav & Nov 1,133,00' 1,100, | 2.748, ock 2,000,0 1.5GQ,M 77 *8 Jul) do do do do do do do do 900.00* — Lone f.m.v&n 5,147/XX ‘ 71’78 71-’78 do 10.963,00i 19,980,03 1,865,(XX Funded Interesi (new), coupon {K do do (new), regist’d f0’ Wisconsin (Sept,30,’68) $167,800):, State Bonds ( Itv Securities New York Water Slock Croton Water Uroton waier Water stock.... C«*oton water Fire indemnity Central Park Fund... do do do Improve ji’t Fund do do do Peal estate bonds.. T3Mnntin«* Ofibt hind Floating debt hind Tun. & Dec 1,227,00* 201,0<J< Sterling bonds (old) coupon... - 98 98 Apr. & Oct Mar.&Sept Apr. & Oct 1,157,000 TENNESSEF(Oct.l,’6S)$34,271,762: Bonds loaned to July Various. Feb. & *ug Jan. & July Feb. & Aug do do 1,642,128 400,000 910,200 22.080,800 I 2,820,750 of 1863 of 1863..... of 1864 • 1888 1873 j 4,724,000 do S Carolina (Oct31,’68)$5,407,30(;: Fire Loan Bonds State 1 onds (old) do do (new) ’79-94 ’7i-’73 1883 1880 do 1870 do Jan. & 47" 1875 1881 1886 1871 May & Nov 176,15t 57% 190v Jan. & July do do ., '83-’84 ’69-'78 1871 2,439,900 2,020,170 1,6''0,000 4, f 95,309 2,400,000 400,000 . 68-’98 '68-’9S| Various. Various. Jan. & July 14,335,500 Isl. (Aug., ’6S) $3,OSS,500: War Bonds of 1861 do do of 1862 1866 1868 1870 1877 18 7 do do Will. do 1878 A.,J.&0. 1872 do 1873 do 1874 do ’75-’77| Jan. & July 1875 do Will J., A., J.&O. 1871 do 1874 25,000 Military Loan Bonds Rh 82 do do do 38,00b 99 69-’06 1886 May & Nov. 1907 Various. ‘86-’8c Jan. & July 1393 Mar. & cept 1872 do do M,QU0 var. 1879 1879 1879 J.,A.,J.&0. Jan. & July 700,000 2,185,000 2,0:35,800 (old), registered 91 July May & Nov Apr. & Oct Jan. & July 318,107 Inclined Plane Bonds State Bonds (new) do do (new) 87% Jan. & 1,499,800 1 87% 1*70 1872 Jan & 1,194.100 600,0iX> 609,500 500,000 I do Mar.&Sept. July 58 760 500,*00 900,000 pKNN’A(Dec ’68) $33,172,951: State Bonds (old), coupon 1872 500,000 (Jau. 1, ’69) $10,521,479: Loan due after 31st Dec., 1870 do do 31st Dec., 1875 102 1877 1878 May & Nov 3,512,000 7,000,000 1,650,000 3,000,002 •. .. &July 7,000,000 ... .. July do Jan. 100,000 ... .. 1886 189C 1879 Jan. & 100,000 100,000 Funding Bonds do do 86,000 do do do do General Fnnd Bonds do do do ..; Canal Fund Bonds do do do do 30th June, 1881.. do 31st. Dec., 1«86 Domestic Bonds (Union Loan) Oregon (-ept, ’68) $176,150 : Rcliefand Bounty Bonds 187S 78-’83 May & Nov 800.000 do do July uo 2,607,300 5,726,SCO 2,250,000 1,400.000 Ohio ’isoo' Jan. & 23,757,000 1,189,780 Bonds for rai1 roads, etc I do do do ex coup j’ 1870 1870 1870 >870 1870 1877 1877 Apr. & Oct. 463.000 do do do T registered.. General Fund Bonds do do Canal Fund Bonds . /88-'90 Jan. & July 69’71 1877 do 200,000 Buildings Loans do 1894 do 400,000 290,400 do do (new).... Sioux War Loan 1862 Mississippi (Jan. 1, ’67) $ : State Bonds (Banks)* Missouri (sep. 1, ’68) $24,012,000: State Bonds Consolidated Bond (interest)... Railroad Bonds(various)* S. W. Pacific RR. Bonds, guar* Hannibal & St. Joseph Bonds. Nevada (June 1, 1869): $558 760 Bunds of 1865 Bonds of 1867 New Hampshire (June 1,1863): War Debt of July 1, 1861 do of Sept. 1, 1864 do of Oct. 1, 1865 do of July 1,1866 N. Jersey (Nov. 30/68) $3,096,100: War Bonds ofl861 (tax free).,. ofl863 (taxfree) “ of 1864 N. York (Oct. 1868) $44,968,786: General Fund Bonds do 1883 1S94 1894 Apr. & Oct ’83-’90 200,000 200,000 . do Vtfed Sep. ’71-’86 101% Apr. & Oct. ’69-'71 966,500 2,952,400 do do ay. T7-’78 May & Nov. 554,180 do (home) do (sterling) Southern Vermont RR. Loan. Eastern Railroad Loan Norwich & Worcester RR. Loan Bost liar f & Erie RR^st^rling) Michigan (Jan. 1, ’69)$3,373,500: Renewal Loan Bonds do do State FRY Lid 1,510,080 Troy & Greenf. RR. Loan(st’g). N.Carolina(Oi tl/68)$l7.209,945: 1372 1374 1886 ’68-’74 1874 Various. Various. Mar.&Sept 110,(XXI 165,(XX) 94,000 50,000 150,000' i 1(10 Apr. & Oct. '71-’72 May & Nov. 1870 Various. $100,000' do 1C0 1(X) pH) &July ’76-’97 July. 115,20i> 1,924,913 100, (XX South’an Relief ’83-'85 Payable. do Mar. & 2,068,616 Bounty Fund Bonds,coupon.... May* Nov. Aug. ’78-*86 734,000 1,069,191 1,409.147 625,007 (currency) 94 1877 129 1880 ’S3-’85 1885 100,000 773,000 215,622 > D Tcn^e Loan Bcun y Loan. do do 525.000 do of 1863 Bounty Loan of 1863 War Loan of 1864 93% April&Oct. ’74-’84 421,000 800,000 do 200,000 4,379,500 4,000,744 3,505,000 do do do do do do (sterling) .. War Loan (currency) Western Railroad Loan (sterl'g) do do (sterl’g; pal Due. do do do 600,000 888,000 • Princi¬ May & Nov. 1882 Jan. & July '71-’76 220,000 3,000,000 • June & Dec 2 7,000 - 107% 107% Jan. & July '71-’81 do ’72-’82 do 1883 500,000 1,537,000 Kentucky (Oct, ’68) Bonds of 1841-’42... $1,986,894: Outstanding. Hate Bounty Fund Loan . Bonds . 120% 121% INTERE8T. Amount 1 in default for interest. 120% 121 431,000 2,832,002 235,000 no do do 2,000,000 War Bonds Indiana (Nov. 1, ’68) $3,273,002: State Bonds War Loan Bonds Kansas (Feb. ’63; $344,475: Bonds issued from '61 to ’67.. Bonds Funding Ter. Debt, &c.. do do Jan. & July do 4S,000 •• are Back Bay Lands Loan Union Fund Loan do do do Coast Defense Loan 1861 1868 982,000 do Western do do do Apr. & Oct July Jan. & Marked thus * .... Florida (Feb.,’68) $500,000 : State Bonds... Georgia (Oct. 15,*63) $6,271,635: Western & AtlanticRR. B >nds. Bonds, 1870 1986 3,066,500 State Bonds to Railroads do do do 886,000 415,000 Is (May,’61; Asked 1836 177.500 (non-taxab.)(Mav,’G5)20y’r Delaware (Ja'i.1’69) $1 456,0u0: <r do 470.500 CoNNECTi’T(Jan.l’67)$10,0 >0,000: War Bonds Bid 1120% 688,000 Soldiers0 Relief Bonds do May & Nov 660,200 .. of 1857 of 1860 do DENOMINATIONS. 18S1 120%'t2l 1881 120% 1120% 1882 1882 123% | 123% 1884 1884 iaij 12i% 1885 i21% 1885 121 = 1885 120% 1885 120 1887 1887 120% 1388 1874 120% 123% 1874 1871 1871 1904 109% 110 1904 110% no; 1895 7j FRIDAY. 1872 1883 1886 1886 732,800 - .. 1881 1881 1881 1881 do do Jan. & July 1,941,000 473,800 Sterling Bonas(extended) do do do Due. 82,500 (extended) ( pal 53.075,000 14,001.000 State Securities. Alabama (Jau. 1, ’69)$4,746,300: State Bonds do do Princi¬ , ’ bo '890 1875 1883 1898 1898 37-'8S 1887 ’74-’7. 1873 1873 00-’71 ’ 80 [July 17,186J- CHRONICLE THE p SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, OH EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JULY 9, TOGETHER SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK. REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF Tues. Satur.j Mod SECURITIES. evl * Thurs^ United States 6s, 1S81 do do do do io do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 6s, 6s, 6s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, do — 6 — 1874. .registered. 78,500 247.C0J J 7otidt & Chicago 1,547,500 Lake Shore and V ich 64,000 Macon and Western 110%' 110% , , 93% 190 83 00 110 j — SO — | i Kentucky 6s ! 66 | 68% 86% — — 101 67% 89% Missouri os, *.. do 6s,(Han.&St.Jos.RR.) New Yo rk 6s, 1872 do 6s 1873 do 6s,’1874 do 7s, State B’yB’ds(coup) do do do (reg.) 90 — 54% 4ov 67 46 1870 — — tos 58% ■ j 66 | X01 55% XGl l.oooj 1,000; — — 56% municipal: do 162 55%'j 55% *02% *62% 56% 55% x.9 x57 61 61% do do do do 29.000| 91 Jersey City Water Loan.. — ' — — 100 100 144% 7,650 611 — 106% 107% 106% 16,500 120 106 l,8l4 7,668 6,000 1,035 16,741 = 13 7 -112 1 1%' 123% — — ,123% -! 99 • 100; 99 100, 101 ,100 105 — 100 13S 100 20 25 100; — Ninth — 110% 110% 60 — — — 112 1001 112 | — 10 160 — _ 29 14! — — j — — — loo! . 160 Improvement.—Bost.Wat. Pow.100;, ,15% Brunswick City Land — j j— 37% 37 89%. 89 86% 83% CO 5/ 69%! 50 100 100 100 20% — 87% 88 American 500 Americuu and M. Union. 100 40 Merchants’ Union .100; United States 100 73 62% 60 J 6 72%: — 27 71 do do 2d mort do do 8s 1st mort do do 7 3-10 conv do do 1st Iowa... — Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage... do do 2d moitgage.. . do do conv New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s 1887 N. Y. & New Haven 6s New Jersey Centrul 1st do new do Pittsb’g,Ft. Wayne & Chic., lstm. 9001 3,450 j — do do <2 72% 73 21% I j 42% 21% . do do do do • — 16 15%| 15% — —• 98% 8% -]—p 16 ~ — Peninsular, 1st mortgage.,........ -ouih • ide, 1st mortgage St. Louis, Alton <fc Terrell, 1st in. do do do 2d, pref 2,510 5,770j income. 522, St Louis &. Iron Mountain, 1st m.. 6 i do Jacksonville & Chic, 1st 90'1 Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort.,ext.. do 2d mortgage, do 7,555 do do 16 do 300 do — 98% 36,000 . .1 •- 93 93% 93% 94 1,000 — 26,(X0 — 94 5,000 87 — — 83 83 — — 83% 84 83% III — 8-;% 1 84% 140,000 17,000 4,000 4,000 1,000 t8% 77. — 2,000 — 73 — — — 4,000 1< 1 101 101 — 91 92% 128 600 — 2,500 1,500 120 ♦ M- l33 133 11,000 6,000 2,000 8,000 1,000 99 i 90% — S 1 93% 90% i 9.1% 85 § 1 94 — 105 — 95 — 4,000 — 96 98% 5.000 4,000 — 96 1,500 92 — 96 7,000 t ico% l00 5,000 82% — — 101% 101 93 7,0(0 7,000 — 3,000 18 — — — 1,000 92% ..... 2,000 2,000 ■ — — - 76 - 85] I zz 90 83 — cons, con 'Western Unions 5,t)00 — 83 equipment... do 300, Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw,1st W.D do do uo E.D 500 ( 2,100 1 ’ 2d mort. 3d mort. do 100; —: 100 98 75 1 C7> S j 22%; 23% 15,000 — do 42% ! 10C, Ohioand Mississippi, 1st mortgage do do ' consol, bonds — 100 37% sy — J 100; 89% — — 1C£ Mariposa Trustee 10 ctIs Michigan Central 8s, new, 1882.... Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund. 20 do do 2d mort.,7s... Milwaukceand St. Paul, 1st mort.. 55 1 — 50 50 Ai*[ — — 100; 100 : — Cumberland 100 Deluwarc and Hudson.. .100 50! Pennsylvania loo — 120 ■ 50 100 — — 100 .100, 94 Stocks : 25 10 700 do • Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869. do 2d mort, (S. F.), ’86 Illinois Central bonds Lake Shore, div. bonds Marietta & C'in., 1st mort 55 50; 50 Cary do Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72 — — 50; Canton Siulc’g Fund Central 1st do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, J883 .. 72 ‘ do 4th mortgage, 188U 182! do 5th mortgage Great Western, 1st mortgage, 1888. 70 Great Western, 2d mortgage 7 Han. &St. Jos., 1st convertible .. do Land grant. — — 9S% *76% 74 93 123% 123% 90% 50 107 73% Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 111 110 59% 73 73 2d mort. Delaw’c, Lackawan. & West, 1st m. do do do 2d m. — 100 100 100 .09 1«>0 46 2,300 conBolid’tcd do Col., Chi. & led. do Metropolitan iscsllQMOus—Bankers & Bro. 400 2,530 ■ 181% 180% 1st mortgage... Income. do do- Cleveland and Toledo, No. lOOj Wells, Fargo &Oo Mining .—Mariposa Gold Mariposa 1st preferred Mariposa preferred — preflOO 37X90 Chicago, K. I. and Pac, 7 percent.. 5,000 Cleve. P.and Ashtnbula, new...... Cleveland and Pitts)>urg, cons do do 2d mortgage... do 4th mortgage.. do — Importers and Traders Manufacturers & Merchants Repress.—Adams do pref.100 Chicagoand Rock Island, lstmorl 93% 94 94 —— Pacific Mail Union Navigation 2,310 — 145% Chicago,Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c. 93,009 Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort 580,003 Chicago & Milwaukee, 1st mort... Chic & Northwest., Sinking ! und. 13,000] do do Interest b nds 54,000; do do 1st mort.. 6s. Park Loan.. Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 126 — do do Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan Quicksilver Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100 * St.Louis, Alton & Terre IIau‘c.100 Railroad Rond*: 90,000: American Dock & Improvement ts Central Pacific gold bonds... ..... 690,500 Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund, — 16%) 61; 6s, (new) 6s, (reg.) 60% — *61 51% x5S VirginiaGs, (old) Telegraph.—Western Union 80 100 .. StoDington j Wilks Barre Ga*.~ Citizens 129 128 — 7,000j 45% 48 48% 47% j South Carolina Gs South Carolina 6s, new Tennessee 5s 6s (old) do do 6s, (new) Central 8,000 112 — — , j do \ 6s (old) 6s, (new) — 88 06 88 00 83 88 — NorthCarolina,6s miticellaneouB Coil.—American Ashburton.... 109% 108 — £5 — Michigan 7s, War Lean Ocean Park Seventh Ward St. Nicholas State of New York Tenth 300 700 III! | Louisiana 6s Louisiana 6s Levee Bonds do 8s Levee Bonds Nassau 108% 106% 107 9,007 76 37 — Indiana 5s Manhattan Merchants Merchants Exchange Mechanics — 7,300 2,831 New llavcn and Hartford 100 202% 2ld 208 New York Central 100 196% 198% 201 New York and New Haven 100 do do scrip. — New Jersey — 105 Norwich & Worcester 109 32% 32% 32% Ohio and Mississippi^ 100 32% do do 15,000 pref 100 283 2 ), L00 ’ Panama 100 150% 1,000! Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic.100 152 153% 94% 93 94 94% 50 93 2,030; Reading 61.003 Rome,Watertown & Ogdensburg — 1 do do 1ST 7 War Lean New York 5s. 1870 do 5s, 1875 do 6s, 1878 Bank Stock* American Exchange Bank of America Bank of New York Bank of Republic Central Commonwealth Commerce Continental Com Exchange Fourth Hanover 80% 80% 94% 94% 117% 117% 81 — 02 — South — 3,000; 83% — 188 MariettaandCincinnati, 1stprei 50 9% do do 2d pref 60 :30 133 132% 136% 132 M ichigan Central 100 129 Michigan So. and N. Indiana .100 77% 77% 77% 77% 2,000 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 76% 76 87% 87% 87 ],(00 do do pref... 100 86% 87% 88% 89 89 88% 7,0,0 Morris & Essex 50 89% 89% 89% 93% — .100 115 81 — pref.100 95% do 4,508 762 159 . 2,003 110% llu% 10-40s ...coupon. 103% 110 XOAOs.registered. 6s,con.,’79,aft.’60-62-65-70 000] 21,400 107% 107% 107% So. 102 103 95% 96 Chicago, Rock Island and Pac..100 116% 117% 118% 75 Cleveland, Col. Cin. and Ind. ..100 75 37% 37% 37% 37 Columbus C. «fc Ind. Cent 109 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 108% 108 Delaware, Lackawuma and West 50 112 113 102 Dubuque & Sioux City 1< 0 do do pref 100 119 119% 152 Hannibal and St. Joseph... 100 U0 Hannibal aud St. Joseph pref. .100 119 145% 143% 114 do pref 165% 167% 173% 173*, 144 143% .100 113 do 4,402,900 1871..registered.\ 1874 coupon.[ do 7s (new) Illinois Cana] Bonds, 1S60 'do Registered, 1800 do — 875,000 10,000 120% !l07%jle7% Georgia 6s do do 409,250 65,000 432,800 33,50o 300,410 ' State : do do Ohio Gs, Jersey 109,600r Chicago and Alton — Alabama 8s do 5s California, 7s> Connecticut 6s do do do 100 10< 102% 103% 104 100 159 100 153 160% do do preferred,.. .100 zz Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO Chicago and Great Eastern 100 82% Chicago and Northwestern 100 80% 82 .... Central of New 1657,000 Oregon War 1881; do. (ly'rly)\ Currency 1871 coupon] Wek ’stale TharaX Fri. . Railroad Stock* : Boston, Hartford and Eric 10% 129% 122% 122% 121%! 123% 122 m%: 122 , 121% 121% '121% 121% 121% 121% 121% 121% 121% 121% 121% 120 120% 120% j 120% 12.)% 120% 120% 120% 120% 120% 120% 119% 120% 119% 120% 120%, z— — Alon« fTues, Satur. STOCKS AND SECURITIES. j 120% 120% 120% 120% 6s, 1881. .registered. j 117% (120% 6s, 5-20s(’62)COMno«.;121%jl2*2Ji ,120% 6s, 5-20s doregist'di 6s, 5-20s (’64) coupon. 119 (121% 6s, 5.20s do regisVd\ —'121 6s, 5.20s(’65) coupon, 119% 121% 6s, 5.20s do reqisCd | 6s, 5.20s (’65 n.) coup. 117%1120% 6s, 5.20s do regist'd\ i — 6s, 5.203(1867) «w/0.|117%|12O% 6s, 5.20s do regied\ — 119% 6s, 5.20= (1868) coup. 119^; ,120>» 6s, 5.20s do regis'd, do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 118%'l20% coupon. Week’sSaleB 180% 136% American Gold Coin (Gold lloom).. 135% 137/t 137% National: Erl. - STOCKS AND 1,000 4,000 — 82 88% 6,000 82 2,000 — ” sir r _ 1U- - mwm 18,000 81 CHRONICLE THE July 17, 1869.] in Minnesota.—A letter in the Chicago Tribune give interesting information about railroads in Minnesota. At th present time nearly four thousand lab orera are at work on the railroad in that State. One thousand men have just been taken by propeller from the lower lakes and transferred to the railroad now building from the head of Lake Superior to the Mississippi River at St. Paul. On the St. Paul and Pacific Railroad, ninety miles west of Minnea¬ polis are under contract. The laborers come from Sweden and Ger¬ many. Agents of the Company have circulated in those countries of Europe deset iptions of the choice lanc’9 in the Big Woods and the Kandiyohi frairies beyond that belt of forest; by similar personal influence, parties of emigran's have been billited from their native villages to the particular fraction of land destined to be a Minnesota homestead ; and the protection of the Company is not withdrawn for a moment of the leng journey. Even after arrival in Minnesota the Company’8 buildings are arranged for their temporay occupation, while more permanent shelter is provided in the immediate section of the roa 1 under construction and of the lands to be occupied. They expect in Iowa t- at every tier of country East and West will have its line of rail. Minnesota begins to show the same sort of enterprise. There are railroads in the two lower tiers of counties; another in the fourth tier, and another in the filth. The North Pacific and St. Cloud and Pembina Railroads will open other and large por¬ tions of the State, and of the region beyond. Of the lines in progress or projected, one is from St. Paul via Skux City to the Union Pacific R iilroad, west of Omaha. As to the Noith Pacific Road, the corre¬ spondent suggests that an eligible route wculd be on latitude 46 degrees, crossing the Missouri River near the northern boundary of the Sherman-Harney Sioux Reservstion, erasing the Yellowstone at the mouth of the Big Horn, and thence wes t near Helena, in Montana, and through the Hell Gate Pa93 to the Rocky Mountains to the channel of Railroads ©I)c ttatltoctij Jitotutor. Railroad Earnings (weekly).—Iu the following table we com¬ pare the reported weekly gross earnings for several weeks in 1868 and 1869 : . “ 4th. “ “ “ “ “• Michigan Central “ “ “ “ “ “ Michigan Southern., ' “ Western Union “ “ ’ “ “ “ “ 134,400 126,800 41,979 37,597 99,374 134,400 35,0 J6 88,299 112,2C0 23,901 92,633 } 82,201 90,8SS 75,567 83,987 75,812 f J j f f Sd, Apr. 4 ! 1st, May 285 ?d, “ ( 3d, June J ,4th, May 1st, Jane 20, “ “ 3d, 89,421 j 84,833 [ 66,660 ] ! \ 524 J Milwaukee & St. Paul..2d, Apr. “ “ 3d, “ “ “ 4th, “ “ 89,203 825 f 118,84S 86,147 1 81,449 ( 81,012 J 4th,‘May 3 1st, Juno I 2d, “ r 3d, “ J 3-1,243 402 140,S18 99,765 1,745 9,266 1,783 9,152 21,970 92.017 13,618 10,568 90,803 9,771 \ [ 4th, May Dec. 17,826 38,513 1,1521 1 “ “ “ Inc. 1869. 301,241 305,426 286,522 365,139 f 283,414 I 266,913 252,278 [ 364,937 Chicago, R. Iel. &Pac..lst, June } “ “ 2d, 3d, 4th, earn’gf- f Chicago and N. West’n. 1st, June 1 " l 2d, “ “ 3d, “ f “ of the leading railroads -Gross 1868. Miles ol road. Week. Railroads. “ some 158,721 f 30,64S J 16,444 1SU I 19 330 l 18,203 1Qn 23*4*466 / 75*,619 27/ 33 21,629 20,584 3,610 5,185 1,254 366 17,842 Georgia.—Railroad enteiprise is active in Georgia. Milledgeville to Macon, completing the Augusta and Macon Railroad, will be built immediately. Arrangements have also been made to build the road from Augusta to Port Royal S. C. The Georgia Railroad Company have agreed to indorse the bonds of the road. The survey of the long-talked of Northeastern Railroad, from Athens to Clayton, in Raybun county, connecting with the Tennessee roads, and making a continuous railroad from Augusta to Knoxville, has been ordered by the Georgia Railroad. The Macon and Brunswick Railroad will be son completed, and the extension of the Southwestern Railroad to the Florida line is also under way. The feud between the Augusta and Columbia and the South Carolina Railroad ha9 been set¬ tled, and the trains of both companies now come and go between Col¬ umbia, Charleston and Augusta. —Railroads The road front in —Negotiations have been in progress for some time for the purchase of the Southwestern Railroad and branches by the Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia. The Savannah Republican says thut the bargain and transfer have been perfected, the entire interests of the Southwestern road having passed into the possession of the Central Company on the 21th ult. —The Frederick and Pennsylvania line Railroad Company has issued corporati n bonds in sums of $200, #500 and $1000, bearing interest at the rate of 6 p r cent per annum in cur¬ rency, pay a el e on the 1st of June and December. The company has endorsed these bonds with a gold bearing interest—or its equivalent— of 6 per cent, and they are exempt from corporation and county tax. the Columbia River. organize the A meeting was held at Leavenworth on July 14th to Leave,nwrorth and Gulf Railroad. The people of the counties inter¬ ested in the road are in earnest, and the work will be speedily under¬ taken and accomplished. Many leading capitalists are among the incorporators, and the scheme is one that will command the co-opera¬ tion and supp rt of the people of a large and important section of country. « —The net profit of the Great Western Rair for the three months ending April 30, 186 (after deducting interest charges loss by against $79,191 45 in the corresponding -Atlantic & Great Western.—, 1S67. (507 m.) (507 m.) $361,137 377,852 $504,992 408,864 388,480 394,533 451,477 471,441 462,674 528,618 526,959 1868. 1867 497,250 368,581 5,476,276 (1,152 m.) 696,147 574,664 757,134 774,280 895,712 898,357 880,324 1,063,236 1,451,284 1,541,056 1,210,387 918,088 807,478 850,192 1,094,597 1 206,796 1,167,544 1,091,466 224,621 272,454 297,464 276,431 .April.. 827,254 1,140,258 1,092,378 1,269,934 1,258,284 268,369 301,952 362,900. 297,625 276,681 297,512 f 414,f24 k"566,403 316,708 378,436 341,885 668,380 ^558,386 ..May.., .June... ..July,. ..Aug... ...Sep... 1,265,831 1,518,483 1,574,905 1,135,334 862,783 833,952 284,977 318,021 898,998 464,778 506,295 .Nov... .Dec... ^442,274 ..Year.. 4,358,611 . 1,001,892 . (377,053 1868 (329 m.) (329 m.) fail. $313,890 $384,119 .320,636. .Feb.. 304,115 326,880 886,527 Mar.. 411,814 April. 415,758 401,616., .May.. 869,625 ..June. 825,501 ...July.. 821,013 ...Aug*. 392,942 ....Sep.. 456,974 _ ....Oct.., .Nov., 880,373 4,371,071 4,570,014 ..Year. 1867. (468 »♦.) $542,416 525,498 627,960 590,557 586,484 507,451 587,881 006,217 069,037 784,801 090,098 578.726 949,190 Dec. ... Jail... ...Feb... ...Mar... ..April.. ...May.. ..June.. 781.669 July... .Aug-.. -Sept.*. 827,639 685,554 746,999 ..Oct.... Nov,.,. Doc •>,. 8,041,181 . $305,857 311,088 379,761 891,163 358,601 304,232 312,879 428,762 487,867 539,435 423,841 370,757 4,797,461 (524 m.) $362,021 838,335 378,735 452,429 399,299 865,116 808,503 437,600 521,826 548,886 486,398 437,502 , . fur. (210 m.) $149,658 149, £42 174,152 168,162 171,736 156,065 172,933 (210 m.) $127,594 133,892 149,165 155,888 130,515 140,408 148,986 171,499 204,596 196,436 210,478 174,500 157,379 9,907 980 1,993,863 220,788 219,160 230,840 204.095 (251 rn.) (708 rn.) $587,442 536,165 444,413 518,800 572,551 626,24S 549,714 794,325 • * , , 889,966 • ' 931,529 685,400 6'1,010 7,817,620 1867. (521 m ) $385,901. ..Jan... 857,409. .Fob... 453,481. .Mar $681,656. ..Jan. .. April.* 473.544. 415,791., .May... June 408,139. . .July.. ..Aug .. ...Sep... ...Oct.... . . .Nov... .Dec.~ (S20m.) $809,228 401,892 369,358 365,404 350,564 751 739- 81,599 ..Aug... ...Sep... 84,652 72,768 90,526 96,535 106,594 114,716 121,217 98,4S2 108,461 95,416 95,924 108,413 126,556 ...Oct.... .Nov... 142,823 132,387 12\065 119,109 .Dec... 123,383 121,408 .May . % B . *• , . .Year . , (340 m.) (825 m.) $151,130. 1867. (521 m.) (210 mj $132,622. .Jan.. 127.517.. Feb... 175.950.. Mar... 171,8*8.. April. .May... 157.397.. . J une. July. Aug... Sept... Oct... . .Nov;... .Dec.... ¥«r 307,948 899,438 >,788,820 4,019,80 1868. (340 m.) 1869. (340 m $211,973 $180,366 Jau.. $242,793 219,064 460,287. .April. 630,841. ..May.. 673,860. .June. ..July. 284,729 282,939 240,135 284,6133 ..Aug.. ...Sep.. 322.521 287,557 865,872 307,122 283,329 .. , ...Oct.. .Nov.. ..Dec... . 6,517,615 $237,674 $278,712 200,793 265,136 27 U, 630 257,799 317,052 286,823 329,078 260,529 304,810 293 341 283, S3 3 309,591 364,723 484,208 450,203 382,996 406,766 429,893 351,759 823,279 121,519 330,233. ..Feb. 420,774. ..Mar.. 468,879 1868. (521 w.) 111,037 Ohio A 1867. 1869. 109.526 1,258,713 1L,204,095 .. Year... . 8,459,319 Jan.. (180 m.) $.39,679 27,006 .Mar... 36,392 40,710 . . 352,704 3!!,v32 . 312,529 . ,, 272,058 ..Feb... $281,19.2 # 379.367 3136,066 1867. 1869. 521 m.) 265 137 279,647 231,351 216,080 265,905 221,459 214,409 252,149 2)4,619 218,6399 217,082 194,455 274,636 233,861 2,961,039 6,50S,630 Western Union, Toledo. W b. ft Western. 1869. . June.. ...1 uly.. 1,021,045 1,101,773 S 1,037,463 £ 766,617s 556,917 5,683,609 \ear.. $94,136 $92,433 .. 78,976 . 055 016 423,397 522,681 g 438,325* 1869 (251 m. $98,51) 91,66 103,558 608,730 ...Mar... 595,-155. .April.. 321,202 333,507 436,412 565,718 458,190 261,145 316,268 18GS. (251 m.) ..Feb..« 558 782 1868. (7:35 m.) $319,76)5 240,756 4,508,642 1867. 1869. 1868. (708 m.) Milwaukee & St. Paul-> 1869. & T. Haute. 1868. 3,892,861 Marietta and Cincinnati 7,160,991 ..Year.. 4,618,743 4,981,149 1867. 1869. (468 m.) (468 rn.) 505,505 $625,721 585,997 604,816 745,703 689,317 720,7771 770,198 656,284 615,600 601,289 656,828 666,424 g 424,589 « 433,434 , . ..Year.. 823,901 727,809 613,330 ..Oct... ..Nov.. ..Dec... —St. L, Alton Ft.W.,ftChicago.1868. (524 m.) . 410,825 390,671 -?ittsb.. S 591,209 1863. .. •• 738,530 .April. -Mich, So. & N.Indiana.1867. 511.820 412,938 . |;599,54S ...Oct... * 516,491 525,242 709,326 319,411. ..Feb.. 645,789. ..Mar.. , . .... .. . 440,771 477,007 $351,767. ..Jan,. 1869. . 524,871 417,071 ..Sep... .Feb... 1S68. , $647,119 419,000. ..May . 508,000 .Ju ne.. .July.. ..Aug . 1867. (431 m.) (280 rn.) (280 m.) $243,787 $276,116 $339,762 $•’.94,771 - Jau.... 304,827 275,139 157,832 395,286 ..Feb.... 235,961 393,648 267,094 318,219 .March 331,148 279,121 282,165 421,068 ..April.. 303 342 345,556 335,510 355,447 ..May... 342,357 f3S4,564 352,169 .June.. 354,244 JL404 012 341,266 ..July... 415.9S2 S558,100 407,8S8 ..Aug... 408,999 *486,1% 477,795 ..Sept... 426,752 2-503.745 456,886 Oct 359,103 y409,568 454,081 .Nov 330,169 (361,700 ..Dec (507 m.) (708 m.) (454 m.) $308,587 RAILROADS. --Chicago and Alton. Illinois Central. 1867. 1869. (410 m.) $292,047 ..Jail... Michigan Central.— 1869. (329 m.) $304,097 283,669 875,210 1868. ..Mar.. (1,152 m.) (1,152m.) $724,890 $871,218, 1,712,248 13,429,534 1867. 1867 *- 1868. 5,091,121 541,491 Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific 1869. 459,370 350,796 400,116 475,257 483,857 477,528 446,596 350,837 $2^,000 worth of coupon ^-Chicago ft Northwestern^ 438,046 443,029 Company of Canada 9, available for dividend exchange, <fcc.)is $81,710 78 period of 1868. EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL 1866. way . , April.. .May... . J une.. July.. k . • , Aug... • • • Sept... 1868. (180 m.) 40,708 39,191 $41,990 42,200 54,557 49,233 41,592 $46,415 57,S52 70,163 60,558 58,262 73,525 126,4% 119.. 667 77,339 59,762 84 607 Nov.. 79,431 97,338 97,599 '17,1*6 Dec.. 54,71S 15,470 TI4.957 $764,871 Oct.... 0 •• . Vwr., 1869. 180 m.) 68,473 .. .. .. .. ., .. •• 82 THE CHRONICLE [July 17,1669 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST, Subscr lb ersw111 confer a COMPANIES Marked thus *are leased road® In dividend col. x extra* « s = stock. standing. far l^lantic A >st. Lawrence*..100 Iolanta A West Point 100 I,10 2,494.900 Jan. A 1,232,100 Jan. A 733,700 Jan A 100 Augusta & Savannah* Baltimore and Ohio Periods. 100 18,151,902 April .V-Oct! Ap’l ’69 Washington Branch*.. Parkersburg Branch ..100 1.650,000 April A Oct Ap’l ’69 So *00 Berkshire* 600,000 Quarterly. 250,000 Jan. A July Blossburg and Corning*.... 50 Boston and Albany .100il4,934,i66ijau. A July Boston,Con. & Montr'al.pref lOff 809,000:May * Nov. Boston, Hartford and Erie.. 100 18,939,800 Boeton and Lowell 500 2,169,000 Jan. A July Boston and Maine, 100 4,550,000 Jan. & July Boeton ana Providence..... 100 3,360,000 Jan. & July 950 000 June A Dec Buffalo, New York, A Erie* 100 100 6.000,000 Buffalo and Erie Burlington A viiesouri Last paid. rate Date July July ’69 July|Jan. ’69 July! July '69 July July July May *6!1 ’69 *69 ’69 July ‘69 July 69 Jmy ’69 Juue'69 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’69 Riv.100 1,235,000 do do prof....100 Camden and Amboy, 100 Camden and Atlantic -50 do do preferred 50 3M1.000 do preferred • •• 50 Cedar Rapids & Missouri *100 Central Georgia & B'K.’g Co.100 Central of New Jersey 100 Central Ohio 50 do preferred 50 377.100! 731.200 801,005 .Tan. & Julv J uly 69 1,159.500 2,200,003 May A Nov Nov.'6' 5,432,009 4,666,800j,ixine A Dec June'69 15,000,000 Jan. & July ♦Jan. *69 2,500.000 j une A Dec Dec '6« 00,0001 do June '69 2,085,9251Jan. & July July ’69 5,141,800 Mar A Sep. Mar.’69 2,423,400 Mar & Sep. Mar. ’69 12,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Mar. ’69 100 10C do preferred 100 Chic. Bur. & Quincy, 100 Chicago and Great Eastern. 100 4,390,000 Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska* 100 1,000,000 Cheshire, preferred Chicago and Alton, Jan. & July ♦Tilly ’69 2.227,000 14,555,675 June A Dec June‘69 do J une’69 17,850,287 14,000.000 April A Oct Apr. ’69 Cine., Ham. A Dayton 100 3,521,664 April & Oct Ap’l ’69 Cincin..RictiradAChicaco*100 374,100 Cin.. Sandusky, and Clevel. 50 2,989,090 do do pref. 50 393,073 May A Nov Nov.’68 Cincinnati and Zanesville... 50 I,676.345 Cleveland, Col., Cin. & Iud.100 10,460.900 Feb. & Aug Aug. :69 Cleveland & Mahoning*.... 50 2,056,750 May & Nov (May ’69 Cleveland and Pittsburg .. 50 5,958,775 Quarterly. jul ’69 Columbus, Chic. ALnd.Ceut*100 000 Quarterly. Columbus and Xenia* 50 1,786,800 Dec A JunoljOct. ’§7 Jnne’69 Concord 50 1,500,000 May & Nov Nov 68 Concord and Portsmouth.. .100 350,000 Jan. A July July 69 Conn. A Passuinp. pref 100 1,822,1001 Jan. & July Ja> '69 Connecticut River 100 1,700,000: Jan. A July July ’69 Cuniberlaud Valley 50 1,316,900 Apr. & Oct. Ap’l ’69 Dayton and Michigan * .. .100 2,409,0001 Delaware* 25 891,206 Jan. * July July ’69 Delaware,Lacka.,&Western 50 14,100,600 Jan. & July July *69 Detroit.*ind Milwaukee 100 452,350 j do do pref. 50 2,095,0001 Dubuque and Sioux City*.. 100 2 142,250 Ja-R A July July ’69 <10 do pref. 100 1,988.170.,Jan. & July July £9 Cistern, (Mass) ;..100 3.553.300 Jan. A July July ’69 Eist Tennessee & Georgia.100 2,141,970! East Tennessee A Virginia 100 1,902,000i Almira and Williamsport*.. 50 500,000!May & Nov Mav ’69 do do pref. 50 500,000 Jan. & July July 69 Erie, 100 57.765.300 Feb. A Aug F«b. ’66 do preferred 106 8,536.9001 January. Jan. ’68 100 3,540,000 Jan. & July July 69 Fitchburg 100 4,156,000: j an. & July Jan. *69 Georgia Hannibal and St. Joseph.. .100 1,812,000! Chicago and Milwaukee* ..100 Chicago & Nor’west — ...100 do do preflOO Chicago, Rock Isl.& PaciflclOO . ... 50 16,058,150 Quarterly. Ap’l ‘69 Lexington and Frankfort...100 511,646 J«n. A July Jan. *69 50 3,572,400 j June A Dec 1 une *69 Little Miam Little Schuylkill* 50 2,646,100iJan. & July July '69 Long Island 50 3,000,0001 Aug. ’66 LouimlJ^Cin. A Lex preflOO *211,121 Jan. & July Jan. ’69 50 1,109,594 Jan. A July Jan. *69 Louisville anJ Frankfort Louisville and Nashville... .100 7,c69,686 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’69 Louisville, New Alb. & OhiclOO 2,800,000 Macon and Western 100 2,000,000 June A Dec June ’69 Maine Ce Oral 100 1.611.500 Marietta A Cmcin., 1st pref. 50 8,130,719 Mar. & Sep Sep do do 2d pref 50 4,460,368 Mar. A Sep Sep.’66 do Common 2,029,77s Manchester and Lawiense .100 1,000,000 May & Nov May . .*’06 Memphis A Chariest 100 5,312,725 Michigan Central, ... ....100 11,197,348 iwaukeeand St. Paul 100 do 100 preferred Mine Hill A Sch’lkill !lav.* 50 Mississipp Central* Mississipp. Cu Toimessce Mobile and Uhio ’69 June’69 Jan. A July ♦Til y 7,151,069 Jan. A July ♦Jau. ’69 69 8,188,272 January. Jan. ’69 3,775,600 Jan. & July July ‘69 100 2,948 785 100 825,407 100 4,269,820 Aid Igomoty and W. Point.100 1,644,104 June A Dec Dec. ’67 Morris and Essex* 50 4.823.500 ♦Jan. A July Ju'y ’69 Nashua and Lowell l(Ki 720,000 May & Nov May ’69 Nashville A Chattanooga ..100 2,056,544 Naugatuck 100 1,81^,900 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69 500.000 Jan. A Julv July *69 1,590,000 Jan.* July 6,250,0001 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69 995.000;Mar & Sep. Sep. ’68 N. Orleans, Ope AGtWestlOO 4,093,425 New York 1 ‘enrrai ..i*m •?M.79> 000 Feb A Aug Aug. ’09 do do int. certifslOO 22.929,600 do Aug. ’69 50 5,500,600 Jan. & July July ’69 New York and Harlem New York & Harlem prof.. io 1.500,000 ♦Tan. A Julv July ’6i ; New Bedford and Taunton .100 New Haven A Nor*hrrrptoulO New Jersey, ... . ....100 New Lor.dr^ NTc;t*-*»r hh .. .... &, Y. 8hd -x stock. lisvgfi...»,,100 9)000,000 jm, & July July ’(#i Stock FRIDAY. out¬ standing. Periods. Laet Gaid. rate Date. 2,000,00* Jan. A July July ’69 300.500 137.500 Jan. A July Jan.*’68 3,068,400 June A Dec June’69 Northern Central, 60 4,798,900 Quarterly. May ’69 North Eastern (S. Car.) 898,950 do 8p.c.,pref 155,000 May A Nov North Carolina 100 4,000,000 North Missouri .100 7,500,000 2V 4 5 IX 2% Bid. ~~3X Asl 86 108' 4 2 ... North Pennsylvania 60 Norwich and Worcester*,. .100 147 5 3 3,150,000 Feb. ’69 2.363.700 Jan. A July July ’69 Ogdensb. A L. Champlain.. 100 3,023,600 Annually. Feb. ’69 21? do preferred.100 100 Mississippi do preferredlOO Oil Creek A Allegheny River50 Old Colony and Newport. 100 Orange and Alexandria ...100 Oswego and Syracuse.... 50 1.36 140 Ohio and 3V f 1,000,000 Apr. A Oct ^p’l ’69 19,522,900 3,344,400 June A Dec june’69 4,259,450 Quarterly. Ju y ’69 4,943,420 Jan. A July July ’69 5 s. 72 105 5 8 108” 4 aj* 2X 3 32* 32X 7! 98 * 2,063,655 482,400 Feb. A Aug Feb.’69 Quarterly. July ’69 May A Nov May ’69 Jan. A July Jan. A July Jan ’69 Phila. and Reading, 50 26,280,350 Jan. A July July ‘69 27 32 Phila.,Germant.ANorrist’n* 50 1.587.700 Apr. A Oct Ap’l ’69 74 Phila.,Wilming. A Baltimore 50 9,084,300 Jan. A July July ’69 Pittsburg and Connellavillc. 50 1,793.926 5 Pittsb., Ft.W. & Chicago .100 11,500,000 Quarterly. July *69 2k iuiv 1012 Portland & Kennebec (new)100 581.100 Jan.A July Jau. ’69 3 Portland, Saco,&PortBm’th. 100 1,500,000 ♦Tune A Dec June’69 3 Providence and Worcester. .100 1,900,000 Jan. A July July ’69 80 2 Raritan and Delaware Bay* .106 2.530.700 15->2 160 6 Rensselaer & Saratoga con.100 2,&50,000 April A Oct Ap’V ’69 158 lbl 5 Richmond and Danville 300 4,000,000 lt>5 15 Richmond & Petersb., 100 847.100 Rome, Watert. & Ogdensb’glOO 2,5U0,000 Jan. A July Ju y ’69 100 7,000.000 50 27.040,762 Pennsylvania Philadelphia and Erie* 50 6,004,200 do do preferred .. 2,400,006 131* *-32 20 113* 62 4 5s 6 4 94X 285 114 63 9 4>4 10536 1(5X 139 3s 152X 154* 3 6 110K ... 100 Rutland do 5 94>l4 E 1173d 5 bds preferred mi St. Louis, Alton, & 100 TerrcH.100 2.30 1,000 Feb. A Aug. Feb.'; 69 pref. 100 2,040,000 Annually. May ’69 cnic *100 1,469,429 9 11,341 Sandusky,Mansf. &Newark.l00 Schuylkill Valley* 50 r 76,050 Jan. A July July ’69 Shamokin Val.&rottsville* 50 869,450 Feb. A Aug Feb.’69 Shore Line Railway 100 635,200 Jan.A July Jan. ’69 South Carolina 60 5,819,275 3 V c6* 37 South Side (PAL.) 100 1,365,600 3X South West. Georgia 100 3,210,900 Feb. A Aug Feb.’69 1< 7>< 107X 2 Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N.Y100 1,314,130 3oX 36 >4 Terre Haute 2X ® Indianapolis 50 1,988,150 Jan. A July July *69 1 3 Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw .100 2,700.000 5 do do. lBtprel.100 1,700,('CO 3V do do 2d pref. 100 1,000,000 ••1 3 I Toledo, Wab & West 100 9,500,000 5 1*V 131 do do preferred.100 1,000,000 May A Nov May *69 4 Utica and Black River 100 1,497,700 Jan. A July Jan.*69 Vermont and Canada* 100 2,250,000 ♦Tune A Dec Jure ’6'' Vermont & Massachusetts..100 2,860,000 Jan. A July Jau 69 lio 112 109 3,353.679 Virginia Central, Virginia and Tennessee.. . .100 2,94 ,791 do do pref.100 555,500 SV103* 104* Western (N. Carolina) 100 2,227,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’64 33* •• do do St. Louis, Jacksonv.& wik & Ill.)... 2,707,693 pref 660,000 Wilmington & Manchester. 100 1,147,018 Wilmington & Weldon 1,463.775 Western Union (Wis. do do 114* 2X 62 4 7 5 4 3 4 4 *3 V 5 .... ICO 1,550,000 Jan. A July Worcester and Nashua 334 434 2 130 Chesapeake and Del. ( (Delaware Division* Lio 200 isiv 50 50 1,983,663 60* 75*4 7 76 V t* 2 3* 81X 4 4 2 • • • 99 58 • • • & 30s o • • jnly ’69 June A Dec ♦Tune ’69 Fe >.’69 1,633,360 Feb. A Aug 129' .100 15,000,000 Feb. A Aug 128 i Delaware & Raritan, 100 4,999,400 Feb. A Aug 235 ((Lehigh Coal A Navigation . 50 8,739,800 May A Nov i Monongahcla Nnvigat. Co. 50 728,100 Jan. A July 18\k i ...100 1,025,000 Feb. A Aug Morrie(consolidated) ....j do 100 1,175,000 Feb. A Aug preferred ennsylvania 6' 4,300,000 144X chuylkill Naviga. (consol.) 50 1,908,207 Feb. A Aug do prefer.. 50 2,888,977 Feb. A Aug Susquehanna A Tide-Water 50 2,002,74b Union, preferred 60 2,907,850 West Branch & Susquchan. 50 1,100,000 Jan. A July ( .... 107 Aug. ’69 fteb.’69 May ’67 July ’6" 8 4 5 5 3 3 993m 1Q0 130 132 72X 7.V 42 43 . 107V Feb.'’69 10s Feb. 67 41 Fib.’67 jan. ’65 Miscellaneous. ... CV?a7.—American... 84 90E 85* Consolidation Central Cumberland .... a 3 25 3s. 3s. 10 1 , | 100 100 100 5,000.000 2,000,000 5,000,000 Metropolitan New Yor« William burg Jan. A 100 2,800,000 50 750.000 Jan. A 16)n 731,2*0 Boston Water Power. .100 4,000,000 1Telegraph.—WcstemUnionlOO 40,359,400 Express.—Adams 50 60 31 220 40 62 33 55' 60* CO 226" 160 200* ’6S July Jan.’69 61 36X 63 16 86 V 69X 59X 15V July ’66 Jan. A July ♦Tu y ’69 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Apr.’68 33* Am. Merchants’ Union .10C 18,00^,000 5 United States 100 6.00 .(00 Quarterly. May ’69 Wcll«, Fargo A Co.. .100 10,000 000 5" Steamship.—Atlantic Mai... 100 4,000,000 narterly. Dec!’67 4 Pacific Mail 100 20,000,000 quarterly. June’ 69 3 TWst.—Farmers’L.ATrust 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July Ju’y *69 5 134 National Trust 100 1,000,000 Jan. A July Ju'y ’69 4 New York Life A TrustlOO 1,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb.’69 Union Trust 100 1,000,000 Jan. A July July ’69 V 209J* 209 X United States Trust.... 100 1,500,000 Jan. A July July 69 4 Mining.—MaripoeaGold... .100 2,836,600 4 145 m Mariposa Gold Prefer d.100 8.643,400 4 do Trustees certifi... 8,824,000 Jfto, & July tiit w b QfticfeiUver,M., v,# 10*oqo,oqq ••«»?»»» 88X S6 60c July July ’69 60 1,000,000 May A Nov Ncv! [mprovemen t. Canton | 4 3 Harlem 50 1,000,000 Feb.A Aug. F b.’69 Jersey City & Hoboken 20 386,000 Jan. A July ♦Tan. *69 50 4,000,000 Jan. A July Jan. *69 Manhattan 131X 77.H 8734 25 1,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Mar.’69 2,500,000 26 500,000 Jun. A Dec. Dec.' ’68 60 Pennsylvania 50 3,200,000 Qua/ta/iy. Feb. 6;>i Spring Mountain....... 60 1,250,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’69\ Spruce Hill 10 1,000,000 Wilkesbarre 100 3,400,000 Apr. A Oct Wyoming Valley 100 1.250.000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’66 Oas.—Brooklyn 25 2,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’69 Citizens (Brooklyn).... 20 1,200,000 -Tan. A July Jan. ’69 5 3 7 »/8 14.v &m 87 4 106* ....... Ashburton Butler Cameron 43* 5 .. .. . .. 144 IX 4 5 2X 3 88 34 58 Canal. 4 5 4 3* . 33* .... Lackawanna a Bloomshurg 50 1,335,000 Lake Shore A Mich. So nth 100 2b 592,190 Feb. A Aug \ng '69 uo do guar. 100 53 -*,500 Feb. A Aug Feb. *69 si i 2 4 e New York, Prov. A Boston. 100 Norfolk A Petersburg, preflOO • o do guar.100 Northern of N. Hampshire. 100 4 do Lehigh Valley cash, 7. pref. 100 5,078,c00 j 100 3,300,000 Quarterly. Jnne’69 Hartford &N.Haven Uousatonic preferred 100 2,000,000 July ’69 Hudson River 100 13,932,700 j April & Oct Ap’l ’69 Huntingdon A Broad Top *. 50 494,380 do do pref. 50 190,750 .Tan. & July Jan. ‘68 Illinois Central, 100 25,277,270; p.-b. A Aug. Aug. ’69 Indianapolis, Cin. A Lafay'te 50 6,185,897 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’67 feftersonv.,Mad.&Indiauap.l()0 2,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’66 -Joliet and Chicago* 100 300,000 Quarterly. Ap’l *69 Toilet and N. Indiana —190 300,000! Jan. & July jaU. "69 do Bid. Ask. 4 5 5 Dividend. Marked thus * are leased roads In dividend col. x,= extra, c — Panama 5,000,900 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’69 j>0 Cape Cod any error discovered In our Tables. COMPANIES FRIDAY out¬ Railroad. giving ng Immediate notice of Stock — cash, great favor by Dividend. 2 5 ’2k 72! 21V 8 5 4 10 4 5 73 27 X 25 85X 8‘X 8V 8X 14 16 49 60 19 83 THE CHRONICLE. July 17, 1869] RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. Subscribers will confer a great favor by giving* us immediate notice of any error If olid liist f'age l will appear in tills place next week.. it Amount l- outstand- ing. s in brackets after the Co’s name. Milwau1 l*-t \ ee Railroad : A St. Paul ($16,835,187) ortgage (E Div. Palmer) moi (Iowa A M nu. Div.). •* “ “ “ 21 “ 5,425,(0) 3,730,' 00 270,(00 (Minn. Cent al) '•»0 x July 1893 5)0 May A Nov 1^74 10o>2 105^ Jan. AJu'y ..f. 1897 Feb. & Al’g 1898 736.000)7.3 Feb. A \ug 1898 750,000 7 7 7 7 7 7 5.0<X',ooo 7 5.91,' 00 . 100, (XX) Montgomery A West Point: Bonds’70 310,(MX) fncome Bonds Mortgage Bonds (new) Morris and Essex: 1st Mrt’g sk’g 2d do IV 1st Mortgage (convert.) iV. Haven A'. Northamp: New Bonds.. Hampshire & Hamden 11.R. do . New Jersey : Bonds of 1853 A'ew London Northern: 1st Mortgage Convertible Bonds Mortgage bonds New Of. North.: Orleans, Jackson Mortgage Sinking Fund Mortgage New Orleans, Opelou. <6 Of. West.: 1st Mortgage Construction Bonds. l*t 2d New York Central: Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ... Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal). Real Estate Bonds Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumeddebts).. Convertible Bonus New York and Harlem ($5,086,425): 1st General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage 4t.h Mortgage N hcork ana New Haven : Mort.Bo’ds N. Y., Prov. and Boston ; 1st Mort. 89 7 8 i : £ a Jan. & 7 1,35)0,0 Xt 246,000 . £ 7 3,455,'00 Mortgage. Naugatuck a 793.OlX) S t (Pr. dn Chien) Mi'wankee Cit.v Tdilwaukee Western. x} Ci o3 C3 l*# •a a O 4-i Description IV. B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ jutstar umn it is expressed'by the figures hog. in brackets after the Co’s name. Railroad t 1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga pr & Oct Mch A 8e.pt J n. & I u ly Jan. A July do do Mhv .V.Nov Feb. & Aug 96“' 1884 18'3 1891 1870 1876 1881 3915 {etRa . 95 35 R. W. A 99 5)6 5,9 46,685) 2,!)0!',000 162.0(H) 592,(HX) 1,514,(XX) 1- 5,000 6 6 7 7 1st 1S89 do A Aug do 1883 18S7 1883 1883 1876 1S76 92>< 89 89 89 99 92 92 Mortgage do 99,500 1,062,500 101 May & Nov 1872 P’eb. & Aug 185)3 June & Dec 1871 April & Oci 1875 Feb. & Ang 73-' 'an. & July 1st 1 101 Mar. A Sept May A Nov. June A Dec Mar. A oep 1886 1890 1876 1870 7 Feb. A 191S Mar. Jun. Jun. Feb. 10 ’80-’87 • • . • • • • • » • . • • • .... ... • .... 86O.OO1 1,000,000 1.900,000 2,510,003 .... A Sep. 1880 A Dec. ’69-’7 A Dec. 1891 A Aug 1863 do 1863 Jan A July 1875 Feb. A A ut 1881 7 7 Semiau’ally May A Nov. P’eb. A Aug April A Oct. Jan. a. July May A Nov. Jan. A July • • • • « • • • • • • • . • • • • • • . . . . . , • 1897 7 Jan, A July 7 June A Dec 7 •lan. A Jnly 7 Jan. A Juh .... .... 1894 • • • • . • • « • 7 7 6 7 7 do 1894 1894 .... • 1894 1892 • 84 76 . .... • • • • .... • • • • • 1198 1894 1892 1876 1875 860,000 700,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1872 2,275,444 5 Jan. A July 1886 Various. 73-92 418,000 6 "N arsons. ’6'.’91 1,167,000 7 250,000 7 Mar. A Sept IS— • .... • • « .... .... .... .... • • • . • . J + • • .. . ■ „„ , . . ... . .... . ... ... .. ° . • ... • • . . • ... . •• ... .. ... .... .... . .... .... . • .... • •. .... .... .... •. «... .... .... .... .... • • • . t » • • • • . • • ,... • ♦ ♦ Mf • • -t . • « • • • • • • . • • « • • • . . • « - ... .... ■n, 300,000 6 Jan. A July ‘70 ’75 300.000 6 do ’70 ’72 ■ . . ... — * 150 . • • do '65 ’6o 175,OCX) 6 Special Mortgage S. W. Pacific, Railroad: 100,00'’ Improvement Bonds Jan. A July 1871 Bonds guar, by At. A Pacific R.R.. 2,000,000 Northern Central($5,182,000): Jan. A July 18S6 200,000 Staten Island: 1st Mortgage 1st Mortgage, State (Md.) Loan Quarterly. ined. 1,500,000 85 Jan. & July 1885 April A Oct 1876 Syra. Bing, and N.Y. : 1st Mortgage 1,721,514 2d do 1,862,000 85 •Tune A Dec 1894 3d April & Oct 15)00 do 1,223,000 Toledo, Pto A Warsaw :1st Mort.E.D. 1,600,IKK) 84 Feb A Aug. )581 1.8C0,«H'0 Jan. A July 15)00 let Mortgage, W.D Consul. Mort. (gold coup) 952,000 2d 1,360,000 April A » ct 1886 do W.D April A Oci 1874 Northern New Hampshire : Bonds... 120,600 92 Mar. A Sep 1869 Toledo Wabash At Western: 700.000 North Eastern: 1st Mortgage P’eb. A Aug It 90 do 1st Mort. (Tol. A Illinois RR) 1868 9(K),0(X> 2d Mortgage 145,000 83’ do 1890 do 2,500,(XX) let Mort. (L Erie,Wab A St.L. RR. 1867 North Carolina: Loan 339,000 May A Nov. 1878 2d Mort. (Tol. A Wab. RR) i,000,COO North Missouri: ($6,000,000) <'o 187S fan. & July 1896 2d Mort. (Wab. A Weet. Railway). 1,500,000 1st General Mortgage 600,000 May A Nov. 1883 Worth Pennsylvania ($3,463,^351); Equipment (Tol. A Wab. Railway) 83 P’.M.A AN 86 Jail. A July 1880 1907 87 2,700,000 Consold. Mortgage bonds 2,500,000 Mortgage Bonds Jan. A July 188T 300,00! April A Oct 1887 Chattel Mortgage 360,000 troy and Boston : 1st Mortgage... 1S85 2d Mori gage Norwich and Worcester ($654,000); ! Jan. & July 1877 3d 650,(HX 7 May A Nov 1875 do Construction Mortgage 150,000 Feb. & Au 45.0(H) 2(H),(HH 7 Mar. A Sep. 1882 1870 Convertible Steamboat Mortgage Jan. A July Union and Logan sport: 1st mort. 2,000,00(1 7 June A Dec 15)05 987,000 Gqdensb A L. Champ l 1st Mort 88 d<r I860 Union Pacific: 1st Mortgage coupon 1S,250,(Mi(j 6 Jan. A J uly *90 ’9S 2d Mort ag> 90 do 92 2,0(H),000 7 June A Dec 186] 80>4 1872 Vermont Central: 1st Mbit (consol Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Mort.E.D. 2,050,000 do 2d 1872 do' 1,500, (XX 7 Jan. A July 1867 38 1st Morignge, W. D 850,000 do Vt. Central A Vt. A Can., 1st mort 1,000,060 8 May A Nov 1876 100^ 1874 546,000 2d Mortgage, W. D.... 92 91 650, (XX1 6 Jan. A Jnly Vermont amt Massachusetts 1st Mort I* com i W.D April A Oct 1 82 225.500 Jan. & July 1898 82 X 84 4!)4,O()0 6 June A Dec 1872 1st Mortgage consolidated.... Virginia A Tennessee : 1st Mortgage 1,652,000 do 1884 3d Mort gage 990,00( 6 Con-olid. mort. sterling (£17,200). 83,430 do 1865 Income bond. 138,500 6 Oil Creek and Allegheny River: 3,27-',000 Feb. A Aug 1877 4th Mortgage 739,001 S Mar. A Sep. 1900 Old Colony A Newport: Bonds 1,338.000 var. Warren :1st M ortgage (guaranteed). 69-’76 511,40(; 7 P’eb. A Aug 1875 Bonds 1,508,000 Mch A Sept 70-’74 Bonds W estchester A Philadelphia : 42,000 :.. 1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon .. 400,000 7 Jan. A Ju’y 1873 Orange A Alexandria ($2,637,762): 2d do May A Nov I860 55!»,600 8 April A Oct 1878 1st Mortgage 400,000 registered Jan. & July 1875 ITedern Maryland; 1st Mortgage,. 2d do or 1st Extension 400,000 6 Jan. A July 1S90 1,130,500 do 1890 2(H), (HX 6 do May A Nov. 1873 1st do * ndorsed by Balt’c 3d or 2d Extension 573.500 do 1890 do 2d Mf.y A Nov. 1916 endorsed 600,Out. 350,000 Oswego A Rome : 1st mort. (guar’d). P’eb. A Ang 1^91 Western Union : 1st Mortgage r. Income 4,000,00( 7 Feb. A Aug 1896 200,000 May A Nov. '70 ’80 198.500 Wilmington, Chari t e /, utherferd: Oswego and Syracuse: 1st Mortgage do. 1st mort. (endors. by Sta'e of'N.C.) 1885 2d Mortgage 1,000,()0< 's’ Jan. A July 1897 375,000 Feb. A A ug 188S York A- Cumberland (North. Cent.) Pacific, of Missouri, 1 ft mort (goln) 3,559,000 Jan. A July 1880 S3 1st Mortgage.... 5)6 129,5(H) 6 Mayr A Nov. 1870 ,500,000 Mortgage construction bonds. #•••• 2d do April A Oct ’70-’75 25,000 6 lan. A July 1871 Panama: l-t Mor gage, sterling 762,000 do Feb A Ang. 1872 1877 3d do (guaranteed Baltimore] 5(H),00( 6 2d Mortgage, sterling 1,150,000 Mcb A Sept 1898 95 Canal Peninsula : 1st Mortgage....... 1,075,000 42 Jan. A July 1886 41 •Jen. A July 1880 96>; Chesapeake and Delaware: 1st Mort. 2,089,400 4,972,000 Pennsylvania : 1st mortgage 5)7 JaAp JuOc 1870 April A Oct 1875 96 Chesapeake a^d Ohio : Maryl’dLoar 2,000, (XX 2d Mortgage 1 4,877,840 do 1890 J. A. J.AO. 15)10 4,375,(XX Stening Bonds, guaranteed General Mortgage Bonds 1.545,00' Jan A July 1885 do Preferred Bonds Short Bonds or Debentures 1,699,500 i’69-’71 3,520,72 4an. A July 1878 Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage". i 1890 800,000 'Bonds due State of Pennsylvania 6,232,754 Mcb A Sept 1870 Delaware and Hudson.; Bonds (coup' 531.000 Phila. and Balt. Central ($800,000): Bonds, Nov. 1, 1867 Jan. A July 1876 May A Nov 1877 1,500, (XX 1st Mortgage 575,000 Jan. A July 1865 Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage 91 752,000 April A Oct 1877 90 Phila. and Erie: let mort. 40 miles 1.000,000 lan. A July 1873 do 83 1-881 87,500 1st Mortgage (general) ssk Lehig'h Coal and Nav,: Loan oil875,000,00(1 Lo in ol 1884 5,606,122 do 190 2d do (general) Quarterly, 1884 82 4,000,000 Jan A July 188.' Loan ofIS97 86 six do 1897 2,000,000 3d do 8()Lj 600,00< Gold Loan of 1897 June A Dec 1897 93 5,000,00(' April A Oct 1870 Phila. & Reading, Hollar B’ds of 184' 2,656,600 Convertible of 1877 '’ Clo 93j* Jan. A July 1871 1877 1,201,850 do 1861 do 106,000 S5 91 Jan. do 14SJXX' 1S8< 91k Motiongahela Navigation : Mortgage do do 1843-4-8-9 July 1887 S3* 1,521,(MX 99 do Morris. Mortgage Bonds 782,251 1)9 1880 Sterling Bonds of 1843 April A Oct 1876 976,800 Boat Loan 267.010 do do 1S86 80* si" 1886 Dollar Bonds, convertible 701 (XXI Jan. A July Pennsylvania. Bonds of 1868 2,255,00 7 April A Oct 1893 Schuylkill Navigation; ($7,762,75 0) 385,(XX! 6 Jan. A July 1884 Phil., turning. A Balt.: Mort. Loa> 1st Mortgage Mcb A Sepi 1872 1,761,213 Coupons Bonds— 1,945,000 6 Ap^il A Oci ‘71 ’87 2d Mortgage Jan. A July 1882 ’ 3 980,676 Pittsburg A Connellsville ($ \500,000, 362,500 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) 400,001 6 P’eb. A Ang 1889 Improvement May A Nov. 1870 90 1st Mort., whole line Susquehanna and Tide- Water; 2,(XX),OCX' 7 Jan. A July 1898 80' 58 Jan. A Julv 1885 1,000,001 Maryland Loan P'b'g,Ft. W. and Chic.: 1st Mortgage 5,250,(XX 7 Scmiau’ully 1912 K'lki 502 97 .V 9 X do do 1878 1912 >,270,(MIC 2d Mortgage 5,160,000 7 Coupon Bonds 92 95 do 1894 do 3d 1912 do 325,000 Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds 2,000,000 7 do Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage. 1876 3.000,(XX May A Nov 1883 Bridge Ben s O. A P. R. lit. Co 153,000 7 various. West Branch and Susq. .1st Mortgagt 1878 616,000 500,000 8 Mch A Sept 1874 Equipment Bonds of 186!) Jan A Juh 1878 600,0(X Wyoming Valley: 1 st Mortgage.... Pittsburg, Cin. A: St. Louis: 1st mort 4,008,(XX' 7 P’eb. A Aug 1900 75 si* Miseel Ian com*: 500.000 7 May A Nov 1H90 Quincy and Toledo: 1st Mortgage do American Dock A Improvement: 1870 t ortland A Kennebec : City Ac, Loan 500,000 6 Bonds (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. ol N. J.) 2,000,(XX) Jan.A Jub 188 92 1st mortgage bonds, ext 229,200 G April A Oct 188.3 do Consolid. CoalCoAMd.): Mort.( conv.) 185)5 1885 Consolidated bonds Jan. A July 629,000 300,000 6 Cumberland Coal: Jst Mortgage Jan. A July Funded Interest Bonds.. 187!' 417,000 91,871 6 April A Oct 1883 Feb. A Aug 188) 597 506 Raritan Del, Bay: 1st Mort. sink, f’d 1,000,(XX) 7 Mch A Sept 1888 Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds. do :id do 1888 250,000 7 Quicksilver Mining: do 1st Mortgage (gold) June A Dt < 1876 187-* 296,000 7 *>00,000 , Equipment Bonds 2d do do 7 Mch A Sept 1842 '87! 650.000 Reading and Columbia: 1st Mort.. Tan. A Jid 1,000,000 J me tg^ge Western Union uelegronn; 850,000 7, Jpno A Dec 1884 •ft* 1st i£0f ICOOVgf tlbli! tm • vstfQj $ SimtorjawmMaUd mi m I 1.8 7,809 7 /May* No? 187 250, (KM) • .... 1892 7 2,565.0 0 j St. Paid A: Pacific of Minn : (1st Div) 1st Mortgage (tax free) 700,000 1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax free) 1,20'',000 1,290.001 Safi dusky, Mans A New 1st Mort. Funded Bonds v Shamokin Val. A Phis.: 1st mort... South Carolina: Sterling Loan Domestic Bonds do do South side (LI.) South Side ($1,631,900): 1st Mortgage (guar, by Poteieburg) 3d Mortgage Aug 7 2,200,(XX J . 3,000,000 1,767,000 do 7 7 7 8 7 10 Mortgage Sink. Fund (ulnar.)-.. do i_ M 'Jan. A July 1873 7 7 7 7 2d do Sacramento Valley: 1 st Mortgage... 2d Mortgage St. Louis, Alton & T. II.; 1st Mort. 2d Mortgage preferred 2d do income St. Louis A: Iron Mountain: 1st mort tit. Louis, Jaiksonv At Chic: 1st Mort 2d Mortgage St. Louis Ac St Jo., 1st mort., gold.. St. Louis, Vandal a A' 'Jerre Haute : id 6 6 2,CO,COO O., sinking fund Rutland: lsl 98 55 Princpal payble. : Potsdam A Watertown, guar lc86 185)0 Apr. & Oct. 143,50i Sinking Fund (Wat. A Rome)— " 8 . Rockford. Rock I. & St Louis 1st Mortgage (gold) conv Payable. 7 Saratoga A Whitehall— xst Mort. Troy, S. A Rut. (guar.) itttim'd A Petersb. Bde, coup A reg General Mortgage. . 1,S42,600 7 ) do do Rome, Water l. dt Ogdens.: 1S91 3,500,000 7 166,0011 7 Jan. A, .hay 1876 450,000 7 Jan. A July 18519 200,000 6 April A Oct 1874 430,000 6 P’eb. A Aug 1878 103 300,0(H) 6 April A Oci 18S5 l. A July 300,000 7 c & Dee 6 ',00' 7 1871 2,911,000 R 1,310,000 8 2d do 1st Mort. FRIDAY* INTEREST. . “ “ PRIDAY, I INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. V. If discovered in our Tables. * • • • • • 84 THE CHRONICLE. SOUTHERN SECURITIES. Quotations by J. M. AVclth & State Securities. Alabama 8s “ 5s Bid 90 Louisiana 6s, ex-coupons... “ new bonds North Carolina, b’ds new registe’d s’ck Tennessee ex-coupons “ new bonds “ 44 “ 44 . “ 44 City 1866 1367 “ Atlanta, Ga, 8s, bonds Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds Charleston, S. C., 6s, stock.. Columbia, S. C 6s Columbus, “ 6s, bonds Fredricks burg 6s 57* G> 50* . Memphis 6s bonds, old 80 50 50J 51* “ new Memphis 6s, end. by Mcmp. ana Charleston Railroad... & Little Rock & State Memphis past due “ scrip, Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds 44 8s, Nashville Gs “ Norfolk 6s Petersburg 6s Richmond 6s Savannah 7s, bonds Wilmington, N. C.,6s 44 41 8s Railroad Securities. 01 ! 80 89 end “ 44 “ 44 “ “ “ “ 95 67* ... 6C 35 30 15 8s income. stock 97 69 44 44 20 • % .. 44 stocks... ; .. 97 103 99 122 97 103 122 75 49 j 69 70 79 44 “ 1 fit.H 8a Soutlisidc, 1st mtg. 8a 44 44 Norfolk & 44 92* 30 82* 2d m guurt’d 3d m. t;a 4th m. 8s 44 Petersburg l Gs.. 60 25 25 80 78 82 m 8s 44 Kiclim. &. Fctersb. lstm 7s 7s 6s 44 44 2d i 44 44 3dm. 8s | 44 85 44 95 m. Bennedoir Brevoort Bid., 44 par 10i 100! , Clinton Oil Home National 10', --1 £ 0*75 i N. Y. & Alleghany, par 5 53 62 I 86 75 SO .. Corydon Grass Valley Sunn ell Gold Hanr .tonG.tte S.r, tV«. Harmon G. & S Kipp & Buell LaCrosse 25; 10 2 50 100 Hope 25 Howard 50 Humboldt 100 Import’ATraders 25 International 100 Irving 25 do do do • do do do and Aug. 330,424 Jan. and July. 329,240 March and Sep 238,875 Jan. and July. do 382,382 do 1S2,719 do 532,490 do 220,117 do 341,381 do 1,550,395 do 1,202,104 do 680,520 do 405,085 do 186,000 do 202,895 do 429,161 do 427,267 do 218,610 do 828,845 do 254,084 do 420,892 379,545 Jan. and July. 365,473 Feb. and Aug. 1,371,936 Jan. and July. do 773,843 200,000 207,140 2,000,000 3,960,282 150,000 225,779 500,000 723,988 200,000 260,099 200,000 265,377 500,000 1,177,492 Feb. 30 200,000 200,010 King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20 150,000 Lafayette (B’klyn) 50 280,000 150,000 Jefferson. Knickerbocker... 40 Lamar Lenox 100 25 Longlsland(B’kly) 50 Lorillard* ’. Manhattan Market* 25 100 100 Meehan’ & Trade’ 25 Mechanics (B’kly) 50 Mercantile 106 Merchants’ 50 Metropolitan * t. .ICO Monta'uk (B’klyn) 50 Nassau (B’klyn).. 50 National 7% New Amsterdam. 35 N. Y. Equitable .3 35 N.Y.Fire and Marl0r> Niagara :. 50 300,000 150,000 200,000 1,000,0(H) 500,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 300,000 210,000 30 Montana New York ‘New York & Eldorado • • 2 6b 43 • .... **20 98 200,000 100 Rutgers’ 25 200,000 150,000 50 1,000,000 People’s 26 Br’klyn 50 50 Republic* 106 Resolute* 25 200,000 Star 50 NX) Sterling * Stuyvesant ICO 25 200,000 200,000 200,000 *1 05 20 . iOwyhee People’s G. & S. of Cal. Quartz Hill 50 Rocky Mountain *601 "i5 Smith &Parmelee Symonds Forks i 66 i *66 i’io ! 1 2 05 % ih .... Vanftt^b IT"- . , • » ••••• . ••••• , . .. , • •tt . . 5 10 . . • . , . Jan. ’65.‘5 io July ’69. • • • 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 14 10 10 7 10 10 10 20 * 10 10 8 20 .6 ’69..5 July ’69. .5 July ’69. .5 Jan 10 5 • • 8* July ’69. .5 • . 7 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 16 10 15 Jan. ’66 ..5 . 10 10 . . . 10 12 10 10 12 10 10 . July ’69..5 War. ’69. .5 July ’69. .5 July ’69. .5 July ’69. .5 . Jan. ’69..6 13 10 15 10 10 10 12 12 10 25 . io 10 18 12 10 11 0 10 10 10 12 10 10 10 10 10 11 15 14 8 10 8* , 150,000 250,000 400,000 250,000 500,000 July ’69..5 July ’69. .10 July ’69. .5 July ’69..6 Jan. .69..3 '69. .8 ’69. .5 '69. 5 July July Ju>y July July July . 10 20 12 10 14 li July Ap’l July July Feb.’69. .6 Jan. ’69..5 July ’69. .5 Jan.’69. .5 July 69..5 . Feb. ’69. .7 Aug. 69..5 . . .. ’69..5 ’69. .5 ’69..8 '69. .5 July ’69..6 13 5 10 Ju y ’69. .5 10 10 11 10 10 10 10 10 . 11 10 10 10 10 Feb. ’69. .5 Ju y ’69. .5 l10 10 10 6 . Feb. ’69. .7 Jan. ’69..5 12 10 10 10 16 10 1C 10 10 10 10 . , July July July July ’69.10 ’65. .5 '69. .5 ’69.10 ’69. .6 ’69. .5 ’69. .8 July 69. .5 July ’69. .5 F<.b. '69..5 July ’69.^5 July ’69. .7 July ’69..7 COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Bid. Askd Albany & Boston • • • • 4 00 Bay State Caledonia Calumet Canada Charter Oak Central Concord 13% • 15 Eagle River Evergreen Bluff. Flint rtcel River Franklin Gardiner Hill... Hancock Hilton Hecia Humboldt Huron Knowlton . * • • • • Companies. Bid. Ask Lake Superior .... . 4 2-5 Mndi hot) Manhattan Mendotaf.-. 55 00 Mesnard Minnesota • • • . 4 24% • • • National 33 00 Native 1 00 7 50 .... • • • • ... ....’.16~ , 23% 2% 25 19 • • • • • • Pewabic 2 75, .. Pontiac . . . .... • • • • • 66 2o • • .... 25 1 5 00 10 10 CO 15 19 5% 10 .... Rockland St. Clair Schoolcraft 80 00 87 00 South Pcwabic 35 00 South Side Star , .... fO 88 00 00 30 3% Pittsburg & Boston. 4 00 Quincy! 16 00 Resolute .... . 5% • Phoenix • • • • • 25 1 50 .... 3 00 76 • • • • • . . . . . . • • . • • • • . . . • . . .... .... .... ... 5 8 ...» • .... 8 12 Petherick , • . 1 Ogima . .... 5% .... .... 25 5% .20 • .... • 2 6 5 .... • — IsleRoyalc* Keweenaw • • Dana Davidson • *50 . • , 11 10 436,717 April and Oct. 8 397,373 Jan. and July. 12 CO 10 281,215 251,364 Feb. and Aug. 10 215,986 Jan.and July, 8 do 8 1,581,471 10 do 300,905 do 7 661,18< do 7 261,7C2 315,978 Feb. and Ang. 10 210,799 Jan. and July. 5 1,7' 6,611 Feb. and Ang. 3* 360,828 Jan. and July. 10 do 10 303,588 255,368 Feb. and Aug. 303,27f Feb. and Aug. 5 368,661 Jan. and July. 10 do 10 414,023 764,629 Feb. and Ang. 10 525,074 Jan. and July. 7 10 do 822,981 500,000 350,000 200,006) 200,000 150,000 150,000 1,000,000 200,000 300,000 200,000 Copper Falls.... Bid. Askd 5 , „ - 1,000,000 Companies. iManhattaa Silver ! Benton 5 j 15 Bullion Consolidated..., Combination Silver 2 01' Consolidated Gregory.. / 00 j 1 00 Hoffman Home Standard 70 • Black Hawk • . Bid. Askd Companies. . — . Bid. Askd . , St. Nicholas! GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. 1ST. Companies. , Security t 82* 77A j Northern Light 50 | Fit Hole Creek "..,.25 50! Rathbone Oil Tract — 05' Rynd Farm 10 15 00 MSherman & Barnsdab....— 8 Oil , United Pe’tl’in F’ms 2 2 50; United States *....10 90 . 10; Buchanan Farm Central 10, June’64. 5 July. , Tradesmen’s 25 United States— 20 Washington 50 WilliamshurgCity 50 jfonkers & N. Y.100 Companies. and . Phoenix + Relict. .. Askd!! 235,209 Jan. .... 30 30 85 PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Companies. $200,000 > ,, 67* 84 85 Fre’ksb’g & Poto. 6s. 44 paid. 300,000 437,452 Jan. and July. 5 io io July ’69..8 200,000 712,548 Jan. and July. 14 17* 14* July ’o9..7 200,000 289,093 Jan. and July. 7* 10 10 July ’69..5 250,000 310,566 Jan. and July. 10 July ’69. .5 Astor 25 250,000 430,652 Feb. and Aug. 10 10 10 Aug. ’69. 7 Atlantic (Br’klyn) 50 300,000 495,379 March and Sep 10 10 11 Mar. ’69. .6 Baltic 25 200,000 210,241 May and Nov. eeekinan 25 200,000 5 Aug.’69 .5 279,751 Feb. and Aug. Bowery (N. Y.) 25 300,000 615,106 June and Dec. 10 15 10 June’69. .5 Broadway 25 200,000 333,806 Feb. and Aug. 12 12 14 Feb. ’69. .8 Brooklyn 17 153,000 326,135 Jan. and July. 20 20 20 Jan. ’69.10 Citizens’ 20 300,000 633,351 Jan. and July. 20 20 20 July ’69.10 70 City 210,000 427,977 ..Quarterly... 12* 14* 14* lan. ’69..3 Clinton 100 250,000 357,918 Jan. and July. 10 12 10 Ju'y ’69. .7 Columbia* 100 do 300,000 436,321 10 July ’69..5 Commerce (N.Y.).IOO do 200,000 10 10 10 July ’69. .5 250,72? Commerce (Alb’y)lOO Feb. and Aug. 10 10 8 Ang. ’68. .4 400,000 641,404 Commercial..... 50 802.767 Jan. and July. 10 10 9 July ’69..5 200,000 Commonwealth ..100 415,978 Jan. and July. 10 10 10 July ’69..5 250,000 Continental * .100 500,000 2,066,854 Jan. and July. 14 14 15 Jan ’69..8 Corn Exchange.. 50 Feb. ’69..5 400,000 426,073 March and Sep Eagle 40 300,000 532,877 April and Oct. 10 10 10 Apr. '69.10 Empire City 100 200,000 256,145 Jan. and July. 14 14 14 July ’69..5 Excelsior 50 do 10 10 10 July ’69..5 200,000 '317,685 Exchange 30 150,000 186,473 Feb. and Aug. Firemen’s 17 204,000 391,419 Jan. and July. :6 io 14 Ju y ’69.10 Firemen’s Fund.. 10 do Jan. ’66. .3 150,000 204,832 3, Firemen s Trust. 10 do 5 July ’69. .5 150,000 206,289 Fulton 25 do io 10 10 Jan. ’69..5 200,000 303,247 Gallatin 50 150,000 May ’65. .6 147,066 May and Nov. Gebhard 100 200,000 259,659 Feb. and Aug. 10 10 10 Fe>*. ’69. .5 Germania 50 500,000 955,475 Jan. and July. 10 12 10 July ’69..5 Globe 50 200,000 2S2,419 Jan. and July. 10 10 10 July ’69. .5 Greenwich 25 200,000 383,732 Feb. and Aug. 1C 12 20 Feb. ’69.10 Grocers’ 50 200.000 Apr. ’65. .5 224,746 April and Oct. Guardian. 200,000 235,360 Jan. and July. 7 7 5 •july ’68. .5 Hamilton 15 do 8 10 10. July '69. .5 150,000 242,293 Hanover 50 do 10 10 10 Jan. '69..5 400,000 650,682 North American* 50 North River 25 Pacific 25 Park 100 Peter Cooper .... 20 70 75 95 conv.7s 1 44 44 44 4 6s 79 Richmond & YorkR 1st 8s.. 41 v 44 2d ... cO | 1 3d a 6s — 89 78 49 85 76 75 72 70 83 SI 74 72 72 i 74 6(5 1 (58 72 1 73* 00 (55 70 73 80 82* 77 74 72 75 83 85 2nds, 6s 3ds, Os.*..... 4th, 8s 44 filed, int. 8s Rich. & 1 anv. lsi cons’d 6s. Piedmont bra’h - .. 62* 63 1 69* — 44 .... . • endorsed 44 .... “ 25 4th, 8s Virginia Central lsts, 6s 50 58 . .. 47*1 .. 2d* 6s 4< 95 100 Central RR. 1st mtg. 7s 90 44 stock.w 118 Southwestern RR., 1st mtg 94 “ stock 100 Macon anti Southwestern s’k 120 Macon & Augusta bonds 72 44 “ end bonds 91 “ 44 stock 25 “ & Brunsw’k end 1). 7s S2i i Macon & Brunswick stock 90 Muscogee bonds “ 44 endorsed 44 *• stocks.. Atlantic and Gulf 7s bonds 77 67 00 ! S8 76 44 stock 78 65 Va. & Tenn lsts 6s Georgia RR. 1st mtg 75 74 Orange & Alex. A Man. 1 -ts 34 7s. . 82 72 2ds 6s..... Sds 8s 4ths8s 44 -T-- 53 77 82 45 VIRGINIA. GEORGIA. “ •10 0s 14 44 in. 7s. m. 62 Memphis & L. Rock lsts, 8s. 82* 85 Mobi'e & Montg. RR, 1st m.. Mobile & Great North. 1st sin Selma and Meridian 1st m. 8s bcl., Rome &;Dalt. 1st 44 44 .. 55 5S 74 80 — Orange & Aiex., lsts 6s,. 8s, int 2 mtg, 8s Alabama & Tenn. 1st 50 stock 44 25 /Etna 50 American* 50 American Exch’e.100 Arctic 50 ,. i 8s, gold bonds, endorsed by . 66* 2nds, 7s 44 44 89 90 Montgomery and Etnalla 1st State of Alabama.... Mobile and Ohio, sterling SO 65 Virginia 0s, end by State Tenn. Memp. & Charleston lsts, 7s 44 I ast .. 75 44 44 Montg’ry & West P. 1st, 8s.. “ 22* CAROLINA. <fc Georgia 6s ’ofc , 71 87 TENNESSEE. East Tenn ’6 ’6f . 69 83 South Carolina Railroad 0s.. 44 44 7s.. 44 44 st’ek North Eastern 1st mtg. 6s... “ 2d 4 6s... 44 end. by State Columbia and Augusta 1st m ALABAMA. 44 124 guard by state S. C 57 1 76 60 69 95 60 62 72 75 60 09 86 88* f5 <50 70 75 “ It'S ! 55 73 55 67 New Orleans 6s bonds “ 40 guaranteed by State S. C.. 00 75 70 ... - Chai leston and Savannah 0s, 63 coupons.. 91 /, ■ Spartcnsburg and Union 7s, Memphis 6s, end. by Mcmp Periods. ... 89 75 .. 70 75 54 Macon 6s, bonds 6s, 2ds, 8s Charlotte «fc S Carolina 7s Greenviile and C lumbia 0s, guar, by State S. Carolina. • 63* “ 6 61 “ SOUTH Lynchburg 6s SO 76 7 65 72* Manchester 1 pfd 7s 44 “ 2d 44 44 44 3d 44 “ 44 2dm 7s. 44 Chari. & ltuthcrf. North Carolina 8s % stock 65 75 Capital. Netas’ts .. 75 50 50 78 44 82 00 dividends. ,. *6 46 Wimvngton & Weldon 7->g’ 87 00 72 44 72 53 NORTH CAROLINA. 57 57* , 44 53* 83 79 44 .... 57 * 57 Securities. 70 56 11 70 “ 2d stock 44 & Ten j. 1st m. 7s 44 44 2d “ South. Mississippi 1st m. 7s. 44 44 2d 44 44 44 “ 31 7. Orleans & Jackson lsts,8s 44 44 cert, 8s 44 44 stock.. N. Or. Jack’n & Opel.lsts, 8s 65 61* registered stock, old “ louuiana. 44 44 C8 66 50 56 52 new “ 44 40* 57 Virginia ex-coupon bonds... 12* Mississippi Cent. 1st mtg. 71 56 564 55 2dm 7s. 83 45 pref sfk M'ssissirn and €0* 61* 5s 44 44 Jan. 3 , 1S69. write Marine Risks. Adriatic 80 40 At antic & West Point stock 65 67 881 87 54 -16 65 64 62 South Carolina 6s, o d 44 44 “ “ Marked thus (*) arc participating, & (+) Bid Ask bonds, end. by Savannah.. Pensacola & Georgia 1st m 7s 92 62 new 6s, 83 82 93 60f ex-coup “ Notv Street. Savannah, Albany.& Gulf7r 68* 69* 6s, Levee... 8s, Levee “ 63* 80 80 90 90 new 92 62* “ “ INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Ask Georgia Cs, old Os, new “ 7s, old “ 7^ A rents, 9 [July 17, 1869, . • • . ..17 * .. • • • . • Superior Tremont, .... .... Winthrop «• ^ .. 1% 4% , • 25 25 | 50 .... Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shareg. t Capital $5J« ,000,in 100,0(1’ gh?i«8 Capital $200,000, in 20,000 shares. Capital of J.fUw SnperF'r-' f» ■' a: 'ns, generally $50 it000 ta 80,000, ' • \ July 17, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE. 85 Exportsof Leading Articles from New York. Qiommerctcil ©itne®. The following table,compiled from Custom House returns, shows exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York since January 1, 1869. The export of each article to the everal port? for the pant week can be obtained by deducting the amount in the last number of the Chronicle from that here given. th€ COMMERCIAL EPITOME. Fkiday Night, July 16. The intense heat of the past few days, and the absence of a large number of business mi*n in the country, have reduced trade to small limits, except in a few specialties which are favored by some temporary influences. We are now in the midst of the “dull sea-on” in business, with little reason from aay circumstances to expect more than the usu \\ course of trade in the next few weeks. a> O* © a CO eo-v—i © 51 03 04 © 0_rH ® © ’ ©oft- of tn © co Ol*iOiO *-7 t- © GO ri QO 4do* cr.Oi O 04 s} r-. in co i- o a: ° ' r© i-Jt—' S c$ ccox THrlOrt 4> >-*T-t?»ir:aococo:o OHO 1 © < l"7cil ’ 9* ViniOO OS 1(5 CO 00 H t-ih 9i 1 O has tone, but without co ~ • • • ■ • • 1 n © ® ri f- rf © 4•cchoco* - •— CO gs © • rji rf t-1 rp n 04 n -r 03 40 GO ©ri © C2 H* —4 co 04 © T-l • © c= q OO © ^ O t-T of H r—CC) qq ICS O CO 1 TirlO. t-i’I'OhCI 91 rr important o cwo 'COGO-JO • lTj n 9t CO • ITS* . 04 co .. .co4-©Tfico©co©coce>©© * co 04 • © co co © GO C3 • cc x tm cs in Ol O) CO C» i-l xr1 rH '*■ — . * • • i~~ ! *c . • ri ' — 9t aj nt CO HHCO < 2 -2 I CO s C? lO Tf H N H ^ f-H l (7t O 3- N OIO c:« > CO CO . O • as 1H -H . TJI ICTjtJIO • ■OOH O O. TJI CO ■t ■ CO CO • >—« cc cy . Si co • cot- • CO cf CO t-THcno • ■ 03 rH ' ’ • Tf OO . ctp ri ■ CO 9t CO CS C3 91 co" 1C 91 co 85 co rH a _ s •c 3 co,1* • : if CO if • » -S tco .O • ye ta os" ‘co . .nO-CH CO H .io • -toif; ioio oo t- . • 00* * * 9? * CO c O O ' CO i—I CC -O-f CO xrOci • ri CO H go" 91 ej H O . Ui8 : n. ' -CO 910 So rfo l- O COrJi CO : ri • 4) CO COO . CO H* iO CO £- -51 • GO t- HC ■ c-co-cr t- H O N CC H •' d I rr t- coo CO 03 9* 5y C3 rH tJI CC i~1 i—I . CO w3 ;OiOM • -^1 • CO rlnrl • cy co ‘iCtht-T •g 2 4> 30 IO • o: 9t • • G>? o 1C H S M o « C/3 TJI Tf • • t— cy CC T-l -O K CO 43 •00 CO .OH-ciHlit-TtiOXGCM Cl t- t /J W O XI O O i C3 ’1^ -CO COCOOIOOIO . '*nvb • •HO'IIIOVX of CO ot CO CO . I ■ . • CO CO 73 9( CO H CIOHif CIO >o io m O CO T}I • I I— tt» —I fH CO r—I L- • CO ri • W • • 9* 9* •*-> -V • ■ • o CO C- t- of I 03 in co is1 • CJ O - co m 9t CO 19 91 ■ri oi-oinoo JO t- l— co CO 0< C3 t— • 40 ■ O CO o» O TH 03 ‘ f- CS ^ ® COOiC ■ OO l— ~t Sh o XS a £ if O t- CO Tt« H O H* —1 Oi 9t H OS > Ol t- Tfl , . S! 10 CO i-^0< . — mo O CO O! © t- t— lO CO Tf CC © O CO H HI OOICCOOOMh O h 1H yf rr 40 f— CO t- t- 7. —' © O C.C CO CC 'O -o f- —' in Tt< m Ol IO • • • • t- 0» rH m co © co © © © OOC-"-in33ClH • IO tOC rH ■ co 4n • ’’ iH 40 r—l O » and from the offering, of being designed to depress prices in of manufacturers, who are now anxious to pur¬ • co »o © ^3 m ^ .r-OCLO © C- 04 • co "Hi n • oi co ® • 0< • o*gc t— 0< ■ •© • © © •»— in © th ‘of 1^" CO ’ • ©'of • ' ‘ ’SI co co • -ri HP cc. o n co 4—Tfl • • 40 in . TJI_C0 ri .©©—'©©©coin •© • . 3 rH .acdH - 00 © if * rH cy © »H CO © 91 - © con * CO © c* CO Tjl 40 40 —4 ^4 7_> -f © © m i-i t5 m © . © GO • • if • . • •C0C.-O?COr-'CO'3< f-. m o> io © Hi . 9> © © IO HrlOl © CO t-7 of —■ • * irr CO ’of CO © © CO 1C3 1- c-co© Ol O © © CO i— ©CO O* CO O* © GO Fruits active and firmer for Raisins, for dried and very irregular for fresh, o* T-( I- (NOMOI rH r-co^OMi-H "-o"of of t-T cf —T t—i s. m '-Q co_ cir)' c*h or domestic. Fish are nearly nominal. Wool is firm. The trade sale yesterday was not a fair test of the market. It had the appearance, both from the terms © -©CO©© yji th CO rH . .©OhiOO •© 04 73 4 • • • • t...’ • Of © in • • • • Freights were fairly active early in the week, but a check to supplies of grain through the canal causes a quiet, closing O 0.' t- 04 CJ as © co c* ’« . ^ n >n T) rr © © r»» in i n ri m • • co lo in •© • © yjr • I -|| rji 1JI Cl H • co • © • CO © ’ © CO in hog products. They generally firmer, though above export orders, but the offerings are quite limited. The receipts of Swine have fallen oft’; there was some movement in Beef early in the week, and the close is firmer, though again quiet. Butter and | Cheese are in brisk demand for shipment, and bring very full Ol © 73 are • © :3 co • in »n •°© 8 CO 04 CO • CO 04 •Til • t— . .H»«» © > ICO • • © © H © • TH • 04 th © *“I ih co oo dull with rates somewhat depressed. Provisions show no decided change • • • in rr ri CO © © © C03 ■ co © prices. Receipts of Domestic Produce for the Week and since Jaa» 1* since Jan. 1 >, O . e © © -1 • in^ • • Tills week Same time ’68. Since Jan. 1. Same time ’68 •—f Ol ca Barley Grass seed Flax seed Beans Peas C. meal.bbls . .. “ 5,622 1,333,479 571,119 7,561.20C 4,133,223 4,817.091 9,454,f-39 116,270 2,387,325 2,861,896 5,98-i 205,612 188,616 210,199 5,420 337,389 76,020 406,818 ”ii 7,380 59,190 16 2,333 4,951 23.664 937 71,644 182,976 27,400 87,703 51,353 1,220 •R3,784 837,684 c 21,967 bags 181,101 Buckwh’t & B.W.fl’r nkg 3,7:8 Copper..bbls. plates. 219 Dr’d fruit.pkg Grease .pkgs. Hemp ..bales. Hides ....No. Hops...bales. Leather .sides Lead —nigs. Molasses nlids & bbls. Naval StoresCr. 215,313 11,377 3C4.787 7,435 15,920 5,528 2,688 8,272 369,185 10,815 1,549 13,639 3,318 1,252 31 2 231 367 3,560 215,735 44,966 1,210 56,800 1,489,920 1,331 3,472 611,600 18,751 10,950 turpen- tlna..bbl Spirits turpen 1,92c 16,980 3,55^ tine Rosin Tar -.. Pitch Oil cake, pkgs.... 2)1 663 9,644 307,577 3,477 4,869) 34,506 805,759 oi . © ■ . <— • C-. C- ri • • f-© ‘CO 61,203 30,813 7,096 335,693 21,831 4,261 422,599 216 55,9:33 .... . 5.937 Provisions— o« ■ © rH t- ©04 03 351,472 289,082 7,88 > 64,4?2 113,670 63,080 47,764 48,315 5,330 12,690 141,023 309 6,274 62,140 146,724 98,776 86,057 61,189 10,109 7,4?6 77,295 8,688 39,601 543 Cutmeat-J Eggs 4,171 48 20 484 450 279 Lard, pkgs Lard, kegs Rice, pkgs ' Starch Stearine Spelter, slabs Sugar, hhds and .... 73 05 ■ . a ... • • • t Tallow, pkgs Tobacco, pkgs... Tobacco, lihds... t 178 1,465 3,141 1.910 ' 10.3S2 r , r . 2,052 4,739 62,843 51,722 95,357 47,835 54,591 23.610 GO 04 © as CO 04 • GOO>©-H ert B l ® • rH • © • • ‘ *©" of (M rr in © Tf C4 l- • • • © ©C004 © 04 ■ ' © © *H 'C co' « % 04 © — © cs 4- © -1 <04 © .© HtJItH • © o» f© © © Gy C4 of 1-1 •C-^CDrl 9* 04 *© rp rp" f rl® £* f— • . • • • • © • n S • t- • © t• : © ©CO© 04 00 00 © CO 00^^ © CO CO 04 © TJI (74 ■ i~ TP 04 TP © CO t- 04 04 04 © o © • 03 g33) O © Tfl n hT in co n co •****:::•••*:• SjrSttd® iSot!:^»aaaiSoil> 1 • * rp • j . t-^co © © 04 t— g* S 'o'SaQaDtDOiaQajMfl ® g 22 p f3 C3 S3 g O « CJ «•« l •rirCrtin i-no .©©rtl • * 678 00 © © © of in if © . • 04 *0 • 1,-546 44,101 31,822 12,135 47,078 14,428 © t- . © Pjfl bDls Rice, rouali busa CO © 04 04 H 225,812 322,4'9 13.299 Pork Whiskey, bbls.... Wool, bales § . • tf • Butter, pkgs.... Cheese Dressed hogs No. o « CJ 19,861 © .© • • ' J28 3 31,465 232,145 58,676 2,207 20,187 Oil, lard Oil, petroleum... Peanuts, bags.. Beef, pkgs Cotton.bales. ** 3,407 © TH co co •© m © cc © © «*? © '©©©CO-hGOth CO T31 TH t- © co yji • © © t- Since Jan. 1. ■ 5 s ar-T 'rot-r This week. ■ :S3 g o H The receipts of domestic produce fjr the week and and for the same time in 1868, have been as follows: Rye Malt..* * co I • Gt rH yt CJ CO ^ o' O foreign Ashes., .pkgs. Breadstulfs— Flour .bbls. Wheat .bus. Corn Oats • os V • • rH CO 03 au • . • Tfl Si H* rH CO > M o" 4 • Tt* rH • c3 O •1C • • • J2SN rH a < o ■ s'' CO Materials firm and active. the interest chase. i nr oc _< ecs HOT ‘ —, CO ©©—■t--© • > whether — r-4 eti riis ncicn . cs CO CO CdO-HOt-iNOOWOOHCO as 99 ■Tr<©C''CC©fOO©©©©TJ'©©C'0 xi change in prices, Breadstuffs without change of moment, but favor buyers, except in Corn. Groceries doing better, and Sugars materially advanced. Tobacco easier and active. Hides and Leather quiet and scarcely so firm. Petroleum has been depressed by reports of increased production, but at the decline has closed quite active. Naval Stores are held llrmer in anticipation of a decline in ocean freights, with more doing at the close. Oils show some variations, but remain quiet. East India Goods are steady, with more doing in M ini la Hemp and Calcutta Linseed, the latter bringing a small ad¬ vance. Metals generally are taking a stronger turn, but with¬ out activity. Tallow has been active for export and firmer. Hops still tend upward; receipts are large for the season, and the growing crop promises well, but the export demand is unprecedented in our commerce. Hay in large supply and steady. Whiskey has advanced, with more doing. Building dull co" rH CO .2 os CO'S g'sf* • > but otherwise CO ■ EH been variable in ^V3* fflCTrltrfio © r-oi ©© COl—CO©©©inCO inac«t-coccoHinaco«(N» CO GO in © r- T!< CO t- H* 1 co o k. o cl it-t-1~ © GO -> © I- W iiiCCOlOtO mow WCOtCCHi — £- TT GO GO 04 CO© 9* 04 04 Of CD CO OC CO CO w< '•/ ww 04^© Gy rp ® of © © th" O t—— co t-'c tCQ cc'rp 4—-- SO t~ CO in rf if 99-f i ■'J,®rlC'3T*iri©CO C-.«TTlOCO Tf 04 r— CO TP 04 c6 © ic co CO rtW th 9*. CO T-l XO ri CO Cotton i-i 9t £ a gSJS^Jg'^ ^ ,0 x? 73 A 5® : ,rH • • ••••••••» cDCDBaDaQCDeoaDOQaQainDaDOiOiB 5'3iS^££e£w;2MD^££ • • ••*!/> — ■» rH r—l »H . —^ * 86 THE CHRONICLE. Imports of Leading Articles. insure the accuracy Or we The folio wijg table, compiled from Custom House returns, show theforeign nnportsof certain leading articles of commerce atthis port fir the last week, since Jan. 1, 1869, and for the corresponding period fJuly 17. LS69. cannot bv telegraph. Stocks at Rates Mentioned. RECEIPTS SINCE SEPT. PORTS. [The quantity Is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] 1808. Same time 1308. For Since Jan. 1, the week. 1&09. Same timo 1808. Earthenware— China 114 5(6 Earthenware... 20,328 Glass Glassware Glass plate Buttons Coal, tons 181 310 5,271 3,0*5 48,720 13,070 055,013 1,552 81 7,307 .. 23,142 .. bales i Drugs, &c.— Bark, Peruvian Blea 8,051 530 Cocoa, bags Coffee, bass Cotton 5,088 32,080 308,273 powders olS 0.180 10 S30 15,9.11 5,091 Cochineal Cream Tartar.. Gambler Hardware Iron, HU bars. Lead, pigs Spelter, lbs Steel Tin, boxes Tin slabs, lbs.. 9,801 > bags 12,10-5 400 391 l,‘.u; Wool, bales 4.UU' ■» 7,571 5 >1 10 31,805 877 119 - 305 53,113 20,39* - r 533* 21.985 10 Flax Furs 1,311 3,400 3,131 5,589 58, US 74 Gunny cloth Hair Hemp, hales 321 Hides, &c— Bristles y) 80' 3,308 920 501 9,315 23,080 1,8 is 4,58.. 18.1.05 343 Ivory Jeweiery, <tc— Jewelry 37 17 Watches Linseed Molasses 950 1,20. 1,211 '593 340.400 121,470 18,000 3.15lii Wines, <fce— Cluunpag’e.bks Wines 521,872 037,390 2i,051 1,400 303,142 635,999 20,8- 8 2,122 3,195 2,059 100,835 48,1,12 58, 93 (3,155 15, 94, id gars 65,778 *14,959 *147,757 *>95,043 79,726 2,955 41,182 1,047,0 >2 1 8,308 593.198 2,453 Oranges Nuts 395,578 204,453 10,850 13,705 9,004 205,707 062,777 156,378 5(9,011 332,094 504 351 703 3 4 040,891 108,254 5,905,817 3,564,8 >4 0,4o9 293,021 593,093 spices, (fcc— (’ <ssia Ginger 2,990 175,428 25,842 86,8.89 20,558 Pepper 1,088 103,948 128,831 3,431 Salt petre Woods— Cork • • • . 2,042 1,2*3 12,781 019 225,50. 12 7.557 022 by value- Kaisius 7,3 ill 3,-515, Hides undressed 00,52c- Kiee 25 India rubber 288,228 Logwood 580 Mahogany 129,607 95.758 54,2)1 207,940 65,949 ( 74,092 150,489 40,750 COTTON. Friday, P. M., July IB, 18G9. Great Other Britain France Forign 1807. 792,807! 585.914 340,588 225,8161 857,025 137,350 Savannah Texas New York Florida North Carolina 354.6871 418,9:52 132,794 20,129 143,8811 109,006 57,499 103,4811 109,202 231,357 19,968 Virginia 156,887 297.424 j 190,132 239 131 15.797 Total thi8year 52,979 87,4(0 153,302 2322,155] Total last year 1(3,301 10,133 30,591 85,013 Other ports * 24,486 272,S28 Waste 28,48.5 Corks 58 Fancy goods 00,179 Fish 20,701 Fruits, «fcc— Lemons 20,31)7 102 Hides, dressed. 59,952 7,403 Articles report'd 5.323 283 2,964 l,i 57 - 13,333 1,891 Tea Tobacco 50 1.5 .. 22,771 2,011 3,185 475,929 326,773 393,3 9 233,212 7,010,830 3,176,090 90,803 109,287 751,097 412,884 2,350,979 3,217,950 ■740 329 00 & bids 3,00 > 1,10’ 10,-0» Gums,crude.... Opium Soda, bi-carb... Soda, sal Soda, ash 7,119 211,228 2,3-9 1,931 2,112 Bags X-3 Gum, Arabic... Indigo Madder Oils, essence.... Gil, Olive 39,005 2 212 Sugars, boxes & 12,030 220 70 *35 . 48 118 010,878 Sugar, lilids, tes 1,251 Brimstone, tons - 3,307 22.9 i 5 189,011 37,011 3,305 3.921 30,927 .8,573 Metals, &c — Cutlery | EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. .... 1 TO— 1. New Orleans Mobile Charleston .. China, mass and neoomri Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, and in 1868: For Since the Jan. l, week. 1809. obtain the detail 229 ' T 6,232 12 550 r _ _ .... Ports. 110,913 614,862 2 *9,357 9,537 163,020 43,408 3,056 56,035 141,047 12,2(0 105,173 192,054 22,<729 80.128 53,146 59,937 314,201 229 7,725 a 235,597 Total. Ship¬ ments Stock to Nor. 10,789 0,232 23,345 11.384 4,241 2,850 479 208 17,819 35,643 150,376 .... 279 10,000 974,355 219,820 229,111 1423,286 838,850 477200 12346.379 1224,298 190.000 223,270 1010,22s 741.338 93,470 .... •Under this head we have added the overland shipments direct to manu factnrers to April 24, aw follows: for the present year 241,090 halts, and for last ye ar 175,0(0 bales. The market the past week has been quiet, and with very little change in prices from day to day. Spinners appear now to be less anxious purchasers, liavi ng laid in fair stocks, and having also reduced consumption somewhat on account of the high prices of the raw material and the present lifeless con¬ dition of the goods trado. Holders, however, in view of European wants for the remainder of the year, feel very con¬ fident and show no disposition to force sales. At one time during the week prices were a shade off, but they quickly returned again on a slight improvement at Liverpool, accom¬ panied with a little increase in the spinning demand here. On Saturday and Monday the market was very quiet buyers purchasing only in a v> ry limited way, the total sales for the two days reaching only ],423 bales (about evenly divided between spinners and speculators,) but prices remained with¬ out change. Tuesday the quotations were a shade off, mid¬ dling uplands being quoted at 34£c, but at the decline spinners and speculators boug.t more largely and more eagerly. Next day (Wednesday) the increased inquiry and a slight improvement at Liverpool brought prices back to the old point. Since then there has been little doing, and to-day the close is very quiet but steady, quotations being unchanged. For forward delivery the inquiry has been very active through the week, the total sales reaching 6,900 bales, all low mid¬ dling, or on the basis of low middling, of which 100 were for July at 33c, 100 for August at 33£c, 100 for September at By special telegrams received by us to-night from each of the Southern ports we are in possession of I he returns show ing the receipts, experts, &e., of cotton for the week end¬ ing this evening, July 10. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the total receipts for the seven days have reached 0,504 bales, (against 4,043 bales last week, 5,200 bales the previous week, and 9,440 bales three weeks since,) 31c, 300 for October at 29c, and 100 for October at 28fc, 400 for November at 27c, 250 for November at 27^c, 950 for making the aggregate receipts since September 1, 1808, up to December at 26£c, GOO for December at 26£c, 000 for this date, 2,324,109 bales (of which 241,000 hales are over¬ December at 20c, and 500 December and January at 26£j, land shipments direct to the mills), against. 2,043,350 hales (of and the balance for November, December and January on which 175,000 bales are overland shipnu-nis), for the same private terms. The total sales for immediate delivery this week foot up 8,623 bales, of which 4,428 bales were taken period in 1807, being an excess last sesuou over this season o by 19,244 bales. The details of the receipts for this week (as the spinners, 4,195 bales on speculation, and the following are closing quotations: per telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1868 are as Upland & New Florida. follows: -Receipts.-—, Received this week at— New Orleans .....bales. Mobile Charleston Bavanuah Texas 1869. 60(1 231 86 i 5 0 1868. 47*2 20 290 Virginia 1868 100 583 231 3,504= 3,166 1,400 .30 Tennessee, &c Receipts.—, Received this week at- 1869. bales Florida North Carolina 116 104 GJi 543 Total receipts Increase this year — exports for the week ending this evening reach a total of 2,079 bales, of which 2,002 were to Gieat Britain, and 17 bales to the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports made up this evening, are now 41,722 bales. Below give the exports and stocks for the week, and also for the corresponding week of last season, as telegraphed to us by our own correspondents at the various ports to-night: .# lb 28 @ 30%©. .. 33%@33% Middling 34%@34% Below we give this market each 398 The as Ordinary— Good Ordinary Low Middling Saturday Monday Tuesday Wednesday .... Mobile. 2Sk;@ 80%@ 33%@33% 34%@34% ... OrleaEB i3%@ 30% @ ... 33%@34 34%©35 ... Texas. 28%® 31 @.... 34 @34% 35 @35% the sales and price of middling cotton at day of the past week: To al sales. 816 637 New Upland & 2,169 3,480 Florida. 34%@34% 34%@34% 34%@.... Mobile. 34% @3 4% 31% @34% 34%@.... .34% @3 4% 34* @34% Orleans. 34% @35 34% @35 31 %@.... 34%@34% 31%@35 941 84% @35 Thursday 84%@34% 610 Friday 31% @34% 3I%@:4% 34%@35 The Growing Crop.—There has been a continuance of good Texas 35 @35% 35 @35% 85 @.... 35 @35% 35 @35% 35 @35% weather growing di-tricta the past week, but still the reporta are not so universally favorable as for the previous six weeks. We hear complaints of a flood in Texas, of limited proporlions, and of Total Same week ShOC k Week ending Exported to too much rain in some other quarters. Not that any particular damage G’t Britain. Cjntin’t. this week. 1808. 1868. 1869. July 10. 246 216 New Orleans has as yet been done to the crop, but these rept rts are remarkable as 1,477 2,799 8,972 Mobile 5,989 3,233 4.964 Charleston '778 907 being the first words of evil we have heard with regard to the growing 299 avannali 1,978 2,009 plant for almost two months. It is, however, a very favorable indica¬ 490 213 Texas 671 51.732 tion that we have received no information as yet of the appearance of New York.... 17,819 1,028 1,038 17 17 Other ports 10,279 15,170 the caterpillar. Some say that the bottom crop is i ow beyond its reach Total... 83,113 2,079 2,002 n 4,217 41,722 If this should prove ao, it marks a decided difference between this season From the foregoing statement it will be seen that, com pared and last season ; for it will be remembered that in 1868 the early crop with the corresponding week of last season, there is a decrease was destroyed by the caterpillar in a large portion of the South. The in the exports this week of 2,138 bales, while the stocks to- losing or saving of this bottom crop is of great importance, not only as total yield, but especially as influencing the early receipts. nightare 41,391 bales less than they were at this time a year affecting the the If it is saved, early receipts cannot fail, we think, to be in excess of ago. The following is our usual table showing the movement last year. of cotton ai all the ports since Sept. 1, according to the latest Wants of Our Spinners.—On the 26th of June we showed that the mail returns, We do not include our telegrams to-night, as actual wants of spinners from June 18 to August 81 would not probawe , ... . ... , s . , . . • • - . • • • • • . . .... .... .. .... .... ... .... .. .... s in raoBt of the cotton July 17,1889.J THE CHRONICLE bly exceed 71,000 bales. That estimate was based upon figures which appear to be confirmed by the returns of the Cotton Manufacturers Association, as we gave them last week. Since June 18 it would that the spinners have taken about 48,126 bales from counting what they may have received overland direct. evident from the “ supply has been distributed as follows. ly exports we make up from mail returns : “ “ “ “ Stock at ports July 9. 7,931 6,HOT 5,075 47,154— 66,767 Post of yesterday estimates that spinners have taken an additional 42,985 bales, which it designates as being in transitu on the 18th of June, and in that manner credits the mills with an accession of over eighty thousand bales Bince the date named. A moment’s examination of his own figures will, however, convince the writer, we think, that he has been a little too hasty ; for, by his process, he not only counts the cotton in the decrease of Southern stocks, but counts it again when it arrives at the Northern porls. There was, of course, some small amount in transitu on the 19th of June (for which allowance was male previous estimate), but not by any means 42,985 bales. Our •pinners will need about 30,000 bales more before September 1st if they do not decrease their consumption. The exports of cotton this week from New York show a decrease from last week, the total reaching 4 3 bales, against 990 bales last week. Below we give our table showing the exports of cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last fou; weeks; also our the total exports and direction since last column the total for the September 1, 1868 ; and in the period of the previous year: same Exports of €otton (bales) from New York since Sept* 1,1868 Same WEEK ENDING Total EXPORTED TO Juue June 22. Liverpool 6. 13. 778 — 1,206 132 15 .... 132 778 147 20 202 10 Havre.*.... Other French ports to date time prev. year. 231,287 280,824 3,070 7,359 234,357 288,183 19,968 25,913 203 .... Tntnl FrAnrh ... 20 . Bremen and Hanover 202 10 99 Hamburg H‘l Other ports .... 200 . All others .... -.. . Grand Total 33,393 32 483 2i,150 1,375 11,385 6,832 54,898 50,705 2,498 2,541 8,206 5,039 5,438 314 262 370.442 10 256 9 .... Spain, etc 26 116 — ••• .... Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c 256 19 968 .... io .... .... Total to N* Europe Total Ju y CO CO .... Total to Gt* Britain. July 29.- 1,206 Other British Ports .... 1,406 152 ... • • • .... • .... 990 413 2,172 The following are the receipts of cotton at New York, Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since September 1, 1868 : NEW YORK. BOSTON. RECEIPTS PROM- This week. New Orleans. Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina. North Carolina.. Sept. 1. 1,291 114,534 1,615 40,543 143,709 16,261 3,5:3 2 656 777 • • • • k • • 837 80 Virginia 1571 North’rn Ports. 139 232 Tennessee, &c. Foreign • • • • Total this year 2,963 year.! 5,794 Total last PHILADELPHIA 68,018 15,680 472 .... Since 7,457 103,632 *7,663 70,541 12.6(18 101,848 1,031 639,830 615,042 This week. • • • 105 .... 35 This SI 468 • • • 1521 25,319 . 35,588 .... 913 7,0:0 230,489 1.328|219,73S . This week. . .... .... . .... 562 290 298 .... 333 .... 549 • • * . • • • . .... 56,638 52,884 . . 315 60 • • • • 18.786 2,355 40 23,253 . 21,800 15,263 .... 9,878 1,318 • 99 Since Septl. 1,587 . 16,515 • .... 5,705' BALTIMORE. 6,799 .... 1,202 69 677 168 ce Septl. week. Septl. 6,751 • • Since • • 10 > .... 457 695 119 18,034 28 77,691 7S,3?n Shipping News.—The exports of cotton from the United States the past week, as pel latest mail returns, have reached 6,075 bales. So far ai the Southern ports are these are the concerned, exports reported by telegraph, and published in the Ch&oniolb 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 manifests only up to Tuesday night, to make the figures correspond with the offi¬ cial week. Below we give a list of the vessels in which these ship¬ ments from all ports, both North and South, have been made: same Exported this week from— Total balesNxw Yobk—To Liverpool, per steamers Colorado, 54....Queen, 78 132 To London, pe' steamer Celia, 15 16 Tp Havre, per steamer Periere, 10 : 10 To Bremen, per steamer Deutschland, 256. 2.6 follows: shipments arranged Liverpool. New York... New Orleans Mobile Savannah • .••*••••*4*. .. bark Dorette, vre. 15 1,103 1,579 .bales. 5,075 form, Bremen. . 1,980 are Total. 413 1.103 a) .... 3,691 260 1,103 1,579 l,9Si) . . ... in our usual Lo r’or. II 1 .»2 *. * 119,893 Showing that spieners have taken from the ports bales. 43,126 How much they have received direct is a mere matter of c mjecture ; we fhould siy not to exceed one or two thousand bales. The Boston in The particulars of these Total bales. July 2 July 9 ...per : The week¬ Exports week ending June 25 ship Uhland, 567. per Total exports of cotton from the United States this week 19,283 bales. This Liverpool, o per 90,610 5,"00 4,643— Total Supply “ seem as July 9 Bremen, ship Maritana, 1.579 Savannah—To Liverpool, per ship Alfred, 1,865 Upland and 115 tea Island the ports, not This is made bales. 9.440 “ “ “ 586 Mobil*— following statement: Stock at tho ports June 18 Receipts week ending June 25 “ Ju y 2. “ “ New Orleans -To 8? ... 15 1,574 1,980 .... 10 1,359 5,075 Gold, Exchange and Freights.—Gold has fluctuated the past week between 135$ anJ 137$, and the close to-night was 13 $, Foreign exchange closed rather weak at 110@110^ for London prime bankers’ 60 days, 110|@U0£ for London prime bankers’ 3 days, 109£@109£ for London prime commercial. Freights $d by steamer, 5-32d oy sail. Bv Telegraph.—The following despatches from the Southern ports and from Liverpool contain some raatteis of iuterest n t given above : Boston, Mass., July 16.-•'Exports this week—to Great Britain and Continent, hand, 3,500 bales. Baltimore, Md., July 16.-Exports this week—to Great Britain, rone; to the Continent. 17 bales. Stock on hand, 1,110 bales. Norfolk, Va., July 16.—Net receipts of the week, 578 bales. Exports —coastwise, 616 bales. Stock ou hand,41 ba’es. market quiet—Ljw Middlings 31%@32c. Sales ot the week, 112 bales. Charleston, S. O., July 16.—Net receipts of the week, 866 wise, none—total, 866 bales. Exports-to Great Britain, 778 bales; coast¬ bales; oiher foreign ports, none ; coastwise, 1,180 bales. Stock on hand, 907 bales. Market quet; Middlings 33c, Sea Island, 50c@$l 00. Sa’es ol the week, 860 bales. Savannah, Ga July 16.—Notniug doing, quotations unchanged Receipts of the week. 534 tales. Stock none. on , xports—7i'5 bale- Uplands and S2 bak*s Sea Island, hand 163 bales Uplands and 136 bales Sea Island. Mobile, Ala., Ju y 16.—Receipts of the week, 234 bales. Exports—to Gieat Britain, none ; coastwise, 1242 bales. Stock on hand 3,233 bales. Sales of the week, 630 bales, !*ales to-day, 80 bales. Low Middlings uom nally 30c. » all coastwise. St >ck on Receipts 10-day, 38 ba es. New Orleans, La., Ju’y 16.—R ceipts to day, 397 bales. Receipts for the week, gross 1,048 bales, net 600 bal s Expo.tr- -to Great Britain, 246 bales ; to Vera Cruz, 104bales, coastwise, 3 110 bales. Stock on h nd, 8,972 bales. Sales of the to week, 335 bales. Sales to-day, ’2 bales Mitldli- gs 32%c. Ju y 16.—Receipts of the week, SO bales. Exports— New York, 25 bales. Stock on haud, 213 bales. Market quiet; good ordi¬ Galveston, Tex , nary 22%c Sales 70 b .les. Liverpool, July 10—4:30 P. M.—The market opened quiet and closed steady, with sales of the day reaching 10,000 ba’es. The sales of the week have b en ■>8,000 bales, oi which 12,000 were taken for export and 8,000 ou rpeculution. The stock in port’and on shipboard is e timated at 382,000 bales, of wnich 210,000 aie American. Thesiocknt s^a, bound to this 627,000 bales, of which 26,000 are from the United States.port, is estimated at For the convenience of our readers we give 'he following, showing the sales and stocks at and afloat lor Liverpool each of the last four weeks : July 16. Tota. sales.... Sales for export Sales on 7d,000 12,000 8,000 speculation Tot^l stock Stock of American Total afloat American afloat 382;000 210,000 627,000 26,000 July 9. July 2. 63,000 10,000 7,0: 0 366,000 207,000 631,060 49,000 Sat. Mon. 12% 12% 12% 12% Wed. 12%-% -% 12,000 388,000 212,OOo 599.000 80,000 Tues. 13 1 6,0^0 671,000 12%-% * 85,000 19,000 11,000 332,000 ls8,000 Trade Report—The advices fr m Manchester are less favorable. ing table will show the daily closing prices of the week : Price Midd. Uplds. *• “ Orleans... “ Up. ta arrive. June 25. 102.000 13 79,000 The follow Thu. Fr. 12% 13% ~% ... ... European kets, our states: and Indian Cotton Markets.—Id reference to these mar¬ correspondent in London, wiitmg under the date of July 3, Liverpool, July 8.—A large business has been transacted in cotton en place in prices. American cot Egyptian $d,and East Indian £ to $1 per lb. The total sales of the week are 102,200 bales, of which 11,380 bales are on speculation ; 18,640 bales are declared for expoit, leaving 72,230 bales to the trade. The transactions “ to arrive” continue on a large scale, at prices cor¬ responding to the general advance. The latest quotations are : Ameri¬ can, basis of Middling, from Savanuah, ship named, 12^1; New Or¬ leans,Mate May sailiug, 12$ 1 ; Low Middling, ship named, 12fd ; Texas, ship named, 12$d ; Dharwar, fair new merchants, May sailing, JCfd fair, March sailing, 10$d ; Dhollerah, fair new merchants, MayJuue sailing, 10 l-10d; June, lOd ; ship named, 10^i ; Oomrawuttee, fair new merchants, April sailing, ;0$d ; March, I0$d ; Comptah, fair new merchants, June sailing 9^d ; Beugal, fair new merchants, May sailing, 8fd@8 9 16d ; March sailing, 8fd ; Rangoon, fuir new early mer¬ chants, M rch and April saili g, 8$ 1 per lb. The following are the prices of American cotton compared with last year’s : this week, and a further ri»e has fiU ton has risen $d; Brazilian $d, r—Fair Description. .—Ord. & Mid—, Sea Island.... 24 Stained 9 11 Ord -G.Ord. L Mid. Upland .... New Orleans. 10% .... Mobile 1 % .... Texas :o% 11% 11% 11% 11% 12% 12% 12% 12% The following are the prices of date and since 1866: 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 18d. 25d. 24d. Mid. Sea Island 27d. Upland... 14 Mobile.... 143* -G’d & fine. 26 -28 32 -50 12 -14 16 -18 Mid —Same date 1863—, Fair. Good. 25 27 34 13 14 17 g’d lair 12% 12!* 12.% 12% .. . 11% 11% 11% -.. .. .. Mid. . -.. 12% 12% 13 13 -.. middling qualities of cotton at this 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869 Mid. Pernamb 14%d. 11 d. 10%d.l2% Egyptian. 13 11% 9% 1C% Broach... 7 7% 8 8% 10% 11% 123* 10% 11% 12% Orleans.... 14% 11 11% 12% Dhollerah 7 7% 7% 8% Annexed is a statement showing the stocks of cotton in Liverpool and London, and also the stocks of American and Indian produce ascer¬ tained to be afloat to those porta : Stock in “ Liverpool London American cotton afloat Indian Total “ 1868. > > Bales ... 603,180 1 36,999 45,000 672,100 1,357,279 1869. 332,420 61,515 80,000 725,416 1,199,35 88 THE CHRONICLE Since the commencement of the year and for export have been to the the transactions speculation on [July 17, 1869, Exports of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬ ber 1,1868. following extent: Actual /—Taken on spec, export from Liverpool, Hull and Actual other outports exp’t from to this date 1808, 1867, bales; bales. bales. 55,190 4,48) 59,584 23,017 0,310 4,318 date—, 1809. bales. American Brazilian this to 1809, 119,060 208,490 43,870 .* 7,080 3,440 24,450 Egyptian. &c.. 12,720 West Indiau... 5'0 East Indian ..177,340 900 81,300 Total.... 334,120 106,970 U. K. in 1868 bales. 85,415 28,791 0,049 0,820 103,713 5,178 111,381 40,039 374,180 1868. bales. 203,478 177,970 89,810 10,100 21,580 015,570 915,120 290,788 The following statement shows the sales and imports of cotton for the week and year, and also the stocks on hand on Thursday evening last: BALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Sales this week.Total Same Ex- Specuiathis period Trade. port. American..bales. 2G,f>10 5,290 Brazilian 14,210 2,940 .Egyptian 0,300 l,5(i0 West Indian.... East Indian. Total 930 22,830 .. 2,250 tion. Total. 4,590 30,190 2,390 19,570 510 8,370 3,180 3,840 31,590 7,920 72,230 18,040 11,330 102,200 To this date week 1809. This . American 5,993 Brazilian 802 Egyptian 4,591 Indian.. East Indian... West 0S1 14,094 1808. year. 120,030 42,100 728,800 1,881,210 2,149,210 , , To this date 1808. 1809. Total. 1808. 085,817 1,033,879 1,202,200 270,822 362,450 029,502 130,510 200,509 129,003 40 509 40 401 79,541 250,603 1,154,731 297,839 18(:8 999,050 20,050 27,010 339,700 8,170 9,820 156,510 4,110 4,190 1,440 1,400 49,250 004,040 14,970 10,540 711,330 272,870 Imports— r— Average weekly sales. 48,740 53,020 353,300 145,810 53,070 57,490 57,8)0 3,250 15.240 33.130 25,530 219,390 20,101 1,437,557 1,810,450 3,320,543 332,420 003,180 352,340 Of the present stock of cotton in Liverpool per cent is American, against 58J per cent last year. Of Indian cotton the proportion is per cent, against 5f per cent. London, July 3.—The cotton trade has been very active. Produce the spot his risen Jd to ^d, and lo arrive £d to §d per lb. Annexed are the particulars of imports, deliveries and stocks : on 1807. Imports, Jan. 1 to July 1 1S08. 1809. 83,525 83,343 08,9.2 Bales. Deliveries Stocks July 1 09,481 130,448 220,102 61,515 130,519 30,999 evening was Havre, July 2.—The stcck of cotton yesterday 36,938 bales, of which 24,210 bales were American, and 0,200 bales East Indian.' It was estimated that 21,905 bales of American, and 124,994 bales of East Indian produce were afloat to the port. Alexandria, June 18.—Rather mure firmness is apparent in the cot ton trade, and prices have slightly improved. Fair is now quoted at 12$d costand freight, and good fair 13| to !8fd per lb. The following are the particulars of shipments : From— G. Nov. 1, 1808, to June 13, 1809 Same “ bales. 120,319 1800-7 1805-0 1801-5 “ “ “ 43,147 41,910 31,050 20,404 207,423 period 1807-8 “ “ Britain, Conlinent, 141,898 162,370 40,333 153,714 Colombo, June 16.—Large contracts Total. ls5,045 204,200 184,704 152,723 247,753 8|d fur Tinnivelly, delivery in ; two months. Germany Belgium 22,770 13,83 > 19,136 100 100 151 i 9,103 243 000 277 122 309 14,047 1,(K)8 Stems, Pkgs. Mant’d lbs. hhds/ & bxs. 1,931 1,440,519 484 107,826 2,035 664 3,041 Holland 8,827 Denmark 488 Italy 5,589 France Spain, Gibralt. &c ... Mediterranean • • • 44,000 •• 729 104 • • • • • • • 12.235 • • 6,3'6 19S li 9,33 4 ■ 2,2Mi t. 355 - 12 .... - • 14 .... Austria 90 910 23 Africa, &c g 50 300 803 203 440 349 1,114 2,033 298 495 201 78 213 401 1,724 2 79,060 20,022 19,032 1,104 Australia, <tec i B. N. Am. Prov South America West Indies East Indies Mexico Honolulu, &c All others Total since Novi.... «... 2,945 803 China. India, &c 89 . 34 17 2 811 85 46 48 1,786 1,977 1,843 354,962 2,900 6,944 rr..- 48 893 .... •. 1,299,524 202,075 51,559 1 125 . 10,318 .35,385 730 9,655 3.917,159 2,778 The following table indicates the ports from which the above exports have been shipped : Tcs. & cer’s. From New York Hhds. Cases. Bales, *7,340 18,145 73 1,010 10,495 020 50 2,272 40 800 10 Philadelphia New Orleans San Francisco 5- 11,479 pkgs. Manfd. 5,076 3,671,606 251 17,019 2,720 70,788 00 309 10 882 15 79,006 . 2,02G 3,850 47 Portland Total since Nov 1. 145,870 3,922 .... 479 700 Virginia 2 hhds. 58 '. .... Lbs. Stems Bxs. & 907 25, SOS Boston 82,300 15,300 31,82.) 3,410 Total Hhds. 11.817 Baltimore —Stocks Same This date Dec. 31, 1808. 1808. day. 188,340 Cer’s Cases. Bales. & tcs. 608 429 1,005 To Great Britain... , 89 20,022 1 9,932 ' 1,104 9,055 3,917,159 2.778 The market for Tobacco the past but ut rather easier prices for week has been active, Lading grades. Kentucky Leaf has been rather pushed for sale, in view of the liberal receipts and the stringency of the money market. The sales of the week amount to about 2,000 hhds., mainly for export, but including a few hundred hogsheads for home consumption. Prices have been mainly in the range of 7£c to 14^c for common to good. Seed Leaf has also been more active, stimulated by some concession on the part of holders, the business being about equally divided between sbippers and home consumption. The sales embrace 55 cases Ohio, crop of 1868, ll^c.; 120 cases Connecticut, crop of 1868, 14Jc.; 62 cases State fillers, 9c.; 44 cases Connecticut, crop of 1866, 15£c.; 30 cases Connecticut fillers, crop of 1866; 91c.; 69 cases Connecticut wrappers, crop of .1868, 38c.; 83 cases old State wrappers, 20c.; also, 54 cases new Ohio seconds and fillers, 55 cases Connecticut, 116 cases Connecticut fillers and binders, 100 cases Connecticut, crop of 1868 ; 400 cases Ohio fillers, and 150 cases Pennsylvania, crop of 1868, ali on private terms. Spanish Tobacco is quiet; 150 bales Havana have been Bombay, June 29.—Total sailings of the week, 15,000 bales, of to Great Britain, 7 500 bales ; sailing in June, 112,00 > bales ; receipts of the week, 6,500 bales. Market very firm Stick for sale sold in lots at 95@110c. issmall. Oomrawuttee, 308r=10 82-100 cost and freight; Dhollera, Manufactured Tobacco is in moderate demand and very 299r—10 4-100d cost, and freight ; Comptab, 278r= 9 37-100 cost and firm. freight; Hinginghaut, 318r=lC-63-100d cost and freight. Freight to The receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and sinec Liverpool unchanged. Exchange, Is ll£d. 71b grey shirtings, 5r 9a; Nov. 1 have been as follows: 8^lb grey shirtings, 6r 9a. An active demand, at gradually advancing RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER 1. 186*. prices. which Virginia Friday, P. M., JulyjG, 1809. There is a considerable decrease in the exports of crude Tobacco this week, the total from all the ports reaching 2,904 hhds, 256 cases and 327 bales, against 6,531. lilids., 559 cases, 491 bales, 47 bbds. stems, and 56 tierces for the previous seven days. Of these exports for this week, 1,269 lihds., 256 cases and 327 bales were from New York, 813 hlids. from Baltimore, 11 hhds. from Boston and 851 hhds. from New Orleans. The direction of the shipments of lihds. was as follows: To Bremen, 989 hhds.; to Marseilles, 825; to Liverpool, 309; to London, 127; to Antwerp, 126;. to Valencia, 313, and the balance to different ports. During the same period the exports of manufactured tobacco reached 193,247 lbs., of which 123,000 lbs were to Liverpool The full particulars of the week’s shipments from all the ports were as follows: Exp’d this week from Ilhdp. Cases. Bales. New York Baltimore Boston 1,229 813 11 250 .... Tcs 127 lihds. Man’d. Stems. Pkgs. lbs. 258 193,243 — Total Total last week Total previous week .. 6/31 6,345 559 217 27 491 75 c 56 47 208 332 428 193,213 119,175 25,043 direction* since November 1* 1868; . Total 2,081 S04 401 504 401 47,243 25,218 350 49,505 556 350 25,346 2,520 54,865 71,695 57,385 1,018 The following are the exports for the past week: Hhds. Liverpool 309 127 . London Bristol . Caecs. .... Bales. .... Bremen 12 150 313 1 . Antwerp Valencia Danish West Indies... Dutch West Indies.... British N. A. Colonics. BriiishWest Ind es British Honduras . - r - .... Tcs. Pkgs. 254 .... .... 80 53 • . * • . • • Lbs. Manl’d. 123,000 . • . . 120 03 4,325 100 .... 46 • • • * .... • ^ • .... . t . • 8,432 • 4 ' 355 8 552 15 589 4 . 20 0 .. French West Indies... • 31 138 . Marseilles Stems f .... Hamburg 73/113 YORK.* NEW ... .... Glasgow 556 of tobacco from New Yoik EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM 1 ll . Cuba Mexico New Granada Brazil * /-T’lsin.Nov.l— hhds. pkgs 5,995 44,110 J 71 2,834 pkgs 42.779 .128 2,322 other Total 256 hhds. 5,848 1,220 ... Ohio, &c 27 50 420 .... .... 1 4 • . .... . . . .1,229 — — 256 4,132 _T... ... 171 836 r. 89 .... .... 9,857 11 .... .... — 2.904 .—Previously—. .... China 851 Below we give our usual table showing the total export of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their Baltimore New Orleans Argemiue Republic... Philadelphia New Orleans Portland San Francisco /—This week—> hhds. pkgs.* 1*7 1,337 51 153 From TOBACCO. • • • • .... t*-- ••• • ■ . . . f 327 . . ' ■ - .... The 5,169 12/285 . .... — ■ • • m -- • • — 258 193,243 exports in this table to European ports are made up from ifests, vended and corrected by an inspection of the cargo. The direction of the foreign exports other ports, has been as follows: From Baltimore—To Marseilles, 813 hhds. From Boston-To British Provinces, 10 boxes. 4 From New Orleans—To Borneo, 851 hhds. man¬ for the week, from the ...To other foreign, H hhds, July 17, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE BREADSTUFFS. Rye, Barley Friday, July 16, 1869, P. M. The market for feverish moderate. Flour forward came The close Receipts Extra State. vanced. Lie. more at was $0 70 @6 75 for Rye Flour and Cornmeal The Wheat market has been equalled in quality or quantity in the United States, and promises to exe»-tan important influence upon prices. To day’s market was quiet but Ann reports of bad weather at the West. on A few loads of Prime No. 2 Spring were taken for export at $1 50. Corn lias arrived fairly, and the stock in store has increased. But the growing crop looks badly, except in the more Southern latitudes, and there is much speculative confidence in the article, favored shilling yesterday by per quarter in advance of an Flour* Oats. bush. 255,953 99,652 2,802 63.960 11,301 8,270 4,161 3.273 7,700 11,500 560 '700 534,576 124,996 415.224 720 915 4.597 127,756 117.295 1,588 54,671 13,683 43,250 68 ’66. 756,888 55,767 20,761 66,8.35 76,108 . ’67. “ 874,603 175,096 390,280 511,724 Comparative receipts at the Flour, bbls ... . . . Rye bush. 160 bush. 3,422 275 r - 200 - - • . 488,801 237,329 6,728 6,589 7,778 64,442 5,256 28,585 398.975 538,260 1867. 1866 1,651,Oil 1,325,840 1,720,275 7,991.189 4,554,722 15,317,144 3,371.571 531,415 495,716 10,075,053 19,837,427 7 000,742 368,583 1,021,208 17,712,421 5,052,773 403,677 199,608 38,463,078 31,359,063 21,402,568 39,303,013 Eastward Movement of Flour and Grain from Chicago, Milwaukee and Toledo for the week iding . July 10, 1869 Flour, Wheat, bbls. : Com, Oats, 26,115 “ ... Comparativeb ... bush. 452,558 895,746 217,601 21,465 Total Previous week Cor. week, 1868. 1867, “ 1866 1,379,720 1,086.620 356,205 2,308,577 742,473 Shipments bush. buss. 304,116 110,108 629,631 162,289 Lake from Ports from bush. K0 375 10)9. bush. 1,360 1,501 237 37,,732 the navigation to July 10: < 25,129 opening of 1868 1867. 819,925 611,112 283,651 1866. 514 304 11.060.210 7.445,471 2,3S8 395 9,616 57,2 7 Fleur 4,701 982 12,221,876 3,492,376 7,709 29, 89 1,497.084 8,017.739 1,381.332 33,865 l-%345,376 127,029 475,306 20,960,969 20,446,102 11,087,049 bbls. Wheat Cora Oats Bsrley Rye Rye 158 699 33,190 Farley, 247,6;j6 103,213 ^ . Total graiu. bull. 5,310,544 4,674,3i6 134,014 25,939,5 !J6 GROCERIES. Friday Evening, Ju’y 16. 1869. The course of business in Groceries during the week under review has been in the general direction of a better trade, accompanied in some instances by higher prices. Th<j under the liberal stock and excellent prospect of the new crop, closing active, to the trade. price of gold has gradually advanced, and a partial reaction Rye has been rather more saleable. Barley Malt has also slightly from the dull trade of last week has taken place, and with improved. Canada Peas remain entirely nominal. these and the inAuences incident to each department by itself, The following are closing quotations : Oats have declined Flou r— Superfine # bbl. $5 45® 6 60 6 40® 6 80 Extra State Extra Western, mon to com¬ good and St. Louis 75®11 00 6 60® 7 10 and 1 California 6 fine 73® Rye Oats, West 85® 9 55 Bailey Matt 4 Meal 4 ;. 00® 6 25 Peas 50® 5 15 . AT 96 1 32 2 00 1 50 1868. , For the week. 22 630 , 1,370,640 805,490 451,645 5,985 4,991 4,777,685 707,575 .199,110 10,760 2,420.045 213,720 711,830 71,050 .3,004,710 Wheat, bush Corn, bush Rye, bush Barley, &c., bush —. FOREIGN EXPORTS FROM NEW To C»t. KIrit. week Since Jan.1 N. A. Col. week.. Since Jan. 1 YORK Flour, C. meal bbls. 15,870 bbls. • • • 243,135 10 7,639 83,912 7,484 , 146,720 5,02.5 226,185 401,105 7.355,760 207,435 FOR THE bush. bush. 55*,900 1.025 • • • • • . • • • • • . t .... • .... 1 Corn bush 7,702 17,000 ]1,334.558 . ... .... % . . .... • , .... • JAN. Oats, bush, . bush. .... 21,932 Wc»t Ind. week.. 2,884 Since Jan. 1 225 17S,221 29,360 Total exp’t, week 36,891 3,909 632,707 Since Jan. 1,1869. 633,286 87.688 C >,‘380,254 77,464 Bame time, 1868.. 465,062 172,145 S 5,957,614 152,993 SINCE Barley 6,712,761 • 4,595,885 9,138,755 290 WEEK AND Wheat, Rye, 1,090,910 194,520 2,109 22,019 18,553 23,003 100,444 31,3-75 41,745 1 ,559,437 39,523 4 ,208,706 .... .... • .... 75 .... market has become Philadelphia, Baltimore In Stork in 85,993 2°,676 53,627 144.508 21,903 19.958 • • • • • • • • 48,312 .... 13,688 • • • • • • • 61,753 in raw. Molasses has been rather at has quiet, but Amily held by import¬ fully sustained prices. has met with good demand, and a steady trade progressed throughout the week at the prices current at the date of our Teas have a last report. been very quiet, 498,349 .... 10 C«rn Oats July 13. 014 113 July 6 >. 531,657 1868. Ju y 13. 328,613 592,919 1 ,460,412 259,985 73.\8*5 made prices. imports of the week in Coffee have been very light, but one cargo having arrived of Rio, one of Maracaibo, and The some few small lots besides. Of Molasses the receipts have Sugar they continue liberal and beyond Only a few packages of Tea by the steamers decreased ; but of the average. have been received. The imports at New York for the week, and at the several ports since January 1, are heads. The totals Tea Tea (indirect import).. Coflee, Rio Coftee, other New York Warehouses: 1869- Wheat 65.861 and the limited sales have been at unsettled . are as given below under the respective follows Sugar Sugar Sugar : Total at all ports At N. York. -From Jan 1 to July 10—» this Week. 1869. 1868. 9,146 6,452 3. *4.02 * a encouraging prospect opened. Sugars have been decidedly more active, and an advance obtained on both reAning and grocery grades, which promises to be permauent. Refined Sugars have been buoyant, and their rapid improvement has in fact created the improvement Since Jan. 1 from Boston »•••••••»•• decidedly Armer, and more Since Jan. 1 70,390 1,585 .... Corn meal, bbls the tone of the ers follows: as and Coffee 1869. > For the Since week. Jan. 1. hush 06 1 00 NEW YORK. r Flour, bbls . Canada Tbe movement in breadstuffs at this market has been RECEIPTS 65® 1 75 98® 95® 1 itt® bl® ® 1 80® 1 20® Yellow new White new 7 25®11 50 Rye Flour, flue and super Corn 1 08® 1 90 Corn,Western Mix’d,new 6 Southern supers extra busn. $1 44® l 56 1 50® 1 55 1 60® 1 65 per Red Winter Amber do White 6 ^5® 6 60 White California Double Extra Western Southern, family Wheat, Spring, : 1868. • 16,384 569 15,532 124 5,609,150 ... grain. bush 1.581,782 945,515 2,709,292 . Wheat, bush 1 022,769 Barley ports, from January 1 to July 10 same 1S69. Corn, bush Cat s, bush Barley, bush dye, bush - 41,691 a Liverpool, although we are still con siderably above a shipping point. The market in the Eastern and Middle States has materially improved, but those States are not important for their corn crop. bush. 1,884 “ Total Corn. 4 766 Previous week 2,981,474 weekending July 10, viz.: 323,963 321,321 8,061 4,763 Corrcspond’g week, 1,433,811 bush. 22,217 lotals 57,138 60,708 Wheat. bbls. Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Cleveland The The weather at tin Northwest this month has been unfavorable to the growing crop. The growth of Win¬ quite ter heat this year, however, has never been Lake Ports for tbe At unsettled and varia receipts from the canal were interrupted on Thurs¬ day morning, and holders becam e very Arm; they looked for a decline in ocean freights to make good the decline abroad, and the lower rate for gold ; but as there was but little freight room on the berth, and as liberal supplies will be due next week, business was checked, except a slight decline in prices. Some speculation has been developed on Western account. at 475 33,075 1,459,744 Chicago good lines of materially ad¬ have .v 28,897 2,966 97,177 39,295 27,051 Total grain, bushels prices have been but 71,418 2,875 a freely, and .largely in excess of previous years at this season. The South is contributing freely to our supplies from her excellent and large crop of New Winter Wheat. We h ave had spirts of speculation in Extra State, and early in the week there was more export de¬ mand; but latterly, with a decline in Liverpool, this lias sub¬ sided, and speculators are less disposed to operate. But the offerings are not sufficiently large to exert an important influ¬ ence, and the decline is but slight from the highest point of the week. 66,379 Malt Peas Breadstuff's the past week has shown tone, but the fluctuations in 89 33,228,814 ..pkgs. . bbls. 16,539 6.057 4,800 2.899 11,220 10,122 6,821 706 Sts5 421,891 583,539 229,875 370,281 402,689 376,639 412,595 214.465 3,178 .boxes. hhds. Molasses Molasses, New Orleans 30,517,132 54 262,819 60 318,551 17,497 10,925 238,826 90 THE CHRONICLE. TEA. Tne market lia3 exhibited Sales have been nia le in a to any particular degree of strength or life. quiet way of email lote, but there has been no vigor in the demand, and withiut auy quotable decline prices have been unsettled and wanting in firmness. Sales include 2,180 half cheBts of Greens and 1,400 do of Japans. The only imports of Tea have beeu 47 packages from Bremen, per no steamer Deutschland. The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and Japan to the United States from June 1,186S,toMay 12, 1869 the date of latest advices by mail; and importations into the United States (not including San Francisco), from Jan. 1 to date, in 1868 and 1869. SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA & JAPAN 1/68, FROM JUNE 1803-9. Black Japan PAN INTO U.S. SINCE JAN extent in the animation prevailing in the market for sugars, but prices are firmly supported and holders are not offering their stocks with any eagerness. For the time being purchasers of all kinds seem fully stocked. Sales include 852 hlids of Cuba, 345 do Porto Rico, 220 do Barbadoes, and 85 do of other kinds. The receipts of the week at New York, and the stock on hand July 15, were as follows : Imports this week. Stock on “ 1307-3. 1809. The indirect 6,057 last year. 14,430,872 0,509,351 13,039,349 5,019,018 Imports at the several ports since January 1 have been 33,228,814 now 30,523,248 reach 1G,587 pkgs, against the week. out There lias been fair demand has existed through¬ a no 1869. Tjtal imports since Jan. 1 at New York “ “ “ *“ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ *• I I quiet at the same list day or two there has . ...111,516 17,790 33,902 71,292 121,613 17,242 bbls, 1869. 1868. ... 13,579 47,739 . Philadelphia... Baltimore New Orleans... “ 43,283 *762 69,193 2,722 20,016 16,707 434 11,077 262,819 “ “ ■ 818,551 17,497 . .. .. .. ‘'Including tierces and binds -reduced to hlids. SPICES. There lias been the usual jobbing trade of fair extent for the season, importance has transpired. Mace is firmly held baen more inquiry for Maracaibo, arising from ruruors of the blockade of at 15, and but little could be bought at that. Some transactions in that port, and with an increased demand, some improvement, in this cloves destined for export are in progress, and will include some 1,000 description has taken place. Oilier West Indian Coffees are unchanged. bags. Our list of prices upon revision stands unchanged. Sales comprise 16,8*22 bags of Rio, 1,010 do of Santos, 3,993 do of Mar¬ FRUITS. acaibo, and 6°, do of Laguyra. In foreign dried fruits there has been a considerable movement in Imports of the week have been very light, including of Rio Coffee, only one cargo by the “ Margaret Powrie,” 4,800 bags. Of other sorts Layer Raisins, on speculative account, ane sale has been made yester the receipts have been 2,586 bags of Maracaibo, per “Spring Bird,’' day and]to-day of 50,00o boxes at $2 75@2 85, now held very firmly at and 313 bags of sundries. an advaace on the latter price. Almonds are also in better demand The stock of llio July 15, and and firmer. Turkish Prunes drag at the moment at rather lower pricep, imports since Jan. 1, are as follows: New York. In Bags. Stock.. Phi la- Balti¬ del. * 7,5 1» 8,200 372.036 Imports.., New Savan. & Gal¬ Orleans. Mobile. veston. more. 157,154 138,188 41*3,784 ... 157,817 5,836 137,133 • . 36,700 • 13,500 11,300 74,068 56,071 50,0 '0 In 3,500 1,500 1'.i,666 9,711 .... 2,^00 2,800 *213,354 208,488 706,365 583,589 Java.' Bingapore. Ceylon 12,013 . Lagnayra 7,031 . St. Domingo. Total . . Balt: N. Orle's import. import. 40,373 3!),015 *12.687 12,616 7,342 1,114 1,254 530 1,216 1 ->1.492 176.033 7,771 . Maracaibo... ♦ 15 ani the imports at the *35,5:4 *4,834 10,361 43,464 19,397 50,383 11,534 .. 34,682 20,856 550 815 1,246 15,133 141 229,S70 £•« ^ 16,002 t Also 65,191 mats. last report there lias been marked improve¬ a ment in the activity of the market for Raw Sugars, taking ilsrbe from a ready and rapidly strengthening market for their own products. Importer] have been able to establish a settled advance of |c per lb on refining grades and a Jc on groceries Receipts have beeu liberal, ani the increased sales of the week have made no impression upon the accumulation of stock here, sales being mainly from itock not yet warehoused. Refine 1 Sugars have been active and buoyaut, and have steadily advanced |c on the bettor and £c on the lower grades marking the improvement, since our last. Sales include 5,300 hlids of Cuba, 005 do Porto Rico, 517 do of Martinique, and 167 do of various other kinds, with 9,350 boxes of Havana and 2,603 bags of St. Domingo. the as increased demand from refiners, who have Lund Imnoris fi follows : r th j week at New Cuba, York, Cuba, a id stock P. Rico, bxs. Stock on hand' Same time 1868 “ “ 1867 *hhds. *hhds. 11,-20 Imports this week 8,433 on Other, 1,716 131,9f0 hand July 15, 79,523 Boxes 1869. 1868. Imp’s since Jan t, at New York 275,911 177,139 “ “ kl Portland.. 7,807 15,050 “ “ • “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ Boston.... 20 512 P!i Bade].. 11 iltimore. N. Orleans 30,9:4 23,513 Total ♦Including tierces 63,224 > , 7,526 46,156 421,891 350,2S1 52.338 43,673 7,679 402,6S9 and barre's reduced to lilids. bgs. 6,821 1 ' as *IIhds — 1869. 1868. 215,317 45,530 43,923 16,970 51,664 bgs. 273 145/707 49,555 40,415 94,730 were Brazil, Manila, *khds. Imports at the several ports since Jan. 1, have been “ notice a declme also in Sardines and Brazil Nuts. dried there has been a fair business a done, notwithstanding the influx o f from the Mediterranean the amount of sound fruit saved from the receipts is light, and when selected and repacked at the stores is held at very firm prices. Palermo Lemons at $8 00@9 00, Menton do at $9 0C@10 00, and Palermo Mountain Orangee at $8 00@8 50. West Indian comes in freely, and are jobbing at $2 C'0@$3 00 per bunch for Bananas. Buracoa Cocoanuts at $35 per M. Sugarloaf Pineapples $17{ft$18 per C for Havana. We annex ruling quotations in first hands : ' " 22,Si 23,736 26,195 follows: Brazil, Manila bags. bags. 18'i9. 7,987 12,600 41,431 10,955 r-Duty Ilyson,Common to fair do do 40,143 412,595 191,101 185,588 i aid— 83 ®l 00 Superiorto fine....l 05 @1 20 Ex line to finest,..! 30 ®1 45 ... Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... do Super, to One.. do Ex line toflnest.l G inp. & Imp., Com.to fair do Sup. to fine 1 do do Ex. f. toflnest.l II. Sk.&Tw’kay,C,tofair. do do Sup.toflno 78® 90 ®1 25 @1 9U @1 15 ®l 35 ©l 73 ® 83® 85 10 55 10 30 70 78 87 /—Duty paid—, do do Ex f. to lln’st nominal. Uncol. Japan, Com.to fair.. 78 ® 83 do Sup’rtoflne. 90® 95 do Ex f. to llnestl 05 ®1 15] Oolong, Common to fair. 75 ®1 00 do Superiorto fine... 75 ®1 00 do Ex fine to finest. .1 05 ®1 45 Souc & Cong., Com. tofair 78® 85 do Sup’rtofino. 90 ®l 10 do Ex f.toflnestl 20 ®1 40 - Coffee. Duty: When imported direct in Am.-rican or equalized vessels from the place of its growth or production; also, the growth of countries this side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized ves¬ sels, 5 cents per lb.; all other, 10 per cent ad valorutn in addition. Rio, Prime,autypaid ...gold Ilf-® 111 I Native Ceylon gold 17 ® 19* do good . gold 10*® 11 I Maracaibo gold 15 ® 19 do fair..' gold 9*® 0$ Laguayra gold 161® 18* do ordinary gold 8*® Sj 8t. Domingo ...gold 15 ® 15J Java, mats an 1 bags ....gold 24* & 25 Jamaica gold 15 ® 16 Sugar. Duty: On raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Du'ch standard, 3; on wi ite or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not relined, 3% i above 15 and not over 20, 4 ; on refined, 5; and on Melado 2# cents per lb do do do 19 to 20 14J® 15* Cuba, inf. to com refining.. 10$® 11* do fair to good do white dc do ... 11 g® 11 jj 14*® 15* do pr me do No. 12, in bd,nc(gold) .. ® .. Ilf® .. do fair to good grocery.. 12 ® 12$ Porto Rico, refining grades, 11$& 111 do pr. to choice do do .. 12*® 13 grocery grades.. 12 ® 13* do centrifugalhhds & bxs 10*® 131 Brazil, bags.. 11 ® .. do Melado 6 ® 9 Manila, bugs 10J® Illdo molasses 10 ® 11* Crushed 1?*®.... Hav’a, Box, D.S. Nos. 7 to 9. 11J® 11 i Granulated 15i®.... do do do 10 to 12 12 ® 13* Soft White 14J® 94$ do do do 13 to 15 12j® 13* Soft Yellow 181® 14 do do do 16 to 18 13’-® 14J .... 1869. 248,320 126,035 115,395 49,170 57,698 38,936 10,484 Tea, Rlolagscftj Duty : 8 conts $ gallon. New Orleans Porto Pico Cuba Musjovado $ gall.70 ® 90 50 ® 75 48 ® 52 do Clayed. Barbadoes... .... . . 45 ® 50 59 ® 60 Spices. Duty: mace, 40 oents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 20; pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents 2 lb. Cassia, in mats-gold ® 45 Pepper, (gold) Ginger,race and Af(gold) 12 11$® Pimento, Jamaica, (gold) Mace (gold) 1 15 ® .... Gloves ...(gold) .. IVOliASSES. There has been In domestic domestic green fruit. Southern dried Apples are bringing 9@ 4c, the la ter for pnme, and State do I5c. Peaches are very quiet. In foreign Duty: 25 cents por Et). SUGAR. our we movement of 238,826 37,777 o o 913 Includes mats, &c., reduced to bags. Since the date of no grer n r—New York— Boston Philadel. Stock. Import. import. import. tags. but and Total. Including Boston, 2,500. Of other sorts the stock at New York July several oorts since Jan. 1 were as follows : Ire ‘ Portland Boston. sufficient animation, however, to create any advance in prices, and the market closes of prices current at the date of our last. Within a follows *Hhds——i , Total at all ports COFFEE.l steady, and as N.O. “ 33,302,017 2)0 3,675 1,814 11,879,135 importations since Jan. 1 The market has been 5,844 6,089 time 1868. ..22,966 N. O. Bbls. 60 631 .... 1863. 9,837,230 12.921,570 7,102,769 42,189,777 1,069 1R0S9 name 1,778 ,. hand '* “ Total P. Rico. Demerara. Otlmr. ♦Ilhds. *IIhds. *IIhds. Cuba, ♦flhds. 1, 11,278,301 13,105,370 18,107,007 10,020,791 Green. IMPORTS PROM CHINA & JA¬ 23,’69. TO APRIL [July 17,1869 quiet trade during the week, which has not shared Nutmegs, No, 1.... (gold) 99® 95 peppei 8 ® 19 ® 27®, and 81 19* July 17, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE. Fruit. Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds, Almonds, G; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 14, Filberts and Walnuts, 3 cents $ tt>; Sardines, 50; Preserved (linger, 50; Green Fruits, 58 cent ad val. Ealstns,Seedless.. do do mat ©0 CO $ box Layer 2 90@2 95 Valencia ..<$lb. Currants lb Prunes, Turkish ...- Almonds, Languedoc do do do Sardines Provence....:.. Sioily,SoftShell @ I2J 9$@ 10 18 © 19 Dried Fruit— Apples, State Blackberries 27i@ $ lb 14J© 15 21 23 © 24 6 © 7 20 © Peaches, pared new Peaches, unpared. 35 © 38 $hf.box 16$© 15 © 16 10 @ l(>ir @ 14 .. Shelled qjlqr. bni tt> Brazil Nuts. .. Dates Figs,Smyrna Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, Bordeaux Macaroni, Italian 12 @ .. 10 © 10} 27£@ 28J 11 @ @ 12 @26 21 @ 22 Citron, Leghorn Sardines.. .. 91 L'rown Drills are scar e, and such stock as h on hand is firmly held D 16$, Laconia 17$, Peppere^ Amoskeag 17$, Boott 17$, Graniteville 17$, Stark A 17$, do H 15$. Prints are quiet and unchanged. Allens 12$, American 13, Amos¬ keag 12$, Arnolds 10, Cocheco 14, Conestoga 12$, Dunneli’s 12$, Free¬ man 10, Gloucester 12$, Hamilton 13$, Home 8$, Lancaster 12$, Lon¬ don mourning 12, Mallory 13, Manchester 12, Merrimac D 12$-13$,do pink and purple —, do W 15, Oriental 12$, Pacific —, Richmond’s 12$-IS, Simpson Mourning 12$, Sprague’s purple and pink 14, do blue 14$, do shirtings 14$, Wamsutta 9$. Print Cloths are steady, and firmly held. Considerable speculation is going on in this line, and printers have stopped buying as far as possible, except for immediate wants. These goods are sold now gener¬ ally on 30 days credit. Prices range from 7£ to 9$c, the last for 64x64 standard. Ginghams THE DRY GOODS TRADE. are firm and unchanged. Allamance plaid 18, Caledonia 14, Earlston 22$-25, Glasgow 16, Hampden 16, Lancaster 17, Man¬ chester 13$. The market during the past week has ruled quiet but very ,Muslin Delaines are about closed out of the market, and prices are firm. The continued warm weather has unsettled. Hamilton 15-20, Lowell 15-20, Pacific Armures appeared to exert —, do 25, depressing influence in all departments of trade, and a gen¬ Alpacas 8-1 are do 0 4 26, l’ekius 22$, Oriental Lustres 18. Tickings quiet, with prices about the same as in our last eral activity in dry goods can hardly be looked for before Albany 11, American 14$, Amoskeag A C A 86, do A 80, do B report. 25, do C 23. August. A slight movement, hardly worth mentioning, AAA do D 21, Blackstone Rivei 16$, Conestoga 26, do extra 81, Cordis 31$, do BB 17$, Hamilton 27, do D 21, Lewiston PS 85, however, has accrued in flannels and some other goods from 30, do 80 25, Mecs. and W’km’e 29, Pearl River 83, Pemberton do 32 A A the operations of a few dealers from the Pacific 26, do E 18, Swift River 17, Thorndike 18. Whittenden A 22$, Willow Coast, but Brook 28, York 30 27, do 32 33$. this lias not a fleeted oilier fabrics than those Stripes are unchanged, though somewhat firmer. immediately Albany 11, American 14-15, Amoskeag 23-24, Boston 15, Everett dealt in. 13$, Hamilton 22, Haymakei 16, Sheridan A 14$, do G A 16, Anticipations for a good business in August appear to be Whittenton AA 22$, do A 20, do BB 17, 15$,CUncasville 22$. do B 15, do 15, York Denims are in about the same condition as very general, and there is hardly a doubt but that an increas¬ reported last week. Al¬ bany 12$, Amoskeag 31, Blue Hill 18$, Beavei Or. blue ing demand for nearly all staple fabrics will be developed 18$, Columbian heavy 31, Haymaker Bro 18, Manchester 20, 26$, do CC Otis AXA from that date for the Fall trade. 28$, do BB 26, do CC 21, Pearl River 80, Thorndike 19, Tremont 19. Flannels are slightly active, under t demand for the California The exports of dry mar¬ goods for the past week, and since Jan¬ ket. Belknap shirting 42$, Caledonia do 32$, Gilbert’s uary 1, 1808, aud the total for the same time in 1SG7 and opera 57$, Rob Roy rolled 6-4 80, Dexter 35. I860 are shown in the following table: Corset Jeans are firm and steady, at quotations. Amoskeag 16, FROM NEW YORK. FROM BOSTON. Androscoggin 13, Bates 12$, Everetts 15$, Indian Orch. Imp 13$, La¬ Domestics. Domestics. Dry Goods Dry Goods. conia 15$,Naumkeag 16$, Newmarket 14, Exports to pkgs. Val. Washington satteen 18. packuges. Val. pkgs. pkgs. London Cambrics arc in demand, and are in most instances sold ahead 2 $500 by Marseilles 103 5,‘226 agents. Messrs. Garner & Co. have put a uew line of these goods on Cuba 19 600 the market. Dutch V est Indies. Amoskeag 10, Portland 7$, Pequot 10$, Victory H 9$, do 33 2,280 A 10, Washington 10. British West Indies. 11 1,255 Mexico 103 13,317 Cotton Bags are firmly hel J, although the demand has si New Granada ghtly fallen 99 21,393 off. American $45, Androscoggin $45, Arkwright A $45, Great Falls Brazil 4 603 42 Argentine Republic $47, Lewiston $47, Ludlow AA $47, Ontarios $47 50, Stark A $47 3,124 Bmish Honduras.. 1 202 60, do C 3 bush $65, Union A $32. Liverpool 8 112 $4,588 Cotton Yarns and Batts have improved Gibra tar slightly, and are held firmly 11 2,<00 at the advanced rates. China Best Georgia Cotton Yarns Nos. 6 to 12 876 SO,220 40, San Domingo lest South Carolina small skeins 41. *3 SrooL Cotton is quiet, at the advance stated in cur last Total this week. 417 $48,533 895 115 report. $93,008 Drook’a per doz. 200 yards 90, J. <£' P. Coat’s Since Jau. 1, 1809.. 15,025 1,630,172 3.015 90, Clark, John, Jr. cfe 530,599 5,181 Same time 1808.... 14,100 1,309,028 Co. 90, Clark’s Geo. A. 90, Willimantic 3 cord 2,711 946,317 6,162 52, do 6 cord 80, Stafford 1800 01,777 Brothers 45, Green 29,384 Daniels 47$, Parker Bros 3 cord 42$, Glasgow 45, We annex a few particulars of leading articles of domestic Hadley 76, Holyoke 47$, Orr Js McNaught 85, Pitchers 42. Woolens manufacture, our prices quoted being those of the leading considerable aro in 1 etter condition. Low priced goods have been in rec c.st, and fine goods also have moved more jobbers: freely. Appearances ind.cate a better business in tlds line than during the past Brown Sheetings and SniitTiNGS are unchanged. All brands are * season. held firmly, and few concessions are offered. Some few brands are Foreign Dress Goods are quiet. The season for these goods will being offered by jobbers at rates slightly below agents. Agawam F 36 not probably open before late in August. Light fairies are about inches 18, Albion A 36 12$, Amoskeag A 36 16$, do B 86 16, do Z 86 closed out, 12, Atlantic A 86 17, do H 86 16$, do P 86 18$, do L 36 14$, do V able reduc and such as are left on hand, aro being offered at a consider¬ an from past rates, dhe last season’s business in these 33 13$, Appleton A 36 16$, Augusta 86 15$, do 30 13, Bedford It goods was lalhcr disastrous rs regards the 30 10$, Boott H 27 opening importation, and 11$, do O 34 12$, do S 4014, doW 45 8$, Common importers are, as a general thing, disposed to be more cautious for the wealth O 27 8, Grafton A 27 9$, Graniteville AA 36 15$, do EE 36 15, coming fall trade. Great Falls M 36 13$,doS S3 12$, Indian Head 36 17, do 30 13$, Indian Orchard A 40 15$, do C 36 14, do BB 36 13, do VV 3412, do NN 36 15, IMPORTATIONS OF DRY UOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. Laconia 0 39 14$,doB37 14,doE 36 13$, Lawrence A 86 13$, do E86 The importations of dry goods at this 14$, do F 36 14, do G 34 12$,do H 2711$,do LL 86 13$, Lyman 0 36 port for the week ending July 14$. do E 36 17, Massachusetts BB 3614, do J 30 15,1869, and the corresponding weeks of!867 and 1868, have been as 12$, Medford 36 15$, Nashua fine 33 14, do 36 16, do E 39 18, Newmarket A 13$, Pacificextra 36 16$, follows: doH 36 16$, do L 36 14$, ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEKENDING JULY Pepperell 6-4 —, do 7-4 80, do 8-4 37$, do 15,1869. 1 CC os 9-4 45, do 10-4 62$, do 11-4 57$, -1868. 1869. Pepperell E fine 39 15$, do it 36 Value. Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. 14$, do O 33 13$, do N 8012$, do G 30 13, Pocasset F 30 10$, do K 36 Manufactures of wool...rkgs. $191,417 367 5H5 too $220,792 $362,175 13$, do Canoe 40 16$, Saranac fine O 33 14, do It 36 15, do E 39 17$, do cotton.. 687 221 503 800 213,388 1,177 294,374 do 179 silk.... 354 132,68 313,706 408 'Sigourney 36 16$, Stark A 36 16$, Swift Itiver 86 12$, Tiger 27 9, 342,731 do flax 416 462 97,3.9 593 Friday, P. M., July 10, 1809. , • • • • • • • , , • c - - .... .... .... “ .... • “ ... .... ... • • • • • • • i . Tremont M 83 11. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings sold pretty well up, although activity is anticipated for some wee Is s yet in this line. Higher rates will prob ibly range as soon as the season opens, unless no are considerable the market for the raw material should take a sudden decline. Amos¬ keag 46 20, do 42 19, do 64 26$, do A 36 17$, Androscoggin L 36 18, Appleton 36 18, Attawaugan XX 36 14, Atlantic Cambric86 26, Ballou & Son 36 16$, do 31 12$, Bartletts 36 16,do38 15,do31 14, Bates XX36 19, do B S3 14$, Blackstone 36 15$, do D 36 14,BoottB36 16$, do G 38 14,doE ^5 13$, do II 28 11$, doO80 18,doR 2S 10$,doL36 16,doW 45 Miscellaneous dry gooas. J FROM 129 43,463 1,778 Total WITHDRAWN 1 $GS6,310 WAREHOUSE AND , , 117,355 62,970 172 2,353 THROWN $928,211 INTO , 376 139,843 113,881 3,414 $1,253,004 THE MARKET DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. do silk do flax.... 347 139 96 163 Miscellaneous dry geode 1,532 Total 2,277 493 $147,005 44,778 48,587 31,086 38,542 .139 34 199 137 $3(19,098 1,002 $206,208 34,634 $93,728 30,478 45,907 2,743 229 134 28 219 294 $325,783 904 $232,162 41,289 32,021 46,268 18,861 19, Dwight 40 21,Eilcrtou l£4 2 19, do 27 —, Forrest Mills—, Forest- Add ent’d forcousu’pt’n 1,778 6,6,340 2,353 928,211 3,414 1,253,004 dale 36 17$, Fruit of the Loom 36 19, Globe 27 8$, Gold Medal 36 15$, Total th’wn ipon mak’t 4,055 $996,338 3,355 $1,253,994 4,318 $1,485,166 Greene M’fg Co 86 12$, do 31 11, Great Falla K 86 15, do J 33 13$,doS ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. 81 18, do A 83 15, Hills Semp. Idem 86 18, do 83 16$, Hope 36 15$, Manufactures of woo)... 1,059 $415,1S5 629 $231,565 1,029 $328,298 James 36 15$, do 33 14, do 81 13, Lawrence B 86 15$, Lonsdale 36 19, do 165 47.262 2:5 cotton.. 65,298 538 140,745 MasonvilleSfi l9,Newmarket C 36 14$, New York Mills 36 do silk 58 90 128 55,889 132,124 25, Pepper¬ 160,638 415 do flax.... £03 ell 6-4 83$, do 8-4 45, do 9-4 62$, do 10-4 67$, Rosebuds 36 48,593 312 105,465 79,819 ]7$, Red Miscellaneous dry goods 170 276 85 37,372 17,956 26,708 Bank 36 12$, do 83 11, Slater J. A W. 86 15,TuscaroraS6 2'), Utica 5-4 J-2$, do 6-4 87$, do 9-4 65, do 10-4 70, Waltham X 33 18$, do 42 18, Total 1,655 - $631,301 1,671 $552,408 2,092 $736,208 do 6-4 82$, do 8-4 45, do 9-4 50,do 10-4 67$, Wamsutta 45 2,3*3 686,340 928,211 3,414 253,004 82$, do 40$ Add ent dlorconeu’pt’n.1,778 29, do 36 22$, Washington 88 10$, Total entered at the ports,433 $1,320,641 4,034 1{1,480,610 5,506 $1,989,91 .... 92 THE CHRONICLE. Financial. Williams & Financial. Bant erf and Brokers. Guion, 11 Wall Galon 4c [July 17, 1869.";: BANKING HOUSE Street, New York. Alex. 8. Petrie 4c Co., Co., Liverpool. OF Jay Cooke 6c Co,, London. Advances made consignments to our Correspoi}dent8, and orders for the purchase of Merchandise, {Stocks and Bonds, executed by Cable or Mail. Travelers’ and Commercial Credits issued, available in all parts of Europe &c. on C. J. HAMBRO 4c SON, London. STREET, NEW YORK. Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds Stocks. Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable AND OTITEK PRINCIPAL CIT1E8 ; And Letters of Credit available throughout Europe. GOVERNMENT WK NE Oil ATE RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL LOANS, receive Deposits, subject to Check, allowing interest, and transact a general Banking Business. JAY COOKE & CO, N ational T rustCompan y COITlITIERCfAL CREDITS, OF THE CITY OF NEW ISSUED BY Morton, Bliss 6c Co. CAPITAL PAID IN ONE Vermilye Darius R. BA Removed to N K E R S Nos. , 16 and 18 EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW Nana DEALERS IN ALL ISSUES OF FOUR PER ON SUBJECT SECURITIES AND IN James G. King’s Sons, GOLD AND 54 William Street. COUPONS, STOCKS, BONDS AND LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬ GOLD, ELLERS. Government and oilier Securities r Bought and sold at the Stock Exchange on Commission. Interest Allowed Draw Dills on „ City Bank ol' London. W_ a M. K. NEW 12 PINE YORK. or Cars, etc. Steel Ralls, UNION BANK OF LONDON. Cos., AGENTS Ward, STREET, NEW YORK, •28 STATE Railways STREET, BOSTON. C. J. Osborn. James Robb, King 6c Co., Addison Cammack Osborn No, 56 Wall Street. 6c Cammack, BANKERS, 34 BROAD STREET. TRAVELERS, Sterling t nvnnxr LONDON. W. Particular County and Corporation Bonds : Insurance, Manufac luring and Bank Stocks, BOUGHT AND SOLD. Central National Bank, 318 BROADWAY Capital Attention $3,0U0,000* Has for sale all descriptions of Government BondsCity and County accounts received on terms most fa vorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United States and Canadas. WILLIAM A. WHEEjjCCK, President William H. Sanfobd, Cashier. The Tradesmens NATIONAL 291 COMMISSION. BANK. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. CAPITAL pall to Invest¬ $1,000,0 SURPLUS . Stock Exchange. 470,00 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY Gibson, Beadleston 6c Co, BANKERS, No. 50 EXCHANGE PLACE. ' STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bought and sold the m< at favorable terms. INTE EF/r allowed on deposits either in Currency or Gold, subject to check at sight, the same as wilu Tapscott, Bros. 6c Co. 86 SOUTH STREET & 23 BROADWAY, NEW YORK City Ha'iks. ADVANCES made on all marketable securities. CERTIFICATES ot Deposit issued bearing interest COLL'cTIONS made at all points of the UNION W, TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool. Ad vancos made on consignments. Orders for Govern ment Stocks. Bonds and Merchandize executed. Kaye um sual facilities; Co., NO. 4 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Orders f«">r Stocks Bonds and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT INTEREST ALLOWED depot.jb subject to checfc at sight. Street, Now York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES, Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS an others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject JANKERS, on No. 32 Broad on Warren Kidder 6c and BKlTusU PLOVINCES. LOANS negotiated on FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC PRODUCE, in store and afloat. We invite particular attention t ds branch o; our bnsinebs.ln whichlwe BANKERS AND BROKERS Sight Drafts and Exchange payable In all parts of Great Britain and Ireland. Credits Cashier Taussig, Fisher 6c Co., Issue the BROKERS Government Securities, Stocks Gold and Specie Southern Securities and Bank Notes; Central and Union Pacific Railroad Sixes; State, City, Town, ments In Southern State Bonds. Stocks and Bonds bought and sold at the New York AND NO. 11 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Slate Bonds. Gold and Federal Securities, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON THE CITY BANK.. ) Messrs. ROBERT BENSON & CO. 5 Utley 6c Geo. Dougherty, FOR BARING BROTHERS 4c COMPANY. WALL DRAW Short-sight Exchange on PARIS, Bills at Sight or Sixty Days, on SIGHT. or more, may lowing interest on all daily balance!, parties can keep accounts In this Institution with special advan¬ tages of security, convenience and proflt. BANKERS Deposits in Gold and Currency received and inte¬ rest allowed on balances exceeding $1,000. nd undertake LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR AT ol ONE MILLION DOLLARS is invest¬ Government Securities, and is divided 500 Shareholders, comprising many gen¬ tlemen of large wealth and llnancial experience, who are also personally liable to.depositors for all obliga¬ tions of the Company to double the amount of tlndr capital stock. As THE NATIONAL TRUST COM PAN Y receives deposits in large or small amounts, and permits them to be drawn as a whole or In part by CHECK AT SIGHT and WITHOUT NOTICE, al¬ STREET, NEW YORK. S. G. 6c G. C. Locomotives, all business connected wit It CHECK among over 6c Co., r d MERCHANTS, Contract for TO SPECIAL DEPOSIT lor, Six Mouths be made at five per cent. Char. H. Ward. Established 1820. Orders in Stocks. Bonds, Gold aud Government Se¬ curities promptly filled at usual rates. Foreign Ex* change negotiated. Draw Bil s on the STREET, egotiate Bonds and Loans i'or Railroad Iron 54 WALL J esup 6c Company, BANKERS AND INTEREST, DAILY BALANCES Wm. R. Deposits. on Wm. G. Ward. BANKERS, BANKERS, STREET. LIBERAL ADVANCES. Internet Henry II. Ward. Winslow, Lanier 6c Co., PINE CENT usua Deposits. on MAKING James Merrell, Sec The Capital ed entirely in GOLD BUY AND SELL ON COMMISSION RAILWAY THE STATE. Mangam, Pres. Street, New York, GOVERNMENT BY RECEIVES DEPOSITS AND ALLOWS ELLERS. STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. Mil.LION DOLLARS. ‘CHARTERED Co.. 6c YORK, NO. 336 BROADWAY world; also, FOR TRAV¬ BONDS. THE ALSO, CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., LETTEBS OF CREDIT YORK. and Bonds of LAKE SUPERIOR AND MISSISSIPPI RAILROAD COMTAN Y, and execute orders for pur TRAVELERS, AVAILABLE;IN ALL PARTS OF EUROPE BANKERS, COMMERCIAL CREDITS, NEW issues ol ANTO CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT Duncan, Sherman & Co., For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hop West Indies South America, and the United State STREET, . Stocks, Bonds and Gold. FOR CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use ol Travelers abroad and in the United States, available in all the principal cities ol the WALL Buy, Sell and Exchange at most liberal rates, al Circular Notes r *'Foreign *.nd Domestic Loans Negotiated. 20 chase and sale of Securities. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Dral Check. Advances made on approved securities. Special facilities foi negotiating Commercial Paper.! Collect’Tn s both inltna and foreign promptly made.. York, Philadelphia and Washington. We BJIETZLER S.SOIIN 4c < O.Frankffort JAIWES W. TUCKER 4c €0., Paris. BANKERS New No. terms. ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON Soutter 6c Co., No. 53 WILLIAM Dealers in U.S. Bonds and Members of Stock and Gold Exchanges in both Cities. Receive Accounts of Banks and Bankers on liberal to Sight Draft. NVake collection* and of oil favoradle term*, promptly execute orders for the purchase or sal e Gold, state. Securities. Federal, and Railroad July 17,1869.] THE CHRONICLE. Miscellaneous, Bankers HARVEY Queen Fire Insurance Co OF LIVERPOOL AND Authorized Capital Subscribed Capital Paid up Capital and Surplus Bankers, Corporations, and others, subject to check at sight, and allow OF EDINBURGH. PAID UP CAPITAL AND ACCUMULATED FUNDS IN GOLD. STREET, NEW YORK, C^ALLYNE’} As8°clate Managers CHAS. E. WHITE, Assistant Manager. Hartford Total amount of marine premiums No We buy and sell, at current ratess all classes of Government Securities, the Bonds of the Central Pacific ver Company; also Gold and Sil¬ coin and Gold coupons. INSURANCE COMPANY HARTFORD, CONN. Capital and Surplus $2,000,000. OF Geo. L. Cuase, Pres’t FIRE INSURANCE CO., OF HARTFORD, CONN. Capital and Nurplus $1,400,000. W. C. Shilton, Sec’y. H. Kellogg, Pres Losses promptly adjusted by the Agents here, andpald ALLYN dc CO., Agents, NO. 50 WILLIAM STREET. buy and sell at the Stock change miscellaneous Stocks Bonds, on J. Pope & Bro. METALS. PEARL STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET C. the longest Six-per- cent. Government Bond in the market. Communications and inquiries by or Telegraph will receive Son, J. L. BrowneJl & Bro., RANKERS BROKERS, & «Jfc No. 4 Wall Street, New York. Execute orders at the New York Stock, Government nd Gold Exchanges, in person, and transact a Gen oral Banking. Exchange, and Brokerage Business. Munroe & AMERICAN NO. 7 RUE Co., Rider 8c No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. NEW DEALERS OTHER SONS. YORK Ireland and Scotland. Bankers lurnislied with and through passage •I the United States on * tickets from Europe to all arts NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. Sight and Time Bills on LONDON, LIVERPOOL, EDINBURGH and DUBLIN, PARIS, BREMEN, HAMBURG, BERLIN, FKANKFORT-ON-THEMA1N, VIENNA, etc. STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD COMMISSION. COLLECTIONS made in all parts of Europe. on & J. M. Bankers and Brokers, 17 Broad St. Government Securities. Gold, Stocks and bought and sold exclusively on Commission Bonds, at the New York Stock Exchange. Interest allowed on Deposits. Reler to WM. H. COX., Esq Cashier Meehanl a National Bac’\.; •~ , - period $3,081,080 49 Reports of premiums and expenses The $1,383,230 61 - - \ Company has the following as- j United States and State of New York^ stock, city bank and other stocks... $7,587,43$ 0$ Loans secured by stocks and other-. . wise 2,214,100 62 210,000 0$ Real estate and bonds and mortgages Interest, and sundry notes and claims due the Company, estimated at Premium notes and bills Cash in bank \-f. .-. .V:;...... ■, 290,530 03 receivable..-.-^ 2,953,267 v.t* A. ^ Total amount of assets $13,660,881 3i " ... —-g Co., DEALERS IN SOUTHERN AND MIS¬ CELLANEOUS SECURITIES, NO. 9 NEW STREET. Loan* Negotiated. Lounsbery & Fanshawe, BANKERS AND NO. 8 WALL Government BROKERS, STREET, NEW YORK Securities, Foreign Exchange, WILLIAM 8. FANSHAWK R. T. Wilson 8c LATE Co., WILSON, CALLAWAY A CO., Bankers and Commission Merchants, NO. 44 BROAD STREET. NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchants Bankers and others allowed 4 per cent on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cotton, Tobacco, &c„ consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents / 11 Bars. K. GILLIAT * CO., Liyerpoc^ y .Six per cent interest on the ontstand* ing certificate!-* of profits will be paid to the holders thereof or their legal representative!) on and after Tuesday the Second ot* February next. The outstanding certificates of tbe issne «l 1865 will be redeemed and paid to the hol€ers thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday the Second of Februaif next, from which date all interest thereon wf l The certificates to be produced at the tut a of payment and canceled. A Dividend of Forty Per Cent Is declared on the net earned premiums of the Company, for the year ending 31 at December 18C8, for which certificates will bt issued on and after Tuesday, the Sixth of ApjiJ By order of the Board, J. H. CHAPMAN, Secretary. Geo. Arkxts J. M. Weith & Arents, 5S 405,548 86 . Gans, Wkith, Gold and Sc same December, 1868... $6,807,97$ QB paid during the WALL PTREET BTOHABD P. LOUNSBERY. White, DeFreitas Rathborne, ary, 1868, to 31st Losses TRUSTEES : RANKERS. 21 AND Late J. M. Weith & Stoker, Taylor & Co., connected with marine risks. Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Englau Sterling Bills of Exchange, policies have been issued upon risks; nor upon Are risks dis¬ RANKERS AND DEALERS IN U. S No. 14 Drafts $9,345,972 12 next. and ABM. BELl : Sterling Exchange business. 4;OVERNMENT SECURITIES. Interest* allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cu* renev, sulyect to Check at, Sight. Gold loaned 35 Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. Successors to NEPHEW, IN Frank Cortis, BROADWAY, Co., BANKERS, SCRIBE, PARIS, 2,563,002 81 ^ ... life cease. 8c wood BANKERS. STREET, NEW YORK. SAML. THOMPSON’S References: Fonda, Pres. National Mech. Banking Ass. NY Blaif, Pres. Merchants’ Nat. Bank Chicago. Lock Issue Chcular Letters of Credit lor Travellers in all parts of Europe, etc., etc. Exchange on Paris. 7 3 favorable terms. on J. H. C. B. John Munroe $& Co., NO. 8 WALL 28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Stocks, Bouda. Government Securities and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Banke. s and Individuals receiv¬ ed 1868.; atten¬ FISK & MATCH, Hardy 1st January, Policies not marked off sets, viz.: issued in aid of the Pacific Railroad., which are widely esteemed by moneyed Mail tion. $6,782,969 82 on - per-cent. Thirty Year Currency Bonds as January, 1868, to 31st Dec., - We offer also the United States Six- NEW YORK H. Ex¬ and commission, for cash. corporations, from 1st A We FIRE Thomas Marine Bisks, on Deposit available in all parts of the Railroad r;;iITE Premiums received 1868... Premiums . in current money. Co,, The Trustees, in conformity to the Charter of fen C mpany, submit the following statement of its affairs on the 31st December, 1868 : interest on balances. We make collec¬ tions on all points in the United States and Canada, and issue Certificates of UNITED STATES BRANCH OFFICE, D. Insurance Union. r PHOSHIX Mutual Opposite IT. S. Sub Treasury. We receive the accounts of Banks, Mercantile Insurance Co Coit, Sec’y. ^ Atlantic NEW YORK, JANUARY 26, 1869. AND Geo. M. HATCH. yoa 5 Nassau Street, New York. North British 50 WILLIAM 8. A. HATCH, Bankers & Dealers in Gov’t Securities, THE $ 14,044,635 31 ri8K, Insurance OFFICE OF THE GEORGE William H. Ross, Secretary.ADLARD, M nager • AND aod Brokers. Office of FISK & LONDON. £2,000,000 Stg. 1,893,226 $1,482,840 Special Fund of $200 000 Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany. IJNITKD STATE8 BRANCH, NO. 117 BROADWAY, N. Y LONDON 93 Charles Dennis, W. B. H. Moore, Hrtary Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Bussell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, Joseph Gaillard, Jr, C. A. Hand, James B. J. Low, Howland, Benj. Babcock, Robert B. Mintuiu, Gordon W. Burnham, Frederick R L. Chauncey Taylor, Royal Phelps, Geo S. Caleb Barstow, A. P. Pillot, William H. Webb, Paul Spofford, • William E. Dtdge, David Lane. James Bryce, Sheppard Gandy, Francis Skiddy, Charles P. Burdett, Stephenson, Daniel S. Miller. Robert O. Wm. Samuel G. Dennis Perkins. William E. Backer, Samuel L. Mitchell, Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert. > James G. JOHN D. Ferguses Ward, Fcrest. JONES, President. CHARLES DENNIS, Vice-President, W. H. H. MOORE, 2d Vlce-Pres’t. J, D, HEWLETT, 3d Tice Pret»«, v 94 THE PRICES CURRENT l fW In addition to the duties noted lou)y a discriminating- duty of 10 per Int. ad vat. is levied on all imports *der flags that have no reciprocal taties with the United On all goods, ^ States. wares, and mer- uandisS) of the growth or produce of onntries East of the Cape of Good ipey when imported from places this idi of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in adi ition to the duties imposed on any such rticles when imported directly from the nlace or places of their growth or product on ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The ton in all cases to be 2,240 lb. Anchors—Duty: 2J- cent? $ ft. 01200ft and upward$ft „• S @ Ashes—Duty. 20 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... # loo Ifc 7 37i Pearl, 1st 7 G2J nominal. sort Beestvinc-Duty,20 $ centad val. American yollow.$ lb 47 40® Bones—Duty : on invoice 10 $ ct. iiio Grande shin jj ton39 00 @ .... Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Pilot $ tb .. © Navy G 4} 11 © 6! © Crackors roadstn£fs—See special report. Bricks. Common Crotons hard..per VI. 8 50 ©10 0? 10 00 @-»l 00 Philadelphia Fronts...42 U0 3 JO Bristles—Duty, 15 cents 1 ; hogs hair $ tb. Auiei u,gray «fcwh.’li? ft Butter aud 40 @ 2 50 Ckeese.—Duty: 1 cants. Butter- Creamery pails State lino us, prime State tirlci ns, ordinary State, ht-firk., prime.. State, lif-firu., ordin’y . * Welsn tabs, prime ... Welsh tubs, ordinary. Western, good Western, lair Penn,, dairy, prime Penn., dairy, good... . Canada Cheese- 37 35 32 32 28 32 29 29 © © © © © © © 26 © *9 © 2i © © . •• Drugs and Byes—Duty,Alcohol, 2 50 per gallon; Aloes, G cents ^ lb; Alum, 30"cents $ 100 lb; Argols, 0 cents $ ft); Arsenic and Assafoedatl, 20; Antimony, Crude and Kegulus, 10; Arrowroot, 30 $ cent ad val Balsam Copaivl, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ lb ; Calisaya Bark, 30 $ centad val.; BICarb.Soda, l£; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ lb; 15 Farm Dairies fair Farm Dairies c iramon Skimmed 11]i© 12 © 8 © © 2 05 . 19 Candles—Duty,tallow, 2£; 15* 3i© Annato, good to prime. Antimony, Reg. of, g’d Argols, Crude Argols, Refined, gold. 15 75 © 19 © sperma¬ 8; it earino and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents ft. Refined sperm,city... © 43 Sperm, patent,. ..*$ ib 58 © Stearic 25 @ 27 Adamantine 20 © 22 wax .. ... 71 of 28 bushels SO lb to the bushel; other than bituminous,40 cents $ 28 bushels of80 lb ^ bushel. NewcastleG\s.2,249ft. 9 Liverpool Gas Carmel.. 12 Liverp’l House Cannello Liverpool Orrel Authracite. qj? ton of 2,000 lb.. 8 f 50 © 05 © .... ... .... © .... 25 © 0 50 ocoa—Duty,3 cents $ lb. Caracas (in bond)(gold) # lb 14 @ Maracaibo do ..(gold) @ Guayaquil do ...(gold) 11 @ St. Domingo (gold) © , 45 © Bi Chromate Potash... .. Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined .. , .. Brimstone, on. Roll[ $ ft.... Brimston Sul¬ 1 lor phur Batnphor, C-t:de, (in bond) (gold) Bamplior, Relined lb. Sheathing,new..$ ft Bolts Braziers’ Sheathing, &c., old.. Sheathing,yellow met 1 Bolts, yellow metal,.. Pig Chile © 33 © 33 @ @ 27 @ .. .. 32 © 35 23 27® © American Ingot 22 © Cordasre—Duty,tarred,3; 22} untarred Manila, 21 other untarred, 3£ cents $ ft*. $ E> Manila, 23 © ’ 21 Tarred Russia! Bolt © © Rope, Russia. 21 Corlts—Duty,50 $ cent ad val. 1st Regular,qrts $ gro 55 © 70 do Superfine 1 40 © 1 70 Is Reiular, Pints..... 35© 50 Mineral Phial ... 50© 12 ® Cotftrn—See special report. 70 40 50 29© .. © 2 25 © 2 35 Sugar L’d,W’e... 4* ... © 93 Sulp Quinine, Am^ oz 2 37j® 2 40 Sulphate Morphine “ 9 75 © .... Tart’c Acid..(g’ld)iplb © 53 .. Tapioca 10!© 11 Verdigris, dry Hex dry 52© 58 Vitriol, Blue 18!© 11 Ducter-Duty, 30 sg cent ad val. Ravens,Light.®*? pee 15 00 © Ravens, Heavy 17 03 © Scotch, G’ck,No.l ^?y © Cotton,No. 1....-[}? y. © 72 G2 . Dye Woods—Dutyfree. Camwood,gold,-pton © .. Fustic,Cuba 44 ..30 GO © 32 00 Fustic, Tampico, gold © 21 00 Fustic, Jamaica, 44 © 21 00 ... . Barraway Seed 3ochiueal,iVIexic,n(g,d) Copperas, American... Bream Tartar, pr.(gold Bubebs, East India.... Fustic, Savanilla “ 20 00 © 4 'U® 5 23 © 87 © 25 87j .... .... 00 00 00 50 Logwood, Ilond 44 Logwood,Tabasco “ Logwood,8t. Do. cur. Logwood,Jam’ca,g’ld 30 33 35 27 Limawood Bar wood 7J 30 © 72 50 ...,, cur. © © 31 00 @ 3» 00 © 28 00 gold 2G 00 © Sapauw’d,Manila,cur. 59 00 © gold Myrrh,Eastlndia Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Gum Senegal GumTragacanth,Sorts Gum Tragaeanth, w. llakey,gold 50 ©14 50 ©16 00 Above French Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4t qualities. (SingleThick) Nov M of Mar. 11 Discount 45@r.o # cen 6x 8 toSs 10.$50 feet S 50 © 6 25 8x11 to 10x15 9 00 @ 6 75 11x14 to 12x18 10 00 © 7 50 11 00 © 8 00 13xlS to 16x24 18x22 to 18x80 ...18 50 © 9 00 20x30 to 24x39 16 50 ©10 00 24x31 to 24x3G 18 00 ©12 00 25x36 to2Gx40 20 00 ©16 0C 28x40 to 30x48.(3 qlts).22 00 @18 Of 24x54 to 32x55.(3 qlts).24 00 @20 0T 32x58 to 34x60.(3 qlts).27 00 ©23 0C English sells at 35 i9 ct. oil abov rates. Groceries—See special report. Gunny Bag’s—Duty, valued at 1 cents or less, $ square yard, 3; ove 10, 4 cents $ ft Calcutta, light & h’y % 15J® 1C! Gunny Clolli—Duly, valued at 10 cents or less $ square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents $ ft*. Calcutta,standard, y’d 231© ••• — Feathers—Duty: 30 ^? centad val. Prime Western...^ Ib 90 © 95 Tennessee.# S3© 90 Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 less $ ft), 6 cents ft, art ^ cent ad val.; over 2 / cenU $ ft), 10 cents ft and 20 ^rl centad v&. Blasting(B) $ 25ft kog @ 4 00 @4 50 Shipping and Mining.. Kentucky Rifle 6 50 © Meal 6 90 © cents or 20 .. Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $i 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish,Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents $ 100 lb. Dry Cod $ cwt. 7 25 © Pickled Scale...$ bbl. 5 00 © Pickled Cod ^j? bbl. 7 : 0 © 8 00 Mackerel, No.I, shore25 ()u © Mackerel,No.l,Halifax © Mackerel,No. I,By 28 50 © Mackerel,No. 3 new © Mackerel,No.2,Halifax.... © Mac’el,No.3,Mass. I’get2 50 ©13 00 Mackerel, Shore, No. 2 © Mac, No.3, Mass,med.l0 50 ©11 00 Salmon, Pickled, No. 1.2) 00 ©25 (0 Salmon,Pickled,$tcc.32 00 @35 00 Herring,Scaled^ box. 40 © Herring. No. 1 35 © Herring,pickled^bbl. 5 00 © 8 0,1 .... ... .. .. 50 40 (.$ 3Jt © 20 am} Skins —Duty, 10$ cen Beaver, Dark.®9 skin 1 (ID © 4 00 Furs 9,1 8!) do Pale Bear, Black brown Badger do 28'© Cat, Wild do House 15 © 14 © 52 © SO© 38 © © 44© 35 GO 4 15 95 85 34 85 89 15 47! 55© . Fisher, Fox, Silver do Cross do Red do Grey Lynx Marten, Dark do pale Mink, dark do pale Otter Musquash, Fall Opossum R.accoon Skut;k, Black 55© © G5 © 33 70 1 1'®® 1 37J Hyd. Potash, Fr. r.nd Eng (gold) 3 55 v© 3 70 Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 0) © Jalap, in bond gold.. GO © Lao Dye 30 © Lloorice Paste, Calabria 27j© Licorice, Paste,Sicily. 24© Licorice Paste Spanish Solid 29 © Licorice Paste, Greek. 31 © Madder,Dutch (gold) 13 © do, French EXF.F.do tfij© ton. 24 @ $ ft . Fruits—See special report. 4m 17|© 12 © 80 © © © 80 © [odine, Resublimed... 6 50 © Flax—Duty: $15 North River 3.5 © 80© 3J 1 12 © 1 Gamboge Ginseng, West 80 © Ginseng, Southern... 90© Hum Arabic,Picked.. 50© Benzoin Kowrie Gedda Gum Dainar.. 00 00 00 50 © 9 ©10 ©12 ©13 .. Deer. 5 50 Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ ters I? ft.. 86 @ © 1 0? 2Iai r~Duty free. KioGrnnde,iinx’d$ft go1d2?i@ Buenos Ayres, mixed . 44 .. @ Hog,Western,unwash curlO © l('i .... 31® _ Arabic, Sorts... . 00 50 50 00 00 00 .... Fustic,Maracaibo, “ 18 00 © Logwood, Laguna 44 35 00 © 39 00 Logwood, Cam. 44 32 0 ) © .... G?© © Extract Logwood Fennell Seed Flo wers,Benzoin. $ oz. Gambier gold 25x30 to 80x44 30x46 to 32x43 32x50 to 82x56.. ..15 16 17 20 22 25 .... .... , 17 Bastor Oil Chamomile Flow’s^®) Chlorate Potash (gold) 44 Jaustic Soda 50 10 50 © 7 12 25 © 8 . . 1 G3 © Gum © 25© 20x30to 24x30.' 24x31 to 24x36 Sholl Lac Soda Ash (8U#c.)(g’ld) 3! 3>4 © Cardamoms, .Malabar.. 3 25 © Gum Gum Gum Genu 45 . Ammonia, Epsom Salts Oorvpnr—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2}; old copper 2 cents $ lb; tnanufa :tured,35 $ cent ad val.;sheathing t*-l pper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 feches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 © 34 oz. <y? square foot, 3 cents Cantharides Butch (/O lee#—See special report. © ..... 17 50 • 14x16 to 10x24 18x22 to 18x30 Senna, Alexandria.... Senna, Eastindia Crude . Subject to a discount of.-45@50 $ con 6x 8 to 7x9... $ 50 ft 7 75 © 6 00 8x10 tol0xl5 8 25 © G 50 11x14 to 12x18 9 75 © 7 00 31 12 Seneca Root 3d, and 4th qualities. .... 85 © Bochineal, lion, (gold) .. 9} 1 57J $ lb. American Window-- 1st,2d, Sarsaparilla,fl.g'd in b’d .. © Sarsaparilla, Mex. “ 11 © -10 @ Coriander Seed 10 27 11J 9* © .. , 00 © 30 90 77 Window Common Window,notexceeding lOx 15 inches square, li; over that, and not over 10x24, 2 ;over that, and no over 24x30 2!; all over that, 3 cent 00 1 55 © Sal Soda. Newcastle “ 27 © Berries, Persian, goid. 31 IJi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle, gold 3 SO © 3 87* Carbonate in bulk 00 00 25 20 © SalAm’niac, Ref 9.3 , Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton Salaratus . 75 1 50 © 3 00 © 10J Rhubarb,China Sago, Pea. led . ' Cement—Ros«ndale“0bI2 00® Chains—Duty,' 2£ cental Ib. One inch & upward^®) 7.j@ Quicksilver... © 20 J © 92© GO © 65 © 1 25 @ 8 50 © 4 50 Copivi Brimstnu 37! 28© 85 © 34 © VO © Phosphorus Prussiate Potash IS 93 m 13 10 Oxalic Acid j . .. © 3 00 . or 10x15inches over 2! cents $? squarefoot; larger and not over 10x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches. 6 cents ^ square foot above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents $ square foot ali above that, 40 cents $? ftre *fl° on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and 13 10!® 35© ..... 75 © Alum Balsam 2 Polished Platenot .. ....© 2 Bergamot G 37!® G OIlLemon 3 87i© 4 Oil Peppermint,pure. 5 75 © G Oil Vitriol 2 CO © 2 Opium, Turkey.(gold) .... ©10 © 2 10 © 95 © © Oil free. Alcohol, 95 per cent. Aloes, Cape 39 ib Aloe3, Socotrine Assafcetida 14 © 1 H@ Oil Anis Oil Cassia Lrlass—Duty, Cylinder © 2 CO Manna, small flake.... Mustard Seed, Cal Mustard Seed, Trlesto. Nutgalls Blue Aleppo Borax, 10 cents $ lb ; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 $? ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 ton, and 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40cents Stt lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ lb; Castor Oil,$l $ gallon ; Chlorato Potash, 10 ; Caustic Soda, 1£; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas®; Cream Tartar, 10 ; Cubebs* 10 cents $ ft*; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cout ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent f? lb; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic,20 ^ cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin Gum Kowrie, and Gum Datnar, 10 cents per lb; Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Gecda and Gum Tragaeanth, 20 $ centad val.; ilyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 “jP lb; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ centad val.; Opium, $250; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ lb ; Phosphorus, 20 $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents $ lb: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad val.; Sal ASratua, 1£ cents $ lb; Sal Soda, i cent lb ; Sarsaparilla aud Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; Soda Ash, i ; Sugar Lead,20cents $ lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, G cents If? lb; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 cent ad val.; Elberial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 $ lb; all others quoted below [July 17,1809 Manna,large flake Bleaching Powder, 30 cents $ 100ft»; Bell nod Arsenic, Powdered “ Factory prime...$ lb Factory lair Farm Dairies prime.. ceti and 89 36 35 3) 30 84 81 31 28 30 23 CHRONICLE . . 75 45 32 25 Skills—Duty : 10 $ cent ad val. fife nip—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila $25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sum and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and Tampico i cent $ ft. Amer.Dressed.^9 ton 275 00@335 OC do Undressed.. <75 00@20U 00 Russia, Clean 240 00©245 00 Italian (m>ld) 490 (0© Manila..$ ft..(gold) 12}@ 12J Sisal... 10© 10! .... Tampico (gold) Jute cur. do do do do do do Buenos A...cur. Vera Cruz..gold da do do Bolivar. Tampico.. .gold Matamoras.gold Payta cur. Capo car. Deer,San J uan79 ftgold do do do Honduras..gold Sisal gold Para .gold Vera Cruz .gold Chargres.. .gold Parr \fr hello.-.. • © 45 @ 50 © 55 © .. 50 40 ?8 3 *. 40 44 44 42 43 34 © @ © © © @ © © © © © 52’ 52! 57! 55 52 55 40 . 44 46 45 45 46 36 8! 4! ed and Skins 10 $1 centad val. Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres^ftg’d © do 21 © Montevideo .. .... Rio Grande Orinoco California San Juan Matamoras VeraCruz .... Tampico Bogota PortoCabello Maracaibo Truxilio Bahia Rio Hache Curacoa, Pt. au Platt .. do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do — Texas currency... do Western Dry Salted Hides50 8 © 4 © Elides — Duty,all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ Chili G'>r'.t,Curacoa$ ft 0 14 1 00 © 4 00 3 00 ©15 00 2 00 © 8 00 50 © 65 25© 50 10 © 15 4 00 ©iO 00 5 00 ©50 00 3 00 © 5 60 73 © 1 75 39 © GO 1 00 © 2 00 2 51 © 4 00 1 00 © 3 00 2 00 © 8 00 ..: 1 00 © 3 0) 3 00 © 9 00 30 10 © 3© 8 25 © 60 50 @ 1 (JO ffay—North River, in bales$ 100 fte for shipping 60 @ — 21 © 20!© 20 © 1G!@ 16 © 22 21! 21! 21 20! 18 © 18 © 17 17 19 19 1SJ© 19! 16 @ 14 © 18 © 16 © 17 14 © 13 © 16 @ 21i@ 20 © 14! 19 17 15 14 17 23 22 * gold do do Maranham. Pernambuco.... do do Bahia do Matamoras do Maracaibo do Savanilla Payta 15 16 © © 13 © 13 © 12 © 14 14 13 15 16! .. © - 12 © 12 © 13 13 12 12 do Para New Orleans...cur 111© Hi© 11 © 9 © 11 © CitJT 3?*bt-tr trim.* cured 12J© Wet Salted HidesBue Ayres.SS RioGtvc.de Calife.'tla ft g’d .... do do 11! 10 12 m July 17, 1869.] THE CHRONICLE. Upper Leather Stock— Cherry boards and plank..70 00©80 00 E.Ar<fe Rio Qr. Kip Minas Oak and ash.. $ 2 gold .. Zanzibar East India Stock— f M2 £0© Calcutta,city sl’htei $ p. gold Calcutta, dead do Hemlock... 3x4, per p5“ce 16 © 19 @ 13 © green bnfiaio,$2» Manilla & Batavia, buflalo $ 2> do do 4x6, bds, Spruce bds, do pile 1)4 in. 10 © ...do 2 in. do $ gall. do do do 11 84 c@ $ lb do of 1867 Bavarian 8 © India ad val. ... $ 2> Para, Medium Para, Coarse East India ,. Carthagena, &c crotches Tfi ft., St. Domingo, ordinary logs 8 00 6 00 cent, © 1 05 © © 55J © © do do do Guatemala Caraccas • Bar, Refl’d Kng&AmerSl 00 ©87 50 G.irtsherrie 42 0(1 ©44 00 r— Bar sizes Sto ekPbicjes—, Swedes,ordinary Bar,English 140 and Amer¬ 00©150 00 ican, Refined 00 00© 95 00 io do do Common 85 00© 90 00 Cut,4d.@60d.$ Horse 00© Rods,5-8©3-l(3inch.. 0U@155 00 Hoop 123 00© 180 00 Nail Rod $ lb 'N© 84 Sheet, Russia Hi© 324 Sheet, Single, Double and Treble 7 5*@ Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 50 00©57 00 do American 15 00©78 00 Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime $lb 3 00© 3 374 East Ind ,Billiard Ball 3 12*@ 3 37* African, Prime.. 2 5n@ 2 87 African,Scrivel.,W.C. 1 25© 2 25 .. Lend—Duty, Pig, f2 $ 100 lb ; Old Lead, 14 cents $ lb; Pipe and Sheet, 2-4 cents $ 5). Galena $ 100 Bt> Spanish German Bar net net PipeandSheet Leather—Duty: $ cent ad val. do do middle light.. docrop,heavy do middle do light.. Oak, rough slaughter. Hemi’k, B. A.,&c.,h’y do do do do do do do do do do do QO do © middle. light. Califor.,heavy do middle. do light. Ori no., heavy. do do middle light. rough good damaged poor do .. .. ©10 50 © 12 sole 35, upper 30 v)ak,sl’hter,heavy$ 2) do do do do . (gold) 0 30 © 6 50 (gold) 0 30 © 6 874 English QU . (cold) 6 30 © 6 37* 40 © 38 © 38 © 38 © 40 © 42 @ 38 © 26*© 30 © 30 © 26*© 39 © 30 © 46 46 42 42 45 45 45 29 32 32 29 314 324 25 © 27 294© 304 29*© 35 © 24 © 20 © 3 4 40 28 23 Lime—Duty; 10$ cent ad val. Rockland,00m. $ bbl. © 1 25 do heavy © 1 75 .. Lumber, &c. Duty: Lumber,20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ centad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, fbek. Bird’s-eye maple,logs, $ ft. 6© 7 Black walnut.....$ M. ft.75 00@85 00 Black walnut, logs$ sup it 8© 9 Black walnut, trotches.... 15© 20 do figur’d & blis’d 22© 1 25 Yeliow pine timber, Geo $ M. It 32 00©33 00 White oak, logs $ cnb. ft.45 00©50 00 do jV.ank, $ M. ft.50 00©55 00 Pper -fc W wood b’ds & ak.—.... 45 00©45 50 80 40 27 18 Salt—'Duty: sack, 24 @ © - and tar, 20 $ cent ad val. Turpent’e, Sv.ft.$2801b 3 75 © Tar, N. County $ bbl. 2 50 © 2 60 Tar, Wilmington 3 00 © 124 Pitch City 2 75 © 2 80 SpMis turpentine $g 42 © 42i Rosin, com’n. $ 280 lb 2 25 © ...... 2 2 2 4 — pale. Nitrate soda 25 © 30 40 © 60 50 © 3 50 00 © 6 00 8© Cake—Duty: 20 $ a; 11 Canary 13 © 14 5 25 © 5 50 $ bus © . $ ton.42 00 ©42 50 in bags.54 50 ©55 00 obl’g, do 51 uG © .. .... ... Shot—Duty: 2} Duty; linseed, ilaxsecd, - Drop and seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or llusks, $1 : burning fluid, 50 oents $ gallon; palm,seal, and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. rape Olive, Mar’s, qs per case do in casks.$ Palm Buck gall.. $ K> Linseed,city...$ gall. Whale, crude do white,American, pure,dry.... Zinc,whito, American, dry,k \ 1 Ill© 8 © white,American, No. l,in ol do White,Fronc3:y do whiio, French,’. 1 oil Ochre ,yellow,Fronch, dry 9© ground, In oil.. Spanish brown,dry $ 13 © 16 100 a C © Spices. -See special report. 24 10 do .53 dinary condition ©.. and hereto Class 1 Wools—The value whereof atClothing the las place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ fi>, 10 cents $ fi> and 11 $ cent, ad val. over 32 cents $ 2), 12 cents $ lb and 10 $ cent, ad val. ; when imported washed, double these rates. Class 2.— Combing Wools-The value whereof at the last place whence to the United States is 32 exported cents or lees $ lb, 10 cents $ lb an d 11 $ cent ad val. ; over 32 cents $ lb, 12 cents $ 2) and 10 $ cent, ad val. Class 3 .—Carpet Wools and other similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 12 cents 01 less $ lb, 3 cents $ lb ; over 12 cents $ 2), 0 cents $ lb. Wool of all classes Imported scoured, three times the duty as if imported unwashed. Am., Sax’y fleece.$ 2) 55© GO do full blood Merino 47 @ do % & % Merino., 46 @ do Native &> % Mer. 47 © fore practiced.” ) as now — doCombiug domestic Extra, pulled., Superfine, pulled 53 © 40 © @ 37© 23 © 22 © 24 © 21 © 32© 27 © No 1, pulled., Califor fine,un wash’d medium do common, do Valpraiso, do South Am.Merino do do Alest zado do Creole do do Cordova, washed , do do 18 @ 27 38 30 17 31 28 Cape G.Hope,unwash’d East India, \\ ashed Mexican, unwashed... Texas, Fine Texas, Medium Texas, Coarse ... Spirits -Duty: Brandy, for first prool $3 $ gallon ; Gin, rum and whiskey, for first proof, $2 50 $ gallon. Brandy, Otard, Dupuy & Co..(gold) $ gal. 5 50 ©13 00 Brandy, Pinet, Castil- © © © © © © 20 ’ lon & do Co(gold) 5 50 @17 00 Henuessy(gold) 5 50 @18 00 do Marett & Co(g’d) 5 50 @10 00 do LegerFreres do 5 50 @10 (0 do oth for. b’ds(g’d) 4 75 @18 CO Rum, Jam., 4th p.(g’d) 4 50 © do St. Croix, 3d proof.. .(gold) 3 50 @ Gin, diff. brands.(gold) 3 00 @ Domestic Liquors— Cash. Brandy,gin&p.spi’ts in bl 10© Rum, pure, 1 10© 4 75 y 3 75 5 CO 1 15 1 15 1 04© 1 05 Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $ a or under, 24 over 7 cents and not above cents; 11, 3 cts $ a; over 11 cents, 3| cents $ 1j and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store prices ‘ English, cast, $ a © I 25 dc gr’d tnoil.$ a 8 DO © 9 00 Paris wh., No. 1 3 50 © 3 75 Chrome, yellow, dry.. 15© 35 ■Whiling, Amer $ 1001b 1 87*© 2 00 Vermilion,China, $ a 95 © 1 (0 . plates, $1 50 $ 100 as. Plates, for.$100 a gold 6 37*© 6 50 do domestic $ a 11 @ 12 Si lli© 2 © d(- . Whiskey, 12 12 silk, Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and .... oil, 3 cents $ lb; Parie white and whiting, 1 cent $ fi>; dry ochres, 56 cev.ti $ 400 ft : oxidesofzinf-, If cents $ a ; ochre, ground in oil,| 50 $100 a ; Spanishbrown 25 $ cettad val; China clay, $5 $ ton ; Venetian red and vermilioD 25 $ cent ad val.; whitechalk,$10 $ ton. Litharge,City....$a 10J© 11 Lead, red,City 10*© 11 do white, American, pure,inoii © 14 thrown 6 75 © 9 25 medium,No. 2 7 00 © 9 25 Canton,re-reel.Nol ©2 7 25 © 7 TO Canton. Extra Fine... 8 75 © 9 00 Japan, superior 10 50 ©11 25 do Good @9(0 do Medium 7 50 © do .... Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in All © © Taysaarns, superior, No. I©4 114© 35 .. $ cent. Tsatlees, No.l©2. $ aiO U) ©11 00 © G 00 © i 45 3) © $ a. 35 9j © 1 00 © 1 05 do bleached winter © l 15 1 73 © 1 75 Sperm,crude do wint. bleach... ©2 05 Lard oil, prime 1 47 © 1 59 Red oil,city dist.Elain © 1 00 do saponified © 1 00 Bank 85 © .... Straits 90©... Paraffine, 28 & 30 gr. Lubricating cents ....;$ a Silk—Duty; free. (currency 5 00 1 40 .. 1y,uncovered Wool—Duty: Imported in the“or ilf 4f Flax. 2 50 © 2 60 Lins’d Am.rough$bus © do Calc’s,Bost.’n,g’d 2 07 © do do New Yk,g’d 2 17 © 2 03 centad val. City thin obl’g,in bbls. Oils Copper .... 10 cts; hemp, 4 cent $ a; canary, $1 $ bushel of a ; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent ad val. $a No. 0 to $ loo lb,and 15 $ cent ac Galv.. $ fi>.lC4@U4 Brass (less 20@25 p^r cent.)..43 ©.► .... .... 60 Timothy,reaped $ bus caek35 00 @60 00 val. “ Iron No. 0 to ltLisl.25-274&5$ ct.ofl Iron Nos. 19 to 26.L;si .37**fc5 $ ot. of IronNos.27 to 36 Li:t.42*&5 Iron Telegraph, No. 8 to il $ ct. ofl Seeds—Duty; linseed, Clover Oakum—Duty fr.,$ lb $2 to $3 59 104© 4}@ gold 70 © 85 80 © 1 60 gold.$ tioz 2 60 @ 9 CO WJrc—Duty: partially refined, 3 cents; soda, 1 cent $ a. » Refined, pure $ a 154© 8 0_* © 9 CO ... Claret....gold.$ Claret nitrate Crude Mad’ra(g’d) Port.(gold) Malaga, dry (gold) 1 00 © 1 25 Malaga, sweet...(gold) 1 10 © 1 25 Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2| cents; refined and 0 do West, thin Marseilles Marseilles 34 4S © Cadiz 50 © Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 2 00 © do flne,Ashton’s(g’d) 3 65 © do flue, Vorthingt’s 2 75 © ©8 60 85 @ 1 25 (gold) 2 25 © 3 50 Sicily Madeira..(gold) 1 00 © 1 25 Red, Span. & Sicilyfg) 90 © 1 00 2 cents cents $ 100 2 00 Burgundy port..(gold) Lisbon 20 bulk, 18 cents $ 100 a. Turks Islands $ bush. Turpentine, rosin,pitch, do — 26 @ 38© Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 39cents $ gallon; crude Oil Fort... 104 2f@ $ gall. 3 50 @ 7 00 1 25 @ 9 00 .... Sherry 8 09 © 8 75 Rangoon Dressed, gold 7?@ 84 In bond Naval .... Madeira Carolina....•.$ 100 a 6 20 © 6 25 Yellow metal Zinc .... 115 95 $ a. $ lb. 100 lb 4 70 © 4 75 shoe,f’d(6d)$ lb do strained do No. 2 do No. 1 do Pale do extra cent, ad val.; over 50 and not ovec cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent, ad val. ; over $1 $ gallon, $1 $ gal Ion and 25 $ cent ad val. cents $ a.; paddy 14 cents, and uncleaned I. C. Coke 6 Terne Charcoal 7 50 © 8 00 Terno Colre..,.. 5 75 © 6 CO 100, 50 50 18*©, 174© Rice—Duty: cleaned 2J . English, spring English blister English machinery.... English German... .. American blister Ameriom cast Tool American spring do American ma< h’y do American Gernun.do 18 @ 9 @ 22 Hi© 11*© ■'24© 19 v 14 © _ 10*© © 10 © © .. .. 10 © 114 15 16 16 19 13 13 13 . Value not over 50 ct* $ gallon, 20 cents $ gallon, and 25 $ 4 © Copper... Scroll 118 0 ©175 00 Ovals and Half Round 115 50©140 50 Band 115 00© HorseShoe Hams, cents Clinch mess .. Wines—Duty: 00 00 00 1‘2 00 @16 00 20 00 @31 50 $ a 164© 20 Shoulders Lard Nails—Duty: cutlj; wrought 2*; horso shoe 2 $ Pig Charcoal 50 0)© Pig, American,No. 1.. 40 00©41 00 Pig, American, No. 2 .38 00 ©40 00 do extra do hams 334@ 294© 30 294© 30 00 © 8 50 75 © 7 50 Tobacco.—See special report. 104 Pork, old ra^ss ©3: Pork, prime mess., ...2S Of) @;9 do prime, 26 00 ©27 Beef, plain mess 10 00 @14 IVIolasscs.—See special report. Iron—Duty,Bars,1 to 1* cents $ 2>. Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 lb ; Boiler and Plate, H cents $ 2>; Sheet,Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 14 to If cents $ 2>; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 oents do do do lams,bacon,andlard,2 cts $ft> Pork,new mess,$ bb!32 00 ©32 12 © 25 © 5 © Bahia (gold) (gold) English (gold; Plates,char. I.C.$ box 8 Straits ct; 8 Florida. $ cl ft. Rosewood,R. Jan. $ lb Plate and sheets an< terne plates, 25 per cent, ad val. -tfanca $ a .. 10© 111 Tin--Duty: rig,bars,and block,15$ cent ad val. Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 14© I?'© 12 © Mansanilla Mexican do 40 _ Honduras (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas Bengal.—(*old)$lb 1 GO © 2 20 (gold) ...© SO © 1 10 (gold) (gold) 70 © 1 024 (gold) 1 20 © 1 45 (gold) © 1 15 .. 24 $ bbl 4 50 © 114© Teas.—See special report. 3.’4@ grav., Residuum :1 cent $ a. American,prime, coun¬ try andclty $ a... .... © .. Naptha, refined. 6S-73 10 © 10 © 8 © 11 © Nuevitas.... Mansanilla Mexican © © ... Foreign 115 test) do Standard white 10 30 , Tallow—Duty refined inbond,piime L. S. to W. (110© 50- © Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily high grd’s $ ton 130 0l'@155 Cl Sugar.—See special report- Petrole 11 m—Duty:crude,20 cents refined, 40 rents $ gallon. Crude,40©47grav.$gal @ 22 do in bulk © 17 Hone- 7 logs do do do do Barytes,American$a Barytes 50 25 © do Port-au-Platt, crotches do Port-au-Platt ndigo—Duty fbck. Ondo Madras Manila Cedar, Amer.com.. 00 6 China clay, $ ton 31 00 @32 CO Chalk.. $ lb © If Chalk, block....$ ton23 00 ©24 00 do 18© 20 per MR. 19 00@22 00 go, do .. Rubber—Duty,10 $ Para, Fine ( 14 © © _ 95 95 © 1 00 22 © 27 Venet.i ed (N.C.)$cwt 2 624© 2 75 22 50 25 26 22© 23© 31© 35© ocul — Duty Ireo. isaboganv St. Domin¬ cent.ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... $ C Ox, American strips, 2x4 Vr © © Horns—Duty, 10 $ do Mtiiio^any, S8 Hops—~-ur.y: 5 coni*$ tt». Crop of 1808 ... ... 90 © ... Cal... Carmine,city made$ai3uo ©16 Plumbago © .... @ ....© do do do Honey—Duty,20 cent $ gallon. Cuba (duty paid)(gr.d ' do do White nineb <x boards...23 0Q@27 00 White pine merchantable bx boards 27 00©90 00 Clear pine 60 00@70 0C Laths 49 © 32 © 26 @ . Vermillion, Trieste 45 00@G0 00 30 00©45 00 Maple and birch 19 © ............. Sierra Leone., cash Gambia & Bissau. © 95 Zinc—Duty : pig or block, $1 50 $ 100 2>a.; sheets 24 cents $ 2> Sheet. $ 2> 12“© 124 l-'rcig'Iits — To Livekpool (steam):s. Cottor Flour $ lb $ bbl. Heavy V)ds...$ton Oil 2 0 0 9 © ..@56 4 0 (sail) Heavy goods... $ toB .... 0 0 2 6 @30 2 0 © $ bbl. 50© © 4 © 3 ••• © $ tee $ t bl $ bunk, i Corn To IIa7ux: © 22 6 @25 .. Petroleum. .... 94© $ tee. $ bbl. Oil Flour Whoat .... .. Beef Pork To London Pork ( 9 © 27 6 @3) ©40 Com, b*k& bags$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Boof d. .... i* • • $ C © $ Cotton $ ©$ Beef and pork. .$ bbl. .. © Measurem.g’ds.$ ton i0 10 © Lard, tallow, cut m t eto«-»* 9 i© AahefLiwt&D’LWton P->*roleum 8 (.0 © 9 00 6 00 © t. i 96 THE CHRONICLE. Dry Goods, Iron and Railroad N.B.FALCONER&CO STAPLE AND NEW YORK, CAST STEEL BOSTON, PHILA., 1203 So.4th stree RAILS, CAST STEEL Cast Steel Frogs, and all other VELVETEENS, TYRES, Steel Material for Rallwajr Use. Umbrella Alpacas and Ginghams, Ac., NO, 217 CHURCH STREET, HOUSE NAYLOR, Between Walker and Lispenard. IN LONDON: BENZ ON 34 Old Broad who For Boston Daily. METROPOLITAN STEAMSHIP I well as Old Rails, Gilead A. Smith, for OUTSIDE LINE OF Corner Neptune Steamers, Bartholomew Hon*e, opposite Bank of England. LONDON, E. C. Iron Railroad Iron, Works, Old Rails, No*. 77 Sc 83 Liberty O.’S Street, Bessemer Broadway, New York. Palm aud Ornamental Iron Works of all S and kinds for SECU¬ Correspoadent* lit America: Buildings. Messrs. Jay Cooke & Co., New Y"ork, Messrs. Jay Couke & Co., Washington, Meisrs E. W. Clarke GLAUCUS, & 2,00ft Ton* Eacli, SAILING Rails, &c. U. S. BONS AND AMERICAN RAILWAY RITIES NEGOTIATE. COMPRISING NEPTUNE, NEREI Sheet Steel. CO., Scrap Iron and Metals. Novelty SONS, Importers of Norway & Sw edes Iron. Including UB, A£B, SF, and other brands, which they 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 description of bar and A Railroad Iron, as WM. JEiSOP Sc Street, give special attention to orders Miscellaneous. Iron and Railroad Materials. Norway and Swedes Iron CO., 80 State street. 99 John street. FANCY British Dress Goods, VELVETS, Materials. NAYLOR & IMPORTERS OF [July 17,1869 Co., Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgar Thomson, Phila¬ delphia TUESDAYS,! HUKSDAYS&SATURDAYS AND Asland,AVm. P. C ) 1,600 Tons Farli, Railroad Iron, Street Rails and Light Rails for Mines. SAILING ON INTERMEDIATE DAYS. From PIER 11 N. R., at fi P. HI. Connecting at Boston with Fitchburg, Boston and Lowell, Boston and Maine and Eastern Railroad, and in New York with the Erie Railway. Freights taken and through rates given to and fro u all points on the above Roads and their connections. No charge for Whariargc In Boston. WM. P. CLYDE, All T OLD BAILS AND SCRAP PURCHAS¬ ED AND SOLD. Genl. Supt. and Anent, Pier II N.R. H. M. WHITN KY, Agent, Central Battery Wharfs, Boston. AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED BURDON Henry Lawrence & Sons, tlie Pa*cal Iron FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC USE. STREET, NEW YORK MEDITERRANEAN GOODS. Apply to HENDERSON No. 7 BROTHERS, Bowling Green, New York. S. W. Hopkins & Co., 68 Old Broad Street, London, AND Sc 71 Broadway, New York, Negotiate In Europe and America every IOWN, CO UNI Y, ClT F Works, Philadelphia. , description oi STATE, AND Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded Boiler Flue9, Gas Works Castings and Street Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. 1 IN YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE. SPIKES. Morris, Tasker & Co., approved Brand* of No. Scotch Pig Iron, In lots to suit .purchasers. 69 MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE 15.2 FRONT SCOTCH PIG IRON. 18 William Street, New York. dr and P. Sand ford Railroad Bonds, For Railroad tion win* the American Companies and Contractors in connec purchase and sale of both Foreign and OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: T. . 15 GOLD SCHNITZF.R, 3 3 CENTRAL BALDWIN Offer for sale Wool*of every li owe*, Abm. Mills WOOL We are Ac E. J. Shipman Mills & & Co., accurately fitted to gauges and thorough ly interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship, F inish, and Efficiency fully guaranteed. MATTHEW BAIRD. GKO. BURNHaM. CHAS T. PARRY EVANS & 153 PEARL CO., STREET, Iron and Metals. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. prepared to make cash advances upon Wool, on the spot or in transit. IRON. IRON McGowan, The Liverpool& London & Globe Ins. Co. n 45 William St. ST., PITTSBURGH, PA. Iron Cotton Ties. The b both AMERICAN and FOREIGN - * undersigned, Sole Agents lie and distribution of the We are always in a position to fhrnlsh ail sizes, pat¬ terns and weight of rail lor both steam and horse roads, and in any quantities desired either for IMME¬ DIATE OK REMOTE delivery, at anv port in the United States 01 Canada and always at the very lowest current market prices. We are also prepared to sup¬ ply Bessemer Steel Rails, In New York, lor the Manufactured by J. J.McCOMB, Liverpool, respect¬ fully solicit orders for delivery In New York or other ports In the United States, or at Liverpool. 80 BEAVER STREET, rolled to any yard and of Contracts for both I BON AND STEEL RAILS will be made payable in United Statoc currency for America, aud in either currency or gold (at the option of the buyer) ior Foreign; when desir¬ ed, we will contract to supply roads with their monthly or yearly requirements of STEEL OR IRON OLD RAILS IN TRADE FOR NEW fbrnlshed, receiving the difference in cash, and allow¬ ing the highest market price for their Ola Bails, and. if necessary, receiving the latter after the delivery of the NGW FC&I18. Orders for Foreign Rails, both Steel and Iron, will be taken for transmission by Mail or through the cable to our LONDON HOUSE, 58 OLD BROAD ARROW TIE AND SELF-FASTENING WROUGHT IKON htVKl K TIES. SWENSON, PERKINS approved lengths. RAILS, taking their IRON BROKER. ?3 WATER We beg to call the attention of Managers of Rail¬ ways and Contractors tlirenuhobt the United States and Canada to our superior facilities for executing orders at manufacturers prices, for all descriptions ol of American and Foreign manufacture, desired pattern and weight for linlal IRON. Wm. D. Insurance. 2,000,000 Companies. Railroad Iron. BROKERS, U. States To Railroad All work Shipman, AJjfetsGold,%\ 7,690,390 Ajffets in the EQUIPMENTS. WORKS. PHILADELPHIA. “ titio LOCOMOTIVE M. Baird description*. “ Opium and Persian Berries. Canary and Hemp Seed, Fig:*, Kaifcin*, Hoxwooil, NO. 50 Railroad Iron AND WHARF, DOS I ON. Liquorice Stick* and Pa*le. Glim* STREEP, NEW YORK. Sc CO., 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 etated periods to ports in America and at the low* eat possible rates of freights. Address S.^W. Hopkins 8c Co.* 09 Sc 71 Broadway* New York.