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»THE

%

(Saimmmfat 93mt& itaitoraij Dfomifot, and f n^uranw gmmwl
A WEEKLY

§atte’

NEWSPAPER,

representing the industrial and commercial interests

VOL. 11.

NEW YORK, JULY 80, 1870.

Bankers and Brokers.

Gelston &

commiwBion.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS.

on

YORK.

Orders for Purchase and Sale of United States Se¬
curities, Stocks, Bonds and American Gold,
Promptly
executed at the usual Commission.

IT Interest, Four Per Cent, allowed
subject to Sight Draft.

on

Deposits,

James C. King 8c Co.,
56

BROADWAY,

Government

Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold
Foreign Exchange.
Issue Certificates of Deposit.
interest allowed on current
daily balances.
Collections made

on

end Europe.

all parts of the United

M1U8 T. BATES.

and

,

Alex. X. Petrie A: C*o„

&

BANKERS

Brown,

&

Duncan, Sherman
No. 11 Nassau

BANKING HOUSE OF

James T. Brady & Co.,
(Successors to S. JONES & CO

Dealers In all kinds

of

BANKERS
No. 32 Broad

AND

&

Co.,

BROKERS,

on

favorable

terms,

orders for ihe purchase

Securities^6’ Federalf
NUEL»

f

Kenyon

Farmers,

Cox

or

sale

BANKERS

&

Daniel Drew,
special Partner.

&

Co.,

Marcuard. a ndre & C
Fould & Co,
London,
Paris
to points suiting Duyers of
Sterling or France

on

|.

I ®
1

Stocks, Ronds

STREET,

and Travelers

Mississippi Valley Bank,
A BANK OF DISCOUNT
AND

and

DEPOSIT,

VICKSBURG, MISS.

Correspondent:—Bank

R. L.

of the Manhattan Co.

Edwards,

RANKER

AND

Government

Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold and
Silver Loin bought and Sold, r
Special attention given to Merchants orders for
Coin.
WM, B.

UTLEY,

GEO. W. DOUGHKBTT.

Utley

&

Dougherty,
BROKERS,

BANKERS AND
NO.

11

WALL

STREET,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Bankers and Brokers.
Henry C. Hardy.
Member N. Y. Stock & Gold Exchange.
Frederick Hardy,
Member jn. Y. Stock
^

Exchange.

Hardy

NEW

YORK

Governments, Gold, and all classes of Stocks and
Bonds bought and sold on commission.
Orders
promptly and carefully executed.

A.

V.

B.

Van

Dyck,

STOCK, BOND AND GOLD BROKER,
NO
30 BROAD
STREET.

Conover,

Issue Letters of Credit
upon London and Paris,
available in all the principal cities on the
Continent.
Buy and Sell Exchange on London, Paris, Amster¬
dam, Edinburgh and Glasgow.

C.

BROKER,

NO. £3 WALL STREET, NEW
YORK.
IP. O. Box 3,328.

Vincent &
7 WALL

NO. 4 WALL STREET,

&

Son,

BROKERS,
NEW YORK.

Co.,

BROKERS,

STREET, N. Y.

STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD bought and sold on
COMMISSION ONLY.
COLLECTIONS made on all parts of the UNITED
STATES and CANADAS.
Special attention given to

Southern Securities.

WILLIAM

ALEXANDER SMITH

&

CO.,

BANKERS,
No. 40 Wall

Street, New York.

DEPOSITS received and interest allowed at
best
Current Rates.
GOVERNMENT and STATE
SECURITIES, GOLD,
RAILROAD BONDS,
STOCKS, etc., bought and
8old on Commission.
ADVANCES made upon
approved Securities.
COLLECTIONS made, and Loans Negotiated.

Gold

Duff &
bankers

Government

Bonds, Exchange.
and
Stocks,

EXCHANGE PLACE,

&»ilwav^n!ii a^eQtJ<>d given to the negotiation of
uffi other Corporate Loans.
^ aand Central Pacific Bonds and Stocks spe-




John A. Klein, C. C. Flowerree. Geo. M.
Klein,
Prtsiaent.
Vice-President.
Cashier.

Credits

commission.

Gold

P. O. Box 4,208.

RANKERS,
NO. 54 WILLIAM

H.

SECURITIES,

WALL STREET, N. Y.

BANKERS A

BANKERS &

John Pondir,
BROKER,

No. 44

Co.,

Available in all parts ot the world

BROKERS,

81 WALL STREET.

lh?°Iernmenl Securlties,
j Qgni and sold

on

NO. 59 WALL

and Railroad

General

14

N. Y.

may be

$2,500,000,

Brown Brothers &

)

Hutchinson,)

GOVERNMENT

James G. King’s Sons,

Sell at Market Ratas

Mdpromptly execute

as

SELLECK, 37 Pine St.Pi.V

Commercial

PA.

Street, New York.

®*ke collections

Wi? tr\i

such terms

ISSUE

ALL UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES,
to11®!* accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS
““sre, and allow interest on
daily balauCcS, sub¬
ject to Sight
Dralt.

I Kwrroir cox,

on

upon.

Special attention given to collections.

Taussig, Fisher

Co.,

St., New York City,

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

Securities.

PITTSBURGH.

&

Citizens Bank of Louisiana

In sums

BROKERS,

And dealers in

*

Telegraphs Transfers of Money
don, Paris, san Francisco, Havana, to and from Lon¬
&c.

A. D.

YORK.

GOLD

CIRCULAR

AGENCY

BROKERS,

STREET, NEW

Co,,

Liverpool.

Capital and Reserved Fund..

Bates

Buy and

Gufon A:

London.

agreed

AND

purchasers,

be
change, in large or small supplied with Bills of Ex¬
cities of Europe, also «ii h amounts, on the principal
Tickets for Passage from,
or to,
Europe,bv the GUION LINK of Mail steamers.
ADVANCES MaDE UPON
uF
COiTON, and other Produce CONSIGNMENTS Cor¬
to Ourselves or
respondents.

ISSUE

RANKERS,
STOCK

can

Cur ent Accounts received

States

J. MUNBO BBOWN.

11 WALL

ana

New York.
COMMERCIAL CREDITS
parts ol Europe, &c. BILLS

NOTES
AND
CIRCULAR
Leuers of Credit available and
payable in all the
PRINCIPAL CITIES OK THE
United States, Canada and West WORLD; also in the
Indies.

BANKERS,
NO.

TRAVELLERS
ISSUED, available

Country Bankers

Co.,

NEW

Dodge, Kimball & Moore

Street,

in all
OF EXCHANGE
drawn in sums to suit
also Cable transfers.

BANKERS,
STREET,

Bankers and Brokers.

Williams & Guion,
63 Wall

Bussing,

Caldwell 8c

NO. 266

Foreign Bills.

27 Wall Street.
Stocks,Government8 and Gold bought and sold

21 WALL

of the united states.

a

Tienken,

and

brokers,

15 WALL STREET, NEW
YORK,
Wm. H. Duff,
John H.
Members of the N. Y. Stock and Gold Tiknken,
Exchanges.

Stocks, Bonds, Gold
bought and sold.

and Government

Securities

Bars, constantly

Interest allowed

on

AN
NO. 53 WILLIAM

KERbt

STREET, NEW YORK.

Dealers in Bills of Exchange,
Governments, Bonds*
Stocks. Gold, Commercial Paper, and all
Negotiable
Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject to
Sight Draft
or Check.
Advances made on approved securities.
_

Foreign Gold and Silver Coin, and fine Gold and

Silver

SoUTTER & Co.,

on hand.

Deposits.

Special facilities for negotiating Commercial
Paper.;
Collect? onsboth inland and foreign
promptlymade.
Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated.

[July 30, 1870.
Western Bankers.

Boston Bankers.

Foreign Bills.

Belmont & Co., Page, Richardson 6c Co., Gilmore, Dunlap
BANKERS,

August
°

BANKERS,
50 Wall Street,
ISSUE LETTEKS of CREDIT for TRAVELERS,
available in all parts of the world, through the
Messrs. de RormcaiLD
and their correspondents.

TO State

The City

0(1 woney on Cali¬

Bank,

Robert Benson Sc

110

Sc

and Travelers!

6c

West Fourth

Co.,

Street,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

)

[ LONDON.

Dealers in

Co., )

Munroe Sc Co,

)

VFARIS.

and

Bank of British North
America.,

108

Street, Boston.

Bills of Exchange, and Commercial
Credits issued on
and

,

Also, make telegraphic transfers
fornia, Europe ana Havana.

ineu*r-

CHRONICLE.

THE

Jf30

Marcuard, Andre Sc Co.,

)

Circular Notes available for Travelers in all parts
Europe and the East.

of

GOLD, SILVER and all kind*

GOVERNMENT RONDS.
COLLECTIONS MADE at all
accessib’e

points and remitted for on day oi payment.

i

Incorporated by Royal Charter.
STREET, NEW YORK.

AGENCY, 17 NASSAU

COMMERCIAL CREDITS
issued for use in Europe, China, Japan, the East and
West Indies, and South Amt rica.
JOHN PATON,
lAe-ents
ARCn’D McKINLAY, JAgenls

Co.,

Morton, Bliss &

Parker 6c

Cobb,

CHECKS

Available in all parts of the

Bankers.

A. C.

Kaufman,

E. H.

S.

on

President,

Collections of Dividends, Coupons, Notes doc.,
dbc., receive special attention.

Brothers & Co.,

52 Wall Street. New Y'

/k.

Jos. Hutcheson.

P. Hayden.

NO.

13

HIGH

S.

Do

al General Banking, Collection, and Exchan^
Business.

AND

STREET,

STATE

88

EXCHANGE
And

iOSTON,

LONDON.

ON

IN

Tapscott, Bros. & Co.
86 SOUTH

Edward C.

Anderson, Jr.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Commission

Merchant,

Savannah, Ga.

on

W. TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool.

Ad

made on consignments. Orders for Govern
Blent Stocks, Bonds aDd Merchandize executed.

Vances

Tucker, Andrews 6c Co.
52 Wall Street,
JAS. W. TUCKER &

Special attention given to consignments of Cotton.
Gold, Stocks, Bonds and Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, bought and sold.
Collections promptly remitted for
Orders solicited lor the purchase ot sales of Produce
and Securities. Prompt attention guaranteed.
New York Correspondents: Lawrence Bros. & Co.

.

-Buy and Sell Bonds and Stocks In London, Paris

and Frankfort, aud negotiate Loans on same.

Holmes 6c

Cortis,

BROAD W AY,

Macbeth,

STOCK AND BOND BROKERS,

Key box

4.

NEW YORK

OF

STOCK

AND

of

the

BRITISH

NASSAU

NOUTH

Street, Richmond, Va,

STREET, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.

LANCASTER, BROWN Sc COt,
No. 2

NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.

STREET.

collected, and other Banking business transacted.
i JOHN PATON,
#
.

Theodore
BANKER Sc
3 EXCHANGE

McKINLAY, J

ASeuts.

Berdell,

STOCK

CHAS. HYDE Prea’t.

Welling,

Charles H.

(Formerly, Welling, Coffin & Co., Philadelphia.)
Broker In Mercantile Paper,
39 WALL STREET,
yom.
jaunoey^coubt.
Governments. Stocks. Bonds, Gold, Sterling,
negotiated STRICTLY on Commission.

E. H.
J. L. 6cBROKERS, Levy,
NO.

126

GRAVIER

Gold and Silver Coin,
Insurance Scrip,
Bank and Railroad Stocks,
Uncurrent Bank Notes,
Land Warrants,

STREET.

State and City Notes,
State and City Warrants
United StaUs Bonds.
Mutilated Currency,
commercial Paper,

Bought and Sold exclusively
’

mission.

on Com-

City Taxes.
w. n. hawks

Hawks 6c

H. CA8TLEMAN

Castleman,

Stock Brokers and Real Estate Agents
COLUMBUS, GEO.
Government Securities, Gold, Stocks, &c. Bonds
of every description, bought ana sold on commission

BROKER,

COURT, EXCHANGE PLACE,
New York.

Stocks, Bonds, Gold, C --eminent Securities, &c.,
&c., bought and Sold c-u commission.- Interest allow¬
ed on deposits.




Circulation

Deposits 500,000.

and

Cooke & Co.

Reference—Meaara. Jay

Particular attention paid to Settlement of State and

Demand and Time Bills of Exchange, payable in
London and elsewhere bought and sold at curren
rates, also cable Transfers.
Demand Drafts on Scotland and Ireland, also on
Canada, British Columbia and San Francisco. Bill
ARCH.

$200,000

-

-

-

EX¬

BROKERS,

WN, LANCASTER dc CO.,

No. 30 SOUTH

AMERICA,
17

-

Bankers and Brokers.

Co.,

NEPHEW.

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

BANK

pital

Deposited with U. S. Treasurer o secure

Loans

Bankers furnished with Sterling Bills of Exchange,
and through passage tickets from Europe to all arts
ol the United States

Agency

TITUSVILLE, PENN.,

C. HYDE, Cashier.

Successors to

SAML. THOMPSON’S

$3,410,300

...

Edward P. Curtis Cashier

and

CHARLESTON, S. C.

No. 1113 Main

BRO

73

..

Bank, having reorganized as a National Bank
Is now prepared to do a general banking bnaine*.
Government Securities, Coin, Gold Dust and Bullion
bought and sold at current rates. Special attention
given to collections throughout the West,
James H. Britton, Pres. Chas. K. Dick on

ALEX. MACBETH.

BANKERS AMD
CHANGE

Issue Letters of Credit.
Draw Jbilis on Paris.

Rider 6c

Capital paid In

Second National Bank,
geo. l. holmes.

Lancaster 6c

N[ K E R S

ESTABLISHED 1837.

CO*,:

Rue Scribe, Paris,

[R A

in St. Louis.
This

Issue Sight Drafts and Exchange payable in all
parts of Great Britain and Ireland.

Credits

NATIONAL BANK OF THE STATE
OF MISSOURI.

BANKER, FACTOR AND

Sterling Credits,

COMMERCIAL PAPER.
Buy and Sell Massachusetts and New York State
stocks.
Government Securities, Stocks Bonds, and Gold
sought and sold strictly on Commission.:
DEALERS

STREET,

COLUMBUS, OHIO,

Henry Clews & Co.,

J. M. Weith & Arents.

W. B. Eaydix

Hutcheson &Co
Hayden,BANKERS,

New York Correspondents:
Howes & Macy,
Luther Kountze

GOODRICH,

C.

Banking Houses.

LONDON*

asso¬

ciation for pajment.

Southern Securities of every description, viz.; Un¬
current Bank Notes, State, City and Railroad Stocks,
Bonds and Coupons bought and sold on commission.
Orders solicited and satisfaction guaranteed. Prices
current issued weekly and exchanged regularly with

JMORTON, ROSE & CO.,

Blake

therefore, hereby notified to

said association are

present the notes and other claims against the

CHARLESTON,
CREDITS,

world

Milwaukee, in the State of Wisconsin, is closing
All note-holders and other creditors of

its affairs.

BANKER AND BROKER,

ALSO,

NATIONAL

BANK
Of

TRAVELLERS,
COMMERCIAL

MERCHANTS

THE

Buy and sell Western City and Coun¬
ty bonds.

Southern

Credit fox

PARl

BOSTON,

(ISSUE,
paid free of Commission) and [letters of

AND

FOR SALE

BANKERS, 36 DEVONSHIRE STREET,

CIRCULAR NOTES,
'issued and

LONDON

ON

BANKING HOUSE

Luther

OF

Kountzf,

52 W all Street. New

Deposits received from Banks

York.

andJndivldaalMiib

ect to check at sight, and interest allowed thereon n
fOUR PER CENT per annum.
,
th(
Collections made throughout the United States,uk
British Provinces and Europe.
Governments Securities bought and sold.

Worthington,

N.

W.

MEMBER N. Y. 8TOOK

BANKER
18

NEW

EXCHANGE,)'

BROKBB,

AND

STREET, NEW

YORK.

purchase and sale
and Excbanf®,

Particular attention paid to the

Stocka, Honda, Gold

DBA?

Manning &r DeForest,

6 BROAD STREET.
Particular attention given to the purchase and sale
Of Southern Securities.

DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO SIGHT
And Four Per Cent Interest allowed on Dally
Balances.

Southern

Securttfea

.

have

attention*

Collections made on all Southern

i

e»Pee,|, I

Points.

1

70*

I fa 80,1870]

THE CHRONICLE.

Bankers and Brokers.

Financial.

LONDON, BOSTON,

PARIS,
19

The

WILLIAM STREET, N. Y.,

City

ISSUE

I,N [G O

Ctriltu for

58«8ib!8

Martin
ARl

Capital

-

-

-

-

Annum

L’D',

*100,000
FREE

JAS.

ISBELL, of Talladega, President.
WM. P. ARMSTRONG, Cashier.
JNo. W.

FROMIU.IS. LGOVERNMENTITAX,

LOVE, Assistant Cashier.

& Runyon,

.Y.

Correspondent—Importers and Traders National

The balance

Bauk.

Successors to

oflthefissne oft

W. B. Mott Sc Co.,
40

Stoker, Tavlor

BROKERS,

STOCK

WALL ST., NEW YORK,

closing
(ton of

w. b. mott,

*N0S B™T0N'

Special.

le 8880-

Wharton & Co.,

Evans,

HAMBURG,

ssldent,

Interest allowed on Deposits.
IATDM

nude.

Collections promptly

iHSAIOAN
ichanff

NO. 7 RUE

NO. 8 WALL

Co.,

0.300

f. B. UONABD.

al Bank

Bullion
ttention

Interest

W. H. FOBTEE.

BANKERS,

,

0,000

Henrv
|

as

Meigs,

Banker mud Broker, No. 27 Wall St.,
Member oi New York Stock

late
firm of H. Meigs, Jr., & Smith).
Offers his services for the
purchase and sale of Gov¬
ernment and all other
Stocks, Bonds and Gold
Interest allowed on deposits.

Investments carefully attended

).aibpI

J.& W. Seligman 8c Co.,
BANKERS,
K0. SO EXCHANGE

PLACE, COR. BROAD ST., N.Y.,
tame Letters of Credit for
Travellers,

U^sWeln any part of Europe, Asia, Africa, AustraDraw

Bills of Exchange and make
telegraphic
truiiere of
money on Europe and California.

OF

Jay Cooke
New

8c

York, Philadelphia
Washington.

So. 30

WiBtiy,
uuesoi

Co.,
and

WALL STREET, NEW YORK
Bell and Exchange at most
liberal rates, all
/

___

GOVERNMENT BONDS.

ad Bonds of
LAKE SUPERIOR AND MISSISSIPP
&MLBOAD COMPANY, and execute orders for
pur
end sale of

WE

Stocks,

Bonds and Gold.

NEGQI'IATE RAILROAD AND
LOINS, receive Deposits, subject to
w«t, end transact

MUNICIPAL

Check, allowing

a

general




Banking Business.

JAY COOKS * CO.

on

sight in the

able

on

demand

CITY

COMPANY,
UNDERSIGNED,

Sinking- Fund

upon

a

completed

on

the 15th August and

all

Daily $1,000
and
can

same manner

or

at

are

in

denominations of

and $500 coupons or registered,

secured

by

an

absolute and only

mortgage upon the entire line, including
all

fixed

current

descriptions of Rolling Stocks and
Equipments. This road is 111 miles in

date, length, the largest portion

of which is

rate, and
available in all parts of the United completed and successfully operated in
the daily running of
States
regular trains, the
Ad
at all
at

vances

made to

Dealers, earnings of which
times, on approved collaterals,
our

are now

th^ interest liabilities

market rates of interest.

We buy, sell and
exchange all
issues of Government Bonds at cur¬
rent market
prices, also Coin and

bonds.

on

in

excess

of

this issue of

Over

$1,500,000

Coupons, and execute

orders for the
Has already been
expended upon this
purchase and sale of Gold and all
first-class Securities, on commis¬ road from Stock Subscriptions and Do¬
sion.

nations, and in addition

Gold

Banking Accounts

opened with

BANKING HOUSE
tinoerj

"3

February, in New York, London,
Frankfort, and are free from tax.

These bonds

Certificates of Deposit issued,
pay¬

Exchange,

(formerly cashier of the Metropolitan Bank, and
or the

bui.ala

DENVER

30 Year

a

gold, payable

with National Banks.

-

pe«Ul

allowed

bearing interest at

julatlon

are

Bond, issued only

or

Balances of Currency or Gold.
Persons depositing with us
check at

Bny and sell Government, State, Railroad and other
desirable securities, making liberai advances on
ume, allow Interest on deposits, deal in commercia
paper, famish to travellers and others Letters of Cre
lit current In the principal cities in
Europe.

of

32 WALL STREET.

No. 10 Wall Street.

Mi

AND

NOW FOR SALE BY THE

These

ENRY

11

Leonard, Sheldon&Foster

ae».

.

15th

STREET, NEW YORK.

W. 0. 8HJELDON.

JOSEPH

Collection*.

Banking House

SCRIBE, PARIS,

Parisf *

-

road, and bear Eight per cent interest in

BANKERS,

tone Areolar Letters of Credit for Travellers in
irtsof Europe, etc., etc. Exchange on

to

No charge for
collecting city paper.
Refers to Henry Clews &
Co., 32 Wall street, N.Y.

John Munroe & Co.,

rATE

ST.

SELMA, ALABAMA,

Special attention

8c

OFlTHK

FKANKFORT-ON-T RE¬

BANKER,

8tockB, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold on

Munroe

*

TH0*K.FERGUSS0N,

Commission.

:Co

Klt.seti

$1,500,0003

RAILROAD

BBOAD STREET, NEW YORK.

5

BERLIN,

MAIN, VIENNA, etc.
STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD
on COMMISSION.
COLLECTIONS made in all parts of
Europe.

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

cf
Co.

Co.,

in Governments

ifled to

^ei’t

8c

and Specie. Stocks and
BANKERS.
Bondi bought and sold on Commission, Government
NASSAU
STREET, NEW YORK.
Coupons bought at Market Rates. Collections made
[jailparts of the l nited States and Canadas.
Sight and Time Bills on LONDON.
LIVERPOOL,
EDINBURGH and DUBLIN, PARIS,
Amounts solicited and interest allowed on Deposits
BREMEN,
Dealers

i\L

gj

Bank

8 Per Cent
per

OF SELMA.

Traveler* in Europe,
U^anyg on Paris and the Union Bank of London, In
sums to suit*
Subscript1011 agents for the Chbonicle in £arls.

indt

Financial.

STATE OF ALABAMA.

Bowles Brothers & Co.,
eel.

13L*.

may

be

pany

have

a

to this the Com¬

Grant from the United

the same con¬ States of
Superior Lands valued at $8,ditions ns Currency Accounts.
Railroad, State, City and other 000,000. The Company is entirely free
Corporate Loans negotiated.
from debt. We
unhesitatingly recom¬
Collections made everywhere in
mend them, and will furnish
Pamphlets,
the United States, Canada and
Maps and all information.
Europe.
us upon

Dividends and
T OST-OR
-Li $1,000

Coupons collected.

STOLEN-TWO

BONDS,
Brooklyn (Jity Six Per Cent, Atlantic
ave, Improvement Bonds,
os. 132 and 133, Principal
payable December 3,1872.
eacn,

All persons are cautioned against

purchasing

Jotiating 1870. same—13 Willoughby
uly 20tn, the

or ne

st., Brooklyn

J. T. BRUSH,
JOHN C. SMITH,

H. N.

BRUSH,
Executors, &c.» of Conklin Brush, deceased.

PRICE 97>* AND ACCRUED INTEREST IN CUR¬
RENCY.

4

W. P. CONVERSE &
No. 54 Pine

TANNER Sc

CO.,

Street, New York.

CO.,

No. 49 Wall Street, New York.

THE CHRONICLE.

132

Financial.

Financial.

Financial,

$1,000,000

7

FIRST

Central Railroad of Iowa

MORTGAGE

Fund

Sinking
,

.

Air-Line Bonds

Land Grant

Bonds

OF THE
Hard been successfully

negotiated leaving but

WEST WISCONSIN RAILROAD CO.

UNSOLD, WHICH WE OFFER AT THE ORIGIN¬
AL PRICE, FAR AND INTEREST.

Bankers

Financial

Sc

Agent* of the

Company,

attracted to these bonds the attention of capitalists

NO. 29 WALL STREET.

Who prize an investment which insures the ABSO¬

THE

PRINCIPAL, and

a

INDIANAPOLIS, BLOOMINGTON,

liberal rate of interest.

AND

The exemption features of the security make the

investment unusually desirable to purchasers resid¬

Western Railway

ing in CONNECTICUT, where they are
Free from every
THE BONDS
on

are

7 Per Cent Gold Loan.

Description of Tax.

secured

by

ALL THE PROPERTY

FIRST MORTGAGE

a

of

railroad

a

fifty-two

miles in

length, running through the center of the

State ol

Connecticut, forming, with its connections,

THE

SHORTEST AND

QUICKEST ROUTE BE¬

TWEEN BOSTON AND NEW-YORK.
oi

PROPERTY

the

covered

The VALUE

by the mortgage is

MORE THAN DOUBLE THE AMOCNT OF BONDS

ISSUED.
The road is
RUNNING

COMPLETED

BETWEEN

AND

TRAINS

ARK

NEW-HAVEN AND

MID¬

direct line from Cincinnati and Indianapo¬
Pekin, Peoria, and Omaha, belug SIXTY MILES

SHORTER THAN ANY OTHER ROUTE.
Over 180 miles of the line ore now in full
operation,
and earning more than the interest on the whole issue
of bonds. The iron and all the materials for the bal¬
ance are on

hand and

being rapidly laid, which

the line VIRlUALLY COMPLETED.

depots

on the

contain in the

be the finest and most substantial structure of the

country, is well under way: a large por¬

tion of the iron work is already prepared, aud will be

placed in position as

soon as the

piers

finished.

are

The business future of the road is unusually promis¬

ing.

The road not only brings the greater part of
New-England nearer New York, but it opens a section

through the populous and thriving State of Connecti¬
cut

which heretofore has been entirely dest tute of

railroad facilities, and, unlike most

new

roads, has

PER

7

CENT

passes

and

35

JAY COOKE Sc
No. 20 Wall

Des

It connects and

through some dozen different towns, whose

aggregate

population

EQUALS

ONE-THU D

OF

THE TOTAL POPULATION OF THE STATE.

THE

.

CHARACTER OF

THE

WORK

ON

THE

ROAD IS SUPERIOR TO THAT ON ANY LINE IN

EXISTENCE IN THIS COUNTRY, while the expense
of construction has been NO

GREATER than

on

IN

FERIOR ROADS.

Corporations, institutions

AND

Moines

The undersigned offer for sale a limited amount of
the Eight Per « ent Land Grant Mortgage Bonds of
tne above-named road.
The lands of the Company
have recently been putin market, aDd at prices that
will nearly, if not quite, pay off these bondj. which
are receivable at par in payment of the lands sold.
Sales of land for the month ot June were about

$40,000.

For lurther particulars apply to

CLARK, DODGE [Sc CO.,
No. 51 WALL

Mortgage Bonds of this
SAFE, PRODUCTIVE

Road

a

AND

The bonds

convertible into stock at par, which

are

greatly to their value.
We have carefully examined the country, its resour¬
ces, and the who e enterprise all through its con se
of construction, and BELIEVE THE BONDS TO
BE
AS SAFE AS GOVERNMENTS.
we

recommend them to

It is

w th

pleasure

customers as a first-class
investment.
Over four-fifths of the loan has been
sold. We offer the balance at 92>£ and interest.
All marketable securities received in
our

Morton, Galt & Co.,
BANKERS,
150 West Main

Street, Louisville, Ky., dealers In
Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Government Bonds
and all Local Securities. Give prompt attention to

collections and orders for investment of funds.

W. M. F. Hewson,

exchange at

market rates.

For full particulars apply to

Turner
14

NASSAU

Brothers,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Indiana State Stocks.

STOCK

STATE OF CONNECTICUT

FOR THE

form of

TRUSTEE

S. G. & G. C.

of convenient

are

denominations,

$500 and

CENT., payable semi-annually, in May and Novem¬
ber, in New York.
banker,

completion of the Wabash and Erie Canal to Evans¬
ville,” approved January 19,1846, and an Act supple¬
mentary thereto, approved January 27, 1847, that said
siocks would be paid in lull, on
presentation at the
agency, in the Citv of New York, on the first day of
J uly, 187U ; such holders are
therefore, In reby notified
that the interest on said stocks will cease on the
first
day of September, 1870, and that the said Stocks
should be presented for payment on or before that
d«te, at ■ he office of the Agent of State, 27 Pme Street,
New York Cit-.
By order ot the Board of State Debt

J.C.

New

Sinking Fund

BURNETT,

Secretary.

York, July 1,1870.

Ninth

or

They

can be obtained of any




THE

-

-

$1,500,000

by sending direct to

Hatch &
BANKERS

CAPITAL

AND

Foote,

DEALERS IN
SECURITIES.

GOVERNMENT

Nos. 40’J' and 409

Broadway.

Invites the accounts of Merchants and Bankers.
Particular attention paid to collections.
THOMAS A.

No. 12 Wall Street.

JOHN T. HILL, Cashier.

Dividends.
OF
THE
ILLINOIS
CENTRAL RAiLROaD cOMFANY-SKW
York, July 7,18^0^A Dividend of FIVE Pi E CENT
in cash,free of government tax. has been declaredDy
the Boara of Directors of this Company, payable on
the 1st day of August next, to the lioideis of lulH>aia
shares registered at the close of the Fifteenth day 01

OFFICE

c

Bank

CITY: OF NEW YORK.

bank

COMPANY.

6*2 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
y8 STATE STREET, BOSTON.

July ir.stant, after which date, and until the Filth day
of August next, the transfer books will he closed.
THOMAS E. v.ALKER,

National
OF

'

Ward,

FOB

RARING BROTHERS &

STOCKS, Issued unoer an act of the General Assem¬
bly of said State, entitled “ An act To provide for the
Funded Debt of the State of Indiana, and f<*r the

each bond is signed
by the Comptroller of the State. The

$1,000, and can, at the option of the holder, be regis¬
tered. They bear interest at the rate of SEVEN
PER

or

Notice having heretofore been given
t» holders of Indiana FIVE PER CENT
STATE

BONDHOLDERS, and

and issued
bonds

IS

BROKER,

Office No. 21 West Third Street, Cincinnati, Ohio
Refer to: All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs.LOCK
WOOD & Co., New York.

AGENTS

CONVE¬

NIENT.
THE

STREET.

WEST

Commissioners.

investment

Valley

CONNECTIONS
THAN ANY ROAD IN THE WEST.

and capitalitts will find

in the First

CO.,

street, New York,

RAILROAD COMPANY.

Pacific, HAVING MORE

The line has thirteen different

New-Haven.

INTEREST,

free of Government tax, and are issued for the
vetv
small amount of $16,000per mile. For the present
the
unsold portion is offered at 95 and accrued intereit
The attention of investors is invited to the fact
that
the road is now nearly finished, and that the
Securitv
is therefore entitled to a high rank.
We believe
there will be no more lavorable time to sell Govern¬
ments and buy really first-class Railroad Securitiessuch as these—than the present. After a full
examin¬
ation we have accepted an agency for the sale of
the
above First Moitgage Bonds, and desire to recom¬
mend them to our customers as a thoroughly safe u
well as profitable investment.

railroad connections, besides water communication
.at Middletown

GOLD

a

well-established and profitable local business await¬

ing its completion.

are

adds

The bridge over the Connecticut River, designed to

kind in this

makes

in 20 miles of the track there is a population of over
600,000. It runs through the best agricultural, manu¬
facturing, and coal mining districts in Indiana and
Illinois, and forms part of a grand central trunk line

NUMEROUS EAST

eight miles to grade to COM¬

There

line, located in cities aud towns that
aggregate 190,000 inhabitants, and with¬

portion is graded for over twenty miles, which leaves
some seven or

BONDS

The only
lis to

from the Atlantic to the

PLETE THE WHOLE LINE.

wcn

The

of the Company pay

The bonds are secured by a First Mortgage on 205
miles of road from Indianapolis, the largest city and
T~08t important railroad center in the State of
Indiana,
to the city of Pekin, in Illinois.

DLETOWN, while east of Middletown, the unfinished

only

center at St. Paul.

FIRST MORTGAGE

White, Morris & Co.,

The solid, substantial character of the security has

OF

9Q £. MILES IN LENGTH, IS NOW HEARTY
j&QtJ
completed. This company are nowmih
ing their work forward with great rapidity, and
entire line necessary to connect St. Louts
and fit
Paul is graded and under contract to be
finished th i
season.
The road runs through the richest
andnm.i
thukly settled portion of Iowa, and is built inX
interests of t he great Northern system of roads whtoh

FOR SALE AT NINETY BY

$500,000

LUTE SECURITY

THE

Per Cent Gold Interest

OF THE

Connecticut

fJuly 80,1870.

VYSE, Jr., President.

Treasurer.

THE COUPONS ON THE BONDS
of Buchanan County, Missouri, due July L
1870, will be paid on and al ter that date at the Bans01
America, New York, free of Government tax.

f ANNER

& CO., Bankers,
49 Wall St., Fiscal Agent!-

A

Profitable

and

Safe

Investment.
SEVEN PER CENT !TOWN BONDS OF UNION
AND
SOMERSET COUNTIES, NEW JERBJtL
Interest payable semi-annually in New York, tuu
nominations of $100, $500 and $1,000.

PARKER &

For sale at 8s W

LAWRENCE,

BANKERS, NO. 1 WALL STREET, NEW

YORK,

'lit

•

*ys

■

*

MB

ommerr|a{ ■ & irfinanqa
§itnltfl$’ tadte, tfommevrixl
V

ftaitwMj ^Unitor, and IhtinmuKe ffoumt.

WEEKLY NEWS PA PE H.

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OE THE UNITED STATES.

NO. 266.

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1870.

VOL. 11.

National

CONTENTS.

Currency law

bank notes

THE CHRONICLE.

was never

was

first passed.

to be allowed to

The volume of the

Congress has authorized $79,000,000 more, making in
$379,000,000. If gold had not risen on the war rumors
139
Changes in Redeeming Agents
of National Banks
' 137 j
there certainly would have been a rise in consequence of an
THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR.
inflation like this.
It is true the new currency has not yet
Money Market, Railway Stocks, :
Quotations of Stocks and Bonds
144
U. 8. Securities, Gold Market,
145 been
Railway News...
actually put in circulation. But such movements are
Foreign Exchange, New York
Railway, Canal, etc.. Stock List.
146
National and State S curities...
147
City Banks, Philadelphia Banks
always w discounted,’’ as the phrase goes, and their direction
National Banks, etc
7—
141 Railroad, Canal and Miscellane¬
Southern Securities
143
ous Bond List
148-49 and force are estimated beforehand by ten thousand busy
THE COMMERCIAL TIMES.
Commercial Epitome
150 J Groceries
154 brains, all eager to make gain by seeing the early approach
Cotton
151 [Dry Goods
155 of the coming change and taking the first advantage of it.
Tobacco
153 I Prices Current.
159
Breadetuffs
153
Secondly, this inflation of the currency will be attended by
abuses, and can scarcely be kept wholly free from corrup¬
tion. The privilege of issuing currency is one of great value,
I hb Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur
and many institutions in the South and West have paid a
Mr. Boutwell’s Policy
The Campaign in Europe

134

life Assurance

135

133 I Latest Monetary & Commercial

138

English News

I Commercial and Miscellaneous
|
News
.

m

exceed $300,000,000.

Now

all

-

..

®l)c Chronic!*.

I

day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine liberal commission for the
privilege.
with the latest news up to midnight, of Friday ,

Now, it is given them
nothing. But there is room for favoritism, and too wide a
range is allowed for the discretion of the executive officials of
for

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
and Financial Chboniole, delivered by carrier
tooitysubscribera,ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)

forTms Commercial

ForOneYear

*10 00

For Six Months

6 00

7he Chronicle will be sent

to

subscribers until ordered discontinued

by letter.

Pottage is20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office.
VILLIAM b. DANA,
f
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publisher*,
JOHN 6. FLOYD, JR. f
i.
79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK.
Post Office Box 4,592.

1^** Remittances should

Office Money Orders.

invariably be made by drafts

MR. BOUTWELL’S POLICY.

:

or

the Bureau.

Now it is well remembered that the bad dis¬

tribution of the first 300 millions of bank notes was due to

discretion to be exercised by Mr.
McCulloch, who was the Comptroller of the Currency. The
present Comptroller, with the best intentions and the most
Post resolute
uprightness of principle, will have no small difficulty
to shield himself from the suspicion of inequitable and inter¬
ested allotment. This is a necessary consequence of leaving
the

permission of this

very

excitement Wall street is too much discretion where a clear settled rule could easily
disturbed by an eager expectancy relative to what is to be have been laid down. As Congress has failed to establish
done by Mr. Boutwell and his subordinates under the finan¬ such a rule it only remains for the administrative officers to
cial legislation
passed in the last session of Congress. Much, announce one, and to adhere to it permanently, fairly and
indeed, of the present speculation in bonds and gold turns without exception.
on the effect which his immediate movements
But this currency law is not all inflation.
There are some
may be expect¬

During the intervals of the

ed to have

the volume of the currency,

pose we have in view, the chief
It is probable that but for

share of attention.
the passage of this Currency
bill we should not now have
For
gold ranging above 120.
if in the first
spasmodic movements caused here by the war
trouble the premium had risen it would probably have re¬
ceded again. But
gold is a very sensitive barometer of the
currency, and the late rise in the premium is in part due for
1 ® extent and
persistency to the changes in our paper cur¬
rency which Congress in this law has just authorized. These
changes are almost all in the direction of inflation. For in
the first
place it breaks through the restriction which was
placed upon the yolume of the bank circulation when the




Ml

war

the supply of gold
on the
market, and on the relative values of negotiable se¬
curities and other commodities. The legislation in question
is twofold:
first, the Currency bill, which was approved 8th
•My, and, secondly, the Funding bill, which became a law
one week later.
Of these two important laws the first has
the more immediate
importance, and will receive, for the pur¬
on

11

perturbation, and what is worse is, that they
It may safely be said, that nei¬
ther in this country nor in any other, was any inflation law
ever passed offering so much encouragement to those finan¬
cial speculators who live upon uncertainty and make gain by
whatever disturbs values, either to put them up or to put
them down, or to do both in turn. As we showed recently,
the seventy-nine millions of new currency is part of it
to be issued in place of government certificates of indebt¬
edness. These are largely held by the banks as reserve,
and their place will have to be supplied in part by
greenbacks. We say “ in part,” because the banks may choose
not to carry quite so heavy a reserve hereafter." They now
carry more than the law requires, being tempted to do so be¬
cause that part of their reserve which is held in certificates
bears interest, and is not unproductive as greenbacks of course
other elements of

tainted with incertitude.

are

are.

When the certificates

are

called in and the banks are

keep their reserve in greenbacks and gold, they may
temnted to run closer to the wind and to hold as small an

driven to

be

4.

m

134

THE CHRONICLE.

amount of reserve as the law

allows.

However this may be,
to be retired if Mr. Bout,

forty-five millions of certificates are
well can find means to pay them off, and whether he can or
not, forty-five millions of bank notes are certain to be issued
in their place.
Besides these, there are nine million*

northern ports

of France, and

[July 80,1870.

descent upon the
German
coast, either in Schleswig or near the mouth of the
Elbe is
expected at once. The cities of Bremen and
doubtless be

a

Hamburg will

defended, but no one would be surprised to hear
of the speedy fall of either of them before the
invaders. On
more
of bank notes
which
will
be issued without the other hand, Denmark, which was
expected to declare for
returning anything. When this is done and fifty-four millions France, has, under British influence, proclaimed her
neutrality
of notes are all out,
twenty-five millions more are to be issued and cannot be expected to aid in an attack on the Prussian
and an equal amount of circulation is to be called in from banks
ports.
situated in States having an excess of their fair allotment
The principal excitements of the week
growing out of the
under the old law. The twenty-five millions of new notes
war,, have been of a political rather than a military
character.
are

to be issued at

once.

But the

old circulation is to be

The London Times

published on Monday the draft of a pro
year, so that during the year there posed treaty between France and Prussia, without
date, or
will be an inflation and afterwards a contraction. Hence it is'
circumstances, except that it was said to have been proposed
easy to see that except these two movements of alternate by the French
Government; and, from internal evidence,
inflation and contraction are
very judiciously regulated so as would seem to have been devised after the
victory of Sadowa,
to strike the proper periods of the
year when they can best in 1866. The substance of it was a bargain between the
two
be endured, there may be no small amount of mischief
done. powers that Prussia should be permitted to take possession of
In any case there are here abundant elements of
speculative the whole of Germany, except the Austrian provinces, while
uncertainty, and no financial bill has been passed for a long France should have her support in annexing
Belgium and
time which is justly open to so
many and such valid ob¬ Luxembourg, and the two nations should enter into an offen¬
jections. Had it embodied more stringent regulations for sive and defensive alliance to carry out these
objects. The
enforcing the redemption of bank notes or for protecting the alarm and anxiety which this publication excited
throughout
solvency and stability of the banks the bill would have called Europe have not been equalled by any other event of the
forth less hostility and less
apprehension, but as it stands, it crisis. The English press and people leaped at once to the
is regarded by conservative financiers as one of
the most conclusion that this
proposition was an expression of the real
dangerous assaults which has ever been made against the and permanent designs of the French
Emperor, and fierce de¬
perpetuity, the strength and the beneficent operation of an nunciations were poured out upon him as the ambitious
honorable banking system.
schemer for a European empire and as the enemy
of Christen¬
dom. The British Government,
challenged in Parliament to
THE CAMPAIGN IN EUROPE.
explain the matter, had nothing to offer; and the accounts
For another week the civilized world has been filled with
given of it by the French press are contradictory and unrumors of war, and
preparations for actual conflict between satisfactory. The French ministry, however, declared that
the two belligerent nations have been
pressed with the ut¬ the treaty in question was originally suggested by Bismarck,
most zeal, but no
engagement has occurred, no military and was never seriously entertained by the Emperor; while
event which has any definite
bearing on the result, and in Count Bismarck himself is reported as asserting that it was
these days in which
diplomacy is carried on by electric the proposition of Count Benedetti, the French minister, in
wires, and trade by steam, the world actually seems impatient the name of his government, and that he has the original
that great battles are not fought as fast as
railway journeys manuscript of it in Benedetti’s handwriting.
are made, and
It seemed for a day that the
campaigns decided with the exchange of tele¬
popular feeling against Na¬
graphic dispatches.
poleon, already strong in Great Britain, would be so much
The military situation i3 obscure to all but the minds that excited
by this affair that the government would be com¬
control it. France and Prussia have continued to mass their
pelled to take part in the war; but the excitement rapidly
troops upon the narrow frontier common to both nations; passed away, and the press
began to discuss the matter more
the heads of their governments have taken the he? 1 of
their coolly. It appears that Count Bismarck caused the publica¬
armies; and it is rumored that the French, who appear to tion of the treaty, for the
purpose of deciding Great Britain
have been more nearly ready than their
opponents for active in Prussia’s favor; but if so, it was too late. The sober
hostilities, are about to advance. They have certainly suc¬ sense of the English
people had already seen the benefits to
ceeded in bringing together, in an
be gained by neutrality, and could not be blinded to them
unprecedentedly short
by
time, one of the finest armies the world has ever seen, pre¬ a sudden
impulse. The secret treaty will doubtless be made
pared for movement and aggression, not for defense ; and it the subject of inquiries and explanations between the Court
is not probable that another week will
pass without an of St. James and the two powers concerned in it; but there
attempt to use it effectually. The preparations of Prussia is no reason at all to suppose that the French Government
are less known, but
it seems to be admitted that her army in will avow the
purpose of carrying out any such scheme as
the Rhine district is smaller than the
French, and that it the destruction of Belgian independence, and unless it does
must for the
present act on the defensive, relying for protec¬ so there is no immediate reason to
apprehend interference
tion on the strong fortifications
among which it is encamped. with the struggle on the part of Great Britain.
It is even believed
by many that the Germans will abandon
While Bismarck has made this clever but imperfect
diver¬
the left bank of the Rhine
upon the first French advance sion on one side, France seems to have been busy on the
without a battle, and make that river their
line of defense; other. Austria, indeed, is now
fully committed to neutrality?
but it is difficult to see how
they can do'this without in spite of all the persuasions and temptations the French can
dispiriting their troops and the nation behind them, almost offer, and Russia is
equally unlikely to undertake any deci¬
as
much as by the loss of a
battle; thus losing, not sive action, unless she can obtain a larger price for her as¬
only the material resources of the rich Rhine provinces and sistance than either of the combatants would have to
pay 5
the Palatinate, but the
patriotic support of their people
but, if yesterday’s cable reports are true, Napoleon has stolen
On the sea the
inferiority of the Germans isjjless doubtful; a sagacious and formidable march upon his opponents by se¬
and the French
evidently mean to make thej most of their curing the alliance of Italy. It lias long been evident that
naval strength. An
expedition [has already sailed from the the people of Rome desire union with the kingdom of which
withdrawn within




one

THE

P SO, 1870]

CHRONICLE.

entitles them to be the capital city; and that
the occupation of Rome by French troops, in behalf of the
pope, is the only difficulty in the way of a peaceful revolutiou, terminating the temporal power of the Pope, and maktheir

history

135

United States exceeds by one third the total amount of capital
invested in railways; and the income of the Life Assurance
companies of this State in I860 was about as great as the

aggregate income of all its railways.
ing Victor Emanuel the king of a united Italy. Napoleon
Such an interest demands the closest scrutiny on the part
has strengthed his throne, securing the support of the church of the public. This is particularly necessary in a business
in France, by propping up that of Pius IX.
But the church which depends on difficult scientific principles, and which,
however perfect its theory may be, involves many practical
}n France has always inclined to more liberal views and
considerations not at all obvious to
casual- observer.
The
practices than those in favor at the Vatican for the last
twenty years, and has regarded with favor the mod¬ general theory of Life Assurance indeed is as well established
the general theory of astronomy.
Of a large given numem civilization, against which the Pope has declared war
The culmination of ultramontanism, in the formal proclama- I her of healthy persons at a fixed age, it may be predicted
a

a?

brought to Napoleon an oppor- with great certainty what proportion will die in each year
tunity of withdrawing from Rome without forfeiting the sup. until all shall have passed away, and the greater the number
port at home of the Catholic priesthood ; and there seems to the more closely will the result accord with the prediction,
belittle doubt that Italy would accept this withdrawal, and [ Of a given sum of money, invested at a fixed rate of interest
permission to occupy Rome, as an equivalent tor the best it may be predicted with equal certainty what it will amount

tion of infallibility,

service she

has

now

could render.

According to the

news reports,

policy has been definitely adopted at Paris; and the
French journals claim that it will secure to Napoleon the
active- support of Italy in the war. This is doubtful, but
it will at least secure the moral support of the Italian
government; and will be, among the people of late so parto Prussia, a good set off against the services rendered by
that power in obtaining Venetia from Austria in 1866.
No new light has been thrown upon the various alliances
which were supposed to exist between the belligerents and
other powers; and every day makes it more likely that
Prussia and France will fight out their quarrel alone, at least
for the present. With regard to the future, there never was
a time when the prospects were more uncertain, even in
the
leading features of political and financial affairs. The Lon¬
don journals still insist that even now the last chance of
peace has not disappeared, but that in the midst of opening
warfare, negotiations are pending, not quite hopelessly,
Napoleon, in his proclamation to his soldiers yesterday, confidently predicts a long and hard fought war; but his cam¬
paign of 1859 and the German war of 1866 were both con¬
fidently expected to last many times as long as they did, and
this

,

to, with its accumulations, at any future time. From these
data, with a little mathematical skill, it is easy to compute

how much each person must pay in cash at fixed times in
order that an association of them may guaranty to each mem*
ber to pay any sum desired at his death. By estimating
interest at a rate somewhat lower than is likely to be obtained,
and

allowance, or “ loading,” for expenses of
management or for accidents, perfect security may be obtained;
and an expert actuary, who knows what policies are outstanding in any such company, and what funds it has in hand, can
always test its security. Any intelligent man may easily
satisfy himself on these points by a little attention to the
statistics of the subject, presented in abundance in all the
adding

numerous

It is
to

an

books which treat of it.

common

for those who

are

concerned in the business

present this unquestionable theory, and then to dwell on
Life Insurance, and to assume that

tbe beneficial nature of

of every man in active life, with
his earnings, to take out a life policy

they have proved the duty
a

family dependent on

fer their benefit.
when carried

on

And certainly the benefits of the business,
in strict accordance with its demonstrated

principles, cannot easily be exaggerated. Too many instances
of his first complete vie- occur constantly in which the income of a family is cut off
tory to grant acceptable terms of peace. Nor is there any by tbe death of its head, and all its members are suddenly
means of
predicting safely that other powers will or will not left in penury, not to produce a deep impression in every
be ultimately involved.
Hence financial and commercial prudent mind. This great interest ought to command the
piospects are as much confused as those of the political and confidence of the entire public so completely that every such
military worlds; business halts throughout Christendom, and man should at once recognize the duty in question, and that
speculation turns upon chance rather than foresight. It is an uninsured life, among those whose earnings are the suppleasant to see meanwhile that our national securities, which port of others, should be as rare as a homestead uninsured
in the first
panic suffered more than any others, are now the I against fire, which is the sole property of its possessor. But
most
strongly held of all, a fact which encourages the hope that this may be the case requires much more than sound
that, in any event of the war, the credit and character of the I general theory, sustained by appeals to the feelings or the
United States will ultimately be well maintained.
| fears, on tbe ground of the uncertainty of life.
Indeed, it may fairly be said that the business of Life InLIFE ASSURANCE.
I surance in this country has reached a crisis at this time.
It is only within the past century that the principles of Life I There is more opposition to it, or at least much more and
Assurance have passed out of the domain of mathematical | severer criticism of its conduct, than ever before. Thiscritispeculation and controversy, and become accepted as estab- I cism grows rapidly in importance, threatens to be a serious
lished results of practical science. Men now living recollect I check upon the growth of the business, and is already felt in
when the subject first began to attract attention among pru- I it, so that there are few companies for instance whose new
dent business men as susceptible of
general application, and I business is as large in 1870 as it was in 1869. That much
as
likely to exercise an important influence on the well being I of what is said in the public press, and still more of what is said
of society. The oldest
company issuing life policies in the I in the streets and markets, against the companies, is unintelUnited States was organized in 1835, nearly the time when I ligent and carping, is true ; but that there is a certain uneasithe first railroad line was
surveyed. The growth of Life As I ness and anxiety upon this subject in the public mind, extendsurance, however, was far slower than that of railways, until I ing even to those who are well informed and well disposed,
during the last ten years ; since 1860, while both have been I cannot be denied; and tbe true friends of the system ought
stimulated enormously, the importance of the former interest I to meet it with entire candor. Such an immense trust as
has increased much faster than that of the latter, so that now I that held by these companies requires the most complete pubIhe amount of the insurances outstanding upon lives in theMicity in its conduct, and must tbe ready to give unanswerable
in tbe former he himself made 'use




136

THE CHRONICLE.

proofs at all times of its just claim

to the confidence it de¬

mands.

enable the State officer
a

Looking then to the practical features of Life Insurance

[July 30,1870.

watchful

supervision

appointed for the purpose,
them.

over

It is

not

to exerci^

reasonable to

put too much confidence in any guardianship of private
into '
a business, all considerations founded on
its beneficial charac¬ ests by
public officers alone; but when, as has
always been
ter must be laid aside.
Men do not enter upon the trade of the case
here, the officers in question are men of
ability ^
writing risks upon lives out of benevolent motives. Consider¬ of excellent business character, when
they are sustained
ed as an institution for the
by an
protection of men against a grave intelligent public opinion, and when the affairs
of
every
danger, it has every claim to the forbearance of society as a company are conducted with almost absolute
publicity,
■whole, and to whatever encouragement the law can give it- the jealous
scrutiny of all its rivals, this supervision
It is regarded
by the common consent of Christendom as en¬ very important guaranty of reasonable prudence of may be a
manage¬
titled to peculiar favor, such as
exemption from the burdens ment. That it has been so in New
as

York, Massachusetts and
laws, is proved by the
fact that in an active insurance
business, extending
through a
promises of a particular corporation, whole generation of men, no life policy issued
under these
it challenges discussion on strict business
principles, precisely laws has ever yet failed to be paid when it became a
claim
as
any other financial trust.
Men enter into it as a profes¬
through any default or bankruptcy on the part of the com¬
sion, lor the purpose of making a living for themselves, and
panies or their officers.' These laws at least make it in the
of
accumulating fortunes; and their conduct in doing so is to highest degree improbable that
any important fraud could be
be approved or
condemned, according to the measure in carried on, in the name of Life Insurance, for
any long period
which they earn the rewards
they receive by faithful services of time. Such a crime would require a combination
rendered by them to their clients. A business that
among
puts on a number of men, usually of prominence and
the garb of
responsibility in
charity is justly suspected of having something the community, involving, not
only dishonesty, but peijury
to conceal; of
being unable to stand the tests of honest and forgery also; and would
inevitably expose itself to
trade. Those who
really contribute to building up a perma¬ official scrutiny, and break down
financially, in a ve»y short
nent and
truly beneficial system of Life Insurance are those time.
who give their lives to it with the
determination to win by
2. Much and
increasing complaint is made of the agency
their services a fair
equivalent for their labor, and to return to system, by which a
large proportion of all the sums invested
the insured, not
charity nor the rewards of successful specu¬ in Life Assurance is
paid to the middle men who negotiate
lation, but precisely the insurance they pay for.
the contract.
It is common to pay the agent or solicitor who
of taxation

and

the

fullest protection of courts of
equity.
But in its relations to the individual
citizen, who is asked to
invest his money in the

several other States which have similar

.

Now there

are

defects in the system of Life Assurance

practised in this country, which

intelligent

are

familiarly known

as

to all

they largely destroy confidence in them.
what they are:

Let

us

briefly state

1. It is said that the nature of the
business affords

peculiar
temptations to fraud and facilities for it. The accounts of
the companies are
complicated, and so open to all the
ingenious devices by which unscrupulous
bookkeepers know
how to
figure out showy and fictitious statements of their
condition.

It has

client for his company

from one-tenth to one-fourth
premium payments for his personal services, and to
give him besides a considerable percentage of all later pay¬
ments as they fall due.
In some instances far larger commis¬
sions even than these are paid, but the rates named are those
of old, standard companies. There are associations in
good
standing which report that they have paid one-fourth of their
entire premium receipts for a
year in agents’ commissions.
Not to insist on the fact that
extravagance in this direction
indicates extravagance everywhere, and that when the
agents
take so much their superior officers
are not likely to be con¬
tented without
proportionately excessive gains, these reports
directly suggest several awkward questions. What sort of
investment is it that costs twenty-five
percent of itself merely
to buy ?
If we compare the investments made in these com¬
panies with railway stocks or bonds or mortgages npon lands
which are negotiated a cost of from
one-eighth to one-half of
a

of the first

in the business, and are more deplored
by
they can be by those less directly interested. But
these defects are
rarely stated at all by such men ; and when
they reach the public, it is commonly in a distorted and
exag¬
gerated form, from some ignorant or hostile source. It is
better that they should be
fairly acknowledged and independ¬
ently estimated, than that they should be suppressed until
they work great evils in the companies themselves, or, what
is
still worse,
permitted to be whispered and magnified, until
men

them than

obtains

one

per cent,

which of them in the aggregate must prove most

recently been proved in London that a profitable to the
purchasers? If one-fourth of a policy*
Life Assurance
Society made official statements of assets suf¬ holder’s
money is lost on its way to the company, how can
ficient perfectly to
protect all its policies, at a time when it his
policy possibly be worth more than the other threewas
actually unable to pay one in a thousand of them, and
fourths, unless the company sells it at less than its value, in
had long,
perhaps always, been bankrupt. The great length which case it is
likely one day to be worth nothiug?
of time which
elapses before contracts of this kind mature
These questions put the
agency system in its least favorabl6
adds to the
danger. With large amounts of money in hand light.
But the universal testimony of experienced officers is
which will
only be called for after many years, the temptation that
agents are indispensible in this business. They work
to
extravagance and rashness is too strong for many men ,and
faithfully, and ought to be liberally paid. That they are paid
when once a false
step has been made, means of disguising it
enormously in excess of what their services ought to com¬
are found from
year to

until the whole false fabric
last; leaving those who have depended upon it
helpless and destitute.
year,

crumbles at

That-there is

disputed by

some

foundation for these fears will

not

be

who is familiar with the history of the
important Life Companies which failed in Great Britain
in 1869. But, on the other
hand, there are peculiar securi¬
ties afforded to the
policy holder by our American system,
especially as it is conducted in New York. The laws of this
State are very
stringent in compelling the companies to keep
their reserve funds up to the
point ot perfect safety; and they
any one

two




mand results from

is tfte fierce

a

combination of evils, chief among

which

competition between companies for business and
for the work of successful agents.
The corporations them¬
selves have been
unreasonably multiplied, and they send out
representatives of a score of them into a small community
in which one or two could
easily do all tbe necessary work.
In
consequence, it is a long and tedious labor for each of them
to win a client, and he must be
paid in proportion. Fifty
of the hundred and
twenty companies now issuing policies in
the United States
might be consolidated into one, with a
single set of officers and agents, and that one would still be

.

THE CH KONICLE.

^oTtfff^ny.' Bur the saving

the United States to

that

are

the,

following facts
-

*

^ wade,-and the success they

free and close

a

criticism, we are satisfied
may be confidently trusted." The
enormous
growth of the interest of late years has been mainly
sound and solid. -The >few large
corporations, which do by
far the greater part of all the
insurance, are perfectly safe
to fulfil all their
contracts, and some of them justly rank

insert11 ^ com mi ssions wouldbe enormous. Ctttwtol of the best ihstitutions are xnot waiting,for this..
^withdrawing from- the competition which has
ved their funds and are limiting> their agents to very
oderate com mission s, trusting to Ihe 'improvement rn their
j^Uiofi,:’anJ, consequently, in public confidence to remune
rtfe^em hy large patronage. * To the present expenses of a
companies on this score no reasonable objection.
•

137

among the strongest aud best managed financial institutions
in the world.
Most of the cavils met with in conversation
and in the press against the conduct of the
as

business

winning by the reform

e r

of

i

1^

i nnce or

malice, and

'

a

are not en¬

itaffbtless compel-all the rest to follow their example, titled to attention. But there are defects in management in
^eaffwhile, the public ought' to understand that companies some quarters which need watching; and while all comwhich persist in paying exorbitant commissions do so at the panies which are legally authorized to issue policies in New
O

of

their pobcy-holders, and, by examining the official

York

itsj.which every year show just how much is expended in-

or

Massachusetts may

be presumed to be good for the
in their policies, it by no means
advantages of policy holders in all

risks

they directly assume
avoiding the- associations which confess to follows from this that the
extrav^aoce of this kind, they will contribute immensely to of them are equal. Most of the Life Assurances made are on
hasten the reform so well begun. In this, as in all the other the mutual principle, in which the common surplus
paid in
relations of every great public trust, the true remedy for by all, in excess of the actual losses and expenses, is ultimately
divided among the members. There is no
abuses' is general intelligence and independent criticism.
objection to this
& It is often, asserted that agents have a direct pecuniary provided that no false representations or
misunderstandings
interest in obtaining clients and issuing policies, regardless of are permitted, by which men are led to expect some charity
the sonndness of the lives insured ; that they aim to earn or miraculous benefits from their payments, over and above
their commissions, above all things, and that they often force the insurance they pay for. The man who is about to select
upon the acceptance of the Companies, sometimes even with a company in which to insure ought not to be influenced too
an(*

of medical examiners, lives which

the connivance

are

not

good, so that heavy losses are incurred for which the theory
no provision.
If some of the newspaper critics may
be believed, this cause alone is enough to make the security
of many Companies doubtful, in spite of the excess of' their
reserve funds, as tested by the tables.
.Thatthere are unscrupulous men in every great business
may be safely asserted, and that unsound or doubtful lives
have very often been assured through the greed or the negli¬
gence of agents may be true,but that this has not been carried
to any serious extent is sufficiently evident from the actual
experience of the Companies, nearly every one of which has
found the actual mortality of its members to fall much short
of any tabular estimate they have dared to adopt beforehand.
mikes

In

much

by the earnest solicitations of an agent, who is likely to
plead the more strongly, the greater the portion of the pre¬
mium that will go to him, and the less that which will be saved
to secure the policy.
But he ought to inquire carefully for a
company which is large, since numbers give stability, cheap¬
ness, strength and safety ; for one which is managed by men of
the highest character, who cannot afford to be connected
with a doubtful scheme; for one which is vouched for
by the
authorities of the State as holding ample funds in reserve
against its liabilities; for one whose business is managed
openly and without disguise or concealment; for one which
does not, as shown by the official reports of the State
Depart¬
ment, pay an unreasonable share of its receipts away in
commissions, salaries and other expenses ; for one whose

fact, the small number of losses has been the most remark¬ policies are fair and liberal in their terms * aud for one whose
experience, of American Companies as a experience, as officially reported, indicates care in the selec¬
whole, and it thoroughly proves both the wonderful vitality tion of lives, and therefore a moderate mortality
among its
of healthy men in this country, aud the general care and members. There are
companies enough within reach which
success with which lives have been “selected ” for assurance.
meet all these' conditions, and issue policies at reasonable^
.*
The evil in question, then, while it may exist in particular rates: and no man
ought to entrust the savings he makes for
cases, has never gone far enough to threaten any serious his family to any institution which
conspicuously fails in any
results to the system at large.
of them.
Jetit is wise in the Companies to adopt every safeguard
against frauds of this kind; and some of them have found CHANGES IN THE REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANKS
The
the
effectual means of preventing them, by
making an early loss Banks fallowing are the changes in 1870,Redeeming Agents of National
from July 14 to July 21,
These weekly changes are
upon a policy a cause for the forfeiture of commissions; and furnished by, and published in accordance with an arrangement made
by offering a reasonable bounty to agents for the lives with the Comptroller of the Currency.
which prove to be really of selected value. Whether it is
LOCATION.
NAME OP BANK.
REDEEMING AGENT."
possible to do away with every motive to increase risks by
Tlie Howard Na¬ The First National Bank of New York,
Vermont—
and the National Hide and Leather
tional Bank.....
Burlington
abolishing all commissions and all agencies, except the salaried
Bank of Boston, approved.
officers of the Companies, and then
National Bank
giving to each policy¬ Massachusetts— The National Rock¬ The Shoe and Leatherin place of the
land Bank.
of Boston approved
Roxbury....
Suffolk National Bank of Boston.
holder the full value of his premiums in assurance, less a
Pen nsy Irani a—
The Keystone Na¬ The National Park Bank of New York*
minimum deduction for expenses, is a question not yet tested
tional Bank
Erie
approved in place of the National.
Bank of the Commonwealth, New
York.
.?
hyexperience in this county. •» It will become of less practical Tennessee—
The Third National the Central Nationnl Bank of New
Nashville....
Bank........
York, approved in place of The
consequence if all the companies follow the example of the
Fourth National Bank of York.
able feature in the

#

•

^

i

-

.....

....

most economical

and most successful ones, some of which
few years reduced their commissions more

have within a
than
one-half, and have brought down their total expenses,
including their commissions, to about ten per cent of their
actual cash

income, a lower rate than can easily be exhibited
hy any other financial trust, requiring anything like a similar

labor in management.
Oxi the whole,

submitting the business of Life Insurance in




M;chigan—

Three Rivers....

The First National The

Bank
...

Commercial

National

Bank

of

•Chicago, approved in addition to
.

_

The central National Bank of New
York.
.

of Mr. Julaud Danvers, on Indian Railways, for the
1869, has just been issued, and states some facts of interest. Al¬
though there was a much larger mileage the net revenue was only
£2,620,952, or £1,670 less than th.it of the year 1868. The gross
traffic had, indeed, increased from £5,320,723 in 18^8, to £5,709, 82
in 1869, an increase of' £380,000, but this additional traffic had only
been earned' by a corresponding' increase of working expenses, from
£2,308,03$ to £3.203,17.L-89-there is aliShtly lesa Profit to 8how‘
—The report

year

4.

?!
in

138

THE CHRONICLE.

[July 30,1870.

£atest IHonetarp anO Commercial (Engltsl) Netos

French Government

RATES OF UVCHANGG AT LONDON. AND ON LONDON
AT LATEST DATES.

course
When France first represented the
matter to the
Prussian Government, Count Bismarck professed to
know nothin
of
A

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—

EXCHANGE ON LONDON

JULY 15.

TIME.

HATE.

Amsterdam... 3months. 11.19*@12. 6
Antwerp
25.42*@:.'5,47*
Hamburg
13. 9*@13.10
44

44

Paris
Paris
Vienna
Berlin

Frankfort

44

<8*25.50
short.
25.20 @25.30
3 months. 13. 0 @13.50
6.26*@ 6.*:7
1.20*@ 1.21*
44

Cadiz
Lisbon
Milan
Genoa

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

44

48* @ 49*
90 days.
52* @ 52*
3 months. 27. 0' @27.20
@
“
“
@
“
44

—

4ft

@

—

25.20

@

—

44

44

44

C4

'44

3

July 15.

mos.
44

n

n

—

days.

50.65

60

days.

gi

60

days
44

44

i

16*
22

21*-21*

—

—

—

days.
4 4

•Tune 24.
June 16.

44

6 mos.

July 6.

44

July 6.

.

44

Madras
Calcutta

u

90

June 23.
June 26.

—

—

Bombay

44

July 14.

—

—

Ceylon

Nominal.

July 15.

—

—

60

Nominal.
25.SO @ —

July 4.

—

—

44

Sydney

11 86

11

—

Hong Kong...

BATE.

short.

July 1

44

Valparaiso....
Pernambuco..

Singapore

25.45

44

....

TIME.

DATE.

44

44

4s. 7d.
4s. 7d.

44

44

44

80

10%-ls 11*

days.

* dis.

| From onr

own

April 20.

80

days.

Is 11 15-16(2

* dis -* pm.

Correspondent, j

Daily News

:

“

The greatest national crime that we have had the
pain of recording in these
columns since the days of the first French
Empire has been
War is declared—an unjust, but premeditated war. This dire consummated.
calamity, which
overwhelms Europe with dismay, is, it is now too
clear, the act of France—of
one man in France.
It is the ultimate result of
rule.”
personal
“
The fifteenth of July, 1870, will be a
day celebrated in history. It will be
known as the day of a great crime.”

This

the

been

secured, although much remains
be done in the Northern provinces.
Prussia, however, is later
now

with her crops,

and the war may cause, therefore, much distress
the peasant population. The. youth have already been
ordered to join their respective
regiments, but as they believe that
their Government is not only in the right, but that it
has been
cruelly wronged, the Government will, no doubt, have the
support
among

of the whole country, while the work of the harvest will
in
be undertaken by the aged and by the female

measure

a

large

population.
Prussian ports will be blockaded, and trade with
Germany will be
stopped, and there will also be much suffering among the mercan¬
tile classes. That this war should take place is more than
ever to
be regretted.
In this country the condition of commerce was
becoming so healthy -after the crisis of 1866, that hopes were

entertained of

caused

active fall trade.

an

The war,

however, has now
different feeling to prevail, and it is quite evident

That the peace of Europe should have been
when the belief in its maintenam o,

that the utmost caution will be shown

of the Hohenzollern

tions.

so rudely disturbed,
previously to the introduction
so strong, has taken the world

question, was
by surprise, and people’s minds are shocked. When a civilized
nation should, for certain ambitious
ends, be the means of such

a

very

In business

circles the

feature

on

of the

all commercial transac¬

week is the withdrawal of

most of tha Continental

buyers from the markets. In wool there ha*
l^d. per lb. Grocery produce is muchlowerio
such distress amongst
many thousands of families as must be occasioned when two such price, an i all ihe other markets have been sensibly affected. The
wheat trade, however, has not been influenced to
powers as France and Prussia, with the deadly weapons
any great extent. A
they each
rise of 2s. per quarter is demanded, but millers are by no means will¬
possess, are engaged in conflict.
Throughout the world it has
been often remarked that at some time or other
Prussia and ing to concede this advance. In the view of an abundant harvest in
France must fight for the leading
position in Europe. Since the this country, and of the receipt of large supplies of produce from the
United States, Russia and Hungary, there is no reason to
battle of Sadowa, and the great success which then
expect
attended the
Prussian arms, France has been
preparing for a conflict with higher prices. It is only in the event of the war becoming more com¬
Prussia, just in the same way that Prussia had been
preparing in plicated that there is any argument in favor of dearer wheat. Oats
secret for the war of 1866.
are decidedly dearer,
That France is
owing to the certain prospect of diminished imprepared for war can¬
not be doubted.
That she has courted this conflict is
certain, and portations from abroad.
the fear is that other powers
The following statement shows the imports and exports of cereal
may be drawn into its The primary
cause of the quarrel is said to
proceed from Spain, but Spain is not produce into and from the United Kingdom lor last week aod since
now alluded to,
and it is not improbable that she will remain September 1, compared with the corresponding periods in 1868-9:
neutral in the question.
FOE THE WEEK ENDING JULY 9.
Some also think that the Emperor will
1869-70
1868-69
purchase the neutrality of Italy by withdrawing his troops from
Imports. Exports.
Imports. Export*
Rome and leaving Victor Emanuel to
Wheat....*
cwt.
490,457 179,554
514,072
89
occupy that city. Just at
Barley.:..,...
121,338
14,110
82,190
4M
this moment a pretext for this movement has
Oats
presented itself.
220,832
60,583
184,065
615
Peas
The dogma of the infallibility of the
48,484
66
20,929
JOi
Pope has just been carried, Beans
60
40,414
22,286
and is to be publicly proclaimed at an
Indian
132,074
174,169
1,121
early date. The Emperor Flour com
94,063
71,°51
11,371
may therefore take advantage of this circumstance to leave the
SINCE THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SEASON (SEPT. 1).
Pope to his fate. Austria is believed to side with France, but like Wheat
cwt. 33,388,619 794,753
22,914,693 167,128
England, prefers to remain neutral. The English government Barley
6,807,807
93,998
8,399,451 100,783
Oats
9,298,657 374,291
5,019,881 112,631
will, no doubt, insist upon the integrity of the Belgian
Peas
kingdom
1,642,262
13,438
1,064,560 24,049
4,458
being maintained, and if this is guaranteed, the war will be con¬ Beans
1,580,123
2,341
2,138,484
Indian corn
8,006
15,058,670
14,857
11,121,350
fined to a contest for the Rhenish
Flour
provinces. That the war will
5,347,010
61,474
3,166,352 31,419
be a protracted one seems
doubtful, the weapons of destruction
Annexed is a statement showing the
imports and exports of cotton
being so effective that exhaustion must be a question soon to be into and from the United
Kingdom, from September 1 to July 14,
realized, but, at the same time, two powers which appear to be
compared with the corresponding period last season:
■o evenly balanced in their arms and
resources, and which have so
Export*.
Imports.
Exports.
Imports.
1808-69.
1869-70.
1868-69.
1869-70.
deadly a hatred towards each other, may continue the contest American
hales 1,349,856
130, .85
98,887
937,517
Brazilian
longer than is expected.
74,322
379,366
45,319
475,162
East Indian
547,HI
1,130,883
431,094
1,349,206
The change of opinion in
England with regard to this question Egyptian..
7,669
164,923
4,115
164,334
destruction of life and property, and of

been

a

fall of Id. to

*

>

*

..

....

'

—

....

....

.

is decisive and conclusive. The Cabinet of
England, as well
those of Austria and Russia, were understood to

Miscellaneous

as

110,842

12,621

134,831

18.299

Total
3,135,870
592,036
3,061,050
support the pro¬
posal of France that the candidature of the Prince of Hohenzollern
The money market has been
very quiet.
The supply of money ha*
should be withdrawn; but as soon as the French
Government increased, and the demand is less active., The curtailment of trade to
began to insist upon the King of Prussia giving a guarantee for
consequence of the continental war is calculated to still further
bis good behaviour for all future
time, it was feared that such a diminish the
inquiry, and a continuence of ease is expected for along
demand could only lead to one
result, and, consequently, opinion time to come. That
money will accumulate here is conBidered.certato,
in England assumed a different
phase, and the oonduct of the and now that war prices have been reached, all sound




a

Minister

crown offered
to
profession of ignorance upon the part of the
Prussian
Minister irritated, no doubt, the French
Government, and
fearing
the possibility that he would be out-generalled in
diplomacy by
Bismarck, the Emperor brought the question to a point
which
must result in immediate war or peace. For Prussia to
have given
in upon such a demand was impossible—for
France to
retreat
would have been dangerous to the Emperor and his
Governmentand thus war is proclaimed.
To a commercial country like this, war is
detestable just ag
much as it is unprofitable. Happily, we know
nothing here of the
horrors of carnage, of homes desolated, of
harvests, just being
gathered in, sacrificed for the ambition of a few. Much of

him.

to
is. ii yta.

London, Saturday, July 16, 1870.
War has at length been definitely declared
by France against
Prussia. The opinion of England in regard to the war is un¬
doubtedly represented by the following extracts from the Times
and

representation to the King, however, brought
about

harvest in France has.

—

Is

it.

greatly blamed. There are,
however
in the question which justify France in the
was

different result, for he admitted that after
consulting his
he had authorized Prince Leopold to accept the

LATEST
ON—

certain aspects
she has taken.

English secnri*

1870.]

July SO,

THE CHRONICLE

be expected to recover some, if not all, of the depreciation
they have undergone. The following are the prices of money :

139
1866.
£

ties may

Back

1869.
1870.
Per cent. Per cent.
.3 @ .. 3 @ ..

minimum

1869.
4 months, ba’k bills
6 months’ ba’k bills
4 and 6 trade bills..

.

ffiffdays™ills 2X@SX

1870.

Percent. Percent.

2*3...

2#@2#
2#@2#
3#<2*3#

2#@3
@3%
3#@3#
8

of interest allowed by the joint stock banks and discount
houses for deposits are :
joint stock banks.
2 @2
2 (§12
Discount bouses at call...
n{gcount houses with 7 days’ notice
2#@2#
The rates

pliant houses with 14 days’ notfce

2# @2#
feature is an advance in the bank

continent the principal
rite at Berlin to 6 per cent. The following are the quotations at the
On the

leading cities :
2
4
3
3

V* V*

...

6

4

Berlin
4
Frankfort. 3

°

3#

Turin
Brussels
Madrid

l#-2
5
6

r-B’k rate—. -Op. m’kt—i
1869. 187C.
1869. 1870.
5
6
6
6

Hamburg
St.

2#

2)4

6

5

..

...

3%
3

3%

3

Ajnst’rd’m 3#

.

—

Pettrg. 6

2*

2)4

6
2 )4
5

—

6)4

5

4*

GOLD
8.

—peroz. standard.

8ir Gold
do
fine
do
Refinable

d.

£o

do

76

d.

B.

9
77
77
9
77 11

per oz.
Spanish Doubloons
South American Doubloons... do
United States gold coin
do

<a-

£

2 p. c.

3 p. c,

94#

3 p. C.

92d
50s. 7cL

9#d.

93#

66s. 7d.

10#d.

48s. lid.

12# d.

64s. 7d.

ll#d.

Is. 4#d. Is. 2#d.

Is. 4#d.

Is. 2# d

English Market Reports—Per Gable.
The

daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬
pool for the past week, have been reported by submaviue telegraph as
shown in the following summary
London Money and Stock Market.—Oonsols

3)4
d.

s.

Fine
peroz. standard, firm.
do containing 6 grs. gold
last price do....

Bar Silver

Fine Cake Silver
kexican Dollars

last price, firm,

1

Spanish Dollars (Carolus)

pieces
Quicksilver, £7 17s.

per oz.
per oz.

per oz.
per

5
5
5
4

d.

8.

OH (§>
o% @
5# ®

5

—

11# @

-

—

-

none

here,

none

exchanges have been affected by the war.' Bills on Italy and
Vienna have been almost unsaleable.
In the Stock Exchange the excitement has been intense throughout
the week, and the fall in prices has been very great.
There have been
thirteen failures in the Stock Exchange, and a much greater number of
compromises ; but, taking all things into consideration, the account has
not been so disastrous as might have been anticipated.
The deprecia¬
tion in the value of securities during the last fortnight has been
enormous, as will be seen from the following statement:
77#
39#
133#
72#
134#
43#
130#
62#
70#

Metropolitan
Midland

131#

North British

.

Northeastern....
Southeastern

Antwerp abd Rotterdam

Luxembourg

Lombardo-Venetian
Argentine 6 per cents
Brazilian 6, 1866

.

37#
146#
75#
12#
14#
17#

90#
92#

Egyptian 7, 1868

83

Mian 6,1861
Peruvian 6,1865

July 16.

Fall.

91#

l#

76
37#

IV
2

128#

6#
3#

69
133
89
127
47

“

69#
128
36

141#
72#
11

11#
14
88

90#
74#

4#
8#
5#
1
3%
1#
5
3#
l#
2#
3#
2#
2

8#
10#

Turkish 5,1865
"
6,1869

25
25

70#
63#

65
56

5#
5#
6#
7#

Five-Twenties

90#

85

28

Erie Railway shares ..
Atl. & G. W. (consols).

Atlantic Bonds

Ste($100)
Illinois Central
Spanish (Quicksilver)

19
17
114#
105 x d
l#prem. 6 dis.

2#
#

2
4#
7#

81

10#

82

15#

Fri.

89#
89#

82
82
81
80
103

81
80
102
15
21

79
102
15
21

21

Thu.
89#
89#

82

to#

22

83

82#
82
80
104

15#

15#

21

22

daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort
77

78#

:

78

....

Sat.
d.

Mon.
s.

Flour, (Western)
p. bbl 26 6
Wheat (No.2 Mil. Red) p. ctl 10 2
“

Red Winter..

‘

10 11

(California white) “

Corn(W.mx d)p. 4801bsn’w 35 9
Barley (Canadian), per bush 5 0
Oats(Am.&Can.)per451bs 2 5
Peas..(Canadian) pr504lbs 41

s.

were—

79#

0

Wed.
S. id.

d.
6
9
7
5
9
0

25
9
10
11
35
5
2 5
39 6

10 n
11 8
85 9
5
0
2 5
41 0

9

11

Tnes.

d.
26 6
10 1

s.

82#

Thu.
8.

25 6
9 9
10 7
11 5
35 9
5

0

2
39

5
6

26

'

9
10
11
35
5
2
39

Fri*
d*

d.
0
8
6
4
9
0
5
6

8.

6
9
6
4

26
9
10
11
34
5
2
39

0
0
5
6

Liverpool Provisions Market.—The market closed quiet, the price
showing a decline, while the other prices show an advance.

of cheese

Sat.
s.

d.

Beef(ex.pr. mess) p. 304 lbs 118 0
Pork(Etn. pr.mess) d 304 lbs 117 6
Bacon

(Cumb.cut)

p.

Lard (American)
Cheese (fine)

112 lbs
“
“
“

58

6

Tnes.

Wed.

d.
6
0
6
0
6

d.
118 6
120 0
59 0
74 0
63 6

8.

118

120

0

73
63

0
6

63

4

57
73

Mon.
8. d.
118 6
120 O'
6
6

58
74
63

8.

Thu.

Fri.

d.
6
0
0
0
6

<3I.
6
0
59 0
74 0
63 0

8.

118
125

•

59

74
63

8.

118
125

Liverpool Produce Market. —Nothing of interest has transpired
during the week, the prices of tallow and common rosin showing an
advance while the other prices remain about the same as at the close
of last week.
Sat.
d.

s.

Rosin (com

Wilm.).per 112 lbs

do
Fine Pale...
44
Petroleum (std white) .p. 8
44

spirit
Tallow (America

Mon.
s. d.

Tnes.
s. d.

Wed.

43
43
43
13 3
13 3
13 3
1 6# 1 6# 1 6#

lbs.

11

...per8 lbs
». ..p 112 lbs.

44

3

10#
44

3

-Thu.

Fn.

d.
56
13 3

d.
56
13 3

d.
56
13 3

1

1 6#

s.

1

10#
45

6

6#

s.

45

6

s.

6#

li

11
45

11

6

45

6

London Produce and Oil Markets.—These markets remain

the

price of Calcutta linseed and linseed oil showing
while other prices remain the same.
Sat.
Line’d c’ke(obl)p.tn£10 0 0
Linseed (Calcutta)...
63 6

5

1869

93#

W

Liverpool Cotton Market.—See special report of cotton,
Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—The market has been quiet during
the past week, prices generally
showing a decline.

5#

23

Sp«ni8lx 8, 1867
“

47
87#

been

89#
89#

81

81
80
103

1#

57#
90#
94#
30#
30#

Knssian 6,1866

89#
89#

U. S. 6s (5 20’s) 1862..
44
“old 1865.. 83
44
“
“
1867.. 82#
U. S. 10-40S
80
Illinois Central shares. 105

here*

The

93

Tnes.

89#
89#
61#
81#

i

—

per oz.
per cent.

July 4.

for account...

Mon.

90
90
83

-

bottle; discount 3

Consols for Money
Caledonian Hail way.
Great Eastern
Great Northern A
Great Western
Lancashire and Yorkshire
London and Brighton
London and Northwestern
Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire

Consolsfor money
44

Frankloit

®@@—

have

steady
throughout the week, closing at 89§. -United States bonds have
generally been quiet throughout the week, and closed 2 per cent
higher than the lowest point touched.

The

SILVER.

Great

1870.

25,433,023 24,420,176 24,358,213
5,938.213
3,920,192
3,359,776
22,080,000 19,941,303 18,731,634
14,614,394 15,722,824 12.493,041
16,904,426 15 6V5.337 18,433,034
12,310,175 10,837 423 12,100,503
22,186,535 19,769,838 21,004,793

Bat.

circular:

Five franc

26,176.629 24,672,785
Public deposits
2,161,726
4,618 373
Other deposits
19,820,939 20.895,525
Government securities 10.028,123 12,8c0,773
Other securities
27,752,249 17,576,507
Reserve
3,224,695 13,487,296
Coin and bullion
18,645,975 22,686,726
Bank rate
10 p. c.
2# p.c.
Consols
88#
94#

6

Considerable supplies of gold have arrived, and they have been
mostly retained. Silver has been in demand for Holland, but dollars
ire rather cheaper.
The following prices are from Messrs. Pixley’s

do

Circulation

Price of wheat
55s. lOd.
Mid. Upland cotton...
18#d.
40 mule yarn, fair 2d
quality
Is. 9d.

1869.
£

1868.
£

.

,-B’krate-* r—Op. m’kt—»
1869. 1870.
1869. 1870.
At Pad*
Vienna

1867.
£

Mon.
Tnes.
£10 0 0 £10 0 0
63 6
64 0

quiet
advance,

an

Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
£10 0 0 £10 0 0 £11 0 0
64 0

64 0

64 0

31 6
0 0
37 0 0
31 0 0

31 6
0 0
37 0 0
30 10 0

31 0
0
37 0 n
33 10 6

-

Sugar(No.l2Dch8td)
31
0
Whale oh
37 0
Linseed oil.. per ton..31 10
per

112 H>

Sperm oil

...90

6
0 *
0
0

31 6
0 0
37 0 0
31 0 0

90

90
37

31

31 6
0 0
0 0
0 0

90

90

90

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEW&.
Imports

and

Exports

for the

Week.—The imports this week show

increase in

dry goods, and a decrease in general merchandise.
imports amount to $6,466,690 against $5,372,109 last week, and
following statement shows the highest and lowest prices of
Consols and the principal American securities on each
day of the $4,402,879 the previous week. The exports are $3,806,211 this week
week;
against $3,667,466 last week, and $3,924,415 the previous week. The
1 aesday. Wed’ay. Thu’ay
exports of cotton the past week were 4,383 Dales, against 6,839 bales
Monday.
Sat’day
|
last week. The following are the Imports at New York for week
Consols
fil#-92# 91#-92# 92#-92# 91#-92# 91#-92# 91#-91#
U. 8.5-20’s, 1882....
86#-8S# 88 -89 8S#-89# 87#-89 86 -87# 83#-85# ending (for dry goods) July 22, and for the week ending (for general
U.8. 5-20b, 1834.
87 -89
87 -89
87 -89
87 -89
86 -87
86 -87
0.8.5-208,1885
87#-88 88 #-88# 88#-89# 87 -87# 86#-.... 86 #-85# merchandise) July 23:
87
IJ.S.5-20B, 1887..
88#-89 89 -89# 86#-87# 87#-,... 85#-....
FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.
?* 8. KMOs, 1904.... 84#-S6 85 -86 86#-87# 86 -87 84 -86 85#-....
....

w

an

The total

The

Friday.

■

...

..

-

Atlantic &G’t West,

1867.

consol’d mort.b’ds 27

Jrie Shares($100)..

-

...

17#-18

Illinois shares ($100) 111

The following
hank of

25

-25# 26 -28 25 -27 24 -26
22)4-23
17#-18 17#-1S 17#-17# 17#-.... 16 -17
1114-111$ 1121-1131 111 -112 1061-107 104 -106

Drygoods

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

1868.

1869.

$2,130,751

$2,024,639

$2,187,841

3,090,101

3,813,444

2,940,653

$5,220,852

$3,838,088

$5,128,494

1870.

$1,777,847
8,679,343

$5,456,690

133,640,285
173,463,145
162,238,561
position of the Previously reported... 141,178,880
Since Jan. 1
$146,399,732
$139,478,363 $178,591,639’ $167,695,251
England, the Bank rate of discount, the price of Consols,
the average
The value of exportsfrom this port to different countries (exclusive
quotation for English Wheat, the price of Middling Upland
Cotton, and of No. 40 Mule Yarn, compared with the four previous of specie) since January 1, compared with the
corresponding time of
7®W»
*ftst year to July 17, is shown in the following table :




return

shows

the

present

THEOHRONIGLE.

140

Same time
1869.

Week ^^r-Notes Issued .for ret’d.ending.
Current week. Aggregate

$52,717,189
3,754.610

Jan.

-Since Jan. 1,

•$53,163,811
5,538,860-

....

/

'

1,976,427
5,016 886
1,391.359

...
..

Venezuela

..2,722,693

....

••

4,455,071
880,470

1,447,284
-T*

■*355,904

.....

1,807,152

2,399,798
1,548,171

672,529

.

repcrtof the dry goodafrade will be

’eb.

238,840
216,110
216,680

$U0jil9,727

Since Jan. 1

The

21317409..-;
.

York

American gold......

July 19—St. Colorado, London—
American
c

.

U

$750,000 July 23—St. Merrimack, St.

gold

American s lver....
45,000
Mexican silver... .10,000
20—St. Java, Liverpool 3,500
Prussian silver...
Silver bars..
5.500
.

“

American

“

.....

Gold bars.
41,000
American silver....
79 000
American gold
1,769,000

“

Liverpool—
824,000
gold

21—St. Abyssuiia,

American
.
American silver....
38/00
Prussian silver
1,000
Gold bars
67,000
Silver bars
3,000
21—St Columbia, Havana—

“

1,600

215,500
23—St.. City c f Washington,
Liverpool—
American gold
1,S82,000
Gold bars
65,000
Silver bars;.
y..
lo,200
American silver.'...
15,000
British gold|.
14,662
Prussian silver
690
23—S!. Lafayette, Havre—
Mexican silver.
4,244
American gold
20,000
Gold bars;.,.....;.
54,275

Total for the week

Previously reported

...$0,101,352
20,925,833

v

Total since Jan. 1,1870
Same time
Same time in
1869
$18,212,726 I860
1868
67,509,316 j 1859
1367
33,774,091 I 1858.
.
1466
,
49,779,151 I 1857.
1865
18,146.175 11856
1364
30,612,893 11855...
1863
23,637,328|1854
1862.
34,894,350 I 1853..
;;
1861
.3,254,976 11852

...

$27,027,185
in

$26,106,797
40,838,057
14,736,660

25,677,'779

'.

jQly 18—Schr. A. C. Leveritt,
Tampico—

June 4

281,770

2.V..

.

Silver

July 18—Schr. Glenga

ry,
Savanella—

..

5u0

.

Previously reported..

....;.

$35,454
7*281,647

......

Total i-ince Jan. 1, 1870.
Same time 1869
Same time 1868

.$7,317,701
9,747,703

4,157,500

24(,168

.

9....

.

225,930

24,150,855 ‘
24,395,013
24,729,685
*’ 25,004,695
25,182,940
"'25,516,445
25,755,225

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

Treasury

:

.

238,780

*•

Coin

—For—- ForC. S.

-

Circulation. Deposits.

Jan.' 8..342,425,05)
Jan. 15.. 342,425,050

19,041,000
18,991,000
Jan. 22..312,303,350
8.941,000
Jan. 29.. 342,313,350 18,721,000
Feb.
5. 312,310,*50 is,571,000
Feb. 12 342,307,350 18,496,000
Feb. 19.,342,396,850 18.393.600
Feb. 26...342,398,350 17/08,500
Mar. 5.. 342,364,350 17,083,500
Mar. 12.. 342,364,350 17,483,500
.

Mar. 19.. 3 4 2,363,6^0
Mar

17.253.600

26.. 842,392,650
17,139/00
April 2..342,294,050 16,989,500
April
842,274,650 16,955,500
April 16..342,246,350 16,950,500
April 23. .842,542,350 16,673,000
April 30..312,251,3')0 16,663.00)
May 7..34 %273 550 16.510,000
May 14. .342,269,550- 16,410,000
May 21..342,362,550 16,3)0,0 0 .
Mav 28. .342,299,750 16,284,00)
June 4..342,227,750 16,281,000
June 11. .342,224,550 16,334,000
June 18,. 342,273.050 16,434,000
June 25- 342,268,050 16,434,000
July 2.. 34 2,278,553 16,4u2,500
July 9..342,323,050 16,391.50 )
July 16.. 342,028,050 16.841.500
July 23.-342,022,050 16.316.500

cer

/-Bah in-Tress.-v
Total.

361.466,050
361.416,050
361.244.350
361,084,350
260,SS 1,350
360,803,350

Coin.

358.783.550 110,724,000 10,000,010
358.679.550 105,783,000 11,556,000
358.702.550 107,285,000
9,357,000
358.583,750 107,549.360 13,27),704
358,51 ,750 108,126.523 20,471,337
358.558.550 108,284.421 20,713,994
358,707,050
358,701,050 112,133,056 21,974,626
358,6sl,( 53
358,719,550 118,735,848 35,197,843
358,369.550 113,000,000 31.000,000
358,3*8,550 105,600,000.30,500,0( 0

15

Jan.
Feb...

Feb.

'•

227,0 0

19........

'

v....

2.

April
April
April
April

859,093

522,400,

454,933.:.

487,159

560,800. ’<o

604,000

*156,743“

4.
11
is

683.500

657.760

762.500
745.500

378,755

....

25

‘2........
July
Juiy... 9
16
duly
23...

-

624,000

492,825 :

28;

June
June
JuneJune

437.100

606.588

752,000
39,000
504.000
497,500

.........'

'

....

revenues of the

*

S12,700

Ml

448,8i0
' 1 585,900

1,518,636
265,000
UWi

605,200
605,373,

812,516

239,193'

“

.....

552,493
292,503
830,141

1,634,0*29
250,329

419,500,,.; w^i3t430
612,400
359,962
584,soo

United States for the fiscal

^

the'nfflciil

are

year

ending

'

-

•

894,468
f,ri?,047

'7->6,7H3’ "'WM

tlnlted States.—TliC following

Revenues of tlie

•

..

298,500 '
.413,- 00
557,0 0
599,000 ’•

>•••

621.100
631.2U0-'

>

952.891

-

733.000

796,539861,803

A439,S90

785,175

1,810,059
'

oli....

576,800 ■

1,903,382

21..

May
May
May
May

677,600
635,500

196,505
352,863

: ‘

501,916
485.500
555.500

16
23

April

441,582

5f 6,200

.

0...-.:

Si

640,200,..,./

329,2(6

•539,700'

.v..’

Dislrih'd’

450,539-.

167,000

490,100
463.(00

1

-

552,300
718,801)■'

273,295>‘

524,700
531*600

CUSTOMS REVENUES OF UNITED STATES.

Fiscal Year.

June 30,.1870.

'•

First quarter
S cond quarter

JtinegB: 1869.

$52,598,922

Third quarter
Fourth quarter

f 49,62^594

f"

41,308*147

49,38ft&4
44;osi;«S5

'48,196 911
51/30,366

.

Total

'

•!’V

$180,003,456

......$193,934,346

The other

of the

revenues

compared with 1869

Treasury for the

same fiscal yearns
‘’’-’fi'S fM

:

Fiscal Year.
First quarter
Second quarter.
Third quarteT
Fourth quarter

i'jwvi

-

.

OF UNITED

STATES.

June 30,1860.

\June 30, 1870.

$49,926/02‘;

••$88*7fiW02

37.264.738
37,980,411

<•

-.-'SueftaM

•••

*58,044,718

C6,5aftW4

- •

u 1

,

Total..

$183,216,219
MISCELLANEOUS

Fiscal year.

'

June 30, 1S70.

•»

First qmrtifr

quarter

'

6,850,4^5

‘4,304,575

...

Total

*

r.

•

'’H.Cid!

-

$6,W6
7,833,119
,5,106,t»4
7,963,676

11 020,5*2

Third

quarter
Fourthquaiter

/

June30i,Jt869.

‘

$6,222,941

..

!.fin*Wr-

$159;l^M9

REVENUES.

“$27^53,165

$28,398,533
-•>

RECAPITULATION.
'
•* June 30, 1870.
‘

'

-.$193,934,346

D'.ieal?A

'June 30i 1869*

-

183,210,219

28,398,533'
3,282,274

Total

..

$3;(
321.041,6

$408,831,872
292,111,269

Expenditures

Surplu3

.36,283,500
40,700,000
40,700,000

'299,ae9,2ji
299,404,721

‘

538,000
631.100
559.100

>.-539,672

■ •

625 600

March 5
March 12........
March 19
■March 26

Jmy

758,000
566,000
573,000

Lands...

34,823,500

-

'

617,618
688,425

..,.

019,000
35.436.500
86.755.500
36,208,000
35.451,300
34,671,(00

299,504,062
299,302,982
^8,467,446
«Oi#;96f),006

:

.

,

26

Feb.

.....

$116,720,103

Washington, July 21.—direction of Secretary Boutwell. aednteresting statement has
/ prepared at the, Treaspry Depafttjicn1’
showing in detail the recei^is and expenditures of the Govern®^
from the 30th of June, 1860, t6 the close of the last fiscal year.
aggregates are shown by the following table :
v

I860
1861..*.

...

1862......:.....;..
1863.:..
1864

.7.—

.

T.7.
tt •

#

t>65

1866...
1807

‘j...;

Total

..

.....

1868......'.....;...

2.—National bank currency issued (weekly and
aggregate),in return '>1869..^.......
for bills destroyed and mutilated bills returned
(weekly and aggregate) 1870
with the amount in circulation at date:




26,152,288

-

665,238
247,6)0
008-400> - '.•726,14*2

5...;

Fiscal year.
Customs
Taxes.
Miscellaneous

34

299,5(S

224,437

313,150

473,200
98,365

609,660
743,481

f

358.914.350

299,4

21,729,247
25,030,573
25,503,773
25,602,138
25,015,283

-

.

Jan._- 22

,

359,2:6,350 113,514,000 19,250,000 35,620,000

299,4S

t——Fractional Currency.—
Keceived. Distributed. Destroy’d

8

Jan^

Currency, outst’d’g.

360,789 850
360,206,850
360,067,850
359,847,&50
359,617,150
359,532,160
359.254.150
859.230.150
359,196,850

^M6Q8

24,134,597

24

-

302,900 '
301,326

.

*

Weekending. *
Jan.

Second

..

-292,760'-.

' r-

.

•

legal tenders distributed:

National Treasury.—The following forms present asummary ofcfcr
tain weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom House.
and balance in the

.

•

INTERNAL REVENUES

Total for the week

299,61®

3.—Fractional currency received from the Currency Bureau by 0. S
Treasurer and distributed weekly ; also the .amount destrpyej and

.....

Gold.

-

813,810
>275,010
178,245
333,505-

.

10,997,818
14,411,003

Silver
$930
Gold.........;.
* 60Q
$1,184 ’ July 18— Str. City of Mexico,
Vera Cruz—
I
1
|
Silver
32,240

'■^576^

213167
2314170
C272.8B3-*

23.585 255

279,0 0

.

figures of the

I

21,786644

289,400
219,850

.

June 30-:

following shows the imports of specie at this pert during the
past week :
.
.
,

SW*949
299,61Sjftl

256/05

..

18,475,062

The

^9,B74’|

21,020,589
21,277,394
21,566,794

231,790

■

18,122.663

..

....

"20,548 199
>-U 788,799

.

Feb.

gold..;...

.

181,500

Spanish gold

Thomas—
■■• ' American gold. i..,.
23—St. Erin, Liverpool—
.

.

“

$80

liwS

20,066 252 '•
20,351 342 i!;

,240.60,0

21.561,320
21,774,180
22,031.030
22,277,400
2-5508,055

""3,

19,748,877

.

July
duly

$96,573,586- $104,956,115 -$103,460,558

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
for the week ending July 23, 1870 :

.

299'iftnS;

Apr,18
■22,238/Sl.'
• ’ : 22,511,846
.--245,770
Apr.28
.313,500
Apr.30
230,655
22,825,346
291,170 ■' •'22.799,225
202,000 ' *' 214,027,446
May Y.....
May 14.
23,050,745.;. ,,,289.400
...,251,520 *
23,3)6,840
23,306,245
305,311
May 21
255,500
23.622,187
M ay 28
23.619/55
313,610
286,480
23,908,667

.

1870.

.

20.002,200
20,881,520
21,061,160
21,349.000

.

212,8'GO
257,450

.

$3,80ft211
99,054,347

100,411,558

93,597,001

103,071,191

Previously reported

•'

20,382,>80

287,840

.

EXPORTS FROM IIW YORK FOR THU WEEK.......
1867.
•
1868.
1869 >,.
For the week...
$2,848,536
$4,544,557
$2,9i6,585

20,088v 80

'179,640

.

:fT,

26s,75C
317,375
285,200
196,747*

‘

212,320

found the importsof dry

geode for one week later.
,
......
>,
....
The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive ofspecie)from
the port of New York to foreign ports,.for the week ending July 26 :

i'9,48()’l27

*: Bl,789 160

Feb/19...... '299,349
Feb. 26
293,830
Mar.
.219,820
Mar.12
279,320

Apr. 2......

U9;075;i37

188,100

19,5(10 8io;

188,270

'

,167,230

19,312,540

190,660

12..;...;‘288,350

Mar 19
Mar.26

18l689;090
18,905,200
19,121,880

v-'

.

772,340

1,905,217
2,310,357

•

8».iir.Jam 15....^
Jan 22......
Jah. 29..-.J..’
Feb. 5.....

Apr. 9

509.568

...

585,059

British Guiana .....
.
Brazil
Other S. American ports.
'

,

.......2,221,173

,

2,429,752
889,768

All other ports

-

.

3,067,685
,.1,001,612

Jlew Granada. .r.

our

......

103,455

•

Other West Indies
Mexico

..

968,134
1,167,051

-

Cuba.••••.•*•'•••«..................

..11,024,241
2,209,695
.1,648,063
,3,507,613
49,103
1,957,429
:
>1,235,290

'■

Britisn N A Colonies V.;.;—...

In

3.003^416

3,178,086

’■

Australia

_

......

•-

»'i.

Hayti

.

10,8-23,183
1,914,345
1,892,065

»

-

'

.

ii, ills,981

Spam
Other Southern Europe,..
East, In dies....
China and Japan

’

187<’.

To
Great Britain.... .... ... .....
Prance
•••••*Holland and Belgium..
Germany
•
Other Northeni Europe

...

*

.........

.

•;-66,857,127
474,744,781
714.709,995
855,234,087

20
22
58
86

1,200,312,982 41
520,609,416 99
357,542,478 714

-

*W•/

Receipts./,

Expenditures.
$63,025,789 34

$55,976^33 S9
.

..

41,;344,983f

51,935,720
111,399,16648
260,623,717 44
329,567,380 W

;-560,250.863IW
490,634,010 *7
387,340,284 6'6'“T 405j8&r

321,490,597 75/

‘■
■

292,111/69 31
$5,308,700,811 23

$3,087,165,475 80

141

TH*;. CHRONICLE
nubiic debt was

SsmSUm*

93. The
has been disposed

23

h

l8S?tta executive,
S

the army

dition of things not

materially better than last year. The activity
noted last week, has subsided into an easier feeling, and
a softening of rat es; but in
expectancy of a. speedy demand from
the West for moving the crops, the banks have exercised a due
amount of caution in loaning their balances.
To day, call loans
have ianged from 3 to 6 per cent, depending upon the collateral,
with the bulk of transactions at 4 and 5 per cent. In discounts
there has been but little paper offering, and the following are the
current rates for the several grades :

It is now
items show how this $5,303,700,of since the fiscal year commencing June 30,
in IS60 about $100,000,000.

in money,

$56,000,000 ; for the judiciary, about $15,000,and volunteers, $1,140,632,060 94—$328,000,000

expended in the

year 1865. For the Quarterand miscellaneous supplies of the War
rr^nund army, $2,146,776,896 53; for bounties from 1863 to
KT198 208,000,; for the navy, $480,043,081 25 ; for pensions, naval
having been

thfe

f

Star’s

supplies, engineer’s

dmilitary, $136,931,457 53, about $2,130,622 63 of which was exbefore the rebellion commenced ; for the Indians, $39,286,
nl7 78 * for interest on the public debt, $851,850,713 29, of which

^nded

“

“

60 days

“

.

■

.

Commercial, first class endorsed

.

6,%

4 mos.

p. c. 1o 7
7
to 8

62 wa9 expended in 1860, and $4,000,173 76 in 1861 ; for
6 mos.
7
to 10
'
single names
60 days
7 p. c. to 8 riiereV $36,969,649 78 ; for public buildings, over $17,000/ 00 ; for
4 to 6 mos.
' 8 to 10
in the Prstal service, over $25,000,000, of which $8,196,,
second class u
.,.3to6mos.
to,.
009 2&.was expended in 1860, $4,064,234 44 in 1861, and about $4,- Bankers, first class Foreign
60 days
6^t-i 7
Domestic...
3to4mos.
7 to 10
950 000 in 1874); for improvement of rivers and harbors, nearly $13,OOO'OOO/nearly $11,000,000 of which has been expended since 1867 ;
United States Bonds.—The tendency of the bond market
forjWsP intercourse* over $20,000,000, $7,200,000 for, Alaska being
coonted in ibis aggregate; for expenses of collecting the Customs early in the week was toward lower prices, consequent upon the
lower London and Frankfort quotations• and the
revenue, $52,591,811 93 ; for expenses of collecting the internal reve¬
general want of1
nues since 1866, $39,000,000.
The balance, of over $175,000,000, is confidence dn all securities
pending the final settlement of the
charged to various miscellaneous expenses.
Franco-Prussian problem. Since Wednesday, however, there has
.-The New Haven, Middletown and Willimantic Railroad in Con¬
necticut; will open for traffic between New Haven and Middletown on b.en a strong and buoyant feeling in the home market, and prices '
theirs of August proximo. The route of this railroad is through have made a marked improvement. There has been qui'e an active
one of the best manufacturing sections of the State, and a large num
investment inquiry, and also a demand for the establishment of •;
berof flourishing towns, built up originally by manrfa^turing inter¬
new National banks.
In case of a war of some months’ duration
ests of one kind or another, will now have an outlet for their pro¬
ducts by means of this route.
it is quite possible that many cautious foreign capitalists will seek
Jhecharacter of the lme as a through roule to Boston, twenty-seven
our Government bonds, as the safest and most
profitable form of
miles shorter than the present line of travel, is better known, and this
investment offering.
giyegit the name of the “ Connecticut Air Line.”
The first mortgage bonds of this company, so far as they have been
To-day (Friday) the market was materially strengthened by the
offered, have met with a ready sale, and the financial agents, Messrs.
advices from Frankfort, quoting our bonds at 82J, so large a rise
Hatch <fe Foote, No. 12 Wall street, are now offering a limited amount
on
of the bonds, of which the details are given in their advertisement on
previous quotations that it was generally believed to be the
page A. ;;
"s '
result of large purchases by the German bankers to cover their "
"
Messrs. Geleton <k Bussing, the well-known firm of bankers at 27
“shorts.” Five-twenties of 1862 close to-night at 110£@I10£,
V^ll street, have recently enlarged their offices and have now very
superior accommodations lor transacting a large business in their line against 108|@109 last week.
The following were the highest and lowest prices of leading
ofbuying and selling stocks, bonds, goldr Ac., on commission.
‘Vi, -*.
*»
We are still offering a limited quantity of the Burlington, Ceda*
government securities at the Board on each clay of the past week:
Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, Wedneed’y Thursday, Friday,
Rapids and Minnesota Railroad Company’s First Mortgage Seven Per
July 23.
July 25.
July 26.
July 27.
July 28.
July 29.
Cent Fifty-Tear Sinking Fuud Bonds (principal an J interest payable in
6’S, 1881 coup.... 113 113 *112 112% 112% 113 *112% H2% 113 113
113% 113%
5 20’s, 1862 coup. 108% 109% 109% 109% 109
109% *109
109% 109% 109% 110% 110%
109
109
gold), at 90 and accrued interest. These Bonds are free of Govern¬ 5 20’s, 1864 “ *108% 109 109% 109% 109 109 *108% 109% 109% 109% *110 110%
5-20*8,1865 “
109 109
109% 109% 109
109%
109% 109% *110
110%
ment tax, and are convertible, at the option of the holder, into stock of 5-20’s, 1865 n “
107% 107% 107% 107% 108
108
*10«% 107% 108% 1“8% *109
109%
5-20 8,1867
“
107% 107% 108
108% 108 1<8% 107% 108% 108% 10S% 109 109%
the Company, at par. The present advanced condition and
5 20’s, 1868
large earn
“
103% 108% *108% 109% 108% 10S% *103% 108% *108 108% *109% 110
10-40’S,
“
*106% 106%
106%
106%
106% 107
107%
iugg of the road warrant us iu unhesitatingly recommending these Bonds Currency 6’s *110% 111 *106% 111 106% 106% *llu% 106% 110% 110% *110% 101%
110%
111
110% 110%
to investors, a9 in every respect au undoubted
security,
This Is the price bid and asked, no sale was made at the Board.
Henry Clews & Co., No. 32 Wall street.
Purchases by the Government on
*S177 3.14

“

“

•>

u

“

“

“

“

“

..

“

*

“

0

.

^

-

•

;

-

’

—

*■

r

.

,

....

*

Thursday, July 28, were
The total now

Bankers’

©autte.

State Bonds.—In this class of securities

DIVIDENDS,
Per

Cent.

When
P’able.

1

■

River-,

1

Banks.
Exchange
Sixpenny Savings
n

£*

Coin

1
■

5
3

.

„r-vInsurance.
Noitfc.American Fire
Broidwav

■

2^
3

.....

Books Closed.

Ang. 2
Aug. 1. July 25 to An i. 1.

Aug. 1

'

on

5

.

The- Money

| Aug. 15. Aug. 1 to Aug. 10

5
8
5

w..,v.. .>..

Gebhard Fire v. |
•..
Miscellaneous.
N-j/apd Allegheny Oil Company

4ug. 1 July 25 to Aug, 1

•

dem.

Aug. 1.
Aug. 2

Friday

Market.—The bank

doing, owing to the fact that speculation has b.en diverted
The leading features, however, have been the
Tennessees, the new having fluctuated between 63 and 60, with a
final recovery to 60f. The old ranged from 64 to 62|, closing at
63. In North Carolinas, the new bonds have declined to 29£, the
special tax being firm at 23|, and the old weak at 49@49£. Mis¬
souri have been dull and steady at 89, and Louisianas, old, at 68.
Arkansas sevens selling at 75, and Connecticut War Loan sixes at
par. The remainder of the list was dull and neglected.
The following are the highest and lowest prices of the most
active State Bonds at the Board cn each day of the past week :

Evening, Jnly 29."

statement

been little

into other channels.

Railroads.
Cleveland and Pittsburgh.
Connecticut and Passumpsic

has

there

business

The following: Dividends have been declared daring the past week:
Company.

? ?

$2,000,000. the total offered being $.2,551,400.
held is $131,804,100.

for

the

week

Saturday,
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesd’y Thursday, Friday
July 23.
July 25.
July 26.
July 27.
July 28, - July 29. •
62% 63%
64
63
63
61
64
61
*63
64 ' *61%
61
61% 61
61%
62
62 %
61
60 %
61%
60
60% 60%
*49% 49%
49% 49% *47
49%
49% 49% *47% 49% *47
49
30% 30%
30
30%
30
80
30
30
*29% 8L , ,29% 29%..*.... 67
*.... 67
*.... 63% *.... 65.
*...’. 64
61
61
*.... 89% *.... 88
*.... 88% *88
88
*....88
*.... 83
-

6s Tenn.x.C
6s Tenn, new...

....

endibg Saturday, July 23, was unfavorable, mainly in that the es JST.Car., old:.
6s N.Car.,
TOeJine was down nearly seven mi llions of dollars, in conse- 6s Virg. xcnew.
8s La., levee...
quecce of the heavy export of specie during the week.
89
89
89 "'89
88
89
S9
89
89
89
The loans 6s Missouri.... 39 89
were
expanded $2,700,000, though ftthe deposits were decreised
This Is the priee bid and asked, nosale was made at the Board.
^00.The banks, notwithstanding their loss in reserve, are
Railroad and Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market after*,
yepin a strong position, and the movement on their
part represents our last report underwent a heavy decline, as will be seen by the
a
steady one. - They are, however,'manifestly cautious in the matter table annexed;
showing the prices of each day/ This was owing
of
lending their surplus, and are disposed to keep th;ir balances well to the unsettled
feeling in the European markets, and the want of
to twill in
anticipation oPprolonged foreign troubles. The follow- confidence,in values. Later in the week, however, under the influ- V.
inoffire the totals of the last bank
statement, compared with those ence of
easy money, aud the rapid rise of United States bonds in * '
of<fH ™rresP°ndiug period in 1869 : 1 1
*
; *
London, a more cheerful feeling was noted, and prices partially
.

*

.

,

Loan*

»v

V--'-

: ->•

•

‘

July 23,1870.

SpS ?:Dl3COUnt8v-i$286,0’-'0,798

July 24, 1869.

*
r

$259,611,889
5

80,079,424
34,110,798
•193,622,260

recovered.

The active stocks dealt

in

were

New Fork Central,

stock and scrip,

Reading, Lake Shore; Rock Island, and St. Paul.
To-day the market has been strong, though not remirkably active,
j.,,,. v.,
,...53,978,711
54,271,802 and closes with few stocks
offering.
with;a year ago, the lom tfatid $26,345,909 higher; | The following were the highest and lowest prices of the active
higher j circu a^on, f 1,U146J lov^erj deposits list of ral'rogd and Miscellaneous stock? on each day pf the
h ^herf and
tetiierg,
l0TOy$ nori* week;




•

'

-

..

,

>

1

142

THE CHRONICLE.

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesd’y Thursday, Friday,
July 25.
July 26.
July 28.
July 27.
July 29.
N.Y.Cent&H.R
93
94
92% 93%
90% 92%
90% 91%
91% 93%
92% 93%
do
88% 88%
scrip
83
89
86% 88%
85% 87%
86% 88%
87% 89
Harlem
132% 133
132% 132% 129 132
129% 130% 132 132 *132% 133
Erie
22% 22%
22% 22%
20% 21% 20% 21%
21
21%
22
22
93% 94%
Reading
93% 94%
93% 94%
93% 96% 95% 96%
96% 97%
Lake shore....
89
90% 91%
90% 90%
90%
88% 90
89% 91%
90% 91%
Wabash
49
49
49
50%
47% 48% 46% 48% 48
50%
49% 50%
106
Pittsburg
106% 106% 106
104% 105% 105% 105% 105% 107% *107%
Northwest.....
83
82% 83%
82
82% 83%
81% 82%
82% 82% 82
82%
do
pref S4% S5%
84% 85
83% 84%
81% 85%
83% 84%
84% 85%
Rock Island... 112% 114
112% 113% 111% 112% 111% 113% 113 114% 113% 114
Fort Wayne...
93
93
93% 93%
92% 92%
92% 92%
93% 94%
St. Paul
60
60% 60%
60%
53% 60
58% 59%
59% 60% 59% 60%
do
76
pref....
76%
75% 76%
74% 75%
74% 76
75% 76%
75% 76%
Ohio, Mississio 84% 34%
33
33% 34%
33% 34%
33%
SS% 34%
84%
Central of N.J. *100
101
100
99
100%
99% 100%
99% *100 100% *100 103
Chic.* Alton.. 115
115
115
115
115
*114%
*114% 116 *115%
do
do pref 117
*115
117
*116
115% 115% 116 116
*116
do.
‘109
—
scrip. *109 114 *108
108% 108% *108%
Saturday,
July 23.

—

....

'

“

*92

....

Clev.,C.,C.&I *73

79

18

18

Col.Chic. <fc I.C

90

Paris (bankers)

33

79% 80
*17% 18

Del.,Lack.,&vv 105% 105%
Hann., St. Jos. ll'» 110

*105
*107

pref *115 120
Illinois Centr’l *130% 132

*78% 80
16% 17%
104% 105

*113%
130% 181

do

Mich. Central. *118
Morris & Essex
88
B.. Hart. & Erie
3%
West. ITn. Tel.

119

8%

34% 34%

Mariposa pref..

11

11

do Trust, cert.

Quicksiver....

5%

do
*9
pref.
Pacific Mail....
40%
Atlantic Mail..
Adams Expr’ss
65%
Am. Merch.Un
United States. *' *

Wells, Faigo..

Cumberl. Coal.
Consolld Coal.

*

i4%

*****

106
110

3%

3%

4%

118

*4%

40%

....

.

.

65“ 65%
•

•

44%
14%
40
29

43

#

40* * 40%

40% 40%

.

.

.

....

65

43

65

....

43% 43%
14% 14%
*
40
30

*

*****

** * *

*79
*78% 80
*16% 16%
17%
17%
105
104% 105 *104% 105
109
“
110
109% *108
*114
*117
*116%
130
131
130%
*iie 118 *118%
118
88
88
*38
88% 89
*3%
3% 8%
3%
34
33% 33%
34%
10
10
10% 10%
10%

Swiss

Amsterdam

....

Frankfort
Bremen
Prussian thalers

67

*65“

14

*4%

4%

¥■

41

*4%

12

....

39% 40**
....

•

•

•

•

44
14
40

29%
66

40
♦

*64% 65%
43% 43%
13% 14
*

*****

*62“

40
30
65

40

*

26% 26%
64

32

15% 65%
42% 42%
43% 48%

.

14

•

*****

14
40

05
*62“ 11%

Government
Bonds.

MarchlO

5,175.450

17
24

‘

3v865,0(i0
2,2*7,050
4.413,0 0
3,741,300

31—-

.

April 7
‘

14

May
“

'

“
‘

“

-

16

1,613,000
1,792,500
2,795,200
2,459,000
2,338,500
2,969,500
3,174,800

23

*

30
7

Jnly
‘

14
21

“

28

amount.

1,209,000

3,915,500
3,862,750
2,791,500
2,376,200
2,725,950
3,641,550

9

“

_

2,129,450
6,040,200

5
-12
19
26
2

Total

Bonds.
922,500
940,700
663,500
586,000
512,500
525,500
401,500
677,300
558,000
671,515
438,9U0
353,000
325,000

1,423,500

1,137,000

1,373,000
1,059,500
687,000
903,000

1,008,500
2,442,500
2,117,600
1,957,500
997,000

446,500

497,000
438,200
247,500
226,000
245.000

2,171,500
1,971,000
1,356,000
813,500

292,000
-

151,500

8,423,900
5,567,201
4,580,660
6,964,300

6.513,305
5,<78,700
3,739,950
7,885,500
5,846,505
5,531,760
3,917,400
3,632,200

4,058,460
6,730,560

4.227,600
4,188,200
4,039,700
4,836,000
4,554,500
4.617,500
4,139,805

The Gold Market.—The Gold Market for the week
past has
less agitation and excitement thau at
any time since
the inauguration of
shown

foreign difficulties. The extreme range of the
premium has been 122£ and 119, both quotations having been
made on the tor e of
foreign despatches. The market has derived
an element of
strength from the heavy exports of specie, and it is
probable that the shipments of the week will aggregate
fully $5,000,000. The principal dealings have been on account of the
foreign bankers, and less has been done in the way of speculation,
the total clearing at the Gold
Exchange Bank -during the week
having been less than $300,0u0,000. To-day the market was
steady at 121£@121£, until near the close of the afternoon, when it
was
heavily raided, and the price forced down to 120i, on the an¬
nouncement that bonds in London had advanced to
82|,) in
Frankfort to 82£. The price
subsequently reacted, however and
closed at 121f@121£ at 6 p.m.
The following table will show the course of the
gold j remiam
each day of the past week :
r-

,

Open- Low- High- Closing.

Saturday, July
Monday, “
Tuesday, “
Wedn’day,11
Thursday, “
Friday,
“

23.... 119%’
25.... 120%
26.... 121%
27.... 121%
28
121%
29.... 121%
...

Current week
119%
Previous week.
116%
Jan. 1’70. to date... 120%

eat.
119%
120%

120%
121

Total

est.

ing.

Clearings.

120%
121%
121%

120

96,286,000

120%
121%
121%
121%
120%

73,599,000

122

121%

122

120%

121%

119%
116%

122

110%

123%

122%

of the latter

63,666.000
59,30),000
73,434,000 1,646,238 2,033,099
49,284,000 1,624,164 1,988117

120% 415,629,000 9,343,5«911,526,775
119 746,327,00014,968,855 18,508,350
120%
....

being due to the advance in the rate of die.;; vat
by the Bank of England to 5 per cent. At present rates double
eagles cannot be shipped at a profit. At the close rates are weak
and sales are
reported at a concession on the nominal rates, which
are as

follows:




46V

:

$457,878

82
626,855 00
669.881 12
579,289 40 “
594,331 80
530,873 75

•Payments.-

Gold.

Currency

$505,817
916,612
491,444
326,635
1,906.925

40 $1,526,045 66
46
117,523 82
33
170,269 30
71
170,862 81
06
2,293,671 19
699,228 44
197,282 15

$363,966

62
473 541 66

200,122 28

312,935

Paym’ts during week..

2,296,947

68

042.2»T^

$74,198,220 72 $16,124,072 11
4,474,654 88
4,042,227 27

Balance July 29

60

394,663 69

$2,812,030 00 $3,357,609 89 $4,846,663 39 $4,474,654
83 *4
Balance, July 22
70,840,610 83 11,277,408 72
*

$69,723,565 89 $12,081,844 84

New York City Banks.-—The
following statement shows the
oondition of the Associated Banks of New York
City for the week
ending at the commencement of business on July 23,1870:
-AVEBAGK AMOUNT OP

Capital

Loans and
CircnlaNet
Discounts. Specie.
tion. Deposits.

tX

$3,000,000 $10,097,000 $5,492,500 $902,000 $2,536,000
$1,062,700
2,050,000 5,880,000
1,137,500
10,100
4,276,400
770,600
8,000,000 6,712,800 2,913,800 871,800 6,802,500
1,725,100
2,000,000 6.176.100
514,500 559,450 4.318.800
' 1,500,000
4,871,960
758,436
473,024
3.618.800
544,702
3,000,000 8,254.132
3,782,429
1,450
9.015,496 1,409,614
1,800,000 4,067,181
438,400
516,190 2,632,969
884,820
City
1,000,000 5,600,669 1,420,500
3,562.922
200,000
Tradesmen’s
1,000,000 3,028,680
99,742
754,006 1,582,029
Fulton
600,000 2,055,542
194,224
1,692,818
715,783
Chemical
300 000
6.539.300
902.700
5,234,COO 1,419,600
Merchants’ Exchange.... 1,235,000
8,288,416
188.757
449,293 2,689,360
619,056
National....
1.500,000 3,608,397
477,307 487,245 2.638.299 1,252,653
Butchers’
800,000
2,418,800
52,600 257,100 1.776.800
504,700
Mechanics and Traders’.
600,000 1,920,408
31,749
195,720 1,308,324
872,154
Greenwich
200.000
1,076,911
2,948
986,587
154,266
Leather Mannf. National
600,000 3,212,824
339,584
260,830 2,107,931
692341
Seventh Ward, National.
500,000 1,365,403
110,135
169.380
1,015,329
828,496
State of New York
2,000,000 4.499.600
901,900 482,000 3.735.800 1,101,614
American Exchange
5,000,000 10.280.400
1,020,000 891,700 6.302.600 1,593,000
Jommerce
10,000,000 22,596,066
898,628 5,119,290
6,885,446 4,772,168
Broadway
1.000,000
9.753.600
81J2T0
900,000 9.261.500 2,300,300
Ocean
1,000,000 2,518,030
57,089
798,475 1,107,881
318,490
Mercantile
1,000,000
3,729,000
174,300
479,100 3,222,100
750,000
Pacific
422,700 2,282.320
13,460
4,730 1,675,160
259,280
Republic
2,000,000 5,116,365
2,790,462
853,419
6,008,451
875,092
Chatham
2,871,200
172 200
450,000
130,900
2.832.800
682,856
People’s.
412,500
1.537.300
24,900
5,989 1.387.500
281,400
North American
1,000,000 2,861.000
100,600
4,070 2,417,000
802,500
Hanover
1,000,000
2,390,776
272,413
289,474
286.448
1,462,009
Irving
500.000
1,923,000
13.9C0
193,835
1.786,0C0
507,000
Metropolitan
4,000,000 11,418,712 2,163,774 2,141,850 6,583,210
463,571
Citizens
1,655.182
400,000
44,321
131,537
1,292,984
828,965
Nassau
i
1,000.000
2,584.058
67,317
3.979
277.904
2,251,029
Market
1,000.000
3,055,800
217,400
518,110
1.981.900
498.900
St. Nicholas
1,000.000
2.687.100
67.6C0
750.200
408.900
1,064,900
3 628,500
Shoe and Leather
119.205
1,500,000
872,841
798,100
2.441.900
Corn Exchange....
1,000.000
2.807.600
54,800
5,787 1,592,700
438,000
Continental
4,665,274
2,000,000
303,239
577,568
3,104,906
758/4)0
Commonwealth
2.709.100
750.000
151,100 233,600 2.518.600
529.000
Oriental
300,000 •1,437,800
4,700
1,100
235,000
1.187.300
Marine
400.000
1,789,110
860,000
124,950
477/40
1,376.280
Atlantic
57,900
98,000
300,000 1,058,600
758,200
Importers and Traders’.. 1,500,000 9,835,900
409,TOO
501.500 9.652.200 2,109,000
Park
2,000.000 17,777,495 2,275,831
906,786 22,079,500 4,768/85
Mechanics’ Banking Ass.
1.141.400
500,000
57,100
298,900
447,900
1.145.500
Grocers’
680.769
300,000
10,886
226,796
2,015
623,900
North River
25.908
199.471
400,000 1,168 200
11,004
1,015,163
Bast River
1,078,200
10,200
850,000
250,000
685.400
258.500
Manufacturers & Mer....
1.537.400
500.000
6,600
677
205/00
1.190.200
FourthNational
5,000.000 19.013,380
1,235,737 2,931,124 16,010,888 3,547/47
Central National
12,099.200
316,636 1,887,500 10,952,454 2/61,155
3,000,000
8econd National
1,510,000
392,000
300,000
270,000 1,284,000
Ninth National
121.000
1,000,000 6,393,000
774,000
5,801,000 1,712,000
First National
3.929,028
878,087
463,507
500,000
335,822
4,409,472
Third National
565,700 786,725
1,000,000 5,463,000
5.347.800 1,007,900
New York N. Exchange*
1,081,760
248,600
2,100
267,800
300,000
660.400
Tenth National
4,004,800
8.311.500
870/00
1,000.000
98,300 904,600
Bowerv National
324,966
2,247 218.500 1,071,641
250,000 1,137,447
New York County
1,198,800
862,400
25,200 178,000 1,098,000
Bull 8 Head
1,644,980
5,421
6,464
1.753.501
200,000
491,836
84,216
Stnyvesant
3,718
510,892
.00,000
Eleve ith Ward.
455.987
75/00
200,000
394,874
843
191,827
Eighth National
810,844
250,000
582,887
250,000
American National
628,060
21,767
872,762
795,999
448,230
500,OOG
Germania
824,733
6,590
828,944
Manufactnr s & Builders
ioV/oo
725,123
748,343
Manhattan
Merchants’
Mechanics
Union
America
Phoenix

.

....

.

.

..

83.970,200 286,090,798 34,358,61232,999,337 233,965,513

53,978,711

The deviations from the returns of previous week are as

follows

Total.

...

Loans

Inc .$2,713,480
Dec. 6,777,076
Inc
971,561

Circulation

Balances. —,
Gold. Currency.
2,080,886 2,542,645
1,843,979 1,661,722
1,311,772 1,644,722
1,336,470 1,656,470
,

Foreign Exchange.—The special considerations
affecting for¬
eign exchange were the same as last week. The market has been
very dull, and weak on long, but strong on sight, sterling, the firm¬
ness

®)

$ ® «r

79

Total.

Specie

Quotations.

follows

New York

Company

2,326,000
1,961,500
1.666,111
965,300
1,259,500

3.324.700

21
28

‘

State &

City Bonds.

44

Banks.

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

Week

@

-Sub-Treasury.

00
425,000 00
523,000 00
560,000 00
553,000 00
513,000 00

25..
26..
27..
28..
29..

44

44

5%

State

.

39
46

45

Gold.

July 23.. $238,000
44

8%
34%
10%

The

lending—

42%

Receipts.
Currency.

Receipts.

130%

This is the price bid and asked, no sale was
made, at the Board.

•Old

as

Custom
House.

....

* 40%

• •••

....

64% 65
43% 43%

5.07%^5.ogjy

81%

©

<27^®5-08%

5R-°7%<a6.oe5

....

39% 40%

....

k

38

81
76

...

Treasury have been

17%

*4%

....

....

The transactions for the week at the Custom
House aod Sob-

105
110

118
89

41%©
37%©
44%@

Hamburg

44

80

....

1S% 14*

....

*43%

82“ 84“

82
81

....

83%
...

4%

*64” 65% *64*
*

129%

3% 3%
33% 34%
10% 10%

34% 34%
10% 10%

80
*79
17

....

....

34
66
•

119

88% 88%

110

80

*...

7
14

•

*108
*115
129
118
*83

....

88%

79"

87

3
Days.
H0%(&

5.13%@5.13%
5.13%@5.18%
5.18%<a5.18%

Antwerp

..

92

Days.

109%© 109%
108%© 109%

commercial

.

Panama

60

London bankers’

....

....

tJuly 80,1870.

The

Deposits.
Legal Tenders

following are the totals for aseries of weeks pasi:
Circula-

Specie.
68,634.212 35,898,493
268,143,603 33,399,135
270,003,682 32,014,747
270.807,768 72,271,252
271,756,871 29,887,183
272,171,388 28,787,692
269,981,721 26,879,513
269,016,279 25,310,322
269,504,285 28,817,596
275,246,471 81,498,999

"83.676,564

May 21. 280,261,077 84,116,935
May 28. 279,550,743 82,723,035
June 4 279,485,734 80,949,490
June 11. 276,419 576 28,523,819
June 18. 276,689,004 28,895,971
June 25 277,017,367 28,228,985
July 2 276,496,503 31,611,330
July 9. 277,783,427 35,734,434
July 16. 285,377.318 41,’35,688
July 23. 286,090,T»8 34,258,612

33,191,648
83,249,818
33,285,083
83,142,188
83,072,643
33,034,113
33,670,365
33,100,357
82,027,786

Mar.
5.
Mar. 12
Mar. 19
Mar. 26
.

.

.

2

.

Apr. 9
Apr. 16
Apr. 23
Apr. 30
May 7

.

'

.
.
.
.

tion.

83,783,942
33.835,739
33,699,568
33,674,894
33,754,253
33,698,258
33,616,928
38,506,393
33,444,641

May 14. —83,293,980
278,383,314 32,453,906
.

.

.

The

617,370

.

Loans.

Apr.

Dec.

.Inc.

following

ate

32,999,337

Legal

Deposits. Tenders.
213,078,341 54,069,933
209,831,225 53,302,004
208,816,823 52,774,420
208,910,713 52,685,063
206,412,430 50,011,793
201,752,434 47,670,633
202 918,989 50,180,040
203 583,375 68,119,646
208,789,350 64,944,865
217,362,218 66,108,922
222,442 319 57,947,005
226,552,926 59,028,306
228,039,345 61,618,676
226,191,797 61,290,310
220,699,290 60,159,170
210,932,852 58,120,211
217,522,555 57,215,525
219,083,428 56,615,254
219,725,468 53,848,970
234,332,355 53,461,841
233,96*,513 rr 978,711
,

.

the latert. quotations for bank stock:

Aggregate
Olearinjr*

603,182,502
548.015,72j

625,079,561
481,253,085
616,053,093

428,4J8.WJ
|44,605,80»
668,515.JJ!
701,060,

659,260,166
625,678,820

576,625,521
513,452,668
572,132,050
498,672,684
537,223,270
662.736,404

490,180,962
623,349,491
759,349,499

THE CHRONICLE.

1870.]

Jofy 80,

Bid. Askd.
Bid. Askd.
Mech. BkgAsso ..
188
160
Broadway
150
Ocean..'.
87
88
121
Mercantile
{64

York,
jjanbattan.
1ft*

Hereby

1

Mechanics

Am. Exchange.
Pacific

city.--

205
107

SSSh BiVer
Tradesmen fl

150

G^enwich..
BBSS®

114

County.

Park

160

160
165

Central Nation’l 103
First National..
Fourth Nation’l 107
Ninth National. 109
Tenth National. 125
Eleventh Ward.
Oriental
160

103

Gold Exchange. 61
Bankers & B.As 100

64
109

124
107
167

..

IS*

Pean

170

Corn Exchange

810,000

Townsnip...

Western

Manufacturers’ •

2,310,000
2,400
800,000 2,355,000 16,772
500,000 2,560,000
2,000
250,000 1,340,200 19,459
113,345
4,8i0
350,000
500,000 1,415,166 2,000
400,000 1,491,700 3,115

570,150 1,596,000

• • •

B’k of Commerce..
girard.

Tradesmen’s
Consolidation

835,6t 6

14,467

1,000,000 3,675,000
300,000 1,369,834

65,000
5,041

250,000

300,000 1,160,198
400,000

Commonwealth ...
Com Exchange....
Union
First
Third
Fourth
Sixth.
Seventh

1,210,590
881,597
300,000

Eighth

Central
Bank of Republic.
Total

583

761,227
490,000
681,430

942,000
750,000 2,830,000
1,000,000 2,135,000

729,000 1,536,000
453,000 1.223,000
613,000 1,994,000
382,500 1,188,500
822,883 V 51,993
196,105
992,126
409,472 1,542,557
390,000 1.139,555
2-28,873
647,271
878,000 2.757,000
395.251 1,039,883
277.769

500,000 1,726,000 20*000
30”,000 1,457,000 64,000
1,000,000 3,587,000 114,000
300,000 1,011,000
200,000
160,000
250.000

17,000

275,000

The

2,170

The deviations from last week’s returns

,

619,000
478,400
450,000
219,735
223.7J9

179,160

450*1*66
209,205
692,000
176,891

855,975

270,000

476,638
852,185
283,471
824,707
428,(00 1,305,000
395,000 1,602,000
1,134,000 3,566,000
323,100
896,300
258,556
843,983
137,000
352,000
157,280
403,380
2'6,000
722,000
706,000 2,120,000
453,000 1,438,000

359,070
210,830
450,000
212,000
776,000
262,724
133,660
135,000
219,385
239,000
586,000
598,250

Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.
Apr.

14
21
28

are as

follows

Specie

Legal Tenders...
Deposits

4

11
18

Apr.

Apr.

At*r.

Circulation

The annexed statement shows the condition of the

Banks for

a

Philadelphia

Tme 6
June 13
June 20
dune 27

Loans.

51,400,381

Specie. Legal Tend. Deposits. O&culation.
13,192,282
39,0*5,042
-10,576,852

1,429,807
1,677,218

lv,704,279

39,382.352

51,587,837

1,5S8,372

13,125,658

39,781,153

Apr.

51,898,135

1,580,747

12,769,911

Apr.

52,041,533

1,499,429
1,314,127
1,063,741
1,247,820
1,222,629
1,164,012
1,049,943
923,948
869,597
841,569
743,285
728,^44
917,270
1,320,947
1,266,800
1,214,046

13,052,827
13,8*2,761
14,827,013
15,441,522
15,c51,265
16,244,785
16,450,837

38,771,237
39,279,143
41,033,306
41,677,500
42,997,076
43,429,347
44,038,042
44,233,016
45,117,172
45,122,720
44,957,979
44,398,340
44,351,747
44,609,623
44,024,172
43,835,846
42,639,473

51,928,431
52,019,535

2

52,243,057
52,413,398
52,234,603
52,500,343

May
May
May

52,3-20,224

June

63^093,534

June
June

53,583,296

53,647,408
54,288,879

June

July
July
July
July

55,037,866
54,667,170
54,294,723
53,942,152

16,739,102
16,926,682
16,702,115
16,309,340

15,805,568
15,401,749
14,595,069
14,223,9S0
14,007,749

10,565 908
10,578,482
10,575,771
10,571,749
10,571,794
10,675,120
10,571,535
10,563,357
10,562,404
10,564,075
10,560,378
10,561,684
10,567,356
10,569,852
10,562,889
10,556,277
10,556,100
10,553,981

10,648,156

Boston Banks.—Below we give a statement of the Boston
National Banks, as returned to the Clearing House,
Monday
July 25,1870.
Banks.
Atlantic

Loans.
Capital.
Specie. L. T. Notes. Deposits. Circnla.
$750,000 $1,516,899 $93,822
$60,720 $542,899
$438,539
Atlas
792.486
1,500,000
686,172
2,804,150
76,446
72,307
Blackstone
1,500,000 3,384,290
252,833 1,442,595
47,538
795,920
«»ton..
1,000,000
1,956,135
27,468
161,500
651,078
593,479
170
Boylston
500,000 1,431,724
238,350
766,409
446,693
Columbian
772,290
1,000,000 2,340,748
78,067
307,000
791,219
Continental..... 1,000,000 1,940,628 99,124
647,037
106,437
563,578
1,000,000 2,708,024 118,255
946,219
106,203
789,820
99,573
590,667
24,286
387,527
perett
200,000
85,015
Janeuil Hall.... 1,000,000 2,274,443 62,565 348.333 1,243,002
572,853
5,811
jnreeman’s...... 600,000 1,495,832
5^9,864
118,366
354,432
356.094
1,000,000 2,480,606
3,768
290,430 1,368,086
“"“Mon
75,683
750,000 1,504,566
731,188
241.308
75,206
444,871
1,000,000 1,848,829 78,99
71,428
548,150
*arket
547,078
853.308
80Q,000 1,525,568 57,555
65,581
Massachusetts.. 800,000 1,803,288 70,784
388,278
207,902
908,518
916,209
13,955
252,843
245,953
81,128
400,000
v.. ..
KftogtB’ ...3,000,000 5,812,537 628,475 763,986 2,798,887 1,810,665
■Wat Vernon..
200,000
615,229
59,333
41,785
373,128
176,840
794,011
K?Bgland--* 1,000,000 2,381,619 105,479 283.166 83*,822
162.333
729,982
786.500
SfSb;
1,000,000 2,277,590 96,336
872,268 1,018,097
864.500
si^0t?n
900,000 1,885,175 162,665
91,818
139,924
2,185,678
595,361
659,958
SSJ5V
Shoe & Leather. 1.000,000
152.438
1,000,000 2,485,981
81,606
924,026
358,356
992.150
2,000,000 3,830,594 133,702
268.214
863,023
283,264
727,202
620,139
1.500,000 3,355,994 106,759
89,101
449,945
179,285
600,000 1,0 <! 0,256 58,808
372.118 1,080,810
2,000,000
3,255,989 287,605
698,789
Washington
38,123
696,905
750,000
86,000
1,934,907
674.696
162.167 1,385,716
790,169
4,169,010 321,899
Swond (Granite)
897,816 2,558,299
785,:-00
4,986,113 290,566
79,498
821,230
953,644
93,000
173,127
gl300,000
948,039
$WCK?m.merce 2,000,000 4,465,612 68,273 528,484 1,263,452
341.214
527,458
595,698
B»kifp
1,000,000 1,875,379 27,766
826,376
5,027,877 347,832
440,552
796,<00
“kof the
Repub. 1,000,000 2,810,177 80,000
1,500,000
794,333
115.167
667,368
EK- v*
1,000.000
490.697
1,774,016 25.600
205.100
442,857
167,129
797,339
336,932
..1,000,000 1,947,654 26.600
795,271
Sjffipge
1,000,000 8,658,812 368,686
110,135 1,806,727
“Me & Leather. 1500
000
774,130
8,125,873
868,289
11,228
182.101

8H?lk,mj*kf®**

lffiooo

B’konR®dnmp’n

{XL6.;*




weeks past

a series ol

Specie.

Tenders.

4,929.867
6,024,691
5,170,700
5,190,348
5 163,494
5,057,341
4,851,954
4,536,884
4,551.701
4,792,968
4.545,690
4,068,744
3,875,717
3,475,528

8,765,874
8,510,573
8,352,201
8,499 444
8.470,455
8,162,080

37,6*0,983
87,708,082
37,093,533
37,123,211
38 851,613

8,276,721

39,532,827
39,920,142
41,042,250
41,205.597

106,901,486
106,454,436
106,416,987

July

3,534,343

3,397,873
3,177,413
4,298,219
5,494,539
5,411,963
1,841,322

106,839,304
106,9.i7,278

4
July 11
July 18
July 25

107,817,458
107,714,221

....

28,447

.Dec.

Legal

Deposits. Circulation*
25,280,027

25,270,484
55,265,007
25,278,443
58,2*5,002
25,290,204
25.231,847
25,209,615
25,207,466
25,2 8,208

39,504,080

8,872,670
10,081,661
9,814,428

,41,675,369
41,160,009

9,584,703

*

95,260,868

9,684,654
9,721,703
9,778,281
9,560,009
9,1S6,082
9,332,858
8,816,494
7,897,646
8.362,919
8,958,724

25,199,719
25,150,880
25,139,278
25,146,390

40,056,344

40.218,62038,901,202

25,175,753

38,647,292
38,899,529
40,360,389

25,135,650
25,130,686
25,139,796
25,178,20 s
25,149,75

40,723.035

40,226,979

29,722,324

SOUTHERN SECURITIES.
Quotations from N. Y. Stock Exchange, and also by J. M.
Weith & Arents, 9 New Street, and A. C. Kaufman,
Charleston, South Carolina.
Bid
98

State Securities.
Alabama 8s
“
5s

Ash

Georgia 6s, old
“
6s, new
“
7s, old
“
7s, new

80

853

Savannah, Albany.& Guif7t>

Louisiana 6s, ex-coupons...
“
new bonds

67*

Bin Ask
40
35
74
753
76
84
86

Macon and Augusta stock...
Macon & Brunsw’k end b. 7s
Atlantic and Gulf7sbords
“
“
stock....

Pensacola & Georg;a 1st m 7s
“
'
“
2dm8s.

“

77

6s, Levee...,
8s* Levee
7«, f emtentiary...
8s, Texas & N.O. R h

•

♦

....

4*

.

•

“

4k

82
•

50

.

•

66

05 OO

64

65*

Greenville and Columbia 7s,

•

•

Sparten burg and Union 7s,
60
guar’d by State S. C
Chaileston & Savannah, 6*
guaranteed by State S. C.. 96

45

7s, Fire Loan Bonds
Columbia, S. O., 6s
Columbus, “ 7s, bonds...

Bonds, 7s, guaranteed
Savannah <te Char. 1st M., 7s..
South Carolina Railroad 6s.

Fredricksburg 6s
Lynchburg 6s
Macon 7s, bonds
Memphis 6s bonds, old
6s, 44 new
Memphis 6s, endorsed
Memphis past due coupons.
Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds —
8s,
“
...
Montgomery 8s

At

“

tNashville6s

45

“

“

consol. 6s
7s
Railroad 6s...
10s..
new, Funding 7s

“

“

44

70

“

“

“

2ds6s
Sds 8s

44

Railroad Securities.
Alabama.

“

“

“

88

“

50

“

“

Augusta bonds..
“

endorsed.

62

....

4

67
86

♦

•

•

•

74*

•

39
j

m.

4th

m.

67
63
....

•

.

78
81
79
78

78*
....

81
78
83

-

“

•

“

u

*

78

*

*82*
82

>

o.,

80

82*

81
78

84

1 m 8s
7s

conv

it

....

...

*

83
95

Fre’ksb’g & 44
Poto. 6s.
44
it

76
73

.

....c.»

Richm. & Petersb. lstm 7s
“
44
2dm. 6s
“
“
3dm. 8s
“

82*

tf f

60
30

guart'dtts..
8s

4 • t

• ••«

.

83

3dm. 6s...c

“

..,

“

2d

Norfolk & Petersburg

stock
Southwestern RR., 1st mtg.
stock
Macon and Western stock

76

Sonthside, 1st mtg. 8*....... 79
“

“

71

-

fnnd, int. 8s
Rich. & Dan\ lsi c 3is*d 6s.
“
Pib mont bra’h
“
lsts 3e.

stock

stock

...

3ds, 6s
4th, 8s

••

“

•a

74
10

80

2nds, 6s

“

..

Central RR. 1st mtg. 7s

»

76
86

Virginia Central lsts, 6s
“

8s,interest
2 mtg, 8s

Georgia.
Georgia RR. 1st mtg

•

70

4th, 8s

.

Mobile & Montg. RF, 1st m..
Selma and Meridian 1st m. 8s

•

74
39
82

•

Va. & Tenn lets 6s-.._.
“
2ds 6s
“

-.

as

aa

4ths8s

Orange & Alex. & Man. lsts

Montgomery and Eutalla 1st
8s, gold bonds, endorsed by
“

-w

77

endorsed

Orange & Alex., lsts 6s,

8s

“

•

70*

56
38

Virginia*

7s, bonds
Wilmington, N. “C.,6s
“

—

69
73

6s....

Savannah

State of Alabama
Mobile and Ohio, sterling

•

Virginia 6s, end

Memp. & Charleston lsts, 7s
44
“
2nds, 7s
“
“

,

1st. end
Income.

72*
75

.

•

rjfg
stock

Memphis & L. Rock lets, 8s.

“

•

#

Memphis and Ohio 10s....
44
44

Petersburg 6s

“

«

stock

Richmond 6s

“

«

by State Tenn. 64*

Norfolk 6s

Montg’ry & West P. 1st, 8s..
44

62

*

North Eastern 1st mtg. 8s...
“
2d
‘8s...
“
3d 44
8s...
“
stock
Cheraw & Darlington 7s.....
Tennessee.
East Tenn. <fc Georgia 6s

New Orleans 6s
“

44

“

•

84
50

•

Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds
“

•

....

....

•

stock..

guar, by State S. Carolina
Certificates, guar, by 8. C...

7s

Charleston, S. C., 6s, stock..

•

•

60*

•

Atlanta, Ga, 8s, bonds....,
“
...

•

91
63

40

Char!., Col. &> Aug, lBt M.,7s
58

-

stock...

dine Ridge, 1st Mortgage
South Carolina.

1866
1867

—

•

62
59

ch. & Ruth.IstM.end
“
1st M., 8s...
North Carolina RR 8s..
“

“

Alexandria 6s

•

75
6
60

“

5s

Securities.

•

•

•

Wilmington <fc Weldon 7s....

Virginia 6s,ex-coupon
6s, i:ew
“
registered stock, old
“
“
“

City

•

...

North Carolina.

6s, new bonds....

“

79
65
79
67
81
77
7

60

2d
“ 8s
“
& Tenr.. 1st m.7s
“
“
consols, 8s
N. Orleans & Jackson lets,8s
44
“
cert, 8s
AA
A A
StOCk
N. Or. Jack’n & Opel.lsts,8s

6s, new,Jan &Ju)y

“

....

'mimm

“

6s, Special Tax...

“

12*

Mississippi Cent. 1st mtg. 7p
44

6s, April & Oct...
reg. stock....
Tennessee 6s, cx coupons...
“
“

....

isiana.

South Carolina 6s, old
“

76
46

Mississippi and Lou¬

North Carolina 6s, ex-coup..
“
8s, new
“

..

bonds, end. by Savannah..

“

61,418,645

Apr.

.

..

..

“

series of weeks:

Date.
Mar.
Mar.
Mar.

Apr.
May
May

6,525

.

May 2.
May 9
May 16...
May 23
May 30

:

Decrease.

.

25......

“

Decrease. $216,231
Decrease. 196,378

....

595,806
504,665

Inc.
Dec.

Cix eolation

comparative totals for

are

:

108,367,481
108,044,028
107,884,867
107,043,809
106,722,659
106,156,094
108,569,372
106,012,627
1<6,245,606
107,001,304
106,949,539
106,840.256
107,097,074
107,151,710

7....,,

“

Decrease. $352,571
52,754
Decrease.

following

follows

are as

Legal tender notes
Deposits

Inc. $103,237
Dec.
570,641

“

Capital

35,149,754

Loans.

15,755,150 53,942,1521,214,046 14,007,749 42,639,473 10,548,456

Loans

8,958,724 29,722,324

28,791

Loans.

Banks.
Capital. Loans. Specie. L. Tend.Deposits.Circnlat’n
Philadelphia
$1,500,000 $ 5,338,300*700,000 $1,072,000 $4,?04,000 $1,000,000
NmthAmerica ... 1,000,000 4.362,078 55,873 1,391,502 3,511,133
780,800
8,000,000 5,317,131 10b,356 1,300,399 4,130,925
716,578
Farmers’ & Mech

Kensington.......

47,350,000 107,714,2214,841,322

260,776

The deviations from last weeks returns

125X

J

Southwark

542,800
492,735

1,530,000

..

Banks.—The following is the average condition
0f the PhiladelDhia Banks for the week preceding Monday,
July 25,1870 :
Total net

Bank N. Liberties

164,557
235,838 -1,254,460

Webster

Specie

PaUiADELPHii

Commercial
Mechanics’.......

395,460
129,000

Capital

..

114

1,537,979
399,309
1,045,212

2,000,000
200,000
1,000,000

Total

..

Manuf <fc Merch
N Y. Nat.Exch

Peoples

125

112

..

Importers & Tr. 157

135

7.503
3,639,568
585,166
27,283
2,436,866 14S,4S5
2,805,879 148,873

Security...

Atlantic
New T.

130

Grocers
East River
Market
Nassau
Shoe and Leath.

::

Commonwealth.

118

Citizens

Revere....,
Union

Continental
St. Nicholas
Marine

108%
104

Irving
Metropolitan

••

•

119

N. America
Hanover

JSSof N.iork 110
Commerce...

167

Republic

145

112

Chatham

124

Union

America..**

Bid. Askd<
95

143

...

.

.

.

85
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

is 77* *75

6^f

70

.

144

OTJSvjQHJtymekK.
QUOTATIONS OF .STOCKS AND BONDS..

...

....

The Dally Prices of the Active Stocks and Governments are Given
Previous Page, Quotations are of the
Per'fW
Value, Whatever the iPar may be. Southern Securities are Quoted in a Separate List.
-ihif

h

■’

STOCKS AND

Bid, Ask.1

SECURITIES.

American Gold Coin..

121%

8TOCK8 AND

6s, 5-20s,

110

Albany A Susqueh, 1st M., 7.
do
do
2d M.,7.

113% 113*

reg

5s, 1874,

•.

%i

»

State Ronds.

....

•

• * • •

i

106%

•

....ji

cou

....

“

•

'9i%
*

*

92

-

t

-

r:.

18
85
SO

84
(Not previously quoted.)
|o
' do
3d M., 6
81
-V
<*)
1
Arkansas 7s, L. K. A F. S. issue.
Hart. & Erie, 1st M.(ola)1 7 85
113 '4 116%;
California 7s
Lo
do
1st M. (new) 7
•I ^
100
Connecticut 6s
do
do 1st M., n.(guar) 7.
do
War Loan
J ...
Buff., Corry & Pittsb., 1st M., 7.
llinois Canal Bonds. 1870
100
Buff., N. Y. & Erie, 1st M., 7...
do
6s coupon, ’77
(100
89%
Burlington & Mo. L. G-, 7..
do
do
1879
100
Bur., Ce. R. A Min.,IstM.,gd
do
War Loan
100
; §5“
Camden A Amboy, 6 of ’75.,
Indiaua5s
100
.

-

.

.

do
do
do

.

.

26%

'

89%
90

.

!

«-

Kentucky 6s

—

98%

Maryland 6s,‘70

%

6s. Defence
'Massachusetts 6s, Gold
do
6s, Currency...

-

do

-

(102%

109

j
100% |
98

58, Gold

do

—

vclult

ICO

i

«...

dQ

.

’

6s, 1883

--

.

,7s,i878:.r::;::..-.:..-Jioe i~~.

do---~7s, WarBounlyLoan 100

;

•

do
Military Loan 6s, 1871 105%j ..
do
Stock Loan, 6s, ’72-’77 104%- 105
do
do
6s, ’77-’82 110 ) ..
Rhode Island 6s
jl00
Vermont 6s
100 j

‘

City Bonds

do
do

do

do
do
Boston Is, gold.'::/./.
ao
6s...

my.

do
do
<lo
do
do
do
do

L

p:I^ii

;

...;

\
•.*.

j 1-5

i

no

do
do
do
do

do

do

1st M.. 6, 1905.

h3

1"..
/

j 98"

§

....

96

J104

>107

!l(>0% 100%

llOl%10l %
j 77

East Penn., 1st M.,
Elnv. & Wil’ms, 5s

•

7,1^8.

do
5th M., conv., 7, ’&8.
Erie & Pittsburg, lst.M., 7, ’82.
! do
do
2d M., 7. ’90.
;

do

consol,
Sc Laiicas.,lst' M., (

-

-

T

i.

1-

85
94

•t'. 100

8f>K
94

do,,

,

jlt'8' ‘

Loanin.i

'

Bur. C. R «fcM.RR,lst M,7(g l)

90
to

104“

74
87

75
88

Teiff., Mad. & I.lstM.(I&M)7, ’8i
do
do 2d M., 7.1873
do
do" 1st M.,7.1906....
.Tunc., Cih. &'lnd.,lstM.,7,
.Tunc., Pliila ,1st M.,gunr.6. ’i

90“

9i"

87% i Kansas Pacificist M„ (gold)
82
Kentucky Cont.,lst M.,.7,.1872^
92 %!
do
,,do„; 2(1 M.,7,18a3..
Lake Sli & M. S., (new) 7,1889.
do
do lst M., S.F.,7, ’85.
do 2d M
J 90
M.(M.S.)7,
.:: 100
lst^L/D M.& T.-) 7,' ’76
,

tl-8

Wks.,lst M.6(gd)

fielma.Marion A Mem.-RR:
1stM., endorsed, 8,/gold).
St. JosDen. C. R,lst My8(gd)
.

wfefft *W7s. rr!;VsV M.j.7, (gd)
Winoiu * SJ.; Peter, 24 M., 7..
Ml9C<)i]jUl£>|l0 J3«md«.
Aul Doak Aim, Co, 77*86.
yg
^e. 1st Alf, h'-x$75„i fitt-,-

.,

100
80

94
81
50
•88

Lehigh Valley, 1st M.. 6,1«7R.

90
85

90*" 92“

88
98

104%
80

! do 1st (neW) M., 6, ’9 - 96%
do lstM./Hazelton,^ ■V.V;
Iifttle Miami, 1st M.y-6,18S3
85
Little Schuylkill. lstM..r7,187 102.
UuyiK
Lonlav, C. &
7, ’97.. 83
86
Louis, a rr'jin
.

Si

751

97
86
«

.

v

!

f

84
to

8*2

b

do

pref...,

VM

114%
105

....

86

Long Island

80

Louisv., Cin. & Lex., pref

do
do
common.
Louisville & Nashville
Marietta & Cin., 1st preferred
do
do
2d pref
Manchester & Lawrence
Mine Hill & Schuylkill Haven.
New Jersey
New York & Harlem, pref...
New York & New Haven....

85
103

do

„.

do

102

116%

m
150
145

scrip.

New York, Prov. Sc Boston....
Northern of New Hampshire
Northern Central...1...
North Missouri
North Pennsylvania
Norwich & Worchester

84%
102
96

22

m

Ogdens. & L. Cliamplaiu.....
do
do
pref....
Ohio & Mississippi, preferred.
Oil Creek & Allegheny River.

82‘

Old Colony & Newport..,..,,.
'Pacific (ofMissouri)

90%

| Panama

I Pennsylvania
jPhilauelphia Erie
iPhiladelphia & Trenton
iPhila., German. & Norristown
tPliila., Wilming. A Baltimore.

UK)
95

Port., Saco A Portsmouth

(Rome, Watertown A Ogdens..
Rutland
do

St.

preferred
Louis, Alton A T. Haute...
do
do
pref.

St. Louis & Iron Mountain.
Toledo. Wab A Western, pref;
Union Pacific
Vermont A Canada
Vermont A Massachusetts....
94

m

West Jersey...

City Railroad Stocks

89

NAME

86

OF ROAD.

Bleecker st. & Fulton Ferry..

Broadway & Seventh Av

Brooklyn City

Eighth Avenue
Forty-second st. & Gd. st. Fer
Second Avenue
Sixth Avenue
Third Avenue

80
27

40
.60-. 70
198
80
40
40
80
80
90
150
125
110 ‘
70
125
•

Central Park,N. & East Rivers
Conev Island (Brooklyn
Drv £)ock E. B’dway & Battery

•

.

•*< •

Canal Stocks.

40

103%

Chesapeake & Delaware...

96

8*

Delaware Division
Delaware & Hudson

9i'

93“

95

96

Lehigh Coal and Navigation..
Moms (consolidated)
do
preferred
Schuylkill Navigat’n (consol).
do
do
pref.
Susquehanna A Tide-Water...
Union preferred...

80“ 82
94
118 120
69
68
20% 25
72
70
.i
"18
82“ •32k
21) „
83..

,

80

.

t.t

Miscellaneous Stocks.

82%
80

•••

.,<r

86%

i

Coal—American.
Central.......;..

30*' •S5

.

•*/...

25

Maryl and Coal .......
Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain......

220;

of’
J.

Wilkesharre

70*'
!

Gas—Brooklyn..:

Citizens (Brooklyn).,
Harlem, j
Manhattan..*

Metropolitan
New York
Williamsburg

82%

‘Loan of 1897,6, ’S7i 78
Gold Loan of *97,6,’97 88%
Convert, of 1877,6,’77! 82%

onong’a.Nav.,,lst M„ 6, ’87..
orris, 1st M., 6, 1876.
do
Boat Loqn, S.F..7, ^5
!huylIv)llNav.,Ist M.,6,1872.
do
do
2d M., 6, M'2..

ID l
120

Little Miami
Little Schuylkill

Income 10s

do*
do Imjnrov,, 6,1870,.
tftoua, & Tld© Water* 6, ’78,,,

.

95

79

do
do
do

.::r

Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette
Jefferson., Mad. & Ind....
Lehigh Valley

96

78
"

195/

pf.

Hartford & N. Haven

-

92“

fil¬

ial

Railway preferred!:..:....
Fitchburg

96%

90

157

Williamsport

Erie

6, ’86.

96

mSlXwT*..
Xoan.d.’Si;

&
do

Canal Bonds.

*

do

.

95%

87k

’

Dubuque & Sioux City;

Flmira

/

99%
93% 194%
....

do

,

84%

?>£
63

Eastern (Mass.)

93%
100

U5%

Detroit & Milwaukee.^,
do
do
pref..,.-.

92“

City RR Ronds.

95
82

....

92 %

Connecticut River

150

Dayton & Michigan

101%!
95%
92%; 92%

e. St. & Ful. F., 1st M., 7, ’80.
B’dw’y & 7th Av., 1st M., 7, ’84..
Cen. Park, N. & E. R., 1st M., 7..
Coney Isl. & Brook., 1st M., 7..
[). P.’k E. B’dway & Bat., 7, ’74.
Eighth Avenue, 1st Mort., 7 ...
Second Avenue, 1st M.,7,1877.
do‘‘ 2d M., 7,1876..
do
do
‘do
3d M.,7,1885..

60

....

<

Svilming. & Read.,1st M., 7,1900

100

g*

Columbus & Xenia..
Concord
Connecticut & Passumpsic,

88

Pac., E. D., 1st M.(gd) 6, ’95
Co
1st M. (gold) 6,. 1896..

do
i6t M.(Leav.BrA7,’96
do
Land Gr. M., 7, ’71-’76
do
Income Bonds, 7,1916
Vervn’t Cen., 1st M„ cons.,7, ’86
do
2d Mort., 7,1891
do
Equip Loans, 8
Vermont & Mass., 1st M.,6, ’83.
Westcli. & Phil., 1st M., conv,7.
do
do
2d M.,6,1878...
West Jersey, 6,1833
West Md, IstM., endorsed, 6, ’90
do
1st M., unend., 6, ’90..
do
2d M., endorsed, 6, ’90.
West. Penn.,IstM. (guar.) 6...

80“

iio' ’

•

do

..

laid., Cin. &'Laf.; IstM:;7:.. /. .*.

do
1
(I. & C->lst.Mjf 7,186?
Inrl. & Vincenes, 1st M.,7,1903,

Chic., Bur. & Quincy
Cincinnati, Ham. &'Dayton.
Cin., Sandusky & Clev.

88
88

IstM. (Quin.A Tol.) 7; ’90...
IstM.(Ill. & South. Ia.) 7, ’82.
2d M. (Tol. & Wab.) 7 78......
2d M. Wab. & Western) 7,71.
2d M. (Gt. West’n of ’59) 7, ’93

Un.

2d M.,7,’75...

do

90

102%

Equipment Bonds,7,’83....
Consol. Mort., 7,1907
Union Pac., 1st M. (gd) 6, ’95-’99
do
Land Grant, 7,1889

96
99
96
89

do
do
Cons. M., 7, ’95
Illinois Central, 7:1875

.

,

97

j

....
„ari*is.
Han. & St. Jos., L. Gr. M.,
do
Convert., 8s
Hud. River, 2d M., S. F., 7,’85.. ,100
do
3d M.,7, 1875
Hunt. & Broad Top, 1st M.. 7f..
,

l66“
:...

.

do

T9
90
80

5S“
-

:

1st M. (Gt. Western) 10, ’71...
1st M (Gt. Western) 7, *G5—
1st M. (Gt. West’n of ’59) 7, ’88

97%

97

do
do
7s, 1880
Erie Railway, 1st M., 7,1S17 ...
2nd M., conv., 7,**79. l 95
do
3d Mort.,7,1883 f'82-'
do
4th M., conv 7, ’80.
do
,

,,.....

gold

Eastern Mass., conv:, 6,1874...
do '
do
Mort;y6,1888...

102
99

....

....

;

107%
92%

,

•93.'

llffi

Klizahetht’’! APadiic >h RR 8s
Evnnsv, Il md’sonAN .l«t M 7s
Jnd’nolis. Bloom’ton A W,7gd
.Lomsv.AN.ash. R, 1st M, cons.,7
Lake Siipe’r. A Miss., lst.M., 7.
Montgomery Citv, Ala., 8s
N.iHav., Mir). A Wil.' RR, 1st M.
N.Y A Osw. Mid. RJtftMTTtgdy

i

■

104

PtR, istM.,6.(gd).

Irtc. M.,6

do

,

86

80% 1 Pitts., Ft. W. & C„ 1st M., 7,1912
do
do
2d M.,7,1912.
do
do
3d M„ 7,1912
93
Rutland & Bur., 1st M., 7,18(53.
do
do
2d M.,7,1863..
K9*
St.I».,Al.,&T.|H.,lst M..S.F.7,’9t
do
do.
2d M.,7,’94.
81
do
' do 2d M... Income, 7
83
St. Lou & Iron Mt 1st M., 7, ’92
85
St. L., Jacks. & Ch., 1st M.,7 ’91 92%
Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw :
1st M.(W.D) 7,’96
1st M., (E. D.) 7, ’94.,
85“
2d M. (W. D.) 7, ’86
75
Toledo, Wabash & Western:
IstM. (T. & W. ) 7, ’90
1st M. (L E. W. & St. L.) 7, ’90

S3
8.*
H

Parkersburg Branch....,.’
Albany

Boston & Lowell.
Boston & Maine
\\\\
Boston & Providence *.: w. ] ii *
Camden Sc Amboy
"
Catawissa
do
preferred
Central Ohio
-.
do
preferred
.**
Cheshire prelerred

85

Phil., Wilm. & Bal., 1st M., 6. ’84

Pitts. Cin. & St L.,lst.M., 7,1900
do
Steuben & I.,6
i Pitts. & Connellsv., 1st M.,7, ’98
do
do
1st M., 6,1889

95
77

75

T

Debentures, 6.
(lo
7, ’93.

do
do

99*'

95
90

M.,7, ’75... t

<

I

i



::::
*

....

io
do lfltM., S.F.;7, ’75.1
lo
do 2d M., 7,1881
(f i*/.v
1 -84.
;t. & Mil., IstM., conv.,7,”
2d M., 8,1875..
do
l 86.
do 1st M., Fund’dcp,.7,
i
<lo /1 st M.,CDet.&Pon, )7,!

Water & Wharf 6s...
Park 6s
Park 6s gold
v./.
Sewer Special Tax6s

Roches. Wat.

83

•

-

.

new

.Chcs. & Ohio

82

Mf, 7, ’IS...

Delaware, 1st M., 6,1S75
do
Ex.M.,6,
do.
jl., L. &W. 1st
.(L.&WJ7

|104% 107

.

r.,

Nevror Recent

84“

83

•(

Dayton & West., 1st M.,7,1905.

96

;

St

87%
95

! ‘si

do

6s, ’85

»»

95
97
92
OO OO

96
90

1 96

Portland 6s
San Francisco 6s of 1858.:..:..
do
7Sj April & Oct.
do
10s
Louis 6s
Water 6s,

90

Dayton A Union, 1st ai.,7
do
‘do
2d M.,7,

99

Alleghany County, 5.

"

1

....

.....; i 90
'102
; J 99

new

do

13''

isi

“v*’‘

Boston &

M.,.7,1873. ioi*

Pennsylvania, 1st M., 6,1 80...
do
2d M., 6,1875
do
Debentures, 6, ’69-’7l
Penn. & N. Y., 1st M., guar
Phi la. & Erie, 1st M.t 7.1887....
do
,lstM. (gold) 6,’81
1st M. (cur.) 6, ’81
do
do
2d M., 7,1K85
do
3d M., 6,1920.....
Philadelphia & Reading, 6, ’70.
do
do
6, *71.
*
■
do
do
*
6, ’80.
do
do
6, ’86.

i

| 90

do
do
2d M.,7,’84.,
do
do
3d M.,7. ’88..
do To’do dcp..b<)Sj.7j

Funded Debt 6s
do
7s...
Water exten. 7s

do

3d

'

90

105

do
do
2d M., 6. ’88. »
Dayton & Mich., 1st M., 7, ’81., :ss* ’

...

Pittsburg Compromise 4%s. ..'75
'' do
5s
j - do
rrA
'•

S'i"

M.,7,1889..

do'

do

...

Philadelphia 6s, old

-•

2d

'

j 93

Cjty Cemetery 7s, ’88

,

f*6

j

do; '1st M., 1,1890. 1!

’

'

92
103

..do

2d

jCleve. A Pitts.
do
co

>«.

Tax Relief 7s, 79
Lunatic Asylum 7s...

do
do
do

....

...

10)

Water Stock 6s, ’75
Central Park 6s, ’76 to ’93....
Docks and Slips, 6s, ’76

6s,

110

.

>•

do

109

....:

Jersey Citv Water 6s....
I ...
Louisville 6s, ’82 to ’84
| 79
da
6s, ’96 to ’97
95
do
Water 6s,’87 to’89.. 19
do
Water Stock 6s,’97.: 76
Ido
Wharf 6s
.....! 76
'
do
special tax 6s of ’89.1 75
New York—
|
Water Stock 5s, ’75 to ’SO
j 90
Central Park 5s, ’98
1 90

1

95“

-

192

Improvement 6s
City 7s

do
Sewerage6sdo
Municipals
do
Sewerage 7s
Cincinnati 5s
6s
do
do
7-30s
Detroit 7s
do Water 7s

,-i

do

....

93“

100%-.
do Cons. S. F., 7,1900.; 88
-do
]
i 92% 93 ( Col.. Ch. & In. Cen., 1st M.,1903. ! 80%
do
do
...j 92 ■ i 93%,'
2d M.,1

Water 6s..
Park 6s

Chicago Water6s

98"

.

do
do
a.

81

do
Int. Bds., 7,’83.
do
1st M.,7.1885...
(lo
Exten., 7,1885..
do 1st (Gal. & C.Un) 7,’8
do 2d
do
7,’7f
do IstM. (Penin.) 7, *98
do Consol. S. F., 7,1915.

Chic.jR’k I. & Pac., 1st M.t 7,’9
Cin., Ham. Sc D., 1st M., 7,’_80..
do
2d Mv 7, ’85..
do
do
do
3d M., 8.77..
Cin. & Indiana, 1st' M., 7
do
-do ' 2d M.,7,1817.

....

; 86'* *86%

Quin., 1st M., 8..
fst'Mi, conv., 8

iioo

Brooklyn 6s
do
do
do
do

j

91

....

102“

Chic., Sc Milwau., 1st M., 7, ’7J
Ch. & Nor’w. pref. R. F.. 7, ’85. |

I

95

of 10..
18S4
6s. 1886
1*90. Park 6s..

os

90

95

1st M., 7
2d, Income, 7..

do

lialtimore
do

88“

, «

2d M., 7

uo

Chic. Bur. &

[104

1877,.,,,.1103

o

2d M.,7.

V/U.J IDt 4U.J u

do

,

do
do

....

i

Ou

Chic. A AltQUj lst M., S. F., 7.

-

h

•

do
do
(new 7
Cjantral .O.hior-lstMM .6..
Cent. Pacific, 1st M., (gold) 6.
CheshireV 6. r : -..-.:.ix.t-.ti.

Missouri 6s, Han. A St. Jos
I ....
New Hampshire, 0s...tww.V*.
Mew York 7s, Bounty, reg
|10fi
do
JOG
7s,
do
cou
do
6s, Canal, 1872
1106
112
do
.....1-7
6s, 1873
do
6s. 1874
..1107
do
6s, 1875
J07
do
6s, 1877
1107 112
.do
6s, 1878
(107
do
5s, 1874
tl00
do
5s, 1875
‘...IIOO
100
Ohio 6s, 1875...
1
100 I
do 6s, 18SI
6.....
Lm.
dp 6s, 1686...........j,r
ii
Ka
*
103
'104
Pennsylvania 5s, 1877

f

do

,

6s, 1878

do

«<
i

1)111

*:

Boston, Hartford & Erie.-

North Missouri, 1st M., 7, lt95 . 80
do
do
2d M., 7,1W.. 67
•do
3d M., 7,1888.. 40
do
North Pennsyl., 1st M., 6.1880.. 94&
do
Chattel M., 10,1887. 111
do
2d Mortgage. 7
38&
do
Funding-Scrip, 7... 100
Northern Cent., 1st M.(guar) 6
do 2d M., S. F., *5,’85. 93
do
do 3d M., S. F.. 6,1900
do
do
do 3d M. i Y. & C) 6, ’77
do
do Cons, (gold) 6,1900 V4%
Ohio & Mississippi, 1st M.,7, ’72 96
do Income M.,(W.DIv)7, ’82
do
Consol. M., 7,1898
Oil Creek & Alleg. IT., 1st ^f., 7. 78%
Old Col. & Newport Bds, 7, ’77.
do
do Bonds, 6,1876..
Pacific of Mo., 1st M., (gd) 6, ’88
do
7s (guar) 1880...

Central of N. J., 1st M., 7

Michigan 6s, 1878
do

do

tv

76

75

do
co
cons. M., 6, ’93.
K. Y. & N. Hav., 1st M., 6, ’75...

90%

95%

Catawissa, 1st M., 7

....

Washington Branch.

••

h

92

Baltnnore & Ohio

96%

construction.

97

90

consol., 6 of’J

do

■

ii

Alleghany Valley...1"

—

;N. Y. & Harlem, 1st

••••

do

■'■l

6 of’83.,
6 of’89..

do
do

do
do
do

----

98

Maine 6s

Bid

,

Railroad Stocks, i \

2d M
convertible.,

97“

,

•J

do
do

N Y. Cent, Prem. S. F., 6, ’83..
do ‘ Sink. Fund, 7,1876.
do
Subscription,6, ’83.
do
Real Estate, 6,1883.
do
Renewal bds, 6, ’87.

....

St

•

SECURITIES

(Not previously quoted.)
Albany & Susqueiianna.

'

-

92%

Balt imore A Oiilo 6s of ’75... : 94%
do
do
6s of’80
do
do
6s of’85...
93
do
(N. W.Va.)2dM.O
do
do
3d M. < S| •• • •

do

(Leb. Br.) 6,’86.
do IstM. (Mem. Br) 7, ’70-’75.
do l&tM.(Leb.br.ex)7, ’80-’85
do Lou. L’n(Leb.br.ex)6,’93
do Consol: 1st M.,7,1898—
Marietta'& Cin., 1st M., 7,1891.
do
do
2d M.,‘7,1896.
Midi. Cen., 1st MV, cout., 8, ’82.
Mil. & St. Paul, 1st M., 7,18 -3..
do
do
2d M.,7.1884..
do 1st Mi (la. A Minn.) 7. ’97.
do
IstM. (P. du C.) 8,1898.
:
do
•
2d M., 7.3,1898.
Morris & Essex, 1st M

94

Allegheny Valley, 1st M.f 7-30
do
do
2d M.,7..
....j Atlantic & Gt. West., 1st M.,
•!
2d M.f
do
do •
....1

....

5s, lS74.m/
5s, 10-40?, reg

do

100

.

3dM....

do

do

110%

....

reg

STOCKS AND

Railroad Ronds.

Railroad Bonds.

(Not previously quoted.)
Cs, 1881, re a

(1§62)

Bid. Ask.

STOCKS AND SECURITIES.

....

U*. S* Governments.

6s, 5-2Ds, (1864) req..
6s, 5-20s, (1CS5) req
6s, 5-20s, (1865, new)
6s, 5-20s, (1867) reg

Bid. Ask.

SECURITIES.

tfilV %'#*.•
»sl f.
.

.

T>'ust—FarmersCLoan A Trust
New York Life <fc TrtBfc....
Union Trust.
United State® TrusS.,
....

Miscellaneous—

Mariposa Gold;.

,

Amerl'-an Express .
....
Mer, Union‘KsprefliJ,,,,,,,
Wells Fartfp scrip .. ,/.»»

.

Bottom

,r*r;

.Jii

•tT“

/.Vr

.-ai.

,

Brunswi’k City Land •,...
Atlantic Mall Steanufcfp.i

1

••v.

9

8^'

'X
42*
m

p

J

1

345
•St

0$

EatlmaM JHonilor,
•^^ANATIOJrorTHE^STOcFANS^BOND^TABL^
f
and Bonds are given *"
$0e

Active

Stocks

pri,Crfoftte” ante; quotations of other securities will be found on
iijjDfeers w“
1.

..

....

t

zette.

,

Securities are .given in a separate
^Cf^birof1WoSX CA «t..er Stocks,
^'“^notation* of Southern
principalcibes (e cept^

^ ^ the CHRONICLE in which a report ol the, Compablished.' A star (*) indicates leased roads pin the dividend ooluran
B^frabies:"of Railroad, Canal and Other Bonds
5.
.n
four raffes, two of which will be published in each number.
In
occupy in
hondg of Companies which have been consolidated are frequently
these J»£e8 J?® "
e of Consolidated Corporation.
The date given .in brackets
pvefi nnder'ri
name 0f each Company, Indicates the time at which the stateimoediately ai
ln the “Interest Column” the abbreviations are as
jneDt °f 1 ? I J ijaimary and July F. & A-==Fehruary and August; M. «fc S.=
foUpws: J-^^temher - A X.O:, ' April and October; M- & N.=May and NoyemMarCV* n =Juiie and December. Q.—J Quarterly, beginning with January;
of

•

*

Missouri will operate the St. Louis & St. Joseph Railroad, and by
'whJch^'through trains Will* in' a few days run to St. Louis from St.
Jge^phv..Tbi8 wiJU farm. thft. shortest jQute, between.St. Ixukwjd St.
Joseph, and probably will be the only one on which ca-s will run
through, unless the Missouri Pacific should make an arrangement with
the Kansas City, St. Joseph <fe Council Bluffs Railroad.—Railroad Ga¬
•

’

•

*

•

Kansas.—A suit is pending in the Mate
legitimacy of local railway bomV. It ij
an action brought by the Missouri, K. & T. R. Co.-to compel the au¬
thorities of Coffey and Davis counties to deliver to plaintiffs certain
bends voted by these counties in aid of the construction of said road.
One of the principal points of the defence (says the Topeka Retard) is
a general denial of the power and right of counties, under our consti¬
tution, to vote aid to railroads. The Record, in its com men's ou the
case, refers at length to that recently decided by the Michigan Supreme
Railway Bonds in

Supreme Court involving the

'

’.,”V

Court.

have obtained
from Madison
to Baraboo, and• tL<-y propose to extend it to Winona.to connect with
the Chicago and St. Paul and the Winona and St. Peter Railroad.
The Chicago and Northwestern Railway Company
control of the charter of the projeoted line of railroad
—

==Quarterly7, beginning with February. Q.—M.—Quarterly, beginning with According to tlie Baraboo Republic the contract secures, under the
Table of United Slates and State Securities will be management of the Paraboo Air Line Railroad Company, the con¬
monthly, on the last Saturday of the month.,
.
..
struction of the road from Madison to Baraboo by the first day of July,
Table of City Bonds will be published on.the third Saturday
nth
The abbreviations used in this table are the same as those in the 1871, and to Reedsburg within five months thereafter, conditioned that
railroad bonds mentioned above. The Sinking Fnnd or assets held by §175,'00 is'voted by the towns interested, and the right of way and
S city aw Sven on the same line with the name. '
.
depot grounds deeded to the company. The survey will be under¬
taken at once.
‘
*!
'"J^^uTlEarnlngs for tlie Latest 1870. Reported,—
Week 1869. Inc.
Road.
Week.
T
The New Consolidated .Mortgage Sinking Fund bonds of the Lake
.79,866 30,135
110,001,
Shore and Michigan 1 Southern Radway Company are now offered in
Chicago* Alton.
?d July 244,526 252,572
New York. These are the only bonds which are secured by a mort¬
Chicago and Northwestern.... .3d July
102,864 13,136
116,000
Chicago and Rock Island
3d July
gage covering the entire property of the company.
The present
97,786 ’■ 7,824
105,611
iunded debt, on. maturity, will be retired into these bonds ; and the
Cleveland and fitfeburg/.
,.2d July
110,255
2,945
143,20!)
amount n 'w offered for sale is limited to the surplus after reserving au
yilvrankec and 8t, Paul...*-.
3d July
46,100 14,600
60,700
amount sufficient for retiring such funded debt.
Pacific of Misso.uri
3d r July
The bonds run thirty
18,561 11,863
30,430
St.Louis and Iron Mountain
3d ; July
years, are issued in coupon and registered form, in denominations of
59,748
4,095
03,843
Toledo, Wabash and Western...3d July
§1,000 coupons, and §1,000, §5,000, and §10,000 ea,ch, regisle'ed, and
are offered kt 97 £ and accrued interest.
Railroad Rond Indebtedness of Counties), in Iowa.~-^e
—The railway between Dubuque and Sioux City, Iowa, was comfollowing is ibe amount of judgments obtained against counties in Iowa
pl ted on the 15tb inst., and trains were to commence running on the
on railroad bond indebtedness, at the receut term* of the United States
18th. This makes the* fourth railroad from Chicago now passing
Circuit Court: •
;*
4,402 40 through the entire State of Lrwa—one from Dubuque, one from Clinton,
1V
Lee...
::i. |49,115^3 Johnson..
1,255 05 one from
Henry-...
45,373 86 1'ottawatamie
Davenport, and one from Burlington. The road westward
1,037 43
4,*:83 08 City of Davenport.'.’;.
Wapello
City of Oubuque
64,985 (54 from McGregor is al o nearly acroes the State, and moving on live’y.
Louisa.-:,r • 6,807 52
17,989 09
Des Moines
4,432 61 Cityot Burlington..’..—L
—It appears that an alliance has been effected between the Iowa
47,112 00
2,583 96 Cily t f Keokuk.......
Iowa
4,075.60 Central and Milwaukee and St. Paul, whereby the latter obligates
City of Iowa City
Poweeheik........
6,366 42
itself to meet the form r at Mas n City in one hundred days.
The
Of these amounte it is reported that Lee County has begun to pay
completion of this gap will place St. Paul in direct connection with
Aer bonds, a surplus mule being the first article offered in liquida ion of
the debt. The tnule Was seized by the officer, and although a large the Iowa coal fields, and when the Southern connections of the Iowa
cumber of persons were present, no one bid on that mule. Of course, Central are completed, it wiM furnish a short liae of communication b. tween St. Paul and St. Louis.
no bidders', no sale ; so' the mule was remande.d to the stable, to eat
himself uj at the public expense.
—It is announced tv at the Pennsylvania Central are to have such a
controlling interest in the Camden and Atlantic Railroad Company an !
>3 St. Louis Sc St. Joseph.— Hie report that this road*lx»d been
the Philadelphia and Trent m roads as will make Atlantic City by the
pur«baeed or leased hy the North Missouri Rai road Company is ineor- sea a
port of entry.
rect,,„Ah .ft*rapgemei!t, howeyervhA9 been made by which the North
j-F

Q

MAlie

.

,

h mo

t

'

—

.

....

-

•

f

•

.*..

. -..

.....

....

...

.

.

,,,,,

.

-

MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.:
-Central Pacific—gold—. ——Chicago and
'1869.

18 7U.

1868.

(350 m.)

(742 m.)
331,568

(280 m.)

-(431 m.)

$276,116

$343,181

275,139
/ 267,094
279,121

315,098
368,726
328,890

303 342

'345 832

312,604;;.

!
;

818,982.,
391,308*.

i

•

485,048* >.

i

*

•

V;, 313,325',
.

.

-

•f568,270'»/
556,080

*1532,657;;

,

383,799.
521, (’36
*761,285'
632,710

-

-

f 384,564
X 404.012
s' 558,100

V..

.

^486,196

^6 9,788^'

*

579,642

«503.745

°

i 635366'*.’

V40»,568

•*,..!

1(410,000

(361,700

’5,749^595;;'

*

.r,

1

*

........

699,532 1814,413 '*

7.817,620 8,823,482

:

.TTT7

...

397,515
340,350

(340 m.)

231,311
265,905

252,149
2)4,619
■217,082

194,455
287,557

307,122
,283,329

*274,686
^(1,686

'

.Dec....

.■Vea’r13,429,534

..

872,114
••*950,636

301,952
‘

1,269,934

*816,708
378,436

.

1,212,081
1,154,529

341,885
668,380
7558,386

.

90,177' . J an
98,275 7 ..Feb..
101,379 ..Mar.,.

$99,541
90,298
304,685
106,641

(329 m.)
$343, b90
on.i ns*11
304,115

.

106,^46

.

19,752

110,213

*4

117.695

111,117

-April.
..may .*,

..

116,198

.

J

.*•■•

821,013
392,942
456,974
‘'511.820
410,825
‘ 390,671

uly.v

*.Aog.
;*.**!* •*'' ..Sep...
..Oct;..
..N'o'v.';;

142,014

125,065 * 1*35,376
119,169 ’ 1 129,306
110,837
121,403

326,886
415,758
369,626
325,50F-

.

June.
.

129.096

1869.

fl)ec...

.

.

*•

1869.

247,661

339,610

632,652

325,854
306.764

3,128,177

“ • 4 *»

» *

273,395
256,272

«/r

-Borth Missoual.-

^-Milwaukee & St. Paul.1868.

1870.

1869.

■•

(329 m.) (329 m.> ■'‘(820 m.) (S25 m.)
$384,119 337,992 ‘,$369,228 $454,130,
‘
im’m 330,238
320,636 ’‘329,127
380.430
420,774
333,507
386,527
460,287
412,03!
436,412
411,814
‘

*jcv>

403,646

<»06.283

366.623

’

363,187

665,718

458,190 *

'

329,950

'428, 397 '

••

630,844
678,800

:

$896,171
382,823
877,0f0

189,0.0
150,416 ;

801,163

96,550

i 6,5U,^6

250,700

4

•

i

k

.

• • • *

«4

y < *^

•!•••«

•

<1053 rn.)

*

(

-

(1033 m)

•

"

..

...

.

‘628,529
500,139
539,238

802,586

-

r

691,420
706,602

1

623,559
.617,585

"

758,467

.,

..

• • ?

r

*

*—Union Pacific--^
1870.
1869, •

**

‘

208,493

~

.

,,

.

£69,400
£50,000

149,1 4

730,700
755,737

-

“““

196,207
239,161

443,133

•

“““

rn.

.roi

94,027

“

-

(

136,-;63

724,514
1,039,811

S2* 468.879
-

18*6.

*

(404 m.)
$119,7 A

525,363

550,917

490.772

448,419
374.542

1869.

1870.
'986 m.)*

586,342

522,683
1024,045
S 1037,463

353,569
473,546

260,169
274,021

259.408
253,36T

5,960,936
* *•

246,046

**

§584,155
T479,236
(393,468

4,797,461

Year..*. 4,570,014 4,749,163 ,;.;.

,

s

241.456

o736,664

g 424,589
*S 433,434

-—Michigan Central.
1868

(523,841

239,522

443,300
507,9''0
629,512

J.455,606,

«591,209

13,415,424

500,393

645,789
388,385
449,932

276,431
*

•

1

and Cincinnati—
1869
'1870.
(251 m.> • *(25Vm.)

1,294,095.. 1,391,345

-

1,057,383

<

837,888
718,82S

•

t

>0

teitei-




rnismmw+n mm*

D/IIO)

,

mm

mwx

>

(390 m.)
201,6C0
218,600
244,161

; (1.157m.) (454 m.) (520-90 m.) (590 m) (390 m.)
$351,767 $401,275 $204,112
§731,283 $308,587
449,6)4 180,840
319,441
297,464
755,404

1,258,284
1,167,155
1,541,056j' 1,032,813
1,321,139
1,507,479
1,414,231
1,570,066
1,107,083
' 1,144,029
867,731
1,001,986

itOCl V.-aV'
.Nov

I

1,094,597
1 211,149
1,180,932
1,076,673

*

.

468,212

830,286
1,149,258
3.092,378

850,192

..July...
•rAUg,.„
.Sept*..

506,623

0,157m.)
$871,218

1869;

1868.'

1870.

8t. L, Alton & T. Haute.—<- ■Toledo, Wab. 4 Western.
v-Paclfic of Mo —> Iron Mt. 1870.
3868*
1869.
-1810.
1869;
1868.
1869; ’
“1870.
1870
1870.
(340 m.) (340 m'.) ’ (355 m ) (355 m.) (210 m.)
' • (210 m.) (210 mo i‘(222m.) (521m.) (521m.) (521 m.)
275,CKX)
$180,366 $! 96,787 “ $194,1.12 $202,447 $102,750 .. Jan,._ $127,594 $132,622 * $152,392 $278,712;; $284,192
26.%')86,
240,394
593,645
158,788 ‘
127,817
133,392
267,867
93,160 ,,Feb.,A,
216,080
218,234 ,! ; 207,303
295,298
172,216
257,799- 342,704
175,960
.149,165
221,459
2**3,065
289,272 ~ 294,874 ,..113,894...mar......
280,b2f. * *■ ■ 311,832
318,699
171,868 **172,347
214,409
278,246 ' 289,550
104,019 ..April.. •*155,388
270,933
26u.52C * 312,529
340,892
157,397 .*•155,Oft
130,545
‘218,689 ( 246^*66 - V 264,273
283,060 115,175 «. may. ^93 344
348,632
348,890
150,719
'140,408
154,132
223,236
249,3^19
263,328
June,;
249,987
28.V33," 810,800
344,164
i84,4ii
.,juiy.M '*'143,986
192,364 ^
484,208.;. 450,246
.186,883
.262,5.! 5
A US*.... .'■..'204,596
275,220 S
450,203*.* 470.720
202,288
196,436
350,613 *
92,803
429,893 * * 422,S6S
204,552
828,041
329,243
,.Oct.,,,,f.. ;* 210,473
829,879 - 083,3'8
189,3*1
174,500
•298;027
m70S".
...
,.Nov„.r
.$98.0*7.
mm
108,5)9
L
iJ99,438
f.oee;..r 157.379

-Ohio* Missiasipp!,

$211,973

.

1869.

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

823,625 * I’eb,..,
344,366 * .Mar...!;
334,653 ..April..
395,044 ...iRay .v.
411,986 ..June..
.

.,4,509,642 4,681,562
••*•

1868.

1868.

(431 in.)
§293,978 ’< Jan...,

402,854
351,044
493,231

^-rTllinois Central.—^ —Marietta
1868.
1868.
1869.-* 1870. -**5*
m.) (862 rn.) (974 m.)
(251 m.) *
1587,442 $659,187' $654,587 * $92,433 :
M6,t65 524.693 * 663,$91. ‘.81,599.,,
444,443 709,64.4;, 644,374
...08,482518,800 568,282
108,461
597,571
572,561 640,974
635,253
95,416
626,248 778 260
750,214 - •*•95,924549,714 696,228
308,413'
763,779 841,363
126,556 '*
,;r
121,519

..

-Clev. Col. Cin. &I
-Chicago & Northwestern—. ^-Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific
1870.
1869.
1870.

Alton.—
1870.

1369.

.♦A<#

AV

..kmiS-

in*

Mil

MM 'IM

146

THE

CHRONICLE.

[July 80,1870.

RAILROAD. CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS
COMPANIES.

11

Stock

Forafull explanation of this table,
see

Railway Monitor,
ceding page.

on the pre¬

i?Psta and Savannah*

100

Washington Branch*

100
100

farkersburg Branch

50

Berkshire, No. 247
100
Boston and Albany, No. 247
100
Boston, Con. & Montreal .pref. .100
Boston, Hartford & Erie,No. 247.100
Boston and Lowell, No. 247
50G
Boston and Maine, No. 236
100
Boston and Providence, No. 247.100
Buffalo, New York and Erie*.. .100

Burlington and Missouri River .100
o
°
do
pref.100
Camden and
,

^

,

Ambov No. 250... 100
do do scrip of joint Co.’s’69
*’70
Camden and Atlantic, No. 251... 50

dc>
Cape Cod
„

do

^

Catawissa,* No.
„

preferred.. 50
60
50

255

JdoT, Preferred

Cedar

50
100

Rapids and Missouri*

no

Periods.

do

pref..

preferred..!!’.!!!’!!

,d°.

8.691.200
2.494.900
1.232.200
783,700
16,267,862
1,650,000
7,239,539
600,000
19,411,600
800,000
25,000,000
2,215,000
4,550,000
3,360,000
950,000

& Aug., No. 257.

Mar. & Sep.
Jan. & July.
June & Dec.

June,
Apr.,
Apr.,

Quarterly.

July!

July.
May & Nov.
Jan. & July.
Jan. & July.
Jan. & July.
June & Dec.
Feb. & Aug.

937,850
377,100
731,200
721,926 Jan. & July.
1.159.500
2,200,000 May & Nov.

5,432,000

May & Nov.

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

-

1,500,000
350,000
2,084,200
1,700,000
1.316.900

2,400,000

& Nov

ay

Jan. & July
Feb. & Aug

Jan. &

July
April* Oct

1,107,291 Jan.

&

Delaware, Lack. & West! No! 255. 50 15.927.500 Jan. & July
July
Detroit and
Milwaukee, No. 249. 50
452.350
do
do
pref.... 50 2,095,000 December
Dubuque and Sioux
3

„

.

City*

Eastern (Mass.),

do
No. 247

100

pre*"

100

......!! !i00

East; Pennsylvania. No. 255
East Tenn.

50
Georgia, No. 224... .100
Elmira & Williamsport,* No.255. 50

Erie?

Erieanci

Pittsburg, No. 255."!!!!!

Fitchburg, No. 247
Georgia. No.

50
100

259
!!'l00
Hannibal and St. Joseph No. 241100
do
do
prof*
100
Hartford * N. Haven, No. 225!!!l00

dr>
do
scrip....190
Housatonic, preferred
100
„

,

Huntingdon and Broad Top*

Illinois Central.

2.142.250
1,988,170
4,033,000
1.309.200

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

&
&
&
&

3,192,000

July
July
July

July

500,000 May & Nov
500,000 Jan. & July
70,000,000 Feb. & Aug
“l00 8.536.900

d.°

No. 252
do preferred

No. 248..

50

Pref’i00

Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette!! 50
Jeffersonville, Mad. & In..No.227100
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg
50

999,750
3,540,000 Jan.

4,156,000 Jan.
3,000,000

& July

&

July

5,000,000
3,300,000
3,000,000

Quarterly.

2,000,000 Jan.

&

615.950

July

212.350 Jan.

25,273,800

& July.
Feb. & Aug
Mar. & Sept.
Jan. & July.

6,185,897
2,500,000
Lake SI10.& Mich. South. No. 255.100 1,335,000
35,000.000 Feb. & Aug.
Lehigh and Susquehanna
50
8.739.800 May & Nov
Lehigh Valley, *0. 255

Little Miami. No. 2i7....
Little
Schuylkill.* No. 255..!!!!!
Long Island, No. 252
Louisv., Cin. & Lex., prf No. 220
do

common

50

50

50
50
JO
50

Louisville and Nashville No. 245100
Louisville, New Alb. & Chicago. 00
Macon and Western
100
Maine Central
100
Marietta & Cin., 1st prf.’ No.'250*150

17,716,400

3.572.400

2.646.100
3,000,000
848,315
1,621.736
8.681.500
2,800,000
2,500,000
1.611.500
8,130,719
4,460,368
2,029,778
1,000,000

Quarterly.

Quarterly.

Jan. &

July,

Jan!

July.
July.

&
Jan. &
Feb. &

Aug,

Jan. & July

Mar. & Sept.
2d pref..150
Mar. & Sept.
common
& ^awrence, No.?47.100
May
Memphis and Charleston. No.242.25 5,312,725 June & Nov
& Dec.
Michigan Central. No.266
100 13,225,848 Jan. &
July.
Milwaukee and St. Paul. No. 25S100
7.665.104 Jan. & July.
do
do
pref
100
January.
Mine Hill & Sch Haven* No. 255’. 50 9,744,268
8.856.450 Jan. & July.
Mississippi Central*
100 2,948,785
MobUe* Montg. pref No 216 "
1.738.700
Mobile and Ohio, No. 259
'106 4^69,820
Montgomery and West Point. !’l00 1.644.104 June & Dec.
Morris and Essex,* No. 250
50
Nashua and Lowell,No, 247.... 100 7.880.100 Jan. & July.
720,000 May & Nov.
Nashv & Chattanooga No. 220.100
2,066,544
Naugatuck. No. 195
100
1.818.900 Feb. & Aug.
New Bed. & Taunton, No. 247’" 100
500,000 Jan. &
New Hav. &
Northarap., No. 247.100 1,500,000 Jan. & July.
July.
New Jersey, No. 250
100
6,250,000 Feb. & Aug.
do
do

do

a<?
Manchester
,,

,

„

_

do

..

Jan.,

!!!!!!!...
493,900
No.243. i66 1,003,500 Jan. & July.
Hudson R..No.252 100
45,000,000 April & Oct.
xr
d° . d(> Harlem. No. 100 44,600,010 April & Oct.
certificates..
New York and tt
197 50 6,500,000 Jan. & July.
do
do
pref..*.
50
1,500,000 Jan. &
New York & New
Havea,No.256.100 9,000,000 Jan. & July.
July.
N. Y., Prov. and Boston No.229
100 2,000,000 Jan. &
July.
Norfolk and Petersburg, pref.. !l00
300.500
do
do
guar. .100
137.500 Jan. & July.
do
do
ordinary
North Carolina. No. 223
^100 1,361,300
Northern of N.H’mnshire.No.257100 4,000,000
3,068,400 June & Dec.
Northern Central. No. 249
50 5,000.000
May & Nov.
Northeast. (S. Carolina). No.20i
898.950
155,000 May & Nov.
North Missouri,
scrip...

"•^London Northern
N*
*

__

No.259P’.C*.’P^ellO(»

!



LaBt paid.

Periods.

Bat«.

Aug'.,

l^T??!lOO

,

Feb.’,’ *70

....

100

July, ’70

May,

>

*70

....

July, "70
July, ’70
Aug., "70

5
6
5
4

Apr., ’70
July, ’70

.

do

do

pref. 50

8,000.0:0
249.100
Portland & Kennebec, No. 253* .100 19,665,000 Quarterly.
July,”*70
581.100 Jan. & July.
do
Jan. *70
Yarmouth stock certiflclOO
202.400
Portland, Saco & Ports No. 221.100 1,500,000 April & Oct. April,*70
June & Dec.
Providence & Worces., No. 247..100
June, "70
Rensselaer & Saratoga, No. 252 .100 2,000,000 Jan. * Tu’y.
July, ’70
Richmond and Danville No. 235.100 3,000,000 Apr! Sfc Oct.
April,*70
Richmond & Petersburg No.235.100 4,000,000
847.100
Rome, Watert. & Ogd., No. 245. .100 3,000,000
Jan. & July.
Rutland, No. 248
July, ’70
100
8,000,000
do
preferred
100
1,831.400 Feb. & Aug.
St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100
Feb. ’69
2,800,000
do
do
do pref.100
2,040,000 Annually.
St. I ouis & Iron
May, *70
Mountain
10,000,000
St. Louis, Jackson v. &
ChicagoMOO 2,478,750
Sandusky. Mansfi’d & Newark*.100
905,222
Schuylkill Valley,* No. 255
50
576,050 Jan. & July.
8hamokin Valley & Pottsville* 50
July, ”"70
869,450 Feb. & Aug.
Shore Line Railway
Feb.,’70
100
685,200 Jan. & July.
South Carolina No. 243
Jan., "70
50
5,819,275
South Side (P. & L.)
100
1,865,600
South West.
Georgia.* Mo. 220..100 3,939,900
Syracuse, Blngh & N. Y, No.252.100 1,814,180 Feb. & Aug.
Feb., "70
Terre Haute aud
Indianapolis.. 50 1,988,150 Jan. & July.
Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw
July, ’70
100
2,700,000
do
do
E. D., 1st pref.100 1,700,000
do
do
Jan., "70
W. D., 2d pref .100
1,000,000
Toledo, Wabash & West.No.255.100 14,700,000
do
do pref.100 1,000,000
do
May & Nov.
Utica and Black River, No. 252.. 100
May, "70
1,666,000 Jan. & July.
Vermont and Canada*
July, ’70
100
2,500,000 June & Dec.
Vermont & Massachu., No. 247. .100
June, "70
2,860,000 Jan. & July.
Virginia and Tennessee
Jan., ’69
100
2,950,800
do
do
pref.
100
555,500 Jan! & July.
Western (N. Carolina)
100
2,227,000 Jan. & July.
West Jersey, No. 250
Jan., ’64
50
Worcester and Nashua, No. 247.100 1,209,000 Feb. & Aug.
Feb., 70
1,550,000 Jan. & July.
July, *70

Pitts., Ft.W.&C. guar*. No.

’70

July,’ ’70
Nov.,’ ’’69
Feb.’,'’70

June,
July,
June,
June,

2,488,757

„

July,' ’70
July, ’70
July, ’70
June, ’70

’70
*70
’70
’70

8
8

i(g’d)
5

3*

‘V;
*3k
”7

'

July,’’70
Mar., *70
Mar., *70

Mar., *70
July, '70
Dec., ’69
June, *70
April,’70
Apr., ’70

>.
,.51

j

....

ll-jl

,

„

Nov., ’69

Aug.!’’70

May, ’70
Aug., ’70
Oct., ’67

May,* ’70

Aug., ’70
July, ’70

July, *70
Dec., ’69
July, ’70
Juiy, ’70

July, ’70
Jan., ’70

Schuylkill Navlgat’n (consol.)*. 50
do
pref.

May’,’’’70

Jan., ’68
Aug., ’70
Sept.,’67
Jan., ’66

Aug!,' ’’70

May, ’67
July, ’70
June, ’70
July, *70
Aug., ’66
Jan.

West Branch and Susquehanna. 50

Miscellaneous.

’70

’70

’70

Aug., ’70
Feb.,’70
July, ’70

50
50
50

Susquehanna & Tide-Water
Union, preferred

July, ’70
Feb., ’66

’70
’70
’70
’70
*70

Coal— American
Ashburton
Butler
Cameron
Central

25
50

25

1,908,207 Feb. & Aug.
2,888,977 Feb. & Aug.
2,002,746
2,907,850
1,100,000 Jan. & July.
1,500,000 Mar. & Sept.
2,500,000
600,000 June i& Dec.

100

2,000.000 Jan. & July.
100
Cumberland Coal & Iron.... 100 10,250,000
500,000
Pennsylvania
50
3,200,000
Quarterly.
Spring Mountain
50
1,250,000 Jan. & July.
Spruce Hill
10
1,000,000
Wllkesbarre
100
3,400,000 May & Nov,
Wyoming Valley
100
1,250,000 Feb. &
Gas.—Brooklyn
25 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug.
Aug.
Citizens (Brooklyn)
20
1,200,000 Jan. & July.
Harlem
50
Feb. &
Jersey City and Hoboken... 20 1,000,000 Jan. & Aug.
386,000
July.
Manhattan..'
;
50
4,000,000 Jan. & July.
Metropolitan
100
2,800,000
New York
50
1,000,000 May & Nov.
Williamsburg
50
750,000 Jan. & July.
Improvement—Canton
16
781,250
Boston Water Power
li
4,000,000
Brunswick City
Telegraph—West .Union. No. 222.100 41,063*,i 00 Jan. &
July.
acfflo & Atlantic
25 3,000.000
Quarterly.
Express.—Adams
100
10,000.000 Quarterly.,
Araer. Merchants’ Union
100 18,000,000 Jan. &
July.
United States
100
6,000,000 Quarterly.
Wells, Fargo & Co
.100 15,000,000
Steamship— Atlantic Mail
100
4,000,000 Quarterly.
Pacific Mail, No. 257
100
TYust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 20,000,000 Quarterly.
1,000,000 Jan. & July.
National Trust
Consolidation Md

'

Sept’., ’66

Sept., ’66

May’,’*70

June, *69
July, *70
Feb., ’70
Feb., *70
July, *70

Dec., ’67
July, *70
May, *70

Feb.',’ *70

,

100
New York Life and Trust ...100
Union Trust
100
United States Trust
.100
..100
Mining.—Mariposa Gold

Mariposa Gold, pref
do

do

Quicksilver
do

100

Trust, certif.

preferred

100
100

common

July, *70

Aug'.,' ’*70J
July’*69
April *70
April ’70
July, *70
July, ’70
July, *70
July, ’70

July **70

Ap'ril*’70

June, *70
May, *70

Feb., *70

June, *70
July, *70
July, *70

1,000,000 Jan. & July.

1,000,000 Feb. & Aug.
1,000,000 Jan. & July.

1,500,000 Jan. & July.

2,836,600
8,693,400
2,324,000 Jan. & July.
4,300,000
5,700,000

Quotations by Geo. K. Sistare, Broker
NAME OF ROAD.
Bleecker street and Fulton

Ferry.

Broadway (Brooklyn)
Broadway and Seventh Avenue
Brooklyn City
Brooklyn City and Newtown
Brooklyn, Prospect Park & Flatb.
Brooklyn and Kockaway Beach...

..

Bush wick (Brooklyn)
Central Park, North & East Rivers

Coney Island (Brooklyn)

Dry Dock, East B’dway & Battery
Eighth Avenue

Forty-second St. & Grand St. Ferry
Grand Street & Newtown
(B’klyn)
Hudson Avenue (Brooklyn)

Metropol tan (Brooklyn)
Ninth Avenue
*
Second Avenue
Sixth Avenue
Third Avenue
Van Br ant 8treet
(Brooklyn)..

in

\
4

1

-

5

A

8

Aug., ’70
Aug., ’70
Aug., *70
May, ’67
Jan., *70

STOCK.

TUU

1

11
!

*

....=

Feb., "70
Feb., ’67
Feb., ’67

"i

Jan., ’65

’s’

Mar., "70

4

Dec., ’69

85ct«.

July, ’69

•T

May,’ 70
Jan., ’70

”5’

0

6

T

Nov.,’69

Aug.,
Feb.,
Jan.,
Feb.,
Jan.,
Jan.,

’66
"70
’70
*70
’70
*70

**5
5
5
1
MM

*T

May, 22
Jan., *70

5

July, ’66

Ml*

T

Jan., ’70

r

June,’70
July, ’70
Nov., ’69

s

2)4

Dec., ’67

Sept.,’69
July, *70
July, ’70
Feb., ’70
July, *70

July, *70

•

>
5
4
10
5
5

....

City Securities, 24 Nassau Street.

PAR

.

July, *70
Juy, ’70
Apr., ’70

i

*

Chesapeake and Delaware
50
1,988,568 June* Dec.
Chesapeake and Ohio
25
8,229,594
Delaware Division*
50
1,688,350 Feb. &
Delaware and Hudson
100 15,000,000 Feb. & Aug.
Aug.
Delaware and Raritan
100
4,999,400
Lehigh Coal and Nav.,No. 256.. 50 8,739,800 Feb. & Aug.
May & Nov.
MonongahelaNavigation Co.... 50
728,100 Jan. & July.
Morris (consolidated) No. 254...100
1,025,000 Feb. & Aug.
do
preferred
100
1.175,000 Feb. & Aug.
Pennsylvania
50
4,300,000

July,’ ’’70

Jan.,
Aug.,
Aug.,
July,
July,
July,

J

2
-

Canal.

Apr., *70

July,'

"3>

^

July, ’70

7.771.500

8,150,000
2.863.700 Jan. *
Ogdens. &L. Champ.*No.252....100 3,077,000 Jan. & July.
July,
1.994.900 April* Oct
Ohio and
No.
19,944,547
do
do
pref
100
8,810,705 June & Dec,
rTeiek aDd Allegheny River! TO 42259.450 Quarterly.
Old Colony & Newport, No. 347.100
4^18,420 'Jan. * July.

Mississippi!1

ing.

.

July, ’70
Nov.,’69

.

North Pennsylvania
50
Norwich & Worcester * No. 247.100

dividend.

.

c

50

Stock
Out¬
stand¬

482.400 Feb. & Aug.
3,711,11*6
7,000,000 Quarterly.
Pennsylvania No. 244
!. 50
May
Philadelphia and Erie,* No. 255 50 33,493,812 Jan. & Nov.
6,004,200
&
do
do pref
50 2,400,000 Jan. & July.
Philadelphia and Read. No. 242. 50 29,028,100 Jan. & July.
Phlladel., & Trenton,* No. 255...100 1,099,120 Feb. July.
Phi a
Ger.&Norris.,* No.255... 50 1,597,250 April& Aug.
Phlladel., Wilming. & Baltimore 50 9,520,850 Jan. && Oct.
Pittsb. & Connellsvllle, No. 255.. 50
July.
1,793,926
Plttsb., Cin. & St. Louis, No. 255 50 2,423,000
do
Panama

380.500

,

Delaware*

Orange, Alexan. & Manass
100
Oswego and Syracuse, No. 252.. 50
Pacific (of Missouri) No. 256....100

’70

Jan. &

1.252.500

5,000,000

4.666.800
15,000,000
2,425,000
50
400,000

Concord and Portsmouth!!!.’!!! !i00
Connecticut & Passumpsic, pref.100
Connecticut River. No. 247..... .100
Cumberland Valley, No. 255
50
Davton and Michigan* No. 263.. 50

Mar.’,'

April & Oct.
April & Oct.

Cin., Hamilton & DaytonNo.263.100 16,000,000 April* Oct
Cln., Richm. & Chicago*No.263. 50 3,500,000 April* Oct.
382,600
Cincin., Sand. & Clev., No. 247.. 50 2,989,090
n.
d0
do pref. 50
428,646 May & Nov,
Cincinnati & do
Zanesville, No. 246 50
Clev., Col.,Cin.& Ind. No. 253..100 1,676,345
10.460.900 Feb. & Aug
Cleveland & Mahoning,* No. 247. 50
Cleveland and Pittsburg. No. 255 50 2,056,750 May & Nov
7,241,475
Colum.,Chic. & In. Cen.*No. 247.100 11,100,000 luarterly.
quarterly,
Columbus and Xenia*
50
1.786.800
quarterly,
Concord

do

Rate.

’70
’70
’70
’70
’70

Jan. & July.
Mar. & Sept,
Mar. & Sept
Mar- &
Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*. .100 1,000,000 Jan. & Sept
Chicago and Northwest. No. 217.100 14,590,161 June & July.
Dec
,do
do
pref....100
Chic. Rook is. * pac. No. 263... 100 18,159,097 June & Dec

,.

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

PAR

Cheshire, preferred
100
2,085*,925
Chicago and Alton. No. 248
100
7,045,000
r.d0 „
Preferred.... 100 2.425.400
Chic., Burling. doQuincy. No.215.100 16,590,000
&
_

For

2.241.250 Jan. & July.

Cent.Georgia & Bank. Co.No.243100
Centra of New Jersey, No. 250.. 100
Central Ohio
50

Charlotte, Col.

paid.

Date.

50
100

Baltimore and Ohio, No. 250

Ni

ing.

COMPANIES.

par

251

Atlantic and Gulf
Atlarr & st. Lawrence* No.
2?5.10C
Atlanta and West Point. No. 221..100

~

Last
Date.

Railroads.

v

AUesfceny Valiev, No.

DIVIDEND.

Out¬
stand¬

STOCK LIST.

900,000

LAST DIVIDENDS

100
200,000
100 2,100,000 June, 1870.
100 1,500,000
8 100
400,000
1870!
100
254.600
100 144.600
100 262,200
100 1,065,200
100 500,000
100 1,200,000 .May ’’70,’ quarterly.
100 1,000,000
100 748,000 May ’70, s
100
170,000
8 100 106.700
100 194,000
100 797,320
100 881.700 July. ’70. quarterly.
100 750,000 May ’70, semi-anl...
*» 1,170/100 May 70, quarterly.,
100 \ 75JOOO

July!

emi-ani...

PAID.

.

July 80,

147

CHRONICLE.

THE

1870.]

NATIONAL AND STATE SECURITIES.
Amount

DENOMINATION.
<“■ * *"

1- d.f»ultforl°ter..t

Outstanding. Rat*.

''

13,241,000
5,174,091
945,000

169.900.850
94,417,250
129,752,500
385,019,100
76,335,350
53,108,450
67,268,650
reg... 136,058,700
t0‘5„
> do do
121,663,550
do
( do
do ),cpn. 211,335,400
109,185,200
roan-5-20’8 (act Mar 3, ’65),
L
Ho
( do
do )cpn... 270,417,150
11,728,500
wa0 ( do
do )cpu. 30.810.850
5,250,000
Loanof’58(act Janel4, ’58), reg.
do
( do
do ),cpn... 14,750,000
6,074,000
r oan of’60 (act June 22, ’60), reg...
948,000
do
( do
do ).cpn...

J?5.20!B(actMar.8,’65),

lojEU’» ^Mar.S,’MtW..

^S-aO’sCactMar 8,’65W,..

Loan:10-40’s(act Mar.3,’64),re^. 129,578,450
do
( do
do ),cpn... 64.988.850
64

...

do
do
New Bonds. ..
New Bonds, 1870,

..
gold
.
Endorsement for RR’s (about).

(April., ’70) $4,425,000:
Act. ’68

....

Caluob»u( April,’70) $4,122,500:
Civil Bonds of 1857
(gold)
do

of 1860

“

“

Soldiers* Relief Bonds
do
Bounty Bonds..

...

“
ComoTi’!r(Apr.l’69) $6,674,992:
War Bonds (May, 61) 10or 20y’r
do do
(Oct.,’61) 10 or 20 y’r
do do (Nov.,’63) 20years
do do (May,’64) lOor 20y’r
do (non-taxab.)(May,’65) 20y’r
Plobida (Feb.,’69) $500,000:
.

State Bonds

fl*0B8U(Jan., 70) $6,014,500:

Western & Atlantic RR. Bonds.
do
do
do
Western & Atlantic RR. Bonds,
do
do
do
Atlantic & GulfRR. Bonds
Bonds, per act March 12,1866...
Illinois (Nov. 30, ’69) $5,124,996:
Ill. & Mich.Canal sterl’g.coup,.
.

do

do

sterl’g

Internal Improvement
Interest Bonds of 1847

..

reg

{new)...

Interest stocx of 1857
Refunded Stock bonds
.

.

...

..

Louisiana April ’70, $14,085,300:
Charity Hospital
Bonds to various railroads.

...

....

do

.

...

Bonds

Floating Debt, &c....

"^(Jan. 1, ’70) $8,100,900:
Civil Loan

2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000

July

May & Nov.

do
do
Jan. & July
do
Jan. & July
Jan. & July

1895

(sterling)

Balt. * Ohio R. R.
(sterling).
Railroad and Canal L iana

.

it

Balt. & Susq. R. R. Loan

•do
do
do

’71-’81

April &Oct.

’74-’84

do

1885

100,000

Jan. &

176.000

1,519,000
75,000

734,000
3,900,000
767,221
429,400
1,607,811
982,426

45,GOO
103,COO

989.500
176,000

*’913,666
66,(100
211,000
94,000
816,000
1,648,283

July

May & Nov.

Jan. & July

fl?iAO?F8-(Oct-1,’69)$27,939,420
tote
...

773,000

35,204
1,250,836

.....

n

Loan.

Hc Hospital. &c.*, Loan

100,000

$100,000
110,000'

165,000’
...

94,000
50,000
150,000

’68-’74

1871

i

1874

1871

o

Jan. So

July

1871
1878
1878

do
do
do
do
Mar. & Sep.
Jan. & July

1880
1880
1880

Jan. &

1866

Jan.

July

&July
do

S. F.

$1,287,
Apr. & Oct.
Mar.&Sept.
May & Nov.
April & Oct
Various.

$1,28*7*,

S. F.
Mar. & Sept
Jan. & July

j. j.

var.

’76-’89
1389

853

-

are

in

& F.A.

Mar. & Sept

F.$942,506]
Various.

1890
1890
1890
1909
1910

do

1873

May & Nov.
Apr. & Oct.

1872
73-’74
’73-’74
1874
1870
1870

Feb. &Aug.
June &Dec.

Apr. & Oct.
8. P. $7,228,
Jan. & July
do
do
do

J.,A J.&O

do
Jan. So July
June & Dec
Jan. & July

1,878,666
21,060,000
1,189,780
800,000
2.442.400
5,451,SCO
2,168,000
1,373,000
900,000
348,107
1,129,420

N.Carolina(Oc1,’69)$29,815,045:
Bonds for rai’roads, etc.*
do
do
do ex coup*

12.376,245

.

Penn’a (Dec 1 ’69) $32,662,878 :
Stock Loan (of 1840)
Inclined Plane (1849).
..

do
do
do
do
do
15

009...

*74-’89
'72-’89
1876
1876

J

n

&

Jan. &
Mar &

July
Sep.
Apr. & Oct.
$1,044,929
do
do

July

S. F. $8,417,
Jan. & July
do
do
do

J.,A.,J.&O.
do
do
do

Jan. & July
do

J.,a.,J.&O.
m As. $27,72
Jan. & July
Apr. & Oct.

1877

18'7
Will.
1878
1872
1873
1874

75-’77
1875

Will.
1874

4,600
’68-’98

Jan. &

July

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

1870
1879
1882
1882
1877
1878
1871
18 2
1872
1877
1877
1882
1882

Mar.&Sept.
Apr. & Oct.
Jan. & July
Feb. & Ang

1882
1883
1893
1894

Jan. & July
do
do
do
do

1870
1868

Jan. &

July
Apr. & Oct.
do

S. F., $160.

400.000

Apr. & Oct.
Jan. & July
do
Feb. & Aug

820,750
4,907,150

(1867)...

92,850

7,909,600
90,400
9.237,050

726,950

(April, ’70) $2,916,500:

War Bonds of 1862
do
do of 1863
do
do ofl863
do
do of 1864

1,106,000
239,000

736,000

841,000
Interest in

S.Carolina(Nov.’69)$6,988,434:

Fire Loan Stock (act. ’38)
do
stg. (lienonB’kS. C.)
State House et’ks (acts ’56-’63).
Blue R’dge RR b*s (act ’54)
New bonds—funding (act ’67)..
Conversion bonds of 1868
Funded bills bank S C
Bonds issued in 1868

304,443
484,000
2,275,000
1,000,000
1,282,971
332.600

1.246.400
800,000

TENNE88EE(J’ne,’70)$45,000,000:

Bonds loaned to RR’s., etc. .*
Bonds endorsed for RR’s., etc*

Funded Interest (new bonds) *

State Bonds (debt proper).... *
do
do
(
do
>....*
do
do
do
(
' )
*
Int. unfunded July ’69 &Jan.’70
Bank of Tennessee Notes

27,547,000
2,196,000

3,948,599
1,706,000
239,166
1,398,640

do
do

Apr. & Oct.
Jan. & July
do
do

Apr. & Oct.
do
do

’77 ’90

’75-’79
1897
1888
1888
1888

Long.

Long.
Long.
Var.
Var.

Var.

6,800,0* K)

1,700,000

Vermont (Feb., ’69) $1,427,000:
War Loan Bonds, coupon
1,227,000
do
do
201,000
reg
Virginia (Jan.,’701 $45,660,348:
Dollar Bonds (old), coupon*... 11,108,000
do
do
(old), registered* 21,865,578

...

’70-’84
’86-’!,r
’97-’02
270..

’7&-’S5

340,000

(new), reg.*

’70-’74

July

2

Sterling bonds (old) coupon*

’70-’7S
*84-’89

Jan. &

(1853)

Fundedlnterest(new), coup*.

1872

176,156

112,000

.

1887

’74-’78
’77-’89
’89-’90

’73-'86

July

Jan. &

’82-’90

1871

1,600,000
4,(95,309
2,400,000

3,918,000

sterling

’41-’71
S. F. $5,735,
Jan. & July
do
do
do
do

May & Nov

*1,515,677

do

do

May & Nov

1877
1878
1872

400,000

’

do

do

&July
do

466.000

Military Loan (1861)

do
do

Jan.

73-’83
1890
1879

Jan. & July
do
do
do

1.721.400
12,600,000

Coupon Bonds (1852)

Rh. Isii.

May & Nov
Jan. & July

I 187S
!

1,483.815

do
do
do
New Bonds RR. (special tax)*
Ohio (Jan. 1, ’70) $10,016,681 :
Loan due after 31st Dec., 1870 .
do
do
31st Dec., 1875
ao
do
80 th June, 1881.
do
do
31st Dec., 1886
Domestic Bonds (Union Loan)
Oregon (Sept, ’68) $176,150 :
Relief and Bounty Bonds

Loan

July

do

’68-’98
1900
1899
1898
43
1870
1875
1881
1886

2.417.400

Funding Bonds* (new)

.

do
do
Jan. & July

Mar.& Sept

*

....

1893
'69-’06

’86-’88

1,002,900
593,400

...

1872

1907

1,*3*9*9,*800

do
do
do
do
do
do
General Fund Bonds
do
do
do
Canal Fund Bonds

853**.
1886

’

General Fund Bonds
do
do
Canal Fund Bonds

Stock

Jan. &

447,000
2,855,000
3,085,00
422,000
540,000
2,475,000
5,667,000
1,614,000
1,5S9,000
3,000,000

899,200

1871

1877
I960

do

7,000,000

Bounty Fund Bonds,coupon...
do
do
do Registered.

do

Apr. & Oct.
July

100,000
100,000
100,000

600,000
1,000,000

’S8-’90
’91 ’93
1890

Jan. &
do

192,000
1,669,000
463,000
84,000

500.600

1888

*8S-’90

do
do

400,000
1,936,000

Mississippi (Jan. 1,’67) $—
:
State Bonds (Banks)*
Missouri (Jan. 1, ’70)$21,594,000:

’71-’S6
’G9-’71

Apr. So Oct.
Apr. & Oct.
Apr. & Oct.

200,000
125,000

..

State Bonds
Bonds of 1867-68
Bonds to North Mo. RR
Bonds to Cairo & Fulton RR..
Bonds to Platte Co RR
Bonds to Iron Mountain RR..
Pacific RR
S. W. Br. Pacific RR
S W. Br. Pacific RR (guar)...
Hannibal & St. Joseph RR
Nevada (June 1, 1869): $558 700
Bonds of 1867
N. Hamp. (Oct. 1, ’69) $2,749,200:
War Debt of July, ’61-’62
do
of Sept. 1,1864...
do
of July 1, 1866.....
N. Jersey (Nov.30,’69)$3,096,100:
War Bonds of 1861 (tax free)..
’*
of 1863 (taxfree)
“
of 1864.
N. York (Oct. 1869) $43,265,306:

do

Mar. & Sep.

966,500
2.952.400

RR.(stf-rl ).

State Buildings Loans
do
do
(new)
Slonx War Loan 1862

1870

1871
’79-94’

’70-’78
1871
1883
1880
1889
1889
413...
1890
1865
1890
1890
’65-90
1890
70-90
1888

do

Bost Hartf. & Erie

1883
1894
1894
1894

May & Nov.

554,180

Michigan (Jan. 1,’70)$2,408,000:
Renewal Loan Bonds
Two Million Loan
War Bounty Bonds
Ste Marie Canal Bonds
Minnesota (June, ’69) $300,000:

’70-’72
1S82
*71-’76
77-’7S

do
do
do

j-3,143,096

do
do
(home)
do
do (sterling)
Sonthern Vermont RR. Loan..
Eastern Railroad Loan
Norwich & Worces. RR.Loan.

do
do
do

pal

May & Nov.i
Jan. & July

200,000
4,379,500
4,000,744
3,505,000

—

Troy & Greenf. RR. Loan(st’g)

do

Due.

June & Dec.

164,00r>
220,000
3,000,000
600,000

do
do
do
do
do >
do (sterling)
War Loan (currency)
Western Railroad Loan (strl’g)
do
do
(strPg)

do

Payablo.

888,000

Bounty Fund Loan

,

Princl

Outstanding. Rate
default for interest

Union Fund Loan
do
do
do
Coast Defense Loan

’71-’72
1873

1910

80,000

2,288,88S

1872
1874

various.

May & Nov.

3,000,000

’96-’98

’7 8-'86
’86-’87

Various.
Various.

100,000
250,000

’72-’82
1883

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

2,553,000
1,000.000

269,000

Belief of tbe South

’86-83
1890

Jan. & July
do
do

June & Dec

1,938,217
8,026,791

^ana^ Loans

1872
1883
1886
1886
1836

1889

500,000

V,855,385




Jan. &

424.500
805,000

°8, % 2* Cana1 Loan (sterling)

..

Mabyland (Oct., ’69) $12,692,938:

Tn

1904

’1877
1880
1833
1884

;..
War Debts assumed...

...

Almshouse Loan
do

1904

do

Jan. & July

800,000
525,000
475,000
2,832,500
3,084,400

of0.
do
tote House

Mar.&Sept.

133.500

”884,*666

Bonds, 1855-61

War Loan of 1861
do do of 1863
Bounty Loan of 1863
War Loan of 1864

BountyLo *

do
Jan. & July
do
Jan. & July
do
Jan. & July
do
Jan. & July
do
Jan. & July
do

134 000

S^eveport Charity Hospital
1869,

**

do

May & Nov

2,188,000

495,880
..

Relief of P. J. Kennedy.

Canal

May & Nov.

19C0

2,000,000

Boeuf&CrocodileNaviCo.

Soaq. & Tide W.

do

’99-’00

750,000

1870, do
do
1986, Funding Coupons

o

May & Nov.

4,000,000

1865, Levee Bonds........

Municipal

Jan. & July
Jan. & July
do

Apr. & Oct.

86*666

1968, Relief of State Treasury

To Fund

July.

1881
1881
1881
1881
1881
‘1881
1882
1882
1884
1884
1885
1885
1885
1885
1887
1887
1888
1888
1874
1874
1871
1871

4,425,000

1,500,000

Military Loan

Penitentiary

do

Jan. So July

516.800

Kintucky (Oct, ’69) $3,307,177:
Bonds of 1841- 42
Bonds of 1843
Bonds to North Bank of Ky....
Bonds of 1843
Bonds for Military Purposes. .
Bonds held by B’rd of Education
..

473.800
712.800
82.500
; 800,000
2,000,000
2,600,000

134,311
694,000

Normal University bonds
Thornton Loan bonds
War Bonds
Indiana (May, ’7')) $1,500,000 :
8tate Stock Certificates
Kansas (Jan. ’70> $1,341,675 :
Bonds issued from ’61 to ’69..

J887, do

Jan. & July

1,500,000

Bonds of 1869

do

64,457,320

168,000
1,941,000

Bonds
do (extended)
do (
do
)...
Sterling Bonds(extended)
State
do
do

Little Rock & Ft. S.,

Marked thus *

Due.

45,540,000
14,000,000

State Securities
Alabama (June, ’70) $7,870,400:

ABKAN8A8

Payable.

INTEREST.

Amount

DENOMINATIONS.

pal

Back

W‘»0,f ‘far do ’

NmPension Fund

Princi¬

Loan, funding Public Debt....
Bay Lands Loan.

'“National (Joly I. 1879).
ffino Coin Intered-

,

interest.

1,865,000
3,472,000
3,225,842

466,250

Jun. & Dec.
do

Jan. &

July

do

Jan & July
do

Jan, & July

71 ’78

’71-’78

Long.

Long.

qpureoavtioguislny.

bftophwruicenieeldB

The

146

rae/CHftaNioLE.
RAILROAD, CANAL

Subscriber* will confer

a

For a full explanation of tliif
Table see “ Railroad Monitor’
on a

preceding

MISCELLANEOUS,

BQjp LIST.

great favor by giving ns
immediate notice of any error
Pages 1 and 2 of Bonds will be
published next week.

COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬
TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED

AND

COMPANIES, AND

r-l

INTEREST.

Amount

c3 o

discovered

O

When

ci

INTEREST.

page.

paid.

P3

77 os

paid.

■

• -

Out-

£ >»

Where

**

CHARAC-

Amount

standing

in our Table

Table
on a

6

standing

“ Railroad Monitor’
preceding page.see

1

'

4

4

11,1

When
paid.

+■»

•a

f

•

«

»

Where
paid.

.

,

Railroads:
1st

Railroads

Mortgage

1st M.

by State of Ala
Morris dc Essex (Jan., ’TO):
1st Mortgage,
sinking fund,
2d

Chattanooga (July 1/G9):
Mort., endorsed by Tcnn...

dc Decatur (Oct. 1,
1st Mort. (State loans)
2d Mortgage

’68):

Erie.

Convertible Bonds
N. Orl., J. d Gt. North. (Feb..
’70):

1st Mort. for $3,000,000
(1850).:.
2d Mort. of 18 60
Jheio York Centr al (Oct. 1,
’69):

Premium Sinking Fund

Renewal bonds
New York dc Harlem (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage of 1853
Consolidated Mort. of 1863
New York dc N. Haven (Apr. 1, ’70)

Mortgage

New York ’90-’92
it

7

1870

7

J. & J..

New York

M.& N.

N. Haven.

1888

7
6

J. & J.
A. & O.

N. Ha ven.

6
6

1 J0,UU0

F.& A.
F.& A.

b

V & A.

'2,000,000

7

M.& N.

New York

1889

291,700

7
6
7

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

N. London
New York

1871
1885
,1872

8
8

J.& J.
A.&O.

N. Y.&LDii
New York

6

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

7
6
6
6

162.000

2,900.000
3,000,000
1,767,000

7
6

New York
«*

44

N.
A.
N.

N.
D.

44

M.& N.
F. & A.

157,000
303,000
43,000

290,000

7
8
8
8

490,500
61,500

8
8

Northeastern (March 1, ’70):

(certidcates)

North Missouri (Jan. 1, ’70);
1st Mortgage of 1865
2d Mortgage ot 1868

Mortgage
Mortgage
Mortgage

Northern Central (Feb.,
’70):
1st Mort. (State loan)

Mortgage (sinking fund)
Mortgage (sinking fund)
Mortgage (Y. & C. RR guar)

Mortgage,

108,048

gold

..

Northern, N. H. (Apr. l, ’70):
Company Bonds of 1854
Northern New Jersey (Jan., ’70):
1st Mortgage
(guaranteed)....

4,000,000
5,000,000

7
7
7

2,275,000
360,000

6
10

811,500

North Pennsylvania (Nov. 1, ’69):
1st

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

New York

o

1873
•1896

44

New York

1894

.7

1,500,000
1,779,000
1,223,000
500,000
1,874,000

6
6
6
6
6

2d
2d
3d

1876
1881

C*

J.&J.

1st

1877
1877
1872
1893

44
4 4

44
,

M.& N.
M.& S.

M.& S.
M.& S.

Chari est’n

1809
1868
1875

44
44

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

2d

New York

1895
1888
1888

44

N’ew York

A.&O.

Mortgage 1864

Rensselaer d

115,000

6

400,000

7

J.&J.
A.&O.
M.& N.

Philadel.
44

Q.-J.

Anuapolls Trred

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

Baltimore.
44

t

|

44
44

J.&J.

1885
1900
1877
1900
Ph

A.&O.

Boston.

J.&J.

1874

New York

....

..

Income Mortgage (W.
Div.)
Consol. Mort.
)

Consol.Mort.ster

...

^

(101 *6,800.001

Oil Creek db Allegh.H.
(Feb., ’70):
1st

Mortgage

Old

Colony dt Newport (Feb., ’70):
Company Bonds
Company Bonds
Company Bonds
Orange, Alex, dc Manas. (Oct.l ,’69):
1st Mort. (O. & A. RR.)
1859
2d Mort. exten. (O. &
A.) 135'...
3d Mort. exten. (O.
& A.) 1858..
4th Mort. exten. (O.
& A.) 1800
1st Mort. (O., A. & M.
RR) 1867.

.,

Pacific of Missouri (Mar. 1,
1st Mortgage (gold)..

’69)7 ‘

!... 7
’70):*

Mortgage Construction Bonds,

Panama (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mortgages,
1st Mortgage,
2d Mortgage,

sterling
sterling

Mortgage,

sterling

guaranteed

Pennsylvania. (April,

8

2.050,000

n

4

850,000
537,000
221,500
2,758,000

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

105,000

7
7
7
7
6

3,170,000

7

1.38SB00
458,000

7

6

1,000,000

6

’70):

Mortgage (Penn. IiR.)
Mortgage (Penn. RR.)
m Mort. (Penn,
lift,), sterling
&ener$l Mort, (puji. to Plttsb,),
Ao
qo
bow, ooupon,
id

*

4*




n*w,

Boston.

J. & J.
J. & J.

44

44
44
44
44

London.

200,000

10

500,000
200,000

M.&N.
F.& A.

198,500

375,000

7
7

M.& N.
M.& N.;

6,500,000
524,7T3

6
7

F.& A.
J.&J.

A.&O,

2,671,000

7
7
7
7

7

4,972,000
3,594,000:

6
6
6

0,820,500!

6

44

J.&J.

7
6

!w 1

18..
1877
1875
1876

44

J.&J.
J. & J.

*

New York
44

Richmond
Alexand’a
New York
44

1 New York
44

*

•

,

New York

‘r

44

j

.

London.
44

1870
1875

1872
1897

44

••

MI

1888
1889-

New York

13.

PUtlfdeJ..

.1880

Lbhiibn-':
.

4t

tf

m1910

-

‘

m

J.&J..
M.& S.

J.

Div.(Jan.l/70):
'

General Mort., for
$2,020,000....
General Mort., sterling

1st Mort., West,
2d M.,W. line

l’e, for$8,060,000
(land) for$,8000,000
St. Paufdc SlouxClty
(Jan-1, ’70):
1st Mort, for $16,000
per njiie

Sandusky,NeW'rKCdw.
Mt
tootpgH0ti, (H)W,

...

’tO):

44

%

.

1812

1813
1912

44

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

it

44*

,1912.

'

4j i

•

44

&

4*

-

•

-

44

1912

44

1876
1887
1874.

hfm

^

44

J.&X' '

San Franc.

J.&J.

44

ffi;
1912'

l•.

1894

r

New York

lS.v

Augusta.

1883.

Boston.

••

1895

A.&O.
A. & O.

1837

,

7

Philadel.

1882
1884

J. & J.‘

New York

44

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

6
6
6
6
6

175,000

6
7
8

7

127,600
13,500
130.500

.

1,500,000

7

•

’80-’87
1896
1890

,

..

j^Tew York ’87-’88
44

4 4

*75-*90
Richmond *7f>-’90
.44

J.&J.

....-•

1373

•

-

..

U,

.

F.& A.

408,500

"

44

J. & I).
M. & S.

9,000,000

4 4

J.& J.
J. & J.
M.& N.
M.&N.
F. & A.

»

•

New York

1875

N. Y. &

R
Pliiladel,

1875

N.Y.orLon

1919

-

'■‘£"

1870

I
c

New York

•

'

732.800

7
7
7

591,000

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

7
7

405,500

F.& A.
F.&A.

New York
4 4

*

'TO-"?!
1891

41

r

10
10

400,000,

1,400,000 10
500,(XX) ■'•7
10

8

1,500,000

’70):

1st Mort. (10 m.) tax tree
1st Mort. (St. P.to
Watab,80m.)
2d Mort. (land grant)

*

•

•

it

if

A.

e

i

M.& S.
J. & D,

.

St.Paul dc itoc.,1st

44

D.

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

*

Portland;

St. L., Alt. dT. Haute
(Julyl,’69):
1st Mort. (series A) sink, fund
1,100,000 7
lBt Mort. (series B) sink. fund..
7
1,100,000
2d Mort. (series C)..
7
1,400,000
2d Mort. (series D)
.;
7
1,400,000
2d Mort. (income)..../.
1,700,000 7
St. Louis d Iron Mt.
(July I, ’69):
1st Mortgage —:
4,000,000 7
St. L., Jclcks. d Chic. (Feb., V0):
1st Mort. (guar.) 1864, tax
free.. 2,365,000 '7
2d Mort. (guar.) tax free
360,000 7
St. Louis and Southeastern ;
isr, Mort. conv. tax free
(gold). I6,000p.m 7
St. Louis <k St. Joseph (Apr. 1,

(guar.)......... i....

'

1.912

44
44

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

19421912.

J. & J.

st’k)

;.

4 4

6

600,000
161,600
1,298.000

.......

.

New York
44

F. & A.

Augusta.. 18.8

'

Mortgage (gold)
2d Mortgage (gold)..,
St. Joseph d C. Bluffs (Jan.l,
70):
1st

(guar.)

Baltimore.
New York

....

7

Sacramento Valley (Jan. 1,.*70)

1st M.'skg fd
2d M. skgfd

'Philadel.

A.&O.

150.000
7
450,000 “7
400,000
7
500,000 7

’69):

Mortgage (gold)
St.L.,Vana. & T.Haute (Jan. 1/70):

*

.

(conv. into Rut. pref: st’k)

1st

“

....

Boston.
.

,

-

J. & J.”
F.& A.
M.& S.
J. & J.

..

l

1893
•1S82

Boston.
-

,

-

4

>4

/

.

189*

F.&A.

N.Y^QrL’b

J. & J.
A.&O.
F.&A.
M.&N^
M.& N.

New Yofk
*

■

*4

•

’

*Jti »

i

••

•

ft

•

44

(

F.& A.

New York

A. & O.

1894
1894
1894
4894
1894

1892'

New York

J.&J.

,

44

.

.

1

x *

.AL&N. '. New York

1,000,000

6

Sf.&'N." Nexy

1,900,000

7
7-

j. & J:"- New York
j. & j.

2,600,000
120,000
700,000

1,200,000
780,000

is
7
7
7
7

S.\

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

$,000
*

44

“1892

J.&J.
J; & J

-London.
New York

.

7

,

4

Ijew

3;#T,

York

New York

4.,

rnouo

i.

1863
1863«

New York
Sacram’to

•

1885

j.&j,;.

a,& o;
A.& O,

1916
1891.

ll

6
6
6

229,200
361,300
31,115

•

188S

J?hi]ad<iV
''

F.& A.

7

.

New York ’70-.’80

A.&O.
•

1873
1875
1873
1880
1882

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

350,000

1st Mortgage ............i.......
Rome, Bat. d Ogdensb. (Jan.1/70):
Sink. F’d Mort.
(Wat. &B) *55...
Guaran. (Pots. & Watert’n) ’53.
Sink. Fund Mort.
(general) ’61..
Rutland d Burlington (Jan. 1/69):
1st M.

1st

1893'
1893

)t

650,(XX>

Consol: Mortgage, coupon
Consol. Mortgage, reg
Roanoke Valley RR. Bonds
Richm. d
Petersburg (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mort.., convertible
2d Mort., coupon and
reg
3d Mort. of 1865. coupon
Rockf., R. I. dc St. Louis (Jan.1’70):
1st Mort- (gold) convert, free
Rock ltd. d Peoria (Jan. 1, ’70):

2d M. (conv. into Rut. com.

;

M

A. & O.

10
10

400,000

Mort. (80 m. in Mo.)
1st Mort. (52 m.in Iowa)..
2d Mbrt. (52 m. in Iowa)
St. Joseph dc Denver City :
1st Mortgage (gold)’tax free...

’92-’93.

New York

A. & 0.
F. & A.

•

1898

Boston.

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

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

•

1872
1872
1874
1882
1898

Philadel.

....

7

679,000

1879

New York

J.&J.
J. & J.

249,962

6
6

1877
1877

44

8
8
7

.

g#

J.&J.

400,000
1,130,500
573,600
381,700
708,000

86,000

General mortgage,
sterling...,
Paterson dc Newark (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st

500,000

6

500,000

Ya. Loan (34 y’rs)
s’k’g Fd, ’58-9.
1, ’70):
Mortgage, 1863 (5-20 vears)
Oswego dc Rome (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage,
guaranteed.
Income Mortgage
Oswego dc Syracuse (Oct.

Osage Valley (Jan.
1st

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

7

278,000

....

1,

400,000
124,500

♦«.

J. & J.-

:

..

Construction Bonds
Vgdensb. dc\L. Cham. (N’ov. 1, ’69):
Equipment Bonds (tax free).
Ohio dc JUssissippi
(April, ’70) :
1st Mortgage (E.
Div.)
1st Mortgage (W.
Div.)
2d Mortgage (W.
Div.)

A.&O.

r

M.&N.

7

....

'.

Sinking Fund Loan
Bond guaranteed by State

it

Philadel.

i

J.& J.

7
7
8

525,000

Saratoga (Oct.l,’09).:

State

J. & J.
A. & O.

F.& A.

7

1,000,000

1st Mortgage .....'
2d Mortgage.
lSt Mort. (Sara. & Whitehall)..
1st Mort. (Troy, Salem &
Rutl’d)
Richmond d Danville (Oct. 1,

1885
1877
1896

44

•

44

London.

i

'

l! 20

1876
1871
1860
1886
1880

44

7
7
7
7
7
7
7

2,000.000
153,000
100.IXX)

.

'

'

6

.7

>

Philadel-.

J.&J.

7

7
7

‘

•#«'•••

J.&J.
J.&J.

7
6
7

225,000

1st Mortgage, 1867..........
Reading d Columbia (Feb., ’70)
1 st
Mortgage 1862.

44

<<
*

7

6
6
6

860,000

(Mar.1,’69):

Philadel.

A. & O.'-'
J, & J.

7
6
7
7

860,000

Mortgage

O.
O.
O.
J.

J.&J.

6.

860,000
860,000

'56.

-

....

875,000
860,000
800,(XX)

$16,000
Portland d Kennebec (Jan. per m,
1, ’70):j
1st Mortgage
extended,. 1863
1
Consolidated Mortgage, 1865...
j
Funded Interest, 1863
Portland d Rochester (Jan. 1,
’70):

1867

5

875,(XX)
875,(XX)

08..

1st Mortgage (gold)'

Shops N.C. ’72 ’78

147,000
182,400
288,000

875,000
875,000
875,000

const rue

art Huron dc L. Mich.
1st Mort. (gold) for

6
6
6

2,394,100

.

F. W. & C.

Philadel.

4,000,000
400,(XX)

.

,

Philadel.

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

775 000

bds’57.
Equip. Bonds of 1869, tax free..
Placerrille d Sacrum. (Jan. 1,’70):

18J9

.

New York

.

P

J. & J.

7
6
6
7
6

6,208.000
J,000 000

....

Mortgage (series K)
Mortgage (series L)
Mortgage (series M).
Mortgage.:
......I
Bridge (O. & P. RR.) Mort..

New York ’73*78
44

A.
J.
N.
J.

7

985,000

(series A):

2d

^ew York

853,000

.

1875

It

J. & J.
J. & J.
J. & ti

7
7
7

6,000.000

Mortgage..

1887

,.

700.000
145.000
.

1883

J. & J.

1,000,000

.

6
7
6
7

Bonds of 1S57

Mortgage

New York

7,'

2,500,000

(Turtle Cr. Div.)

1st Mortgage (series
B).
1st Mortgage (series.C).
1st Mortgage (series D).
1st Mortgage (series E).
1st Mortgage (series F}7
2d Mortgage (series G)
2d Mortgage (series
H)
2d Mortgage (series I)..

18S3

J. & J.

1,086,300
2,266,000

City & ‘"ounty loans'.
Piltsb.. Ft W. dc Chic.
(Feb., ’70):
1st

1833
1876

44

44

194,000
100,000
250,000
439,00>

North Carolina (April, *70):
Mort. Bonds (various) ’67-’63...

1890

44

'

Mort. (new) free State tax..

1st Mort.

8

381,800
102,000
2,497,800

-..

Pittsburg dcConnellsv. (Feb., ’70):
1st

T886‘

New York

J. & J.

Mortgage
Funding Mortgage
2d Mortgage for $500,009

1875
1878
1887

Fhlladel; *70-^1
Philadel;

3,000,01)0
3.598,000

Loans of’43, ’44, ’48 and ’49

1880

300,000
45tl,000

:

Q’t’ly.

800,000

.

Loan ofl857, convertible
Loan of 1836,
sterling
Loan of 1836, sterling
Loan of 1868
Loan of 1868
l oan of 1870
($5,000,000) conv...
Phila., TVilm. dc Balt. (Nov. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, convertible
Loan of 1866
Loan of 1867
Pittsb.,Cin. die St. Louis (8ep., ’69):.
1st Mortgage
'
1st M. Steuoenv. & lad.
re-org.
Col. & Newark Div. Bonds

1899

*4

.

Harrisb’ig

1,000,000
3,000,000
2,000,006

do(currency)
"

7

1,000,000

dc Read. (Dec. 1, ’69):

Loan of 1849
Loan of 1861

;i889

7

7

1st

Philadelphia

1887

250,000

York,Prov.d Bost.{Sep.l ’69) 20,000p.m

Extension .•
New Bonds 1869
Norfolk dc Petersburg (Oct.
1, ’69)
1st Mortgage

2d do
3d do

3,000,000

A.& O.

'

'.

do
do
do

co

1876

New York

A.&O.

Mortgage
Improvement

Mortgage

5
6

600,000

,

Hiiladelphia d Erie(Yeb. ’76):
1st Mort. (Sunbury & Erie
Rli.)
1st Mort. Phil. & Erie
(gold)...

18S7

Bridgep't.

J. & J.

6

Consolidated

1S90

Nashville.

J. & J.

1,059,500

N. Y. dc Oswego Midland:
1st Mort. (gold)

2d
3d
3d

J. & J.
A.&O.

Mortgage

Philudel. dc Balt. Cetit. (Nov.,
’69):
1st

Mew York

5,946,689
1,514,000
592,000

Real Estate

2d
3d

1st

J. & J.
A. & O.

'

guaranteed
Peoria dc Bureau Val. (Jan. 1,
’70):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Peoria Pek.dc Jacksonv.fJan.1
,’70):

6
6
10

2,741,000
1,168,000

Mortgage Bonds
1st Mort., extension

31

it

60,000

2d Loan
8d Loan
N. J. Southern (Del. & Rar.
Bay):
1st Mortgage, tax free
New London North. (Jan.
1, ’70):

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Funded Interest

Mortgage,

6

1,000,000
400,000

Jersey (Jan. 1 '70):

Is iLoan

<r

it

r

.

6,082,538
1,114,224

Pennsylvania dc N. Y. (Nov., ’69):
1st

1914
1891
1900
1SS9

500,000

1st Mort 1869.

State works purchase
Short Bonds (debentures)

1886

1,546,000

7

Mortgage

7 €io
1st

2,009,000

146,700

New Haven dc Derby by
(Jan. 1, 70):

1st

New York

205,000

1st Mort. (convertible) 1856
Newark dc New York (Jan.:*70):
1st Mortgage, 1867.....

New

New York

M.& N.
F.&A.
J. & J.
F. & A.

500,000

Income (Tenn. & Ala.)
Naugatuck (Jan. 1, ’70):

1st

M. & S.

7
7
7
7

:
-••*-*>*

1888

2,465,176

Nashville

guar,

8

3.000.000
600.000

Nashv. &

Mortgage

New York

480,000

Convertible bonds
Construction bonds

1st

M.& N.

5,000,000

Mortgage

1st

8

1,200,000

Montgomery d Eufala (Oct.,

y

is:-;
18.;“

V

Yoi’k

Rjiir.TM

1896;

tb'S 4

/iiltlil

149

THEOHRONIGLE

mw

•RAILROAD,’ OA-NALAND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
gul)*c^lber* will confer a great flavor by giving us Immediate notice of any error discovered in our Tables*
.3^10 £'•

vf n

Pages l aud. 2 of Bonds will be published next week.

r

t'K

10 *tnf?

•

navspA^fS:^ Aif 1> CfiARAC-

ffiwffliCPBrriEi? ISSUED; Amount
standing

"3

Out*

■"Tul],

<D

explanation of turn

“Railroad Monitor

%i5.

When

&

?nt preceding page.

TER OF

©

2a
S ►>
Z 2

Where

paid.

08

COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬
securities ISSUED. Amount

«

INTEREST.

paid.*

-

iFor

>■

Consol.

v

irfgBSSlS^Mortgage

7. '820,000-

8;'

79,830
52,000
.665,000

c

7

6
6

250,000

pr.fe.R.;BanX Bonds
Central N \

West Wisconsin (May 1,
1st Mort. L. G

J.&D.:
J.&D.

44

^

44
44
41

*

_

New

6

7

New York

A.&O.

Brooklyn.

'8
6

258,000
574.400

*6
6
6
6

407,800
800,000
31,700

M. (ofl

pref.) for $540,000
Ta. State Loan (suspended)..

HU

'52,400

New York

J.&J.

New York

New York

Petersb’g.
44

—

'

-8

aeffle of Mo. (J

6

t. (gold) $25,000 nt
Swthuuatemr Gar. (Aug* 1, ’69):

:

399,000
300,000

Mageogee RR Bonds.

Men Bland (Oct. 1, ’69):

528,000

6

J. & J. '

500^000
250,000

v.

Stittoon (Jan.l. ’70):
...

'“ ”

6
6

J.&J.

New York

1879

New York

1879

7

.7
7

406

8

900,000

7
7

2»

Elttrt..(Gt.'W’t'n of »59.181 ra.)
Equipment Bonds(T.& W.,75 m.)
lionwl. Mortgage (500 m.)conv.
rby A Boston (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage

•^Mortgage

•

44

1900

J. & J.

London.

M.& N.
J. & J.

New York

1881
1886
1897

Sistare, B

roke

44

J. & J.

M : ?*

’

■

Bonds

197,737

J. & J.;

7

New York

1st

* '

’

*•

V

V

f

500,000

515,700
174,500

J. & J.
J. & J.

386,000

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

1,000,000

114.000

J. & J.

_

r;

„

113,444
-

J. & J.
J. & J.
J. &" J.
J.& J.
J. & J.

y

G. K.

Street.

J. & J.

New York

1830

7

J. & D.

New York

1884

7

J.& J.

Brooklyn.

1872

300,000

7

M.& N.

626,000

.7

J\ & J.

214,000

7

J. & J.

300,000

.

1878

New York

18..
18..

700,000

7

M.&S.

New York

1874

208,000

7

J. & J.

New York

18..

200,000
60,000

'7

A.&O.

New York

1873

7

M.& N.

1671)00

■7.

J. & J.

New York

18..

350,000

J.&D.,

New York

1877

150^000
815,000

7
7
7

F.& A.
A.&O.

.7

M.& N.

250,000

7

J. & J.

New York

1890

7

J. & J.

New York

1890

2,089,400

J. & J.

Philadel.

1886

2,000,000

-J.
-J.

Baltimore

1870

London.
Baltimore.

1890
1885

1878

'

.

,

200,000
•

1,500,000

Mortgage

*" *

-■

<«

1876
1885
1888

84
it

1870

Boston.

Boston.
44

*

1886
1891

76-77

I

1889

Boston.

1883
1879

New York 1860
■

«

■

.

: >
f... K.

1860

1853,
f

New York

18721884

19003

New York

J. & J.

'

7 '
7

J. &'-J.
J. & J.

54,800
5,656,099
2,000,000
5,000,000
1,496,879

6
6
6
6
6

J. & J.

782,250

Morris (Feb. 70):; •
1st ana 2d Mortgages ...
Boat Loan, sinking fund

6
7

743-,654
161,960

1 239,425

Pennsylvania (Feb., 70):

1st M ort. tax free g. by Pen. RR
Schuylkill Navigation (Nov.l, ’69):

=

'

II

f

1881

PhiladeL*

1866
1873

44

Philadel.

1873
1884
1897
1897
1877

JerseyCity

1876
1885

Q.-J.
Q.-F.
J. & D.
J.&D.

A.&O.

1877

•

A.&O.

Improvement
Susq. A Tide Water (Feb., 70):
Maryland Loan.
Loan of January 1,1878
Pref. Interest Bonds
Union (Feb., 70)
Iat Mortgage
West Branch A Susq. (Feb., 70) :
1st Mortgage ...;
2d Mortgage tax free
WyofningMaUey (Feb., 70):
1st Mortgage
....

1,361,000

J. & J.

Phtlade

1887

1,751,213

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

,

Philadel.

1,500,000

,

Convertible Loan of 1877

1899"

Utica.

J. & J.
M.& N.

3,500,000
boy RR.

Loan of 1873

Loan of 1884
Loan of 1897
Gold Loan of 1897

1§96

J.& J.

800,000

Lehigh Navigation (Nov. 1, ’69)

1895
1895

New York

1

4,375,000
1,699,500

having nextjpi-eference.

Registered Bonds (tax free)....
Registered Bonds (tax free)....

1896
”a-’76
1916

J.&D.
J.-&D,
M.&N.
M.&N.

b

44

7

1,500,000

7

Dela. A Raritan: See Cam. & Am

’95-’97

J. & J.

7

ns

694,000

Delaware AMudson (June, 70):

1878

44

J. & J.

6

6
7
■7

710,000

Delaware.Division (Feb., 70}:

1873

J’el,’71

3,000,000
1,500,000

r

Philadel.

789,300
576,887

1882'

New York

7

'■g^rtgage (funding)’.'.’.*.*!1 778,’000




44

M.& N.
M.& S.

F.& A.
J. & D.
J. & J.
M.& N.
M.& S.

-

293^00

*>',

A.&O.

1,200,000

(J
Maryland Loan, sinking fund.
Guaranteed Sterling Loan

1887.

6
6
6
7
7

1,600^)00
2,240,000
4,063,000
6,303,000
600,000
378,000

494,000
990,000.
778,000
11Q,000-

,

1888

,

io

1885
1875

New York

• ••••••■•

^a^redl’ertiflcatese.

<<

J. & J.

WrtS^Feb-*’70):
*

New York

G
6

S^ago, sinking ftind
FS£f>c?rn^ertlhle. tax free....
”'

Q.-J.

1,600,000

-

•

Philadel.

Canal:

N.Y.&Bos. ’95-’99
’95-’99
Boston.
87-’89
N. Y.& Bos ’72-’T4

150,000:

’MaruT’ei*:::;;

J. & J.

1871-

J. & J.
J. & J.
A.&O.
M. & S.

4,221,000

1

1873

Mortgage

-

.........

New York

200,000

Plain Bonds (x t rce)

1888
1890
1882
1878
1871
1893
1883
1907

6
6
7
10

4,275,000

(Jan., ’70}:

1896

J. & J.

,—

Mortgage

1890.
1890

27,237,000
26,915,800
7,864,000
8,163,000

Centra? (Juno 1, ’69):

• • •

7

500,000

^government subsidy)

(C0n80l.)

1896
18941886

1880

N.
A.
N.
N.
N.
N.

J. & J.

7

360,000

UnionPadjic,

rtsflffQ (consol ^

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

6
6

lstMort., guaranteed
2d Mort., guaranteed
faion Pacific (Marchy’70>:

*

44

J. & J.
A.&O.

Iroy Union (Oct. 1, ’69):

..

44
44

F.&A.

7
7
7
7

7

427,000

Br.)...

New York

300,000
300,000
650,000

..

'Convertible Bonds.

$500,000
*10»000 P-m(May 1, *T0):
f^^P^^gold^ $25,000 p. ra...

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

7
7
7
7

-^Mortgage..,.,
.•MHortgage,

for

New York

500,000
300,000
1,000,000
1.500,000
2,500,000
600,000
2,700,000

..

.WMortsrage 1868.

10
7

1,771,000

tit Sort. (Quin. & Tol., 34 m.)..
lstMort. (Ill. & S. Iowa, 41 m.).
2d Mort. (Tol. & Wab., 75 m.)
'
&
2d Mort. (
t. £Wab. & W’t’n, 167 m.)

vjstitprt. (Leayenworth

F.& A.
J. & D.
A.&O.
J. & J.

'

jstM. (L.Erip, W.& St.L.,167 ra.)

;Land Grant Mort.

New York

250,000

Eighth Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
42d st. A Grand st. Ferry (Oct.1,!*69):
1st Mortgage
<
Real Estate Mortgages
Ninth Avenue’(Oct. 1, *09):
1st Mortgage
Second Avenue (Oct. 1, *89):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
i...
3d Mortgage.
Consolidated convertible
Sixth Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
Third Avenue (Oct. 1, *69): -

New York

A.&O.

1,200,000

BO&rt; (Gt.wtn, W. D.,100 m.)
BtMort; (Gt. W’t’n of ’59,181 m.)

.'(government subsidy)

F.& A.

Isl^A^Brooklyn

1880

A.&O.

....

E. Div. (Jan.l, ’70):
lstMort. (gold), 140 m
I-tstMert.(gold), 253,94 m
-

4,000,000

.

Coney
(Oct. i,’69):
1st Mortgage
D,yD'k,E.B,dwayABat.(Oc.\,’te):
1st Mortgage . —........

1875

7

lot., mb. A Western (Jan. 1, ’70)

V£*faciflc,.Oent. 5r.(Jan.i,’69):
SffW- tax free
M Mort.

-

i

7

1,800,000
1,600,000

/KBS&Sfcfc::::::-::
Eqajpm’t bVs of IS <0 conv.S.F.

$10,000,000

44

340,000

TFar«aw>(Jan.l,’69):
Mortgage (W. Div.)

•land Grant Bonds for
uicome Bonds

Boston.

F.& A.

200,000

Mortgage Bonds of 1869

'W^r^jigoid), tax free
"W'Jwrt.^governrrrent subsidy)

’93-’96

Broot.,Pro8.P:A'Platb'h(Oc.l ,’68):
1st Mortgage
CentralP.yNTA E. River (Oct.V,'(ft):

1874

1,707,050

ind'polis(Feb.,’70):

,

1899

Philadel.

1st Mortgage

Philadel. ’70-’To

6

$j/ra&.Bingh. A N. Y. (Oct. 1, ’69):

lstMort. (Tol. & Ill„ 75 m.)

New York

Mortgage
Brooklyn Dify (Oct. 1, W):

1886

New York

7

1890
1890

Yari.

1st

1888

New York

J. & J.

850,000

bWotigflge

mremuteA

...

Mortgage

1st

”37-’80

Macon.

1890
1890

M.&N.

Broadway A left Ave, (Oet. 1, ’69);

’62-’72

—

7

„.

SVMnitwwnph (Nqy. 1, ’69):

Mortgage

Var.

200,000

Mortgage

isSSwnff, n0)V
flit

7

'7

Baltimore.

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

sau

1898

Boston.

J.
J.
J.
J.

Street Passenger R.R. Quotatio

'

fiqjbpsnyBoncte...

UtMortgage,

J.&J.

1888

Bleecker SLA’Fulton ^.(Oct.1,’69):

'

20,000 pm

’84 ’85

1,800,000

Witmingtmi A Weldon (Oct. 1, *69):
1st Mortgage, sterling
Sterling Bonds
Sinking Fund Bonds of 1867.

’84-’90
'96-’00
1887
70-’75

44

N.Y.& Lon

New York

2,800,000

’84-’90

Petersb’g.

18..

A.& O.

800,000

Wil.,Chari. AHutherfd (Oct.,’63):
1st Mortgage, new
Wilmington A Dead. (Feb., 70): *

1887

1899

200,000
400,000

Wicomico A Pocomoke (Jan. 1,70):

1st

1896

a

New York

800.000

Mortgage

1st

1883

it

J. & J.
A.&O.

500,000

Mortgage

ist

1873

1878

Pacific:

Western.^

1893

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

Camden.

1875

J. & J.

guar

'

M. & S.

,M. & S.

*4

612,800

70):

....

ttoK'Dtp ref.j ’for $709,000
Consol M.'( VJ pref.) for $651,000

t&kruj Mountain iOct. 1, ’69):

4ro,ooo

1,000,000
316.500

Whitehall A Plattsb. (Sept. 1, ’69):

1880

Boston.

J. & J.
A.& O.

Philadel.

557.500

Mortgage (gold)

1st

New York

...

New Yqrk

1890
1890
1890
1890

Mortgage preferred......... T6,(j00,000

Western

'71-’85
’71-’85
’69-’72
’73-’74
88-’91
1892
1871

London,
44

1898
1898

1876

Charlest’n

44

400,000

1st Mort., endors. by Baltimore
1st Mortgage, unendorsed^....
2d Mort., endors. by Baltimore.
2d Mort., end. by Wash. Co.

1st

750,000

tjrsjre^xu-zu yea

Mortgage,

1st

1874

Augusta.

F.’&A.

150,000

.............

44

44

Western, Ala. (Jan. 1, ’69):

1872'

New York

J.&J.

**7’
.A

Utk.IfiwU>jC. a !.t.r4sl6^XX)p. m,
Sn^mre (Dtc. 1/69):

J. A J.

7

fouthAN.Alabu ma (Jan.l, ’69):

•\

44

1872
1864
1887

44

511,400

Loan of 1883
Loan of 1866,1st Mort..'.
Joint morr. onC.M. M.RK, ’69.
West Shore Hud. Div. (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage

New York

...

J.&J.
J. & J.
A. & O.
J.&j;
J.&J.
J. & j.
M.&S.

..5
5
7
6
7
6

247,475
377,010
353.500
41,000
80,000
415,000
1,500,000

namesticJBoads f Ki)»
Domestic Bonds (special)

:

•

Philadel

.6.

Bonds (H)..
domestic Bonds (G)
Domestic Bonds (I).

j.

•

F. A A.

1,628,320-

Domestic

£?.

•

-,*••*..

7

300,000

IsfMortgage-

U

Philadel.

129,000
1,102,000

Yestem Maryland (Jan. 1, ’70;:

854 000

Singloaii,£59,052 11s. id....

-

1889

New York
Selma.

New York
New York

8

2,012,944
262.500

lit

'

264,000

ttSlSgloan-, JB452^lil0a«

1st

New York

7

700,000

Carolina (Jan. 1.170):

Sfitketn

J.&J.

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

7

838.500
241,000
3,000,000

Rivers).

fit Mortgage-

Ml

1889

New York 1880
4*
1870

....

•

V*!* •
'

1st

tat Mortgage

New York
~

-

^2I(SS5%dAt*(MMCh;.iTO) •
Mortgage

sMem

J. & J.

'

jjgSSSflSBtew

-

683.500
849,000

Conso .Mort.,
Consol. Mort.,

-

M^M^Daiion flFe&y.Woj
^Wort; (Ala. & Tenn. Rivers)
(Ala. & Tenn.

7
7
7

-

M Mortgage

Srt

500 ‘JO
217,000
73,000

..........

',oantrfe\Jbrr- L AS):

■

Mort., 1st class
.Mort., 2d class
3d class.
4th class
Warren (Jan. 1, 70):
1st Mort., guaranteed
Westchester A Phila. (Nov* 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, convertible
3d Mortgage, registered
West Jersey (Jan. 1, 70):
Conso

l869

paid.

Vicksburg <fc Merid. (Mar. 1,
'

d

•Sfc*
4

Where

paid.

Railroads:

-

Railroads:

^

When

preceding page.

on a

......

:^5;vv;v;-.

2*

full explanation of this
see “Railroad Monitor” standing

a

Table

'

!

AfO*

«8 ©

INTEREST.

Out¬

M.& S.

Philadel.

1872
1882
1870

4.016,670

J. & J,

308.500

M.&N.

1,000,000

1^50,000

London.
Baltimore.

825,000

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

3,000,000

M.&N.

Philadel.

1883

299,000
298.500

J. & J.

Philadel.

1878

M.&N,

600,000

J. & J,

2,000,000

1885

1878
1894

44

1888,

Philadel.

1878

J. & J.

New York

1886

J. & J.

New York

1879
1881

New York

1878
1879

Miscellaneous:
T
-

.

;

i

'

-

*

'.

»

Amer. Dock A Imp. Co.CJan.l .’69):
Bonds (gnar. by C. RR. ofll. J.)

Cumberland Coal (Jan. 1, ’69):

IstMortgage

Pennsylvania Coal: Mortg. B’ds;

Quicksilver (Feb., ’70)
1st Mortgage (gold)

17,000
592.500

jr &a.

500,000

J. AD.

1865^

1900’
71*’80

1,000,000

M.&N.

684 100

X.

it

Jv& J.

800^00

2d Mortgage (gold)

U

Nov

1889
187

BGtanpkaohersz’gtfde,

tagoquirvoteneain

Prices

150

THE

die €

n

CMEONICLB.

mmercia 1 8imes.

tu

COMMERCIAL

EPITOME.

continues

be

Exports of Leading Articles from New
York
following table, compiled from Custom House
return*

exports of leading articles of

Fork since

Fbiday, July 29.

General trade

The

unsettled

credits is

serious obstacle to business for export.
Cotton has fluctuated sharply, under speculative
a

but closed dull and lower.

there is
cline.

Breadstuffs

are

influences,

again lower, but

revival

of export and speculation at the de¬
Tobacco is lower and moderately active. Groceries
some

have been in fair request, but
Sugars are lower.
Hides show a large movement in the

forty-eight
sold, including a large line
quoted at 22£c. gold, for
past

hours—some 40,000 having been
of Rio Grande, part to arrive, and

dry, and 12-Jc. gold, for wet salted. Leather is also active
and Jc. higher.
Skins are generally better. Tallow in
steady demand and firm.
Naval stores have shown more
activity ; spirits turpentine
advanced early in the week, but the close is
drooping; rosins,
at the lowest
prices current in many years, have sold more
freely, 4,000 bbls. having been taken for export at $1 60@
$1 80 for common to good strained, with 4s.
freight to Lon¬
don; oils have been firm but quiet; petroleum has been
more active in the
past two or three days, with a slight re¬
covery of tone and prices, while a “corner” in Philadelphia
forced an advance of 1-J-c. for refined on the
spot.
East India goods and metals have been
wholly without
salient features, and prices are without
change. Hops-have
been more active, and prices are better; the
reports from the
new
crop are not favorable.
Whisky has been in larger sup¬
ply and declined. Fish are coming to market quite freely,
and prices are weak.
Foreign fruits are in some cases held
for higher prices.
Building materials are dull at compara¬
tively low prices
Provisions have been without further
advance, though the
sales for export have increased ;
except for prime mess pork,
in which an advance to
$31@32, according to brand, has in¬
terrupted legitimate business. Beef is comparatively quiet.
Butter is selling fairly and firm ; but the trade in
cheese,
embarrassed by the difficulty of
negotiating exchange and the
scarcity of suitable freight room, has become slow, and the
late improvement is not fully
supported.
Freights have been more active, favored by a better sup¬
ply of sail vessels unemployed, and a slight decline in rates,
but by steam, rates are well
supported. The chief shipments
have been grain at 12d by steam to
Liverpool, 13d by steam
to Glasgow, 10@10^d
by sail to London, 9f@10d by sail to
Bristol, and 7@9d per quarter to Cork for orders, with con¬
siderable flour to London by sail at
3s@3s 3d, closing at the
lower rate., There has also been more
doing in petroleum
charters at high rates.
Receipts of Domestic Produce

for

tue

Week and since

Jan* 1*

The receipts of domestic
produce fjr the week and since Jan. 1
nd for the same time in 1869, have been asfollows:
This
week.

Ashes...pkgs.
Breadstuffs—
Flour .bbls.
Wheat .bus.
Corn
Oats

Rye
Malt

Barley
Grass seed.
_*lax seed

..

Beaus
Peas
C. meal.bbls
“

bags

Buckwh’t &
B.W.fl’r pkg
Cotton, bales.

Copper..bbls.
“
plates.

Dr’dfruit.pkg
Grease .pkgs.
Hemp ..bales.
Hides —No.

Hops...bales.
Leather .sides
Lea* ....pigs.
Molasses hhds
& bbls.
Naval StoresCr. torpentn*..bbl




Since
Jan. 1.

Same
time ’69.

This
week.

Since
Jan. 1.

i

Same
time ’69

183

5,931
4,920
Spirits turpen¬
tine
528
40,165
65,210
816,606 1,463,776
Rosin
8,352 340,189
623,875 9,759,743 8,978 539
Tar
500
44,090
364,201 3,684,149 5,440,580
Pitch
2,165
497,610 3,094,909 2,608,615 Oil cake, pkgs..;.
1,5 is
51,264
140
277,397
202,883 Oil, lard
145
3,124
1,642
438/108
260,893 Oil, petroleum...
91,641
1,337
619,383
76,020 Peanuts, bags..
*43i
57,193
50
27,160
7,080 Provisions—
250
2,556
2,333
Butter, pkgs.i..
5,384 269,893
270
59,086
73,526
Cheese
58,523 517,448
7,800
178,741
27,400
Cutmeats
419
74,657
4 •’SO
34,670
54,200
Eggs
3,551 195,850
228,545
456,869
182,701
Pork
71,033
4,208
Beef, pkgs......
613
54,900
2,814
11,377
Lard, pkgs
400
52,301
8,076
400,358
368,326
Lard, kegs......
779
16,079
582
9.885
8,226 Rice, pkgs
31
13,128
1,075
10,074
18,506 Starch
3,160 147,188
24
11,832
5,861 Stearine
447
7,442
55
3,468
2,688
33
2,000
2,547
353
7,812
239,919
268,195 TaUow, pkgs.*!!!!
395
20,907
78
21,236
49,129 Tobacco, pkgs... 4,463
85,491
35,725 1,470,395 1,632,156 Tobacco, nhds...
2,840
49,616
280
1,331 Whiskey, bbls....
3,592 127,214
Wool, bales
75,978
9,343
12,804
19,001 Dressed hogs No.
65.476
Rice, rough busn
1,801
.

Suj|ar, hhds and

•

•••

•

468

5,241

10,6911

ass

-

p

40,011
327,300
59,467
2,809
65,496
4,462

469,932
58,662
374,757
415,906
66,296
123,498
63,803
48,075
49,757

6,650
13,243
158,260

6,527
2,205
5,569
68,282
58,912
99,810

13,948
54,591

23,640

1.

the

same

eh0

commerce from the
port of^

January 1, 1870, to all the principal foreign
countries

also the total expost of

by conflicting
January
respecting the probable effect and duration of the war
in Europe, and yet, on the whole, business shows some im¬
provement over last week. The unsettled state of foreign
to

views

[July 30, ltfo,

and

articles for the last week
and since

/r.ty 80, 1870.]
Imports of Leading Articles.

.

»k.

THE CHRONICLE.

151

The market for

cotton the past week has been
exceedingly ir¬
table,compiled from Oustom House returns, shove regular and
unsettled, closing almost nominal at a decline of $c.,
theforeign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port
Middling Uplands being quoted at 20c., against 20$c. last Friday.
for the last week, since Jan. 1,1870, and for the
The market has been
corresponding period
largely controlled by speculative influences,
in 1809:
and until towards the close has
scarcely felt the steady decline in
Liverpool, which closed to-day at 7$d. against 8fd. last Friday. We
For
Since
Same
referred in our last to the
For

H>e following

lrn»,8ho»

,

‘tries, an,j
aQd sinra

the
week.

r
;a©5Fg

isttgg
1

59

China
Earthenware
Glass
Glassware....
Glass plate..
Buttons
Coal, tons
Cocoa, bags....

or

6,413
29,218
244,088
8,969
5,710

1,824

4,922

24
15?
80

16,904

5,0*7
640
912
m
400

Bark, Peruvian
Blea powders..
Brimstone,

Cochineal.

;*o»oot-,
;

Cream Tartar..

"62

ToUi

245

'580
72

Hides, Ac—
Bristles

21
435i
429
9:

..

Watches
Linseed
Molasses

Su^ar^ hhds.tcs

9,658

11,377

19,516

24,732

2,066
1,341

Wines

Cigars
Corks

Fancy goods....

65

299,826
113,441

12,338

409

9,368
635

82,573
154,380
18,396

69,030
125.567

34,727

375,477
788,246
357,172

467,462

327.374

677,886
528,005

Ginger

♦ - v *

10,811

166,311
23,108
135,551
226,809

175,698
27,068
168,948
138,284

71,724

125,083

41.625

Logwood
Manoganv

9,666

192,856
85,961

59,273
286.343

70,382

COTTON.
Friday, P.M., July 29, 1870.

By special

telegrams received by us to-night from the
Southern ports we are in possession of the returns
showing the
receipts, exports, &c., of cotton for the week
ending this evening
July 29. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the
total receipts for the seven
days have reached 6,612 bales (against
7,477 bales last week, 9,474 bales the previous
week, and 8,565

20$c. On Wednesday it became apparent that much
had been made in filling these contracts, and the advance
was lost, and
yesterday, the stimulus being lacking, the decline in
Liverpool caused a falling off of $c., at which the market to-day
was
exceedingly flat and nominal. Tho extreme low grades of
cotton have been
disproportionately low all the week, because they
are not available to deliver on
contracts, and the spinning demand
has also been for the better
grades.
The business for future
delivery was active for the first half of
the week, hut latterly has been dull. That for
July covers a wide
range of prices, and the advance of Low Middling to 20c. on Tues¬
day shows the working of the “corner.” The sale to-day of Low
Middling for July at 18$c., with only one day to deliver, while
the same grade on the
spot brought 19c. suggests the explanation
that in sales for future
delivery the seller is entitled to fill his con¬
tract with any grade from
good ordinary to good middling, on the
basis of low middling, so that
parties having irregular lots of cotton
take this method of
disposing of them. The closing prices of low
middling uplands each day of the past week for future delivery
are

shown in the annexed statement:
23.

July

.

August
September

,
.

October

■®»<

RECEIPTS.

5»»t*

5i§s

BKOBIPT8.

Kec’d this week at—

1870.

New Orleans, hales
Mobile

1,468

1869.

393
113
187
310
52
329

202

Charleston
Savannah (eat)
Texas (eat)

1,500

Ac

1,938

Tennessee,

705
250
•

The exports for the week

:**.

G.Brit

4,379
* *

Charleston

Savannah (est)
Texas (est)

v

New York
Other ports

stn

!*■*

From the

Contin’t

2,663

week.

*

*

*

*

.

.

•

46,511

'907

9,613

921

2,169,512

foregoing statement it will

be

■

17

ie*

16*
16*

....

Total sales for future

delivery reach 15,100 bales (all low Middling)
7,900 bales were for July, 950 at 19$, 1,050 at 19, 750 at
19$, 200 at 19$, 3,800 at 19*, 300 at 20, 100 at 19$, 200 at 19f,
100
at 18$, 200 at 18$, and 300 at
18$; 4,450 bales for August, 900 at
17$, 650 at 17$, 50 at 18, 30 at 17$, 350 at 17$, 500 at 17$, 100 at
16$, 100 at 16$, 300 at 17, 200 at 17$, 700 at 16$, and 300 at 17
;
900 hales for September, 500 at
17, 300 at 16$, and 100 at 16$;
1,200 bales for October, 300 at 16$, 100 at 17, 200 at
16$, and 600
at 16$ ; 300 bales for November at
16$, and 300 hales for Novem¬
ber free on hoard at New Orleans at
16$, and the following are
the closing quotations:
of which

Upland and
Florida.

Ordinary
Good Ordinary
Middling

per

lb.

Middling

Good

Middling
we

15
19
20

22

@....
@....
@....

Orleans.

15*®....
17*®....
19*@....
20*@....
22*®....

®....

15*@...,
17*®....

15*®.,..

19*®....

1?*®..

give the total sales of cotton
day of the past week:

Saturday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday

530

2,042
560
871

1,251

Friday

935

Stocks

Cotton

@

...

20*®..,,
22*®....

price of Uplands

Good

Low

Middling.

Middling.

17*®....
17*®....
17*®....
17*@....
17*®....
llx®....

15*@....
15*@....
15*®....

19*@....
19*®....
19*®....
1»*@....

20*@..„
20*®....
20*®....

15*®....
15*@....
@....

19
19

@...\@....

20*®....

20
20

©....
@....

Interior Towns.—Below we
give the
figures received to-night, showing the stocks of cotton at the inte
rior ports at the close of business
to-day, and add those for last
week and the
corresponding periods of last year for comparison:
of

Columbus, Ga
5,758

9 05*7

251
117

1,364

at

J uly 22.

3,430
3,000
3,825
2,790

869.

July 22.
495
300
184

1,875

qq 090

Total.

.

24,736

,

July 29.
495
300
84
175
150
364
95

1,663

4,164
2,000
4,315
3,198
1,700
7,830
3,884

1,700
6,465
3,526

21,608
8,087

that, compared with

18

Ordinary,

Ordinary.

15

Texas

20*®....
22*®....

and

at this market each

Total
sales.

I

New

Mobile.

17*®....

Cow

1869.

15,866
2,338

115,165

1,426,580
seen

17

17*

1870,

5,500
8,400
25,500
11,000

-

•

14

2,663
290,118

29.

8*

July 29.

....

2,571

a

1870.

....

28.

19*
17*

18
17
17

Stock.

1869.

7,042

27.

19*

278

the
corresponding week of last season, there is an increase in the ex¬
ports this week of 8,692
bales, while the stocks to-night are 75,943
bales more than
they were at this time a

27,091

'200
175
418
103

The foregoing shows the interior stocks have
decreased during
the week 4,206 bales, and that
they are now 28,347 bales in ex¬
cess of the same
period of last year.

year ago.
The following
showing the movement of cotton at all the ports
Visibi.e Supply of Cotton.—The
from Sept.
1, to July 22, the latest mail dates.
following table shows the
We do not
include our
quantity of cotton in sight
of each of the two
telegrams to-night, as we cannot insure the
past
or obtain the
accuracy seasons :
detail necessary, by
telegraph.
is our

!*«•!

1,690

ending this evening reach

2£7i

-Total

tH

year

17*
....

"28

6,612
4,922

receipts

Increase this

....

6,950
.Total since Sept.l... 1,479,894

0)0

Total

Total this Same w’k

New Orleans...
Mobile

«r

17
62
470

Virginia

Exported to—

Week ending July 29.

1151

bales.

North Carolina

1869.

total of
were to Great Britain and
2,663 bales
to the
Continent, while the stocks at all the ports, as made
up
this evening, are now
115,165 bales. Below we give the exports
and stocks for the
week, and also for the corresponding week of
last season, as
telegraphed to us from the various ports to-night:

9,613 bales, of which 6,950

•«*2

Florida

1870.

26.

19*

20

November

Below

Rec’d this week at—

25.

19
17 *
17*
17

bales three weeks

since), making the aggregate since
1869, up to this date, 2,849,096 bales, against 2,111,110 September 1,
bales for the
same period in
186&-9, being an increase this season over last season
of 737,986 bales.
The details of the
receipts for this week (as
telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1869 are as follows per
:

against specu¬

progress

663.221

162,409 5,659:410 5,376,944
7,659 304,200 203,624

WoodsCork
Fustic

360,260
132,135

891

$28,831 $777,010 $492,819
8,188
69,623
86,000
72,117 1,190,416 L ,056,694
387 242,066 446,250

Pepper
Saltpetre

631

549,488
646,336
22,3 8
1,505

196
25

Wool, bales
Articles report’d
by value—

1,345

724

294,218

446,383
682,814
23,208

Waste

1,844

2,219

381,129

6,295
4,103

Wines, Ac—
Champag’e.bks

Raisins
5,704 Hides undressed
58,493 Rice
Spices. Ac—
982
Cassia

2,035

....

31,417 517,532 781,604
31,027 2,739,100 2,373.444
1,793
51,861
64,224

3.131

928

23

4,730

1,767

Tin, boxes
slabs, lbs..

55,913 Fish
22,402 Fruits, Ac—
23,950
Lemons
1,841
Oranges
3.774
Nuts

20,896

s8!

Hides, dressed.
India rubber
Ivory
Jewelery, Ac—
Jewelry

678,098

416

3,803
58.03?

200|

Steel

Rags

36,035

2.350
3,606

14
590

Spelter. .“.

14,233

2,410
2,772

“ corner”

a

July delivery. This con¬
Tuesday Middling Uplands had

advanced to

2,429
4,168
893,780
823,793

86,680
527,943
14,165
827,741
55,749 4,586,637 8,238,505
1,359
76,464
95,863

Lead, pigs

Tin

132

26,892
20,617
1,160

24

103
93

Hardware
Iron, KK bars.

3,438
57,329

500

650

Hair
Hemp, bales

5 640

1,191
19,264

1,015
51,972

Flax
Furs
Gunny cloth

9,158

3,795

23,472

Opium
Soda, bi-carb...
Soda,sal
Soda, ash

334,782

1,759
4,098
7,920

1,350

Oil, Olive

6,905
S5.6&8

262

"i7

Oils, essence....

Jan. 1,
week.
1870.

Metals, Ac—
Cutlery

appearance of
lators who had been “ selling short” for
tinued with much vigor, and on

Same
time
1869.

the

2,681
3,610
1,248

10

indigo

Madder

Since

lime
1869.

Sugars, boxes A
12,273
bags.
18,445 Tea
10,225 Tobacco

7,111
11,364
11,246
3,640
2,148
12,363

204

Gambler....
Gums, crude....
Gum, Arabic...

«SS:

21,129
19,295
530,566

1,976

Drugs, Ac.—

**WL«

3101

2,824

Coffee, bags...
Cotton bales.....

[SSgan

Jan. 1,
1870.

usual table

1870.

RECEIPTS
SINGE SEPT. 1.

ports.

a•

1869.

1868.

5obu°ert6“8;;-- 1,186,151
802,295

793,865
226,181

Savannah

199,713
355,694
144,511
103,876
15,797
35,761
157,591
81,826

Charleston

239 826

481,794
235,223
130,872
21,433
57,139
199,264
63,727

Texas

gewTork
Florida
Worth

*.

Carolina ’.! !

JjSinla

®wer ports

Tstalthis year

.

last year..

2,867,724
.

"

..,




•••

.

....

2014.815

EXPORTED SINGE SEPT. 1

Great
Britain. France

583,797

161,115
83,899
204,570
122,598
317,980

256,566
15,910

TO

Other

foreign Total.
196,488
18,939

NORTH. STOCK.

Stock in Havre

986,815
195,964
7,535
93,259
17,034 265,400
14,588 146,302
63,801 399,018

•59,429
43,476
144,349
212,164
141,522

""50

1,825
43,796
9,121
17,787

7,540
56,789

"‘*50
9,640
8,562

24’,712

9,640
33,274

Glasgow.

'

188,568

53,855
15,642
6,945
4,543
7,979
25,000

.

.

Stock rest of Continent
.

'300

.

12,000

344,949

342,592 2029,752 .953,887

219,837

229,552 1,426.014 .‘842,560

48,048

.

127,320

976.685

.

,.

1,056

1,442,211

.

.

Total

.

315,000
63,864

400

..

Stock in

1869.

589,000
29,735

550

143,200
10,300

s.

8HIP
M’TS TO

48,500
5,200
7,950
15,000
28,000

21,800
35,000
59,000
17,810

21,162

403,000
115,165

718,000
41,266
1,663

24,736

1,449,146

.

1,290,155

■y.wjaig!

increase.in flie Q’ottoiTih si^V’to-Higlit
figures indicate
of T82,9M bales compared Witl?:'the saine date of 18B9. '" ^ r ’ v^r-1
*•»,•>
>n
-c" '\fr
"

tJ%t3o;sia70fr i

the' cwkmmm

152
These

an

«

TiiveT-'• V^*’>s"BSrclo

m*

?■

.

.

.-

.,

,*•

.

Brit.

pooh..Havre,-.- Iona*. .Sisal „ Fayal. £rpv. Total.

New York
.........
k.
....
New Orleans
....
..-2*076
.a..
Mobile
i .I; ;Y,V"^ ‘.V.'' '
Sa van nail........ ....
3, o 41
....

,v• •

r,

>i5

j

4,383
-*V:099-'

....

-.r

23

•

....

■

.' - 500 :*;.%•.•• r v.,j. h*>
&c.-r-Baga liAvc-been without movement
....
....
....
..««•[* <3^511.
week and prices-are nominally 13.^c^l3fc, - gold- in-bond.. T6XR8
1,791-, • -*».... M,• / • »•«„/>; *»♦,•: .. ...... ',1,791
The market for cloth is quiet, but: considering, the'position ,oi‘ the Heston....
..**
.iii •
*«»*
2
40 —_ _ 42
article, and as holders -are few in .numbers prices ar-e firmly Ireld23
40
500
12,356
0,715
2.076
Total
Smail orders from the South are coming in. and are being filled, at'
31c. for India in bales, and 31^c. for: ,BaraeO(,and domestic.. Sales.
Gold Exchange and Freights.—Gold has fluctuate 1 the past week
ds 100 balqs in lots. Holders anticipate an active demand . during between
1194, and 122 and the close to-night was 120$. Foreign^
August* and claim that buyers cannot hold ofl‘ much longer. . The. Exchange h without important change. The ioJlowing were thetas
shipments South from tins port the past month are about GOO bales,,
quotations: London bankers, long, 109f@109$; short 110$, and coral
part recent purchases, aud part held dor some .time on Southern mercial, ,1(1 ftai09d,
Freights closed at $ by steam and Y-32(L
account. -The following table will -show the 'deficiency...of the
OJ.V
by sail to Liverpool.
. - .
.
• .\y
•
stock as compared with last year/;.*
„7,/
f),400
By Telegraph from Liverpool.— .
oV:;:
vV ,: •
Stock of cloth'in New York, August 1.1369.-'bales.''..’.:.
12,500.
Stock of cloth in Boston, August 1,1869.
Liverpool, July 29th—5 P. M.—The market has ruled dull and closed:
flat with sales reaching 8,000 bales.. The salo-i of the week h ive been 57,003”
Total stock, August
si.wo
On way from Calcutta/August 1,1869..'. —
.*
3,21^—25412. hales, of which 5,0: 0 were taken for export,,, and 2,000 for speculation., The
Stock of cloth.in New York July 29, ’70.,.
3,540
stock in port is estimated at 589,000 bales, of which 301 000 bales, are Ameri¬
'..44:::
Stock of cloth in Boston July 29, *704
44..44.4;;'.. 4,837
r - can. The stock of cotton afloat bound to this port, is 4T6J300 biles, of. which
(•*

GunnyBags, Bagging,

the past

'

,«

.

--

»«.** •VtVti

-

,

.7.:.:...8.87Y,. ' '
4:.;4’'..6,519—14*896

Total stock July 29,1870.
:—
n
On way from Calfehtta. by last Circular ,i.
Showing a falling off in 1870,.from.same

V...V.
data 186!), of 10,21ft

- There has been nothing doing in Jute, Jute Butts or Hemp, and’
I] in the absence of sales prices are nominally as quoted last week. -j
3;
—The ..exports of cotton this week from New-York show a decrease
hales, against .6,839 bales last
H* since last week, the total reaching
H 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
l-j the total exports and direction since September . 1, 1369; and in the

j-i

1,

list column the total for the same period

of the previous year;? ?'

59,000 bales are American
Total sales.

speculation

t..

Stock ot American

574,060
815,000

Total afloat

404.00J

..

■

•

J

•

""
-

-

TJ

The following
week:

Tues.
Wed.
Mon.
Thu. • Fr/:'^
S!©>..- 8J@8|, 8 ©Si
7*©..;? 7l©;ifcj
"£$©.-*. 8l©8^
8 ©S|
8©...
...© .
; ©..'.
...©...
market for yarns aud fabrics at Manchester is flat
Sat.

Price Midd. Uplds
8?©...
*•
u
Orleans
8|©...
“
*l
U d. to arrive.
.©..

V

.

EXPORTED TO

'July

Jnly

Liverpool

'

Other British Ports 4

....

>

•

50

6,694

-6,510

European

14

99

*....

50

Bremen and Hanover

•

*

4

b wing are the prices of American

'

>
•

3

•

.

•

•

.

Total to N, Europe.

190’

631

50

....

....

-

>

f

•

’

..

....

8%.-

,

9>* ,..10.
9% . 10 ,
9%'
10%

The

54,968

1,809

2,498
2,511

•

ft.*.*.

.

.

.' f •

,

.

Total Spain* etc.

'

V

^ *

V

•

r>

*

^.155

6.899

Grand Total

,

-

1,809

24d.1’ 25d.' 18d: •
10 V 11^ U%
9>;
Mobile.. 10X
1
9%
Orleans 10^ 11% 12%
9%

Mid. SeaIsl’d ISd

,'5.,039

.

4,383 399,018 315,458

6;839‘

Annexed

The following are the receipts of cotton at New York, Boston, Phila¬
delphia.and BaUimc'e for the last week, and since September 1, 1869 :
—

BOSTON.

NEW VORK.

RECEIPTS FROM>

C...

-

This
Week.

Since
This
week. Sept. t.

V'

■.■*

v.;. * t i" "*m -

Since

SeptL

2,404

,

SeptL

Egyptian.

•'

Texas'/?....'/.'..
Savannah..*4.:.'
Mobile
Fionas - *' ‘

.

”49,643
156; 280
17.0.S2
6,996

1,679
....

....
’

South r(Jarolina.
North Carolina?

Virginia

50

*
>

206
418
801

North’rn Ports.

‘.v.

•

.

—

4,750

’649,386

-Shipping

•

•

•

| 4,127,237,948,

•

'

*•
•

-

•

•

•

89

•

.

...

•

.

.

•

•

•

•

.

>

•

IS,841

.

‘■-.A*

/ ♦

i

*.

,

,

.

r

M
'

^

-

,

25,650

-.*•••.-.•

.^Phe'liarticular&Hjf these shipments, arranged in our
ae follows :




J33,30p.

23,9)6

26,244

3,770

83,010

104,793

Total.... 212,510

319,340

385,520

192,634

231,445 '

'

the week and year,

14,380

-

37,360

v

«

4,154

3, 60 ’

610'

SALES, KTO., OX* ALL

DESCRIPTIONS^

Total
-Sales this, week.Ex- Specula- - this
Trade. port,
tion.' Total. * 'year.
902,0S0
American..bales. 28,450 3,210 2690 34,350
500
182,220
5,090
Brazilian
4.590
101,670
110
2,630
■

Egyptian2,520

West Indian.’...
East Indian.
..

Total...:.

....

680'

11,139

'.-'■40
2,9.80

47,330

6,810 4,290

-640

1,600

24,630

15,710

534 810

53,460 1,745,390

S,ame,

/period
-

To this

2

American. .4.

40

Brazilian......

Egyptian.:....

week. 1870. ‘
36,744 1,092,722
210,130
'3,270
•799
124,925

West Indian., .4122
East Indian.^.. 31,307

12,856
1

g'ac*'

fiw.o ■.

Totsl#

••••••§

date

72,^4^

’

Total.

/ date

.

1869.

751,530 1,039,118
499,251
303,086
226,540

-140,999
26,702,/, 4*7,029 T.89,027

1,802,B44T’A13^-,

11,050
11,540
574,160

/791.850

weeAJr&-;

761,000
297,260
*138,910
45,701
775,000

28,460 19,970
5,080

8,360

11,080

14,870

3,750 -.4,190
630 1,430

48,

2,017,870 49,000
-Stocks -

To this

’ 1869.

.!

1869. ’ '•187O.‘106I;'

-Imports
This

*

Thursday esenjiig;

and also the stocks on hand on

r‘.:,

last:

1,791

usual foriift, are

balefr.':
'

65,353

55,946

184,070

4,860

..

‘

Actual

exp’tfroar.
II. X. ih-

•1869.
bales.

5,078
5,345
129,425

3,541
’

••

West Indian...'
810
East Indian
71,760

23
500

..

Total

1870;

45,490

Egyptian, &c..

rTotal ba|es^

specula¬

the transactions on

bales.

435..400-,

;

other outporta to this date—*

bales;’

21,800"'

>v3o,000i
.,..70,000,

,

Liverpool, Hull and

•

io,30ol;

'

•

r-Actnal export from

137 80^687

J
Amelia, 2,091
,t...
... .,.r
.
Texas—To Liverpool, per bark Cremona. 1,791 „.*.r
BosTONr-To Fa'al, per bark Frelonia, 1 bale, 1 box,... .4........
,
To British Provinces, per —
, 40 bB
'. ■. 4...V. 4...: ...F. J.
•

export have been :

216,200

23.....'........... ....... ......
Mobile—fo Oarce’ona, per barx-Boringnen, 500
Savannah— lo Liverpool, per bark Floetwing, 1,450 Up.‘...per ship

400

143,200 *

739:540

.

124,680

.

Abbott Devrraax,:-1,009
To Sisal, per schooner Salvador,

,

29,734

27,(K«J

American.*,. ..127,360
Brazilim..j >4. 7,7i0

_ .

-

•

15,000

.:4‘

bales.

Liverpool, p^r steamers Colorado,

f

.....

bales.

2,900....Java* 74.6 .. •
:'Absynn;a, 280....City of Washington, 257
per shipJZ Harvest 4,m
’:
Z [*T_ J
;1 Ononn *200
Qpeen,
New Orleans—To Havre, per brig Acilia Thurlow, 1,067- ...per schr.
2,076

N*W York—To

•

550
48,500.
5,200
7,950

,

*

bales. So

b^e«*<:v
;592irtl6t

..

t

8

...

'■*'

the United States the

latest mail returns, have reached 12,356

'

bales.

•

63,864

92:i59

;,“618

282. 57,154

44

.,

.K»'

1870,

;

381,610

r-Taken-onspec. to-thisdate
1868,
1869,
1870,“

*'•>■.

0 ' *

6#
6*

.

:

»

—

as

i >

.. ....

.....

the commencement of the year

tion and for

-

the Srithern ports are Concerned, these are the same exports
reported by telegraph, and published in' the Chronicle last Fri¬
day, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are the expoits forWith regard to..New York, we include the manifest
two weeks back.
only mV 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:
far

’

’’

Bremen........
Restof Continent.;...... 4.
American 00Won afloat.
Indian cotton afloat....

Since

2,784
.82 33,428.
268
2,745
’818. 24,672

,

9%
S '-v 9

8

6%
6%

estimated stock of cotton in
of American and Indian, produce afioaf.

Mars"ilies.'.'.....»

•

•

•

14.815

55

5

*70T 51,371

•

•

•

•

1
*

m

13,725

92

News.—The exports of cotton from

pint week, a« per

•

84
mi

»

.

....

7,477
1,329
•

226,549

.721.158

Tofaul last year?

•

•

.

,

•

* •

...

'

8,974

•

278

7,918

I.btal this year

•

107

5,045

m

....

\96,581

-.

Vr

.

m

128.
39,272
524 .63,57;
244 20,814
228
.'4;,

'45,295
.

1,287 *131,772
”4 659

Tennessee, &c.

Foreign

114,552

1,527

..a;

•

•

*i

•

18,477

511

12,691

,,

‘722

•

225 }-22,S-J0

"■*>

"■'LL_

4,427

''

12%?

\

..

.

Broach...
Dhollerah

’

..........

t-avre..

-

-

statement showing the

'

■

'

’

’

Since
This
week. Beptl.

Since

This
week.

3,044 jr 49,973’
296 | 10,910

95,380

'

‘

Glasgow..4 44 4'4....

'

‘

New Orleans.

a

Europe, and also the quantities
compared with last year:
;
Stock in Liverpool.
London

BALTIMOBE*

PHILADELPHIA

is

i2/e

10%

’

; 1867. 1868. 1869.'1870
Mid. Pernamb 10%d. 10%d. 12%d.' 9^

1869. 1870.

Upland.

.

12%...,,

’ 10%

.

qualities of cotton at tins'

following are the prices of middling

date aad since 1867:
1867. 1868.

Fair.,.,Good

.

10%.

...

-r-

1,375

..

.

.—Same date 1869—,

•

Mid.

27
27 ,
82'
30 -48
12’ > !
11 -12’ 14 -15' 11"
”? •.?-?.
Mid. Mid. G’d Hid. Mid. F.

r

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c
4

<—G’d
fine.

-24

21

9%
9%
9X

.

Moble
N. O. & Texas...

61.492

....

•*

r

g’dfaif

15
18
9
* ■ •• 10 *”
11 rd. G. Ord. L.

.

T’pland............

33,393
20,140

19,141
5,578

190

....

....

19,975

r-Fa

f.

^

<—Ord. & Mid—>

Stained..

30,773

-.101
530

‘

'

Sea Island

>

17,737

....

:

Description.

19,975

17,731
V *.

cotton

.

Hamburg
Other ports

writing under the date of July 9

*

Liverpool, July 9.-™* The fo

4^83 317,980 235,636

.

....

Total Frenclt

Markets.—In reference to these iflar-

Indian Cotton

and

kets, our correspondent in Loudon,
states:

14

99

Havre....'....
Other French ports..

•

j>rev.
year.

4,3$3 316,482, 232,466
'
3,070
1,498

6,599
-

to

.date

26.-

•

'.mo!

*

6,750

TetaJ to Crt. Britain.

'

46

1S9
\

July-

•/19;

6,561' 6,404/

,

—

July’

-

32.

54

Trade Report.—The

Same
time

Total
*r

,59,000

closing prices of cotton for tfre-

table will show the daily

\

.

67,000

and nominal.

k—*r*—

V

'

,

;7o,ooo

.

»

’

American afloat..

EkportsafCoitonCbaleaiCromNeyg IforfcsIkiCe SeJ^t, 1, 1869
-

-457,^

•

6 000

Totnl stock

\

•

July 154. July 22. July.
43,000
>58,000
IvQOO.
’.7,000
•-■•4,000
3J)I)0. -v 2,000
;
607,000
589,000
593,000
3 4,60*)
320,000
318,000
403,00(1
476,003
454;0tf0

3

;

Sales for export
S ues on

*..*•'

.

J uly

ThiB

day.
820,270
69,050
44,090
.T 1.720

Same
date
1869.

•

■"'''?**

1869^1

210,31Q

.76t9W

6.980

fi.iSfl

69.100
51,160

MM
26(560*

-July 30,

stock of

present
against

01 the
American,

THE

1870.]
55

oo

per

cotton in Liverpool, 54 per cent
cent last jear. Of Indian cotton the
ueut
jc«i.

Friday, Jnly 29, 1870. P. M.

The market for Breadstuffs the

July 16.—The Cotton trade is depressed, and prices

London

jd Per lb. lower.
and stocks :

deliveries

153

BREADSTUFFS.

14 per cent

proportion is nearly 25 per cent, against
to

CHRONICLE.

past week has shown a downward
frequent efforts of holders to
the decline with 8peculative
expedients, and closing firm.
The receipts of flour have
materially increased, and a considerable
portion of the offerings have been found to be sour and otherwise

are

tendency, accompanied, however,
The following are the particulars of imports, check
I860.

237,32:4

m

79,262
171,772

53,864

ir^r-1 t0™y

1S69.
145.668

29,734

lb70.

unsound.

Liverpool shows

there have been

TOBACCO.

a

with

decline of

circumstances

no

shilling

a

stimulate

to

bbl., and

a

continuance of

a

speculation. Under these combined adverse influences, prices have
fallen off 25@50c. per bbl., and the
greater decline ? has been in
shipping extras The sales yesterday embraced 3,000 bbls. extra
State at $6, against $6 50 last
Friluy. The sour and musty flours

Friday, F. M., July 29, 1870.

m

decrease ia the exports of crude tobacco this week,
total from all the ports reaching 1,947 hhds., 169 cases, and
997 bales, against 4,230 hhds., 319 cases, 2^3 Daks, and 479 hhds. (mostly shipping extras) which have come upon the market have
been taken quickly at $5
50@6 25, closing with scarcely anything
stems for the previous seven days.
Of these exports for this week
bringing over $5 75. They are mostly taken for shipment, so far as
1506 hhds., 165 cases, 994 bales, were from New York ; 2 hhds.,
as we can learn.
Rye flour has experienced an advance of a dollar
3 bales from Boston, and 439 hhds., 4 cases from New Orleaus.
bbl.
At to-day’s market there was more demand
for extra
The direction of the shipments of hhds. was as follows : To Liver¬
State, for export, with a partial renewal of speculation, and at the
pool, 973; to London, 421; to Glasgow, 101; to Marseilles, 439} close
no good liues could be
pureha?ed under $6 25.
and the balance to different parts. During the same pe»iod the ex¬
Wheat ha3 been unsettled, and
prices show an irregular decline.
ports of manufactured tobacco reached 170,308 lbs., of which 86,8 84
Receipts have somewhat increased, and the export demand has been
lb3. were to Liverpool.
The full particulars of the shipments from
restricted by the constant reduction of limits to
all the ports were as follows :
foreign orders, and
the scarcity and high rate of ocean
Ceroons. Hhds.
Man’d
freight. Speculators have pur¬
Eip’d this week from
Hhds. Cases. Bales.&T’rces. Stems. Pkgs. lbs.
chased moderately on each decline, and thus
prevented any very de¬
165
994
Sew York
110,308
cided break in prices, such as has taken
Baltimore
place in flour, and the de¬
2
Boston
3
40
cline is only about 3@5c.
Philadelphia
per bush. Considerable new wheat begins
439
New Orleans
4
124
to arrive
by rail, and goes far towards meeting the wants of millers,
San Francisco
There is a

the

•

4

1

<

••••

•

b

*

....

....

....

„

....

....

..

•

....

....

....

...

....

....

....

...

....

•

•

•

....

....

“

•

and to that extent embarrasses the sale of full boat
loads.

______

Total
Total last week
Total previous week.

The

169
319
318

4,230

...

4,075

..

997
283
373

164
133
260

....

479
14

494

170,308
49,815
260,394

private advices fiom Liverpool indicated

receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since Nov.

1, have been

as

follows

:

RECEIPTS AT NEW

YORK SINCE

-Thisweekhhds. - pkgs.
47
4,023

From
Virshn.a
Bhlimore....
New Orleans.

-T’lsin.Nov.l—
hhds,
pkgs

Previouslypkgs
1,645
75,517

hhds.

53
25

Other

1,692

797
757

976
250

850
782

9H3
2)0

L228

40,723

1,839

43,637

tive.

79,600

17

2,914

Ohio, Ac

3,067

....

....

448

....

Corn declined until, ou
Wednesday, several boat loads of prime
Western mixed sold at 99e@$L 00, but there was renewal of
spe¬

448

....

culation, and yesterday there was a recovery of two cents, but
to-day the advance was lost, and the close was at about the lowest
The market for Tobacco, the past week, has been but
moderately prices of the week. Oats have declined, and close with the sale
active, and prices have favored buyers.
to-day of about 50,000 bushels prime Western at 59c. Rye is
Kentucky Leaf has sold to the extent of about 600 hhds., of scarce aud advancing, but we hear of no late transactions
except
which about 250 hhds. are for
export; the balauee for home con in Canadian at $1 05(ajl 08 in bond. In Barley we hear
of a sale
Bumption. General trade has been dull, but one or two large buyers of 10,000 bushels State at 80c.
Barley Malt is in demand at full
have been in market the
past two days, and they have been able prices. For Canada Peas the last
price paid was $1 12 in bond
to get a concession of
^@lc. per lb., according to grades and cir for export,
cumstances, and we quote the range of prices at 6£@l3£c.
The following are
closing quotations :
Seed Leaf has met with a fair
inquiry, but prices continue weak FlourWheat,Sprlng, pertmsfc.fi 10© 1 45
3,039

and unsettled.

5,268

43,922

Sales embrace 75

19,090

46,961

Connecticut

cases new

on

84,36S

Superfine

.

RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK.
i 870.
s
Same

<

For the
week.

Rye, bu^h...
Barley, hush.

EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM NEW YORK.

Cases.
50
65

London

SlB«gow.
Indies

fc1** West Indies
branch West Indies

...

Hhus.

Pkgs.
•

*

*

*

*

'~37

•

•

*

*

•

Manuf1 d
lbs.

•

•

•

~6

72

•

•

•

Total....

8,978,539

457,731
1,401

1,337

619,333

76,020

3,094,909

2,603,015

....

0,745
imi ono

foreign exports for the week, from the

RECEIPTS

AT

LAKE PORTS

At

202,83

FOR

5,650**

Totals

.* N* 9”v'r° F*?‘

;•&

bales....To British

Correspond^ week, 69.
“

.

bush.

6,236

other

24

9
•

•

•

•

•

s

733,845
91,081

8,315,357
1,576,785
79,039

■

75

T.

12,399

315

to the latest mail dates

Wheat,

21,060
15,861
22,376

Milwaukee
Toledo
Detroit

Cleveland

..To Laguna, 100 boxes and

1,654
9,275,151 560,481
21t,207
5,201
65,734
1,575

THE WEEK ENDING

(196 lbs.) (60 lbs.)

Previous week




5,440,580

Flour*

„

r°m^di^s^reanS—1^,° ^arsei,les>439 hhds.

Jan. 1.

45,758

140

Since

week

1,019,305

1,263

9^875 Chicago

....

00/4

'

47,581

29,170

54,219

bbls.

—

of the

For the

1,463,776

450

623,875
364,201

and the movement of breadstuffs

„

«

Since
Jan. 1.

.

43,000

followiug tables, prepared for the Chronicle by Mr. E. H.
Walker, of the New York Produce Exchange, show the grain in sight

“

804

,

For the
week.

816,606
33,670
9,759,743
3,684,149
277,397

1^466

....

6

thill..

07 700
A 4) i\)Z

27,702

....

*4

,

The

OO^OOi

•

Cl

New liranada

WMirecticn

Bales.

Since time Jan.
Jan. 1.
1, 1869.

EXPORTS PROM NEW YORK.—
1 .870.
f
—
1869.

.

,

497,640

past week;

Hhds.

65,210

C. meal. bis.

the exports of tobacco from New York for the

Liverpool

...

.

complaint

Hems

i

-

Flour, bbls.

are

1
1
1

;

...

goods.

following

Red Winter..
Amber do
White
6 15© 6 50 White California.

Extra State
Extra Western,

Virginia cutters, who, it is said, sell di¬
rectly to small dealers in competition with the parties here who
receive consignments from
them—underselling, in fact, their own
fhe

$ bbl. $5 40© 6 00
6 20© 6 40

40© 1 45
60© 1 53
com¬
60© 1 90
mon to good
©
Double Extra Western
Corn,Western Mix’d,....
95© 1 01
and St. Louis
6 50© 8 50
1 06© 1 08
Yellow, new
Southern supers
©
White, new
1 10© 1 14
Southern, extra and
Rye
I 15© 1 20
6 40© 9 00 Oats
family
67©
67
California
©
Barley
80© 1 60
Kye Flour, super & extra 7 00© 8 00
Malt
1 10© 1 35
Corn Meal
5 40© 6 25 Peas, Canada
1 10© 1 25
The movement in breadstuffs at this market has been as
follows :

private

terms; 70 cases Pennsylvania fillers, 11c.; 200 cases fillers anc
seconds, crop of 1869, 21@23e.; 52 cases Wisconsin wrappers
20c.; 120 cases State wrappers, 17@35c.
Spanish Tobacco is dull and heavy. Sale3 .250 bales Havana
at 88(g^l05c., in
jobbing lots.
Manufactured Tobacco is dull and unsettled. Much
ismadeof the action of

#]

brought 2c. more money; nine boat loads; or about 68,000 bushels
prime No. 2 Spring sold at
33@1 35, and old Amber Winter
brought $1 53, but the strength of the market was mainly specula¬

1. 18 69.

NOVEMBER

To*day,

renewal of speculation
in that market for a rise, and wheat of all
grades was more salable
than yesterday.
Soft Spring, suitable to go forward by steam,
a

"

*Estimated,

’68

.

’07,

71,183
66,871
39,041
23,585

30,620

285,014

369,085
115,794
6,245
60,300

Corn.
bush.

JULY

Oats.
bush.

:

23, 1870.
Barley. Rye.
bush.

bush.

(66 lbs.) (32 lbs.) (48 lbs.) (66 lbs.)
640,063 164,616
11,445
13.499
2,913
4,013
22,001
66,145
27,300
2,490
2,279
1,776
6,607
600
22,870
20,100

836,438
770,604
565,475

278,961

95,421

623,322

58,948

2,902

369,019

974,965

20,002
20,100
4,454
9,697

76,975

7,096

17,123

673,767

240,554

14,324

721,060

276,494

24,891

103,357

16

*

rzmcxs?.

Comparative Receipts at the
to

[July 80, 1870.

THE CHRONICLE.

154
same

small,

ports, for four years, from Jan. 1

Mj

of the leading goods showing a decided dull tone. The
gold market has had a quieting

rather tame state of affairs in the

Julj 23:

1867.

1868.

1870.

1869.

2,097,307

2,797,929

1,882,140

17,953,344 8,230,030
16,323,648 19,426,449
5,920,417 6,279,581
410,919
399,936
212,517
551,516

6,061,282
17,380,686

38,390,084

41,151,861 33,579,446

.

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Oats, bush
Barley, bush

18,595,435
13,586,080
4,966,020

.

.

.

797,131

Bye, bush
Total grain, bush

And from

.

pointed in the calls made upon them for distribution, and thifef
who did not already hold sufficient supplies to meet orders, hs?e
merely bought to the extent of early necessities. On currency
values there has been some strengthening up to conform to the in.
creased premium on coin, but the advance was very slow, while gold

8,741,958
684,836

521,239
.

27,240,001

August 1st, to and including July 23, for four years:

Flour

4,897,848

5,332,198

bushels. 45,979,802

41,283,891

26,994,197
12,357,808
2.697,385
1,274,971

27.692,670

bushels.... 89,304,163

bbls.

Wneat
Corn

...

Oats

Jarley
.iye
Total grain,

'1867-68.
4,010,314.

1868-69.

1869-70.

SHIPMENTS

SAME

FROM

PORT8

22,576,260

19,971,839
2,649,405
2,092,132

93.689,937

84,974,878

68,650,822

33,731,110
8,080,848
2,431,925

1,830,679

WEEK ENDING JULY

28.

Corn,

Oats,

Barley,

busb.

bush.

kVeek ending Jaly 23.... 84,105 1,190,823

910,715

228,210

Previous week

558,444
727,890
540,015 170,735
and grain from

Wheat,
bush.

bbls.

54,552

701,696

Week, ending July 24... 68,717 663,400
Comparative Shipments of flour

8,903
11,060*
500

the

Jhicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, and Cleveland, from Jan. 1

to

ave

in

some

molasses.
The stocks in New York at

ports since Jan. 1, are

Rye,
29,689
6,707
3,383

of

1870.

2,044,662

2,676,575

Wheat
Corn
Oats

bush.

16,271,427
10,i61,120
3,488.692

15.473,S53
12,347,8889
4,690,289
192,312

as.follows

since

1870.

January 1

18©.

84,666.208

..pkgs.

39.697
783,83-1

146,629
82,171

89,423
37,776

boxes.

123.212

98,553

180,776
120,025

875,233

Molasses

.

.hhus.
hli

17,687
757,135

248,290

444m
439.778

442.584

20,255

23,742

36,©0,151

249,343
283,746
439,258

148,741

..hhds.

1867.

Imports at leading port*

1869.

1870.

Tea*(indirect import).

leading

:

....lbs.

July 28

1868.

1869.

bbls.

date, and imports at the five

Stocks in New York
at date.

Sugar

Flour

particularly

ordinary qualities of goods. The supplies are, as a rule, liberal
and easily available.
Imports this week have included 13,632 bags of Rio coffte, and
about 3,182 bags of other sorts; and good receipts of sugar and

bush

ports

r 1 \>ur years :

instances shown a decided weakness,

on

3,680,882

bush.

Flour,

jrices 1

1866-67.

32,124,782
3^,901,870
15,753,998
2,829,512
1,505,706

FOR

evidently somewhat disap.

effect, but aside from this, jobbers were

1,703,413

445,418

Flour, bbls

inclusive, f

some

■-.i

253,612

....

TEA.

Barley
Rye

.

..

GRAIN

‘‘IN

SIGHT,”

July

Ln store a New rork
1,326,380
In store it Buffalo
580,040
In store at Chicago
1,652,555
in store at Milwaukee
1,220,OU)
In store at Toledo
355,034
In store at Detroit
74,472
In store at Oswego*
50,000
In store at "t. Louis
63,104
Afloat on lakes for Buffalo and Oswego. 454,819
Afloat on New Yor'c Canals for tide water 919,258
Rail shipments for week
63,225

Total in

s ore

and in transit

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“•
“

“

“

“

July 23.
July 16.
Jaly 9..
Jujy 2.

m

mm

m

..

m

m

m

m

....

•

Corn,
bush.

'

401,616
210,020

1,836,681
57,106

332,228
1,317
25,000
284,030
649.284

423,949
139,809

6,758,887 4,361,100
7,870,771 4,648,005
8,142,050 4,464,377
8,2 )7,272

..

.

23, 1870.

Wheat.
bush.

.

.

33,166,057

..

This market has again shown a want of life and does not appear to be alto¬
gether satisfactory to the trade in general. There are evidences that stock j|
wanted, and the majority of holders are willing to meet any fair outlet, but u
currency values do not respond fully to the increased premium on gold, bnriness is much restricted.
Low grade Oolongs and choice Greens have sold
in a small way 3@5c. per lb. higher, leading to hopes that buyers were about
Oats.
Barley. accepting the situation, but up to the present writing the improvement has not
bush
bush.
extended to other grades, and goods move slowly. With a fair current Bale of
528,471
113,018
lines, however, it is not improbable that jobbers may soon distribute the stock*
73,200
420,610
61,444 from which they have been supplying the wants of consumers, and then com¬
78,628
pelled to make good the broken assortments, infuse rather more animation
41,759
L325 into the market. We learn of sales of 3,300
pckgs. Green, 2,200 do Oolong and
34,949
1,420
15,000
20,000 2,500 pckgs. Japan, part of the latter to arrive per steamer.
40,129
1,126
Imports this week have included only about 284 pkgs. per steamer,
186,500
The following table shows the comparative shipments of Tea ftom China and
376,077
4',986
8,903 Japan to the United States from June 1, 1869, to June 1, 1870, compared with
110,361
the previous year, and Importations into the United States (not including San
1,905,684
202,288
2,291,949
207,896 Francisco), from January 1 to date, in 1869 to 1870:
..

561,714

Total

.

4,519,066

June 25. 7,918,240
June 11. 7,523,450
June 4.. 6,975,655

2,373,953"
2,381,955

4,003,381 2,217,613
3,942,170 2,392,173
2,811,866 2,006,067
May 27.. 6,919,306 2,450,134 1,799,343

•

•

198,461
184,283
193,344
206,148
223,362

248,249

SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA & JAPAN FOR
THE WHOLE 8E ‘SON IN

says :

Chicago.—The Chicago Tribune of the 25th inst.
“The condition of the wheat now in store in 1 his city is a matter

18©.

12,782,938
14,647,259
7,236,006

1WW.91I
14,882,27
8,788X06

42,540,620

Ja^an.lbs
Total

at

1870.

13,418.387
18,407,607
10,626,794

42,452,788

34,666,203

85,670,951

lt-69-70.

The indirect

Heatfd Grain

IMPORTS FROM CHINA A JAM
INTO THE U. S. BDTCX JA1.1,

13.081,057
18,698,318
10,761,245

Black, lbs
Green, lbs...:

♦Estimated.

TWO YEARS PAST.
1868-69.

importations, including receipts by P. M. Steamers via Aspin

wall, have been 39,697 pkgs since January 1,

against-17,687 last year.

COFFEE.

of great importance to the grain-dealiDg community of the Northwest.
The proprietors of no less than five of our principal elevators report

There has been a very fair movement in Brazils, mostly in invoices to the
regular jobbing trade, hut the market has lacked a spirited and healthy tone;
and the advantage gained during the week has been entirely in favor of the
of that grade.
The cause assigned for this fact iathe speculative activ¬ buyer. The very prime and choice grades form only a small proportion of the
ity of the last spring and summer, which kept up the price of No. 2 stock in first hands, and these were fairly supported ; hut importers, finding
epiinsr to a point where the p ocess of shipping the grain to the sea¬ the medium and lowr qualities slowly but sorely accumulating, have accepted
board entailed an inevitable h ssof something like 10 cents per bushel
all offerings at current rates, and in many instances shown favors amounting
Of course the shippers were far from taking hold freely under these
to a slight decline.
There is not, however, any perceptible tendency to force
circumstances, and wheat accumulated to the extent of nearly two am
business, the disposition apparently being to merely keep such outlets supplied
a-half millions of bush ds the warehousemen had so much «»□ hai.c
as present themselves, and prevent too great an increase of supplies in first
that they professed themselves unable to keep it in good con ition.”
hands. The West India styles have been neglected beyond an occasional job¬
The same paper of 27th says:
'*
It may interest some holders of paper representing wheat which is bing call, and present few features of interest, values ruling to some extent
reported to be hot in Chicago elevators, to know that the total receipts nominal, though holders refuse concession. Java has been in a feverish, un¬
of wheat in this city since the 15th day of June exceeds the amount certain state, without much business doing. Early in the week private advice*
now in store by a few
thousand bushels. Inasmuc 1 as the boast, of were received from the Batavia sale, the tenor of which were kept very secret,
the warehousemen is that they keep all grain as fresh as possible by but certain movements among the leading operators seemed to indicate tbit
serving out the oldest wheat to shippers, and as they now represent nothing particularly encouraging had come to hand, and the subsequent nthat the wheat out of condition has all been in store six weeks or nouncement of a public sale for to-day (Friday) induced the trade generally to
await the turn of affairs under the hammer. We learn from jobbers of only a
longer, and as they further claim that nearly all the No. 2

aggregate of about forty-four bins of heated No. 2 spring wheat,
which is probably more than one half of the bins in use for the storage
an

—

}

spring
city is hot, it is perhaps pertinent to vary an old light trade in all styles, the unsettled currency values restricting operation*.
The sales reported during the week were 17,464 bags Rio, 425 bags Maracaibo,
question slightly, and inquire, What have they done with it
140 bags African, 900 bags Laguayra, and 180 hags Java. At Baltimore silt* j
While putting questions, it may not be impertinent it we ask another!1
How is it that the only grain that ever gets hot belongs to the
specula¬ have been made of 8,471 hags Rio, including 4,500 bags on New York accomt
tive grade, when the inferior grades do not get out of condition
The auction sales of Java to-day were a decided failure, and for a time b»»
most demoralizing effect upon the market. Buyers were out in full force, W
though, by the rules of inspection, they are not warranted to keep
The No. 2 wheat and No. 2 corn, which are defined to be ‘ sound,’ Ac., appeared to have lost all confidence and the bids were so very low that the m
when taken into store, are precisely the grades that are annually pro¬
of the offering was withdrawn. From the “ Zeehlcem’s ” cargo 1,352
nounced to be out of condition.
It may be that the practice of buying
sold at 19ic.@20c., and from the “ Auburn ” 200 mats, at 19ic.@2Uc.
long, demoralizes these grades, but to outsiders it seems as if the prac the afternoon the balance of the “ Auburn’s” cargo, 15,244 mats, were sow * I
lice of selling short, on the part of the elevator men has more to do private sale, and this appears to have a beneficial effect, the market ckXDfj
with it. There certainly could be no better way devised for
getting comparatively steady, though at least Jc. gold below previous values.
out of a dilemma than to call the grain hot, and buy it in at a
Imports this week have included the following cargoes of Rio: “ Wand®*
heavy
discount.”
5,132 bags; “ Nyborg,” 4,500 hags; “ Ardeone,” 4,000 hags. Of other sorfc®
imports have included 3,067 bags Maracaibo [per “ Teresa,” 55 bags Uff^\

wheat in

this

^

i

i

GROCERIES.
Friday Evenimg. July 29, 1870.




New

\
"

and about 60 bags of sundry other kinds.
July 28, and the imports since January 1 are as

In

Bags.

Phila-

York.

delphla.

89,423
entirely void of any unusual ex } Stock date 1869
Same
146,629
during the past week, and the volume of business rather 1
”**.*.*'!” 465,‘Sm

The general market has been
ritemeni

per “ Emma Dean,”
The stock of Rio,

....

....

8,200

Baltlmore.

80,000
25,500
269,664

166,947

New

Savan.*

Orleans. Mobile,
....

13,500
84,602
74,068

1,800
5,201
20X02
19^66

foRoWS.

veston8,703

2X00

^80,

THE

CHRONICLE.

Hi other aorta the stock at New York, July 28, and the imports at the

The

several

nuts are

/-New York—, Boston

disap.

stock,

>"i?immore::::::

he few

WJOO;:-

have

t615

J.m

21,060
e 1QK

MSSmoV.V.V.V.'
gk

irrency
he in.
Ie gold

500

7,250
457

*400

*99i

*996

179,124
185,861

59,662
34,777

5,452
20,856

4,109
550

1,246

“Tfocludes mats, &c., reduced to bags.

jularly

N. Orle’s

import, import, import.
1,500 *3,118

31,062
16,484

37,776

gipietima, 1869

Philadel. Balt.

import. import.
apo
*43,409
51,955
13,682
64,465

5,915

liberal

155

ruled low, sales from vessels at
$1 75®$1 87# per bunch for Baracoa. Cocoasteady and in fair demand at
$40 00®$45 00 per M. for Baracoa.
and $60 00 per M. for
Carthagena. Limes sell pretty well at $8 00 per barrel,
, Pineapples are out of market.
Lemons from the Mediterranean are in
good de¬
mand and continue firm,
selling at $13®$14 per box from store. At auction
to-day 2,981 boxes Palermo sold at $4
70®$14 per box. Oranges are scarce,
and not quotable: a few in
very bad order sold at auction at
$1 20 per box.
The domestic dried fruit
market has been without
any new feature since our
last; there is no inquiry scarcely for any
kind; the absence of demand is probably
on account of the
abundance and cheapness of
green. Prices are nominally as
last quoted. The
crops so far are all reported to be
fully up to the average,
and this, together with the
large stocks of some kinds that will he carried
over,

ilu rince January 1 were as follows:

lieting

i»

1870]

996

249,343
243,290

t Also, 54,533 mats.

gives most of the trade the
impression that prices will rule low the
coming

SUGAR.

season.

The amount of business doing in raws has been quite moderate, and the mar¬
ket in a slow and generally uninteresting condition throughout the greater
rtion of the period under review, with the bulk of the sales made at a

fe, and
ir

and

Domestic green
with ready
$2 25 per

aligbtly lower range of values. Some few orders were filled from neighboring
dfieianda few of our local buyers have been picking up odd lots to put to
immediate use, hut refiners—now about the only operators—find their produc¬
tion selling less rapidly than anticipated, and have largely curtailed their
pur¬

chases in consequence, though few if any hold more than an ordinary accumu¬
lation of stock. Values have undergone no serious reaction,
in

ing ports
iry l.
1869.

part, to

17,687
737,135

PRICES
prices

are a

ruling quotations
fraction higher.

444,004
439.718

>b€ altostock is

refuse to advance their bids.

it, but as
>ld, buri-

buyers

Sales of 3,728 hhds. Cuba,

1,500 hhds. Porto Rico,

4,350 boxes Havana, and 553 hhds. Melado.
Imports at New York, and stock in first hands, July 28,

sold

Cuba,

eriabont

bxs.

Imports this week... 17,479
since Jan. 1 187,135
same time, ’69 300,065

t has not

“

“

t sale of

Cuba,

*hhds.

2,939
194,372

P. Rico,
*hhds.
139

Other
779

26,712
23,372

222,102

Stock In first hands.. 123,212
Same time 1869
148,741
«
“
1868
54,375

len com-

oimatioD

were as

Brazil,
bags.

*hhds.
21.218

63,545
118,643

23,872

Tea.

98,553
130,776
104,415

dong and

26

16,797

375,233
120,025

1,484
2,416

44,336

288

MOLASSES.
The monotony of the market has at last been
broken by several sales of the
grocery and boiling qualities, and a few
cargoes bought for Canada. The
movement, however, was not very general, nor are
many signs shown that it
will be continuous, and aside from a little
more steadiness on the most desira¬
ble grades values show no
important variation. The stocks were somewhat
reduced by the business transacted, but are still
pretty large and owners have
no great hesitation in
meeting a demand when it is developed. The common
and inferior qualities are
entirely neglected and dealers find it impossible to
decide upon a fair range of quotations. Sales of
250 hhds. Cuba, 1,550 hhds.
Porto Rico, 118 hhds.
Surinam, 80 hhds. Demerara, 75 bbls. New Orleans, and
for Canada 525 hhds.
Barbadoes; and 215 hhds. old Cuba.
The receipts at New York,
and stock in first hands, July 28, were as

ihinaand
iredwith

ling San
A * JAM

C1JAI.1.

1969.

12,004,919
14^82^7
85,670,951
la Aspin

follows:

Cuba,

P. Rico,
*hbds.

*hhds.

Imports this week
“

3,216

Stock in first hands
“
“

"

Imports
The

of

Duty paid—, j
New Crop.
Hyson, Common to fair
/-Duty paid65 '@ 75
H.Sk.& Tw’kyEx.f. tofin'st 70 @ 75
do
Superior to fine.... 80 @ 95
Uncol. Japan. Com. to fair.7 73 @ 78
flne!to finest.... 1 05 @130
do Ex.
do
Sup’r to fine... 80 @ 90
Young Hyson. Com. to fair. 55 @ 60
do
,

„

do
do

Super, to fine.

Ex.flnetofinesti
Gunp. & Imp., Com. to fair.

85

3^566
6,4-44
6,696

10,240
25,221

Sugar Sc Molasses

N. O.
bbls.

9421
14,194

as

3,398
3,591
1,571

Prime, duty paid

Rev York

187,135
18,958
18,355
Wtimore
36,655
Rev Orleans... 22,643

Boston

PWldelpMa...
Total
*

283/746

Including tierces

300,064
24,066
#31,106
25,024
63,744

300

follows:

444,004

-*Hhds.1870.
1869.

250,694
68,441
49,368
G5,715
5,035

270,562

50,343
57.135
53,149
8,589

439,253

439,778

Bags.

1870.

~ 1869.

do good
do fair
do ordinary
Java, mats and

250,010
140,002
30.596

21,976

2 78,281
-

52.743
48.149

10,955

..,

442,584

390,128

-*Hhds.1870.
1869.

110,255
45,254

118,439

70,965
20,398
6,749

77,946
18,684
11,117

253,612

305,881

37,753

and barrels reduced to hhds.

operation to some extent.

Advices from the crops of late date
rtfiand and to report
favorably for holders of the stocks.

i,

fonder*.’
ar sortaft*
i

:*WOBof

80

rj.

bags

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

com.

refining
9#® 9#
fair to good
refining.... 9^@10
prime...
@10)6
fair to good grocery....
10#@10#
pr. to choice grocery...
10#@11
centrifugal, hhdB. & bxs. 9#@11#
Melado
5#@ 8# j
moiasses

are

'

said to be

*

The market for most
Foreign Dried goods is in a healthy condition, and with
•kir
consumptive demand and moderate receipts prices have further
advanced
are firm.
Turkish Prunes have been in request both for
consumption and
^iktlon, and during the week about 600 casks have been
sold, the price ad¬
12#c. to 14#®15c. for new, prime old are held at 10#®ll#c.
are selling rather
more lreely but no change can he
noted in prices.
advanced to 22c. for Languodoc, Tarrgona and Ivica. Sardines
^eman^ and prices remain very firm, but no advance is percep.Wr, Stouts are very scarce and prices are higher. Currants are without
I
bit in fair demand.
Wjjeign Green from the West Indies are in
less demand and Bananas have
.

oring from
Ajponds have
skT ^Cen ^




17#@19
15#@19#
16#@18#
8^@ 9
15

@17

do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

Nos. 7 to 9... 9#@ 9^
do 10 to 12.. 10
@10#
do 13 to 15..
10&@11#
do
16 to 18..
11#@12#
do 19 to 20.. 13 @13#

I
i

12#@13#
9#@10#

Brazil, bags
Manila, bags..
White Sugars, A
do
do

8^@10

-

Hav’a, Box,D. S.

Havana, Box, white
Porto Rico, refining grades....
do
grocery grades

do
do

9#@10#
8#@ 9#
13#@....
13#®....

B
extra C

18#@13#

.

Yellow sugars
Crushed and granulated
Powdered...
Clarified, different refineries-.

12

@12#
@14#
....@14#
©....

Molasses.
New Orleans (new)
$
Porto Rico (new)
Cuba Muscovado (new)
Cuba Clayed (new)

gall.

o@
S7@
37@
35@

Cuba centrifugal
Old Crop Cuba

28®
22@
30@

English Islands (new)
Rice.

Rangoon, dressed, gold in bond 3#@ 8# | Carolina

8# $ 9

Cassia Batavia., .gold $ ft.
Cassia, in mats...
do
Ginger, Race and Af (gold)
Mace
do 1
Nutmegs, casks
do
cases Penang

46

46#@

47
47

11

11#

22

@
@
@1
@l
@1

| Pepper, in bond
| Pepper, Singapore
do Sumatra
Pimento, Jamaica

28
05

I

07#

do
Cloves

,

in bond.....

11 @
....@

(gold)

;

.

(gold)

c

H#

27

26#
18#

@

18#@
S#@
25#@

do
do

4

Fruits and Nuts.

Raisins, Seedless,new $ mat
.©8 00
do
Layer, old,
box..3 25 @
do
Layer, new, $ box..4 30 @

j Brazil Nuts

..

Valencia,

!b

do
London Layer
Currants
^ ft.

Citron, Leghorn

Prunes, Turkish, old
Prunes, Turkish, new

do

,

....

I

Prunelles

@

J Filberts, Sicily..

Barcelona
15 @
I African Peanuts..':
.@4 50
Walnuts, Bordeaux
12 @ 12#
Macaroni, Italian....;
45 @
I Fire Crack, beat No 1 V box
10#@ 11#
14#@ 15
Apples, State
$ 1b.
....

8
14
@ 13
@2 00
—@ 13#
@
15
3 00@3 25

13#@

DOMESTIC DRIED FRUITS.@
6

@
do
@
7#
Southern
4
Figs, Smyrna
ft. 11
do
@ 17
sliced
9
Cherries, German
7 @
I Peaches, pared
9
16
Canton Ginger
do
@ 10# I
unpared, qrs&hlvs
5
Almonds, Languedoc
22 @
do
Provence
none@
Cherries pitted, old
18
do
Ivica
22 @
i Pecan Nuts
$ lb. 12
do
Sicily, soft shell
©
Hickory Nuts
$ hush
do
Shelled. Spanish
@
J* Peanuts, Va.g’d to fncy do 2 00
do
paper shell
45@ 48
do
com. to fair do 1 25
Sardines
$ hf. box. 36#® 37
{
do Wil.,g’dtohest do 150
Sardines
qr, box. 18#@ 19
Dates

Iuo Western

6#

5 @ 10
@ 5#

I Blackberries

@

5

©
@

22
7

7 @ 19
@ 7#
@
@

....

FRUITS.
,

gold.
gold
goal
gold.
gold.

gold 15#@15# j Laguayra
gold. 14#@15
St..Domic
Domingo, in bond
gold. 19#@21# Jamaica

....

We have heard of no
important movement of invoices during the
week; in
,«t there appears to be
scarcely any wholesale market at present, the desirable
*todu being almost
entirely controlled by leading jobbers. The tone is
quite
I® *nd a fair amount of
goods are being distributed considering the dull
*W«of groceries at the
moment; hut the irregularity of currency values check

eri 1
soidat

Sup’r to fine.
Ex. f. to finest

Sugar.
Cuba, inf. to

do

-Molasses.

SPICES.

v*

do
do

gold. 17 @17# i Native Ceylon
gold “
16%@163£- i Maracaibo

....

-Boxes.1870.
1869.

@115
@ 75
@ 95
@140
@ 70
75 @ 90
1 00@1 30

do
Superior to fine.... 80
do
Ex fine to finest... .1 U5
Souc. & Cong., Com. to fair. 60

at

-Sugar.-

95
62

Oolong, Common

Spices,

leading ports since Jan* 1.
imports of sugar (including Melado), and of Molasses at the
leading ports
1 to
date, have been

Ex. f. to finest.
to fair....

@110

25 @160
75 @ 90
do
Sup. to flne..l 10 @1 30
do Ex. fine to finest.l
40 @1 75
Hyson Sk. & Tw. C. to fair. 58 @ 63
do
do
Sup. to fine. 65 @ 68

102

4,2 !0
7,018

16.778

same time ’69
same time ’68

“

252

20,334
15,870

Other
*hhds.

10J99
11,875

*hhds.

75,512
83,865

since Jan. l
same time 1869

“

Demerara,

New Crop.

Rio

Manila, Melado
hhds.
bags.
166,986
104,991

On the purchase of small lots

Coffee.

follows:

541

ei
stocks

ketdoenfj

CURRENT.

in first hands.

ts

243,290

c.

Apples are lower, selling at
Pears sell at $2 503$3 50 for Chisel
and $3 00®$4 00 for

$1 50®*2 50 per bbl.
Bell.

We annex

sustained gold premium ; but aside from this we find that all
impor¬
who have desirable goods in store are comparatively indifferent
sellers,
and though the prevailing outlet is fully met and there is a little stock
over,
an entire absence of any undue pressure to realize is a
noticeable feature. The
arrivals have been small but in excess of the sales, and the
accumulation is
somewhat increased. For refined the demand has fallen off
considerably, and
with manufacturers not only filling back orders but in some instances
accumu¬
lating supplies, prices have declined on'all grades and shown some
irregularity.
The general market closes with evidences of a little more
inquiry, but
the toirly

sjnjsi

iave

owing,

are coming in
freely and, at comparatively low prices meet
sale; this morning 10 car-loads of peaches came in and
sold at $125®
basket, and $2 50®$4 per crate.

....

13

@3 25
@2 00

„

@2 75

Grocers’ Drugs and Sundries.
Alum

;

Bi-Carb, Soda

Borax

Sal Soda, Cask
Sulphur
Saltpetre
Copperas
Camphor, in bbls
Castile Soaps
Epsom Salts

3#@
5#@

31

@

2#@
4#@

10
—

@

1#@
74

@

12#@

8#@

8# | Sic. Licorice
5# I Calabra Imitation....

32

|

15

Madder
Indigo, Madras

®
®
@
@1
@1

gold. 11
gold.1 20
gold. 80
16
Cordage, Manilla, # and %. 21#@
I
do
do Large sizes. 21 @
76
Sisal
@
12#
do Bed Cords
1 75 @2
3

4#

do

Manilla

—

3# | Jute

do

150

16
21

12#

25
15
22

21#
19
50

@2 50

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.
The excited, unsettled tone in the

Fbiday. P.M., July 29, 1870.

dry goods market at

last
The
fact that gold has not farther
advanced, and that the wr.r excite¬
ment, after its first flush, has materially toned d >wn, has served
to
our

writing has materially subsided during the week just clo^d.

THE CHRONICLE.

156

until

allay anxiety, and to postpone any extensive operations
a
more definite report should be received of the progress of the war.
The withdrawal of the German ships has served to delay the ar¬
rival of new goods, bat importers are not over-anxious in the
matter, as they hesitate to withdraw goods from warehouse until
actually wanted, and goods already purchased will lose nothing in
the delay, for, should the difficulties between France and Prussia be
amicably adjusted, gold would probably recede to about its former
figures, while, if war contiuues long, and prices of German goods
advance, these must share the improvement. Importers are raising
the cry of light stocks and sorcity of goods, but still they seem

perfectly willing to sell their goods at market rates, while the
announcement that both Prussia and France will respect all vessels
not carrying articles contraband of war, leads to the belief that

[J«ly 30,1870,

Indian Orchard1A40 13$,doC 36 12, Laconia O 39 14$, do B ft* Vo,
Lawtenee A 36 Ilf. do 0 36 13$, Lyman 0 36 13 dr E 36 131 u '’,l
iif, uo \j ao
nyman ij 3613
gfi
chu8ettsE3311$, Medford 86 16, Nashua fine 83 12$,do 36 184 rlftF?"
15i,Newmarket A 11$, Pacific extra 36 18i,do H 36 141 Pennorov!,,,
30, do 8-4 35, do 9-4 40, do 10-4 45, do 11-4 50, Pepperell E fin
13$, do R 36 12$, Pocasset F 30 8£, Saranac fine O 33 12 rln
0.
13. Stark A 36 18$,Swift River 36 11, Tiger S'? 84.
’
Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings have experienced less act t
than during the past few weeks, and prices are
slightly easier
stocks
accumulate.
Utica 6 4s are reduced to 274 6-4 aoa

JJ2*’
p6

9-4

51$,

and

10-4

56$.

to

V?
86

Amoskeag

46 19, do 42 m’
Androscoggin L *36 ,•
Arkwright WT 86 17$, Ballou & Son 86 13$, Bartletts 36 u
do 33 14, Bates XX 36 17, Blackstone 36 14 $, Boott B 36 15 doOsri
11$, do R 2S 9, Clarks 36 19, Dwight 40 18, Ellerton 10-4 89l_4s
Forestdale 36 16$, Fruit of the Loom 36 17, Globe 27 8 Gold mILi’
36 14, Great Falls Q 36 16$, Hill’s Semp. Idem 36 16,
Hope 8614
James 86 16, Lawrence B 36 18$, Lonsdale 36 17, Masonville 86 17’
Newmarket C 36 13$, New York Mills 36 24, Pepperell 6-4 so do Ku

do

A

36

15$, American

A

36

12$,

uninterrupted. Another 50, Tuscarora36 20, Utica 6-4 27 $, do 6-4 32$, do 9-4 51$, do 10-4 mi
Waltham X 83 13$, do 42 18, do 6-4 30, do 8-4 35, do 9-4 40 do iru
feature seems to prevent further advance, ard that is that th3
45, Wamsutta 36 21$.
’
*
Prints are without material change; the strike in the
prices of English goods have in no manner responded to the higher
print cloth
prices for German fabrics, but, on the contrary, trade in the manu¬ mills at Fall River has strengthened prices of gray cloths and prints
are firmer,
facturing districts of England is nearly at a stand-still, and cotton sortments. but the demand is yet small, and confiued to evening Jp asAmerican 11$, Albion solid 11, Albion ruby 11$’ Allens
is again declining both here and at Liverpool. All these influences 11, do
pinks 12, purples 11$, Arnolds 9, Atlantic 6$, Dunnell’sllL Ham¬
have served to bring a reaction from the advance and excitement ilton 11$, Hope 7, Lancaster 11, London mourning 10, Mallory 11
Manchester 11$, Merrimac D U$,dopink and
reported last week, and prices of all kinds of goods are about the Oriental 11$, Pacific 11$, Richmond’s 11$, purple 13$, do W 121
Simpson Mourn’g 101
eame a3 at the opening of the month, with the exception ,of the
Sprague’s pink 12, do blue and White 11, do sliiitings 104 Warn
commercial relations will be carried on

difference in the

gold premium.

moderately active early in the
week and very firm, but later the fear of high prices seems to have
been dispelled and trade has relapsed to its former dullness.
The
hot weather has also kept people away from the city.
excessively
Some effort has been made by a few leading houses to attract cus¬
tomers by reducing prices on one or two lots of goods in an irregu¬
lar way, but the results show that it is as yet too early to force
trade. The demand lor ail standard staple goods, however, has
Domestic Cotton Goods were

sutta 7@7$.
Printing Cloths

'

higher, from the strike at Fall River, and 7c. is
the quoted prices for 64x64 square cloth t -day.
Other Cotton Goods are slow and without features of special inter¬
est, and prices are somewhat nominal for the time. Lancaster camb¬
rics are lower.
We give quotations of a few styles;
Cotton Drills.—Amoskeag 15, Augusta 15$, Graniteville D 16,
Hamilton 15$ Laconia 15. Pepperell 15, Stark A 15, do H 14.
are

Checks.—Caledonia 70 25, do 50 25, do 12 26$, do 10 23, do 8 18,
do 11 22$, do 15 27$, Cumberland 15, Jos Greers, 55 16$, do 65 18$
Kennebeck 22$, Lanark, No. 2,10, Medford 13, Mech’a No. A 129.

Denims.—Amoskeag 29, Bedford 19, Beaver Cr. CO,—Columbian,
of pressure.
heavy 28, Haymaker Bro. 15, Manchester 20, Otis AXA 25, do BB23.
Corset Jeans.—Amoskeag 12$, Androscoggiu 13$, Bates 10$,E?erett8
Domestic Woolen Goods continue to improve in all particu¬
15$, Indian Orchard Imp. 11$, Laconia 12$. Newmarket 11$.
lars, and there are evidences that our manufacturers are at last
Cotton Bags.—American *37 60, Androscoggin *40 00, Arkwright
11

been sufficient to relieve the market

masters of the situation.”

Their ability under existing laws to

A *40 00, Great

Falls A *40 00, Lewiston *40 00, Stark A *42 50.
Stripes.—Albany 10, Algoden 16$, American 14, Amoskeag
compete with foreign production is becoming more and more appa¬
21-22, Boston 12$, Hamilton 20-21, Haymaker 15, Sheridan A 12$
rent, and should the French and German manufacturers be entirely do G 13, Uncasville A 14-15, do B 13-14, Whittenton AA 22$.
cut off there need be no lack of the better makes in this market.
Tickings.—Albany 10$, American 14$, Amoskeag A C A 32$
Some of the new styles just brought out by a leading manufacturer do A 25, do B 21, do C 20, do D 17, Blackstone River 15, Conestoga
extra 32 24, do do 36 28, Cordis AAA 27, do BB 16$, Hamilton 22$
were submitted
to expert judges side by side with foreign Swift River
14, Thorndike A 16, Whitten ion A 22$, York 80 25.
Ginghams—Clyde, 11; Earleton, extra, 18 ; Glasgow, !5 , Gloucester,
goods of the highest character, and the preference was given by
them in a majority of instances to the domestic goods.
Prices 12$ ; Hadley, 14 ; Hampden, 15 ; Hartford, 12$ ; Lancaster, 17; Lanca¬
shire, 15 ; Pequa, 12$; Park Mills, 14 : Quaker City, 14.
have still further strengthened up during the week and the stocks
Printed Lawns and Percales.—Pacific Percales, 23$; Lancaster,
of all grades have been reduced, while the leading makes are sold 17@2i ; Manchester, 15 ; Merrimack, 23$ ; Pacific 1400 Lawns,17;
ahead and for value at the time of delivery. The market for fine do Organdies, 20 ; Spragues 1400 124 ; ^Atlantic 1400 17.
Carpets.—Lowell Company’s ingrain are quoted at |1 for super
wools has advanced one or two cents per pound during the past
fiue, 2 mos. credit, or less 2 per cent., iO days ; *1 15 for extra super,
few days, causing an increased firmness.
and *1 42$ for three-ply ; Hartford Company’s *1 for medium super¬
fine ; *1 12$ for superfine ; *1 42$ for Imperial three-ply, and $1 50
Foreign Goods have barely heid their own in price during the
for extra three-ply ; Brussels *L 80 for 8 fr., *1 90 for 4 fr., and $210
past few days, while the speculative feeling previously reported for 5 fr.
has died out for the moment, in part owing to the fact that actual

delayed while it is announced that merchant ships
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY U00DS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORE.
and in part from the fact that all staple
The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending July
goods quickly advanced to the relatively higher premium of gold, 28,1870, and the corresponding weeks of 1869 and 1868, have been as
follows:
and no margin is thought to be left for speculation. The regular
ENTERED for consumption for THE WEEK ENDING JUl-T 28,1870.
trade in these goods is reported slow at the close, and not above
1868.
1869.
1870.-that of the dull season in previous years.
Pkgs.
Value.
-Pkgs.
Value
Pkes. Value.
Manufactures ol wool... 1,110
989
$301,570
1,094
$431,963
The exports of dry goods for the past week, and since January
do
cotton.. 870
1,301
152,789
368,147
1,438 391,381 [
do
silk....343
1, 1870, and the total for the same time in several previous years
677
551,947
316,227
358
do
flax
1,321
173,212
1,069
280,124
1,092 21».T»
are shown in the following table :
Miscellaneous dry goodB. 313
84,965
481
162,413
610 W'4!
PROM BOSTON
-PROM NJ5W TORE.Domestics.
Dry Goods.
Domestics.
Total
3,957 $1,228,712
4,622 $1,797,594
4,481 $1,4
Val.
Val.
hostilities

are

will not be liable to seizure,

.

(

-

.

„

packages.

pkgs.
416

.

.

.

.

1866

.

.

We annex
manufacture,

9,180

15,401
14,540
5,441
2,222
62,465

$42,053
1,102.938

1,667,938
456,930
773,355
352,503
....

7

pkgs.

$7,031

40

2,012

699,896

3,118
2,908

567,188
988,241
820,817
678.797
678,797

5,262
6,260
5,580

3,607
2,198
...

-

•

.

.

1,774
29,617

few

pirticulars of leading articles of domestic
our prices quoted being those of the leading Jobbers;
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings continue quite steady in price.
The demand for all kinds excepting standard makes is light, with some
feeling of uncertainty as to the future of prices, owing to the unsettled
condition of the cotton market both here and at Liverpool. A few
makes of goods are
lower.
The reports of low water in
many
of the
has the effect of giving
some
streams
strength to the market.
Amoskeag A 36 18$ do B 36
18, Atlantic A 36 14, do D 12, do H 18$, Appleton A \ 86
181, Augusta 86 12$, do 30 11$, Bedford R 30 8$, Boott H 27 11, do
a

Grafton A 27 7$, Graniteville A A,
26 16, Great Falls M 36 12, do S 88 11, Indian Head 36 14, do 80 12$,

O

84




Oomraouwealth O 27 8,

WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN

3,492

INTO THE

MARKET D1

THE SAME PERIOD.

Manulactures of wool...

706

$293,841

cotton..

156

39,834

Silk
flax

108
238

124

107,758
61,171
14,401

1,332

$517,005

do
do
do

Miscellaneous drygoods.
Total
Add ent7d for

conBU*pt’n8,957

1,228,712

Totalth’wn xuon m’rk’t 5,289 $1,745,717

629
261

$218,033

89

124,743
58,3S6
15,837

302
35

1,316
4,622

73,172

$490,171

1.797,594

5,938 $2,287,765

ENTERED FOB WAREHOUSING DURING THE

$444,567

$494,721

1,130

122,916

silk
178
flax
292
Miscellaneous dry go Jds.
39

259,376

69,567

407
136
323

19.527

113

23,148

Total
2,274
Add ent d for consu’pt’n.3,957

$857,107
1,228,712

2,109

$851,777

Total entered at the port 6,281 $2,185,819

|8WJ|

1^9

I

1,889

1^51

WJI

M

4^481 VWJ
6,350

SAME PERIOD.

Manufactures of wool.. .1,356
do
cotton.. 409
do
do

829
234
82
555

110,998
175,794
97 270

898
373
J13
594

-

#

Jgj.

4,622 -1,797,594

2,233 tg
4,4M ^

6,731 $2,649,371 *

6,714 I**894*1

Jnly

80,'1870.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Texas Cards

Life Insurance.

H. M. Moore,

EQUITABLE

LIFE

Assets over
Income -

Alfred Muckle,
Factor, Commission, Receiving

and Forwarding

Merchant,

GALVESTON, TEXAS.
Tihoral advances

Bd*tber

-

6,000,000

Banker4 and Brokers.

Labatt,

.T. C.

JOHNS,
JVSBKTT

TO

NEW

WALL

Circular

BANKING &

Thk City

Trusts.

I. L. Leonard

&

Calvert, Texas.

for

in sums to SUIT

BANKERS,
TERMINUS HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL R.R.,

Calvert, Texas.

Orleans, Mobile, Memphis, Chattanooga, Nashville
Atlanta, Macon, and intermediate points.

Bank, Robt. Bknson

Thb Bkitish

*Linkn

ranches, Scotland.

Co.

NEW YORK

& Co., London.

Bank, an! its various

EXCHANGE PLACE.

STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
FOREIGN

EXCHANGE and GOLD bought and sold
favorable terms.
INTEREST allowed on deposits either In
Currency
or Gold, subject to check at
sight, the same as with
the City Banks.
ADVANCES made on all marketable securities.
CERTIFICATES ot Deposit Issued bearing interest
COLLECTIONS made at all points ot the UNION
and BRITISH PROVINCES.

Fort &

Jackson,

WM. A. STEPHENS
G. Francis Opdyke.

NO.

25

NASSAU

WACO, TEXAS.

(Corner of Cedar street.)

and

Habde,

A. M.

Coiambus, Colorado Co.

McKinnon,

Lyons, Fayette Co.

DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms, Banks
Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at
sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Four per
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT issued,
bearing Four
per .cent Interest, p ’y&ble on
demand, or after
fixed dates.
on ill accessible
points In the
United States, Canada and
Europe. Dividends
and Coupons also collected, and all most
promptly
accounted for,

8ECEIVING, FORWARDING,
7
Is

AND

GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

ORDERS
promptly executed, for the purchase and
sale of Gold; also, Government and other
Securi¬
ties, on commission.
INFORMATION furnished, and
purchases or ex¬
changes of Securities made for Investors.
GOTIATIONS of Loans, and
Foreign Exchange
eflected.

Lockwood & Co.,

Financial.
94

J. M, Weith

Arents

& Arents,

Late J. M. Weith & Cor,

SEALERS IN SO(J
CELLANEOUS

rilEKN AND MIS¬
SfcCtR.TI ES,

Selma,

cars for
M eat Point,

Transact

a

BROADWAY.
General

Banking busi¬

ness, Including tlie purchase and sale
of Government and State Bonds Rail¬

road

Stocks

securities,

and

on

Bonds, and other

commission.

LITCHFIELD, DANA
BA NKERS

Cor

n e

STOCK
NO.

3 b

&

J AMES.

BROKERS,

BROAD

STREET.

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS,

Si?Raliroa9is1CS
\ Bought and

BONDS.

°f the °NION and Centbal

Sold

on

85 ST. CHARLES

New




AND

&

STIMSON,

BROKERS,

No. 18 William St.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and
Gold
on commission.
Accounts of Banks and Individuals
solicited and
interest allowed on deposits.
Wm. B. Litchfield,
Lewis A. Stimson.
Charles H. Dana,
Walter E. Colton.

bought and sold

E. B.

STREET,

1.14 p.m.
p.m.
p.m.

5.55
8.10
Ar. 5.'0
Lv. 9 00
“
11.52
Ar. 2.55
Lv.11.45
Ar. 3.35
“

“
“
“

a.m.
a m.
a.m.

p.m.

p.m.
a m.

l 40 p.m.

8.1:0 p.m
8.00 a m.
10 10 a.m.

a.m.

a.m.
a.m.

p.m.
p.m.

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
a.m.
a.m.

p.m.
a.m.

Atlanta, Macon, Montgomery.
Eufaula, Mobile, Savannah, and

J. B.

YATES,

PACIFIC

MAIL

STEAMSHIP

COMPANY S

To California &

China,

Touching at Mexican

Port*

AND

CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS.
On the 5th and 21st of Each
Month.
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 trom Panama
for SAN
FRANCISCO, touching at ALAN Z AN ILL O
Also, connecting at Panama with steamers for
SOUTH PACIFIC AND CENTRAL
AMERICAN
PORTS.
One hundred pounds
baggage allowed each adult

Baggage-masters accompany baggage through, and

attend to ladles and children without
male'protectors. Baggage received ou the dock the
day before

sailing, from steamboats, -railroads, and passengers
who prefer to send them down early. An
experienced

surgeon on board. Medicine and attendance free.
For passage ticl ets or lurther information
apply
the Company’s ticket
otiice, on the wharf, loot
Canal street, Nortli River, New York.

<PBfrFoR

o

BABY. Agen*

Liverpool,
Queenstown,)

CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS.
THE
LIVERPOOL AND
GREAT
WESTERN
STEAM C"AIPan.Y will dispatch one of their first-

class

full-power iron

screw

steamships from

PIER No.46 NORTH RIVER, EVERY
WEDNESDAY
as follows:

MANHATTAN, Captain Forsyth..Aug. 3, at lO^A.M.
MINNESOTA, Captain Whineray.-Aug.lO, at 4 P.A1
IDAHO, Captain Price
Aug.17, at 10 A.M.
NEVADA, Captain Green
Aug.24, at 4 PM.

COLORADO. Captain Freeman....Aug.81,at 9 P.M
WISCONSIN, Capt. Williams
tept. 7, at 3 P.M.
Cabin passage, |80 gold.
Steerage passage, (Office No. 29 Broadway) *30 cur¬
rency.
For freight or cabin passage
apply to
WILLIAMS & GU ION, N o. 63 Wall-Bt.

R. T.

Wilson &

Litchfield, Special

Co.,

LATE

William Heath & Co.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,

BROKERS,

Orleans, Louisiana.
W Wi28SS“ gi,LeD A° buying, selling and leas¬
er
*m«8, /JmilAdJi°n8 a.ud etc.
collecting rents, other real estate, paying of
’ v 3 6

“

“

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.

General Eastern Passenger Agen

Commission.

Oavis & Freret,
ttBAL ESTATE

“

a.m.

intermediate poinis.
t Charge cars for Nashville and New Orleans. No
change from this point to New Orleans.
± Change cars for
Mobile, via M. & O. R. R.—-All. Rai
9 Change cars for Memphis.
**
Change cars for Vicksburg.

(Via

No. 9 NEW STREET.

Loang Negotiated.

...

Change

BANKERS,

Geo

...

823
850

F. R.

COLUITIBUS, TE^XAS,

Lm. Wbith.

...

Time.
Ar. 6.19
“
9.00
“
12.45
“
7.28
“
1115
“
6.27
“
4.45
“
6.00
“
5.44
“
3.30
“
12.15
“
4 37
“
7.25
“
7.55
“
5.45
“
5.30
“
7.00

Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal
street

COLLECTIONS made

Harde & Co.,

...

...

STREET,

cent per annum.

T.

....

...

0
228
324
610
74.

Geo. Opdyke & Co.,

BANKERS,

correspondenceNew York:
Winslow, Lanier &, Co., David Dows & Co. Cincin¬
nati: First National Sank, Merchants National Bank.
New Orleans: Louisiana National Bank, Wheless &
Pratt,Bankers. Galveston : T. H. McMahan & Co.

GO’GNOBTH.

OYDYKK,

Bank, New York.

Gallipohs, O.

D

.

Time.
Lv. 9 <0 p.m.
“
6.55 a.m.
“
12.55 p.m.
“
6.00 a.m

THROUGH LINE
BORGK

I George W. Jackson,
| Late Cashier 1st Nat. Bank

'•

...

066
5GRAN D JUNCT ON1107
MEMPHIS
...1159
**JaCKSoN
...13 9
ATLANTA
9>2
MACON
MONTGOMERY... ...1127
MOBILE
...1852
NEw ORLEANS..

BANKING HOUSE OF
Wm'.A. Fort,
Late Fort & Trice.

...

tCHATTANOOGA
NASHVILLE
t CORINTH

ADVANCES made on
consignments, &c.
STOCKS and BONDS bought and sold at New York
ock Exchange.

NO. 50

GO’G SOUTH.

WASHINGTON....
GO KDONSVILLE.
BRISTOL
Knoxville

on

on the most

Adams & Hearne,

Draw on National Park

of Credit

RANKERS

HEAD OF HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL R.K.,

RICHMOND, and Points on the Coast,
At9.‘0P.M. from foot of Cortlundt street, via New
York and Philadelphia Line, by GREAT SOUTH¬
ERN, MAIL ROUTE TRAIN, for Richmond. New

Miles.

Co., Gibson, Beadleston &
Go,

BANKERS,

W

*

HOTTINGUER & CO., Paris.

Purchase and sell real estate, pay taxes and adjust
Titles, prosecute Land and money claims against the
state and Federal Governments; make collections.

"fl.l

n n n

*CLEVElA

TEXAS.

Receive deposits and execute

Letters

Draw BILLS

EXCHANGE,

AUSTIN,

AND

jpgting’

STATIONS.

Available in all parts of
Europe and America, &c

Johns AGENCY
& Co.,
LAND

MEMPHIS,

MOBILE-ALL RAIL.

STREET,

Travellers,

W. YON ROSENBERG

References

ORLEANS,

BANKERS,
Issue

KIRBY,

Route

At S.iO A .M. lor

James Robb, King & Co.,
56

0,B.

TEXAS

$12,000,000

-

Mail

Leave New York

all kinds ot Stocks.

C. R.

-

made on Consignments of Cotton

STRAND, GALVESTON, TEXAS,
EXCHANGE BROKER & INSURANCE AGENT

T,

-

-

Southern

WILLIAM C. ALEXANDER, President.
HENRY B. HYDE, Vice-President.
GEORGE W. PHIt LIP-S Actuary.
JAMES W. ALEX ANDER, Secretary.
bAMUEL BORROWE, City Manager.

produce in iiand or Bill Lading therefor.

Samuel K.
Dealer in

GREAT

OF THE UNITED

TEXAS.

BUT AN,

Transportation.

ASSURANCE SOCIETY
STATES,
116,118,120,122 & 124 BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

COTTON BROKER & BANKING,

1o(toB

157

14
J **

RRAAH firavn'K^wjim
nn-UAil

'kt
slIILEr, NEW YORK.

Gold Stock and Bonds
bought and sold on Commis¬
Orders executed in Boston and London.

sion.

WILSON, CALLAWAY Sc CO.,
Bankers and Commission
No. 44 BROAD

Merchants,

STREET, NEW YOLK

Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms.
Merchan t
Bankers and others allowed 4 per eent on
deposits
The most liberal advances made on
Cotton, Tobbacco
&c., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondent
Messrs. K GILLIAT & CO., Liyerpoo

158

THE

OFFICE OF THE

OFFICE

Co.,

on.

Premiums received from J anuary
1 to December 81,1869, inclusive
611,290 80

no Policies, except on Cargo
Freight for the Voyage.
No Ricks have been taken upon Time
or upon Hulls of Vtssel*.
Premiums worked off as Earned, du ing the
period as above
(608,830 22
Paid for Losses and Expenses, less
Savings,
&c., during the s ime period
324,344 50

Policies not marked off 1st

2,588,001 28
(8,628,689 06

Return Piemiums

The

nor upon

With Marine Risks,
iss

January,

1869, to 81st December, 1869
Losses paid daring the

(6,472,916 <1

same

period

(2,802,245 46

Expenses

City, Bank and other Stock

(7,856,290 (0

Loans secured by Stocks and otherwise... 8,148,400 00
Real Estate and Bond* and Mortgages,....

210,000 00

John K. Myers,

688,797 63

Total amount of Assets

Martin Bates,
Moses A. Hoppock
B. W.Bull,
Horace B. Clafiin,
W. M. Richards,

(14,468,806 06

Six per oent Interest on the outstanding

profits will be paid to the holders thereof; or their

First of February next.
The outstanding certificates of the issue of 1886 will

of

Emil

on will cease.

The certificates to be

Upon certificate!

which were Issued (In red scrip) for
such payment oi Interest and

produced at the

Read,

William A. Hail,
Francis Moran,
Theo. w.
Robert Slimmon,

Morris,

Stephen C. southmayd

JOHN K. MYERS. President,
WILLIAM LECONEY, Vice-President

met earned premiums et the

Company, for the year

ending (1st December, 1869, for which certificates will
be issued

on and alter

Tuesday, the Filth of

next

Ry order of the Board,
9 *H. CHAPMAN* 86ersiavft

M. K.

J esup & Company,

BANKERS AND
12 PINE

Charles Dennis,

Cars, etc.

'

Rails, Locomotives,

nd undertake
all business connected ivith R

C.

G.

&

Cos.,

Henry Colt,

B. J.

Wm. C. Pickersglll,
Lewis Curtis,

Benj. Babcock,

ways

Woodman,

Dealers in STOCKS, BONDS
RANTS.

James

Taylor,
Geo. S. Stephenson,
William H. Webb,
Sheppard Gandy,
Francis Skiddy,
Charles P. Burdett,
Robt. C. Fergusson,
William E, Bunker,
Samuel L. Mitchill,
James G. PeForest,
Robert L. Stuart.

Daniel S Miller,
Wm. Sturgis,

Henry K. Bogert,
Dennis*-" erkins,




Chauncey,

K. L.

Byrce,

J. D. JONES, President.

CHARLES DENNIS, Vice-Pres’t.

W.H H.MOORE, 2d Vlce-Pre’st.
J

*

(119,848 66

1869,

Company

WLETT, ,8d Yice-Pres’t.

on the 31st

were as follows:

December

U nited

States,State,Bank and other Stocks (404,836 Z
Stocks and other Securities
53,589 Z
Cash on hand and in Banks, and with For¬
Loans

on

eign Bankers
Interest
lected
Bills

86,850 81

Investments due, but not col¬

on

4,822 06

receivable,and Premiums due and

collectable

Security Notes
Scrip, Salvages and other Claims
Company...

499,53144
300,000 00
due the

77,81015
(1,427,880 02

The Board of Trustees have resolved to
pay to the
Stockholders an INTEREST DIVIDEND of
THREE
AND ONE HALF (3H) PER
CENT., free of Govern¬
ment Tax, on and after

TUESDAY, February let

TRUSTEES.
James Freeland,
Samuel Willeta.
Robert L. Taylor,
w iliiam T.
Frost,
William Wait,
James D. Fish,

A. Foster Higgins,
Francis Hathaway,
Aaron L. Reid.
John D. Wooa,
Geo. W. Hennings,

Henry Eyre,
Joseph Slagg.
Edward Merrilt,

Ell wood Walter,
D. Colden Murray,

Townsend Scudder,
Samuel L.Harn,

Daniel T. Willets,
L. Edgerton.
John S. Williams,
Charles Dimon,
Paul N. Spofford,
James Douglas.

Henry B. Kunhardt,

McCready,

William Nelson, Jr.,
Harold Dollner,
Jos. Willets,

ELL WOOD WALTER, President,
AKCHD. G. MONTGOMERY, Jr’Vlce-Prei’t.
ALANSON W. HEGEMAN, 2d Vice-Presldt.

Dbspabd, Secretary.

Fire Insurance
NO.

62

WALL

YORK.

iEtna Insurance

Comp’y,

HARTFORD, CONN.

INCORPORATED 1819.
Cask Capital
$3,000,000
Assets..

and

Agency,

STREET.

00

...$5,549,504 9T

Springfield

LAND WAR¬

INSURANCE CO.‘
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

Knauth, N achod &Kuhne

Minturn,
Burnham,

Frederick

Weston,
Royal Phelps,
Caleb Barstow,
A.P. Piliot,
William E. Dodge,
David Lane,

The Assets of the

FIRE & MARINE

New

York,
AND

BROAD ST.

Leipzig, Saxony,
85

INCORPORATED
Casta

BRUHL.

Providence
INSURANCE

DRAW IN SUMS TO SUIT

Washington
COMPANY,

OF PROVIDENCE, R. L

the

principal cities of Germany, Switzerland,
ngland, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, Bel¬
gium, Russia, Italy, Spain, Denmark, &c.
Issue Letters of Credit for
Travelers,
available in all parts of Europe.

1 8 4 9.

$500,000 00
$936,246 65

Capital

Assets

BANKERS*

Gordon W.

R. Warren

'

Howland,

Robt. B.

Companies

‘NEW

C. A. Hand,
James Low,

Charles H. Russell,
Lowell Holbrook,

(91,724 50

30 PINE STREET, N. Y.

^Joseph Gailliard, Jr.

Moore,

Of Mutual

C. J.

STREET,

Bonds and Loans for Railroad

TRUSTEES:
J. D. Jones,

for

Negotiate
Contract for
Iron or Steel

ORGANIZED

Ca^sta Capital
Assets....

179 9.

$200,000 00
....$392,425 5«

American

Timpson & Ingersoll,
NOTE
69

WALL

BROKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Special attention given to the buying and selling o

Grocery Paper,”

01

Cash paid to Dealers as an equiv¬
alent for the Scrip Dividends

MERCHANTS.

BANKERS,

W. H. H.

Stockholders

Bryce Gray,

redemption will be la

A dividend of FORTY Per Oent is declared on the

(1,002,661

N.L.

THOMAS HALE. Secretary.

gold premiums,

gold.

Cash paid to
Interest

Heineman,

Jehial

February next, from whleh date all Interest there-

time of payment and cancelled.

79,649 93

Net Earned Premiums

Augustus Low,
Oean K. Fenner,

A. Wesson.
John A. Bartow.
Oliver K. King,
Alex. M. Earle,
John K. Waller.

legal representatives, on and after rueeday, the

paid to the holders thereof, or their
legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, the First

from Jan*
uary 1st to December 31st, 1869.
(1J062.811 00
Less Return Premiums

A.

A. S. Barnes,
Egbert Starr,

certificates

b€ redeemed and

4

William Leconey,
Wm. T. Blodgett
H. C. South wick,
Wm. Hegemau,
James K. Taylor,
Adam T. Bruce,
Albert B. Strange,

A. C, Richards,
G. D. H Gillespie.
C. E. Mllnor,

86

as earned

TRUSTEES s.

2.518,458 60

Cash in Bank....

ot

outstanding

day of April next

207,568 81

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable

'

20,142 <7

1st
day of February, from which date interest
thereon will cease. The Certificates to be
produced
at the time of payment and cancelled.
A Dividend In serin of THIKT V-FIVE PER
free of Government Tax, is declared on the net CENT,
amount
of Earned Premiums for the
year ending December
31st. 1869, for which certificates will be
issued on and
after TUESDAY, he 5th

Interest and sundry Notes and Claims due

Company, estimated at

(1,871,796

Premiums marked off

(1,166,129 23

The whole of the OH 1 STANDING CERTIFICATES
OF THE COMPANY, OF THE ISSUE OF
1865, will be
redeemed and paid In cash to the holders
thereof, or
their legal
representatives, on and after TUESDAY,
the

United States and State of New York Stock,

the

46,000 00

SIX PER CENT INTEREST on the

The Company has the following Assets, vlS4

1,039,Ui 53

Total Premiums

Losses, Expenses, Commissions
and Reinsurance, less
Salvages(718,144 12

Certificates of Profits will be paid to the holders
thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after
TUESDAY, the 1st day of February.

(1,287,630 49

Yobk, January 20,1870.

OF" The following Statement of the
affairs of the
Company, on the 81st December, 1869, is
published in
conformity with the requirements of its
Charter:
Premiums outstanding December
31st, 1368.. (841,063 83
Premiums received during the year 1869....

Paid during same period:

(865,725 41
234,561 05

Premium Notes & Bills Receivable
Subscription Notes in advance of
Premiums
Reinsurance and other Claims due
the company, estimated at
Total Assets

Returns of Premiums
and

Company has the following

Cash in Bank
(86,015 51
Uniied States and other Stocks.... 583,009 90
Loans onbtocks Drawing interest. 196,700 00

Fire Risks disconnected

Premiums marked off from

36.697 03

Assets:

Ho Policies have been Issued upon Life

Risks,

Premiums.....^....(715,754 26

Company has issued

Co.,

35 WaU Street.
New

(104,463 46

and

Marine Risks, from

Total amount of Marine Premiums

No

JOT THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT OF THE

This

Janaary, 1869

Insurance

affairs of the Company is published in conformity
with the requirements of Section 12 of its charter:

Total amount of Marine

December, 1869:

January, 1889, to 81st December, 1869.(6,090,687 81

Premiums

Mutual

HOWARD BUILDING, 176 BROADWAY,
N.SW Yobk, January 13,1870.

1869

of the
Company, submit the following Statement of Its affairs

1st

MERCANTILE

Outstanding Premiums, January 1,

MW-

HEW YORK, January
The Trustees, In conformity to the charter

on

OFFICE OF THE

THE

COMPANY,

Insurance

Premiums received

OF

Insurance.

Pacific Mutual Insurance

ATLANTIC

on the 81st

[July 80,187%

Insurance.

Insuranoe.

Mutual

CHRONICLE.

INSURANCE COMPANY,
OF PROVIDENCE, R.

ORGANIZED

Casta Capital
Assets
IAS.

A

-

L

1881.

$200,000 00

$372,219 M

ALRXANDER. Asrent.

THE CHRONICLE.

M 30, 1870.)

Mustard seed, Trieste...
Nutgalls,blue,Aleppo..

PKICES ouerent,

Oil
Oil
Oil
Oil
Oil
Oil

®
@

IRON—

Pig, American, No. 1
Pig, American, No. 2
Pig, American Forge
Pig, Scotch, No. 1
Bar, refined, Eng. & Amer.

currency 2 87*®
“
@2 62*
bergamot
4 50 @
lemon
2 90 @295
peppermint, pure ... 3 25 @ 8 50
vitriol (60 to 68 degs) 2 00 @ 2 50
Opium,Turkey
gold. 9 50 @1100
Oxalic acid
25
22*©
Phosphorus
- 70 @
Prus8iate potash,Amer.
31 @
63 @
Quicksilver
Rhubarb, China
1 18 @ 2 00

jj^tS^9SSS^
A?5?lrtsort

20
28

anlB
cassia

f» 100 ft 6 26 © 8 75

g^JpgTl^FS-Seetpeclafrefort?7

...

.gStoafeae:(jutaftSinB,prime

Salaeratus
;...
Sal ammoniac, ref. gold.
Sal Boda,Newcastle,g’d

28 ©
ggftriSfi. ftlr
24 ©
State* haltfirkins, choice. 90 ©
state*, half-firkins, ordin’y 22 &
ffelBh tubs, prime
27 &

20

Scroll
Ovals and halt round
Band
Horse shoe
Rods, #@3-16 inch

...

@

10#@

Sarsaparilla,H.,g’d,in D’d
Sarsaparilla, Mex. “

...

80

@

10#@

Senekaroot

....
....

ffifc:::::::::
)ld^ common

U
6

dairies, comment

gklmmed
CANDLESoaftnari enerm

defined spena

3perm,
Stearic

ament—
Boiendale
COAL-

Vitriol,blue

,

100 00@125 00
95 00®
96 00®

85 00@120 00

9
U

00®

Cotton,No. 1
DYE WOODS—

14

4 87

15,000 tons

grata
10,000 tons egg

‘-®

1C

201)00 tons stove
2 000 tons chestnut....

15^

©4
@4
@4
@5
m

12,000 tons steamMem *... 4 12

-

20*

COBKB—

V gro.

55 © 70
1 40 @1 70
86 © 50

Mineral
60 © 70
Phial
12 © 40
OTTON—See apeolal report.
OTTON SEED—
Cotton s’d, Up’d * ton 18 00 @ 20 00
Cotton s’d, 8. Is. V ton 22 50 ©
DRUGS AND DYES—
2 02*@ 2 05
Alcohol,
14 @
16
Aloes, Cape
V ft
70 @
75
Aloes, Socotrlne
Alum

Annato, good to

prime

80

19#@

Antimony, reg. or...gold
Algols, crude
Argols, refined
gold
Arsenic, powdered. “
Aisafoetlaa
Balsam caplvl
Balsam tolu
Balaam Peru.

8#

....@
@

20

50

.

18
18

@

....

Buenos

20 ®
74 ®

65

Carrawayseed

74*@

26

Cream tartar, pr...gold
Cnbebs, East India
Cutch

•

’

Gambler....gold..V
Gamboge

oz.

Arabic, sorts

benzoin

Gum kowrie

go‘a
Gum myrrh, East'indiaV.
Gum myrrh,
Turkey....
.

a?*? •/••••

potash, Fr.

Ta^ J

'V,V

gold

•

•

2
81
20

•

@

3#@
„

@
@
@
®
@
©
@

14#@
80

©
©
©
.©
28 ©
42
42
•

95

•

•

•

•

Rio

32
•

•

•

•

55

© 1 15

Iodine,resublimed

ftifSCnanha»Brazil
SS® paste, Calabria.
ft2„c«pa«eISicily...
paste, fep., solid

® 3 70
o IV
®850

® 2 20

41 ®
24 ®
20

42
25

@
~
@
g*d®erp Dutch..... .gold 11* ® 12
Fr,RXF.F>
..
®
16*
large flake
l 76 @ 1 75
small flake....
115 ®
....
Mustard seed, Cal,,,,.
7 ®
i«

Worice Paste Greek...

E^der.

{J^nna,




81

Grande

California
Para.
New Orleans

33
46
45
33

@

18*

@
@

19*
19*
20

19*

@

“
“

“
cur.

City sl’ter trim. & cured
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio gr.

18*@

18

kipft ftgld

Minas
Sierra Leone
cash
Gambia and Bissau
Zanzibar
East India Stock—
Calcut. city sit. ft ft gold
Calcutta, dead green....
Calcutta, buflfalo.... ft ft
Manilla & Bat. buff..ft n>
HONEY....

12

18
18
15
12
12
15

12
11
10
10
11

@

12*
n*
10*
10*
11*

16

@

16*

13*@
12*@

14*
13*

Crop of 1868
'

ft ft
do 1869 (good to prime)

j
I

Bavarian

HORNS—

Ox, Rio Grande
VC.
Ox,American,...,,

@
@
..©

“

No. 1
No. 2

pale

extra

OAKUM
OIL CAKE-

80

@2 37*

@1
@3
®2
@4
@6

3 75
5 00

pale

41

40*@

.....ft ft

7*@

City thin, obi., in bbls.fi ton.45 00@
“

OILS—

85
50
00
75
00
10*
....

in

42 50®
bu^s
obl’g. in bags...45 00®

Olive, Mars’es, qts and
pts ft case 4 00 @7
Olive, in casks ....ft gall. 1 87*@1
Palm
fi lb
9*®
Linseed
V gall.
94 @
Cotton Seed Crude
“
Southern yel.

50

®
®
@
@
@
@
@
@
@

60

Whale, crude Northern..
65
Whale, bleached winter..
75
Sperm, crude
1 35
Sperm, winter bleached. 1 55
Lard oil, prime winter... 1 25
Red oil,
67
75

1 20

Zinc, white, dry,No. 1.
Zinc, white^o. 1, in oil.

9#®

9*®

li*@
10 @
6*@
9

00
40

10*

96

32*

68
80
1 40

l so
70
....

@1 75

®

Zinc,white,French,dry 10 @
Zinc, wh., French, in oil
12*@
Ochre, yt l., French, dry
1 @
Ochre, “ground, in oil
6 ®
Spanish luo.,dry.ft 100ft 1 00 ® I
Span.bro.,gr’dmoil.ftft
8 @
Paris whiie.EngfUOOlbs. 2 25 @2
Chrome, yellow, dry
12*@
Whiting, Amer..ft 100 ft 1 75 @ 2
Vermillion, China...V ft
77*@

9*
9*

....

10*
7

12

12*
15
2
9

25
9
50

28
00

87*

13

@
6
ft ton.24 00 @35 00
ft ft
1%®
2
Chalk, block
ft ton.21 00 @
Barytes, American
32 50 @85 00
PETROLEUM—
China clay
Chalk

....

Crude, 40®47 grav.f) gall. 17#@
Crude ,in bulk
18 @
Refined in bond, prime L.
S. to W. (110@U5 test) 26 @
Standard white
27*@
......

Naptha,refln.,65-73grav.
Residuum

7
4

00
00

1 90
2 10

@

Plumbago

Cuba(dutyp’d)goldf»gall.l 10 @115

HOPS—

©
©

00
25

Vermillion, irieste
90 @
95
Vermillion, Amer.,com.
22 @
27
Venet.red (N. C.) V cwt. 2 00 @ 2 50

@
@
@

@

“

Lead,white,Amer.,dry.

20

12

“

i3"

25*@
18*@

35
25

00
00

00®

80

PROVISIONS-

Pork,m08»

9
V bbl 4 00

ft bbl,30 50

@
@

21*@

24#

@
16

17#

SALTS»ETRfciSht0n,8’g,d * 10
Rained, pure...

»

46

....
....

...

28#
....

....

In

43u

60^

2

2 25

® 3 35

,**5#

5#@

ft ft
Timothy...
ftbueh. 7
Hemp, foreign
2
Linseed, Amer’n rough
Lins’d in N. Y....ft bus. 2
Linseed, Cal. (bags) (In

14
26
00

@
@
@ 2 40
..

....

<&

....

•Boston)

9 00
7 00
3 50

15*®....

Clover

..”

27*@

gold 2 35 ©

....

Tsatlee.No. 1,2,3.4 & 5.ft ft 9 C0@10 76
Teatiee.re-rteled
9 25@10 26
Taysaams,
No. 1 *2 8 60® 9 00
1
aysaam, Nos. 8,4 and 6..

7 36® 8 00
8 50® 9 60
9 50® 10 20
6 70® 8 40

Taysaams, re-reeled
Haineen.

Canton,re-rld,Nolto exdo

Plates,for’n.ft 100V.gold 6 37*@6 50
Plates, domestic
V ft
7*@11*
Brandy—
^_ft gai|.
Otard, Dupny & Co..gold 5 50@1S 00
Pinet, Castillon & Co “
50@17 00
Hennessy
“
50® 18 00
Marett & Co

“

Leger Freres

“

Other

3
5

foreign brands “

50@10 00
50® 10 00

4 90® 18 00

Rum—Jam., 4th proof.
St. Croix, 3d proof...
Gin, different brands

“

Brandy, gin &
Rum, pure

....1 10® 1 15

.

“

4

*

3 50® 3 75
3 00® 5 25

Domestic liquors— Cash.
pure

50® 4 7i

sp'ts In bl 10® 1 15

8TEEI^y

102*® 103

English, cast
English, spring
English blister
English machinery
English German

ft ft

15 @
7 @
10 @
11 *@
18 @
12 @
18
9 @

Amerloan blister
American cast
Tool.
American spring....
“
American machinery “
American German..
“
SUGAR—See special report.
TALLOWv

12

18
10
17
14
15
11

®
@

o
9

American, prime, country
and city..ft*lb

•••

12

@

TEAS—See special report.

10>

TIN—

Banca
Straits

ft ft,gold

as*@
37#© 88

....

“

English
“
Plates, char. I. C.. V box
Plates, I. C. coke
Plates, Terne coke
Plates, Terne charcoal..

33
8 75
7 50
6 00
7 75
TOBACCO—See special report.

WINES—
Madeira...:

1 75
2 25
1 90

Litharge, city
.-.ft ft
Lead, red, city
Lead, white, Am.,in oil.

@

@
@
@
®
@
®

strained, ft 280 ft

13*
13*

12*@
12

00

22

Straits
Neats foots,
PAINTS—

@

@
@
@
@
@

00

35

“

20

gold.

“
Maranham
Pernambuco
“
Matamoras
“
Savanilla
“
Bahia
“
Chili....
“
Sandwich Island.. “
Wet Salted HidesBuenos Ayres., ft ft gold.

95
65
75
70
33
65

and

..gold O 50
BVAU 8

Maracaibo;

60

21*

“

“

5

.

....

“

“

Western

do

Turpentine, soft ..ft 280 ft
Tar, Washington..ft bbl. 1
Tar, Wilmington
2
Pitch, city
2
Spirits turpentine.ft gall.
Rosin, commmon to good

West, thin,

“

Dry Salted Hides—

10*
18*

24

18
19
19

cur.

do

Yellow metal
Zinc
NAVAL STORES-

“

@
@

16

160 00

Copper

1

21

19*@
18*©

23 00® 24 00
|210 000
175 00

Sugar
do
2 50®2 75
do
MOLA8SES—See special report
NAILS—
Cut, 4d.@60d
ft 100 ft4 25
Clinch
6 00
Horse shoe, Pd (8d.).. ft ft 28

00
00
00
Ot

“

Texas

6*
3*

•

Rum

75

“

Curacoa
Port au Platt
Bahia

62*

•

•

90
60
70
48
32
o«
60
28

•

sorts.*!
tragacanth, w.

•

SO

ft.

Ginseng, Western
.1
Ginseng, Southern
Gum Arable, nicked.

...

•

•

Fennell seed

Gum Senegal
Gum
tragacanth,
Gum

•

•

Exrtact logwood

bum

•

•

100

@

“

RioHache..

@
@
@
..
18 @
6 @
@
.@
10
io @
•

21

48

26 0u@ 28 00

.

22*@

“

Truxillo

@

23

“
“

Bogota.

® 4 75

12

Flowers,benzoin..V

Tampico

Maracaibo

Porto Cabello

26*@

Coriander seed

Gum

@ 5 25
®
31
®

29

...

Epsom salts

18*

©

28*@

“
“
“
“
“
“

Orinoco
California
San Juan...
Matamoras
Vera Cruz

...

@ 2 20

00

...

31*

7*@
5#@

“

Rio Grande

21

17*@

Cochineal, Hondur..gold
Cochineal, Mexican. “
Copperas, American....

00

©

70@

Ayres.. ft ft gold

Montevideo

40

heavy hhd
do
160
do
140
Heavy
do
do
125
do
Light
Extra heavy bbl.
do
125
do
110
Heavy
do
do
80
Light
do
Molassesshooks.incl. head’g.2 60®2

23

31

Dry Hides—

4*®

Cantharides f» ft
2
Carb. ammonia, in bulk
5
Cardamoms, Malabar
Castor oil
Chamomile flowers, V ft
jhlorate potash
.gold
Jauatic soda
4

@

gold

98

00
00
00
00
00

Extra

14*

HIDES-

S#@

gold

Cunphor.reflned

®

50 ®

Brimstone, flor sulphur.
Camphor, crude
(in
bona)

Jute

00@ 58
00@ 88
00@123
00® 48
00@ 50

.........

21

Tampico

2*®

81

40

American dressed..ft ton.255 00@290
American undressed
180 00®190
Rnssia, clean
240 00@250
Italian
gold.245 00@250
Manila
ft ft
IS @
Sisal
@

4#®
14 ®

Bichromate potash
Bleaching powder
Borax, refined
Brimstone,cru. ft ton gld44
Brimstone, Am. roll V ft

50
00
50
50

^Sjiprting, in 1 ft canis’trs.ftft 28®

...

33

Slackwalnut
#-inch sycamore
1-inch
do
Spruce boards and planks
Hemlock bo’rds and plank
Extra heavy pipe etaves
Heavy
do
do
Light
do
do

GUNPOWDERBlasting (B).... ft 25 ft keg. 3 00@
Shipping and mining
3 90@ 3 50
Kentucky rifle
5 75@
Meal
5 25®
Deer
5 25@

®
1 05 ®
8 50 @ 4 50
.®
45
27 ® 31

58

Maple and birch

GUNNY BAGS-

...

.

Barkpetayo
Berries, Persian
gold
Bicarb, soda, N’castle"

Cherry boards and planks 73 00@ 78 00

....

State, prime.
ft ft 1S*@
FRUITS—See special report.
GROCERIES—See special report.

gunny (SlothCalcutta standard....yard

®

White pine mer. box b’ds 24 C0@ 31 00
Clear pine
58 00@ 59 00
Oak and ash

00
00

n>

SPIRI&?ee8PeClalr*POrt-

Rockland, common.ft bbl. 115®
Rockland, heavy
1 75®
LUMBER, STAVES, &o—
Southern pine
f82 00® 37 00
White pine box boards... 23 00® 28 00

6 50@ 7 00

35®

20

...

LIME—

@

26*®
80 ®
24 @

...

.

14 00®

HEMP-

34

85

“

®
@

27

....

@16 00
@19 00
©35 00

g^ja^commontosuper’r 8 00® 10 50

®

27
26

“

“

10 0f @ll 00

North River, In bales ft 100
ft for shipping

28#®
2*®

“

18 00
20 00

28 50®
27 00@27
@84
5 00® 7
45®

28

..

“

“

.

heavy.

middle

light..
Orinoco, heavy
middle.
light....
rough
good damaged
poor
“

“

“

7 50® 8 00
28 00@80 00
24 00@25 00
10 00@12 00

p. c.

“

@

28 @
27 ©

“

...

FLAX-

Calcutta, light & h’vy,

California,

“

19 00
86 00
28 00

29

light...

“

4 50® 5 00

.

1st regular, quarts,
do superfine
lit regular, pints

34
32
28 @

.

“

“

7 00® 7 25

Mackerel, No. 1, shore
Mackerel, No. 1, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2
Mac’rel, No. 8, Mass., large.
Mackerel, shore, No. 2
Mac’rel, No. 3, Mass., med.
Mackerel,No. 1, Halifax...
Salmon, pickled, No. 1
Salmon, pickled
V tee
Herring
ft bbl.
Herring, scaled ...ft box.
Herring, No. 1... 4

17

„

Sheathing, yel. mefdl.netf 22
Bolts, yellow metal
t *4
Yellow metal nails
32
American ingot
20 ©

-

ft quint.
ft bbl.
V bbl.

84

middle.

“

...

cur. 30 00@

Pickled scale
Pickled cod

j-0
80

“

@
@
©
@
@
@

83

middle

“

...

gold 18 00® 20 00

Dry cod

25

do .... 10
8t.Donungo do
do ....
COFFEE.—Bee special report
COPPER—
Sheathing, new
.V ft CO
Brartera*
Sheathing, <fcc., old...

“

“

(a

36

light..
rough slaughter
Heml’k.B. A.,&c., heavy

...

@6 40
@6 62*
@....

87

“

...

60 0C@

cur.

^S^ganwood

Guayaquil ao

Bolts....

“

“

...

“

...

Limawood
Barwood

io

Maracaibo (gold in bond)

...

@
@

53

middle....

“

....

@

00

S^D-6 80da-; —-K°ld

...

..

light
crop, heavy.

“

“

...

„

65
70
25
85

COCOA-

Caracas.

“

..

00® ....
June 29

1.-TI

Anthracite—Auet. > '■
,1,000tons lump... ..

Oak, slaughter, heavy
“
“

6 35

net.8 00
“ 8 00

LEATHER—

52
11

6 25

“

Pipe and sheet

Camwood... .gold, V ton.120 00®
Fustic, Cuba. “
“
©
Fustic, Tampico
gold 19 00®
19 00®
Fustic, Jamaica
18 00®
Fustic, Savanilla
“
Fustic,Maracaibo.... “ 17 00®
Logwood, Laguna.... “ 34 00®
Logwood, Honduras. “
....@
Logwood, Tabasco... “ 20 00®
Logwood, St. Domin.gold 17 00@
Logwood, Jamaica
19 00®

....

“

Bar

...

....@

gold.6 85 @6 40

English

...

@
@

17 00
Scotch,G’ck,No. 1, f» yd 68

....

00®

ft 100 ft

Spanish....;

German

“

Ravens,heavy

90®

LEAD—
Galena

50
85

@

f» pce.15 00

Ravens, light

@24

,

Newcastle Kfts,i.' Iiverpoolgaeoami •
Liverpool uouae-% i

9

DUCK-

<.onde.
V ft

,

@
@

wunoe.

Adamantine..

25
16

m

80

....‘♦'ft

patent

14*
18#

U ^
18*©

c.) gold. 2 25

...

Sugar lead, W’e
“
21 *@
Sulp. quinine, Am., V oz 2 20 @
Sulphate morphine, “
8 60 @
Tartaric acici (chrystal)
gold....,
f» ft
@
Tapioca
10*@
Verdigris, dry & ex. dry 35 @

Vft 14#@

Firm dairies, fair
Farm

Shell Lac
Soda ash (80_p.

j£ @
I
12

to good

fSon^ime
factory fair.....
farm dairies, prime

Senna, Alexandria
Senna, East India

24 @

WbB,.ordinary

@
@
@
@
@ 2

@

50

ft 100 ft 8 50 @
Rangoon, dressed ..gold 6 75 @
In bond
3 25 ©
SALT—
Turks Islands ..ft bush.
40 @
Cadiz
40 <a
V sack 2 50 @
Liv’pT fine, Worthingt’s 2 12*@

....

97 50@130 00

XI
X
Welsh

60
23
14
38

26 00
30
12
16
...29

Beef hams
Hams
Shoulders
Lard .;
RICE—
Carolina

....

Hoop
105 00@150 00
Nall, rod
ft ft
7 @
7
Sheet, Russia
U#@ 11
Sheet, sing., doub. & treb. 5 00@ 6 (
Rails, Eng. (gold) ..ft ton. 59 00® 60 00
Rails, American
70 00® 71 00

...

1 85 @

Pork, extra prime
Pork, prime mess
Beef, plain mess....,
Beef, extra mess

00
00
00
00

STOBB PBIOXB.

...

6#@

32 00® 88
30 00® 81
29 00® 30
33 00® 66
75 00®

Bar, Swedes, ordin. sizes.. 110 00®
Bar, Eng. & Amer., refined 75 00®
Bar, Eng. & Amer., com’n. 72 50®

...

Sago, pearled

169

@
@
@
@
@

_

....

9 00
7 W

6 26
8 *

ft gall.

8 50® 7 00
75® 9 00
2 00® 8 50
Burgundy port
gold
75® 1 21
Lisbon
“
2 20® 8 DO
Sicily, Madeira
“
1 00® 1 a
Red, Span. & Sicily... “
90® 1 So
Marseilles Madeira... “
70®
85
Marseilles port
“
80® l 60
Malaga, dry
••
1 00
90®
Malaga, sweet
“
1 00® 1 UB
Claret....
ft cask “
85 00®60 09
Claret
V doz. “
2 40® 9 00
WOOL—
N. Y.& O., Pa.
West, & Va.
XXX
ft ft. 44@48 52®35

Sherry

Port

42®45
40®42
40@42
35®40
88@40

50®5«
48®50
45®48
43® 4 5
42®4S
48@60 50®56
85@40

No. 1
No. 2
Coarse

Combing
Combing, unwashed
Extra, pulled
Super

S5©40

36®4t
Spring Fall
California—
clip.
Clip.
A2 or X2 to A P or XXX 26®S0
20@2C
B or X8
25@38 2G®28
S or X4
20@28 1S®20
Bu’nos
Ayres Merino,unwashed 25®28
Mestiza, No 1. unwashed
22®24
“
No. 2
*•
19®22
“
NOS.3&4 “
17®20
Cape
.
28® 32
Syrian, washed
26®80
“
unwashed
17@i9
Mexican
“
16@17
Texas, fine
17®8S
Texas, medium
16@88
Texas, coarse
12®20
_

.

ZINCSheet

ft a>

FREIGHTS— ,—STXAM.—,
To Livbbpool: s. d.
s.d.
Cotton
ft lb
* @...
Flour ....ft bbl
@36
H. goods. ft ton 36 0 @50 0
Oil
60 O’ @....
C’n,b &b.V bn.
®....
Wheat..b. & b.
12 @....
Beef .....ft tee. 7 0@....
Pork
ft bbl. 5 0®....
To Havbb :
by sail
I
Cotton
ft ft
Tobacco
ft hhd. 8
Tallow
ft ft
Lard...... -

.9

10

@

—SAIL.—t
s. d.
s. d
....©
..

....

....@
C.

1

00

*@
#
@10 0U

c.

Woods
8 00 @10 00
Petroleum
;
5 00 @ 5 06
To Mklbottknb, ft foot.
e#
26
To Sab Fkanoisco, by Clipper
Measurement goods ft rt
m ©
25
Heavy gooda
ft ton
@12 00
Nails
ft keg.
@
50
Petroleum, .ft c. ol 10gall.
@
55
B’roadiron V ton ofaMQ ft
@ ....
.

Coal ssr^tsss

Mills

It

>.4 4

©10.00

I

THE

160

r

AND

PROPRIETORS

G.

COTTON

ENGLAND, NEW YORK

MERCHANTS.

NEW ORLEANS

SELF-FASTENING BUCKLE TIE.

Buy and sell Railway Bonds and Negociate Loans to

Thla is for the planter, the compress and the ship ;
the best and most convenient Tie manufactured. It
Is recommended by all of tne dealers in New Orleans
after a thorough investigation as to the merits of the
various ties in use. They are made of the best quality
of English ion, nicely painted, put up in bundles of
uniform weight and are sold under a guaranty to

For sale

by dealers throughout the country.

RAILS,
SUPPLIES,
STREET RAILS Sc CARS,

RAILROAD

158 Common Street, New Orleans.

69 wall st.,

89

maae on

Consignments.

2 18

PEARL

Bentley D. Hasell,

York,

COMMERCIAL

BROKERS,
INDIA & DOMESTIC GUNNY CLOTH,

And dealers in

Ganny Bags, Linseed, Jute Rutts,

Established 1842

Co,

2^” Entrance

on

YORK,

BOSTON,

PHILA.,

80 State street.

99 John street.

208 So. 4th stree

CAST STEEL RAILS,
CAST STEEL

Frogs, and all other

TYRES,

Steel Material lor

Railway Use.
HOUSE

IN LONDON:

NAYLOR,

BENZ ON Sc
34 Old Broad Street,

as

well

as

Old Rails,

John C. Graham & Co., Morris,

CO.,

a

Cotton

Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

„

Commission,

OFFICE AND

15 GOLD

Miscellaneous.

C. B. &
Sc

89

J. F. Mitchell,

Leonard

WAREHOUSES:

He:nry Lawrence & Sons,

AGENTS

192 FRONT STREET. NEW

YORK

John Dwight & Co.,
MANUFACTURERS OF

AND

WOOLENS.

COMMISSION

Co.,

RIG DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL.

our

House,

Wright, Brown Sc Co.,
No. 69 WALL

STREET, NEW YORK.

Everett &
66 State

Co.,

Street, Boston^

AGENTS FOR

AUGUSTINE

HEARD

OF CHINA AND JAPAN,

Advances

St

CO.,

j ;;




i

*

mer

SODA, &C.,

Slip, New York,

Brinckerhoff, Turner &
Polhemus,

,

favorable terms.

To

Railroad

COMPANIES.
We bei to call the attention of
eg
Managers of Railwavs and Contractors
id
throughout the United States
wlltl)Cm oiav
and Canada to our superior facilities for
executlu,

GRSBBSB&HSBltf' a“ dcscripU0“^
Railroad Iron.
We are always in a position to furnish
all
terns and weight of rail for both steam sizrs, pat¬
and horse
roads, and in any quantities desired ei her for IMME¬
DIATE OR REMOTE delivery, at
any port in the
United States or « anada and
always at the very low¬
est current market prices.
Contracts will he made
layable in United States currency for American, and
n either
currency or gold (at the option of the buyer)
for Foreign, and when desired, we
will contract to
supply roads with their monthly or yearly require¬
ments.

orders for Foreign Rail6, will be taken for transmis¬
sion by Mail or through the cable to our

LONDON

HOUSE,

58 OLD BROAD

STREET,

for execution at a fixed price
in stealing or on com
mission at the current market pr ice abroad when the
ordf-r is received in London;
shipments to be made
at stated periods to port9 in America and at
the low
est possible rates of freights. Address

S.

W.

Hopkins & Co.,

NO.

*71

BROADWAY.

Gilead A. Smith,
Bartholomew Ho une, opposite Bank
of

England.

LONDON, B. C.

Railroad Iron,
Old Rails,
Bessemer

Rails, &c.

U. S. BONDS AND AMERICAN

.RAILWAY SECU¬

Correspondents in America:
Jay Cooke & Co., New York, Messrs. Jay
Cooke & Co., Washington, Messrs E. W. Clabkk
& Co., Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgar Thomson, Phlla
essrs.

deiplila

i

...

The Liverpool& Lon*
COTTON S AIL DUCK don
Globe Ins. Co.
Manufacturers and Dealers in

*

And all kinds ot

COTTON CANVAS, FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER.
ING, BAGGING, RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES
&C. “ONTARIO’
SEAMLESS BAGS,
“
AWNING STRIPES.”

Also, Agents
United States
A full

made on consignments ot approved
ch&ndize.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

RITIES, NEGOTIATED.

N«. 11 Old

MERCHANTS,

Represented in the United States by

MCANERNBY.JB

Railway Supplies.

SALERATUS,
SUPER CARB.

Wright &

CHAS T. PABBY

JNO.

Securities of all kinds negotiated on

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

Yrork,

For the Sale oi

COTTONS

H. II. WALKER.

DEALERS IN

STREET, NEW YORK.

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC USE.

Street, New

MANUFACTURERS

GEO. BURNH.VM.

Miscellaneous.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

87

63

Works, Philadelphia.

anufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded
Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street

SELMA, ALABAMA,

For

Scrap Iron and Metals.

Tasker & Co.,

Pascal Iron

of

JNO.F. TANNER.

CO.,

Railroad Iron,

Southern Cards.

Buyers

MATTHEW BAIRD.

Thomas Street

Who give special attention to orders for

,

All work accurately fitted to
gauges andthoronph
y interchangeable.
Plan, Material, Workmanship
Finish and Efficiency fully guaranteed.
wp’

Supplies.

NAYLOR &

30 Central Street. Boston.

.

Co.,

PHILADELPHIA.

Special attention to negotiating Railway, State and
County securities.

Sugar.

Joseph B. Glover & Co.

&

Railway Iron, Equip¬

ment and

Cast Steel

6c

WORKS,

TANNER, WALKER Sc McANERNEY,

GENERAL RAILWAY AGENTS,

NEW

LOCOMOTIVE

M. Baird

Arthur Parker

Hasell

317 BROADWAY

J. C. Rogers & Co.,
New

STREET,

OPPOSITE PLATT.

Post Oflice Box 3102.

beaver st.

BALDWIN

EQUIPMENTS.

OLD RAILS Sc METALS.

tf

COTTON FACTORS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS

Liberal Cash advances

RAILWAY

ET.

Cammack,

Rails,

.

AND STEEL

K. C. O.lMMAOK.

Nalle &

...

ENGLISH Sc AMERICAN IRON

B. D.
XDWABD NALLE.

Rails,
Old

The Bowling Iron Company, Bradford England.
The West Cumberland Hematite Iron Co., Working
ton England.
V

J. J. McCOMB, Liverpool, respect¬
fully solicit orders for delivery in New Y ork or other
ports in the United States, or at Liverpool.

& Co.

AND

AGENTS FOR

Manufactured by

EAYER STli

Iron

John J. Roberts,

SWENSON. PERKINS Sc CO..

EDWARD FOOT*

Rails,

Bessemer Pig Iron, *crap,
Steel Tyres, boiler pla’es, Ac.

ARROW TIE AND SELF-FASTENING
WROUGHT IKON BCcKLE TIES.

80

3teel

Rails, Steel Rails, Old Rails,

Supply all Railway Equipment and undertake all
Railway business generally.

York, ior the

ALEX. P.
PI8K^

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

IMPORTERS OF
Iron

Iron Cotton Ties.
The undersigned, Sole Agents n New
sale and distribution of the

40

Railways.

give entire satisfaction.
WILLIAMS, BIRNIE & CO.,
63 Beaver street, New York.
Sole Agents ior ihe Atlantic States.

OHAUNCEY VIBBABD,
EMERSON FOOTE,

41 CEDAR ST.. COR. OF WILLIAM ST.,
GENERAL RAILWAY AGENTS AND

OF

TIES,
AND

Materials

J. S. Kennedy & Co., Vibbard, Foote

JOHNSEN,

MANUFACTURERS

AND

Iron and Railroad

JOHN S. KENNEDY. HENRY M. BAKXB. JOHNS. BARNES

VIBBARD, FOOTE Sc CO.,

CHARLES

[July 30,1870.

Materials

Iron and Railroad

Cotton.
4'

CHRONICLE.

Bunting Company,

supply all Widths and Colors always in stock
13 Sc 15 Liepenard Street. "

Affets Golds 17,690,3 90
AJjfetsinthe
U. States 2,000,000
45