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tfHE lattes’ (ternfmat faitwag Pimitot, awl gnsMfatttt fmmtat A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, ' •> * r< REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 10. NEW YORK, JUNE 25, 1870. Bankart and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Foreign Bills. James C. King & Co., Williams&Guion, 63 Wall TRAVELLERS BANKERS, NO. 56 BROADWAY, Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Foreign Exchange. States GOLD P. O. Box No. 32 Broad SECURITIES, For the use ALL UNITED STATES CREDIT, of Travelers abroad and in the United Make collections and of world; also, 4,203. COMMERCIAL CREDITS, JAMES T. BATES. J. MUNBO BROWN. Bates & Capital and Reserved Fund BANKERS & A. D. 11 WALL WM. B. $2,500,000, sors to S. JONES & CO.,) Marcuard, a ndre & C; Fonld & Co, Paris points suiting ouyers of Sterling or France, Dealers in all kinds of Securities. Brown Brothers & NO. 59 WALL Special attention given to collections. Kknyon Cox, ) Horace Manuel, > General Daniel Drew, Wm. H. Hutchinson,) Banners. Special Partner. Co., BROKERS, Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds bought and sold on commission. on Robinson, Chase & Co., NO. and Gold PLACE, the negotiation of Lailway and other Corporate Loans. Union and Central Pacific Bonds and Stocks cialty. a spe¬ - Duff & Tienken, BANKERS AND B;R O K E R S, STREET, NEW YORK, Wm. H. Duff, John H. Tilnkkn, Members of the N. Y. Stock and Gold Exchanges. 15 WALL Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Government Securities bought and sold. Foreign Gold and Silver Coin, and fine Gold and Silver Bars, constantly on hand. Interest allowed on Deposits. Manning &r DeForest, 6 BROAD STREET. Particular attention given to the purchase and sale oi Southern Securities. AND BROKERS* GOVERNMENT SECURITIES on Deposit Accounts Van B. Dyck, 18 BROAD 30 STREET, 7 WALL Southern Securities. N. Bussing, No. 40 Wall on Worthington, MEMBER N. Y. STOCK BANKER 18 NEW AND & CO., Street* New York. DEPOSITS received and Interest allowed at best Current Rates. GOVERNMENT and STATE SECURITIES, GOLD, RAILROAD BONDS, STOCKS, etc., bought and Sold on Commission. ADVANCES made upon approved Securities. COLLECTIONS made, and Loans Negotiated. Soutter & BROKER, STREET, NEW YORK. DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO SIGHT DRAF And Four Per Cent interest allowed on Daily Balances. have especial attention. Collections made on all Southern Points. Co., BANKERS* No. 58 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. apd sale Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Exchange, Securities SMITH EXCHANGE, Particular attention paid to the purchase Southern ALEXANDER BANKERS, commission. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. W. COMMISSION ONLY, Coin.EC L'LONS made on all parts of the UNITED STATES and CANADAS. WILLIAM 27 Wall Street. Stocks, Governments and Gold bought and sold STREET, N. Y.| Special attention given to 2,404. Gelston & Co., BROKERS, STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD bought and sold on The undersigned have this day formed a co-partner¬ ship for tne purpose of transacting a general banking STREET. Vincent & BANKERS Sc New York, May 27th, 1870. P. O. Box BROAD Conover, Brokers, b UGENE N. ROBINSON, GEOh-GE H. CHASE, THOMAS B. A l K NS, WILLIAM T. MORRIS. Government Bonds, Exchange, Gold and Stocks, V. NO. OFFICE OF BROKER, Particular attention given to IN Commission. Interest allowed A- Bankers and Brokers. John Pondir, No. 44 EXCHANGE DEALERS York. Stocks, Bond and Gold bought and Sold exclusively and stock commission business. In Wall Street, New the world Bankers and 81 WALL STREET. YORK STOCK, BOND AND GOLD BROKER, ^ RANKERS & No. 47 Co., Commercial and Travelers Credits Available In all parts of NEW McKim, Brothers & Co., ANKEtlS STREET, BROKERS* STREET, ISSUE PITTSBURGH. PA. Kenyon Cox & WALL promptly and carefully executed. London, (Suice sale Governments. Gold, and all classes of Stocks and Bonds bought and sold on commission. Orders Bank, Baring, Brothers & Co, James T. Brady & Co., 11 NO. London Joint Stock In sums to or Dougherty, BANKERS AND Dbaw on BANKING HOUSE OF terms, GKO. W. DOUGHKRTY. UTLEY, Utley & SeLLECK, 37 Pine St. N.U STREET, NEW YORK/ fkvorable Gold, State, \ Federal, and Railroad AGENCY BROKERS on promptly execute orders for ihe purchase Securities. For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope West Indies South America, and the United State CitizensBankoF Louisiana Brown, SECURITIES, Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and others, and allow interest on daily balance s, sub¬ ject to Sight Dralt. States, available in all the principal cities of the STREET, N. Y. Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Ratss ISSUE OF 14 WALL BANKERS AND BROKERS, & Co., CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS And dealers in GOVERNMENT Taussig, Fisher & Co., CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU 8TS„ BROKERS, 3,328. Coin. Guton Sc Co., Liverpool. BANKERS, BANKERS, AND ■P. O. Box UPON CONSIGNMENTS OF CO i TON, and other Produce to Ourselves or Cor¬ respondents. London. BROKER, Government Securities, Stocks', Bonds, Gold and Silver «:oin bought and Sold. Special attention given to Merchants orders for also Cable transfers. ADVANCES MoDE Alex. S. Petrie & Co.* AND NO. £3 WALL ST BEET, NEW YORK. ana Dodge,Kimball & Moore Duncan, Sherman STOCK R- L. Edwards, RANKER Street, New York. COMMERCIAL CREDITS ISSUED, available In all parts of Europe, &c. BILLS OF EXCHANGE drawn in sums to suit purchasers, Issue Certificates of Deposit. Interest allowed on current daily balances. Collections made on all parts of the United and Europe. NO. 261. Dealers In Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds? Stocks. Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable Securities. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Dralt or Check. Advances made on approved securities. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collect?»nsboth inland and foreign promptlymade. Foreign tnd Domei tic Loans Negotiated. 802 TBE Foreign Bills. CHRONICLE. [June 26, 1870. Boston Bankers. Southern GEO. L. HOLMES. August Belmont 8c Co., Page, Richardson 8c Co., B 4NKERS, 50 Wall Mreet, ISSUE LETTEKS of available in all parts of tbe world, through the lUESSItS. DE ROTHSC tilLD and their correspondents. Also, make telegraphic transfers of money on Cali¬ fornia, Europe and Havana. British America. Bank North of Fills oi Credits issued W. N. HAWKS Morton, Bliss & Co., parts of 66 State 108 commission 110 A West Fourth Street, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Co., Dealers in Street, Roston? GOLD, SILVER and all kind!? GOVERNMENT BONDS. AGENTS FOR AUGUSTINE ALSO, COLLECTIONS HEARD OF CHINA CREDITS, on Gilmore, Dunlap 8c Co., BOSTON, Ruy and sell Western City and Coun¬ ty bonds. paid free of Commission) and letters of Credit foi] description, bought and sold Western Bankers. ' NOTES, TRAVELLERS, Cobb, Everett 8c J8SUE Castleman, Stock Rr okers and Real Estate Agents COLUMBUS, GEO. Government Securities, Gold, Stocks, &c. Bonds Marcusrd, Andre ACo.,) Circular Notes available for Travelers in all C. h. CA8TLEMAN Hawks 8c ) VPAKIS. BANKERS, 36 DEVONSHIRE STREET, Europe, China, Japan, the East and South America. JOHN PATON, ? Agents ARCH’D COMMERCIAL Co. and- 4. of every McKINLAY.J issued and LONDON. €o,,) Europe and the East. AGENCY, 17 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. COMERCIAL CREDITS CIRCULAR Key box 1 Parker 8c CHARLESTON, S. on V Munros A Incorporated by Royal Charter. issued for use in West Indies, and B*nk, and Robert Benson A Macbeth, STOCK AND BOND BROKERS, Exchange, and Commercial and Travelers The City ALEX. MACBETH. Holmes 8c RANKERS, Street, Boston. 70 State CREDIT for TRAVELERS, Bankers. & MADE COM points and remitted lor AND JAPAN. on at all accessible day oi payment. Advances made on consignments oi approved mer chandize. CHECKS Available in all parts of tbe world on 'MORTON, ROSE & CO., Southern jr—- Bankers. ON FOR SALE - P. Hayden.- LONDON. LONDONg.AND PARI* Jos. Hutcheson. W. B. Hayden NATIONAL Blake Brothers 8c Hutcheson 8cCo Co., Freedman’s Savings Bank Hayden,BANKERS, STREET, Wall Street. New York. 52 STATE 28 STREET, EXCHANGE And ON BOSTON, LONDON. Sterling Credits, DEALERS IN COMMERCIAL PAPER. Bey and Sell Massachusetts and New York State Stocks. Government Securities, Stocks Bonds, and Gold bought and sold strictly on Commission. Tapscott, Bros. 8c Co. . 86 SOUTH Issue Sight vances Centra Office W, TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool. Ad made on consignments. Orders for Govern ment Stocks. Bonds and Merchandize executed. Tucker, Andrews 8c Co. 52 Wall Sueet, JAS, Wr. TUCKER A 8 Rue CO«,! Scribe, Paris, Washington, D, C., 73 BROADWAY, NEW The Deposits are now C. NEPHEW. Bankers lurnished with Sterling Bills of Exchange and through passage tickets from Europe to all arts oi the United States Sight Drafts A. S Petrie & Co., London, Iioval Bank Ireland, Dublin ; Bank of Scotland, Edinburgh. Grimshaw A Co., Liverpool. Also on Germany on oi C. France and Sweden. Agency BANK OF of BRITISH A in E R I C A 17 the NASSAU NORTH , STREET. Demand and Time Bills of Exchange, in London and elsewhere bought ana sold payable at curren ratt-s, also cable Transfers. Demand Drai s on Scotland and Ireland, also on Canada, British Columbia and San Francisco. Bill collected, and other Hanking business transacted JOHN PATON. , ARCH. McKJN>LAr,f AZenUs. Theodore BANKER 8 EXCHANGE Sc Berdell, STOCK BROKER, COURT, EXCHANGE PLACE, New York. Stocks, Bonds, Gold, Government Securities &c &e., bought and bold on Commission. Interest allow¬ ed on deposits. Capital paid in $1,250,000. Is S. C. a general banking business. Orders solicited and satislaction guaranteed. Gaylord 8c Co., and Rond SAINT LOUIS Prices W. M. E. STOCK : Henry Clews & Co., STREET, MO. Hewson, BROKER, Office No. 21 West- Third Street, Cincinnati, Ohio Refer to: All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs. LOCK, WOOD & Co., New York. J. M. Weith & Arcnts. Anderson, Jr. BANKER, FACTOR AND Broker*, NO. 323 NORTH THIRD exchanged*regularly with New Yoke Correspondents Second National < Merchant, Navannah, Ga. Special attention given to consignments of Cotton. Gold, Stocks, Bonds and Foreign and Domestic Exchange, bought and sold. Collections promptly remitted for Orders solicited tor the purchase oi bales of Produce and Securities. Prompt attention guaranteed. New York Correspondents: Lawrence Bros. & Co. .^pltal - - - - - C. HYDE, Cashier. w CHAS. HYDE Pres’t.l ’ Charles H. Welling, (Formerly, Welling, Coffin & Co., Philadelphia.) 39 Co., STOCK AND WALL EX¬ BROKERS, new yoke. Governments, Stocks. Bonds, Gold, Sterling, Loans negotiated STRICTLY on Commission. Reference—Menri. Street, Richmond, Va. BROWN, LANCASTER A CO., STREET, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. LANCASTER, BROWN No. 2 A CO., NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. BANKERS, 160 West Main Street, Louisville, Ky., dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Government Bonds to BANKING UOUNE OF “ Excnange Dealer, CA RON DE LET 8TJiEKTy HEW ORLEANS. 3eneral Partner Partner in Commendum Morton, Galt 8c Co., R R O K K it AND 28 and Jay 4 ooke A Co. and all Local Securities. Give prompt attention collections and orders for investment of funds. J. L. Levy, S TO C K Paper, STREET, jaunoeyJooukt. No. 1113 IRaln No. 30 SOUTH $200,06 0 Deposited with U. S. Treasurer o secure Circulation and Deposits 500,000. Broker in Mercantile Lancaster 8c Bank, TITUSVILLE, PENN., Commission BANKERS AND CHANGE on Kdwabd P. Cuktis Cashier Stock Notes, State, City and Railroad Stocks, Coupons bought and sold on commission. Howes & Ma«-y» Luther Kountze prepared to do Sam’l A. current Bank weekly and Banking Houses. now Government Securities, Loin, Gold Dust and Bullion bought and sold at current rates. Special attention «• Southern Securities of every description, viz.; Un- current Issued $3,410,300 ...— BROKER, CHARLESTON, Bonds and STATE This Bank, having reorganized as a National Bank given to collections throughout the West James ii. Bkitton, Pres. Chas. K. Dick Kaufman, BANKER AND THE ESTABLISHED 1837. EATON, Actuary. J. W. ALVORD, Pres t, JAY COOKE & CO., New York Correspondent. A. OF MISSOURI. in St. Louis. D. L. YORK Successors to SAML. THOMPSON’S General Banking, Collection, and Exchanor OF Mardnsburg, New York and Washington. Collections promptly made. These Banks are lor the Colored people. Edward C. Cortis, HIGH NATIONAL BANK (Ga.), Savannah. Macon, Jacksonville, Tallahasse, Mobile, Huntsville, New Orleans, Vicksburg, Mem¬ phis, Nashville, Chattanooga, Louisville, St. Louis Buy and bell Bonds and* Stocks in London, Paris and Frankfort, and negotiate Loans on same. Rider 8c 13. S. COLUMBUS, OHIO, Business. BANKERS. Issue Letters of Credit. Draw Bibs on Paris. Do a,; Baltimore, Norfolk, Richmond, New Berne, Wil mington, Raleigh, Charleston, Beaufort, Augusta, Drafts and Exchange payable in all on at , BRANCHES AT STREET, NEW YORK. parts o 1 Great Britain and Ireland. Credits NO. CHARTERED BY CONGRESS IN 1805, AND j. l. Levy E. J. Hast collections made on all point*. Luther Kountzf, 52 Wall Street. New York. Deposits received from Banks and Individuals, sub ect to check at sight, and interest allowed thereon at FOUR PER CENT per annum. Collections made throughout the United States, the British Provinces and Europe. Governments Securities bought and sold. June 25, 18T0 THE ) Financial. Bowles Brothers & Co., Stoker, Taylor 6c Co., OF THE REPORL’ OF THE CONDITION BANK, CHATHAM NATIONAL New York, In the State of New York, ol business on the 9th day of June, 18<0. Db.-RESONRCES. at the close in PARIS, LONDON, . Credits lor 99 per 30,917 81 379 J3 — (as per 31,781 9! 303,<38 26 schedule) Exchanges for Clearing House Bills of other National l.anks 1.... Fractional Currency (Including Nioke s) . 38,23 > 00 o36 25 $20,193 67 on payable in 40 WALL BANKERS Sl BROKERS, ST., NEW YORK, Specie. Stocks and bought and sold on Commission, Government Coupons bought at Market Rates. Collections made In all parts of the I nited States aud Canadas. Accounts solicited and interest allowed on Deposits. Bonds mott, 25,470 51 144.364 18 1W,451 & 400.000 00 Certificates stamped 99 Capital Stock paid in 325,003 00 •••••••••• $51 313 82 1S,8 17 13 885 52 Circulating Notes received from Comptroller 132.5.0 00 Less amount on hand 4,470 00 Amount outstanding State Bank Circulation outstanding Dividends unpaid lnuividual Deposits 2,.f 85,880 5a Notary Public. 6c Co., AMERICAN NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, NO. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Issue Clicular Letters of Credit for Travellers in all arts of Europe, etc., etc. Exchange on Paris. LEONARD. — 00 00 00 52,624 25 Premiums 67,755 25 Exchanges for Clearing-house 3,559,458 46 Bills of oiher national banks 50.000 00 Fractional currency (Including nickles;.... 3,111 98 [Coin $6,102 07 Checks on other Banks payable 17.859 75 .. -Legal-tender notes Clearing-House Certificates 236,361 82 410,000 00 100,000 00 ." Total ' Capital stock paid In Surplus fund und profits $2,000,000 00 191,623 75 Circulating notes received from the Comptroller $675,300 00 Loss amount on hand 22,221 00 outstanding $2,055,366 29 3,281,878 10 Due to national banka Due to other banks and bankers $9,732,634" ^ director.. Sworn to and subscribed before me this eleventh day of June, 1870. * Dunoan MoGreoob, Notary Public. OFFICE OF THE Flit 1C INSURANCE Offers his services for the purchase and sale of eminent and all other Stocks, Bonds aud Gold Interest allowed on deposits Investments carefully attendee J. 6c W. Seligman 6c Co., BANKERS, NO. 59 EXCHANGE PLACE, COR. BROAD ST., N.Y., Issue Letters of Credit for Street, New Yoke, June 8th, 1870.—The Board of Direotora have this day declared a Regular beml-Aunuai Dividend of (5) five per cent. Also, an extra dividend of (5) five per oeut. free of government tax. payable on and after July 1st. JAMES GILMORE, Travellers, Payable iu any part of Europe, Asia, Africa, Austra¬ lia aud America. Draw Bills of Exchange and make telegraphic transfers of money on Aurope and California. tfewetary. Currency or Gold. depositing with us can sight in the same manner check at as with National Banks. Certificates of Deposit issued, pay¬ able on demand or at fixed date, a bearing interest at current rate, and available in all parts of the United Advances made to at all at times, on Dealers, approved collaterals, market rates of interest. We buy, sell and exchange first-class Securities, We Buy, STREET, NEW commis¬ Gold Banking Accounts may be opened with us upon the same con¬ ditions ' s Currency Accounts. Railroad, State, City and other Corporate Loans negotiated. Collections made everywhere iu the, United States, Canada and C. G. 6c Coupons collected. Woodman, BANKERS, York, Philadelphia aud WALL on sion. Washington. 29 cur¬ prices, also Coin and Coupons, and execute orders for the purchase and sale of Gold and all Dividends and Jay Cooke 6c Co., No. all rent market or New our Europe. BANKING HOUSE 30 FINE STREET, N. Y. YORK Dealers In STOCKS, BONDS, and RANTS. LAND WAR¬ ■ Sell and Exohange at most liberal rates, all ssues of GOVERNMENT BONDS, aud Bonds of LAKE SUPERIOR AND M1SS1S81PP RAILROAD COMPANY, and execute orders lor pur Knauth, N achod 6cKuhne BANKERS, New York, Lelpxi*, Saxony, , ▲ND ohase aud sale of COMPANY, No. 11 Wall Broker, No. 27 Wall St., 4,137 575 34 524,098 16 Total 12 Stale of New York, County of New York.—I C. F. TIMPBON. Cashier of “The Continental National Bank,” do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. C. F. TIaIPSON, Cashier. Correct—Attest. T. J. S. FLINT, ) HAMILTON Meigs, (Formerly cashier of the Metropolitan Bank, aud late of the firm of H. Meigs, Jr., & Smith). 5,286,744 39 , * 553,079 00 a.925 00 6.587 50 outstanding Daily issues of Government Bonds at Member of New York Stock Exchange, $9,732,634 12 Cb.-L LABILITIES. Bauktr and all on States 212,900 00 IvGold Treasury notes „ W. H. FOSTER. Buy aud sell Government, State, Railroad and other desirable securities, making liberal advances ou same, allow interest ou deposits, deal in commercia paper, furnish to travellers and ochers Letters of Cre alt current in the principal cities in Europe. Henry allowed Persons No. 10 Wall Street. 14 $22,880 63 29,143 62 Speoie, viz.: W. C. SHELDON. Leonard, Sheldon6cFoster 70 95 350,000 00 Banking house Interest Balances of John Munroe 6c Co., W. B. 32 WALL STREET. BANKERS, BANKERS, 62 Banking House of ’♦Tnii Munroe CONTINENTAL Dk.-RESOUKCES. Loans and discounts $3,161,767 Overdrafts 3,675 United States bonds to secure circulation. 667,000 U. S. bonds aud securities on hand 275,000 Other Stocks,bonds and mortgages 367,877 Due from other National Banks 121,016 Duo from other banks and bankers 6,985 street, N,Y. Commission. REPORT OK THE CONDITION OF THE NATIONAL BANK, la New York, in the State of New York, at the close of business on the 9th day of June, 1870. No charge for collecting city paper. ;y Refers to Henry Clews & Co 32 Wall ;o., Collections promptly Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold on 301,<50 03 157,185 31 Lewis Hurst day of Juue, 1870. Amount BANKER, Interest allowed on Deposits. „ Dividends unpaid Individual deposits Certified checks WILLIAM S. FANSHAWE BANKERS AND BROKERS, 9? $3,895,228 85 State bank circulation Foreign Exchange LOUNSBERY TH0?K.FERGUSS0N, 5 BROAD 8TBEET, NEW YORK. 99 I, GEORGE M. HARD, Cashier of the Chatham National Bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. GEO. M. HARD, Cashier. Correct—Attest: JOSEPH M. COOPER, ) NATHANIEL HAYDEN, > Director*. H. B. LOOMIS. ) Statk of New Yobx, City and County of New York.—Sworn to aua subscribed before me this 15th gold YORK. Securities, Special. 3,%7 00 Uncolleeted checks Due to National BankB(as per schedule). Due to other Banks and Bankers (as per schedule in P. BROKERS, STREET, NEW Gold and RICHARD Evans, Wharton 6c Co., made. 41 ,UiO 47 ■ I WALL Special attention to Collections. $3,895,228 85 Cb.-LIABILITIES. Taxes paid 8 Government ENOS RUNYON, , w. b. Legal Tender Notes Curren* oxpenses Lounsbery 6c Fanshawe, SELMA, ALABAMA, Gold...... Discount Interest; Profit and Loss COMMISSION68 “nd G°LD B0TOHT AND 80LD No. Daalers in Governments and other Surplus Fund on LONDON. LIVERPOOL, DUBLIN, PA&S, BREMEN, COLLECTIONS made Lq all parts of Europe. Runyon, A. F. B. MARTIN, 98,700 CS Banks 6c STOCK p.j>41 02 Checks YORK. Bllla and 00 W. B. Mott & Co., 3,686 05 Notes NEW Sil^VBli-NN4fceg!LIN’ F^NKF0feT-0N.THE. to suit. Successors to 293,6ol 56 per schedule) Real Estate Current Expenses 3 per cent. Martin 99 3,997 00 v Gold Treasury STREET, <85 98 Circulation Specie, viz.: Coin NASSAU 1. Subscription agents for the Chronicle in Paris. 11,720 23 64,923 54 Cash Items Travelers In Europe, sums schedule).. Checks and otner BANKERS. 21 Exchange on Paris and the Union Bank of London, in Due from other Banks and Bankers (as Suspense Account BOSTON, STREET, N. Y., ISSUE 149,017 94 853 80 Supt. Banks Dept. State oi N. A Due from other National Bankers (as . 19 WILLIAM $2,274,713 73 and Discounts Commercial Paper $1,175,909 22 Time Accommodation 639,163 72 298,043 82 Demand Loans on U.S.Bonds Do on other Stocks and Se¬ Loans Overdrafts U. S. Bonds to secure Bonds and Mortgages 863 Bankers and Brokers. Bank Statements. curities Bad DehtB—See sec. 88 Other Suspended and Over¬ due Paper Indebtedness of Directors.... CHRONICLE. BROAD ST. Stocks, Bonds and Gold. 85 BBUHL. DRAW IN SUMS TO SUIT WE NEGOTIATE RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL LOANS, receive Deposits, subject to Check, allowing erest, and transact a general Banking Business. JAT COOKS * CO. luue Letters of Credit (hr Travelers, available to all par to ef Europe. 804 TAE [CHRONICLE. Financial. 8 Per Cent per IN [June 25,1870, Financial. INDIANAPOLIS, BLOOMINGTON, Annum GOLD, Financial. Rer Cent Gold Interest •7 AND (FREE OF GOVERNMENT TAX) Western Railway FREE FROM U. S. GOVERNMENT TAX, FIRST MORTGAGE 7 Per Cent Gold Loan. The balance ot the Issue of Sinking The bonds are In denominations of $1,000 each, first mortaage on 205 miles ol road, from Indianapolis, the largest city and most Important rail¬ road center in the State of Indiana, to the City oi Pekin, in Illinois. ONE HUNDhED AND SEVENTY MILES of the seeuredby $1,500,000 OF THE ST. 1 JOSEPH AND DENVER ► RAILROAD COMPANY, CITY Z2 NOW FOR SALE BY THE UNDERSIGNED, These 30 Year Sinking Fund Bond, issued only are a completed road, and bear Eight per cent inter¬ est in gold, payable on the 15th August and 15th Feb¬ ruary, in New York, London, or Frankfort, and are lfne These bonds in denominations of are |1,000 and $500, coupons or registered, anc secured by an absolute and only mortgage upon the entire line including all description of Belling Stock and Kqulpments. This road is 111 mile* in length, the largest portion of which is completed and successfully opera¬ ted In the dally running ol regular trains, the earnings of which a*-© now in excess of this issue of bonds. of the iuterest liabilities O ver Has already been expended upon this road from Stock subscriptions and Donations. The Company are enlrely fr .e Ir »m debt. We unhesitatingly recommend them, and will furnish Pamphlets, Maps, and all infor¬ mation. r PRICE 97X AND ACCRUED INTEREST IN CURRLNCY. W. P. CONVERSE & CO., No. ai Piae S reet, New York. &.CO., 7 Street, N«.w York. of IJ. S. Tax) OF '1IIE BURLINGTON. CEDAR RAPIDS MINNESOTA It.R. CO.’S & . FIRST MORTGAGE Fifty Year Convertible Bonds, AT QUANTITY FOR SALE 90, AND ACCRUED INTEREST, ^.The greater part of the Roa i is already completed, and snows large earnings, and the balance of the work is rapidlv progressing. We unhesitatingly recommend these Bonds as the satest and best inv stiuent in the market. U. s. F* ve-iweutlea at current prices only return 5 per cent inter st, w liile these pay 8>4 per cent in gold ; and we regard tue see n it j equally good. Henry Clews 6c Co., BANKERS, 3a Wall-st., New York. Gibson, Beadleston 6c Co, BARKER*-• HO. 50 EXCHANGE PLACE. STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bought and sold the most favorable terms. INTEREST allowed on deposits either in Currency Gold, subject to check at sight, the same as with the City Banks. ADVANCES made on all marketable securities. CERTIFICATES oi Deposit issued bearing interest COLLECTIONS made at all points of the UNION and BRITISH PROVINCES. on or Profitable Safe and Investment. thirty-six depots 011 OVER 1,000,000 GOVERNMENT, the line, LOCATED which, together with the Road and all Its prop erty, these Bonds are a First Mortgage. UDon CONTAIN, IN THE AGGREGATE, A POPULATION OF 190,0C0, averag¬ ing over 920 to each square mile, within a radius of half a mile of the track, and WITHIN TWE TY EXEMPTED FROM TAXES UPON ITS LANDS FO 15 YEARS. MILES OF THE TRACK THE:iE IS A POPULATI >N OF ABOUT 6 0,000. 70 Miles Finished and It passes through the counties of Marion, Hendricks, Montgomery, Fountain, Warren, and Vermillion, in the State of Indiana, and Vermillion, Champaign, De Witt, Piatt, McLean, and Tazewell Counties, in Illinois, on the line of the old emigrant State road, ft om which income is ol moitgage when Road is completed, $4,000j000. The Road is divided into four sections, and $1,000,000 Bonds are issued upon completion of each section thickly settled than o*her sections of the West, as the cltits, large villages, and products of these As these lands are sold, the proceed* a> e held by the Sinking Fund for the liquidation of the bonded debt. These Bonds, we confidently assert, are the saiest and cheapest security offered In this Trustees counties demonstrate. Betides the large agiicultural productions of this section the manufacturing interest is very extensive In the large towns, and is rapidly increasing. on this line are as a market. exten¬ TRICE sively and proiitably worked, and FURNISH BUSI¬ NESS FOR OVER THREE HUNDRED COAL CARS on this Line at present, and MOLE THAN TWICE THAT NUMBER WILL BE REQUIRED TO CARRY COAL ON COMPLETION OF THE REMAINING 90 AND ACCRUED INTEREST. 1 he cupone are payable January and July. PamPamphlet, with full particulars, aud map cau be obtained at the office of earnings 170 miles it is safe to assume that the LOCAL BUSINESS ALONE WILL BE AMPLE NOT ONLY TO PAY THE BONDED on White, Morris 6c Co., DEBT, BUT LARGE DIVIDENDS ON THE STOCK. in addition to the population and wealth of ihe country, and all that is necessary to support a first- Rankers At I Sc Financial 29 WALL STREET. THE ulianapolis it connects by main lines with the MERCHANTS Columbus, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Pennsylvania Central,Baltimore and Oh o Chesapeake ai d Ohio, apd oth r important Railroad lines. At Pekin, the Western terminus, connections are made with Peoria, Quiney, Keokuk, Burlington, and Omaha. At Bloomlngtoo, with the Illinois Central Road, which runs north-west 60U miles to Fort Dodge, very large business will be done with this At Danville it connects by rail with Toledo Iowa, A line. on Lake Erie. A map will show all these to NATIONAL Of Milwaukee, in the State of Wisconsin, is closing its affairs. All note-holders and other creditors of said association therefore, hereby notified to are present the notes and other claims against the asso¬ ciation for payment. E. H. GOODRICH, be very important connections in makiog through lines President. over this route. The Loan is placed beyond any contingency by the present earnings from local traffic on 170 miles, which must necessarily be doubled when the trains run through. THE BONDS ARE CONVERTIBLE at of the holder Into stock at par at the option any time, which adds The CiivrnxM National Bank have this July 1. GEO. M. HARD, Cashier. Timpson 6c Ingersoll, In trnst with the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company .and cancel $2,000,000 bonds issued to the NOTE Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad, now ruerged into this road, making the loan onlv $3,000,000, OVER HALF OF WHICH ^LD IN EUROPE AND THIS M \RKET. ance we ofler at 92 AND ACCRUED INTEREST. At this low price the Bonds, being so amply secured, will be quickly marketed. thoroughly posted in regard to the start, have closely inspected it from time during construction, and being familiar re ources of the G 9 HAS BEEN The bal¬ '* responsibility and integrity of the oflicers and direc¬ Company, and the present earningg of the road, it Is with pleasure that WK RECOMMEND THE B 'NDS AS «>NE OF THE CHEAPEST AND SAFEST 1NVE-TMEN18 IN THE MARKET, sure ol a high standard among the best railroad securities in the WALL BROKERS, STREET, NEW YORK. Special attention given to the buying and selling o Grocery Paper.” Tames Robb, King 6c Co., BANKERS, country, the tors of the £ BANK day declared a Bemi-auuuul l-ivulend of EIGHT (n) PER CENT, free of tax, payable on the 1st of July next. Transfer b^okd to be closed from June 23 to They may be registered Company, if desired. Coupons payable April and October, free of tax. Total loans $5,000,100—$2,000,CO) of which are placed to redeem New York, ) June 22, 1370. of THE DIRECTORS OF THIS greatly to their value, with the wealth and 56 Issue WALL Circular STEEET, Letters of Credit lor Travellers, Available in all parts of Europe and America, &c. Draw BILLS in sums to SUIT on country. Ward, All marketable securities received In exchange at market rates. Bonds delivered to all points free of express charges. AGENTS FOR BARING BROTHERS & COMPANY. I 6$ WALL STREET, NEW YORK, SB STATE STREET, BOSTON. / * . BANK cities of and with the Agents of the Company, class road, and make it a profitable investment through local traflic.it forms a grand central trunk line for through business, N OT SURPASSED BY ANY ROAD OF EQUAL LENGTH IN THE WEST. time to LAWRENCE, S. G. 6c G. C. derived, with rapidly increasing An air-linefrom St.Paul to Milwaukee and Chicago These Lands estimated worth $3,000,000. Total amount numerous The coal-mines at Danville Running, receipts. was laid out in the beet portion ol those States before the time of railroads, was then the main linb of Western travel, and consequently became more road from the BANKERS, NO. 1 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. are LAND GRANT OF ACRES FROM IS CITIES AND T jWNs THAT We have been > SEVBN PER OFNT TOWN BONDS OF UNION AND SOMERSET COUNTIES, NEW JERSEY Interest payable seini-annually in New York, in de¬ nominations of $110, $500 and $l,0t0. For sale at 85 by PARKER A There AT PAR. at the Farmers’ Loan and Trust * A FIFTEEN YEARS TO RUN FROM JANUARY, 1370, AND CONVERTIBLE INTO STOCK WHOLE ISSUE OF BONDS. The balance, thirtyfive miles, is being rapidly constructed, is nearly all graded, and UNDER CONTRACT TO BE FINISHED DURING THE CURRENT MONTH. From Hie present Per Cent Gold Loan, (Free A LIMITED OPEKATION, equipped with first-class rolling stock, and already EARNING MUCH MOKE THAN THE INTEREST ON THE LINE. ho. 49 Wall , IN FULL Bonds WEST WISCONSIN RAILROAD CO. which $1,500,000 TANNER are now Fund OF THE new upon a free from tax. a 0 f TtTD 1MFR A U KIM UK RrHTHFPQ JjRO 1 JtlllRS, RANKERS, No. 14 NASSAU STREET, HOTTINGUER Sc CO., Paris, The City Bank, Robt. Benson & The Bbitish Linen Co. ranches, Scotland. ADVANCES made Bank, Co., London. an I its various consignments, &c. ; STOCKS and BONDS bought aud sold at New York ock Exchange. on ganto’ tedfc, (tatmwdal $iro^, failgfonftw, ami gtmmwtt iaaraal. A WEEKLY REPRESENTING NEWSPAPER, TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OL THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 10. SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1870. CONTENTS. Advice to Speculate People very foundations on which our financial machinery is and those foundations cannot be threatened or disturbed THE CHRONICLE. The Money Market The New tux Rill S05 806 Latest Monetary & Commercial English News About in Wa'I street.. Commercial and Miscellaneous News 807 808 The Isthmian Cans! Scheme U. | Quotations of Stocks and Bonds | Railway News j Kailway, Canal,etc., Stock List. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York Southern Securities...!..'.*‘*.'.*.7 Commercial Epitome | 815 ous Bond List 809 811 817 818 THE COMMERCIAL TIMES. 826 827 831 reasons we have opposed the various funding and currency bills which have been lately agitated in Congress. They inflict mischief in their very discussion and to realize or mischief still. 822 j Groceries 823 Dry Goods 8251 Prices Current 825 j with¬ profound injury being done somewhere, and the injury may be the more profound and vital the less perceptible it is to a superficial observer. For these and other 816 820-1 ■ built, out THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR. ^arlc®t; Railway Stocks, S. NO. 261. relax put them into force Nor could we for as a laws would do more moment withdraw or opposition to these pernicious measures because the Breadstuffs changing seasons bring a temporary alleviation from some of the bad effects of these proposed loans or of their discussion. It is needful to raise th§ae points and to bring them into distinct public view because otherwise the present ease of the Thk Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Salur money market might be regarded as evidence that the un¬ day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine with the latest news up to popular provisional legislation to which we have referred is midnight of Friday. less pernicious than was formerly supposed. If we would TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. investigate why the money market maintains the present For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier to city subscribers, ana mailed to all undisturbed tranquility we should find that it is because there others, (exclusive of postage,) For One Year $10 00 are those conditions For Six Mouths present, all of which are more or less 6 00 7 he Chronicle be Cotton | Tobacco our CfyrotticU. will sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued by letter. cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. WILLIAM b. DANA, f WILLIAM B. DANA & OO., Pnblisners, JOHN o. FLOYD, jr. f 79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK. Post Office Box 4,592. Postage is 20 1®°* Remittances should Office Money Orders. invariably be made by drafts or Post THE MONEY MARKET. Some persons have expressed surprise that the money mar¬ ket receives so much less impulse than a short time ago from the discussions in bill for Congress touching the funding bill and the enlarging the But the curreocy powers of the National banks. seek. For as to the funding to be little prospect of its reasons are bill there seems not far to conducive to financial ease. In the first place there is a large accumulation of floating capital seeking investment. We have in Wall street and in all our great monetary centres so much plethora of unem¬ ployed funds, the reservoir of floating capital available for loans is at so high a level, that the limited demand for legiti¬ mate business and for the ordinary business of the country is not enough to keep it employed, and the rates of interest have fallen accordingly. Nor is the accumulation growing less. On the contrary foreign capital is flowing into Wall street being attracted by the advantageous use which can there be made of it, and by the larger profits which it conse¬ quently commands. Secondly, there is abundant confidence pervading financial circles. There is no fear of any commercial panic such as depressed business last year. The crops promise well. Business generally is in a healthy state, and the anticipation of a good fall trade seems to animate the most sagacious of our financial prophets. Here then we have two of the chief conditions for monetary ease, there is abundant accumulation of floating capital and those who have it have abundant con¬ fidence to lend it. Scarcely any period probably has there been so large an amount of time loans running, and the dis¬ position to make such loans is one of the healthy and promising features of the financial situation. But. we must not omit the third point, namely, the state of the currency. However large the supply of capital, its passing, and the bill contemplates no changes which would project any immediate contracting forces into the monetary machin¬ ery. Its effect would be rather to expand than to contract^ to stimulate rather than to depress the life and animation of the money market. Moreover, there are obvious reasons why at this dead period of the summer the financial mechanism of Wall street is far less impressible and less sensitive to hostile influences that at almost any other part of the year. During tliis inactivity in financial affairs, when the monetary business of the country is small, the pressure upon the machinery i9 also small. Hence a little extra pressure can be applied with¬ out serious trouble. But let the money market be over¬ burdened and its mechanism overstrained, and every new per¬ turbation causes derangement, and does harm. It does not follow, however, because less trouble in the money market ments between the lender and the borrower follows the agitation of the currency and funding bills in Con hampered and deranged if the .currency * gress that no other mischief results. These bills touch the “ate, aud especially if it be likely ' currency ^ - ^ ^ , much . at the 806 THE CHRONICLE. [June 25,1870. ought to expand responsively to the increas¬ general according to the demands of the manufacturers of ing demands of business. Now whatever may be said in these articles for protection. On the other hand the proposed other respects, our currency is not in an unfavorable condition high taxes on nickel and its alloys and ores are omitted : that as regards the money market. There is a superfluous accu¬ on live animals is reduced to twenty per cent, and the un¬ mulation in the great financial centres. No contraction is in¬ fortunate mistake of the House Committee upon the matter tended. There is even a talk of expansion. And as of books is rectified. The free list is nearly unchanged; hut expansion if it come will.be extremely conducive to monetary the Senate Committee strike from it crude sulphur and oxalic ease, so the very distant prospect of expansion tends to and sulphuric acids, and add to it antimony and its ores. increase in a slight degree the ease already existing, since in A measure which deals with such varied interests and con¬ Wall street all such changes are “ discounted ” long before tains such a multitude of details cannot be properly estimated as a whole, without they arrive. subjecting all its parts to a careful scru¬ On the whole then, the monetary ease now prevailing, is tiny. Those who take the pains [to examine it carefully will founded-..on an abundance of capital, a healthy state of find that, like the bill for which it is a substitute, it is not financial confidence, and a favorable condition of the cur¬ the result of any broad principles or scientific views of taxa¬ tion ; but rather a collection of expedients, dictated in part Is the money market, therefore, healthy, and will the rency. existing ease continue ? This is, after all, the great question. by the wish to reduce the popular burdens, in part by the It is with a view to interpret the future that most of our wisli to conciliate certain-, private interests, and again in part readers study the daily changes of the financial thermometer, by the spirit of compromise between these aims. Hence it is and all that we may say of the past is of little avail then, a loose and ill-digested bill, especially in the tariff sections, except to throw some light on that which is to come. With¬ with which the private interests in question are more par¬ out attempting a positive answer then, we may say that as ticularly concerned. They will find also that the host parts for several months capital is likely to accumulate here with of the measure, the Internal Revenue sections, are unfortu¬ increasing rapidity, and as the currency will probably not nately too wide a deviation from the carefully matured plan be seriously tampered with by Congress, the money market of the House of Representatives to justify the expectation would seem to be in little seiious danger of trouble prior to that they can be accepted without modification there at this the opening of the fall trade, except something should arise late period of the session, unless one or the other House shall to disturb the prevailing confidence, and to substitute for it a be of a more yielding temper than is common with either. general and widespread depression. And this contingency Thus, the bill is likely to go to a Conference Committee, does not appear to be very likely. where it may very easily and suddenly be changed into some¬ thing not so good as that which either House has framed THE NEW TAX BILL. separately. The bill reported by Mr. Sherman to the Senate on Mon¬ The Senate bill, however, while it contains some changes day, from the Committee on Finance, under the title “ An Act which are not improvements, is likely to be considered as to Reduce Internal Taxes and for other purposes,” cannot more acceptable to the country than its predecessor, simply easily be recognized as the same bill which was received from because it more nearly meets the demand for a reduction of the House of Representatives, and referred to that Commit¬ taxation. The actual surplus revenues of the treasury for tee, two weeks before. In fact, the House Bill had fifty sec¬ this year are a hundred millions of dollars, and with the de¬ tions, of which the Committee have struck out tlmty sixJ creasing pensions and bounties, the reduced army and the entirely, rewritten most of the others, and added nine new increased economy in the civil service now promised us, to¬ ones of their own. gether with the natural growth of taxable trade, th^re is every Nor are the proposed changes less important in substance reason to suppose that, with existing revenue laws, this sur¬ than in form. The long list of special taxes, so carefully plus for next year would be one hundred and thirty millions* prepared by Mr. Schenck’s Committee, is si ruck out entirely, ^Now let one hundred millions of dollars of taxes be repealed, and every vestige of the old licenses repealed, except those of and the entire nation would feel the relief in all its industries, distillers, brewers, manufacturers of tobacco and cigars, and so that the remaining taxes would he far more productive dealers in spirits or tobacco. The taxes on than before. In fact it is a moderate estimate to legacies and suc¬ put the cessions, on passports and on gross receipts are also aban¬ surplus even then at fifty millions of dollars. The people under¬ doned. The stamp taxes are retained as at present, except stand this now so well that they are unanimous in their that on promissory notes for less than a hundred dollars, all re¬ demand upon Congress to make the reductions liberal; to ceipts, and canned or preserved fish are freed from stamps; carry them as far as is consistent with perfect safetv to the and the transfer of a mortgage, except when made upon a public credit. The House Bill provided for the remission of sale, or as security for a debt, is also exempted. The income duties yielding in all little more than fifty millions of dollars, tax is the only part of the Internal Revenue system which was and the Finance Committee add to this perhaps ten or twelve maintained by Mr. Sherman’s Committee substantially as millions more, besides the abandonment of the Income Tax prepared by the House of Representatives, and this was yes¬ by the Senate; which, if finally carried out, will perhaps terday entirely struck out by the Senate itself, by a decisive make the repealed taxes amount to nearly seventy millions of vote. dollars. If the special taxes are restored, to compensate for In the tariff sections of the bill the changes are less sweep¬ the Income Tax, as some Senators are disposed to urge, the ing, yet by no means insignificant. The schedule of sugars remissions will be less than sixty millions; and there does not is revised in the interest of the refiners. The reductions in seem to be any disposition, in either branch of Congress, to the rates of duty upon wines, spirits and spices are struck relieve the poople to any greater extent: although, if the out, although they certainly promised to diminish smuggling proposition were now to lay new taxes, rather than to repeal and increase the revenues. The impost on hemp is reduced old ones, there would not be a single vote in favor of raising and made uniform. The tax on coal is reduced to fifty cents so large a surplus as this measure will still leave in the per ton. The duties on iron and steel and manufactures of Treasury. them are retained nearly as fixed by the Schenck bill p those This then is not sufficient. That is to say it is not on grindstones and building stones, on marbles, on hair¬ doing for the oppressed industry of the nation all that Con¬ cloth, hair pins, aniline dyes and buttons are revised in gress now has an opportunity to do. Taxation is not a moment when it ' I * ZJune 25,1870.] blessing, and there is THE no CHRONICLE. §87 occasion for extreme hesitation and speculators can never have an even chance in this game. A removing so candid examination of them will convince any one that his delicate reserve, now that the way is open to much of the burden. Off with it boldly, and let the relief neighbor, at least, ought to let it alone. One of these is the substantial, is the cry ot the people; and they are right. fact of occasional panics in prices, which come sometimes This criticism especially applies to the tariff schedules, in from causes which can be traced afterwards, but sometimes some of which duties which are extramely burdensome are remain hidden always. When they do come, they affect the retained without good reason. The secret of financial legisla¬ whole body of speculators. A man can no more retain his tion is to keep a people prosperous and happy as well as to cool head and unbiased judgment at such times than he can tax their prosperity and happiness; and every duty which is keep dry in a heavy shower of rain. Such a panic always levied on the very foundations of their comfort and existence ruins a number of men; and every one of them will show is so much taken from their power to contribute to the you that his fortune was made, if only, at the critical mo¬ government. It was doubtless the foolish conduct of rapa¬ ment, he had acted on his own principles; or perhaps if he cious tyrants in taxing the necessaries of life that first had not acted at all. But men always do act, in such cases, sug¬ gested to old iEsop his fable of killing the goose that laid the and always do make mistakes. golden eggs. Again, the fluctuations in prices are not the results of any one cause, but of many causes acting together. The cheap¬ ADVICE TO PEOPLE ABOUT TO SPECULATE Ii\ WALL STREET. ness or dearness of particular stocks is one of the elements of When Mr. Punch undertook to give “ advice to people the problem, which will doubtless be felt in the end; but for about to marry,” he doubtless the purposes of speculation it is not even the most important thought of several volumes of be wisdom, and them before his pupils, of these elements. It would be*far more valuable to them to when it suddenly occurred to him that all he had to say on know whether “ the managers ” of the road in Wall street, the subject, and, indeed, the whole duty of man respecting its directors, if they are of the common, speculative kind, it, could be summed up in one word ; and accordingly, when and if not, the clique of bankers who have nominated them, his article appeared it was shorter than the famous natural¬ wish to buy the stock or to sell it. If the managers want the ist’s chapter on “ snakes in Ireland.” It was simply, “Don’t.” stock, it is pretty sure to put on its worst appearance before But the consequences were not momentous. The falling the public, and to go down. ' If they want to sell out, its re¬ off in marriages, in consequence of this impressive advice, was ports will be of the most glowing and hopeful character, and inappreciable, and if we should simply reproduce Mr* it will rise. But how is an “ outsider ” to know what “ the Punch’s advice, with the heading of this article, it is not managers” really want to do? He may be sure that if he likely that the whole or even half of the class addressed investigates this question he will be misled ; for the great would heed it. We must therefore be more specific. gamblers who hold the cards against him are both able and It is a common saying among bankers and brokers, when eager to mislead him. a “new man” brings his theories and his monev into the If stock-gambling were in all respects an even game, the stock market, that he is come to be fleeced. Every house in final success in it would belong, on the average, to the longest Wall street that keeps active speculating accounts, knows purse. In every class of business the advantage of large well that nine out of ten of its customers lose more than they capital over small is immense; but where the profits looked win, and that more than half of tlujm in the end lose all they for are those of fluctuating values, all the advantages of large have. Most bankers will candidly tell new customers so ; capital are exaggerated enormously. ■ When a man deals in and we have heard one experienced broker and speculator stocks “ on a margin,” let his general views be as sound as clients strongly if they had money to tlnow away in possible, he is still7 limited in his power to wait by the urge his gambling to take it to a faro bank at once and “ fight the amount of his margin ; and many a speculator has entered on tiger,” as on the whole a pleasanter and less dangerous way a career with sanguine expectations as to prices, only to find than depositing it with him. In a great many other walks that these expectations are far more than realized, indeed, but of life there are Josses, disappointments and wrecks to be that he is ruined, simply because they were not realized quite seen on every hand, but there is no other business so thickly soon enough, and his “ margin” gave out on the way. There strewn as stock-jobbing with impressive illustrations of the are games of cards known as “bluff” or “poker,” played by old Spanish proverb, “ many come f >r wool who go home the most rash and reckless gamblers, in which a player loses shorn.” all his stake unless he can keep on increasing it as fast as his But these gloomy generalities do not affect the hopeful adversaries; and many a luckless wight has been “bluffed” mind of the confident youth, who has carefully studied out out of his savings on the Stock Exchange in the same way, the stock reports in the newspapers, an l has concluded that although his bet was really made on a winning hand. A nothing but a little judgment and self control are necessary very large capital is needed, to enable the speculator to “ take to was about to spread make his future. The whole secret of speculating is to buy cheap and sell dear ; now what has he to do but to wait until stocks are very low, and buy them ? Surely, if he buys only then, he cannot fail to make large profits. In some form or other this notion takes possession of scores of men, and they deposit mono}7 and give orders accordingly. Only when a few bitter experiences have taught them the impossibility of applying any general test of “ cheapness” or “ dearness” to prices, do they begin to understand that the market price at the moment is always the result of the combined judgments of many hundreds of men, applied to the subject with an intensity which only personal interest excites, and with a shrewdness which nothing but long experience can produce. He who would predict the course of prices for a day must needs be wiser than “a multitude of counsellors.” Besides, there are many special reasons why individual the chances,” and await his harvest time. But to the herd of “operators” stock-jobbing never can be an even game. These men do not speculate for themselves, but always pay brokers to do it for them. On the supposition that these brokers are always perfectly wise, able and honest, and in all these respects they will bear comparison with any other profession, the “ operator” has always against him the commissions he pays for brokerage and interest compounded monthly. It is evident that, in the aggregate, all the com¬ missions of all the brokers, and all the interest accruing, must come out of the pockets of their customers, apart from any sums which these customers may lose to one another, and which do not affect the general result. That is to say, if one man owned all the speculative stock account in the street, so that all his operations would check one another, he would lose, besides the interest account, just the commissions paid 808 on all the business. THE CHRONICLE. [June 25, 1870. Each commission alone looks small, and assigned were the facts brought out by the survey now com¬ but pleted. The only practicable pass through the mountains is large that occupied by the Panama Railroad, under a charter from and thriving trade. And it is just because, in the end, every the Columbian Government, which, grants them the light speculator must on the average, lose precisely all he pays for to its exclusive use, except in case the projectors of a canal these purposes, that we find so very few exceptional cases in through this pass shall properly indemnify them for any which long accounts show a profit, and that the books of damage which the railroad might suffer by the rivalry or every “commission house” are chiefly a round of losses to competition of the canal; and as the canal would virtually the customers. destroy the business of the road, the indemnity awarded All these principles have been well illustrated on the Stock would undoubtedly be the present value of the road. But Exchange this week. There has been of late a general dis¬ this consideration need not deter capitalists from undertaking position to expect a large advance in prices. Hundreds of the work. Since tlie opening of trans-continental railroad persons whose business is elsewhere, have been into Wall communication east from San Francisco, the Panama road as street to buy stocks on speculation with immense amounts of a property has suffered materially, and it might nowT be pur" idle capital seeking investment, and with large financial chase for a sum much nearer its actual cost than would have schemes for railroad consolidation and paper dividends de¬ been accepted two years ago. Besides, to a company pro¬ vised in various parts of the country, there was a prospect, it posing the construction of an inter-oceanic canal, it would be was claimed, of such an inflation of stocks as has not been invaluable. Not only would it give the right of way across seen since the famous bubble of April 1SG4. Now all this is the only part of the Isthmus at which a canal could be cut, changed; the sanguine speculators are few; many have sold but its possession would very greatly facilitate the progress out at a loss and disappeared, while others are hesitating and of the work—saving from fifty to one hundred millions, at doubting of the future, and ready to be panic-struck on a least, in the cost of the canal when completed. slight provocation. And what has happened to produce the But even with these advantages, the woik would not be change ? Nothing whatever, except that an unfortunate specu without very great difficulties which would be likely to pre¬ lator, who had gone beyond his depth, has failed in attempt¬ vent private capital from undertaking it until there was at ing to make good his retreat. This man, indeed, has had an least the promise of larger profit than could as yet be ob¬ experience second in extent to none; and all who have known tained from a navigable water-way between these two oceans. him declare that his abilities are extraordinary. His general This difficulty of procuring an adequate supply of efficient views of late have accorded with the general course of the laborers is a serious difficulty, and one for which provision market. Surely this combination of advantages ought to should be made at the outset. The experience of those en¬ insure success, if success could bo insured in such a career, gaged in building the railroad will be found of much assist¬ His utter and deplorable failure, involving friends with him, ance in determining the source from which such a supply ought to be enough to warn many from undertaking, with a could be obtained. A proper consideration of this question small part of his great resources, that which he could not will lead us to the important conclusion that the difficulty of accomplish. procuring and keeping a sufficient force of laborers is, to a But this is not all. The mere fact that this man’s great extent, peculiar to Darien—both Nicaraugua and stocks were sold out on Thursday, on account of his losses in Tehuantepec, which have been surveyed at different times gold, changed the whole tone of the stock market, from firm with a view to the discovery of practicable canal routes , ness to weakness, from buoyancy to despondency. Nothing being more favorably situated in this respect. In Nicaraucould show in a stronger light the unreality of the business gua a much larger number of natives could be employed tban this fact; and every man who embarks his future in the on the work than at Darien, while the salubrious and de¬ treacherous ventures of the stock market ought to know that lightful climate of Tehuantepec would attract largo numbers he is subjecting himself to defeat and loss, as the results of of Americans and Europeans who could not be induced to trifles which no human foresight can avoid, and which, in any venture even a temporary residence in either Darien or other business, would not be regarded as worthy of a Nicaraugua. It must be remembered that the difficulties moments’ attention in the study of its prospects.. experienced by the engineers of a canal with regard to labor would be far greater than those encountered in building the THE ISTHMIAN CANAL SCHEME. railroad, as the work of grading the surface and laying a The latest accounts from the Isthmus of Darien, relative single track of less than fifty miles in length is a mere trifle to the progress of the exploring expedition sent out some as compared with the cutting of a ship canal for that dis¬ months since to discover a practicable route for an inter- tance. According to trustworthy estimates furnished by oceanic ship canal, are discouraging. Practically, the expe those thoroughly acquainted with the topography of the dition is a failure. No depression in the Cordileras had been country and the difficulties of the work, it would require a discovered up to the latest mail dates, and it is probable that, working force of 15,000 men to build the canal in twenty by this time, one or both of the vessel-; engaged in the work years, or 20,000 men to build it in fifteen years. To keep will have left for home. All the information gained by the number up to that point at Darien would require the Commander Selfridge goes to show what might have been constant addition of recruits, making a total of fully 200,000 ascertained from the records of previous surveys, that, owing men, allowing for the probable sickness, mortality and deser¬ to the existence of a the interest account when money is easy is not very large, in the aggregate they are enough to support and enrich a - practically impassible mountain range extending the entire length of the Isthmus south of the line of the Panama Railroad, no canal could be opened between the two As oceans. our readers will tions. - There is another a success difficulty in the which should affect our way of making the selection of a route. canal We refer to the geographical situation of the Isthmus of Darien, being peculiarly unfavorable, owing to the prevailing calms and received the in the Bay of Panama which render that port available only many excellent for steamers, sailing vessels being often several weeks in work¬ remember, when the scheme isthmian canal first assumed a definite form of an it approval of the administration, we gave reasons why such a work could not be undertaken in ar.y ing out to sea and into the region of the North and South part of the Isthmus with the least prospect of being carried East trades. Both Tehuantepec and Nicaraugua are free to a successful completion; and among the reasons we from this objection, as they lie north of the Equatorial Calm June 25,1870.] Bolt, and each THE CHRONICLE. especial advantage over Darien readily accessible from the Atlantic, as well as the Pacific side. In fact, many eminent engineers have urged that Nicaraugua presents numerous advantages for such an undertaking. The San Juan, a navigable river of ample width for sailing vessels, extends from the Carribean Sea, at Grey town, to Lake Nicaraugua, from which to the in being Pacific possesses an is distance of less than fifteen miles. said to be soft and the surface generally Pym, a accomplished naval officer and survey of this route for the British Government a years ago, expressed the belief that communication .few a between Lake Nicaraugua and the Pacific could be opened difficulty, and at an expense not exceeding $20,000,000. A very important advantage claimed for this route is, that there would be a saving in navigation of from six hun¬ dred to a thousand miles for ships on each side of the without Isthmus, which is a matter worthy of consideration. The distance from all the ports on the Gulf of Mexico, from New Orleans and Galveston, to Sisal, would be reduced six hundred miles gua, of by the opening of the canal route in comparison with Darien. by of Nicarau¬ wav rain worih no March, it is one of the mentioning has fallen since the commencement lightest ever known. What sort of a second crop we shall have is at present uncertain. If genial rains before the month closes it would we were to have some probably be above the Hay has, of necessity, considerably improved in value dur¬ ing the last six weeks, the prices of the best meadow descriptions having risen from £1 43 to £5 10s per load of 36 trusses, and clover hay havmg advanced to £7 6s per load, there i3 every probabihty also that a further rise will take place, for the season, so far as a bay crop average. The soil is level, Knd Captain engineer, wrho con¬ an ducted mind that more 809 is concerned, is too far advanced to expect the loss which has already resulted to be made good. Of course the growers will make every effort to secure what litlte grass there is, and hope for a larger second An important effect of this defective yield will be seen upon the price of oats, beans, and peas. Indeed, these articles have already risen about five shillings per quarter, with the prospect of a further crop. rise. With regard to Winter-sown be bad ; but wheat, the prospect does not seem to Spring-sown descriptions evidently promise to be a light crop. Dry weather, as is now so well known, suits the wheat when it has arrived at a certain stage, and as Winter wheat some, if not in a great measure to plant (owing in the severity of the winter, had be¬ very hardy, and must have taken firm hold of the ground to en¬ able it to endure the keenness of the air) was a vigorous plant when the present drought commenced, it is only fair to conclude that at the present time that crop was rather flourishing than otherwise. I find the following in one cf the agricultural journals, aud it may prove of interest to your readers : come For the Tehuantepec route many important advantages are also claimed, among which is the still greater saving of distance than The by way of Nica ing thewheat crop in the north of England has made considerable progress dur¬ month of May, although the weather has not been warm raugua. A canal across the Isthmus, but being has been however, would be not for all thatdry is far fromsuitable for that plant. It has also kept itsthroughout, color; but it far from two hundred miles being thickly set on the ground, and however it may in length, and considerable lock¬ tiller or spread, if the plants are not there it can never be a full crop. A piece of rich-lookin" wheat is scarcely to be seen, while on the poorer ground it is age would be necessary to overcome the elevation of the considerably snort for the time of year. Barley aud oats generally look well. interior stretches of table tine seed the ground land, making the estimated cost of They got asurface hastime,far resisted being well pulverised with the frosts; the flne loose so the drought. The exceptions are where such a work about the ground was not ploughed till seed time, and wrought badly; there the $326,000,000. The great expense thus are poor and thin. A very large breadth of turnips has been sown this crops spring, and in some localities, especially on involved would probably have had prevent the acceptance of this ure to get them away ; but, as a rule, the coasts, theyin want of sufficient moist¬ they are much moisture, and in route, although the Isthmus of many parts, where up, have been eaten oft* by the fly. The turnip crop is con¬ Tehuantepec possesses graphical, geographical and climactic advantages other isthmuses. ot thorough a What have said shows the we survey of all these possible topo¬ over the importance avenues and a sequently at present in a precarious state. The pastures are very short of grass —have not been so much so at this time for The new land hay many years. will not he much more than half a crop. If rain comes soon the old land may make up yet. Cattle are fairly, considering the shortness of the pastures, but it nas the effect of doing keeping the markets well supplied with fat, markets are anything but brisk. Sheep shearing has commenced, aud where well wintered giving a good fleece. Taken altogether, it may be said to be an average clip. and lean comparison of their respective advantages and disadvantages. When the Government shall authorize From the Southern country, however, the accounts are rather more such a survey, its encouraging with regard results, with a fair statement of the traffic likely to pass over week, in which a Surrey to wheat. The Times contaius a letter this the route will furnish the data for farmer argues that, as the weather thi3 year correct judgment, as to the is precisely similar to that in 1863, when one of the most abundant feasibility of the undertaking. Jiatest crops was secured, the quality also being remarkably fine, a result may be attained now, if the present month should only to be unsettled. It is said that a “ dripping ” June Ulonetarp antr (Commercial Cfngtisl) fttATJSS OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON AT LATEST DATES. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— JUNE 10. EXCHANGE ON LONDON LATEST ON— TIME. Amsterdam... Antwerp...... Hamburg Faria Paris Vienna BATE. DATE. TIME. short. 11.18%@11.18% 3months. 25.32 3$@i5.47% 13.10% (til 3.10% 25.35 ©25.42% short. 25.17% ©25.25 June 10. short. 37%©12.42% it 44 3months. 12 Berlin *4 Frankfort 6.26%© 6.27% 1.20%© 1.20% 44 .... Cadiz Lisbon Milan Genoa 44 dU dUU Naples “ 44 New York.... Jamaica Havana ttio de Janeiro Bahia “ © © Calcutta Sydney 44 JuDe 10. short 44 44 May 17. May 21. — days. 4 4 44 44 44 is 5%<J 4s 5%tZ 2 p. c. dis. lslO 13-16-1*10% ti 1*1013-16-1*10% 30 days. % p.c. dis. l*10%d | From — - ' 121.60 3 mos 6.23% short 90 days. 119% 52% 60 days. ‘.K) days. 60 days. 4» 44 Feb. 21. GO — our own u May 17. May 27. it May 18. May 7. 6 mos. 44 44 June 9. 44 May 16. 44 Juue 7. 44 April 26. 80 days. 109% 1 p. c. pm. _ 16% 22% @23 22% 46% 24% ©24% 4*. 6%tf. 4s. 6%d. 1*. 11 1*. 11 6-16tf. Is. 11 d. Is, ItKd. % p. c. pm. Correspondent.! London, Saturday, June 11,1870. Another week of fine dry weather has been of great benefit to the holiday seekers, of whom there have, as usual, been many during Whit, week ; but the farmers and others interested iD agricultural pro¬ duce have evinced anxiety at the continued absence of rain# Hay making has been commenced in the southern counties of England this week, aud should the weather remain dry, the crop will be cut and carted in a few days, for, as might be imagined, when it is borne in some " happeu gladdens the farmer’s heart; but, unfortunately, up to the present time the clouds have' Ailed to drop their fatness upon the earth. The writer of this letter arrives at the following conclusions : 1. That we shall have a good crop of wheat, notwithstanding the severe ravages of the wire-worm and slug, because the seed was got in on a fine tilth, and the plant has since been kept in check and pre vented becoming “ winter proud ” by a severe winter aud an ungenial spring, and this slow growth ha9 had the effect of stiffening the straw, which guarantees the crop against “ lodging ” at a future stage, and the rainless summer we have had up to the present time has been equally favorable, as such weather almost invariably results in a good wheat crop. 2. June 10. Feb. 24. June 9. — 25.20%© — “ — ..... Madras 44 © 25.22%© 13. 8%@ “ Valparaiso.... Bombay 44 May 20. Pernambuco.. Singapore Hong Kong... Ceylon.. 44 44 May 23. 90 days. 52% © 52% 3 months. 26.10 ©26.15 44 44 BATE. 11 90 similar We shall have light crop of barley, because it has been parch¬ by the sun and scourged by the wire-worm, and no amount of rain can now remedy its stunted growth and deficiency of plants. 3. From the same causes oats will be a light crop, but not to the a ed same extent as barley. 4. Winter beans have * a miserable appearance, arising from the long Winter, which they can sel¬ dom stand on the heavy soils on which they are usually planted, and in many districts they are preraatut ely in bloom, although not a foot long ; spring beans look a shade better, and peas also, although the latter were early much injured in the leaf by a light fawn-colored beetle¬ looking insect, which no one seems to know much about. All these cereal and pulse crops will come much sooner to the sickle than was anticipated six weeks ago, on account of premature ripening. 6. Hay will be the 1 ghtest crop within memory, because there is no bottom grass anywhere. 6. Mangelwurzel will be a fair, if not a heavy crop, as it was got in *n Buperb order, has come up very well, notwithstanding the drought, and luxuriates in a dry summer and sunshine. 7. Potatoes, although several times touched by late spring frosts, do continuance of bleak and wet weather iu 610 [June',2 5, 1870.' THE CHRONICLE. permanently iijured, and look well generally; and if the be anxious to ascertain what will remain for themselves out of the drought should continue, and cause a light crop, it will likely he of wreck. superior quality. Money has been in good demand, and the rates of discount are firm'. 8. Lean cattle and sheep will be cheap for a time, because,there is The supply in the open market is rather limited, and very little ac¬ no feed for them, and the breeders are forced to sell ; but beef and commodation is obtainable under the Bank rate. A large amount of mutton will be dear, because all Winter-fed stock is now disposed of, and silver has been shipped this week to Japan, owing to the intention of grazing stock will have to be fattened with excessive quantities of oil¬ the Jupauese Government to replace the old coinage by the issue of cake anu other expensive artificial food, to make np for the deficiency new dollars, about equal to Mexican dollars in shape, weight and fine¬ not appear of grass. The the ness. trade throughout the country has of course been firm. At commencement of the week prices n>.e 2s. per quarter, and since corn then business has been transacted on French account at a further ad¬ of Is per vance quarter. Spriug corn shows an average improvement quarter. Our imports continue on a large scale, and for of Is. per lust week were considerably in excess of the corresponding week in The quotations are as under: 1869. 1870. Percent. Percent. Bank minimum.... 4 © .. 3 ©,.. Open-market rates: 30 and 60 days’ bills 9%®*% 3 months, bills 3%©3% 1869. 1870. Per cent. Per cent. 4 months, ba’k bills 4 ©4% 6 months’ ba’k bills 4 @4% 4 and 6 trade bills.. 4%©4% 2%©3 2%©8. The rates of iuterest allowed by houses are: 3 @3% 3 ©3% 3%©3% the joint stock banks and discount 1869. The following statement shows the imports and exports of cereal produce into and from the United Kingdom lor last week and since September 1, compared with the corresponding period last season: 4. FOE THE WEEK ENDING .TUNE 1863-70 Wheat cwt. , 3,018 15,213 495 35,751 365,462 232,572 33,253 27,263 6,892 2,457 159,427 .... 751 155,019 6,567 Wheat. cwt. Barley Oats Peas beans Indian Flour 31,181,446 6,258,625 7,397,243 1,182,766 1,415,009 14,097,991 4,913,311 corn 276,254 24,625 101,517 12,408 2,203 14,794 24,376 16,079 „ SINCE THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SEASON , Imports, Exports 14,230 74,338 O.ts Peas.... Beans Indian corn Flour 695.571 37,860 300,244 Barley..., 1863-69 , Imports. Exports. 1 4 20,909,478 8,183,579 4,528,665 897,830 2,050,100 10,267,042 2,943,535 151,222 99,800 99,968 23,397 4,453 944 29,264 f^On the continent, and especially in France, there has also been a drought, and in all the Fiecch corn markets an important rise in prices has taken place during the present week. In the manufacturing districts nothing of importance has transpired. The usual holidays have been observed, and have tended to restrict business considerably. The following report is from Manchester : Considering that this is the great annual holiday week in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire, as much business has been going on so far as might reasonably have been expected. It, does no1 amount to much, but it is about enough enough to keep prices steady. Some business was done for Calcutta at the end of last week, ami to-/1 ay prices remain the same as they were on Friday last. Owing to the Liverpool cotton market having been closed yester¬ day and to-day, spinners have not been prepared to accept lower prices than they took lust week, which has curtailed business, as buyers have made a fair number of oilers for both export and home-trade yarns at slightly lower rates. On the whole there seems to be a pretty general confidence in prices, and, judging by the firmness of producers, it. seems probable that more business may have been done of late than there has generally been given credit for. The state of the cotton market and future prospects of supply have ceased to have much influence in this market for the present. Very little attention is paid to anticipations of next year’s American crop, about which it is of course much too early to speak. In fact, last year's experience proves that curly prognos¬ tications arc of very little use at any time. ... 1 1866. £ Circulation 1867. £ 26,678,446 * Public deposits 7,126,969 Other deposits .... 20,127,347 Government securities 11,098,454 Other securities 31,270,277 Reserve 3,515,550 14,481,895 Coin and bullion Bank rate 10 p. c. Consols " 86% Price of wheat Mid. Upland cotton... 40 mule yarn, fair 2d following statement shows the imports and exports of cotton into and from the United Kingdom, from September 1 to June 9, compared with the corresponding period last season : Imports. 1869-70. bales American Brazilian East Indian Exports. 1869-70. 1,168,285 360,895 87,425 44,814 404,725 3,785 11,676 1,018,723 Egyptian Miscellaneous Total 159,122 93,644 2,805,584 552,425 Imports. Exports 1868-69. 1868-69 S45,7U4 427,173 1,195,841 152,603 114,907 2,736,236 112,806 65,855 490,231 6,321 15,453 690,169 The next series of public sales of colonial wool will be commenced Thursday, June 16. The ariivals since last sales have been 239.762 bales, comprising 44,841 bales from New South Wales and Queens¬ land ; 73,523 bales Victoria ; 25,335 bales South Australia; 13,125 on Tasmauia ; 55,947 New Zealand ; 3,747 Western Australia, and 23,244 bales from the Cape of Good Hope. The iron market continues very firm, aud a large business is doing Tin continues to rise in price. It is satisfactory to notice that telegraphic communication with India is now complete, and that in the course of a few hours messages are received from all the principal ports in the Indian empire. One firm sent this week instructions to its agents at Calcutta, prior to leaving business in the evening, and received a telegram shortly after ten the next morning, with the information that the orders had been executed Iu this caee the message was sent via the Persian Gulf, but the Fal. mouth, Gibraltar and Malta line has been successfully submerged this week, and consequently two means of telegraphic communication are now open. A .3%@2% 3%©2% * 1869. £ 1870. £ 23,219,902 24,0u3,665 23,306,718 6,949,901 9,804,049 7,415,041 17,172,723 20,302,549 17,169,319 12,836,314 13,294,557 14,148,276 18,650,101 18,850,214 17,331,344 13,562,670 13,668,975 10,788,398 21,330,400 21,214,815 18,630,883 4 p. C. 2>6 p.C. 2 p. C. 94%d 92% 94% 47s. Id. 65s. 14d. duality 1868. £ 4d. 70s. 8d. ll%d. Is. Is. 7d. 5%d. Is. Is. 3d. 16,067,318 13.018,579 19,014,016 12,789,889 20,643,314 3 p. C. 92% d 5d. *45s. 3d. ll%d. *10 lM6d. lid. - 23,245,021 10,716.594 45s. Is. 3%d, 3%d. Price June 2. Money on the Continent shows scarcely the quotations : any alteration. Annexed are B’krate— 1869. 1870. At Paris Vienna 2% 4 Berlin 4 Frankfort. 2% Arast’rd’m 3% ... The exchanges gold for expoit. Op. m’kt—. 1869. 1870. 2% 2 5 4 4 4 3% 3% 4 2% 3% Turin Brussels Madrid l%-2% 3* 3% are 5 r—B’k rate—, 1869. 187C. 5 5 ... ... Hamburg . /—Op. m’kt— 1870. 1869. 6 — 2% 2% 5 5 — — 4% 2% 6% 7 6 — Petb?g. 7 mostly firm, and there is scarcely St. 2% any 2% 6 demand for GOLD e. Bar Gold do fine do Kefinable . .peroz. standard. 77 77 77 do do Spanish Doubloons South American Doubloons., United States gold coin ..peroz. do do None here. . — — — s. The stock markets 5 last price do.... 5 grs. gold Quicksilver, £7 © 9 11 © © — — — — © © SILVER. per oz. standard. Spanish Dollars (Carolus) Five franc pieces d s. 9 .. - Bar Silver Fine.; do do containing Fine Cake Silver Mexican Dollars d. .. r The @2 @2 following statement shows the present position of the Bank of England, the Bank rate of discount, the price of Consols, the average quotation for English Wheat, the price of Middling Upland Cotton, and of No. 40 Mule Yarn, compared with tbe four previous years: — 222 3,107 3 3 The 307 (SEPT. 1). ' Joint stock banks Discount bouses at call Discount houses with 7 days’ notice.... Discount houses with 14 days’ notice 5 d. d. s. o% © — 0% © — 5% © — 11% @— peroz. 5 last price per oz. 4 1 peroz. — — peroz. — — 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent. none none — — — — here. here. dull iu the early part of the week ; but during the last two days they have been firm, more especially as re¬ gards British railway shares. American government securities are firm ; but American railway shares, with the exception of Illinois Central are dull. The following are the highest and lowest prices of consols and the principal American securities on each day of the week : were Monday. Tuesday. j Wed’ay. Thu’ay Friday. Sat’day ! Oonsols U. S. 5-26’s, 1882.... U. S. 5-20S, 1884. U. S. 5-20s, 1885 U. S. 5-208, 1887.. .. »J. S. 10-408, 1904.... Atlantic & G’t West. consol’d mort.h’ds Erie Shares($100).. Illinois shares ($100) 92%-92% 92%-94% 92%-92% 92%-92% 92%-92% 89%-89% 89%-89% 89%-89% 89%-89% 89%-89% 8S Holiday. -89 88 -89 S8 -89 88 88%-S8% 88%-88% 88 -88% 88 91 91 -91% 91 90%-91 36%-S6% «6%-86% 86%-86% 86 -.... -89 88 -89 -88% 88%-88% -91% 91 -91% -86% S6%-86% 29 -29% 28%-29% 27%-28 27%-28% 27%-28% 18%-18% 18 -18% 18 -18% 17%-18%I 17%-17% 1101-11H 111 -111? 112 -H2i llli-112 i 111 -111J Messrs Speyer Brothers have announced that they are prepared to eubsciiptions to an issue of $4,000,000 seven per cent part mortgage bonds ol the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad Company. The bonds are of $1,000 each, and are issued at the price of £196 17s 6d per boud of $1,000; and they bear interest at the rate of 7 per receive cent per annum. English market Report*—Per Cable, telegram from Madras, dated yesterday morning, states that the The daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬ dry leaf indigo crop is suffering from the want of rain. pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as The liquidators of Overend, Gurney <fe Co., limited, have announced shown in the following summary that they are now prepared to pay the final London Money and Stock Market.—The market for Consols has promissory note, thus satsfying the whole of the creditors* claims. The shareholders will now been steady, quotations showing a very little change. United States . June 25, 1870.] THE CHRONICLE. securities have been showing an steady throughout the week, 67’s and 10-40s, advance, while the others remain about the same. Bat,. Mori. Tues. 92% 92% 90% 89# 92% 92% 90% 89# U. S. 10-40s 87 Illinois Central shares. 113# 88% 88# 87# 113# 87% 19% 23# 19% Consols for money “ 92% lor account... 92% U. S.6s (5 20’s) 1862.. 90% “ “ “ old 1865 89% 14 “ ‘l 1807.. 88% . Erie Railway shares .. Atl. & G. W. (consols). The 96# 88# 20 28# for U. S. 6’s 96# For the week...... Sat. d. Mon. s. Flour, (Western) p. bbl 24 3 Wheat (No.2 Mil. Red) p. ctl 9 3 “ “ Red Winter 10 1 5‘ “(California white) “ 10 2 Corn(W.mx d)p.4801bsn’w 31 6 Barley (Canadian), per bush 5 0 Oats (Am. & Can.)per451bs 2 6 Peas..(Canadian) pr5041bs 37 0 of Tues. s. d. 24 0 9 1 9 10 10 9 31 6 5 0 2 5 38 0 d. 24 3 9 3 10 1 10 2 81 6 5 0 s. 2 37 5 0 a were- 96% decline. Wed. s. d. Thu. Fri. d. 24 3 9 1 9 10 10 9 31 6 5 0 2 5 38 C s. 21 3 9 1 9 10 10 9 31 6 5 0 2 5 38 0 s. d. 24 9 9 10 81 5 8 1 8 8 6 0 2 5 38 same as at the close of last week. Sat. s. Ill 102 Lard (American) Cheese (fine) 56 70 66 “ “ Mon. 8. d. d. 0 6 0 0 0 Ill 102 56 70 66 Tues. 8. 0 6 0 0 0 Ill 102 55 70 66 Wed. d. 0 6 6 0 0 s. Ill 102 55 68 66 Thu. d. 0 6 6 6 Fri. d. Ill 0 M2 6 55 6 69 0 65 0 s. 0 8. Ill 102 55 69 66 d. 0 6 6 6 0 Liverpool Produce Market.—Nothing of interest has transpired during the week, spirits of petroleum showing a decline, and fine rosin showing an advance. Sat. 8. d. do 5 12 29 1 1 44 Fine Pale... 8p turpentine Mon. s. d. 0 0 3 5 12 29 1 1 6# 1 3 0 0 8 Tues. 6# 1 44 1 3 5 6# 1 44 1 3 Thu. 6* 0 3 8 London Produce and Oil Markets.—These markets remain the prices of linseed cake showing advance. ing 0 quiet, decline and Calcutta linseed show¬ a an Sat. 5 0 0 03 (i Lius’dc’ke(obl)p.tn£ll Linseel (Calcutta)... 8ugar(No.l2 Dch std) per 112 lb Mon. Tues. £11 0 0 £11 0 0 . 0 63 6 0 31 9 0 : 31 9 90 0 0 38 0 0 31 5 0 0 63 6 0 31 9 90 0 0 38 0 0 31 10 0 80,404,521 Wed. Thu. Fri. £11 0 0 £11 0 0 £11 0 0 79,535 422 .. 90,000 Total for the week Previously reported ...’**.* 14,296^93 Total since Jan. 1,1870. Same time in 1869 1868 1867 1866 1865 Sametime $14,046,620 43,702.627 22,873,174 43,534,278 17,521,047 27,411,833 19,031,040 21,749,863 3,024.822 I8b4 1863 1862 1861.... The Jgg 1859 $18,429,776 31,431,107 1858 1857 1856 1855 1854 1853 1852 11,870,151 20,056.996 12,230,980 15,696,472 14,364,938 7,919,886 imports of specie at this port for the last June 13—St. $15,182,941 in follows: as $886~448 . City of Mexico, 10,518,262 week reported were vana— Vera CruzSilver $4,813 20,000 Gold June 18—St. Fah Kee, HamilGold Previously reported.. 0 31 9 so 0 0 38 0 0 31 10 0 0 63 9 0 31 9 90 0 0 3b 0 0 31 5 0 ; .*.*.* ***** 1 .*,.*!.*..*!.*.*.**.!.*. .*. ” Same time 1868 Same time 1867 2,500 $7,016 220 8 934 140 3,754 048 1,554*989 N ational Treasur v.—The following forms present a summary of cer¬ tain weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom House. 1.—Securities held by the U.S. Treasurer in trust for National bank ; and balance in the Treasury : For 0 63 9 0 31 9 90 0 0 38 0 0 31 5 0 $400 V.i!!."!!.**!!.’.*!!’.*.*!.*.* 6,988,’507 . 0 63 6 $3,370,111 80,115,569 . Total tince Jan. 1, 1870 Same ime I860 1 1870 $4,427,531 .... June 16—St. Moro Castle, HaTotal for the week.. d. 5 0 13 0 29 3 1 61 1 1 44 3 B. 0 0 3 13 29 1 1 41 - 1869. $2,670,477 following will show Gold Wed. s. d. d. 5 0 12 0 29 3 s. $3,928,664 90,307,132 Coin For U. S. -Eal. in Treas.- Circulation. Deposits. Total. April 2..342,294,650 16,989,500 359.254.150 April 9.-842,274,650 16,955,500 359.230.150 April 16.-342,246,350 16,959,500 359,196,850 April 23.. 342,542,350 16,673,000 359,215,350 Coin. cer¬ tificates. Currency, outst’d’g. f * 113,514,000 19,250,000 35,620,000 16,663,009 May 7.. 34 >,273 550 16.510,000 358.783.550 May 14.. 342,269,650 16,410,000 358.679.550 110,724,000 10,000,0(0 34 019,000 105,783,000 11,555,000 85,436,500 May 21..342,362,550 16,310,0"0 358.702.550 9,357,000 36,755,600 May 28.-342,299,750 16,284,00) 358.583.750 107,285,000 107,549,360 13,271,704 36,208.000 June 4..342,227,750 16,281,000 358.511.750 108,126.523 20,471,337 35,451,300 June 11.. 342,224,550 16,334,000 358.558.550 108,284,421 20,713,994 34,671,(00 June 16.. 342,273,050 16,434,000 358,707,050 2.—National bauk currency issued (weekly and aggregate), in return for bills destroyed and mutilated bills returned (weekly and aggregate) with the amount in circulation at date: April 30..842,251,350 COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEYV&. Imports a and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week show decrease in The total and dry goods, and a large iucrease in general merchandise. imports amount to $6,438,661 against $4,785,471 last week, $7,022,961 the previous week. The exports are $3,370,111 this $4,818,752 the previous week. week against $8,827,468 last week, and The exports of cotton the past week 6,551 Dales, against 5,122 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) June 17, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) June 18: were FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW TORE FOR THE WEES. 1867. 1868. 1869. General merchandise.. $1,034,9S9 4,331,123 $960,023 3,535.865 $86!,495 5,494,236 $1,165,846 5,272,815 Total for the week..~ $5,366,112 $4,465,888 111,016,220 $6,355,731 145,963,854 $6,438,661 135,188,014 $115,482,108 $152,319,555 $141,626,675 Dry goods Previously reported... 118,827,396 Since Jan. 1 $124,193,508 1870. Week <—Notes issued for ret’d.—* ^—Mutilated notes burned.—, Current week. Aggregate. Current week. ending. Apr. 2 Apr. 9 Apr,16 Apr.23 Apr.80 May 7 212,320 21,561,820 21,774,160 212,860 257,450 Since Jan. 1, To Great Britain France Holland and Belgium.. 1870. . Germany Other Northern Europe. Spam Other Southern Europe.. East Indies China and Japan Australia BritisnN A Colonies Cuba .. . Hayti Other Wert Indies Mexico New Granada Venezuela British Guiana Brazil Others. American ports. All other ports . - In . $43,231,598 3,503,151 2,231,604 8,740,591 1,310,984 1,553,297 2,695,325 70,367 953,954 1,047,083 In 219,850 21,786 644 21,999,811 22,238,981 22.511.846 22,825,346 23,027,446 23.316.846 213,167 239,170 272,863 299,575,894 299,526,608 299,567,788 299,546,SOS ' Same time 1869. 1,561,760 4.401,328 1,299,691 3,033 068 800,468 1,731,316 341,642 488,483 1,531,797 2,074,868 505,269 report of the dry goods trade will be found the importsof dry goods (or one week later* our Notes Aggregate. Circulation 22,031,630 245,770 22,277,400 230,655 22,508,055 313,500 299,467,363 291,170 22,799,225 202,000 299,543,632 May 14 251,520 23,050,745 289,400 299,512,553 May 21 255,500 23,306,245 305,341 23.622,187 299,447,712 May 28 ,/ 318,610 23.619.855 286,480 23,908,667 299,474,842 June 4 279,910 23,585.255 225,930 24,134,597 299,505,045 Junell 281,770 34.150.855 24 224.137 292,750 299,504,062 June 18 244,158 84,395,013 302,900 24,729,247 299,302,982 8.—Fractional currency received from the Currency Bureau by U.S. Treasurer and distributed ; also the amount weekly exports from this port to different countries (exclusive legal tenders distributed: of specie) since January 1, compared with the corresponding time of Weekending. April 2 last year, is shown in the following table : April 9 The value of : June 14—Schr. Impulse, Mara¬ Mexican silver.... caibo— 18,453 For London— American gold.. . $10,000 Mexican silver.... 108,233 American silver... 2,000 Silver bars l 268 June 14—St. Westphalia, ParisJune 16—St. Missouri, Nassau— Gold bars.,*. 102.973 American silver... 20,842 Mexican dollars... 3,000 For Havana— For London— Spanish doubloons Mexican dollars 35,130 36,013 June 18—St.City of Washing¬ Gold bars 259,000 i ton, Liverpool— Silver bars 13,900 | British gold. June 15—St. Java, Liverpool— j June 18—St. Deutschland, Bre- 5,930 Gold bars 159,000 | men— June 15—Schr. Eveline, MayaGold bars | 31575 guez I Ju'..e 18-St. England, LiverAmenean silver... 10,000 I pool— June 16—St. America, Paris— | Gold bars 0 Liverpool Provisions Mark< —The market closed quiet, the prices bacon and lard showing a decline, while the other prices re¬ main about the 21 $94,235,796 $83,074,998 $83,962,953 $83,485,680 the exports of specie from the port of New York for the week ending June 18, 1870 : The 87% Liverpool Cotton Market.—See special report of cotton, Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—The market has been quiet during th3 past week, California wheat and peas showing an advance, while No. 2 Red Western, and Rad Winter wheat show 1868. Since Jan. 1 19% 96% , Previously reported 28% (1862) at Frankfort 96# „ 113 18% 28# 1867. _ 8!)# 89# . ofspecie)from ending June EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 92% 92# 90% 112# 19% 28# The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week Fri. 92# 92# 90# 89# 88#ox.c, 87% 87% 113% 96% Thu. . 113 28# daily closing quotation s Franktoit W 92# 92#-% 90% 89# ' 811 ^Fractional Currency. Received. Distributed. Des 196,50 i 560,800 , April April April May 16 23 30 752,000 7, May May May 14 21. 28 39,000 June June June 485,500 352,863 1,903,382 606.588 504,000 156,745 762,500 745,500 11 18 492,325 1,810,059 706,539 861,803 604,000 4 Oliio and year destroyed, and 657,760 378,755 952,891 Leg. Ten Disribt’d i... 576,800 437,100 624,000 785,175 621,100 5,439,290 894,468 531,200 1,814,047 329,631 812,700 7-76,763 620 959 448,8(0 585,900 605,200 Mississippi Railroad. -The annual report 1869 shows the following: Earnings 1869. 186S. Passengers Freight Express and Mail $1,192,030 03 1,567,497 67 150,019 77 $2,915,547 47 $2,964,040 67 Decrease. 1,586,818 96 146,239 79 Total 1,513,636 265,000 1,334,072 for the $1,230,981 92 $48,493 20 Showing a decrease of only $48,493 20 in the earnings, while the operating expenses were reduced foi the same period the sum of $318,462 86. The following statement, in detail, shows the expenses incurred, and pAid, (both ordinary and extraordinary,) charged under the following heads; * THE CHRONICLE 812 Maintenance of Motive Power $558,778 91 Way and Structures.... 301,727 18 and Care 888,284 118,’508 74,191 45,610 Tranepo'tation Expenses... General Expenses Taxes, Municipal and Government Overcharges, etc Ballasting Road bed, etc Bridges Depot Buildings and Engine Houses.... Fencing 64 65 60 06 64,105 01 43,386 02 3,600 77 13,167 42 51 6% 56 Materials for Shops Real Estate purchase Interest on Loans, Legal 15,394 00 21,643 20 97,177 89 867,405 00 Expenses, etc Rebuilding Passenger*and Freight Cars Coupons of Interest on Bonds 153,278 08 Interest on Prefe:red Stoca Dr. noad property, road bed, superstructure and bridges from Cincinnati to East St. Louis.. Charged this account in 1869.. Real Estate, depot line.... Amount charged grounds and buildings on the account in 1869 Storrs township improvement, transfer station und cars Amount $24,068,830 89 6,350 64 1,440,673 12 1&494 00 1,459,167 12 valued charged to account in 1869 28,265 44 1,707,000 CO 347,988 43 2,0o4,S8S 43 25,042 59 279,819 17 Telegraph line Cincinnati to St. Louis. I'linois Southern Railro d purchase.. Shop tools and machinery — Ordinary operating expenses acc unt Amount charged 10 account in 18C9... 141,740 93 2,801,283 84 1,987,150 94 4,788,439 78 Extraordinary expenses account Amount charged to account in 1869 844,941 96 807,393 2) Mortgage bonds, coupons and interest on the same paid Amount paid in 1869 Amount paid Sterling coupons 360,081 92 864,!'50 CO 1,152,235 16 8,C55 50 727,487 42 461,70L C5 paid on preferred stock Amount paid in 1869 Interest 253,278 08 714,979 13 154,964 03 Inventory of material on hand Additional to shops in 1869 206,660 59 LOUISVILLE DIVISION. 1,047,419 51 472,381 84 65,281 35 1,585,582 70 Running accounts to be settled ... Account due lroni agents and others for uncol¬ lected revenue. 11,730 01 109,624 30 120,754 31 Cash balance on 87,360,444 20 265,994 39 hand January 1, 1870 Total Decrease Milwaukee and St. Paul R. R. and $19,813,313 07 as Amount 226,604 44 converted in 1SG9 “Trus.ees” cettiiicatee, unconverted “ *• 4,754 23 “ Income “ Funded debt Consolidated Issued and sold in 2,030,000 00 “ “ “ 18G9 “ “ “ Exchanged for second mortgage bonds in 1879.. and Cohasset Railroad, and then dissolved. Scliuylkill Navigation Co.—A meeting of the stock and bond¬ holders of the Schuylkill Navigation Company, held" recently, rat;fied the lease of the canal and its franchises to the Reading Railroad Company on the terms formerly published. There is to be a vole taken within the next three days, but the vote at the meeting was so nearly unanimous that there can be no doubt of the result. Boston Hartford & Erie 1,270.000 00 1,OS7,000 00 10,010 CO 2,367,000 00 101,860 00 3,572,159 32 2,915,547 47 lor I860. 6,487,706 79 Arrearage account, pay rolls unpaid “ bills of supplies, etc Open accounts to be sett ed with contractors and others Floating debt, mataring in 1870, 1S71, 1872 and 1873 112.024 56 89,592 86 78,399 63 212,304 30 Temporary loan*, principa'ly fjr aid of construc¬ theLouisville division, anticipating sale of securities, $500,000 of which has been paid since the close of the year tion ot as was its eIRct on the bonds and stock. The Governor, in his veto, says: “ It does not comport with the dignity or the interests of the Commonwealth to maintain the relations involved in this bill with a corporation which has shown itself so incompetent and unfaithful to its trusts.” The bill is dead for this season. Louisiana Loan.—It has been announced that the new lo State of Louisiana, in amount $3,000,000, has been taken by Stern Brothers, the London bankers, the price was 72^. City, Colorado, June 20.-The Denver Pacific Railroad on the 24 th of June. Tne track laid to the suburbs of the City of Denver,, and within two miles 1869 AND 1868. 1868. 1869. 1863. BETWEEN Passcng- Passeng- 'January February $68,594 89,161 M’ircb 100,291 April 99,466 100,640 May June July August September October November December Total $98,368 91,037 111,352 99,935 102/89 97.791 102,077 84,047 191,127 122,515 92,072 94,229 134,476 97,665 1( 4,586 90,863 130,t00 100,238 114,291 1869. Mail <fc 1868 Mail & Freight. Freight. Express. Lxpregs. $98,V64 $104,888 $13,517 $13,715 128.76 4 30,518 11 550 116,400 109,883 144 831 11,284 139,496 13,067 103,996 87,646 103,016 97,210 162,6:13 91,741 181,581 162,983 14,002 11,617 11,106 10,221 12,716 14,283 11,987 10,632 11,560 12,126 11,746 9,661 14,802 16,250 12,750 18,4< 2 16,166 13,672 101,876 113,826 168,162 182,741 1 81,588 141.074 of by the Chi¬ Railroad Company, a branch of the Chicago, aud will be completed and in operation early Shipping Flour and Wheat to Liverpool.— 156,286 1 56,647 129,455 $1,192,030 $1,230,981 $1,567,497 $1,586,813 $166,619 $146,v39 1,192,080 1,E67,497 146,239 $38,951 $19,321 $9,7?9 broker, statements' ex quay at Liverpool,' shipments hence per steamer, at a cost ranging from 100 to 15 c. per busbei, and $4 65 to $6 per barrel, “free on board,” with freight at 6d. per bushel and le. 6d. per barrel (including 5 per cent primage), exchange at rates ranging from 118 to 140 per cent loss a on and all Liverpool charges deducted. Example : What price cental, ex quay at Liverpool, is required to clear a loss on shif menls of wheat at a cost of 135 per bushel, f. o. b., and Gd. freight, with exchange at 109£ per cent, and gold at 113£ per rent ? First multiply the rate of exchange by the price of gold, and the result is the currei cy equivalent, which in the foregoing example is 124 per cent; then turn to the table, and where 136c. per busbei cost and 124 per cent exchange intersect each other, the required auswer will be found, viz.: 9s. 8d. per cental. currency, per C COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF MONTHLY EARNINGS, SHOWING THE DIFFERENCE era. spring. to dear Flour per barrel. 'ey; «*- ' 118 $ 4 65 4 70 4 75 4 80 4 85 4 90 4 95 5 00 5 05 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 ! §cI O $37,626,438 59 ers. depot. The Chillicothe ar.d Omaha Railroad has been leased Cost Oi 552,831 31 of the Messrs. formally opened for bu*ine-s cago and South Western Rock Island and Pacific, p.; •- Total .n —Denver »- 1,045,152 74 1869. veto of the generally anticipated, was showiug the prices required for wheat and flour 30,093,679 06 - Railroad—Gov. Ciaflin’s Boston, Hartford and Erie Aid bill From a circular of Mr. Alexander B. Moreau, Hour and grain No. 113 Broad street, we extract the following tabular 16,500 00 Sterling consolidated mortgage bonds Earnings credited this account *• an 221,500 00 due July 1, 1874 due Oct. 1,18S2 due Oct. 1,1882 due Jan. 1, 1898.. ihe Sabula ro.id will be of the St. Paul. 850,000 00 546,000 00 W.D., due July 1, 1872.. • “ “ as adjourned meeting of the stock Company held in Boston on the 11th inst., the committee appointed at a previous rryeeting submitted a report, which gave a thorough statement of the condition and a calculation of the prospects of the road under independent management, tnd closed by recommend¬ ing that the road be put into the bauds of the Old Colony Railroad Company. The report was accepted, and by it, stockholders can dis¬ pose of their stock at $11 per share to the Old Colony and Newport Company, with the privilege of taking half of their pay in slock of that company. The meeting also unanimously ratified the action of the directors in subscribing for $126,000 worth of stock in the Duxbury next 8,419 50 bonds, E. D., due July 1, 1872 “ Second acceptei Soutli Shore Railroad.—At 3,714,124 62 First mortgage The was holders of this — 3,345,950 89 360,000 00 charged in 1869 Ackley. to Company companies Company, to be provided for Amount extention of that road from Sabula to Marion, and thence to the West is now of the 186,6SC 93 Preferred capital stock Sabula, Ackley and Company met at Marion, Iowa, June 9, for ihe purpose of consi¬ dering the proposition of the Western Union Railroad Company will be Trustees common certificates, outside 01 the capital stock $48,493 20 Dakota.—The directors of the Sabula, Ackley & Dakota Railroad $37,626,438 59 Cr. Common cap'tal stock certifi ates Trustees ceitiflcaPs, unconverted $58,278 18 9,779 98 Increase in Express and Mail 51,696 66 Construction work. Iron rails for track Beal estate and depot ground $88,951 89 19,3 il 29 _ Northwestern, with tracks and Equipment and rolling power for locomotives Decrease in Passengers Decrease in Freight proposition of the Western Union Railroad and the- contract between the two completed. According to this, the Western Union or rather the Milwaukee <fc St. Paul, with which the West¬ ern Union is about to be coDslidated, agrees to iron and equip the road if the other company would grade, bridge and tie it. It is said that the whole road will be put under contract within a very short $24,075,181 43 time. The line is very near that of a road now in progress from Clin¬ ton through Maquoketa and Anamosa which will be a feeder of the $2,967,905 39 AND MISSISSIPPI RAILWAY COMPANY, GENERAL LEDGER ACCOUNT FROM NOVEMBER J, 1867, TO DECEMBER 81, 1869, INCLUSIVE. Total. OHIO [June 25,1870, 10 15 20 25 30 85 40 45 50 60 70 80 90 00 s. . d. 20 9 20 11 21 2 21 4 21 7 21 9 22 0 22 3 22 5 22 7 2i 9 23 0 23 3 23 4 23 7 23 10 24 0 24 8 34 7 25 0 35 9 26 26 3 8 130 124 8. d. 19 11 30 1 20 3 20 6 20 8 20 10 21 0 21 3 5 21 21 7 21 10 23 0 22 3 22 5 22 7 22 9 23 0 23 2 23 7 24 0 24 8 25 0 25 5 s. 136 d. 19 19 19 19 0 2 5 7 1» 9 19 11 20 2 20 4 JO 6 20 8 20 11 "31 1 21 3 21 5 21 7 21 30 22 0 22 2 22 6 22 11 23 8 24 24 0 4 8. 18 38 18 d. 4 6 8 18 10 19 1 19 3 19 5 19 7 19 9 19 11 20 % 20 8 20 5 to 7 20 9 20 31 21 1 21 8 21 7 21 11 22 8 23 0 23 4 140 d. s. IT 10 18 0 18 2 18 4 18 6 18 8 18 10 19 1 19 3 19 5 19 7 19 9 19 11 £0 1 20 3 20 5 20 7 20 9 6 21 21 5 22 2 22 5 22 9 —. Wheat per cental. O Ssc. 100 103 105 107 1C9 110 ) 12 114 1)5 118 s 7 7 8 8 8 3 8 124 d. d. 8. 9J It* 7 7 8 91 1 7 3 7 11 41 51 8 7 8 8 9 8 11 9 0 0 8 1 8 21 8 4 8 5 8 61 8 7 8 9 8 101 9 0 9 1 117 118 120 9 11 122 9 3 124 9 .41 125 9 51 127 9 7 '9 128 9 8 9 130 9 91 9 132 9 11 9 135 :10 1 9 140 10 5* 10 145 : 10 H 10 150:11 51 U 10 2 3 4 6 8 0 4 8 130 136 d 8. <il. 8. 2 4 7 T 7 7 7 7 /T 7 81 *7 91 7 ■ 101 8 8 7 0 1 , 8 51 7 7 7 8 21 8 3 8 41 8 6 8 71 8 8 8 9« 8 :10 9 0 9 11 9 si 9 7 9 : It 10 6 11 1 7 2 7 31 7 fl 7 * • 81 9 101 7 It 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 0 2 31 4 51 6 7* 9 8 11 9 2* 9 6 9 91 8 140 d. s. 6 9 6 11 7 0 7 11 7 21 7 81 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 7 10 7 111 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 81 9 6 9 3 9 91 June 25,1870 ] THE CHRONICLE —The card of Mr. R. L. Edwards, banker and broker, 18 Wall street, will be found on the first page of the Chronicle. Mr. Edwards gives atteotior to all transactions in the purchase and sale of stocks, bonds, governments and gold and silver coins. —Messrs Parker 4; Laurence, bankers, No. 1 Wall street, advertise seven per cent Town Bonds of the counties of Union and Somerset, in New Jersey, at 85. This ought to be considered a good investment in a conservative S'ate like New Jersey, where people Jo not incur debts uuless they mean to pay them. —The card of Messrs Dodge, Kimball and Moore, bankers and brok¬ ers, at No. 14 Wall street, will be foun 1 on the first page of the Chronicle. ThU firm includes some g nllbmon well known in finan¬ cial circles, and we believe that the house contiaues business under the new style with every prospect of a fine business. €t)e bankers’ <0>a?ette. DIVIDENDS. The following Dividends have been deciared daring the past week: Per Cent. Company. When P’able. Books Closed. Railroads. Housat nic prifjr.ed Michigan Ce ntral Providence & Worcester Ogdensbnrg & Lake Champlain..... Boston & Low 11... Boston & Maine Boston & Prov d- nce Boston A $4 ’. ‘ 5 ” ”” $3 50 July 4 July 5 July $5 July $5 Ja'y . bany Connection, iiivcr Fitchburg Old $5 I.*.”.!!!.! Colony & Newport ugdensbnrgh Michigan southern Lake ;Shr r & Panama Hanover National (ssmi-anninl)”* Importers1 «fc Traders1 National 't radesmen’s National.. Metropolitan National (s .mi-annual) National Bank of Commerce National Park Bank *** 6 ”.... 5 5 7 4 5 Irving Nati nil Bank of Aineiica (semi-annual) Central National (scini-annn il) Bank of New York (semi-annual).. People’s 4 5 5 6 .. Oriental National Broadway Chat am Na ional National Shoe <fc Leather Mechanics’ Nutional Fourth Nat ional Bank of North America National Butchers’ & Drovers’. • .. Greenwich ”” ” Savings Ajlantic National.... 8 6 5 4 3* 5 3 4 . Citizen*’ Naiional M a rket. N ationa:.... ^ National $3 1. auk. 2.% 4 6 1. July 5 4 1 i 1 v July K . 1 .Tn 1 $3 <fc wn 1 5 1. 1. 1. 1. 1 July gu Ranks. Rome, Watcrt July Juiy July 15 July July 'uly July i 1 5. 1. July July J uly •u y duly July July 'uiy July July July July July July July l.j« 1 15. June 22 to July 9. 11. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1 1. 1 1. 1. June 23 to July 1. 1. 1 1. 1. July 1. July 18. 1 uly June 24 to June 25 to 1. June 25 to 1 5 5 5 July July 1. July 1. 6 G 5 6 July 1. June 20 July 1 3# July . ...” Hope Fire Miscellaneous. (semi-annual) Farm rv Loan A Trust. Co. Union T ust Company N. Y Gmra ty & Indemnity <'o grades; Commercial, first class endorsed “ 5 5 5 to July 1. June 22. 1. June 23 to July 1. “ “ 44 44 second class “ 1. 1. June 25 to July 2. 1. June 24 to July 1. money market is the continued outflow of currency to 6p. c to 7 7 60 days Domestic.. 3 to4 to 8 8 3 to 6 mos. to 18 4# to 5 7 mos. to 10 United States Bonds.—The bond market has been on the whole lower. Gold having declined about 2J a fall in bonds was naturally to be expected ; the decline, however, has been only about | per cent, so that the later issues now raDge l-3{g*2 per cent above the price of gold ; a fact which ehows a very decided firm¬ ness in the market. The declLe in prices has been encouraged also by sales by the foreign bankers, who appear to have been ex¬ changing their bonds for gold, apparently under an idea that the course of the foreign exchanges will next month induce an upward .turn in the gold premium. There are two probabilities at present influencing the market: first, that the Treasury with its unusually heavy currency balance will next month materially increase its purchases of bonds, and second, that the passage of a bijl author¬ izing more national curreucy will create a demand for bonds for banking purposes. The announcement that Messrs. Garfield, Jones & Sheldon have been appointed on behalf o( the House upon the Conference Committee on the Currency Bill is construed as favoring the adoption of an inflation measure. The Treasury purchased yesterday $1,000,000 five-twenty bonds, the total amount offered being $4,884,550. The closing prices are the lowest for the week, as will be seen from the subjoined quotations. The following were the highest and lowest prices of leading government securities at the Board on each day of the past week; Saturday, June 18 r.’s. 1881 coup ... 5 20’s, 1862 coup. 5 20’s, 1864 5-20*8,1865 “ 5-70’s, 1865 n “ 5-20 8,18-17 5 20’s, 1863 “ “ 10-40’s, “ Currency 6’s This Is the Monday, Tuesday, Wedneed’y Thursday, June 20. 118% 118>* *118 112% 112)4 112% 111% 111% *111% *111% 111% 111% 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% June2i. June 21. 118% 112% 111% 111% 113% IU *118 *112% *111% *111% T.3% 118% 112% 111% 111% 113% 114 114% 114 114 114 114 *113% 114 *108% 108% *108% 103% 108% 108% *114 114% *114 114% *111% 114% price bid and asked, no 118% 112 111% *111% 113% 114 *113% J08% *111% 1862, reg. 18G2, cou. $136,450 Total held. June 23. 1864, COU. 1865, reg. $15,104,703 20,900 41,350 17,210,200 52,100 34,500 . • • • ... 9,703,450 68,900 a which continmtion of the are Friday, June 24. 117% 117% 117% 111% *111% 111% 110% 110% 111 111 110% 111 113 113% 113 “* 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% 103% 108 108 114% 114 114 Thursday, June 23d, on The total 18G5, 1865, 1867, 1867, 1868, 1S63, s new, r.. new, C.. reg cou .... reg.. .. cou now Purchased June 23. 5-20’s of State Bonds —In this c!ass of been June 23. 118% 117% 112% 111% 111% 110% 111% 111 113% 113% 113% 114 114 113% 108% *108% 114% 114% sale was made at the Board. the Government #1,000,000; to’al offered, $4,884,550. $121,429,100. Details ate as follows:- the West, This (fflix was apparent in a reduction of $2,038,000 in the legal tender average of the last bank state¬ ment. This week, the shipmeuts have, perhaps, been lighter than last; but there is no prospect of their immediate ce?sation. The refusal to-day of the Chicago banks to rediscount grain paper, to enable spectators to carry grain for a rise, having precipitated a fall of 8 cents in the price of wheat there, is likely to induce an enlarged movement of grain eastward; and ns currency is scarce at the western grain cities, there may be a fur:her demand for it upon ... “ Purchase l Fuly July 5Xto7 days 4to6m»e. Bankers, first class Foreign 44 5 p. c. to 5)4 to 6 60 names “ 4 44 days 4 mos. 6 mos. single 5-20’s of July 60 “ “ Purchases by Market—The only feature of moment in the chiefly to the grain poits. various * Friday Evening, June 24. Money firmer maiket may be expected, there is a disposition to select the shorter date. The following are the current quotations for the a July 1. Insurance. Monta ik Fire Great Western Marine (go’d) Kings County Fire (seini aunua’) Jersey Citv Guard an Mutual Life ’uly 2. July 1. The paper market shows a very decided ease. There is very little of any grade offering ; bat as the period is approaching when June 20. 5 City July 1. oJ3 .. ... .. $70,700 451,450 113,500 were held is Total held. $47,667,900 ....... 28,981,600 . . . . 2,744,500 500 curities the chief feature has speculative movement in the Tennessees, a wealthy combination. There still under the control of is yet a large “ short” interest in these issues, and the new bonds 6o£ with elosmg quotation at 64^ The old issues have been strong, an 1 advanced from 63 to 67f, with late ea'es at 66$. In North C.iro ioas there has been a revival of speculation in the spechl tax bond-?, which advanced from 25 to 26, the new bonds being firm at 27 @ 28, and old at 48 @ 49£. 94|. The Missouris were firm, and iu demand at 94 New York. Although the banks have lost The Louisiana securities were steady o i small sales. The new $3,000 000 of legal tenders, and a much larger amount of nitional currency, the with¬ $3,009,000 six per cent. Louisiana loan, has been taken by the drawals have had r.o effect upon the tone of the money market, the London banking firm of Stern Bro her3 at 72^. The balance of supply of funds on call beii g very abundant, aDd rates easy at the list was dull and neglected. The following are the highest and lowest prices of the most 3@5 per cent, with a preponderance of transactions at 4 per cent. It is to b* expected, however, that these large remittances will active State Bonds at the Board rn each day of the past week : Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesd’y Thursday, Friday portly suffice for faci itating the earlier movement of the grain June 18. June 20. June 21. June 24. June 21. June 23. 6s Tenn.x.c 65 65% 65% 66 66% 67 66 % 6S% 67 67% crop, roThat the shipments at a later date may be expected to 68 Tcnn,new... 63% 74 63 64% 65 94 61% 62% 65% 65% 61% 61% 64% 64% 6s N.Car., old.. *... 48% *48% 48% 48% 48% *43 49 *49% 49% 49% 49% prove somewhat less than they otherwise would have been. It is 6s N.Car., new. 26 26 26% 26% *25% 26* 27 27% *27% 28 *27 % 28 6s Virg. xc *.... 69% *.... 70 70 * 68 70 *68 % 69% 63% 68% to be taken into account also iu estimating the future course of the 8s l a., levee... *93 93% |*91% *91% 95% 95% 95% 95% *95 68 Missouri.... 94% 94% 94% 94% 91% 91% 94% 94% 91% .94% 94% 95 money market that the banks havo now $8,500,000 more legal tenders than a year ago, and that their This is the price bid and asked, no sale was made at the Board. surplus over legal reserve stands $L0,000,000 higher than then: and further that as the cur Railroad Miscellaneous Stocks.—The dull, steady course of rency balance of the Treasury stands unusually high, a large the stock market has been slightly varied by the failure of Mr. amount is likely to be disbursed by the Treasury in the purchase James Boyd, a well-known broker, who was carrying it is said of bonds. 'The market thus appears to be well fortified against 40,000 shares of stock and $5,000,000 of gold, chiefly, according to ny stringency connected with the coming crop movements. report, on account of Mr, Ed. B. Ketchum. This resulted in a have been in active demand at 61 to .... * .... .... :S14 THE CHRONICLE. [June 25, 1870 large extent of selling out upon New York Central, Pacific Mail, I Foreign Exchange —The liberal supply of grain bills, coming Shore, Rock Island and Ohio & Mississippi, and as none ap-1 concurrently with light remittances by importers, has produced a peared to care about resisting the effect of the sales, prices fell off wea^er feeling on exchange, and rates are $ beiow the late maxiH@4 per cent, the reduced quotations continuing up to the close. I mum quotations. Lake The continuance, of the war ou between rates June 3. the trunk roads naturally has a tendency to depress the market, although the fact May earnings show an average increase of about 10 per do The following Antwerp 5.15%® 5.13% 5.!5%@5.13% Hamburg 36%® 36% Amsterdam 41%® 41 £ Franklort 41 ® 41% Bremen 79%@ 79% Berlin 71%® 71% The transactions tor the each on day of the last : Saturdav, Harlem Erie Reading Lake Shore.... Wabash Pittsburg- 109% U0% 84% 84% 89V 00% Northwest do pref Rock Islanc... Fort Wayne... St. Paul do pref.... Ohio, Mississin Central of N.J. Chic. & Alton., do do pref do. scrip. Clev..C C. &I Col.Cliic. & l.c 121 121% 97%' “■ 97% f>7% 68% 82% 83% 41% 109% 109% 118% 118% '117% 119% “113 H3% *8i , Pel., Lack. ,&W Hann., St. Jos. 82 22% 22% '111 111% 120 121% do 'pref 120% Illinois Centr’l 141% Mich. Central. *124 Morris* Essex »90 Alton & T. H.. do Monday, June 18. June 20. 98% 100 98% 100 \)4% 95% 94% 95% 145% 145% 145% 145% 24% 25% 24% 25% 107 V 1<8% 107% 108% 100 100% 99% 100% 59% 59% 58% 59% „ N.V.Cent&H.R <lo scrip 121 141% 124% Tuesday, Wednesd’y Thursday June 21. 98% 99% 94% 94% 140% 141% 5% 35 15% Friday, June 23, June 21. 98% 99% 99% 99% 98% 99% 94% 95 93% 9-4% 94 94% 140% 141% 140 110% 139% 140 24 24% 23% 24% 24 24% 23% 24% 106% 107% 106% 107% 106% 107% 106% 107% 99% 99% 98% 99% 98% 99% 98% 99% 58 58% 56% 58% 55% 56% 55% 57 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 84% 84% 84 84% 83% 83% 82% 84 82% 84 89% 90% 89 89% 90% 90% 88% 89% 88% S9% 120% 121% 120 120% 119% 120% 117% 119% 116 118% 91% 97% 97% 97% *97% 97% 94% 95 94% 95% 67% 68 66% 67% 66% 67% 65% 66% 65% 66% ■81% 82% 81 81% 82 82 80% 81% 80% 81% 40% 41% 37% 40% 37% 38% 37% 38 37% 38 109% 110 109% 109% 108% 109% 108 108% 107% 107% 117% 119 118% 119 118% 118% 118 118 .*118 118 * *.... 119% *.... 119% 119 *117% 118% *.... 117% 112% 114 *112% 114 114 *113 113% 112% 112% 81% Sl% 81% 81% *81% 82 *80 *80% 82 82 22% 22% 21% 21% 20% 21% 20% 20% 20% 20% 111 111 110% 111% 'in% m% 111 111% 110% 110% 121% 121% *121% 122 '120 121% 117% 118% 117% 118 121% 121% 121 121 '120 119 120 120% 118 119 140% 141 140% 141 '139% 140 ‘139% 1139% 189% 121% 124% *'.24% 124% 1?5 125 •124% 125% 90% 90% 90 90% 90% 90 90 90 89% S9% 36 36 91 36 64 B.. Hart. & Erie West. Cn. '1 el. Mariposa pref.. do Trust, cert. June 22. ... pref 5% 35% 35 16 45 *15% 35% 16 42 35 CO 63 64 5% „ 1% 4% 34% 35% 16% 16% 5.12%@5.11% Swiss the highest and lowest prices of the active list of railroad and miscellaneous stocks week do short against that influence. were do shrt.l 110%® 110% Paris, long 5.15 ®5.13% that the cent is some set off 4% .... +C/I *60 4 4% 34% 35% *16 !... “ ■* CO ’ 3% 34% 16 15 40 1! 40 9 f14 CO 63 4 35 16 40 9 June 10. 109 ® 109% London Comm’l. 109%® 109 do bkrs’Jno 109%® 11C% Treasury have been as Custom House. Receipts. June 18 June 24. 109%®109% .... 110%® 110% 5.15%@5 13% 5.13%@5.12% 5.15%®5.15 5.15%®5.15 86 @ 86% 86 ® 86% 36 ® 41 41 ® 41% 41 ® ® 41% 40%@ 41 40%® 40% 40%® 79%® 79% 79%® 79% 79%@ 71%® 71% 71%® 71% 71%@ week at the Custom House aod .... . 298,000 285,000 360,000 451,000 331,711 20 645,302 74 562,919 35 522,852 37 1,442,930 43 578,133 71 2,004.424 81 00 00 382,825 64 473,749 06 445,704 81 425,000 00 Sub- -Sub-Treasury. Receipts. —Payments. Gold. Gold. C’urrenci Currency. . 00 00 86% 41% 40% 79% 71% follows . $282,000 00 $320,231 39 $1,732,257 52 $1,233,786 23 . 20.. 21.. 22.. 23.. 24.. Total / June 17. 109%® 109% 109%® 109% 109%® 109%® 1G9% 110 ®110% 110%® 5.16%®5.15% 5.16%®5.15% 5.13%@5.14% 5.14%®5.14% 5.16% g>5 15% 5.16%®5.15% 5.16%®5.15% 5.16%®5.15% $2,104.030 00 $3,958,646 91 76,843,644 33 5,484,296 12 9,686,977 $80,802,291 24 Paym’ts during week. 4,247,353 94 $1,667,613 75 238,321 -85 70,091 81 36,104 50 1,791,040,82 1,058,533 78 259,054 296,033 240,456 1,274.733 57,796 80 15,171,273 44 . Balance, June 17 $4,247,353 94 $3,97f,263 8,976,263 91 Balance June 24 76,554,937 30 11,195,5^9 53 New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the condition of the Associated Banks of New York City for *he wick ? I ending at the commencement of business on June I 18, 1870: -AVERAGE AMOUNT OF Banks. Capital New York Loans and Net Circula¬ Discounts. Specie. tion. Deposits. Legal Tenders, $3,000,000 19,610.200 |4,519,100 $886,800 16.980.700 $1,450,100 *39 Quicksiver.... Manhattan 7% ‘*7% 8% 2,050,000 6.109.700 8% *7% 860,700 *7% 664,600 10,100 4,267,700 do nref. Merchants’ 16 * 15% 16 3,000,000 6.696.500 2.273,300 876,800 6,069,500 1.487.900 *13 15% *13 ‘ 15 * Pacific Man.... Mechanics 43% 44 ‘4 44% 45% 2,000,000 41% 42% 43% 5.751.100 548,200 41% 42% 566,267 4,618.500 Atlantic Mail.. 41% 42% 1,033,800 Union 36 35% 36% 36 1,500,000 36% 36 35 35% 35% 4.898.884 576,808 389,329 Adams Expr’ss 35% : 33% 35 483,099 3.355,062 America 64% 64% 64% 65 66 3,000,000 7,817.105 2,118,987 65% 65% 66 67 67 1,450 Am. Merch. Un ; 66 7.872,768 2,535.282 46 * 46% Phoenix : 46% 46% l,800,vX)0 47 46% 46% 47 47 3,839,015 925,869 520,475 179,782 United States. 47% 47^ 2,705,787 45 City 45% 45% 45% *45 45 1,000,000 5,153,561 45 45% 45% 45% *45% 46 1,005349 370,000 3,293,391 Wells, Fargo.. Tradesmen’s 16% 16% 1,000,000 17 17 17 3,187,284 17 17 74,786 ,16% 16% 17 17 17 552,982 Cumberl. Coal. 711,352 1,754,649 Fulton 41 39% ; 41 600,000 2,204,435 39% *39 40 40 146,273 1,663,158 539,404 Consolid Coal. 28 Chemical 28 '27 28 *27' 28 * *«% 28 300 000 28 6.155.800 838,500 28 Canton Co 5,040.050 1,465,800 67% 67 67% '67 Merchants’Exchange.... 1,235,000 3.310.951 68% *67 67 67 68% *66 95,147 748,106 439,149 67% *66 2,785,592 National 1 500,000 * 3.260.885 349,134 380,293 489,830 1,404,835 This Is the price bid and asked, no Butchers’ mle was made at the Board. 800,000 2.502.400 619,000 52,300 257,700 1.934.500 Mechanics and Traders’. " 600,000 The 1.967.300 383,220 25,600 195,720 1.898.500 is a summary of the amount of Government bonds Greenwich 200.000 1,097,701 772,901 -130,880 2,919 Leather Manuf. National 600,000 S,248,015 State and City securities, and railroad 341,971 764,950 262,532 2,220,962 Ward, National. and other 500,000 1,359,549 bonds Seventh New York 258.368 88,044 170,604 905,677 State of 2,000,000 4.622.500 sold at Stock 482.000 625.600 3,710,(00 1,216,600 American Exchange for the past and several previous weeks: 5,000,000 9.691.800 861,600 899.600 5,258,600 1,316,100 Commerce Week 10,000,000 21,619,204 822,520 5,289,745 8.822,250 8,151,144 Government State & Total Broadway 1,000,000 Company 9.107.700 ending— 900.000 77,300 8,165,COO 2.296.900 Bonds. Ocean City Bonds. Bonds. 1,000,000 amount. 2.459.952 MarchlO 87,741 790,680 376,463 1,160,201 Mercantile 5,175 450 1,000,000 2,326,000 922,500 3,479,000 126.700 481,000 631,900 8,423,900 Pacific 2.792.500 17... 422,700 3,665,000 2,249,474 1,961,500 15,615 388,097 940,700 4,749 1,775,333 5.567.200 Republic 24... 2,000,000 4,396,220 44 2.313,925 853,419 2,257,050 5,453,121 1,386,689 1.666,111 663,500 4,580,661 Chatham 31 450,000 2,541,195 2 794,506 149,261 125,061 127,868 4.413*000 965,300 586,000 5.964.300 People’s 412,500 April 7... 1,520.900 216.000 13,200 5,993 1,821,400 3,741,300 1,259,500 512,600 5.513.300 North American 1,000,000 2,663,059 14... 101,450 281,333 4,070 2,102,328 3 324.700 Hanover... 1,423,500 525,500 1.000,000 5, v73,705 2,506,808 286.241 228,956 291,448 2i..;. 1,528.063 44 Irving 2,129,450 500,000 1,209,000 401,500 1,805,000 3,739,950 14.400 475,000 185,467 1,620,000 28.... Metropolitan 4,000.000 11,183,573 6,040,200 1,137,000 1,842,181 2,155,400 6,183.077 671,428 677,300 7.885.500 Citizens May 5.... 400,000 1,644,894 3,915,600 1,373,000 41,136 364,175 558.000 1,888,863 132,556 5.846.500 Nassau 12 1,000.000 2,395,377 65,787 858,248 44 3,862,750 8,979 2.395,377 1,059,500 671,515 Market 5,531,765 1,000,000 19.... 2.999.700 572.300 193,800 2,016.100 521,460 2.791.500 687,000 438.900 8t. Nicholas.. 3,917,400 1,000,000 2.729.700 26.... 69.700 433,200 1,168.000 745,400 2,376,200 Shoe and Leather 903,000 353,000 1,500,000 3.632.200 3.671.700 June 2.... 51,465 858,505 2.413.700 ; 776.600 2,725,950 1,000.000 1,008,500 325,090 2.669.300 377.0C0 4,059,450 Corn Exchange 88,530 5,797 1,592,4(0 9. Continental 3,641,550 2,000,000 2.442,500 446.500 4,459,763 235,380 2,971,887 550,925 818,000 6.730,650 Commonwealth 16.... 750,000 1,613,000 44 2,117,500 2.543.100 233.600 951.000 149,500 2.451.200 497,000 4.227.500 Oriental 23.... 300,000 1,400,761 1.792.500 10,878 4,771 216,420 1,589,629 1,957,500 438,200 4.188.200 Marine 400.000 1,644,950 1,407.560 201,180 360,000 485,260 rI he Gold Market.—Gold has been 300,000 1.126.400 weak and lower, the price Atlantic 56,100 803,600 174.300 99,000 Importers and Traders’.. 1,500.000 10,679,977 172,517 502,612 10.105,738 2,024,993 Park... touched 111£. The fall in sterling exchange to 109^, and Mechanics’ Banking Ass. 2,000.000 16,220,037 2,487,183 935.000 20,483,771 4,482,362 500,000 1,091,700 67.400 300,800 1.221.200 573,600 the anticipation of the 300,000 744,708 59,102 596,682 2,015 payment of the July interest upon tie Grocers’ 100.199 North River 400,000 1,110.243 11,001 30,689 1,009,809 246,042 public debt has produced a weaker feeling and prepared the market East River 350,000 1,084,993 5.168 689,052 258,500 232,946 Manufacturers & Mer.... 500,000 677 1,426,200 5,800 1,121.000 242,000 for a sharp decline. The needed occasion 5,000,000 18,758,409 occurred in connection Fourth National 1,579,977 2,914,084 15,683,700 3,407 718 Central National 3,000,000 11,919,280 359,807 1,885,000 10.801,830 2J844.183 with the failure of Mr. James 8econd National 300,000 1,459,000 270,000 354.500 1,211,000 Boyd, above alluded to, nearly Ninth National 173.000 1,000,000 5.660,000 780.000 5,155,000 1,5.2,000 $5,000,000 of his gold being placed on the market in one First National 500,000 4,067,937 421,006 338,910 4,370,403 746,857 day. Third National 1,000,000 5,118,666 303,828 4,911,138 771,521 1,219.599 Theie has been little or no New York N. Exchange* 300,000 1,032,200 3,000 551.500 206.200 rallying from the effect of these forced Tenth National 268.500 3.439.8.00 1,000.000 8,700 907,000 965.500 2,813,800 sales, and the market closes weak, under the announcement made Bowery National 250,000 1,020,385 218.500 2,565 377,327 1,158,440 New York County 200 924,100 178,100 333,200 1.127.700 this afternoon, that the Bull s Head 200,000 1.716,842 5,512 6,473 Treasury will announce the prepayment of Stuyvesant 1,806,434 417,586 .00,000 1,516 48,057 463,414 42 40 9 ilk 8* * following Exchange 4i 44 44 44 44 ... 44 44 .. 44 having ... the July interest on Tuesday next. shipments of treasure this week have been quite light. The Treasury sold on Wednesday $1,000,000, the total bid for being $2,700,000. The The gold loan market has indicated through the week a large outstanding short interest, a moderate percentage having been paid “for borrowing,” but to-day 1@2 per cent was paid “for carrying.” The following table will show the course of the gold jremum each day of the past week : -Quotations. Hign- Cloe- Open- Low 112% •12% Current week 112% Previous week 113% Jan. 1’70. to date... 120% , Balances. —» Gold. Currency eat. est. ing. Clear ngs. 112% 113% 112% 30,892,000 1,582,957 112% 112% 112% 22.077,000 1,255,426 112% 112% 112% 112% 16,630,000 1,163,056 112% 112% 112% 112% 22,646,000 1,760,699 111% 111% !11% 111% 45,737,000 1,388,109 111% 111% 111% 111% 70,900,00') 2,008,472 ing. Saturday, Jure 18. Monday, “ xu Tuesday, ‘ 21. Wedn’day,11 22. Thursday, “ 23 Friday, 24. Total 111% 112% 1J0% 113% U3% 123% 1,798,595 1,422,670 1,316,819 1,979,916 1,611,116 2,266,650 111% 208,882,000 9,149,719 10,390,796 112% 212,159,000 8,475,694 9,675,234 111% Eleve ith Ward 200,000 Eighth National American National Germania Manufactur s & Builders Total 493,081 250,000 500,OOt 824.496 807 708,530 28,648 2,120 £30,872 547,517 874.418 555,854 83.970.200 276,689,004 Inc. $269,428 Inc. 372,152 Dec. 69,542 .. Specie... Circulation.. The following are Loans. Mar Mar. Mar. Mar. Apr. Apr. Apr. Apr. Apr. 5. 12. 19 26 2. 9. 16. 23. 30. . 68,684,212 268,140,603 270,003,682 270.807,768 271,756,871 272,171,388 269,981,721 269,016,279 269,504,285 275,246,471 May 7. May 14. 278,383,314 May 21. 280,261,077 May 28 279,550,743 . June 4 279,485,734 June 11. 276,419,576 •*.».! June 18, 276,689,004 . Deposits Legal Tenders..*. the totals for a Circula¬ tion. 77,550 249,519 212,312 ibs.ooo 28,895,97133,072,643 219.932,852 58,120,211 The deviations from the returns of previous wetk Loans 453,003 611,010 728,019 250,(00 449,355 ere rs Dec. Tec. follows $766,438 2,038,959 series of weeks past: Specie. 36,898,493 33,783,942 33,399,135 33.835,739 82.014,747 as,699,568 72,271,252 33,674,894 29,887,183 33.676,564 25,787,692 33,754,253 26,879,513 33,698,258 25,310,322 33,616,928 28,817,596 33.506,393 31,498,999 33,444,641 32,453,906 83,293,980 34,116,935 33,191,648 32,72^,036 33,249,818 30,949,490 33,285,083 28,523,819 33,142,188 28,895,971 83,072,643 Legal Aggregate Deposits. Tenders. Clearfngs. 213,078,341 54,065,983 603,182,605 209,831,225 53,302,004 548.015,727 208,816,823 52,774,420 208,910,713 52,685,063 206,412,430 50,011,793 201,752,434 47,570,633 202 913,989 50,180,040 203 583,375 53,119,646 208,789,350 54,944,S05 217,362,218 56,108,922 222,442 319 57,947,005 226,552,926 59,023,306 228,039,345 61,618,676 226,191,797 61,290,310 220,699,290 60,159,170 219,932,852 58,120,211 525,079,561 481,253,035 516,052,093 476,845,858 429,468,971 444,605,809 653,515,114 701,060,925 659,260,661 625,678,320 576,625;521 513,452,668 572,182,050 498,872,684 June The following are the Iatert The deviations from last weeks returns quotations for bank stock: Bid. Askd. Mech. Bkg Asso xl37 New York Manhattan Merchants Mechanics Union America 160 125 140 125 150 Mercantile 126 Phenix North River.... Tradesmen’s Fulton Greenwich Butchers* Drov Mechanics & Tr. National Merchants’ Ex.. Leather Manuf.. Seventh Word... State of N.York Commerce .... Republic • 154 , 108 lio109 126 .. Grocers East River Market Nassau Shoe and Leath. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. .. 140 140 125 112 128 1(>6 165 107 175 Corn Exchange. 129 Cii eolation.. . comparative totals for aseries of weeks past Total net Capital. Loans. Specie. L. Tend.Deposits. Circulate Philadelphia $1,500,000 $5,090,0001455,000 $1,591,000 $4,222,000 $1,000,000 North America 790,100 1,000,000 4,347, liO 55,803 1,393,157 3,250,857 Farmers’ & Mech.. 2,000,000 5,200,501 45,480 1,582,985 4,250,440 711.410 Commercial. 023,000 2,300 720,000 1,522,000 810,000 2,293,000 Mechanics’. 478,420 474,000 1.214,000 5,000 800,000 2,341,000 Bank N. Liberties 812,000 2,435,000 451,000 2,000 500,000 2,090,000 Southwark 220.410 504,51)0 1,439,800 250,000 1,331,700 12,878 227,300 357,000 1,COS,701 4,810 250,000 1,12’,097 Kensington Penn Townsnip... 218,035 179,500 951,910 1,000 500,000 1,359,100 Western 461,353 1,540,273 1,510 400,000 1,373,343 452.700 Manufacturers’ 400,000 1,159,680 570,150 1,542 500 5,000 Banks. 5 100,156,094 100,509,372 100,012,527 K-6,245,606 107,001,304 106.949,539 100,840,250 107,097,074 107,151,710 5,057,341 4,851,964 4,536,884 4,551.701 4,792,968 4,068,744 3,875,717 3,475,528 100,001,480 3,534,343 100,454,486 . May , 100,722,059 9 May May May May . .. 3,397,873 . .. 16... . 23 30 Tme 6 Jun* 13 June 20 10,433,107 9,386,266 9,386,206 S,918,129 8,705,874 4,929.867 5,024,691 .... Anr. condition Monday, 109,651,272 108,905,389 108,367,431 108,044,028 107,884,807 107,043,309 Deposits. Circulation. 25,100,003 40,903,823 25,212,614 39,918,414 24,230,806 38,475,853 25,225,629 37.638,842 95,260,868 37,681,983 25,280,027 37,708,082 25,270,484 37,093,533 95,265,002 37,123,211 38 851,013 25,278,443 58,285,007 39,504,080 25,290,207 39,532,827 25,231,845 39,920,142 25,209,019 41,042,250 25,207,404 41,205,597 25,2 18,203 41,075,309 25,199,719 41,100,009 25,150,880 40,056,844 25,139,278 40,218,620 25,140,390 38,901,202 25,175,753 38,647,292 Tenders. Specie. 5,035,000 4,884,147 4,031,770 109,083,041 109,997,027 . Apr. Apr. .. „ 7 14 21 ... 2d 7....,14 21 28 4 11 18 25 2 Apr. .. Psuladelphl* Banks.—The following is the average of the PhiladelDhia Banks for the week preceding June 20,1870 : are 373,927 253,910 29,363 .. Legal .. , following Loans. .. . Peoples.... 117 107 . 118 Irving Metropolitan Citizens 106 . . N. America Hanover The Atlantic New Y. Countj »unty. Importers & Tr. 15a Park X16334 .. Manuf & Merch 103 N Y. Nat.Exch. Central Nation’l xlOS First National.. 210 Fourth Nation’l 109>6 109 Ninth National.xl09 Tenth National. 127 Eleventh Ward Oriental 100 Gold Exchange. 50 107 Bankers & B.As 180 130,470 Dec Deposits.... Specie Commonwealth. , 113 Am. Exchange. 113 Pacific Chatham 170 no* . $447,050 Loans. 122 St. Nicholas Marine follows: are as Legal tender notes Capital Continental , 90 85 Ocean 200 City # .. Broadway 126 615 THE CHRONICLE. 25, 187o.] 4.457,113 8,510,573 5,170,700 5,190,348 8,352,201 8,499.444 163,494 8.470,455 8,102,080 8,270,721 ' 8,872,070 10,081,001 9,814,428 9,581,703 4.545,690 9,081,054 9,721,703 9,770,281 9,560.009 9,180,082 . . B’k of Commerce.. Girard Tradesmen's Consolidation City Commonwealth Corn Exchange.... Union First Third Fourth Sixth Seventh ... Eighth Central Bank of Total 1,000,000 2,890,000 2,035,000 15,755,150 53,047,408 087,381 3,162,000 1,053,874 827,799 210,000 593,000 177,629 445,020 852,247 775,825 215,284 E01,<00 1,545,000 442,000 1,585,000 1,251,000 3,971,000 370,800 950,713 9,758 1,525,000 386,395 272,643 236.428 780,370 127,000 362,000 392,410 151,000 241,000 690,000 590,000 72 9,000 2,157,(00 1,497,000 213,000 783,000 202,050 133,715 135,000 219,335 239.700 586,010 593,350 as follows : Legal Tenders... Decrease. $392,709 $59,112 Deposits...........1 ecn ase. 451,115 Increase. 2,498 Specie Decrease. 98,284 Circulation The annexed statement shows the condition of the Philadelphia Banks for a series of weeks : Capital Charleston, South Carolina. I Securities. State “ ... Increase. 76 5a 84 Georgia 0s, old “ 44 “ Louisiana 0s, ex-coupons... “ new Date. Loans. 7 14 21 Apr. May 4 11 18 25 2 May May May May 9...... 16 23 30 J une June June 0 13 Apr. Apr. Apr. .. .. 51,400,381 61,418,045 51,587,837 51.898,135 52,041,533 51,928,431 52,019,535 52,243,057 52,413,398 52,234,603 52,5i 0,343 52,320,224 53,093,534 53,588,296 Specie. 1,429,807 1,677,218 1,588,372 1,580,747 1,499,429 1,314,137 1,063,741 1,247,820 1,222,029 1,164,012 1,049,943 923,948 869,597 Legal Tend. 13,192,282 12,704,279 13,125,658 12,769,911 13,052,827 13,882,761 14,827,013 15,441,522 15,851,265 16,244,785 16,450,837 16,789,102 1(5,920,682 16,702,115 10,309,340 841,569 743,285 53,647,408 Boston Banks.— Below we give 20...... National Banks, as June 20, 1870. a Deposits. Circulation 39,0' 5,042 10,576,852 10,565 903 39,382.352 39,781,153 10,578,482 38,771,237 10,575,771 39,279,143 10,571,749 41,033,300 10,571,794 41,(577,500 10,575,12n 10,571,53 5 42,997,070 43,429,347 10,563,357 44,038,042 10,562,40a 44,233,016 10,564,075 45,117,172 10,560,37a 45,122,720 10,561,68f; 44,957,979 10,567,354 44,398,340 10,569,852 statement of the bonds 6s, Levee 8s, Levee “ 7s, T emtentiary... “ 8s, Texas &N.O. Rli NorthCarclina 0s, ex-coup.. 44 0s, new 44 6s, Special Tax... South Carolina 0s, old “ Loans. Capital. Specie. L. T. Notes. Deposits. Circula. $90,483 $442,188 $442,877 $750,000 $1,407,512 $52,681 795.784 135,459 771,540 2.819,011 5,754 1,500,000 Blackstone 219.200 1,470,927 64,540 783,395 1,500,000 3,328,704 Boston 150,42S 019,122 587,822 43,-114 1,0(0,000 1^39,838 218,752 445,404 758,6< 0 Boylston 500,000 15,170 1,440,110 Columbian 250,30!) » 631,942 71,400 793,761 1,000,000 2,232,112 Continental 80,336 100,541 014,638 568,4 52 1,993,146 1,000,000 Eliot 180,340 1,082,751 79,083 793,580 1,000,000 2,013,5S8 Everett 477.235 99.702 25,857 2U0,000 018,321 42.535 Faneuil Hall.... 1,000,000 278,000 1,169,911 60,861 568,418 2,188,702 Freeman’s 108,858 547,001 855,974 12,444 600,000 1,504,985 Globe 882 350.080 217,571 1,171,032 1,000,000 2,471,662 Hamilton 242,304 109,090 30,592 789,749 750,000 1,492,072 Howard 09,500 450,000 518,920 54,152 1,000,000 1,869,022 Market 490,831 13.535 113,383 352,833 1,462,577 800,000 390.8S1 251,548 Massachusetts.. 948,172 48,331 1,842,915 800,000 Maverick 14,753 79,842 277,319 24‘V715 837,293 400,000 75 <,923 2,420.917 Merchants’ 1,814,210 3,000,000 5,971,268 243,337 Mount Vernon.. 43,748 30,500 3-5,440 6(33,878 177,053 200,000 New England.. 798,732 299,288 701,414 98,019 1,000,000 2,224,634 North 145,2. 0 793,328 89,128 024,504 2,223,054 1,000,000 424,094 Old Boston 1,008,336 305,400 900,000 1,850,917 127,222 Shawmut 90,500 651,468 594,244 1.000,000 2,100,317 99,200 Shoe & Leatner. 1,000,000 90,715 148,430 876,593 359,300 2,496.234 991.343 State 919,315 242,786 2,000,000 3,768.374 140,985 Suffolk 214,164 730,725 3,824,736 168,899 730,957 1.500,000 118.057 Traders’ 21,063 178,391 397,652 1,141,013 600,000 690,079 Treraont 383,933 878,155 2,000,000 3,212,069 238,574 594,831 1.819,802 85,667 34,6S9 513,341 Washington 750,000 First 313,450 1,092,773 794,120 1,000,000 3,857,(578 129,313 Second (Granite) 1,600,000 389,525 2,732,898 783,700 4,798,286 2.6,865 Third 907,974 2,204 007,594 102,003 173,547 300,000 B’kof Commerce 2,000,000 622,333 1,521,017 29,841 950,529 4,420,645 **’k of N. Amer. 1,000,000 14,030 594,972 1,854,097 342,697 517,212 B’kof Redemp’n 1,000,000 800,000 515,652 1,013,742 4,950,552 127.760 B’kof the Repub. 1,500,000 148.200 70,000 654,207 793.500 2,714.103 498,076 167,514 440,004 51,995 1,000,000 3,756,305 City 125,657 708,195 839.500 40,340 Eigie 1,845,208 1,000,000 797,915 112,181 Exchange 1,188,000 1,000,000 3,734,(544 280,011 50.343 Hide <fc Leather. 1,500.000 124,832 770,475 764,980 3,139,707 Revere 397,537 232,576 1,814,903 13,703 2,000,000 3,920,976 31,463 25,100 601,838 130,000 396,310 200,000 Security 153,428 543,914 Union. 935,437 1,000,000 2,313,567 150,768 Webster 498,801 242,726 1,081,092 1,530,000 2,802,335 ■95,437 Banks. Atlantic Atlas ... .... Total. 47,350,000 106,454,4368,397,873 9,186,082 38,647,292 25,175,753 90 784 44 registered stock, old “ “ “ 44 “ “ “ City 1800 1807 7s bonds 49 28 20 25} 914 ... 70 “ 49 new,Funding 7s Petersburg 0s Richmond lift. Savannah 7s, bonds 41 .. i 52 70 44 c-h. & Ruth.IstM.end “ “ IstM., 8s... 00 clue Ridge, 1st Mortgage .. South Carolina. Char!., Col. & Aug , 1st M.,7s 44 ... 86 70 Montgomery and Euialla 1st 8s, gold bonds, endorsed by State of Alabama Mobile and Ohio, sterling 44 “ “ “ “ “ ... 8s,interest 2 iiitg, 8s stock iV!r>t)i'f* Monty, R.R1 1st. m. Selma and Meridian 1st m. 8s 73 79 .... 55 50 70 70 78 .... 72* 78* 57 54} 554 58 70 00 84 75 05 88 90 50 .... 00 70 70 85 f8 05 73 73 60 73 87 91 05 90 50 94 96 stock... guaranteed by State, S. C.. Bonds, 7s, guaranteed Savannah & Char. 1st M.,7s.. South Carolina Railroad 0s.. “ “ “ “ 7e stock North Eastern 1st mtg. Ss... “ 2d 4 Ss.:. 44 3d 44 8s... 44 stock Cheraw & Darlington 7s.... • ^ ... 50 87 50 .... .... 60 724 80 70 74 41 71 TO 45 92 70 • • • • • • 71 . 10 80 75 Ten nessoe. »fc Georgia Gs East Tenn — by State Tenn. 44 44 44 stock .. Memphis and Ohio 10s “ “ 0s Memphis & L.44Rock lsts, 8s. 44 endorsed Virginia. Orange <fc Alex., lsts 0s, '2ds6s. 2ds 6s “ 4th, 8s 2nds, 0s 3ds, 0s 4th, 8s “ “ .. Rich. & Uanv. lsi cons’d 6s. Piedmont bra’h “ “ lsts 8s Southside, 1st mtg. 8s — ... 2d m guart’d 3d m. 0s 4th m. 8s “ 0s.. “ »i 7^ Richm. & Petersb. 1st m 7s “ “ 44 44 “ ’82' 74* 81* 81* 83 70 86 80 82* 90 77 74 72 83 75 . 77} 72* 824 2d m. 6e 3dm. 8s 44 44 44 44 41 conv -4 07* . 78 83 95 7s 77* 6s 70 ... 82* 82* 80 Fre’ksb’g & Poto. 6s. 44 78 85 75 00 30 30 Norfolk & Petersburg 1 m 8s • 71 fund. int. 8s “ - .... S5 Orange & Alex. «te Man. lsts Va. & Tenn lsts 0s “ 85 78 42 55 38 09 73 72| Sds 8s 4ths8s 07 04* •c0 44 * 03 Virginia 0s, end Memp. & Charleston lsts, 7s “ 2nds, 7s . ...A • . 07 “ 100 106 100 120 • 02 07 80 55 90 70 05 82 Savannah, 0, & Charleston “ bl 704 59 29 10 71* 93 79 82 78 62 30 90 40 Virginia Central lsts, 0s 94 79 Sparten-burg and Union 7s, guar’d by State S. C u . SO 64* 73* .... 78 73 7S 70 59 95 “ 104 stock 96 Central RR. 1st mtg. 7s “ 118 stock Southwestern Rii., 1«t, mtg. 91 stock .". 94 Maeon «nd Western stock 110 44 Augusta bonds .. 78 *• “ endorsed. 86 . • 72* 44 Georgia. • • Greenville and Columbia 7s, guar, by fetate S. Carolina. Certificates, guar, by 8. C “ 1st. end Income. “ • • North Carolina. North Carolina RU 8s *• stock Alabama. “ stock.. Opel.lets, 8s Wilmington & Weldon 7s.... Railroad Securities. 41 • • N. Or. Jack’ll & “ Montg’ry & West44P. 1st, 8s.. • 12* 82* 44 “ 67 61 55J 05* 71 8s 81 46 09 10s.. “ 41 00 - “ 85 J 814 88 81 7 60 consols, 8s N. Orleans & Jackson lsts,8s “ 44 cert, Ss 094 564 45 70 70 75 71 consol Gs 7s. Railroad 0s... 30 “ 82} .... 44 8s 2d & Tenn. 1st ra.7s “ < 80 07 70 isashvilieOs New Orleans 0s “ ^ 494 274 74 55 Memphis 0s bonds, old “* 0s, “ new Memphis 0s, endorsed Memphis past due coupons. Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds.... 8s, “ ... . |Ash Mississippi and Lou- 87 851 .... Fredricksburg 0s Bid 25 85 81 39 isiana. 5S Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds Charleston, s. C., 0s, stock.. “ 7s, Fire Loan Bonds “ 2d mbs. 44 Securities. Atlanta, Ga, 8s, 44 44 824 Mississippi Cent. 1st mtg. 7f 44 “ 69 ’0s, i:ew /Savannah, Albany.& Gnlf7s bonds, end. by Savannah.. Pensacola & Georgia 1st m 7s “ 8l| 08* Virginia 6s,cx-coupon .. 75 SO 024 044 5s Macon and Augusta stock... Macon & Brunsw’k end b. 7s Atlantic and Gulf 7s bonds “ “ stock.... 74 78 95 reg. stock Tennessee 6s,ex coupons... 44 68, new bonds.... “ • 934 951 77* 82* 79 “ • 90 6s, new,Jan & July 6s, April & Oct... “ Boston returned to the Clearing House, Monday, . 89 0s, new 7s, old 7s, new 44 Mar. Mar. Mar. -V Bid As!: 1011 102* Alabama 8s “ 743,285 10,309,340 44,398,340 10,509,S52 by J. M. 9 New Street, and A. C. Kaufman,} YVeltli & Arents, 270.000 jk The deviations from last week’s returns arc Loans Quotation* from N. Y, Stock Exchange, and also 358,8*3 211,990 450,000 27S,740 1,000,000 3,377,000 15,000 0,480 200,000 1,418,271 300,000 1,145,951 400,000 1,236,195 910,407 300,000 8,900 500,000 1,854,000 30",000 1,417,000 18,000 1,000,000 4,003,000 75,000 300,000 1,000,325 739,223 200,000 490,000 150,000 649,700 19,300 250,000 920,000 275,000 750,000 Republic. 858,855 250.000 SOUTHERN SECURITIES. 85 • • • • .... a ’• 75 8X6 THE CHRONICLE [Juno 25, 1870. QUOTATIONS OF STOCKS AND BONDS. The Dally Prices of the Active Stocks and Governments Value, Whatever the Par STOCKS AND Bid, Ask. SECURITIES. American Gold Coin 111% s, 6sj Gs’ 6s’ Sr{ 5s, do Bid. Ask. SECURITIES. do 2d M., 7.. 94% .... do do 2dM.,7... Atlantic & Gt. West., 1st M., 7. do do 2d M., 7. Baltimore & Ohio 6s of ’75 do do 6s of ’80 do do 6s of ’85 do (N. WT.Va.)2dM.6s do do 3d M. 6s 5-20s ’ (1-55) re'g 5-20s, (i865{ new) reg 5-20s’, (1867) req 5-20s’, (1368) reg 1874, non % 1874, reg 103 reg State Ronds. (Not previously quoted.) Arkansas 7s, L. R. A F. S. issue. 75 Connecticut 6s loj do War Loan Illinois Canal Bonds, 1870 do 6s coupon, ’77 do do 1879 do "War Loan Indiana 5s 115 101 . Joi* * . I . . .... lui 191 do do 2d 3d Bos., Hart. & Eric, 1st 7d% 1:2 96 95 95 si” Belvidcre Delaware, 1st M., 6. do do California 7s Previous Page. on a STOCKS AND Quoted In are SECURITIES. a Bid. Ask. Railroad Bonds. Allegheny Valley, 1st M., 7-30 re.g (!K64) ret/ 5s{ 10-40s, Given Quotations are of the Per Ccn Separate List. STOCKS AND Bid SECURITIES Ask. ... 114% 5.20s, (1S621 6-ij.5-2.is{ are Southern Securities Railroad Bonds. Albany & Susquch, 1st M.t 7.. U. S. Governments. (Not previously quoted.) 6s, 1331, rrrf « STOCKS AND may he. 1 J do do 84 M., 6. 85 M.,6., M.(old) 7 do 1st M. (new) 7. do 1st M., n.(guar) 7. Buff., Lorry & Pittsl)., 1st M.,7. Buff., N. Y. A Erie, 1st M., 7... Burlington & Mo. L. G.. 7. 31 do do do do do do (Leb. Br.) 6, f86. lst-M. (Mem. Br) 7, ’70-’75. 78% 97 93 lstM.(Leb.br.ex)7, ’80-*85 Lou. L’n(Leb.br.cx)G,’93 78% Consol. 1st M., 7, 1898 Marietta A Cin., 1st M., 7,1891. 91% do do 2d M.,7,1896. 76% Mich. Cen., 1st M., conv., 8, ’82. 120 Mil. A St. Paul, 1st M„ 7,18 8.. 95 96 do do 2d M., 7, 1884.. SI do 1st M. (Ia. & Minn.) 7, ’97. 89 90“ do 1st M. (P. du C.) 8, 1898. 107% (lo 2d M., 7.3,1898. 94 95*' Morris A Essex, 1st M. 101% do do 2d M 98 99% do do 32 Railroad Stocks. 77 96 92 77 90 do do convertible., construction. 9i% 90 Hav. A N’liamp, 1st M.,7, ’99. do 90 Bonds conv., 6, ’80. N. Y. Cent., Prcm. S. F., 0, ’8:1 93% do Sink. Fund, 7, 1876. 102% Bur., Ce. 11. & Min.,lstM..gd.,7. Camden A Amboy, 6 of ’70 (Not, previously quoted.) Albany A Susquenanna Alleghany Valley Baltimore A Ohio... Washington Branch Parkersburg Branch Boston A Albany Boston, Hartford A Erie Boston A Lowell Boston A Mtiine Boston A Providence Camden A Amboy 148% - 4 135 151 118% 118% — 28 76% preferred Central Oliio 71 % 53 48 do preferred Cheshire prelerred Columbus A Xenia 149 3% 132 150 Catawissa do .... 47 !♦ Chic., Bur. A Quincy—; Cincinnati, Ham. A Dayton. 95 90 140 . 157 97 103 75 93 U3 do 98 Subscription, 6,’83. f-9 Concord do Real Estate, 6,1888. 89 do 96 do 6 of’75 do Renewal bds, 6, ’87. 93 94 do do 6 of ’83 Connecticut River 95 Kentucky 6s V * N. Y. A Harlem, 1st M.. 7,1873. 101 do io 6 of ’89 do 90)7 Dayton A Michigan Maine 6s 96%, co do cons. M., 6,’93. do 5 Detroit A Milwaukee consol., 6 of ’89.. 91% 95 Maryland 6s, ’70 N. Y. A N. Hav., 1st M., 6, ’75... 91 Camden & Atlantic, 1st M., 7 98 do do prel'.... do -6s, Defence 102% North Missouri, 1st M., do do 2d M.,7. It95., 89 106% Dubuque A Sioux City 'dassaehusetts 6s, Gold 108 do do am. A Bur. A Co., 1st M., 0 2d M.,7,1883.. 65 68* * Eastern (Mass.) 124 ilo too Os, Currency... do do 3d M.,7, 1888.. 43 44 27 60 Catawissa, 1st M., • Elmira A Williamsport do 99 f>s. Gold North Pennsyl., 1st M., 6,1830.. 95 80 Central of N. J., 1st M., 7 do '•«i% do prel'... Michigan Os, 1ST;! Hk: do do <’hattel M„ 10,1887. 109 110 43 do ♦()O t • 47 Erie Railway preferred 2d M..7 do Os, is;s ...101 do do 2(1 Mortgage.7 do 90 132% 90% Fitchburg nic\v 7 do Os, 1SS3 ...iioo do Central Ohio, 1st M., 6 irox Funding Scrip, 7... 102 Hartford A N. Haven 8J!<j do 7s, ISIS ..ln-3 Northern Cent., 1st M. (guar) 6 Cent. Pacific, 1st M., (gold) 6.. u:p?> Huntingdon A Broad Top — do 7s, WarBouutvLonn lion do do 2d M., S. F., Cheshire, 6 ’85. do do Missouri 6s, Hun. A- St. Jos pref I D4! '.15 do do 3d M„ S. F., 6,190-1 Chic. & Alton, 1st M.. S. F , 7.. 97 New Hampshire, 6s Indianapolis, ('in. A Lafayette do do 3d M. (Y. A 0 6, ’77 do 10 2 Ci do 95 1st M.,7 Jefferson., Mad. A Ind.... New Yojk 7s, Bounty, reg 1108% 109% do do Cons, (gold) 6,1(00 18%* do do 2d, Income, 7... 1 92% 116% 117** Lehigh Valley do 112 I 78, do cou. Ohio A Mississippi, 1st M.,7,’72 Chic. Bur. A 5uin., 1st M., 8... 114 .102 103 102%: do !09 I 7s, Canal, 1870.... do Income M.,(W.Dlv)7, ’82 do do 88 1st M., conv.. 8. 1 Little Schuylkill do 105 %1 6s, 1872 do Consol. M., 7, 1898. 91 6:1 64 Chic.', A Milw an., 1st M., 7, ’71. 9 % 95*' I 92* Long Island do 6s, 1873 1-5%, .... Ch. A Nor’w. SO 81 100% Oil Creek A Allcg. II., lat M„ 7. 81%: 81% | Louisv., Cin. A Lex., pref do pref. S. F., 7, ’-5. 6s, 1874 1(5%! ....i Old Col. A Newport Bds, 7, ’77 do 90 do Int. Bds., 7, ’83.. 42 93 43 do do common. do 6s, 1875..: 105% j do do Bonds, 6,1876 do do 96 1st M.,7,1885 80 Louisville A Nashville 80% do 6s, 1877 1106 do 89 do 9)** Pacific of Mo., 1st M., (gd) 6. ’83 88 Exten., 7, 1885... do New Alb. A Clilc.. Louisville, 6s, 1878 106 do do do 1st (Gal. A C.Uii) 7,’85 100 7s (guar) 1880... 93%' .. Marietta A Cin., 1st preferred 1T" do 5s, 1874 10.) do do 2d do 8 Pennsylvania, 1st M.,6,1 80... 102% 103 do. 7,’75. 95 do 2d pref do 5s, 1375 100 do 2(1 M.,6, 1875.... 98% 99 do do 1st M. (PenIn.) 7, ’98.1 90 93 133 Manchester A Lawrence Ohio 6s, 1875 09 98 do do do Consol. S. F., 7,1915.. 92% 93% Debentures, 6, ’69-’71 96% Mine Hill A Schuylkill Haven. 107% It 8 do 6s, 1881 101 Penn. A N. Y., 1st M., guar Chic. A Rock I., 1st 103 92 7 101 New Jersey do 68, 1886 !17% 119 103 i Pliila. A Erie, 1st M.,7,1887.... 91% do A Pac., 1st M.,7, ’96.1101% New York'A Harlem, prel'..... Pennsylvania 5s, 1877 103 do 1st M. (gold) 6,’81 91 ' 92 Cin., Ham. A 1)., 1st M., 7,’30... ! 91 , < 3 ;;;; 160 New York A New Haven do Military Loan 6s, 1871 05% do 1st M. (cur.) 6, ’81 do do 2d M.,7,’85...) 87 88 151 do do do Stock Loan, 6s,,TJ-’77|,Oi^ scrip. do 2d M.,7,1885 do do 3d M., 8,77... 95 91 Now York, Prov. A Boston— 92% 93 do do 6s,’77-’S2 10514 do 3d M.,6,1920 Cin. A Indiana, 1st M.,7 Northern of New Hampshire.. U5 120 j-82 ! S3 Rhode Island 6s j!U3 do do 2d M.,7,1817..{ 83 ! 83 Philadelphia A Reading, 6, ’70. IK) 91 84% Northern Central Vermont 6s 100 do do C., Rich. A Ch.,1st M.,guar.,7‘95 6, ’71 North Missouri 21% cio do do do 2d M., 7,1839. 6, ’80. 93% 82 North Pennsylvania. 84 City Bonds. do do Cin., San. A Clev., IstM., 7,r’77. 83 ’77.i 6, ’86. 105 106 Norwich A Worchcstcr Baltimore 6s of ’75 95 do tio do 1st M., 6, I960.. do 6, ’93. 94 %| 91% Ogdens. A L. Champlain do 18'4 do do do do 1st M., 7,1890.. 7, ’93. 10 do do pref.... do 6s, 1886 Clove. A Pitts., 2d M„ 7, ’73.... 99 Phil., Wilm. & Bal„ 1st M.,6, ’84 1(K) Ohio A Mississippi, preferred. 74 u do i 94%i 91% 1890, Park 6s .'PitIs. Cin. A St L., 1st M., 7,1900 96 do co 3d M.,7,’75 96 Oil Creek A Allegheny River. 94 91% Boston 5s, gold 97' i 98 1 I do do Steuben A I., 6 do 1th M., 6,’92... 78% 80 Old Colony & Newport 97 16% do 6s ; Fills. A Connellsv., 1st do do Cons. S. F.. 7. ID'.KR, 85 M.,7, ’98 75 I 75% Pacific (of Missouri) Brooklyn 6s do do 1st Mm 6, 1889 Col.. (Mi. A In. Cell.. 1st M.,190s.1 81 % 81% Panama 133 37 do Water 6s 91% 95 do do 2d M.. 7, l!K*9. 69% > Fitts... Ft. W. A C„ 1st M„ 7.1912 105 (105% 116 [116% do Park 6s Pennsylvania 91 CoIuiiImA Xenia,1st M.,7, *90.; 1W ; do do 2d M.,7,1912. 100% 101 * Philadelphia Erie. 59% j 59% do Bounty 6s, 1888 do do Cumber. A Penn , 1st M., 6. ’91.j 3d M.,7, 1912 94 * 94% 120 Philadelphia A Trenton do Citv7s Rutland A Bur., 1st M.,7, 1863. do do 2d Mm 6. 'S3. 20 * Pliila., German. A Norristown 160 Chicago Water 6s do 9o „do 2d M„ 7, 1863.. Dayton A M ieh., 1st M., 7, '81.. Pliila., Wilming. A Baltimore. 106 do Sewerage 6s do do 2d M., 7, ’81.. 82 S1.LmA1.,&T.|1I., 1st MmS.F.7.’9I 97%! Pittsburg A Conncllsville do Municipal 7s do do do do 3d M., 7. ’88.. 81 2d M., 7, ’91. 87 Port.,-Saco A Portsmouth do !IHI 97' Sewerage 7-s do do 2d M., Income. 7i 75 do M’o’do dep. bds, 7, ’8|-’9I. 84 I 78 Rome, Watertown A Ogdens.. 120 120 Cincinnati 5s SO St. Lou A Iron Mt., 1st M.., 7, ’92 39% -IK) Davton A Union, Ist M., 7, ’79. Rutland 25 28 do 6s 88 9 *t Si. L., Jacks. A Ch., 1st M.,7’9-1 ',■> \; ‘do do 2d M.,7, ’79..I do 75 92% 76 preferred do 7-30s IIP. 102 do do Inc. M., 6,’79. j Toledo, l’eoria A Warsaw: St. Louis A Iron Mountain... 48% 49% Detroit 7s UK) 99 1st M. (W.I)) 7, ’96 Davton A West., 1st M.,7, 1905. 83 SI. Louis, Jacksonv. A Chic.. 82% do Water 7s ’ in* !H* 1st M., (E. D.) 7, ’94 do do 1st M.. 6, 190.)., 73 35 SI Toledo. Wab A U esteru, j ref. Jersey City Water 6s 95 96 2d M. <W. I).) 7. ’86 69 * 72% Delaware, 1st M., 6. ls75 ' Union Pacific 41% 4 2 Louisville 6s, ’82 to ’84.. SO 771 do do Ex. M., 6, ’75. Toledo, Wabash A Western Vermont A Canada 103 do 6s. ’96 to ’97 761 74 1st M. (T. A W. ) 7, 93 k 96 Del., L. A W. 1st M.(L.A W.)7.’71 93 Vermont A Massachusetts 66 do Water 6s, ’87 to ’89.. 79 1st M. <L E. W. A St. L.) 7. '90 do do 1st M., S. F., 7,’75. j 98 West Jersey 127* ■ do ■Water Stock 6s, ’97. 76 1st M. (Gt. Western) 10,.’71... do do 2d M.,7, 1881 | 91 do Wharf 6s < 76 79 1st M (Gt. Western) 7, V5....I Dot. A Mil lstM.,conv.,7, ’75 j 84 do special tax 6s of ’89.; 71 1st M. (Gt. West’ll of ’59) 7, ’88 do 86 2d M., 8,1375 90% New York— City Railroad Stocks. I 1st M. (Quin. A Tol.) 7, "90 do IstM., Fund’d cp,7, ’75- 75 83% 85 Water Stock 5s, ’75 to ’SO 95 1st M. (Ill. A South. Ia.) 7, ’82.1 do 1st M.jDet.APon )7,’T1 86 NAME OF ROAD. Central Park 5s, ’98 2d M. (Tol. A Wah.) 7 78 do 2d M.,(Det.APon.)8, ’86 95 81 Bleecker st. A Fulton Ferry... Building Loan 5s, ’71 to ’73.. 47% 85* 10 2d M. Wah. A Western) 7,71. Dubuq’e A. S City, 1st M.,7, ’33 96% 100 Water Stock 6s, ’75 Broadway A Seventh Av 60 99 67% ! 10) 2d M. (Gt. West’ll of "59) 7, ’93 Eastern Mass., conv.,6,1874...| 98 100 81% 82 Central Park 6s, ’76 to ’93 Brooklyn City 198 97% 100 do do Equipment Bonds, 7, ’83 78 Mort., 6,1888... ”.9 Central Park, N. A East Rivers 35 Docks and Slips, 6s, ’76 40 * ; 97% East Penn., 1st M., 7,1S88 Consol. Mort., 7,1907 1 81 40 City Cemetery 7s, ’88 Coney Island (Brooklyn 30 '103105 Elm. A Wil’ms, 5s Union Pac., 1st M. (gd) 6, ’95-'99; } 60 87% 87% Dry Bock E. B’dway A Battcryi 90 Tax Relief 7s, 79 95 1: 3% 105 do do Land Grant, 7,1889: 76% do 7s, 1880 .1 95% Lunatic Asylum 7s Eighth Avenue [150 1103% 105 do Erie Railway, 1st M., 7,18<7 Income 10s ! 98 99% 87% Forty-second st. A Gd. st. Jer.il 15 125* * Philadelphia 6s, old i 99 M(>() Un. Pae., E. 1)., 1st M.(gd) 6, ’95 80 do 2nd M.t conv.. 7, ’79.1 95% 96 8! Second Avenue ( 95 f 35 6s, new „ do M00% ioo.% co do 1st M. (gold) 6, 1896.. I 3d Mort., 7,1833. 91 %| y> 76% 77% Sixth Avenue 1125 TO Pittsburg Compromise 4%s. .7 75 ; do do 4th M., conv, 7, ’89. 83% 83% 1st M.(Leav.Br.)7, ’96 Third Avenue do 195 do 5s T.. ! ** 1 do do 5th M., conv., 7,’88. 73 Land Gr. M„ 7,’71-’76l 55* * 80 do Funded Debt 6s 'JO Erie A Pittsburg, 1st M., 7, ’82. — do Income Bonds, 7,1916j 25 27 do Canal Stocks. do 7s do do 2d M.,7, ’90. Verm’t Ccn., 1st M., cons., 7, ’t6 86% .... do 86% Water exten. 7s. 98* do do do 2d Mort., 7,1891 consol,7,’98 43% Chesapeake A Delaware Alleghany County, 5 80 81 78 Harris. A Lancas.,lst M.,6, ’8:1.1 do Equip Loans, 8 104% Delaware Division.. 93 do do' Cs, ’85.. 98 Han. A St. Jos., L. Gr. M.,7, ’81 108 Vermont A Mass., 1st M.,6, ’83. Portland 6s 91% 94 Delaware A Hudson 125 do Westell. A Phil.. 1st M., conv, 7. 110 Convert-., 8s San Francisco 6s of iS5S.\\"! Lehigh Coal and Navigation.. 69 85 I Hud. River, 2d M., S. F„ 7, ’85.. It2% do 69% do 2d M.,6,1878... do 7s 92 I Monongaliela Navigation Co.. ICO 100 do Sd M., 7, 1875.. West Jersey, 6,1853 I 97 do Morris (consolidated) 10s, gold 25 97 %: 30 West Md, IstM.,endorsed,6, ’90 .(Hunt. A Broad Top, 1st M.. 7.. .j St Louis 6s do preferred 70 72 80% I do 1st. M., unend., 6, ’90.. 77*v 79 do do 2d M., 7,’75... do Water Cs, goldi 97 "| 97% I do Schuylkill Navigat’n (consol). 16 - 17% do do 2d M., endorsed, 6, ’90. Cons. M„ 7, ’95. do 66% "Water A Wharf Gs. do do 1 pref. 36% 86% j 80% West. Penn.. 1st M. (guarl) 6...I [Illinois Central, 7,1875 ! 110 do Park 6s 95 Susquehanna A Tide-Water... 12 83 • (Ind;, Cin. A Laf., 1st M..7. 74 j 72 Wilming. A Read;,1st M., T) 1900 91 98* * Union preferred do Park 6s gold 96% 97% I \ do (I. A C ) 1st Mm 7.1888! 86 88 do Sewer Special Tax (is 85%; Ind. A Vincenes, 1st >L,7.1908.1 j City RR Bonds. Miscellaneous Stocks 96* * 98 I Bice. St. A Ful. F.,lst M.,7, ’80. 75 j1J e O'., Mad. A 1,1 st M. (IA M) 7, ’81' 80 New or IteceiitLoans.i j do do 2d M.,7,1873 98 19 B’dw’v A 7th Aw, 1st M„ 7, ’81.. 80 Bur. C. R. & M. RIt, 1st 82% Coal— American 90 39 M.7(g i)! j do do 1st M.,7,1906.... 80 Cen. Park,N.& E.II., 1st M.,7.. 81 Cites. & Ohio RR, 1st M., 77 Central 6,<gd); j '-0 60 I June., Cin. A Ind., 1st. M.,7, ’85. 50 Coney Isl.A Brook., 1st M.,7.. Clti.pCin. A Louis. II., 1st M, 7 :u) Maryland Coal i , 95 'June., Pliila 1st M., guar.6, ’82. 89 9') ! I). D’k E. B’dway A Bat., 7,’74. 85 95 Ind’polis. T-lloom’ton & W, 7gd ...J 92%: ,Kansas Pacificist M.. 221 I Pennsylvania 83 (gold) 7. 95 (Eighth Avenue, 1st Mort., 7 97% 100 LouiswANash.II, 1stM,cons.,7' ....! 90 (Kentucky Cent., 1st M., 7,1872. t Spring Mountain 50 Second Avenue, 1st M„ 7, 1877. 85 95 Lake Supc’r. & Miss., 1st 1 W ilkesbarre do do 65 2(1 M.,7,1883,. 90*' 52* 64 M.,7 i *95 do do 2d M.,7,1876.. 80 90 Lake Sh A M. S., (new) 7, 1889. Citv, Ala,, 8s.. ‘ ' Gax—Brookly n .do do 3d M., 7,1885.. 75 N. Hav.,Mid.&>Vil. IIR. 1st M. 400 Citizens (Brooklyn) ....... 160 do do 1st M., S. F.,7, ’85. 99% 100* Canal Ronds. N.Y A Osw.Mid. 100 Harlem do do 2d M. (M.S.) 7,’77. 2 0 R,lstM.7(gd) Chesa. A I)elaw., 1st M.,6, ’86.. 92 94% 95 Roches Wat. Wrks.,lst 95 do Manhattan 80 1st M. (J)., M.A T.) 7, ’76 I M.6(gd) 2-9 Delaware I)iv., 1st M., 6. 18 81 Selma.Marion & Mem. IIR84 (lo 1st M. (C. A Tol.) 7, ’85. 103 Metropolitan... 1st .\L, endorsed, Lehigh Navigation, 6, ’73 New York do 8, (gold) 2d M. (C. A Tol) 7, ICO do St. Jos w Den. C. 11,1st Lean of 1884, 6, ’8-tl, 87% ’86.] .. do Williamsburg Dividend Bonds, 7 M,8(gd) ! | 97% (lo 93% [ Loan of 1897,6, ’67! D'j/st—Farmers’ Loan A Trust Lawrence, (Pa.)lst M„ 7,1886.. do Gold Loan of’97,6,’97; 89** st New York Life & Trust.... 89% •* Lehigh Valley, 1st M„ 6,1S73.. 93 do Convert, of 1877, 6, ’77i s’s SO Union Trust do do 1st (new) M., 6,’9 92% 95%1 West Wis. RR., 1st Monong’a. Naw, 1st M., 6, ’87..! United States Trust do do IstM., Hazel ton, 6. 90 ‘ Winona A St. I’etcr,2d M.,7. {Morris, 1st M.,6, 1876 82* ..j 80 Misrellan con*— Little Miami. 1st M„ 6,1SS3 80 ) 85 do Boat Loan, S. l'\. 7, ’85i 74% 75 Little Schuylkill, 1st M.,7,1877. 102 Brunswi’k <'ity Land....... 8% Schuylkill Nav., 1st M., 6,1872. 75 Pacific A Atlantic Teleg... m ILoulsv. C. A Lex., 1st M„ 7, ’5*7.. do IfHsccIIane’us Bonds. do 2d M„ 6,18'2.. Atlantic Mail Steamship.. Louis. A Fr’k., 1st M., 6, ’70-’78.. 88 Am. Dock A Im. Co. 7, ’,86 10 81% do do Improw, 6,1870.. 97 do Mariposa Gold Louisv. Loan,6. ’81. 81 8 82 Long Dock’Bonds Susquc. & Tide Water, 6, ’78... 87%’ 90 ! L. A Nash. 1st M. (m.s.) 7, ’77.. 95 American Express yr. Union Tclo. 1st 47%; Union, 1st Mortgage, 6,1883... M.,7 1875.. 88% l 89%; Wells Fargo scrip do LomLoan 3 ,.. LUI .... .... . . .... .. ... ... 162% iu31 .... 9i%|:::: 3*1% ..... ii‘% .... .... . .... I .... . ... j M?, 96%' ’?o'..*.’ j ... ... 8-i%; .... •g ” “ , . * ... ' „ — • ••.I, — • . , ... ... Montgomery .. ... .... .. i5Cui% .0“;.I!-1“tM'6(,"l>| --I £8 ' M.,7,*(g*<i) . :!:fi (M.8.)6,’86-’87 77 79^ Wyoming Valley, 1st M 8 1 ? JSo&tou Water Power , *8% June 25, 1870.] THE CHRONICLE in Railway JHonitor. a first class 817 condition—completing the bridge over the Ohio at Park¬ ersburg, shortening the line thence to the Big Hocking, straightening the line through the tunnel on the north si lei f F?X?LANA'riON OF THE STOCK AND BOND TABLES. and Ohio Railroadwill make its main linediyAthens, <fcc. The Baltimore the way of Parkersburg in1 et«ad of Wheeling, The Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad will Prices of tHe Active Stocks and Bonds are given In tke also lay Bankers’ Gazette ” ante; quotations of other securities will be f und on the pre¬ a track on the nridge whi-h crosses the Muskingum, between Marietta ceding page. and Harmar, to connect with the Du k Creek read. 2. Quotations of Southern Securities are given in a separate • “ Table. 3* No reliable prices of Insurance Stocks can be made. 4 The Table of Itallroad, Canal and on —Arrangements have been Other the next page, comprises all Companies of which the stock is sold in any ot the principal cities (except merely local corporations). The figures just after the name of the company indicate the No. of the CHRONICLE in which a report ol the Com¬ pany was last published. A star (*) indicates leased roads; in the dividend column x—extra; a=stock or scrip. 5. The Tables of Railroad, Canal and Other Bonds occupy in all, four pages, two of which will be published in each number. In these pages the bonds of Companies which have been consolidated are frequently given under the name of Consolidated Corporation. The date given in brackets immediately after the name of each Company, indicates the time at which the state¬ the to Omaha will be shortened about sixty miles. Messrs. Turner Broth¬ who offer for sale the first mortgage b nds of the In danapolis, Bloomington an l Western Railway Company, report that the bonds are selling rapidly, and that the loan will be closed at an early date. —The St. Paul Press gives the from the President of the pany Q.—F.Quarterly, beginning with February. Q.—M.=Quarterly, beginning with Week. Chicago and North western 1869. June 2(5-,522 ..2d June 125,209 126,S76 Chicago & Alton...1. ..2d June 112,141 Milwaukee and ..3d June 374,463 Mich gan Central ..1st Jui e St. Lo us, &Iron Mountain ..2d June Toledo Wabaeliand Western.. ..2d June 75,OSS 31,816 109,645 118,711 8Q,230 Inc. 286,522 Chicago and Rock Island St. Paul — object cf their visit to this city is to make some personal observations preliminary to a settlement of their programme, which, it is fair to suppose, embraces some scheme of connection with St. Paul. r The Northwestern Company cannot afford to do without a direct communication with the commercial metropolis of the North¬ Reported.— 1S»0. 21,538 75,(9 4 73,143 Dec • 20,999 .... 1,67(5 .... 2,499 25,751 ... west.” . . The South Pacific Railroad (formerly the Southwest Branch of the Missouri Pacific Railroad) ■ as been successfully completed from St. Louis to Springfield, Mo., and will be rapidly prosecuted south westward to the 35th parallel of north latitude,where the line will join the Atlantic and Pacific dailroad. The South Pacific Company is under an able Boston management, with Messrs. Seligman as their New York and Frankfort bankers. In May the road received $97,000 traffic, although but very recently opened to — 12,242 .... 10,278 1,946 • recently on a visit to to push to an immediate consummation the scheme of an ex¬ tension of the Northwestern from Madison to Winona, thus connecting it with the Winona and St. Peter Railroad, which they own. The latter road is to be completed to the Minnesota River at St. Peter, but no further extension of it is proposed at present. Beyond this the policy of the •company in regard to the Minnesota connections has not been de¬ termined on, and the the last Saturday of the month. Road. following as information obtained Chicago and Northwestern Railroad Com¬ Minnesota : “ The new directory have de¬ termined 7. The Table of City Bonds will be published on the third Saturday of each month. The abbreviations used in this table are the same ns those in the tables of railroad bonds mentioned above. The Sinking Fund or assets held by each city are given on the same line with the name. Railroad Earnings for the Cutest Week Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western, and the Chicago, Burliui'Quit cy Railroads. By this route the distance from Cincinnati ers, March. «. The Tabic of United States and State Securities will be on Indianapolis. Bloomington ton and ment of its finances was made. In the “luterest Column” the abbreviations are as follows : J. & J.=January and July; F. Sc A-=February and August; M. Sc S.= March and September; A. Sc O. April and October; M. Sc N.=May ard Novem¬ ber; J. Sc D.=June ami December. QJ. =Quarterly, beginning with January; published monthly, made by the and Western Railw ay Company, as soon as the road is completed, which it is expected will be in July, to run through trains from Cincinnati to Omaha. These trains will pass over the Cincinnati and Indianapolis, Stocks, • • • Lake Shore & Michigan Southern.—The directors of the Lake •Shore A Michigan Southern Railway Company have for some time past had in contemplation the expediency « f placing a new mortgage on all their property and franrhists (except the Detroit, Munroe and Toledo Springfield. branch), amounting to 925,000,000. Recently it has been deciJecl upon, At a meeting of the stockholders of the Missouri Pacific Railroad and at the meeting to-day the board authorized the issue of $25,000,000 consolidated mortgage bonds, for the pin pose of retiring the bonds now Company, held in St. Louis. Mo., on June 15th, a lease between that outstanding as they mature, for d-uble track equipment, &c., where Company and the St. Louis, Lawrence and Denver Road, and a branch to Lexington, Mo., was the same is needed, and for other unanimously ratified. The former road is a cut purposes, including the taking up cf off between Pleasant Hill, Mo., and the floating debt. The bonded debt of the company Lawrence, Kansas, which will shorten the dis auce to Denver about On June 1st \va< twenty miles, and give St. Louis $23,313,000 Lobs — shoiter route to Southern Kansas. The Ogdensburg and Lake Cl)2mplain Railroad has declare i a 924,000— 1,324,000 dividend of 3£ per cud. fl he contract with the other roads is 6 per $21,989,000 cent for three years, 7 per cent for three years, and 8 percent for 25,000 000 fourteen years. The extra l per cent is made from the surplus, which is sufficient to enable them to pay the extra 1 per cent for three years, $3,011,000 making it a 7 per cent stock for the six first year\ amount due June 1st, and which has been paid Less debt of Detroit, Munroe and Toledo branch, not in¬ cluded in the new mortgage — . Tot'd amount Amount of f bo: d d debt to he lelunded c new in< ngage Leaving to be used f —Daily Bulletin. r a $400,003 the purposes above named The issue of $3,000,000 of Third Mortgage Bonds of the Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad Company; is to raise the funds to put this road — Chicago and Alton. liSLl*. 1S70. 1868. (350 m.) (742 7/1.) (280 rn.) 331,568 (431 7//.) $276,116 275,139 267,094 $313,181 279,121 328,390 313,325 333,799 521,i 36 761,285 391,308 4S5.1K8 f 503,270 402,854 351,041 493,231 506,623 468,212 397,515 310,350 *486,19(5 «503.745 535 366 (410,COO V4()9,568 [361,700 5,719,595 1869. 1870. (862 m.) (862 rn.) (965* m.) $587,142 $659,137 $654,f 87 663,391 644,374* 597,571 6)5,253 1868. 668.282 646,974 626,248 778 260 649,714 696,228 841,863 979,400 914,403 814,413 696,677 7,617,6208,823,482 f——Ohio & 1868. (340 m.) 217.082 223.236 194,455 287,557 307,122 283,329 274,636 233,861 192,3(54 275,220 964,089 92,803 828,041 298,027 254,896 2,915.5C 108,461 95,416 Commercial see m 110.213 ...May., . -) 1870 $194,112 207,302 f246,266 289.272 278,216 264.273 I . 1,541,056 950,636 (329 m.) $313,890 304,115 326,880 415,758 369,625 325,501 321,013 392,942 456,974 Year. 4,570,014 Iron Mt. 378,456 341,885 668,380 Miscel¬ and 511.820 1870. 329,950 353,569 1868. (350 m.) .Mar.., .April, May.. , 821,202 333,507 . Oct Nov... .Bee... • 127,817 158,788 172,216 172,317 265.136 • Year., 174,500 157,379 1,923,862 2,014,542 94,927 196,207 136,263 039,161 269,400 259,000 149,184 139,0(0 525,363 96,550 -V. Haute.—^-Toledo, Wab. (521 m.) $278,712 196,136 210,473 $119,721 586,342 250.5-00 (222 m ) $152,392 143,986 201,596 • 1870. (404 m.) $213,101 1 6,517,816 155,081 1869. (404 rn.) 001,163 1868. -July.. Aug... .Sep.... 184,411 67S,800 -North Missouri,-* 724,514 1,039,811 1870. 140.408 382,823 377,0^ 0 443,133 730,700 630,844 458,190 1869. .June. 3,128,177 $896,171 4(50,287 (210 m.) $132,622 130,545 256,272 (936 rn.) 330,233 420,771 436,412 565,718 ; (210 m.) $127,594 133,392 149,165 155,388 175,950 171,8C8 157,397 154,132 144,164 18(5,88-j 202,238 204,552 1S9,351 168,559 (825 m.) 81037,4(53 .... 273,395 1870. $369,228 $454,130. 1868. ..Jan... .Feb.., 1809. 8 556,917 2. 468.S79 374,542 306.764 5,551,397 ^1024,045 490.772 448,419 339,610 825,854 ^-Milwaukee & St. Paul.-^ 423,39? 522,683 473,516 4,749,163 . & Western.-^ 1n7(>. (521 rn.) (521 rn.) 1869. $284,192 275,(00 293,645 240 394 257,799 2S(i,825 342,704 260,529 295,298 318,699 310,892 311,832 ........ /—Union Pacific-—* 1870. 1869. (1053 m.) (1033 m) 528,529 500.189 539,238 . . • * 283,1'S3 484,208 450,24(5 617,585 450,203 470,720 429,898 • 700,000 » 312,529 348,890 810,800 758,4(57 422,.‘568 323,3?8 293 344 ....... 1870. (390 m.) 201,5(0 218,600 244,161 246,046 259.408 253.3(57 *581,000 ' Y475,600 (887,700 g424,5"9 1869. ) (390 m.) $362,800 $204,112 398,200 180,840 443,700 239,522 443,30!) 247,661 507,9’. 0 241 456 *579,000 S 691,209 -Clev. Col. Cin. &I-^ rn §480,900 7658,386 (329 m.) (329 m.) $384,119 337,992 320,636 329,127 380.430 386,527 411.814 412,033 406,283 403,646 366,623 .-St. L, Alton & T. 1870. (355 tn.) (210 m.) $202,447 $192,760 267,867 93, ICO 294,871 113,894 289,550 301,019 283,000 115,175 319,441 316,708 1,258,284 (60S 645,789 862,900 419,000 f 508,000 A440,300 J 801.952 1,212,081 1809. 410,825 390,671 2(52,5 ’5 144^153 1.211,149 1,180,932 1,076,673 ...Oct... ...Nov.. ...Dec... 249,319 350,613 329,243 298,708 236,108 J une. .July.. ...Aug ...Sep... 1,391,315 ) 1,094,597 1870. (520-94 m.) $351,767 $308,5S7 297,464 276,431 755,404 872,114 Is.and Pacific 1869. 4,797,461 .. 110,837 1869. 850,192 $731,283 13,415,424 . 142,014 135,376 129,306 (355 $724,890 807,478 13,429,534 90,177 ..Jan 98,275 ...Feb 101,379 ...Mar., 106, -we ..April. 129.096 121,519 125,065 1870. (1,157/n) Michigan Central. 116,198 126,556 (340 m.) $196,787 218,234 253,065 279,933 (1,157/n.) $871,218 830,286 1,149,258 1,092,378 1,269,934 1868 117.695 r-Facific of Mo (1 152 m.) 1868. (454 m.) e433,434 .., 1870. 104,585 106,641 1 9,752 119,169 121,403 1870. 1,507,479 1,570,066 1,107,083 1,001,986 (251 m.) 108,413 1869. 2)4,619 $211,973 231,351 265,905 252,149 98,482 1869. Year.. l 95,924 Mississippi. (340 m.) $180,366 216,080 2 >1,459 214,409 218,639 Items, page. 1,167,155 1,03?,813 1,321,139 1,414,231 1,144,029 867,731 .Oct .Nov $99,541 ■90,298 1,294,095 709,644 previous .Bee.... 8 1869 618,800 672,551 699,532 July.., Aug.., .Sept.., • • (251 m.) (251 tn.) $92,433 81,599 524 693 681,040 June. —Marietta and Cincinnati- 536,165 4 14,443 389,966 901,630 >. 4,608,642 4,681,562 <—Illinois Central.— 763,779 • 345 812 579,642 1868. Railroad 1868. (431 rn.) $293,978 •Jan... 323,825 ..Feb... 314,366 .Mar... f 334,673 April. M ay.. ,390,044 315,098 303 342 1.532,657 j on a Chicago & Northwestern--. r-Chic-Hock * 1870. 358,726 r S 511,854 S6 9.7&S « 1869. 784,564 X 404,012 g 558,100 j 556,01 0 other News, MONTHLY EAliNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. —Central Pacific—soil212,604 218,932 For laneous 591,420 706.602 623,559 . 1,057,332 323,279 899,488 434,283 837,388 716,828 4,013,200 4,252,312 5,709,183 •n • f, • f. T • Ml • • • • • • • • • • 818 THE CHRONICLE. (June 25, 1870. RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Subscribers will confer a great favor by giving us Immediate notice of any error discovered In our Tables, COMPANIES. For a see DIVIDEND. Last explanation of this table, full paid. For full explanation of this table, Raihcay Monitor, oil the pre¬ ceding page. Periods. Raihcay Monitor, on the pre¬ ceding COMPANIES. a see Date. page. Rate. DIVIDEND. Stock Out¬ stand¬ Last ing. paid. Periods. Date. Rate. pA iR Railroads. Allegheny Valley, No. 251 par 50 100 Atlantic and Gulf Atlan. & St. Lawrence* No. 225.10C and West Point. No. 221..100 Atlanta Augusta and Savannah* 100 Baltimore and Ohio, No. 250 100 Washington Branch* 100 Parkersburg Branch 50 Berkshire, No. 247 100 Boston and Albany, No. 247 100 Boston, Con. & Montreal .jpref. .100 Boston, Hartford & Erie.No. 247.100 Boston and Lowell, No. 247 500 Boston and Maine, No. 236 100 Boston and Providence, No. 247.100 Buffalo, New York and Erie*...100 Burlington and Missouri River .100 do do pref.100 Camden and Amboy No. 250—100 do do scrip of joint Co.’s ’00*’70 Camden and Atlantic, No. 251... 50 do do preferred.. 50 Cape Cod 60 50 Catawissa,* No. 255 do preferred 50 Cedar Rapids and Missouri* ... .100 do do pref.. .. . Cent.Georgia & Bank. Co.No.243100 250. .100 Central of New Jersey, No. Central Ohio do preferred... 50 Charlotte, Col. & Aug., No. 257. 50 2.241.250 3.691.200 2.494.900 1/232,200 733,700 10,267,862 1,650,000 7,239,533 000,000 19,411,600 800,000 25,000,000 Jan. & July. Mar., ’70 Jan., ’70 3X April & Oct. April & Oct. Dec., ’69 Apr., ’70 Apr., ’70 Quarterly. Apr.',* ’73 Jan. & July. May * Nov. 2,215,000 Jan. & July. 4,550,000 Jan. & July. 3,360,000 Jan. & July. 950,000 June & Dec. 4 5 July, ’70 Nov., ’69 July, ’70 July, ’70 July, ’70 Dec:,’69 5 3 5 3X 380.500 5,000,000 937,850 Feb. & Aug. Feb., ’70 377,100 731,200 721,9-26 Jan. & July, Jan., ’70 1.159.500 2,200,000 May & Nov, 5,432,000 May & Nov. 4.666.800 June & Dec. 15,000,000 Jan. & July. 2,425,000 June & Dec. 400,000 June & Dec. — . .. Panama 100 50 Pennsylvania No. 244 Philadelphia and Erie,* No. 255 50 . do do SX Nov., ’69 J ’70 ’69 *69 *70 ’70 1.13 5 1* l ’70 *70 ’70 ’70 ’69 5 5 5 June, ’70 2 April,’70 Apr., ’70 3X 4 *3* Nov., ’69 3 ‘sx Feb., ’70 May, ’70 April,’70 Oct., ’67 Dec., ’69 May, ’70 Jan., ’70 Feb., ’70 July, ’70 Apr., *70 3X 2X 2X *5* 3 5 4 ’69 ’70 ’70 ’70 ’70 7 3% 3X 4 3 2,X 3X Jan., ’70 Feb., ’66 Dec., ’69 4 7.9 July. ’70 Jan., ’70 *4* July, ’70 July, *70 July, ’70 3 4 Shore Line Railway South CarolinaNo. 213 iSouth Side (P. & L.) South West. Georgia.* No. 220..100 Syracuse, Bingh & N. Y, No.252.100 Terre Haute and Indianapolis 50 Toledo, Peoria* Warsaw ^.100 do do do 1st pref.100 do do do 2d pref.100 Toledo, Wabash & West.No.255.100 .. do do do pref.100 Utica and Black River, No. 252.. 100 Vermont and Canada* .100 Vermont & Maseachu., No. 247. .100 Virginia and Tennessee 100 do do pref Western (N. Carolina) West Jersey, No. 250 Worcester and Nashua, No. 100 50 ’70 ’70 ’70 ’70 July, ’70 4 5 5 Apr., ’70 1* 5 Jan., Jan., Feb., Apr., 5 4 25 50 25 100 100 Pennsylvania...Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 50 50 10 .. May*,'’70 ’69 *70 ’70 3 * 79. ’70 7*39. 4 4 3X 5 *5* Feb., ’70 4 3 5 July*,* *69 *4* 4 4 4 4 5 3X .Jan., ’70 April *’70 June, ’70 May, ’70 .. .. Feb., ’70 59. July, ’70 Jan., ’70 Apr., *70 5 June, ’70 **8k 3X 4 ... 50 Manhattan 50 Metropolitan 100 New York 50 Williamsburg Improvement—Canton 50 16 Boston Water Power.. Brunswick City ! 39. * *5 July, ’70 ~ax ’69 Feb. * May, ’70 7 Jan., *70 Feb., ’70 "2H Jan., ’70 5 Aug. Feb., *70 *4 Jan. & July. Jan*.*,* *’70 ’*6* Jan., ’70 iuss "3X June & Dec. Jan. & July. May, Jan., .June, Jan., Jan. & July. Jan. & July. Feb. & Aug. Jan. & July. July, ’69 Jan., ’64 Feb., 70 Jan., ’70 June & Dec. 3 & 30s 3 4> oa May & Nov. Jan. & July. ’70 ’70 a d 3 4 2 ’70 ’69 • o • 4 5 5 aciflc & Atlantic Amer. Merchants’ Union United States 100 100 Wells, Fargo & Co 100 Steamship — Atlantic Mall 100 Pacific Mail, No. 257 100 Trust.— Farmers’ Loan &JTrust. 25 National Trust 100 New York Life and Trust.. .100 Union Trust 100 United States Trust 100 Mining.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa Gold, prtf do do Quicksilver do ..100 -....100 Trust, certif. preferred .. 100 100 common Feb. & Aug. Feb. & Aug. iFeb. & Aug. May & Nov. Jan. & July. Feb. & Aug. Feb. & Aug. 4 5 5 3 3 Feb., ’70 -Feb.,’70 Feb., ’70 May, ’67 Jan., ’70 ~6* Jan! July. Jan., ’65 *5* 1,500,000 Mar. & Sept. 2,500,000 500,000 June & Dec. Mar., ’70 4 2,000*000 July, ’69 ”5’ May,’ 70 Jan., ’70 '*5* Nov.,’69 ’66 ’70 *70 ’70 ’70 Jan., ’70 *5 & Jan. & July. Dec., ’69 6 85cts. O 10,250,000 500,OCX) 2‘ 3,000.000 100 10,000,000 Express— Adams 3 * Feb., ’67 Feb., ’67 41,063,i(X) (Brooklyn) 100 25 20 Jersey City and Hoboken... 20 3X *3*9*. * SX sx April,’70 Feb. & Aug. Feb. & Aug. Telegraph—West.Union. No. 222.100 .100 . Wyoming Valley 4 Sept., ’66 Sept., '66 3 12 Mar., ’70 July, ’70 **5* !» Wilkesbarre 2X 3 5 ’70 April,’70 Feb., ’70 3,200,000 1,250,000 1,000,000 3,400,000 1,250,000 2,000,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 386,000 4,000,000 2,800,000 1,000,000 750,000 731,250 4,000,000 Citizens Harlem 2 3X Jan. Feb. & 2,478,750 905,222 576,050 869,450 635,200 5,819,275 1,365,600 3,939,900 1,314,130 1,988,150 2,700,000 1,700,000 1,000,000 II,700,000 1,000,000 1,606,000 2,500,000 2,860,000 2,950,800 555/500 2,227,000 1,209,000 1,550,000 50 100 f/«9.—Brooklyn 3* April,’70 July, "JO ~2*X Jan. & July. Feb. & Aug. Jan. & July. 10,OtK),000 50 25 Coal.—American Ashburton Butler Cameron Central 5 Feb., ’70 Feb., ’70 July, ’70 ’70 ’70 ’70 ’70 July, ’70 May, ’70 Annually. 2,(MO,000 1,983,563 8,229,594 1,633,350 15,000,000 100 4,999,400 Lehigh Coal and Nav..No. 256.. 50 8,739,800 Monongaliela Navigation Co.... 50 728,100 Morris (consolidated) No. 254...100 1,025,000 do 100 1,175,000 preferred 50 4,300,000 Pennsylvania Schuylkill Navigat’n (consol.)*. 50 1,908,207 do 50 2,888,977 pref Susquehanna & Tide-Water 50 2,002,746 Union, preferred 50 2,907,850 West Branch and Susquehanna. 50 1,100,000 Miscellaneous. 5 4 ’70 ’70 ’70 4 ’70 Canal. Cumberland Coal & Iron....100 * April April July, July, July, Jan., 247.100 Chesapeake and Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio *3X June, ’70 Apr., ’70 Aug., ’66 Feb., ’70 Jan., ’70 100 4 Aug., ’70 May, ’67 Apr., ’70 Dec., ’67 Jan., ’70 May, ’70 50 100 Consolidation Md .. ’70 '...100 IX Jan., '68 Feb., ’70 Sept.,’67 Jan., ’66 June, July, Feb., Feb., Jan., pref.100 Delaware Division* Delaware and Hudson Delaware and Raritan Nov.,’69 Jail. do St. Louis & Iron Mountain St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chicago*.100 Sandusky, Mansfi’d & Newark*.100 Schuylkill Valley,* No. 255 50 Shamokin Valley & Pottsville* 50 3X Jan,. ’70 Jan, ’70 Dec., July, July, Jan., Jan., do . an.*,* ’70 Mar., Mar., Mar., Jan., Dec., ' Feb.*,* 50 pref Philadelphia and Read. No. 242. 50 Philadel., & Trenton,* No. 255...100 Phila.,Ger.&Norris.,* No.255... 50 I,597,250 April & Oct. Philadel., Wilming. & Baltimore 50 9,520,850 Jan. & July. Pittsb. & Connellsville, No. 255.. 50 1,793,926 Pittsb., Cin. & St. Louis, No. 255 50 2,423,000 do do do pref. 50 3,000,0: 0 Pitts., Ft.W. & C. guar*. No. 249.100 19,665,000 Quarterly. Portland & Kennebec, No. 253* .100 581.100 Jan. & July. do Yarmouth stock certificlOO 202.400 April & Oct. Portland, Saco & Ports No. 221.100 1,500,000 June & Dec. Providence & Worccs., No. 247..100 2,000,000 Jan. & July. Rensselaer & Saratoga, No. 252 .100 3,000,000 April & Oct. Rielimond and Danville No. 235.100 4,000,000 Richmond & Petersburg No.235.100 317.100 Rome, Watert. & Ogd., No. 245..:00 3,000,000 Jan. & July. Rutland, No. 248 100 1,883,300 do preferred 100 1,831,400 Feb. & Aug. St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100 2,300,000 do Feb., Dec., Jan., June, June, 2,063,655 482.400 Feb. & Aug. 3,71t,l!6 7,000,000 Quarterly. 33,493,812 May & Nov. 6,004/200 Jan. & July. 2,400,000 Jan. & July. 29,023,100 Jan. & July. 1,099,120 Feb. & Aug. . 1.252.500 Cheshire, preferred 100 2,085*925 Jan. & July. Chicago and Alton. No. 2-18 100 7,045,000 Mar. & Sept. do do preferred 100 2.425.400 Mar. & Sept. Chic., Burling. & Quincy. No.215.100 16.590,000 Mar- & Sept. Chicago, Iowa ana Nebraska*..100 1,000,000 Jan. & July. Chicago and Northwest. No. 217.100 14,590,161 June & Dec. do do pref.... 100 18,159,097 June & Dec. Chic.. Rock Is. & Pac. No. 259.. 100 16,000,000 April & Oct. Cln., Hamilton & l)aytonNo.2 ‘9 .100 3,500,000 April & Oct. 38*2,600 Cin., Richm. & Chicago*No.229 . 50 Cincin., Sand. & Clev., No. 247.. 50 2,989,090 do do do pref. 50 428,646 May & Nov. Cincinnati & Zanesville, No. 216 50 1,676,345 Clev., Col., Cin. & Ind. No. 253..100 10.460.900 Feb. & Aug. Cleveland & Mahoning,* No. 247. 50 2,056,750 May & Nov. Cleveland and Pittsburg. No. 255 50 7/241,475 Quarterly. Colum.,Chlc.& In. CenV*No. 247.100 11,100,000 Quarterly. 50 Columbus and Xenia* 1.786.800 Quarterly. Concord 50 1,500,000 May & Nov. Concord and Portsmouth 100 350,000 Jan. & July. Connecticut & Passumpsic, pref.100 2,084,200 Feb. & Aug. Connecticut River, No. 247 100 1,700,000 Jan. & July. Cumberland Valley, No. 255 50 1.316.900 April & Oct. 2,400,001 Dayton and Michigan* No. 229.. 50 Delaware* 50 1,107,291 Jan. & July. Delaware, Lack. & West. No. 255 50 15.927.500 Jan. & July, Detroit and Milwaukee, No. 249 . 50 452.350 do do pref.... 50 2,095,000 December Dubuque and Sioux City* 100 2.142.250 Jan. & July. do do pref. ..100 1,988,170 Jan. & July. Eastern (Mass.), No. 247 100 4,033,000 Jan. & July. East Pennsylvania, No. 255 50 1.309.200 Jan. & July. East Tenn. Georgia, No. 224 100 3,192,000 Elmira & Williamsport,* No.255. 50 500,000 May & Nov. do do 500,000 Jan. & July. pref.. 50 100 70,000,000 Feb. & Aug. Erie. No. 252 do preferred 8.536.900 100 Erie and Pittsburg, No. 255 50 999,750 Fitchburg, No. 247 100 3,540,000 Jan. & July. 100 4,15G,000 Jan. & July. Georgia. No. 259 Hannibal and St. Joseph No. 241100 3,000,000 do do pref....100 5,000,000 Hartford & N. Haven, No. 225... 100 3,300,000 Quarterly. do do scrip....190 3,000,000 Housatonic, preferred 100 2.000,000 Jan. & July 615.950 Huntingdon and Broad Top*.... 50 do do pref. 50 212.350 Jan. & July. Illinois Central. No. 248 100 25,273,800 Feb. & Aug. Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette.. 50 6,185,897 Mar. & Sent. Jeffersonville, Mad. & In.,No.227100 2,500,000 Jan. & July. Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000 LakeSho.* Mich. South. No. 255.100 35,000.000 Feb. & Aug. Lehigh and Susquehanna 50 8.739.800 May & Nov. Lehigh Valley, No. 255 50 17,716,400 Quarterly. Little Miami, No. 247 50 3.572.400 Quarterly. Little Schuylkill.* No. 265 50 2.646.100 Jan. & July. Long Island, No. 252 50 3,000,000 Louisw, Cin. & Lex., prf No. 220 JO 848,315 Jan. & July. do common 50 1,621,736 Jan. & July. Louisville and Nashville No. 2i5100 8.681.500 Feb. & Aug. Louisville, New Alb. * Chicago. 00 2,800,000 Macon and Western 100 2,500,000 Jan. & July. Maine Central 100 1.611.500 Marietta & Cin., 1st pri. No. 250 150 8,130,719 Mar. & Sept. do do 2d pref..150 4,460,368 Mar. & Sept. do do common 2,029,778 Manchester & Lawrence, No.247.100 1,000,000 May & Nov. Memphis and Charleston. No.242.25 5,312,725 June & Dec. Michigan Central. No.213 100 12,329,700 Jan. & July. Milwaukee and St. Paul. No. 258100 7.665.104 Jan. & July. do do pref...100 9.744,268 January. Mine Hill & Sell Haven* No. 255. 50 3,856,450 Jan. & July. 100 2,948,785 Mississippi Central* Mobile* Montg.pref No. 216. 1.738.700 Mobile and Ohio, No. 259 .100 4,269,820 Montgomery and West Point.. .100 1.644.104 June & Dec. Morris and Essex,* No. 250 50 7.880.100 Jan. & July. Nashua and Lowell, No, 247 720,000 May & Nov. 100 Nashv. & Chattanooga No. 220.100 2,056,544 Naugatuck. No. 195 100 1.818.900 Feb. & Aug. New Bed. & Taunton, No. 247... 100 500,000 Jan. & July. New Hav. & Northamp., No. 247.100 1,500,000 Jan. & July. New Jersey, No. 250 100 6,250,000 Feb. & Aug. do scrip 493,900 New London Northern No. 243. .100 1,003,500 Jan. & July. N. Y. Cent. & Hudson R.,No.252.l00 45,0H0,000 April & Oct. do do certificates. .100 44,600,0C0 April & Oct. New York and Harlem. No. 197 50 5,500,000 Jan. & July. do do pref 50 1,500,000 Jan. & July. New York & New Haven,No.255.100 9,000,000 Jan. & July. N. Y., Prov. and Boston No. 229.100 2,000,000 Jan. & July. Norfolk and Petersburg, pref.. .100 300.500 do do guar. .100 137.500 Jan. & July. do do ordinary .. 1,361,300 North Carolina. No. 223.. 100 4,000,000 Northern of N.H’mpshire.No.257100 3,068,400 June & Dec. Northern Central. No. 249 50 5,000.000 May * Nov. Northeast. (S. Carolina). No. 201 898.950 do do 8 p. c., prel 155,000 May & Nov Nortli Missouri, No. 259.,. 10b 7.771.500 North Pennsylvania 50 3,150,000 Norwich & Worcester * No. 247.100 2.363.700 Jan. & July. Ogdens. & L. Champ.* No.252 100 3,077,000 Jan. & July dc do pref.100 1.994.900 April & Oct Ol.io and Mississippi. No. 195 100 19,944,547 do do pref 100 3,810,705 June & Dec Oil Creek aDd AUc rhenv River. TO 4/259,450 Quarterly. Old Colony A-Nev/port, No. 347.100 4>13^0 Jan. & July .. 2 4 Mar. & Sep. Jan. & July. June & Dec. Orange and Alexandria 100 Oswego and Syracuse, No. 252 50 Pacific (of Missouri) No. 256....100 Quarterly. Jan. & July. May & Nov, & Aug. & Aug. & July. & Aug. Feb. Feb. Jan. Feb. Jan. Jan. * July. & July. May & Nov. Jan. & July. Aug., Feb., Jan., Feb., Jan., Nov Jan. & July. Quarterly. Quarterly. 18,000,0(X) Jan. & July. 6,000,000 Quarterly. 15,(XX),000 4,000,000 Quarterly. 20,000,000 Quarterly. 1,000,000 Jan. & July. 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 .... 5 5 5 5 5“ , Jan., ’70 Jan., ’70 June,’70 July, ’70 1 .... ’69 Jan., ’70 July, ’66 - 6 5 .... *T 2X 2 3 Nov., ’69 2X ' Dec., ’67 Sept.,’69 July, ’70 July, ’70 Feb., ’70 July, ’70 Jan., ’70 2X 3 5 4 10 5 5 .... ;;;; j N. Y. & BROOKLYN CITY PASSENGER RAILROADS. Quotations by Geo. K. Sistare, Broker in City Securities, 24 Nassau Street. NAME OF ROAD. Bleecker street and Fulton PAR Ferry.' Broadway (Brooklyn) Broadway and Seventh Avenue Brooklyn City Brooklyn City and Newtown Brooklyn, Prospect Park & Flatb. Brooklyn and Rockaway Beach... Bushwfck (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 1 an (Brooklyn) Ninth Avenue Second Avenue Sixth Avenue Third Avenue , ... Van Brunt Street (Brooklyn)... STOCK. TOO 1 900,000 100 200,000 100 2,100,000 100 1,500,000 100 400,000 100 254.600 100 144.600 100 262,200 100 1,065,200 100 500,000 100 1,200,000 100 1,000,000 100 748,(XX) 100 170,000 100 106,700 100 194,000 100 797,320 100 881,700 100 750,000 100 1,170,000 100 ( 75,000 LAST DIVIDENDS PAID. June, 1870 3 January, 1870 ,May ’70, quarterly 2X May ’70tsemi-an’l 5X July. ’70, quarterly". May’70, semi-an'l May 70, quarterly June 25,1870.] THE CHRONICLE 81* NATIONAL AND STATE SECURITIES. Prlnci- DENOMINATIONS. pal Payable. Due. Marked thus National (June 1, 1870). 13,232,000 5,183,0)3 & Mar. 3, ’63), cpn f Loan: 5-20’s (act Feb. 25,’62),reg... do ( do do ), cpn... Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar. 3, ’64), reg... do (A June 30, ’64),cpn. Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar. 3, ’65), reg... do ( do do ),cpn... Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar 3,’05N),r^... do do ),cpn. ( do Loan : 5-20’s (act Mar. 3, ’65),reg... do ( do do ) cpn... Loau : 5-20’s (act Mar. 3,’65)reg,.. do (do do )cpn 94,568,450 945,000 Loans(acts J’ly 17AAug5’61,r«<7 ( 169.749.650 I Loan of’58(act Junel4,’58),m7. do (do do do July. Jan. & July Jan. & July do May A Nov. 75,135,650 May A Nov. 54,268,150 66,403,250 136,924,030 119.372.650 213,626,300 109,179,200 270.415.650 11 668,500 30,870,850 . 1881 1881 1881 1881 1881 1881 1882 1882 1884 1884 5,254,000 14,746,000 6,074,000 ), cpn... Loan of’60 (act June 22,’60), reg... do ( do do ). cpn... 958,000 Loan: 10-40’s(act Mar.3,’64),r^. 129.426.650 do ( do do ),cpn... 65,100,500 Bearing Currency Interest— Pacific RR.B’d9(Juf.l’62AJul.2, 04 64,457,320 Three per cent. Legal Tender cer¬ tificates (act of Mar. 2, ’67) 45,540,000 Navy Pension Fund 14,000,000 do do May A Nov Jan. & July do 1885 1887 1887 1888 do Jan. A July do Jan. A July do Jan. A July do Mar. & Sept, do 1871 1904 1904 July State -- 1895 Mis8issiprT(Jan. Sterling Bonds(extended) do do New .. - Bonds, 1870, eolct Endorsement for RR’s (about). Arkansas (April., ’70) $4,425,000: Bonds of 1860 Litt'e Bock & Ft. S., Act.. ’68 2,600,000 do do oflSOO Soldiers* Relief bonds do do Jan. & July do Jau. & July Jan. & July 2,138,000 (gold) Jan. A July Jan. A July do ... “ 138.500 424.500 Bounty Bonos.. do May A Nov. 4,425,000 1,500,000 .... California! \pril,’7<i) $4,122,500: Civil Bonds of 1857 “ Apr. & Oct. 805,000 “ Connecti’t( Apr. 1’69) $6,674,992: War Bonds (May, 61)10or20y’r do 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 do do do («>ct.,’61) 10or20y’r do (Nov., ’63) 20 years do (May,’64) 10or 20y’r do (uon-taxab.)(May,’65) 20y’r Florida (Feb., ’60) $500,000 : 2,000,000 State Bonds 500,000 Georgia (Jan., 70) $6,014,500: Western A Atlantic RR. Bonds. do State Bonds Bonds ofl 867-68 Bonds to North Mo. RR Bonds to Cairo A Fulton RR.. Bonds to Platte Co RR Ronds t,o Iron Mountain RR. Pacific RR S. W. Br. Pacific RR S W. Br. Pacific RR(gnar)... Hannibal A St. Joseph RR Nevada (June 1, 1869): $558 760 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 (tax free) “ of 1864 N. York (Oct. 100,000 do Western & Atlantic RR. Bonds. do do do Atlantic A Gulf RR. Bonds.— Bonds, per act March 12,1866... 176 000 1,519,000 75,000 734,000 . 3,90'»,000 Illinois (Nov. 30, ’60) $5,124,995: III. & Mich.Canal sterl’g.cowp.. do sterl’g 767,221 429,400 reg . Internal Improvement (new)... Interest Bonds of 1847 Interest stocK of 1857.. Refunded Stock bonds Normal University bonds Thornton Loan bonds do 1890 1889 ’99-’00 19C0 1877 1880 18S3 1884 June A Dec Jan. A July May & Nov. Jan. A July May & Nov. Feb. & Aug. Jan. <fc July o 982,426 do do do do Mur. A Sep. 45,000 103,000 Jan. w Jan. A 1,500,000 Ju y . Louisiana April ’70, $14,085,300: Charity Hospital 1863, Relief of State Treasury Bonds to various rai1 roads. 1865, Levee Bonds 1867, do do 1870, do do 3,666 ... . Shreveport Charity Hospital... 1869, Penitentiary Bonds To Fund Floating Debt, &c.... ’70)$3.100,900:\ Civil Loan Bonds, 1355-61 War Loan of 1861 do do of 1863 Bounty Loan of 1863 War Loan of 1864 Municipal War Debts assumed... Maryland (Oct., ’69) $12,692,938: Ches. A O. Cana' Loan (-terling) Susq. A Tide W. Canal (sterling) Halt. v. Ohio R. R. (steiling)... Railroad and Canal L ans Apr. & Oct. do S. F. $1,287, Mar.ASept. May & Nov. 66,000 211,000 April A Oct Various. 91,000 316,000 1,648,283 * 86,'666. 2*0,000 2,553,000 1,000.000 4,000,000 1866, Funding Coupons . Jan. A July , ... July 989.500 176,000 . •. Bounty Loan Relief of the South MASSAOHUS.(Oct.l,’69)$27,939,420: State 2,000,000 495,880; 80,000 134 000 5 6 6 8 6 8 6 8 8 100,000 7-30 250.000 7 3,000,000 384*666 800,000 525,000 475,000 2,832,500 3,084,400 1,855,335 Bounty Fund Bonds, coupon.>jr do P« do 0 c 0 1871 1871 1878 1878 var £ CtJ O •c CD ’86-’88 6 1890 1890 1890 1909 1910 F. $942,500. 6 6 6 6 6 6 Various. do Mar. A Sept Feb. & Aug. June & Dec. Apr. A Oct. S. F. $7,228, Jan. A July ’70-*’78 1871 1883 1880 1889 1889 413... 1890 J.,A ,J.AO *65-90 1890 do Jan. & July do 35,204 3,026,791 100,000 $100,000 165,000' 94,000 60,000 150,000 do May A Nov. Apr. A Oct. do Jan. & July June & Dec Jan. & July 70 90 1883 1873 1872 ’73-’74 ’73-’74 1874 1870 1870 ’71-’76 5 5 6 4,379,500. 4,000,744 3,505,000 554,180 966,500 2,952,400 200,000 125,000 5 5 5 5 5 400,000: 6 1,936,000! 5 do do do S 1877 1878 1872 July Nov 009... ’82-’90 1887 ’74-’78 ’77-’S9 ’89-’90 ’74-’89 '72-’89 1876 1876 ’73-’86 do do 1,614,0001 6 1,589,000: 7 3,000,000 ! 6 do do do 500,600115 J.:n A 899,200: 6 600,000: 6 Jan. A July Mar A Sep. 6 S.F 1,000,000' IS 7 7 7 C 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 No 700,000 1,878,000 2 f,060,000 1,189,780 800,000 9,442,400 5,451,SCO 2,168,000 1,373,000 900,(KM) 1,129,4201 j jj 12.876,245! ’7ft-’8l! ;’86-’96 ’97 ’02 ,270... | Jan. A do do do 1870 ! J.,A.,J.AO. 1877 18 7 ! July Will, i 1878 1 1872 : 1873 1S74 J.,A.,J.AO. do do ." do Jan. A July do 75-’77 ! 1875 J., \J. AO. m As.$27,72 Jan. A July i Will. 1874 * 4,6 0 i’68-’9S :'68-’9S Jan. A 190f» 1899 1898 43 1870 July Apr. & Oct. do S. F., $160. Jan. A July do do do 1875 1881 1886 1871 May A Nov July ’75-’85 Jan. A July 7870 1879 Apr. A Oct. 5 Jan. A July do Feb. A Aug do do do do do do do do 4^ 5 5 6 6 5 6 5 6 484,000' 5 * 6 6 6 6 6 6 Tennessee (J’ne,’70)$45,000,000: Bonds loaned to RR’s., etc. .* 27,547,000 Bonds endorsed for RR’s., etc* 2,196,000 Funded Interest (new bonds) * 3,948,599 6 State Bonds (debtproper)....* 1,706,000 6 , ’70-’74 Apr. A Oct. $1,144,929 6 Interest in g’ld 304,443 6 do do ( do )....* 239,166 do do ( do )....* 1,398,640 Int. unfunded July ’69 &Jan.’70 6,800,0t)0 Bank of Tennessee Notes 1,700,000 Vermont (Peb., ’69) $1,427,000: War Loan Bonds, coupon 1,227,000 do do reg 201,000 Virginia (Jan.,’70) $45,660,348: Dollar Bonds (old), coupon*... 11,108,000 do do (old), registered* 21,865,578 ’70’78 ’84-’89 Jan. A 239,000 6 736,000 6 841,000 6 2,275,000 1,000,000 1,282,971 332,600 1,246,400 300,000 1872 July Jan. A July do do S. F. $8,417, 1,399,800 1,002,900 593,4001 6 1,10",000 . 1 fcSKJ 1879 do 5,567,000; 6 7,909,600 90,400 9.237,050 726,950 Blue R dge RRb^s (act’54) New bonds—funding (act ’67).. Conversion bonds or 1868 Funded bills bank S C Bonds issued in 1868 73-’83 ’41-’71 540,000| 6 92,850 (act. ’38) do stg. (lien on B’k S. C.) State House st’ks (acts ’56-’63). 1878 uly S. F. $5,735, Jan. A July do do do 2,475,000 6 4,907,150 Carolina(Nov.’69)$6,988,434: Fire Loan Stock do May 447,000 2,855,000 3,085,00 422,000 0 340,000 .. 1871 1877 191'0 7,000,000 2 820,750 Stock Loan (1867) do do do do do do do do do do Rh. Isl. ril, ’70) $2,916,500: War Bon s of 1862 do do of 1863 do do ofl863 do do 011864 Apr. A Ort. do 3,918,000 (1853) ’S8-’90 ’91 ’93 1890 Jan. A July do Jan. A 112,00t* Military Loan (1861) 18*8 ’8S-’90 do do 100,000 400.000 466.000 do do ’71-’86 ’69-’71 Sep. May A Nov Jail. A July 1,483,815 Coupon Bonds (1852) 77-’78 1S83 1894 1894 1894 Apr. & Oct. Apr. & Oct. Apr. & Oct. Jan. A J do 192,000 1,669,000 463,000 84,000 ’70-’72 May & Nov. do Mar. & j- 3,143,096 If 176,15ti Inclined Plane (1849) 1871 May A Nov. ..S. Reliefand Bounty Bonds Penn’a (Dec 1 ’69) $32,662,878: Stock Loan (of 1840) ’79-94’ J. J A F.A. 1882 Jan. A July do do do 1,515,677 1,600,000 4,C 95,309 2,400,000 400,000 6 . 1870 ’69-’C6 1886 1907 May A Nov. 1,721,400: 6 12,600,0001 6 . 1873 1872 1893 June A Dec. 2,417,400| 6 do do do New Bonds RR. (special tax)* Ohio ( Jan. 1, ’70) $10,016,581 : Loan due after 31st Dec., 1870 do do 31st Dec., 1875 do do 30th June, 1881. do do 31st Dec., 1886 Domestic Bonds (Union Loan) Oregon (''opt, ’68) $176,150 : . 853*’. Mar & Sept rai’roads, etc.*... ( do do do ex coup* f Funding Bonds* (new) ’76-’89 1889 853 ’71-’72 1865 1890 1890 2,288,88S H 1866 6 348,107 . 1880 1880 7880 1910 do N.Carolina(Oc1.’69)$29.815,045: Bonds for O 70 do do do do Canal Fund Bonds rO 0 a - do General Fund Bonds >-> £ F.'$\287, S. Mar. & Sept Jan. A July Various. Various. do 43 1871 , Canal Fund Bonds do do do do do do O ’78-'86 ’86-’87 do registered. General Fund Bonds/.... x... q Due. Payable. 220,000 5 3,000,000 6 600,000 5 888,000 5 200,000 5 164,00:> 1869) $43,265,306: General Fund Bonds bn c3 1872 1874 ’68-’74 1874 do do do 773,000 110,000, ... p« ’96-’98 1,9:38,217 Balt. & Susq. R. K. Loan R dlroai A Canal Loans Lunatic Hospital. &c., Loan Lunatic Hospital (West. Mass).. General Statutes Loan.... > <D ’71-’81 ’72-’82 1883 ’74-’84 1885 1,250,836 269,000 u do do do State House Loan 0 43 ... Almshouse Loan P do < 134,311 694,000 Military Loan April &Oct. various. 516.800 Bonds of 1841-’42 Bonds of 1843 Bonds to North Bank of Ky.... Bonds of 1843 Bonds for Military Purposes. Bonds held by ti’rd of Education Maine (Jan. 1, Jan. A July do do Jan. A July Kentucky (Oct, ’69) $3,307,177: Boeuf & CrocodileN^vi f’o. Relief of P. J. Kennedy. do do 1,607,811 •• War Bonds Indiana (May, ’70) $1,500,000 : State Stock Certificates Kansas (Jan. ’70) $1,341,675 : Bonds issued from ’61 to ’69.. . 1872 1883 1886 1886 1886 ’86-88 a do do : Princi¬ pal Rate 100,000j 1, ’67) $ - 168,000 1,941,000 473.800 712.800 82.500 800,000 2,000,000 Outstanding 100,000 .. State Bonds (Banks)* Missouri (Jan. 1, ’70)$21,594,000: State Securities. New Bonds. Buildings Loans do do (new) Sioux War Loan 1862. ... Alabama (June,’70) $7,870,400: State Bonds do do (extended) do do ) ( do .... Michigan (-Jan. 1,’70)$2,408,000: Renewal Loan Bonds Two Million Loan War Bounty Bonds Ste Marie Canal Bonds Minnesota (June, ’6u) $300,000: 18S8 1874 1874 1871 . do do do do do do do (sterling) War Loan (currency) Western Railroad Loan (strl’g) do do (strl’g) Troy & Greenf. RR. Loan(st’g) do do (home) do do (sterling) Southern Vermont RR. Loan.. Eastern Railroad Loan Norwich & Worces. RR. Loan. Bost Harif. A Erie RR.(sterl ). 1885 Jan. A July do Coast Defense Loan Bounty Fund Loan 1885 1885 do Jan. & Union Fund Loan. do INTEREST. Amount In default for interest Back Jan. & July 129,649,900 385,121,700 are Loan, funding Public Debt.... Bay Lands Loan Bearing Coin Interest— Loan of ’til (act Feb. ft,’61), reg.... do ’61 ( do do ), cpn. Oreg. War fact Mar. 2, ’61), yearly I do ( do do ),tyear. * 5* 5 Mar. 1882 1882 1877 1878 | 1871 i Rat*. 1 INTEREST. Amount Outstanding. in default for Interest are ; DENOMINATION. M arked thus * ASept. Apr. A Oct. Jan. A July Feb. A Aug Jan. A July do do do do do do Apr. A Oct. Jan. A do do July Apr. A Oct. . 18^2 1872 1877 1877 1882 1882 1882 1883 1893 1894 1870 1868 '77’90 ’75-’79 1897 1888 1888 18S8 Long. Long. Long. do do Var. Var. Var. Jim. A Dec. do ’7l-’78 .... Sterling bonds (old) coupon* Fundedlnterest(new), coup*. do do do do (new),reg.* sterling ... 1,865,000 3,472,000 3,225,842 466,250 Jan. A do Jan. A do July M ’78 Long. Long. July Jan, & July Long. Long. ...7| previously, thqupoetagien bfpowriuceeinlsd The 820 THE CHRONICLE. RAILROAD, CANAL AND Subscribers will confer a “Railroad page. .. Bonds to State of Pa., endorsed Androscoggin (Jan.l, ’69): 1st Mortgage (Bath Loan) Atlantic A Gt. West. (Nov. 1, *69): 1st Mort., skg fund (Pa.) ) 1st Mort., skg fund (N. Y.) — 1st Mort., skg fund (Ohio)— > 1st Mort., skg fund (Buff, ext.) 1st Mort. (Franklin Branch).. J 2d Mort. (Penn.) ) 2d Mort. (N. Y.) > 2d Mort. (Ohio) 3,800,000 8 J. & J. New York 7 J.& J. M.&N. New York 1888 1895 1885 1 81 1,000,000 2,000,000 ; 175,000' 77,000 Sterl. Bds of Nov. 1, ’53, £‘K*),tXXi| Baltimore A Ohio (Oct. 1, ‘6.0 : Loan of 1S55, skg fund Loan of 1850 Loan of 1853 Baltimore Loan of 1855 2d Mort. (N. W. Va. RR.) of ’53. 3d Mort. (N. W. Va. RR.) of ’55. Haiti, A Potomac (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mor gage of i860 fgold) Hay de Nog. A Marnuet. (Feb. ’70): Income Bonds ot 1865 and 1366.. Helridere Delaware (Feb. 1, *70): 1st Mort. of 1852 (guar. C. & A.). 2d Mort. of 1851 3d Mort., of 1857 Blue Ridge of S. Car. (Jan, 1, 70,: 1st Mort.. guar, gold Albany (Feb., *70) 185,000! 3,560,000; 8,512,400 3,908,000 2,000.000 241,2001 M,& N. J.& J. A. & O. 7 A. & A.& A. & A. & J. & A. & A. & J. & A.& O. O. O. 1,710,500 5,000,000 458.500 140,000 London. Mortgage 2d Mortgage Burl., C. R.d• Minneso.(July 1, ’69): 1st M. (gold) conv. skg f’d, tax fi Burl, A Missouri R. (July, ’70): 1st Mort. (land & railroad) Bonds conv. into pref.st’k (2ds) Bonds con v. into pref. st’k (3d s) I ncome Bds conv. to com.stock Convertible Bonds of D70 is t Mort.conv. on br. (37 miles) Burl, A Mo., in Xebras. (Jan.,’70) 1st M. Land & RR conv..tax five California Pacific (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mort. (gold) Camden A Amboy (Jan. 1, ’70): Dollar Loan for $800,000 Dollar Loan for $675.000 Dollar Loan for $1,700,000 Dollar Loan for $2,500,000 Consol. Mort. Loan for $5,000,000 Sterling Loan, £313,650 Sterling Loan (new) £369,200.... Dollar Loan (new) Camden tfc Atlantic (Jan. 1, NO): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage New^ York 1st Mort. (for $350,000) Cataicissa (Nov. 1, ’69): 1st Mort Cedar Falls A Minneso. (Jan.l,'’70): 1st Mort.(C. F. to Waverly,14m.) 1st Mort.( \V. to Minn.Line,62m.) Cedar O. J. O. New York J. & J. New York London. J. J. O. J. J. J. London. Baltimore. Baltimore. Boston. 1,000,000 499.500 745,000 4,000,000 J. & D. M.& S. F. & A. J. & J. New York Princeton. Charlest’n When Princpal payble. Where paid. paid. 580,000 J. & J. J. & J. B oston. 1884 1S90 1st Mort. 1st J. & J. Boston. 44 A.& O. A.&O. A. & (). New York New York 1919 1891 J. & J. New York 1896 New York 1st c. 1st J. & J. Boston. 1894 2,250,000 J. & J. New York 18S9 New York' 1S93 Boston. 1875 A. & O. A. & O. F.& A. M.& N. J. & I). A.&O. M.& S. New York J. & .T. A. & O. Camden. F.& A. F.& A. Phil ad el. ‘ •69-’97: Fhiladel. 1S82 ; 1870 1875 1883 1889 1889 1880 1894 44 44 <4 44 London. 4 * 154,000 J 1st 1st ! New York 1,900,000 F.& A. M.& N. F. & A. 2,500,000 M.& S. Baltimore. J.& J. & J. & J. & New York ’95-*99 1885 26,010,000 Subord. Lien Calif. St. aid (g’d) 1,500,000. Conv. B’ds (conv. into U.S.trds) 1,500,000 2d Mort. (J. S. loan) 26,010,000 ,J. J. J. J. 44 j 1895 | | 1870 1875 44 41 1890 1890 , 1884 — Notes (Counon) tax free.. New York 1907 Mortgage Mortgage, sinking fund, *58. Conner. A Passnm. R. (Aug. 1,’69): Sinking Fund Mortgage J. & J. l Mortgage, S. F.. 186? 1st Central of New Jersey (Jan. 1. NO): 16,000 p m 1st Mortgage '. 900,000 2d Mortgage (MX),000 1885 Mort.for $5,000,000 Connecticut River (Feb., ’70): New York 44 $1,200,(XX) Columbus A Xenia (June, ’69): 1873 1880 44 Mortgage (gold) tax free... Union & l.ogansn’t. 1st Mo-t Cons.lst M.SkgF’d for $15,000,000 Consol. 2d Mort. for $5,000,000... Colnm. A Hocking V. (Jan., ’70); M.& S. 1,N0): Philadel. 1872 856,000 M.& N. J.& J. A. & O. New- York 1877 1,100,000 7 7 7 3,026,000 941,000 8 4% J. & J. J.&J. New York' 1883 Frankfort. 1890 New York 1890 2,400,000 *95**99 Connecting, Phila. (Nov. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Cumberland A Pen nsyl.( Feb., ’70): 1st Mortgage 2d Mort. (skg fund, $20,(XX) a y’r) Cumberland Valley (Feb., ’70): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Da nv„ Urb., Bl. APeki n (J ul v 1, ’69): 1st. Mort ''gold) conv., S.F., free Dayton A Michigan (Apr. 1, ’70): IstMort. .skg fund, $30,(K)n f 20 Mortgage ^ ** 3d Mortgage Toledo Depot Bonds Dayton A Union (July 1, ’ 1st Mortgage 69): 2d Mortgage Income Mortgage Dayton A Western (July, ’63): 1st Mortgage 1st Mortgage Delaware (Jan. 1, *70): 1st Mortgage bonds State Loan Bonds Guaranteed Bonds Extension r 7 8 8 8 8 8 400,000 600,000 I860 1872 RK4 1876 93-’94 «l 44 ! 44 1893 1883 44 M.& S. M.& N. 70-’80 A.& O. Boston. 1879 li-89 1878 1878 ltf.9 7 J.&J. New York 1887 7 A.&O. New York 1909 7 J. & J. F. & A. New York 1880 1892 M.& N. Var. J. & J. New York F.& A. New- York 800,000 738,000 600,000 1,OOO.UOO J. & J. J. & J, ,J. & J. 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 6 7 7 7 10 M.& F.& F.& F.& M.& 44 41 44 N. A. A. A. N. J.&J. J.&J. 44 “ 44 44 < I 44 * “ M. & S. G.-F. 44 1885 1883 1885 J885 1882 1875 1881 1878 1898 44 . A.& O. M.& N. 1874 1874 1898 1915 1874 1871 1888 44 ti 7 J.&J. J. & J. New York 1896 7 M.& N New York 1899 8 J. & D. New’ York 1889 7 7 8 M.& N. New- York ! 1880 1885 1877 >! 7 Mortgage Bonis’.’ 44 J.&J. • 4 J. & J. New’ York J. & T>. J.&J. i7 17 New- York i 4 1893 ’77-’S7 J. & J. New York 1895 J. & J. > 65,000! 7 7 New York 1895 1889 M.& S. F.& A. J. & D. New York 7 M.& N. New- York 7 7 7 J. & D. J. & J. A.&O. New York ’71-’85 44 J. & J. New- York F.&A. New- York ) M J.&J. 7 ) 6 » 7 >1 1,300, (XX) j ) )i ) Vernon A Del. Col.,Chic. A Did. Cent. (Apr. 1.’69): 2d Mort. (Col. & Ind. Cent. RR.) Income B’ds (Col. & Ind. C. RR.) Constru. B’ds (Chic.& Gt. E.RR) Income B’ds (Chic. & Gt. E. RR) 786,000 NO); M.& N. 7 ) ) 7 7 7 ) ) 44 44 44 7 7- ' M.& S. J. & J. ) ) 6 7 ) 7 7 ) > 7 A. & (). 7 D 7 44 44 J. & J. M.& N. J.&J. J. & l>. ) 1893 ’70-’99 1870 .... M.& S. M.& N. J.& J. M.& N. » 1877 1900 1890 .... 1 1,500,000 Mortgage Mortgage 4th Mort., for Cons. Skg F’d 1S78 1879 1889 1S94 New York: 1895 1st Mortgage ent. Pacific of Califor.an. 1st Mort. (gold) 1877 7 3d 1st Mort. (Hul)bard Branch)... Cleveland A Pittsburg (J an. 1, ’70): 2d Mort., for $1,200,(XX) 3d Mort., for $2,000.000 1919 2,100,000 Mortgage Cler., Col., Cin. d• Ind. (Mar.,’70): 1st M. (C.,C.& C. RR) $25,000 a yr 1st Mort. (Bell. & Ind. RIL).. 2>l M. (J.P.&C.RR) due Oct.’70. 1st Mortgage, new, S. F Cleveland A Mahon. (Jan..*70); 1877 1872 “ M.& N. J. & J. . - Cleretand. Ml. 1,600,000 Mortgage (new) New- York 500,000 (Sand.& Ind.RlD... (S., 1). & Cin. RIt) '55.. (Cin.,S.& Clev.HR), ’68 Cincinnati «f Zanesv. (July 1, ’69): 1S70 1873 1882 1886 1898 1,200,000 900, (XX) 294,000 500,000 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 1SS6 A. & O. J. & J. J. & J. A .& (>. J. & J. J. & J. 835,000 Boston. M.& N. Mortgage 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Cincin., Richm.A(7/ic.(Apr. 1 ,’70): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed 2d Mor'gage... Cincin., Sand. A Clere. (Jan. *70): 1873 1873 1879 ’.Jan’v. M.& N. 236,500 J. & J. (July 1,’69;: Mortgage Cincin., Ilam. <f- Dayt. (Apr. 1,’70): 1st Mortgage of 1853 1st 6,000,000 500,000 6 10 1st 1st 1,846,000 791,500 2d Mortgage, guaranteed Cincinnati AMartinsr. (Jan.l,’70): New York 867,(XX) 7 Chillirothe A Brunsic. 1899 J. & D. M.& N. 1,700,000 210,000 983,1X1 44 44 7 Boston. 2,000,000 380,000 4,666,100 1,518,066 w 6 6 : J .&J. 3,000,000 675,(XX) •KXt.tXX) 6 2d Mortgage of 1865 3d Mor* ’67(8. F.,$25,000 yearly) Cincinnati A Indiana (May, ’70): New York 823,220 1900 l’uU.UOO 206.IXX- lstMYrfjc(gd)truar hyCRI&P.cnr 1884 1899 1899 44 New York 1,000,000 New York M.& N. J.&J. J.&J. J.&J. J.&J. J.&J. Mortgage Chicago & Southwestern New York Boston. D. N. J. S. O. 1,200,0001 1865 6 (Beloit* Madison RR) M.& S. J. & J. J. & J. J. & M.& J. & M.& A. & 5,057,000! 600,000! New York Chicago, R. I.A I’acific (July, ’70): New York 1865 Boston. 1870 New York isio Boston. | 1889 400,000 300,0001 J.&J. Elgin ana State RR. Bonds Mortgage (Peninsula RID.. Cons. Skg F’d B’ds, conv. ’till ’70 Equipment Bonds Equipment Bonds 1875 J. & J. 200,0001 1810 2,000,000 1st T>9-’71j 700,000 100,000 Charlcst’n Mississippi River Bridge Bonds |’70-1-6] J. J. J. M.& S. Extension Bonds (Gal.& Chic. Un.RIL) 2d Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un. RR.) Albany. London. Boston. A. 6 7 1st Mort. j isst Boston. 505,ao Mortgage, 1867 1,000,(XX) Chic., Dane. A Vincen. (Apr. 1,’69): 1st Mort. (gold) sinking fund... 18,000 p m Chicago, loica A Neb. (Jan.l,*70); 1st Mort., guaranteed 1860 592,000 2d Mort., 1863 218,(XX) Milwaukee(Jwnc\, ’69): Chicago A 1st Mort. (C. & M. RR.,45miles) 397,000 2d Mort. (M. & C. RR., 40 miles) 182,(XX) 1st Mort. (C. & M. RR., 85 miles) Ch icago A North west. (J une 1 ,’69): Preferred Skg Fund (on 193 in.) 1,249,500 Interest Bonus (fund, coupons) 755,000 1st Mortgage (general) 1877 1885 1887 J. & Jr A. & O. A. & O. F. & J. & -T. & J.& (Trust) Mort Cartilage & Bur. RRM.,tax free I)ix\, Peo. & Han. RR., tax free. American Cent. RR., tax free.. Peoria & Hannibal RIL, tax free Keokuk& St. P, 1st M,s. f. tax free Chicago, Gin.A Louisr.(Jan. 1 ,’70): 70-N1 1,600,000 1st Central of Iowa ; 1st Mort. (gold) tax free 1st 2d Mort. (Frankfort),kohl Trust Mort. (Burl to Peoria).. 1909 A.& O. New York; 1916 Rate. l , A. & O. Georgia (heb., 1870): Mortgage Chicago, Bur. A Quin. (May 1,*70): 1875 1SS0 1885 1890 1873 1885 7,600,000 Central Ohio (Feb. standing “ 1st 1,293,000 Central of 2d Mort., income iBHI 1878 New York Rap.AMissou./(.(Jan.l,NO;: Mortgage Chicago <f- Alton (Jan. 1. ’70): 1st Mort., sinking fund pref 1st Mortgage Boston. ’70-N1 Pori & Bos M.&N. J. & J. & A. & J. & J. & J. & 1st 1890 A.& O. J. & J. 1st Mort. (land grant) Cent. Hr. of U. Pacific (Jan. 1, *69): 1st Mort. (Atcli. & Pike s I*. RR.) 2d Mort. (U. S. loan)... Cheshire (Dec. 1, ’69): Company Bonds of’70, ’75 & ’80. Chester A Ch. Br.June.(Jan. 1,’J0): 1st Mort., sinking fund Chester Valley (Nov. 1, ’69): 1879 1876 1684 1882 18S2 1881 1883 1895 J. & J. 490,000 Burling. Cv>.) Jam 1 ,’70): | I 1877 125,000 . 1st Mortgage Buffalo tf- Brie (Nov. 1, ’69): Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RIL). Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RID. Comp. B'ds (B. & St. Line RID. Comp.B’ds (Erie* N’the’st RR) Comp. B’ds (Buff. & Erie RR.).. Buffalo, N. V. db Erie (Oct. 1, ’69): *jsi M. t \ a. c tb i.K.) g nut. U) St. 2d Mort. (Va. Central UR.) id Mort. (Va. Central RR.) Income Mort. < Va. Cent. RR.).. St ate Loan (Va. Central RR.)... 1890 527,000 ...... Mortgage Buff., Corry 'd- Pittsb. (Nov,1,’09): 18% Portland. : 1st 1898 New York London. Var. 579.500 Wash’ton. O. I). O. A. & (>. A. & O. 863,250 4* ... 825,000 1,095,776 484,000 44 7 401 200 .... - 7 7 44 A. & O. M.& N. 7 425,000 Albany Loan (Alb.& W.Stkbge) 500,000 ass. Sterl. Loans (West’n RR.) 1,619,520 Alar Bonds (Western RR) 753.500 ost., Clint, A Fitchh'g( Feb., *70): 1st Mort. (Agric. Br. RR.) of *64. 400,000 Boston, Clinton & Fitchburg.. 260.500 Host., Con. d• Montr'l (Apr. 1, ’69): 1st Mort. (71 m.) 204,000 2d M. (71 m. & 1st 22% in.) conv... 150,000 2d M. (71 ni. & 2d 22% in.) conv... 200,000 Sinking Fund Bonds 4%,000 Host., Hart. <(• Brie (Dec. 1, ’68): 1st Mort. (old) 600,000 1st Mort. (new) 14,000,000 1st Mort. (new) guar, by Erie... 3,000,00(1 Floating Debt, Nov., ’69 7,349, *63 Mass. L. (sec. by $4,000.0001st M.) 3,000,000 Boston <(• Unveil (Feb., ’70): Convertible Bonds of 1853 55,000 Scrip Certificates 866,(XXI Mortgage (whart purchase) 200,000 Brunswick A Albany: 1st Mort.(go'd) guar. by Ga 15,000 p.m 2d Mort., S. F... Buff., Ilrad. A Pittsb. (Nov., ’69): Camden d 6 4,000,000 ! 7.3 17,579,500 Consolidated Mort., free Sectional Bonds Atlan. <t- St. Liwrence (Jan. *70): j 1st Mort. (Port. Loan) skg fund. 2d Mort. of April 1,1351 Sterl, lids of Oct. 1,’64 (5-20 vrs). Railroads: Chariest. A Savannan (Oct. 1, *69): 1st Mon. (guar, by fe. Carolina) UiartolleCot. A Aug. (Jan. 1, 70): 1st Mortgage ffasm enic A Ohio (Feb., ’70 : 1st M., *70, S.F.(gd)for$15,000,000 1889 1,000,000 ) 1st Mort. Atlantic A Gulf (.Jan. 1, *70): 1st INTEREST. : Mortgage, 1865 Mortgage, 1869 Alex.. Loud. A Jlamp. (Oct. 1, }’69: 1st Mortgage, for $8,000,000) Allegheny Valley (Feb. 1, ’,70): General Mortgage 1st and 2d Mortgage - paid. : 2d 3d Boston A For a full explanation of this Table see “ Railroad Monitor” on a preceding page. Where paid. $ Alabama A Chattan. (Jan. *70): 1st and 2d M. (gd) guar, by Ala. Albany A 'usqueban. (Oct. 1/69): 1st Mortgage, 1863 Albany City Loan, 1865 Consolidated When Monitor,”; liallroads TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount , ; see preceding Tables^ our COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬ INTEREST. Cutexplanation of tlnsstanding , on a MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. great favor by giving ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In Pages 3 and 4 of Bonds will be published next week. COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬ TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount Table [June 25, 1870. 1900 1873 1876 1873 New York New- York 44 44 44 44 44 44 .... 1873 1875 1892 1900 18.. 18.. 18.. 18.. 1905 7 7 A. & O. F.& A. New York A.&O. New York 1897 44 1908 1909 j 7 ) 7 M.& S. New York 1890 J 6 M.& S. Boston. 1878 [) D 6 Boston. 7 J. & D. J. & D. 1876 ’76-’77 9 6 M.& S. Philadel. ’00-’C4 0 6 M.& S. l) New- York 6 M.& N. 1891 1888 0 0 8 8 A. & O. A. & O. Philadel. 0 2,000,000 7 A. & O. New York 0j 7 0: J. & J. M.& S. New- York 44 44 1904 1908 44 1908 1881 1884 1888 New York ’81-’94 44 0 7 7 7 0 0 5 7 7 6 M.& S. J. & I). J.& D. New York X) X) 7 6 J. & J. J.&J. New- York X) X) 6 6 6 6 J.&J. J.&J. J.&J. Philadel. 0i »i 00 44 A.& (). M.& S. J.&J. 1879 1879 1879 44 44 1905 1905 44 44 44 1 41 • 1875 1876 1875 1875 previously thqpuoategien bfopwureicnields The Jrne 25, 1870.] THE CHRONICLE. 821 RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS Subscribers will confer a COMPANIES, AND . CHARACTER OF SECURITIES ISSUED Amount For a full explanation ol tills Table see “Railroad Monitor” on a standing o S When Where. paid. paid. TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount fl Ster.ing (Oak. & Otta. Rli.) B’ds Dollar (Oak. & Otta. RR.) R’ds. 1st Mort. (I)etr. & Pontiac RR.). 2d Mort. (Det ?.& Pontiac RR.). 1st 1st do (Feb. ’70): Mortgage, 1863 do Land Gr., 1863 Dubuqe dc Sioux City (Jan. 1/69): 1st Mortgage (1st division) Construct. Ronds (2d division). Sinking Fund Ronds, conv Dubuque d Southwest.(Jan. 1,'70): 1st Mortgage 1st New Y’ork 2,500,00) 7 M.& N. New Yrork 2,500,000 1,000,000 628,525 377,115 1,511 6'39 150,867 51,000 7 8 7 7 6& 7 44 44 100,000 Ronds of June 30, ’66 (condit’lv) 3d do Des Moines Valley J. & J. A.&O. M. & S. 7 M.& M.& ,J.& M.& M * M.& M.<* A. & F.& J. & 2,310,(XX) 4,690,000 8 8 A. & O. A. & O. New Y'ork 300,000 660,000 900,000 7 7 7 J. & J. J. & J. New York 150,000 6 7 7 250.000 8 N. N. J. N. N. N. N. O. A. J. New Y'ork 44 44 44 44 New Y'ork 44 44 44 44 on a 44 44 M.& N. 1st Mortgage Lustern (Dec. 1, ’68): Mass. State Loan. 1st lien Sterling, convertible Dollar, convertible Essex Railroad Bonds New Mortgage East Pennsylvania (Feb., ’70): 1st Mort., sinking fund, 1858 .... East lenn. dc Georgia (July 1, ’69): Tennessee State Loans 7 J..& J. New Y'ork 275,000 420,000 739,200 214,000 Q.-J. F. & A. J. & J. M. & S. Boston. London. Boston. 500,000 5 5 6 6 6 495,900 7 M. & S. 1,467,277 J. & J. 44 44 Philadel. Tennessee State Loans Tenn. State Endorsed Bonds... Elm. db Wil'msp't. (Feb. \0)l»t ra. f> per cent Ronds Erie Railway (Oct. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage, convertible 3d Mortgage 4th Mortgage, convertible 5th Mortgage, convertible Buffalo Branch Bonds Sterling convertible, £800,000... Erie d Pittsburg (Feb. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Consol. Mort., free of State tax. European d N. Amer. Jaw. ’70 Laud Grant onds (tax free)) 1st M. Winn.to N.B.Line,60m.> 2d M. Bangor to Winn., 55 m..) IstM, Bang.toWinn,(BangLien) Evansv. dCrawfordsvM >ct.l,’69): 1st Mortgage of 1852 (Ev. & 111.) 1st Mortgage of 1854 (Ev. & C.). 1st Mort. (Rockville extension) Flint d PereMarquet. (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage, L. G J.& J. J. & J. J. & J. New York 136.400 6 6 7 2,199,000 178,000 1,000.000 570,000 6 6 7 5 J.& J. & J. & A. & New York 3,000,000 4,000,000 6,000,000 4,441,000 926,500 186.400 4,844,444 7 7 7 7 7 7 6 M.& N. M.& S. M.& S. A.&O. J. & D. J. & J. M.& S. New York 800.400 Mortgage (old) Mortgage (new) East Tenn. dc Virginia (July 1,'’68): 7 7 7 J. & J. A. & O. J. & J. New York 6 J.[& J. N.Y &Lon. 640,000 162,700 1,613,000 44 44 J. J. J. 1876 44 Philadel. • 4 O. 44 44 44 44 44 London. 44 44 2d Mortgage 3d Mortgage Flint & Holly Mortgage Fredericksburg d Gordonsville: 1st Mort. 8. F., tax free (gold). Ft. W, Jack.dSaginawlMay 1,’69): 1st Mort., guar. ($15,000 p. m.) 2,000,000 332,000 722,000 7 7 7 150,000 381,000 424,000 600,000 250,000 7 7 8 10 1,000,000 n 4 8 Gr. Rapids d Indiana (J an.l, ’70): 1st Mortgage (gold) guar Grand River Valley (May 1, ’68): 1st Mort. (guar.) for $1,000,000 .. Greenville <e Co/umida(Oct.1,’69): 1st Mortgage Bonds guar, by State of S. Car.. Certificates, guaranteed Harrisb. d Lancaster (Nov. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Hartford db N. Haven (Feb., ’70): 1st Mortgage, 1853 Hannibal d Naples (Jan., 1870): 1st Mortgage, 1868 Hannibal d St. Joseph (Jan.18,’70): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible *. Eight per cent Loan Ten per cent Loan Mort. Bonds. 1870, conv.tax free 1st Mort. (Quincy & Palmy .RR.. 1st Mort. (Kan. C. & Cam. RR.)) Hart.,Prov. dFishkill (Feb. ’70): 1st Mort. (R. I., 26.32 m.) 1st Mort. (Conn., 96.01 in.) Hempfield (Nov. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage Housatonic (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d Mortgage Houston dc Texas Cent. (Feb. ’70): 1st Mort. L. G., S. F. (gol i) 1866. Hudson River (Jan. ’10): 2d Mortgage, sinking fund Sd mortgage Buntingd. d R. TopMt.(Fc\>. ’70): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage Illinois Central (Jan. 1, 70): Construction Construction Redemption, 1st & 2d series N.Y.&Lon. New Y'ork 44 44 New Y'ork 44 44 $25,000 yea M.& N. New York o' <W 1899 1889 ’70-’86 4,000,000 n J. & J. New York 1899 J. & J. New Y'ork 1886 262,000 806.500 429,293 7 7 J. & J. J. & J. 700,000 6 J. & J. Philadel. 1883 927.000 6 J. & J. New Y'ork 1873 625,000 7 M.& N. 1,450,000 50,000 7 7 A.&O. J. & J. 1,834,000 904,000 1,200,000 500,000 1,200,000 8 10 8 8 10 481,000 1.574.500 New Y'ork 1886 Cliarlest’n ’81-’86 1888 .... New Y'ork 44 1888 1881 1883 44 44 J. & J. J. & J. 1872 1885 1892 1892 F. * A. J. & J. New York 7 7 J. & J. J. & J. Provide’ce Hartford. 1876 1876 500,000 6 J. & J. Philadel. 18.. 191,000 100,000 7 7 J. & J. F. & A. Bridgep’rt 1877 1885 2,600,000 7 J. & J. New York 1891 2,000,000 183,000 7 7 J. & D. M.& N. New Y'ork 1885 1875 416.000 367.500 7 7 7 A. & O. F.& A. A.&O. '.Pliiladel. 7 A.& A. & A. & A. & New Y'ork N.Y.& I on 1,000,000 3.187.500 332,000 2,500,000 2,500,000 . 6 6 6 44 44 44 44 O. O. O. O. New York London. 1870 1875 1895 1875 1875 1890 1875 1883 Pliiladel. 1877 1st Mort. (H. Point extension) 1st Mort. (Glen Cove Branch).. 1st Mortgage, new 175,000 150,000 1,500, LOO F.& A. M.& N. M.& N. 2,116,000 J.&J. New Y'ork 88,000 100,000 J. & J. J. & J. New Y'ork ’70-’78 1,424,000 849,000 225,000 267,000 27,500 88,000 833,0W J. & J. New Y'ork ’69-’77 Mortgage 1st Mort. (Memphis Br.) 1st Mort. (Bards'own Br.)... 1st Mort. (Leb. Br. Exten.) Louisville Loan (Leb. Br. Ext.) Consol. 1st Mort. for $8,000,000., Macon d Br-utmcick (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mort., guar, by Georgia c, H Maine Central (June 1, ’69): $1,100,000 Loan (A. & K. RR.)... 1st Mort. (P. & K. RR.) 2d Mort. (P. & K. RR.) $400,000 Loan (Maine Central).. Marietta dCincinnati (Feb. ’70): 1st 1st Mortgage, dollar Mortgage, sterling 2d Mortgage 1st Mort. (Scioto & Hock. RR.). Memphis dCharleston{J\x\y\,'&T) 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d Mortgage Tenn. State Loan Memphis d Little Rock (Jan. 1 ,’7C): 1st Mort. (on road and land), Arkansas State Loan Michigan Central (Dec., ’69): 1st Mort Convertible, sink fund 1st Mort Convertible 1st Mort Sterling, convertible 1st Mort Sterling, non-converti Milxcaukee d St. Pinl (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage (370 miles) 2d Mortgage (370 miles) 1st Mort. (E. Div., Palmer) 1st Mort. (Iowa & Minn., 220 m.) 1st Mort. (Minn. Central) 1st Mort. (P. du C.,235 miles). 2d Mort. (P. du C., 235 miles) . Milwaukee City Milwaukee and Western Mineral Point (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage Mortgage 2d Mort. guar Iowa Southern (Feb. ’70): 1,700,000 F.& A. New York 1908 1,450,000 7 7 Mobile d Ohio (Jan. ’70): .... .... 7 New York Pniladel. 19C8 18.. New York 1837 1st 1st 1873 Mortgage ortgage, sterling Mortgage, sterling, Interest Bonds Interest Bonds, Income Bonds J. & J. 10,000p.m 1890 1893 1899 1897 1881 44 44 ’86-’87 1886 Louisville. ’70-’75 1870 ’80-’85 1893 New Y'ork 1898 New York 1881 Boston. ’90 '91 1874 1870 1,095,600 621,000 300,000 307,700 F.& A. & F. & J. & A. O. A. D. 2,149 500 1,050,000 2,500.000 300,000 F.& F.& M.& M.& 1,293,000 1,000,000 1.817,937 M.& N. J. & J. J. & J. New York 1880 1885 1890 1,300,000 900,000 M.& N. New York 1890 1897 1,600,000 A.&O. A. & O. M.& S. M. & S. New York J. & J. New York 1893 1884 1874 1897 New Y'ork 1898 Bangor. Boston. ’70-'71 A. A. Baltimore. London. N. Baltimore. 1891 1891 1896 1896 N. 44 44 577,000 500,000 467,489 5,487,000 1,316,000 7 793,000 8 3,792,000 7 208,000 7 8,672,000 8 1,K9,000 7.3 7 234,000 2,475,000 7 London, 44 A. & O. M.& N. J. & J. F.& A. F.& A. M.& S. J. & J. 44 1882 1882 1869 1872 1898 1873 1891 New Y'ork 320,000 10 7 8 M.& N. F.& A. 1,278,980 Mississippi d Tenn. (Oct. 1, ’69): 1st 2,200,000 O. N. N. J. N. O. O. 44 1,997,000 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Tenn. State Loan 1st - A.& M.& M.& J. & M.& A. & A. & 44 1,350,000 Mississippi Central (Sep. 1, ’68): 1888 800,000 , New York M O. New York .... i O. J. O. 1876 1874 1880 1892 1885 1886 1899 A. & O. 7 M.&N. New York 1885 1877 795.500 360,000 2,000,000 10 Mortgage, sinking fund... Long Island (1870): 1,500,000 8 1,500,000 & & & & 44 M.& N. A. & O. 400,000 A. J. A. A. 2,015,000 864,000 44 44 1,489,000 « J.& J. 924,000 500,000 Mortgage 7 8 1879 1873 1898 1872 1,500,000 1,495,000 1893 New York 1,089,000 3,350,0001 134.500 1910 Mortgage 3d Mortgage,.,,, New York A*& O. M.& N. M.& N. F.& A. J. & J. J. & J. 1897 1899 1899 1883 1st J. & J. Pliiladel. New Y'ork 7 44 Pliiladel. New Y'ork 1st Mort.... 44 1875 1880 1885 1890 1871 M.& N. J. & I). A. & O. A.&O. Ironton (Nov., ’69): 44 44 F.& A. F. & A. J. & D. Jack.,Lans.d Sagtnaw (Jan.1,’69): J.& J. New York 1899 7 J.&D. M.& N. J. & J. A. & O. M. & S. M.& N. 1895 7 1,000,000 130,000 7 7 7^ 7 10 New York 3,000,000 Mortgage, tax free 1888 1885 AC New York- 2,770,000 1,077,600 1st 1872 44 J. & J. Consolidated Mortgage Missouri R.,FtS.d Gulf(jan.l,’70): 1st Mortgage for $5,000,000 Missouri Valley : 1st Mortgage (gold) Mobile d Girard (June 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage, endorsed Mobile d Montgomery (May 1,’69): 4. New York 1,000,000 1,000,000 Mortgage Redemption, 3d <• eries, sterling. India nap. Bloom'ton d West 1st M. (gold) Convert., tax free. Jndianap., Cine.d Laf.(May, ’70): 1st Mortgage, 1867 1st Mortgage, 1869 1st Mort. (Ind. & Cine.). 1858 Indian. Crawf.dDanv.(M&yl, ’69): 1st Mortgage (gold) Indianap. d Vincennes(¥eA>.I,'&d)\ 1st Mortgage guar 44 1899 1896 .. V 8 New York 5,256,000 .. Augusta. M.& N. 2,693,000 Louisville Loan Louisville d Nashville (Feb. ’70): 1st Mort. (main stem) Louisville Loan (main stem)... Louisville Loan (Leb. Br.) rly. New Y'ork 1882 1900 2,000,000 Louisv., Cin.d LexingJJuly 1,’69) 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Louisvilled Frankfort( July 1 ,’69): 1880 1887 1«88 J. & J. J. & J. Pliiladel. Philadel. New York 1st 1889 1889 1881 7 A.& O. A. & O. 44 F. & A. 1st M.& N. ,T. & J. M.& S. M.& N. 1885 1893 1874 44 500,000 Little Schuylkill (Jan., ’70): A J. & J. M.& N. F. & A. Mortgage Little Miami (Feb. ’70): 1899 1899 New York 1st 1882 1890 1893 615,500 . Georgia— Ronds (May, ’70) J. & J. 7 7 7 200,000 Leaven., Laicren. d Gal.(Jan.,’70) 1st Mortgage, 1869 Lehigh d Lackaican. (Nov. 1/69): 1st Mortgage, tax free.. Lehigh Valley (h eb., ’70): 1st M. 1858 (exchange for new). 1st (new) Mort. (tax free) 1868.. 1st Mort. (Hazleton RI{.) 1862... 3 6 1874 J. & J. 1st o gold. 1,000.000 New York Lawrence (b eb. ’70): 1877 1879 1883 1880 1888 1891 1875 .. . J. & J. J &J. M .& S. J. & J. 900,000 500,000 400,000 200,000 .... 1898 1896 18M) 2862 44 1881 1873 1906 1882 8 128,000 794,000 287,000 1st Mort. S. fund M. S. & N. I. 2d Mortgage M. S 1st Mort. (I)., M. & T. RR.) ... 1st Mort. (C.,P. & A. RR.).... 2d Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.) .... 3d Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.) 1st Mort.(C. & Tol. RR.) s’k’gTd 2d Mort. (C. & Tol. RR.) Dividend Bonds Lake Sup. d Mississippi: 1st Mort. (gold) for $4,500,000.. 1892 1880 1882 44 6,500,000 Lake Sh. & Mich. South.CZov.'M): New Bonds, 1869 1888 New York 44 500,000 3ff',0.0 More (Lov. & Lex.) Mort. (Cov. & Lex.) Lackawan. d Bloomsb. (Feb., 70) 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1st Mortgage (extension) 2d Mortgage (extension) Income *.•• • Lake Erie d Louisville (July ln>9): 1st New York 1,200,000 800,000 250,000 IstMor.t (Cov. & Lex.)......., '69-’74 1872 1874 1876 1888 N. O. O. O. 800,000 . 1883 1883 1897 1894 J. & J. 441,000 guar... Junction, Cinc.&Ind.”(Julyl,’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1st Mortgage (Newcastle Br.).. Junction, “Pliila.” (Jan., ’70): 1st Mortgage, guar., tax free 2d Mortgage, taxlfree Kansas Pacific (Jan, ’70): 1 jl M. (gold) I’d grant, s’k’g f d. Kentucky Central (Jan. 1, *70): 1908 44 Mort., sinking fund M.& A. & A. & A.& 397,000 1,961,000 150,000 Joliet d N. Indiana (July 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed 1883 1894 1888 New Y'ork 1st Var J. & D. 612.000 ... ■ 1877 1898 A.& O. J. & J. 500,000 500,000 .. 1st Mort. (Ind. & Mad. RR.). 2d Mort. (Jeffersonville RR) 1st Mort. (J., M. & Ind. RR).... Louisville (endorsed) Bonds Joliet d Chicago (July 1, ’69): JUO 1873 1873 1871 1886 7 7 paid. ? •Jeff.. Mad.d Indianap. (Jan., 70): 1875 1875 1875 1875 450,000 100,000 £ >* V ss d, a Where paid. page. Is Mortgage 2d Mort... 1899 1,500,000 Mortgage, preferred Duchess d Columbia (Jan. 1, ’70): preceding When JamestowndF>'anklin(Nov.\,'§rjy. 1871 1875 1881 1878 44 % a For a full explanation of this Table see “Railroad Monitor standing U JPU.P, Railroads 7 7 7 CS Q} INTEREST. Out¬ Railroads: 564,000 1,111,000 1,633,000 Tables. our COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬ a © INTEREST. Out¬ preceding page. Del., Lack. d Western (Nov. 1/69): 1st Mort. (Lack. & Western RR.) 1st Mort.skg Pd(East. Ext. RR.) 2d Mort. (D., L. & West.) free.. Denver Pacific (Jan. ’70): 1st Mort. L. G. (gold) 1869 Detroit d Milwaukee (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d Mortgage 1st Funded Coupons 2d Funded Coupons BOND LIST. great favor by giving u« Immediate notice of any error discovered in Pages 3 and 4 of Bonds will be published next week. 6 J. & J. 600,000 1,105,700 7 A. & O. J. & J. New York 8 Memphis. 1876 ’8l-’93 10 J. & J. Boston. 1899 1,000,COO 7 F.& A. New York 400,000 7 New Y'ork 44 44 1873 1876 1892 18.. 98,000 1,200,000 | sterling Montgomery d Eufala (Oct., ’69): stM. by State of Ala..., M.& N. New York 1888 5,470,000 1,181.600 755,040 Mobile. London. Mobile. London. Mobile. 1882 1882 1883 1888 968,603 M.& N. M.& N. M.& N. M.& N. M.& N. 480,000 M. & S. New Y’ork 1886 previously. thqpuoategien bfopwruiecnields The 822 till! CHRONICLE. Commercial ® i m e 0. Export* of Leading Articles from New York. The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show of leading articles of commerce from the port of New the exports COMMERCIAL' EPITOME. York 6ince Friday Night. June 24. The [June 25, 1870. January 1, 1870, to all the principal foreign countries, and genethI trade for the past week has been quiet, not also the total export of tlu same articles for the las' week and since even breadstuffs have shown their recent activify and prices January 1. tor nearly all the oo_^rt-_© r-iio_eooa leading staples have ruled in favor o ©©©c*©©eot-c»©o ©Q^icHcor-Jigt" ©_© © © O © a5 © rH©’Gft-:'©©© buyers. The decline in gold has discouraged holders, 25 etcohp© many fc-03co of whom have been looking for a higher premium, and a £2®* c© ..OCOCOHTfOWOO g’ ©©©©©eo©©;Pi—a)Hpcor-cH Ho>2io corresponding advance in*merchandize. HJ^t* CO CO HP hpj© © lcTocotg" © *—I © lOU © © ea COCO CO CO © cc © t* -3* »o CO TV ghco •-» HP rH © cocot- ri Ci 50 o Cotton has further declined, Breadstuffs have been very irregular, and close lower and unsettled. Groceries have been rather slow, and prices weak. Tobacco without essential CO an © Tallow prices. active, and prices in firmer, but the business has 3 t-> a *3 The receipts of domestic produce for the week and since Jan.l and for the same time in 1869, have been as follows: Ashes...pkgs. Breadstufl's— Flour .bbis. Wheat .bus. Corn Oats Rye Malt Barley 4,335 . 4,951 This Since Same Jan.l. time’69 week. Spirits tine turpen- 95,097 421,276 1,1 SO,939 Rosin 718,308 6,250,892 4,980,225 Tar 369,433 2,121,821 3,640,068: Pitch 208,552 1,985,167 1,879,344; Oil cake, pkgs.... 9,311 251,837 181,453 Oil, lard..... 28,118 333,527 232,392, Oil, petroleum... 593,123 76,020. Peanuts, bags.. 741 5.587 32,175 281,608 43,126 2,010 32,239 2,64-1 91,641 52,154 ioo 3,022 . .. C. meal.bhls bags Buckwli’t & B.W.fl’r pkg Cotton.bales. Copper..bbls. ‘‘ plates. . 2,110 26,510 2,280 57,583 146,205 29,447 221,599 68,124 27,400 48,913 178,726 6,134 2,814 359,009 2,177 11,377 339,701 .... .... 351 4.596 336 9 52 656 Dr’dfruit.pkg 18 .pkgs. Hemp ..bales. 63 63 Hides ....No. 4,272 Hops...bales. 311 Leather .sides Lead ....pigs. 49,632 Grease 6.595 4,481 11,712 3,372 1,818 201,167 19,977 1,264 940 7,369 1.930 Naval StoresCr. turpen Cheese Cutmeats Eggs Pork 5,474 2,032 280 219,940 39,887 1,322,188 1,331 18,611 i 4,199 9,127 241,141 812 71,054 174,757 63,529 420 31 394 111 53,63s 4,891 Stearlne 50,722 13,418 12,285 111,790 199 13,603, Starch 2,633 230,391 5,520 5,540 57 20,016 60,840 489 Su^ar, lihds and Tallow, 353 pices Tobacco, pikes... Tobacco, hhds... Whiskey, bbis.... Wool, bales Dressed hogs No. Rice, rouah bush 108 9,670 13,308 Beef, pkgs Lard, pkgs Lard, kegs 6,1571 Rice, pkgs 12,804 .... Molasses hhds & bbis. 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GH CO • • rH • r-T ‘ t- • • OO CD © GH © Tp • • • -P © CC HP rH .© . • • © ©2 ♦ • © co • w • ■ - • •-?© «© .81 ‘t-rH©0©GH©0 ■©©®iHP©3DC*fe:£7r-H 00 IP, © GH_© OO GO^CO^tP ■ S00' t-H © |g1 -g3 i-i f^ X3 0Q OQ 0Q «i BJ CO 0Q M XI X3 p P o d P rj^ g S - 4,208 11,009 124,124 5,703 SalJl.g® 2,052 4,053 54,830 39,214 fao^;«MOQfa 85,978 w 24,503 0 -0 o 54,591 23,640 o n kZ ©" © © q CO rH CD L— *tP © t- ® CO HP ■ 3Q ’ tP © ' C * JO * *q. ; Tp GH —* aS c4 o ® c-rH • oT©^ co of © rH © CH « ■ . .8 * o H • ■ 'af OH rH * :S * • :« Tf ; c« TV :§ -5 SO ' O 1-3 *2 Sng ,3 2*-' eo •© © CO rH © © gT GH *° O .■2?© O ja • -HP GH oow o P » • . 1-7 H* © © rH QQ .S5 3,967 45,845 © © <r> CO 1-1 • © fa 62,594 47,352 HH as © C3 © pq “o 312,497 169,695 62,806 98,256 . rH .©©©© ©CH© — *v & 28,621 269,649 53,030 1,796 55,908 347,995 54,063 <?* • i,, HrH aS M 5 .... Grass seed Flax seed Beans Peas “ 339 Same time ’69. • •th fl S Since Jan. 1. *© <©o»t- s t* rh This week. T-i CH ©2 ©o© o HP T? CO h_qj! cf so© • aS ® 13 53 the Week and since ’ ; Tr rfl ” Stettin* for 92^22 • 5«© 2> co" r-7 • © 00 (O by a supply of ice-packed. Other hog products have ruled firm, but quiet. Beef, of all kinds, has also been quiet, and butter has been slow ; but cheese, with largely increased supplies and slightly lower prices, met with a brisk export demand for Liverpool, mainly at 14@14£c. for prime and choice factory made. The wool market remains dormant, and prices remain unsettled. Ja»» 1.. CO t- CO CO CO _ i-i _ 2 Fruits and fish have shown no movement of importance. Pork at some decline have been more active; the"depres¬ sion being caused Receipt* of Domentic Produce ’O' lO © CO f-H ©“ .t-„eo 35’ o ■< Whiskey has materially declined both here and at the West. Hops have been in request for brewing, and are firm. Hay in good demand. Building materials show a pretty uniform decline, except for lath, which is scarce. only bulky shipments are petroleum, and with a good supply of ton¬ nage in port, rates have been easier to British ports. Ships on the berth have got wheat to Antwerp at fid, and to Havre at 8J@8J1 ; but the Liverpool steamers have accepted as low as 4jd. But to day, the decline in wheat caused some improvement, with wheat by steam, at fid. to Liverpool 5£d. to Glasgow, and petroleum 5s 3d to Dunkirk and 6sand to • © T-»Wf pig iron The • • ‘ co O co co © co r u port the market by endeavoring to conceal the increased receipts, have precipitated the decline. East India goods have ruled dull, and are pretty uniformly weak, with some decline in Calcutta linseed. Metals have been firm, and sold fairly, especially Ingot dull. CH *- QQ In naval stores, we notice some decline in spirits turpentine and rosins, due to large receipts and accumulating stocks, but at this decline the demand has somewhat improved. Oils have met with a fair sale, but at prices a shade easier for all descriptions in which much business has been done. Petro¬ leum has declined under a pressure to sell. Efforts to sup¬ Freights have ruled - © • 'S! nt breadstuffs and ch©© • GO g§ for export at full and straits tin. 00 t- ■ © ia more copper, Ip CO • cjetofao Ki © af rH©* co~ so —f tjT ro oor-T©rHt-©©Hp©Tp rH rH O* i-'QocoOt-irrcoi '■O’ e- so CH rH H O* r-1 GH ch WO^Hqu u ® has been in request o; u ^ active. CO O CO CO —; private terms, and there has been evidently anxiety to realize. Goat and deer skins have also been more 03 rH hp rH CO change. Hides and leather have been some cases have ruled slightly been mostly on —TaferfoTcf©'c» OtKoSio GH co ch t- © CO - HP CO co rH hp ch co eo CO w co as CO —< HCOWrl coc< v ino> Hp © -i © © TJ1 HP t- O i-H ■S?22*OQcOtPoO'hP • 03 © © rH HP © ‘*^83 . • • 00 HP CO©© © © © HP HP © © © © c- © © June 25,1870.] THE CflEONlCLE- 823 Imports of Leading Articles* The market has continued dull all the week. Monday and compiled from Custom House returns, shows Tuesday there was a slight revival of confidence among holders, ttieforeign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port and good ordinary advanced $c. This was owing to an improve¬ f»r ( he last week, since Jan. 1,1870, and for the corresponding period ment in foreign advices, after the announcement at Liverpool that in I860: the Bombay shipments for England for the week i Ptie ending the 20th quantity is given In packages when not otherwise specified.! inst. had been only 11,000 bales. Thursday there were rumors r The- following table, . For the week. Since Jan. 1, Same lime 1869. 1870. China, Glass and For Since the Jan. 1, week. 1870. Same time 1869. Metals, &c— Earthenware— China 262 Earthenware... 1,510 Glass 94 121 78 97 Glassware Glass plate Buttons Coal, tons 313 Cocoa, bags Coffee, bags 31,258 Cotton bales Drugs, &c.— 4 Bark, Peruvian. Blea 312 powders.. Brimstone, tons Cochineal Cream Tartar.. 2,738 90 61 Gambler 1,626 Cutlery 5,458 23,157 5,266 30,752 270,259 7,279 208,757 9,654 4,718 2,351 3,386 178 2,031 17,812 882 58 47.372 757 649 155 130 22,938 16,714 1,030 isi 1,285 2,149 47,710 Flax Furs Hair Hemp, bales Hides, &c— 91 33,386 5,683 383 249,548 396,607 491,611 619,100 2,630 13,268 Wool, bales 273 Articles report’d by value— Fancy goods.... Fish 29 854 18,958 573 India rubber 652 1,311 17,766 1,398 7.01S 22,066 Ivory Jewelery, &c— Jewelry 89 27 Watches Linseed Molasses 5,996 1,800 1,615 1,071 604 542 272,056 90,868 323,460 112,329 66,730 59,086 91,869 122,343 17,178 24,083 166,155 Ginger Pepper Saltpetre 791 28.289 224,263 1,439 1,980 50.971 6,057 155,935 525 174,910 15,234 44,266 8,766 WoodsCork Fustic 21,061 1,311 735 20,184 330,954 203,198 3,058 774,665 615,795 5,689 316,816 475,537 33,750 465,687 610,585 201,772 4,842,458 5,448.664 17,734 135,759 197,135 Cassia Bristles Hides, dressed. 639,376 21,502 $46,388 $614,365 $407,619 48,810 73,288 38,149 961,513 913,914 948 240,078 390,578 Corks 51,093 Fruits, &c— Lemons 18,779 21,240 Oranges Nuts” 1,122 Raisins 3,219 3,134 Hides undressed 5,301 Rice 55,761 Spices, &c— 1.953 52,514 561 830 1 6,850 Cigars 969 1,001 Gunny cloth 470 1.703 3,970 42,647 229,976 40,570 10,566 Tea 16,084 Tobacco 9,123 Waste 2,708 Wines, &c— 1,095 Cliampag’e.bks 13.80? Wines..: 1,643 6,697 4 Madder Oils, essence.... Oil, Olive Opium Soda, bi-carb... Soda, sal Soda, ash 705 2,062 2,031 3,632 2,370 226,943 894,987 262,130 278,674 63,689 82,024 S72.717 684,116 1,319,193 2,079,870 20,819 ^bags 5,415 671 10 7,454 3,162 21,403 5,005 1,440 Sugars, boxes & 8,719 9,442 2,011 ’it>9 Indigo 10,665 ....” Tin, boxes Tin slabs, lbs.. Steel 2,792 31,106 Rags 13, 29 Sugar, hhds, tes & bbls 584,195 10,902 13,510 488,315 2,460 262 Guim, crude.... Gum, Arabic... 146 Iron, RR bars. Lead, pigs 4.785 2.705 73 Hardware 67,225 r. Logwood Manogany . 19,841 100,524 120,188 85,909 48,460 289,632 43,396 37.408 that the movement would be freer this week, while Manchester advices were not encouraging; consequently Liverpool was lower and very dull, while our own market developed the same features, which were continued also to day, the close here to-night being heavy, with middling uplands at 21c. Holders would be willing to make some concessions on large orders, but do not press sales, and appear indisposed to yield anything to meet the small retail business which has been in process all the week. For future delivery the tone and prices have corresponded with the fluctua¬ tions above noticed in the movement of cotton on the spot, except that the changes have been more decided. The probable price of the next crop continues to be the absorbing question of the day. Sales of the week for October have been at 18 @ 18$c., which indi¬ cates the prevailing opinion at the moment. Total sales of futures during the week reach 21,050 bales (all low middling or on the basis of low middling, except as hereinafter stated), of which 3,250 bales were for June, 850 at 20, 100 at 20$, 100 at 20f, 600 at 20$, 100 at 20$, 100 at 20$, 400 at 191,400 at 19 11-16,500 at 19$, 100 at 19$ ; 11,050 bales for July, 1,700 at 19$, 950 at 19$, 300 at 19$, 2,050 at 20, 900 at 19$, 1,050 at 20$, 1,300 at 20$, 500 at 19$, 300 at 19$, 400 at 18$, 400 at 18$,400 at 19, 300 at 19$, 400 at 19$,; 3,700 for August, 1,700 at 19$, 100 at 19 11-16, 300 at 19f, 500 at 20, 500 at 19$, 700 at 19$, 300 at 18$, 100 at 18$„ 100 at 19 ; 1,700 bales for September, 500 at 19, 700 at 18$, 200 at 18$, 300 at 19f ; 800 bales for October, 500 at 18$, 100 at 18$, 250 at 18$, 400 bales for November, 200 at 18$, and 200 at 18$, and 100 October and November at 18$. The total sales for immediate delivery this week foot up 5,938 bales (including 189 bales to arrive), of which 3,132 bales were taken by spinners, 465 bales on specula¬ tion, 2,141, bales, for export, 200 bales in transit, and the follow' ing are the closing quotations: Upland and OOTTON. Friday, P.M., June 24, 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 June 24. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the total receipts for the seven days have reached 12,847 bales (against 15,52G bales last week, 17,995 bales the previous week, and 22,441 bales three weeks since), making the aggregate since September 1, 1869, up to this date, 2,813,323 bales, against 2,096,604 bales for the same period in 1868-9, being an increase this season over last season of 716,719 bales. The details of the receipts for this week (as per telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1869 are as follows : RECEIPTS. RECEIPTS. Rec’d this week at— 1870. 1869. Rec’d this week at— 1870. 1,182 3,772 1,028 1,120 3,207 Mobile Charleston Bavannah Texas 686 1,259 1,471 831 271 1,609 Tennessee, &c 2,123 Florida North Carolina bales. 8 277 90£? 2,081 12,847 9,440 Virginia Total receipts Increase this year 178 189 3,407 The exports for the week ending this evening reach a total of 19,898 bales, of which 15,270 were to Great Britain and 4,628 bales to the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports, as made up this evening, are now 206,827 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: Exported to— Weekending June 24. G.Brit New Orleans Mobile Charleston Savannah Texas New York....... Other ports Coutin’t 1,702 4,016 1,639 1,201 .... 205 3,618 . .. V . 419 5,718 1,639 1,406 3,648 7,779 , 419 6,631 407 .... Total 15,270 Total since Sept. 1... 1,375,419 Total this Same w’k week. 1869. .... 4,628 666,731 .... 8,104 1,409,907 20,047 12,491 206,827 325 .... 1869. 82,207 25,031 5,670 16,339 18,080 45,000 14,500 T ... 7,038 19,898 2,042,183 t Stock. 1870. 72,053 17,351 12,847 3,964 3,610 1,743 .... From the foregoing statement it will be seen that, compared with the corresponding week of last season, there is an increase in the ex¬ ports this week of 11,794 bales, while the stocks to-night are 134,774 bales more than they were at this time a year ago. The following is our usual table showing the movement of cotton at all the ports from Sept. 1, to June 17, the latest mail dates. We do not include our telegrams to-night, as we cannot Insure the accuracy o obtain the detail necessary, RECEIPTS PORTS. 1870. New Orleans 1,111,615 Mobile 299,134 Charleston 232 380 8avannah 463,606 Texas 232,355 New York 126,S34 Florida 21,252 worth Carolina... 56,538 ,. Virginia 196,286 61,025 Other ports Total this year . Total last year.. by telegraph. 2,800,475 .... 1869. 789,662 224,213 191,942 362,064 141,846 102,612 TO 15,724 115,358 287,931 * 244,565 14,429 1,825 42,087 9,121 17,603 192,410 18,439 7,330 17,034 12,798 137,277 62,150 367,684 154,615 79,533 ‘*”50 50 9,640 .... 2,087,164 946,284 186,211 91,853 252,758 ” 34,953 8,213 22,315 we 16%®.... 18%@.... lb. 16!W@.... 18*;®.... 20%®.... 21%@.... 22%@.... 20 21 @.... @.... 22%@.... 9,640 30,528 140,373 39,931 137,961 198,756 61,115 *7,513 55,937 184,579 Orleans. 17 @... 18%®.... 20%®.... 21%@.... , 23 @.... Texas 17%®.,. 19%@ ... ^21^®..., 23%@.... give the total sales of cotton and price of Uplands day of the past week : at this market each Total sales. Saturday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday, Ordinary. 427 914 * 17 17 1,615 1,178 Good 1? 17 784 720 @.... ®.... Low - Ordinary, Middling. 18%@.... 18%®.... 20%@.... 20%®.... 1S%@.... 20%®.... 20%@.... 18^@.... 18\@.... 18%®.... ®.... 16*®.... 16%®.... 20%@.... 20 @.... Middling. 21%®..., 21%®.... 21%@.... 21%®.... 21%®..., 21 ®.... The Growing Crop and Future Prospects.—There is little to add with regard to the growing crop this week. of Complaints and widely separated points, but especially from the West and South-West; we doubt^ however, whether any considerable damage has yet resulted, ex¬ cept in,very limited districts ; the return of warm, sunny weather during the past week has served to brighten the prospects, even where they were a little doubtful. .We think it right, however, to warn our readers against acting with too much confidence at pre ¬ sent upon the current large estimates of the yield, or expecting too low a price for the next crop. The danger this season is that the majority of the trade will go to that extreme and be bears since they have been deceived this year by accepting the bull’s story. Without doubt the new season will open with a consider¬ able increase in the cotton in sight, and, if our crop turns out well it is likely that the world’s supply next year will be in excess of this year’s supply ; but we should remember that our crop has yet to pass through all the dangers both of summer and fall, and, fur¬ ther, that far more cotton can be consumed at 9d per lb. than at ll$d. too much rain are current from very many Stocks of Cotton Interior Towns.—Below at 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: 1870. , we 1869. v June 24. June 17. June 24. 8HIP- Great NORTH. STOCK. ! Other Britain. France foreign Total. PORTS. 509,309 153,348 82,698 193,637 Below per . EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 M’TBTO - Ordinary Good Ordinary Low Middling Middling Good Middling Mobile. 1869. ■ New Orleans, bales New Florida. 87,436 31,027 7,402 18,747 19,609 49,000 Augusta, Ga Columbus, Ga Macon, Ga Montgomery, Ala Selma, Ala..! Memphis, Tenn NashviLe, Tenn *551 329,630 832,476 2,022,285 826,165 228,289 956,714 219,588 225,551! 1,401,853 795,588 95,891 of the 10,415 2,240 2,870 4,940 6,173 4,315 3,190 12,637 505 550 300 350 610 665 375 400 1,127 763 2,193 4,695 46,365 5,835 8,02 2 42,813 The foregoing shows the the week 3,552 bales, and cess 8,730 4,575 5,790 4,158 2,668 12,237 4,655# Total 2,017 12,500 1,360,179 . June 17. same 909 interior stocks have decreased during that they are now 40,530 bales in ex* period of last year. 824 THE CHRONICLE. Visible Supply op Cotton.—The following table shows the uantity of cotton in sight at this date of each of the two past q To Stock Stock Stock Stock Stock Stock Afloat 1870. Liverpool bales. 1869. 642,000 24,374 in London in Glasgow in Havre 388,000 71,831 500 in Marseilles. in Bremen rest of Continent for Great Britain (American) Afloat for France (American and Brazil)... Total Indian Cotton afloat for Europe Stock in United States ports Stock in inland towns 300 144,700 9,900 24,100 50,000 100,000 35,891 320,6G3 206,827 39,700 13,050 12,450 20,000 79,000 30,610 626,754 72,053 5,835 42,813 Total 1,600,768 1,359,583 These figures indicate an increase in the cotton in sight to night of 223,798 bales compared with the same date of 1869. thip Minerva, 1,539 ..per schooner W. L. Burroughs. per 2,31S.7...7.V Bagging, &c —The market for bags and cloth during the past wreek, though prices remain firm, has been dull but the speculative 395 2,505 2,505 Amsterdam, per brig Preference, 534 T... 531 Charleston —To Liverpool, per brig J. A. Dtvereux, 115 Sea Island, 1,215 Upland 1,330 Savannah—To Liverpool, \ cr ship Charlotte, 3,544 Uplands and 37 Sea Island 3,581 Galveston—To Liverpool, per bark Jane Young," 1,220. .7 .7.7.7.7.7.. 1,230 Baltimore—To Bremen, i er steamer 149 Boston-To Llverp ol. per steamer Leipsig, 149 Malta, 40 40 To To British Provinces, .... per 40 , 40 , Total The as particulars of these shipments, arranged in follows our : New York. .. LiverHavre. pool 5,511 .. .. Charleston .. 1,330 m , 111 . • • • • British Vera st’dam Provinces Cruz. Total. 6,551 dam. 193 716 3,318 395 19,460 3,039 1,330 3,581 1,220 534 . , .... * * -. 149 . 40 burg. . • Baltimore.... 35,410 usual form, are Bre- Ham- Rotter- Ammen, 1^,771 2,976 2,505 , Gunny Bags, 2,976 2,318 To Amsterdam, per ship Mary Risscil, To Vera Cruz, per schooner Louise Willistou, 395 Mobile— I'o Live pool, per N ncy M , seasons : Stock in Havre, [Jana 25, 1870. 149 - ..... 40 80 spirit observable a few 'weeks since is now wanting. Holders generally claim, however, that as soon as the ..27,988 5MII 250 193 7lG 40 2,852 393 35,110 fall demand sets in speculation will revive and Gold Exchange and Freights.—Gold has prices tend up¬ fluctuate i the past week wards again as the consumption will exceed the supply ; but between lll£ and 113^, and the close to-night was 111£. Foreign consumers do not think they will lose anything by holding Exchange is steady at the reduction made yester^ ay. The following off and look for easier prices later in the season. Cloth were the la'-t quotations: London bankers, long, 1(J94@ 109# ; short, is held at unchanged rates; we quote 3(H@31 per cent currency 110(a)l 1U£, and commercial, Hi1094. Freights cWd at i 1 by and 20c. gold, in bond, and 32c. for domestic. Sales are 50 bales steam, and 4@5-32d by sail, to Liverpool; by steam and India, for cmsumption, at 31c ; 100 Borneo, at 32c ; and 800 rolls sail to by Hamburg, aud £c by steam to Bremen. domestic, from June to January, at 31|c. Bags have been without By Telegraph from Liverpool.— transactions, they are held at 15@16c, gold, in bond. Jute and Liverpool, June 24th—5 P. M.—The market has ruled dull jute butts have sold freely, and we notice the sale of 1,000 bales to-day with sales reaching jute to arrive, at Gc gold ; 1,000 at 5£c.; and 4,200 jute butts, on spoliation. only 7,000 hah s, of wlTch 1,000 were taken for export and Tbe sales of the week hive been 55,000 bales, of which spot and to arrive, 5^c, currency. 6,0CC were taken for export, and 4,(00 on speculation. -The stock The exports of cotton this week from New York show over last week, the total increase reaching 6,551 bales, against 5,122 bales last week. Below we give oar table showing the exports of cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last four an weeks; the total exports and direction since September 1, 1869 ; and in the list column the total for the same period of the previous year: also Export* of Cotton (bales) from New York niace Sept. 1, 1869 Total EXPORTED TO June i June May 31. Liverpool 7. 6,981 Other British Ports 4,524 £0 6,981 Havre Other French ports 99 6,792 Total French Bremen and Hanover 59 548 33 Hamburg Other ports Total to N. Europe .... 5S1 . 5,541 17,600 3 Total 441 • Grand Total • 7,562 Description. 60 341 1,375 54,632 2,498 This week. NeW Orleans. Texas 1,531 1.042 Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina. 83,505 45,573 1,9S4 146,557 « • • 367,6S4 312,707 997 301 BALTIMORE. North Carolina.. Virginia 456 9 1,064 Tennessee, <fcc. Foreign... 0 . 127,016 . 5.8113 659 .... • • ....! • • • • • • .... 3,949 .... 128. . 645 876 126 .... 20,996 10,660 , This week. 3,857 8,654 .... 54,293 North’rn Ports. . Since Septl. + m .... . This week. 37,6101 90 .... .... . 5 .... 19,603 189 .... Since Septl. 18,101 100 11 99 160 230 14.714 2,773 33,141 2,121 23,756 6 .... 4 12,478 624,103 1,985 | 207 626 189 3,334 i 214,023 1,795 47,426 I 54,048 690 90.211 1,443 76,347 Shipping News.—The past week, far as per the Southern as exports of cotton from the United States the latest mail returns, have reached 36,410 bales. So ports are concerned, these are the same exports reported by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle last Fri¬ day, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are the exports for two weeks back. With regard to New York, we include the manifest only up to Tuesday night, to make the figures correspond with the offi¬ cial week. Below we give a list of the vessels in which these ship¬ ments from all ports, both North and South, have been made" T< New York—1To Liverpool, p^r steamprs Java, 370 City of Antw« rp, 10 Calabria, 382 ...Nebraska, 2,377....England, 1,384 City ofWa hington 4S7... per thips Hugucot, 150 Edith Warren, 330 .. To New Naturalist, 51 Hamburg, per steamer Orleans-To Li\e Cimbria, 193. pool, per thips Sandusky, 3,045 Kate Prince, 3,722.. .Wm. Cummings, 2,569....Emma, 2,194....per 9* 9* 9% 10* 9* io ..® ® .. 10% 10* 11% 11* 11 11* U% 1015-16 11* 10% 11* 12 of middling qualities of cotton 1867. 1868. Mid. Pernamb ll*d. 10*d. Egyptian. 12* - 9* 7* 7* 7* Broach... Dhollerah Actual •—Taken on 1870, bales. American Brazilian 113,240 7,700 Egyptian. &c.. 4,660 West Indian... 810 East Indian 67,660 .. spec, to this date- 1869, 1868, bales. bales. 99,050 18,080 11,200 192,590 49,380 36,610 330 3,180 77.506 167,760 ..... at this 1869. 1870 Il*d.l0* 10 6* 8* 9 8 8 specula- export from other outports to this date 1870. 1869. bales. bales. 45,697 23,303 45,907 22,259 2.916 3,655 4,502 89,509 3,647 83,124 Actual exp’tfrom U. K. in 1869 bales. 133,300 61,800 11,050 11,540 674,160 Total.... 194,071 297,080 350,260 163,687 1«5,S32 ' 791,850 The following statement shows the sales and imports of cotton fo the week and year, and also the stocks on baud on Thursday evening last: SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS. ■Sales this week.Total Same Average Ex- Speculathis period weekly sales. Trade. port. tion. Total. 1869. year. 1870. 1819. American..bales. 21,890 1,200 2,320 25,410 724,170 606,270 25,120 19,520 Brazilian 2 0 3,510 500 4.110 158*440 222,2)0 5,590 7,710 Egyptian 50 2,600 10J 2,759 89,420 104,770 3,810 3,200 West Indian.... 870 2) .390 20,1-30 740 1,400 35,640 East Indian. 7,580 1,770 600 10,010 407,700 839,190 11,720 14,560 .. Total 35,950 American Brazilian 12,930 3/(53 Egyptian West Indian.. 4,949 East Indian... 13,771 10* Liverpool, Hull and This week 101 19 3 716 prices of American 7* Since the commencement of the the transactions on year tion and for export have been : 3,140 3,5S0 bales. 5,541 the , 10 7-16 10* 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. Mid. Sealsl’d ISd 27d. 24d. I9d. Upland. 11* 11 11* io* Mobile.. 11* II* U* lo* Orleans 11* 11* 12 10 15-16 13,630 .... 6,802 1,155 92 60,539' 216 679.677 Upland Mobile , _ 7,434 9 Ord. .... • Total this year Stained .... 16,692 Fr. 10 ®10* 1C*®1( f ® /—G’d .—Same date 1869-% fine. Mid. Fair. Good. 22 -25 30 -48 24 26 82 10 !2 -13 14 -15 11 12 16 G. Ord. L. Mid. Mid. G’d Mid. Mid. F. 70 722 Thu. g’d fair 19 The following are the prices date and since 1867: 44,171 201 1 16.034 6,922 108,536 44,699 • .. 16 5,039 Since 137 + Sea Island 1,809 Septl. Wed. . are r-Pa'r ,—Ord. & M d-» .... I Since ® fo'lowing .... 1 Sept. 1. 11.- •The : 2,511 Philadelphia! ,001) * Liverpool, June 33,137 20,120 following are the receipts of cotton at New York, Boston, Fhila. cfelpbia and Bn) lime *e for the last week, and since September 1. 1869 : This week. kets, our states: 1,809 BOSTON. 46 and .... RECEIPTS PROM- 871,0 !0 Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these mar¬ correspondent in London, writing under the date of June II 36,472 6,551 384,000 303,<:60 120,000 366,000 282,000 .... The NEW YORK. European .... 5,122 4,000 612,000 Tnes. . N. O. & Texas.... 7,100 606,000 10;*®:0| 10}@lff 10*®.. 10i®i0| 10*®10| 10*®... . .... • • 6,000 4,000 603,600 3*9,000 .... .... June 24. 55,000 6,000 4.000 5,600 9,000 327,009 Sat. Mon. Price Midd. Uplds 101®. 10}®... “ Orleans 10*®... 10*®... U D. to arrive. .®.. 1,010 .... 109,0J0 bales Jut e 17. 66,000 136,000 155,' 00 100,OOq Report.- -The following table will show the daily closing prices for 301 193 716 .... Spain, etc fJ rade in port The stock the week: cotton 18,291 5,578 June 10. 42,000 3,000 4,000 Total afloat 19,736 Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c Allotbers 19,736 June 3. 51,000 6f 17,603 .... 40 401 249 )>rev. year. .... Total sales Sales for export. Sales on speculation. 287,931 233,300 .... 58 ! 21 128 .... .... .... time 286,818 230,245 1,113 3,055 58 .... .... date 5,541 4,623 59 .... June 21. 14. 6,742 .... Total to Gt. Britain. I to .... is estimated at 642,000 bales, of which 463,000 are American. of cotton afloat bound to this port, is 371,000 bales, of wh ch are American Same WEEK ENDING •• 12,062 Total 937 To this date 1870. 42,670 1,460,660 1,608,070 1 mports 911,077 190,283 116,( 86 28,029 254,677 » To this date Total. I860. 1869. 660,074 1,039,118 256,974 499,251 126,006 226,540 34,254 89,027 243,837 1,141,343 31,631 1,495,15.21,820,145 2,995,279 46,980 47,09q —StocksSame This date 1869. day. 1869. 866,400 64,340 248,500 73,390 58.500 9,529 24,370 63,8S0 2,70) 109,500 25,56) 6,13© 46,970 203,800 603,200 435,440 837,760 76,900 June 25,1870.] THE CHRONICLE. Of the present stock of cotton in Liverpool, neurly 60.83 per cent ie American, against 57 per cent last jear. Of Indian cotton the proportion is 18 per cent, against nearly 18 per cent. over 1868. Bales. Deliveries 65.260 130,167 39,180 Stocks, Havre, June 17.—The following particulars circular, and extend to June 1: fried <fc Co.’s > IMPORTS. . ot> r® are ,—DELIVERIES.—* , E-s? , ® S-2S r * S. have been: J8G9-70 J8J8-9 JSJJ-g The The sales of the week have been 35 following past week are Continent. 40,263 387 213 40 169 YORK, 35,153 30,825 lbs. .... 4‘ 0 10 7 .. .. . .... .... .. 2 Total 1,061 .... 602 09 9,565 3,222 99 12,727 Bombay, June 6.—Oomrawuttee, by sail, 275r. = 9 8-lOOd.; by canal, The direction of the per lb, cost and freight ; Broach, foreign exports for the week, from the other machine-ginned, by sail, S10r.= !0 16-100d. ; by canal, 10 46-.100d. per lb., cost and freight; ports, has been as foliow.s * Dho'.leta, by sail, 278r.=9 17-1 OOd. ; by canal, 9 47-100d. per lb., cost From Baltimore—To Bremen 681 likds, 308 do stems, 123 bales and 172 boxes— and freight; saw-ginned Dharwar, by sail, 301r.==9 95-100d. • by canal, To Demerara 8 hhds, and 4,432 lbs Manufactured ...To 10 31-10od. per lb., cost and Nayaguey 4 lhds, 57 bales. freight. Market dull. Arrivals during From Boston To Bahamas 11 boxes... To Surinam 3 hhds past week, ending 6th inst., 82,734 bales; To Fort an previously, 802,044 bales; total Prince 20halt bales.. .To Hayti 100 half bales since January, 884,778 To Hal fax 5 casks, bales; clearances, 101,176 bales; previously, 23 halt boxes To Cape Ilaytien 50 bales.. ..To Other British Provin¬ 541,064 bales 9 38-100d - . .... .... 67 7 Hayti...*. 230,228 Bales. 1,143 Onba 380,09r 152,43” MamiFd •> Cases. 28. Gibraltar for orders Bri'isli West, Indies. 201,33, 26,684 395,071 Hamburg: Antwerp Total 177,06® 41,278 149,271 126,754 1864~5 NEW Hilda. Liverpool 181,16. 42,409 160,054 Ohio wrappers the exports of tobacco from New York for the . 140,905 131,604 ™-6 cases : EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM commencement of the Gt. Britain. hales. .r shipment, but scarcely a shipment on specu¬ in fact, it may be called Bremen From Nov. 1 to May 26— for moderate. , season was of 1868, at 28c; 100 cases Pennsylvania, crop of 1869, on private terms; 41 c.ise3 Connecticut, second crop of 1856, at 23c ; 1865). 50 cases State, crop of 1869, on 1870. private terms; 530 cases Ohio, 125,079 60,322 198,477 If 8,192 crop of 1869, lor export, on private terms. 71,831 24,374 Spanish tobacco has been rather more active, and the sales in¬ from Messrs. Sieg¬ clude 160 bales of Yara, on private terms, and 250 bales Havana, at 85@102c, currency, duty paid. Manufactured tobacco is steady and firm, but the demand is only ^ Alexandria, May 28.—The exports since the ; Ohio noted crop §^3 -—STOCKS.—, <—AT 8EA.—\ ^ 1870. 1869. 1870. 1869. American 7,«48 227,294 8<,687 4,918 142,891 103,287 112,400 27.400 33,293 24,923 Brazilian 1,873 29,116 81,447 173 19.366 31,547 12.400 3,200 1.433 4,194 622 18,495 42,381 12,800 7.800 37,619 86,765 Miscellaneous... 1,490 ^’A1'3 27>r,S1 9,0ol 11,189 180 7,301 10,6^9 5,410 1,300 Total.. 11,863 298,756 158,004 5,923 218,056 192,901 143,010 39,700 72,355 115,882 5ci ^ fe® . cases regular way lation. London, June 11.—The cotton trade has been dull daring the present week, and prices show a slight fall. The following are the particulars of imports, deliveries and stocks : Imports, Jan. 1 to Jane 10 five hundred Jn the 826 - total. 642,2 0 bales ; last year, 799,849 bales. Estima¬ shipboard, 146,000 bales. Freights, by sail, 27s. 6d. ; overland, 75s.; canal, COs. Exchange, Is. 11 9-!6d. Shirtings, 8£lb., Cr. 6a. ; steady. From New Orleans—To Ma-se'lle.i 879 hhds,9 cases To Amsterdam 20hhds. To Bordeaux 20 hhds, 47 bbls, 2 boxes. From San Francisco—To Victoria 55 cases, 4 pkgs....To Mexican Ports 4 TOBACCO. BREADS TUF PS. ; ted stock on ces, 31 boxes. c.-ses. Friday. P. M., June 24, 1870. There is Friday, June 24,1870, P. M. increase in the exports of crude tobac:o this week, the total from all the ports reaching 3,57 6 an The market for breadstuff's has been very unsettled during the hhds, 670 cases, and 389 past week and, through the development of speculation at the bales, aguinst 1,930 hhds, 510 cases, 8Ld 1,142 bales, and 308 hhds West, closed with the export movement checked, and a feverish stems lor the previous seven day?. Of these exports for this tone generally, owing to the action of the Western banks. week 1,961 hhds, 602 cases, and 99 bales, were from New York ; 693 Flour has arrived rather more freely, and yet the supply has not hhds, 180 bales, 308 hhds stems from Baltimore; 3 hhds, and 110 been excessive. The demand has been fair, but the only prominent bales from Boston; 9 9 hhds and 9 cases from New Orleans and business was on Tuesday and Wednesday, when about 20,000 bids 59 cases from San Francisco. The direction of the shipments of shipping extras were sold mainly for France, at $5 90@$t> 10. hhds was as follows; To Marseilles 879 ; to Gibraltar for orders There was also some speculation. Towards the close, however, 1,143; to Liverpool, 387; to Hamburg, 40; to Bremen 894 and the export demand subsided and the market was left for support to 308 do. stems; to Antwerp 169, and the balance to different ports. S Western speculators. To-day prices declined 10(a;15c., with very During the same peiiod the exports of manufactured tobacco reach¬ little demand, either for export or home use, and prices closed very ed only 17,159 lbs., of which 9,505 lbs. were to British West unsettled. Indies. The full particulars of the shipments from all the ports Wheat has not arrived so freely as last week, and has generally were as follows : ruled dull. Tuesday and Wednesday there was something of a Ceroons. Hhds. Man’d ExpM this week from Hhds. Cases. Bales.<fcT’rcca. Stems. Pkgs. flurry caused by a renewal of French demand, but it soon subsided, lbs. New York 1,661 602 99 as the export buyers 12,721; Baltimore operated wPh much caution and refused to 693 !c0 308 172 4,432 Boston 3 110 70 purchase at the advance asked. But Western buyers came into the Philadelphia New Orleans market yesterday ; Chicago and Milwaukee were much about this San Francisco market, and these operators sold wheat there and bought here. To¬ Total 670 3.578 389 303 295 17,159 day, with the intelligence of a marked decline at the West, and Total last week 1,930 510 1,112 64 171,497 Total previous week 2,980 287 61 854 J 111 180 82,48g lower accounts from London and Paris, the market became quite The receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since Nov unsettled. It was reported that Chicago bankers had refused to 1, have Ken as follows : renew paper against wheat to extend after the 1st of July, being REOEirTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER 1. apparency unwilling to carry over seven million bushels into the 1869. next harvest, but anxious rather that the wheat should be sold r-Tliie week—* r-Previously—» r-T’lsin.Nov.l— . - ... From Virgin.a B utimore- New Orleans Ohio, &c Other Total hhds. pkgs. 66 3,847 41 41 .... 3,SOS 1.25S 714 569 3,995 481 21,315 .... .... 4,372 The market for tobacco the without decided hhds. 23,836 pkgs 54,777 854 hhds. * 1,344 264 755 '569 12,324 25,213 445 68,664 pkge 68,264 695 204 12,808 445 27,881 73,036 past week has been fairly active, but while there is a demand for it. Prime No. 2 Milwaukee closed at $L 32 against $1 38 yesterday, but at this concession there was general activity. The decline at the West was even greater. more Corn sold early in the week os low as 93 95c. per boat-load good No. 2 v^ ei’.ern mixed, recovering yesterday to §1 00 <gt $1 01, and during to-day at 93c @ SI 00. Common White Western lias latterly sold pretty freely at $1 05 @ §1 06, and Round Yellow State has declined 8 @ 10c. in the past few days, under a better supply. Oats have been ia full supply, and dull and drcoping. Rye is more settled at 90ine decline. Barley dull and nominal. Barley Malt in demand at $L 00 @ $L 10 for State, and $i 20 @ $1 25 for Canada. There ha?: not been anything ol moment done in of improvement. Kentucky L°af the aspects of the market have been about as last week ; low lugs and fronted leaf have been neglected, but good serviceable Clarksville tobacco has been wanted for export. The sales lor the week amount to about 1,1(0 hbds, of which 750 hhds were for export, and 350 hhds to manufacturers and the trades Of the quantity taken for expoit 500 hhds were for the French coutract. The range of prices remains as last Peas. quoted, 7 to 15c. Seed leaf has been more active, mainly for export, the sale of The following are closing quotations : In THE CHRONICLE. 826 Flour— Wheat, fci®prlng, per busb. $1 Red Winter 1 $ bbl • $5 36© 5 60 Extra State 6 80© 6 10 Amber do 1 Extra Western, com¬ 1 White mon to good 6 75© 6 25 White California Double Extra Western Corn,Western Mix’d,.... 0 and St. Louis 6 26© 8 75 Yellow, new... 1 Southern supers ...@ White, new 1 Southern, extra and Rye 6 50© 9 25 Oats family 15© 48© 47© 60© Superfine ..© .... California © Barley Malt 5 40© 5 80 5 20© 5 65 Peas, Canada ... The movement in breadstuffs at this market has been -RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK.- Flonr, bb’s., 96,097 421,276 29,447 48,918 6,250,892 Wheat,bush. 718,308 Corn,bush.. 369,433 Rye, bush... 9,311 Barley, bush Oats, bush.. 208,552 4,980,225 3,640,063 184,453 2,121,821 251,837 598,128 1,985,167 follows: as -1869.Since For the Jan. 1 week -1870. For the Since week. Jan. 1. 1,180,939 386 95© 63© 80© 90© -EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK.— 1870.Same For the Since time Jan. week. Jan. 1. 1,1869. C. meal. bis. 05 10 10 10 70 CO 10 15 95© 02© 05© ... Rye Flour, super & extra Corn Meal 38 45 60 90 82,290 2,056 805,396 36,359 40,091 1,284 6,693,232 575,995 148,873 46,325 532,136 3,202 8,889 57,484 496,56A 75,60* 4.338,57? 1,450,79* 26,83^ 41,06^ 18,754 76,020 9 1,879,344 11,732 The accumulations of goods available is well assorted, quite large and unusually liberal, with almost daily additions. The difficulties between importers and the quarantine officials have not as yet been adjusted, and continue to interfere greatly with the movemeut of goods, to such an extent indeed, that a number of cargoes have been ordered to other cities to discharge. Imports this week have included one cargo of Black l ea, 18,092 bags of Rio Coffee, and about 4,611 bags of other sorts. Receipts of Sugar aDd Molasses have not been particularly large. The 9tocks in New York at date, and imports at the five leading ports since Jan. 1, are as follows : in IN STORE IN NEW to the latest mail dates YORK AND BROOKLYN 1870. June 11. : 1870. ' June 4. 1869. 1868. June 13. 612,830 June 12. 505.286 91,287 168 675 25,187 13,299 94,447 11,38) 102,875 •• 431,421 91,287 Oats, bush 663,655 141,353 452,415 105,763 35,414 107,876 40,403 58,242 22,065 Barley, bush. Rye, bush... Malt, . 1,705,355 . 528,836 218.851 1,491,050 1,365,4? 6 523,419 1,635,050 2,612,990 ♦Including about 50,000 bushels of California. RECEIPTS AT LAKE Flour* bbls. (196 lbs.) 30,582 20,378 . . . . Cleveland. . Totals Previous week..., . . . >. i :. ♦ FOR THE pkgs. (indirect Import) Coffee, Rio bags. Coffee, other bags. —boxes. Sugar Sugar hhds. Sugar bags. hhd9. Molasses Wheat. bush. (60 lbs.) 21,212 12,262 10,500* 480.641 663,604 142,649 35,831 Corn. bush. Barley bush. Rye- bush. bush* 4,799 747 7,300 39,500 403 l’ooo 743,813 29,415 10,650 1,034,803 263,906 284,11G 371,183 1,191,879 235,151 37,117 27,498 12,268 1,002,952 1,792 137,072 • 94,934 1,396,675 92,321 1,509,691 106,438 1,395,082 43,702 283,534 29,730 146,088 Oats. • • . 938,992 785 2,162 3,'829 12,408 Estimat-d. Comparative Receipts at the to J une 18 same ports, for four years, from "Jan. 1 : 1870. 1869. 1,746,465 Flour, bbls 2,538,643 1868. 1867. 1,661,199 1,256,760 4,251,616 11,988,963 2,930,057 353,323 13,594,113! 7,172,982 14,125,409 14,214,318 5,141,0891 4,344,415 394,875 394,729 514,657 192,170 28,962,195 33,770,143 26,317,614 20,167,504 1869-70. 1868-69. 1807-68* 1866-67. 4,047,006 5,082,812 3,865,734 3,429,420 bushels. 41,227,946 38,007,650 26,841,434 18,192,925 2,643,724 2,054,814 31,242,022 27,639,454 15,112,069 .1,805,637 1,337,917 21,010,922 26,837,756 77,137,089 53,513,840 Wheat, bush Corn, bush Oats, bush 709,485 Rye, bush ri otal grain, hush 526,211 470,657 i ' 8, for four years Flour .bbls. Wneat Com Oats 28,585,138 11,221,075 2.609,789 1,182,876 Barley Rye.- Total grain, bushels.... 79,776,774 shipments from SAME Flour, PORTS 87,243,547 FOR Wheat, bbls. bush. Week ending June 11... 74,474 1,014,166 Previous week 102,539 1,140,-36 Cor. week, 1869 102,053 1,344,032 Comparative Shipments of flour WEEK Corn, bush. ENDING 1870. 1,697,836 Flour bbls. Wheat Corn -Oats bush. 11,495.813 6,762,846 2,360,423 355,863 220,142 Barley Rye> - Total 21,194,587 Oats, bush. 473,251 1869. 2,306,754 7.292,326 1,690,264 1,682,072 18. Barley, 586,012 466,101 185,379 982,378 398,714 and grain from : bush. 19.99! 15,391 1,200 Rye, bush. 7,552 12,408 7,738 the ports 1868. to of June 18, 1867. 10,645.936 9,629,309 3,570,071 182,726 498,407 24,526,419 GROCERIES. Friday Evening. June 24, 1870. The markets generally have shown quiet tone and present lew the final disposition of the tariff question have had a tendency to somewhat retard oper¬ ations, but aside from this the distribution of goods to the interior at the moment is small, and jobbers find nothing to warrant them in adding to their stocks. Yalues have been fairly sustained, though the f< w alterations are mostly in buyers favor, and the new features of interest. 31,703 1157,202 227,694 231,675 15,769 671,552 219,104 146.599 32,358 139,778 113,111 120,678 12,995 110.400 98,930 399,101 19,329 404,057 364,121 362,878 413.094 355.720 212,970 225,288 TEA. sources and at times the market was almost complete stand, still a liberal and generally well assorted stock is offered and owners quite willing to part with a portion, but can find no outlet except in the way of an occasional small call for invoices. Really choice Greens still appear to be sustained better than other qualities, and when buyers find anything just suited to their wants they pay comparatively full prices, but all other grades are quite irregular and rather on the downward turn. Sales of 4,000 pkgs Greens, and 1,057 pkgs Oolongs. Imports this week have included the following cargo, viz.: “ Avon,” from Foo Chow, 486,799 lbs of Black. an The following table shows the comparative shipments of Tea fiom China and Japan to the United States from June 1 to May 11, in two years, and importa¬ tions into the United States (not including San Francisco), from January 1 to date, in 1869 to 1870: 1 TO MAY IMPORTS FROM CHINA & JAPAN INTO THE U. S. SINCE JAN. 1. 11. Total. 1869. 13,155,376 18,407,607 10,626,794 12,782,938 6,245,179 9,837,236 14,436,872 6,509,351 41,439,327 Japan 1870. 12,968,469 18,485,684 9,985,174 Black, Green 1868-69. 42,189,777 32,733,271 33,228,814 13,705,157 The indirect importations, including receipts by P. M. Steamers via Aspinwall, have been 31,703 pkgs since January 1, against 15,769 last year. Hong Kong, May 11.—Messrs. Olyphant & {Co.’s Circular states of TearLittle can as yet be said relative to the new crop, or the coining season. Re¬ ports of favorable weather reach us from all the producing districts, and from the Black Tea country wc hear that the crop is expected to be a fine one, whilst at Foochow uncertain rumors are current of inferiority of the leaf although the prospects have been previously stated as satisfactory. Musters that have thus far been received at the different ports are small, and not sufficient to justify an expression of opinion as to the general quality of the new Teas.” Yokohama, May 21.—Messrs, Augustine Heard & Co. report: —“ A moderate business has been transacted in exports, since the issue of our last printed re¬ port of the 12th inst., the most noticeable feature being cue arrival and purchase of a few small parcels of new crop Teas. The quality of these early arrivals is found to compare favorably with that of former seasons, but they can scarcely be regarded as a criterion of the bulk of the crop.” The doubts a as to For Brazil styles the demand has. been rather moderate and confined in a great measure to the invoices per regular Rio steamer, which as usual are rather more desirable than the bulk of the arrivals per sail. Buyers, however, have exhibited no great anxiety and seldom operated beyond the wants of a few days, the proverbially dull state of trade at this season of the year, and the probability of a reduction in the tariff inducing a feeling of continued caution against accumulating supplies. The detention of cargoes at quarantine has resulted in great annoyance and expense to importers, but with all the coftce available it. is JUNE Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, and Cleveland, from Jan. 1 inclusive, for four years : m 1869. 33,228,814 COFFEE. 13,813,079 10,127,021 3,829,287 Barley, bosh January 1. is69-70. (56 lbs.) (32 lb*.) (48 lbs') ( :6 lbs.) 668,745 172,819 19,117 29,478 4,118 56 25,868 6,279 63,680 95 20,920 360 73,950 60,970 30,507 The demand has been moderate from all 18, 1870. JUNK since 1870. 32,733,274 SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA & JAPAN WEEK ENDING Imports at leading ports lbs. FROM JUNE PORTS At cases Tea Tea at WAREHOUSES. few a Stocks in New York at date. 1870. 1869. following tables, prepared for the Chronicle by Mr. E. H. Walker, of the New York Produce Exchange, show the grain in sight and the movement of breadstutfs [June 25, 1870. hardly probable that the volume of trade would have shown a larger aggregate. Light Coffees of all kinds continue in an excessively dull condition, are becoming more plenty, and are available without much diffi¬ culty, though the majority of holders refuse to name concessions, and prices may be callefi nominally steady. The other coastwise markets without excep¬ tion have been quiet, and the movement of goods into the interior is at present very slow. The general market closes quiet. Sales for the week of 5,425 hags Rio, 500 bags Maracaibo, and 200 bags Costa Rica. Arrivals of coffee for the week have included the following cargoes of Rio :— Steamer “Merrimack,” 15.468 hags; “ St. Laurent,” 399 bags; “Hansine Marie,” 2,225 bags. Of other sorts the imports have included 628 mats Singa pore, per “Ferndale;” 2,000 Maracaibo, per “ Laura Pride;” 289 bags St. Domingo, per “ City of Port au Prince,” and 10 bags of sundry other kinds. much The stock of Rio, June 23, and the imports since January 1 are as follows: New York. In Bags. Stock Same date 1869 146,599 ImportB 329,746 Phila- delphia. “ in 1869 60,970 416,477 Baltimore. New Savan. & Gal- Orleans. Mobile, veston. 17,943 1,000 5,000 2,000 45,400 17,600 4,400 213,350 84,602 20,802 8,702 154,547 69,862 2,800 19,666 .... .... 8,200 Total, 86,913 218,999 657,202 671,552 Messrs. Wright & Co.’s telegram from Rio dated June 1st, reports sales for United States since May 25th 23,000 bags, shipments 10,000 bags, stock on hand 130,000 bags, price 6!|700, and exchange 22&. Mail dates are to May 25th, and Messrs. Boje & Co.’s circular reports during the last fortnight our market has shown the same active demand, which reigned during the preceding one, and transactions especially for the United States, would nave been much larger, if holders had not continually raised their demands owing to the small receipts from the interior and the very favorable reports from the United States. Fine qualities are very scarce, and brokers quote for these grades 200 reis higher prices, while they quote an advance of only 100 reis for good and low qualities. These quotations do; however, not agree with the pretentions of dealers, who refuse to sell at the prices quoted, seeing the stock decrease more and more through limited supplies. Receipts during the month have averaged only 3,400 bags per day, and have latterly fallen offaveraging only 2,800 bags per day during the last fortnight. SHIPMENTS OF COFFEE TO THE UNITED STATES. 1888. From 1st January to SOth April Rio—Vessels sailed from May 1st to May 20th Santos—Vessels sailed from May 1st to May 19th Of other sorts the stock at New York, ports since January 1 were as follows: 832,022 1869. 1870. 456,510 293,755 101,428 bags. 7,075 bags. . June 23, and the imports at the several June 26, 1870.] /—New York—, „ In bags Java and Ceylon stock. Singapore Boston Import. import. f850 Philadel. Balt. N. Orle’s ss import, import, import. *49,708 4,891 *48,409 9,943 57,852 8,069 31,061 11,164 181 ‘400 934 30,507 32,358 161,498 162,425 35;7T1 34,277 5,452 20.856 4.052 300 Li Li o o c,c~ 921 1,246 250 Maracaibo 20,095 4,275 Laguayra St. Domingo Other 146 Total Same time, 1869 CHTtOMCLE. THE * Includes mats, &c., reduced to bags, mats In second hands. 1,500 *3,118 500 S» good prices. Pineapples bringing from vessel $14@16 per C; prices are hardly more than nominal. New Virgiuia are coming in of bet¬ quality and probably will be still better next week, they are nevertheless very low some small sell ling down to $1 00 per bbl, but good will bring $1 50© ng $2 00 per bbl. Strawberries are less plenty, and the quality and condition bet¬ ter, consequently prices rule higher. Cherries are abundant and sell low, good bring 8@14c, and fancy 15@18c per lb. Blackcap Raspberries are becoming more plenty and are lower. Nuts have ruled less active the past week, still there is a good demand for Wilmington Peanuts at prices a shade higher Pecans are steady though not very active at the moment. Canned good, al¬ though it is late in the season, continue to sell fairly at easy prices. We annex ruling quotations in firBt hands. On the purchase of small lots prices are a iraction higher. ana . .. _ 921 227,694 251,462 t Also, 54,533 mats; besides about 5,000 SUGAR. The market for in and sold at Bananas $1 75<g)2 00 per bunch; Baracao Cocoanuts $35@$38 per M ; and Carthagena $65 00@70 00 per M. Domestic Green old Apples are about used up, ter 3,052 5,882 came 827 sugars has been in a more quiet and generally less en couraging condition for the selling interest than for the week ending with our last report. The trade are distributing but slowly and refiners sell their pro¬ raw Tea. New Cror ip. New Duty paid- Crop. Duty paid— 65 @ 75 Hyson. Common to fair. H.Sk.& Tw’kyEx.f.tofln'st 70 © 75 freedom, and the demand in consequence has been correspond do Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair.. 73 @ 78 Superior to fine.... 80 © 95 ingly curtailed, buyers merely taking such parcels as were required for imme do Ex. flne’to finest 1 05 @1 30 do Sup’r to fine... 80 © 90 do Ex. f. to finest. 95 ©1 15 Young Hyson, Com. to fair. 65 @ 75 diatc and positive necessities, more particularly since the circulation of a rumor do Super, to fine. 85 @1 10 Oolong, Common to fair.... GO @ 70 * that the tariff bill is likely to pass the Senate with the rates of do Ex. finetoflnestl 25 @1 60 do Superior to fine.... 75 © 95 duty even lower do Ex fine to finest... .1 05 @140 Gunp. & Imp., Com to fair. 75 -v@ 90 than previously anticipated. Arrivals in the meantime have exceeded the out do Sonc. & Cong., Com to fair. 60 © 70 Sup. to fine..1 15 @1 80 let and the stock has accumulated to very do Snp’r to fine. 75 © 90 large proportions. A number of Hyson do Ex. fine totofinest.l 40 @1 75 do Sk. & Tw. C. Ex. f. to finest 1 00@1 30 fair. 58 @ 63 parcels have been placed in store, but pretty liberal amounts were at all times 1 do do Sup. to fine. 65 © 68 available from pier, and selections could be made without Coffee difficulty. Holders gold. 17 @17^ 1 Native Ceylon gold 17X@19 throughout have shown a comparatively confident tone and refrained entirely Rio Prime, duty paid do good gold. 16>4@16^ I Maracaibo gold 16 @193^ from any pressure to realize, but the position was such as to render weakness in do fair gold. 15)4@15}£ ! Laguayra go.d. 17 ©19 do ordinary St. Domingo, in bond gold. 14>$@15 gold. 8%@ 9* prices almost a certainty, particularly with declining gold to add to the depres¬ Jamaica Java, mats and bags gold. 20 @22 ...gold. 15 @16 sion, and buyers have gaiued all the favors. Refined have sold rather slowly, Sugar. ' the stock commences to accumulate and prices further declined. The general Cuba, inf. to com. refining Havana, Box, white 8%@ 9 12 ©13 do fair to good refining market closes with a dull tone and prices favoring buyers, though there is no 9)tf@ 9>£ Porto Rico, refining grades 9 @ do do grocery grades.... 9jk@ll pressure to realize, and the offerings mainly from landing parcels. do fair to good grocery.... © 9% Brazil, bags.'. rime Sales of 8^@ 9.^ fl*k@10 do pr. to choice grocery., grocery, 10^@10K Manila, bags 8%@ 9 3,473 hhds. Cuba, 1.168 hhds. Porto Rico, 200 hhds. St. Croix, 82 hhds. Demerado centrifugal, lihds. & bxs. 9 @11 hds. & bs ! White Sugars, A 12M@12^ ra, 291 hhds. Melado, and 5,439 boxes Havana. do Melado 5 @ 8 do ao B... i @12^ do moiasses do do extra C 8%@ !•>£ ! @12)6 Imports at New York, and stock In first hands, June 23, were as follows: Yellow sugai’9 Hav’a, Box,I>. S. Nos. 7 to 9... h%@ 9% 11 @1136 duct with less * . "libels. bxs. Imports this week... “ “ 6,296 4,241 147,394 166.749 time, ’69 269,803 186,479 since Jan. 1 same P. Rico, "hhds. 419 Cuba, Cuba, Other *hhds. 229 17.763 20,923 15,139 Stock in first hands.. 110,400 Same time 1869 139.778 “ “ 1868 53,570 21,317 63,545 100,726 98,980 166,445 104,991 14.426 399,101 120,678 1,450 1,258 20,215 113,111 239 72,633 “ Havana, June 17.—The Weekly Report says: Sugar.— Clayed.—The market has retained its previous firmness throughout the week, but. owing partly to the higher pretensions of holders, who at tne close exact 814@9 rs. perarrobe for No. 12 of good common frain sort there has been less doing. The sales which have been reported during the week amount to about 25,000 boxes of all classes —against 45,000 last week. Shipments this week from Havana and Matanzas have been as follows : To New York To Hhds. Boxes. Boxes. Baltimore, &c 4,718 5,524 177 510 Boston 118 487 Portland Total export of the week to all countries The general movement at both ports has been -Rec’ts this w’kBoxes. Hluls. 1870 1869 69,051 228,004 392,830 2,602 292,742 94,330 67,703 Hhds. 909 318 8,512 1,019,213 Stock at date.Boxes. Hhds. 459,663 385,688 79,971 62,146 983,023 MOLASSES. 494,386 15,613 17,740 13,930 quite dull and uninteresting during the week, ;therefining demand having become pretty well supplied and showing less life, and the trade calling for merely odd parcels on special orders or to keep up a small assortment. The inferior qualities find no outlet as yet, though some holders are hopeful that the Canadian market may eventually make room for a portion of the surplus. Prices on the general range remain about as before, and on upper qualities are comparatively steady, though the stock is more liberal with a tendency to further increase. Sales of 150 hhds. Cuba muscovado, 336 hhds. Porto Rico, 560 hhds. Cuba clayed, 125 hhds. Demerara, and 50 hhds. St. Croix. The receipts at New York, and stock in first hands, J uue 23, were as follows: "hluls. Imports this week “ Stock in first hands “ “ “ “ *hlul8. 1,601 .....76,497 15,252 time’69 9,679 time’68 17,039 2,492 1,092 3,878 67,095 same same Other "hhds. *hluls. 45 367 15,495 10,389 since Jan. 1 same time 1869 “ Demerara, P. Rico, 3,911 6,627 5,615 8.03U 1,585 2,224 1,192 N. O. bblB. 9,121 14,134 .... Sugar. ,—Boxes. 1870. 1869. New York.... Boston . Philadelphia.. . Baltimore New Orleans.. Total * 147.394 17,359 . . . . 17,146 30.001 19,775 231,675 . , "Hhds. 1869. 1870. > , , 400 Bags. , 1870. 1869. /—Molasses. , 211,461 51,582 40,081 223,432 249,469 40,074 49,255 111,053 258,104 45,180 30 596 41.481 92,146 37,932 58,473 22,963 63,024 55,487 44.574 21,976 10,955 4,267 6,786 362,878 364,121 —, *Hhds. 1870. 1869. 269,802 17,614 30,654 404,057 18,233 .... .... 6,186 10 810 413,094 355,720 212,970 225,288 SPICES. There is absolutely nothing of any public interest in this market. A few in¬ voices are here in first hands and available at current figures if wanted, but the majority of jobbers are well stocked both as to quantity and assortment, and having the trade well in hand are indifferent operators. Prices still remain at about the figures previously quoted, but on the least desirable goods occasional concessions are made in order to realize quickly. FRUITS. The market immediately following our last was quiet, but at the close there is an active demand, partly speculative and nearly all goods tend upward; there is a noticeable advance in currants and filberts j all the Barcelona filberts in first hands have been bought up. Sardines remain firm, no new have been caught as yet and the stock on hand is rapidly decreasing. Fire crackers have been quiet, still the larger holders are firm at $3 50, but many of the smaller dealers who bought at low prices sell at 20@25c. below the price of larger holders. Domestic Dried have continued without change in apples since our last, the demand is still limited to jobbing lots for the immediate wants of the near by trade. Unpeeled half peaches have beenin demand from the West, and prices have advanced, but quarters show no improvement in either demand or price. Pitted cherries have sold rather more freely at a slight decline. Blackberries are very dull, and rates if anything are a little easier. Foreign Green box fruit is in very moderate supply and prices are higher, and tend upward, Oranges selling from store at $9 00@$9 50 per box. and Lemons at $9 a 10 per box. , 101,354 30,972 66,273 15,879 Including tierces and barrels reduced to hhds. West India have been less New Orleans (new). $ gall. Porto Rico (new) :..... Cuba Muscovado (new) Cuba Clayed (new) Crushed and 9%@10 Powdered 10^@11 11J6@12>6 granulated 13^@13^ 1336@1SJ6 Clarified, different refineries @ 12>2@13 Molasses. 8<i@ 95 Cuba centrifugal 28© " 68 40© 37© 37© English 45 39 islands 30© (new) Rice. Rangoon, dressed, gold in bond 3 @ 3)6 | Carolina 8 @8# Spices. Cassia Batavia...gold $ H>. Cassia, in mats... Ginger, race Mace do © 46)6© and Af (gold). do Nutmegs, casks do 46 47 4' 11^@ 12 1 25 I Pepper, in bond I Pepper, Singapore @1 80 do Sumatra Pimento, Jamaica do 1 07>£©l_10 (gold) in bond 12 11^® 27 © 27)6 27 X 26>£@ (gold) do do ID 4 18)6© —© Cloves @1 10 25&@ 26 Fruits and Nuts. 8 Raisins, Seedless,new Brazil Nuts mat .@7 75 © do Layer, old, $ box..3 25 © Filberts, Sicily 13K@ 1! do do Barcelona Layer, new, ^ box..4 15 @4 20 © li do 1 40© 1 75 Valencia, $ Tb 15 @ African Peanuts do London Layer .-...©4 50 Walnuts, Bordeaux, new © Currants lb © 12 Macaroni, Italian © Fire Crack, best No 1 ^ box 3 2C@ 3 50 Citron, Leghorn. 41 @ 42 DOMESTIC DRIED FRUITS. Prunes, Turkish, old © 9)6 Prunes, Turkish, new 18)6© 14 Apples, State $ !b. 6 @ 7 Prunelles.. 16 © 6 do Western 5 © Dates 6 )6© 6 do Southern 4 © 17 clo sliced 10 © 11 Figs, Smyrna Tb. li © 9 6 @ Cherries, German Peaches, pared, East Shore. .. .© Canton Ginger do do @ 10X .© Georgia do 7 Almonds, Languedoc 22 © 23 unpared, qrs & hlvs 5 do Provence 8 none© Blackberries 7)$© do Ivlca 2iV* Cherries, pitted 18 @ 17 @ do Pecan Nuts...’ V lb. 12)6© 13 X Sicily, soft shell @ do Shelled, Spanish Hickory Nuts 3R bush.l 00 @1 10 @ do paper shell ....@ 45 Peanuts, Va.g’d to fncy do 2 00 @3 25 Sardines $ hf. box. 32 © 32)6 do com.tofairdo 125 @2 00 SardineB .$ qr, box. 17 do WiL.g’d to best do 150 @2 40 17K Grocers’ Drugs and Sundries. cases Penang . ... Alum S%@ Bi-Carb, Soda Borax Sal 30 Soda, Cask Sulphur Saltpetre Copperas Camphor, in bbls Castile SoapB Epsom Salts @ 2)6@ 4>6@ 8% Sic. Licorice 4% j Calabra Imitation 31 2)6 4% 10 @ 1%@ 75 @ 16 2 76 12)6@ 3&® 12)6 4 Madder 16 © gold. gold.l gold. Cordage, Manilla, )i and do do Large sizes Indigo, Madras do Manilla Sisal do Bed Cords do Jute @ 11 © 20 @1 80 @1 22)6© @ 17 21 12)6 25 15 23 22 20 @2 50 @2 50 @ 1 75 150 .... Imports of Sugar & Molasses at leading ports since Jan. 1. The imports of sugar (including Melado), and of Molasses at the leading ports from January 1 to date, have been as follows: , 10 to 12. 13 to 15. 16 to 18. 19 to 20. — The market has been Cuba, do do do do .... , 122,905 85,935 1,012,821 do do do do ... follows: -Exports since January 1. xpc -To IL S.-To all Ports. Boxes. Hhds. Boxes. Hhds. 1,866 2,475 31,611 50,917' 49,779 1868 as do do do do Brazil, Manila, Melado bags. bags. hhds. plenty most of tne week, but to-day several cargoes THE DRY G-OODS TRADE. • The Friday, P.M., June 24, 1870. period is past for any activity in fabrics from the out of town trade, and the the market for summer city retail demand for these goods is insufficient to give an animatjd appearance to the m rket. Prices do not change quotably, but are in a great degree nominal, only the most staple fabrics, or goods adapted to the cur¬ rent wants being held at steady prices, r Thus far the sales of the month are rather less satisfactory than during a corresponding period last season ; the quantity of goods placed is about the same, but owing to the low values during the year, the receipts for the month are light. With the present pros¬ pects for a spirited traffic this Fall, however, as well as the light stocks throughout the market, there is a b.tter feeling evident, and hopes are expressed that both manufacturers and wholesale dealers may reap larger profits during the coming season. The woolen interest is experiencing a lull now, which is expected to last until after the “fourth,” when aients will begin receiving t ieir samples of fine goods, and a more brisk demand is expected from clothiers and jobbers. Since the withdrawal of a large amount of superfluous machinery, the lessened production has been instrumental in hardening prices of woolens, and now the tendency of the market is upward, though traffic is yet too light to warrant an advance except in special lines. 828 THE CHRONICLE Foreign goods are quiet, without change in any particular. The stock of dress fabrics in first hands is lighter than for several years two exceptions, where dealers hold considerable quantities of goods imported late in the season, to meet the wants past, with ODe or [June 25,1870. Checks.—Caledonia 70 26*, 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 24, Lanark, No. 2,10, Medford 13, Mech’s No. A 1 29, do 85 18, Miners 10 24, do 50 25, do 8 19, Park No. 60 17*, do 70 19}, do 80 21*, do 90 25, do 100 26, Pequa No. 1,200 13, do 1,600 17*. Go anticipated trade. Representatives of our principal import¬ 2,000 26, do 2,800 27},£tar Mills 12 16, do 18 18, do 20 29, Union No. 20 22}, do 50 25, do 18 20, Watts No 89 16. ing houses are leaving by nearly every steamer, for the purpose of Denims.—Amoskeag 30, Bedford 19, Beaver Cr. CC,—Columbian, making arrangements for importations to meet the Fall trade. heavy 28, Haymaker Bro. 15, Manchester 20, Otis AXA 25, do BB 23, The exports of dry goods for the part week, and siuce January do CC *20, York 30, Boston 12*. Corset Jeans.—Amoskeag 12*, Androscoggin 13*. Bates 10}. Everetts 1, 1870, and the total for the same time in several previous years 15*, Indian Orchard Imp. Tl*, Laconia 12*. Naumkeag —, Newmarket are shown in the following table : 11*, Washington satteen 16, Kearsage 15*. Cotton Bags.—American $37 60, Androscoggin $40 00, Arkwright ■FROM NEW YORK. FROM BOSTON of an « —s Domestics. pkgs. Val. 11,U27 $17,594 9)8,077 1,608,629 1,143,740 4,6 28 2,138 Total for week.... 144 Since Jan. 1,1870... 7.853 Same time 1809 14,569 *• 44 44 “ 44 1868 1867 1866 1 860 41 “ 44 We Dry Goods. packages. 25 1,553 Domestics. Val. pkgs. 1,029 $4,473 406,278 300 350 2,860 4,580 838,781 5 985 637,729 3,827 2,393 3,347 728,033 337,912 4,094 2,118 658,810 1,702 23,227 55,526 few pirtieulars of leading articles of domestic manufactuie, our prices quoted being those of the leading Jobbers Brown Sheetings and Shirtings.—There is a moderate trade doing in unbleached cottcns of staple brands at Bteady prices, though the movements are only fair in the aggregate, being confined to small lots for current distribution. The supply of standard goods iu first hands is light, and no excessive stocks are leported in aoy but lower grades. Manufacturers are limiting their production with a view to sustaining prices, and in this they are geneially successful, although some of the standard n annex a . tikes of brown goods have been reduced one per yard by agents during the week. Our list will show but few alterations. Agawam F 36 114, Amoskeag A 36 U*. do B 36 14, Atlantic A 36 16, do D 12}, do H 14*, do P 86 12, do L 36 13, do V 83 12*, do N 30 lo*, Appleton A 36 14}, cent Augusta 36 13}, do 30 11}, Broadway ;-6 12, Bedford R 30 8f, Boott H 27 11, do O 34 11-}, do S 40 12}, do W 46 18-J-, Com¬ monwealth O 27 8, Grafton A 27 7}, Graniteville AA 86 16, do EE 36 16, Great Falls M 36 12, do S 83 11, Indian Head 36 16, do 30 13, In¬ dian Orchard A 40 13*. do C 36 12, do BB 36 1 l,do W 34 10, do NN 36 18}, Laconia O 39 14},do B 37 13, do E 36 12, Lawtence A 36 1 If, do C £56 —, doF86 12*,doG34 12, doH 27 10, do LL 86 12, Lyman 0 36 13, d'rES* 14}, Massachusetts E 3311-}, do J 30 11*. Medford36 16, Nashua fine 33 13, do 36 16, do E40 17, Newmarket A 12}, Pacific extra 36 14*, do H 36 14}, do L 36 13, Pepperell 7-4 30, do 8-4 35, do 9-4 40, do 10-4 45, do 11-4 60, Pepperell E fine 39 13}, do R 36 12*, do O 38 11*, do N 30 10*, Pocasset F 30 8f, do K 36 18}, do Canee 10 15, Sar¬ anac fine O 83 13, do R 36 15, do E 39 17, Sigourney 36 10}, Stark A 86 14*, Swift River 36 1!, Tiger 27 84. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings.—There is a light trade in the best grades of unbleached cottons, but sales are only made in small lots to supply the immediate wants of the distributing trade, in lower counts and less favorably known brands, there is but little stability to prices, and jobbers are, in some instances, clearing out their stocks at concessions from quoted p-ices. The general range of values remain steady and without special change. Stocks in first hands are suffi<;i-. ently low to give a fair degree of firmness to prices, jnd we hear of no important breaks. Amoskeag 46 19, do 42 17*, do A 36 15}, do Z £4 11, American A 36 12}, Androscoggin L 36 1G, Ark¬ wright WT 86 17}, Auburn —, Atlantic Cambric 86 21, Ballou <fc Son 86 13}, do 31 11, Bartletts 86 15,do 33 14, do 31 13, Bates XX 86 17, do B 38 14. Blackstone 86 14}, do D 37 13}. Boott B 36 15, do C 83 13}, do E 36 12, do H 28 11*, do O 30 11}, do R 28 9, do W 45 19, Clarks 36 19, Dwight 40 18, Ellerton 10-4 39}-45, Forestdale 36 15, Fruit of the Loom 36 17, Globe 27 8, Gold Medal 36 14, Greens M’fgCoS6 1C*, do 31 10, Great Falls Q 86 16*. do J 33—,do S 81 11*. do A 82 18*, Hill’i Semp. Idem 36 16, do 83 14}, Hope 86 14, James 86 15, do 33 13},do 31—, Lawrence B 36 13* Lonsdale 86 17. Maaonville 86 17, Newmarket 0 36 13*, New York Mills 36 24, Pepper¬ ell 6-4 30, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do 10-4 oO, Rosebuds 86 16, Red Bank 36 11, do 88 10*, Slater J. & W. 36—, Tuscarora36 20, Utica 5-4 80, do 6-4 35, do 9-4 60, do 10-4 65, Waltham X 3313*, do 42 18. do 6-4 80, do 8-4 35, do 9-4 40, do 10-4 45, Wamsutta 45 29, do 40* 26, do 86 21*, Washington 33 9*. Prints.—-Jobbers have sought to relieve the monotony in this line somewhat, by offering “ drives ” in some lines4 but have not met with remarkable success, inasmuch as buyers manifest no desire to take more goods than can be easily placed, even at marked concessions. The agents for the more popular cambrie styles are still sold ahead, but are not now receiving many orders for future delivery. Manufac¬ turers are turning out some fine designs for the fall trade, and are, we understand, prep uing to manufacture heavily. Quotations are steadily maintained for the most part, although in a few instances, chiefly in seconds,” they may be considered nominal. Albion solid 11, Albion ruby 11*, Allens 11, do pinks 12, purples 11*, Arnolds 9, Atlantic 6* Dunnell’s 12, Hamilton 11*, Hope 7, Lancaster 11, London mourning 10, Mallory 11*, Manchester 11*, Merrimac D 12, do pink and purple 14, do W 18}, Oriental 11, Pacific 11}, Richmond’s 11}, Simpson Mourn’g 10*. Sprague’s pink 12, do blue and White 11, do shirtings 10}, Wamsutta 7(5)7}. A $40 00, Great Falls A $4) 00, Lewiston $40 00, Stark A C 3 bush $60 00, Union $27 50, Ontarios A 42 50. Stripes.—Albany 10*. Algoden 16}, Americau 13-14, Amoskeag 21-22, Boston 12*, Hamilton 20-21, Haymaker !5, Sheridan A 12}, do G 13, Uncasville A 14-15, do B 13-14, Whitteuton A A 22*, do BB 17, do C 15, York 23, Eagle 12. Tickings.—Albany 10}, American 14*, Amoskeag A C A £4, do B 22, do C 20, do D 18, Blackstone River 15, Conestoga extra 32 26, do do 36 30, Cordis AAA 28, do BB 16}, Hamilton 22*, Lewiston A 36 34, do A 32 80, do A 81 29, do B 30 25, Mecs. & W’km's 29, Pearl River 30, Pemberton A A 24, do E 17, Pittsfield 9, Swift River 14, Thorndike A 16, Whitten Jon A 22}, Willow Brook No. 1 27, York 80 25, do 32 31. Domestic Dress Goods.—There has been a divideJ fal ing off in the sales of dress fabrics during the week, and prices are weak throughout the list. We hear of a few sales of lawns, and standard makes of Percales, but the aggregate amount is unimportant* Ginghams—Clyde, 11 ; Earlston, extra, 18 ; Glasgow,\l, Gloucester, 14} ; Hadley, 14 ; Hampden, 16 ; Hartford, 12} ; Lancaster, 17 ; Lanca¬ shire, 15 ; Pequa, 12*; Park Miil?, 14 : Quaker C»ty, 14; Roanoke, 12* ; Union, 12*. Mousselink De Lainrb.—Hamilton, 15 ; Lowell, 15 ; Manchester, 15 ; do all wool, 37*; Pacific, 15 ; do Armures, 18 ; do plain, 18 ; do Robe do C, 20 ; do plain Oriental, 17; do Anilines 20 ; do Serges, 21 ; do Aipacas, 21 ; do do 6-4, 23* ; Percales 4 4, 23} ; Lu- ins. 17. Printed Lawns and Percales. Pacific Percales, 23*; Lancaster, 17(221 ; Manchester, 15 ; Merrimack, 23} ; Pacific 1400 Lawns, 17 ; do Organdies, 20 ; Spragues 1400 12}; Victoria 12.0 16; Atlantic 1400 17 ; Manchester do, 16}. Carpets—Tap Brussels, $1 47; English Brussels, $2 05f3‘2 25; Roxbury Tap Brussels, $1 35 ; Body Tap Bigelow, $2 00 ; Lowell extra 3-ply, $1 42}; do. extra super, $1 16; do. sup r, $1 ; Hartford Oarpet C >., extra 8-ply, $l 50; do. imported 3-ply, $L 4‘2* ; do. superfine, $1 12} ; do. medium superfine, $1 00 ; do. body Brussels 5*franc, $2 10 ; do. body Brussels 4-frame, $1 90; do. body B ussels 3-frame, $1 89; Icgrains, Philadelphia makes, 70c.^$l 00; di. cotton warp, 50c. Woolen Goods.—There is but little trade in any woolen fabrics, but the movements appear to be fair for this stage of the seasoD. Clothiers take small quantities of cassimercs in novel styles, at steady, and in some instances, unproved pi ices. Light movements are also, reported in cloths and Doeskins. Foreign Goods.—7he market iu this department remains larguid, wit i very little business doing* except in cress goods ; of these a few of the best styles find ready sale at steady prices, but quite a quantity of thnshy fabrics are offered We hear of fair sales of very low. piques at steady prices, and in one or two instances an advance has been obtained over the asking prices of a week or two ago. Linens remain quiet with small movements. I’rices are finn'y maintained, however, and an active trade is anticipated later. The auction houses find some difficulty in getting saleable stocks,owing to the light stocks in first bands, and even these cannot n)w be disposed of to any great advantage under the hammer, as buyers seemed indisposed to pay anything like a fair percentage on first co-J. The cash houses hold their closing sales of dry goods this week. do A 27, — IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations of dry goods at tins port for the week ending June 24,1870, and the corresponding weeks of 1869 and 1868, have been as follows: ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOB THE WEEK ENDING JUNE 1863. Miscellaneous dry at 6*e.; extras at quiet but firm. Standards 64x64 6}@6fc. are quoted Cotton Drills.— the demand for exportation is light, though we hear of a few sales in this direction. Snail lota are in steady request for home consumption, at firm prices. Amoskeag 15}, Augusta 16, Graniteville D 16, Hamilton 16, Laconia 15}, Pepperell 15, Stark A 15, do H 14. Other Cotton Fabric-.—The market is dull cotton are goods, and although quotations in most cases nominal are throughout fir heavy generally unchanged, they Value. 333 $124,855 110,3(8 . 4tl9 404 . . gooas Total . 431 100 1,748 withdrawn from , Pkgs. Manufactures ot wool.. do cotton. do silk.... do flax.... r — Pkgs 62,194 444 591 209 832 194 $691,132 2,330 308,269 88,446 warehouse and thrown “ Printing Cloths—Are $12 50, do 1869. Value . $149,828 24, 1870. , Pkgs. 1670. Value. $121,561 138,172 108,793 75’, 267 309 543 832 736 504 $741,568 2,424 $800,135 J 58,758 248,890 INTO THE MARKET 287.809 126,539 126,954 LURING the same period. Manutactures of wool.., do cotton. do silk do flax Miscellaneous drygoods . . . . . 247 87 32 235 188 789 $106,341 24,334 35,000 48,000 4,575 149 138 25 144 223 $55,987 34,903 26,875 32,163 11,786 139 126 24 301 846 $47,132 85,056 22,550 39.116 16,817 679 pf b1,74S $218,250 694,132 $161,714 9,330 741.668 1,436 2,424 $160,671 800,135 Totalth’wn xpon m’rk’t 2/37 $912,382 3,009 $903,282 3,860 $960,806 • « » 0 • • • • m ' Add eat d for conou. rn • • t. ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool. 572 81 00 310 $227,405 547 19,679 $186,415 101,472 69,818 305 52 dry go:>ds.3,117 72.930 39.825 415 52 95 970 Total 4,140 Add ent d tor consn’pt’n,.1,748 $429,857 694,132 1,371 do do do Miscellaneous . cotton.. silk . flax. . Total entered at the port 5,888 $1,123,989 2,330 $118,218 20,167 291 179 44 258 176 $455,918 741,568 948 2,424 $269,655 800,135 49,894 3,701 $1,197,486 43,985 55,902 61,941 9,609 8,372 $1,089.79 June 25, 1870.] THE CHRONICLE. Texas Cards, H. M. Dry Goods. Southern SOLE AGENTS FOR Mail Route TO LAWRENCE MANUFACTURING CO. NEW KEYSTONE KNITTING MILLS. Alfred Muckle, ORLEANS, MEMPHIS, AND MOBILE-ALL RAIL. . GERMANTOWN HOSIERY MILLS. I’ottou Factor, Commission, Receiving and Forwarding Merchant, GALVESTON, TEXAS. Liberal advances made on Consignments of Cotton and other Produce in hand or Bill Lading therefor. Samuel K. GREAT BANKING, BRYAN, TEXAS. , Transportation. Townsend & Yale, Moore, COTTON BROKER Sc 829 BLACKSTONE KNITTING MILLS. GLASTENBURY KNITTING CO. WINTHROP KNITTING CO. Leave New York PENNSYLVANIA KNITTING CO. At 8.'0 VM. for RICHMOND, and Points on the Coast, At 9,‘-=0 P.M. from foot of Cortlandt street, via New York and Philadelphia Line, by GREAT SOUTH¬ ERN MAIL ROUTE TRAIN, for Richmond, New CUYADUTTA GLOVE WORKS. Labatt, BRONX TAPE CO. Orleans, Mobile, Memphis, Chattanooga, Nashville Atlanta, Macon, and iuiermediate points. STRAND, GALVESTON, TEXAS, , EXCHANGE BROKER & INSURANCE AGENT. C. B. & Dealer in all kinds ol Stocks. r, K. JOHNS, F. J. C. KIRBY, w. VON ROSKSB2KO KVKIUCTT, C. R. TEXAS Johns AGENCY, & Co., J. F. Mitchell, COMMISSION 87 LAND Sc 89 GO’G SOUTH. Miles. NEW YORK MERCHANTS, WASHINGTON ...228 GOKDONSVILLK. Street, New York, BRIS POL Knoxville *ULKVEi,A x D Leonard MANUFACTURERS BANKING & EXCHANGE, STATIONS. ... ... ... .... ... tenATTANOOUA AGENTS ... 610 74 • 823 830 NASHVILLE tLOKINTH 066 5GRAND JUNCT.ON1107 ... AUSTIN, TEXAS. For the Sale of Purclnse and sell real estate, pay taxes and adjust TLles, prosecute Land and money claims against the State and Federal Governments; make collections. Receive deposits and execute Trusts. COTTONS — - J. L. Leonard & Co., BANKERS, AND --- -- - MEMPHIS WOOLENS. - .jL - Banter* and Brokers. rough Otdykb, Wa. A. Stephens G. Francis Opdtke. HEAD OF HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL R.K., BANKING HOUSE OF Calvert, Texas. 7 Adams & Geo. Opdyke & Hearne, NO. BANKERS, 25 NASSAU W m. National Park Bank, New York. A. Fort, Late Fort & Trice. I Gf.obge W. Jackson. Late Cashier 1st Nat. Bank Gallipol.s, O. Fort & Jackson, BANKERS. WACO, TEXAS. References and cobkhspondknck:—New York : Winslow, Lanier & Co., David Dows & Co. Cincin¬ nati: First National Bank, Merchants National Bauk. New Orleans: Louisiana National Bank, Wheless & Pratt, Bankers. Galveston : T. H. McMahan & Co. " S T. Harde. A. M. McKinnon, Columbus, Colorado Co. DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms, Banks Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Four per Lockwood & Co., FORWARDING, 94 BROADWAY. AND Transact COLUMBUS, TEXAS. Geo Arents Late J. M. Weith & Co., DEALERS IN SOUTHERN AND MIS¬ CELLANEOUS SfeCCRiTIES, No. 9 NEW STREET. Negotiated. Corne STOCK 38 & a General Ranking busi¬ Stocks and on BROAD STREET. AND a m. a.m. p.m. p.m. am. p.m. p.m a m. a.m. 41 it 44 14 14 44 44 44 5.44 p.m. 3 80 12.15 4 37 7.25 7.55 5 45 5.30 7/0 p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m a.m. iuiermediate pomis. 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.—Ali Rail § Change cars for Memphis. ** Change cars for Vicksburg. J. R. General Eastern PACIFIC MAIL YATES, Pas-enger Agent.. STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE To California & China, Touchlug at Mexican Ports AND CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS. On the 5th and 21st of Each Month. .Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal street at 12 o’clock noon, as above (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday) for ASP1N WALL, connecting via Panama Railway with one of the Company’s Steamships lrom Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at MANZANILLO 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 protec¬ tors. Baggage received on the dock the day before sailing, from steamboats, railroads, and passengers who prefer to send them down early. An experienced surgeon on board. Medicine and attendance tree. For nassage ticl ets or iurther information apply the Company’s tuket ottice, on the wharf, loot of Canal street, NortJi River, New York. F. R. BABY. Aget>»? :AFor Liverpool, (Via Davis & ESTATE Freret, ' 85 ST. CHARLES Orleans, BROKERS, S'lR&ET, Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold on commission. and Individuals solicited and interest allowed on deposits. Wm. B. Litchfijsld, Lewis A. Stimson, Charles H. Dana, Walter E. Colton. E. B. Litchfield, Special Accounts of banks Levy & A MODEL HOUSE.—Send Scrip for Descrip¬ tion / GEO. J, COLBY, Architect, Waterbury,Vt Borg, Queenstown,) THE LIVERPOOL AND 'GREAT WESTERNv STEAM C 'MPanY will dispatch one of their firstclass full-power Iron screw steamships from PIER No. 46 NORTH as follows: RIVER, EVERY WEDNESDAY MINNESOTA, Captain Whineray..June29, at 4 P.M. IDAHO, Captain Price July 6, atilXA.M. NEVADA, Captain Green July 13, at 4 i'.M. WISCONSIN, Capt. Williams July20, at 1 P.M. COLORADO. Cautain Freeman July 27, at 4 P.M. MANHATTAN,Captain Forsyth. .Aug. 3, at lO^A.M, Cabin passage, $80 gold. Steerage passage, (Office No. 29 Broadway) $30 cur¬ rency. For freight or cabin passage apply to WILLIAMS & GUION, No. 63 Wall-st. DEALERS IN Southern and Miscellaneous Securities No. 30 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. In connection with the Manhattan STREET, NEW YORK. Gold Stock and Bonds sion. Wilson & Co., LATE BANKERS AND BROKERS, J 3 BROAD R. T. Savings Bank William Heath & Co., Louisiana. Prompt attention given to buying, sellmg and leas¬ ing of plantations and other real estate, paying of taxes, collecting rents, etc. BROKERS, bought and sold Memphis, Teuu. and other No. 18 William St. BROKERS, Bouglit and, Sold on Commission* New Bonds, commission. BANKERS James, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS, BONDS. all issues of the Union and Central Pacific Railroads , a.m. LITCHFIELD, DANA Sc STIMSON, GuLD and REAL p.m. p.m. p.m. of Government and State Bonds Rail¬ securities, J. M. Weith & Arents, NO. a.m CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS. J. M. weith. Loans a.m. p.m. * ness, Including the purchase and sale road Financial.' 6.55 “ 12.55 “ 6.00 “ l.ll “ 5.55 “ 8.i 0 Ar. 5.* 0 Lv. 9 00 “ 11.52 Ar. 2.55 Lv. 11.45 Ar. 3.35 “ 1 40 “ 8/0 “ 8.00 “ 10 10 Also, Co., GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ...1127 ...1352 ...1502 Time. Ar. 6.19 a.m. 44 9/0 p.m. 44 12.45 p.m. 44 7.28 p.m. 44 11 15 a.m. 44 6.27 a.m. 44 4.-15 a.in. 44 6.00 p.m. 44 “ Change cars tor Atlanta, Macon, Montgomery. Selma, West Point, Eufauia, Mobile, Savannah,and cent per annum. CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Issued, bearing Four per cent Interest, p'yable on demand, or alter fixed dates. COLLECTIONS made on ill accessible points In the United States, Canada and Europe. Dividends and Coupons also collected, and all most promptly accounted for, ORDERS promptly executed, for the purchase and sale of Gold; also, Government and other Securi¬ ties, on commission. INFORMATION furnished, and purchases or ex¬ changes of Securities made for investors. GoTiATlONS of Loans, and Foreign Exchange effected. BANKERS, RECEIVING, ...1055, STREET, Lyons, Fayette Co. Harde & MACON MONTGOMERY... MOBII E NE>* ORLEANS.. Co., Calvert, Texas. on t ...13 9 9>2 (Corner of Cedar street.) TERMINUS HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL R.R., Draw **J VCKSON ATLANTA GO’G NORTH. Time. Uv. 9 .0 p.m. bought and sold on Commis¬ Orders executed in Boston and London. WILSON, CALLAWAY Sc CO., Bankers and Commission NO. 44 BROAD Merchants, STREET, NEW YORK Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. MerchaD *a Bankers and others allowed 4 per eent on depos.is The most liberal advances made on Cotton, Tobbacco &c., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondent Messrs. K G1LLIAV & CO., Liyerpoa . 1'HJK CHRONICLE 830 Insurance. Insurance. OFFICE OFFICE OF THE 1870. Ths Trustees, la conformity to the charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of Its affairs 1st affairs STATEMENT OF January, 18(KJ, to 81st December, 1869.$6,090,637 81 2,583,001 28 $8,628,639 06 is published In conformity Section 12 of its charter: Outstanding Premiums, January 1, 1869 $104,463 46 Premiums received from January 1 to December 81,1869, inclusive .611,290 80 Total amount oi Marine Premiums $715,754 26 Company lias Issued no Policies, except on Cargo and Freight for the Voyage. Risks have been taken upon Time or upon tluils of Vessels* Premiums worked off as Earned, du.ing the $608,830 22 Paid for Losses and Expenses, less Savings, &c., during the a me period 304,344 50 Return Piemiums 36,697 03 Tlie Company lias tlie following Assets: Fire Risks disconnected nor upon with Marine Risks, Premiums marked off from is* January, 1809, to 81st December, 1869 $6,472,915 <1 Premium Notes & Bills Receivable Subscription Notes in advance of Premiums ' Reinsurance and other Claims due the company, estimated at $865,725 41 234,561 05 . 46,000 00 20,142 <7 Total Assets $1;16U,129 23 SIX PER CENT INTEREST ou the outstanding Certificates of Profils will be paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, ou and after TUESDAY, the 1st day of February. Losses paid during the same period $2,802,245 46 Returns of Premiums and Expenses......$1,287,630 49 The Company has the following: Assets, vl*4 United States and State of New York Stook, City, Bank and other Stock $7,856,290 00 Loans secured by Stocks and otherwise... 8,148,400 00 Real Estate and Bond? and Mortgages,.... Interest and sundry the Company, estimated at 207,568 81 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable Cash in Bank. 1,513,452 00 683,797 68 .,. Total amount of Assets The whole of the OU i STANDING CERTIFICATES OF THE COMPANY, OF THE ISSUE OF 1865, will be redeemed and paid in cash to the holders thereof, or tlieir legal representatives, on and after TUESDAY, the 181 day of February, from which date Interest thereon will cease. The Certificates to he produced at the time of payment and cancelled. A Dividend In serin of THIRTY-FIVE PER CENT, free of Government Tax, is declared on thenet amount of Famed Premiums for the year ending December 31st. 1S69, for which Certificates will he issued ou and after TUESDAY, the5th day of April next 210,000 00 Notes and Claims das $14,469,506 94 TK1J5TEBN: John K. Myers, A. C, Richards, G. L.H Gillespie Adam T. Bruce, Albert B. Strange, A. Augustus Low, Dean K. Fenner, Emil Helneman, Jehial Read. William A. Hail, B. "W. Bull, Horace B. Claflin, W. M. Richards, A. S. Barnes, Egbert Starr, Six per oi oent Interest on the outstanding osrtlAcatss profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, tbs A. Wesson. John A. Bartow. Oliver K. King. Alex. M. Earle, John IC. Waller. Francis Moran, 'lheo. W. Morris, Robert Slimmon, Stephen C. bouthmayd JOHN K. MYERS. President, WILLIAM LECONEY, Vice-President First of February next. The outstanding certificates of the issue of 1006 will THOMAS HALE, Secretary. bt redeemed and paid to the holders thereof, or their Phoenix legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, the First on will cease. The certificates to be produced at the time of payment and cancelled. Upon certificates which were issued (la red scrip) for gold premiums, such payment ol Interest and redemption will be la OF COM® ANT H. Kellogg, Pres t. A. W. Jillson, Vice-P’t ▲ dividend of FORTY Per Cent is declared on the Company, for the year Losses promptly adjusted by the Agents here, andpaid in current money. EZRA WHITE & SONS, Agents. ending 81st December, 1869, for which certlflcatee will be issued on and alter Tuesday, the Fifth of April next No. 50 William Street. North British Mercantile Insurance Co TRUSTEES: • Jones, Charles Dennis, W. H. H. Moore, Henry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersglll, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren "Weston, Royal Phelps, Caleb Barstow, A.P. PlUot, "William E. Dodge, David Lane, James Byrce, Daniel S Miller, Wm. Sturgis, .'Joseph Gailliaid, Jr. C. A. Hand, James Low, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, liobt. B. Minturn, Gordon W. Burnham, Cbauneey, Baylor, Geo. S. Stephenson, William H. Webb, Sheppard Gandy, Francis Skiddy, Charles P. Burdett, K. L. Robt. C. Fergusson, William E, Bunker, Henry K. Bogert, Dennis Perkins, Robert L. Stuart. J. D. JONES, President. CHARLES DENNIS, Vice-Pres’t. W. H. H. MOORE, 2d J. D. HEWLETT, 3d Vice-Pre’st. Vice-Pres’t* AND EDINBURGH. PAID UP CAPITAL AND ACCUMULATED FUNDS $14,044,635 31 IN GOLD. UNITED STATES BRANCH 50 tVlLLIAM OFFICE, uary 1st to December Less Return Premiums earned from Jan- 31st, 1869 Manager UHAsiSs^HiTE.’ 1 associate Managers. . Net Earned Premiums $1,002/61 07 Losses, Expenses, Commissions and Reinsurance, less Salvages$718,144 12 Cash paid to Stockholders Interest for : $91,724 50 Cash paid to Dealers equiv¬ alent for the Scrip Dividends of Mutual as an Companies $119,848 66 The Assets of the Company on the 31st December were as follows: U uited States,State,Bank and other Stocks $404,826 25 J oans on Stocks and other Securities...... . 1869, Cash 53,539 28 on hand and iu Banks, and with For¬ eign Bankers Interest on Investments due, hut not col¬ lected collectable B&NKEH8 AND MERCHANTS, 12 PINE STREET, due the 77,810 15 $1,427,380 02 The Board of Trustees have resolved to pay to the a l INTEREST DIVIDEND of THREE AND ONE HALF (3J<) PER CENT., free of Govern¬ Stockholders ment Tax, on and after TUESDAY, February 1st. TRUSTEES. James Freeland, Samuel Willets. Robert L. Taylor, v\iPiam T. Frost, William Wait, James D. Fish, Ellwood Walter, D. Colden Murray, Townsend Scudder, Samuel L. Ham, A. Foster Higgins, Francis Hathaway, Aaron L. Reid, John D. Wood, Geo. W. Hennings, N. L. McCready, William Nelson, Harold Dollner, Jos. Willets, John S. Williams, Charles Dimon, Paul N. Spofford, Henry Eyre, Joseph Slagg, Kdward Mei rilt, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton. Henry B. Kunhardt, Jr„ Vice-Pres’t. ARCHD. G. MONTGOMERY, Jr.. ALANSON W. HEGEMAN, 2d Vice-Presid’t. C. J. Dkspakd, Secretary. Fire Insurance NO. 62 WALL Agency, STREET. iEtna Insurance Comp’y, INCORPORATED 1819. Cash Capital.. Asset* $3,000,000 $5,549,504 OO 97 Springfield FIRE & MARINE INSURANCE CO. SPRINGFIELD, MASS. INCORPORATED Cash Capital Asset* 184 9. $500,000 OO $936,246 65 Providence Washington COMPANY, PROVIDENCE, R. I. Rond* and Loans for Railroad Cash Capital Assets Cos.* Contract for Steel Rails* Locomotives. nd undertake! all business connected wltU Ra iwar* 179 9. $200,000 OO $392,425 52 American INSURANCE Negotiate Cars, etc. 499,531 44 300,000 00 mpany INSURANCE J esup 8c Company, or 4,822 00 . Security Notes Scrip, Salvages and other Claims OF Iron 86,850 82 Bills receivable and Premiums due and ORGANIZED M.K. “ $1,082,311 00 79,649 93 STREET, NEW YORK. EZRA WHITE, Manager. SAM. P. BLAGDE N. Ass t Frederick Samuel L. Mitchill, James G. DeForest, OF LONDON $1,371,795 36 as HARTFORD, CONN. THE AND J. D. Total Premiums Premiums marked off NEW YORK. By order of the Board, J «H. CHAPMAN, Seeretarri following Statement of the affairs of the Company, on the 31st December, 1869, Is published in conformity with the requirements of its Charter : Premiums outstanding December 31st, 1368.. $341,683 83 Premiums received daring the year 1869.... 1,039,111 53 James Douglas. ELLWOOD WALTER, President, Capital and Surplus $1,600,000. Sktlton, Sec’y. G. II. Bubdick, Ass’t Sec’y. net earned premiums oi the Nxw Yobk, January 20,1870. S3P~ The HARTFORD, CONN. D. W. C. gold. Co., is Wall Street. Bryce Gray, of February next, from which date all Interest there* FIRE INSURANCE No C William Leeoney, Wm. T. Blodgett H. C. Southwick, Wm. liegeman, James li. Taylor, C. E. MUnor, Martin Bates, Moses A. iioppock Insurance Paid during same period: Cash in Bank $86,015 51 United States and other Stocks.... 5^,009 90 Lo tns on Stocks Drawing interest. 196,700 00 Ho Policies have been Issued upon Life Mutual of the Company with the requirements oi period as above January, 1869 Risks, mercantile THE o Marine Risks, from Total amount of Marine Premiums FOLLOWING tAT’THE This December, 18691 Premiums op.Policies not marked off 1st - OFFICE OF THE HOWARD BUILDING, 176 BROADWAY, Njsw Yobk, January 13, 1870. HEW YORK, January 26, on THE COMPANY. Mutual Insurance Co., Premiums received OF Insurance. Pacific Mutual Insurance ATLANTIC on the 81st [June 25,1870. . OF COMPANY, PROVIDENCE, R. I. ORGANIZED Cash Capital Assets— 118, A* 183 2. $200,000 OO $372,219 38 ALEXANDER, Agent*a j 25,1870.] June fHR CHRONICLE. PRICES CURRENT. Manna, small flake Ihe Duties on Foreign lmpoi'ts were pubished in the Chronicle of August 14,1869 ASHES— Pot, 1st sort BEESWAX- $ 100 ft 6 50 © 7 00 Americanyellow ...ft lb 36 @ 88 BREADSTUFF'S—See special report. BRICKS— N.Riv. common hard..ft M 7 00© 9 50 Crotons 15 00@ 18 00 85 00© 42 00 Philadelphia fronts BUTTER AND CHEESEButter— State firkins, prime '29 © 80 State, firkins, fair 24 @ 28 State, half-firkins, choice. 29 @ 30 State, half-firkins, ordin’y 2i @ 24 Welsh tubs, prime 28 @ 30 Welsh tubs, ordinary 25 @ 27 Western, prime 24 @ 26 Western, fair 22 © 23 Old, common to good 12 © 20 Chccso Factory prime $ ft 14%@ 14% Factory fair 14 Farm dairies, prime Farm dairies, fair Farm dairies, common Skimmed 13%@ 11 ... 35 45 14 ounce. 14 ounce. $ lb Newcastle gas, 2,2401b Liverpool gas cannel 9 50©.... 11 00@ .... .... COCOACaracas ft ft Maracaibo (gold in bond) Guayaquil do do St.Domingo do do 18 26 .... 19 30 12 8% © © @ © 11 8 .... COFFEE.—Sec special report. ft ft new 30 @ © @ .© 30 30 Yellow metal nails American ingot 22 17 .... © 19%@ 20% uORKS— 1st regular, quarts, do superfine 1st regular, pints Mineral Phial ft gro. 55 1 40 35 70 @1 70 © 50 © 70 © 40 @ 50 12 COTTON SEED— Cotton s’d, Up’d $ ton 18 00 Cotton s’d, S. Is. ft ton 22 50 Alcoliol, Aloes, Cape AloeB, Socotrine ® 20 00 @ .... 2 0?%@ 2 10 14 © 16 70 @ 75 Alum ....@ @ 3% Annato, good to prime 50 @ 1 00 Antimony, reg. of...gold 22 @ 13 @ Argols, crude Argols, refined 24 gold 23%® ft lb . • • • Arsenic, powdered. Assafoetiaa Balsam capivi Balsam tolu Balsam Peru ' “ ^%@ 34 © @ @ © 85 1 05 3 50 Bark petayo Berries, Persian....gold Bi carb. soda, N’castle “ • • • 27 Bi chromate potash Castor oil 78 Chamomile flowers, ft ft 22 28 Jhlorate potash gold 26%@ Jaustic soda 4 75 © 4 95' Cochineal, Hondur..gold Cochineal, Mexican. “ Copperas, American Cream tartar, pr ...gold Cubebs, East India 71%@ @ Flowers, benzoin..ft oz. Gambier....gold..ft ....@ @ 31 © 18 © 6 @ ....© ...@ 10 © 30 @ lb. 3^@ Cutch Epsom salts. Exrtact logwood " Fennell seed. Gamboge Ginseng, Western Ginseng, Southern Gum Arabic, nicked.... Gum Arabic, sorts 90 60 70 48 32 Gum benzoin Gum kowrie. 60 28 Gumgedda @ @ @ © © © @ 65 2 8* 6% 3% 10% 18% 60 4 95 65 75 75 S3 35 32 14^@ gold Gumdamar Gum myrrh, East India.. Gum myrrh, Turkey.... 30 @ 42 © @ @ @ 42 Senegal 33 46 45 33 55 Gumtragacanth,sorts.. Gum 28 flakey Hyd. potash, Eng 95 @ 1 15 tragacanth, w. gold Fr. and gold 3 50 © 3 70 Iodine, reBublimed ©350 Ipecacuanha, Brazil .... © 2 20 gold 1 00 © 30 Licorice paste, Calabria. Licorice paste, Sicily... Licorice paste, Bp., solid Licorice paste, Greek,.. Madder, Dutch gold Madder, Fr. EXF.F. “ Manual largo flake X • 40 24 20 31 10 © @ © © © © 45** 41% 25 29 i2** 16% 70 © 1 75 •• .. © 80 23 14 86 .. 85 25 16 Shell Lac .*... 47 Soda ash (80 p. c.) gold. 2 02%@ 2 85 Sugar lead, W’e “ 2i%@ Sulp. quinine, Am., ft oz 2 20 @ Sulphate morphine, “ 8 60 © Senna, Alexandria Senna, East India © © @ @ . LEAD— Galena gold - 50 10%@ 35 @ 9%@ dry ex. Fustic, Tampico gold Fustic, Jamaica “ Fustic, Savanilla “ Fustic, Maracaibo “ Logwood, Laguna.... “ Logwood, Honduras. “ Logwood, Tabasco... “ Logwood, St. Domin.gold Logwood, Jamaica 11 38 10 Oak, slaughter, heavy “ “ .. “ “ .. Sapanwood ft .. “ . Rockland,common.Vbhl. Rockland, heavy 25© 81 Copper .... ... ... ... Snorting, in 1 !b caniB’trs.ft lb 36@ 1 06 Yellow metal Zinc NAVAL STORES— 12 7 gold HIDES— Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres., ftlb gold 5%@ 20 18 18 19 Tampico “ 19%@ “ “ “ ....© © @ @ © AW, Porto Cabello Maracaibo “ 19 16 “ 19 “ “ “ “ “ 19 17 14 “ Truxillo Rio Hache Curacoa Port au Platt Bahia Texas .\...cur. Western “ Dry Salted HidesMaracaibo Maranham Pernambuco Matamoras Savanilla Bahia Chili Rosin, commmon to uood strained. 280 2 05 “ No. 1 2 75 “ No. 2 2 20 “ 4 25 pale “ 18 19 19% 13 14 @ © “ “ ft lb gold. “ “ ** cur. City sl’ter trim. & cured Upper Leather Stock— 13 14 @ © 15%@ 13 @ 14 14% 16% 14 © @ © 9%@ 11% 11 9% 10% Calcutta, dead green.... Calcutta.buffalo....ft lb Manilla® Bat.buff..ft lb HONEY- 19 87 28 20 © @ © © 20 88 SO 22 China clay Chalk Chalk, olock 12 @ 14 13 13 Cuba(duty p’d) goldftgall.l 06 ©1 12 Crop of 1868 do 1869 Bavarian ft lb (good to prime) 3 10 © @ 8 22 © 6 00 8 15 47 55 65 — St«iadard white ... Naptha, refln., 65-78 gray. & Residuum PROVISION S— Porkf mew Mestlza, No 1. unwashed “ 44 ■ 88 50 ©85 00 18%@ 14%@ 25 18% @ 26%@ 9 © ft bbl 4 00 © ... ... 9%@ clip. No. 2 Nos. 3& 4 “ 44 9% @ © .... .... 9 7 6 8 25 45@48 41@45 88@40 38@40 50@55 35@42 Fall clip. 20@2S 2<J@23 1S@20 25@28 22@24 26©30 17@19 15©17 17@8S 16©38 12©20 Texas, fine Texas, medium Texas, coarse ZINC— sheet 9 © 10 ft lb FREIGHTS— .—STEAM.—, BAIL. To Livebpool : s. d. s. d. s. d. s. d Cotton.....ft lb % @.... %@5-32 Flour ....ft bbl ....@16 10©.... H. goods .ft ton 17 6 @25 0 12 6 ©20 0 Oil 30 0 @35 0 25 0 ©.... C’n, b & b.f» bu. @ @.... , .. Wheat..b. & b. @ 5 4%©.... Beef ft tee @3 6 ....@2 6 Pork ft bbl @2 6 ....@19 To Havbe : by sail. ■ f c. « c. Cotton V lb %@ % Tobacco fthhd. 8 00 ©10 OO Tallow ....»» %©.... Lard ■ %©.... Measurement goods ft ton 8 00 ©10 00 Petroleum 5 00 © 5 06 To Melboubj<x, ft foot (** 26 To San Fbanoisco, by Clipper Measurement goods ft ft to © 20 Heavy goods f» ton 8 00 ©10 00 Nails ft keg. 80 © 40 Petroleum, .ft c. of 10can. 90 © 40 Rbroadirou. f*tonofw40» © .... .. .... V bbl.SO 76 ©80 80 36 00 75 25 19©22 17@20 28© 82 unwashed “ 87% 12 35@40 Mexican @ @ © 9 .. 33@40 Cape 28 @ 2 00 12 40@48 38@42 35©40 38@40 4b©50 Syrian, washed “ 12%@ 11 A2 or X2 to A P dFXXX 26@30 B or X3 25©28 8 or X4 20@28 Bu’nos Ayres Merino, unwashed 65 ‘ 75 © Spring California— — 77% 84 84 9 ft gall. Combing Combing, unwashed Extra, pulled Super 10% 9 © 25 @ 9 @ @ 2 37% 15 38 X 00 .!« 2 @ @ @ 40 44 No. 1 No. 2 Coarse 00 7 12 14 13 12 18 10 3 50© 7 00 75© 9 00 2 00© 8 50 Burgundy port 75© 1 25 gold Lisbon “ '2 20© 8 50 Sicily, Madeira 44 1 00© 1 25 Red,Span.& Sicily... “ 90© 1 00 Marseilles Madeira... 44 70© 85 Marseilles port 44 80© 1 60 44 Malaga, dry 95© 1 00 Malaga, sweet 44 1 00© 1 06 Claret ft cask 44 35 00@60 00 Claret..’: ft doz. 44 2 40© 9 30 WOOLN.Y.* O.,Pa. West. A Va. XXX ft lb. ..©.. 50@55 XX 42@45 48@5Q 10% ft ton.24 00 @25 00 ft lb 1%@ 1% ft ton.2100 @ Barytes, American 32 PETROLEUMCrude, 40®47 grav.ft galL Crvda, in Dulk Refined in bond, prime L. S. to W. (110@115 test) I6%@ 16% 13%© 12%© 9 12%@ 1%@ 11%@ Port .. 6%@ 9 @ 18 10 17 44 WINES— Madeira @3 75 @ © .... © @ @ 35\@ Plates, char. I. C..f» box 8 75 © Plates, I. C. coke 7 00 © Plates, Terne coke 6 00 © Plates, Terne charcoal.. 7 75 @ TOBACCO—See special report. &%© 9%@ 31 10 15 7 ft lb,gold Sherry Vermillion, Amer.,com. 27 22 w «. Venet.red(N.C.) ft cwt. 2 00 @2 50 Plumbago © 6 A.&Riogr.kipftlbgld 25%@ 26 Minas Sierra Leone cash Gambia and Bissau Zanzibar East India Stock— Cal cut. city sit. V ft gold Litharge, city .ft n> Lead, red, city Lead, white, Am., in oil. Lead, white, Amer., dry. Zinc, white, dry, No. 1. Zinc, white,No. 1, in oil. Zinc, white, French, dry Zinc, wh.. French, in ofl Ochre, yel., French, dry Ochre, “ ground, in oil Spanish bro., dry. ft 100 lb Span. bro.,gr’d in oil.ft lb Paris white .Eng ft 100 lbs. Chrome, yellow, dry.... Whiting, Amer.. ft 100 lb Vermillion, China...ft lb Vermillion. Arieste ft lb city..ft lb English © @ 70 © @1 50 100 PAINTS— 12 © 12% 12%@ 12% 11 10 9 foots, .... @ 2 27% 05@1 05% 1 TIN— Banca Straits 44 67 60 14% @ gold 2 25 @ and .... 10 00 7%@ Red oil Straits Neats 14 16 “ Buenos Ayres.. Rio Grande California Para , 14 15 18%© 15%@ ft lb .... 14 American, prime, country 28 86 Olive, Mars’es, qts and pts ft case 5 25 @6 Olive, in casks —ft gall. 1 40 @1 Palm ft lb 9%@ Linseed ft gall. 95 @1 Cotton Seed Crude 52%@ 41 Southern yel. 62%@ Whale, crude Northern.. 65 @ Whale, bleached winter.. 75 @ Sperm, crude ! 39 @ 8perm, winter bleached. 1 60 @1 Lard oil, prime winter... 1 25 @ 17 20 “ Sandwich Island.. Wet Salted Hides— B. 16 pale 15%©.... 10%@ 10% 4%@ TEAS—See special report. OILS— 19% 18 15 18 17 20 20 00 25 @2 50 ©5 25 @25 00 “ @ @ © © @ @ 00 City thin, obi., in bbls.ftton.45 00@ in bags 42 C0@ West, thin, obl’g, in bags.. .43 50®44 00 19 19 20 20 gold. “ “ OAKUM OIL CAKE— 20% © 00 00 @2 10 ... 21 “ : New Orleans 17 @ @ @ 22 ft lb ft bush American blister American cast Tool. American spring.... 44 American machinery 44 American German.. “ SUGAR—See special report. TALLOW- .... 41 22%@ 28 21%@ 22 21 @ 21% “ “ “ “ 6% 00 ... extra 7% SEEDClover English German .... © © Montevideo Rio Grande Orinoco California San Juan Matamoras Vera Cruz 00 Turpentine, soft ..ft 280 lb © Tar, Washington..ft bbl. 1 75 © 1 85 Tar, Wilmington 2 00 @ Pitch, city 2 87%@ Spirits turpentine, ft gall. 38 © 39 North River, in bales ft 100 lb for shipping 85 80© HEMPAmerican dressed. .V ton.265 00@315 00 American undressed..'. © Russia, clean .250 00@ Italian gold.265 00@275 00 Manila ft lb 14 © Tampico... 50 00 50 50 © © © @ © @ 85 gold English, cast English, spring English blister English machinery “ $100Jb4i:5 lb .... Whiskey 22 Clinch 6 OO Horse shoe, Fd (6d.).. ft lb 23 ... 00© piece. ...@ NAILS— Cut, 4d.@60d pure Crude... Nitrate soda STEEL- 25 22© 26 23© “ 81© do 2 in. “ 50 85© 20 strips, 2x4 18© “ per M. ft. 18 00© 21 00 MOLASSES—See special report. 23% 5 50@ per ...4x6, ...bds. Spruce bds, “ plk 1% in. “ “ 13% 6 50@ Jute 00 9 20 ... Hemlock...3x4, “ .... SALTPETRE— . 7 . 28 21 %@ Sisal 7 . 5 00© 7 50 6 .... — .... 14 00©14 50 7 00© 7 50 27 00@27 50 ©34 00 35 80© Meal Deer 125® 1 75© Bird’s-eye maple, logs ft ft. 6© Spruce Eastern... v M. ft. 18 00© 20 Bl’k walnut, logs ft sup. ft. 8© Black walnut crotches... 15@ Yel.pine tim., Geo.,f»M.ft. 33 00@ White oak, logs. ft cub. ft. 45 00@ 45 White oak, plank, V M. ft. 50 00© 55 Pop.&W.W’d.b’ds&pl’ks 45 00@ 45 Cherry boards and plank 70 00© 80 Oak and ash 45 00© 60 Maple and birch 30 00© 45 White pine box boards 23 00© 27 Wh. pine merch. box b’ds. 27 00@ 30 Clear pine 60 00© 70 Laths ft M. 2 15© 2 11 50@12 00 Kentucky rifle rough good damaged... poor “ LUMBER— © 30%@ .. middle. light..., ... LIME— 27 50@28 00 13 00@13 50 GUNPOWDERBlasting (B).... f* 25 lb keg. 4 00© Shipping and mining 4 50© “ “ “ $ p. c. Orinoco, heavy @ .... Liv’p’l, Higgins.ft Liv’p’l fine, Ashton’s, g’d Liv’p’l fine, Worthingt’s 2 00 Plates, for’n .ft 100 ft .gold 5 85 @6 25 Plates, domestic ft lb 7 @ 11% SPICES—See special report. SPIRITS— Brandy— ' /-ft gall. Otard, Dupuy & Co..gold. 5 50©18 00 Pinet, Castillon& Co “ 5 50@17 00 “ Hennessy 5 50@18 00 Marett & Co 44 5 50@10 00 Leger Freres 5 50@10 00 41 Other foreign brands 44 4 90@18 00 Rum—Jam., 4th proof. “ 4 50© 4 75 St. Croix, 3d proof... “ 3 50© 3 75 Gin, different brands " 8 00© 5 25 Domestic liguoi's—Cash. Brandy, gin & pure sp’ts In b 1 15© 1 20 Rum, pure 1 15© 1 20 27 © 26 © 27% 27%@ 28% 26%@ 27% 30 @ 33 24 © 26 20 © 22 “ quint. 6 50@7 12 Calcutta, light & h’vy, 28 light.. “ 30 00© GUNNY <^LOTH— Calcutta standard... .yard 27%@ middle “ “ .. Mackerel, No. 1, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Mackerel, shore. No. 3 Mac’rel, No. 3, Mass., large. Mackerel, shore, No. 2 Mac’rel, No. 3, Mass., med. Salmon, pickled, No. 1 Salmon, pickled ft tee Herring, scaled ,„.,.ft box. Herring, No. 1 '. Herring ft bbl. heavy. “ “ FISH— Dry cod 28 36 @ © © 2 15 © 2 40 © 2 05 8PF1 tfr “ .. 19 00© 18 00@ 17 00© 19 00 cur. 44 82 light... California, 35 30 sack 2 10 9 00@10 75 Tsatiee.re-reeied 9 25@10 25 Taysaams, No. 1 & 2 8 50© 9 00 Taysaam, Nos. S, 4 and 5.. 7 25© 8 00 Taysaams, re-reeled 8 50© 9 50 llaineeD 9 50@10 20 Canton,re-rld,Nol to exdo 6 75© 8 50 Japan, common to super’r 8 00@10 50 42 40 39 40 40 37 29 30 29 28 29 29 ©325 TurksIslands ..ft bush. Tsatlee.No. 1,2,3.4 & 5.fR lb “ ... . “ 3 00 Cadiz 16% © 8 75 © 7 12% Rangoon, dressed. .gold 7 00 Boston) 28 middle. “ .. 19 00© middle light.. rough slaughter Heml’k, B. A., &c.t heavy . « 17 15 © SILK— © 00 ft 100 lb 8 25 In bond SALT- Refined, .. @15 00 @18 50 @35 00 © 19 © 12% Lins’d in N. Y.... ft bus. 2 25 Linseed, Cal. (bags) (in @ © 38 87 36 S3 34 34 .. middle.. @28 26 © Timothy @7 50 Hemp, foreign I 90 © 2 50 Linseed, Amer’n rough © r~cash, ft lb- light crop,heavy. 34 00© 86 00 © 28 00 20 00© 17 00© 18 00 18 00@ 19 00 cur. 60 0C@ 62 50 gold 18 00© 20 00 Ltmawood Barwood net.7 70 “ 7 70 Pipe and sheet LEATHER- 52% @ 6 20 00 00 00 OO 12 „Lard @6 25 @6 40 @6 45 6 20 “ Bar .. (chrystal) ft ft. “ ft lb RICE— Carolina ....©.... gold.6 20 English ... Tartaric acid .V 100 lb Spanish German .. Bogota 17%@ 12 10%® .... 14 .... “ .... © .© Coriander seed • 37% Bleaching powder 2 75 @ S 00 Borax, refined 30 29%@ Brimstone,cru. $ ton gld44 50 @ Brimstone, Am. roll ftft 3%@ Brimstone, flor sulphur. 4 @ Camphor, crude (in bona) 21 gold 20 © 72 Camphor, refined 71%@ Cantharides $ ft 2 00 20 Carb. ammonia, in bulk. 17 17% Cardamoms, Malabar... 5 25 37% Carraway seed • 3 ... • .... Sarsaparilla, Mex. Beef hams .... .. 22 26 11 16 29 Hams Shoulders ... Salaeratus 20 © Sal ammoniac, ref. gold. 10%@ Sal soda, Newcastle, g’d 1 70 © 1 80 Sarsaparilla,H.,g’d,in D’d © 30 Seneka root .... — .., FLAXN. River, g’d to prime. ft ft 13 © FRUITS—See special report. GROCERIES—See special report GUNNY BAGS- DRUGS AND DYES- J. X 6%@ 00 00 00 00 .... @ Prussiate potash, Amer. SI- © Quicksilver 68 © Rhubarb, China 1 18 @ 2 00 Sago, pearled 88 81 30 37 Bar,Swedes, ordin.sizes..110 00© Bar,Eng. & Amer., refined 77 50© Bar, Eng. & Amer.,com’n. 72 50© Scroll 87 50@U5 00 Ovals and half round 95 00@110 00 Band 95 00© Horseshoe 95 00© Rods, %@8-16 inch 85 00@120 00 105 00®145 00 Hoop Nail, rod V lb 7 © 7% Sheet, Russia 11 @ 11% Sheet, sing., donh. & treh. 4 %@ 5% Ralls, Eng. (gold) .ft ton. 59 00@ 60 OD Ralls, American 71 00@ 72 00 T2 . COTTON—See special report. ■ Phosphorus 32 00© 30 00© 29 00© 84 00© 75 00© 8TOBE PBIOE8. gold, 10 25 @10 50 22%© 25 bbl. 4 50@ 5 1 ft bbl. 7 50© 8 00 Mackerel, No. 1, shore 29 50@S0 00 Sheathing, &c., old.. Sheathing, yel. metal,new 22 © Bolts, yellow metal 24 @ 4UQUUV* Oxalic acid S 00 ... degs) 2 00 .... Pickled scale Pickled cod COPPER- Jalap,.; Lac dye vitriol (60 to 68 DYE WOODSCamwood —gold, ft ton. 120 00© Fustic, Cuba. “ “ @ .... .... Gum peppermint, pure Opium, Turkey Ravens, light ft pee.15 00 @ Ravens, heavy.... 17 00 © Scotch, G’ck, No. 1, V yd 70 © Cotton,No. 1 “ 55 © Liverpool house cannel... 14 00© Anthracite—Auct. of Scranton, May 27 10,000 tons lump 4 07%@4 20 12,000 tons steamboat 4 12%@4 20 15.000 tons grate 4 25 @4 37% 11,000 tons egg 4 45%@ 20,000 tons stove 5 00 @5 12% 12,000 tons chestnut 4 20 @4 27% Bolts Braziers’ lemon Pig, American, No. 1 Pig, American. No. 2 Pig, American Forge Pig, Scotch. No. 1... Bar, refined, Eng. & Amer. .... Pork, prime Pork, prime mess Beef, plain mess Beer, extra mess 7 00© ... 4 00©5 00 ft C. IRON— .... DUCK— 00© 2 .... @ 2 62% © @ 2 95 @ 8 05 © z 50 5 20 2 90 Verdigris, dry & @25 @16 14 COAL- Sheathing, “ bergamot HORNS— Ox, Rio Grande Ox. American. 16 28 currency 2 87%© anis cassia Tapioca @ @ 23 ft n> © © © © Nutgalls,blue, Aleppo.. Oil Oil Oil Oil Oil Oil Vitriol, blue Sperm, patent Adamantine CEMENTRosendale 13 9 @ @ 6 CANDLESReflned sperm Stearic 14% 14% 13% © © 14 1 15 7 20 Mustard seed, Cal.... Mustard seed, Trieste... 831 COS1m/.II,I *•>•<•• *• ~4| 600 ©700 , ^ 832 THE, CHRONICLE. Iron and Railroad Materials. VIBBARD) FOOTE Sc CO., AND CHARLES PROPRIETORS G. ‘ ' JOHN S E JOHN * N, AND MANUFACTURER* COTTON TIES, ENGLAND, NEW - - YORK OF ; ' AND NEW ORLEANS SELF-FASTENING BUCKLE TIE. This Is for the planter, the compress and the ship ; t'ie best and most convenient Tie manufactured, it is recounne ided 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 Iran, nicely painted, put up in bundles of uniform weight and are sold under a guaranty to S. & 65 Beaver street, New Vo -5c. St o.- 41 CEDAR ST.. COR. OF WILLIAM MERCHANTS. ARROW TIE AND SELF-FASTENING WROUGHT IKON RUCKLE TIES. Manufactured by J. J. McCOMB, Liverpool, respect¬ fully solicit orders for delivery in New York or other ports iu the United States, or at Liverpool. IMPORTERS OF EDWARD NALLE. E. O. Nalle & OAMMACK. Cammack, COTTON FACTORS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS 158 Common Street, New Orleans. Liberal Cash advances 69 wall st., 89 maae on beaver st. Company, Bradford England. Co., WorkingEngland. Supply all Railway Equipment and undertake all Railway business generally. Post Office Box 8102. New York, COMMERCIAL BROKERS, INDIA & DOMESTIC GUNNY CLOTH, Gunny Bags, Linseed, Jute Butts, Sugar. Joseph B. Glover & Co. 30 Central Street. Boston. Southern Cards. JNO. ment & YORK, 99 John street. CAST STEEL on Co., the BOSTON, IN SELMA, ALABAMA, Buyers For a Cotton of Commlatlon. TYRES, Steel Material for State CO., Street, to orders for • anufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: THE CITY BA NJK of Selma. Capital *100,000 ISBELL, of Talladega, President. WM. P. ARMSTRONG, Cashier. JNu. NV. LOVE, Assistant Cashier. Correspondent-Importers Bauk. and Traders National Lawrence & Sons, Foreign Ralls, will be taken sion by Mail or through the cable to our LONDON 192 FRONT STREET. NEW YORK SUPER CARB. Transportation, valuable Directors, Stock¬ holders and Employees. Railroad Questions discussed by Practical Railroad Men. Illustrated Description of Railroad Inventions. Railroad Engineering and Mechanics Record of the Progress of ltaliroads. Railroad Reports and Statistics. General Railroad News. Railroad Elections und Appointments. Twenty-four large quarto pages, published every Saturday on and aitei April 2,18,0. Terms $3.00 a year, in advance. Address . N. KELLOGG, Publisher, 101 Washington St., Chicago Old HOUSE, S. W. Hopkins & Co., 71 BROADWAY. Gilead A. Bartholomew Smith, House, opposite England. LONDON, E. C. Railroad Iron, Old Rails, Bessemer Bank - Rails, &c. U. S. BONDS AND AMERICAN RAILWAY SECU¬ RITIES NEGOTIATED. SALERATUS, Railroad Gazette. to all Railroad & Co., for transmis¬ 53 OLD BROAD STREET, for execution at a fixed price in Sterling or on com mission at the current market price abroad when the ordr-r is received in London ; shipments to be made at stated periods to ports in America and at the low est possible rates of freights, .address of FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC USE, %’*. ll A A >urnal of STREET, NEW YORK. John Dwight — yearly require¬ ments. orders for MANUFACTURERS OF Miscellaneous. Railroad We are always In a position to furnish all sizes, pat¬ terns and weight of rail for both steam and roads, aud in any quantities desired ci her for horse 1MM KDIaTE OR REMOTE delivery, at any port in the United Stales or Canada, and always at the very low¬ est current market prices. Contracts will be made payable in United States currency for American, and in either currency or gold (at the option of the buyer) for Foreign, and when desired, we will contract to supply roads with their monthly or MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE JAS. Apply to We beg to call the attention of Managers of RailContractors throughout the United States ways an jr id Canada to our superior facilities for executing orders at manufacturers briccs, lor all descriptions of both AMERICAN and FOREIGN Miscellaneous. He nry Correspondents SODA, ScC., in America: Jay Cookk & Co., New York, Messrs. Jay Cookr & Co., Washington, Messrs E. W. Clarkk & Co., Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgar Thomson, Rhila essrs. Slip, New York, Brinckerhoff, Turner Polhemus, & deiphia The Liverpool & LonCOTTONS 4ILDUCK don & Globe Ins. Co. Manufacturers and Dealers In And all kinds ot COTTON CANVAS, FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER 1NG, BAGGING, RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES &C. “ONTARIO* SEAMLhSS BAGS, “ AWNING STRIPES.” . 1 COMPANIES. NO. Alabama. of No. Railroad Iron. Sc Kails, Scrap Iron and Metals. 15 GOLD of YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE. To Pascal Iron <? Brandts Pig Iron, York. PHILA., Railroad Iron, as well as Old T. PARRY 208 So.4th stree BENZON 34 Old Broad CHA8 -- Railway Use. ——4 WORKS. HENDERSON BROTHERS, No. T Bowling Green, New HOUSE IN LONDON: give Bpeclal attention approved In lots to suit purchasers. RAILS, Cast Steel Frogs, and all other who ■■■■— Co., GEO. BUENUAM. Scotch Thomas Street. CAST STEEL NAYLOR, ..— SCOTCH PIG IRON. All Supplies. 80 State street. ■■ LOCOMOTIVE MATTHEW BAIRD. NAYLOR & CO., NEW - All work accurately fitted to gauges and thoroughy interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship, and Efficiency fully guaranteed. negotiating Railway, State and 837“ Entrance ■ finish Railway Iron, Equip¬ and to — favorable terms. GENERAL RAILWAY AGENTS, Special attent'on County securities. 817 BROADWAY ■■ PHILADELPHIA. Arthur Parker. Hasell >— M. Baird & Railway Supplies. Bentley D. IIasell, w MCANKRNEY,JR DEALERS IN on * BALDWIN TANNER, WALKER & McANERNEY, 63 BROADWAY,r NEW YORK, John C. Graham & Co., Morris, Tasker & Co., Works, Philadelphia. N.Y. RAILWAY EQUIPMENTS. “ Consignments. J. C. Rogers & Co., Established 1812. The Bowling Iron And dealers in Rails, AND The West( umberland IlematPe Iron Securities of all kinds negotiated Co., NEW YORK* Old Tyrrs, boilerplates, Ac. H.H. WALKER. & RaiJs, Iron Rails, AGENTS FOR B. D. 80 i EAYEK STREET. 3teel Ralls, Steel Ralls, Old Ralls, Bessemer Fig: Iron, *crap. Steel EDWARD FOOTE BROADWAY, Railways. JNO.F. TANNER. New York, lor the dc CO., 40 Buy and sell Railway Bonds and Negociate Loans to Iron ALEX. P. FISKK Vibbard, Foote ST., ton Iron Cotton Ties. SWENSON, FERK1NS OHAUNOBY YIBBABD, EMERSON FOOTE, GENERAL RAILWAY AGENTS AND CO., Sole Agents for ihe Atlantic For sale by dealers throughout the country. The undersigned, Sole Agents n Bale and distribution of the HENRY M. BAKER. JOHN S. BARNES J; S. Kennedy & Co., give entire satisfaction. WILLIAMS. BIRNIE KENNEDY. Iron and Railroad Materials ■ Cotton. [June 25,1870. Also, Agents United States Buntlns Company, A full supply all Widths and Colors always lu stock 13 Sc 15 LUpenard Street* A]fetsGold,$i 7,690,3 90 AJfets in the U. States » 45' 2,000,000 William St * .