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I

§aitwa*j Ponitot, and gngtmwtt iouraat.

ante’

NEWSPAPER,

A WEEKLY
REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND

COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

John Bailey,Late Bound &

John [. Cisco & Son,
BANKERS,

NO, 59 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
BROWN, BROTHERS & CO.’S BUILDING.
Receive money on Deposit and allow interest at the
rate of 4 per cent per annum on daily balances, sub¬
ject to check at sight.
Issue Certi icates of Deposit bearing four per cent
interest, payable on demand.
Negotiate Loans.
Execute promptly orders for the purchase andsa’e

J. A. Buckingham.
F. F. HrLL,
Bailey.
Member N.Y. St. Ex.

Bailey,Buckingham& Co
BANKERS AND

Buy and Sell Government and other Securities
commission.
Make Collections on all
and Canada.

Buy and sell Commercial Paper, make advances on
good securities, execute orders for the purchase and
sale Of Stocks, Bonds and Gold for the usual commis¬

Soutter 6c

Interest Allowed

on

usual

Deposits,

Winslow, Lanier 6c Co.,
BANKERS,
PINE

STREET,

NEW

YORK.

Co.,

BANKERS
AND

DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

No. 12 WALL STREET, °

ALEX. S. PETRIE &
in London

STREET, NEW YORK.

Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds
Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable

Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject to
or Check.
Advances made on approved securities.

71 Wall

Sight Drat

Special facilities fot negotiating Commercial Paper.
Collect’ nnbboth ini ind and foreign promptly made.
Foreign i.ncl Domestic Loans Negotiated.

Co.,

Gardner,

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
NO. 5 NEW

STREET, NEAR WALL, NEW YORK.

WILSON, CALLAWAY St CO.,

deposits.

Tobacco,
&c„ consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents,
K7 GILLIAT & CO., Liverpool.

LETTERS OF CREDIT

Gold

a

Specialty.

Money received upon deposit and interest allowed
upon current balances.
T. A. Hoyt,
James Gardner,
Vlce-Pres’t. Gold Exchange,
formerly of Georgia

8

WALL

Government

STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD.
AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHAN GE.

James G. King’s Sons,
54 William Street.

fH. C. FAIINESTOCK
< EDWARD DODGE,

)

(PITT COOKE.

OF

KENNEDY, HUTCHINSON & CO.,
NO. 40 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
Dealers in Gold Silver, Government Securities, &c

Jay Cooke & Co.,

Robt. McKim.

Jno. A. McKim.

McKim, Bros. 6c Co.,

Fifteenth

BANKERS,

62 WALL STREET.
Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at
sight, and special attention given to orders from

ocher

places.

Franklin M. Ketchum.
Georg'S Phipps
Tuos. Belknap, Jr.

KETCHUM, PHIPPS Sc BELKNAP,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,

No, 24 Broad Street, New York.
Government securities, railroad ind other bonds
railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and
exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercantile
paper aud loans in curreucy or gold negotiated. Inte*

rest allowed vn depoiit9«




Philadelphia Bankers.

Street,
Philadelphia.

In connection with our houses in
we

Philadelphia and

have this day opened

1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in

an

PHILADELPHI A.
Commission Stock Brokers.
J. BELL AUSTIN.

108 Sc

We shall give particular attention to the purchase
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES O

all issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks,
bonds

and gold, and to all business of National Banks.
JAY COOKE & CO.

Mweu 1, mi

110

Dealers in

West Fourth

Street,

GOLD, SILVER and all kinds

of

GOVERNMENT BONDS.

"

points and remitted for on day of payment.
CHECKS

v

ON

LONDON

AND

PARIS

FOR SALE.

this city.

be resident partners.

and EXCHANGE Of

CHAS. H. OBERGE.

Gilmore, Dunlap’& Co.,

office at No.

Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.
New York, Mr. H. C. Fahxestock, of our Washington
House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will

SALK,

Oberge,

313 WALNUT STREET,

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible

Street,

Opposite Treas. Department,
Washington.
Washington

6c

Austin
,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

New York.

No. 114 South 3d

Exchange.

WILLIAM S. FANSHAWE.

deposits, subject to check at sight.

Sts.,

Collections Hade,
Haslett McKim.

Securities,

BANKERS,

BANKERS.

Corner Wall and Nassau

YORK

Cincinnati Bankers.

>

1

COOKE,

NEW

No. 4 WALL ST., SEW YORK.
Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly izsented. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED

SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW

WM. G. MOORHEAD,
H. D. COOKE,

BROKERS,

Warren, Kidder 6c.Co.,

EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.

JAY

Guion,

STREET,

RICHARD P. LOUNSBERY.

FOR TRAV¬

.

Specie and Banking: Office.j

mail.

Street, New York,

RANKERS AND

ELLERS.

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold exclusively on Commission.

or

Gold and Foreign

Bankers and Commission Merchants,
NO. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchants

Messrs.

by cable

Lounsbery 6c Fanshawe,
NO.

R. T. Wilson 6c

CO., London,

Merchandise, executed

Williams &

•a

Hoyt 6c

Horace J. Morse.

Albert F. Day.

Orders for Stocks, Bonds, and

Bankers and others allowed 4 per cent; on
The most liberal advances' made on Cotton,

GOLD, &c.

deposits of Gold and Currency

subject to draft.

LATE

Hatch, Foote & Co.,

Commission.

Interest allowed on

Sterling Exchange at Sight and Sixty Days upon

BANKERS,
No. 53 WILLIAM

on

Stocks, Ronds, Gold and Government
Securities, Bought and Sold

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬
EL. £j ERS.

Special Agents for the sale of the First Mortgage
Bonds of the Union Pacific Railroad Company.

Commission.

BROKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

sion.

parts of the United States

Bought and sold at the Stock Exchange

AND

NO. 1G WALL

on

on

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬
ELLERS!
Government and other Securities

Day 6c Morse,
BANKERS

WALL STREET.

44

*

BROKERS,

Of Go d.

27

NO. 157.

SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1868.

YOL. 6.

FIRST

NATIONAL

BANK

OF

Cincinnati, Ohio.
John W. Ellis, Pres.

Lewis Worthington, V.Pres.
Cashier.
SURPLUS
$314,852 89
Collections made on all accessible points and
promptly remitted for at best rates.
Theodore Stan wood,

CAPITAL

$1,000,000

Directors:
John W. Ellis,
Lewis Worthington,
Jas. ▲. Frazer, R. M. Bishop,

WUUamWwd* A S.WUwlow,

,

L. B. Harrison
Robt. Mitchell

Jvi. ftawwn4

OFFICE OF THE

Co.,

the Charter of the
submit the following Statement of its

Company,
on

At Right or

Sixty Days; also,
of Credit for

ters

December, 1867:
Marine Risks,
January, 1867, to 31st De¬
the 31st

from let

(58 Old Broad

$7,322,015 75

cember, 1807

Policies not marked
January. 1807

Premiums on
1st

2,838,109 71

Europe

1867 to 31st December,

$7,597,123 16

1S67

paid during the
$4,224,364
period

Losses
same

Returns of Premiums

61

318

Company has the

The

following As-

eets, viz.:
United States and State of New

$6,SG4,485 00

2,175,450 00
Estate and Bonds end Mortgages,
210,000 00

wise

Interest and sundry notes

City and County
vorable to our
Canadas

and claims

Company, estimated at
Premium Notes and Bills Receivable..

373,374 02

BROADWAY.

most fa

Correspondents.
of the United States

and

WHEEuCCK, President

Sanford, Cashier.

Interest on tlie outstand¬
ing certificates ol profits will be pal
to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives
and af<er Tuesday tlie Fourth o
on
Six per cent

Bank.

No. 29

certifi¬

paid to the holders thereof, or their lega
representatives, on ana alter Tuesday the
Fourth of February next, from which date
amount so redeemable will cease
to be produced at the time of pay

ary,

1868.

next.

the Board,
CHAPMAN,
Secretary

CAPITAL
SURPLUS
RICHARD BERRY,

By order of the

TRUSTEES:
Arthur Leary,

Henry Meyer,
Edward H. li. Lyman,
George Moke,

Thebaud,

$1,000,000
450,000

Francis Hathaway,

Lloyd

& Co.,

W. H. II.

Moore,

Wm. C.

Pickersgill,

Lewis Curtis,
Charles H. Russell,

Mutual Insurance

Sun

COMPANY.

STS.,

(INSURANCE
49

Lowell Holbrook,

Weston,
Royal Phelps,
Caleb' Barstow
R. Warren

A. P.

Hand,
B. J. Howland,
Benj. Babcock,
Fletcher Westray,

Jr.,
W, Burnham

Gordon

Robt. C. Ferguseon,

Frederick Chauncey,

David Lane,

James Low

Bryce,
Francis Skiddy,
Daniel S. Miller.
Robert L. Taylor,

GeorgeS. Stephenson

James




Widiam H. Webb.

Paul

Spofford.

Charles P. Burdett,

Shephard Gandy.

President,
CHARLES DENNIS, Vice-President.
W. H. H. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres.

JOHN D. JONES,

J. ».

SCRIBE, PARIS,

Issue

NO. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
Circulartietters of Credit for Travellers in

parts of Europe,

etc., etc.

S. G. & G.

aH

C. Ward,
*

BROTHERS & COMPANY,
WALL STREET, NEW YORK,

BARING
56

28

STATE STREET,

participate in the

BOSTON.

Temple &

HEWLETT, 84 Yice-Presty

LIVERPOOL.
The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys
the United States, is prepared to make advances
yq shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwcrt & Cohen
on don and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
>-edits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies. South America, &c, Marginal credits
the London House issued for the same purposes.
LONDON AND

j

SIMON DE

20 Exchange

VISSER,

Place, New York,

Marsh,

BROKERS.
Dealers In Government Securities,&c. on Commission.
No. 9 Wall Street, cor. New.
BANKERS AND

Frank
BANKERS AND

& Gans,
DEALERS IN U. S
SECURITIES.

GOVERNMENT
No. 14

Drake Kleinwort&Cohen

profits.

GRINNELL, President.'
JOHN P. PAULISON Vice-President,
Walker, Secretary.
MOSES H.

Isaac H.

Also Commercial Credit*,

AGENTS FOR

tied to

Robt. B. Minturn,

Pillot

William E. Dodge

BUILDINGS) "*

WALL STREET.

AND CIRCULAR

John Munroe & Co.,
AMERICAN BANKERS,

Joseph Gaillard, Jr.
J. Henry Burgy,
Cornelius Grinnell,
C. A.

P. Fabbri.

JOHN H. LYELL, President.
THEO. B. BLEECKEIi, Jr., Vice-Fres.

4

Dennis Perkins,

Henry Coit,

Francis Skiddy,

Aspinwall,
E.

OF CREDIT,

Sturgis,

Charles Dennis,

Edward Kaupe,
Henry Oelrichs,
James R. Smith,
George Mosle,
Gustave H. Kissell,
Gerhard Janssen,
- William Paxsou,
John H. Earle,

Stephen Johnson,

E. V.

AJTD

Henry K. Bogert,
Joshua J. Henry,

HANSFORD, Secretary.

LETTERS
Incorporated 1841.
For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United
$1,614,540 78
States, available in all the principal cities of the Capital and Assets,
world; also,
This Company having recently added to its previous
COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000, and subscrip¬
For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hop
tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues
West Indies, South America, aud the United State
to issue policies of insurance against Marine and Inand Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected
rom Marine taken by the Company.
Dealers are eu-

CIRCULAR NOTES

NO. 7 RUE
Wm.

Board,
W. P.

President,

BANKERS,
CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU

Certificates to be
and cancelled to

that extent.

ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

Duncan, Sherman

DIVIDEND

States Tax, is

all interest thereon

BROAD STREET.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

TRUSTEES:

John D. Jones,

CENT.

declared on the net
earned premiums entitled thereto, for the year ending
31st December, 1867, lor which Certificates may be
issued on aud after the 1st day of May next.
FIFTY PER CENT.
of the outstanding Certificates of Profits of the issue
of 1859 will be redeemed and paid to the holders there¬
of, or their legal representatives, on and- after Tues¬
day, the 11th day of February next, from which date
and the United

ISSUE

dividend of Thirty Per Cent. Is
declared on the net earned premiums
of the Company, for the year ending; 31»l
December, 1867* for which certificates will be
issued on and after Tuesday the Seventh of April
A

J. H.

will
Febru¬

outstanding Certificates of Profit
and after Tuesday, the lltli day of

TWENTY PER

The Tradesmen’s

cancelled to the extent paid.

22,803 2 0

CENT.

SIX PER

Stewart Brown,

ed and

83,399 12
31,037 69
$767,549 73

Designated Depository of the Government. Banker
Dealers’ Accounts solicited.
D. L. EOSS, Preside
T. IT. Stout, Cashier.

291

$630,309 72

mated value

NATIONAL BANK*

Fifty per cent, of the outstanding
cates of the issue of 1865 will be redeem-

By order of

and Mortgages

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable
Salvage, Re-insurance, Accrued Interest
and other Claims due the Company
Insurance Scrip and Sundry Rotes at esti-

and

February next.

194,790 00
40,785 15
92,000 00

other Stocks
and Cash due

Real Estate,Bonds

assets:
$29,809 57
272,925 00

will cease. The
presented at the time of payment

$ 1,000,00O.

Capital

the following

Loans on Stocks,
the Company

be paid on

of Government Bonds-.

accounts received on terms

WILLIAM A.

$307,390 93
$207,661 23
14,418 30

Interest on the

$3,000,000

Tenth National

$13,108,177 11

Total Amount of Assets

ment, and

E. Milno*.
Oarlrt.

H. Cbugeb

252,414 82
3,232,453 27

Cash in Bank

The certificates

and

and New York.

Collections made in all parts

William H.

due the

interest on the

The Company have
Cash in Banks
United States Stocks

Bank, City and

Charles

all descriptions

Has for sale

York

Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks.
Loans secured by Stocks, and other¬
Real

and the East.

TTTTT.

Life

Jan. 1,18fc8

Losses and Expenses
Return Premiums

cities of

executed for the Purchase

Capital

upon

disconnected

Central National Bank,

$1,305,805 93

$89,855 49
293,116 87
$382,972 63

.'

Total

Earned Premiums to

Bonds In London

Statement of the
with the require¬

to Dec. 31,1866

No Policies have been issued
Risks, nor upon Fire Risks,
with Maiine Risks.

OF UONDON.

Lxn P. Morton.
Waltkb H. Burns.

and

Expenses

elegraphic orders

T

Bale of Stocks and

received

Premiums

Street, London.)

principal towns and

AYailable In all the

Risks; nor upon
nected with Marine Risks.
Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬
ary,

Outstanding Premiums

BURNS & CO.,

UNION BANK

46

Life
Fire Risks discon¬

been issued upon

Circular Notes and Lot-

AND THE

oft

Pre i iums. .$10,160,125

Total amount of Marine
No Polices have

The Trustees submit the following
affairs of the Company in conformity
ments of the Charter:

Travellers’ Use, on

MORTON,

li. P.

Premiums received on

NO. 61

EXCHANGE,

STERLING
JANUARY 25th, 1868,

in Conformity to

INSURANCE COMPANY,
WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK.
January 23, 1868.

YORK.

STREET, NEW

tO BROAD

Mutual

The. New York

BANKERS,

Mutual Insurance

affairs

INCORPORATED 1798.

& Co.,

L. P. Morton

Atlantic

The Trustees,

Financial.

Financial.

Insurance.

NEW YORK,

[June 27, 1868.

CHRONICLE

THE

802

A.

WALL STREET

W. Dimock

& Co.,

BANKERS,
NO.

16

NASSAU

STREET.

aud Stocks
and advances
favorable terms.

Government Securities of all issues, Gold
bought and sold upon commission only,
made upon the same on the most

Special Attention

Banks and Bankers.
and Currency Deposit®
at
^,s jWMQCK * CO.

given to tha accounts of
Interest allowed upon Gold

BubjfjM w

cues* «

June

Page, Richardson & Co.,
BANKERS & MERCHANTS,

DEALERS IN FOREIGN EXCHANGE,
BONDS,

GOLD AND

114 State Street, Boston.
TRAVELLERS’ CREDITS issued on London
Paris available in ail parts of Europe.

and

LOANS OF STERLING made to Merchants upon
favorable terms.
DEPOSITS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY received,

subject to draft at sight and interest allowed.
ADVANCES made on consignments to Liverpool
and London.

FIRST NATIONAL

Boise

BROKERS,

I1VH

Boston, Mass.

Bankers and Brokers.

Thompson’s Nephew,

EUROPEAN
PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE OFFICE,
73 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Drafts on England, Ireland 6c Scotland
Bankers furnished with Sterling Exchange and
through tickets from Europe to all parts of the United

Bankers and Brokers.

States.

RANKERS AND BROKERS,

SECURITIES,

STREET, NEW YORK

NO. 5 NASSAU

Co.,

Thomas Denny &

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN

GOVERNMENT

NO. 39

WALL STREET.

Circular

Annual Financial

Our

Buy and sell, at market rates, all descriptions "of
United States Securities, and give especial attention
to the conversion of

NO. 231

NEW PLANS AND

for

1868
Is now ready, and will he forwarded free of charge t
parties desiring to make investments through us.

Into the

BONDS OF 1SG5 AND 1867.
Certificates of Deposit issued, Deposits received and
Collections made.
Also, General Agents for'
NEW FIVE TWENTY

Company offers to insurers all the advantages
by any responsible company in re¬
spect to terms and plans of insurance, and, in addition
to low rates on ordinary lives, it makes a still further
reduction to those using the Hoiuoeophatic practice.
Persons about to insure are invited to give our
This

proposals

Go.,

issues of

UNI TEDfS TATE
'

all

STJS T O € R S

INCLUDING

1st, 2d, & 3d seriess
Certificates.

LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN’
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS.

Compound Interest Notes of 1864 A
1865 Bought and Sold.
VERMILYE & CO.

&

Gold, State, Federal, and

of

D. D. T. MARSHALL,

J esup & Company,

BANKERS AND MERCHANTS,
12 PINE STREET.

Contract for
Iron or

Railroad Cos.,

Steel Rails,

Locomotives,

Cars, etc.,
and undertake

all business

connected with Railway*-

Lockwood &

Co.,

RANKERS,
NO. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET.
DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND
OTHER SECURITIES.
Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency,
■ubiect to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchant#
and Bankers upon favorable terms.

National Trust
423 PENN

Company

STREET,

PITTSBURGH,

PA,

Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum and
Mining Stocks.
Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to
Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬
ments made.
Orders Promptly Executed

Hedden, W inchester&Co
BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

Particular attention given to collections, and pro
seeds promptly remitted.

McGinnis, Jk

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
BROAD

STREET,

NEW YORK.
Exchange,
or Sold on

^Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds,
Commercial Paper aud Gold, Purchased

Commission..-

allowed same as with
Incorporated Bank. Bonds and Loans negotiated

Deposits received and interest
an

for Railroad

s

Compaute 1

ti. Maury

& Co.,

BANKERS AND BROKERS.

No. 1014 MAIN

ST, RICHMOND, VA.,

Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes,
State. City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c.,
bought and sold on commission.
Deposits recived and Collections made on all
accessible points n




-he United States.

N» Y. Correspondent, YQQ.Z

COMPANY,
New York, January 11, 1868.
following statement of the affairs of the Com¬
pany is published in conformity with the requirements
ot Section 12 of its charter :
Outstanding Premiums, Jan. 1,1867
$149,480 75
Premiums received from Jan. 1 to Dec, 31,
1867, inclusive
796,612 87

Total Amount of Marine Premiums

gft.,

5

$946,093 62

THIS COMPANY HAS ISSUED NO POLICIES EX¬
CEPT ON CARGO AND FREIGHT FOR THE
VOYAGE.

No Risks
or

have been taken upon Time
Mulls of Vessils.

upon

marked off as Earned during the
period as above
$827,044 19
Paid for Losses and Expeusos, less Savings,
&c., during the same period
603,270 41
Return

74,421 12

Premiums

The Company

has the following asset*

Cash in Bank and on hand
$84,029 31
U.S.aud other stock (U.S.$433,100). 476,298 33
Loans on Stocks drawing interest.. 66,550 00
Premium Notes aud Bills

$626,877 64

Receivable

Subscription Notes in advance of Premiums
Re-insurance

Company,

and other claims

due the

estimated at

279,584 45
91,438 94

52,477 92

Total Assets

$1,050,378 95

Six Per Cent.

Interest,

the outstanding Certificates of Profits will be paid
to the holders thereof, or their legal representati
on and after Tuesday, the 4th day of February ne
The remaining Fifty Per Cent of the
on

Outstanding: Certificates of the Com¬
pany of the Issue of 1863,H
will be redeemed and paid in cash, to the holders
thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after
Tuesday, the 4th day of Februaiy next, from which
date interest thereon will cease.
The Certlncates to
be produced at the time of payment and cancelled.
A Dividend in Script of FIFTEEN Per Cent, is de¬
clared on the net amount of Earned Premiums for the

ending December 31st, 1867, for which Certificates
after the first day of June next.

will be issued on and

^J^clAAcul Jft.,
ovVl.

0$eclLpIA Ln JIL gf.

<§feculLtLeA
j3tale.Lq.rL {J-ce/LCLn.q.e, clu-cL
m.em.betA afi ^ftaeLe. clllcL f^aLcL
fJzcelicLrLg.rA in. bath cltieA.
jfLec.au.n±A a~fi JJJcirLhA clllcL
JJ/Jo-rLhelA teeaLiLecL on. LLbetcdL
cltlcL

.K.

Pacific Mutual Insurance

year

Rankers,

lb gfc. Set

cular

OFFICE OF THE

McGinniss,Bros.& Smith,
4

Send fo

Premiums

Bankers and Brokers.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold at market rates, on commission only.
Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬
proved securities.
Particular attention given to orders for the purchase
or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells
Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.
All orders faithfully executed.
JOSIAH HEDDEN,
ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER. ROBT M. HEDDEN.

NO.

Sec’y.

STEWART L. WOODFORD, Counsel.
EDWARD M. KELLOGG, M. D.,
JOHN W. MITCHELL, M. D.?
Medical Examiners.
A. COOKE HULL, M. D., Medical Director.

The

Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities
Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds

$100,000

Capital

E. A. STANSBURY, Secretary.
A HALSEY PLUMMER, Assistant

TRINITY BUILDING, 111 BROADWAY.

STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS,
No. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

Washington M. Smith.
John
E. W. McGinnis.

President.

JAMES CUSHING, Jr., Vice President.
ELIZUR WRIGHT, Consulting Actuary.

F

_

John

Clarkson,

Railroad

.

McCreery, 471 Broadway.

Hon. Richard Kelly, Pres’t of 5tli National Bank. „
John Simpkins, 29 Wall Street.
Wm. C. Dunton, of Bulkley, Dunton & Co., 4
St.
Peter Lang, ot Lang &
4 Front Street.
Wm, B. Kendall, of Bigelow Carpet Co., 65 Duane St.
Hiram W. Warner, late Warner & Loop, 332 5th Aye.
Charles L. Stickney, 209 Bowery.
William Radde, Publisher, 550 Pearl Street.
Thomas B. Asten, 124 East 29th Street.
G. B. Hammond, Tarry town, N. Y.

Agents and Solicitors wanted.

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES,
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and
others, and allow Interest on daily balances, subject to
Sight Draft.
Make Collection* on favorable term*,
and promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sals

NO. 69

Negotiate
Ronds and Loans for

Rates,

Drake Brothers,

/Tew York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan.

M. K.

careful examination.
DIRECTORS.

New York*

Securities. »

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
“
6
“
1861,
6
“
*» r
1865
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes,

Per Cent Currency

No. 32 Broad Street,

Bay and Sell at Market

RANKERS.
No. 44 Wall Street. Neiv York,
Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery

a

D. D. T. Marshall. 157 East 34thIStreet.
Hon. Stewart L. Woodford, Lieut. Gov. State N. Y.
Jas. Cushing, Jr., of Leroy-W. Fairchild
Co.
Edward E. Fames, of H. B. Claflin & Co.
Elisha Brooks, of Brooks Bros., 468 Broadway.
Hon. Rich’d B.,Connolly, Comptroller of N. Y. City,
Robert T. Sewall, of Sewall & Pierce, 62 Broadway.

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

First Mort¬

&

Vermilye

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

LOWER RATES.

hitherto afforded

SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES

Central Pacilie Railroad
gage Ronds,

of New York,
BROADWAY,

Of the City

George G. Lake, of Lake &

Hatch,

&

Fisk

Mutual Life InsuranceCo

America.

principal places in Idaho Terri¬
tory promptly attended to. “ Telegraph Transfers,”
Sight and Time Exchange, for Gold or Currency, can
be purchased on this Bank, of National Bauk North
mcrica, New York City; National Bank of Com¬

S.

HENRY BAYLBS

JAMBS BKOK,

A. DUPM,

City, I. T.

Homceopathic

Collections on the

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
STATE STREET, BOSTON.

RANK OF IDAHO

Organized March 11, 1867, (with circulation), under
Act of Congress approved June 3,1864.
Capital, $100,000.
Authorized Capital, $500,000^
B. M. DU RELL, Pres.
C. W. MOORE, Cashier.
New York Correspondent,—National Bank of North

merce,

STOCK

Insurance

Western Bankers.

Boston Bankers.

JTo. IS

803

CHRONICLE.

27,1868.]

telmA.

TRUSTEES: 3
William Leconev'^'

John K. Myers,
A. C. Richards,
A. Augustus Low,
W. M. Richards,
G. D. H. Gillespie,
C. E. Milnor,
Margin Bates,

Frederick B. Betts,
Moses A. Hoppock,
W. H. Mellen,

B. W. Bull,
Horace B. Claflin,

Ephraim L. Corning,
A. S. Barnes,

Egbert Starr,
A. Wesson,

John A. BartowJ*
Alex. M. Earle *
John A. Hadden
Oliver K. King *
Dean K. Fenner
Wm. T. Blodgett*

Lewis Buckman*
Chas. H. Ludington
Jos. L. Smallwood **
Thomas Eakin.
’
Henry C. Southwirv
.

Wm. Hegeman

James R. Taylor
Adam T. Bruce *
Albert B. Strange

JOHN K. MYERS, President.
WILLIAM LECONEY. Vice-President

"C.S,

■THOMAS HAIB, Secretary,.

V

-

'

Twent>

*

801

Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw

coupons
OF

THE'

Railway Company’s

OF THE

Pacific Railroad
Company,

Union
DUE

1ST,

JUDY

paid on and after

Wsll be

Tax,

Company’s Office, No,

At the

1868,

bearing

that date

PRINCIPj^l

will now be
checks „lur the

CISCO, Treasurer.

The

Coal andiron
Company.
Bonds Payable

40,000 First Mortgage
1880.

The

property of this

Company

consists of 3.008 1-10

land, in McKean county,
and P. R.R., worth, witl
present improvements, at least $13",000 which valua
tion will be largely enhanced by the development of
the property, and for which purpose, and no other, the
money raised on these bonds is required to be used.
Two veins of coal—one cannel and the other bitumin¬
ous—and excellent mines of iron ore are on this land
and only need working to double its value. Sixty
thousand dollars Avorth of bonds is the t otal authorized
to be issued, and constitute the only debt owing by
the company, interest 7 per cent, payable January
and July in New York.
i But $40,000 are offered for sale at present, and at
very reasonable rates. A lirst class reliable Invest
meat.
MANSFIELD, FREESE & BROWNELL,

timber, eoal and iron
Penn., on line of Buffalo, B.
acres

Bankers, No. 50

Broad street.

ALTON
of First Mortgage Bonds.

CHICAGO AND
Coupons

RAILROAD

and

division
cent Cou

Annually in
August.

PAYABLE IN

1896

Division, between
Peoria, "Warsaw and Keokuk, except the amount now
ofiered for sale, which has been reserved to pay for
iron ordered to complete the lipe, now oiler the same
at EIGHTY-FIVE, flat, that is to say with the August
coupon attached
Capitalists desiring a safe, cheap and reliable in
vestment, the mortgage being only $15,000 per mile,
can be supplied with the Bonds, in amounts of not
less than $5,000, by applying at the oilice of the Com¬
pany,

No. 26 Exchange Place.
CHARLES L. FROST, President.

St. Paul

City

7 Per
Bonds. 5

Cent

the Third National Bank, New

AND

July and Jan¬

York-

BROKERS,

38 BROAD STREET.

JOLIET AND CHICAGO RAILROAD
Coupon} of First Mortgage S per cent Bonds,

DUBUQUE AND SIOUX CITY
road Coupons of First Mortgage Bonds.
DETROIT Sc MILWAUKEE
road Coupons of First Funding Bonds.

^RAIL-

City

SIX

DUBUQUE SOUTHWESTERN RAILroad Coupons of First Mortgage Preferred Bonds.
Due

July 1, 1868, will

ST.

LOUIS

JACKSONVILLE Sc CHIof 10 per cent Equipment

ATLANTIC AND GULF RAILROAD
Georgia, Coupons of Consolidated 7 per cent Bonds
free of Government tax,
Also, due July G,

these

Preferred Stock.
M. K. Jesup

Sc Company.

York, June 25, 1868.

THE PANAMA KAIL-

road Company, Tontine Buildings, No. 88 Well
New York, June 24,1868.—45th Dividend.—The
of Directors have this day declared a Dividend
(6) Per Cent out of the earnings of the

street.
Board
of SIX
road for the
three months ending 30tli instant,
payable to the
stockholders, or their legal representatives, on and

after the 6th of July next.
Transfer books will be closed on the afternoon of
the 20th instant and reopened on the morning of the
9th prox.
HENRY SMITH, Treasurer.

METROPOLITAN NATIONAL RANK

(No. 108Broadway) New York, June 23, 1868.—Divi¬
dend.—Ihe Directors of the Metropolitan National
Bank have this day declared a semi-annual Dividend
of SIX (6) Per Cent, tree of tax, payable on the 1st
Monday of July next.

oooks will be closed until JulyCashier.
9tli prox.
GEO. I. SENEY.

MECHANICS’

NATIONAL

BANK,

1868,—Dividend.—The Board of
Dividend of FIVE (5) Per
Cent, free of tax, payable on and after 1st ofJuly next.
The transfer book will be closed until that date.
WM.

New York, June 29,
Directors have declared a

H, COX, Cashier.

Jameson, Smith&Cotting
BANKERS,
It AND

A

20,1868.—
FIVE (5) Per
of the last
six months, free of all taxes, payable on and after 1st
next.
July
Transfer books will be closed from 22d instant until
first proximo.




STREET, NEW YORK.

16 WALL

Desirable Investment.

S. J.

OAKLEY, 0aefcier,

MILE.

Pacific at Kan
and
Railroads
Central direct connec¬
Dubuque.
agricultural and coal
connections
portions of
road now
completed is constructed in the most substantial man¬
This Road

sas

connects with the Union

City, already

completed westward 350 miles,

with the Iowa Central and the Cedar Rapids
in Iowa, forming by the Iowa
a
tion with St. Paul, and by tne latter with
It runs through the choicest
lands in the State of Missouri, and by its
will liaVe the finest and most populous
Iowa and Minnesota tributaries to it.
The
ner.

We recommend the above loan as an undoubted se¬
curity, and are authorized to offer a limited
of the Bonds at 83 1-2 and accrued interest. For the
character of the security we refer, by permission, to
li. LENOX KENNEDY, Esq., President Nationl
Bank of Commerce, New York.

amount

Messrs. E. D.
H

F.

MORGAN & CO., New York.

VAIL, Esq., Cashier

.National Bank of Com¬

York.

J. H. BRITTON, President
State of Missouri, St. Louis.
J. R. LiONBERGER,
St. Louis.

SEVEN PER

LOGANSPORT

CENT FIRST

MORTGAGE BONDS

amount of the above
named bonds at the low rate of 85 and accrued inte¬
rest. These bonds are secured by a First Mortgage
on the road between
Union, Ohio, and Logansport.
Indiana, being a link in the Columbus, Chicago and
Railroad Company, the new route to
Indiana Central
Chicago, and are convertible at the option of the
holder, into the First Mortgage Bonds of that Com¬
pany. For further particulars apply to
DREXEL, WINTHROP & CO.
We

offer for

sale a limited

No. 18 Wall

,

National Bank of the

President Third National Bank

JOHN J. ROE, Esq., President State
tution, St. LouiB.

Savings Insti¬

Jameson, Smith& Cotting
Street, New York.

of
FIVE

President and Directors of the
The
Bank
America have this day declared a Dividend of

(5) Per Cent, for the current six'months, tree from tax
payable on and alter WEDNESDAY, July 1,1868. .
The transfer books will remein closed from this
date to the morning of Friday, July 3,1868.
WM. L. JENKINS, Cashier.

NATIONAL PARK

BANK OF NEW

1868.—The Board of Directors of
this Bank have declared a Dividend of SEVEN (7)
Per Cent, free of all taxes, payable on the first clay of
July next, until which date the transfer books will
remain closed.
J, L. WORTH, Cashier.
York, June 19th,

THE

CHATHAM NATIONAL

Street, New York.

BANK

semi-annual Dividend of
declared, pay¬
tlie 20tli inst.
Board.
Cashier.

New York, June 17, 1868.—A
EIGHT (8) Per Cent, has been this day
able on and alter 1st July next.
The transfer books will be closed from
to July 2. By order of the
O. H. SCHREINER,

EIGHTH NATIONAL
16th, 1868.—The Board

York, June

BANK, NEW
of Directors Of this

declared semi-annual Dividend of FIVE
(5) Per Cent, free of tax, out of the profits of the past
six months, payable on and after the 1st day of July
a

Bank have

next.
The

transfer books

will be closed from

till the 1st

proximo.

Thos. A.

Vyse, Jr., Pres.

the 25th inst.

CIIAS. HUDSON,

Cashier.

John T. Hill, Cash.

NINTH NATIONAL BANK, NEW
York, June 12, 1868.—The Board of Directors of this
Bank have declared a Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent
free of all taxes, payable on tne first day of July next.
The transfer books will close on the 20th instant and
reopen on the 1st proximo.
v
JOHN T. HILL, Cashier.
OFFICE

FOR

PACIFIC RAILROAD,
SAVINGS BANKS, TRUST COMPA¬
Company of California, 54 William street, New York
NIES
June 15th.—The Coupons of the First Mortgage Bonds
of of the Central Pacific Railroad Co., due July 1,
And Investors Generally.
1868, will be paid in full, free of Government tax. on
presentation on and alter that date at the Banking
douse of FISK & HATCH, 5 Nassau street. Sche¬
The towns of West Farms. Morrisania, Westchester
dules of 25 or more Coupons (for which blanks will be
County, New York, will issue bonds in aid of the con¬
struction of the “ Southern Boulevard.”
Said bonds furnished on application) will be received for exami¬
nation on and after the 24th inst.
,,
„
•
will bear interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum,
TON, Vice-President.
payable semi-annually (March and September) in the
city of New York. By Special Act of the Legislature,
Savings Banks and Trust Companies within the State
are authorized to purchase said bonds for the purpose
of investment. No safer or more desirable invest¬
ment can be found. A limited amount for sale at ear
BANKERS,
AND INTEREST by
50 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
Lawrence
bought andsold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock,
Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem
CENTRAL

Gibson,Beadleston & Co.,

Brothers & Co,

BANKERS,

MERCHANTS EXCHANGE NATION-

sl Bank of the City of New York, June
Dividend -A semi-annual Dividend of
Cent has been declared out of the profits

sale of

Accrued Interest.

UNION AND

DUBUQUE AND SIOUX CITY RAILroad Dividend, 3 1-2 per cent, less Government tax on

The transfer

the authorized agents for the
Bonds, oiler a limited amount at

85 and

1808.

OFFICE OF

BANK OF COMMERCE,
New York.

The subscribers,

tax,

of

May Is

In

in the City of

cago Railroad Coupons
Bonds, free of Government

New

Bonds have 20 years to run, interest payable
and November 1st, at the

be paid at our office, No. 12

New York, on and after the
1st proximo, less Government tax,
Also, due July 1,1868.
Pine street,

BONDS.

CENT

PER

NATIONAL

road Coupons

Expended in
$11,340,000.
The only lien upon the Road is this First Mortgage
of Six Millions, and which is LESS THAN $16,000 PER
Construction to date,

BANK OF AIT1 ERIC A—DIVIDEND—

RAIL-

DETROIT AND PONTIAC
of First Mortgage Bonds.

St. Louis

ST.

Actual Cash

A111 on 111 in

16 Wall

RAIL

YORK.

completed and in operation from

JAMES LOW, Esq., New

Stout, Thayer & Co.,
BANKERS

COMJIERCE IN NEW

merce.

The subscribers offer a limited quantity of the above
Bonds lit EIGHTY-FIVE per cent. They have eigliteen years to run. Interest payable 1st
uary, at

AND JULY,

Missouri River, and
to ATLANTA, in Northeast Missouri, 242 MILES.
The entire length of road which will be completed
in NOVEMBER OF THIS YEAR, 382 1-2 MILES.

the Western

on

ABLE JANUARY

BONDS

LOUIS to BRUNSWICK, on the

Q’ompany having disposed of all of the $1,800,-

000 bonds issued

Lewis Run

Seui*

X

-AGE

PER CENT

-.TIONAL BANK OF

The Road is

interest at 7 pe**

pons Payable
February

20 Nassau St., New York

Schedules with twenty or more coupons
received for examination, and go a
same will be delivered June 30th.

JOHN J,

-

r*

Hi© Western

300,000 on

YEARS SEVEN '

INTEREST

AT THE

.xi.

MdRtU *
.

'

FOR SALE

Government

of

COIN, Free

In GOLD

FIRST

BONDS

MORTG AC E

FIRST

Rail oad

North Missouri
30

MORTGAGE BONDS

FIRST

Financial.

Financial.

Financial.
the

fcfune 27,1868.

CHRONICLE.

THE

16 WALL

THE

bers.

Interest

STREET, NEW YORK,

NATIONAL
Dividend of SIX
will be paid on and

TRADESMEN’S

Bank, New York, June 19tli, 1868.—A
(6) Per Cent, free of all taxes,

after July 1st.

ANTHQITY 0ALSBT,

Cashier.

-

_

allowed on Deposits.

....

collected.
securitie
Professional men

Dividends.Coupons and Interest
Liberal advances on Government and other
Information cheerfully given to
Executors etc., desiring to Invest.
•

Befer^bvjpermisslgn to | _j^Dasnsy, mqbgan &

fifes’ fcutte, (StomwMM

§aitWMf pMhw, and

A WEEKLY

fmmwl

NEWSPAPER,

c

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

VOL. 6.

SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1868.
CONTENTS.

...

The Treasury Payments
Week
The Breadstuff's Trade

consternation would be the

Railroad Earnings for May
805

Latest Monetary

Next

807

and Commercial

English News
805
806

Commercial and Miscellaneous
News

i

,

.

...

.

807

810

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Money Market, Railway Stocks,

Commercial
Cotton
Tobacco
Breadstuff’s
Groceries..

U. 8.

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

-

4.Z

n

-rt

*

National Banks, etc
•National. State and Municipal
"Securities List
-Sale Prices N.Y. Stock
Exchange
,

.

811
j

•Railway News

Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
Railroad, Canal and Miscellane-

81H

Epitome
•

Dry Goods

Market.,...

815
S25
826

817

818
819
S20

814 I Prices Current and Tone of the

THE RAILWAY MONITOR

,

821

A.. .829-830

AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.
827
Bond List
Insurance and Mining Journal
828
Advertisements
801-4, 823-4, 831-2
ous

with the latest

news

up to

midnight of Friday.

The Commercial
to

__

and

sum.

The

oity subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)

For Six Mohths
Postage is 20 cents per year, and is paid by the

WTiiLTAM b. DANA,

}
J

floyd, Jb.

$10 00

6 00

subscriber at his own post-office

WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers.
79 and 81 William Street, cor. of Liberty.

Remittances should

invariably be made by drafts

or

Pos

Office Money Orders.

Oomplete tiles of the Chronicle

from

July 1, I860, to date

can

be had at this office.

CHANGES IN THE REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANKS.
The

following is the only change in the Redeeming Agents
of National Banks for the week ending June 25. These
weekly changes are furnished by, and published in accord¬
ance with an
arrangement made with the Comptroller of
the Currency.
LOCATION.

New Y<*rk.

Brooklyn

NAME OF BANK.

redeeming agent.

The Naspau Nation¬ The Metropolitan National Bank o
al Bank of Brook¬
New York, approved in place of The
National Bank ot Commerce in New
lyn
York.

THE TREASURY PAYMENTS NEXT WEEK.
In prospect of the large disbursements by the
ment on the 1st July, two
questions are discussed

Govern,
in Wall
street, one touching the expediency of holding so much gold
in the Treasury, the other
forecasting the business effects of
the outpouring of so much new floating
capital into the loan

market.

~

As to the first of

constant

support afforded by this working balance of

singular that in face of these facts there
arises every now and then an outcry about the “ idle” bal¬
ance of co*n in the Treasury, as if this coin locked up in Mr.
Van Dyck’s vaults was not quite as active as any coin in
the United States, wherever and however it be employed.
It is the old story of the hub and the spokes : the central
mass of coin in the Treasury is the hub, and the dispersed
masses of coin all over the country are the spokes, both are
in fact, equally active and equally necessary.
To see the importance of keeping a large balance of gold
in the Treasury we need not suppose, as some rather fanciful
persons do, that the gold in the Treasury regulates somehow
the depreciation of our paper currency, so that if we were
to hoard up our coin balance to a given high amount, the
greenback currency would be equal to a standard coin cur¬
rency, so that no calling in of the superfluous issues, no con¬
tracting of the redundant circulation would be needful to
bring the greenback dollar up to par with gold. There is
no need to resort to this theory to justify Mr. McCulloch
for keeping a large gold balance in the Treasury. The bal¬
ance is useful, it has an important part to play in the support
of the national credit, and it cannot be dispensed with.
Those persons, therefore, who urge that the coin receipts
should be paid out or sold as fast as they come in from cus
toms duties, and should never be allowed to accumulate in
the Treasury vaults, are almost as far astray as are the
opposite party who maintain that the balance should be
increased indefinitely as a means to bring back specie pay¬
It is somewhat

Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier

For One Year

John e.




that

danger.

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
For

'

uation it need not much exceed one half of

coin is
just as necessary to the safety of the Treasury mechanism as
®l)c (JHirotticU.
is a constant supply of water to a locomotive.
The
Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬
day morning by the 'publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, machinery would be otherwise liable to explode, and full of

The

_

set afloat that the

Treasury was in default, the greatest
result, the alarm would spread all
over the
country, and there would be an upheaval of the foun¬
dations of the financial edifice, terminating probably in some
great catastrophe. To shut the door on all such dangers the
Treasury must have, first, a good constant revenue from cus¬
toms duties, and, secondly, a sufficient balance in hand to
tide over any emergency arising from financial panics, or a
falling off in trade. If we be asked how much is a “sufficient
balance,” we reply that it should be at least a quarter of the
gross disbursements for interest, and that in the present sit
was

THE CHRONICLE.

Changes in the Redeeming
Agents of National Banks.-

NO. 157.

these, there ought not to be much differ¬ ments.
ence of
But the question how large the Treasury balance ought to
opinion. The gold bearing debt is now mounting to
such vast dimensions that the most ample provision is be, admits of * illustration from the fact that the interest dis¬
required for the payment of interest. Every one can see bursements are very unequally distributed. The heaviest
that if the slightest doubt should arise to-day about the
pay¬ drain on the Treasury is in May and November, when most
ment of the interest due on Wednesday next, if the rumor of the Five-Twenty coupons mature.
The new bonds more
.

Off

¬

I

recently emitted, together with the Sixes of 1881 and some
minor securities pay their interest in July, when the aggre¬
gate reaches about 28 millions, and is increasing with the
new issues now
going on. In the future arrangements for
.funding, the distribution of payments of the interest through¬
out the other
eight months of the year should be better
provided for.
&
We need not spend much tinte in discussing the effects of
these heavy disbursements on business.
Twenty-eight mil¬
lions will be the amount of the coin interest, seven millions
more will come out of the Treasury for the principal of the
loan of 1848. This loan amounted to 1G millions, and by
the authority given in the act the Secretary has bought up
about half of the bonds already. The remainder being
reimbursable at any time after 1st July, will perhaps not be
presented for payment very promptly. But, however, this
may be, the Government interest, and that of the banks,
railroads and other corporations now falling due, will make
an
aggregate of over sixty millions to flow out into the
reservoir of floating capital from which the loan market is
already too amply supplied. This capital will seek invest¬
ment, and by a very natural law the interest generally invests
itself chiefly in the kind ot securities from which it lias been
derived. Judging from analogy, therefore, the money mar¬
ket ought to work more easily, and there should
spring up
an increased
activity for Government bonds, and for the
sound dividend paying securities.
How long the easy state of things will last in the money
market is an important practical inquiry.
Perhaps the only
possible answer is that while the current political agitation
may have considerable influence, still all the financial con¬
ditions are present for an easy money market and a
prosper¬
ous Fall trade; that for obvious reasons the
Treasury can do
nothing—will do nothing to disturb the monetary equilib¬
rium, and-that for the first time in six or seven years we can
look forward to several months of
comparative exemption
from the ordinary causes of
curreney^derangemcnt and finan¬

II

i

u

t

cial spasms.

been
same

ment

-

general decline in the price of flour and grain
is the result of considerations, relating to the prospective har¬
vest.
There appears to be no dissent in any quarter to the
conclusion that present ^prospects warrant lower prices for
breadstuff's; there is, however, some difference of opinion as
to what extent of decline
Pres¬
may be reasonably expected.
ent prices range 10@15 per cent lower on flour than at the
beginning of the year, and on wheat 7£@I2J per cent, while
corn is about 25
per cent lower.
For the purpose of illustra¬
ting the course of prices, from Jan. 1st to the present time, we
present the following comparative quotations of breadstufls at
New York at stated
-TRICES

periods:
OF

BREADSTUFFS

AT

Jan. 7, 1868.

Flour, Superfine

per

Extra State

bbl.

$8 60© 0 40
10 10®10 85

NEW

YORK.

April 24, 1868.
$0 <0©10 00
10 35©10 85
10 50©10 90
11 75©!6 00
10 40®11 15
12 75©14 50
2 45© 2 63
© 2 85
2 99© 3 00

June 10.ISOS.
$7 25® 8 25

Hye

1 70© 1 80

2 05® 2 35

S 25© 0 75
9 00© 9 85
9 75©14 50
9 35®ll 10
10 50®13 00
2 12© 2 28
2 50© 2 55
2 60© 2 70
2 55© 2 80
1 06© 1 08
1 14© 1 16
1 96© 2 05

Oats, Western cargoes

87
1 80© 2 10

85©
87
2 10© 2 35

2 20© 2 40

Shipping R. hoop Ohio

Double Ex. West.fc St.Louis
Sohthern supers
California

Wheat, Spring
Red Winter
Amber Winter
White

per

Corn, Western mixed
Southern white

Harley

husli.

10 25®11 00
12 50®16 00
10 75@11 60
12 50©13 75
2 30© 2 50
2 65© 2 75
2 80© 2 85
2 80© 3 25
1 38© 1 44
1 35© 1 45

84E>©

3 00© 3 40

1 16© 1 19
1 14® 1 10

:
BREADSTUFFS AT NEW YORK FROM JAN.

OF

RECEIPTS

883%”

1 TO JUNE 19.
Increase

1867.
tt

Corn meal
Wheat

tt

Corn

U

Rye

U

Oats

,

.TV

X

V/ 1

u

u

111V f

of this liberal

XI uu

Vi

1868.

644,135

...bb’s.

Flour.,.

956,970

312,835

178.255

41,535
3,035,860
4,622,770
172,230
419,690
1,326.845

136,720
693,145
2,803,115
36,220
273,960
780,350

VV W* XIV

-

.

3,729,005
7,425,885
208,450
*693,650
2,107,195

—

vmiivw

The shipments from this port from
19, compare as "follows with those of the same

supply.

Jan. 1 to June

period of 1867:
EXPORTS

OF

BREADSTUFFS

FROM

NEW

YORK, FROM JAN.
1868.

1 TO JUNE 19T1I.

1867.

Barley, bmli
Oats, hush
Corn, bush

from

seen

Dec.
Dec.

comparison of the two

16,106
85,815
436,678

6,473

tables, that

all equal to the gain in
receipts. We have received of flour 312,835 bbls. more

the increase in the
the

a

2,5SG,975

Inc..

38.943
3,647,856

179,049

inc..

2,624,524
152,993

4,084,534

It will be

Inc..
Inc..

381,953
94,747

202,904
78,274
37,549
’ 136,887
SCO,217
124,758

Flour, bids
Corn meal, bbls...
Wheat, bush.
Rye, bush

exports is not at

1867, and have shipped only 179,049 more than
of wheat our receipts are 3,035,860 bushels more, and
our
exports 2,586,975 more ; of corn we have received
4,622,770 bushels more, and have shipped 436,678 less ;
while our receipts of oats are 1,326,845 bushels more, and our
exports 85,815 less. It is true that at the beginning of the
year stocks were unusually low, and that a large amount of
this supply has been required for making up that deficiency >
but the fact nevertheless remains that, so far as respects the
movement at the principal grain port of the country, the
supply available for home consumption shows a very large
gain upon last year. A similar increase of receipts is apparent
at the lake ports, as will appear from the following comparison:
RECEIPTS OF FLOUR AND GRAIN AT THE LAKE PORTS, FROM JAN. lBT TO
than in
then ;

JUNE

13, FOR FOUR YEARS.

1865.

1S68.
..A

Flour, bbls

Wheat, bush

Total

The recent

'

unusually large. How they compare with these for the
period of last year appears from the following state¬

....

Com, bush
Oats, bush
Barley, busli
Rye, bush

THE BREADSTUFFS TRADE.

t

[June 27,1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

80b

or

....

graiu, busli

It is thus
are

....

seen

....

....

a

l,433,c6S

961,803

S,065,200

6,889.448
13,112,439

4,109,264
391,936
190,008
24,093,095

458,249

324,055
683,232

7,244 604
6,236,380
4,549,297
440,993
246,764

18,S65,175

27,910,509

18,717,978

4,104,548
10,986,011
2,792.985
522,' 3S2

13,324,081

5,514,941

interior grain ports

either 1867
bushels below those of

bushels in excess of those of

little

The stocks at

1866.

1866.

1,227,030

that the arrivals at the

about 6,000,000

1865, and

1S67.

1,517,497

3,000,000
Chicago has been reduced to a compar¬

over

and the
show a material falling ofl,
close upon harvest, and that the

atively low point, especially those of corn and oats;
arrivals at the lake ports now

but, considering that we are

comparatively ample, this consider¬
hardly be allowed much weight as ail argument in
favor of a firm market. Taking into view all the circum¬
stances relating to the home visible supply and to export, the
late decline in prices can hardly be regarded as precipitate or
stocks
ation

on

the seaboard

are

can

unfounded.

the approaching harvest
unusually flattering. In all parts of the United States the
weather has been -highly favorable to tbe growing crops. In
sections there has been too much rain for the corn, and
farmers have had to resort to a second planting ; but, even
respects this crop, there is no apparent reason for doubting
that the yield will be fully up to the average. The Western
States have doubtless planted fully up to their capacity; and
The

prospect of the supply from

is

some

as

Considering that, at the beginning of the year, stocks at nature has seconded their efforts with more than ordinary
New York were unusually light, owdng to the premature closing beneficence. The Southern States, discouraged by the poor
of the canals, and also the
consequent locking up of a large results of the last cotton crop, have somewhat increased their
quantity of grain, which at that time gave a factitious firmness production of cereals, to the growth of which an unusually
to the market, the decline can hardly be considered an unwar¬ moist condition of the atmosphere has been peculiarly favor¬
ranted one. The receipts at this port since January 1st have able,. so that there will probably be a moderate surplus in




June

807

THE CHRONICLE.

27,1868.]

export or for consumption in other stocks, and next as to whether the crops of 1869 are likely
districts. The reports from California are equally encourag¬ to sustain the recovered position, before assenting to the re¬
turn of old prices for breadstufts.
ing. The late high prices realized on grain, and the favor

that section available for

Liverpool mar¬
ket, have encouraged a large extension of wheat growing in
that State. The weather also, as elsewhere, has proved propi¬
tious, and, according to the latest reports, the crop is likely
to exceed that of last year by one third.
In connection with
the home supply of breadstuffs, however, it is important to
keep in mind that there is considerable danger that the po¬
tato crop will prove a failure on the Eastern seaboard, a fact
which must be allowed due weight in estimating the future

with which California wheat is received in the

value of

grain.

The crop accounts from Europe also encourage the expect¬
ation of an unusually abundant wheat crop. With no one

RAILROAD EARNINGS FOR MAY.
The gross earnings of the under-specified
month of May, in 1867 and 1868, and for the

of each year are

French market.

exhibited in the subjoined statement;
-

1868.

AND

May

90,526
333,952
358,601
401,900
282,939
586,484
171,736
329,078

Michigan Central
Michigan Southern &North’n Ind..
Milwaukee and St. Paul
Ohio and Mississippi .

Pittsburg, Fort Wavne and Chicago
St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute...
Toledo, Wabash and Western......
Total (14

of each year

341,181
1,306,796
308,891
496,666 2,506,339
85,000* 421,058
869,625 1,659,711
400,486 1,746,470

$5,042,583

204,619 l,3i'9,172
611,914 2,872,915
180,000*
813,050
260,529 1,355,227

Western
Chicago and Alton
Chicago and Northwestern
Illinois Central
Marietta and Cincinnati

1,152

Pacific
...

.

Michigan Central
Michigan Southern & Northern Ind..
Milwaukee and St. Paul

Mississippi...
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago....
St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute....
Toledo, Wabash and Western..
Ohio and

Western Union

410
708
251
285
524
740
340
468
210
521
180

245,710

first five months

MONTHS OF

1867 AND 1868

.—-Miles—> .—Earnings—,
1867. 1868. 1867. 1868.
507
507 $4,101 $3,717
280
280 4,483 5,068

Railroads.
Atlantic & Great

1,165,997
3,485,654
803,248
1,360,678

$5,457,035$22,872,294 25,175,938

MILE DURING FIRST FIVE

Chicago, Rock Island &

202,299

70,163

earnings per mile during the
are given below :

GROSS EARNINGS TER

2,382,047
465,975
1,7*9,998
1,948,743
1,632,106 2,053,996

565,718

57,852

—

roads)

The gross

$1,884,731
1,255,255 1,419,191
3,697,937 4,674,079
1,321,321 1,525,891

335,5*0
895,712
251,916
477,007

Illinois Central
Marietta and Cincinnati

1808.

1367.

$355,147 $2,079,4:14

$459,370

Chicago and Alton
Chicago and Northwestern
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific...

,—Five Months—,

%

1868.

1807.

Railroads.
Atlantic and Great Western

Western Union

1867

MONTHS OF

MAY, AND FOR THE FIRST FIVE

GROSS EARNINGS FOR

exception of moment, the weather has been highly favorable
to the growth and
healthy condition of the crops. In Eng¬
land, the period for ploughing and sowing, both in the Fall
and the Spring, is admitted to have been unprecedented,
while the mild Winter was favorable to a healthy and vigor¬
ous
growth of the plant, so that it would require unusually
bad weather to
spoil the present prospects of an abundant
yield. The “blooming” season comes in at about this time,
and much must
depend on the character of the weather at
that period, which, at the latest advices, was very favorable.
In France, the harvest is
already in progress in the Southern
districts, with every prospect of at least an average yield.
In Algeria, the
crop has been already harvested and proves
remarkably good, so that, instead of importing, as last year,
that country will probably have a surplus to send to the

railroads for the
first five months

1,152

452
708
251
285
524
740
340
408
210
521
ISO

Differ’e—,

Incr. Dec.
$... $3S4

585

3,210 4,057

847

2,205

6,175
3.719
2,776

179
1,352
386
571

3,850

3,429

3,223
3,5i0
1,673
5.823
3,333

6,133

3,871
2,601
1,124

3,353
3,364
1,852

7,448
3,824

2,611
1,365

130
...

...

1,310

176

421
47

....

10
241

Egypt, the grain crops no longer suffer
6,576 6,618 $3,493$3,839 $316
$...
Total
from the diversion of agriculture to cotton growing, and this
Estimated.
year’s wheat crop is unusually abundant. The reports from
the Danube districts are as yet somewhat meagre, and the
latest HUonctarg emit Commercial (Sngtiof) N.ma
same may be said of Prussia; but, so far as they go, they
KATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON
ft re
AT LATEST DATES.
entirely satisfactory, and indicate the probability of a yield
fully equal to, if not in excess of that of last year.
EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
EXCHANGE ON LONDON.
JUNE 12.
As a general result, then, it may be said that the world’s
LATEST
RATE.
TIME.
DATE.
BATE.
ON—
crops, in their growing condition, promise a larger yield than
last year. There yet remains the harvest, however, with all
11.89 @
short.
short.
11.18 @11.18)6 June 12.
Amsterdam...
25.22)6@
3 months. 25.37 %@25 42)6
its contingencies and adverse possibilities. The dangers of Antwerp
13. 8)6 @
13. 9%@13.10%
Hamburg
25.17%@
25.30 @25.35
*25.20 @
3 mos.
blight and excessive rains have yet to be encountered, and, Paris
short.
25.15 @25.22)6
Paris
3 months. 11.82)6@'il b7%
until these liabilities have been passed, no safe calculations Vienna
6.26%@ 6.27)6
Berlin
82%
June 12. 3
32 @ 32)6
can be made as to the result.
Even assuming, however, St. Petersburg
49 @49>£
Cadiz
5!%@51%
June 11. 80 days.
90 days.
51%@ 51%
that the harvest should prove as favorable as the growing Lisbon
3 months. 27.70 @27.80
Milan
27.70 @27.80
season, it would be rash to jump to the conclusion that we Genoa
27.70 @27.80
Naples
110%
June 10. 60 days.
New York....
must therefore return to old prices for breadstuffs.
Stocks Jamaica
% p. c.
May 10 90 days.
11%
June 10. 60 days.
have been depleted by three years of deficient crops, and it Havana
18 @
May 12.
Rio de Janeiro
18%@
May 16.
may be safely assumed that stocks are now everywhere below Bahia
45%@46%
April 22.
Valparaiso....
18% @18%
Niay 18.
the old average.
There are indications that in this respect Pernambuco.. 60 days.
48. 4%d.(&
6
4s. 4d.
May 4
Singapore
48. 4%(/.@
4s. 4d.
May 15.
there has been considerable recovery effected within the past Hong Kong...
1%@>% per ct.
2 p. c. dis.
May 5.
Ceylon
Is. 11 %d.
June 8.
Is. 11 %eZ.
few months so far as the receiving ports are concerned.
Bombay
At Madras
Is. 11 %d.
June 9.
Is. 10 %d.
is. 11 1-16d.
-June 6.
Is. lOJd-ls. lOitZ
the leading Western cities, stocks are generally larger than at Calcutta
1 p. c. dis.
April 23. 30 days. % p c. prem.
30 days.
Sydney
the same period of last year, and in the New York ware¬
Less 2 per cent.
In

*

TIME.

—

44

44

—

44

44

44

44

it

44

—

—

u

—

—

—

—

—

44

—

44

—

mos.

—

44

—

—

44

—

4 4

-

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

*

—

—

—

—

—

44

4b

—

—

—

—

44

—

—

44

—

—

mos.
44

44

—

—

44

44

44

44

tt

tt

44

44

*

houses

we

hold about

one

million bushels

more

than

a year

TFrom our own

Correspondent.]
London. Saturday,

June 13, 1868.

The imports of wheat into the United Kingdom, from
The promise of an early and abundant harvest has materially
January 1st to May 30th, are 8,000,000 cwts. more than for
altered the position of the corn trade, and, during the last two or three
the same months of 1867; the arrivals at Belgium are 25 per
weeks, an unexpected, as well as important decline, has taken place in
cent, larger, and at the ports of Western Europe generally
the value both of home-grown and foreign produce.
Two failures
the receipts are much above those of last year.
These facts have aheady been reported, and assuming that the weather should
would indicate that some gain has been made in stocks at c ntinue favorable, it is not improbable that we shall hear of further
the receiving ports from the generally abundant harvest of failures amongst the class of smaller and less wealthy speculators. It
*
not, however, considered likely that, beyond some heavy losses in
last year; but the amount in farmers’ hands the world over
connection with recent transactions, the more influential class will be
was never lower, with the one exception of last year, so that
seriously embarassed. It seems very clear that, during the early part
it will require an ample surplus from the harvest of 1868 to
of the season, the profits in the wheat trade .were so very large that
bring up the world’s stocks to near their former condition. those who were speculating then will be able to bear a considerable
This being the case, it would seem probable that the trade strain upon their resources before being compelled to give in. For
will wait to ascertain, first the effect of this years crop upon
jhat reason we believe that the failures amongst the
ago.




s

speculators in

'

wheat, in the event of a further decline in the
an important character.
The fact, however,

quotations, will not be of

that some failures have
already taken place, is clearly calculated to produce much caution in
far, the

afloat and in store

as

will suffice for

our

wants until the new crop comes

to market.

Not

only is the prospect very encouraging

in this country, but in

rly every foreign country there is also the promise of an abundant
yield, of produce. In Algeria the crop has been already harvested, and
in striking contrast with last year the yield is good, and there will
therefore be no necessity for an importation from the Black Sea or from
Marseilles. In the south of Fiance the harvest, if not already in pro¬
nea

the trade.
So

[June 27,1868.

THE CHRONICLE,

808

season

has been remarkable, and there have been no com¬

plaints respecting the crop from the period of sowing until now. A
time for ploughing and sowing, both in the Autumn and in the Spring,
which is admitted to have been unprecedented, gave great hopes that
a good
crop would be secured.
At no former period, probably, was
the operation of ploughing and sowing completed under more favorable
circumstances.
A mild, dry Winter, which, though mild, was suffi¬
ciently severe to check its rapid growth, seems to have enabled the
wheat plant to germinate in a healthy manner, and to fix itself firmly
in the ground.
The dryness of the last few months has also enabled
the plant to make steady progress, and, at the present time, it is not
only forward,'but is also strong, and appears capable of bearing con¬
siderable strain from bad weather, should such intervene between now
and harvest.
In the course of a few days the wheat fields will all be.
in bloom, a period, no doubt, as critical as any other period of the sea¬
son, and we can only hope that fine, calm weather will prevail, so as to
enable the plant to pass through that state of development in a satis¬
factory manner. Even now, in the south of England, the plant is in
full bloom, and the weather is calm, fine, almost cloudless.
In a wcrd,
the season has been almost unpecedented, and, in a changeable cli¬
mate like ours, it seems to be scarcely credible that since the ‘25th of
April last, we have only had in and about London, in the way of rain,
a
drizzling rain for one day, a gentle rain for about four or five hours
last Thursday week, and a severe thunderstorm 3resterday fortnight, so
that for seven weeks scarcely any rain has fallen.
And yet the wheat
crop is thriving, but other grain requires moisture.
With the wheat,
however, in bloom, and with the hay harvest in progress, a change
cannot be wished for now.
It is believed by many of the leading
farmers that, in the southern counties of England, wheat will come
freely to market during the closing days of July ; but, as a necessity

gress,

will be

very

shortly commenced, and if a

depressed trade be a

fair average. In Egypt
a
country which, during the high price of cotton, neglected the produc¬
tion of breadstuff’s in order to grow more cotton—there has been an
abundant yield ; while from the United States no unfavorable reports
have yet been received.
The high price of produce in Europe has
naturally had the effect of causing the acreage of land under cultiva
tion to be increased not only in this country, but also in many other
countries, and especially in the United States and in California. It
follows, therefore, that with a good yield per acre (should such be
secured) the total production of wheat at the coming harvest must be
large. In the face, therefore, of such an event, we ought not to be
unprepared for a heavier fall in the value of wheat, and a more com¬
plete replenishing of our empty barns than could have been expected.
While, however, the position of the wheat trade seems on the eve of
a decided improvement, the prospect
as regards Spring corn is not so
favorable.
Barley, beans, peas, and also p otatoes require moisture, and
it is very probable that the crops of those articles will be small.
A
few days rain would, however, work a great change.
The pastures are
also deficient in many places, but as the supply of old hay iu the
country is large, the diminished yield of grass will not be severely felt.
Should, however, the Summer be hot, it is not unlikely that beasts and
sheep will be sent prematurely to market, and if that should prove to
criterion, the harvest seems to be at least a

be the case, we may

suffer from dearer meat later on.

week, wheat has advanced in price to the extent of about Is.
quarter. Millers are undoubtedly short of stock, but with the
existing prospect there is no reason why they should make large pur¬
for the fulfilment of that belief, the weather must continue as fine as
chases.
Although wheat has declined 10@l2s. per quarter, the price
at present, inasmuch as the belief is founded upon that assumption.
of flour remains about the same, and no alteration has been made in
To most, the late fall in the price of wheat has been a surprise: This the
price of bread, consequently the fall in the value of wheat has not
is due to the fact that the decline cannot be attributed to a super
yet benefitted the public. This week, millers, with the object of re¬
abundance of supply, but to the prospect of an early and abundant
tarding an alteration in the price of flour, are paying about Is. per
harvest.
Had it appeared probable that the harvest would have been
quarter more money for wheat, but are pocketing about 10s. per
reaped at the average period, the decline in the value of wheat would quarter in all their recent transactions. Since the commencement of
have been delayed to the extent of the few weeks that we now consider the
season, the imports and exports of wheat into and from the United
ourselves forward, assuming, of course, that the crop promised as favor¬
Kingdom, have been as follows :
WHEAT.
ably then as it does at the present time. But the hope so generally
,
Exports
entertained that the crop will be early as well as abundant, has caused
Imports
*
1867-68.
1806-67.
1866-67.
1867-68.
cwt.
much depression, and a consequent decline in prices.
cwt.
cwt.
cwt.
Everything must From—
603,456
374,756
20,320,886
28,874,100
Jan.'l to May 30
now
depend upon the weather. So far as we have already stated,
4,673
17,767
637,803
755,817
Week ending June
This

per

,

,

...

nature has been

it is

as

beneficent and kind

as

she could

be,

an

i at present

G......

Total

...

20,958,689

29,129,917

302,523

60S,126

only possible to conclude that a work, almost finished, will be
FLOUR,
completed as it was begun. Ample supplies of wheat afloat from
23,551
15,782
2,508,606
2,879,446
Jan. 1 to May 30
abroad, a disposition on the part of speculative holders of pro luce to Week
7.613
1,831
44,865
126,284
ending June 6
escape without further loss, and caution on the part of millers must
25,382
23,395
2,553,471
3,0U5,730
Total
tend to flatten ihe market and to cheapen the price of wheat.
Hence
prices must continue in favor of the buyer unless the downward move¬
The general trade of the country remains quiet, and iu most depart¬
ment be checked by a return of unpropitious weather.
The extent of ments of business the transactions have been of quite a hand-to-mouth
our
imports during the season shows clearly the groundless fears of character. There appears to be no speculation, and, as a consequence,
those who predicted a famine with regard to a supply of wheat.
goods and pro nee change hands only to meet immediate wants. Such
Judging from the nature of our imports since the 1st of September last, a position of affairs is likely to coutiuue, notwithstanding the cheap
we are bound to conclude that the
production of wheat in the world in ness of money.
1867 was greater than in 18G6. An increase of 8,000,000 cwt, in our
In the money market, the utmost quietness has prevailed, and, as
the supply of money is still very large, the rates of discount have con¬
receipts is a clear indication of this, notwithstanding our imports of
flour have been lese in 1867-8 by about 250,000 cwt, than in 1866-7 ; but tinued to rule, low.
The mercantile demand is extremely limited, and
when we bear in mind that France has imported largely of wheat, and in the face of the quietness of trade, i3 not likely to increase at pres¬
has sent us very little flour, and that several other minor countries, such
ent.
The imports of the precious metals are still on a considerable
Spain, Algeria and Sweden have imported to some extent, the fact that scale, and there is no export demand for gold of importance. Hence*,
our
imports of wheat h ive been so considerably augmented, must needs it is probable that the supply of money will continue to augment. It
confirm the assertion that more wheat was produced in 1867 than in can
scarcely be thought, however, that when ihe harvest shall have
1866.
The increased importation of wheat at the ports of Western been
gathered in, the trade of the country will remain as quiet as at
Europe is due to the abundant harvest in the South of Russia, in the the present moment. ‘ Mach, of course, however, depends upon the
United States and California, and in Australia and Chili.
The bounti¬ result of the harvest. The present rates of discount are subjoined :
ful harvests of the Western hemisphere of Australia and of the South
1867.
1S68.
1867.
186S.
Per cent. Per cent.
Pnr pprif Ppv npnf
of Russia have more than supplied the deficiency of those of Great
6 months’ ba’k bills 2%@3?^ 1%@2
30 and 60 days’ bills 2>ti'@.23i l%mVe
4 apd 0 trade bills.. 2X@3X 2
Britain, France, Spain, Algeria, Sweden and some parts of Germany. 3 months, bills
2^@2;8
4 months, ba’k bills 2<J£@,2%
The tempting prices offered for produce in the British and French mar¬
kets caused wheat to come freely forward, and it is probable that if
The changes in the rates on the Continent since the close of last week
the stocks of wheat at the outports could now be ascertained, it would have been unimportant.
The supply of bullion held by the Bank of
be discovered that our imports had somewhat
France shows a slight diminution, but the total stock is still very con¬
considerably exceedid
our
consumption. At one perio l the quantity of wheat afloat was ; a siderable. Much quietness continues to prevail on the Continent.
much as 2,000,000 quarters, and there is now as much foreign wheat
Annexed are the quotations for money at the leading cities;




-

...

..

'

•

June

r-B’k rate—,
1867. 1868.

,-B’k rate— ,-Op. m’kt—>
1867.1868.
1867.
1868.
At Paris
Vienna

2%

4
Berlin..... 4
Frankfort. 2%
AmBt’rd’m 3

*■

...

2%

2%-3

Turin
5
Brussels ..2%
Madrid... 5

l%-2
2-2%

l%-2

Hamburg.

2#

1%

2

4
4

4

2%
2%

4

Petb”g.

St.

2

Op. m’kt—,

5

—

2%-%

2#
5

—

1868.

1867

2%-3

—

1%

l%-%

—

6% 7%-8%

7

6-6%

scarcely any demand for bar gold for export; but American
eagles have been in increased request on French and German account.
In silver, scarcely any business is doing.
The chief demand is for the
Continent, there being no inquiry for the East. The prices of bullion
There is

subjoined:

are

GOLD.

d.
per oz. standard.
do
Refinable
do last price.
Spanish Doubloons
peroz.
South American Doubloons... do
last price
United States Gold Coin
do
do

Bar Gold

apparent, and the market closed steady at 73£. Illinois
stronger, selling up to 101£, after opening at
'100£, and closed at lOlf. Erie shares have been quiet, closing at 45£.
J. S. bonds at Frankfort are still held firmly at 77$ for the old issue.
;one

was

Central shares have been

Fri.
Consols for money
94%-95
“
for account... 95
U. S. 6’s (5 20’s) 1862.. 73%
Illinois Central shares. 100%
Erie Railway shares
45%
Atl. & G. W. (consols).

The

Sat.

73%-%
101

o

45%
33%

a

d.

s.

0% @—
5% &—
10% @-

Thu.

94%-%

94%
94%
73%
101%
45%

94%
94%
73%
101%
45%

95-%

c3
*—<

Wed.

Tues.

Mon.

94%-95

.

94%

73%
101%
45%
....

....

....

daily closing quotations for U. S. 6*8 (1862) at Frankfort

Frankioit

standard.
do
peroz.last price.
per oz
do

peroz.

containing 5 grs. gold

Money and Stock Market.—Consols have been quiet during
week, opening at 94£@95 for money, and 95 for account, closing at
94£@94£ for money, and 94f for account. U. S. bonds opened the
week at 73£, but during the middle and close of the week a stronger
he

....

d.

Bar Silver

London

..

SILVER.

do

809

THE CHRONICLE.

27, 1868.]

77%-%

.

77%-%

77%

were—

77%-%

77%-%

77%

Liverpool Cotton Market.—This market has been variable during the
week, opening firm and buoyant, and after experiencing a

depressed
feeling through the middle of the week again became active at the close,
with prices a little better.
The sales for the past week, as reported
Of dishonest nations, or at least of dishonest governments, the Span¬
per cable, have amounted to 73,000 bales.
The market closed at the
ish nation, or the Government of Spain, seems undoubtably to stand
following authorised quotations : Middling Uplands ll$d., and Middling
foremost. Your readers will remember that a few months since
Messrs. Bischoffsheim and Goldschmidt issued the prospectus of the Orleans at llfd.
Thu
Fri.
Sat.
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Spanish Colon al Loan for the payment of the interest on which the Bale* sold
2 >,000
15,000
10,000
7,000
9,0^0
12,000
revenues of Cuba and the Philippine.Islands were to be hypothecated.
Pri.-- Midd. Uplds. 11%-%
11%
11%
li%
H%-%
11%
Orleans
11%-%
11%
11%-%
11%
11%-%
11%
But the contractors urged the necessity of a bill being passed bv the
Mid.Uplds.to arriv
Cortes that the Home government, failing the revenues of the Spanish
Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—This market has remained quiet
colonies, would be responsible for the interest as well as for the sinking with but few alterations in quotations. Western Wheat, Oats and Peas
fund. The Cortes declined to pass the bill, and consequently, Messrs. show no
change. Flour and Corn are each down 6d., and California
Bischoffsheim decided on returning the money to the subscribers, with White Wheat Id.
The market closed quiet.
interest at the rate cf 2 per cent, per annum.
Unfortunately for the
Tues.
Wed.
Thu.
Sat.
Mon.
Fri.
8. d.
s. d.
d.
8. d.
8. d.
s.
8. d.
contractors, the sum of £110,000 had been deposited by them as
31 6
31 6
31 6
32 0
32 0
Flour, (Western)
p. bbl 32 0
12 4
12 4
12 4
12 4
12 4
caution-money, and yesterday they received a telegram that that Wheat (No.2 Mil. Red) p. ctl 12 4
13 8
13 8
13 8
13 8
13 8
(California white) “ 13 9
amount would be confiscated at the expiration of eight days.
How Corn (West, mx’d) p. 4801bs 34 9
34 6
34 6
34 3
34 9
34 9
old
“
(ifferent. is such a policy from that of Russia, which paid its creditors
3 “6
3 ”6
3 ‘6
3 “6
3 “6
Oats (Am. & Can.) per 45 lbs
3 0
with strict punctuality, even while a war disastrous to her was being Peas..(Canadian) pr504lbs 43 6
43 6
43 6
43 6
43 6
43 6

Fine Cake Silver
Mexican Dollars

“

....

—

—

....

I

*•

“

“

short-sighted policy if Spain were
Liverpool Provisions Market.—Beef still remains at the quotation
honestly with her creditors asMessrs. Bischoffsheim have dealt fixed some two or three weeks since. Pork has been dull, closing
with the subscribers to the Spanish Colonial Loan.
at 79s.
Bacon has shown more firmness toward the close of the
In the Stock Exchange business has been very quiet, and Consols,
week, and has gained 6d., closing firm at 48s. Lard closed doll at
under the pressure of some considerable money sales, have somewha^. 63s.
; and Cheese firm at 52s.
declined in price.
The highest and lowest quotations on each day of
Tues.
Wed.
Mon.
Thu
Sat.
Fri.
d.
s. d.
s. d.
s. d.
s. d
s. d.
the week are subjoined :
110 0
110 0
110 0
110 0
110 0
0
carried on!

to deal

It would be

a

far less

as

s.

110

Thur.

We ek ending June 13 Monday. Tuesday Wed’y.
Consols for money

95

-95% 95%-95% 94%-95

95

Friday.

Bat.

-95% 94%-95% 94%-95

The

following statement shows the present position of the Bank of
England, compared with the state of its resources at this date since
1865.
It also ex ibits the minimum rate of discount, the prices of
Consols, whea% middling upland cotton, and No. 40 mule yarn at this
date since 1865

:

1866.
£

1867.

21,191,106
8,802,198
12,935,381
11,480,025
19,516,637
9,9c6,274
16,045,669

26,578,446

23,219,902
9,804,049
17,172,623

3 p. C.

10 p. c.

1865.
£

Private deposits
Government securities
Other securities
Reserve

7,126,969
20,127,347
11,098,444
31,270,277
3,515/50
14,481,895

12,886,314
18,650,101
13,662,670

21,3:30,400

22,204,815

2% p. c.

2 p. c.

94%

Id.
14d.
Is. 7d. ]

47s.

41s. 5d.

17%d.

.

Is. lOd.

£

23,535,840
7,415,041
20,302,549
13,294,557
18,850,214
12,408,155

86%

90%

Price, of Consols.

1868.

£

65s. 4d.

ll%d.
Is.

5%d.

9‘% %
70s 8d.
lid.
Is. 3d.

American securities have been ?ather

quiet, and United States FiveTwenty bonds have steadily declined in price ; Illinois Central Rail¬
way shares, however, have been /ery firm, and have been dealt in as
high as 101 £ ; Erie Railway shpres have not materially altered in price
while in Atlantic and Great Western Railway debentures the fluctua
tions have been trifling; United States Five-Twenty bonds close at 72-i,
to 72J; Erie Railway shares 45£ to 46£ ; Illinois Central 99£ to 100£
and Atlantic and Great Wef tern Railway consolidated mortgage bonds
82£ to 331. The highest and lowest prices of the principal American
securities cn each day of the week are subjoined :
W eek ending

J^itne 13 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday.

U. S. 5-20’s..
73
Atlantic & G’t West¬

-73% 73

-73% 72%-73

72%-73

72%-72% 72%-72%

33%-....
32%-33% 33%-33% 32%-33% 33 -33% 32%-33
Erie Shares ($100).. 45%-46% 46%-..
46 -46% 45%-46% 45%-46% 45%-....
Illinois shares ($100) 99%-100 lOOf-lOU
101%
1001-101$ 100%-% 100-100%
ern

consol’d bonds

.

Advices from Frankfort state that United States
were

in fair demand for investment,

Five-Twenty bonds

and that prices ruled firm.

Englisli Market Reports—Per Cable.
The

daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬
pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as
shown in the following summary ;
V

V




\

Pork(Etn. pr.mess) d 200 lbs
Bacon (Cumb.cm) p. 112lbs
Lard (American)
“
“
Cheese

(fine)"

“

“

80
47
64
53

80
47
64
53

0
6
0
0

0
0
0
0

80
48
63
53

0
0
6
0

80
48
63
53

0
6
0
0

80
48
63
53

0
0
0
0

79
48
63
53

0

0
0
0

Liverpool Produce Market.—This market has generally been quiet,
Rosin, Spirits, ani Refined Petroleum remaining unaltered
from the close of last week.
Spirits Petroleum is firmer at the close.
Spirits Turpeutine advanced 6d. on Monday, but on Wednesday receded
to 28s. at which price it closed.
Tallow is a little weak at the close, sell.
ing at 44s. 9d., after being quoted at 45s. all the week.
Common

Wilm ).per 112 lbs
middling....
“

Rosin (com
“

fine

pale. ...".

•

(std white) .p. 8 lbs.
spirits....per8 lbs
Tallow (American). .p 112 lbs.
Clover seed (Am. red)
“
I etroleum

•

Sat.
d.

s.

6

3

Tu.
d.

Mon
d.
0 3
s.

6

....

•

•

....

•

....

....

“

•

28
1

9

8

45

•

0
4

28
1

0
4

28
1

•

0

45
•

...

0
•

•

•

45

•

•

6
4
9
0

45

3

6

....

.

.

0
4
10

45

0

d.
3

•

•

•

•■

•

.

28
1

....

....

s.

-

6
4
9
0

28
1

Th.

d.

6

3

.

•

Wed.
s.

s.

•

..

“

“

Sp turpentine

Fri.
s. d.
6 3

•

•

•

28
1

0
4
11
44 9

....

.

•

•

•

Jjondon Produce and Oil Markets.—Calcutta Linseed has been

steady
Sugar has been weak, but closed active at 26s.
Linseed
Cake and Oil are again noticed in the dispatches, and are quoted at
£11 and £ 12 respectively.
at 62s. 6d.

Fri.

Line eel (Calcutta)
Linseed cake (obl’g).p ton
“
oil
“

Sperm oil

Whale oil.... p. 252

£0 62 6

Sat.

Mon.

Wd.

Tu.

Th.

£0 62 6 £0 62 6 £0 62 6 £0 62 6
11 0 0 11 0 0 11 0 0
32

0 0

“

32

0 0
...

gals

Sugar (No. 12 Dch std)
per 112 lbs
Latest:

26 6
Friday

London, June 26—6

p.

26 3

26

3

26 3

26 0

Evening, Jane 26,

m.—Consols close at 94£@94f formcr.ey, and

94f@34£ for the account.
United States Five-Twenty bonds, 73$ ; Erie Railway shares, 45$;
Illinois Central shares, lOlf.
Frankfort, June 26—United States Five-Twenty bonds close at 77$
for the issue of 1862.

Cotton.—The

weekly circulars issued to-day, by authority cf the
Liverpool Cotton Brokers* Association, have the fol’owing statistics:
The sales of the week have been 60,000 bales, of which 14,000 were
f jr.export, and 9,000 on speculation. The total stock of cotton in port,

including

cargoes yet

unladen, is estimated at 607,000 bales, of which

The total stock at sea bound to
port is estimated at 639,000 bales, of which 39,010 are on the way

869,000
this

from the United States.

are

Liverpool, June 26—6 p. M—Cotton.—The market
more active, and the sales of the day foot up 15,000
are

dosed firm and
bales. The fol¬

the closing prices: Middling Uplands, ll^@llfd.;

Middling

Orleans, ll|@ll£d.
Trade

firm.

Report—The market for yarns and fabrics at Manchester

i8

•

12.—SNeacuornitls

decline of 3d.; California

a

The market closed

Wheat, 2d., and Western Red Wheat, Id.

steady.

>
Provisions, Lard has declined 6d.,and Bacon has advanced 6d.
closing at 62s. 6d. and 48e. 6d. respectively. The market closed quiet.
In Produce, Common Rosin has lost 6d.,and is quoted at 6s. 9d.
Refined Petroleum is heavy at Is. 4d. per gallon.
Spirits has advanced
In

gallon.

to Is. per

London, June 26, 6 p. m.—Sugar has declined 3d., the
beiDg made at 25b. 9d. per cwt. for No. 12 Dutch Standard.

last sale8

17,888,627

1857

25,076,402

28,708,189

20,453,187

1856
1855

23,900,351
3,247,368
20,069,745

1854

12,762,864
15,696,47.2
14,795,829

1853
1852...,

8,057,067
11,524,621

1863.

/.

1862.
1861

I860...:
The

imports of specie at this port

June 15—St. Virgo,
Silver

Gold

Castle,Havana,
$23,000
7,300

$62,116

3,487,066
$3,549,181

Previously reported
Total since January 1,

1868

National Treasury.—The

*

following forms present a summary of cer

weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom Houses
held by the U >S. Treasurer in trust for National bank
Date.
For Circulation.
For U. S. Deposits.
Total.
June 0
941,456,400
38,292,950
379,749,35
13
341,599,400
38,467,950
380,067,35
20
341,456,400
38,447,950
'
379,904,350
bank currency issued (weekly and Rggregate), and the
tain

“

“

(including worn-out notes) returned, with the amount in

Week

Week.—The imports this week

the

for

June 18—St Morro
Gold...'
Silver

Vera Cruz'....
$15,218
;....
16,590

Total for week

,

ending.

Exports

during the week have been as

follows:

circu¬

lation at date:

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
and

$33,051,478
12,146,639

i

1865

amount

Imports

$23,455,564 1859
44,942,564 1858

1866

-

shows

In the Breadstufts market corn

White

Same time in

Same time in
1867

I8b4

from the United States.

lowing

[june 27, 1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

8i0

June 6
*“
13
“
20

100,050

Circulation.

returned.
^ 8,277,646

299,930,175
299,907,625
299,985,635

8,400,346
8,497,846

808,307,971

174,910

Notes in

Notes

Notesissued.
,
Current week. Aggregate.
197,775
380,270,821

308,482,881

received from the Currency Bureau by U. S.
distributed weekly; also the amount destroyed:
Received. Distributed. Destroy’d

dry goods, and in general merchandise, the
being 14,465,888, against $5,013,085 last week, and 14,259,340 the Treasurer and
Week
previous week. The exports are $2,670,477 this week, against $2,359, June ending.
6
445,100
272,830
430,200
661 last week, and $2,546,370 the previous week.
....457,000
424,625
13
503,300
The exports of cot
20
503,181
513,000
257,928
ton the past week were 1,358 bales, against 896 bales last week.
The
Treasure from California.—The steamship Arizona, from Aspicfollowing are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods)
wall, arrived at this port June 22, with treasure for the following
June 19, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) June 20 :
show

a

3.—Fractional currency

decrease both in

total

“

“

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW

1866.

1867.

$2,074,282
4,672,661

$1,840,192

3,278,447

General merchandise...

186S.

$1,034,989
4,331,123

1865.

Drygoods

consignees:

YORK FOR THE WEEK,
-

$960,023
3,505,865

$4,465,888

$5,366,112

Total for the week......

$5,118,639

$6,746,943

Previously reported....

70,615,490

145,694,466

*18.827,396

111,016,220

$75,734,129

$152,441,409

$124,193,508

$115,482,108

Since Jan. 1

In

our

report of the dry-goods trade

will be found the imports of dry

goods for one week later.
The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive ofspeciejfron;
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending June 23 :
EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR

THE WEEK.

»

Total.

The

1868.

$3,928,664

$2,670,477

90,307,182

80,404,521

I860.

$2,023,471
76,912,968

102,495,87 i

$78,936,439

$104,884,214

$94,235,796

$83,074,998

For the week

Previously reported

...

Since Jan 1.

$2,388,335

exports from this port to different countries (exclusive
of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, compared with the
corresponding time of last year, is shown in the following table;
The value of

1868.
,
is week. Since Jan. 1.

To
Great Britain..,

$880,461

France

S

19,970

Holland and Belgium

270,102
56,415

Germany
Other Northern Europe..

73,244

Spain

Other Southern
Hast Indies

132,287

Europe...

23,819

China and Japan

97,030
82,796
132,662

Australia

British N A. Colonies....
Cuba

Hayti

.

..

Other West Indies

162,765

Mexico

1,944
181,815
10,639
88,961
12,034
434,557
t.8,976

New Granada

Venezuela
British Guiana

Brazil
Others. American ports..
All other ports

The

York

1867.
,
Week.
Since Jan. 1.

,

$1,892,598

$43,619,363
4,156,915
2,304346
6,883,133

$52,636,494

103,455
189,637
561,928
54,871
75,812

6,267,600

194,641
38,730
190,802
2,970
170,760
6,140
123,052

756,256
2,546,462

55,773
1,838,798

1,307,833
2,060,188
3,485,283
1,080,143

4,247,967

911,244
1,780,960
321,622

762,421
1,532,067
1,925,123
591,533

1,211,345
1,193,993
1,129,046
2,974,022
634,933
3,527,717

123,110
27,360
47,572
96,887

942,772

2,538,457
10,828,052
768,482
526,679
2,536,647

1,571,848
344,044
642,996
1,370,362

-

763,473

of New

American silver....
18—St. Weser, Bremen—

5,000

Silver bars

81,450
2,000

American

“

gold

16—St City or New

York,

Liverpool
Gold bars
Silver bars
“

.,

.

..

66,400

“

25,270

18—St. Columbia, Havana,
American gold
Total for the week




1,200
55,900

gold

20—St. City of Antwe’ p,

Liverpool—
American

“

gold

.

20—Brig Nile, Maracaibo,
American gold
20—Bark Osprey, Cienfuegos—
American silver..

6,550

420,000

20,000
8,000

$1,890,532
43,702,628

Previously reported

Total since Jan. 1,1868.

3,892

Foreign silver
20—Bark Ilva, Maracaibo,
American

.

A merican silver....

•“

“

**

450,000
17—Bg. Harry Ponce, P. R.,
gold

163,600

gold

Gold bars

89,382
40,206

17—S t. Cuba, LiverpoolGold bars
American

“

American

97,896

Foreign silver,

“

•riftf* *

1.168.779

NTar.22. Arizona

Q 91R find

Steamship. At date. Jan. 1.
Apl. l.H.Chauncey. 864,698 10,081,304
Apl. lO.Oc’n Queen.1,175,754 11,257,058
948,020 12,205,078
Apl. 22. Arizona
Apl. 28.H.Chauncey 466,909 1 2,671,987
May 6.0c’n Queen. 727,849 13,399,836
May22.Arizona... 1,177,496 14,577,332
May 28.H. Chauncey 618,040 15,195,372
Date.

.Tnno 05

$45,593,151

Ari^rvna

1 OKS OK1

16 ORS 409

Statement.—The New Orleans Republican gives
following statement of the debt of Louisiana, from the report of
State Auditor; adding, however, the free school fund bonds which

Louisiana Debt
the
the

he had omitted:
Bonds loaned Consolidated Bank
Bonds loaned Citizens Bank
Bonds issued in favor of Charity

$541,000 00
4,297,333 33

Hospital, Nashville Railroad,

Mexican Gulf Railroad and for relief of S ate
Bonds to Jackson Railroad
Bonds to Opelousas Railroad

Treasury

1,397,000 00

884,000 00

650,000 00

298,000 00
160,000 00
136,000 00

Bonds to Vicksburg and Shreveport Railroad
Bonds to Baton Rouge and Gross Tete Railroad
Bonds to Seminary fund
Bonds to Free School fund
Levee bonds
Bonds for payment of coupons

,

529,000 00
1,000,000 00

494,800 00

Additional Levee bonds

1,787,000 00

Floating debt

1,293,867 81
$13,332,601 14

Total

Virginia Debt Statement.—The Treasurer of the State
has made the
to Messrs.

of Virginia

following exhibit of the State’s indebtedness, in a letter

Thomas Branch 4c Co., of Richmond :
Treasury Office

of

Virginia, )

Richmond, June 19, 1868.

reply to yours of this date asking a
State, I herewith submit the following ;
In

xxuxvuui

Hamb’g,
$368,884

Since

since

776,137

29,286

following will show the exports of specie from the port
for the week ending June 20, 1868 :

June 9—St. Germania,
Gold bars

San Francisco since the commence¬

Steamship. At date. Jan. 1.
Ian. 9.Rising Star $989,464 $989,464
“
22.Arizona.... 951,705 1,941,170
Feb. l.H. Chaunceyl,298,584 8,239,753
Feb. 9.Rising Star.1,255,333 4,495,087
Feb. 20.Arizona
..1,568,161 6,063,248
Mar. 2.H.Channcey. 1,551,270 7,571,680
Mar.ll.Rising Star. 476,147 8,047,827 I
Date.

1.580,612

....

$1,063,050 50

shown in the following statemeh

.

1867.

1865.

976 50

54,826 45

arrivals ot treasure from

ment of the year, are

1,276 00
1,500 00
2,000 CO

Trevor & Colgate

260,954 20

A Belmont & Co

Wells, Fargo & Co

J. & W. Seligman
Ribon & Munoz
G. Hirschfeld
Isaacs Js Aech

139,000 00
60,995 89

Eugene Kelly & Co
Duncan, Sherman & Co..

$323,512 65
125,000 00

Dabney, Morgan & Co...
& Co.

$14,573 54
31,821 70
47,110 61

Panama Railroad Co....
Moritz Mayer
Weil & Co

kjx

oiu

iogjcioi tu uoubi

j

statement of the debt of the
uu

••••••• « • • * • •• • ••••«••• ••••

Amount of old coupon debt
Amount of new debt (funded interest)..
Amount of unpaid interest yet to be funded
.
Amount of interest due to 1st July, 1868, on new debt—funded
and yet to be lunded
Amount of unpaid interest to 1st July, 1868, on old debt—rate 6
per cent, ana only 4 per cent paid
V.
Amount of interest due on old debt to 1st July, 1S68—which will
not be paid
Amount of interact due July, 1867, and January, 1S68—and not

collected
Total
Note.—In the old registered debt there is embraced

12,973,000 00
6,844,957 00
500,000 00

791,246 00

656,966 00
985,448 00
100,000 00
$44,855,915 38

$2,042,655 44, which is
by the sinking fund and literary fund; but $1,800,000 of bonds guaran¬
by the State is not included as part of the debt in this statement.

held
teed
Balance in the Treasury,

17th June, 1867....

Balance In the Treasury, 17th J une, 1868

GEO, RYE, Treasurer of Virginia,

$569,000
197,000

ad inUrim,

•t

June

—

The Richmond and

Fort Wayne Railway

Company.—An agreement

recently been made by which the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton
Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Company join pro rata
in guaranteeing the interest on $1,000,000 bonds, to be used in purchas¬
ing the iron, chairs and spikes. These companies also agree to
the rolling stock in the proportion of 148 to 70 miles,. The
Hamilton and Dayton and Eaton and Richmond Companies are to run the
road on joint pro rata account with the Pittsburgh,Fort Wayne & Chicago.

has

with the

furnish
Cincinnati,

Bonds.—The figures “600” in the ad¬
vertisement of the Union Pacific Railroad, referring to the number of
miles completed, have recently been changed to “640,” and we take
pleasure in calling the attention of our readers in general to the fact
that they are 40 miles nearer to San Franciseo, and to those of our
readers who are holders of Union Pacific Railroad Bonds (as we pre¬
sume most of them are) to the fact that they have got 40 more miles
Union Pacific Railroad

of railroad for their

security.
selling faster than they could be

The bonds have been

issued, an 1

obliged to take orders for their delivery at a future date
of the road admits of further issues.
the bonds has been advanced to 102, which is, perhaps,
the best testimony of their great popularity with investors. The suc¬
cess in negotiating this important loan is similar to that of the Govern¬
ment Seven-Thirty loan, which was taken with such wonderful rapid¬
ity throughout the whole country, ani its security is equally good.
Messrs. J. H. Brower
Co. give notice in our columns of the re¬
establishment of their commission house, from June 1st, instant. We
believe that all parties who are familiar with the history of the firm
will be glad to know of its resuming business.
Manufacturers and all others interested in the purchase or introduc¬
tion of steam boiler improvements, are referred to the advertisement
of E. E. Tiffany & Co., in another column.
The attention of our readers is called to Tiffany & Co.’s advertise¬
ment of Russell’s Patent “Separator and Scourer,” for use in grist
the agents are
as

the progress
The price of

mills.

readers is particularly called to the advertise¬
of American Silks, by the well known manufacturers Messrs.

The attention of our
ment

Cheney Brothers ; the

card will be found on page 823.

Bankers’
™

~

^^DI V iId IE ND8.
Dividends have been declared during

The following

PER

NAME OP

WHEN

CENT.

COMPANY.

PAY’BLE

Banks.
National....
Merchants’ Exchange Nat..

Hanover

North Kiver

4

5
5
4
5
5
6
4
5
4
6
4
6
6
5
5

Peoples

Central National
Fourth National
National Butchers & Drov..
Mechanics National
National Bk. of Commerce.
Atlantic National....

l ..

..

Nat Bank of America....
Citizens National .

Metropolitan National
N. Y. Nat Bank’g Ass
Nat Shoe & Leather

Manufacturers &
Matket National

July I

Providenc •

n

.

At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank

Ccmpany’sOffice

Company’sOffice
Company’sOffice

Imurance.

oples Fire

July 1 Far. L. & T. Co.
July 10 Far. L. & T. Co.
July 1 Company’sOfflce

5
5
6
5

Reading (scrip)

3
5

July
July
July
July

2%

BOOKS CLOSED.

June 20
June 22
—

June 19
June 20
J une 23
June 20
June 20
—

—

-

.

1 Company’sOflice
1 Company’sOflice
1 Conmanv’sOfflce
1 Company’ sOfllde

24
23

June
June
J.ine
June
June
June
June
Ju e
-

23
23
24
23
24
23
-

—

—

June 24
—

—

June 26

July 1“
;June 23

Company’sOfflce

Company’ sOfflce
Company’sOflice
$3
6
Company’sOffice
4
Company’sOfflce
Company’sOflice
Company’sOflice
3% June 27 Company’sOflice
4
July 1 Company’sOffice
4
July 1 Company’ sOfflce

$4

& Newport

Norwich & Worctster

p.

July 5
J uly 10
July 1
July 1
July 1
July 1
July 6
July 1
Juiy 1
July 1

July 1
July 6
July 1

$5

Nebraska....

Metropolitan (Bostor)
Concord & Portsmouth
Eastern (Mass!
Eastern ( ^.H.)
Oil Creek & Allegheny...

1

July

2
2

f!lipmnnor

Panama.
Boston &

July 1

3%

Continental National
N. Y. National Exchange..
Atlantic Nat’l (Brooklyn)..
Railroads.
Dubucpie & Sioux City pre.
Cleveland & Pittsburg

Old Colony

1

4
5
4
6
6

East Kiver National
Grocers National

Chic. Iowa &

July 1
July 1
July 1
July 1

4
6
4

Tenth National

At Bank
A t Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At B6nk
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bank
At Bgnk
At Bank

July 1
July 1
July 1
July 1
July 6
July 1
July 1
.Tilly 1
July 1
July 1
July 1
Juy 1
July 1

4

Merch...

At Bank
At Bank

July 1
July 1
July 1
July 1

6
6

the past week:

WHERE PAYABLE

x

—

legal tenders showed a gain of $3,364,000. The course o
money during the week has been such as might be expected from
this improved state of the banks. The banks have been free
offerers < f money, and to brokers the rate has been generally 3@4
per cent, with very r re exception! at 2 per cent. The beginnings
of a change from this condition of extreme ease are becoming
apparent. The banks are. commencing to place themselves in
readiness for the change to be naturally expected toward the close
of next month. There is more commercial paper offering. The
commission houses have advanced freely to the manufacturers, and
are now
requiring a fair amount of discounts. This the banks are
in a position to grant; but they are unwilling to take paper hav¬
ing 3@4 months to j\n at late rates, and therefor# generally
decline all prime full date paper at less than 6@7 per cent. For
this reason, the rates of discojnt are about 1 per ce t higher than
a week ego ; and as sellers of paper are not at present prepared to
meet the advance, there is a proportionately better supply of money
on call, producing an ease in rates which is more or less deceptive.
The banks report diminished receipts of currency from the interior
and especially from the West. At Chicago there is a more active
demand for money, especially in connection with the lumber trade.
At Cincinnati, there is a con iderable amount of exchange on New
York coming into the market, made against purchases of wool.
At Boston, although the rate on demand loans remains about the
same, there is more discounting, and the rates for paper are report¬
ed about 1 per cent higher. At present the predominant expecta¬
tion here is that call loans will remain easy up to the middle of
July, after which a Lrge demand for money will be experienced.
The following are the quotations for loans of various classes :
the

Percent

Per cent,

Callloans
Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills, 3
months

3 @4
@ 7

.,

5jfr2> 6

Good endorsed bills, 8 &
4 months
do
single names
Lower grades

United States Securities.—Governments

—

—

-

-

June 26

July 3

6’s, 1881 coup
U. 8. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons.
U. 8. 6-20’s, 1864
“
U. 8. 6-20’s, 1866
“
U. 8. 6 20’s, 1865, July cpn
U. S. 5-20’s,1867,c
U. 8. 5-20’s, 1868, C
U. 8.10-40’s,

June 20

There
of the

prices. The range of

108%

exhibited rather

110%

110

110%

111%

111%

113%
113%

112%
112%

113%

113%

112
•

•

•

•

•

•

»

104%

U. 8 7-30’s 8rd series.....
and

109%

no%
110%

U. 8. 7-30’s 2d Series

Railroad
—

hve continued quite

May 22 May 29. June 5. June 12. June 19 June 26*
116%
115
115%
116%
W%
117%
111%
113%
112%
111%
no%
113%
110%
109%
110%
109%
110%
108%

U. S.

June 26

<at
6 <& 8
© ..

priee?, however, has been sustained by investors, who have been
neither refrained from buying at the unusually high quotations, nor
yet have been eager sellers. It appears, indeed, to be generally
conceded that the price of Government securities must in future
range higher than they have heretofore. There has been for the
last few days been a little uneasiness among some holders at the
prospect of the exciting discussion of financial issues in the Demo¬
cratic Convention to be held on the 4th proximo, and this has
caused some realizing yesterday and to-day, of which dealers who
wanted to get in a supply of bonds at lower prices have availed
themselves for breaking down the market to the extent of about
£ per cent. The depression, however, appears likely to prove only
temporary, as the expectation among dealers is very general that the
large interest disbursements of July, together with the payments of
the loans of 1847 and 1848, will cause an unusually active demand
for bonds in July. The Assistaut Treasurer has issued a notice to
the effect that after June 30,1868, the bonds of 1847 and 1818 re>
peetively, will cease to bear interest, and requesting holders to send
them in for redemption. Within the last few days the Treasury
has redeemed about $1,500,000 of these bonds, at a discount equiv¬
alent to the interest from the time of payment to July 1.
The following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬
pared with preceding weeks:

-

—

•

active, the transactions for the week being unusually large.
has been considerable speculative movement on the part

brokers, with consequent fluctuations in

(foa^ette.

■

•

811

THE CHRONICLE.

'

27, 1868.]

105%

106

108%
108%

309%

109%

199%

10

114

X.cl09%
105%
106%
due.
109%
109%
109%

114

109%
107%
110

Stocks.—The stock market has
A sort of indefinite idea has taken

Miscellaneous

more

activity.

have been agreed upon
Mercantile Fire
between Messrs. Eldridge and Drew on the one band and Mr.
miscellaneous.
June 21
4
July 1 Company’sOfflce
Natinnn ITrnst Co.
Vanderbilt on the other, in reference to the Erie management, and
J
23
5
.July 1 Companv’sOfflce
Farmers Loan & Trust
that as soon as this is completed a large dividend will be declared
Friday, June 26,1868, P. M.
The Money Market.—1The week opened with an improved con¬ upon "New York Central, and the iwo leading stocks run up simul¬
dition of the banks.
With an increase of only $1,024,000 in th ■ taneously to much higher prices. This expectation has produced a
generally more buoyant feeling in stocks, and in a few shares there
loans, there was a gain of $813,000 in the deposits of currency
has been considerable activity. Large sales have been registered of
and gold combined, or of $2,837,000 ia currency deposits, while




—

une

...

hold o! the street that terms of co -operation

[June 27,1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

612

Reading. Michigan Southern, Rock Island and Northwestern. It in the receipts of customs were $124,000 in gold, and $1,711,671
in Gold Certificates.
appears, however, doubtful how far these are bona fide transactions
The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubBeading has been run up on a large “ short ” interest in this city
and Philadelphia ; considerable amount of stock, however, has Treasury since April 4 :
Weeks
Custom
Changes in
Sub-Treasury
been bought for covering these contracts within the last few days.
Balances.
House.
Ending
Payments Receipts. Balances.
The injunction restraining the Directors of the Northwestern Co. May 2....
Dec.
2,131,831
27,813,127
22,172,626 101,208,223
5,640.605
Dec.
106,970
34,789,865
2,2*4,604
34,896,835 101,315,865
from declaring a stock dividend has not yet been removed ; and the May 9....
Inc.
68,678
2,402,484
30.0*5,338
30,149.0'6 101,378,870
vay 16....
,

Directors

are

the restraint

understood to have deternrned that, if

be continued, they will make a dividend in cash
Pacific Mail has been active in connection with

instead of stock.
a

movement for

May 23....
rMay 0
June 6
June 13
June 20...
..

..

2,162, 17
2,240,980
1,900,118
1,682,483
1,835,670

32 512,267

31,225,382
51 170,721
30,090,497
12,505,201

42,162,953
29,601.023
14.317,045

25,947,576

25,523,528

Inc.
Inc.
Dec.
Inc.
Dec.

102,685,765
94,677,986
94 188,612

96,060,267
95,636,220

1,806,688
8,007,768
489,474
1,871,756
424,047

“

cornering ” a large short interest in the stock, the price having
Foreign Exchange.—This week, there appears to have been
103J. In State stocks there has been an active specu¬ rather more demand for exchange from merchants, and the supply
lative movement, with a further rise in prices.
of commercial bills having been quite light, rates have been firm at
The following were the closing quotations at the regular board
figures leaving a narrow margin for the shipment of specie.
compared with those of the six preceding weeks:
The following are the closing quotations for the several classes
May 15. May 22. May 29. Jane6. June 12. June 19. June 26. of
foreign bills,compared with those of the three last weeks
Cumberland Coal
34
36
34%
advanced to

Quicksilver

50
9
129

Mariposa pref....

New York Central
Erie
Hudson River....

128%
69
136

Reading
Mich. Southern..
Michigan Central

44

84%
105%
67%

29%

8%

133%
69%

141%

141%
96%
89%

140

140

100%

101%
92%

94

70

119%

120

86%
108%
68%
81%

87%
107%

79%

97%
115%
148%
31%

•

•

.

•

....

89%
107%
x.d.65
x.d.77%
105%
111%

154%
29%

....

69%

90%

111%

102
111
150

The Gold Market.—In the Gold Room

29%

69%

81%
103%

•

.

90%
103%
69%
79%
105%
112%
156

.

30%

there has been less

speculative movement than last week, and the premium has been
left more than of late to seek its natural level. On the price touch¬
ing about 140£ there has been large buyers, and, judging from the
present temper of the market, it would require (onsiderable changes
in the circumstances influencing the value of gold to put the price
below 140. The effect of the payment of the July interest appears
to nave been fully discounted.
The merchants are known to be, in
many cases, “short” on gold, and hence the rate “for borrowing”
has ranged from 5 per cent per annum to £ per cent per day. The
shipments of specie for this week appear likely to exceed those of
last week. The Treasury has decided to commence the payment of
the July interest on Monday next.
The fluctuations in the gold market, and the business at the Gold
Board during the week closing with Friday, are shown in the fol¬
lowing table :
Quotations.

*

Open- Low- High

Cos-

Total

—Balances

,

est,

est.

140%
140%
140%
140%
140%
140%

140%
140%
140
140%
140%
140

140%
140%
140%
140%
140%
140%

ing.
clearings. Cold. Currency.
140% 39,2^1,000 $1,309,660 $2,239,613
140% 28,103,000 1,017,322 1,435,897
140% 30,502,000 1,039,483 1,554,283
140% 53,155,000 1," 21,434 2 136,323
140% 36,175,000 1,212,834 1,852,330
140% 31,102,000 1,041,834 1.713,779

Current week
140% 140
140%
Previous week.
140
139% 141%
Jan. 1 *68, to date.... 133% 133% 144

140% 218,288,000 7,150,567 10.932,225
140% 319,160,000 10,905,407 16,163,256
140%

...

The movement of coin and

bullion at this

ending on Saturday, June 20, was

port for the week
as shown in the following formula :

Treasure receipts from California
Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports
Com interest paid from U. S. Treasury in New York

$62,116
233,000

Reported new supply thrown on market

Withdrawn for export
Withdrawn for customs

Withdrawals in

excess

$1,890,532
1,923,000—

..

of

reported

new

$11,193,631
9,124,830

of

$2,068,801

r

$1,449,615

sources

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

Treasury have been

as

follows

do short

Antwerp

:
.

Sub-Treasury

Receipts.
$316,480 59

Payments.
$11,628,389 17

430.944 27

659,823 20
1,013.233 16
628,794 74
4,705,063 37
7,412, *72 69

17.
18.

36*, 196 61
363,808 04

19.
20.

187,440 95

168,800 45

Total
$1,835,670 81 $25,947,576 23
Balance in Sub-Treasury morning of June 15

—,

Receipts.
$9,600,613 38
1.106,535 65
1,352,818 87
1.266.494 54
4,893,037 44
7,304.029 65

$25,523,528 93
96,060,267 31

Swiss

....

Hamburg
Amsterdam
Frankfort
Kremen

Berlin

Balance

on

Saturday evening

Total amount of Gold Certificates




25.947,576 23

the week

Decrease during the week

©110%
110%@ 110%
6.1:i%@5.12%

$95,636,220 oi
424,047 30

issued, $605,000:

Included
•

i

&
no @i:o%
@110%
no%@ 110%
110%© 110%
6.13% @5.12% 5.18%@6.18%
5.11 %@5.10
6.11%@5.10
5.i6%@5.13% 5.16%@5.13%

6.11%@5.10
5.16% ©5 18%
6.16 J4 @5.13%
36%@ 86%
41%@ 41%
41 %@ 41%
79%@ 79%
71%@ 72

...

110

5. >6% ©5.13%

36%@
41%@
4I%@
79%@
71%@

5.16%@5.13%

86%
41%
41%
79%
72

36%@
41%@
41%@
79%©
71%@

36%
41%
41

79%
72%

New York City Banks.—The

following statement shows the
City for +he week
ending at the commencement of business on June 20,1868;
condition of the Associated Banks of New York

AVERAGE AMOUNT OF

Net

Circnla-

Loans and
CaDital. Discounts.

Legal

tion.
Deposits. Tenders
Specie.
$3,000,000 $9,459,670 $2,050,383 $768,595 $8,932,823 $2,800,178
11,455
4,264.050 1,695308
2,050,000
5,493,488
213,143
Merchants’...
890,308
7,513,136
5,931,762 2,139,015
3,000,000
464,809
Mechanics
4,073,902 1,221328
180,724
570,515
2,000,000 5,572,954
Union
658,678
471,958 2/438,788
153,541
1,500,000 4,033,987
America
1,785 7.717,544
2326371
974,789
3,000,000 8,745,810
Phoenix
513,275 3,943,467 1,074366
4,834,024
222,027
1,80O,jOO
815.000
177,806
2,077,194
City
1,000,000 4.528.651
749.458
Tradesmen’s
30,938 748,192
1,987,596
1,000,000 3,186,875
Fulton
1,909,428 1,082,550
144,225
600,050 1,968,556
Chemical
223,280
5,088499 1,465329
6,323,183
300,000
868391
21,979
447,512 8,637,411
Merchants’Exchange.... 1,235,000 3,861,508
National
485,155
801,729
798,521
38,061
1,500,000 2,670,313
Butchers’
264,000
661,400
1,910,400
40,100
860,000 2,451,800
499,667
Mechanics and Traders’.
1,732,748
18,492 195,720
600,000 2,206,133

Banks.
New York
Manhattan

Greenwich

Leather

Manuf. National

Seventh Ward, National.
State of New York
American Exchange
Commerce

Broadway

200,000
600,000
500,000

2,000,000

5,000,000

10,060,000
1,000,000

Ocean
Mercantile

1,000,000

1,000,000

Pacific

422,700

2,O0o,OO0

Republic
Chatham

450,000
412,500
1,000,000
1,000,000
500,000
4,000,000
400,000

North American
Hanover

Irving
Metropolitan
Citizens
Nassau
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather
Corn Exchange
Continental
Commonwealth
Oriental
Marine
Atlantic

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

1,000,000

2,000,000
750.000

300,000
400,000
300,000

Importers and Traders’..

1,500.000

1,161,722
3.329,996
1,217,941
5,048,941
10,442,681
24,277,527
5,874,752
3,503,329
3,345,607
1,981,037
4,344,355
2,032,236
1,314,279
2.579,096
2,437,915
1,582,000
11,931,177
1,723,814
2,075,154
2,738,263
2,757,890
4,593,100
4,260,430
4,165,168
2,802,309
1,339,373
1,847,046
1,325,896

9,260,173

2,000.000 15,559,559
Mechanics’ Banking Ass.
500,000 1,094,598
Grocers’
803,824
300,000
North River
400,000
1,416,005
East River
995,073
350,000
Manufacturers & Mer....
500,000
1.306.503
Fourth National
17,040,052
5,000,000
Central National
3,000,000 12,996,822
1.299.503
Second National
300,000
Ninth National
1,000,000 5,838,320
First National
500,000 4,177,299
Third National
1,000,000 3,904,936
931.651
New York N. Exchange.
300,000
Tenth National
1,000.060 2,893,000
New York Gold Exch’ge
956,437
Bull’s Head
200,000 1,704,464
256,972
National Currency
JOO.OOO
740,171
Bowery National
250,000
453,147
Stuyvesant
Eleventh Ward
478,322
1,128,155
Eighth National
Park

82,520300 274,117,608

Total

The deviations from the returns of
Dec $1,024,416

Specie

Dec. 2,068,801
Dec.
47,726

Circulation

The

following

are

8,445
113,283 267,379
53,044
177,791
182,279
330,000
325,920 988,854
559,509 5,945381
50,436 900,000
120,988 798,465
481,467
43,405
133,915
38,132
858,750
354,327
30,879 129,903
6321
43,314
333,000
106,863
50,942
290395
185381
9,000
175,404 2,180,967
20,906
132,337
4,070
38,113
592,959
152,271
752.417
29,247
942,671
24,167
6342
25,838
565,030
39,695
240.127
48,241
6370
8,725
360,000
109,046
99,809
20,265
498,151
37,642
203319 1,025,000
6,496 308,878
6,711
72,250
19,760
11,329
714
283300
13,589
' 786
148,115 2,954,353
61,703 1,734,042
270,000
902,012
22,056
28,782
429394
247,492
797,017
5359 267,977
83,400 913300
543,967
"7,565
6,734
90,000
2,908

825,764
2,410356
786,205
4,330,921
5,663376
7.424,932

4,821317
2,289,433
2,742315
1,708328
3,923348
1,936329
1,213331
2368376
1,408343
1355,000
6,476,825
1,462.475
1,797,614
1,951385
1389,053
3,144300

3,149,789

2,634,526
2,513,091
1,175,906
1312344
1,014,670

7,574,767
18,781,463
1,155,999
733,853
1,182,709
654,869
1,014,189
14,886,962
13,662,135
1,042,422
5,680,157
4.419355
8,375364
685,027
1,976,600
•

124 254

956,709
404376

1,768,731
1,746331
7,115356

1388,436
685,974
772,145
467,072

2,054,479
492,119
269,740
554,000
436,487
446,000

1,992333
894,789
586,799
843324
475361

1311,600
452,000

832 000

279,980
526,472
275311

1,985362
5,490,188
476339
258353
287301
204306
242,633
5,651374
43'9,441
857,059
1.970336

1360,694
948,604
276,795
750,600

860334

153367
185.618

897,101

3,147

221,100

1,947,439
326367
516,144
421,823
389309

9,200

250.000

1,120365

106,622

’81325

9,12433034,119,120 211,484387 72,567382

previous week are as follows:

Deposits..
Inc.
Legal Tenders ........Inc.

$813,622
3,864,742

the totals for a series of weeks past:
CirculaLegal
Aggregate

Deposits. Tenders. Olearines.
180,956,846 51,709,706 667,783,138
April 11. 252,936,725
179,851,880 61.982,609 493,871,451
April IS. 254.817,936
181,832.523 60.833,660 623.718,923
April 25 252,314.617
180,307,489 63,866,757 602,784,154
May 2. 257,628,672
191.206,135 67,863,599 688,717,892
May 9 265,755,883
199,276,668 67,541,8^7 607,0:’8.667
May 16 267,724,783
201,318,305 67,613,095 480,186,908
‘-02,5 7,550 62,*83,002 488,7 6,142
May 23. 267,881,^79
M y 30. 268,117,490
204,746,964 65,633,964 602,118,248
June 6 273,792,867 14,328,531 84,188,159 209,089,665 68,822,028 640,668,829
June 13 275,142,024 11,193,631 34,166,846 210,670,765 69 202,840 630,828,197
June 20. 274,117,608
9,124,880 34,119,120 211,484,887 72,667,682 663,988,817
Boston Banks.—Below we give a statement of the Boston
Loans.

April 4 254,287,891
.

.

$121,583,796 24
Deduct payments during

....

Jnne 26.

June 19.

....

110

Loans

Custom House.

June 15
16.

do

a....
Paris, lone

<§>

..

..

.—

reported supply
Supply received from unreported

3,813,432
3,518,416

Decrease of specie in banks
excess

$295,116

supply

Reported new supply in excess of withdrawals
Specie in banks on Saturday, June 13
Specie in banks on Saturday, June 20

Actual

bkrs’ Ing
do shrt.

do

June 12.

110%© 110%
110%© 110%
109%@ 110
5 13%©5.12%
5.11%@5 10
5.13%@
6.13%©
86%@ 36%
41 %© 41%
41 %@ 41%
79%© 80
71%@ 72

People’s

ing.

Saturday, June 20....
Monday,
22....
44
Tuesday,
44
23....
Wedn’day, 44
24
Thursday, 44
25 ...
Friday,
41
26....

June 6.

London Comm’].,

134%

89%

109%
68%

109%
147%
30%

....

9%

134%

88%

66%
77%
95%

107%
Illinois Central

7%
132%
69%

119%

.

.

24%
49%

25%
,,,

88

85%
105%

76
95

preferred

Rock Island......

143%
94%

87%
.

26%
50

,,

72%

68%

.

Clev. and Pittsb.
Clev. and Toledo.
Northwestern....

.

133%

138
93

90%
86%

26%
51

29%
61%

30%

29%
60%

.

.

.

Specie.
tion.
17 097,299 34,227,108
16 348,150 34,194,272
16,776.642 34,218,581
14,948 647 34,227.624
16,166 873 34,114,843
21,286,910 34,2'6,409
20.939,142 34,193,249
20,476,947 34,183,038
17,861,088 34,145 4 06

National Banks, as

returned to the Clearing House,

May 18

Monday, June

Loans.
Specie.
Capital.
$750,000 $1,560,043 $15,985
154
1,000,000 2,208,899
3,744
2,766583
1,000,000
1,771
1,741,971
750,0t 0

Boston

98,'

1,420,574

600,000
Boylston
1,000,000
Columbian...
Continental
500,000
Eliot
1,noo,ooo
Faneuil Hall.... 1,000,000
Freeman’s
400,000
..

2,301.521
1,296,115
2,417,198
2,112,447

1,000,000

Globe

750.000
Hamilton
Howa d
750,000
800,000
Market
Massachusetts..
800,000
Maverick
400,000
Merchants’
3,000,000
Mount Vernon..
200,000

'

New England... 1,000,000
North
1,000,000
Old Boston
900,000
750.000
Shawmut
Snoe & Leather. 1,000,000
State
2,000,000
Suffolk
1,500,000

Traders’
Tremont

Washington

....

849,182
6,596,597

74>50

-

600,000
2,000,000
750,000

200,000

200,000

927,163

4.925.728
1,679,547
4,568,229

2,465.507
1,770,965
1,920,975
3,136.511

2,025,862
3,275,931
2,411,889
2,761,280
466,090
427,905

Loans

Specie
The

119,882
326,490
66,115
1,135,164
131,948

“

“
“

6....

4....

May
“

11...
18....
25,.,

“
“

1....

June
“

8....

L“
“

15.-.-.

22....

$124,356

Dec.

85,557

are

22,1868

:

797 728

177,370
797,011

1,031,347

362.400
595,-64

841,991
969,649
83:,559
490,7; 6

359,833
990,435
757,795

575, t; 08

590,616
795 940

795,500
174,891
972,258
597,255
799,000
795,500

456,551
344,596
795,675
793,990

395.400
646,052
492,028
99,806

130,000

14,564,614 42,583,871 *25,197 317

191,039
815,165

.

Inc.

6,752

✓-—Circulation.

.

Deposits. National.
36,008,157 25,175,194
36,422,929 24,213,014
3^,417,890 24,231,058

168,023
167,019

36,259,946

2^,231,978

164,331

87,635,406

25,203,234

37,358,776

25, v25,173

160.385
145,248

State.

166,962

160,241
160,151

37,844,742 25,234,465
38,^98,141 25,210,660
40,311,569 25,204,939

159,560

41,470,376 25,194,114
41,738,706 .25,190,565
42,583,871 25,197,317

159,313
159,15

158,902

Banks.—Tho following is the average condition

preceding Monday, June
Total net

Liberties

Manufac. &

100
100

Merch.*,

Nassau*...

(Brooklyn)
National (Gallatin)

Nassau

.

New York
New York

County..
NewYorkExchange.
Ninth
North America...

North River*

I Ocean
Oriental*

Park

*

Bank N.

252,000
500,000 Jan. and July..
400,000 Jan. and July..
Marine
*100 1,000,000 Jan. and July..
Market
25 2,000,000 Jan. and July..
Mechanics’
500,000 Jan. and July..
Mechanics’ (Brook.). 50
60
500,000 May and Nov,.
Mech. Bank. Asso...
25
600,000 May and N ov..
Meehan. & Traders’.
100 1,000,000 May and Nov..
Mercantile
50 3,000,000 Jan. and July.
Merchants’
60 1,235,000 Jan. and July..
Merchants’Exch..
100 4,000,000 Jan. and July..
Metropolitan

Manufacturers’

2,213,000

.

Southwark
Kensington

5,000

2,179,000
2,161,000
1,416,100

8,950
10,632

624,000

1,217,000
3,395,000
2,052,000
1,449,700
1,129,333
1,000,387
1,581,245
1,188,742

534,000
953,000
859,000
578,300
383,000
275,609
620,445
385,000

..

Phoenix.

Republic.
St.

....—

Nicholas’

461,000

Seventh Ward.
Second
Shoe & Leather

219,629
229,170

Sixth
State of New

176,980
6,725
451,710

Stuyvesant*

Tenth.
Third

219,840

Tradesmen’s.

588,009
181,861
270,000
358,952

Union

479,558

25Q,000 1,151,420 15,012
500,000 1,347,907
400,000 1,338,8:16 l’,4i9
Manufacturers’
570,150 1,660,000
799,482
298,552
B’k of Commerce..
250,000
980,757
984,000 2,581,000
1,000,000 3,280,000 18,000
Girard
203,231
826,938
3,285
200,000 1,383,153
Tradesmen's
339,685
872,111
Consolidation
300,000 1,077,661
578,106 1,044,426
1,3-4,719
City
400,100
295,562
991,856
Commonwea.th...
237,000 1,137,013
526,000 1,603,000
Corn Exchange....
500,000 1,835,000
200
693,000 2,196,000
Union
30 ,00J 1,565,000
1,149,000 3,739,000
First
1,000,000 3,920,000
900,774
367,796
Third
974,451
800,000
723,200
218,000
Fourth
225,000
680,073
351,000
133,000
Six h
150,000
409,000
559,000
195,000
Seventh
250,000
768,000
613,000
188,000
Ei glth
797,000
275,000
645,000 1,875,000
Central
750,000 2,405,000
301,000 1,033,000
Bank of Republic
1,000 000 1,809,000
905,000
308,000
Exchange
937,000
300,000
PeBn Township...
Western

Peoples’*

..

York..

.

...

Williamsburg City*.

100
100
50
100
100
100
100
100
60
50
50
50
100
25

20
100
100
100
100

100
100
100
100
100
100
40
60
50

1,000,000 May and Nov .
300,000 Jan. and July..
1,500,000 April and Oct..
3,000,000 Jan. and July..
200,000 Jan. and July..
300,000 Jan. and July..
1,000,000 Jan. and July.
1,000,000 Jan. and Ju y..
400,000 Jan. and July..
1,000,000 Jan. and July..

300,000 Feb. and Aug..
422,700 Feb. aud Aug.
2,000,000 Jan.and July..
412,500 Jan. and July..
1,800, OCX Jan. and July..
2,000,000 Feb. and Aug..
1,000,000 Feb. and Aug..
600,000 Jan. and July.
300,000 Jan. and July.
1,500,000 Jan. and July.
200,000 May and Nov..
2,000,000 May and Nov..
200 0001
1,000,000 Jan. and July..

4

Jan. and
Jan. and

129

5 121
5
5
5

121
5

4 137
6
5 106*

107)4

6

8

6
5

200

5

124*
5 12
5

107

4

108

5 180
JO
8#

4

5
4

5

5 210)4

6

4 105)4 106X
5
8

10
5
5
5
4

119
119
109

6
6
5 145
5

July ’68
4 100*
July ’68........6 150
July ’68
5
July ’68
5 126*
Jan. ’68
6
May ’68
5 121
May ’63
5
•

•

•

5

way ’68
Jan. ’68

6 122

180

July ’68

6 120

July ’68
May ’68

6
4

134

Apr. 68
July ’68

5

115

8

•

July ’68

6

•

July ’68....

5

107

4

108

5

Jan. ’68

5 ‘35*

Jan. ’68

Jan. ’68

July ’68

4

• «

-

• •

«

5 108
5

Jan. ’68
Feb. ’68

May ’68 extra..5
July ’68
7
July ’68
5
Jan.
Feb.
feb.
Jaa.
Jan.

108
5 120
C 111
4 120

’68
’68
’68
’68
’68

July ’68

5 114)4

May ’68

U3

•

July ’68
July.. Jan. ’68
July.. July ’68
1,000,000
1.500.001 May and Nov.. May ’68
Jan. ’68
500,300 Jan. and July.

1,000,000

140

5

& Trad.*..

comparative totals for a series of weeks past

310,000
800,000
500,000
250,0-0

Bid. Ask

Last Paid.

Periods.

Amount

.

Pacific

Commercial.......
Mechauics’

g

33

..

695,407

233,133

o

.

179,2 s 0

299,121

National.)

Friday.

Dividend.

100 3,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’68
500,000 Jan. and July.., Jan. ’68
100
American
100 5,000,000 May and Nov... May ’68
American Exchange.
75
300,000 Jan. and July.., July ’68
Atlantic
’an. and July.., July ’68
50
500, 000 J;
Atlantic (Brooklyn).
100
250,000 Jan. aud July., Jan. ’68
Bowery
’an. and July.., Jan ’68
25 1,000, 000 J
Broadway
50
300,000 Feh. and Aug.. Feb. ’68
Brooklyn
Apr. ’68
50
200,000 Quarterly
Bull’s Head*
800,000 Jan. and July . July ‘68
Butchers & Drovers 25
100 3,000,000 Jan. and July . Jmy \>3
Central
50
200,000 Jan. and July . Jan. ’68
Central (Brooklyn)..
25
450,000 Jan. and July. July ’68
Chatham
100
800,000 Quarterly— May ’68
Chemical
25
400,000 Jan. and July.. July ’68
Citizens’
100 1,000,000 May and Nov.. .May ’68
City
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’68
City (Brooklyn)
July ’68
100 10,000,000 Jan. and July.
Commerce
100
750,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’68
Commonwealth
100 2,000,000 Jan. and July.. Ju’y ’68
Continental
Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’68
Corn Exchange* .... 100 1,000,000
Oct. ’67
100
100,000
Currency
30
200,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’68
Dry Dock
50
350,000 Jan. and July.. Jily ’63
East River
100
250,000 Jan. and July.. July ’68
Eighth
inly ’68
100
200,000 Jan. and July
Eleventh Ward
100
150,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. *68
Fifth
100
500,000 .Quarterly ... Apr, 68
First
100
500,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’68
First (Brooklyn)....
100 5,000,000 Jan. and July., July’68
Fourth
30
600,000 May and Nov.. May ’68.
Fulton
500,000 June and Dec. June’68
Gold Exch-nge
25
200,000 May and Nov. May ’6s
Greenwich*
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. July ’68
Grocers’
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’68
Hanover
100 1,500,000 Jan. and July.. 'July ’68
Importers
50
500,000 Jan. and July. July ’68
Irving
Feb. ’68
50
600,000 Feb. and Aug.
LeatherManufact’rs
50
400,000 Feb. and Aug.. Feb ’68
Long Isl (Brook.) ..
50 2,050,000 Feb.and Aug.. Feb.’68
Manhattan*
Jan. and July. Jan. ’68
30

Capital.
Loans. Specie. L. Tend. Depos.* Circulat’n
$1,500 000 $5.0S2,000 $47,000 $1,387,000 $3,362,000 $1,000,0'0
*'ww“v'
1,100,967 2,870,613
786,000
North Ami/ica.... 1,000,000 4,367,665 56,051
714,780
Farmers’ & Mech.. SjOO'^OOO 5,122,055 17,162 1,493,892 4,083,755
Banks.

Philadelphia

42,910,499

America*

383,3:36
245,363

43,731

Philadelphia Banks for the week

of the

not

1,826,345

Circulation

10,626,937
10,630,945
10,630,979
10,631,220

36,574,457

L 1 8 T.

STOiO K

Capital.

(Marked thus * are

353,282

344,032
573,295
771.555

Iuc

43,243,562

Companies.

357,390
242,503
437,216

248,417
3,218,203

Deposits

15,993,145

BANK

356,123

72,429

1,500

43,016,968

182,711

16,078,308

792,477

493,756
1,806,831
980,636
526,042
453,536
736,110

194,286

Legal

Philadelphia

796,745
598.239

592,000
374,322

Tenders.
Specie.
731,540 13,004,924
97,020,925
873,487 12,522,035
97,*50,230
805,486 11,905 603
98,906,805
02,343 677.063 12, v 98,545
815,469 12,656,190
97,624,197
97,332,2-3 1,133,668 11.962,368
96,938,524 1,186,881 12,199,422
97,04i,720 1,018,809 12,848.141
766,553 14,188,806
97,458,997
631,149 14,368,900
98,116,632
561,990 14,373,575
99,513,938
99,3^9,632 476,433 14,564,614

13....
20....
27....

440,098

790,793
1,084,926

216.200
505,769
230,501
264,813

Loi.ns.

April

693.325

404.622

15 837,117

53,381,820

593,748
443,942

weeks returns are as follows :
Legal tender notes
Tnc.

Dec.

following

154.550

63,122,521

53,491,364

June 22

include $158,902 State circulation.

The deviations from last
Capital..,

147,350

16,184,865

53,562,449

.

795,505

702,739
734,950
665,808.

658,877 1,176,403
833,327
166,503
425,636 1.419,590
632,731 1,702,703
626,913
100,257
7*, 581 1,245,967 1,996,093
501,004
482,476
1,337
735,067 1,831,002
15,297
811.555
234,000
735,617
131,000
15,614
924,714
230,750
9,646
911,695
287,142
9,655
735,044
24H,850
2,485
455,252 3,006,506
10,766
236,500 1,177,581
12,639
324, r 05 .- 1,211,874
13,821

42,300,000 99,389,632 476,433

This total does not

*

437,000

10,632,665
10,661,276

36,030,063
36,000.297

799,294

709,311

1,575,839

345,300
162,397
207,900
395,536
95,846

39,870

,

Deposits. Circula.
$447,555
$543,023

284,485
192,129

1,667
2,152,020
'707
3.429.744
27,9.03
3,418,754
12,088
1,080,268
3.286.727 108,373
13,868
1,908,794
4,057,403
9,47i
3,490,454

1,500,000

Total June 22.

$169,460
399,376
351.200

133

2,156,306
1,905 331
1,743,339

1,000.000
1.000 000

Security

1,501

542.971

2,194,918

1,000,000
1 000,000
Exchange
Hido & Leather. 1,000,000

Everett

2197

1,549,821
1,447,407
1,609,293

Third
B’k of Commerce 2,000,000
B’k of N. Amor. 1,000.000
B’k of Kedemp’n 1,000,000
B’k of the Kepub. 1,000,000
1.000 000
City

Revere
Union
Webster

40,748
1,945
1,507
1,054
3,114
8,175
1,075

(Granite) 1,000,000
300,000

Eagle

4, 292

1,186,077
2,567,445
1.608.743

1.000.000

First
Second

L. T. Notesi.

15,381,545
15,823,099

383,525
2S0,302
239,371
226,581
175,308

53,494,583
53,463,225

....

Mav 25
.'une 1...
June 8
Jur e 15

22, 1868.
Banks.
Atlantic
Atlas
Blackstone

815

THE CHRONICLE.

27,1868.]

June

•

•

<

•

•

•

«

4

....

...6

..

6
...5 118
8#

212,920

450,000
227,000
798,000
261,830
133,765
135,000

219,000

..

240,000

£93,000
417,500
175,000

.

BANKING AND FINANCE,
i he First Mortgage Gold Bonds of the Rockford, Bock Island
and St. Louis Railroad Company are offered at 95 per cent of their par
value, bearing 7 per cent interest in gold, payable semi-annually, on
Feb. 1 and Aug. 1, ia New York or London, at the option of the
holder, free of aDy government tax.
The first coupon is payable on
Feb. 1, 1869. Each bond is for $1,000, or £200 sterling, and both

15,99d,145 43,243,662 10,631,220 principal and interest is payable in gold coin. The bonds are also con¬
vertible into stock at the option of the holder. These bonds are a first
This column includes amounts due to hanks.
class security, being the first lien on a road through the coal districts
The deviations from last weeks returns are as follows :
156,028 of Illinois at the rate of $25,000 per mile, covering the coal lands
Legal Tenders.. .Increase
Capital
Increase . 126,592
Loans
Increase
$259,299 Deposits
241
belonging to the company, as well as the railroad property. The bonds
Increase.
Increase .
Specie
7,403 Circulation.
run for fifty years.
The company is organized on the plan of the Del¬
The annexed statement shows the condition of the Philadelphia
aware, Lackawana and Western Railroad Company, combining with
Banks for a series of weeks.
the ordinary operation of a railroad the possession of coal lands, and
Circula.
Loans.
Date.
Specie. Legal Tend. Deposits.
10,642,670 the mining, transporting and selling of coal.
The stock will be, with¬
31,278,119
13.208,625
215,835
52,2C9.234
Apr. 4
10,640,923 out doubt as valuable as that of the Delaware, Lackawana and ‘West’
32,255,671
14,194,<85
250,-40
52,266,°49
Apr. 11
10,640,479
33,950,952
14,493,287
52 989,780
222,229
Anr. 20....
34,767,290 10,640,312 ern Railroad Company. These bonds are for sale by
14,951,106
204,699
52,812,623
Apr. 27
10,631,044
86,109,937
14,990,832
314,366
53,333,740
May 4....,
D. A. BOODY, Banker, No. 12 Wall street.
36,017,596 10,629,055
iMwa?
mm
Total, June 8

...

16,017,150 53,381,820 182,711

*

>

.

...

May U..




.

w.tb.w

.

814

[June 27, 1868.

THE CHRONICLE.
NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES LIST.

Subscribers will confer a great favor
Amount

DENOMINATIONS.
Marked thus *

are

la default for Interest.

Outstanding

by giving

INTEREST.
Rat*.

Prlncl
•al

I?

Payable.

ue.

us Immediate notice of any error

| FRIDAY,
I Bid

Marked thus *

are

Outstanding ^

in default for interest,

MAssACHus.(Jan.l,’68)$24,664,440
National (Juue

State Almshouse Loan
do
do
do
State House Loan

1,1868).

Bearing Coin Interest—
Loan of ’47 (act Jan. 28, ’47), reg.
do
’48 (act Mar. 31, ’48), reg.
do
’48 ( do
do ), cpn.
Loan of ’61 (act Feb. 8, 61), reg.
do
’61 ( do
do ), cpn.
Oreg. War (act Mar. 2, ’61), yearly
do
( do
do ),\year.
Loans (acts July 1,’61 A Mar. a,

$8,582,641

Jan. & July

18,415,000

do
do
Jan. A July
do

264,246,200

Jan. A July

1881

do

1881

May A Nov.
do

1882
1882

Slay A Nov.

1884

do

1884

do

so
a*.

-3
CK

May & Nov 1885
do

1885

May & Nov.

1886
1886

us

do
Jan. A July

_

Loan: 10-40’s (actMar.3,’63),re^.
‘do
(do
do ),cpn.

Loan, funding Public Debt,

do
do
do
Back Bay Lands Loan
Union Fnnd Loan
do
do
do
Coast Defense loan

20,000,000
7,022,000

193,790,400

do
Jan. A July
do
Jan. & July
do

Mar. ASept.
do

|l09%

Bounty Fund Loan

no

do

113 %
109* 110 *
111

,‘■18%

|iii%

Ul%

113%

114

1887
1887 iii" 114%
113
1874 114
1874 120
1871

124"

1871
1904
1904

do
do

do

Pacific HR.B’ds(Jul.l’62&Jul.4,’64
Treas. Notes (act Mar. 3,’65)2d ser,
do
( do
do)3dser

Comp.Int.Notes (act of Mar.3*63)
Three percent. Legal Tender cer
titicates (act of Mar. 2, ’67)
-

Bearing no Interest—

25,902,000
105,610,650
21,604,890

Jan. A July
Jun. A Dec.
Jan. A July

do

4,379,500

do

4,000,744

(sterling)

War Loan (currency)
Western Railroad Loan (sterl’gj
Troy A Greenf. RR. Loan (st’g)
do
do
(home)
Sonthern Vermont RR. Loan
Eastern Railroad Loan
Norwich A Worcester RR. Loan
Michigan (Nov. 30,’67) $3,610,500
Renewal Loan Bonds
Two Million Loan
War Loan Bonds
War Bounty Bonds
Ste Marie Canal Bonds

106% }07%
107% 107% Minnesota (Nov. 30, ’67) $325,000:
State Buildings Loans
do
(new)....
do

1895
1868

109% 110

I109%

1868
1868

110

(act Mar, 3, ’63)
Matured Debt not presented....

Gold Certificates

20,298,180

’67) $4,066,210:

Of Oct. 1, 1865
do
of July 1, 1866
N. Jersey (Feb. 20,’68) $3,196,100:
War Bonds of 1861 (tax free)...
of 1863 (tax free)

do
do
Arkansas (Juljrl, ’66) $1,509,000:
State Bonds* (Real Estate Bank)

* (State Bank)
©allpornia (July 1,’67) $5,101,500:
do

Civil Bonds of 1S57
Ids
of 1860
do
soldiers* Relief Bonds
do
Bounty Bond s
€onnecti’t (Jan.1’67) $10,0v>0,000

11

War Bonds (May,
do
do
do

’61) 10 or 20y’r

(Oct ,’61) 10 or 20 y’r
(Nov., ’63) 20 years

do

do
do

(May, ’64) 10or 20 y’r

do (non-taxab )(May, ’65) 20 y’ r
Delaware (
) $
:
State Bonds to Railroads
Florida (Feb., ’68) $50U,0J0 :
State Bonds
Georgia (Oct. 15, ’66) $5,706,500:
Western & Atlantic lilt. Bonds
do
do
do
Bonds, per act March 12,1866...
.

Western A Atlantic RR. Bonds,
do
do
do
Atlantic & Gulf RR. Bonds
Illinois (Mar. 1, ’68) $6,621,289:
.

Ill. A Mich.CanalB'ds.coi^xw
do ..regid'd
do
State Bonds
do
do
do
do
do coupon
do
War Loan Bonds

|
\

}

.

,

do

of Nov, 1840

do

(various)

Military Bonds
LO tJiSLANA(Jan. 1/67) $13,357,999:
f

-•
.

Bonds loaned to Bank
do
do for RR. Stocks, etc.
do
do for Schools
do
do for Levees

t:!,

do

(funding coupons) 1866..

State Bonds proper

Maine (Jan. 1 ’67) $5,127,600:
.

.Mass. Land Debt of 1853

f'

'Civil Loan Bonds, 1855-61
tsJWar Loan of 1861
do
-

do

of 1863

’Bounty Loam of 1863

.War Loan of 1864
H

Hyland (Oct. 1, ’66)$12,428,689:

Bonds (to RR’s. A Canals)
do (
do
do

Vlo

610,000
3,555,50
187.500
213.500

1,145,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000

500,000
100,000
176,000
3,030,000
1,519,000
75,090
734,000

685,000
4,838,933
2,575,000
665,000
1,000,000
409,800

750,000

..

do

Jan. A

1885

July

var.

Jan. A

July 1872
May A Nov 1874
Jan. A July 1886
do
68-’74|
May A Nov. 1874
Feb. A Aug. 78-’86|

July

May A Nov

,

101%

100%
100%

100%

1866
1868

..

July 1881

Jan. A

July ’76-’97|
July.
’83-’84f

Jan. A July

1868

Apr. A Oct. ’71-’72

May A Nov.

1870

Various,
do

’68-’73
’80-’95

Feb. A Ang. '68-’86
Various.
69-’99
Jan. A July 1897

Various.
1886
Feb. A Aug. 86-’87
Jan. A July 1893

do
do
(new)
Military Loan Bonds

Rh. Isl. (Apr. 3o, ’67) $3,606,500:
War Bonds of 1861
do
do of 1862
do
do of 1863
do
do of 1863
do
do of 1864
South Carolina (... .)$5,284,611
Fire Loan Bonds
State Bonds (old)
do
do
(new)
Tennessee (Oct.l,’67)$82,562,323:
Bonds loaned to RR’s., etc
Bonds endorsed for RR’s., etc..
Funded Interest (new bonds)
State Bonds (debt proper)
do
do
(
do
)
do
do
(
do
)
Vermont (Feb., ’68) $6,039,500:
War Loan Bonds
Virginia (June ’68) $42,813,260:
Dollar Bonds (old),
coupon
do
do
(old), registered
Funded Interest (new), coupon.
do
do
(Dew), regist’d.
Wisconsin (Feb. 28,’68) $284,100):
State Bonds

(101%

1879
1879

do

Jan. A

99

76’77 100%

do

Jan. A

1870
1870
60 ’65
69 ’70

98

800,000

525,000
475,000
3,832,500

Baltimore ($21,928,656):
Internal Improvement Stock...
do
do
do
Jail Stock

63

...

October.

Various.
do

Mar.A Sept
Feb. A Aug.
Jane ADec.

Water Stock
Pittsb. A Connellsv. RR. Loan
Baltimore A Ohio RR. Loan
Park and Park Improve. Stock.
Defense Loan

67-’72
’67-’78
1871
1883
1880

...

Floating Debt Stock

1889

Boston

1,878,893
185,420

J.,A ,J.AO. 1870
do

1890
1889

dc

1890

do
do

(

de

525,008
1,525,507

do

6,700,6581 6

100,000 7
100,000 7
125,000 8
100,000 7

do
do

’85-’89

609,500

500,000

pal

Payab,e‘

Bid

Due.

Asked

May A Nov. 1872 112%
Apr. A Oct. ’73-’74
do

’73-’74

Jan. A July

1874

Apr. A Oct. 1868

June ADec 1877
Jan. A July 1870
June ADec. ’68-’72
’68 ’72
do
May A Nov. 1882
Jan. A July ’71-’76

’77-’78

do
do

1S83
1S94

do

May A Nov.

do
Mar. A

1894
1894

Sep. ’71-’86
Apr. A Oct. ’6S-’71
’89-’90
’91 ’93

do

do

1890
do
Jan. A July ■67 ’71

1877

do

Jan. A July
do
do

98

1878

7S-’83

95

1886

May A Nov 189C
Jan. A July 1879
Jan. A

July 1877
1878

’41-’71

July ’62-’90 94% 94%

Jan. A

’82-’90
’81-’87
’8l-’85 94%

do
do

do

94%

99%

Jan. & July
May A'.Nov.
Apr. A Oct.
Jan. A July
Jan. A July 67-’84
’86-’96
do
’07-’O2
do

1,599,800
1,002,900
593,400

J.,A.,J.AO 1870 102
Jan. A July ’68-’78 101%
’68-’78
do
J.,A.,J.AO ’72-’75

700,000
1,689,780
3,042,567
10,760,000

ioi%

’68-’70
do
7 Jan. A July 1877
1877 108
do
7

3,272,900

\l
6

Jan. A

July ’68-’92

April A Oct.

Jan. A

’68-’92

July ’93-’00

111

*08%

77%

83
78

76

76%

4,095,309
2,400,000
558,577

6
6
6
6
6
6

Jan. A July 1868
99
1870
do
1875
do
1881
do
1886 102
do
’68-’71
do

182,711

7

J8n. A

4,993,000
5,083,052
400,000
912,313
22,086.687
3,000,000

5
5
6
5
6
6

1,600,000

468,50° 6
1,196,000 6
269,000 6
776,000 6

917,000 6
798,808 5
3,275,000 6
1,210,803 6

July ’75-’85

Various,

’77-’82

do

’68-’70

1879
& July ’77-’92
’77-’92
do

Apr. A Oct.
.

Aug.

1871

Apr. A Oct.

1S71

ASept.

1882

Apr. A Oct.

1883

J.,A..J.AO.

68’70
71-’91
1887

Feb. A

Mar.

105

July 1893
Feb. A Aug 1894

Jan. A

Jan. A July
do

fan. A July Long.
21,914,000 6
do
Long.
2,207,000 6
do
4,585,156 6
Long 76%
17%
1,706,000 6
Apr. A Oct. Var.
Var.
do
239,166 5%

<7

77%

.

1,398,640

6

6,039,500 6
12,973,000
19,961,643

j- 6,844,957
284,100 6

do

Var.

Jun. A Dec

’71 ’78

fan. A July
do
do
do

Long. 58% 58%
Long,
Long. 57%
LODg.

Jan. A

July ’77 ’85

Municipal Securities

.

150,000
845,000

do
do




do
do
31st Dec., 1875
do
do
30th June, 1881..
do
do
31st Dec., 1886 ..
Domestic Bonds
Oregon
(April, ’65) $182,717 :
Relief and Bounty Bonds
Pknn’a (Nov. 30, ’67) $36,475,052 :
State Bonds (old),
coupon
do
do
(old), registered ...
Inclined Plane Bonds
State Bonds (new)

April AOct. ’74-’84|100

4,517,650

874,000
1,421,000
339,000
251,000

6
6
7
7
6

1,081,500
463,000
100,000

..

Jan. A July ’71-’81 100
do
72-’82 100
do
1863 100

do
do
do

9!),475

216,000|

1,750,000

,

Jan. A July 1877 134
1880
do
do
83-’85
do
’83-’85

Jan A July
do

739,500

400,000

Bounty Fund Bonds, coupon..)
do
do
do
registered) 26,862,000
N.Carolina (Oct 1,’67)$13,970,070:
Bonds for rai1 roads, etc
|
do
do
do ex coup \ 10,210,500 j
Funding Bonds
2,259,500j
Ohio (Nov. 15, ’67) $11,179,702:
Loan (Union) due July 1, 1868..
280,366
Loan due after 31st Dec., 1870
2,183,532

Apr. A Oct. 1861
Jan. & July 1868

1,339,438

(

do
«•

899,000

300,000

issued from ’61 to ’67..
Funding Ter. Debt. Ac..
Kentucky (Oct 10,’67) $5,238,692:
State Bonds of July, 1838.
do
do of April, 1841-42...
dc*

1870

4,525,719
395,000

Xinsas (Feb. ’68; $844,475:

do

do

156,000
608,200

War Loan Bonds

d

770,560

)

Iowa (Feb. ’68) $300,000 :
War Fond Bonds
Bonds
Bonds

1883
1885
1886

)

Indiana (Nov. 1, ’67) $5,396,613:
State Bonds

i

do
do
Jan. A July

of 1864

N. Yo^k (Oct. 1, ’67) $48,356,622:
General FundLoans
do
do
do
do
do
do
Canal Fund Bonds
do
do
do

May A Nov. 1872

712,800

(extended)
do
do
(
do
)■
Sterling Bonds (extended)
do

Edo

210,000
2,361,250
65,000

275,000

State Bonds (Banks)*
7,000,000 6
Missouri (Jan. 1, ’68) $22,822,354:
State Bonds
555,354
Railroad Bonds (various)*..
12,499,000
Pacific RR. Bonds*
6,768,000
Hannibal A St. Joteph Bonds..
3,000,00
New Hampshire (June
1,1867):
War Debt of July 1,1861
1,194,100|
do
of Sept. 1,1864
600,000

“

State Bonds
do

Mississippi (Jan. 1, ’67) $...,

do

10,834,202

State Securities*

Alabama (Nov. 1,

Loan of 1858
Sioux War Loan 1862

3,505,000
4,355,516
654,180
966,500
200,000

....................

50,000,000

356,144,212
32,531,589

U. S. Notes (greenbacks)
Fractional Currency

6
5
5
6
5
6
5
5
5
5
5
6
5
5
5
5
5
6

50,000
150,000
53,000
247,000
220,000
3,000,000
600,000
888,000
200,000

General Statutes Loan

,

Bearing Currency Interest—

150,000 6

—

do
do
cpn.
Loan: 5-SO’is (act Feb. 25,’62),rap.

do ), cpn.
Lit an: 5-20’s(act Mar. 3, ’64), reg.
do
(do
do ), cpn.
Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar. 3, ’65), reg.
do
( do
do \cpn.
Loan: 5-20’s (act Mar.3,’65N),r^.
do
( do
do ),cpn.
Loan : 5-20’s (act Apr. 12,’66),reg.
do
( do
do )cpn._
Loan of’58 (act June 14, ’58), reg.
do
( do
do ), cpn.
Loan of’60 (act June 22, ’60), reg.
do
( do
do ), cpn.

1868

July.
Jan. & July

.

Lunatic Hospital (West. Mass.)
do
do
do
(

1868
1881
1881
1881
1881

do

(

1867

1,016,000

’63), reg.

do

Lunatic Hospital. Ac., Loan

5

$100,000

110,000 5
165,000 5
94,000 5

......

FRIDAY

Princ!

INTEREST.

amount

DENOMINATIONS.

) Asked

discovered In our Tables.

97

98%

($12,845,376):
Municipal Bonds

do
do
do
do (currency)
Water Loan Bonds

do

do

do (currency)..

15,422}

4,1*5,399

250,000
4,335,084
1,000,000
5,000,000
723,966
2,192,168

325,000|

6,088,200
1,000,060
1,800,000
1,088,000

336,000

Tune ADec. ’67 17F

F.M.A.AN. ’74 ’76
do

do
do
do
do
do

do

’70 ’79
75 ’7f
’67 ’95
’67 ’95,
'67 ’91
1887
1878 :
’09 ’72

May A Nov. ’73*75
Various.
Various.

Quarterly.

Various.

’75 ’92
’83 ’90
’78 ’76

1894

98%

9S%

815

_
June

THE CHRONICLE.

27,1868.]

EXCHANGE,
ENDING FRIDAY, JUNE 26, TOGETHER
IN THE SAME WEEK.

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK
REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF ^HARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS
STOCKS AND

SECURITIES.

American Gold Coin (Gold
D.&]. §
United States 6s,

6s, 1881 ..registered 113
V
6s, 5-20s (’62)coupon.
109V
6s, 5-20s do regist'd
113V
6s, 5-20s(’64)coupon.
6s, 5.20s do regist'd 111V
6s, 5.20s (’65) coupoh
6s, 5.20s do regist'd 114
6s, 5.203 (’65 n.) coup

do

do

do

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

do

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

do

do

do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do

do

113V

111V
109V
111V

6s, 5.20s do regist'd
6s, 5.20s (1861) coup.
6s, 5.20s do regia'd
6s, 5.20s (1868) coup.
6s, 5.20s do regis'd

2,741,500

311,500

110

—

Ind. ...100
roD5’PaLn£8v-& Ashtabula. 100
60
Cleveland and Pittsburg
Cleveland and Toledo.
Delaware, Lackawana and

Dnbnqne & Sioux

—

6s, Oregon Wai 1881
6s,
do. (hy'rly)
6s, Pacific R. R., is.

102V

~

102V

-

Hannibal and St.

Harlem

—_

110

7-30s T. Notes. 2 d se.
do
do 3d series 110

63

—

(new)
Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860
do Registered, 1860

36,009

99

do

Kentucky 6s, 1868-72

I!

....

Louisiana 6 s

Michigan 6s, 1883
do
7s, War Loan, 1878

98V

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

do
6s, (Pacific RR)
New York 7s, 1870
do
6s, 1873
do
5s,1868-76

7s, State B’yB’ds (coup)
do
do
(reg.)

*73%

III!

820

65%
78%

2,300
3,550

134V 134V 134V 133% 134%

10,922

30V 30V

11,850

5,346
55,586

90V

92

61%
77V

64%
77%

..

preilOO

100
98

78V

65
78

65

77V

230

65

65

5
10

*145

loo

100 29V
i00

30V

30
79

350
30

330

10 v
100)4 I02V 1C3V

Alton & Terre Han‘e.100

396,000

73V

*78

*74 V *79

76%

Chicago and Alton, Sinking

426,500
6,000

77V

74V

10

118

400

.

67

67V

C8

46

1,513

47%

47V

48

48

50

100

Fund'

1st mortgage...

do

Sr

Chicago, BnrPton &

Qn°incy‘ 8 n c'

93

Sink! Fund
,d°
Interest
do
5° 10 p* fORipment
1st mort..
3°
Chicagoand Rock°l8lflndni°lid,ted+
Chicago p Tafa island, 1st mort
ClevefamiflTui
7Percent..
do
a„Pitt8^r«-2(1 mort..

68,500

231500

do

106
94

1,000

81

—

12,000

81V

81

82

102,000
1,261,000 Chicago & Northwest.,

Kings Country, 6s..

1,000

—

99V

—

12,000

96V

96V

96

—

—

No.

100
100

120

JL

100
,100

130

—

100
100

*

Continental..

100
100
100

Exchange

Fourth
Fulton

110

110

Merchants....*.
Merchants’ Exchange
Nassau

100
100
100
100

KfK

—

To

—
—

—

50

Ocean
.

iIT

78
55

110

—

Michiganson^fpnfe
MUwankeeand8t.P^n.tm7ort:
134

133

133

420

135

134

Telegraph.—Western Union... .100

Steamship.—Atlantic Mail

100

New

—

9C0
50

49V

3,375
1,900

34V

35

30

—

—

6,290

9

8V

——

-

—

lot V
Pacific Mail
...100 97V 102V 102V 102V
25 V
26V
Union Navigation
100
Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust 25
Union Trust
100
55V 54V
Express.—Adams
100 55
50V 50V 50V 49V
American
500
27
28V
Merchants’ Union
100 27V 27 V 27
50
51
52
United States
100
26V
27
27V 27
Wells, Fargo &Co
100 26V

.

—

101%

200

33,268
500

7,000

96% 96V 96V

2.000
32 500

96

99
90

Central,?Sgage"
do
68,1887....*.’“
York & N. H.^bondfffl*’ ’' ’

Ohio and Mississippi, 1st

5,000

—

101V

99%

99V 99V

—

—

-

94

—

133

98~

98V

mon^ik

44,000
1,000
9,OGO
2.0C0

90

90

90

Newrork

1

—

17V lex
5
SV
4V
50
49V 50
100 49
3TV 35V 35V 34V

Canton

1,000

102

do

50

•
Metropolitan
100
Improvement.—Boat. Wat. Pow. 20
Brunswick City Land....—

2,000

102

MmisandEssexfutmort^

—

50

Manhattan

77%

-

10

50

Gas. '-Citizens

iTmi^!!!

TS5!®®^

•

Pennsylvania

3,000
~

imnoisdc°entralCCd^le- 1867‘

100
100

Miscellaneous Stocks :
Goal.— American
100
Ashburton
100
100
Central
Cumberland
100
Delaware and Hudson... 100

3,000
4,COO

—--

~

HSaiafd St*dj^epfenV.bds

—

100
100
100

Tonth
Tradesmen

97V

97V

4

—

!*....-100

an^Chfcago

1,000

103V
102

..

fd mortgage, 1883....
mortgage, 1880

100

Ninth
North River

122

100

Milwaukee, 1st mort * ’

mortgage, 1868

17

145

—

50

Metropolitan

iot

7,000

99

5® 2d mortgage, 1879....“

65
32

106

—

Prip

—

100
100

Manhattan

171

-—

Galena

100

Importers and Traders
Leather Manufacturers

36
15
10

121

121
120

121

2,000

13,000

92

Clevd1andandd0To,edCo°,D|in,g^F„bnd|
Delaw>e,Lackawda°n.^es7t8,isVm.;

—

*....

9,000

98V 98V
95

PESO?:

—

.

Commonwealth

Phenix
Seventh Ward
Shoe and Leather
State of New York
St. Nicholas

118
91%

91V

91V

do

Jersey City 6s, Water Loan
New York 7s
do
6s 1876
Bank Stocks :
American Exchange
Bank of Repub’ic
Central

Corn

300

Rnfr,iRvv0ad Bonds:
Central of'tF' &/rie’ 2d mort
do
f
Jersey, 1st mort...

6s, Imp’t Loan

Commerce

28V

—

22,830

1,000

—

Municipal:
Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan
do

29

200

10V

Wabth and W?s°teS
Rensselaer ^Saratoga!10 PrC%

76V
*77 V 76%
78
*78 V *78
76
77
76V 76% 76V 77V
*58V I58V X58V
*59V *59
*59
58V 57V 58
57V 5SV 58

6s, (new)
do. Registered

do
do

2,000

94V

E

Virginia 6s, (old)

50

—

Toledo,

72

Ohio 68,1870-75
do 6s, 1881-86
Tennessee 6s ‘68
do
6s (old)
do
6s, (new)

750

—

—

pref“ ‘ ‘ * • •JJ0' 111% 111% 11IV 111% 111% 112%
103V 104%

d°

M. toms,

770,000

95

94V

94V

101%

x73

168 -

Rome &

—

do
North Carolina, 6s
do
6s (old)..
do
6s, (new)

'

157

Reading^’ Wiike & ChicilOO
Watertown".'.'.';.";'' ,2!

—

III

94V

Missouri os,

do

140

200

3,510

140

140

138

50

100

88

—

122

.*.*!.*.*.*! *100 1£5

Panama

-

100

—

1st preilOO

New York Central
and New Haven
Norwich and Worcester..
Ohio and Mississippi

Indiana bs, War Loan
do 5s

do

J

300

75

75V

100

ICC

14,800

69%

68%

92V

New

—
—

do 1877
do 1879
do
War Loan

do ;

78

68
68X 69V 69V

Morris & Essex

’79,aft.’60-62-65-70

650

—

Milw0ankeeanast°PanI.2dPref^
,.?°.. pre,"l$
Jersey

—

42,140
4,900

—

pref-,50“

Milwaukee & P. du Ch. 1st

17,000

447
200

—

Centra^....
$
Michigan So. and N. Indiana
.100

21/0 >

89

25,C60

—

Michigan

$8,000

—

89
99

88

93

7s

60,000
119,100

—

—

Georgia 6s

1,295,500

106V 107 V 107V 107V 197%
107V
107
110
liov
110
110V 110 v

18,060
50,955

69%

7»V

79V

Joseph, . .....100

Hudson River
Illinois Central
Ind. and Cincinnati.
Marietta and Cincinnati,

400

79V
195V 105V 105V 106V 105V
1(5V
90V
91
90V
104
90V 90V
9 V
9C% 90
103V 103% 103V 103%
107 V
123
123
123
123

City?” ??*P L°

do

—

—

West

60

1,270

136

68%

69

68
79V

66V
77V

77V

preferred.100

do

5,000
397,000

113V

,

6s, 1871..registered.
6s, 1874
coupon.
5s, 1874. .registered.
5s, 10-40s ...coupon.
6s, 10-40s .registered.

6s,cou.,
do

110% 110

—

—

pref.100
Pac. .100

do

,

Rock Island and
„

nwind» Col. Cin- aHd

1,000

—

,d0

™

404,000

—

—

100

Chicago and Northwestern

90,000
1,196,000

—^

preferred..*.’!l00
QuincylOO

„
, do
Burlington and

nMdo

22,000

663,000

113V 113V
114V 114V 114
109V
113%
114V 114V 114V H4V 114

State:

do
do

1,084,500

640

136%

134V 135V 135
136
135V 136

133

10

No.

124V

125

126

100 132V

Chicago and Alton

80,000

—

Alabama 5s
Connecticut War Loan
do

$524,000

117V 117V
112V 113V 113V 113%
113V 113V U3V 113V
109V
111V 111% ilOv 110
111%
110
110
111% 111V 111% 111%

—

100
100

„

117V 117V 117V 118

1881.’....coupon.

do

**a4lr9ad Stocks:
8ion. Hartford and Erie
central of New Jersey

140V 140V 140V 140V 140V 140V

Room)..

Week’s Sale

Fri.

Wed. Thun*

Mon, Tuee.

Satur.

SECURITIES.

STOCKS AND

Week’s Sales

Fri.

rhur8

We4

Tues.

Satur. Mon.

10,000
11,000

—
—

-pdJ?
consol, bonds
ptninsu?a?PP ^rdbyS- of Mis
wTlSS
l8t & Chm.f 1st m.
Pittsb g, Ft. Wayne mortgage....
do
& do
4°
2d mort.
3d mort
do

98V

Pacfflr* p

98

98%

—

1 ruz

106V

iUO

2,000

——

94V

94

ao

—MM

—

-

—-

-

„

—

—

Mining.—Mariposa Gold
Mariposa preferred
Quicksilver
Miscellaneous—Bankers & Bro.




100
100
100
Ass

106

4,802

46%

406

25
47

26V

9V
25V

9V

8V

—

26

—

106

9
25
—

4,S99
1,300
5,855
200

4

K

9V

53%

8%

3,859

24%

4,6C0

£

Toledo &
do

Toledo,

£

£ & gf/
mortfeS
24 mortgage.

Wabash, 1st

.

Peoria^ WaffiStlb
wD
do
do

dt>
Western

Unjon Tel., 7s Bonds...
,
2801] Long Dock Bonds

87

3,Cf0
3,000
4,000

82

81V
96

85

500
500

—
..

82V

-

72V
—

85

85'
99

—

85V
-

-

-

7,000
ECO

3,tC0

816

THE CHRONICLE.

Commercial Stines.
COMMERCIAL

any

There is simply an
season of the
year,

we

as
better state of

do not discover any

of the leading staples.

02

45£@46c.

Oils have been without essential

important business.

hCC«

t-(oo

C5 ©

co

.CO CO 1
OO 1
CO GO <

IHCSOICS

CO

■
-

oo

ft*T—<

'of©
t-

w p

00

_

•

S'JO

m

•

o®V
£ G*
lft

*

J
-*“3

having declined

reaction yesterday,
and prices closed

«

*

r-T

or co

•

S92

•’-ico

•

ffi,

CO

.

bulk,
sharp

a

■

•

o3

S

i

«

’£<®COl>.
f co
05

§
”

.

| o: 05_t-»

.

■

I

^

-

p

.

*

‘ft*

:§

Earthenware

2,398
9,440

Glass

Glassware
Glass plate
Buttons

Molasses...
Metals, &c.

3,575
21,293
184,224

•

•

827
146
71

36,707

Goal, tons
1,756
Cocoa, hags...
702
Coffee, hags
29,502
Cotton, bales.
Drugs, &c.

26,9.8
7,448
563,171

Cutlery

..

.

....

..

Bark. Peruv
Blea p’wd’rs
Brimst, tns.
Cochineal...
Cr Tartar
Gamhier....

255

1,145
134
453
50

...

"i2

Gums, crude
Gum, Arabic

3,527

5.083

4,848

2,183
833

12,403
364

4,837

Oil, Olive...
Opium

593
12

275

22,7^4

580

Soda, bi-carb

5,055

Soda, sal....
Soda, ash...

52,314

1,134
2,685

19,081

Flax

12

Gunny cloth
Hair

24,298

t

Hemp, bales..!
Hides, &c.
Bristles

Hides, dres’d

-dia rubber.,

vorv..........

634

116

Furs

2,735
7,349
8,336
54,363
495

3,996

17,654
933

ewelry, &c.

Jewelry

Watches....
Linseea......




476,8801

6,085
14,043

*39
o

10 129 j
224

1,917
2,652

ess....

2,496
40,088

189

352

Indisro
Madder

Oils,

2,770

1,080
652

225,507

49

Hardware...
61
Iron,RRb’rs 32,089
Lead, pigs.. 5,994

Spelter,lbs..110,136

Steel

6,700
Tin, boxes.. 25,712

Tin slabs,lbfel75,8S7

Rags
Sugar,

tes <fc

1,329

hhds,
bbls.. 12,564

15,322 Sugar,bxs&bg 6,830
9,343 Tea

3,391

738 Tobacco
701 Waste

575

9,151
‘2,495

Champ, bkts

534

.ift

»-?

•

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1 co co
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50

t*

in

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•

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coo

TT

.

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lft 05

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lft lft CO

*

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•

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•

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CO 50 l>»

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05

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at

[r^-coiq

•

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249,844 158,309
218,118 214,911
3,068,114 830,751
83,975 117,149
344,660 299,759
3,008,921 1,999,340
20,377
38,711
249,639
339,522

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.

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CO •*“4

00

51,230
64,549

Wines
6,429
43,841
1,718 Wool, bales
14,777
24,511
2,926 Articles reported by value.
2 03
Cigars.
$12,013 $272,846 $219,762
16,775 Corks
6,212
91,376 125,140
437
Fancy goods.. 24,106 516,075 1,876,434
81,626 Fish
4,858
189,421 340,968
10,672 Fruits, &c.
17,309 Lemons
2,160
323,209 251,179
96^5
Oranges.... 14,971 493,158 616.095
1,630 Nuts
6,429
282,993 427,792
21.322
Raisins
14,651 655,536 452,475
2,111 Hides, vindrsd. 63,653 3,068,806
5,144,425
75,134 Rice
32,895 501,206 33S,231
Spices, &c.
1,005 Cassia......
72,854
70,297
4,479
Ginger...... 4,078
20,129
30,lln
22,591
361
Pepper
128,536 156,617
1,334 Saltpetre..... 1,000
3,431
31,678
Woods.
338
Fustic
2,111
70,953
27,501
465
99 890
Logwood
7,323 144,076
224,484, Mahogany..
46.612
823
71,698

CP

co

4,336

41,576

CO»Oft*i— O'fO-iCJ

a

•

144,161
624,252
15,766

607,509

ftf

CO

173,191

544

11,847 Wines, &c.

••^1

•cc’-'P

corfi

•
‘

.

•

■

5.509

•

•(NIO't-T

Imports of Leading Articles.

179

C* T*

S'

lft’-l

•:*

05 0O

important changes.
Freights have been only moderately active, the shipments
being mainly grain, closing at 5@5£d. by steam to Liverpool.,

China

•*oo5»o
•

»-1

O

China, Glass & Earthenw’e.

*0*0*

o

oo

■

•

co »ft

I—I

.

•

1867.

*CO
‘ft*

■

■OO

| CO H

•ffiCOH
CO *5» o Ot
r-( ft* "«3<

p

For
Since
the Jan. 1,
week.
1868.

••—I

■ft*t-

.1000

■lOCO
■'C' CO

O CO

Jan. 1,
1868.

05 ft*

■252
Tjl
■

•

oS

•

week.

ot*o
05 50 tH

•

.

f

1

ra
a)

S3

For
the

•’JIO®*

*

£ a 2 *af
> N

^0

packages when not otherwise specified.]

•

gin © •• »o
©tH

■COCO

3
CO A)

*E p
cq O

•P

given in
Since

eo a tt-H O TJi

■

*

00 OO <?*
|©10H

5

P

•

[The quantity is

-O OO O
rr 00 ft*
T-l CO

.

•

I

S3

ing period in 1867:

3

PQ

go*
unusually heavy, could probably be supplied without
P
©
causing any very material improvement. Buyers, on the
other hand, encouraged
by the recent decline in most goods,
feel confident that bottom has not
yet been reached, and in
a
consequence will not operate except through necessity. Ship¬
pers still hold aloof, and the limited trade doing is almost
t> ®
|>
entirely for home use. At to-day’s market Mess Pork closed
S n 2*0
at $28 25, and
prime steam Lard 16Jc.; but in Bacon and
other cured meats there was more
inquiry. Beef and butter
are dull, but
cheese, with liberal supplies, shows more busi¬
ness, prime factory selling at 14^@15.
Metals show a slight further
improvement in Pig Iron, and 9
considerable activity in Ingot Copper at
o
^c. decline ; other
metals
remaining quiet.
®
w
5 0050
East India goods are dull, and most articles
^
r*50
quoted at some * ^ ‘S oof
§

1,1868, and for the correspond¬

£- ft*

▼—<

lft

05

3

if not

The following table,compiled from Custom House
returns, shows
the foreign imports of certain
leading articles of commerce at this port
for the week ending June 19, since Jan.

■

jO

Iftftt

feeling of apathy in all depart-

no

.rjcjcoowoioao!
•^ft*tC* OO ft* CO »—I.

*

•

53

In the minor articles of trade there have
been

CO lft

.5;

CO COO
Iftft*
•rl05ft*
•rH

*© ft* <

r-Tco" ‘ *t-T

05

decided alteration in the general
range of
prices. Holders in the majority of cases, however, while they
refuse any further concessions,.seem rather more inclined to
sell to a fair extent at current
rates, and a bona fide demand,
no

•
•

vdio

ft*

•1—<

still note

ec in <
-cocji

.

’Ofrji

early in
50@60c., gold,

we

^

_r

<

above named.
There was a large export movement in Whalebone
the week, including South Sea and Arctic at

decline.

oo c©
I

*Q

the offerings on sale being much reduced,
to-day at 16^-c. and 32c. for the qualities

ments, with

COOOt

ft*"

mainly
change or

to 15^-c. for crude in
and 30^-c. for standard white refined in
bond, showed a

„

>

CO oo >

>

Petroleum after

per lb.
In Provisions

GV t— ft* CO

CO

Hides and Leather have maintained the advance noted last
week, but sales have been less active.
Naval Stores have ruled dull,
except for Spirits Turpentine,
of which sales have amounted to several hundred
bbls,
at

Leading Articles from New Yorl£.

of the Chronicle from that here
given:

absence of demand not unusual at this
and holders are content to await such de¬
shall follow the holidays, when it is believed a
affairs will prevail.

velopments

of

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the
exports of leading articles of commerce from the por of New York
since
January 1, 1868. The export of each article to the several ports
for the past week can be obtained by
deducting the amount the la^t
number

EPITOME.

inactive; but

marked-feeling of depression in

Exports

The

Friday Night, June26.

The markets continue

[June 27, 1868.

•

'ao

eft co

;

CD rH

•

p

05 co

—

ft*

lft Cft
CO

CO

r- »H

CO O

P P $
®

i

0*5

.JJ |P
>583 S3

p
O

n*

•do.
i

t- Ht*

Cft 05 00

HHft*XMnW£*
r-l rH

r<

g,J :

^ftiOOCft**

-rtl

HH

I—

—'

O Cft

Ill'S
op® ^ • g-p.v: ■o»«£^S
I op ,a®c^PHPQPQWt>‘H
Apce- -SjjaS |
iSlSTas

SS :S

ill S || | e

81

032
QO

s
8
h

.

•

:

:

T-l

CO Tf

• p

:p

■

•

:

: :-a :g„

June 27, 1868.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Receipts of Domestic Produce for the Week and since

graph.

Jan* 1.

The

same

time in 1867, have been

This
week.

Aehes, pkgs..

228

Breadstuffs—
Flour bbls.:

as

follows:

Since
Same
Jan.l. time’67

2,814

40,841 49fi,402

Wheat, bush 346,9363,628,871

8ince
Jan. 1.

Same
time ’67

208,535
18,728
5,320

144,275
10,861
3,069
38,326
2,202

week.

17,171
968
89

pkgs
490 22,876
461,7138,278,518 3,048,974 Oil, lard
80
6,456
276,0242,412,779 823,920 Oil, petroleum 18,765 285,824
Rye..........
2,023 185,120
C8,000 PeaDUts. bags
91 22,332

Cora
Oats
Malt

625

300,526
3,660 406,818

Barley

Grass seed..
Flaxseed
B

50
756

ans

Peas.........

4,490
22,976

7,720-179,846

C.meal, bbls.
C.meal, bags.

4,704
76,484
1,646 213,868

Buckwheat &
B

59 05 1

W.flour,plig

8,272

C >tton,

274,140
43,732
46,318
7,720
16,37
267,85;
39,149
210,516

Provisions—

Cut meats...

311

PORTS.

61,026

N.Orleans, June 19.
Mobile, June 19...
Charleston, June 19

261,172

591

59,380

400

8,359

148
5,391

Pork

7,270

8,518

60,586
8,218

99.268

527

Beef, pkgs...
Lard, pkgs..
Lard, ke^s..
6,085 h ice, pkgs. .
Starch
381,692
5,319 Stearine
7,058 Spelter, slabs
20,936 Sugar, hhds.&

50

95,852
85,900

678

1,816
28

3,583

....

1,759
5,769
62,886
44,709
80,590
23,536

14,428

2,435

SHIP¬

Great
Britain.

108,063

France Other

87,624 11,318
111,775 10,269
131,877 7,842

574,089
233.938

2,936 13,226

104,762

238,406 9,904 9,195
39,670 1,625 17,797
286,190 26,085 55,927

257,505
59,092
868,202

88,600

30,591
37,355
152,751
60,194

79,873

STOCK

NORTH.
POETS.

Total.

for’gn.
825,053 142,3*8 106,663
208,827 10,432 14,679

238,459

485,947
107,768

MENTS TO

223,470

6,986
5,579

34,791
•

•

•

55,433

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

15,004

•

•

•

•

*

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

*...

37,855

8,289
18,311

....

8,239
21,375

....

....

170
•

144,512

3,064
Total this year.. 2,153,873 1,213,296 193,350 220,556 1,627,202
Same time last year l,804,d02 1,119,177 188,239 112,002 1,419,418

5,073

1,223
33,791
25,900
12,117
25,048

580,135
352.610

Texas, June 12
New York, June 26*
Florida, June 19t..
N. Carolina, Jun. 26
Virginia. June 26..
Other ports,Jun 26*

2,801
70

i

Savannah, Juue 19.

7,055

3,990 136,015

SINCE

SEPT. 1.

78,098
146,108
115,901
25,434
94,280

<•

1 TO—

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT.

rec’d

254,183

bales.
6,055 353,509
528
Copper, bbls..
8,3)2
459
Copper,: lates
Dr’d fruit,pkg
157
13,348
Grease, pkgs.
3,268
9,938 bbls
45
178
536 Tallow, pkgs.
Hemp, bales..
Hides, No.... 8,137 283,279 179,330 Tobacco,pkers
91
Hops, bales..
3,034
3,074 Toba< co,nhds
Leather, sides 29,855 481,159 1,256,661 Whisky, bbls.
Lead, pigs
2,704
1,109 Wool, bales
Molasses,hhds
Dressed bogs,
and bb'H
10,428
12,480 No
Naval St )res
Rice, rough,
Crude trp.bbl
4,700
3,040 bush
Spirits tnrp.
2,850 25,886
25,791
...

Stocks at Dates Mentioned*

444,016
12,068

Butter, pkgs. 10,957 199,716
Cheese
21,969 197,070

Eggs

add this week 3,006

we

:

Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept* 1, and

This

3,159 Rosm
Tar
672,221 Pitch
692,860 Oil cake,

To the Galveston receipts

bales for corrections

receipts of domestic produce for the week and since Jan. 1

ind for the

817

•

•

i

•-

«

121,000
786,408 117,596
695,535 248,960
....

The market this week has

presented no new feature. Prices
very sensitive, fluctuating under the slightest influences;
The truth is, holders express great confidence in
being able to
sell out the small remaining stock without yielding
are

anything,

depending upon the wants of onr own spinners for the demand
3,964 and
yet, while the reports as to the growing crop continue
good, much anxiety is felt lest the new crop may find them
with a portion of the old on their hands.
COTTON.
Inactivity at Liv¬
Friday, P. M., June 26, 1868.
erpool, therefore, or rumors of increased shipments at Bombay,
By special telegrams received by us to-night from each of or temporary withdrawal of the demand here, appears to bring
the Southern ports we are in possession of the returns show- out,cotton at lower figures only, however, to be followed with
, higher prices on a favorable turn
in the European advices,
ing the receipts, exports, &c., of cotton for the week ending Still the stock is now 80
very limited> that if
considerable
this evening, June 26.
From the figures thus obtained it foreign demand should spring up, or reports of real or fancied
appears that the total receipts for the last seven days have injury to our crop find general belief, a sharp advance might
reached 2,761 bales (against 4,011 bales last week, 3,579 be looked for* The fluctuation has been less this week than
bales the previous week, and 4,661 bales three weeks
since,) )a,st> bein^only about lc the market closing to-day, with better
J\ advices from liverpool at 31*c. for Middling Uplands. Sales
making the aggregate receipts since September 1, 1867 0f ^ie week foot
up 12,347 bales, of which 8,308 bales were
up to this date, including the returns by telegraph to- taken by spinners, 2,879 bales on
speculation, and 1,160
night, 2,156,634 bales, against 1,813,091 bales for the same | ba^es f°* export. The following are the closing quotations :
New
Upland &
period in 1866 7, being an excess this season over last
Florida.
Mobile.
Orleers
Texas
season of 343,543 bales.
The details of these receipts for this | Ordinary^
29 @....
28#®....
29k
$ b> 28#®....
30 ®....
29#@....
29#©....
30#
week, (as per telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1867,
31 ®....
30#®....
30#®....
8tk
-

.

^

I

*

.

.

.

p

.

,

■

.

M/vh

AH

.

ntunAC

An

o

f ntT/Min Kl

a

i

rt

+ L

a

..

u

a

h

a am

,

an£

-

.

.

...

,

are as

follows

~

,

31#®....

:

Received this week at—
New Orleans
bales.
Mobile
Charleston
Savannah

r—Receipts.—,
1868.
504
103
270
842
400
404

Texas, est
Tennessee, &c

1867.

2,208
413

1,145
2,407

/-Receipts.—,

Received this week at-- 1868.
Florida*
hales
9
North Carolina
20

Virginia
Total receipts
Decrease this year....

1,411
1,243

The exports for the week
and must of course continue

209

2,761

Below

1867
106
58
195

each

31#®....

32

®....

82k

give the price of middling cotton at this market
day of the past week:
we

Upland &

New

Florida.
31 @....

9,186
6,425

30#®....
30 ®...

ending to-night are also small,
quite unimportant for the remain¬

30

®..

.

30#@31
81#®

...

der of the season, the

Mobile.

Orleans.
31#®....
81 ©....

31#®
30#®.*..
30#®
30#©....

30#®31#
31#®....

31
82

Texas.
31#®..
8 #©..
3"#®..

30#®....
SO#®

...

...

80#®..
3'#®31.
82#®..

...

®31#
©....

total from all the ports for the last seven
The exports of Cotton this week from New York show a
days reaching 6,796 bales, of which 2,946 bales were to small
increase, the total shipments reaching 1,358 bales,
Great Britain, and 3,850 bales to the Continent, while the

ag^t 896 baies last week. Below we give our table
made up this evening, are now reduced to 107,858
showing lhe Sports of Cotton from New York, and their
bales.
Below we give the exports and stocks for the
week, direction for each of the last four weeks; also the total
and also for the corresponding week of last season, as tele¬
exports and direction since September 1, 1867; and in the
graphed to us by our own correspondents at the various ports last column the total for the same period the
of
previous year:
stocks,

as

to-night:

Week ending
Total S ame week
Exported to
»
G’t Brita n. Contin’t. this week.
June 26.
1867.
680
New Orleans
3 279
3,959
14,646
Mobile
246
1,455
1,701
3,804
Cnar.es^on
286
1,924
Savannah...
140
Texas
2,920
811
Alloiher ports.
325
1,136
13,254
,

.

........

«*•

..

.

—

...

.

.

•

.

.

.

.

*...

•**•

••••

....

•

.

•

•

...

Total....
*

...

2,946

3,850

6,796

36,688

Stc>ck
,
1868.
1867.

*9,000
7,199

6,100
4,957
4,000
76,602

107,858

Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept* 1,1S47

60,588
17,711
EXPORTED
3,034
11,027 |
12,924
101,200 1 Liverpool

WEEK ENDING

Total

TO

June

Total to Gt. Britain..

foregoing statement it will be seen that, compared
with the corresponding week of last season, there is a decrease
in the exports this week of 29,892 bales, so that the former
increase in the total shipments since Sept. 1, 1867, as com¬
pared with the same period of the previous year is now reduced
to about 175,000 bales, while the stocks to-night are 98,621
1
bales less than they were at this time a year ago. The follow¬ 1
ing is

our

usual table showing the movement of cotton

the ports since Sept.
We do not include
ensure




our

the accuracy, or

telegrams to-night,

obtain the detail

as we

necessary

Havre.

cannot

by tele-1

287

51
•

•

•

....

56
93
•

..

to

prey.

23.

date.

year.

471

815

278,881

337,641

7,859

6,057

•

•

•

471

815

25,882

....

....

•

•

72

•

•

149

•

*

•

72

Total

600

Spain, etc

Grand Total

203

26,921
6

....

318
225

310
....

....

310

543

600

2,813

....

....

•

....

•

859

*

896

•

•

•

•

1,858

26,085

26,937

82,272
11,885

83,578
18,660

6,832

6,847

50,489

51,985

8,266

115

8pain, Oporto and Gibraltar....
All others

286,190 348,699

2,172

Bremen and Hanover

Hamburg

Total to N. Europe

•

51

Other ports

Jane

115

....

Total French

at all

1, according to the latest mail returns.

....

2,018

Other French ports

June
16.

287

....

Estimated.

From the

9.

2,013

I Other British Ports

206,479

June

2.

Same
time

860
953

5,438

1,813

368,202 * 124,438

The receipts given for these ports are only the shipment! from Tenntafte.
Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated.

S!*"

w

Receipts of cotton at the port
and since Sept. 1:
This
Since
week. Sept. 1.
Bales. Bales.

From
New Orleans
Texas
Savannah
Mobile

.

784
6

Since
This
week. Sept.l.
Bales. Bales.

97,241
27,649
267 99,765
146 115,218

480
15

....

Per Railroad

5,105

....

Total lor the week.

Total since Sept. 1.

The following are

delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and
tember 1, 1867:
Philad’phia.—»
«—Boston.—,
r-

Last

Last

Since

week.

Sep. 1.

5,119

Savannah
Mobile
;
Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

.

21,767

....

.

.

.

.

.

Reshipments.

t This total does

not include the

3T

.

.

•

•

•

Description.

.

.

Mobile.
New Orleans
Texas

....

....

.

....

....

following figures show

The

12,293

27d.

93,012

railroad receipts at Philadelphia.

lSd.

..

-..

-..

..

-..

Mobile.
Orleans.... 18

,

City of

27d.
11%

11%

land

318
225
17

and 285 Up¬

44

London

To Bremen per

brig W. H. Bigelow, 880

344

pool.

From
New York....
Boston
New* Orleans
Charleston ..

Galveston

Havre.

men.

318

815

17
314
286
880

1,998

314

of the year

<—Taken on spec, to
1867,
1868,
bales.

/—Actual export from

286

1807.
hales.

114,627
34,653

37,620

41,880

154,164

185,394

Total.... 350,260

99,980

159,950

261,693

347,373

1,015,040

4,410
5,790

75,032

6,397

5,419
5,701

10,240

6.302

the sales and imports of cotton for
stocks on hand on Thursday evening

The following statement shows
the week and year, and also the

last,

compared with last year:

SALES, ETC., OE

ALL DESCRIPTIONS.

Sales this week.
,
Ex- SpeculaTrade. port.
tion. Total.

American.. ..bales. 17,900
Brazilian
7,450

2,(510

Egyptian........
West

1,660
7,400

Indian

East Indian

4,572

-

This
week.

American
Brazilian
Egyptian
West Indian...

...

..

...

receipts this week 270 bates. Exports to
foreign, none. Stocks 6,100 bales, of which 1,070
are on shipboard not cleared.
Market firmer, Middlings 29c.
New Orleans, June 26.—Cotton firm ; middlings 29 cents. Sales 150 bales;
receipts 115 bale-; exports 3,279 bales. Sales of the week 1,199 bales ; rece pta
504 bales. Exports—Continent 3,279 bales ; Liverpool 660 bales. The account

9,000

bales.

8,610
2,690

540

1,870
10,860

210

2,860

.

...

Total

...

period

year.

1867.

To this
date
1868.

■

1868.

—v

I Ol1867.

Total.
1S67.

r" • •

This

day.

51,110 43,480

--StocksSame
Dec. 31*
date
1867.
1867.

451,490
165,700
58,240
26,200
12,010
60,630 159,860

103,420
66,030
38,990
13,640
225,380

861,490

447,460

381,390
137,630
61,080

6,856

46,191

1,683,5401,702,5713,223,276

652,740

1,888

1867.

26,590 20,900
4,680
9,160
294.890 152,750
3,940
4,110
145,540 103,240
1,540
1,420
43,970
47,200
9,830 12,420
546,990 527,730

45,850 1,930,2S01,519,420

ports.

Average
weekly sales.

904.890 (588,500

987,837 894,0491,220,335
313,117 266,606 433,946
125,623 135,301 197,783
57,789 107,047
33,340
228,023 34S,8231,264,160

30,563
* 6,587
297

East Indian....

June 26.—Cotton

80

300

860

Same

Total
this

Imports

/—

domestic ports 1,078 hales,

1 040 21,8-20

2,880

37,080 6,810 1,960

Total

bales.

completed ; stock will approximate

24,380

1867.
bales.

2,260

give them in full:
Savannah, June 26.—Receipts for the w'ek 842 bales; exports, foreign, none;
to domestic ports 1,682 bales. Market fimer, more doing, Middlings 29@29%c.

being taken, but not yet

bales:
51.310

850

other items of news we

of stock is

91,160
14,410

1866,

Egyptian. &c.. 36,610
Wes't India, &c 3,180
East India, &c. 77,500

Telegraph,—We have given above the week’s receipts, exports
and stocks of cotton as reported to us in our telegrams received to-night
from the various ports.
As the following despatches contain some

Charleston,

bales.

to
1868..
bales.

this date—,

Actual

exp’tfrom
this date—. K’gdom in
outports

227,900
87,740
12,590
22,660
664,150

192,590
40,350

American
Brazil

By

Stock 4,597

1,201,200

speculation and export have
other

2,567
225

435,330

Liverpool, Hull and

burg. r Total.
225
1,358
17
344
286

2,005

652,740
39,130
74,000

1,594,520

Since the commencement
been to the following extent:

...

Total

1868

subjoined:
1868,

76,000
588,830

Total

Ham¬

1,687

..

1857.

68,200

..'

—Exported this week to—
Bre¬

are

861,490

—

“

Indian

hark Texas, 1,687

Liver¬

1S65. 1866. 1867.

.

afloat

American cotton

880
1,687
Total exports of cotton from the United States this week
. .bales. 4,572
The particulars of these shipments, arranged in our usual
form, are as follows :

Galveston—To Liverpool, per

.

.

.

Bales

Liverpool

Stock in

Total bales
Antwerp, 21... Louisi-'
815

318
Allemannia, 225
Boston—To Liverpool, per steamer Delaware, 17
New Orlean:—To Havre, per schooner Kate Brigham, 344
Charleston—To Liverpool, per ship Amelia, 1 Sea Island
To Bremen, per steamer Weser,
To Hamburg, per steamer

..

16%d.l3%dll%d. 10%
Egyptian.. 15% 13
12% 9%
Broach....
7
7%
7%
9
Dhollerah. 9%
6%
7%
7%

have been made:
794

..

including the supplies

News.—The exports of cotton from the United
States the past week, as per mail returns, have reached
4,572 bales. Below we give a list of the vessels in which
these shipments from all the ports, both North and South,

ana,

17

qualities of cotton

The stocks of cotton in Liverpool and London,
of American and Indian produce afloat to those ports,

Shipping

Exported this week from—
New York—To Liverpool, per iteamers

11%
11%

'

Mid. Pernamb

11% 11

14

Upland.... 17%

26,362

697

129,221

-..

the price of middling

14% 11%
14% 11%

Mid. Sea Island 34d.

«...

170

11%

..

-..

13
13

1867. 1868.

1865. 1866.

4,810
55,071

«

12%-..

23

20
14
13
13
14
14

11%
11%

.

..

at this date since 1865:

6

109

30
14
12

11%
11%

9%-10%
9%-10%
9%-10%

....

-32
-10

27
13
11

11

....

Upland

14,141

•••

.

Sea Island
Stained

Same date 1867—n
Fair. Good.

,

fine.—. Mid.
18
38 -66
12
17 -19

g’d fair—,

Ord. & Mid—,

217

....

414

.

.

.

303

•

<—Fair & r-G’d&

147
188

.

.

•

3,802
1,555

.

.

■

13.—Only a moderate amount of business has been
and a further decline has t ken place in
the quotations.
The total sales are 45,850 bales, of which 1,960 bales
are on speculation, 6,810 bates declared for export, leaving 37,080 bales
American cotton has fallen £d. to-£d.; Brazilian, ^d.;
to the trade.
Egyptian, ^d., and East Indian £d. per lb. Holders of East Indian
cotton have shown some anxiety to realise.
American cotton due from
Savannah, to arrive, has been sold at 10£d. per lb., on the basis of
middling. Annexed are the prices current of American cotton:

Sep. 1.

195

203

....

•

.

.

....

....

21,322
57,170
33,812

hales. 1,246 215,320

receipts

week.

.

370

586
88

Sep. 1.
5,316

....

....

....

Last

under tha date of June 13>

,

Liverpool, June

Since

Since

.

.

14,386

109

correspondent in London, writing

our

transacted in cotton this week,

^-Baltimore.—n

18,012

.

.

.

.

50

....

since Sep¬

....

18.737

....

Virginia
New York, &c*
Tennessee, Kentucky, &c...
Total

414

42.567

463

New Orleans
Texas

week.

599,192

Boston, Phila*

the receipts of cotton at

Receipts from—

kets,

Markets.—In reference to these mar

states:*

Norfolk, Baltimore, &c..

168,457
9,014
14,482

1,663

.

Indian Cotton

■Kuropean and

of New York for the week

From
South Carolina
North Carolina

44,093
23,273

Florida

*

[June 27,1868,

THE CHRONICLE

818

American

Of the present stock of cotton in Liverpool, 58£ percent is
against 52 per cent last year. Of Indian cotton the
10 per cent, against 18^ per cent.
London, June 13.—The cotton trade is very dull, and even at a
duction of £d. per lb. there have been but few buyers.
Annexed

proportion is

the

particulars of imports, deliveries

and stocks:
1866.

1S67.

re¬
are

1868.

26.—Cotton—Sales to-day 250 bales; hut little cotton
Bales.
188,880
65 260
80,817
Offered; market firm; Middlings 27%@28 cents. Receipts 14 ba'es. bales Imports, Jan. 1 to June 11
Deliveries
..
76,385
330,167
133,443
of the week 625 hales; receipts 103 bales; exports—Liverpool 1,455 bales; to
Stocks, June 11
90,308
68,192
39,130
the Continent 246 bales; coastwLe 1,472 hales; stock 7,199 hales.
Bombay, June 6.—The shipments during the week have been 90,000
The Growing Crop.—A well informed correspondent writes us from
bales.
Nashville, taking exception to our estimate of land under cotton in Ten¬
Madras, June 9.—Western cotton is quoted at 8d. per lb.
nessee, as given in an editorial in last week’s Chronicle on the “Pros¬
Alexandria, May 29.—The cottoD market ha9 continued very inac¬
tive, and prices rule almost nominal. Fair cotton is quoted at
pects of the Cotton Trade.” He says : “ the yield this year in Ten¬
nessee we cannot reasonably expect will equal last season.
In the to 12£d. ; and good fair at 18£d. to 18fd. per lb., free on board.
middle division of the State there is fully i to ^ less land in cotton, shipments since the commencement of the season have
Totals
G. Britain, Continent,
From—
201,33ft
41,278
and the plant is full two weeks later.
Cannot speak so positively o Nov. 1,1867, to May 28,1868
bales. 160,054
30,825
180,092
. 149,271
152,43°
the western portion of the State.” The general conclusion of our edit¬ Same period 1866-7.
26,684
125,754
4865-6
230,22*
35,153
195,071
1664-5
orial that there is in the whole country about the same area under
'Mobile, Ala., June

been:

“

last year is not affected by our
We think that is a safe estimate. Our reports

cotton this year as

remarks.

TOBACCO.

this week with

Friday, P. M., June 36,

all favorable, and we have received further
statement that there is great improvement in the

™

.

,




,

r

1868.

week show a small
reaching only 2,805
ainst 3 231 hbds., 615 cases,

exports of crude tobacco this
decrease the total at a^l the ports
The

Working of the freedmen.
Considerable anxiety, however, continues
- .u,
to be expressed as to the effect upon them v. the election excitement |
of
in the Fall.
Since, however, their own pockets will be so largely and 1
directly affected by any carelessness or idleness at that time on their
,
I
part, we look for much less of it than is anticipated.
w

44

correspondents’

regard to the weather are
confirmation of our

“

“

12|d.
The

257 cases and 594 bal
\
°1j
___
* For at the close of our London letter in previous part see Telegraph dis.
patcheslatest.news respecting the Liverpoolacotton market ol this paper.—[Ad
1 Commercial & Financial Chronicle.
hhd

June

$19

THE CHRONICLE.

27,1868.]

EXPOETS OF TOBACCO FROM NEW

YORK.*

bales, 15 tierces and 489 hhds. stems for the previous
Lbs.
Lbs.
Hhds. Cas. Bal. Manf.
seven
Hhds. Cas. Bal. Marl.
days. Of these exports 640 hhds., 185 cases, 527 bales
48,926
98
564' Melbourne
Liverpool..
were from New York; 1,104 hhds. and 45 bales were from
London
21,621
28
Sidney N. S. W.
27
British N. A. U.
54
Londonderry...
New Orleans; 1,061 hhds. were from Baltimore; 35 cases
7,646
Cuba
45 177
2
421
2
37
British W. Ind.
213
and 22 bales from Boston ; 37 cases from San Francisco. Antwerp
10
"3,119
12,486 British Guiana.
812 11,768
6
Lisbon..,
New Granadr...
54
The direction of the shipments of hhds. was. as follows: 1,30-: Venice..,
200
527 106,551
640 185
Total for week.
87
hhds. to Liverpool, 1,041 hhds. to Amsterdam ; 287 hhds. to
The exports in this table to European ports are made op from mani¬
Italy; 45 hhds. to Bremen ; 54 hhds. to Lisbon, and the bal. fests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the cargo.
ance to different
ports. During the same period the exports
The direction of the foreign exports for the week, from the
of manufactured tobacco reached 117,694 lbs., of which other
ports, has been as follows:
48,926 lbs. were shipped to Melbourne, and 21,621 lbs. to From Baltimore—To Liverpool, 20 hhds....To Amsterdam, 1,041 hhds.
From New Orleans—To Liverpool, 1,104 hhds
To Havana, 46 bales.
Sidney. The full particulars of the week’s shipments from From Boston—To Liverpool, 35 cases....To Madeira, 181 pfcgs*--.Miquelon,
418

....

....

....

....

saes>

m

m

m

....

a

....

.

„

••••

••••

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

*

all the

ports were as follows :
Stems
hhds.

Hhds. Case. Bales. Tcs.
527
185

Export’d this week from
New York

Man’i

’Pkgs.

....

Baltimore

.

••••

22

35

Boston
New Orleans

...

.

•

.

•

•

,,,,

•

.

Total this week
Total last week

•

•

594
418
158

....

•

.

.

*

.

....

••

-

857
615

309

»

37

San Francisco

....

•

.....

....

45

1,104

Philadelphia

.

....

309
193

....

lbs.

bales....To British Provinces 32

41 pkgs and 55 boxes....To Hayti, 22
boxes.
From Philadelphia—To Havana, 11,143 lbs.
From San Francisco—To Russia, 36 cases

manufactured.

To Honolulu, 1 case.

106,551
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

.

.

.

BREADSTTJFFS.
Friday, dune 26, 1868, P. M.

11,143
....

The market has been
117,694

have had

irregular ; but in most articles prices

downward

tendency.
The receipts of flour have been fair, and the week opened
Below we give our usual table showing the total exports with a
strong pressure to sell, under which there was a general
of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their but
irregular decline in prices. At this concession a con¬
direction, since November 1, 1867:
siderable shipping demand from Great Britain sprung up in
Exports of Tobacco from tit© United States since Novem¬ the common extras, and about 18,000 bbls. were taken at
ber 1, 1867.
$7 75@$S 75 for extra State, as in quality, but closing with
Cer’s
Pkgs. Manfd none to be had at the lower figure, and the bulk of the busi¬
lbs.
hhds. & bxs.
Cases. Bales. & tcs.
Hhds.
To
ness at the close being at $8 50@$8 75.
963 1 ,097,873
7
457
312
The finer grades of
Great Britain..
9,833
1,699
545
4
133,017
1,108
14,674
44,297
7,099
36
15,577 family flours, $12 per bbl. and upwards, have been very diffi¬
1,201
1,180
Belgium
146
565
1,516
4,400 cult to move; but towards the close the better grades of trade
7,605
Holland
6:
218
3,677
Italy
43
21
19,607 brands, ranging from $10 to $12, have been more saleable.
France
3,481
193
55,570
Wheat was generally held higher at the commencement of
1,039
8,346
Spain, Gibralt. &c
113
228
57
13,404
Mediterranean
the week, $2 20 being generally named for No. 2, and $2 15
60
621
'Austria
524
310
73
33,018
639
Africa, &c...
61
8,890 @$2 16 being paid ; but liberal receipts for a few days, and
1,132
China, India, &c..
264 2 ,225,202
dull accounts from Liverpool, had a depressing influence, and
23
4
1,216
Australia, &c
1
164
370
209
96,373 the
1,045
B. N. Am. Prov...
advance was lost. Shippers have bought a few loads daily,
60
10
559
220
2:3,031
2,S55
South America....
759
514
37
689
591,809 and there has been a better attendance of millers; but price*
6,820
West Indies
175
716
East Indies
41
43
2
6
6,370 could not be supported, and the close to-day was lower at
Mexico
903
29
Honolulu, &c
$2 05 for No. 2 Spring, and White California sold at $2 65.
59
6
41
8
All others
The receipts at the West have fallen off materially, and those
532
2,631
5,909 4 ,544,141 markets have been unsettled
25,486
16,375
51,043
by speculation. Receipts at this
indicates the ports from which the market have been quite limited for a few days, but there are
The following table
large quantities afloat. We are not getting anything of con¬
above exports have been shipped:
sequence as yet from the South; and in various parts of that
Lbs.
Tcs. & Stems
Bxs &
section of the country the yield proves to be much less than
hhds.
Bales.
cer’s.
Hhds. Cases.
pkgs. Manfd.
From
was
283
294
1,621 4,331,919
12,310
22,703
27,481
New York
expected.
231
31
152
54
39,363
2,348
16,170
Baltimore
Corn has suffered a steady depreciation in price under
24
606
2,882
9,940
2,450
3,556
Boston
70
12
162,719 liberal receipts here and at the West, dull accounts from abroad,
Philadelphia
20
170
6,522
New Orleans
and a general inactivity of trade, until to-day, when prices
681
11
368
5an Francisco
172
183
10
352
touched $1 05 for good shipping mixed. ' Even at this con¬
Virginia
302
200
7
Portland
Total previous

...

3,231

808

week

489
7

15

11

-

....

•

•

•

.

.

a

....

•

.

....

.

...

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

(

•

84,245
36,620

....

....

•

•

13

....

....

....

m

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

•

•

•

*.

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

.

.

....

....

—

•

•

.

•

.

•

.

•

.

•

•

•

.

.

.

....

•

.

•

....

...

«-

•

....

.

•

«...

....

....

'otal since Nov 1.

.

51,043

16,375

The market lias been more

25,486

...

...

532

2,631

5,909 4,544,141

active for Kentucky Leaf, with¬

cession the demand was by no means pressing. Competition
Vom wheat for freight room by steam to Great Britain is one
of the obstacles to an export demand. There has been a large

essential change in prices, although the low grades, to speculative movement in oats, but with no other effect than to
which the business is mainly confined, are somewhat Jess firm. rarely support prices. Barley, barley malt and Canada peas
have been quiet, and nearly nominal.
The sales af the week foot up about 700 hhds. at 7f@10c. for
out

lugs, and ll@19c. for low to prime leaf. In Seed Leaf there
has been a large movement, partly speculative, and prices rule
very firm. The sales embrace 700 cases Pennsylvania, at
from 9@14e.; 250 cases old, State of Ohio, low grades, at 5J
@9|-, and 150 Connecticut, 8@55c. Aisoin new Connecticut
2,500 cases have changed hands; fillers at 9^-@12|-c; seconds,
16@18 ; wrappers, 37^@50c.; and in New York State, 200
cases fillers, 7@10c ; in Havana, 500 bales have been disposed

75c.@$l 10. Manufactured tobacco
revision of the tax,
receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since

of at prices ranging from
is quiet, pending the
The

Nov. 1 have been as

The

following

closing quotations:

are

Corn

Flour-

8 00® 9 00

Extra State

Western,

mon

to

Amber do

White

com¬

10 75®14 50
10 00®12 50

California

Rye Flour, fine and super

RECEIPTS

Malt
Peas Canada

NEW

AT

From

-

Virginia
Baltimore
New Orleans...

Ohio, &c

This week—,
hhds.
pkgs.
242
1,859104
173
485
1,232
....

....

Other
Total

....

.

.....

1,786

2,443

1. 186V.

t—Previously—*
hhds.
pkgs
6,796
46,486
1,419
3,765

7,038
1,55S

2,207

267

703

20,565




...

267

65,848

31,734

....378,801

13,172
2,207

68,296

following are the exports of tobacco from New Ymk
for the past week:
The

Corn meal, bbls

37,720
4,315

703

12,687

1,074
21,797

~

48,345
3,869

901

29,918

For the
week.

T’lsin.Nov.l—*
hhds.
pkgs

FROM

NEW YORK

1S68.

Gt. Brit, week
since Jan. 1

bbls.
—

5,129

88,249

bbls.
..

1,005,090
181,370
4,054,040
7,932,365
209,440
705,955
2,467,620

48,120
3,115
325,035
506,480

275,700

12,305

FOR THE

bush.

990

360,425

AND SINCE JAN.

WEEK

Rye,

Earley.

bush.

bush.

Oats,
bush,

52,950

63 2,616 73

-•w

*

Since
Jan. 1.

week.

681,355
141,0:35
741,755
3,181,915
67,935

Flour, C. meal, Wheat,
To

follows:

For the

871,680
FOREIGN EXPORTS

® —
1 35® 1 50

*

Sinre
Jan. 1.

1,800

...

2 00® 2 25

-

YORK.

It$67.

r

RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER

1(9® 114

Tbe movement in breadatufifs at this market has been as

follows:

55
70
76

1 80® 1 90
82i® 88*
® ..

Barley

8 25®10 25

fine

18

1 03® 1 05

Rye
Oats, Western cargoes..'.
Jersey and State

9 00®10 50

25

1 10® 1 11

Yellow
White

9 50®14 00

and

extra

$5 60® 6
1 97® 2
2 60® 2
2 60® 2
2 55® 2

Corn, Western Mix’d new

8 00® 9 25

good

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
Southern supers

Southern,
family

Red Winter

8 50® 9 75

Shipping R. hoop Ohio.
Extra

Meal

Wheat-Sprlng, per buBh.

$ bbl. $6 75® 7 50

Superfine

.

...

_

1.

Corn

bush
125,379

3,584,463

H« A. €ol. week..

88,693

500

\STe*t Tnd. week.
since Jan. 1

5,307
175,892

2,735
55,756

400

6,743

53,200

Total exp’t. week 20 306

....

360

1,568

35,000

45,167

360

21

pared with the other articles embraced within our reports, has
been in good demand.
Molasses very dull.
Imports of the week have included two cargoes of Japan
tea, 25,648 bags of Rio, about 3,000 bags of Laguayra, and
a few sundry lots of other coffee ; and of sugar and
molasses
receipts rather below last week. Stocks of coffee have de¬
creased, and of sugar and molasses, increased since our last
report. Full details of the imports at the several ports for the
week and since Jan. 1 are given below under the respective

5,606
59,116

8,593

2,937
70,105

since Jan. 1

132,947

39,3033,780,803
1, 1868 402,259 101,490 2,677,724 152,993
40,519 136,887 860,217 125,0084,321,743
time, 1867 210,746 81,412

since Jan.
same

,

Since Jan. 1 from
86,934

Boston

Philadelphia

32,875

44,370
10,770

122,243

EXPORT or BREADSTUFFS

29,859
GREAT

TO

16,979
3,142
2,610 509,367
10,077 501,321

430

27,090

32,969 25,442

-..

-Balomore

16,198
66

FROM

IRELAND

AND

BRITAIN

1, 1867.
From
New York
New Orleans
Baltimore
Boston
California
Other ports

bush.

;

.

bush.

6,800,322

1868
351,733
325
1868..
1868.. 20,143
9,297
1868..
1868.. 19,163
1868.. 43,079
Junel9, 1868.. 32,499

Junel9,
“ io,
“ 12,
“ 12,
“ 19,
May 20,

SEP?
Corn,

Wheat,

Flour
bbls.

Date.

Philadelphia

5,620,20=

same

do

58,286
10,770
27.090

5,104,313

THE

do

do

do

7,319,483

4,958,310
1,198,969
1,767,914

8,232,979

Receipts

1866

Sugar

,

Com,

bush.

53,805
14,717

578,723

386,498

16,193

26,188

594,916
151,c82
245,651

362,686
74,407
68,111
94,990

....

Barley.

Wheat.
bush.

Com.
bush.

Oats.
bush.

122,276

972,583

188,328

5.028

134.383

11,954

13,611

6,769
7,-386
2,338

11,475
3,100

113,166
1,726

22,920

12,300

2,450

Cleveland.
•

.

•

•

.

283/ 34 1,101,879
390,769
759,646
146,068 1,002,952
594,460 1,830,396
917,445
758,849

43,702

•

48,923
’66.

29,7130
88,611

*65.

101,043

,’67.

Comparative receipts at the

same

bush.
800
188

Rye,
bush
541

1,301
,

#

39

4,732
5,560

...

1,266

320

1,792
13,854

2,162
2,28o

654,969

3,207

16,334

93,56 j

ports, from January 1st to June
1865.

1866.

1S6&

Bye, bush

1,521,979

4,251,616
11,9=8,-463
2,93 ,057
526,211
4 0,657

8,659,669

26,317,614

Barley, bush

1,256/ 20

14,214,318
4,344,415
.393,729
192,170

...-.

1867.

1,561,199
7,172,982

Oats, bush

20,167,504

3

1866-67.
June 1 to May

Pekoe

34 ,025

12,0.8

.

7313,967
65,157
2,026,818
8,087,001

Hyson
Young HyBon

1,778,881
1,911,326
5,496,842

Imperial

21,068,782

Gunpowder

444,140
263,098

30,157,489

11,043,725

Twankay
Hyson skin..

6,99-5,220

5,204,266

1867-68.
1. June 1 to May 1.

lbs. 1/58.8.9
468,183

Congou & Sou
Pouchong
Oolong &fting

8,162 049

776,799

Chicago, Milwaukee and Toledo, since
opening of the lakes, by lake and rail, of flour and grain for three

Japans

33,483,535

Total, lbs

1,465,033
182,750
11,627,225

Flour, bbls.

Stocks

of

1867.
June 15.

Wheat in store at

and 1868 at this date

The above

8,937

The indirect

1867.

1868.

1,629,639
267,493
11,118,209

12,078
510,277
55,936

1,611,187
6,45-3,350

1,250,638

5,900,781

1,408,849
1,476 950

1,439,030

1,753,926

4,693,739

5,605,193

29,252,582

*29,915,038

(1,103,400 lbs.) at Boston.

originally shipped to Halifax,

the United States,

San Francisco.

importation since Jan. 1 has been 5,439

and

except

pkgs.

493,900

Shanghai,

April 30—Messrs. Oliphant A Co.’s

The departure of the Tavistock from Shanghai
closes the China season of 1867-68.
The total export
land and America shows a falling off as compared with

of Tea :

f

:

447,000

870,500
612,000

Total

.

172,700

277,000

592,000

1,482,500

449,700

1,039,000

following are British statistics for the week
They present the same features as those of the
previous week, a remarkable falling off in farmer’s deliveries, and an

reliable and intt

resting information to

ending June 6th.

communicate. Canton teas are

beiDg hurried forward, some few parcels having
market, aud at Macao further settlements of new
have been made, at, it is said, very full prices.

Great Britain.—The

already arrived to
Tay-Shan Congous

COFFEE.

throughout the week. Advices from Rio
per steamer Merrimac, so far as they affected the market, have acted
beneficially. Quotations for the lower grades of Rio had been reduced
26,025 qrs., at 70s 8d £ cent, at which they remain at the close, with but very little business,
44,819 “ “ 65 4d
For other kinds also the inquiry is very light.
Sales have been made
of 11,570 bags of Rio, including the balancess of the cargoes of the
I. C.
Flour
Sa ks.
Bbls.
Qrs. “Umea,” “ Oslo” and “ Esmeralda,” 902 do Laguayra and 59 do Mara¬
11,012
1,263
The market

has been quiet

dependence upon the Western Continent for supplies.
farmer’s deliveries.

Week ending June
Same time 1867

6, 1868
IMPORT8.

Wheat.

United States (Atlantic ports)
Canada and other British Colonies
California and chi i
France, Spain and Northern Europe....
Mediurranean and Black bea

12,772

Total for week
Total since 1st January
Same time 1667

49,511

,

/

Qrs.

5,300

571
23,426

caibo.
5,604
230
663

11

12,7-31

978,815

465,504

6,563
93,980
20,009

6,497
167,419
213,117

The total

7,390
18,402
460,151
434,446

GROCERIES.
Friday Evening,

There

10,925

Circular, reports
for New York
1,002,000
3,69r,900
4,337,000
both to Eng¬
8,415,400
4,923, KUO
9,982,600
-..
last year, and
758,700
2,565,50.
3,473,900
5C0 the discrepancy is most noticeable in 0 ngou tea to the former, and
28,300
113,000
Congou season
open
Chicago and Milwaukee in 1866, 1867 green tea to the latter country. The newfrom the interior will vague
bout a month hence, but as yet reports
are
and unreliable, though a fortnight hence there should be some fairly
1868.
1866.
1867.

Chicago, bush
Milwaukee, bush

almost total

74,875
265,153

3,300
749,541
33,024

3,300'

table includes all shipments to

96,642 packages to

1868.
June 13.

202,600

403,800

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Oats, bush.
Bariey, bush

289.582

191,774

689,659
28,190
1,302,452
7,379,936
1,541,066
1,977.267
7.102,769
+33,302,647

All at New Ycrk except three cargoes
+ Add to this 372,814lbs. per “Guam”
thence to New York.

seasons :

June 16.

159,626
296 456

The following table. shows the shipments of Tea from China and
Japan to the United States from June 1, 1867, to May 1, 1868, the date
of latest advices by mail; and importations into the United States (not
including San Francisco), from Jan. 1 to date, in 1867 and 1868:
IMPORTS PROM CHINA A JA.
SHIPMENTS PROM CHINA & JAPAN SINCE JUNE 1.
PAN INTO U. S. SINCE JAN 1.

1,062,846

15,154,477
5,2 6,528

1866.

I,48102653

500,846

366,957 lbs. per
LiverOlyphants*

Shipments Eastward, from

^

•

16,776

6,439
567,732
223,343
819,100
366,783
214,465

701,310 per “ Alexandrina ” from Yokohama, and
“Julia Ann ” from Nagasaki; also 114 boxes per steamer from
)ol. Dates from China are to May 1.
We quote from
circular below.

*

the

•

a

12,408

711,687

3,829
16,970

235,151

261,013
137,672

25 for four years :

Flour, bbls

•

bush.

4,277
20,130

29,252,582

very firm market throughout the week, which has
operated to restrict business, as the demand has not been very active.
5*,899
17,180 At the close trade is quiet, but prices are firm at the rates ruling during
the week. Sales have been made of 9,814 half chests Oolongs, 400 do
70,079
10,360 Souchong, 4*127 do greens, and 1,060 Japans.
#
41,8 »
Imports of the week include 1,068,267 lbs. of Japan tea, as follows:
11,485

Wheat,

Flour.
bbls.

-

•

TEA.

22.181

From

14,388

There has been

Lake Ports for the week endirg June 20:

at

14,155

254,4=5

Rye,

2.183

.

15,937

8,805,261

68,522

.do

Totals

3,370

12,109,834

bush.

.

1867.

1868.

114

Sugar....
Sugar

bbls.

.

-From Jan 1 to date-

29,915,038

91/45

Flour,
.

:
This
week.

CONTINENT.

From
.

follows

25.648

77,224

127,262
111,727

1866
1865

do

are as

450,654
G69,105
485,224
2,750

31,829

125,802

period, 1867

TO

V

The totals

heads.

476,239

Total
To about
do
do

[June 27,1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

820

has been

an

June 26,1868.

improvement in business from the extra

imports of Rio for the week have been 25,648 bags, making
country in first hands June 25th 215,292 bags. Details

the stock in the
are as

follows

:

Newltork—St. Merrimac 2,056, Silver Star 3,988. At Baltimore—Anna
Marie 4190, abbots Rending 5,414, Adelaid 5.000, Grey Eagle 6,000.
At this port—2,973 bags of Laguayra, per Hertres; 136 St. Domingo and 25
sundiit-s have come to band. At Baltimore 236 bags from Bremen, and at Bos¬
ton 47 bags of St. Domingo.
The stock of Rio coffee June 25, and the imports from Jan. 1 to date
At

in 1868

and 1867 were as follows
n ew

In

York.
141,492

Bags.

Phila-

Balti

del.
7,700

more.

48 600

New

Savan.&

Orleans. Mobile.

11.300

6.200

Gal¬
veston.

Total.

215,292
102.874

ordinary dulness of last week, although we are still unable to Stock date 1867. 68,424 5,950 25,000
3,000
Same
567/32
2,800
9/11
50,071
Imports
356,179
5,836 137,135
record a marked activity in any branch of trade.
Teas have
3,200
500,846
7,500
55,882
in 1867 311,718
10,730
been very firm and business small in consequence.
Of Rio Of other sorts the stock at New York June 25, and the imports at the
Coffee about 12,000 bags have changed hands. Sugar, com several oorts since Jan, 1 were as follows:



•

,

“

.

•

»

,,

•

,

In

♦44,754
10,088

33

Singapore.
18,799
3,604
8t.

Domingo.
8,945

Includes mats, &c.,

•

•

2,138

685

....

247 Phllad’a

Portland
Boston

2,118

197

....

256

56.001

31,296
815

24 403

815

11,154

144

144

223,343

FOR

“

“
*’
“25“
27“
“
2^“
“
29-Baltimore
25-

4,609

Hremerin..'.. .5,00J

.Anna Marie...4,109

“
“
“
“
“
“
“

“

4,471

7-New York.Brazileira
4,B<0
7-Baltimore..Amazon
4,000
7“
Abbots Reading5,414
9..Cricket
“
5,011
10-New York.Silver Star ...4,528
10“
.Talisman
5, 00
1C“
.Samos
3,4lo
12“
.Elisabeth
4,165
“
16.Green Olive..4,542

hags of coffee 181 931

Total

Orinoco

....Moses Rogers.....5,000
....Bella
3,500

“

an

among

buyers gave a firm

market, which increased under an increasing inquiry, and
advance of
was obtained in nearly all grades.
Subsequently the

20,653
19,315

operators seemed to slacken, and business was dull. To¬
day, however, at full prices sales have been large, and the market
closes strong. The demand is firm with the trade and refiners. Sales
have been made of 6,212 hhds. Cuba, 291 do Porto Rico, 368 do Dem¬
erara, 102 do Barbadoes, 4,464 boxes mostly Havana, and 2,800 bags

Details for the week
Cuba
bx’s.

,

are as

follows

in boxes but less in

:

P.Ri. Other Brazil

Stocks June 26,

41

154
53

....
....

Cuba

,

hhds. hhds.hhds. bags.

N. York .8,362 3,699
Portland
Boston. 4,694
582

At—

boxes,

Philad?l...
Baltimore.
N. Orleans

991
850

1,040

Other
Cuba.
PRico.For’n, Tot’l,
b’xs. ♦hhds. ♦hhds ♦hhds. *hhds.
53.570
71,133

At—

N. York stock.
Same date 1867

27,406
Imp’ts since Jan 1. i67,838 180,038
do
Portland
5,509
3,783
do
Boston
36,139 35,309
do
43,750 50,217
Philadelphia
do
Baltimore
16,477 14.217

-

do

60,813

Total import.... 819,100
Same time 1867. 159,626
*

s

P. Rico, Other
hhds. hhds.

hhds.

4,910
2,023
67

[2,122

9,372

58,212

4,424

13,369 219,893
1,491
7,327
4,3 2 44,085

2,572

361

53,150

12,305

5,949

327

•

....

•

•

25,178

....

• •

• *■

10,926
9,147

289,582
965,153

20,065

8,077

•

•

14,952

•

the

are

ruling quotations in first hands.

Duty: 25 cents per fl>.

r-Duty

r

aid-

Ex fine to finest.. .1 40 (n 1 65

do
do Ex f. to fin’st 85'
Uncol Japan, Com. to fair.. 66
do
Sup'r to fine.l 00

Oolong, Common to fair.70

Hyson, Common to fair
85 @1 C5
do
Superior to fine.... 1 10 @1 85
...

do

95

Sup’rtoflne.

95

do

Ext to finest! 85

do
Ex fine to finest.. 1 85
Souc. & Cong., Com. tofair To

Sup. to fine .1 25 @1 55
r. tofinest.1 65 @1 90

do Ex.

H. Sk.&Tw’kay,C,tofair.
do
do Sup. to fine

Superior to fine...

do

Exfinetoflnest.1 45 ®l 75

do
do

Ex f. to fineatl 10

do

Gunp. & Imp., Com.to fairl 05 ®i 20
65 ® 70
85 ® 95

Coffee.
Native Ceylon

Rio, Prime, duty paid ...gold 16J® 17
do good
cold 15?® 16
do
do

Maracaibo.

-

gold 14}® 15 1 Laguayra

fair

St Domingo
ordinary
...gold 13}® 13|
Java, mats an 1 bags .►..gold 22}4> 234 I Jamaica

Brazil, Manila
hgs. &c bgs, NO
'

*

.

Cuba,
do

do
do
do
do

►

gold
gold
god
...gold
gold

17}®
15}®
15}®
D}®
14}®

19
174
164

15
154

54,722

•

•

•

•

107

....

12,551

292,742
168,365

87,246

261,822

..$gall... ®

41,088
43,184

Since Jan.l.

983,023

877,180
782,474

..

do

..

Clayed.

Baibadoes...

.™

.

•

..._.«

44
45

47
70

47 ® 50

Spices.
cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and doves, 20;

pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents 18 fi>.
Cassia, in mats-gold $ lb

52®

Ginger, race and Af(gold)

11}®
95 ®
88}®

12

I

I
89

Pepper,
(gold)
Pimento, Jamaica.(gold)
Cloves
(gold)

pepper and

*4}
26}

21
27

Fruit.
Duty : Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds,
Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1}, Filberts and
Walnuts, 3 cents $ fi>; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50: Green Fruits.

^

eent ad val.

Raisins, beealess. .$) }cask
Total export—.

® 16}
16»®
powdered...16f® ...
Soft White
If}® ..
do Yellow
14 ® 15

Granulated
Crushed and

48 ® 70

260
262

and stocks at Havana

week.
5 »,881

....

# gallon.

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

“

,

8 oents

(gold)
Nutmegs, No. 1.... (gold)

hogsheads.

Rec’d this r-Expts to U. S.—*
week.
week. Since Jan. 1.

do

Iff
13$
14}
15}
16$

molasses.
:

Mace

294,663 46,598 25,522 366,783 52,005 162,460
58,743 296,456 17,107 57,7b8
237,608

do

do 10 to 12 12 ®
de 18 to 16 12 ®
do 16 to 18 14 ©
do 19 to 20 16}®
white

Loaf

do

to choice

do
do

do
do

12}® 13
11}® 14}
oentrifugal
JV1 elado
7}® 9
Hav’a, Box, D.S.Nos. 7 to 9. li @ 11}
pr.

do

do
do

grocery. 12 ® i2?
13 ® 14
prime to ch. do
inf. to com. refining . 10J© 11}
fair to good
do .. 111® 11}
fair to good grocery., )1{(® 12|

Duty: mace, 40
153

44,205 107,738

do

gd reC$fl>. m® li}

do

do
do

hhds

2,338
36,583

2,800
5,000

Porto Rico, fr to

Duty

9,857

485

Havana, June 20, 1868.—Receipts, exports
and Matanzas have been as follows:

Stocks
boxes

494,386
405,771
606,496

MOLASSES

break during the week in the dulness and depres¬
sion which haye settled upon the market.
Holders are now storing in
There has been no

preference to an acceptance of the low figures offered by buyers, and
quotations are considerably reduced business is almost at
a stand still.
The unsettled state of the question as to the tax on dis.
tilled spirits, directly affecting the demand for Molasses for distillation
is believed to be one cause of the unsatisfactory condition.
Sales have
been made of 246 hhds. Porto Rico, *89 do Demerara, part at auction
100 do Barba loes, and 68 do of sundry kinds.
The i ggregate receipts of the week again show a decrease.
The
receipts at aU ports foot up 14,888 hhds., against 17,783 last week.
The total receipts at the ports since Jau. 1 now reach 289,682 hhds.,
against 266,168 hhds. in 1867. Details for the week are as follows;

do

$ box

Layer

OuTrants

$ lb

Citron, Leghorn

Prunes, Turkish
Dates

Almonds, Langnedoc
do
do
do

Provence

Sicily, Soft Shell
Shelled

Sardines
Sardines

....

# hi. box
V qr. box

8 go®....

3 95®4 00

11}® 11}
27 ® 28
11}® 12
7 ®
9}
35 ® 36
24 ® 26

Figs,Smyrna
Brazil Nuts

« lb

Filberts, Sicily
Walnuts, Bordeaux
Pearl

Sago

Tapioca
Macaroni, Italian
Dried Fbuit—

14 ®....
47 ® 50
29 ® 3>

Apples

17}® 18

Peaches, unpared

Blaokberries
Peaches, par* d

f? lb

«® 9}
16 ® 19
20 ® 21
8 ® 12

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.

while current




2,016

are

504

32,471

26,485

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to

Year.
1868
1867
1865

709

•

shade lower, but these

are a

Annexed

...

and imports since Jan. 1, 1868, were as follows :
,

New Orleans

•

*•

Sugar.

imports of the week are about the same

hogsheads than last week. At all the ports for the week the receipts
foot up 16,987 boxes against 14,346—and 14,155 hhds. against 19,140
last week, making the total receipts to date 319,100 boxes and 366,783
hhds., against 169, 26 boxes and 296,466 hhds. to same date last year.
,

•

583

•

•

2,281
2,068

light, but sales are of not less than the ordinary
of the year. Our quotations stand unchanged.

Pernambuco.

At—

•

212

confidence of

The

40,643
63,506
17,751

in limited demand just now, and business quiet.
and other kinds generally are firm
in price.
Mediterranean green frait has improved in price. Sicily and
French lemons selling during the week at $9 }2}@9 62 } per box at
West India is in abundance, and selling at irregular prices.
auction.

tone to this
an

season

Foreign dried

Prices

do

activity

42.951

5,775

6,578

109 779

523

FRUITS.

do

SUGAR.

early part of the week

11,882

•

Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair .„. 80 @1 10
do
Super, to fine. .1 lft ®1 4)

Private bills 17%®18d.

Exchange.—London, hank hills nominal.

In the

amount for this

3,800
4,500

.

“

•

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads.

The trade continues

STATES.

New York....Merrimac
“
...Ht rtha
“

•

SPICES.

LOADING FOR THE UNITED

VESSELS

798

1,589

.

m

386

13,564
14,740

7,500

Total
106,316
In the same period sailed for Eu¬
rope 27 vessels with together. 76,615

.P C.Warwick.4,260
,Wm Cundall.4,704

May 5-H. Roads...Felix
“

332,022

5,001
18-Baltimore. .Adelaide
“19“
.Grey Eagle... .5,0C0
,4,192
“19“
.Palme
“
24“
.Three Sisters.4,600

.Mississippi .12,200
.

335,093

“

Apl.24-New York. Ruth

♦

•

4,247

62.348

.

.

m

7,168

380

240,762

1868.

Mayl6-New York..Contest

U. STATES

THE

1867.

292,974

25th afm.il

it
tt

Baltimr re
New Orlear s

k

N.O
bbls.

STATES.

UNITED

1866.

From 1st Jan. to 30th April

..

m

follows:

Total

foreign. for> ign.
22,019
1,102

rara.

18,457

77,782
42,048
30,285

.

Boston,
Philadelphia

mats.

+ Also 49,785

reduced to bags.

SHIPMENTS OP COFFEE TO THE

SINCE

.

Portland

Janeiro, May 26, 1868.—Messrs. Boje & Co’s Market Report
states of coffee : Since the last eight days buyers have withdrawn from
the market, owing to the exhorbitant demands of dealers, by no means
justified by the latest news from abroad, holders, however, remain very
firm, expecting that arrivals will continue small during the next time.
Sales have been 134.400 bags ; stock is 70,000 bags.

SAILED

♦Hhds at—

«.*#•

....

....

Other

Deme-

28 1,048

202

847
66

...

.....

Porto
Cuba. Rico.
3 878
17,039

.

Rio

VESSELS

338

1,910

805

4,018

Baltim’re.
N. Orle s

Stocks, June 26, and imports since Jan. 1, 1868, were as

32,3 2

11,154

•

37,487
37,800

151,527

N. York

3,438

12,086
2,600

173,790

27,663
28,954
*

•

at

10.088

.

•

Porto Deme-i
Cuba. Rico. rara.Other

Hhds.

Porto Deme¬
Cuba. Rico. rara. Other.

at—

66,032

1,490

55,968
21,178
19,010
20,844

Ceylon....

import, import, import*

21,278

*1.'.<48

11,315

Hhds

Balt. N. Orle’s Total

-New York—. Boston Philadel.
Stock. Import. import. import,

bags.

821

THE CHRONICLE.

June 27,1868.]

Friday, P. M., June26, 1868.

Spring trade closes as satisfactorily as could have been
expected, when we consider the many adverse influences that
have so greatly impeded operations. Jobbers have been
enabled to work off largely their surplus stock, and have done
a
good business this week in filling orders for immediate
trade, as also in supplying some of their large customers
The

THE CHRONICLE.

822

[June 27, 1868.

active last week at Providence 9
and the closing price for 64x64
was 81 cents, with a tendency to a further advance.
Prints show no great change.
Jobbers have cleared out their light
work so close that it is difficult to fill an important order. Good
convention mediums are somewhat scarce, and for dark work an advance is antici¬
tempt some pated. Allens 12*-13*, American 12*, Amoskeag 12*, Arnolds 11, Co-

goods as arc low in cost and always com¬
mand a'sale. Many firms are now taking their half-yearly
stock, preparatory to the Fall campaign, and wo must expect
with such standard

Print Cloths were reported more
with sales amounting^ to 99,600 pieces,

quiet times for some weeks unless the political
that assembles here on the Fourth of July should
buyers to inspect the state of the market and to place a few checo 13*, Conestoga 13*, Dunnell’s 12*, Freeman 11, Gloucester 12*'
‘
13*, Hamilton 13*, Home 7, Lancaster 12*, London mourning 124-, Malorders. During the week the business done in first hands hory 13-14, Manchester 12*-1 8*, Merrimac D 12*, do p’k & purple 16,
•

i

,

n

i-i

-

has been of
_

advanced

satisfactory character and prices have
do chintz 13*, Oriental 12*-13*, Pacific 12*, Richmond’s
/»
13*, Simpson Mourning 12*, Sprague’s pur and pink 14*, do blue and
those makes of brown and bleached muslins, ot wh> i6j do fancy 14, do shirtings 14*, Victory 10*, Wamsutta 10,
a

very

.

,

on

.

11111

.

prospective demand exceeds the probable supply. Wauregan 11*.
Gl?RHiAfiS
mainly to be attributed to the gow 16-16*, Hampden 16, Lancaster 18, Manchester 13*.
J
Allama“Jjreplaidl9, c^le^onia Glasdecrease of production, some mills having matciially curtailed
Muslin Delaines are quiet. Prices are nominal, except on new
their work, while others have shut down altogether until the work, which is held at 18 cents. Arraures 20, do plain 20, Hamilton
15-18, Lowell 15-18, Manchester 15-18, Pacific 15-18, Pekins 24,
price of the raw material allows a better margin on manu¬ Piques 22, Spragues 15.
Tickings are inactive.
Albany 9, American 14, Amoskeag A C A
facture than now exists. Altogether there is a very sanguine
85, do A 30, do B 25, do C 22, do D 20, Blackstone River 18, Conestoga
feelino-s as to the Fall trade, and the recent advance will be 27*, do extra 32*, Cordis 30, do BB 17*, Hamilton 26, do D 20, Lewis¬
ton 36 32*, do 32 30, do 80 26, Mecs. and W’km’s 80, Pearl River 83,
beneficial, if not carried beyond the bounds of prudence.
Pemberton AA
Swift River 17, Thorndike
which the

The

cause

for this advance is

#

18*, WhitYork 80 25, do 32 32*.
Stripes are dull.
Albany 9, American 13*, Amoskeag 28*, Boston
15, Everett 13, Hamilton 23*, Haymakei 17, Sheridan A 13, doG 14,
Uncasville dark 16, do light 16, Whittenton AA 23, do A 21, do BB
16, do C 15, do D 12, York 22*.
Checks are quiet. Caledonia No. 70 27*, do 60 25, do 10 25, do
8 19, do 11 22*, do 15 27*, Kennebeck 23*, Lanark No. 2 12, Park No.
60 15, do 70 22*, do 90 27*, Pequa No. 1,200 12*, Star Mills 600
10*, do 800 16, Union No. 20 25, do 50 27*.
Denims have shown a better inquiry for the best makes.
Iu first
hands we note a elight advance in one or two popular brands. Amoskeag
30, Blue Hill 14, Beaver cr. blue 19, do CC 22*, Columbian extra 80,
, Otis
Haymaker 19, Manchester 21, Lingard’s blue 16, do brown
AXA 29, do BB 27, do OC 23, Pearl River 28, Pittsfield —, Thorndike
18, 7re nout 20.
Cottonades have been in fair request for this season of the year.
Far. & Mec. Cass. 40, Lewiston 40, New York Mills 31*, Plow. L.
<fc Anv. 37*.
Corset Jeans are unchanged. Amoskeag 14, Bates 10*, Everetts 15,
27*, do X 17,

exports of dry goods for the week ending June 23, and
January 1, 1868, and the total for the same time in
1867 and 1860 are shown in the following table:
The

since

-FROM BOSTON.

-FROM NEW YORK.

-Domestics.Val.
pkgs.

Exports to

2
3
33
10

Canada
Cuba
New Granada

Venezaela
London
Mexico
Madeira
St. Pierre

....

594

705

•

.

-

.

.

.

,l##

•

....

Miquelon

....

•

•

•

53
Total this week..
$9,296
Since Jan. 1, 1863 . 11,8271,143,740
Same time 1867. ..► 4,628 637,729
“
1860... 55,526
....

We

annex a

manufacture,

few

our

pkgs,

•

.

f

•

.

•

.

•

.

.

.

.

....

.

.

.

...

.

.

1.944
•

•

72

.

.

22

43

$4,444
838,781

.

.

21

....

2,393
3,347

-

....

•

•

....

.

•

.

2,500

.

•

,

....

....

cases.

$....

....

63
9

....

•

packages.

$216

7,781

Domestics. Dry Goods

Val.

^

5,991
4,407

723.633

23,227

...

tenden A 22*, Willow Brook 28^-30,

particulars of leading articles of domestic
prices quoted being those of the leading I Lacoaia 14, Naumkeag 14, do satteen 17*, Pepperell 15, Washington
satteen 16*.
Cambrics show a

jobbers:

slight increase of activity, with a tendency to firmer
activity during quotations. Silesias continue quiet. Pequot cambrics 10*, Superior 8*,
the past week, the transactions in first hands being larger than had been Victory H 9, Washington 10, Wauregan 10*, Blackburn Silesias 16,
Indian Orchard 15, Lonsdale twilled 14*, Victory J twilled 15, Ward 15
anticipated. This demand at even a slight advance on standard and
Cotton Bags have been selling a little more fairly.
Lewiston have
fine brown goods has imparted a better tone to the market, and job¬ advanced 2* cents.
American 47*, Lewiston 52*, Stark A £2*, do C
bers have receive! from their large customers orders for many 3 bush 67*.
Cotton Yarns are inactive at unchanged quotations.
40 for large
brands that always command a sale.
Agawam 36 in. 14*, Amos¬ and 42* cents for small skeins are the asking rates.
Foreign Dress Goods for midsummer wear have sold moderately
keag A 36 17*, doB 36 17, Atlantic A 36 18, do H 36 17*,
well. Jaconnet9, Organdies, and Lawns have been taken to complete
do P 36 14*, do L 36 15, do V 36 15, Appleton A 35 17*,
assortments, and these goods, and especially Percales, are jobbing at
Augusta 36 16*, do 30 13*, Bedford R 30 10*, Boott H 27 11, a
reduction, preparatory to taking stock. The remaining dress goo Is
doO 34 12*, do S 40 14 j, do W 45 19, Commonwealth O 27 8*, Grafton call for no
special remark, and the sales at auction are over for the
A 27 9£, Great Falls M 36 144,doS 33 13*,Indian Head 36 17*, do 30 14*, season.
Indian Orchard A 40 16*, do C 36 14*, do BB 36 13*, do W 34 12*,
Domestic Woolens continue quiet, but a mere active trade is ex¬
do NN 36 16, Laconia O 89 14*, do B 37 144, do E 36 13*, Law¬ pected for the ensuing week; the agents are now showing cards of
rence C 36 17, do E 36 15, do F 86 1**, do G 34 12*, do H 27 11,
their new work in Fancy Cassimeres, which, both for quality and
o LL 36 14, Lyman C 36 15*, do E 86
17*, Massachusetts BB 36 14, sty e, in many cases, merit great commendation.
do J 30 13*, Medford 36 16*, Nashua fine O 33 14*, do R 36 16, do
E 89 18, Newmarket 36 14, Pacific extra 36 17*, do H 36 17*, do
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK.
L 36 15, Pepperell 6-4 —, do 7-4 27*, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do
10-4 60, do 11-4 55, Pepperell E fine 89 16, do R 36 15, do O
The importations oi ary goods at tins port for the week ending June
S3 13*, do N 80 12*, do G 30 14, Pocasset F 30 10*, do K 36 14, do 40
17, Saranac fine O 33 14*, do R 36 16, do E 39 18, Sigourney 36 25,1868, and the corresponding weeks of 1866 and 1867, have been a»
10, Stark A 86 17, Swift River 36 13, Tiger 27 9*, Tremont M follows:
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings

have shown

more

(

83 11.

entered for consumption for THE WEEK ENDING JUNE

Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings

The finer

grades

are

have been

more

in request.

selling moderately at unchanged quotations,- but

-1866.Value.
Pkgs.

Manufactures of wool... 900
do
cotton.. 369
do
silk...,
175
do
flax.... 416
Miscellaneous dry goods. 219

$367,895
109,967
178,785
98,826
78,729

-1867.Value.
Pkgs.
465
400
177
393
131

$206,267
114,499

25, 1861.
-1868.-

Pkgs.
338
409
404
431
166

Value

$124,855
110,368

an advance of 1@1* cents on some medium and low grades.
308,269
187,289
101,901
88,446
Amoskeag 46 21, do 42 19, do A 36 17*, do Z 33 12, Andros¬
55,786
62,194
coggin 36 18, Appleton 36 17, Attawaugan XX 36 15*, Atlan
1.566
$668,733
1,748 $694,133
Total
2,079 $834,202
tic Cambric 36 27*, Ballou <fc Son 36 15*, Bartletts 36 16*, do
83' 14*, do 30 13*, Bates 36 18*, do BB 36 16, do B 33 13*, WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE MARKET DUBIN0
THE SAME PERIOD.
Blackstone 36 16, do D 36 14, Boott B 36 16, do O 83 13*, do H 28
Maniiiactures of wool... 1,219 $403,191
171
$75,431
247 $106,341
54,286
do
cotton.. 152
256
80,904
87
24,334
11, do O 30 13*, do R 27 10*, doS 86 14*,do W45 19, Dwight 36 21*
do
silk....
88
86,107
153
114,756
32
35,000
Ellerton E42 20, do 27 10, Forrest Mills 36 14*,Forestdale 36 17*, Globe
do
flax.... 585
163,161
252
55,334
235
4S,000
30,770
243
11,584
188
4,575
27 8*, Fruit of the Loom 36 19, Gold Medal 36 15, Greene M’fg Co 36 Miscellaneous dry goods. 880
Total
2,024
$832,515
1,075 $338,000
780 $218,250
13, do 30 11, Great Falls K 36 16, do M 33 14, do S 31 13, do A 83
Add ent’d for consu’pt’n 2,079
834,202
1,566
668,733 1,748
694,132
15, Hills Semp. Idem 36 17*,do38 15,Hope 36 15*, James 36 16, do 38
14*, do 81 13, Lawrence B 36 15, Lonsdale 36 18, Masonville 36 18, Total tli’wmipon mak’t. 5,003 $1,666,717
2,641 $1,006,742 2,537 $912,382
Mattawarakeng 6-4 —, do 8 4 —do 9-4 —, do 10-4
, Newmarket
ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD.
O 86 15*, New York Mills 36 28, Pepperell 6-4 29, do 8-4 45, do 9-4
572
796
$227,405
$351,830
50, do 10 4 —, Rosebuds 36 17, Red Bank 36 13, do 32 11, Slater Manufactures of wool... 691 $291,895
81
96
31,754
19,879
67,597
do
cotton..
206
J. <fe W. 86 16, Tuscarora 22, Utica 5-4 32*, do 6-4 85, do 9-4 62*, do
60
57
69,818
58,117
29,623
do
silk
39
10-4 67*, Waltham X 33 14, do 42 16, do 6-4 27, do 8-4 45, do 9-4 50,
310
391
13,493
72,930
40,164
do
flax....
161
25
3,117
39,825
14,239
15,297
do 10-4 —, Wamsutta 45 82*, do 40* 29, do 36 25, Washington 33 10*. Miscellaneous dry goods. 21
Brown Drills of the best makes continue scarce, but the demand is
$429,857
1,365 $469,432 4,140
$444,576
Total
1,118
chiefly confined to the home trade. Androscoggin 11, Amoskeag 17, Add ent d for consu’pt’n .2,079
668,733
694,132
1,566
1,748
834,202
Boott 17, Graniteviile D 16*, Laconia 17*, Pepperell 17*, Stark A 17,
2,931 $1,138,165 sjs88. $1,128,989
Tffcal entered at the port' 3,197 $1,278,778
do H 15*.

there is




.

....

.

June

JENKINS, VAILL &

MERCHANTS,

GOODS COMMISSION

DRY

MANUFACTURED BY

NO. 175

Brothers.

Machine Twist,
Sewing
Trams and Organzlnet,
FINE ORGANZINES FOR SILK MIXTURE

STREET,

Germania Fire Ins.

AMERICAN SILKS.

Cheney

PEABODY,
48 LEONARD

Insurance.

Commercial Cards.

Dry Goods.

MERES.

Silk,
CASSI-

COTTONS AND

Handkerchiefs,

PoDgee

the sale of

WOOLENS,

Silk Warp Poplins,
Silk Dress Goods,

J. F. Mitchell,

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS.

21 WALKER STREET NEW
Sole Agents for

YORK,

JOSEPH GREER’S CHECKS.
Also, Agents for the Sale of
Fine 6-4 Scotch Coatings ; Oxford, Cadet, and Fancy
Jeans, B. & W. Checks aud Fancy Tweeds; Shirting
Flannels ; Ginghams, Ticks, and Balmoral •
Skirts, of several makes.

RUDOLPH GARRIGl E, President.
JOHN E. KAHL, Vice President.
ugo Schumann,

The Hope

EDWARD II. ARNOLD & SON,

SCOTCH AND IRISH

4 Otis

210 Chestnut

LINEN CHECKS, &C.,

Merchants,

10 and 12 German Street, Baltimore.

DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
The partnership between the subscribers, under

J. H. Brower & Co.,29th
dissolved by mutual consent, November

was

J. H. BROWER.
W. H. SELLERS.
B. B. BLYDENBURGH.

1st, 1868.

New York, June

DRILLS,

70 & 72 FRANKLIN

This Company
Fire on terms as

Company

BROADWAY,

150,000

$222,433

1867

Assets, June 1,

Insures against Loss or ramageby

favorable as any responsible Com¬

pany

JACOB REESE, President

JAMES E, MOORE,

Secretary.

Relfast.

Banbrldge.

Co.,

INSURANCE.

FIRE

American Fire
Insurance Co.,

North

114 BROADWAY,
v
COOPER INSTITUTE, THIRD

OFFICE

BRANCH OFFICE 9

The
under the firm of

AVENUE.

*5

-

for the transaction of a general commission business
and have such arrangements as to enable them to
offer their friends and former correspondents liberal
facilities upon consignments.
Strict attention will be given to such interests as
may be intrustdd to our care.
J. H. BROWER.
B. B. BLYDENBURGH.
New York, June 1st, 1868.

Importers of

$500,000 00
255,057 77
Capital and Surplus, January 1,
1867, 6755,057 77.

Cash

Insures

Property against Loss or Damage

COMMISSION

British and Continental.

United

INSURANCE

COMPANY,

In the City oi New York.
NO. 40 WALL STREET.

MERCHANTS,

58 BROAD STREET, NEW

States

YORK,

$2,300,000

ASSETS
Offer for sale, IN BOND,

Hall,

FIINE BOURBON

Manufacturers of 4
rom

Jr. A CO’S.

EndjtGlasgow.

Distilleries, Ken¬

Co.,
John Dwight &York,
New
AGENTS FOR;

Company,

Insurance

“ONTARIO” SEAMLESS BAGS,
AWNING STRIPES.”

Company.
A full supply all Widths and Colors always in stock.
59 Broad Street, New York.
E. A. Brinckeiuioff,
Theodore Polhemus,
J. Spencer Turner,
II, D. Polhemus, Special.

Edward Lambert & Co.,

Charter Perpetual.

CAPITAL....

$3,000,000.




J.

L. J. HENDEE, President.
GOODNOW, Secretary.

Assets July

COMMERCIAL

PAPER.

1,1867

Liabilities
NSURANCE AGAINST LOSS

-

$4,650,938 27
377,668 46

AND DAMAGE BY

FIRE.

NEW YORK AGENCY

WALL STREET.

SPECIALTY

BENJ. 8. WALCOTT Preal

Company.
NO.

11

WALL

STREET.

$1 50,000 00
692,305 61

Capital
Incorporated 1819

Also, Agents

United States Bunting

$606,634
50,144

....

OF HARTFORD.

And all kinds of

COTTON C ANVASS, FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER¬
ING, BAGGING, RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES

.

Hamilton Fire Insurance

iETNA

COTTON SAIL DUCK

12

Gross Assets
.
Tota ^Liabilities

Rxmsxn Lams, Secretary J

Insurance.

&

Manufacturers and Dealers in

NO.

$400,000 00
206,634 79

Surplus

HORSFORD’S CREAM TARTAR.

CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y.

“

July 1st, 1867.
Cash capital.,

SUP CARF. SODA,
AND SAL SODA.

o,,

&C.

COMPANY,
NO. 45 WALL STREET.

No. ll Old Slip,
MANUFACTURERS OF

SALJERATUS,

RUSSELL, Sole Agent.

JOHN EADIE, President.
Secretary.

Hanover Fire Insurance

SEWING.

Theodore Polhemus

thereafter.

tucky.

UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE

88

their own and other first-class

WARREN STREET, NEW YORK.

THOS.

and annually

Nicholas Da Groot,

Spool Cotton.

IS

WHISKIES,

AND RYE

UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS,

CLARK,

by Fire at

the usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of the
Company, or at its various Agencies in the principal
cities in the United States.
JAMES W. OTIS, President.
R. W. BLEECKER, VicePrea

LIFE

AND

Linen Handk’fs,

Mile

*

Surplus

DISTILLERS

Laces and Emb’s,

JOHN

.

INCORPORATED 1823.

J. M. Cummings & Co.,

Goods,

NOS. 12 & 14

r*

F H. Carter, Secretary.
J. Griswold, General Agent.

STREET, NEW YORK,

Byrd &

'

.

Cash Capital

J. H. Brower & Co.,

Sole Agents for

George Pearce &

Cash Capital

PARTNERSHIP.
subscribers have this day formed a partnership

WHITE GOODS,

And F. W. HAYES & CO.,

OFFICE NO. 92

of the late firm have all been liqui¬

dated and settled.

PATENT LINEN THREAD

White

Street, Philadelphia.

CHASE, STEWART A CO.,

The liabilities

STREET,

DICKSONS’ FERGUSON A CO,

Fire Insurance

Street, Boston.

LEONARD BAKER A CO.,

LINEN GOODS,

SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS,

Street, New York.

102 Franklin

CHENEY & JULIA KEN,

1867,

198 & 200 CHURCH

Secretary.

the firm of

George Hughes & Co.
Importers & Commission

$876,815 50

TOTAL ASSETS

AGENTS;

C. B. &

376,815 50

PURPOSES TO ORDER.

SILKS FOR SPECIAL

Of Several Mills.

$500,000 00

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1868

*

Belt Ribbons.

-

,

Co.,

BROADWAY, N. Y

CAPITAL,

ASH

Foulards and Florentines,
Sole Agents ior

3

82

THE CHRONICLE

27,1868.]

LNO.

62

JAS. A.

WAJbl-

STREET.

ALEXANDER, Agent.

Surplus

The Directors have this day declared the usual semi¬
annual Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent free of gov¬
ernment tax, payable on and after July 1st.
The transfer books will be closed on the 25th inst.
JAMES GILMORE, Secretary.
New York, June 10th, 1868.

THE

SingerManufacturingCoj
BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
458
Proprietors and Manufacturers of tbs world re¬

nowned

SINGER SEWING MACHINES,

824

THE CHRONICLE.

640

MILES

Financial

^

OF THE

Union

[June 27,1868.

Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw

Pacific

Railroad

COMPANY’S

RAILWAY

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, WESTERN
Are now finished and in operation. Sixty miles of track have been laid this Spring, and the work along the
whole line between the Atlantic and the Pacific States is being pushed forward more rapidly than ever
before. More than twenty thousand men are employed, and it is not impossible that the entire track, from

Omaha to Sacramento, will be finished in 1869 instead of 1870.

The
energy, men and money can do to secure the completion of this

GREAT NATIONAL

means

$t00,000 for Sale In Lots
at 83 1-2

provided are ample, and all tha

DIVISION.

of;^10,000

Flat9 by

Kendrick, Christie & Co.

WORK,

NO. 44 EXCHANGE PLACE.

at the earliest possible day, will be done.

OFFICES 15 AND 16.
The UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY receive

:

United States
I.—A GOVERNMENT GRANT

Treasury,

New York, June

01 the right of way, and all necessary timber and other materials found along the line of its;operatlons.

REDEMPTION OF

24th 1868.

LOANS OF

IT. S.

1847 AIMD 1848.

II.—A

GOVERNMENT

the
the

Of 12,800 acres of land to the mile, taken in alternate sections on each

donation, and will be

a source

of instructions from the Secretary of
Treasury, the holders of United States Bonds of
loans of 1847 and 1848 are hereby notified that said

In pursuance

GRANT
side of its road. This is an absolute

of large revenue in the future.

Department
the office of the Assistant Trea¬
surer in New York, on and after the fibst day of
july, 1868 (proximo), and that interest on the afore¬
said bonds will cease after June 30th instant.
All bonds must be assigned to 44 The Secretary of
the Treasury for Redemption,” and endorsed by the
party to whom payment is required to be made.
Where such assignments are executed in a repre"
sentative or fiduciary capacity, the evidence of au¬
thority to make the assignment must accompany the
certificates. Should that evidence be already filed
with the Department, the date of its transmission and
the bureau in which it was lodged should be stated.
Certificates presented should be listed in a schedule
In which the numbers, denominations, names of payees
and other data above required, should be set forth.

bonds will be redeemed at the Treasury

in Washington, or at

m.—A GOVERNMENT GRANT
Of United Slates Thirty-year Bonds, amounting to from $16,000 to $48,000 per mile, according to the difficulties
to be surmounted on the various sections to he built. The Government takes a second mortgage as security,
and it is expected that not only the interest but the principal amount may be paid in services rendered by tne

Company in transporting troops, mails, &c. The interest is now much more than paid in this way,
securing a great saving in time and money to the Government.

besides

IV—A GOVERNMENT GRANT
Of the right to issue its own FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, to aid in building the road, to the same amount as
the United States Bonds, issued lor the same purpose, and no more. The Government Permits the Trustees

H. H. VAN

for the First Mortgage Bondholders to deliver the Bonds fo the Company only as the road is completed, and
after It has been examined by United States Commissioners and pronounced to be in all respects a first-class

railroad, laid with a heavy T rail, and completely supplied with depots, stations, turnouts, car shops, locomo.
tlves, cars, &c.

DYCK,

Assistant Treasurer.

Treasury Department.
June

V.—A CAPITAL STOCK SUBSCRIPTION.
stockholders, of which Over Eight Million Dollars have been paid In upon the work'already

From the

done, and which will he increased as the wants of the Company require.

York, as follows:
The notes that matured on the

.

.

VI —NET CASH EARNINGS
Way Business, that already amount to more than the interest on the First
earnings are no indication of the vast through business that must follow the opening
but they certainly prove that
On its

Mortgage Bonds. These
of the line to the Pacific

such a property, costing nearly three times their amount,

Are Secure

Beyond

any

Oontingenoy.

p^y

The Company
Teserve

The principal is payable in gold at maturity.
liberal income on their cost.

THE MARKS r

The price is

Subscriptions will be received in New York.

value of the Bonds and the accrued interest in currency at the rate
irom the date on which the last coupon was paid. Subscriptions will be received

Parties subscribing will remit the par
of Six Per Cent per annum,
n

New York

At the

Oompauy’s Office, No. 20 Nassau Street,

John J. Cisco &Son, Bankers,
And by

eharge by return express.

No. 59 Wall Street

the Company’s advertised Agents throughout the United States.

Remittances should he made in

drafts or other funds par in New York, and the bonds will be sent free of

Parties subscribing through local agents will look to them for their safe delivery.

AND MAP FOR 1868 has just been published by the Company, giving Puller Information
possible in an advertisement, respecting the progress of the work, the resources of the country
traversed by the road, the means for construction, and the value of the bonds, which wilj be sent free on
application at the Company’s office, or to any of the advertised agents.
A PAMPHLET

|g

JOHNflJi^OISCO, Treasurer New York.

**”'

U

18 1868




NATIONAL RANK)

taxes, payable on

and after the 1st day of July next.
R. BAYLES. President.

THE CEN1RAL

NATIONAL B'NK

of the City of New York, New York, June 19, 1868.—
The Board of Directors of this Bank have this day de¬
clared a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent,
free of tax, payable on and after July 1st proximo.
The Transfer books will close at 3 P,M. on the 20th
inst, and reopen on the morning of July *d.
W. H. SANFORD, Cashier.

"TE TH NATIONAL BANK, NE1V
York, June 24,1868.—The Board of Directors have this
day declared a Dividend of FOUR (4) Per Cent, free
of taxes payable on and alter 1st July next.
The Transfer books will be closed until that date.
J. H. STOUT, Cashier.
OFFICE OF THE

ILLINOIS
CENTRAL
RAILROAD
Company, New York, 11th June, 1868.—At a meeting
of the Board of Directors of this Company, held this

AND BY

•

MoCULLOCH,
Secretary of the Treasury.

June 23,1868.—The Board of Directors of
National Hank have this day declared a
semi-annual Dividend of FIVE Per Cent, free of all

believe that these Bonds, at the present rate, are the cheapest security in the market, and

the right to advance the price at any time.

H.

New York,
the Market

for $1,000 each, and have coupons attached. They bear
the first days of January and July at the Company’s office in the City of New

York, ac the rate of Six Per Cent in Gold.
102, and at the present rate of gold, they
a

presented on or before the 15th of July. The notes
that become due on the 15th of July^nust be presented
on or before the 1st day of August.
The bonds to be issued in exchange for the notes
will bear interest from the 1st day of July, 1868, and

*

The Union Pacific Bonds run thirty years, are
annual interest, payable on

15th of June must be

the interest on the notes will be calculated according¬
ly. The bonds will be oi the issue of 1867 or 1868, a
may be preferred, and they -will be issued in the order
in which the notes are presented.

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS
upon

22, 1868.

desire to avail themselves
of their right to convert the same into 5-20 B >nds are
hereby notified that the notes must bo presented at
the Treasury Department at Washington, or at the
office of the Assistant Treasurer United States at New
Holders of 7-30 Notes who

..

diy It; was
Resolved, That a dividend of

FIVE Per Cent in
cash, free of Government taX, be paid on the first day
of August next to the holders of the full paid shares

registered on the thirteenth day of July next, and

that the tran fer books be closed on i he said thirteenth

day of July, and opened on the fifth day ol August

following.

Resolved, That in pursuance of the plan approved
at the shareholders’ meeting, May 27, 1868. the shares
of the Company be increased by the issue of eight
shares for every one hundred now outstanding, and
the same be distributed to the holders of shares regis¬
tered on the Company’s books on the 1 st day of August
next, in the proportion of one share for every twelve
and one-half shares then held by them.

Resolved, That where, in the distribution of such
shares, a st ckholder would be entitled to a fraction
of a share, the Company will retain such fraction, and
will pay therefor.
THOMAS E. WALKER, Treasurer.

V

f

June

825

THE CHRONICLE.

27,1868.]

plat more
portions, on which buildings are erected by men
engaged in the brick yards, petroleum factories, and other establishments,

Besides

®l)c KaUroaM Jflonitor.

building lots

on

remote from the settled

paved streets, there are lots on the

and which are in brisk demand for tenements.
The iron works and
(weekly).—In the following table we com¬ rolling mills (the most complete and extensive in the country), saw
pare the reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of several
mills, petroleum factories, oyster and fruit packers, breweries,,
shipyards, copper works, brick yards, car and iron bridge establish¬
leading railroads for five weeks in 1867 and 1868 :
ments, marble and stone cutters' yaids, and other establishments,
Gross earn’gs--, .—Earn. p. m-;
Week. Miles of
constitute the business of Canton.
All these, except the ship¬
1868.
1867.
1S68.
1867.
road.
Railroads.
177
230
110,818
89,741
Atlantic & Gt. Western.2d, May. )
yards, are employed to their full capacity. To accommodate the
196
232
99,300
117,668
1
3d,
11
greater part of the employees engaged iu these establishments there
166
239
I 507
84,269
121,056
4th, “
are now in Canton more than 600 dwelling houses, four churches, four
162
187
82,116
95,073
1st, June. 1
176
202
89,615
102,394
public schools, and several private schools, 30 grocery and provision
1
2d, “
stores, with other accommodations to meet the wants of a respectable
250
168
I
288,278
193,522
Chicago and N. West’n .3d, Mav. 1
368
280
community. The amount received for rents during the year is $43,423,827
323,244
4th, “
246
184
874 64, showing an increase of $8,556 93 over preceding year.
283,415
211,984
1st, June h 1,152 -1
The
231
186
266,913
214,974
2d, “
entire receipts from all sources are $62,870 70, or $6,892 77 more than
219
190
3d, “
J
L 219,101 252,278

Railroad Earnings

'

it

At

n

u

ii

ii

it

u

ii

ii

ii

it

u

u

ii

ii

.

a

ti

ii

ii

it

ii

ii

r

73,976
-

2S5

70,263
G7,1S6
72,874

-

290

84,833
77,753
82,203
73,992
81,013

297
272

•

259
216
235
255

288
259
284

158
147
222
135
141

158

65
62
124
86
19

70
80
170
101

Company.—The report of the Canton Company

for the

r

Michigan Southern.... .2d, May.
11
tt

•i
ii

i

u

ti

tt

‘it

u

ii

ii

u

ii

-

ii

3d,

524
.

J

.2d, May. 1
3d,
“
4th, “
[
1st, June

Western Union

82,927

1

3d, “
4th, “
1st, June
2d, “

ii

The Oanton

82,677

77,324

4
!

116,326
71,065

1
f

86,147

73,941

81,450

11,747

12,668

11 232

iso

-1

J

“

82,921
100,138
US,848

l

14,505

22,337
15,577
14,340

30,649
16,444

18,209

191
226
164
155

91

for sales of
produc¬
valua

received ihe preceding year. The amount received
land is $577 40, and for sate of annuities $6,019 85, showing a
tive income of $56,278 35 per annum, with no depreciation of the
of the propei ty on account of sales iv otherwise.
revenue
this sour.e will now continue to increase on account ..of the improved
condition of the property rented. The expenditure
year
$87,709 03, of which 30,787 50 was paid for 700 shares of the
was

.1st,May. )
2d,
“
3a,
“
2d, June i
3d,
“
J

Michigan Centrala

The

of the

from
i*

company'*

stock; $2,500 for account of subscription to the Union Railroad Company ; $1,400 for a claim against the company which had been in liti¬
gation for many years, and $2,000 to extinguish a ground rent. With

item

these deductions from the whole amount expended, omitting the
for new b il lings, $11,736 73, we have the current expenses
taxes and repairs, $89,214 80.
The Union railroad,
to furnish an outlet at tide-water for the Western Maryland and
ern Central Railroads was commenced last Fall, but owing to a change
of administiation in the city, work was stopped for
The Northern Central Railway Company is now acting in

including
which is designed

North¬

owns nearly 5,000
several months.
which has been im¬
concert with
proved with substantial wharves, and the greater part has been leased the city to build the road immediately.
for short terms, never exceeding five years, for the purpose of securing
The following item n from a Missouri newspaper :
to the company all advantages arising from the increase of value, and
The purchase of the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad, by the Penn¬
to retain the control of it when required for such extraordinary improve¬
sylvania Central Railroad Company, is authoritatively announced. On
ments as may be specially beneficial to the company.
The receipts for
wharf rent for the year were $11,379 24, derived from about one-third Monday the Governor transferred the Southwest Pacific Railroad to
the Company, incorporated by the General Assembly last Winter, of
of the property.
The building lots, with fronts of from 14 to 20 feet which
Frauds B. Hays, Esq., of Boston is president, and General Clin¬
paved streets, and a depth of 80 to 100 feet, number about 1,000,
and lease at from $1 to $3 per front foot per annum. Preparations have ton B. Fisk of St. Louis is vice-president. This Company had previously
into possession of the franchises of the Atlantic & Pacific R aa.
been made by parties to put up at least 30 houses on lots sold to them.

year ending May 31, 1868, states that the company
feet on the deepest water in the harbor, most of

on

come

EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.

COMPARATIVE MONTHLY
1866.

(507 to.)

$504,992
408,864

388,480
394,533

1868.

1807.

$391,771 .Jan....

222,241
290,111

421,008 .April..

438,046
443,029

269,249

380,796
400,116
475,257
483,857
477,528
446,596
350,837

541,491

497,250
368,581

.June..

(798 to.)

$1,185,746
987,936
1,070,917

1,153,441

1867.

387,269
322,638
360,823
323,030
271,246

..Sept...
..Oct....

..Nov
..Dec....

...

..Year

1368.

917,639
1,139,528

1.208.244 1,071,312
1,295,400 1,239,024

..

.-.
..
..

1,444,745

1,498,716
1,421,881
1,041,646

..

...

..June..

-..July..
Aug
Sep...
...Oct...
Nov..
...Dec...
..Year.

*14,596,413 14,139,264

'

312,846
277,234
412,715
413,970
418,024
384,684
338,858
884,401
429,177
496,655
429,548
352,218

1867.

(524 to.)
$305,857

311,088
379.761
391,163
358,(>01

(524 m.)
fan..
$371,011
339,736, .Feb..
331,497 Mar..
455,983 April.
400,456. ..May..
.

-

.

.June.

..July..
..Aug*.,
...Sep...

662,163
599,8.W

682,511
633,667
552,378
648,201
654,926
757,441
679,935
555,222

7,343,120




480,626
578,253

57i;.348

537,381

Jan...
.Feb...
..Mar...

.

(708 to.)

$647,119
524,871
417,071
440,271
477,007
5 J 6,494
525,242
709,326
738,530
823,901
727,809

613,330

6,540,741

.Dec..

(692 to.)
(692 to.)
$1,086,3(50 $901,571
845,853
895,887
1,135,745 1,075,773
1,190,491 1,227,286
1,170,415 1,093,731
934,536
1,084,533
1,135,461 1,1(1,(593
1,285,911 1,338,915
1,480,929 1,732,673

..April..
...May..

163.699

.June..

167,099
166,015
222,953
198,884
244,834
212,226
177,364

July.*.

-

•

Aug.,..
Sept,*.

.Oct.,..
Nov.,..
-

Dec,..»

~Year« 3,351,525

$149,658
149,342
174,152

168,162
171,736
156,065
172,933
220,788
219,160
230,340
204,095

171,499

3,307,980

880,993
925,983

808,524

317,977

*2400.941

..Dec...

S260,268
3,466,922

.

Michigan Central.

.Jan..

.

..Feb..
..Mar..

.April.
..May..,

*

.

_

•

•

Jnue.

.

..July.,
..Aug..,

.

•

•

•

,

..

»

.

.

.Dec...

••

.

.

..

.Year

1,201,239

1,258,713

..

Sep...

..Oct.
.Nov...

•

**

1866.

(275 TO.)

(692 to.)
•
$

Jan...
.Feb...
..Mar
.

..

.

..

.April..
..May...
.June..

..July..
..Aug...
...Sep...
..Oct....
.Nov.-.

Year..

(740 TO.)

$131,707
123,404

$340,511

123,957
121,533

245,598
244,376
208,785

(740 to.)
$368,484. .Jan..
.

350,884. ..Feb.

262,031
316,389

333,281. ..Mar..
435,629. .April.
565,718. ..May..
.June.

..July.
..Aug..

188,815
276,416

...Sep..
...Oct..
..Nov..,
.Dec....

410,359
328,539
129,287
2,538.800
1866.

,.

(521 to.)

TO.

$127,594,..Jan...

$226,059

213,097. .April.
.May...

194,167
256,407
270,300
316,433

.June..

325 €91

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

304,917

133,392. .Feb...
149,105. .Mar...

1867.

Year

...

f—

(521 to.)

$237,674 $278,712
200,793 265,793
270,630
317,052
829,078
304,810
309,591

396,248

364,723

.Oct..,,.
.Nov:...
.Dec....

349,117
436,065
354,830
264,741

382,996
406,766
351,759
307,948

*.Year~

8,694.975

8,783,839

263,259
292,385

260,529

359,645

415,758

383,952
284,977
313,021
398,993

335,082
324,986

369,625

464,776

429,166
493.649
414,604
308.649

506,295
412,933

330,373

4,371,071

Mississippi.

310,762

$211,973
231,351

265,905
252,149

204,619

336,066
272,068

3,880,583 3,459,319
-Western Union.1867.

im¬

(180 to.)

am to)

$46,415

45,102

$39,679

36,006

27.666

39,299

April..
..May...

43,333
86,913

.June..
J uly. •

.Oct....
.Nov..
Dec..

102,686
85,508
60,698
84,463
100,303
75,248
54,478

86,393
40,710
57,853
60,658
58,262
136,496
119,667
79,431
54,718

.Year~

814,001

TW,W7

,

(340 to.

379.367

302,425
281,613

...Jan...
...Feb...
..Mar...

.Aug...
.Sept...

1868.

1867.

(340 to.) (340 to.)
267,541 $242,793
219,064
246,109
279,647
326,236
284,729
277,423
282,939
283,130
240,135
253,924
234,633
247,262
322,521
305,454
278,701
865,372

(157 to.)

.

1868.

(285 to.)
$343,319
304,315
326,880

362,783

365,196

1866.

1868.

(521 to.)

283,669
375,210

337,158
843,736

1866.

1868.

301,275

401,900

1867,

(285 to.)
$304,097

—Ohio &

Toledo, Wab. & Western.-

1868.

(210

1867.

(285 to.)
$282,438
265,796

..Year.. 4,260,125

-Milwaukee & St. Paul.1868.

558,200
S.415,400
«

1866.

•

,

308 891

4,105,103

►

•

$283,600
281,900
362,800
288,700

(851,600

.Year..

1,000,086 1,451,284
1,200,216 1,508,883
1,010,892 1,210,387
712,359 918,088

1868.

(452 m.

15517,703

...Oct..
.Nov...

S 428,474
®
345,027

238,926'

•

•

224,621
272,454
280,283
251,916
261,480
274,800
f 404,600

..Aug...
...Sep...

•

•

$292,047

257,230

.July,.

880,324

797,475 1,038,824

•

•

(410 m.)

209,099
277,505
306,693

•

•

(228 to.)
$241,395
183,385

.June...

898,357

•

T. Haute.

(210 TO.)

774,280 1,068,959 .April,.
895,712 1.206,796 . ..May...

.

*

(210 to.)
$178,119

.

Marietta and Cincinnati.1867.
1868.J
1866.
(251 to.) (251 to.)
(251 to.)
(708 to.)
$94,136 $92,433
$90,411
$519,855. ..Jan..78,976
81,599
85,447
488,088. ..Feb.
98,482
84,652
409,684. ..Mar...
84,357
72,768 108,461
81,181
467,754.,.April..
90,526
96,388
490,666 .May
96,535
.June..
103,373
106,594
98,043
.»»■
•* ..J uly..
114,716
106,921
..Aug...
121,217
104,866
...Sep...
...Oct....
142,823
113,504
.Nov...
132,387
112,952
123,383
.Dec...
123,802

.Dec.^.

1867.

(1,032 to.)(1, 152to.)(1, 152m.)
$590,767 $696,147
$741,926 ..Jan...
459,007 574,664
800,787 .Feb...
855,611 ..Mar..,
613,974 757,134

624,174

1867.

1866.

1868.

1868.

Central.

1867.

1867.

9,424,450 11,712,248

..Year

7,160,991

155,893
192,138
167,301

.Oct...
.Nov..

,

330,169

1867.

.

Aug..
...Sep..

426,752
359,103

1866.
..

July

.

408,999

r-St. L, Alton &

606,217
GG9,037
784,801
690,598

^

354,244

14,143,215

1868.

611,914

.June.

415,982

€61,971
588,249
504,066

..Year..

573,726

7,467)313

569,250
667,679

.

270,386. .April.
341,181. ..May..

1,211,108
935,857

370,757

586,484
507,451

411,' 605

mNov...
i.Dec...

(468 to.) (468 to.)
$542,416 492,694
525,498 602,754
627,960 684,189
590,557 774,103

..Jan..
.Feb..
261,599. ..mar..

$259,539.
296,496

157,832
235,961
282,165
335,510
342,357

1.530,518

-Fittsb., Ft.W.,&Chicaeo.(468 to.)
$559,982
480,986

505^465

...Oct....

4,650,328 4,613,743
1866.

(708 to.)
$603,053
505,266

1866.

1868.

304,232
312,879
428.762
487,867
539,435
423,341

1867.

(2S0 to.)
$243,787

-New York

Mich. So. & N. Indiana.
I860.
524 m.)

(280 to.)

3,695,152 3,892,861
1866.

Feb..
Mar..
..April.
...May.

1866

1867.

-Illinois Central.

*

(775 to.)
$906,759 $1,031,320...Jan.-.

1,101,632 1,122,140
1,243,636 1,118,731

1,416,101
1.476.244
1,416,001
1,041,115

321,597

..Aug...

(775 to.)

1,217,143

329,851
871,543

..July...

5,476,276 5,094,421
Erie Railway.
1866.

.

355,447, .May...

459,370

462,674
528,618
526,959

$226,152

Feb....
.HlarcU

395,286
318,219

377,852

474,441

(280 to.)

(507 to.)

(507 to.)

$361,137

451,477

1866.

i-Chic-, Rock Is. and Pacific.—

—Chicago Sc Northwestern—*

—Chicago and Alton.—
1868.

-Atlantic & Great Western.-

40,708
89,198
49,231

70,133

73,525
•r
♦♦

_

826

THE CHRONICLE

21,1868.3

June

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Subscriber* will confer
COMPANIES
Marked thus * are leased roads
In dividend col. x = extra, c
'

.

,v

a

%?eat favor by giving- us Immediate notice of aUy eYror discovered In our
Dividend.

_

cask, s

=>

Stock

FRIDAY

out¬

stock.

Last
Date,

Periods.

standing.

Railroad.

COMPANIES
Marked thus * are leased

paid.

dividend col.

.rate Bid. i Ask.

cash,

Albany and Susquehanna....100 1,774,924

2,494,900 Jan. & July Jan. ’OS 2
1,232,100 Jan. & July Jan.’08 3%
733,700 Jan <fe July Jan. ’08 3%
....100
Augusta & Savannah*
Baltimore and Ohio
100 18,151,902 April A Oci Apr. ’68 4
122% 123
150
Washington Branch*......100 1,050,000 April & Oct Apr. ’08 j 5
Atlantic & St. Lawrence*—100
Atlantic & West Point
100

Parkersburg Branch....

.

3%
IX
250,000 June & Dec Di c. ’67 2%
50
100 13,725,000 Jan. & July July ’OS 5

Blossburg and Corning*

Boston and Albany

600,000 Quarterly

B uffalo and Erie...,.\

I,O5340i

100 6,000,000

Jjurlington & Missouri River.100 H,596,500
Camden and

Amboy,

100 5,000, "()0
50
378,455
preferred 50
723,500

Camden and Atlantic
do

do

60

Cape Cod

Catawissa*

721,920
1.159.500

50

;

do
preferred
Cedar Rapids & Missouri
Central Georgia & Banu’g
Central of New Jersey

50 2,200,003

RivlOO
Co. 100

4,666,’ 800

50

2,000.000

100 18,000,000

Central Ohio

preferred........50
400,000
Cheshire, preferred
iqo 2,017,825
Chicago and Alton,
100 3.880.500
do

do
preferred* [loo 2,425,400
Chic. Bur. & Quincy,.
' ion 12,500,000

Chicago and Great Eastern “..100 4,390,000
jducago, a n<i Vilwaukec* ....100 1,000,000
Iowa & Nebraska*.,.100 2,227,000
Chicago
ohicago& ^or’west
100 13,232,496
do
pref. .100 14,789,125
Rock Isl. & Pacific..100 14,000.000
^CiruC.,Ham. & Dayton
100 3,521,064
302,950
*Nncin.,Richm’d & Chicago...100
50 1,070,345
Cincinnati and Zanesville..
Cleveland, Col., Cin. & Iud.. .100 10,450,000
Cleveland & Mahoning*
50 2,044,000
100 8,750,000
Cleve, Pain. & Ashta
Cleveland and Pittsburg
5,411,925
... 50
Cleveland and Toledo
50 0,250,000
Columbus & Indianap. Cent..100
Columbus and Xenia*
50 1,780,800
..

Concord
Concord and Portsmouth
Conn. &Passump. pref
Connecticut River

50

Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50

do
do
scrip. 100
Detroit and Milwaukee
100
do
do
pref.. .100

Dubuque and Sioux City
100
do
do
pref. ..100
100
Eastern, (Mass)
East Tennessee & Georgia.. .100
.

do

do

pref. 50

do

Jan. &

preferred

June’08 10s
June ’68 10s
Oct. ’67 5
Apr. ’6:> 8s

do

78%
09%

do

Aug
May & Nov May ’08

69%
79%
105% 105%

100
50
50

8S%

Milwaukee & P. duChien
ICG
do
do
1st pref.100
do
do
2d pref.100
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100
do
preferred
100
Mine Hill a Soh’lkill Haven* 50

Dec & June Dec.

07

48
5

100

.

100
50
.100

Nashville & Chattanooga

...

T.

New Bedford and Taunton

New Haven Sr.

Jan. ’08

July ’08
Apr. ’08

3
5
4

86

120

100

Northampton.. 10

January.

Jan. &
Jan. &

Jan, ’08

July July 98
July Jan. ’08

015,950
190,750 |Jan. & July

uan.




128

7
4

75%
1*9

3%

*

..

79%

3

94%

Feb*’*68 4*'
July '68
May ’68

333
6
3c5t 105% 105%
53
54

104*

5s
5
4

July *68
Apr. ’68
July ’68

104%

185

108

112k 112%
Apr. ’6S 2%
3
3
4

Feb. ’68
June ’68
Jan. ’68

Apr. ’68

ioi*

‘3*‘

100

100

Feb. &

2.300,000

Aug.

Feb. ’68

3%

30
81

82
82
46
68

Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68
Jan. &

July Jan.’6S

8-

210

139% 140%;

‘3%
08;5,8s W
60

Aug.
Sep. ’67

Jan. ’66
\pr ’08
Jai-. ’68

4

5

1%

3,214,250
1,014,-00
5,437,333
8,106,342
3,775,6(H)

June ’67
Jan. ’08

Mar.’68

February..
February..
Jan. &

i

11
50%!

94*

4

111%;

•

..

•

•

•

•

•

Feb.’67
Feb. ’67

July

Jannary. Jan. ’67
Jan. & July Jan.’68

Miscellaneous.
Coal— American

3
4
2
2
3
4

3
5
10s
5

28%
10%

25 1,500,000 Mar. & Sep. Mar. ’68

Ashburton. ..7
Butler
a
Consolidation
Central
Cumberland

99%

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill

28%

Wilkesbarre

50
25
100
100
.100

50
^
-...
..

50
10

.100

Wyoming Valley

100

Gas.—Brooklyn

117%
92

135
120

25

Citizens

20

)

(Brooklyn)

Harlem

92%)

•4*

•

• •

•

•

Manhattan

105
98

Metropolitan

108

New Yonc...
William, burg

98%’

64% 65%
77% 78
117
117%

Improvement. Canton

45

6

500,000 Jun. & Dec. Dec. ’67

6,000,000
2,000,000 Jan. & July
5,000,000
3,200,000 Quarterly.
1,250,000 Jan. & July
1,000,000
3,400,000 Apr. & Oct
1,250.000 Feb. & Aug
2,000,000 Feb. & Aug
1,200,000 Jan. & July

July ’68
May ’68
Jan. ’67

30

Aug. ’66
Aug. ’67

153

1,000,000

.100 2,800,000
50 1,000.000 May & Nov May ’68
750!000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68
50
731,2'0
16%
100

4,000,000

>

Dec. ’67 4
Mar. ’67 3%s
May ’68 5 135

70

500.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68
132

United States Trust.

Mining—Mariposa Gold
134% 134%

100

50
35

32
191
35

July ’60 20
Telegraph.—Western Union. 100 40,359,400 Jan. & July Jiny ’67 2
Express.— Adams
100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’68 5
American
500 9,000,000 Quarterly. May ’68 2
Merchants’ Union
100 20,000,000
United States
...10b 6.000,000 Quarterly. Dec’ ’’66
Wells, Fargo & Co.. .,.100 10,000,000
Steamship.—Atlantic Mai:
100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’67 2%
Pacific Mail...
100 20,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’67 3
Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. & July July *68 5
National Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. & July July ’68 4
New York Life & Trust.. 100 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 10
Union Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. <fe July July ’68 4
Boston W ater Power

50

2,500,000

Jan. ’68
Feb.& Aug. Feb. ’68
20
386,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68
50 4,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68

50

Jersey City & Hoboken..

60

825,407
3,588,300

1,334,000

• • •

•

[!
168

•

41 M

514,640 Jan. & July Jan. ’08

8,572,400! June & Dec

50 1,983,563 June & Dec June’68 3 * 134
100
50 1,633.350 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 3
131% 133
.100 15,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 8
."V.
100 4,500,673 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 5
43% 44%
Lehigh Coal and Navigation . 50 8,739,800 May & Nov May ’67 3
Monongahela Navigation Co. 50
728,100 Jan. & July Jan. ’6S 5
Morris (consolidated) .
100 1,025.000 Feb. & A tig
74
do
preferred
100 1,175,000 Feb. & Aug Feb.’ ’68 5
22
24
Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. & Aug Feb-. 07 6
42
43
do
prefer.. 50 2,888,977 Feb. & Aug Ftb. ’67 6
30
32
Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 2,002,746
Union, preferred.,
50 2,907,850
West Branch & Susquehanna. 50
*••• *
1,100,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’65
50
Wyoming Valley
800,000 Irregular. Oct. ’67 *4* 78%

Delaware Division* :
Delaware and Hudson...
Delaware & Raritan,

4

4

•

Canal.

Chesapeake and Del

85

3

•

75%

si*’

’08

Jan.
July
100 6,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68
loo
895.000 Mar & Sep. Sep. ’67
N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO 4,093,425
B?w York Central,
100 28.537,000 Fe & Aug Feb.* ’68

New Jersey,
New London Northern..

July ’68

CfO/8

78

8%

•

3,616,350 Mar. & Sep
720,000 May & Nov
.100 2,056,544
100 1,430,600 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68

...

30%

June ’68

817,100

50 5,819,275
100 1,365,600
100 3,203,900
Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..100 1,314,130
Terre Haute & Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150
Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .100 1,115,400
do
1st prel.100 1,651,316
do

72

May ’08
July 68 3%

Montgomery and WestPoint.100 1,644,104 June & Dec
Morris and Essex
Nashua and Lowell

100

6^%

,

2,000,000

South Carolina
South Side (P. & L.)
South West. Georgia

100 2,948 785

Mobile and Ohio

100

67

u

July July ’68 3% 103% 103%
Quarterly. Oct. ’07 2%

100 7,502.800i Jan. & July July ’68
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00
Feb. & Aug May ’68
do
do
guar.100
580,800!Feb. &Aug Feb. ’68

Naugatuck

90

Jan. &

100 5,312,725

Mississippi & Tennessee*,

5s. 65
90
3
68
3
103
4

2,040,000 Annually. May ’68
Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*100 1,469,429
Sandusky, and Cincinnati;.... 50 2,9S9,090
do
do
pref. 50
393,073 May & Nov Nov. ’67
Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100
901,311
Schuylkill Valley*
50
676,050 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 2%
ShamokinVal. & Pottsville*. 50
869,450 Feb. & Aug eb.’68 3
Shore Line Railway
100
635,200 Jan. & July Jan.’68 3

July July ‘68 3% 100* * 102*
90% 90%
Quarterly." July ’08 2

2,040,1001 Jan. & July
Aug. ’60
Long Island
50 3,000,000
Louisville and Frankfort
50 1,109,594; Jan. & July Jan. ’08
100 5,492,038 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’08
Louisville and Nashville
Louisville, New Alb. & Chic. .100 2,800,000'
Macon and Western
100 I,500,000
Apr. *68
Maine Central
100 1,600,860
Marietta & Cincinnati,1st pref 50 8,130,719 Mar. & Sep Sep.’’60 3s.
do
do 2d pref.. 50 4,460,308 Mar. & Sep Sep.’00 3s.
Common
do
2,029,778
Manchester and Lawrenae ..100 1,000,000 May & Nov May ’68 5

Mississippi Central *

.

St. Louis, Alton, & Terre H.. .100
do
do pref.100

4

50 10,731,400| Quarterly. Apr. *08 2%

Memphis & Chariest
Michigan Central,

,000,000
2,469,307

50

Rutland
do
preferred...

Jan.'&

pref. 50
100 23,392,3001Frb. & Aug.!
Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette 50 6,185,897 Mar..& Sep
Jeffersonv., Mad. & Indianap.100 2,000,900 Jan. & July
Joliet and Chicago*
100
300,0001 Quarterly.
Joliet and N. Indiana
100
300,0001 Jan. & July
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000
Little Miami
*
Liittle Schuylkill*

898,950
155,000 May & Nov

Rome, Watert. & Ogdensb’g..l00 2,490,000 Jan. & July July ’68

79

118
94

93

2

,648,900 Quarterly. May ’68

100

Richmond and Danville
Richmond & Petersb.,

147

145
80

do
do
2d pref.100
908,400
47% 47%
Toledo, Wab & West
100 5,700,000
122
123
do
do
preferred.100 1,000,000 May & Nov M«y ’68 3% 68% 6>%
Utica and Black River
100 1,466,800 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 4
100% 101
4
Vermont and Canada*
100 2,250,000 June & Dec Dec ’6
58
60
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100 2,860,000 Jan. & July
’68 1%
Virginia Central,
100 3,353.679
i'z6
3%
Virginia and Tennessee - . .100 2,94 ,791
do
do
4
pref.100
555,500
Western (N. Carolina)
100 2,227,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’64
Western Union (Wis. & Ill.)
1,902.000
2,707,698
66
i Wilmington and Manchester. 100 1,147,018
500,000 May & Nov May ’08 2%
I Wilmington & Weldon
& July Jan. 63 3% S4
500,000 Jan.
1,468,775
68% 68% Worcester and Nashua
75 1,522,200 Jan. & July July ’68 5%
28.405.300 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’60 4

Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50

^high Valley
Lexington and Frankfort

’68
’67

’68

St.

Hahulbaland St. Joseph
100 1,900,000
do
do
pref.100 5,253,836
Hartford &N.Haven
100 3,000,000 Quarterly. July ’08
Housatonic preferred
May ’07
100 1,180,000
Hudson River
100 9,981,500 April & Oct Apr. ’08
do
Illinois Central,

& July July
& July Jan.

Ohio and Mississippi,

Feb. &

100 3,540,000
100 4,150,000

Fitchburg
Georgia

’68

Feb. ’67
,150,000
2,363,600 Jan. & July July ’68
Ogdensb. & L. Champlain —100 3,023,500 [ Annually. Feb. ’68
do
Apr, ’68
preferred.100 ,000,000 Apr. &

128

July July 63

April & Oct
April & Oct

100
100 8.530.900

Erie,

& Julyj July
& July July

594,201 Jan. & July Jan. ’08
11,288,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’08
2,812,000
1.047,350
1,500,000
1,073,952
July 68
1,988.170
3.583.300 Jan. & July only '68
2,141,970

East Tennessee & Virginia .100
Elmira and Williamsport*.... 50
'

100
100

*

Ask

800.500
137.500 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 3%
,068,400 June &Dec Dec. ’67 4 117

50

North Pennsylvania
Norwich and Worcester

15* 15%

100 2,409,000

Delaware*

Jan.
1.500.000 dan.
0,000,000 Jan.
I,755,281 Jan.

6,785,05*

paid.

Date. Irate Bid.

Periods.

standing.

100 20,226,604
preferred.. 100 ,500,000 June & Dec
5
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’08
Old Colony and Newport.-....100 4,848,320 Jan. & July
Orange and Alexandria
100 2,063,655
Feb. &Aur Feb.’ ’08
129% 130
Oswego and Syracuse
50
488,400 Feb. & Aug
Panama
100 7,000,000 Quarterly.
Pennsylvania
50 22.097,978 May & Nov
Jan. & July Jan. ’08 3%
Philadelphia and Erie*
50 5.996.700 Jan. & July
20%
do
do
preferred .. 2,400,000 Jan. & July
57% 58
Phila. and Reading,
May & Nov May ’6^
50 23,856,101 Jan. & July
Phila., Germant. & Norrist’n* 50 1,569.550 Apr. & Oct
June & Dec June ’68 5,2
Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 9,058,300 Jan. & July
125
Quarterly. Apr. 08 2% 123
Pittsburg and Connell sville... 50 1,776,129
71
72
June & Dec J line ’63 3
Pittsb., Ft.W. & Chicago
100 II,500,000 Quarterly.
80
June ’08 3
do
Portland & Kennebec (new)..100
579.500 Feb.&
os' 68% Portland, Saco, & Portsm’th.100 1,500,000 June &Aug.
December. Dec. ’07 3
Dec
135
186
Mar A Sep. Mar. ’08 5
Providence and Worcester... .100 1,890,000 Jan. & July
136
187
Mar & Sep. Mar. ’08 5
Raritan and Delaware Bay*.. .10C 2.530.700
152
Mar. & Sep. Mar. ’OS 5
Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO 2,500,000 April & Oct
88

50 1,500.000 May & Nov
100
350,000 Jan. & July
100 1,822,100 Jan. & July
10n 1,700,000 Jan. & July
50 1.310.900 Apr. & Oct.

Cumberland Valley
Davton and Michigan

North Carolina
North Missouri

Last

out¬

stock.

Northern Central,
North Eastern (S. Car.)
do
Sp. c., pref

147

FRIDAY

Stock

.100]

Apr. ’68

Boston, Con. & Montreal,pref.100 1,340,400 May & Nov. NOv. ’07 3
Boston, Hertford and Brie... .100 14,884,000
Boston 'ind Lowell
500 1,970,000'Jan. & July July ‘68 4
Bostor* and Maine,
10C 4,070,974 Jan. & July July ’OS 5
Bost'jp and Providence..
100] 3,300,000 Jan. & July July ’08 5
Bo Alio, New York, & Eric*. .100
950 000 June & Dec Dec. *07 3%

roads

extra, c =

Norfolk & Petersburg, pref.
do
do
giiar.lOO
Northern of New Hampshire. 100

50

100

=

=

v ?w York
50
and Harlbm
New York & Harlem pref— 50
N. Y. and New Haven
100
New York, Prov.& Boston. ..100

par

Berkshire*

s

x

Tables.

Dividend.

1,500,000

100| 5,097,600

Mariposa Gold Preferred.100 5,774,400
Quicksilver
100 10,000,000

Jan. &

July! Jan. 68
Fob

49
17

50
18

34%
53

34%
53%

47%

49

25%

25%

46%

47

25

25%

102*

33

102

5

?H\

'5

8%

sieg'd 24% 125%.

June

827

THE CHRONICLE.

27,1868.]

RAILROAD, CANAL AND

LIST.--Page 2.

MISCELLANEOUS BOND

will appear Iul this place

Bond List Page 1

next week

& West Point:
Income Bonds....

Bonds’70

Mortgage Bonds (new)
Morris and

Essext&b,347,437);
sinking fund

1st Mortgage,
2d
do

.

Naugatuck : 1st Mortgage (convert.)
New Bedford & Taunton
N. Raven
Northampton : Bonds..
Hampshire & Hamden R.R. do .
New Jersey ($850,000); Bonds of 1853

New London Northern : 1st Mortgage
New Orleans, Jackson & Gt.
1st Mortgage Sinking Fund
2d Mortgage...;.....

North.:

Opelou. tfc Gt. West.:
Mortgage Construction Bonds.

New Orleans,
1st

New York Central:

Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ....
Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal)..
Real Estate Bonds

(assumed stocks)
(assumed debts)..

Subscrip. Bonds

Sink. Fund B’ds
Convertible Bonds
New York and Harlem ($5,993,625) :
1st General Mortgage
Consolidated Mortgage
4th Mortgage
N lork ana New Haven: Mort.Bo’ds
N. Y., Prov. and Boston : 1st Mort

Improvement Bonds
Northern Central

($5,182,000);

1st Mortgage, State (Md.)
do
2d
3d
do
Northern New Hampshire :

Loan...
Bonds..

is not given in detail in
umn it is expressed by the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

April & Oct
200,000
485,000: 6 Feb. & Aug
140,000 6 Jan. & July

Apr. & Oct.

6,189,154
2,909,000

May & Nov

June & Dec

Feb. & Aug
do

1,514,000
453,000

do

or

do

2d
3d

or

1st Extension ...
2d Extension ....

& O.)

Income

1st Mortgage

Pacific, guaranteed by Missouri
Mortgage construction

Panama: 1st Mor.gage,
2d Mortgage, sterling

Peninsula

:

3,000,000
1,797,000

June & Dec

99,500

April & Oct
Feb. & Aug
Jan. & July

1,062,500
250,000
100,000

Quarterly.

1,500,000
1,937,000
1,064,500

Jan. &

bonds

125,900

Mar. & Sep.
do
do

do
General Mortgage Bonds
Short Bonds or Debentures
Bonds due State of Pennsylvania
Phila. and Balt. Central ($S00,000):

Mortgage
Philadelphia and Erie ($10,600,000)
1st Mortgage on 40 miles
1st

Convertible Loan

850,000
750,000

Mortgage Loan

Connellsville ($1,500,000)
1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.).
P h'g. Wt.W. and Chic.: 1st Mortgage
ittsburg &

Co

...

...;

bonds, ext

Consolidated bonds

Bay:
Mortgage, sinking fund

aritan and Delaware

do

Equipment Bonds

Riading and Columbia: 1st Mort...
Rsnsselaer <fc Saratoga consolidated :
1st Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga .
2d
do
do
do
1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitehall....
iBt Mort. Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) .

Richmond <& Danville ($1,717,500) :

,4thMortgage

viterest Bonds

Richmond & Petersburg ($319,000):

Bonds, coupon &




var.

l.mooo

700,000
1,200,000

Sandusky and Cincinnati:
Mortgage bonds
Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark:

981,000

1871
1875
73-’78
1881

iried.
1885
1900
1874
1869
1868
1867

100

96%

95
86

Mortgage (guar. byPeteishurg)
3d Mortgage .
Special Mortgage
86% S. W. Pacific, Railroad:

82%

S5

ICO

R.R.

7 Jan. & July
7 June & Dec
6 Feb.

& Ang 1900

•

•

• • •

Jan. &

July

6
6

do
do

‘70 ’76
’70 ’72

July 1871
•

July

1886

Syr a. Bing, and N. Y. :
1,721,514 7 April & Oct
1st Mortgage
1,600,000 7 June & Dec
Toledn^eo & Warsaw .1st Mort,E.D
775,000 .
1st Mortgage, W.D
498,000 .
2d
do
W.D
Toledo B abash & Western .-(13,300,00)
Feb. & Ang
900,000
-1st Mort. (Tol. & Illinois RR)
7
do

1876
1894

7
7
7

May*Nov.

7
7
7
7

Quaiterly.

1878
1878
1883
1907

•

•••

•

•

•••

••••«•••

A •

• #
9 •

....

•-

• •

• ft'

....

•

•

....

•

•

....

•*

#-»
•

....

•• •

♦

•

•

4

*

•

• • •

’65’68

•

»

♦

• • •

6

•

•

■P

Sept

•«••••

•

•

1875

7 Mar. &

»

•

•

1875

18—

7 Jau. &
7
7 Jan. &

•

« • • •

Feb. & Aug 1872
Jan. & July 1886
68-74
Various.

200,000

....

•

7
5
6

B’d

98

•

July

•

1896

1892
1892

July

2,000,000

•

•

J.A.J.&O. 1900

Jan. &

175,000

•

• •

•

P

61%

Jan. &

300,000
300,000

+

• • •

97
86

1894
1894
1894
1594

7

1st

Bonds guar, by At. & Pacific
Southern Minnesota: Land Grant
Staten Island: 1st Mortgage...

7 Semi an’ally
7
do
7 May & Nov.
7 April*Oct.

7

1,492,033
250,000

Domestic Bonds
South Side (LI.)
South Side ($1,631,900):

-v

....

700,000
2,275,311

Valley & Pottsville:
Mortgage
South Carolina: Sterling Loan....

•

*

•

....

1,290,000
818,200

1st

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

8

St. Paul & Pacific of Minn ; (1 st Div)
1st Mortgage (tax free)
1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax free)

•

•

10
10

2,200,000
2,800,000

Mortgage
Funded Bonds

1880
1887

1872
1872
1874
1882
1877

98

99%

103%

75-’76

May'&]Nov.

do.
Jan. & July
Jan. & July

isso

April & Oct ’70-’7o
Feb & Aug. 1872
Mch & Sept 1884

6
-

var.

Jau. &

Julj

5

575,000 7

1st

Jan. &

Jul}

1910
1890

1876

104
•

•

98%

•

....

....

•

•

102,100

July

April & Oct

1870
1871
1880
1880
1886
1868

106,000

1,521,000

411,000

400,000
5,250,000
5,160,000

registered .......

153,(XX)

1,000,000
500,000

500,000

Jan. & July
do
do
do

May & Nov.

6 Jan. & July 1884
6 April & Oct '71 ’8r<
6 Feb. & Aug
7 Semi an’ally
7
do
7
do
7
do

1S89
1912
1912
1912
1876

7
7
7

1881
1881
1890

Feb. & Aug
do
-

230,000 6 April & Oct 1883
1895
do
300,000 6

1,000,600 7
250,000 7
296,0X0 7
800,000 7
150,000 7
450,000 7
400,000 7

Mch & Sept
do
do

Mch & Sept

•

•

104

of Pennsylvan ia: 1st Mortgage
Lehigh Coal and Navigation :

Erie

94%

f •••

• • • •

85

85%

80

82
....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

-• • *

1,800,000

300,000

300,000
650,000

.

Convertible of 1877

..

Monmgahela Navigation ; Mortgage
Morris * Mortgage Bonds
107

106

Boat Loan

Pennsylvania & New York ;
1st Mortgage (North Branch)

100%

Schuylkill Navigation; ($7,775,720)

....

1st Mortgage...,
2d Mortgage
80

85

....

Wyoming Valley: 1st Mortgage.

200,000

500,000

550,000

3
7
7
3

826,000
140,547

7
7

Feb. & Aug ’ 73 ’75
69 ’76 69%
do

..

.

....

Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds.

Quicksilver Minina :
1st
2d

I

‘

Mort.,prin.&int.payable in gold
do

Western Union
1st Mortgage

do

Telegraph:

convertible

•

•

•

•

*

96

1890

•

•

•

»

96

188'*
1885
1875
1882
•

•

•

do
& Aug

200,000 (»
3,165,400 r Feb.

Jan. &

«...

72%
....

....

1872
1884
1865
1875

Jan. & July
Ja Ap JuOc
do
•

•

•

•

Jan. & July
531,000 7 Mch & Sept
1,500,000 7 May & Nov

752,000 7 Jan. & July

• •

•

•

•

•

•

•

• •

•

•

•

•

•

*

« •

•

1886
1873

Quarterly,

1886
1870
1890
1885
1878
1870
1877
1865

Mch &
•Jan. &

Sept

Jan. & July

1885
1878
1894
1883
1878
1878

597,6C0

*500,000
1,000,000

•

•

•

do
do
June & Dec
do
Jan.
July

April & Oct

July 1882
May & Nov. 1870
do
do

May & Nov.
July

Jan. &
Jan &

July-

Tan. & July
Tan. & July
J an. & J uly
Jan. &. July

April & Oct
Feb. & Aug

I June &

Dec

1886
1886

1879
18—
18 1881
1873

1 Jan. & July 1879

4,057,200 ?'May*Not. 1675

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

■P •

.

•• •

• •

.*• # •

....

o • •*
....

•

n,

.

.

.

.

..

95
•

•

•

•• »

•

» «

•

* *

98

97

•

-•»

•

• ••»

...

•

•

82
9T
86

80

3

•

•

•

% •

•

«

•

•••

•

—-i

•

....

72

63%

•

•

1872

417,000
1,500,000
2,000,000

•

95

94

1876

629,000

•

•

85

May & Nov.

1,000,000
1,250,000
325,000
3,000,OOC
633,000
600,000

•

•

•

96

do

362,500

•

•

•

1896

267,010

1,761,213

•

•

•

1870
1884
1897
1897
1877
1887
1876
1S85

148,000
782,250

•

•

1890

155,500 6 May & Nov. 1870
25,000 6 Jan. & July 1871
do
1877
600,000 6

384,162
5,606,122
2,000,000
5,000,000
1,201,850

82%
82%
73%

•

•

July 1897

2,000,000 7 Jan. & Dec.
500,000 7 May & Nov.

1,699,500 6
800,000 6

-

....

July 188^

Jan. &

-

1,000,000 *

...

102% 103
76% 77
June & Dec 1861
36
37%
Jan. & July 1^7

‘

400,000 7 Jan. & July 1873
662,800 3 April & Oct 1878
696,000 <3 Jan. & >uly 1890

Cen.R.R. Co. of N. J.) 2,000,000

Consolid. CoalCo.UMd.): Mort.f conv.)
Cumberland Coal: 1st Mortgage....

May & Nov. 1890

Apr. & Oct.
May* Nov.

June & Dec
do
1,000,000 .
do
448,000 .
511,400 r Feb. & Ang

500,OoO

Miscellaneous :
American Dock & Improvement:

Mortgage

Jan. & July

Mar. & SGP3 Jan. & Jni v

’

3 980,670

Improvement
Susquehanna and Tide-Water;
Maryland Loan
Coupon Bonds
Susquehanna Canal pref. int. hondt
Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage
West Branch and Susq.:let Mortgage

Mariposa Mining: 1st
2d
do

Apr. 4% Oct.

7

10,240,000 1
1

do

1890

590,000

Loan of 1870
Loan of 1884
Loan of 1S97
Gold Loan of 1897

104

7

••

_

(guaranteed Baltimore)

Bonds (guar.

t

.

Bonds, Nov. 1, 1867

1888
1888
1876
1879

•

1st Mortgage

>..

Preferred Bonds
Delaware Division: 1st Mortgage
Delaware and Hudson.; Bonds (coup)

....

600,000

,

500,000
600,000

Chesapeake and Delaware; 1st Mort. 2,089,400 6
Chesapeake and Ohio : Maryl’d Loan 2,000,000 6
4,375,000 5
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed

•

Jan. & July 1873
80-’87
do
Mar. & Sept 1886

130,500 7 fane & Dec

do
do

i’ooo,ooo

1

Canal

1882

6
6
6
6
6
6

;

..

Wilmington, Charlotte & Rutherford :
1st more, (endors. by State of N.C.)
Wilming'on & Mancli'r ($2,500,000);
1st mort. (1st, 2d and 3d series) ...
2d mortgage
York A Cumberland (North. Cent.):
1st Mortgage
2d
3d

» •

6

Jan. &

Mortgage (convert.) Coupon

Western Union

90

....

do

1st

2d
do
,
registered
Western Maryland: 1st Mortgage
do
1st
, guaranteed...
.

1901

April & Oct

Mortgage

Warren: 1st Mortgage (guaranteed).
Westchester & Philadelphia :

6

7
6

:

Mort

do
3d
Income Mortgage

98% 98%

500,000

2

(consol.) 2,000,000

Virginia & Tennessee ($2,177,000) ;

•

5,000,000

3d
do
Convertible
Union Pacific : 1st Mortgage coupon
Vt. Central & Vt& Canada : 1st mort
do
Vermont and Massachusetts 1st

1877
1881

1,000,000

Equipment (Tol. & Wab. Railway)
Consoid. Mortgage Bonds
1 roy and Boston ; 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage ...:

2d

’70-’80
1S85

4,972,001 56 Jan. & JnljT 1880
1875
4,880,001 '6 April & Oc ’69-’71
6,375,73c

99% 100

1916
May & Nov.
Feb. & Aug 1^91

350,000
200,000
198.500
375,000
7,000,000

3,400,000

1st Mort. (L Erio,Wab & St L. RR.)
2d Mort. (Tol. & Wab. RR)..
2d Mort. (Wab. & West. Railway).

1874
1870

1869

•

Vermont Central: 1st Mort.

573.500

59,00C

115

1866
May & Nov.
Jan. & July 1875
May & Nov. 1S73

1,130,500

2,000,000

Quincy and Toledo: 1st Mortgage.
Portland & Kennebec ($1,373,400);

1st
2d

Feb. & Aug

400,000

1,415,000

Bonds

1st mortgage

April & Oct

221.500

976,800
171,500
200,000

do

Jan. & July
do
do
do

2,050,000

1843-4-8-9
Sterling Bonds of 1843
Dollar Bonds, convertible
Philadelphia & Trenton : 1st Mort.
Philadel., Wilminq. & Baltimore:
do

Bridge BonSs O. & P. R. R.
Pdtsburg and Steubenville:
1st Mortgage

Jan. & July
Feb. & Aug

9S7,000

2,656,600

3d

July
April & Oct

100,000
300,000

Philadelphia & Reading ($6,560,825)
Dollar Bonds of 1849
do
do
1861

2d Mortgage
3d
do

& Terre Haute:

1st

4,000,000

(general)
(general)]

PhUadel., Germant. & Norristown:

Coupons

July

Jan. &

1,150,000
1,075,000

Mortgage

do

Jan. &

762,000

sterling

1st Mortgage

1st Mortgage
2d
do

July

April & Oct
April & Oct

1,500,000

Pennsylvania ($19,6S.,573)';
1st
2d

Mortgage...

Shamokin

1,338,000
1,458,000

Bonds

($2,637,762):

Oswego and Syracuse;
2d Mortgage

90
90
1876 133
1876 133

1872 101
May & Nov. 1893
Feb. & Aug

2,500,000

($580,000);

Oswego & Rome:
1st Mortgage (guar. byR. W.

946,000
400,000
329,(XX)

•

.

Ogdensburg and L. Champlain :
1st Mortgage
Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Mort.E.D.
1st Mortgage, W. D
2d Mortgage, W. D

Orange & Alexandria
1st Mortgage

1887
1883

93% 95
94>;

May & Nov. 1883
do

165,000
671,000

360,000

Income Bonds, W.D
Old Colony & Newport:
Bonds

1889
1883

Mar.& Sep. 1880
Jun. &Dec. ’69-’74
Jun. & Dec. 1891
145
Feb. & Ang 1863
58
1863
do
Jan & July 1875
Feb. & Aug 1881

1st Mort 1,372,000

1,085,000 8 .april & Oct

1,842,600

7
7
7
7
7

• • •

• •

•

Mar. &sep.

1,800,000

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage preferred
2d
doincome
St. Louis, Jacksonv &Chic:
St. Paul & Chicago ($4,000,000);
1st Mort. land grant, S. F. guar.

1S86

50,000

Mortgage Bonds

Chattel Mortgage....'
Norwich and Worcester
General Mortgage
Steamboat Mortgage

2d Mortgage
St. Louis, Alton

2,741,000 ' 8 Jan. & July 1890

339,000

Mortgage
North Pennsylvania ($3,292,154) .*

Sacramento Valley: 1st

1871^

8

511,500
547,000

.1

1

731*600

Potsdaln & Watertown, guar
R. W. & O., sinking fund
Rutland: 1st Mortgage
do

1876
1881
1869
1874
1873
1885

Prinei payhl

T3

175,000

Rome, Watert. & Ogdens.:
Sinking Fund (Wat. & Rome)....

1915

Feb. & Aug
Jan. &July
do
Jan. & July

Payable.
1

General Mortgage

[1881

May &Nov

145^000

1st General

July

do

700.000

North Missouri: ($6,000,000)

1870
1876

do

5.000,000
576,000
196,000
174,000
450,000

2d Mortgage
North Carolina: Loan

"

Jan. &

100,000
310,000
750,000

North Eastern: 1st Mortgage

•G

-

N.B.—Where the total Funded

Railroad 2
Railroad:

S ®

_

Amount
Debt outstand¬
the 2d col¬ ing.
|
s

Description.

N. B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount
is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand¬
ing.
umn it is expressed by the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

PRIDAY

INTEREST*

Description.

•

• •

•

•

•

m

828

THE CHRONICLE.
PETROLEUM dTOCK LIST.

[June 27,1868.

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.
Marked thus (*) are

Companies.

Alien Wright
Bennenoff Run

'

Bergen Petroleum

^

Bliven

Ivanhoe
Manhattan

.100

N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons

.

**'

Buchanan
Central
1

i,ann

Cherr
x,,

V

..

/RunPetrol’m.... 2
Run special
5

Adriatic.......... 25
50
60
American*....

jjatem Oil
*A]/liiHibia Oil

.

—

JBmpire City..'

5

JExcelsior

5
5
5

IFirst National
'Germania
G’t Western Consol

Rynd Farm

.

Citizens’..,. 20

Bid.U
lid 3

•

•

•

Clinton

.10

Commercial
50
Commonwealth ..100
Continental *
.100
Corn Exchange.. 50
...

Excelsior

....

Madison......,.,.
Mandan

Alt
2 30
1

...

♦

m

m

3 75

m

Manhattan...

Mendotat
Merrimac

«

•

•

Ba;

•

•

•

Bo

.

t

8

6%

Milton

.

1%

Minnesota

....

Caledonia,

5

Mesnard

• •

L

-

m

2

...

4%
5%
4%

Mass

-

5 00 ’National
28 ao<io 00 i Native

Canada
Charter Oak.

1

...24% 21 00 22
Copper Harbor.

New York
North Cliff
North western

3*50j

« • •-*

Copper Creek.
1

50

•

•

75

1%
1%

...

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

—

1%

^

..

Excelsior
Franklin
French Creek

1

...

Evergreen Bluff....

5%

•

66

io

•

1 00

...

....

....

2
2
2 75

Hanover.

....

1%

•

•

•

3 25

•

1*66

50

go;,..
I].cc, a.

....

50*00 Superior

44 00

%

....

Humboldt.

50 00

Hungarian

....

....10
....33
5
8

Knowlton.
♦

..

...

Washington
1 00

.

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.

t

Niagara
50
North American* 50
North River
Pacific
Park
Peter Cooper

6

2%
.,3

Winthrop

*_Capital $200,000, in 20,000 shares.

1 CO

50

(B’klyn).. 50

National
7%
New Amsterdam. 35
N. Y. Equitable.3 35
N.Y.Fire and Marlon

1

West Minnesota
Winona

....

Nassau

1%
1%

Victoria
Vulcan

Metropolitan * t. .ICO
Montauk (B’klyn) 50

21

Tremont

1

2 00
90

85

11

Toltec

....

Lorillard*
25
Manhattan
100
Market*
100
Meehan’ & Trade’ 25
Mechanics (B’kly) 50
Mercantile
loo
Merchants’
50

8

Rockland
76
St. Clair
6%
St. Louis
1
St. Mary’s
5%
Salem
%
Seneca
1
Sharon
%
Sheldon & Columfcian.21
South Pewabic
17
South Side
2
Star
11%

12 5C

25

Longlsland(B’kly) 50

00

6%

Ridge

10 00

00^34

22

10

Resolute

100

Lamar
Lenox

—

25
25

100
....

People’s

20
26

Republic*

Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares

Rutgers’

Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.

100
25

Bid. Askd

Ada Elmore
Alameda Silver
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific
Bates & Baxter
Black Hawk

par
35
40

90
55
80
30
75
j 7 00
35
45
1 50

—

10
—

.

.

St. Mark’s
St. Nicholast

Security +

.

Standard

•

•

—

•

5

Bftnton

Bob Tail
Boscobel Silver
Bullion Consolidated

•

25

50

•—

25

Corydon
Des Moines
Downieville

4

30 00
5 35 5 45
34
40

Edgehill
Empire Gold

....

4*i5 4*20

Owyhee
People’s G. & S. of Cal.

—

Fall River
....

i

....

Gunnell
Gunnell Union

48

60
.

1C

50

GO
1 00
40

—

.

.

.

70
55
77
1 75

....

.

,

20 00 30 CO
5

1 10
•

•

4

•

11

10

19

Sonvor

3*50

20
100

Vanderburg

....

10
3
1
40

—

•

•

1

Texas

•
....

00
55
00
i 0
70
10

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Bid.!

Companies-

Copake Iron

-

pa*-

5

Foster Tron
Lake Superior Iron
100
Bucks County Lead..... 5
Denbo Lend »«%
•
*“—■
• • • •
Mauhan Le&d
Plie nix Lead
—
-

Iron Tank Storage




—

¥*

v

Askdj

Saginaw, L. S. & M.
•

•

m

•

•

•

•

....

•

»

•

•

*-• •

....

,

,

,

..

....

WallkillLead
Wallace Nickel
Rutland Marble..

“Bid7 Askd

Long Island Peat
Ruese.-FLe

il Savon do Terre

par
.

io

io

10
10
10
14

10
10
10
10
7
1C

10
12
10

7
10
10

..

7

12

12

8
10
5

i6

10

io

i2

io

5

20
30
6
5
10
14

do

do

30
5
30
9
18
10
15

13*
11
30
5
20
15
10
14
16
5
8
12
11
10
8
12

5
35
10

Aug.

200,000
150,000
250,000
400,000
393,700
250,000

500,000

553,716

’68.7

,

10

7

*8

do
do
do
do
do

do

•

3*

*5
10
6
5
10
10
7
14
5

do
Jan. and July.
943,185 Feb. and Ang.
270,958 Jan. and July,
do
212,314
224,012 Feb. and Aug.
222,577 Feb. and Aug.
178,717 Jan. and July,
do
>
359.405
642,353 Feb. and Ang.
190,206 Feb. and Aug.
281,451 Jan. and July,

Companies.

Dividend.

Par. Capital

paid in.

Date.

•

8
.

io

8*
10
10
8
12
10
1<>
8
8
10
7
7
10
5
5

10
10
14
8
5
5

,

5
10
10
10
8
7
10

68.6

Ian ’68 5

*

.

11
5
10

3*

.

•

10
18
12
10
10
0
10
10
10
12
10
10
10
10
10
11

15
14
8
10

10
10

•

10
10
10
10
10
10
10
14
10
10
7
10
10
10
20

20

12;

•

•

7
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
16
10
15
8}
10
10

.

.

10
10
5

ii
10
10
5
10
10

Feb’’’68.6
Apr.’68.5
“

’68.8
.’68.5
Feb. 68.5
’’68.5
’68.5
Jan. ’68.5
Jan’68.3*

J’y’66.3*
Feb.’686
Feb.’67.5

Ang.’67.5

F’b.’66.3*
Jan. ’68.5
Jan. ’68.5
Feb.’68.5
Feb.’68.6
Jan. ’68.5
Jan. ’68.5
Feb.’68.5
Feb. ’685
Jan. ’68.5
Jan. *68.5

Price

Bonded Debt,

p.ct bid.

o

d

«

BleeCk.St.&Fult.F. 100 $900,000

Broadway (B’klyn) 100 200.000
B’dway <» 7 Av.NY“100 2,100,000
B’klyn, Bath & C. 1.100
B’klyn Cent.&Jam. 100
Brooklyn City... . 60
B’k’nC. feRid’w’d. 100
B’k’n C. & Rock.B.
Cent. P’k,N.& E. R 100
Coney Isl. & B’klyn 100

D.D’k.E. B d’y.&c. 100

Companies.

Tudor Lead

...

10

eb.’68.5

1 15

«

Twin River Silver

14
10

15

—

Symonds Forks

io

14
10

68.5
r

CITY PASSENGER RAILROAD STOCKS & BONDS.

25

Smith &, Pnrmelee

First National.
Gold Hill

25

Scnsenderfer

—

io

14
10

«

95,099
172,618

200,000
200,000

Washington *+...100
WilliamsburgCity 50
Yonkers & N. Y.100

5

Quartz Hill...
Reynolds
Rocky Mountain

12*

17*

140

.

....

....

1

_

....

—

■.

r.iV^rfv

—

....

—

—

....

—

Combination Silver....
Consolidated Gregory... 100

5
40
3

2

LaCrosse

....

55
8

10

Central
Columbia G. tfc S

....

—

....
—

20
3 00
15
45
5

—

ICO

Tradesmen’s
25
United States.... 26
Washington
50

io

4

50
100

Stuyvesant....... 25

88

Manhattan Silver
100
Midas Silver
5
Montana
10
11 New York
1
1 New York & Eldorado
10 Opbir Gold
1

—

Burroughs.

Hamilton G. & S.b’ds par
Holman
2
25
Hope

Kipp & Buell

10

do
do
480,549
do
127,448
256,( 87 Feb. and

200000

25

Star

Bid. Askd

Companies.

.

50

10
10
10
10
14

204,664
5<9,480 Feb. and Aug.

200,000
150,000
150,000
1,000,000
200,000

Sterling *

Companies.

10
10
10
5
14

159,630
695,322
217,103

300,000

Resolute*........ 100

15
12
20
20
12

Phoenix + Br’klyn 50 1,000,000 l,C99,8i’2
Reliei..
50
200,000 227,003

4%i50 00

io

10

257,458 March and Sep

Knickerbocker... 40

10

3*

‘9

150,000 179,875 Jan. and July,
do
280,000 824,362
do
150,000
124,S36
do
300,000
419,774
do
150,000
175.545
do
200,000 301,939
do
1,000,000 1,214,615
do
500,000
648,755
do
200,000 351.173
do
200,000
260.750
do
150,000
150,991
do
215,453
200,000
do
200,000
269,836
do
300,000 303,462
do
150,000
179,766
do
150,000
275,861
do
200,000 233.405
do
365,325
300,000
291,309 Jan. and July.
210,000
200,000
273.680 Feb. and Aug.
1,000,000 ,060,509 Jan. and July,
do
500,000
541,400
350,000
393,829 April and Oct.
200,000 281.546 Jan. and July,
do
200,000
229,250
150,000 199,287 Feb. and Ang.
150,000
164,440 Jan. and July,

Lafayette (B’klyn) 50

10

12* 14*

200,010

50

io

10

King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20

30

io

10*

Jefferson

—

Quincyt

*

....

Gardiner Hill...,,,

Hamilton...

^

....

..16
•

Princeton
Providence

...

-.10
Everett

.34

10

12
20
20

233,253

5 0C

50

14
7*

10
12
20
20

200,000
300,000
200,000
163,000
300,000
210,000 353,764 Feb. and Aug.
250,000 293,943 Jan. and July,
do
300,000
f61,839
do
200,000
213.472
400,000 417,194 Feb. and Aug.
200,000 226,092 Jan. and July.
250,000 277.680 Jan. and July.
500,000 1,432,597 Jan. and July.
400,000
385.101 March and Sep
300,000
425,060 April and Oct.
200,000
246,090 Jan. and July.
do
200,000
226,229
150,000 134,011 Feb. and Ang.
204,000 273,792 Jan. and July,
do
150,000
123.101
do
150,000
160,963
do
200,000 204,720
150,000 147,066 May and Nov.
200,000 232,520 Feb. and Aug.
500,000
597.473 Jan. and July.
200,000
222,207 Jan. and July.
1,000,000 2,385,657 Jan. and July.
200,000 272.173 Feb. and Aug.
200,000
187,065 April and Oct.
200,000
198,456 Jan. and July,
do
150,000
185,228
do
400,000
426,752
do
200,000
144,613

25
7 25

‘*25 i

5%
3%

..

10

180,285 May and Nov.
192,588 Feb. and Aug.
399,062 June and Dec.
280,551 Feb. and Aug.
259,089 Jan. and July.
438.750 Jan. and July.

22*66

50

„.

Humboldt

6 00

•

•

*5

16
5
5
10
10

100
Import’&Traders 25
International
100
Irving
25

4 00

7

Pittsburg & Boston... 5%
Pont iac
10%
Portage Lake
—

•

.

'

July.

and July.
and July.
225,585 Jan. and July.
289,191 Jan. and July.
279,261 Feb. and Aug.
312,089 March and Sep

2,000,000 2,393,915

25

Howard

11

Phoenix

•

Jan. and

350,018 Jan.
581,436 Jan.

150,000
500,000
200,000
200,000
530,000
200,000

Hope

11%

Petherick
Pewabic

Dev«n.
...

4

Pennsylvania *

74
•

;...—

Ogima

....

...20%

2

Norwich

•

Dana
Davidson

00
3S

5%

50 Naumkcag
1
1 00, New Jersey Consol... .10

22*66

...

4 00

20

30

Firemen’s
17
Firemen’s Fund.. 10
Firemen s Trust. 10
Fulton
25
Gallatin
60
Gebhard
100
Germania
50
Globe
50
Great Western*t.l00
Greenwich
25
Grocers’
50
Guardian
—
Hamilton
15
Hanover
60
Hoffman
50
Home
100

6

1866 1867

Periods.

“

50

Exchange

.paid 1
Superior,...,
2

Lake

....

40
100

Eagle
Empire City

Bid. Askd

Lafayette

...25%

100

Columbia*
.10(1
Commerce (N.Y.).IOO
Commerce (Alb’y)lOO

Companies.

»

70

City

208,336

300)000
200,000
200,000
250,000
250,000
300,000

200,000

..

COPPER MINING STOCK LIST.
Companies.

.

25
25

Bowery (N. Y.)
26
Broadway
....
25
17
Brooklyn

....—'

United States

50
25

Baltic
Beekman

Union
10
United Pe’U’mF’ms....
a

—

..

Atlantic (Br’klyn) 50

—

Sherman & Barnsdale

....

Aston...

10

Southern

10

Hoffman

Arctic

Oceanic
Oil i’reek
».».—
Pit Hole Creek
25
Rathbone Oil Tract,.... —

10

$200,W0

American Exch'e.100

2 50
2 00

1
»'.i0

....

dividends

Capital. Netas’ts

iEtna

Mountain Oil.
—
5
National
N. Y. & Alleghany
5
New York & Newark.... 5
N. Y. & Philadel
5

.

'*

Brooklyn..

write Marine Risks.

2
2

5
10
5
..10

Bradley Oil....
Brevoort....

Bid. Askd

HamiltonMcClintockpar —

io

_

Jan. 1, 1868.

participating, & (t)

—

2 00

2 15

19

20

,25
—
—

25
—

5
—

....

•

•

•

•

•

• • •

.

.

.

.

16 50
...

....

•

•

...

•

•

•

•

•

•

Eighth Avenue.... 100
42d St. & G’d St, F. 100
Har.

Br.,M.&Ford

Ninth Avenue
Second Av. (N. Y.).
Sixth Av. (N Y.)..

100
100
100
100

...

Feb. ’68

1867
1867

750,000 May ’68

8

3%
3

5
12
5

R. E. Mor

Nov. ’67

)
75,000

5
12

1st Mort.
1st Mort.

...

....

....

"

>»•*••••

Third Av. (N.Y.).. 100 1,170,000

V.BnmtSt.&E.Bas

1867
1867

1

Companies.

<

1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
Real est.
1st Mort.
let Mort.
1st Mort.

130
1st Mort.

.

40,000
85,000

var.

1,500,000

1884

80,000 1883

498,S10 1870
300.000 1872
20,000 1884

45,000
550,000 1874
148.000 1873

672,000
203,000
327,150 1873

134,500
124,000
167,000
700,000 1867
180,000

1,280,000
12,000

1890

pr In addition to
below, a
ad

cent,

Dfltgs and Byes—Duty, Alcohol,
% o0 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents # ft;
Alum, 60 cents # 100 ft; Argols, 6
cents # ft ; Arsenic and Assafaedati

CURRENT.

PRICES

the duties

noted

Manna,large flake.... 1 70 @ 1 75

cent ad val.
Balsam Copalvi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30_

Oil Anis
© 3 70
Oil Cassia
© 3 50
Oil Bergamot....
6 874 © 7 00
Oil Lemon
3 75 @ 3 80
Oil Peppermint,pure. 6 00 © 6 50
OilVitnol
:
2}@

20; Antimony, Crude
10; Arrowroot, 80 38

discriminating duty of 10 per
val. is levied on all import's

under flags

that have no

rcciprotal
and mer¬
produce of

treaties with the United States.
On all goods, Mares,

chandise, of the growth or
Countries East of the Cape

of Good

Hope, when imported from places this
side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty
of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the
place or places of their growth or produc¬
tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Sillt excepted.
The top in all cases to be 2,240 ft.
Anchors— Duty:• 2} cents # lb.
Of 2U0ft and upward# ft
8 ©

cent ad val.
ft 8 25 @ 8 00
9 87 @10 00
Beeswax—Duty,20 $ centad val.
American yellow.# ft
49 @ 51
Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct.
Rio Grande shin $ ton43 00 © ....
Broad—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
# ft ... @
Pilot
Navy

@

••

84 ©

Crackers

18}

special report.

00 ©l*. 50
00 @ ....
Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair
hard..per M.10
Philadelphia Fronts...40

Butter and
cents.
Butter— ‘
Fresh pail
State firkins,

#ft 45 ©2 00

Clieese.—Duty: 4

prime

.

State firkins,ordinary

State, hl-firk., prime..
State, hf-ftr*., ordin’y
Welsh tubs, prime ...
Welsh tubs, ordinary.
Western, good
Western, lair.*
Penn,, dairy, good...
Penn., dairy, lair.....
Canada
Grease.
Cheese—

....

30©
29 ©

27©

29©
20 @

27 ©

25©
30 @
25 ©
28 ©
25 ©
©

..

H

Factory prime...IP lb
Factory fair
Farm Dairies prime..
Farm Dairies fair
Farm Dairies common
Skimmed...

34
33

29

33
29

32
20
3J
20
30
27

©

14©
13 @

124©
11 ©
9 ©
3 @

15
14

14
12
10
9

Candles—Duty,tallow, 24; sperma¬
ceti and wax a; it earine and ada¬
mantine, 5 cents $ ft.
Refined sperm, city...
45© *♦
Bperm, patent,. . .# ft
55 ©

$ cent
30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents # ft.
Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents
ft; Castor Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo

rate Potash,* 6 ;• Caustic Soda, 14,
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, 4; Cream

val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kow

50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange
50 cents; Oil Cassia and OilBerga
mot, $1 $ ft; Oil. Peppermint, 50

# cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents $ ft; Phosphorus, 20
$ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents
# ft: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad
val.; Sal ASratus, 1} cents $ ft ; Sal
Soda, 4 cent $ ft ; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; Soda Ash, 4 ; Sugar Lead, 20 cents
# ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 # oz.
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
$ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre
porations and Extracts,$1 # ft; all
others

quoted below* free.

Alcohol, 95 per cent.
Aloes, Cape
$ ft
Aloes, Socotrine
.

Alum

Annato, goodto prime.
Antimony, Reg. of, g’d
Arsenic, Powdered “
Assafoetida
Balsam Copivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

71

24*
2S
40
95

©

1 80 ©
© 8 60
45 ©

Berries, Persian, gold.
Bi Carb. Soda, New¬

81

27©

castle, gold

41
184

4|©

Bi Chromate Potash

©

Bleaching Powder....,.
Borax, Refined
Brimstone, Crude $

41
33

44©

324©

(gold).37 00 @38 00

ton

..

©

3}

..

©•

e*

(In

©
bond)
(gold)
Camphor, Rofined
1 10 ©
Cantharidos
1 65 ©
Carbonate Ammonia,
17 ©
in bulk
Cardamoms, Malabar., .

..

.

C<!*al—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 # ton
of 28 bushels 80 lb to the bushel;
other than bituminous,40 cents $ 28
bushels of 80 lb $ bushel.
Newcastle Gas 2,2401b. 9 50 © ..
Liverpool Gas Cannel.. 11 00 ©12 00
Liverp’l House CannellO 00 @17 00
Liverpool Orrel
.... © ....
Anthracite. $ ton of
2,000 ft
6 50 © 7 00
Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ ft.
Caracas

(in bond)(gold)

# ft

Maracaibo do

..(gold)

Guayaquil do ...(gold)
St. Domingo.. ..(gold)

16 ©
..

©

11 ©
74©

164
114

84

Coffee.—See special report.

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot,
24; old copper 2 cents #ft; manu¬
factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing
"»pper and yellow metal, in sheets 42
hches long and 14 inches wide,
Weighing 14 © 34 oz. # square foot,
9 <jents $ ft.

Sheathing,new..$ ft

..

©

33 ©

Bolts.,...
Braziers’......

Sheathing, &c.t old..

18 ©

Sheathin&yellowmeM
Bolts, yellow metal,..
Pig Chile
American

Ingot

26 ©
26 ©
©
224©

Tarred Russia

# ft

Bolt Rope, Russia,....

204©
...

©

..

©

Fennell Seed

Flowers,Benzoin.$

oz.

Phial. .@

40

30 @

15}©
15}
3}@
8}_
10}@
104©

17 ©
80 ©

...gold

44©

Gamboge
Ginseng, West
Ginseng, Southern...

1 75 @
90 @
1 00 ©
45©
81 @
80©
84©
144©

Gambler

.....

Kowrie..........
Gedda
gold

Gum Myrrh,East

70




Epsom Salts....,
Extract Logwood

GamDainar

50 @

Cotton—See opeplal report*

Cutoh

«

Cork*—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
1st Regular,qrts $ gro
55 © 70
do Superfine
1 40 @ 1 70
1st Regular, Pints
35 © 50
Mineral

Cubebs, East India....

20

22

30, r

..

Gum
Gnra

184

..

50
©
Chamomile Flow’s#®)
85
©
Chlorate Potash (gold)
Caustic Soda
“
4 811© 5 12}
21
20 ©
Carraway Seed
14
35
Coriander Seed
14 ©
90
©
Cochineal, Hon. (gold)
75
Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d) 73 ©
1*
li@
Copperas, American...
28}@
28}
Cream Tartar, pr.(gold

Gum Benzoin...

21

....

15
34

^

'23

....

Castor Oil

Gum Arabio,Picked..
Gum Arabio, Sorts...

Cordage—Duty, tarred,8; umLrred
Manila, 24 other untarred, 34 cents
# ft.
Manila,-

-

33

83 @

•

..

_

phur
Camphor, Guide,

74©

•

•

_

..

Chains—Duty, 24 cents # lb.

upward# ft

•

..

25 ©
85 ©
85

Brimstone, Am. Roll
$ ft
Brimstone, 1 lor Sul¬

One inch &

©
21
©
75 ©
75©
3$
8}@
60 @ 1 25
11*
©
..

18
Argols, Crude
' 18 ©
23} ©
Argols, Refined, gold.

31
23
Cement—Rosendale#bl....@ 1 75
30©
21 ©

Stearic
Adamantine

$10

Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 #
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub
limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap

74

44©

India

Gum,Myrrh, Turkey.
Senegal-...
GumTragacanth .Sorts
Gum

Gum

Tragacanth,

.

©

-

,

.

16
4

60

00
95
....

75
85
85
86
154
50

©

33

35 ©

40

60 @ 1 00
fiakey,gold
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and
Eng
(gold) 8 60 © 8 80

Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50

Ipeoacuanha,Brazil... 3 00
Lac Dye

.

Paste,Calabria
Licorice, Paste, Sicily.
Lioorloe Paste Spanish
Liconoe

Solid

Lioorloe Paste, Greek.

adder, Dutch. .(gold)

dO| French, SXJ\Ftd9

85

85

©

© 1 00
35
834©
78 ©
80

Phosphorus

....

Prussiate Potash

Quicksilver
Rhubarb,China
2 25 © 3 25
Sago, Pea.led.........
64©
7
Salaratus
20©
8 ©
8}
SalAm’niac, Ref (gold)1
Sal Soda. Newcastle “
3}@
H
Sarsaparilla,H.g’d inb ’d 25 @ 30
14
©
Sarsaparilla, Mex.
“
..

36

35 ©
25 ©
20 ©

Seneca Root

Senna, Alexandria..,.
Senna, Eastlndia

28
22
50

37? ©

Shell Lac
Soda Ash

(80#o.)(g’ld)2 5-16©
©
Sugar L’d, W’e...
’*
©
Sulp Quinine, Amf oz;
Sulphate Morphine. *4 6 85 ©
..

....

,(g’ld)#ft

Verdigris, dryAex dry

2}
25
2 25

51 ©

50 ©
10 ©

Tart’c Acid.

12}@

Tapioca

.

.

52
13
60
11

Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.

Ravens,Light. .#pee 16 00 ©
Ravens, Heavy
18 00 ©
Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 #y.
©
Cotton,No. 1...,$ y.
58©
Dye Wootls—Duty free.
Camwood,gold, $ ton ....
Fustic,Cuba ‘k
..32 00
Fust’C, Tampico, gold ....
Fustic, Jamaica, “ 23 00
Fustic, Savanilla “ 22 50
Fustic,Maracaibo, “ 22 00
14
28 00
Logwood, Laguna
Logwood, Cam.
“
“ 19 66
Logwood, Hond
.

Logwood,Tabasco “
Logwood,St. Dom. “
Logwood,Jamaica 44
Limawood
Barwood

.....

44
44

....

72

©160 00
© 33 10
@ 24 00
© 24 00
© 23 00

©
©
©
©
©
20 00 ©
lfi CO ©
75 09 ©
@

...

....
..

20 00
....

21 00
16 50
S5 00
26 00
@ 60 00

Sapanwood,Manila44

Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val.
Prime Western...# ft
y0 @
\)5
Tennessee.,...,
80 ©
85

Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
# bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬
rels, 50 cents $ 100 ft.
Dry Cod
# cwt. 6 00 © 7 25
Pickled Scale... $ bbl. 5 00 © 6 25
Pickled Cod....$ bbl. 6 25 © 6 50

Mackerel, No. 1, Mass

22 25 @22 50

shore

Mackerel,No.l,Halifax22
Mackerel,No. 1, Bay..23
Mackerel,No. 2, Bay..18
Mackerel, No. 2, Ha axl9
Mac’el,No.8,Mass. l’ge 9
Mackerel, No. 8, H’faxlO
Mac, No. 3, Mass, med. 7
Salmon, Pickled, No.1.26
Salmon,Pickled,#tce
Herring, Scaled# box.
Herring, No, 1
Herring, pickled#bbl. 6

00 @22 50
00 @ 28 25
00 @18 50
00 @2) 50
25 © 9 50
50 @11 09

75 © 8 00
00 @27 00
© ....
40 @ 45
25© 28

00 © 9 50

Flax—Duty: $15 # ton.
Fruit*—See

24

16©
special report.

North River..,. ,#

Furs and Skins

ft

4 00 @ 8 00

........

do Cross
do Red
do Grey
do Kitt

...

5 00 @50 00
3 00 © 5 00
75 @ 1 50

60

40 ©

Lynx

Marten, Dark

pale
Mink, dark
do pale
do

Otter

Musquash, Fall
Opossum

60

30©

...

5
1
3
1

50 © 2
00 @20
00 @ 3
00 © 8
00 @ 3

00

00
00
00
00

3 00 ©

7 00

12 ©

15
12

5 @

40

Raccoon

10 ©

80 © 1 00

Buenos A...cur.
Vera Cruz..gold

Tampico. ..gold
Matamoras.gold
cur.
Payta
Cape
cur.

do

©

29 ©
31 ©

SO

124©

14

Central America

do
do
do

do

87 @

val.
874© 434

Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad
do
do
do
do
do
do

Honduras,.gold
Sisal
gold
Para....„ ..gold
Vera Cruz .gold

do
do

Missouri...gold
#«rtt*89ld

414©

42

@

474

50©

524

-

©

524

45 ©

45
60

45 @
..
@

474
45„

48 ©

414©

46 ©
45©
...

.,
*»

©

Florida ....gold

do

©

Glass—Duty, Cylinder or Window
Polished Plato not over 10x15 inches,
24 cents $ square foot; larger and
not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $
square foot; larger and not over 24
x39 inches 6 cents $ square foot
above that, and not exceeding 24x60
inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all
above that, 40 cents
on

square

474
60
45

foot

unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and

Window, not exceeding lOx

Common

15 inches square, 14; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not
over

that, 8 cents

24x30 ,24 ; all over

$ ft.

Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th
qualities.
Subject to a discount of 45@50 # cent.
6x 8 to 8x10..$ 50 ft 6 25 @ 4 75

American

6
7
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
24

8x11 tolOxlS'.
11x14 to 12x18
18x16 to 16x24
18x22 to 18x30
20x30 to 24x30
24x31 to 24x36
25x36 to 26x40
28x40 to 30x48
24x54 to 82x56
82x58 to 84x60
34x62 to 40x60

75
50
50
00
50
00
00
00
50
00

© 5 00
© 5 50
© 6 00

© 7
© 8
© 9
©10
©14
@16
@13
26 00 @21
Frer.ch Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and

00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00

4th
(Si ngleThick) Ncv'l ia
of Mar. 11 Discount 45@50(p cent.
6x 8 to 8x10. $50 feet 8 50 @ 6 25
8x11 to 10x15
9 00 © 6 7B
11x14 to 12x18
10 lO © 7 60
11 00 © 8 00
13x18 to 16x24
18x22 to 18x30
13 50 @ 9 09
20x30 to 24x30
16 50 @10 'O0
24x31 to 24x36
18 00 @’.2 nn
qualities.

25x36 to 26x40
28x40 to 30x48.(3

20 00

00

qlte).a2 '00

00

34x60.(3 qV g).27 qo ©23 00
English sella at 9
^
0g above
32x58 to

rates.

Groceries.—gee special report.
Gunny Bags—Duty, valued at
cents 'or less, $ square
10, 4 cents $ ft

yard, 3; over

Calcutta, light &h’y % 18 @
Gunny Clotli—Duty, valued at 10

or less $ square yard, 3; over
10,4 cents $ ft.

cents

22 ©

Calcutta, standard, y’d

22fr

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20
cents or less
ft, 6 cents ^ ft, aio
20 ^ cent ad val.; over 20 oenti $
ft, 10 cents
ft and 20 3j} centad va.
Blasting(B) $ 251b keg
@4 00
© 4 60
Shipping and Mining..
6 50 @
Kentucky Rifle
..

..

Meal

6 00 ©
5 50 ©

Deer

..
..

Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬
ters $ ft
86 © 1 OB
.
Hair—Duty free.

RioGrande,mix’d$?ftgold28 @
Buenos Ayres,

mixed

14 27 @

.

Hog,Western, unwash.curlO ©
Hay—North River, in bales# 100 fta
for shipping
70 ©
80
Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila,
$25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Suns
and Sisal, $15 # ton; and Tampi
1 cent# ft.
*
Amer.Dressed.# ton 270 00@290 00
Undressed

do

175 00@180 00

Russia, Clean..(gold) 24<> (0@245 00
Italian

(pold) 230 00@240 CO
11
10$@

Manila..# ft..(gold)

Beaver,Dark..98 skin 1 00 @ 4 00
do
Pale
75 © 2 50
5 00 ©i2 00
Bear, Black
do brown
2 00 @ 8 00
Badger
£0 © 60
Cat, Wild
25 @ • 60
do House
10 @
50

Fisher,
Fox, Silver

./©

Deer, Arkansas^.gold

Sisal

-Duty, 10$ cent

Deer,SanJuan#ftgold

25

84

© 7 124

....

Oxalic Acid

Goat.Curacoa# ft cur.

w.

Jalap, in bond gold...

..

Skunk, Black

55 @
..

10

35 ©
.

Opium, Turkey.(gold)

and
ad val.; Crude Camphor

15

*

1

..

....

rie, and Gum Darnar, 10 cents per ft
Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Guni

Common

# ft.
Amer’n.gray &wh.

.....

cents $ ft : Calisaya
Bark, 80 $ centad val.: B1 Carb, Soda
14; Bi Chromate Potasn, 3 cents $ ft
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft ,
Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft ; Crude

Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone,
$ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton,

95 ©
7J@
14©

Nutgalls Blue Aleppo

and Regulus,

Balsam Peru, 50

ad

Bricks.

1

Manna, small flake....
Mustard Seed, Cal....
Mustard Seed, Trieste.

Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent
# ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent

Ashes—Duty: 15 $
Pot, 1st sort... # 100
Pearl, 1st sort

Breadstuf fs—See

829

THE CHRONICLE

June 27, 1868.]

(gold)

Jute

10©
6 ©

10}
6}

Hide*—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 # cent ad val.

Dry Hides—
Buenos

Ayres#ftg’d

Montevideo.... do
Rio Grande
do
do
Orinoco
....

California

do
dc»

San Juan
Matamoras
VeraCruz

do
do

201©
21©

21

(Sjf*

.».

©

©
17}@
16i@
16i@
..

21}
21}
21}
19}
20
28
17}
17}

do

Bogota

Porto Cabello
Maracaibo
Truxilio

..

do

17©

57}

do
do

...»

16 @
17 ©
14 ©
17 ©

15

do

Tampico...

18
15}
15

do

18

18

Bahia
Rio Hache

do

14}©
14 ©

Curacoa,

do

18 @

15

11 @

13

S.

Domingo

Pt.

&

Piatt., do
Texas
do
Western
do
au

Dry Salted Hides—

gold
do

Chili

Payta

14 @

16

13 ©

15

15 @

16

16 ©

16

22}@

12 ©
1S|@
12©
12 ©

18}
13}
13
14}
13
13

11}@

12}

do

11}@
..
@

H

Para
do
New Orleans...cur

10©

11}

li}@

12}

12}@

19

Maranham
do
Pernambuco.... do
Bahia
do

Matamoras..Jo
Maracaibo...', do
Savanilla .... do
Wet Salted Hides—
Bue. Afres.# ft g’d.
RioGr vnde

Calife.‘*ta

....

do

City»l’hter trim.*

«ur«d*

12j@

12}

Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. <fc Bio Gr. Kip
$ It gold

@

..

White
oak, pipe,
extia
$ M.
do
pipe, heavy
..
do
pipe, light.
..
do
pipe, culls.
.,
do
pipe,ciills,lt
..
do
hhd.,extra.
..
do
hhd.,heavy
.-.
do
hhd., light.
..
do
hhd., culls.
..
do
bbl.,extra.
..

29
24

27 @
22®
@

Sierra Leone., cash
Gambia & Bissau. .
Zanibar

East India Stock—

Calcutta,city sl’hter

Jicutta, dead green 15f@ 13J
164
p. gold
12f@
124©

buffalo, $ fl)
Manilla & Batavia,
buffalo
$ lb
do

13

.

Cuba (duty

paid) (gr Id

83 @ 1 00

$ gall.

Scoiiia# ft.
$ 1b 20 ©

Hops-^uty:
Crop of 1867
do of 1866

ad val.
Para, Fine

$ 2)

6 00
cent,

^T9 ft..

r-

Sheet, Russia

Sheet, Single,
and Treble

Bails, Eng. (g’d)$
do -American

5©

ton 51 00©

$ lb*

Spanish
German

English

75

8

FWolasseg.—See special report.

Nails—Duty: cut 14; wrought
horse shoe 2 cents $ lb.
Cut,4d.@60d.$ 100 ft 4 75 @ 5
Clinch
6 50 © 6
Horse shoe,f’d(6d)$ ft
27 @
Copper...
40 @

net .. @10 00
Sheet... .net .. @12 00
JbeatUer—Duty: sole 35, upper 80

88
38
86
38
42

light..
docrop,heavy

do

do
do
do
do

middle
light..
Oak, rough slaughter.
Hernl’k, B. A., <fcc.,h’y
-do
do middle.
do
do

do

do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do

42 @
38 @
28®
284®
284®

light.

26J®
274@
do light. 274©
Orino., heavy. 244®
do middle 27 @
do
light. 274®
rough
35 ©

Califor., heavy
do middle.

d0

@
@
@
@
@

-

44
40
42
46
44
46
29
30
30
27
284
28*
254
28
234
39

good damaged 24 @ 27
do
194® 214
poor
Duty; 10 $ cent ad val.

Bookland, com. $
heavy

do

bbl.

*.

JAVES—
White

Oak,

hhd.,

We»tXadia,.|*M
•

V




(free).

@ 1 25

@ 2 25

© 4J 00

00

and vermilion 25
white chalk, $10

do

75

pure,

40

pure,

@

dry

Zinc, white, American,
dry, No. 1
do white, American,
No. 1,in oil
do White,French,dry
do white, French, In
oil

9®

Brandy, Otard, Dupuy
& Co..(gold) $ gal.
Brandy, Pinet, Castillon & Co(gold)
do Henpessy(gold)
do Marett & Co(g’d)
do Leger Freres do

14

94

9 @
12f@

12
13

@

dry
around, in oil..

Spanish brown, dry $
100 1b
do gr’dinoil,$
Paris wh., No. 1

1b

Chrome, yellow, dry..

e@

2|@
15 @
@

practiced.”

Clothing

or

$ ft and 11 $ cent. a<Jval.;

cents

32 cents $ ft, 12 cents $rft and
$ cent, ad val. ; when imported
washed, double these rates. Clasb

over

.

2.—Combing Wools--T1ie value where¬
of at the last place whence exported
to the

United States is 32 cents

less .$ ft, 10 cents
cent ad val. ; over
cents $ ft and 10
Class 3 .—Carpet

or

$ ft and 11 $

32 cents $ ft, 12
$ cent, ad val.
Wools and other

similar Wools—The value whereof at
the last place whence exported to the
United States is 12 cents or Jess $
ft, 3 cents $ ft ; over 12 cents $ ft,
6 cents $ ft.
Wool of all classes

do
do
do
do

full blood Merino
% & % Merino..
Native & % Mer.

48 ©

Extra, pulled..

52

45 .@
60 @

47

55

42©
42 @
30 @
28 @

......

Superfine, pulled
No 1, pulled
Califor, fine.nnwash’d
do
do

53

46 ©

Combing

medium

do

do

48
46
36
33

26 @

common,

22 ©
28 @

do

Valpraiso,

South Am.Merino do
do
Mestizado *
do
Creole do
do
Cordova,
washed

30

25

30

34©
28 @
20 @

37
32
24

34 @
Montevideo,com.washd 32 @

37
35

Cape G.Hope,unwash’d
East India, washed....
Mexican, unwashed../

38 @

42

T<%as, Fine..;

28 @

20 @
19 @

TeSas, Medium.......

40
21

82

25 @
20 ©

Texas, Coarse

28
25

Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 $
100 fts.; sneets 24 cents $ 1b.
Sheet
$ lb
12 @ 124
Freights—

(steam):s. d. s.
$ lb
4®
Flour,w..*....$ bbl.
..@16
Heavy ,: 'V>ds.. .$ ton 15 0 ©

75

Oil
Corn,

30

English, cast, $ ft . .
English, spring
English blister
Fnglish machinery....
English German

blister.
cast
Tool
American spring do

9

American
American

2

American

/

—

To Liverpool

75

35
35

mach’y do

Germa.do

18 @
10 ©
114©

23
124

11*@
21 ©
10 @

1
2

1?4@
14 @

..

@

Cottox

....

...

7 cents and not above 11, 3 ots
$ ft; over 11 cents, 34 cents $ ft
and 10 $ cent ad val-. (Store prices.)

8
35

Class 1

glace whence cents less $United
tates is 32 exported to the ft, 10

00
00
75

over

24

VirmUfontOWw, ^ ft 115 @ 1 20

5 00 @17 00
5 50 @18 00
5 50 @10 00

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued
at 7 cents $ ft or under, 24 cents;

1 00 @ 1 25

8 @

104

5 20 @13 00

Domestic Liquors—Cash.

10

..

Wools—The value whereof at the last

Brandy,gin&p.spi’ts in b $5 @
Bum, pure, in bond...
25©
Whiskey, in bond ....
30 @

'

17

24©

43 @
53 ©

5 0i) @10
do oth for. b’ds(g’d) 4 40 @ 9
Rum, Jam., 4thp.(g’d) 4 50 © 4
do
St. Croix,
3d
proof. ..(gold) 3 50 © 3
Gin, diff. brands.(gold) 3 00 @ 4

Ochre,yellow,French,
do

10 @

104©

Imported scoured, three times the
duty as if imported unwashed.
Am., Sax’y lleece.$ ft
65 @ 60

Spirits-Duty: Brandy, for first proof
$3 $ gallon ; Gin, rum and whiskey,
lor first proof, $2 50 $ gallon.

@7 124

"Whiting, Amer...

@135 QQ \

11
n

in oil

white,American,

do

104®
1(.'4@

domestic

$ft

20 per cent.)
do
.

10

Spices.—See special report.

$ ton.

Lead, red, City
do white, American,

fore

3£@

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and
plates, $1 50 $ 100 fts.
Plates,foreign $ ft gold
64®

95

25
00
CO

: Imported in the “ or¬
dinary condition as now and hereto¬

Canton,re-reel.Nol@2 8 50 @ 8 75
00 © 9 25
Japan, superior
11 00 @13 25
do
Medium
9 00 @10 00
China thrown
noiniual.

....

25

00
85
60
25

Wool—Duty

Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk,
35 $ cent.
Tsatlees, No. 1©3.$ftl0 00 @11 25
Taysaams, superior,
No. 1 2
9 00 © 9 tO
do medium,No3@4. 8 00 @ 8 50

$ cent ad val.-

Litharge, City.... $ ft

Cepper

Shot—Duty: 2f cents $ ft.
Drop
$ ft
llj@
Buck
1*4©
;

90

25
50

$ ct off list.
$ ct. off list
$ ct. off list

Telegraph, No. 7 ta il
Plain
Brass (less

....

36 @

val.
Iron No. 0 to 18 20@25
No. 19 to 26..-..'
30
No. 27 to 36....
35

104

10 @

gold

50

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered
$2 to $3 5i $ 100 ft, and 15 $ cent ad

..

Canton. Extra Fine... 9

Paints—Duty; on white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents $ ft; Parie white and
whiting, 1 cent $ ft; dry ochres,56
ce?.tt $ 100 ft: oxidesofzinc-, 1$ cents
$ ft ; ochre, ground in oil,$ 50 $100
ft; Spanishbrown 25 $ ceLtad valChina clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red

Pam»dB'dl & P?'*. « 00 @ 65 03
Cherry B ds Ss Plant 7^ 00 @ 80 00
Oak and Ashi^... 4 ^
^
70 0

@

£0 @

Lubricating
Kerosene

a

80

..

2 00 @

do wint. unbleach. 2 20 ©
Lard oil, prime winter 1 45 @
Bed oil,city dist. Elain
90©
do saponified, west’n
.. @
Bank
@
Straits
80 ©
Paraffine, 28 & 80 gr.

Woods, Staves,etc.
_UUtj: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 $ oent ad val.; Rosewood
and Cedar, free.
Spruce, East, $ M ft 21 00 @ 23 00
■'uthern Pine
35 00 @ 40 00
^"te Pine Box B’ds 23 00 @ 27 00
Pine Merch.
Box B o«ds
27 00 @ 80 00
Cl“«W
•••ii600°® 3 621
Eastb'rn-V M .... ®

B$f?...

@ 4 124

bleached winter

do

Lambert

Maple and
Biaok Walnut

(gold)

Sperm,crude

2 00 © 8
Burgundy port..(gold)
75 @ 1
Lisbon
....(gold) 2 25 © 3
Sicily Madeira..(gold) 1 00 @ 1
Red, Span. & Sicily(g)
90 © 1
Marseilles Mad’ra(g’d)
70 ©
Marseilles Port.(gold)
80 © 1
Malaga, dry
(gold) 1 00 @ 1
Malaga, sweet...(gold) 1 10 © 1
Claret
gold.$ cask35 00 @60
Claret.,...gold.$ doz 2 G5 © 9

ft;

$ bus 5 25 @ G 25
2 90 @
Link’d Atn.rough$bu8 2 65 @ 2 75
do Calc’fl,Bost’n,g’d .... © 2 25
do do New Yk,g’d 2 274© 2 30

casks.$ gall.. 2 4) ©
$ft
124© III!
Linseed,city...$ gall. 1 08 @ 1 10
Whale, crude
85
81 ©

46

Port..

....

Canary
Hemp

do in
Palm

cash.$ lb.—,

6 50 @

$ft
104®
Timothy,reaped $ bus 2 5) @ 2 60

Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning
fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal,
and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.;
sperm and whale or other fish (for¬
eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val.

jjar

-

.

IS

ad val.
Clover

-

Olive, Mar’s, qs
per case

....

Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,
4 cent $ ft ; canary, $1 $ bushel of
60 ft ; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent

do
In bags. 53 00@58 00
West, thin obl’g, do
55 00@56 00

.... @ ....
(gold) 6 25 © 6 374
(gold) 6 25 @ 6 50
(gold) 6 30 @ 6 87

Oak, sl’hter, heavy $ 2)
do
do
middle

2 90 ©

Oakum—Dutyfr.,$ ft
8©
11
Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ centad val.
City thin obl’g, in bbls.
$ ton.61 00 ©62 on

Oils

16

15 ©

151®

Crude
Nitrate soda

454

do strainedandNo.2.. 3 <0 @ 3 50
No. 1
.3 874© 5 00
do
do
Pale
5 00 © 6 00
do
extra pale
6 00 © 8 50

109 lb

ad val.

5 25 @ 5 50
© 3 50

I. C. Coke
9 50 @10 50Terne Charcoalll 00 @11 60
Terne Coke...* 9 00 ® ....

Wines—Duty: Value not over 50 ct*
$ gallon, 20 cents $ gallon, and 25 $
cent.,ad val.; over 50 and not over
.100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent,
ad val. ; over $1 $ gallon, $1 $ gal¬
lon and 25 $ cent ad val.
Madeira
$ gall. 3 50 © 7 00
Sherry,...'...
1 25 © 9 00

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 24 cents;
refined and partially refined, 3 cents;
nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft.
Refined, puro
14
$ ft
.. @

4 00 © 4 25
3 75 © 4 00

45 @

33

2'
1
1
1

l

IQ @ 1

b’k& bags$ bus,
Wheat, bulk and bags
Beef
-..$tce.
Pork
$ bbl.
To London (sail)
Heavy goods... $ tOB 12

0
5
4@
5
^,@26
..@19
..

Petroleum
Beef
Pork
Wheat

$ bbl. 1

@30
@

6 @15 0
@25

Oil
Flour

3 @

0

....

@50

,...$tce.
$ bbl.
$ bush.

Corn
To Have* ?
Cotton
$ lb
Beef and pork.. $ bbl.

,

,

244®

Tobacco.—See special report.

@

..

21 @

..

Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 1 60 © 1 65
do fine,Ashton’s(g’d) 2 50 © ....
do fine, Worthingt’s 2 60 © ....

val

Turpent’e, soft.$280ft.
Tar, N. County $ bbl.
Tar, Wilmington
Pitch City
Spirits turpentine $g
Rosin, com’n. $ 280 1b

194
51 50

ad

do
do
do

@

32©

Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100
bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft.
Turks Islands $ bush.
45 @
Cadiz
37 @

75

80

Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 3<Jcents $ gallon; crude
Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20

10

7

00

Naval

30 opnt

30

..

-

24 '
24
Plates,char. I.C.$ boxll 50 @12 10

StraitsT.........(gold)
English
(gold)

17

..

gold

Tallow—Duty :1 cent $ ft.
*
American,prime, coun¬
try and-city $ ft..,
12 @ 12f
Teas*—See special report.
Tin—Duty: pig,bars, and block,15 $
cent ad val. Plate and sheets and
terne plates, 25 per cent, ad val.
Banca
$ ft (gold)
27i@ 274

22

$bbl. 3 50 @

Rangoon Dressed,
duty paid

24;

26 @
18 @

Yellow metal
Zinc

cents;

Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ ft.;
paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 ceutB
$ ft.
Carolina ....-.$ 100 ftlO 50 @11 374

6

4©

Bahia....*..

If

35©

Lard

10

5@

Pipe and
*9 cent

12 @
8 ©

25 @

do

79 00© 80 00
Ivory-Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $ft 3 00© 3 15
East Ind, Billiard Ball 8 0;® 3 25
African, Prime..
... 2 62J@ 2 871
African, Sorivel.,W.C. 1 25® 2 25
JLead.—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 2); Old
Lead, 14 cents $ ft; Pipe and Sheet,
24 cents
Galena

Mexican
Florida. $ c.

20
13
13

ft.

00@100 00
00© 90 00
0 @170 00

181©

Double

Honduras

Mansanilla.....

00

@
Provisions—Duty: beef and pork,
1 ct; lams.bacon, andlard,2 cts $ft
Pork, ne w mess, $ bb!28 20 @28 37
Pork, old mess
27 75 @28 00
Pork, prime mess
24 00 @24 25
do prime,
22 50 @23 00
3eef, plain mess
15 00 ©2G 50
do extra mess
**20 50 @24 75
do hams
26 00 @35 ( 0
$ ft
Hams,
15J© 17
12 @
13
Shoulders

14
10
15

14 @12©

14

164®

in bulk

grav.,
Residuum
Gasoline

Rosewood, B. Jan. $ lb

@150 00

9 ©

10 @
8 @
11 @

..

do
do
do

SturePeioks—,

$ 2)

Rose*

14

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas

...133 00@I85 00

Nall Rod

..

40

Mexican.....

do

00@150 00
Band
125 00@ ..
125 00© ....
Horse Shoe
Bods,5-8@3-16inch.. 100 00@160 00
Hoop

do

Refined,free, 8.W....
do
in bond,prime
L. S. to W. (110©
115 test)
do Standard white
do do, prime white
Naptha, refined. 70

f

v; '*'

Sugar*—See special report.

....

214®

Crude,40©47grav.$gal

10 ©

do

87 50@ 90 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
ican, Refined
95
io
do
do Common 85
Scroll
:
125
Ovals and Half Round 120

Petrole um—Duty: crude,20
refined, 40 ;ents $ gallon.

30 @

Nuevitas....
Mansanilla

@
©

....

Barytes, Foreign

10

logs

81 G0@87 50

ordinary

Barytes,American^ft

00
00

7©

do
do

Hoop, and Scroll, II to If cents $ 2>;
P/£, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3
cents $ B>«
Pig, Scotch,No 1.
$ ton 38 00®41 00
Pig, American,No. 1.. 3S 00®39 00
Pig, American, No. 2 . 84 0 '@35 00

Bar Swedes,
sizes

00
00

50

ordinary logs

®

(in gold)

@
$ lb.
Chalk,-block....$ ton23 00 @21

Chalk

25 @

do
Port-au-Platt,
crotches
do
Port-au-Platt,

Carthagena, &c
@ 45
Indigo—Duty free.
Bengal
(^old) $ 1b 1 10 @ 2 05
(gold) 75 ® 1 40
Oude
(gold) 85 ® 1 00
Madras..
Manila
(gold)
70 ©
95
Guatemala
(gold) 1 10 ® 1 45
Caraccas
(gold) 80 © 1 05
Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 14 cents $ 5).
Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 2); Boiler
and Plate, 1* cents $ 2); Sheet, Band,

Bar, Bell’d Eng&Amer
Bar, Swedes, assorted

00
00

St. Domingo,

do

®

East India

Venet.red(N.G.)$cwt 2 85 @ 2 874
Carmine,citymade$ftl6 00 @20 00
@
Plumbago
.
.
6
China clay, $ ton.....30 00 @3100

@140 00*

...

4uho?any, Cedar,
wood—Duty Iree.
Mahogany S we Domin-

82J©
®

Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

^

HEADING-White Oak
double bbl
240 00©

val.

Ox, Rio Grande... $ C 7 00®
Ox, American
5 00®
India Rubber—Duty. 10 $

00
00
00
00

© 90 00
© 60 00
@120 00
@ 80 00

^

hhd

oak

40

nominal.
35

Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad

.

@225
@175
©170
@110
@235
@175
@110
@100
@150
@115

Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Sicily
$ ton.. 100 00 @210 00

Vermillion, Trieste ... 1 00 @ 1 10
do
Cal. & Eng.. 1 15 @ 1 29
do
27
Amer.com..
22 @

@275 00

HEADING-White

25 ©

Bavarian

bbl.,heavy.

do

do
bbl.,light
do
bbl., culls..
Red oak, hhd.,h’vy.
do
hhd., light..

©

..

Honey—Duty,2 cent $ gallon,

sizes

[June 27,1868.

TfitE CHRONICLE.

830

..@26

..@19
44@
44
@
$ c $
1 @ .. „
..

@

..

g’ds.$ ton 10 00 @12 00
lord, tallow, ent m t
etc****
V lb
Meaaurem.

Aahes,pot&p1l, $ ton 10 00 @12 00
Petroleum,..,......* $ Q @

-i

June 27, 1868.J

jL

For Sale.

& Niagara Fire Insurance

Mansfield,
Freese
Brownell,

RUSSELL’S PATENT DOUBLE SUC¬
TION SEPARATOR AND ADJUST*
ABLE SCOURER COMBINED.
The undersigned have a large number of certificates
given by reliable millers in Pennsylvania that the
above is the most perfect and economic Separator of
Grain (without wasting scarcely a kernel) yet intro¬
duced.
Saving one of Wheat per bushel over all
others. For rights apply or address immediately
E. Tiffany & co.,
15 Wall street, New York.

COMPANY.
OFFICE 12 WALLjSTREET.

Commission merchants,

NO. 50 BROAD

Mi scellaneous.

Insurance.

Miscellaneous.

Bankers and

831

THE CHRONICLE.

Pro¬

only.

at¬

interest

•allowed on deposits.
J. L MANSFIELD,
Vice-Pres. 1st Nat. Bank Decatur, Ill.
J. L. BROWNELL,
Pres, of the Open Board Stock Brokers,

$1,000,000
368,000
The Directors have declared a Dividend of FIVE
PER CENT, free of tax, payable on and after Monday
CASH CAPITAL

STREET, NEW YORK,

TT. S. Bonds, Coin, Stocks, Grain, Flour, an/d
visions Bought and Sold on Commission
Liberal advances on consignments. Particular
tention given to collections. Four per ceu*,

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st,

1868

13tli inst.

January 8,1868.

J, D, STEELE, President.
NOTMAN, Vice-Prest.

N.Y.

FREESE & CO.,
Commission Merchants, Chicago, Ill.
FREESE & COMPANY,
Bankers, Bement, Ill.

Henry

WATER DETECTOR
AND TIME WHISTLE COMBINED.
The above improvement, secured by Letters Patent,
is certified by the most eminent engineers as the only
Infallible Detector of an insufficiency of water in

EUREKA LOW

Kip, Secretary.
«

-

_

_

I. M.

Queen Fire Insurance Co
LONDON.

steam boilers.
The simplicity and absolute
of all its parts, its exemption

OF LIVERPOOL AND

J. L. Brownell & Bro.,
BROKERS,
J

28 BROAD STREET, NEW

YORK.

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received
on favorable terms.

Special Fund of $200,000
Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany
United States Branch, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y.

Home Insurance

National Bank,

OFFICES

Ornamental

Co.,

$100,000

Capital

:

O. 135 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, AND
TAGUE STREET, BROOKLYN.

J. L. Mansfield, Vice-Pres.
Freese, Cashier.
Prompt attention given to collections on all accessi¬
ble points in the Northwest.
Isaao Freese, Pres.
T. W.

Freese & Company,

Capital.....
Assets, Jan. 1, 1868

Ironworks,” No. 1,186 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia.
Engineer of the above works will cheerfully
answer any inquiries as to its efficiency, salety and
success.
The Detectors are manufactured and sold at
a large profit for $50 each.
The owner having an in¬
sufficient capital has authorized the undersigned to

The

151 MON

and terms

oiler the entire patent for sale x For price
apply or address immediately
E. TIFFANY & CO.,
15 Wall street, New

DECATUR, ILL.

OF

.....$2,000,000 OO
3,623,896 78
107,49J 55

Liabilities

CHAS. J. MARTIN,
A. F.
D. A.

BemeLt, III,,
Banking and Exchange business transac¬

A Regular
ted. U. S. Bonds and Coin bought and sold. Capi¬
talists can make desirable Real Estate Investments
through our House. Correspondence solicited.

North B

Mercantile Insurance Co

President.

OF

WILLMARTH, Vice-President.
HIALD, 2d Vice-President.

ESTABLISHED IN

T. B. GREENE, 2d Asst. Secretary.

Advances made on Consignments. Eastern orders
for all Western products solicited. Prompt and care
ful attention given.

VIA PANAMA
New

THE

Annual

OF THE CITY OF NEW
NO. 330 BROADWA’S

YORK,

.

Capital;One Million Hollars.
CHARTERED BY THE STATE
Darius R.

Mangam, Pres,

James Merrell, Sec.

Receives deposits and allows FOUR
INTEREST on daily balances, Subject

plicant.
Losses

CALIFORNIA

Sight.

SPECIAL DEPOSITS for six
be made at five per cent.
The Capital of
ed among over

t

CHARLES DANA

PACIFIC MAIL

To

LORD, DAY & LORD, Solicitors.
DABNEY, MORGAN & Co., Bankers.

Hartford

Place, N.Y.

FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF HARTFORD, CONN.

STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S

Capital and Surplus $2,000,000.

States

OF
W. B.

Mail,

An




MATTHEWS,

CONNECTICUT FIRE INSURANCE CO

Everett

Fo#6£roaastree

&

Co.';

AGENTS FOB.

M. Bennett, Jr„
Losse

J. B. Eldredge, Pres’t

promptly adjusted by the Agents here, and paid
in current money.

WHITE, ALLYN Sc CO.. Agents,
NO. 50 WILLIAM STREET.

LARGE

I,,

FIRE!

Brooklyn, May 15,186*.
Co., New York,
Gentlemen,—Our planing mill, with Fifty Thousand
feet of lumber was destroyed by fire last night, and
we are happy to say your Alum and Dry Plaster Safa
preserved our books, papers, and money in excellent
Messrs. Marvin &

and will call on

SHEARMAN BROS.
hours, and the cast

This Safe was red hot for several

iron feet were

0? CHINA AND JAPAN.
1 A

Sec’y.

^

AUGUSTINE HEARD St OO#
-""‘■T'.

Capital $27 5,000.

v

order.
We want another and larger one,
you as soon as we have time.
Yours truly,

28 State Street, Boston,

~

OF HARTFORD, CONN.

»

Medicines and

further information, app
office, on the wharf, oot
Canal street, Normal xviver, New Yor*.

*

9

through. One hundred pound

experienced Surgeon on board.

Offices To Let,

H. Kellogg, Pres t

Clark, Sec’y.

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

and 21st connect at Panama with

attendance free.
For passage tickets or
at the Company’s ticket

HiILIEai&lEy} jSenflan3^

*

Capital and Surplus $700,000.
J, N. Dunham, Sec’y.
E. Freeman, Pres

when those dates fall on
the preceding Saturday), for

(except

steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for
Antral American Ports. Those or 1st touch at Man¬
zanillo.

Baggage cnecsed

CO..

SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND MARINE
INSURANCE COMPANY,

1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City.
11th—Henry Ceauncey, connecting withMoNTANJ
autn—Arizona, connecting with Sacramento.

allowed each adult.

INSURANCE

HARTFORD, CONN.

Capital and surplus $1,200,000.

LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH
ER, FOOT o ] Canal street, at 1
o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, an

Departures of 1st

FIRE

PHOENIX

California.-

Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t

Sec’y.

Geo. M. Coit,

JULY :

jjdWAJU)

Sheppard Gandy, & Co

T^ C^ALLYN^'} AssocIate Managers

And Carrying the Unit

of security, convenience and

BROADWAY, BROAD and NEW Streets ne

of Fabbri & Chauncey

CHAS. E. WHITE, Assistant Manager.

with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.

On

of Aymar & Co

of David Dows & Co

SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq. .of

Sunday, and then on
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,

WALL, Apply to

Dabney, Morgan & Co
of E. 1). Morgan & Co.

of S. B. Chittenden & Co

THROUGH LINE

21st of every month

'

of

SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, Esq.,

Vice-President,

No. 54 Exchange

gentlemen of large wealth and financial experience,
who are also personally liable to depositors lor all ob¬
ligations of the Company to double the amount of
their capital stock.
As the NATIONAL TRUST
COMPANY receives deposits in large or small
amounts, and permits them to be drawn as a whole or
in part by CHECK AT SIGHT and WITHOUT NO¬
TICE, allowing interest on all daily balances,
parties can keep accounts in this Institution witli

JDflY&JHICaiALcmNTrn^

Chairman.

SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq
AYMAR CARTER, Esq
DAVID DOWS, Esq
EGISTO P. FABBRI, Esq

D. N. CARRINGTON, Agent.
WM. H. WEBB, Fresident.

months, or more, may

IBESTSELCOHD
^ jtUPQCLL CQTTMT

promptly adjusted and paid in this Country.

CHAS. H. DABNEY, Esq.,

20th of Every Month.
or the day before when these dates fall on Sunday,
from Pier No. 46 North River, foot King st., at noon.
JUNE 5.—Steamer SANTIAGO DE CUBA, connect¬
ing with new Steamship OREGHNIAN.
JUNE 20.—Steamship GUIDING STAR, connecting
with new steamship NEBRASKA.
These Steamships are expressly fitted for this trade,
and are unsurpassed for Salety, Speed, Elegance, and
Comfort, and tlmir rates for Passage and Freight will
always be as low as by any other Line.
For further particulars address the undersigned at
Pier No, 46, North River, New York.

ONE M LLION DOLLARS is divid¬
500 shareholders, cuminioinoc many

special advantages
profit.

Currency at option of Ap

New York Board of Management:

RAILROAD.

Sailing Arrangements

PER CENT.

to Check at

Income

Policies issued in Gold or

The 5 th Sc

National Trust Company

$10,000,000
12,695 000
4,260,635

Capital
Accumulated Funds

OPPOSITION TO MONOPOLY.

THROUGH LINE TO

(IN GOLD) :

CAPITAL AND ASSETS

COMPANY.

STEAMSHIP

STREET, NEW YORK.

Subscribed.

NORTH AMERICAN

Chicago, HI.,

1809.

UNITED STATES BRANCH,

Steamship Companies.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

EDINBURGH.

AND

LONDON

J. n. WASHBURN, Secretary.
GEO. M. LYON, Asst. Secretary.

Co.,

M. Freese &

r it i s h

AND

50 WILLIAM

I.

York.

THE

Desiring to deal directly with its Customers, this
Company will hereafter make a rebate from the Pre¬
mium on Risks in the City, equal to the .Commission
heretofore paid as Brokerage. ‘

BANKERS,
-

Whistle enables those having it in charge to examine
and prove its reliability at least four times a day,
or ot'tener if deSjred.
The “ Detector ” lias now been eight months in use
bv the “Philadelphia and New tiork

GEORGE ADLARD, Manager.

William H. Ross, Secretary.

J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.T.
C. B. Blxia, Pres’t Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago.

First

freedom from corrosion
from becoming clogged
by tilling with sediment—there being no channel or
chamber to afford a lodgment—the impossibility of
its getting out of order without the engineer or at¬
tendant being apprised of the fact, the utter absence
of any means by which the instrument cab be tamper¬
ed with; the advantage of its being also a Time

.....£2,000,000 Stg.
1,893,220
.*.$1,432,340

Authorized Gapital
Subscribed Capital
Paid-up Capital and Surplus

BANKERS Sc

THE

.

P.

actually melted.

It can toe seen at cur store, N0, ^HBOADWAX,

,p0
■~rr

4

H(;332

tfiE

Commercial Cards.

cflitoNicift

[.Tune 2?, 1868.

Iron and Railroad Materials.

Iron and Railroad Materials*
'

Brand & Gihon,

NAYLOR &

Importers A Commission Merchants.

NEW

YORK,

99 John street.

110 DUANE STREET.

IRISH Sc SCOTCH LINEN GOODS,
V

208 So. 4th stree

Jobbing and Clothing Trade.

Cast Steel

RAILS,
TYRES,

Frogs, anti all other Steel Material for

Agents for the sale of
WHITE

HOUSE IN LONDON

Alfred Savidge &

as

Co.,

All

the

approved Brands of No.
Scotch Pig Iron,

IN

YARD, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE.
In lots to suit purchasers. Apply to
HENDERSON BROTHERS,

.

No. G Rowling

S, DAVIS, Jr’s., DIAMOND BRAND

Sugar Cured Hams
Apply to

.

Green, Tfew York.

PHILADELPHIA.

ROUNDEY,

All work

accurately fitted to gauges and thorough

ly interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship,
Finish, and Efficiency lully guaranteed.

CORNER BEAVER & NEW STREETS, NEW YORK.

MATTHEW BAIRD.

Gang, Wright & Co.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions
NO. 27 MAIN ST., CINCINNATI,

GEO. BURNHAM.

T. PARRY

CHAS

Morris, Tasker & Co.,

O.

Pascal Iron
Manufacturers

Works, Philadelphia.

Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded
Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street
Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

W* H. Schieffelin&Co.,
Importers and Jobbers of

©P RUGS,

We are always in a position
terns and weight of rail lor

15 GOLD

:

STREET, NEW YORK.

PERFUMERY, AC.

ARCHITECTURAL

WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK

•J

Bessemer Steel

The Novelty bon Works,

METALS.

CORNER OF BROADWAY, N Y,
Manufacture

292 PEARL STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET

Plain and Ornamental Iron Work

NEW YORK

Complete Fire-proof Structures—Columns, Lintels,
Floors, Roofs, Castings, Shutters, Vaults. Safes, etc.,
of Cast or Wrought iron, Also, Iron Bridges, Iron
Piers, etc.

~

F?%c F.

A.

for Buildings

Dana,

IIY. J. DAVISON,)
WM. W. AY EES, }
J. HEUVELMAN,)

FOREIGN A AMERICAN RAILROAD
"

IRON, OLD AND NEW,

Pig, Scrap Iron and other Metals, Lo¬
comotives, Railroad Chairs A Spikes.
Old Ralls Re-rolled or Exchanged for new.
67 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

Agents,

approved lengths.

MORA IRON.

/

Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC
192 FRONT

DANNE-

(at the option of the buyer) ior Foreign; when desir¬
ed, we will contract to supply roads with their
monthly or yearly requirements of STEEL OR IRON

RAILS, taking their

OLD RAILS IN TRADE FOR NEW

furntehed, receiving the difference'ln cash, and allow¬
ing the highest market price for their Old Rails, and,
if necessary, receiving the latter after the delivery, ol
the New Rails.
Orders for Foreign Ralls, both Steel and Iron, will
he taken for transmission by Mail or through the cable
to our

LONDON

USE,
7

STREET, NEW YORK.

HOUSE,

58 OLD BROAD

STREET,

for execution at a fixed price in Sterling or on com¬
mission at the current market price abroad when the
order is received in London; shipments to be made
at stated periods to ports in America and at the low¬
est possible rates of freights. Address

Hopkins & Co.,

S. W.
69 A 71

Broadway, New York.

To Iron Manufacturers.
Wc beg to announce to the proprietors and mana¬
gers of Rolling Mills and Iron Manufacturers through¬
out the Unitea-States and Canada, that we are con¬

stantly receiving from both American and Foreign
Railroad Companies heavy shipments of

Rails.

Old

We are, therefore, always in a position to furnish to
consumers any
immediate or
remote delivery at all points in the United States

quantity desired ior

required will contract to supply
mills with their monthly or yearly consumption at
the lowest current market prices.
We are also prepared to transmit by mail or through
the cable to our

HOUSE.

LONDON

©

beg to announce that I have this day entered into
a contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & Sons, of Sheffield
for the whole Annual Make of the above Iron, which
In future, will be stamped
1

Contracts for both IRON AND

and Canada, and w,lien

NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE

SWEDISH

rolled to any
yard and of

STEEL RAILS will be made payable in United States
currency for America, and in either currency or gold

v

GENUINE

Rails,

of American and Foreign macufacture,
desired pattern and weight for linial

DEPARTMENT

I VOfJ 77 A: 83 T.TRRRTV STREET
LIBERTY STREET,
NOS. 77 &

any

DIATE OR REMOTE

OF

Tliomas T. Pope & Bro.

to furnish ail sizes, pat¬

both steam and horse
quantities desired either for IMME¬
aelivery, at anv port in the
United States or Canada and always at the very lowest
current market prices.
We are also prepared to sup¬
ply
roads, and in

o

OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES

Indigo, Cork*, Sponges,
FANCY GOODS,

prices, for all descriptions of

Railroad Iron.
1

BALDWIN locomotive works.
M. Baird & Co.,

CINCINNATI.

170 AND 172

Old Rails, Scrap Iron and Metals.

SCOTCH PIG IRON.

Sold by leading Grocers In principal cities.

Companies.

We beg to call the attention of Managers of Rail¬
ways ana Contractors threughout the United States
and Canada to our superior facilities for executing
orders at manufacturers

FEES, RICE, AC., AC.

^

as

HOUSE, 58 OLD BROAD ST,

both AMERICAN and FOREIGN

SUGARS, SIRUPS MOLASSES, COF¬

HEAD A

well

LONDON

To Railroad

Railroad Iron,

Brokers in
18 4 1

CO.,

special attention to orders for

DUCK, AC

PHILADELPHIA PA,.

r

Railroad Iron,

A
34 Old Broad Street,

who give

FLAX SAIL

County, City and

BONDS,

In connection with the purchase and sale of

:

NAYLOR,BENZON

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

Town,
STATE

-

-

LINENS, AC,

Broadway, New York,

Railroad,

Railway Use.
WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’

Hopkins & Co.,

69 A 71

Negotiations of enery description of

CAST STEEL

In foil assortment for tlie

S. W.

PRlLA.,

BOSTON,
80 State street.

CAST STEEL

‘ESTAR'CTlIliD 1856.

CO.,

[f jLEUFSTA, W. JESSOP A SONS.
And to which I request the special attention of the
trade.
*

STREET,
7
for old rails off ol Foreign Railroads for
5ft OLD BROAD

Oraers

shipments at stated periods to any ports in America
at a fixed price in sterling or for execution on com¬
mission at the current market prices abroad when
the order is received in London.
In this department
of our business our

facilities

are

unsurpassed and

our

greater

S. W.

Hopkins 8c Co.,

69 A 71 Broadway, New York.

Leufsta, In Sweden, 29th April, 1867.

CARL EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor.

Townsend & Yale,
92 A 94 FRANKLIN

90,
e

STREET.

kbal

Agents for

-

WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above
nolrice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers of,
Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders
for this Iron, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel
made from the Iron, at their establishments. Nos. 91 &
93 Johh Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed

Mnfg. Company,
Manufacturers of

Germantown Hosiery Mills.

SHEET

*




BRASS,

GERMAN SILVER PLATED METAL,
BRASS BUTT HINGES,

Blackstone Knitting Mills.
*r,»

Mnf*g ’Co.

Gilt, Lasting, Brocade, and Fancy Dress Buttons,

Glastenbnry Knitting Co.

Pennsylvania Knitting Co.

Winthrop Knitting Co.
■9

Cayndutta Glove Works.
Bronx

RAILROAD

Smith,

PLACE, LONDON,

W.’

IRON,

BESSEMER

Street, Boston.

Scovill

Keystone Knitting Mills.

Bristol Woolen

15 LANGHAM

RAILS,

STEEL TYRES,
AND METALS

Lawrence Manf’g Co.

0

Gilead A.

Tape Company.

Kerosene Oil Burners
*

-*

And Lamp

Trimmings,
And Importers and Dealers in every Description oi

Photographic Goods.
NO* 4 Beekman street & 36 Park Row, New Yqek,

Manufactory* Watbebvby, Ct«

Railroad Bonds and U.S. and other Americrn Securi
s

negotiated, and Credit and Exchange provided for

U. S.

or

Continent.

Consignments solicited on the usual terms of any of
the staples.

.

-

.

,

-

Special Counting and Reception Rooms available for
Americans in London, with the facilities usually found
at the Continental Bankers.
*
.

Street

Cars, Omnibuses.

JOJHN STEPHENSON A CO.,

7

-

MANUFACTURERS.

New York,