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I HUNT'S MERCHANTS' MAGAZINE, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES VOL. NEW 12. YORK, U Id 14 "IS ** v. K. o LATVE. secretary, Pres't., J. o. WALLis, Vice-Pres't.n alfhonsk la CTK, Cashier. Texas BaukluB and Insurance Co., OAi,VKsrO.>. Cash Capital. $388,000 DIliKCTOKS: M. brau'lon, J. C WallU, F. B. Lubbock, M onln, S. Jemison, M. W. BaKer, Leon .. ScTinelder, K. S. Willis, T. A. Gary, W. B. Wall. K.b'l. Mills, T. .1. H. Aud.rson. Special aiteutluii given to collections at all po'nts in t')e State, and remittanc* s promptly made, without any charge except customary rates orsxchauge. Blum, Ge " * 10 8 •• the advertisement occaplee one oolamn or up* diacount of IS per cent on theee rates will be II BRANDON, J. war Ji, a allowed. Space measured Is In U agate type. lines to the Inch. &.dTertlsements will hare a (arorable place when put in, but no promise of contmnons Insertion In Uts best place can be dven, as all advertisers muat Aave eqnal opportnnlltes. ftrs Win, B. CO., FUBLISHKRS. Stii ft William 81 St., N ot Subscription t«iins T. Wh. a. BTSPims OPSTkS & Geo. Opdyke see Co., (Corner of Cedar street.) Texas Bankers. McMahan & OtPOSITS received rom Indirldnals, Firms. Banks Bankers and Corporations, subject to clieck at Bight, and interest allowed at the rate of Foub per Co., Bankers, ABd We have Texas. prompt and reliable correspondents at all the principal points tlirouKhout this B'ate. aod upon all collections pavable cent per annum. caKTll--loATK8 OF DEPOSIT Issued, bearing FotJk Ser cent interest, p 'yable on demand, or after xed dates. Dealers In Forelfcn snd Domestic Exchange, OALTESTON, in inis City or Houstci, make for collecting, and only actual charge upon interior collections. Immediate and prompt attention fiven to all basiuess entrusted tons. KefertoNat. no charge ark Bank, Howes ft Macy, anu Spofford Tileston ft C0..K. Y.,id Nat. Banli.Bustoo, Pi^eLepeyre ft Uro., N. O., Drexel ft Co., Phila. COLLECTIONS made on til accessible points In the United utates, Canada aud Europe. Dividends and Coupuus also collected, and all most promptly accounted for. ORDKUS promptly executed, for the purchase and sale uf Ould also. Government and othar Securities, on commission. INFUKMATIUN furnished, and purchases or exchanges of securities made for Investors. NEGOTIATIONS of Loans, and Forslgn Exohange ; Texas, We give special attention to collections on all aecasalble poll ts. DIK£CTOI<S: W. J. Hatchings, P. W. Oray,A. J. Bark*. Cor. Ennls, W. M. Kice, b.. H. Gushing, BhNJ. A. BjTTS, President. WILLIAM National Bank of Texas GAI.VESTON, all accessible points. KOPPEkL. President. UENDLEV. Vlce-Preat, Cashier. AbSlstanl GHARLXB « „ ^ -. ( Ami;r. Ex. National Bank. ., Correspondents, T. N. ^ Traders Xat. Bank. J ,„,, K07B3, Charles G, Johnsen, conmssioN kebchant, Lock Box STItKET, iLU In all th« also In the ; anada and West Indies. Telegraphic Transfers of Money to and lyois Loodon, Paris, SSB Frauelaoo, Havaua, fte. & R. T. Wilson Co., WILSON, CALLATFAT St €0., Bankers and Commission Slercbants, No. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW TOHK OoTemment Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bouKht and sold on the most liberal turma. M^rchan t Bankers and otiiers allowed 4 per rent oa depos.ts; The most liberal advances made on Cotton, TobT>9«'^*V ftc, consigned to ourselves or to our eorrespanaest Mssara. K Kbxtou OliXIA'.' * CO.. UverporL <"ox, ) HoB.,OB MANtJXL, > Wm.U. HuTOUiNSOK,) DaxiblDbbw, General Special Partner. Partners. & Cox Co., BANKEBS & BKOKEKS, Kenyon n WALL STREET. SeenrltiM, Stoeka. Hoods sad Gold BANKING HOUVB OV NEW YORE. ^Dealers in Bills of Bxcnange, Oovernments, Bondsr Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable on Deposits subject to Sight Dralt Advances maae on approved securities. Special racliltlea fox. negotiating Commercial Paper./ Collect' *)nsboth InTma and foreign promptlymade. Foreign and Domeillc Loans Negotiated. James Robb, King 9« KouNTZE Brothers, 14 Wall Street. New York. Deposits received ttom Banks and Indinduala, sab eet to check at sight, and Intersst allowsd thereon al fOVti PKU CENT per annum. Collections made mrooKhont tba UnlUd •tuas.iM British Provinces and Europe. Oovernmeou seoarltloa booghs and sotd. BZCHANOE, COTTON, KTC. AvaUable In all parte ol 4c Brenisam, Texas. Houston— First National Bank; Correspondents Oalveston Bali^HntchinRs.ft Co; New Orleans— Pike, Brother ft Co.; New York— Dum an, Sherman ft Co. Co., STOCK BBOKBBS, 40 Europe, etCn Mmibsr of OITT BANK, LONDON, OB York. I the York Stock Kxchaog; Cubbedge N. Turk Stoek rmiisim & Hazlehurst, BANKKBS AND BBOKKBS, COMMEI«:lAL (RKDlTfl and DRAFTS on LONDON. PAiaS, and fCoTl. vNU. ADVANCES made <>n >;ouslgnmenu, STOCKS and Alao BUNDa boaght aud sold on Commission. hew Wall btreet Stocks and Bonds BOnOBT AND SOLD ON COMMISSIOir. J.P. WILLIAM^ A. DENIS'N WILLIAMS. , II«ssrs.HOTTINOI7EB & CO., ofParla BASSETTBANKEBS.BASSBTT, & A. D. Williams THXOtrSH TBB Particular attention given to Becalrinc and Tor Balls. & Co., BANKEBS, WALL STREET, Issue I.etters o( Credit for Traweller Netv Orleans. 3&t. Will purchase warding t WO Co., M. ^ and nayable made on J. J. 7. Culled Statea, fttocks. Securities. Inttrest allowed AND CIRCDLAB ISSUE CIRCILAR NOTES I.etTers of Crrdlt available BANKEBS, No. SS New York <ntr, bought aud sold on commission. & SOUTTER or Check. Collections St., PRINl'IPAL (ITIK-i OK IHK eoTemment Capital, $376,000. Houston, Nassau elleoted. €ITY BANK OF HOUSTON, ~VHB 1 1 LATB NASSAU STBEET, NO. 2S page. T. H. No. BANKING HOCSE OP DANA A W tsrwor O. FSAXOIS & Co., Duncan, Sherman Current Accounts received on such terms is Biay b agreed upon. Bankers and Brokers. KsossB Otqtki, 308. Bankers and Brokers. f.. a •* B2 • foUowIng M cents per line. ordered less than 4 tfraee, " 5 Umea or moi e " » " " " It NO. 20, 1871. Texas Cards. !2Vboertt0cment0. AdTartucraentt will b* Intarttd *t the prlc«i per line tor each iDterUon : MAY I4ACON, GA. ColIaetlODs, and Maks do a General Banking Brokans* BsAmm. astf I Sayles Sc Bassett, Atty's at Law, Brenuam, Texas. John Munroe & BBTBR 10 EAST BIVER NATIONAL BAKK. Co., John Pondir, No. 8 'Wall Street, Neiv Tork, P. R. Smith & UUOClical&r Co., BANKEBS AND comnissioN mbbchants, BBXAj;, TSXA9, Inciters of Credit lor Trkvellert, DfAW DUU ua Munroe NO. 1 BROKER, and 8c Co., BUS K'RIBB, PARIS, rarable In Gold or Eqaivalent. In It Bonds, Bsehaas*, Oovem^Mnt Gold and Stocks, Ho. 44 BZCHANOE PLACB. ParUcttlar attenilan glraa to tba secotlaUos of Hallway and othar CurportU Lowe. r niou and Central PasUC BOMI ud Stocks a specialty. ; THE 610 Bankers and Brokers. O. H. *. O. BA.B2r«T. KATJtOlfD. X, D. FOSTIB. Banker* and Brokers, Foreign BiUs. PARIS, I,ONDON 19 comer «e Fine Street, of WlUiam No. Neiw Hork, BKJAB AND DRAW IN SUinS TU No. Saxouy, SCJIT the principal cities of Germaay, Switzerland England, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, lielgium, Ku88ia, Italy, Spain, Denmark, i&c. all 41 TO P. O. Box YORK. And iseiTB orders In Securities, TKANSFEE8 OF MONET And to transact any business pertaining to an Amerlaan Banking House In London. JAir COOKE & CO. Silver coin bought and Sold. Special atteutiou given to Merchants orders for Co., 94 WiLLIAMS&GuiON, 63 Wail Street, New Vork. TRAVELLERS and COMMERCIAL CREDITS ISSUED, avallaWe In all parts of Europe, &c. BILLS OF EXCHANGE drawn In sums to suit purchasers also Cable transfers. Country Bankers can be supplied with Bills of Ex change, large or small amunnts, on the principal cities of Kurope, also with Tickets for Passage from, or to. Europe, by the GUION LINK ol Mall Steamers m & Dickinson, BANKERS, [26 BROAD Transact a General Bunking bnslncss; Including tke pureliase ot SaXITBL LAWBBlfOB. WU. PaXKXB, Member of N. Y. Stock Kzctaange and Gold Board. & Lawrence, & BANKERS & BROKERS, Goveromeut Securities, Gold, Stock and Bonds uought and sold ou commission. Accounts received and Interest allowed ou balances, which may be "heoked lor at sight same as at fiank. A. V. STDUT, President Nat. Shoe and Leather Bank J. B. DICKINSON, late President Tenth Nat. Bank. TLATT K. DICKlNSON.MemberofN.Y. Stock aid Uold Exchange. HOWARD C. DICKINSON, Member ot N. Y. Stock Exchange. JOU S bio No. NO. 69 W. G. Chittick, STREET, NEDT ¥ORK, Buys and Sells, on Commission, And Securities, ice, Transacts a General DEPOSITS Ourreiit all CIRCULAR NOTES paid free oi Commissioa) and letters o (isaaad so TRAVELLERS, ALSO, COniHERCIAL CREDITS. all received and interest allowed at best etc., bought and approved Securities. COLLECTIONS made, and Loans Negotiated. Bauklng Business. & Winslow, Lanier & Co., BANKERS, K PINE STREET, NEW Agents for the sale of City, County and Railroad Bonds, isane L«>.tte.rs of Credit for foreign ravel. BANKERS AND STOCK COMMIBSION BR0KBB8, No. 16 WtiU Street, New York. Deposits received firom Banks, Bankers, Merchants and ottiArs, subiect to check at sijtht, aa with banks, etioBs made all part* «t U>« United StstM. m 86 SODTH STREET, NEW YORK. Issue Sight Drafts and Exchange payable in a and Ireland. Credits on W, TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool. Ad /ances made on consignments. Orders for Gov ment Stocks, Bonds and Merchandize executed. parts of Great Britain & Co. 52 Wall Street, JA8. W. TUCKER A Rue Scribe, Paris CO',': •; BANKERS. issue Letters of Credit. Draw Bills on Paris. Lester M. Clark. Lawrence Brothers & Co. & Co. Tapscott, Bros. Tucker, Andrews YORK. Receive 'the accounts ol interior banks, bankers, corporations and MercliaQts. No. 262 Broadway. Special attention Riven to Voluntary and Involuntary Bankruptcy, and arrangements between Creditors P. O. box 4,008. i';d Debtors. parts of the world on MORTON, ROSE & CO' LONDON. i'tates given to every liranch of the business. Co., ISSUE GOVERNMENT and STATE SECURITIES, GOLD ADVANCES made upon & Bliss New Vork. Ac. james King, ATTORNEYS AND COUN8EI.I.ORS. parts ot the world Morton, CO. Sold ou Commission. Loans Negotiated and Investments made on Favor* able Terms. Orders for Stocks and Gold carefully executed at the Regular Boards. Prompt attention Edwin Street, KAILROAD BONDS, STOCKS, Commercial Paper, Sterling Excbange, Govemmeut No. 40 'Wall Co., ISSUB Available in & ALEXANDER SMITH & WALL STREET, Commercial and Travelers Credits bank:brb. No. 35 WAI.I. Co. Credit foi Stocks, Bonds and Gold Bought and Sold on Commission. Dealers Ln American and >oreign Gold and Silver, Government Securities, &c. Collections made lu all parts of the Country. WILLIAM & Gnlon Liverpool. WALL SIREET, NBW YORK. 1 Co.. Brown Brothers Parker, Successors to Kellogi: New York, & London. Parker STREET,] Oor, Exchange Place, other Produce to Ourselves or Cor- Alex. S. Fetrle Available In Stout made upon CONSIGNMENTS OK BROADIVAY. and sale Government and State Bonds. Railparticular attention to the PURCHASE AMU SALE OF GOVERNMENT.STAT-B AND i<ALLliOAD SKCU- road Stocks and Binds, and etbe KlTUtS. ~^DepoBits received subject to check at sight. securltlas, ou <:ummlsslou. : 8 Wall Street, New York, Transact a Gbhibai. UAHBiiie BrsiNxss, and glvb OoM and respondents. BANKKR8, Banker* and Brokers, Government Securities Stocks Bonds >onght and sold strictly on Commtssion. ADVANC'ES COTTON, and Lock. WOOD 8c Co., Oou. Sterling Credits, ttoccs. Bonds Uold and Cammann & ST&TE STREET, .aoSTCN DEALERS IN COMMERCIAL PAPBR. Buy and Sell Massachussetts and New York State 3,338. Securities, Stocks, 38 Co., New York. EXCHANGE ON LONDON TO VAKS R. L. Edwards, 'Government Co., the world CIABLE STREET, 58 Wall Street. AND COMMERCIAL CRBDITS and CIRCULAR LETTERS FOR TRAVELERS, avallabla In all parts of To execnte & Blake Brothers LOMBARD STREET. LONDON, available in all parts of £nrope. BANKER AND BROKER, WALL tJEW London, In i, 1871. STERIilNQ EXCHANGE, laaue Letters of Credit for I'ravelers, JIO. 88 & McCulloch 85BRUHL. ST. York, January We are prepared to purchase and sell l<eliisls, of WALL STREET, ^ay Cooke, Knauth, N achod &Kuhne WANKERS, iO Kew In CoNNXcrrioH with thb Hocsx of T R K:B T, Neiv York. , N. Y., Subscription agents (or the CBBOinoi.x In Paris. BANKERS, S WILLIAM STREET, Bzcbange on Paris and the Union Bank sums to suit. Street, N.T. Leonard, Shfildon&Foster . Co., BOSTON Credits for Travelers In Europe, and Marine Inanrance Stock, Fire WALL . issirx^ PVIiESTON, KAYIHOND & Co. 10 & Oilman, BowJes Brothers C. DXILXB IK INSURANCE SCRIP, Wall Street, 5 i_May 20, 1871. Bankers and Brokers. Raymond & Co., Wlliam Barney, Late CHllONJ(Ji.K. Jos. C. Walcott. David B. Sickles' & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, Buy and Sell Bonds and Stocks In London, Par and Frankfort and negotiate Loans on same. Clark Walcott No. 39 Broad Street. We buy and sell STOCKS. GOLD and GOVRRNMENT SECURITIES also, STATE, CITY, COUNTY, and RAILROAD BONDS ou Commission. We negotiate Loans for STATES, TOWNS, RAIL; ROAD and other CORPORATIONS. Interest allowed ht d on Deposit Balances sut^ect to rafts. THE INTERNATIONAL BANKING HOUSE OF BRELAZ, ABT & \»l B«K«Bt Str***, W., CO., LVBdoB- Agency of the RRITISH NORTH BANK OFAlflBKlC A, REMOVED TO 48 WALL 8TKEET. Commercial Credits Issued for use Ip Europe, China Japan, the Kast and West Indies, ana South America. Demand and Time Bills of Exchange, payable In London and elsewhere bought and sola at curren rat08, also cabin TraDsfers. Demand DraitB on Scotland and Ireland, also on Cacada* British Columbia and San FrHnclsco Blllft collected Jand-otuer Banking business transacted .^^ IJOHlS PATON, > Air«nt» II J May f> : THE CHHOMCLl'; 20, 1871. W»at»ni BoftOB Bankers. & Co., Page, Richardson Jepoelted witb U. 8. and Depoalia 9M,O0O. Vlonown Robert Bensoi itiuuroc & Co. AMD C. UlrcuUi Notes avftlUblo for Travol«r« Id UYDK, BSTABLISHKO & OANKKKS. Cobb, Is UKVONSItlKK Sl'UKKT. ai BOSTON, 1 Buy aad eell Western CItjr and Ooun- 51"*" .•s,4).<>.a(>o New York This Bank, harlnk reorganised as a National Bank now prepared to do a genera] banking business. Oovernment Securities, Coin, Uold Onstaud Balllon boagbl and sold at current rates. Bpeclal attention Wen to collections throughout the west J sjiaa U. BaiTTOM, Pres. Caas. K. Dioasoir, V Pnst KSWABD P. Ctnris Cashier J Morton, Galt & Co., 150 Wsst Main Street, LoalsrlUs, Ky., dealers In Foreljrn and Domestic RxcUange, Oovernment Bonds and aa Local Seourltles. utrs prompt attantloo to oollsotloos and orders for iDTesunent ol (tmds. AHBRIOVa. OA. W. M. PHILADELPHIA. No. Ofllce West Third :il A. SILVKK and nOVBHNlttKN r HONOSi. OOLLECTlOiyS niADB OHABLESTON, Aast.-CBShlar. all accesulh e PITTSBDROH, Buy and Co. . PA. kinds of Railroad, City and othsr sell all securities. for. Naw Toac CoauspoMDaMTs KonnUe J.M.WelthA Arenu. BearyCleiis ACo., Brothers, & Co R. U. IsasLL. Isaai,L. IsBELL 6c Son, . BANKERS, III., TALLADEOA, ALABAniA, Will make larestmenta for Corporntlons, Butates and iO'livlduaU and negotiate Keat Ustiite Loans, Commercial Paper, Railroad bonds an<t Stocks, and other Correspondent E. H. Levy BROKERS, ORAVIBR STRBBT. lit Near Orleana, La. Slate and City Notea.1 Odd and SUrer Coin, Insnrance Scrip, State and City Warraala Bank and Railroad Stocks, Uucurrent Bank Notes, Land Warrants, I'nltcd .—HOWBS A MACY. STATB OP ALABAHA. tiecurltles. Bouabt and Sold exclnslrelr on Coaa Particular attention pild to Settlement of Stata aad City Taxes. JaO. J.COBBM, City Bank The Refer by permlaalon. In UlllCAOO, to W. F. COOLBAUUH, President Union Nat. Bank, 8. M. NICKBRSON Prealdent Fint Nat. Bank. gutfs Bonds. MutllaLea Cnrrency, commercial Paper, mission. Special attention to collections. New York & L. J- NO. FINANCIAL AGBNT8 OP SELRIA. p. L. Samuel A. Gaylord & Co. Capital . . AUOUSrA, QA, WM. NORTH THIRD 8TREBT ARMSTKONO, Csshler. P. JNU. W. LOVK, Asalatant Cashier. N.Y. Correspondent— Importers and Traders National 8A1NT LOUIS MO. ol ths United Statsa 8100,000 . J AS. ISUELL.of Talladoga, President. Bond Brokers, JOIU JaT COHBM. COHBH, NO. J. Cohen 6c Sons, J BANKERS dc BBOKEKS, CoUecUoBB made on aU parts NO. Sj3 A CO (Snice'wors to B. JONEii Collections solicited and promptly remitted lor. at made and promptly remitted In Sonth Carolina AHORBAL KSTATB LOAN BKOKKRB, stock and & James T. Brady O. S COLLECTIONS ON ALL ACCESSIBLE POINTS jAVas Chicago, BLAZa J. C. Uncnrrent Bank Notes, Bonds, Stocks, Specie Kx. Ac, Ac, bought and sold. LONDON AND PAHIS King ol OP NORTH CAROLINA. FOR 8ACB Field, parU al N. O. the Ualud SUtea. DK8IUNATBU UEPOSlTOUy OF TUK UNITBU STATES AND FINANCIAL AliKNT. W. U. WiLLABO, President. C. Dawar Caablai chau|fe, kind* points and remitted lor on day ol payment. f!UEGK!l ON Bank, VriLHINOTON, !«>r«et. all Waubi, caahlar. BANKXK AND BROKER, Co., OINOIN^ ATI, OHIO. Djalenln tiOI.D, A. K. National K. B. BoaatMa, Prsst. Raleigh National Bank Kaufman, C. Wai. Bryea LOCK- S mth'ern Bankerei. Western Bankers. — Msaars. Corraspondenls ColleoUons made on Refer to: All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs. WOOD A Co., New York. Transact a generiftl BaaklOK au(i KzohaafebnstneHs ncludlQg furoliase and Sale or StuuKS, Uuuds, Quid on CoinoiiMlon. Fourili New York A Co. Street, Cincinnati. Ohio. «tc. & liu Uc»t lor. Hewson, F. STOCK BKOKBR, BANIvKUS, & n a general banking baslaass. Oottoo pe >aaa< Collections mads aad promatly r^alttee First BKJAMISON^feCo. Co., BAMUntS AND BROKSKB. on order. BiNKBICS, FhiUdelphla Bduicera. wnnaaB aoa.* ' Ooi W. Wheatley & . Do GiLMORE, DUNLAP Merchant, aehange, boagbt asd aoM. ColleeUoBS pronietl* raamsa CoiieetioBs r«ams4 Mf Orders solicited for ik« parahasses aeMSO< aad Secnrltles. ProBi • naraatu ly boude. 108 Commission Prss-t. 1837. Capital paid In Parker HTUa In St. Louis. pkrU of ftll lh% KMt. ftud CHAS. Cashier. Jr. NATIONAL BANK OP TUB STATB OP miNSOUill. l-AUIN. & inarcu>r4, An4re Baalrars. BANKttR, •-AOTOH AND tauo.ucu Treaaarer to ieoure Clroulatioh i AMD Kurupe ..... Oapital of Kzclunye. knil Coiiimeroul auU Tr»relert Creitlu |MU0(1 on The VUr HMiik, l«nk, ontham TITIJSTII.I.a, PKNN., Hosiun. atreel, Bmlwrfc Second National Bank, Edward C. Anderson, HA.NKKHN, 10 State 611 John Craig, Banker, Anansta, Oa. Kspeclal attention paid to the purchase aad sale ot Gold. Bank N'tei*. Bonds, Sloca.. Forelg.i and OoSMSxch nxe. collectluus made awl proaasda prompttic I- ly reiultted. Trust California T. J. Perkins, BANKER, EUPAVLA, ALABAIHA. Co., 4» CALIFORNIA STRKKT, SAN FRANCISCO. RXCUANOK, BANK NOTBS AND COIN BOUURT AND SOLD. BANKBRS, Dealers In BictianKe, Ag nts m Collections made on an aoeesslbls points in the Statas. Financial and Trast Sonthem Bnslneaa INTEREST ALLOWED OX DEPOSITS, nONEY TO LOAN, Wm. Fowlsb. Strong Vaults lor Sale Deposits. President. USNRT L. i DAVIS. | D. W. Fowler Caabler. C. THOMPSON. BomaBTUxa. SommerviJle, 4c BROKERS, Preetaent. Cashier. Valley Bank, A BANK OF DISCOUNT AND DEPOSIT, TICKSaORe, HISS. N. Y. (;orrsspoadaat:—Baak of tna Manhattan Oo. sao. L. BOLiiaa. Holmes & Macbeth, STOCK AKD BONO BHUKBRS, CHARLBSrON, S.C. Bpaolal attention given to purchase of Cotton.: H. U. Ilalxht. John Cnrrey, W. H. sharp, J. c. Jofansou, bamuel Crlm. C. W. Hathaway, 11. Barrol > a. Ualrd, M. Rosenbautn, J. O. Kldrldjre. H lleydenfetdt, U. J. Booth, c. J. DeerlUK, F. S. Wenalusar, W. B. Uumoilai^, il. L. Davis, 0. M. Flam Wu. Blackwood, C. s. Hobl>a, a. u. Moore, Tyler Vloe-Preaidaat. Mississippi MONTOOMRRYAALA, Keyboxtt. iiet, J. T. P. BaAjtoa. J . J aHuaa, Pres't. CaAB. YOKK CORRKSPONDKNT Jos. S. Vloe-PresX Merchants CartU. Nr.W & BANKERS Trustees s Vtrst National R. H. OBM A. KLBia, C.C. FLOWBaaaa. Sao. M. Klsiv & CaskT. AUGUSTA, OA. I Casli Capital, O «.. r. BXCHAROB BANK Planters NATIONAL BANK, Bank or New York. Bbax •....• apaolal attaattoa paid t« CoUaottoa*. Sonthem BMT, O AUeCSTA. OA. Beaacttiaa oi eran daacn ati o a . tU-- QaMoMa ; llals, Otr aMrned Sioeks * . ^ __ ^ ^ ^ la aUjaftaM lUs Stats m»' prCoUa tloaaatada a^ rsMtla^tar current Buik Bonds and CoapoaSi $aOO,000 tmUt caieOaa oanaat rata o( (Isa, at ea Aar at Bav Tork IU.ohaace. eoOwf 612 New OF New Us capital ol Financial. now fuUy prepared for Business. AS the first of the Old Institutions of the State to Improve the opporiunlty of furntahlng our population with the facilities of a local circulation on wulch tbe Interest accrues to our people, we respectlully solicit a portion of your Business. Board of Director*: VAK BENTHUY8EN, WALTEK PUSH, (of Salo- F. mon & Simpson,) JOHN PH'LPS, K. F. LA VILLEBEU VKE. H-W. FAKL^Y, VICTOK MEYEK, B.M. POND, W. HART WELL, K. J. V ENABLED, LEON OODCHAUX, ^.,i^x. KOHN.Pre-ldent, C»RL THEO. HELLMAN, Vice Pres't, (of Seiigman Uellman & Co.) JAMES CHALARON. Cashier. NO. TOWHSIND. P. O. W. FaeiNDK. B. the Bonds of the following Railroads; ROAD AND ITS BKANOHKS-8 per cent. BURLINGTON AND MISSOURI RIVER RAILROAD (IN IOWA)—S per cent. BURLINGTON AND MISSOURI RIVER RAILROAD (IN NKBKA^KA)—Sperccnt. KANSAS CITY, ST. JOSEPH AND COUNCIL BLUFFS RAILROAD—8 and 10 per cenl. MIS-^OURI RIVER. F( iRT SCOTT AND GULF KAIL- Having the Endorsement of two Railways, GREAT WESTERN OF CANADA, DETROIT & MaWADKEE, RAILKOAU-IO per cent. FORT WAYNE JACKSON AND SAGINAW ROAD— <i them as equal to anything in the market. ulars, Edwabd Haisht, Late Pres't of the Nat'nal of BAII/- per cent. Commonwealth, Edwabd Haight, Member I & majM, pamphlets &c., send No. 9 Wall Co., New that date. DRAKE BROTHGRS, Bankers, NEW YORK St., York. WE TRANSACT A GENERAL partic- No. 16 Broad street. corner of Neiv St., : For or call upon BANKERS. 16 Broad St. 'rHE COUPONS DHE MAY 1. 1P71, ON PORT JHURON end LAKE MICHIGAN RAILROAD BONDS be paid on presentation at our office after BANKERS, Exchang •. New York Correspondents Treyor & Colgate, Mor- to, DRAKE BROTHERS, Jb., of N. Y. Stock Exchange. | Ltman. Co. Michigan A Limited number of the bonds of this road have been placed In our hands FORSALE at NINETY AND ROAD— 10 per cent. ACCRUED INTEREST. To those desiring a sate LEAVENWORTH. LAWRENCE AND GALVESTON paying investment we have no hesitation in offering Particular attention given to business of Correspondents. Colltctlons remitted for at current rate ol & SEVEN PER CENT GOLD BONDS, Buy and Bell on Commission BANKERS & BROKERS, NEW OKLliANS. ton, BUxB & Michigan Lake BROAD STREET, 6 Townsend, Lyman & Co. Edward Haight jy State 20, 1871. Port Huron Higginson, BROKERS IN uauk Q. & Chase CHICAGO, BURLINGTON AND QUINCY RAIL- $600,000 M. M. SIMPSON", Bankers and Brokers. GOTcrnment Securities, Stocks, and Railroad Bonds, Orleans. ThlB Baut, organized under the general law ol Con- Intact, Is [May Orl eans Cards. Union National Bank gress, with THE CHRONICLE. Railroad State EA?:KING RUS'- recelTliig- deposits on which we allow iuterest, aud subject to cbecit at sight. Afl Aff'-nts of the United States Treasury, we are prepared to receive Dubscrlptlons to the nuw U. a. Bonds. NEhS, Bank National State OF NEW ORLEANS, Formerly LOUISIANA STATE BANK, Incorporated Oovernmeut 18 18. Capital ..$500,000 I.lnilt,..$ 1,000,000 | Loans. "We will buy or Prompt attention given to Collections upon all points In the Southern States. Collections free of charge otiier than actual cost upon disiant places. Remitt;tnces promptly made at current rates of exchange on ihe day ol maturity. is.zchango parcnased and sold upon all points. H. KENNEDY, Pres't E. RlGNEY, Vloe-Pres't. SAMUEL CHA8.L.C. DDPUY Cashier. O. OF NEW ORLEANS, ALEX. WHELEiS, LOUISIANA. roEK, March Bauk Stocks and other Bankers and Biokers. S. G. & BARING BROTHERS -. 6** . W. S. G. C. WALL STREET, NEW YORK. and HBEBTY STREET for Railroad Coa., Contract for iron or Steel Rail*, I>ocoin«tlTes, Cara, etc. ftnd undertalte all business connected ivltli Rallivay Money to Loan ON DESIRABLE REAL ESTATE. Mead BANKERS, & SIN OL AIR. Jr., « this CO., 9 Wall Street, FINANCIAL AGENTS OF THE R. 141 Taussig, Fisher Clark, O. COMPANY. & Co., & BANKERS AND BR0KER3, No. 32 Broad Street, New York* BROADWAY, Buy and The attention of Capitallst8|and Investors generally ALIiI7NITE:D Invited to the Co., No. 3 Pine Street. Market Rates Sell at STATES SECURITIES' Solicit accounts irom MKRCHANTS, and others, and allow interest on dally balauCcs, subject to Sight Uralt. BANkSks MORTGAGE inake collections on lairorable terms and promptly execute orders for the purchase or sale of IValklll Valley Ralliray Company, which we offer tor sale at 90 and accrued interest. In Gold, State, 1 Federal, PAYABLE IN GOLD. The coupons are paid semi-annually in this city, on the first days of April and October, free of government tax and tbe Issue of bonds Is limited to $20,000 per mile of completed road. Any information concerning them will be given at our fflce. Office of Delaware the & Hudson CANAIi COMPANY, Nrw Yoek, May T THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE fl Company, held May J\. holders of 10, 1871. STOCK- 9. Ib71, t.'ls the v^ lollowmg seiitlemim were elected Managers for the ensutuKvear: CharleBjN,,TaIbot, Kdwaid.!. Woolsey, George Talbot Olynliant, Abiel A. Low, Robert Leiiui Kennedy, James M. Halst^d, Le Grand B. Cuniion, James R. Taylor, Thomas iMrkson, JoUn Jacob Aator, Tliomas I'ornell, William J. Hoppin, I^^aac N. Seymour. The Board of Managers, ut a meeting held this day, unanimously re-elected Ihomas Dickson President for t the eusnlng year. ; FINANCIAL AQENTa. andtRaUroa Securities* currency. The Railway is situated on the west side of tbe Hudson River, and is now running for 20 miles to New Piltz, and Is under contract to be in working order to Kingston next fall. The bonds are a flrstclass Investment, and we invite the closest investigation of them. The principal and interest are nORTGAGES PROntPTLlT CASHED. ERASTUS F. mEAD & THOMAS CLARKE, Jr. Principals only Dealt nrlth. WM. lii lor sale by, EDIFARB HAIGHT & Per Cent Gold Bonds Company, 7 BANKERS AND mEBCHANTS, and Loans Bonds OFFICE OF Is & payable in gold Price of the Bonds, 90 In currency. Full particulars of the above may be had of, and the Securities. FIRST M. K. Jesup PLETED ROAD, the coupons city. DESIRABLE Foreign Exchange. ttonda Co. MacDouoall, Government Bonds, Stocks, Gold, NeKotiato & ADVANCES made on all marketable securities. CEllTlKlCATESot Deposit Issued bearlnii Interest •JOLLKCTJONS msde at aU polott at tha UNIOB Home BANKERS AND BROKERS, 59 that can be tound. It passes throu};h the Cement, Flag-Stone and Lumber regions of Ulster County, and the rich agricultural bottoms of Delaware aud Green counties, ail of which have not heretofore been;i-eached by railroad facilities, and from which sections the formation of the country prevents the construction of a competing line. The 36 miles of road operated for three months is already paying net earniaga equivalent to 7 per ceut gold on its cost of construction aud equipments. Tbe Issue of Bonds is limite dto $20,000 per mile of COM- ; no. so EXCHANGE PLACE. STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bonght and sola on the most favorable terms. INTEREST allowed on deposits either In Currency Fanshawe & MacDougall 4. at Gibson, Casanova BANKERS COI?IPANlf. STATE STREET* BOSTON. Fahshawb, NO. also, ; Securities. once lor the above Secnrltlea or they be sold on commission, at sellers option. WALL STREET, NEW YORK, as 100 miles of the most direct possibetwcca the Great Lakes and deep-water naviifutloQ ou the Hudson Klver, the whole Una ol which will be completed ana In operation on or before October 1, 18^2, aud give a new line of road to Lake Ontario and the Wtat, 25 miles shorter than any liue ad BRITISH PROVINCES. Sc aud Interest Payable iu Gold This Koad covers or Gold, sublect to check at sight, the same as wltb the City Banks. AGENT8 FOR Oswego RR. ble liue " SPECIALTY'^ G. C. Ward, & SKV£N PKR CENT SEMI-ANNUALLY. STREET, In.nrance Stocks and Scrips will NINTH NATIONAL BANK. E V, IBnys and Sells Cash paid New Yoek Cobrrspondbnt: Principal Bail i65 TTAI.!. President, Correspondence solicited. Rondout 15, 1871. S. JAS. K. BEADLES, Vice-President. point. Bonds and OF IHK New KICHARD JONES, Cashier. Particular attention given to Collections, hoth in the City and all points In connection wltli it. Prompt returns madejit best rate of Excliauge, and no charjre male, excepting that actually paid upou any aiatant FIRST mORTOAGC: G01.D BONDS the Issue'^ol all Investment orders particularly attended to. COLLECTIONS marie on all accessible points In tbe United States and Canndas. CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Issued, payable with Interest, and available at all business ceuires. Bank National on commission tjecurities, liailroau Stocks, Flrst-Class XKoine Iiivestmeiit. Gold. E. N. sell A I CHARLES P. HARXT, Treaswer. TOirit HUNT'S MERCHANTS' MAGAZINE, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL VOL. AND COMMERCIAL SATURDAY, MAY 12. CONTENTS. THE IV: Trewary and oTBankNotes Agents 613 islative Restrictions BaUroad Earnings for April, from January 1 to May 1 English and 616 News 617 Commercial and Mlscenaneoua News 615 616 618 THE BANKERS' GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR. Honey Market, Rajlnay Stocks, O. 8. Securities, Gold Market, foreign Exchaii2;i\ Now York City Banks, PhtladolphiaBanks National Banks, etc <iaotatians of Stacks and Railway News Railroad Stocks City Bond List Railroad, Canil oils Bond List 624-5 686 687 (38-9 Bonds 630 Breadstufts 633 1 This there is effective an obvious propriety in the adoption of this policy, by holding national bank notes the Treasury virtually lends money to the issuing banks without interest, and the notes being payable on demand, no Groceries 634 636 639 63llDryGoods | be sortsd oat shall for and Miscolane- THE COMMERCIAL TIMSS. Commercial Epitome Cotton 808. means of checking the unhealthy might be market, and it plethora of the money as tlie undue accumulation of continued so long bank notes continues at this centre. Mr. Boutwell has fall power to do this without any additional legislation, and would be a very Latest Monetary and Conuncrclal 614 Bailroads of Pennsylvania. bank notes which are received there in the Rodeeminf; of National Banks Cliangcs Sailroad Consolidation and Leg- NO. 20, 1871. and sent to the redeeming agencies for payment. CHSONICI,K. the Plethora INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. Prices Current notes being sorted and sent home bank can object to in its accordance with the law. Another method ^[)t (H^fjronicU. TbbCommeroial AND FiHAMCiAL Ghbonioli istSMueJ evtry Saturi(^ mnrning, with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. OoHHriKoiAi, 4MD KiMtNoiti. Chbohioli, delivered by carrier toelty 9a^«cribers,ana mailed to all othesa, (ezoiOstTe of postafe,) For One Year 11000 For Six Months 6 00 7 lu CnnofichK wHl bt tent to mbterlben until ordered diKontinutd by letttr. roHag«ia%)<niU4tmrytar,andit paid l>y tht mbseriber at hit otm j)04t^>fflC4. WILLIAM B. DANA, VTBUilAM B. DANA A 00., Pnbllshera, jom e. rLOTo, jb. ( 79 and 81 William Strsst, NEW YORK. Post Omcs Box 4,533. Mr. Alex. Holmes is our only trivelling agent. I — The Publishers cannot be ^^" A neat flle responsible for Remittances anless made by numbers of the CHBomcLK Volumes bound for subscrilwrs at tl 86. «oond volumes of the CuRONifLK arc wanted by the publishers. efllce for 50 cents. is sold at the The first and reported that Mr. Boutwell is about to take measures for reducing the accumulation of banlt notes at this centre of the National Banking system. One of the leaat satisfactory aspects of the financial situation is the extreme ease of our money market, and the consequent stimulus of speculative excitement from the accumulation of idle capital and of bank notes. For several years we have had, at this season, anxious among our city bank officers as to the policy of the money market of part of its burden by sendirg discussions relieving the notes of conntry banks to the proper redeeming agents. No work to satisfactorily. practical plan has ever been put in operation, and in the Such it could legislation the country banks have contrived successfully to resist. H the Treasury will adopt the plan suggested above as a temporary palliation of the evil there is little doubt that the proper enactment can be passed through Congress at an early day. We this are therefore gratified to learn that method of redemption under Mr. consideration, and the promptitude with which he has taken action in cs hereregard to the double eigles shows that now is conwhenever he remedy apply a tofore he is ready to vinced that the needful power TAB TEEASUKT AND TUB PIBTHORA OP BANK NOTES. It is made Boutwell has for holding current object is the This plan has however been tried, and the Clearing House. not be Tmi . same the banks found that without compulaory legislation TESMS OF BVBBCSIPTIOK-FATABU IH ADVAJTCB. D rafts or Post-OfBce Monc^ Orders. for accomplishing the formation of an assorting machinery here in connection with is in his hands. The subsid- ing of the excitement in the gold market as soon as it was announced that a supply of double-eagles was available at New Orleans, and that meanwhile the mint was engaged in coining large pieces only, adds another illustration to the long list of similar facts showing the vast power exercised over every department of financinl the Treasury. The inference is affairs by irresistible the policy of that the Secre- tary of the Treasury will be regarded as responsible for the use of those vast powers over the monetary judicious machinery with which our defective, anomalous financial system invests him to a greater extent than is enjoyed by the any other great commercial nation. absence of appropriate legislation, there is some doubt whether much can be done towards applying > complete remedy. So long as the country banks are not compelled financial minister of New ing of forced loans to these banks to the extent of the notes However important, this is but a subordinate matter. held. There is this further advantage in the plan here suggested These notes. they which to banks of the vaulU to redeem their notes in New York, they would be able to notes will lie in the remit notes here as fast as any Clearing House machinery belong until the moment arrives when there is a legitimate can be made to send them home for redemption. Our city demand for an increased volume of currency. When this banks thus assume a heavy burden; and such of them as need comes the notes will flow out of their hiding pUce, allow interest on doposils are compelled to pay a heavy and entering into the gen-jral current of the circulation, thry tribute to the banks of the interior. The mischievous results will be as salutary as they are now mischievous. We Uy which follow this needless swelling of bank deposits in no stress on the fact that the Treasury will e.scaps the mak- York could, however, be partly neutralized Boutwell would give instructions at the Treasury if that Mrall for the relief of the plethora of bank THE CHKONICLE. 614 The [May 20, 1871. danger to be met, the greatest mischief to be own transcontinental system of Canadian railroads from is in the money market, where the plethora of Halifax to Puget Sound, and are too anxious to construct that chief remedied, bank notes is producing its usual effects new road stimulating spec in to Orient through British territory, to be the willing to invest ulation. 100 millions of dollars in constructing a new rival foreign line, which would scarcely be rates of interest rule low, the present crisis is by no means able to command a dollar of capital in this city. Moreover one in which we can safely neglect due precautions against every one who has had much lo do with the initiation of possible trouble. Our foreign exchanges are not in a satis- large engineering schemes well knows that the needful negofactory state, and any trouble in '.he Euro|iean money mar- tiations for 1,300 miles of railroad could not possibly be kets would be likely to affect us adversely. The vast amount matured and the capital raised in secrecy. Still, when Although the present monetary aspect of English capital lending here on call is tranquil and is link in a not very likely to scheme was announced on Thursday, this it took every one informed circles nobody seemed or to have much inclination to be suddenly drawn upon but our merchants and foreign bankers are by no means reassured, nor is the general by surprise, and condition of financial confidence improved by the fact that the believe in its bles very closely that enjoyed ; in the best have ever heard of to it But among the general public there Bank of England lias this week lost 3 millions of its gold has been, as we have said, a multitude of inquiries and reserves, while the existing pressure on the British money discussions as to this new enterprise. In part this is due to market is increased by the announcement of a Turkish the adroit mention of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad, loan for 30 million dollars, and also of a loan for Spain whose credit it was perhaps designed to injure, and whose besides the French Indemnity loan and that of our own new reputation for wealth and power, sagacity and success, resemFive per cents which tiave too many competitors to rise sud- denly into very extraordinary favor in London. AND LEGISLATIVE CONSOLIUATION some years ago under the by the Great Western great railroad engineer, Mr. Brunei, i BAILRUAD truth. RESTRICTIONS. Company of England before dered and its its vast resources were squan- prosperity destroyed by a magnificent but too Wall street has been considerably agitated for some days prodigal policy of extension. The lailroad annals of England by the presence in this city of several railroad show that consolidation may be an evil, and that the union magnates, prominent among whom are Messrs. J. Edgar of different lines under one management, however beneficial Thompson, J. N. McCuUough, and Thomas A. Scott, of within certain limits, becomes, when it is pushed too far or with the Treasurer, too mush legislated about, equally mischievous to the public the Pennsylvania Central Railroad past ; Secretary, General Superintendent and several Directors of interest and to the stockholders of the roads themselves. Mr. Brunei's road and many others in England, formerly very profitable, were for a long term of subsequent years as specula'ors the sudden recent advance in Erie shares is unable to pay dividends, and have often required the most supposed to be in some degree due to the doings of these skilful management to keep them out of hopeless bankruptcy. gentlemen, who are supposed to be in communication with It is the more important to keep in mind these facts, for Commodore Vanderbilt and with the Erie Board of Direc- there is some foundation for the prevailing fear that the sime tors. Others have ^declared that these paities, instead of rage for consolidating vast lines of railroad, which has nearly and that their spent its force in England after causing severe losses to being agreed, are animated by hostility negotiations contemplate several alterna'jives, each of which multitudes of investors, is now likely to gather strength and But for this, such rumors about interests would bo most to extend among ourselves. is urged by the road whose promoted. Probably the most absurd conjecture of all is the Pennsylvania Railroad and Commodore Vanderb'lt would The vast power that this secret conclave is constructing a great railroad not vise up day after day in Wall street. monopoly whicli shall control the whole traffic to ihe Pacific wielded by capital accumulated in few hands gives to the most the Great Western Railroad Rumor of Canada. precise object of this gathering, a d the to busy is by many ; and intena slope, through line across 'ith British capital to complete a vhis continent for that purpose. scheme was announced on Thursday in a ing to have been sent from San Francisco ; new This difficult projects possibility, and of course the tendency to over-expanded consolidation among the railroads, even where works at last the most cruel injuries to the stockholders, telegram purport, it and some persons, produces for a time magnificent profits. Moreover, such more credulous than discerning, are urging that Congress schemes seldom fail to terminate eventually in promoting should interfere by specific legislation to check the danger- the growth of national wealth and productive power. Even ous growing power of our capitalists and corporations. The Mr. Brunei's Great Western road, which has erected, as it despatch which has helped to provoke this outburst is as were, a great monument of warning to rich •orporations how follows, and refers to an absurd project of building a rail they risk bankruptcy by over-expansion, has exerted an road on a route long ago surveyed and rejected San Francisco, May 16. Papers have been drawn up here to-day securing the most extensive and powerful railroad corabi: — nation ever attempted in the world. It includes the Pennsylvania Central and connections from the seaboard to the Union Pacific terminus at Ogden, Utah, and on this side the California Pacific (not the Central Pacific, but the Vallego opposition line), which will be extended north to Goose Lake, Oregon, and connecting with the Oregon Railroad to Portland, possibly also to Puget Sound thence to Christmas Lakes thence eastward along the south side of Snake River, in Southern Idaho, to a point in easy connection with the Union Pacific, eastward of Ogden. This route will avoid the heavy grades across the Sierra Nevada, and complete a continuous line from the Atlantic to the Pacific. It will be constructed immediately, all the capital having been secured in Europe for the entire work. No subsidies will be asked. ; We are story, ; assured that there which is ested purposes. is no truth whatever in this supposed to have been published for At the first cursory vie* most of inter- its state- amazing influence in enriching of England which it and developing certain traverses. tages might have been No won without districts doubt the same advan and ruin inflicting loss and want upon widows and orphans and frugal mechanics whose invested money was wasted, sunk and thrown away. There is a method of railroad extension which, without these and loss t*) investors will promote production, stimulate national growth, and augment the risks of individual suffering public wealth. Hereafter we may endeavor to point out in detail these fundamental conditions of railroad extension. some of For the present purpose, however, one or two general remarks suffice. And in the first place we must future enlargement of our network of railroads. now in the United States must expect a very rapid 55 tliousind miles of road We have in opera- ments are not very credible. English capitalists just now tion, or twice as much as we bad twelve years ago. At the are too busy with the preliminary arrangements f j?- their prefent^rate of growth it will not require a decade to in . May 20, THE CHKUMICLK 187L] oreaM our network we be hHaII 100 thousand milea, and ev«n then to thoroughly supplied with railroads than lens And we are France or (iorinany times ai many have almost four shall square miles of territory to each mile of road England has now. In extending these roads amalgamais inevitable between existing roads and new roadx. Being necessary, such consolidation must he left free, and cannot without danger be interfered with by legislation us 6x6 net increaaeon 12 roads $509,104. lUUJKlAP SAIDimM rii has been rathly advised some in Secondly, every well-placed istered and quarters. line, ndds ten-fold well-built, its cv'St in the available capital of the nation, does it Omtnl a few years to by giving passes, by this new values to the real-estate through which it creating new marlcets and extending the old markets, by d«nsifying population and thus calling into existence manu- A in Feb- In ; Msroh in April tlM Aran.. tm. imo. •ns.tao tm.i» ISMM llMTSM*. titt.«a «I.M> Ms^om tM.OM MMn MMU UMTS * tndluupoll*. M*ri«tU A andnoaU Ktohlssn 0«Dtral MllwankM economically admin- i( llllnol* 11,804; is CmtnlPtclfle Ohloaoo * Alton CleTebnd, Col., dn. wu was (514,500; and the net increase on 12 roads as tion U rmda wm $4103M January the net increaM on ruary the net decrease on 12 roads 10S.*M 4t«.«« m.rm PmiI Ohio A MlMtnilppI PwlAc of MlMoiirl St. Loiiln i, IroD Muiintoln Tolddo, WthMh A 1t»,m4 MS.IHO MR.4tS 4M.in im,am «1.T»I IW.HO M.SM Union 115,511 BM,MO 101.M5 sta.aw am,«70 .$J[miao •4,m,M9 im.iM 81. WMtem Toul Mn m.iM 444.no Pacific • ^,m m,m4 u,m HMMI <ro,m Hiami. 1 ft.** M,«» tW.TI8 The prospect ol large earnings in the current month seems to be very good the freight movements of the Interior will probably exceed those of May, 1870, and the — by enlarging the area and swelling the passenger traffic should also be increased, particularly on volume of our internal and exteruHl commerce. In these those roads leading to the Paciiic coast, as the diaturbaooes and other methods railroad extension increases the wealth in Europe will have an important influence in turning the of the masses of our people, multiplies their means of tide of pleasure travel towards California during thb rest of earning livelihood, and by enriching all orders of the the season. community, raises the standard of comfort among them all. The statement of earnings for the past four months of the By the same process the pressure of taxation is lessened, for facturing industry, as each man's ability to bear the burden grows, the popula tion increases, and there are more individual citizens t^ con- tribute to the aggregate revenue ol the government. On we have always advocated as a this principle thxt is it investment productive of property, the national liberal grants of public land, to such important pioneer railroads as Central was the Illinois more valley, and as 10 years ago in the Mississippi recently have been the Pacific roads in Rucky Mountains. the region of the Seirras and the short, the great In regulating governmental principles interference forbid whatever binders the healthy growth of railroads and justify such legislative acts only as foster such The minor growth. can safely be left and amalgamation to work their own cure, and any legislative evils of consolidation may be contrived to check them, will probably like the meddlesome remedies of an unskilled physician aggravate rather than relieve the malady. manipulations which year needful enable country to pay It seems evident that the ten- is Upwards an increase, as shown quite satisfactory. by the returns given below and the large earnings which have been made in several years since the war, are appa; rently not exceptional, but will be continued and increased with the growth of the country. The ings of liock Island and Chicago and reported earn latest Northweatem (these roads having an arrangement for sharing certain specified expenses and profits) have been as follows: The North- western Road reports for the ten months, ending March 31 : Rzcxirrt. Qros* earnings Decrease in 187(^71 JSS9-10. ism-n. tl0.4S8,45l) ^.811,171 gt, equal to 5 9S- 100 per cent. $317,%! TOTAL cciuuiirr CBAROn. 18«»-70. MTO-Tl. Operating ezpcnaet, tales. Intereet, Ac $8,850,195 t7.S7,8Sl Saving in the above items in ten months, in 187^-71, tl,SO,8M. eqnalto $17 65-100 per cent. Rock Island as follows : —January — ^D«ceml)er.-, Gross earnings A Private investments in costly works, whicli, like railroads, are absolutely is dency of railroad business .—Febmary . . 1870. 1R69. 1871. 1870. 1871. 1870. $393,468 $166,032 $387,173 $401,175 $361,871 $44«,«M similar conspicuous improvement in net profits (against its a decrease in gross earnings) to that fhown by the Chicago national debt and bear the burden of taxation, should not be and Northwestern road, is seen on the Union Pacific, the latter reporting an increase of $358,166 in net earnings for three months from January 1, while the gross receipts cramped or to this fettered with a single impediment, restriction or disability that Our young system can be dispensed with. of railroads, like all be free grow so rapidly developing organizations, must were 1214,511 ami so harmoniously as keep pace with the material exig-ncies of the national life. it is \t to swii'tly RAILROAD KABNINUS FUR APRIL MAY Nearly all an increase A9iD TO A Alton an. & Cincinnati below show list have no particular the decrease of $27,283 on 96,430 on significance, as the the Union Pacific former road has already earned 193,765 more, in the past four months of this in the same period of 1870, and the Union while showing a decrease in gross traffic, is also year than Pacific, making such an important saving in the net earnings larger than last year. shows an $45,615; increase of Illinois Central, $40,751, and Toledo, crease of any rood 1122,492 33,574 ; ; The Central Chicago and Milwaukee and Wabash and Western, —$125,511. The month of April was make expenses as to rather favorable Pacfic Alton 8t. Pauj the largest in- fiir the railroads than otherwise, and the weather generally such a-« to favor both the passenger and freight business, while the moveiient of some kinds of cereals on the Western roada was considerably larger than in the same month of 1870, In 1 TO MAT 1870. IDCTCM*. $1,«»,370 4I48S.«16 1,188.079 •18,604 1.446JI8I l«i,0M 114,M0 88^077 119,943 i,4sa.sm> 1.589,117 S14,1M MlOtl 1,045.413 IB,'^ l^a•8 mt,mi 1,585.586 1,081,786 L000.456 Louis A Iron Mountain. .. Toledo. Wsbaah A Western.... 1.5S1.680 8»l,6a6 i.ia&,S05 UnionPaciBc 1,»S7.M7 1.94a87S $17,888,471 $15,817,741 518,440 Omtmm. 4a.is 6I6,0in Pacillc of Missouri Total ~ 1. UTn^aOi Milwaukee * 8t. Paul Ohio & Mississippi St. the Ohio and Mississippi and 1,133,534 1,400,461 Michigan Central earnings for April, 1871, compared with the same month of 1870, ond A Ind. niinoU Central Marietta I. of the roads included in the in their 1 $l,SaS,<86 1,450,118 Central Pacific Clere.. Col., JANDART JANUABT 1871. Chicago HM less than last year. SAIQCraeS FBOll to U,S41 ttt.'IU $i.8Ta,<n m.tm $ami,ia> P«niisrlv>Bl> Kallroad.— The company ffiv«e notice to sharvho1der» that they have the privilefre of nbaenbing for new stock at par, one share for every six as registered, April 80. 1871. Holders of lees than six shares will be entitled to tabscribe for a full share, and those holdinK more than a multiple of six shares SuhKriptioo will b^ will be entitled to an additional share. received and the first instalment ot ."iO per cent will b« payable between the 22d of May and 32<1 of June, 18T1. Seoona inatalmeot of SO per cent between the 22d November snd t)ie 39d DecemIf stockholders prefer, the whole can be paid at the ber, 1871. time of sabfioription, but no sulwcription will be reoeired after June 22. The semi nnnaal dividend of the company will be paid per cent or $9 OO per on the 30th Inst., and will probably be Those who wish to oflket dividend to the first instaloient share. That i». the on Bubscription will do so at the rate of $15 to $2•^ company will pay $13 on six shares of stock, and the sabeerlber will pay the company $2.'> as 50 percent on the first inaUlmeBt of his share of new stock. The company, it will be seen, seta 40 per cent more in cash than it pays out, while the aharaholder gets a share of stock for $50 that is now aeUing at $65. for every six shares'that he owna. : 6 . ;; THE CHRONICLE. 6U5 [May 20, 1871. RAllROABS OF PENNSYLVANIA. The annual railroad report of the Auditor General of the State of Pennsylvania, J. F. Hartranft, Esq., has published, and we State report one of the most valuable issued, and gives is present below an abstract of road corporations with entire secrecy, so more prevalent, the public mation that frequently, there many VVilliamsport Hanover Branch Joy Hempfleld & Port Carbon Nesqnehoning Valley New Castle & Beaver Valley 604.777 180,260 1,335,000 34,938,000 376,100 18,169,400 100.000 46,225 2,646,100 52,060 600,000 3,483,800 65,426 323,375 3,866,450 200,000 282,350 1,000,000 605,000 Newry Branch (1)11025 Lackawanna & Bloomsbnrg Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Lehigh & Lackawanna Lehigh Valley Kun Littlestown Little Schuylkill navigation and Lorberry Cr ek Lykens Valley & Shamokin A Centre County Hill Navigation and Mine Hill & SchuylkillHaven Mill & Mine Mount Carbon Mount Carbon & Northern Central North Pennsrlvania Oil Creek & Allegheny Hlver Oil City & Pit-Hole Branch Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Coal Pennsylvania & Delaware • Pennsylvania & New York Canal and Perkiomen ... & St. . . 442,058 2,869,600 443,663 Louis 600,000 from receipts. sources. all Total* operating ex- penses. Rate per cent per of dividend. annum $ $ $ $ 1,244,951 2,530,767 1,662,682 3,469,288 I .389,763 2,577,000 14,000 65,632 700,000 ."iOO.OOO 2,008,095 130,000 996.000 800,000 2,27»,.335 22,283.000 300,000 6,688.000 26,166 46,150 783,500 100,000 862,621 187.000 3,438,523 40,000 414,417 778,309 2,720,163 ta 52 7.495.000 3,862,8H7 26,732,5«4 566,000 8,000,000 610,200 1,100,00) 12.598,000 10,164 !.70 25,400 37,8ii0 2,349,500 10,027,9(»0 100,000 l,POn,000 97,0 2,24.3, '24 118,987 1,288. .5.38 700,000 520,' 00 651,5 869,450 577,408 .^5,000 Tioga Tresckow Tyrone & Clearfield Lawrenceville Westchester 684,045 1,022,450 754,717 957,.500 107.000 1.800,000 1.612,200 848.7.34 263,521 2,312,.374 $354,318,423 202,001,810 16,149,020 411,487,104 16.5.000 Philadelphia Western Pennsylvania Wilmington & Reading Total 16 (5) 344,109 ll,8-'5,289 210,824 600,095 16,n9,.361 254,609 409,8 6 12,419,062 149,193 43,349 81,747 19,888 44 W,157 26,521 248,766 3,5,317 50,861 287,575 35,317 48,416 167,022 21,195 17,333 199,0 7 4,161,204 112,851 1,013,729 8,685,720 1.3,484,926 426,396 6,444,414 64,917 5,753 6,207,274 96,089 7,746 1,594 134,035 1,219,815 8 (8) 6, 10 6 6 (7)7,(9)5 ix" (8 80 10 7 65,.363 801,302 8,639,347 (9) 8, (7) 10 3,617,407 52,248 9,270 10 10 6X 10 7X 6>f 12 10 10 612,816 405.262 384,525 2,625 3,758,043 2,007,575 876,175 2,290.919 48.074 12 793,160 2,898,623 1.3.56, SOS 2,718,702 60,700 17,581,706 1,855,910 729,975 1,208,253 39.220 11,260,085 (10)5 12X 10 20 47 (4) 135,426 814,258 919,685 637,771 121,930 r23',663 00li,43^ 2.459,154 8,189.315 249.308 246,575 3,144,044 4,769.174 11 46 287 60 152 40 17 26-60 95-31 6-75 193 9-25 1 20 40 54 789,614 251,679 3,144,044 9,671,367 700,465 1,389 328 2.577,146 784,277 1,880,024 2,821,124 2,095 009 62,1.30 136,473 164,331 201,689 207,263 140,221 129,095 24.5.301 273,664 87,096 171,893 26,613 1,205 5.39 440.262 1,168,761 1,530,240 16.5.416 89,248 .342.968 1.207,165 1,647,868 10 10 10 8 11 28 1,230,792 16'i,' 80 989.330 154,000 202.886 1,498,807 .3,671 181 36,785 227,626 2,566,519 1 (3) •ISO.OOO 479,.330 91,983 556.895 4,106,221 14-92 9S8,902 201,000 500,000 243,000 2,502,260 500,000 580,900 66,000 510,000 248,980 91,983 362,856 3,826,001 (5) (6) 138 66-60 96 7 364 90 .58,468 . TitusvUle 12 10 1650 576,840 1,5^9,460 702,495 810,000 93,000 9,471 1,448,395 44 82 12 50 3-78 37 47 7 2 60 1,777,649 20.368.736 31.776,473 1,502.042 1,497,604 10,8?4.468 159.207 16,154,804 267,271 2r,802 1,0.56,404 21,597 2,678,741 19,627 105 262,720 59,300 99.030 167,271 4.166 1,949,020 13 876 679 609,564 17,015 622,693 3 7-25 28 25 33,806,907 2,000,000 100,625 .326,690 6 (7)7 2,147 48,402 15 101 22,283 14,097,097 7,258.861 8,126,996 247,215 186,802 76,141 413,041 131,640 3 166.877 38,960 4 62 80 7.30.249 191,000 941,825 175,000 264,810 158,742 655,812 4 15 12 20 (1) 3 nO,OuO 75 cts. 6 54107 282,815 1,004,624 2,000 11,258 606,084 90,000 (6) 161.445 135,536 377,616 11 51 3,81 1,967 208,2.59 93,300 82,546 5,988 72,505 186,738 263,862 7-50 36 78 459 83-69 12 66 3,420,045 251,115 323,375 12,357 103,882 17 60 18,338,237 100,657 86,240 1,466,283 253,464 5,0 86' 41 4.12 2,278,300 384,228 1,469.229 18 825,060 264,800 391,603 1,484,290 2,620,200 78,946.687 4,618,978 130,000 169,427 257,890 1,882.550 1,657,798 2,738,811 268,000 2,414,316 898,324 3,950,000 54,134,089 2,650,000 2,000 7,901 167 12-80 5 6-78 7-47 74 115 661,C02 .576,050 Southwark & The have. 14 7-25 21 60 11,1.37.107 19,661 56,697 495,900 1,620,000 507,268 1,269,150 Summit Branch & now 7 26 43 20 20 6. 742,166 3,826,600 790,919 35 .',200 1,371,900 120,650 10,.550 Columbia West Chester Freight 395,153 768,698 21 20 l,493,6-.'9 1,2.59,100 & Allegheny Southern Pennsylvania Iron and Wellsboro' the infor- (6) 23.398..300 Shenango & 99,000 583,600 700,000 175,000 9,562,650 100,000 5,424,350 12,050 Schuylkill * Susquehanna Schuylkill Valley Navigation and Shamokin Valley & Pottsville Union 51 19 3,.308,L0 220,606 8,404,300 30,401,600 1,626,260 PortKennedy & 1,060,000 352.800 4,000,000 101 ,939 2,811,700 Pij-mouth Heading 471,200 107,000 1.30,90i) 3.3,830,000 Philadelphia & Baltimore Central Philadelphia & Erie Philadelphia & Beading Philadelphia, Germantown & Norristown Philadelphia & Trenton Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Pittsburg, Cincinnati 132 387-60 4IS.5.0OO . & Lebanon receipts. laid. $ (2) 1,000,000 5,000,000 3,160,000 4.269.450 '. Pinegrove road 8,816,616 8,772,566 584,700 8:14..350 Junction Mifflin ment. Total receipts ger line of equip- 296,819 all passed to compel public reports May $ 186,000 965,000 300,000 1,325,625 18,808,850 89,800 392,550 1,309,200 1,000,000 83,536,910 1,099,250 126,000 80,000 116.850 <t Lancaster. 1,182,560 1,809,665 Jamestown and Franklin Mahanoy of floating debt. 266,649 1,278,.300 Broad Top Mountain Mill now 441,a50 40fj,000 Saw becoming more and a year to the State authorities, for we have laws This the custom of managing rail- 14, 1870. Cost of Length of main Passenroad and The am'nt $ 3,369,600 524,270 107,200 871,900 120,650 7,482,225 46,900 203,172 Ironton Little Chronicle of 3,963,000 29,9 .9,900 600,C00 2,286,000 428,717 Chester Creek Chester Valley ChestnutHill Cleveland & Pittsburg Colebrookdale Columbia & Port Deposit Connecting Cornwall (formerly North Lebanon) Cumberland Valley Delaware, Lackawanna & Western East Brandy wine & Waynesburg East Mahanoy East Pennsylvania Huntingdon made once 42ti,900 Erie Erie & Pittsburg Fayette County rrankf ord & Holmesbnrg As information. st bee*^ regard to each road. 7.5,455 Fogelsviile Harrisb'g, Portsmouth, Mt. the debt. 2,25(i,300 Chartiers & in funded 29,598,695 650,000 1,000,000 Barclay Coal Company Bedford & Bridgeport Bellefonte and Snow Shoe Buffalo, Bradford * Pittsburg Buffalo, Corry & Pi ttsburg in prospect of any greater protection to stockholders than they is little of capital stook. « Allegheny Valley Atlantic &, Great Western Bald Eagle Valley Elmira much important of these companies, and unless Total am'nt Total am'nt now paid in now of Name of Company. & most important points of information far as their financial affairs are concerned, is unfortunately report for the previous year was published Catasauqua Catawissa the obliged to rely upon the returns, to be obtained about is made more to be is all 21 21,061 r,797 2 .50 2 12 20 20 30 60 5 913 106,651 138.167 120,650 24,637 800,444 420^622 191,168 195,183 85,440 288,566 171,389 52,516 87,739 88,547 72 695,404 100,051,766 65,913,570 26,384 6 37-50 9 26.30 67 63-60 5,102 40 22,193,628 and expense of operating. Includes branches and laterals. (4) Includes mall and expresB receipts. * Includes cost of maintaining real estate, repairs of machinery, a> Estimated. Per share. (7) (6) CHANGES IN On Official May preferred stock. (8) Stock. (3) (9) On common stock. (6) Includes express receipts. (10) Scrip. THE REDEE^IINO AGENTS OP NATIONAL BANKS Nenr National Bank*. The following 11th of Floating debt unascertained. (2) national banks have been orf^anized since the 1871 No. 1,817— The National Commercial Bank of Mobile, Ala. Authorized capital, $208,000; paid in capital, $104,000. Charles Hopkins, President; Dudley Hubbard, Cashier. 1.3, 1 Authorized to commence business May 1871. of Commerce of Green Bay, Wis. Authorized capipaid in capital. $100 000. George Lammers, President tal, $100,000 Lawton, Cashier. Authorized to commence business May 17. G. A. 819— The National Bank ; 1871. Authorized 1,820— The Manufacturers' National Bank of Appleton, Wis. C. G. Adkins, President capital, $50,000; paid in capital, $37,600. A. Galpin, Jr., Cashier. Authorized to commence business May 17, 1871. -— — , May . ; . THK OHllONICLR. 20, 1871.1 Tb« rollowinK ara the ehanvM In lb« RcdMatag AgmtM of Nations! (inoa (ha 11th of May, 1871. TtiMs waskly changes art and published in accordance with an arrangHiiienl made Baoki furnitheil by, with ihe Cumplrnller of Iha Curraooy. o lii'Hvily on tli.> hiwir iiii<lclla cUm. Mr. B«fii«l OaboTM eh*r> actarized budget " No. 8 " as a " budget of rerenge." In dpll*, however, of the hardship to which clerks, ke., of C900 • jt»t aad under, will AKB or The Union UIIooIh- Uko... The Second National Bank SlooxCity. New York, approved. The First National The t'niuu Naliuual Bank of Chicago, Bank approved. Thr Nat'l Exchange The Third National Bank of Cincin. Bank natl, approved In addition to the American Exchange National Bauk Iowa— Slgottmey . Tlfllu of Missouri- New York The rirst National The National Park Bank of New York, Bank approved. The Salem National The Ninth National Bank of New Bank York, approved In place of ihe National Park Bank of New York. The First National The Merchanu' National Bank of Bank Chicago, III., approved. The First National The National Park Bank of New York, Bank approved. The Qallatin Nat'l The Fourth NaUonal Bank of Now Bank York, approved. The Mannfaclnrers The National Park Bank of New York, National Bank.. the Union National Bank of Chicago, and the First National Bank of Mil- Paris niinola— Salvm . . . Michigan Conatantine... Michigan— Xiapeer IlUnois- Shawnsetown. Wisconsin Racine waukee, approved. Wyoming Ter— Cheyenne Pennsylvania Wllliamtiport Lonisiana— New of Chicago and the Ninth National Bank of Ohio- Orleans.. The First NaUonal The Fourth National Bank of New Bank York, approved. The First National The National Park Bank of New York, Bank approved in place of the First National Bank of New York. The New Orleans The Ninth National Bank of New Natloual Bauk York, approved. The Raleigh Nat'l The First National Bank of WashingBank ton, approved In place of the National Bank of the Republic, New . North Carolina— Raleigh York. JCatest fUoiietarp ICATi^fl iHf iitwa (Sngltst) AT LATICST I>ATK8. KZOBAMaB AT LONDOHXXCHANGS ON LONDON. MAY 5. Timi. Amsterdam... Antwerp Hamburg nuis 3 maTi. short. ii.i» an.WH months. 13.1 gli.lM Vienna a months. IS.n^Oli.SSK Oadic Smos. 1S.7J,®18.7H Smos. 155.85 short, 11«X Mays. 90 days, Milan a amos. 81 11-ia - 5i!>i®M months. 3«.8SX«»38.87)i Qenoa Naples Sew t. York.... Jamaica Havana Mi^4. 60 days May 5. 90 days. Bio de Janeiro Bahia April April Valparaiso ch. ao. April 11. iTo »x 17. ». tt Penumbuco.. Singapore Hong Kong... Ceylon 60 days. April 1». 6 mos. 4*. 4 p. c dis. (t Hadnu •• CalcatU Bydnev It l<.lu»-lC®Kd. •1 an days. X p. Mayl. Mayl. U. 11 l-16(f. Some persons the prosperity flctitioas bat they are the continue to shut their eyea to realities. The late war is in itself a powerful argument in favor of free trade, for notwithstanding the magnitud/i of that terrible straggle, and our important commercial relations both with France and Germany, the loss to this country was comparatively ssiy opponents of free trade, and Is ; who So widespread is our commerce that any loss we sustain any particular department, or with any particular country, is compensated in frequent instances, by an improvement elsewhere and it is remarkable that although within a comparatively short distance of us a fearful war has been raging, and in which we had no right to interfere, our trade of last year waa fully equal to any trifling. In From the principal agricultural sections of the country the reweek respecting the growing cropa are favorable. Wlieat is perhaps the least satisfactory, the severe ports received during the frosts of the places. c. dis. London, Saturday, May trade during the week has been firm, and although change has taken place, prices have shown a hardening The wheat very 1«. 11 1-16<J. little tendency. a statement showing the imports and exports of Kingdom, from September 1 to compared with the corresponding period in 1869-70. Annexed [From oar own correspondent.] 6. The proposal of the Qovernment for raising the sum required to meet the increased expenditure of the country by resorting to direct taxation alone, that is to say, by the imposition of a sixpenny income tax has led to two important debates in the House of Commons daring the week. On Monday it was moved by Mr H. Smith, the conservative member forj Westminister, that it be declared " inexpedient that the income tax should be increase^ to the extent contemplated in the financial proposals of Her Majesty's Qovernment," but this proposal was negatived by a majority of 85. On Thursday, Mr. McCuIlagh Torrlus moved that the tax be five pence, instead of six pence in the pound, but after a long discussion, that proposal was also negatived, although the Government majority was reduced 46. The course the Gov. emment has pursued with regard to the Budget has been very severely criticized even by its own supporters, and some of the liberal members have refrained from voting on the question at all Had there been any strength in the opposition, and had Mr, Disraeli felt that his\inflaence was sufficiently great to form a strong cabinet, the ministry must have given way; but as the belief W. ; 4«7B<i. 4». 5<f. Bombay ; ; IMX 4»>ia49.V LUbon ; cheaper. ».8SI<@J8.87X ti.«)M® «.*l m^O ; abundant and cheap the woolen trade is healthy the iron dla. tricts are well employed and bread is at a moderate price. The weather for the growing crops is excellent, and there seems eTerj prospect for the country oi a year of unexampled proeperity. 4X<i. BATI. short. Nominal. Berlin Vrankfort St. Petersburg business. The position of the country Is now very dlfTerant. The war has thrown a large amount of trade into oar hands cotton is 3S TUta. Mays. is.16 short, it winter having caused the plant to decay in many At the same time, there is probably less land under wheat cultivation this season as there is evidently more attention being paid to grazing, owing to the very lucrative price now being obtained both for beef and mutton. The "fall" of lambs this year has been unusually heavy, and no doubt equal attention has been paid to the production of beef. Some time must elapse before this but il the increased year's produce can be brought to maturity gupply of stock is in the country, there will be certainly abundance of food for it, for there can be no question about the heavy yield of grass. In a short time our supply of turnip-fed cattle will be pretty well [exhausted, and the season for grass-fed stock will be commenced. It may be safely said that our supply of meat during the summer months will compare very favorably with that received last year, which was remarkable for an unprecedented drought. And not only shall we have more meat, but dairy produce will be more abundant, of better quality and LATBST DATS. ia.i0X(ai3.ii <i»2S as .... Paris snbjeet, former year. and (fiommerctal BICOHANWB XT (.UNUUN, ANO ON LONDON OK— mast bo admitted that the eouatrj la now than at any former period. The last sixpenny rate was daring the Abyssinian war, whaa the country was nothing like so proaperoaa, and when ofldal liqaidators were compelled to enforce calls npon nnfortoaAto shareholders in defunct companies. Cotton was then mnch dearer than It is now, and great caatlon pervaded every department o^ l>e better able to pay a six-penny rate Stock The Fint National Bank of Chicago, approved. Yard Nat'l Bank of Ohicago.... The First National Iowa— aoasmra aenn. aaiiK. «17 is cotton into and from the United May 4, 1870-1. American Kiporls. 9«8,S<S 8I1,4I» 7tt,VS« «0l,J73 17V.683 3bO,40S 84.810 180,067 8.11S (,857 8,3U,m 689,744 t.45S.0M SUAU Brazilian Bast Indian - Ejjyptlan ktscelUneons Total 18«B-10. Imports. tales 1,781,673 an entire absence of a demand Imports. »M,7«0 14t,M0 S8,l»« Kzperts. 7*,aoi 8.416 10.010 601,8:8 gold for export, and There is the accumulation in the market continues on a rapid scale. The supply held by the Bank of England is now £28,498,890, beiag £3,500,000 more than at this date last year. So long as such a for lamentable state of affairs exists at Paris, money is likely to accumulate here but it is expected that with the return of order in Pu-is, large supplies of bullion will be sent away from this market. Good government, however, should bo added, for until that is established, even Frenchmen will be unwilling to risk their Several Frenchmen have started In boaineag capital In France. out of France, a>id among them, I am informed, M. Schneider, late President of the Corps Legislatif and proprietor of the Creuxot Iron Works. The commercial demand for money is good, but the is that the accession of the Tories to power would be short-lived, and that an unnecessary disturbance would be the result, most of supply being so very large, choice bills are taken at 2^ per centthe liberal members, although disapproving of the Budget, have New loans continue to be talked about, and it is expected that one voted with the ministry, and saved its fall. Mr. Lowe, in intro- for Spain will be launched in a few days. A small loan for £000, ducing his budget, said that the Qovemment were desirous o' 000 for Costa Rica will, it li said, be brought oat next wedL The' keeping the income tax as low as posdble, as a high rate pressed following are |)ti^aoUUona formoney ; ; . . 1870. 1871. 1870. Open-market &... 3 Percent. Tercent. Imonthe'ba'kbllle 3 @SM SJi'il'JX SV® 8 niontbs' bn'k bllle 3)i@3!^ 4 an J 6 ratio bills. . S'4&4 rales: days' bills 27i@3 & •• 3 2.'4®.|i Smontlis bills The rates of interest allowed by the joint stock count houses for deposits are as under last year, are as . 1870.1871. 2>i 6* (i 5 Berlin 4 Franklort. 8K Amst'd'm. Twin 2}f IX i^ IX iH 1?( 1870. - Bmssels.. 5 Madrid.... pool for the past : — American securities, with rather a drooping market. Prices have rallied slightly to-day, but close about Jc. lower that one week ago. fluctuation in the prices for 3X Hamburg. 1871. 1870, — — 2>i i 3 5 4« 7 23i Consols for money " account U. S. 6s (5-208, 1862 St. Peters- S>i ... 5 3« 3>tf 6 5 burg.... 6 closing quotations in the markets of : 1870. 1871 2X 4 5 5 1871. 2« 5 4 under Market Reports—Per Cable. London and Liverweek have been reported by submarine telegraph, as shown in the following summary London Money and Stock Market. There has been some little The daily .-B'krate-, ^Op. m'kt-, ,-B'krate— -Op.m'kt— At Paris Vienna EnsUsta. 1871. S 2 are the quotations at the leading Continental compared with those of 8 Sat. Mon. 93% 93% 90X 90H 9.3% 90>f compared with the four previous years £ £ 24,997,015 5,128,327 20,209,045 13,2i7,«96 19,233,404 114,457,824 £ bank post bills Publicdeposits Other deposits .-... 2S,C0I,C03 7,406,357 17,535,100 Government securities 12,886,814 19,220,896 Other securities i(es«rre of notes coin . 10,983,547 19,138,357 Bank rate 3 p. Consols Price of wheat Mid. Upland cotton.. mule yarn The £ 24,303,5!S8 26,423,5110 5,116.802 8,632, toe l.i,9J7,787 16,001,874 12,896,281 18,856,149 b 675.t06 19,717,590 12.958.741 19,932,767 14,020,798 17,5S2,3S2 c. 923* 63s. lOd. . Ud. Is. 5d. 11,918,107 20,404.992 7,576,521 18,582,083 iX p. c. 92>i 449. 9d. p.C. J! bi% 749. 2d. 12;id. Is. 41. 10,973,652 19,848,607 3 p. c. 94 428. 7d lOXd. 3Xd. nH'i. Is. Xd. circular. The " " principal change since last week the price of silver and of old Mexican dollars & B. do fine do liefinable Spanish Doubloons South American Doubloons.. United states gold coin 77 do do . peroz. do do gILTBB. d. rt . 78 78 . 1. «. ii 8 8 Consols U. S.5-90'8, 188J, (J. 3. 5-20S, 18-i4. U. S. 5-20S, 1835.. U. 8.5-208, 1887.. (J. 8. 10-403, 1904 ... Atlantic &G't West, coniol'd mort.b'ds Krio Shares (*100) Illinois shares ($100) d. 9 |i = — ®— — 8. Bacon Lard (American) Cheese (fine) . © ©— — @ 4 IlJi . . i9X-21 -43 " " 51 66 11 3 11 11 4 9 4 12 5 U 9 346 346 44 3 44 44 40 6 S76 11 11 12 9 3 9 4 350 349 44 44 40 35 40 35 40 35 5 Fri. d. s. —There has been a further decline 8. d. 106 6 s. 106 51 6 51 d. 6 66 66 — d. 8. 106 64 33 51 66 6 640 380 38 9 6 Mon. Sat. B. d. s. d. B. 6 6 d. B. 6 106 63 106 626 380oc390 61 51 66 66 £ B.d. 10 10 63 6 £ Thur. d. 9% Fri. d. d. s. s. 66 17 6 15 66 17 6 15 420 — » d. 5 32 5 8. d. 10 10 63 6 9% 66 6 15 17 9 420 9 420 42 £ s. d. 10 10 63 6 .36 36003600 ton 32 £ 36 82 82 oil 8. 10 10 63 36 11211> Sperm oil Whale oil Linseed B. Linseed Oil has declined to Otherwise the market has been quiet and steady. Fri. Thur. Tues. Wed. Mon. Sat. 15s. Lin8'dc'ke(obl).^ tn Linseed (Calcutta).... Sugar(No. 12Dch«td) f d. 66 17 6 15 42 London Proditee and Oil Marketa. £31 s. 9% 9% Wed. Tues. d. 66 17 6 15 66 17 6 15 " " (flnepale) Petroleum (std white)..* 8 lb " (spirits) Tallow(American)...¥112B 42 82 36 82 £ 83 36 5 81 15 d. £ B.d. 10 10 63 6 36 3(i 00 s. 10 10 63 6 Sli 82 83 36 31 15 31 15 003600 00 COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWs. — Imports and Exports for the Week. The imports this week show a decrease in both dry goods and general merchandise. The total imports amount to $6,5(51,621 this week, against $7,846,327 last week, and $10,383,036 the previous week. The exports are $4,306,496 this week, against $3,846,933 last week, and $3,910,936 the previous week. The exexports of cotton the past week were 13,095 bales, against 17,844 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) May 13, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) May l3. FOXIEIGN IMPOBTS AT NBW TORK FOR THE WKEK. 42Ji-42J< 20«-21)ii2:v-21H llOJ-lUl'llU-.... 1101 lUJ 110-111 6 12 34 3 640 «ll5lbcc38 ... EosIn(com.Wilm.).,¥1121b Friday. ISat'day. 43 4 d. been steady. . 19!(,-19XiJ9?,--19i4 3 12 8. 87 d. s. Liverpool Produce Market. With the exception of a small reduction in the price of Spirits of Petroleum. The market has 9.3i,'-93«|93ii-93K 193X-93J< '98>i-93Jf 90M-90J< 90Jf-90X 90Ji-90« 903i-90« 90>i-9"X 89)i-....|90 -....90 - ...89 -90 I8't -90 90 -90,V 90X-901iii)0)i-90'^ 90K-....l90«-... 92^-.... 92X-.... 92>i-....|»2J<-92KI92X-92« |89>i-. . 8»>tf-. 89X-89\ \SS'/. 89X »9>i-89X . d. Beef (ex. pr. mess).. ^304 lb 106 6 PorkfEtn.pr. mess). W bbl 640 @TI 93V-93K 42X-43X|4!K-43X42X-43 11 11 3 Thur. 276 In Pork there has been a dull market, with a loss of 3s. during the week. The weakness has extended to all descriptions of provisions also, and quotations are lower throughout. closing at 67s. 6d. Pork has dropped to 65s. 7d., and is weak. Bacon is lower, closing at 39s., and a slight decline is noted in Lard also. Fri. Thur. Tues. Wed. Mon. Sat. : I d. 1110 40 35 Liverpool Proviaiona Market. There has been an increase of firmness in the Consol market, and With the British railway shares have further improved in value. exception of the lines over which the Continental traffic is carried, the traffic receipts are very favorable. For last week, on 13,908 miles, they were as much as £870,763, against £823,713 last year on 13,654 miles, showing an increase of 354 miles and of £48,051. As the lines traversing the manufacturing districts show very substantial increases, good evidence of the activity of our trade is Foreign governaient securities, excepting United States, afforded. Brazilian, Russian and Italian, have been dull. Atlantic and Great Western Reorganization Stock has been as high as 15i premium, and the certificates of debenture are at 45 to 46. Erie railway shares are much better, on the announcement from New York that the demurrer put in by the directors to the Committee's Bill of Complaint had been overruled, and that the directors were ordered to file their answer in thirty days. The following were the highest and lowest prices of consols and the principal American securities on each day of the week Tuesday. iWed'ay.l Thn'ay show a in Cheese, to-day's quotations closing at 668. d. d.J 3 16® 5 OH OX _ B 13-16 per oz. standard 6 Bar Silver, Fine 5 do containing 5 grs. gold peroz. standard do peroz. no price. Fine Cake Silver per ez list price. 4 lOX Mexican Dollars s. 276 13 11 3 6 ^504*44 Peas (Canadian) Co.'s 8X @77 3 40 35 OatsfAm. &Can.)....t^45a) : per oz. standard. 34 Barley f Canadian),... |! hush eOLD BaiQold (California White)..,. 14 Corn(W.m'd)..,^4801bn'w a slight rise in is 11 1110 (RedWintor) Wed. Tnes. d. 8. 270 bbl 27 Wheat (No. 2Mil. Red).. ipcti l8.Xd-" following prices of bullion are from Messrs. Pixley Mon. Sat. d. 6. W Flour (Western) 13,655,610 23,498,220 2X p. c. 9:iX 698. 7d 7 5-16d' Is. 96% .... — See special report of cotton. Market. — The market has been generally tendency to higher prices. and Coin and DuUion 40 £ . steady with the exception of corn, which continues to 1871. including Circulation, No lAverpool Breadatufa 1S70. 1869. Fri. 93% 93% 90% Liverpool Cotton Market. : 1868. ;96% 96%' Frankfort Thur. 93% 93% 90% 90 OO'i 90X 92%' 92% 9iH 89 89% mx 89>i for United States 6s (1863) at Annexed is a statement showing the present position of the Bank of England, the Bank rate of discount, the price of Consols, Frankfort were the average quotation for English wheat, the price of Middling Upland Cotton, and of No. 40 Mule Yarn, fair, second quality Wed. 93% 93% 90% Tues. 93X 93X 90% 90H 92% 93% "old, 1865 90^ " " 9iy, 1867 92X U.S.10-40S 89% 89>i The daily closing quotations * Nominal. 1867. Oregon bonds, guaranteed by California the Central Pacific, will be introduced at an early day by a leading firm, and others are to follow. Money continued very abundant. dis- 1370. cities, There were some sub- : Joint stock banks Discount houses at call Discount houses wilh 7 days' notice.... Discount houses with 14 days' notice The following 20, 1871 Bridge bonds, " but the advertisement came too late to be operative." @3.H banks and Omaha scriptions for i%%iy, 3 [May amounts of old ones have found buyers." 1871. ii4& . Percent. Percent. Bankmlnlmnm.... »ti : CtiitONtOLK. 618 8>iand ' UOS-110 The Frankfort advices state that the stock and share markets continue strong, in the face of a flood of now issues, especially of a 1868. $1,.333,006 4,441,246 1869. 1870. 1871. Dry goods acncral merchandise... $1,402,998 4,185,.326 11,581,174 3,670,952 $1,795,842 4,765,779 Total for he week.. Previously reported. $5,773,251 85,680,403 $5,588,324 116,170,375 $i-.,252,]26 $6,661,621 107,864,780 1.37,074,773 $91,453,654 $121,758,699 $113,116,906 $143,636,394 . Since Jan. 1 . American Mortgage and City Bonds. The large amount In our report of the dry goods trade will be found the imports of linterest due on United States government securities is now par- dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) Hally placed in these more speculative channels, the price of foreign ports, for the week ending United States bonds being too high to induce re-investment. from the port of New York to May 16 There has also been a demand for six per cent Georgia bonds at EXPORTS mOM NEW TORK FOR THE WEEK. 1870. 1871. 1869. 1868. 78i to 73. Still the market is limited for those descriptions, and For the week $3,667,044 $4,306,496 $3,871,328 $4,035,781 80,193,266 61,183,081 86,085,777 American iirms, it is stated, "will find themselves in error if they Previously reported.... 88,112,464 calculate on a large sale for new crejitlons merely beoauge email $61,064 594 $64,850,125 $90,398,273 $69,148,245 WnceJan. 1 variety of : | ( —— — : May tk£ G&ttONtCt& 20, 1871.] The Collowlog New York will hIiow tlin week lor tlie osporU AAioricnn jfold ThurlnifU, LondonAmerican gold $«.000 May Fur Uaiuoarg— American gold Java, 7ft,00D May May 10-Sch. J.W. 8 May American gold lS-8tr. AbyMinla, LlrSilver HaracallK) — May I'l— Bark bam Florence Pe- 10,000 . . May 11— Str. Bronu-n. SoutliTotal for the week Previously reported Totol since Jan. Same time t»,0J8,«M 1871 1, Same time In 1887 1886 186S t9,4M,414 11,840,841 8S,849,W» The imports of specie at this port 11,1«1,»4» 8,800,711 «,6(8,84t daring the piMt week have been as follows May 8—Str. May la— Str. Tybee, San Do- mingo Porto May 680 MlBionri, M.BOO Silver $1,144 Gold l»-8tr. City of Limer- Ha- ick, vanaSilver Eric, Rlco- Silver May 11—Str. Bargold.. 11.800 140 . Total since January (15.164 t,W4,481 1, 18T1 In I J870 1989 Same time Atlantic t ar« secvred upon a property which, the Ohio River, now when In proceas of rapid con' nearly $80,000,000, and an actual value in Roa<la, KranrbliH-a, r<Kl>t^ of way, tie., of not less than #00,000,000. Tlie U>Ul amount nl which one half has flS.OOO.OOO, of Is The Central known and Pacific- Bonds aireatly In-ch wtld. negotiated by us, amounting to have a ready market evorywliere, \xiag favorably actively dealt In at all the principal Sto<!k Kxclianfres all times at which Is now above par. The Bonds of the CiiESArBAKB and Ohio Railroad Co. we believe to be of equal value and seeority, and must in time lake a like rank in market value and salable character, Holders of Five-Twenty Bond?, desiring to fond them otherwise than in the now Five Per Cent Government Loan, may do so with entire safety, at a profit of about 20 per cent, and without reduction of Interest, by an exchange for the Bonds of the Chksa- quoted market price, FBAKB AND OHIO RaILKOAD May from CO. and accrued interest 1. We also buy and sell Oovcminent Securities, and the Bonds of the Central Pacific Railroad Co.. and as agents of the U. 8. Oov- $3,009,746 emment, $8,886,830 new United In $6,888,887 1868 8,610,0411 1867 Camden A to Price of the bonds, until further notice, 91, Halifax— Total for the week Previouriy reported Same time Him t'RtTIK>. of this country and Euro]>e, and are readily la table at ,888,888 148,008 .-.«:' in 1870 1869 1888 GOVKRNMBNT •TRKBT, completed and fully equipped, will represent a cost of structlon, is $25,88Ji.000, tera. 16,048 tiix Ohio Railroaj> Co. the loan 78,889 78,888 Ilumaooa— American allver. M,900 Spanish gold 113,800 Gold ban S,743 iSlaliland, ffold (4,800 vana— 1&,000 1S6,S68 TiiK in UATcn. Hatcr, New York, Ma; lH, IH7I.( Pbb Curr Gold Borm or tub Ciiksapkakx anh Nauau MO the extension lolno Ooldban May IS— Str. ColumbU^ Ha- Amerlan gold Silver bar* 10— Bark John Boulton, Torto Cabello American gold 1,108,000 Portign golc Porelgnillver Liver- BaNKKIU AMD DkALKRS No. I«,g«8 Bonttuunpton— American void pool— American at,«M May IS— 81'mablp Hvrpunn, tt,no I/OO- A. H. Piu 4 Liverpool— Brltlabsold soo.ooo FtSK. 1400,477 Hllverbare 13-8lr. City of Brook lyn, Silver bar* MaylO—Str. Habvkt Amrrloaagold Hay 9-Str ?mmKL IINIING AND : amplon— phif. Si.Tliouum- 619 tpMie from lh« port of of kiiiIIok Mkjr IS, 1871 M*y 8— Brli( Marie and Hn M«j 10—Htr. Colorado, don- , .: will attend the funding of Five-Twenties into the to States Bonds. 1.0»6,S«1 FISK & HATCH. BaUroad.—The receipts from opera, tions of this road for the year ending Dec. 31, 1870, were From passengers From freight From express From United States mail From lulsccUaueoiis $322,069 04 98,004 33 15,780 90 3,000 00 I,sj9 % Total „ Working expeusoa $334,444 33 175,078 31 Balance $159,.366 C3 In the report of the superintendent the receipts are stated at 1334,444 23 for the year 1870, against $.321,438 44 in the year 1869— an increase of $13,00.'5 79, and the total exoenses in 1870 at $175,21.5 23, againat $221,270 04 in 1869— a decrease of $46,060 81. The percentage of receipts expended in operating in 1870 was 51.14, against 01 in 1860, a decrease of 9.86. Tlie President in his report says The earnings and expenses of operating the road, excluding renewals, from the year 1865 to 1870, inclusive, together with the percentage of receipts thus expendeid, are given in the following table r Banking House of Hbnbt Clbws & Co., 83 Wall st., N. Y. Our business is the same as an Incorporated bank. Deposit accounts can be opened with us in either Currency or Five per cent, interest will Coin, subject to check without notice. be allowed on all daily balances. Checks upon us pass through the clearing house as if drawn upon any city bank. We issue Circular all parts o( Letters of Credit for travelers, available in the world ; We also Commercial Credits. money make tele any desired point, and transac every description of foreign banking business. We draw Bills of Exchange in sums from £1 upward on. The Imperial Bank, and Messrs. Clews, Habicht ti Co., London. The Provincial Bank of Ireland, The National Bank of Scotland, and all their branches. We issue Certificates of Deposit payable on demand or at fixed Earnings. Expenses. Front Per cts date, bearing interest, and available at all money centres. 1886 $l'm,880 01 $366,848 33 888,498 31 66 83 1888.... 388,649 96 149,3m 54 1.39,356 51 Orders executed for Government and other investment secnri 51 75 188T 808,973 08 149,936 73 48'84 157,045 3 also Gold and Exchange. 1888 3X>,040 84 174,945 74 190,096 10 53 83 ties 1888 830,677 66 174,630 03 146,067 63 54 4. Advances made on approved collaterals and against Merchan 1870 333,514 87 167,0*) a 186,431 57 50 Oj dise consigned to our care. The Company have 8 engines, 19 first ilass and 15 second clas We make collections of Notes, Drafts, Coupons and Dividen.ls passenger, 4 baggage, 2 mail and 89 freight cars. Miles run by engines with passenger trains, 120,760 freight, 32,509 gravel, with promptness on all points, and are fully prepared to offer wood, construction and switching, 10,367 163,036, against 160,166 banking facilities upon either currency or gold basis. in 1869, an increase of 3,470. : graphic transfers of to — : 1 ; ; — ; BALAMcs sanrr. Capital stock—common Capital stock- preferred Fractional scrip First mortgage bonds Second mortgage bonds _. . . ^„^ Third mortgage bonds Bond* and mortgagea Second mortgage conpon BlUx pavable , scrip. Due for materials, Ac Wages due hands tor December. 7B.079 10,438 58,307 15.761 60 4) Victor Frelherr Von .Magnus, Berlin. Julius May, Frankfori-on-thc-Maln. Adolph Vom Rath, Cologne. 14 86 3,93789 Charles Ferdinand Rodewald, London. Frederick Rodewald. London. 160,386 OS #1,443,660 88 Cost of road Thomas Scllar, London. Rudolph Sulzbarh, Frankforton-theMaln. L. Joseph Speyor, Frankfort -onthe-Maln. Managing Director—Otto Nesile. ..^,7«,l |1,78«,88H8 Equipment Proaiaud lots Interest on bonded debt 8n,S4S-M W 138,in 68,87100 Total (Including miscellaneous items not above enumerated).. $8,448,660 88 — Attention road passes tlirough a rich section of the State heretofore deprived of railroad faciliticH, and is an important internal im|)rovement. When completed the line will l>e the shortest connecting the great lakes with deep water navigation on the Hudson. The section of the road finished is in profitable operation. Fuller particulars can be obtained of Messrs. HaigUt & Co. Manager— Leopold Bonn. Assistant Auditor— George Thomas Brooking. Banker •— The London Joint Stock Bank, London. invited to the advertisement of Messrs. Edward Co., who have just brought out the loan of the Hondout is Haight Si and Oswego Railroad Company, the same being first mortgage seven per cent gold Imnds, the issue of which is limited to $20,000 per mile of conii>Ioted road. The bonds are offered at 90. The (Limited). OnutcToBs. George Albrecht, Bremen. (Ueeu, Henry Ixmdon. Edward Carl Klotz, Frankfort -on-tbe-Maln. ^^^ . Balance of Income GERMAN BANK OF LONDON $877,100 00 753,700 00 wa S9 490,000 00 500,000 00 U The Capital of the German Bank of London Limited £1,800,0(11 divided a capital into 300,000 Shares of £10 each of which 80,000 Share*, r e pcawia of £600,000. have b«ea lasued, subacrlbed for, and allotted, aad ac« iMended Mf : to be fully paid The bank Is np wltbla months. six eatabllshed In — London and baa no bianchca on the Oontlaaal or Wd , tS n igo Uata SHiO awriUea abroad. It Is now prepared to open b u l l and generally to attend to ttansacttoas sppattalatac to l>VinlgB business. 9artholom«w Qoue, Bartholomew lane, Loadon, E. C, April, tSTl. : . .. : : . THE CHRONICLE. 620 GREAT NATIONAL LOAN. FIVE PER CENT. BONDS OF THE UNITED STATES. j^-NEW The Treasury Department is now able Sixes, 1881..., Fives, 10-40's. Fives, 1874.... 93,538,600 190,139,600 137,192,600 6,035,000 283,678,100 194,567,300 20,000,000 $1,174,918,950 $727,209,600 $1,902,128,550 2,107,846,150 -i 4, 20, 1871; 13,965,000 57,874, 00 Total Total March to promise that the registered Certifi Catea of Stock, and a good part of the Coupon Bonds of the New Loan of the United States bearing Five per Cent, interest, payable quarterly in gold, will he ready for delivery early in the present month. The subscriptions to the loan now amount to $62,000,000, and it is expected that the subscriptions and sales will progress more rapidly when the certificates and bonds are ready for market abroad as well as at home. The whole sum of Five per Cents offered to the public generally, and to the holders of United States 5-20 Bonds, without qualification, is $200,000,000. When this amount, to which preference is thns given, is taken up, the remainder of the Five per Ceitts, $300,000,000, embraced in the new loan of July 14, 1870, for refunding the public debt, will be offered in connection with $300,000,000 Four and one-half per Cents, and any part of $700,000,000 of Four per Cents, the one running fifteen years and the other [May 1869 Reduction of funded debt. $205,717,600 Yearly gold interest charge, March Present yearly charge 4, 1869, amounted to. $1S4,255,350 111,982,034 Reduction in interest charge $12,213,316 DEBT— Jtn.T, PUBLIC 1865, TO MAT, 1871. Maximum Debt Description. Five-Twenty 6 per cent stock. Other Six per cent stocks Ten-Forty five per cent stock Other five per cent stock Three-year 7-30 per cent notes.. Three-year six per cent notes. July Present debt, Mav 31, 1865. 1, 1871. $606,589,500 302,301,012 172,770,100 27,022,000 330,000,000 212 121,470 $1,403,883,150 283,678,100 194,567,800 20,000,000 $2,150,784,112 $1,902,128,550 $473,114,799 205.822,845 $3,56,096,800 . . thirty years. a copy of the New Five per Cent. Bond, under and pursuant Loan Act of Congress Total funded. The following is to the New FOBU op FIVE PBE CENT. BOND. INTKBEST I FtJNDED LOAN OP 1881. | ABE INDEBTED TO THE BEARER IN THE SUM OP DOLLARS. Issued in accordance with tlie provisions of an Act of Congress to authorize the refunding of the National Debt." approved July ft 1870, amended by an Act approved January 20, 1871, and is redeemable at the pleasure of the United StatcH after the tlrat day of May, A. D. 18S1. In coin of the standard value of the United States on said July 14. 1S7U, with Interest In such coin from the day of the date hereof, at the rate of five per centum per annum, payable quarterly, on the first day of February, May, August and November in each year. The principal and interest are exempt from the pajnnent of all Taxes or Duties of the United States, as well as from taxation lu any form by or under State, municipal, or local authority. This Bond is 51,02,3,000 20,483,.'JOO Fractional currency Past-due notes and bonds. five per cent. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA entitled " Greenback notes Greenback certificates Gold certificates '25,750,0.32 40,570,998 3,096,012 17,263,120 Total Treasury circulation. Less gold in Treasury $721,950,796 35,337,858 $471,270,310 Balance Less currency balance. $686,612,938 81,401,775 $364,806,831 16,172,116 $605,211,163 $2,755,995,275 $2,250,762,766 106,46.3,979 An Act Washington Entered IS Recorded RcKlsterof the Treasury. Registered bonds will be issued of the denominations of $50, $100, $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000, and coupon bonds of each denomination except the last two. The interest will be payable in the United States at the oflSce of the Treasurer, any Assistant Treasurer, or designated depository of the Government, quarterly, on the first days of February, May, August and November in Net Treasury circulation. Total principal of debt* Yearly interest in gold Yearly interest in currency Total amount of interest charged • $848,6.34,215 $64,419,628 87,412,423 $111,982,034 $151,832,051 $113,519,504 1,537,470 Exclusive of accrued interest. C. C. NORVELL, In charge of advertising United States loans. Treasury Office, New York, May 2, 1871. each year. The interest on the registered stock of this loan, it is determined by the Treasury Department, will be paid as conveniently to the holder as on the Coupon Stock, and personal attendance, or attendance by proxy at the Treasury, to draw and receipt for the interest will be dispensed with wheMver the check of the United States Treasurer, mailed punctually to the address and order of each holder on or before every quarter-day, is prtferred to such attendance. This check, payable in gold coin at the Treasury in New York (or such other office as the Stock is registered at), will be negotiable or collectable on the indorsement of the owner or owners of the Stock. In pursuance of this arrangement, the subscribers to, or purchasers of the Stock in its registered form (which is a complete protection against theft or other losses incident to Coupon Bonds payable to bearer) are advised to give their Post-oflice address iu fnll, and to notify of any change in the address between quarter days. The whole proceeds of the new loan will be applied to the payment or redemption and cancellation of the 5-20 years six per cent, bonds, and in addition to these proceeds the 5-20s are now being reduced by parchase at the rate of $10,000,000 per month. The entire efl'ect, therefore, of the new loan, in connection with the existing Sinking Fund process of the Treasury, is to reduce both principal and interest of the Public Debt of the United States. The loan creates no additional su/iiJy of Qovernmsnt stocks, while the application of the surplus revenues derived in gold from Customs is constantly lessening, as it has been doing for two years past, the Funded Stocks beaiing six per cent, gold interest. The 1st of May schedule of the Public Debt, which has just been published by the Secretary of the Treasury, shows a reduction in these stocks since the April schedule of $12,215,700 and a further lessening of the yearly interest charge thereon of $732,942. This leaves the total yearly interest charge in gold $111,982,034. In the same month the Treasury paid and canceled $2,470,000 of the Three per Cent. Currency debt, reducing the whole of this debt bearing Interest to $51,023,000, and the yearly interest charge thereon to $1,537,470. The proposed further reduction of the annual interest charge upon the Public Debt by refunding is as follows ' OIVIDBNDS. The following DWldends have been declared during COMPANT. American m IscellaueouR. Merchants' Union Express Co. the past Per When Cent. P'able. July l.lJune lOto July 3 . week Books Closed. 3. Pridat Evening, May 19, 1871. TUe Money Market.— With the continued accumulation of deposits in our city banks, money has been still easier than heretofore quoted, and loans of large amounts to the leading dealers in Government securities have frequently been made at 2 per cent, while 3 and 4 per cent have been the fair quotable rates of the week for loans on miscellaneous collaterals. National bank notes continue to be at a discount of \;@i per cent, where the holders wish to obtain greenbacks for them, but deposits having largely increased in the banks there is less pressure to obtain legal tenders, and large amounts of national currency are left untouched in the bank vaults. From the extraordinary ease in money on call, and the general expectation that the market will continue easy for some time to come time loans have naturally been made at lower rates, and 4 per cent per annum on thirty days, or six per cent on six months contracts, have been the ordinary terms, with approved collateral security. No change has been announced in regard to the operations of the Treasury in purchasing bonds or selling gold or negotiating the new United States bonds, and with Mr. Boutwell's policy unchanged there is a general expectation that money will be easy for some months ahead. The last city bank statement showed a large increase in deposits and legal tenders, but comparatively unimportant changes in the other items, the details being as follows Loans, decrease, $81,487 deposits, specie, increase. $389,229 circulation, decrease, $72,836 : By new five of $300,000,000 United States six per cents for four and exfchange of $500,000,000 United States six per cents for per cents of 1861 By exchange $5,000,000 a half per cents of 1866 By exchange of $700,000,000 United Statea six per cents for four per cents of 1901 The large and 4,500,000 $23,500,000 rapid accumulation in the last few years of private capital now retired from active business, and of the cash Savings and Life Insurance pre minms deposited with or intrusted to the provident institutions of the country seeking the most undoubted security, pledged to be kept free of all taxes, under national or local authority, and content, provided this object be assured, with moderate rates of interest— will no doubt ultimately absorb so much of these New Stocks as may not be taken iu voluntary conversion of United States S-20s, or marketed abroad. The Ofllcial Schedule of the Treasury affords the following classification of Funded Stocks (in Gold) of the United States as outstanding on the Ist of May : all Date. 5-20S, 1862 5-208, 1884 6-20S, 1865 5-SiOs, 1865 (new) 5-aOs, 1867 5-208,1868 Total 5-209 (IK Registered. Total $383,401,050 45,700,000 $107,664,600 66,781,600 54,605,800 72,476, 90e 91,299,100 $490,965,650 102,481,600 179,919,350 255,468.500 $1,010,040,660 the present condition of the same date in the last two years May a35,898,0flO 11,414,500 39,654,450 $393,842,500 $1,403,88:1,150 19. 1871. fJ)i!).-,>S 1.291 Loans and dlscounU Specie Circulation Net deposits 14, 1870. ta73.4(10.0OO 32.400.000 83,3(10.000 16,l%,523 31,321,479 831,9S6.013 Leeal Tenders 2-«,40O.tOO 57.aiX).000 64,2:;2,293 : May 15, 18R9. t2C9.500,llOtl 15,4a).(«0 83.901,(100 199.400.(«iO 53 6(».l,000 Commercial Paper has been further stimulated by the low rates of money on call, and we quote 5@6 per cent for The demand for the best class of endorsed notes at 60 days, while other grades are also quoted at easier rates than heretofore. Quotations are as follows : percent. Commsrclal, class first " •• •* Bankers', Coupon. 182,986,600 244,099,500 28,539,960 associated banks, compared with the •* endorsed first 60dav9. 4 montlis. 6 months. " slnglenamea •' •' QOLD) OP THE UNITED STATES. 128,313.5.50 increase, $4,374,478; legal tenders, increase, $2,153,082. The result was to leave the banks $1,466,898 stronger in their excess over legal reserve, the whole excess being $14,629,442. May annum by refunding FUNDED STOCKS ; The following statement shows 14,000,000 Total saving per ; ; '• ,,, 4to Uulted States Bonds. 6 60 davs. 6 6 5 mouths. Sli® 6X S to 4 — @ @7 @8 ® ®6 60 days. class foleign domestic « 6 nontlis. • , s 5S® 6X 'i Government bonds have been more and higher, chiefly on account of the rise in gold and The foreign bankers extreme firmness of foreign exchange. have been among the principal purchasers, and have taken bonds bills or shipping specie for shipment in preference to buying under the existing difficulty of obtaining Buitable coin. Under active :: May : these intluoncM Flv«-Twontio8 of 18(13 have Bold up to lil| agAiiut 111, the cloKlntr price in our Uiit report; FIvoTwentlnii of 1887 to 114 against ll;t^, and Ten Fortii* to 110 aKalnut lOflJ. Ths Treasury purchasixl |3,(XK),000 on Wodnewlay. Iwtww-n 111.23 and 111.49; the total offerinKS were $4,877.00U, a rnnallor amonnt than at any previous purchase for several weok* past. Subscriptions to tho 5 \n^T cent loan now roach al><)ut |lO.'),(H)0,()00, and HoniK of the now lionds (cou|x)n fl,(HH)n) havo coinn forwHrd from Waahintflon and been delivorcd to tlio eubBcrilxirH lo tlio loan, in proportion to the respectivo amounts takon by oach of tlicm. Thb bond is liandsomely enfrraved, and occu]>in« 'about ono half the page of royal quarto bank-note pa|M;r on which it Is printed. and the 40 coupons (iiuartorly for 10 yoarH) the othor half. U<ith bear tho vl(jfnott« of (Jon. William Henry Harrison. In rngard to any further or diflnront arrnn^(Muunt8 for the nejfotiationH of the bonds, thero Ims boon as yet no announcement, and it has prol>ably been anticipated that tho readiness of the bonds for delivery would have tho ott'oct of largely increasing subscriptions. The following were the highest and lowest prices of leading government securities at the Board on each day of the past week 8«tnr(1«y. Mondajr, Wrj' 19. May IS. ••», 1881 coop..., S iO'l,18S'4 oonp, IMS inx 'in S.»r«,18M Ill Ill 113 " • 186S * S-aiTB, 1309 a &-» a, 1807 • 117W Tmsadnr. WedniKid'r Tharidajrt May 1«. 'iniiiux ....•iiixuiM s'-i»» May I0« Gnrrancy 9*a ... .... IISX 1». htx •i\iii ii7)< ....-" lIltilllH 11IH>:IH mi;)} . •' 10-Wa, Hay 17. UIX MIX .... IllUUlli MIKIIIH .... llS^illSW its9 ..„ I13H113K 113H .... nas tisv 113)2 .... 118X >13V U3H .. 'IISK luj! ii.iS .... •II8« IMK " 5-30'a,l8« Frld»jr, May I». ••.nn inn .T. ...«....» IllKlIlK \H% Villi llliK 113V .... 113M 114 114 lUti KJSK .... ".ntvlOVK 109K109V V»\ 'lUXllSV •ll5)ill»X 1I9HUSX tlSV 114 .... .... Hi U4;< 114 .... 110 r.ox 119H l<9k' .... .... TblA Is the pdce bid aad aaked. no «ai4 waa made at the Board. State and Railroad Bonda.-Southern State Ixmda have been active, and, as a general rule, higher. There is evidently more confidence felt in Souihem State bonds as a class, on account of the several influences atTecting the secorities of the difTerent * which we have heretofore noticed, the chief of these being the more conservative spirit generally felt throughout tho South, and tho opposition to any further increase of their present indebtedness. Tennessces and Jfew North Carolinas have advanced materially the latter bonds, after deducting the ovenlue interest, are obtained at a very low price, and some of the issues are considered to be of unquestionable legality, and States, influences ; recognised as such in the State. In regard to funding the Virginia debt a circular has been issued from the Socond Auditor's Richmond, stating substantially that office at 1. Persons wishing to fund their stock and interest will apply in person here, or place their stork, with instructions and proper orders as to the kind of stock they elect to take, etc , in the hands of some one outside of this ollice. ». Eicept where stock is to be funded in the same name, and for the same kind of stock, a power of attorney will be required. 3. Where interest only on all rejjistered stock s ands to tho credit of a party, Ist July, 1871, tho order of tho owner will be sufflcicnt, specifying in whose name it shall be funded. 4. Tho " new cerliflcates" of January 1, 1866, and January 1, intertjst to those periods, will be funded, with thereon to let July, 1871. 6. The funding will commence on the 5th of July next. arrears of 1S67, issnod for all tiio interest Railroad l)onds have tieen in good demand at firm prices. Cen10U@102, and Union Pacific First Mortgage Land Grants 86J to 87i, and Incomes 88i to 89i. The following are the highest and lowest prices of the most active State Bonds at the Board on each day of the week tral Pacifies close at Bonds 93i . to 93}, 08 Tenn..old... 8s Tean.new... « N.Car.,old.. «8 V.Car., new. •« Vtr(t.,old.... 6b B C, n, J & J 13. TUX 70X 70 70 Monday, Tuesday, Wertnesd'y, Thursday, May 70 70 48 3»X •69 .... 63i< 1st.... D. P. L'dOt.... »H P. Income.. 87X Ceni.Pac.Gold lOlX tj. 68 Hi R** 87« * This Is .... .... 15. lOiJ May IS. 7l))4 ..„ .... .... •«8X TO 8IIV •m Missouri .... On.Psc. : : M :::: wS ^ May 17. 70X 71 •2 f!< •W ]\^. 23 •68X «9H •70V 71 63H 64 95U .... sag .... 87X »7X 88X .... m made 18. 19. g >3X «9H 36^ »SX .... BIH .... •87K 87V 101)i at the May 70V 70}< 7«H 70V •kit «\i •48X 46V ""^ 36XS7 .... t'lH .... the price bid and asked, no gala was May P .... .. ,. 63X63H te.ii «3V 87 6» 9SV «« ... .. 101H102 Board. ; movement is more commonly believed to be the result of efforts made by the Erie parties themselves. The $3,000,000 new stock have been cancelled, and official notice to that effect given to the Stock Exchange. There have been no further developments as regards Pittsburg, which has fluctuated between 125 and 138i, closing at 137^. The report being current that a 60 per cent stock dividend will be made next week. The following substitute for article 31 of the Stock Exchange Constitution was adopted on the 12th instant The rates of commission, where nn af^rcemcnt has been xaaAe to the contrary, •hall be as follows Une quarter of one per cent on the par value of stocks, bonds, and other se<-urtties. when the transaction la made for a regular certificates M C hM To da^ tho market hem feverish and eidtad. with mauirtal fluctuations in prioea; Ella fall ofT to 994^W#, aad tba market closed l)an>ly steady at near the lowiwt figure* of the day. The following were tlie liigliimt and lowmt price* of tb« aetlv* list of railroad and miscellanuouaatock* on each day of the laat waak Baiardar, Monday, Tosadar, Wsdn«Ml'* Ttiartdar, May a. Mair l«. May IT ii*J». May 1*. H.T.(Mot*H.R do Harlem aerlp uizsiiin saw .- IM wv tsS Rria KesdInK ll9Si 114' LakeShora.... lOSK IW< 118 m IM M Wabash Pltlaburi; Northwest do pref Rock Island... Port Wayne... St.Paul do U6X do pref do "" •90 8a )< 3IK Panama Del..Lack.,*W Uann., St. Jos. do pref .... M KUM 101 iw: issx • lg« •8X »V a** 80 i(i>2 II IJ .... Am. Merch. LTn !i7« .... United States. Wells, Fargo. t«« 88 4i 49« WW »8 .... •a 54 80! i*]i 18BX nii M 4 *6ti 9*X «K lou »% 4>S t»^ 80 V 61 46 ex 108 IJO .... .. Vest. ITn. Tel. Marlnosaprel.. Quicksilver.... PaciacMall.... Adams Kxpr'sa 97V «8« 48H 48X the price bid and asked, no taU • Tr'.s Is MM lUV mn vna 103 Illinois Centr'l Tlic MV d n MX mi IW« Mich. Central. Morris ft Ksaex B., Hart. & Brie Union Paclllc. asS I14U MV nv II8X1UU 1I8K1I6V 119 KM *t Col.(ihlc.*I.C Cl«v.,(;.,C. I4W tlH «S 81H 81V 91 SIK •I mS II m «v MM **% l«Q utw in M» 17 lUiilUS MW .... Ohio, MlsslMlo Csnlral of N.J. Iir7« Chic* Alton. .•116W iiO iiiiiua it4«ii>9 Il»' «4I< 81 prsf.... IIIM mil 64! Gold market. was made at tha Board. —Gold has been active and advancing, and closed at 113 against 111} last week. The principal cause of the higher premium has been the large export denuuid arising from the high rates of exchange, which are kept up by the scarcity of double-eagles for shipment. The difference between small coin and double-eagles continnes to be about i per cent, and unless, the latter shall be obtained from the Sub Treasury there seems to be little prospect that the supply from hoards and other sources will be sufficient to meet the export demand. The customs requirements and " short" interest in the gold market are also sources of Customs receipts for the week have strength to the premium. l)een $3,849,000. On gold loans rates for borrowing have ranged " from flat" to 3 per cent, and for carrying " flat" to 2^ per cent. To-day the rates for carrying were 1 and 2 per cent, and for borrowing 1 and 2 per cent to " flat." At the Government sale of $2,000,000 on Thursday, the total bids amounted to $.5,910,000. and the awards were tietween 111.90 and 113.01. The export of specie last week was about $3,000,000, and the shipments for the week ending to-morrow will probably be near the same figures. The following table will show the course of the gold premiom each day of the week past > Open* tjnotatlons.*" " * lion Uigh- fng. est. 8atnrday,MayI3....1tlK '• 19 ...lUH Monday, " 16 ...::1X Tuesday, '" Weilu'day •f " 17....1I1V 18 ...lllK Thursday, l»....ll»< Friday, MIX M Current week Previous week Jan 1, 1871, to date .110« IIIH lllX IllV UIV ll'.X UlX IIIK 112X iiix lUX HI" uox ItJX lllX 112M Forelcn Exchange. Clearings. 111% IllX inv uiv ToUl Cloe- nt. IIIH IIIX — Foreign tn.Tnjmi »,tM,IW 6UM,MI0 Balaaee*. , Gold. Corraaer. ti.TSjoM ti^nMi ns,464 i,o.2,sa MjaoJW i.7<8ja) iomsm 44,110,001 1,8MX* i,9ao,Mi in 8Ma>,0DO l.6M,l«) 1JM8J4* lU TBSXtSm itix UO.1KJ00O I,W*,1I0 1,481,»6 l.T I3'«J« in exchange has been extremely firm at 110|@110i for 60 days sterling, and llOJKalll for short Rates are still supported by the scarcity of donble eaglea sight. for siiipment, which have been worth aboat i<a5-16 premiom, the supply being rather more liberal to-day, and the lower rate accepted. Notwithstanding the high quotations th» demand for exchange has been rather better, as some parties lately holding off for lower prices of gold and sterling have become discoaraged, and pur chased at current rates. There have iieen increased shipments of government bonds bj the foreign banking houses, but not to such an extent as to balance tlie trade movement, and exchange will probably contiaae firm for some time to come. To-day there was a perceptibly feeling, and while asking rates were unchanged, transactions frequently done at a concession. Cotton exports from all porta have been 77,384 bales against 4,'>,787 bales in the same week last year. Quotations are as follows: •I Dan. • Day*. London prime hankere, commercial.... Paris (hankers) ** Antwerp Swiss..: AmMerdaai Uambnrg Frsnklort Bremen Prussian thaler*. The week'at the transartVoiis "for'tiie Cutom HovM and Treasury have been as follows Custom House Reeelpta. : investor one-eighth of one per cent on the par valac of all securities bought or sold, when the transaction Is a siM»culatlve one. 8ec. a. The lowest coiniiiission on all pnrchasea or sales of stocks, bonds or other securities, made for jKTsons not memb«'rs of the Kxcliange, shall be one-sixteenth of one per cent (ui ih'- par valnc of all seeurities bought or sold. Sac, i>. XUe lowest commiiuiou uu all puicliase* or caitui u( atocka, buuds or • eai mt Friday, Railroad and UllsceUaneona stocks.— The stock market has been quite irregtilar, with considerable speculative activity at times, and prices at the close generally higher than last week. During the first few days tho market was comparatively dull, and in consequence of the small business prices seemed to lack strength, except in Union Pacific and Erie, which advanced but subsequently there was a stronger tone with more business, and on many of the prominent stocks higher prices were made yester day and to-dav than have been reached before this month. New York Central lias sold up to lOOJ, do. certificates to 95i, Reading to 115i, Lake Shore to 113i, Erie to 84}, Reading to 115i, Union Pacific to 37i, Rock Island to IMJ, and N. J. Central to 114^. On Erie, Reading, Lake Shore, Union Pacific, and N. J. Central, these are the highest prices of the year. The S|>eculation in Erie, which has been the leading feature of the market, has been accounted for by various reports that the road is to pass into the hands of a new party, Mr. Vanderbilt being most generally named, but the ; : other axraritlM. mad* for rnmibm of tba lirtMaia. ikail bo at Ik* rat* of per 100 sham of Ibepar vala* of ||00 ; ptfitFftt valoa of boads aMt eqnal to 100 tbarM of fnU itock. Any msmbw Ttolallns Mettona A nr B of tbi* article, dliveUr or iD^tlrwOr. •hall, niHin conviction, caase to be a memb<T of tbs New Tork 8u>ck KxrhaaM. : Baturdsy, May H .. THE OHRONlOLIt 20, 18?!.] s-Wa, . Saturday, Monday, May "^ " Tuesday. Wi.dne*lay, •* Thondaj, " Fnoay. ToMU •• 18, , IJ... 16. . I?,,, 18, , 1».., tinjm abTiMsai/.RacatsM.. , OoM. tl,9S4.4l6CI l,t«*.tn tM,a«7 UMtm , . IgMMM 4*4.181 7» M 418,911 ai n i.'ijan i.aMM a M».4N M BtH^n 9)0,000 atH,nn Cainaey 7i«.aaN iWBidBiw Sub- — PaiaMBU. CamacT. OoM. IIJMjraM . WiSM *«IRS MMuan iMii^M MMuau THE OHKONICLE. e^22 May Balance, Payment during week. Balance, May — $64,8:9,595 40 (13,139,730 96 6,991,159 98 4,848,221 25 . . Boston Banks. Below we give a stateraent of the Boston National Banks, as returned to the Clearins' Hotise, on Monday May 15, 1871 7,636,417 05 e8,%l,937 50 18 »57,838,«35 43 19 $7,231,529 71 — New Yohk City Bakks. The following statement shows the condition of the Associated Banks of New York City for the week ending at the commencement of business on May 13, 1871 AVBRAea AMOUNT OF . Loans and Banks Capital . New r orK Manhattan.. Merchants* Mechanics Union America PUcenlx City Tradesmen's Fulton Chemical Merchants* Exchange SOOOOO 1.235,000 Gallatin. Nattonai Butchers' Mechanics and Traders' 1500,000 800,000 600,000 200.000 800,000 500,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 10.000,000 l.OOO.OOO 1.000.000 1,000.000 422,700 3,000.000 '450,000 412,500 1.000,000 1.000,000 500.000 4,000.000 400.000 1,000.000 1.000.000 l.OOO.OOO 1,500,000 1.000.000 3,000,000 760.000 800,000 400.000 300.000 Greenwich Leather Mannl Seventh Ward, New York American Exchange State 01 Commerce Broadway Ocean Mercantile Paolflc Republic Chatham People's North American Hanover Irving Metropolitan Citizens Nassau Market St.Nlcholas Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange Continental , Commonwealth Oriental Marine Atlantic Importers and Traders'. Ka8tP.lver Manufacturers &Mer.... Fourth National Central National Soconrt National Ninth National First National Third National New York N. Exchange Tenth Natlonil Bowerv National New York 2,000.000 600,000 300.000 , _ 400.000 850,000 500.000 "" ' 5,000.000 _,_..,„. 3,000,000 300.000 1,6661666 500,000 1,000,000 300,000 1,008.000 Connty German American Ball 8 Head The 1.10S,46(i 1.196.160 1,078,015 1.463,800 8,551 5.200 30.5'>3.700 11.609,000 1.444,000 6.5SS.00O 5.!C9,800 •206.872 789.412 984,752 885,(Bt ^•22S,a)0 500.008 200,000 lOfloOi) The following Aprils.... April 13... April22... April 29. .. May6 13.... $81,487 Inc. 889.-2'29 Dec. 72,8^26 I 28.5,580.666 285,301,796 287,554,538 2S3,3I2,7;8 13,ff70.87-) 15,597,189 15,80;.2»4 16,196.5;3 2S5,2Sl,^29l — PnrLADKLPiiiA Banks. 1.896,31'0 1,543,200 T76.10O 1.977.149 602.667 590.000 658.984 C96,0.)l 1,302.970 847.827 561,646 529,600 470..500 132.863 826,1.10 225,718 1.052.639 1.S1S.500 Kensington Penn Wes em Manufacturers' Bank of Commerce Girard Tradesmen's Consolidation City Commonwealth Corn Exchange.... Union First Third Fourth Sixth Seventh Eighth 2.50.(00 Central Bank of Republic. Security Total The 275,000 'CT.OOO 1,000,000 22»,«X) 2.'24O,00O 1,178,544 1,635.110 813,901 .939 2.5O,:!10 591.730 ?26.60ri 3.106.500 6,016,381 13.(175,700 3iJ10.587 1.103,100 703.688 l.U«.36.i April JIJJJ -.14 Sjy?; Mayl5 54.040,816 63.972.340 54,018,151 New England 1,000,000 1,000,000 900,000 North Old Boston Shawmut 1.000000 Shoe 1.000,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 4 Leather State Sufl'olk Traders' Tremont Washington First Second (Granite)... Third of Republic... Kngle Exchange Hide & Leather Kevere Union Webster Total Loans Specie Legal Tender Notes American Aetna 1.288.000 1. 080.600 1,450.700 Arctic 80 Astor Ill 5,961,000 .5.211,300 786.500 265.400 6.aJ1.50O 968,100 4.319.100 1,018,447 1.159,100 898,1(10 2-25.00O 214.(MO .•VIS.TOO 1.181,000 306,710 440.000 247,639 3.5.15,325 6,381 1,735.558 215.000 16,196,523 31,321,479 231,956,018 64,252,298 '2.674 40.788 •250.000 448,073 9,3(15 week are 116.836 73,124 201.690 392,158 weeks past Tenders, 222,138,095 215.793,667 214,725.838 217,180,796 cfeavings 53,270,543 50,915.997 52,534,143 56.636.788 60.426.291 82,099,211 61,252,293 •222,319.216 ?27,581,540 231,956,013 Sp»cle. 648,8497103 656>844S6 6S7 061.863 8 o;662 6ii9 809.774 660 891,853.'»3 689,627,934 L. Tender. Deposits.Clrculat'n. 1.906,400 1,286,747 1,225,700 870,0a) 434.000 747,000 548,000 297.000 233,040 389,861 436,000 766,687 32-2.933 610 1.46.'J).)4 4,895 47,000 8,677 3,694,000 1,385.43.) 1,129,000 3.97.619 253,365 445,167 240,758 1,158,692 1,252,635 968,726 1,704;000 1,704,000 1,377,000 3.719.000 1.045,360 l855,0 585,000 816,000 983,000 8,056,000 2.385,000 423,000 11,000 6,000 18,000 493 000 441,000 1,030,000 369,6.30 241,000 149,000 137,000 181,000 413.000 490,000 91,000 $14,575,1,8>8 $3,^91,000 3,989,481 3,762,200 1,897,000 1,368,000 2.171,000 1,517,400 929,379 967,680 1,485,916 1,170,700 577.510 3,028,000 951,819 853,252 88;,318 887,758 1,647,000 1,487.000 3,308.000 968,565 1,042,998 408,000 778.000 780,000 2,448,000 1,481,000 191,000 $43,662,846 1,000 213,372 68,970 I I Legal.Tenders. Deposits Circulation Specie. $1,000,000 799.350 862,000 617,000 468,760 461.00(1 211, .30(1 228,805 171,530 369,851 321.577 314.488 .54..s»l,498 t '2-9,038 54,661.415 54,819,857 356,548 800,478 55,033,'229 E231,508 12,980380 13,632,889 14,403,888 14253^(3 14,575,823 691.6:13 ,>ri7.147 358,525 .30.396 1.056.963 1.095.2-5 716.717 178.250 77.(17 |Sir,.-227 1 ni3..577 4,0(i2 9i8.!»6t 1,849.401 4,(66.669 12.6,50 4391 140,245 475.038 121.600 467.258 4329,965 32.745 6911.900 1,221.600 4.555.063 1,961,163 5.779.741 2,866.877 1,757,203 1,902,762 60328 .... 74.026 543,300 271,618 667.316 211,882 12.120 229,'il3 2,246 '24,825 01,9-23 '2,762 177,229 103,787 10,412 .302.317 82,851 123.419 41,263 775,>'.17 363.730 9.59.465 6,56,362 59:1,171 876.752 644,321 1.190.174 3 408.264 782,1(2 779.666 174,535 827,659 1.159,.3S0 2,065.344 616.526 1,186,009 59,1,333 709.000 793,967 .8:52.802 5.36.9-^3 2,480310 491,822 .39.660 180.428 400,380 41,784 476,294 812.686 1.515.142 1.13S.S99 2,297.353 470.817 959.755 267.299 289,650 27.5.33 389.220 71t9,'2I6 :ol,776 447,500 l'27.0OO $51,4f9,S34 $24,899,65 Deposits Circulation Inc. 101,8601 I Dec. Dec. : 15(4,481 29,6ti5 Corrected by E. S. Bailey Hid. Askd Fulton 57 51 108 84 112 105 449.064 216,910 597,000 172,553 270,000 351,080 210,115 450.000 2'20,000 792,000 86 187 Guardian Hanover .1110 300 Citizens* '.35 City Clinton Commerce 166 120 108 H.7 250 94 Eagle 180 Empire City 105 95 128 . 123 106 .116 116 Irving .112 International.. 115 Jefl'erson .147 no Knickerbocker ..1.10 36 185 108 Lamar 97 133 Lorillard Lafayette Excelsior Fireman's Fireman's TruBtl 12 . Niagara 82 North AmerlcanlOS North River... .111 Phenix 116 117 149 112 74 Relief Market 108 Security. Sterling 113 Stuyvcsant United states. 1.35 . ,16(1 .116 Yonkcrs&N ,. made by . .. Nortb Carolina. City Securities. Did ^lexandriaGa Ga,7s Angnsta, Ga., 78, bonde iAtlaela, Ch'leston, S. W C, 78, F. L. bds Oolumbia S C 6b Colnmbue, ** 7a» bonde 80 KK 67 8)t Macon 78, bonds Memphis 6s, endorsed Memphis past due ecu pone. Mobile, Ala., 68, bonds " 88, ... . iNftBh'ville68 • Norlolk 6b Petersbarg6B ...-.. " 8b 76 82 7(1 60 B^i m & Weet P. Ist, 8b " " iBt, " . eni Income. Montgomery and Enialla Soutb Carolina. A Aug, let M.,7e Char!., Col. '•-^ " " Savannah & Char. 1st M.,7e.. North Kastern let mtg. fs.. 60 80 66 t5 86 82 62 70 '9d 88... 3d " SB... " Block Cheraw & Darlineton 78.... Bine RIdee, Ist Mortgage . m m «0 '10 East Tenn. Block Macon and AnuUBta bonds . 96 88 86 " endorpe4l. 80 86 Macon and Aignsta stock. 8U Atlantic and Gulf stock 2'25,276 843 . Savannah, Albany.* GnlfTs bonds, end. by Savannah.. 81 Pensacola &G«or|{talBtm7B 80 Deposits. Circulation. «l,887,490 39,257,723 41,418,084 41,871.067 43,024,711 48,487,870 43,682,848 11,074,161 11,070,834 11,066.476 11,068.964 11,098.345 11,118,978 11,119,780 " nisslsslppl 2dm and 88. <>I 54 10 11 85 66 1.0 " '(0 Virginia. A Alex., Iste 68,.... 2d86B SdeSs 93 Orange & .&lez. ATenn lets 4th, 88 84 " ! 8ts, 6s 2ndB, 6b .. 8d8, 68 4th,8B fQid. int. 88 c^Es'd 6s. Plb-'mont 88.. IstB'^ ,-. Isl Sonthslde, iBt mtg. 8b 2d m. paart'd6».. " 8-2 Norfolk 73 SdJ Uki * Dan " 40 16 Kan. Sd86B " " A> 87 Virginia Central Eich. 4th68B 8« 78 84 iBte 6b " 98 93 90 85 4U 32 3dm. SO eo iai 90 75 87 90 61 ft 4tbni.8fl & Petersburg 1 m 8f 93 78 " Sd m. 88 85 I.on- Cent. iBt m. 8s 83 •' 8b Sd 77 4T«iin. lBtm.7B 81 cenaold, 8b 73 85 80 82 7b 7(1 60 75 70 'U .11 90 75 74 68 '(1 .54 87 70 lOs Islana. MlBsiBB 681 65 60 Georgia. BouthweBternKK.,lBt mtg. 80 96 55 A Virginia 6b, end by State of Tenn Va. H'l 76 80 7H MemphiB and Ohio Isl m.Se Ask 1 Tennessee. Orange Ml y» 68 IHiO 93 53 63 78, 'lU 88, Ist stock... Sparten'bnrg and Union gnar'd by States. C 75 65 Ballroad Securities. Alabama. JIontg'rY Wilmington & Weldon78,.. " Ch. & Ruth.lstM,en( " " lstM.,S8... b-( 65 68 70 6S «5 Ricbmona 6b Asli 67 70 6) Belma and Meridian 321901 110 77 S3 105 160 105 Tbese ((notations are ot the I.ess Active Securities wtalcb are not Given on tbe Next Page. 577.000 'ncrcasc... ..Decrease 185 145 85 some quotations are several of the principal dealers, though necessarily nominal. I:»,(10O $11,119,780 1(12 .,146 Y.103 1C5 190 55 175 SOUTHERN SECURITIES. Prices arc '24I.«10 800 003 170.000 100 106 73 80 Republic 105 .112 Manhattan.. 175 120 National 115 73 50 ... New Amsterdami07 N.Y. Equitable. ISO New York 112 117 13(1 Lenox Long Island Askd 102 188 Nassau lis 86 102 Howard 219,335 178,000 70 Brooklyn gold bonds, endoreed by 68 Stite of Alabama 68 Mobile and Obio. 3mtg, 8b 261 .988 .109 Grocers' Gerraanla Beckman Bowery Continental Mercantile Merchant*' Metropolitan 105 .113 86 Columbia Commercial Bid. Mech. &Trad'rs' .1.50 103 .101 Oebhard Globe 200 " 11,977,547 11,953.186 838,3.53 291,832 Dee. Wilmington, N. C.,«b condition of the Philadelphia Legal Tender. •242.246 1,633.655 176.862 784,830 741.313 1,102,412 3,19-2,914 •- ..Increase 445,143 846.8(6 408,543 45;,-219 41,139 42,013 639.109 144,297 . 5,360 83.800 3.200 1,951 8.000 26,500 4.810 7,000 ' 240,%2 592,952 476.128 1.061.673 343.087 3.708,083 467.208 240.000 278,814 49,006 233.037 351,906 14.5.301 Bid. Askd. as follows Inc. $4.3:4.418 inc. 2,153,082 Deposits. 13:7,865 Qnotatlons of Ne-w Tork Fire Insurance Stocks. •2:16,a53 1. '292,010 336.:100 11,776 22,447 176,723 779,069 1,247,693 596,278 1,554.821 1.249,621 Inc. Adriatic 78:!.(«I0 .... 781.721 1074.834 $47,550,000 $114,381,623 $1,784316 $12,266341 3,473,(K10 397.1X10 80..5(in 13,361 199,775 $428,738 794,564 The deviations from the returns of previous week are as follows 10.929.a»l 3I4.(«IO 4.276 22,653 3.064 32.161 3,193,325 3.961.675 617,528 2.474.131 3,163.638 2,000,000 200,000 1,000.000 1.500,000 Security '29,167 4,'2«1,.563 1300,000 2-29.300 Net Deposits Legal Tenders The annexed statement shows the for a series of weeks •APl'i'W MonntVernon •211.744 Banks Loans. Merchants* Specie. L.T, Notes. Deposits. Circnla. .5(13,«00 deviations from last week's returns are as follows Date. Aprils.. April 10 Maverick .•m.ooi 618.000 606.800 603.700 891 .OUI iSifiOO 883.000 626,400 1.'2,55,900 Massachuselts 1,600,000 l,aiO,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 369.,3.54 2.915.700 1..5W.60O 2.394,783 Mirket City .371 2.410 335 1.958.2(« Howard Bank 1,58'2,.'H3 1.341.46:1 Globe Hamilton 5,092.600 turn Decrease. 790,6(0 102,629 574,112 850.783 866.7»2 JOO.OCO 1,000,000 600,000 1,000.000 760,000 1,000,000 800,000 800.000 400,000 3,000,000 200,000 2<M3« The following is $5,200,000 '4.161.109 4.161.109 5,155,400 2,410,000 2.411.000 2,400.000 1,447,000 1,067,860 1,329,876 Increase. . ,lnorcase. 666,4(;0 969 9.56 653.006 17A14vl00 $1.4S7,g()0 Specie 1152,811 249.920 85,143 203,833 124,639 257,667 •205 878 1:9,714 97,011 207,217 73.101 1,(00,078 99.872 1,(X10.000 1.965.300 495,356 993.600 821.150 890.816 513,000 260.602 1.392,649 3,343.000 l.«'5.390 4.033.692 2.543.200 1,351.471 2,550.054 1,408,312 1,911.000 5.427.581 611,612 495,433 526.363 956.005 922,377 1,344,534 $15,984,160 $55,033,229; $231,508 Capital 217..360 I Loans, Loans .... 50,334 820 87,845 1,933 Continental B'kof Redemplion. 6.K».600 Total net 250,000 250,000 500.000 400,000 670,150 250,000 1,000,000 200.000 800,000 400,000 800.000 500.000 300,000 1,000,000 800,000 SOO.0OO 150,000 435221 1,000.000 1,000,000 1,000,000 Bank of Commerce. Bank of N. America 5.6(/7,118 : Bouthwark .570,264 761.700 431,235 600,000 2.000.000 750.000 1,000.000 1,600 000 S0O.0OO 3.000,000 1,000,000 6.408.8811 the average condition of tbg Pliiladelphia National Banks for the week preceding Monday, May 15, 1871 Banks. Capital. PhiUdelphla $1,500,000 North America 1,000,000 Farmers and Mech. 2,000,000 Commercial 810,000 Mechanics* 800,000 Bank N. Liberties. 500,000 953,.362 239,418 89,758 635,000 827.000 2.9IO.400 69.000 1,867.900 269.0XI 180,000 81.575,789 31,568.901 81,546,127 31,488,404 31,481.929 31,391,305 31,321,179 17.9;6.692 15.513,186 15,712,951 5.733 4.000 293,871 190,446 159.150 5.417 3.;30 Specie. Circulation. 291,0^3,937 290,107,870 18,5.178 155 12,652 61.400 500.000 200.0QO Broadway Columbian 696.93:1 are the totals for a series of Loans. Aprlll... Dec. 1,000.000 Boylston 1.170.300 deviations from the returns of previous Lo:in8 Boston 671.177 1.624.734 677 1.319,300 2.50.000 $449,742 186,647 319,833 256,.5U1 376.400 1.000 48.900 9,347 6.11S,.'M) 1,300,000 4.503.100 70.3ffl.900 2-9,231,291 Specie Circulation May 2.S06.700 3,813.000 2.750,900 3,747.166 2.370.000 1.449.930 1,874.670 1,561,6(3 477,644 624.9a7 832..S33 130,6(:0 11.300 566.089 1..551,720 •24..591 131.400 42.1'17 3.925 87,900 499.630 51.6(10 746.0U1 49.400 W7,400 11M,900 5,720 103.218 572..59U 80.700 238,H«) 2.(rj() 4,530 44,45(1 360,000 21.195 98.817 89.100 503,100 l,JI8,.50;i 963,286 6a,6U) 305.800 8,6(r7 1.915 22.820 10,8.53 S.l.'iO.SOO 200,000 00,000 300.000 Ms anfactar«r3& Builders Totals 2,imooo 10.311,350 1,633,437 2.517,769 1,000.000 American National Mermanla 171.851 493,000 951,000 4,092.495 900,000 783,000 479,700 4.700 148,.550 '2,845,378 Btayvesant Kieve ith Ward BlKhth National 7M,8i3 98,639 2,.S95,157 1 1.415 2.'i6,827 5?2,T00 498,336 162,200 61,548 74.3(0 17.370 819.497 119,300 2.129 212.3 7 T.V8.019 2.50,000 3(iO,000 886,000 539,819 479.300 203.6'23 399,5.58 9,:S65,600 $159,fc75 4,141 8,678 1.7f0 1,.500,000 Everett FaneuilHall Freeman's 163,281 19.665,006 7.602,200 2,460,573 3.677,600 1,986,450 4,729,067 2.175.700 1.316.194 2.868,365 $36,376 2,686,292 3,576,773 2,003,116 1,425,359 508.065 2,866.387 2,002.494 2,5!8,633 788,253 2,851,319 1,566 364 2.557.851 1,670,272 1,983,891 1,165,534 1,919,288 880,614 8,412,783 6:6.175 2.158.747 2,325,282 1.935,331 2.099,811 2,762,166 4,104,570 3,390,778 1,795,400 445.171 486,239 252.800 195.700 2.894 11,200 $I,61.3.»58 5,658,600 6,258,400 4.2O9.80O 3,501.600 7,567,039 2.995,832 5,476,214 2.262,461 1.797.480 4,449.781 2.301,574 1,349.711 1,794,600 1,431,300 792.010 2.210,269 885,190 3.101,185 5,014.200 9,8 •29,940 52,';00 Loans. $750,000 1,500.000 Kliot 520,9'23 2.4(17,600 Legal Capital. $863,600 393.923 782.399 192.683 187.446 486.591 3,002,400 931.868 3,130,561 1,259,471 4.S60.55S Net Banks. Atlantic Atlas Blackslone $837,500 $11,325,800 •243,200 1,373,'291 6.186.944 2,878,335 8.821,196 , DepoBlta. Tenders, tlon. $2,299,400 674.400 930,700 302.000 11,701,800 18,074.691 1,098.300 I ,.500.000 Park.. Mechanics' Banking Ass. Grocers' North River Clrcala- Discounts. Specie. $3,(HXl,Wn |l?,!iri9.000 3,050,000 6,275,800 6,727,liU0 3,000,000 2,000,000 5,239.300 1,500.000 4,607 100 3,000,000 8.871,773 l,800.o00 4.316.40! 1,000,000 6J79,364 3.4'il.462 1,000,000 3,094.071 600,000 ay 20, 1871 [ Bichm. 4l PeterBb. letm '.'a ., " " 2d m. 6f " " 3d m. 88 " Fre'kaVg & Poto 68 784 . " " " " »' " con-r 1e ....1 " 08 ....( 6S 80 03 m •w 85 79 8! 90 75 85 f4 82 76 90 80 91 70J «Si 82 96 85 87* 80 .... .-• m May THE CHRONICLE. 20, 1871.] 821 GENERAL QUOTATIONS OF STOCKS AND B0ND6. Tke A«UTe Htock* and Bonds kItcd on a Prevloaa Pac« are not Hrpratrd here, qnntallona »rt> madx oi tha Par Cent Value, Whatever the Par may be. Honthern aerurllira are Quoted In a Separate LUt. nooia AHD MouaiTiEa. Tocit Bid, Ask. Newr Tork Prioaa. Amtrloftn (iold Coin U.S. aoVKRNMBNTS. i:»)<j Oreal Weatern, 2d M. MM.,., M do r»t ITATK New do MX HO.S'DS. do do do Vlrxlnlaaa, old 8^ 90 M MX 7a,Uold do 18(8 do now bonda SpocUITax Cnrollna , t* new bonda do do April ft Oct... Mlaaonrl (a do & Han. Lonlalnna St. Joseph. s« 7U do do 6a, 8S 88 88 do 7a. leree bonda do ira.. i:SH large bonds loix 6e Khode lalaodea Alabama Sa do do Col., Chic, ft Ind., iRt Mort. 8a 88 Railroad bonda... Arkanau 6a, ninded do 7a, L. K. ft Ft. S. 188. do 78, Memplils ft L. K.. do 78, L. K.,T. B.ftN.O, do 78. Mlaa. One. ft KB Ohio 6a, 1875 do 68,1881 do Sa, 1886 Kontucky 6a w w M Canal Bonda, 181V 6a coupon, *i7 do do do Buffalo «s W do do do do do 60, 78, 1876. . Port Huron Lake Mich 87M do coniniou Tin., ft & Hartford Long ft ... ft do Cln., let preferred do 2dprcf.... . *': . . Mich. Cent., I8t M.Sa, istl Chlo., Bur. jk (i. 8 p. c. lal M.. 118S !l3!k Illlnola Central 7 n. ct., 1875.. Alton *T.H., do „?.** Chin, do iBt Vri M M prof. ^ ^''a. '<' M. Income.. N. Western S. Fund... u trO 87 77 ft do "o do do do Int. Bonda a** do C01180I bda 91 y 93 do Kxtn. Bds 87 do IttMort.. MX 100 Han. ft St. .To. Land Orants... do do convertible I04X 104X Lack, ft Weatern Bonda 101 Kel., Lack, ft Weetom, Ist M. M m6' do 3d M. M _ do Tol. ft Wab-h, Ist Mort. oifd. 94 do 1st M St L dir.. 89 do IdMort S9 do Rqnip. Bds... do Cons.CoUTert jjX Hannibal ft Naplea Ist M Ureat Weaters,lstM., IB88..., n 93k 150" 133* 18M Mariposa Oold M do do Oold Gold 103 do Ss.gold Uhlcago Sewerage Ik. do Municipal 79 Portland 6s Burlington ft Mo. Cheshire, 6 do »7M L.e„T „ do M atock...... 1*. . Ronthem Mobile 6e "^ to 86 U8M JOK Haven IWM n la, Jan., A., J. t>, Detenee of IS Baltimore i* 99" Boston <a 18TC. II do »8 NewOrleanaSo do do con isi" do do bonds, 7b,II!! 44 do do Ms 98 M 81 Orange do Va. 108 Northern Central flH 1-3 North Pennaylvania »4M tS on Creek ft Allegheny River. 104 lOJM 'JJM Pennsvlvania :w Igji PhliadplphlaKrie ,J*« Philadelphia ft Trenton IS8 !¥ Phila., (German, ft Norriatown 173 178 Phlla., Wllmlng. ft Baltimore 106 1I« :Weat Jersey 180 iCheaapeakeft Dela. Canal.... -... jDelaware Dlvlalon Canal N i:,-^ Lehigh Coal and Navigation.. ^M WK Maryland un do No. I Baltimore. !8t Cnrrener... do do do 79M 81 . iOOK . i. Xnc.Bor.ds,7, No. 16, IicadinK do do pref. Sniqnehanna ft Tide- Water. Wcat Jrraey 7b, .Ian. ft July... MB Boa ton. MalneCs New Hampshire, 6a M. (gold) Paclflc (ot Mlsaourl) etock.... (consolidated) 61 preferred lit Sehnylklll Navlgat'n (eonaol). , C "OS M.(gold) Denver Paclflc RR ft Tel North MIsaonrI slock ft I{e8d..lBt M., 7. 1900 Iiclaw., Ist M.,6, "86 do Boston Water Power ts, 68, Sa, « %8. 108 Horna Certll.. »K ISM. M.(Leav.Br.)7. "M Land Gr. M.,7, 1861. do do do do do do ft O. I8M do do 6e,:9l». da do do da do 6e oi '80. do taolW (N.W.V9.)3dM.«i M.ta IMO, ParkSe IWM Balthaare 4k Ohia «• of Ti M M M M :!'* M do Charleston I 1 I ) ft 4lhHort.te Sav.ta, gnar do da 7s . Col. 7a, gnar do do Keertif.. Nortbeaatem Ut M.8S South Carolina Is (new) do do 7s (aew) do do Block GsorgU Bonda, It do stock . Greenville I ft OaolrsI Georgia, do I SdM.ls.. Tenn., tat M. ta do Mart. slock Ist TS.. ilMacoaft Branswtekend. TS... 'iMacon ft Western stock Atlantic ft Gull 7s consol Bonini'y * Weal. P. ut M. I*. oblTeftr I Ohio Sterling, WIMj dn do do ex ctfs. ,2! I5B 18 do _ do do do N. Orleans lOS 9JM •«" ft RAn.ROADS. Alex. KK Isl M. la., ft do I M Co 4aaaachnsetta ft Little 8i-huylkill Mine Hill ft SchuylklU 9S Atlantic Mall Steaassalp.. Vermont 7. Elmlraft Williamaport Rlmira ft Wliliainsport pref.. Lehigh Vaiiey M Delaware ft Hudson Canal. Tnstees do ft Amboy etock .Catawlsea ttock preferred stock do IMM common. — 1st lat Ist 108 M six 82M .Camden so do Nashville ft '1 ?" do ) 29 ik 60 eu 83 lOi.'iC Lou.L'n(Leb.br.ex)6, Consol.lBt M.,7, 1898... Louisville 6, "71. lis" 6, "SO. 6, '86. 10* Debentures, 6. 80 i!8chnylklllNav.,lst M.,6. 1873 do do 2d M., 6, IS.'-S.. do do Improv., 6, 1870.. 141 Br)7.'7ft"7B. latM.(Leh.hr.ex)7, Delaware Dlv., 1st M.,6. '78 .. 80 Secnrltlea. Lehigh Navigation, 6, *78 S3 Atlanta bonds, 8a do Loanori864,«, '84 MM Charleston stock te Loan do of 1897. 6, "OT 93 Savannah 7b. old do Gold Loan of "97, 6, "97 «x do 78. new do Convert, of 1877,6, '77 Memphis old bonds, 6s Morris, 1st M.,«. 1876 do new bonds,ls do Boat I.oan.S. F..7. '85 94' S3 SO Pennsylvania Coal Spring Mountain Coal Wlikesliarre Coal do 91 91 W do do Wllmlng. Chesa. 134 100 latM.fMem do . I 38M Qnlcksllver preferred wells Fargo aerlp M. (gdlii) 6, -81 M. (cur.) 6, 89y Westch. ft Phil.. lat M., conv,-. do do 2dM., 6, 1878... 54M 88 West .leniey. 0, l,SS3 51 Cnmberland Coal Maryland Coal C:aikton 1st do do do do do MUtCELLANBOUS STOCKS. ;i3X American Coal Consolidated Coal 98 IUoh.So.7perct.3d Mori 9; MIch.S.ftN I.S.K.7p.c.... 10: Paolllc R. 7b, giiari'd by Mo.. 99XI1U0 Central PacllTc Bonda Union Paciac lat Bonds 9IM do Land Qranta, 7a. MX Income 13a „„ do A Erie 7b Phlla. ft Suntiury 78, ISli Philadelphia ft Reading, 6, ID. itlM ISO usu WM M.,6,1'80... 103 6, IffiS.... 98 D«bentnree,6,'89-'71 94 do 57 FrT:.. Ist M.,6, TO.*™.. Mad. ft Ind. stock. LoniKv., CIn.ft Lex., pref. 1st Phlla. ftErle,l8t » ft do Loulsv. Loan.t.'SI. Naah.lst M. (m.s.) 7, TI., Lor.. Loan rm.B.M,m.<ir do (Leb.Br.>*,'8t Jefferson., 2dM.. Snnbtirv I ft do do do do do do Pennaylvania, do do 168 eo' do -8,1865-76 Morrlsft Essex 1st Mortgage Extended. New Jersey 99X lOJ do IstEndorsed New York 4k Hftrleni do 78, 2d do New York ft Bsrlem, pref. I87» do 7«,3d do tR88 93 New York ft New Haven do 7b. 4th do do do scrip. 1880 do 7«. 5th do 1888 83H New York, Prov. ft Boston Long Dock Bonds Norwich ft Worchester ... Boll. N T. ft E. I8t M., 1877. Ohio ft Mississippi, prelerred. Bud. R. 78, 3d M. S. F. 1883. Rensselaer Saratoga do 78, 8d Mort., ins Rome, Watertown ft Ogdona.. Harlem, l8t Mortgage St. Louis, Alton ft T. ildUte. do Con. MVf * S'kgF'd. do prcf. do Albany & Snsih'a, 1st bjnds.. St. Louis ft Iron Mountain do do 93 2d do 933i Toledo, Wab ft Weatern, pref. do do 8d do <0K . 81 58 K. Haven Island Marietta 101 lUl . L. St. Iionla. 81 Lonls6« io WaterOs.gold do new MX ilo Waterft Wharf 6a.. do aParkts do Park ta geld .„ ... 94X do SewerSpeelalTaxd North Missouri. Sd M.,7, ' 93 Kansss Paelfle Ist If., (gold) 160 Phll.,Wllm.ftBal.,lstM.,<,'84 Indlanap Ind. Central.... Sioux (Mty Louis, n M «n 90"! 90 Loulsy.C.ftLex..lBtM.,7.'g7_ MM Little Schnylklll.lst M.,7, 1817. ltd" 7b. 94 98 I m.,gd,7 92« Dubuque ft Brie Railway preferred 89 89 e» Anihoy, 6 of "75 do 6of83.... 6 of '89 do Jnnc.PhliR .Ist .M.,guar.6,'88. Lehigh Vallpy, 1st M.,6, IMS.. do do let (new) M.,6, "H. I !08Ml» do Water ta, '87 to '80. do Water Stock ts, •97. do Wharf6s do special tax (s of IS. Jeff., Mad. Jk I.lBtM.aftM17, 11 do do 2dM.,7, IKTS..... do do lat M.,7, 1906.... 79 94 98 M.,6 2d M.,6 .<ld M.,6 ist Hunt, ft Broad Top, Ist M. 7. do do 3d M.. 7, "75... do do Cons. M., 7, "98. Ham. & Dayton Col. Chic, I Columbus ft Xrnlastock Dayton ft Michigan atock Little Miami Block LoniaTllle. 9aM North Peunsyl., 1st M., 6, 1880.. 90 do Chattel M., 10, 1887. do 3d Mortgage, 7 97M 100 do KiindingScrlp, 7... 100 Oil Creek ft Alleg. T!., Istlil., 7. 100 Ind., CIn.ft Laf., Ist M..7.... do a.ftC list M.,7.IU,a •Innc. CIn.ft ln<1..1st M.,'I,'M. Ittle Miami. 1st M.,6, IMS.... In, Ham. ft Dayton stock.. ,. Lonlsvllle<e, !l3to'87 do fs,'97to'9« gatawlsss, 1st M., 7 Im.ft WlI'ms, 5e do do 78,1880 (Not prevlonsly quoted.) Albany ft Snaquenanna MM Chicago ft Alton 1I3S do do preferred... 'iSx Chic, Bur ftOulncy Clev., Col., Cln. ft Mirh., lat M.,7, Si.. ft do do !dM.,T,'»4. do do 8dM..7, tt.. do To'do dep. lid«,7,'h-'«4. Dayton ft West., 1st M.,7, IMX. do do latM..«, ItOS. ' m . . RAILROAD STOCKS. ^ I .t" "".^ do do do consol., 6 of '89. Cam. ft Bnr. ft Co., lat »!., 6 M ^1778 end.. Brie . Ckmden WM ft n^ new do do do do Peoria, Pekln St. Louis ft Iron Mt. 1st 68, Belvldere Delaware, loix ft , 75 7S ( . N.T *08W.Mld.R,lstM.77gd) do [Dayton 40 WM 4«mI 90 107MiI«7K . 98 Mt 7 p.e., I toSyra. Covington ft Cln. Bridge...... Cln., nam. ft D., Isl M., 7, 88... do do 3* M., '7, •««... ... .... , preferred do do Ss do Funded Debt 6s.. do do 7s do Waterexten.7s... 97 Allegb any County, 5 93X1 do do 6s, -SS.... to 90 1 do do »* m do Manchester ft Lawrence Naahuaft Lowell Northern of New llRnipablre. I!3 I.3M do do 9dM.,»,77... Ogdens. ft L. Chsmplain WJf Cln. ft Indiana, iBt M.. 7 109 do do prof.... do do 3d M.,7, ISn..! Old Colony ft Newport. l'3y Colum., ft Xrnia, Ist M.,7, to. Port., Saco ft Portamonth .... 188 il Pittsburg Compromise 4M8. 107 101 conv. 1 «k 107 «« 78.1876 I 1-t tiiort. 78... guar, 7b, gold. Jacks. do Lafayette |I04 Pennsylvania 5s, 1877 .lies do MlllUry Loan 6b, 1871 itil kio.; do Stock Loan,*s,'73-'do do 6s, TI-'^ Philadelphia 68, old I iS O. R. ft Ind, 1 M U>ulsv.ftNash. K.lst M, cons. ,7 Lake Shore ConRol[dntcd,7.. Montclair RR 01 N. J. 7s, gold Northern Paclflc RR, 7-30 gold 6s subscription M« Sur.C. R ftM.KU. lBtM,7(gd> iCnes.&ohloKK, lBtM.,6,(gd) preferred Cincinnati. . lOO Conn. Western, M Philadelphia. 1875.. »>i do iM 73 ft mt Parkershnrg Branch Central Ohio it' 38y Clev. stock. Sammit Branch [Vermont ft Canada Vermont ft Maaaachnsetts 88' bondit ... Chic, 1st union Tele. lstM.,7 3 :Riitland ] 113 ft Wallklll Valley, Ist M.. gold 68,1887 6e, real estate., 106 NSW. OR RF.CENT LOANS. U.S. New Loan, 5b, gold un 68, 18S3 I a" 99 _ 159 H " ' bong Dock Bonds •mx 98 m" «8>i MISCELLANEOUS BONDS. Am. Dock ft Im. Co. 7, "86 97« 109X UAILROAD BONDS. H ft Indianapolis, Cln. Jefferson Rit, Ist Mort. bonda. n" rark6a lot do 7s 8 year Asaewment 7s l«0« New Vork 6 per cent, "iS.. 93 100 do -!».. W 100 do do 88 10) do do do IS.. do „ ,100 do *87.. do do 7*8 102x1:04 N. r. Central new do do construction North Missouri, Ist Mortunge do do 2d Mortgage. CITY BONDS. Watr 106 Soath Side Railroad bonds. do do skg fund. Morris ft E'sex, convertible... 100 100 Brookl]rr6a M 97 H" MM *i ABh.,ni'wbds. do old bds ft Erie, ft i6i' 100 llaTcn es Krie guaranteed Jacksonville St. L. Michigan 68,1873 do do do do ft do 60 56 Itll do 6s,I»78 do 68,I»i3 do 78,1878 New York 7b, Bounty, reg do 78, do cou do 68, Canal, 1812 do 6a, 1873 do ta,1874 do Is, 1875 do 6e,18T7 do 68,1878 do 6a, 1874 Sa.iais do do 5g,18W ft ri. Cleve., P'tIIIo 1:1 101 101 do 1879 "WarLoan fndlanaas. War Loan do 5a, do new York Boston. H. Cedar Palls ft Minn.. Ist M.... Detroit, Monroe * Tol bonds. is" Lake Snore Div. bonds 1<M Clcre. ft Tol.,n"W bonds . Illnola .. do do 3d Mort ToL, Peoria* Warsaw, K, I).. do do W. D.. do do 3d M.. Penltentlarr ^8, & Chicago, lat Mort.... * Ot Eastern, Ist Mort.. Chic. to" Calirornla'a 10: l..lollet do do 98 Mortgage... Consolidated... do do do 7 8-10 do do 1st Mort do do I.ftM. d do 2dM do . MarlelM ft CIn., 1st Mort Iciilc. ft Milwaukee lat Mort... »SK »IH 68 Connecticut T do do Cnna. (g»id) <. I'M Plltt.*Connellsv..lBt M i?,**) do dn lat M.,<. Isn West Md,lstM.. endorsed,!, 1« do Ist M..anpnd.,t,%l.. do M, endorsed, 3d 4, t*. _ Baltimore ft Oliinsioek Cincinnati 5s Connecticut River 14* do 6s Connecticut ft Paaaumpalc, pf. Ml ii" do 7-808 Eaatern (Maaa.) ......'.. U4)(, Ham. Co., Ohio 6 p. e. ong bds. FItchbnrg. liS^ iS'* Income ft Miss., 1st do 61 now bonda OiM 6a, new floating debt. do Sandusky Concord iCln., 48K Dnb. ft Slonx C, lat Murt S8» Peninsula RR Bonda 6t. L. ft Iron Mountain. Ist M, r.k MIL ft St. Paul, iBt Mort. 88.. Carollnate, (Id dn Funding Act, 18M. as ' MM 9IM iBoalon ft Maine Beaton ft Providence Cheshire preferred., IdMort SdMort 4th Mort do Ohio — — I Alton Sinking Fund, do ist Mortgage.. ft do do to W endoned do ft do do do Chic, new bonda 7a, 78, ft Ist M..cona.,7,*8( 3d Mori., 7, 1891 ft Can., new, 8 108 ft Mas*., lat M.,*,'n. .'Boston ft Albany slock... .Boston, Hartford A Erie.. Boston ft Lowell stock... do 3d Mort. 8<lMort. p. c. oo'tbdaiKU PltU., Consol. S. F'd. 93 00 do do S7 OeorgUda W. Verm'l Crn., r Norihem lent., let M do do Id M., ».. .. |F., t do do 8d M.^.r., 9, 1900 do do «<«>«. <T. ft t)*,":! nrw bds. loiMiiUJi Vermont ... Chic, ut M... 104 Vermont .. do do do 8 Cleve. do new bonda do roiflHtcrcd old... IBM... do do do do I8u7... do do do Korth do do do do SoDth do do do PltU., Ft. Tenneaaoo 6a, oM do do new bonda 4o do do do n .. ft Toi. Milk 1111; Kund.. Jersey ceniriii, .'d Mort. CleTe. hM) r<0 (a, vaua, fta,l*74,r<o Ja, KMAa.rw 3d M..7, do lalM.(naw>7. Old Col. ft Nrwpurl Bda. 6, T*. 5?* do do Bonda, 7, 1877.. loey *nt Rutland, now, 7 1 M.,7, I* I»t 111.. do II. I»i I .i«iM..a . i ft nxltlBiora. Cln.,8an.ft Cler.,IstM.,7, 77. Rastem Maaa.,eonT., t, IIM.,. Ilartroi d ft Kris, iBt M (old ) 7. , Morris i-sni,hwj)mf BM.IAak Uk »iilneT ft Toi.. I8t v.. IKIO.... LftSo. Iowa. Ill Mc.rt ItlM llTXi 8*len* ft Cbli-ago Kx ended 101 .. :< Mort... alonaft < i>i I Cklo. •a, Aik. iii.i. KAILROAD BONDS. lU (Not prttrloualj qaoted.) tt.iSBI.rM ;... ••,5«)i, (imir<(r •a, S-Ma, 0'>HS r«(r •a, s-9a>, ( Ism, DOW) Aire novBiTiK*. ta. Interest. stock-.. .,,.... JacUirM M. 8a. do do 99), ft osrt^ts. N. Orleans ft Op«loaa.lstBlt Mb*. Central. Ist M.7S..... MISS, ft Tenn., 1st 7S BsslTsan. ft U aasi la ds M *' 1 94M I Msm^ »» ft da McatUi ft CbsrUstoa, do do LttUe K. Ist 7s.. 1i>.. stock. MM.... n III M 78 110 THE CHRONICLE. 624 Sthe matltoay iHonitor. EXPLANATION OF THE STOCK AND HOND TABLES. I. Prices of tlie Active Stocks and Bonds are given In the " Bankers' Gazette " ante ; quotations ol other securities will be found on the preceding page. and Insurance Stocks, ininlng. Petrolenm. CltY 3. Bank Railroad and Gas Stocks, and Soiitlieru Securities of those kinds which are least active, are all quoted either reaularly or occasionally at the end of "Bankers' Gazette," on a previous page. 3> Tbe Table of Railroad, Canal and Other Stocks, on another page, comprises all Companies of which the stock is sold in any of the The figures just after the name principal cities (except merely local corporations) ol the company indicate the No. of the Chkonicle in which a report o! the Company was last published. star (*) indicates leased roads ; in the dividend column i=M:(ra; 6=5iocA: or scrip. . A 4. The Tables of Railroad, Canal and Other Bonds occupy in all, four pages, two of which will be published in each number. In these pages the bonds of Companies which have been consolidated are frequently The date given in brackets given under the name of Consolidated Corporation. Immediately alter the name of each Company, indicates the time at which the statement of its finances was made. In the "Interest Column" the abbreviations are as follows J. ic J.=January and July F. &. A-=February and August M. & S.= March and September A. & O. April and October; M. & N.=May and NovemQ. J. =Quarterly, beginning with January; ber; J. & D.=June and December Q, F. ^Quarterly, beginning with February. Q. M."=Quarterly, beginning with ; ; : ; — — March. 5. The Table of State Securities 20, 1871. to the probable leasing of these Companies to the Pennsylvania submitted Railroad. It is stated that the question to be to-morrow at a meeting in Trenton, will be not whether the stockholders, for that the lease will be submitted to a vote of seems to be conceded ; but whether it shall be submitted with or ' without a recommendation from the united boards that it be accepted. Either way it is expected that the lease will be at the earliest practicable moment submitted to vote of the stockholders two-thirds of the entire capital stock of the company in its favor being required to make the lease effective. The Reading Railroad, which made an offer on the day of the annual meeting of the joint companies to lease the Delaware and Raritan canal and a conditional offer to take the united works, having made an arrangement with the President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company for the use of the canal should the lease be perfected, withdraws its offer and is no longer a competitor for either of the united works. This fact will be made known officially at a meeting of the directors to-morrow, and thence be promulgated to the stockholders and the public. The lines of the Companies, owned or leased, traverse 17 of the ; 21 counties of New Jersey. TECB CAPITAIi 18 — stock will Funded debt Funded debt be published monthly, on [May of the several of the United : $18,990,677 12.420,060 3,843.893 Companies Companies the last Saturday of the month. The Table of City Bonds will be published on tbe third Saturday abbreviations used in this table are the same as those in tbe tables ot railroad bonds mentioned above. The Sinking Fund or assets held bv each city are given on the same line with the name 6. of each month. The Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad, und Albany and Susquehanna Railroad. — At the annual meeting of ihe stockholders of this ComMay 9, 1871, the following gentlemen were elected Charles N. Talbot, Edward J. managers for the ensuing year Woolsey, George Talbot Olyphant, Abiel A. Low, Robert Lenox Kennedy, James M. Halsted, Le Grand B. Cannon, James R. Taylor, Thomas Dickson, John Jacob Astor, Thomas Cornell, William Thomas Dickson, Esq., was J. Hoppin, Isaac N. Seymour. re-elected President for the ensuing year. The Delaware and Hudson Canal The New York Times says Company, on the 18th inst., concluded a perpetual lease of the Rensselaer and Saratoga Railroad from Albany and Troy to Lake Champlain and Rutland, Vt., including the old Schenectaoy and Saratoga branch from Schenectady to Ballston. The whole mileage of road, without sidings and turnouts, is 181 miles, and the conditions of the lease are seven per cent on the capital of $6,000,000 the first year and eight per cent thereafter, and the interest charges on the debt of $203,816 per annum. The arrangement aifords the Delaware and Hudson a complete or continuous connection by rail from their mines via the Albany and Susquehanna Road, already under lease, to Lake Champlain and the North. In regard to the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad, formerly leased to the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, it will be remembered that a very fierce contest for the control of the railroad company was inaugurated some eighteen months ago between Mr. Fisk and Mr. Ramsey; that each party claimed to have elected their Board of Directors, and that various suits were thereupon commenced. The main suit was tried in the Special Term, and judgment given against the Fisk party. An appeal was taken, and the General Term have given a decision affirming the judgment, and directing that further prosecution of all suits be discontinued, the Ramsey directors to have immediate possession, and costs to be paid by the Fisk party. pany, held : Total $35,-245,e20 This capital is represented in property as follows Cost of Camden and Amboy road, Including branches, steamboats, other equipmentSj real estate, &c Cost of Delaware and Rantan Canal and appurtenances : $12,527,160 41 4,735,353 53 8,955,993 16 642,112 36 Cost of New Jersey Railroad, equipments, property, <Sc Real estate and capital payments of the United Companies INVESTMENTS IN AND ADVANCES TO AUXILIARY WORKS. $4,586,906 00 3.56,750 00 2,064,728 68 70,708 17 57,752 04 447,880 30 831,285 26 Stocks Bonds and mortgages ^ Advances Sent to England for extinguishment of English debt Sinking fund for extinguishment of sterling loan Unappropriated materials on hand Cash in hand of Treasurers $36,245,629 41 Total : be seen that the Companies hold $8,500,000 of stocks, bonds, cash, &c., beyond the cost of their railways and canal. The traffic of the Companies last year was It will : RKCEIPTS. Passengers Freiglits Mails MiscellaneonB Total Operating roads Operating canal $3,806,658 37 2,6.56,121 18 37,602 16 70,173 72 Del. | | I & Raritan Canal $888,352 86 a34,642 20 467,921 30 $7,260,240 78 I $238,824 83 304,849 50 $4,549,186 $2,711,055 836,874 387,803 rotal 60 18 92 50 70,441 97 30,000 00 171,367 91 Interest Transit duty and taxes Premium and discount Sinking fund N. J. R. R. and Trans. Co General expenses $1,486,488 30 1,224,666 88 Total and .. EXPENSES. $3,947,011 87 Operating steam towing. Net receipts Profit tolls Steam towing Rente and auxiliaries.. loss carried to surplus earnings Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad. — The Chicago Baihoay Review has the following from the annual report " The organization of the company is a of the above company consolidation of several, forming a continuous line of railway from Buffalo to Chicago, 540 miles in length. The company owns and Elyria to Sandusky, 35 miles; Oak controls branches as follows Harbor to Millbury, 15; Toledo to Elkhart, Ind., 133; Adrian to Erie Railway Stock The Times of to-day has the following Jackson, Mich., 46; and Adrian to Monroe, Mich., 34 miles. The The Erie movement ran up to 34| per cent, and new theories of following roads are under separate organizations, but their capital the source of the rise multiply as the price goes up, and the appa- stock is owned wholly by this company Detroit, Monroe and rent " mystery" contributes in no inconsiderable measure to the Toledo, 65 miles, and the Kalamazoo and White Pigeon, 37 miles. anxiety of the speculators to take " a turn" in this new wheel of The Jamestown and Franklin Road, 51 miles, is operated by the comfortuneThe Pennsylvania Central people and the Michigan pany under a lease. It is contemplated at an early day to construct Central are credited to-day, in common with the Vanderbilt roads, this line from Jamestown to Ashtabula. The Kalamazoo, Allegan with making court to a great property which it is supposed Gould and Grand Rapids Road, 58 miles, is also operated under a lease, and Fisk will soon voluntarily abandon lor a consideration, or be making in all 1,014 miles owned and leased by the company. The ousted by decree of the Federal Court when the main issue of the company has 34 miles of double track, mainly between Erie and Heath and Raphael suit becomes before Judge Blatchford. It was Cleveland, ai.d 233 miles of side track. During the past year 25 authoritatively announced at the Stock Exchange this forenoon new engines and 601 cars have been added to the equipment of that the 30,000 new shares, notified 80 days ago for registra- the road, at a cost of $654,309 45. The present equipment contion at the Farmers' Loan on the 19th would not be issued. The sists of 299 engines, 274 passenger and 6,077 freight cars. The present registration of $75,000,000 is now overdrawn by authorized capital stock is $50,000,000, of which sum $35,000,000 30,000 shares, so that the Heath and Raphael, or Coleman Receiver has been issued to the stockholders of the various company's stock, 60,000 shares, cannot all be registered unless a corresponding entering into the consolidation, leaving $15,000,000 which can be amount of other stock is withdrawn by purchase, which will issued only by authority of a previous vote of the stockholders. probably be done. The bonded debt of the company amounts to $23,283,000, the The Hudson River and Harlem Connection.— The new annual charge for interest on which is $1,561,810, the rate being Of this debt cross-cut line, connecting the Hudson River Railroad at Spuyten 7 per cent on all except $200,000, which is 8 per cent. Duyvil with the Harlem Railroad at Mott Haven, is nearly com- 19 classes of bonds are secured by mortgages on distinct portions pleted. The building of this road has been attended with compar- of the road. The earnings for 1870 were atively little difficulty, with the exception of a heavy cut through From freight $8,6.58,661 81 4,153,612 11 the Hill near the Mott Haven terminus. The cutting is through From passengers 645,366 94 sources other all hard gneiss and blue rock, 40 feet deep by 20 wide. The road will From be readv in June, when all the Hudson River passenger trains will $13,157,540 86 Total run over it. 8,368,821 08 Operating expenses, including taxes—62 1-6 per cent Taxes on Dividends, Sec, In 18rO.-The Attorney-General 5,088,719 73 Net earnings (whose opinion was asked by the Secretary of the Treasury) Interest on bonded debt and guaranteed stock, leases, etc 1,777,202 42 2,752,360 00 pronounces that the statute of 1870 does not remit, as the Commis- Dividends— two of 4 per cent each sioner of Internal Revenue assumed that it did, taxes on dividends $4,529,662 42 Total and interest falling due in the last five months of 1870, commencing Surplus 569,157 3G for the year August Ist. The earnings of the road for the first four months of the year United Companies of New Jersey.— The following dispatch in 1871 show an] Increase of $393,000 over the corresponding from Philadelphia, May 18, gives the latest information in regard period of last year. : : — : May THE OHKOMCLK. 20, 1871. 625 — Aunual Rrport of neorcla Hallroa4. Tlia rocelpU for The operating expenawi hvn beea 49 89-100 p«r emt of th« road rarningH havo Inrreaiwd orer tlio provlonR yonr thn mira of gross earningi. BanilnicMrail* $11,177 $148,000 02 and the out profit*— attvr dcdurtlnK "U paynixnt* on Numii'T iiTpaaaengaracarrled ... 7S«,7«7 account of roud, ordinai7 •"^ eiLraordiuary liavo iiicri-asol TfinM of frffght rof>ved In narrow gaatrn rmrn 4flt,fllO btvri 08. The gruu eaj-ulngs of the road have The net tiaming have been 13 08-100 per cent, out of wbieh two $3tt&.IM f30.2(!8 roiti pawKciiircr r<*cvl|>U cash dlvldenda have bien paid to the stnekhnlden, of 4 per east l.OW.IIU 71 ; M — Ii.% From Ffom frvichl r.Ti-lpt. mjllrocclpti. -»l,vn,og« hnvi< lMM<n «,»*•. SI The operatinK expenaea for the same time For nimliirtlng traiirporUtlOB For iimtlvc powiir For mnliitrnuiici-or w«jr For uialuU'uaucc of cars M «:t,71H T7 . »7ii.0IW 14 &8,tB9 »— Uovernmunt each, freo fniin lax. fiailroaH /ierord. The Oheaapeake and Ohio allroad.—M—- — : $a'»l,!HVi 41 V^'k h Hatch, financial agents of thia CVimpaoy, have relirefttlon of the Coni|>any, advanced the price of Its 'if>(* Imnds, which '.huy are negotiating from 90 to 01 in CMuatquaa^* of the improved Investment deinacd they give the following aeeout of the progrcHs in the extenaion and Iroproveinont of the road: Since the first mortgage six per c«!nt loan of the Company for $15,000,000, now in [irocess of negotiation, for the purpnae of extending the road to the Ohio Klver, aa a great East and Weat Trunk line, was first placed u|>on the maract, over $7,000,000 have been sold. The jjroceeds from the sales of the bond* have kept the Company amply supplied with means lor vigoronaly pushing forward the work on the extension ol the road between the White Sulphur Springs (the present Western termlnaa, to which the road is coiniileted and In operation, 227 miles from Richmond), and the final western terminus on the Ohio River, and have been economically and judiciously applied to that purpose. The rapidity with which the bonda are now- being taken, in exchange for Hve-twenties and for new investments, Inanres the early sale of the remaining balance of the loan, which will yield an amount suincioiit tor the completion of the work. For various reasons It was deemed important by the directors that the western end of the road, from the Ohio River to the vicinity of the Falls of the Kanawha, a distance of about 90 miles, should b« completed at the earliest day possible, and consequently a large proportion of the labor and resources at their command have been directed, during the past year, to tliat'end. R-lween 5.000 and 0,000 men have l>een constantly employed upon the work, which has rapidly progressed toward completion, and it is expected that this division of the road will be put In operation during the coining summer. In the meantime the work on the intermediate section, lietween the Falls of the Kanawha and White Sulphur Springs, is all under contract and being carried forwnnl. so as to be ready as soon as the tunnel at the Big Bend of the Oieenbriar can be opened. This tunnel is being rapidly excavated, and the entire extension will be completed and the road put in o(>eralion as a continuous through line from the tide waters of the Chesapeake Bay to the Ohio River, and prepared to receive the extensive through business which awaits it. within a little more than a year from this date. During the past year the completed portion of the road now in operation from ISichmond to the White Sulphur Springs, 227 miles, has l)oen thoroughly improved. About 18 miles of the iron lias l)cen replaced with new mils of the best quality, and important additions to the equipment have been made in new locomotives, cars, &c. The earnings of this portion, aa a local road, without through connections, have l>een very satisfactory, reaching nearly $800,000 for the past year. The certainty of the early completion of the road to the Ohio River has also stimulated a great activity in preparations for the development of the mineral and agricultoral resources along its line. ' $8a,6M *7 , EarnlDga over and above ordinary ezpenm Out of which have been paid tM^.SSIl 90 $U,On Forn«wdopoU For For For For For For new looomotlvi- enginua ni-w c«r« old locomotive onslnea rebuilt new toolB and gtatlonary onglnw Oovcmment tax on gmaa recalpU 48,987 106,ISS J8,987 4,(8B 4,797 1,886 new colvcru t6 W TO 4* 35 79 «- $«06,440 01 Net Income 14(H,0«i 2>J Balance to rcBcrvcd fund $147,064 73 The gross earniofcs of the road have been very eatlsfactory, but it will be seen that the expenditure has been very heavy. It will be noticed that the earnings of the banking department have been small, and somewhat less than the receipts tor the previous year. This resulted from the lact that our cash capital, previously small, was mostly absorbed in some ejtrn outlays and investments, by which interest and discount account were of course reduct>d. As an auxiliary to our other business, the means of advancing to merchants aid business men are very desirable, and, as one means of supplying this want, the Board proposed an increase of capital to an ext«nt not exceeding $5,000,000, and obtained permission of the Legiulature for that purpose. Subscriptions were obtained to the amount of $44,800, and the subscription suspended until the Bonsp of the st,)ckliolder8 could be had on this mode of incrensiug the resources of the company. The sense of tho Convention ia respectfully asked on this subject. The very heavy outlays necessary for improvement of property and to secure our Southwestern connections, as explained in our last annual report, added to the inducements to increase cash resources in some form. This could only be done by increased subscriptions to capital, by au increase of bonded debt, or by sale of securities. These resources have all been partially resorted to, and by reference to the state of the company now exhibited and compared with that of last year you will find Caplul stock increased Bond acconnt $44,800 65,500 increased Stocks and bonds of companies reduced otlier 18,000 Total $1«3,300 CInciouatI, Hamilton 4k Darton Railroad.— The stock- holders of the C, H. & D. R.R. met in annual session on the Otii inst. Daniel McLaren, the president of the company, submitted liis annual report, from which we abstract the following interesting items Gross earnings of the company $1,870,881 9t 6a7,»9S 98 Traneportatiou cipcnscs $848,3% 05 Leaving for Interest on bonds, taxes and dlvldendf Central Faoiflo . MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. —Chinago Northwestern — ^Cbie-Bock Is a^dPae*''<•-^^Cle. Chicago and Alton. . 1871 (890 m.) 1870. n4Si tn.) $413,101 394,176 488.331 638,798 768,719 1870. m.) (431m.) $343,181 815,096 388,796 328,380 345,839 $281,106 1408,658 C418.709 „506,880 §497,519 (431 S»t,480 481,085 578,870 756,980 r 7»,274 402,8M I 783,099 851,044 498,931 506,6X3 468,912 397,515 840,350 s 807,815 = i T l 777,183 838,447 746,800 612,806 7,983,513 4,681,563 —lllint i» Central lflC9. (862 m.1 $6S0.l:)7 . ti61.788 601,326 555,067 ; 666,415 e08,»l5 668,861 861,53'l 896,677^997,750 8,678,966 (»Wm.) $l9«,7in 1871. (393 m.) »i.\981 158,954 164,699 143,860 1870. (3.%5 4,M9,4(M 1869. (251 m.) m.) $2n2,'U7 1870. (251 m.) $99,541 90,996 104,585 $90,177 98,275 106,611 109,752 117,686 118,198 118.086 143,014 135,876 118,306 110,887 106.246 110,213 111,117 Ili;i27 118,407 139,996 1,391,346 1,418,866 1871. (355 m.) 918.735 136,311 319,964 186,416 101..'r79 June July.. .... 1871. (951 m.) 18 ,888 196,294 140,740 118,173 1,371,780 1,.371,780 1,14)1,145 1,087,963 Tear. 13,355,461 (210 m.) $!I2.181 1869. (964 m.) Jan.... . . Feb. »,SM,468 1,848,881 $384,119 390,888 886,887 . niar.... . . April. niay. 411,814 408,848 July.., Aujr. ., Sept.... Not... Tear.. — (210 . Jan .. . 1«,372. Feb... 144,6:17 129.590 736,664 ^684,155 p 479,938 1383,488 . . inar. April. niajr.. June. Juljr.. Oct... Not... Dee... YeW.. 329.127 360,430 411,080 408,188 883,187 1871. (284 m.) 418,756 441,866 441,885 470,708 ........ 1869. (816 m.) $454,196 830,133 410,774 460,187 880.844 878,800 666,841 4,749,163 4,791,385 7,180,668 68M68 378,860 4*7,990 511.477 794,514 46.3,873 Alton 1870. (m m.) 1871. CH9 m 1869. ) ^iL $181,881 127,817 168,788 171.118 179,347 195,081 190,719 »«>,38t •«t,7Dt 811,881 M7,aas 490,846 101,186 168,ie6 1,014,541 148,486 313,198 1«,04S »a,8n 174,0n itt,aBB 819,011 S17,8n aaiino St>,B7S 161,186 ,-Vortli Kiaonri.-, isn. 187a (630 W. (404 ».) 1871. 1870. (936 m.) 0,018 m.) 306,71)6 tiBe,171 aai,8a 317,481 877,000 Sn,«71 443.133 463,864 430,700 795,737 836,434 881,098 806,818 906,313 791,014 918,796 $113,101 198,907 988,161 1870. Weit^ra.-. •"• i»ri. 198,7» Ml,080 98«,68» MtiiaB 188,88l 188^188 — . VnioaPMifla — 1870. na86M.) lB/7,888 ,•46 mtjm 4711,790 411,886 451,a8 «B,>1S ifr,7M 484,188 886,174 ailL791 888,488 444.810 ... tamM 1081188 888,188 888,170 •88,880 748^408 641,408 TK^aiB TH,6H Bfn,8if »8,»4 4,iaM<l 4.416,4a 188,»6 188,000 aa8,48( Mioim 175,458 810,8110 198,887 144,181 3,160,410 iS:» 846,880 jg,jj_ 180,188 465,089 818^180 810,888 •48,688 88l,7g6 886,411 8a(kO<8 S13,S» Clp *t-« '^4 387.172 361,871 478, 3TO * T.Hante.^-Toledo.Wa)! * $l32,8tt Ausr. Sepl... 1870. (•»*•:) $.337,992 1,0»,8I1 801,163 498,960 1A960 $401,275 449,654 500,398 443,300 507,900 529,.M9 462,400 666,100 507,800 838,199 Col, jg,j(j_ m.) ( simiiiii 433,786 171,888 197,897 154,181 144,164 (590 m.) ^¥>lwattks»*8t. Fasl.-> aK,881 1888. (210 m.) in.) 351 .767 319,441 329,980 353,888 473,548 490,773 448,419 874,943 .-It. L. 1871. tn.) 645,789 386.885 449,981 r 623,841 JL455,606 -•flohigan Central. . $12K.218 < 1871. 1870. 1869. m.) (590-90 &15,7D8 Jnae.. ^-Tronirt 1870 ],80^673 Oct.. Not... Dec... . 1871. ( $706,024 753,782 856,359 929,077 1,177,897 1,154.529 1,080.916 1.246,213 1,275,171 2)i8,4l4 1,2,M,95» 1.157,066 1,037,973 Aujf... Sept... . (l,l.'>7»n.) I jr. Bee..., 187,8» ,W,m ma Oet..., Il80.4n a3i8,9n &3M,187 April. . 1870. m.) $892,092 830,286 1.142,165 1,112,190 mar.... 144,093 141,376 1816.064 1149,987 ,^91 1,919 E.300,971 . 153,5.31 95.666 102.683 101,265 116,175 116,»t9 107,524 122,000 124,124 117,009 1X1,791 118,078 15«,06S 170,988 . 1441,197 (404.263 267.867 996,566 179,548 189,190 1:9,488 179,461 816,0«4 837,649 339,091 881,490 'J218,984 JTan ... Feb... 313,555 340,.W1 379,618. 398,654. •-47.'>,808 Obi" % Kiis'iHlopl. ^Paelflo of Ho.-. 1870. 316,036 312,896 318,039 408,6 5 ft I»i9. (1,1.^7 — Karistta andOincinosH — 712,618 897,915 899,061 901,235 90.%225 , 814,413S 811,707 ifiia^ r . 1871. (465 m.) • 1870. 1871. (974 m.) (1109 m.) $1)28.383 639,640 604,693 709,644 566,269 «M0,974 778,980 886,118 841,383 979,400 914,406g- ; t,m,ia i»n. (umatj mj$n »njM 488lM> 884,840 . THE CHRONICLK 626 [May AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK RAILROAD, CANAL, Subscribers will confer a great favor by glTlng ns Immediate notice of COMPANIES. Last paid. FeriodB. Date. ceding page. Kallroads. 3;ffi.l(X, Atlan. it Atlanta and West Point. No. 2i9..1«) ™ 100 JUO 5U ™ Berkshire, Jan. 21 Jan. ;,256,300 3,691,200 2,494,900 1,232,200 ...,.-- ^f^^ St. Lawrence* No. Angusta and Savannah* .... Baltimore and Ohio, April 8 Washington Branch* Parkcrsourg Branch . Mar. Jan. do do & & Mar., "71 Sep. July. Dec, lAprll& Oct. Apr., Apr., 'eoolixjO Quarterly. Jan. & July. April* Oct. 1 "71 Panama, No. Phllad. and Erie,* Mar. I May . Nov, &, Jan.& July. Jan.& July. Jan. A & Ang. Feb. June June Central Pacific No. 28S Jharlottc, Col. & Aug., No. 257. 100 Cheshire, preferred, Jan. 21 100 Chicago and Alton. Mar. 25 100 do preferred do No.'JCS.lOo Chic, Barling. & Quincy. Dec. Dec. ft ft "70 "70 '70 - Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska^ .100 Chicago and Northwest. No. '273.100 pref....l00 do do Chic, Rock Is. ftPac. No.263...I00 Oin., Hamilton ft DaytonNo.26.').tOO Cln., lilchln. ft Chicago"No.263. 50 Clncln., Sand.ftClev., No. 278.. 50 do prcf. 50 do do Cincinnati ft Zanesviiie, No. 216 50 Clev., Col.. Cln. ft Ind. No. 253. .100 ..,„.,., .. May 428,616 ^„ NOT. ft -.--,.-- Jan.&July. Jan., Jan.* Dec, 452,g0 July. 2,095,000 5,000,000 4,062,600 1,!»9,200 December.. Jan. July ft Jan.&July Jan.&Jnly lOO 100 50 100 Fltchburg 100 Georgia. No. 259 Joseph, Jan. 28100 Hannibal and St. pref.. ..100 do do Hartford* N. Haven, Jan. 21... 100 scrip. ...190 — 100 Lackawanna and Bioomsburg .. .50 Lake Sho.& Mich. South. Feb. 25.10(1 50 Lehigh and Susquehanna 50 Leliigh Valley, No. 255 50 Little Miami, No. 217 50 Little Schuylkill.' No.255 50 Long Island, No. 252 Lex., prf N0.-276 JO common ;... 50 Lonisville and Nashville No. 284100 Louisville, New Alb. * Chicago. 00 Macon and Western Maine Central Marietta & 100 100 Cln., 1st prl. May '71 '71 '66 Feb., 1,996,250 3,740,000 4.156,000 Jau.ftJnly. Jan. ftjoly ..-^ -,. 4,800,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 Jan. * 35,000,000 8,739,S(I0 May* 18,159,100 Quarterly, 4,10;,-.50 '2,646,100 (Juarterly. 3,000,000 848,700 1,623,482 8,681,500 2,800,000 2,500,000 Jan., '68 Feb., '71 Sept., Jan., '67 '66 Nov, Jnly. Dec, "70 5 Feb. ft Aug. Feb." '71 "iyi 910,350 576.050 869,450 Jan. ft July. Feb. & Aug. Jan. & July. Quarterly. N,819,275 6,35,200 1.365,600 & Feb. 3,93!',900 1,695,825 1,988,150 3,000,000 1,700,000 i,ooo.a)o 14,700,000 Aug. January. Jan., Feb., Jan., Feb., '71 Feb., "il '71 Jan., "TO May, '70 Jan., '71 Dec, Jan., '70 '69 555,500 Jan. 2,227,000 Jan. Jan., '64 1,209.IHK) Pec, 70 Jan., '71 May Nov ft 8K "V 2>i|=d '71 '71 '71 Jan., 1,000,01X1 3 (gM) 3 May, "'68 Annually. 5 1 3), 36,745,000 & July June & Dec. ,666,0(X1 Jan. 2..500.000 2.660.(*I0 2,95i>,80O Jan. 1 * .Inly. & July. Feb.* Aug, Jan. * July. Juneft Dec 1,400,5.55 1 July ft .983,563 3' Dec, '70 Feb., Feb., Feb., '71 '71 4 2 8,2'29.594 Feb.* Ang. 1.6S3,.3.'iO Feb. 15.000,000 4.999.40O Aug, ft Feb.* Aug, May & Nov, '71 '67 '67 Jan.&July. Jan., '65 1,500,000 Mar. & Sept. 25 2,500,000 50 600.000 Jnne Dec. 25 100 10,250,000 600,000 100 100 4.400,000 Qna,rterly. 4,(XX1,000 50 1,250,000 Jan. ft July, 50 1,000,000 10 & Nov, May 3,400,000 100 Aug. 1,250,000 Feb. 100 25 2,000,000 Feb. & Ang. Mar., "71 Dec, '69 8,739,8(«1 I & & 1.908.'2(I7 2,888,977 2.002,746 2.907.850 1,100,000 Feb. Feb. * & — Dec, Dec, Dec, Doc, .50 l,.'iO(l,IXX) Jersey City and Hoboken... 20 asfi.ooo Manhattan 5t> 4.000,000 2.SO0.000 1.000,000 1 1x0.000 731 .'250 100 50 50 '70 '70 May, New York Lite and U nlon Trust '70 i'71 Jan., Aug. Feb., Trust . . .100 100 100 100 100 do '71 '69 '71 do Trust, Quicksilver certlf. preferred 100 100 100 do common Cor—Pullman Palace N, y. & BROOKLYN NAME OF ROAD. . May 4 Nov 111,000 """ " Jan., Grand Street & Newtown (B'kljn). Hudson A"enue (Brooklyn) Metropol an (Brooklyn) Ninth Avenue Second Avenue I 2,000.001. ".9,993,817 4,024.474 Sixth ..,. 'jon« 4,25»,460l & n«e Qiiarteilf, Avenue Third Avenue V«n Brant 8tree»,fVoo!ilyn> Feb. & Aug. 1,000,000 Jan. & July. 1,500,000 Jan. & July. 1 .o(X).ooo Ang., '66 Feb.., '71 '71 '71 5 '71 '71 S Nov., Jan., "70 •S' "Jl 5 July, '66 Jan., "TO Jnne, '71 July, 5 6 '71 S Nov., '69 2>4 Dec, '67 2X 3 Sept. ,'«» Dec, Dec, '70 •70 5 Feb., '71 10 Dec, Dec, •70 '70 5 J 4 •2,836,600 8,693.400 Jan. 2,.32.|,000 4,300,000 5.700,000 ,000,00 I STOCK. Bleecker street and Fulton Ferry, Broadway (Brooklyn) Broadway and Seventh Avenue Brooklyn City Brooklyn City and Newtown Brooklyn, Prospect Park * Flatb. Brooklyn and Rockaway Beach Bushwick (Brooklyn) Central Park, North & East Rivers. Conev Island (Brooklyn) Dry Dock, East B'dway & Battery. Eighth Avenne Forty-second St. & Grand St. Ferry. , . . Nov. Jan.&July. 41,C63',i(« "70 * July. Felj: '15. Qiiaftc'rly "3 CITY PASSENGER RAILROADS . May* July. & United States Trust Gold Mariposa (iold, pref Dc'cV^O June* Dec May * Nov. 4,000,0(10 & 'TO '67 J.an., "71 Jnly. Jan.* Jnly, ft '71 Dec, Jan., Fob,, Jan,, Jan., July. Feb. & Aug, Jan. & July. Jan. '70 Feb., Nov'.','69 Quarterly. 3.000 TOO 25 (Juarterly. 100 10.000.000 100 18,000,000 Jan. & July. Quarterly. 6,000,000 100 5,000,000 100 Wells, Fargo* Co Quarterly. 4,000,000 100 St«ani,'(*i».— Atlantic Mall Quarterly. 100 20.000,000 Pacific Mail, No. 257 July. Trust. 25 1 ,000,0(X) .Ian. 2>'K«(.— Farmers' Loan Jan.* Jnly. 1 .(xxi.mxi 100 National Trust Dec, ft Jan.* 1. '200.000 Harlem Jfinifi;/.— Marlnosa Jan. Dec, * '20 85ct*8 Jan.1,'70 Express.— hA».m% Amcr. Merchants' Union United States May, "71 June, '69 Worcester,* Jan. 21.100 L. Champ.* NOJ275 lai prel.lOOl * I'acfftc* Atlantic Jan.&July, & do Jan. Dec, Feb., Feb., New York . ft Jan., Apr., "Tl '71 -71 '70 '71 '71 Aug. Aug. Williamsburg Impror-ement—CAnton 16W Boston Water Power loo Brnnswick City r«!«ff)'apft— West.Union. No. 277.100 Jan. ft Jnly. Jan. ft Jnly. Feb. & Aug. New Bed. & Taunton, Jan. 21... 100 New Hav. * Northamp., Jan. 21.100 lOO New Jersey," No. '250 scrip do New London Northern Jan. 21.. 100 N. Y. Cent. * Hudson B..Jnn.21.100 do certlllcates..lOO do New York and Harlem, Jan. 21.. 50 do pref. do 50 New York & New Haven,No.2"i6.100 dii Apr., Jan., Apr., '70 Metropolitan Jan.&July .1(0 O'lloandMlBSlsslppl. April I....IOO do do prel lool OH Croe lu-d Aliegh,inv mver,to' Quarterly. & July. April * Oct. .June * Dec. Jan. * lu'y. Apl-i Oot. & Pennsylvania Spring .Mountain Spruce Hill Wllkcsbarre Wvoming Valley (?«*.— Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) Feb .& Ang. and Essex," No. 250 50 100 Nashua and Lowell, Jan. 21 Nashv. * Chattanooga No. 220.100 No. 195 100 Naugatack. Ogdecs. "Tl '70 Feb., 50 50 Ashburton July ICorrrs Norwich M Dec, '71 '67 Water Bntler Consolidation Md Cumberland Coal * Iron V aryland Coal Co , Mobile ft.Montg.prel No.2S3.. .. 100 Mobile and Ohio, No. 259 N.Y.,Prov. and Boston lJo.32a.100 Norfolk and Petersburg, pref.. .100 do da ^ar. .100 do ordinary .. do North Carolina. No. 267 lOO Northern of N.H'm|»hlre,No.257100 Northern Ceulral. No.249 50 Northeast. (S.C). April;a 50 do doSp.c.prel 50 North Missouri, No. '259 Itt. (forth Pennsyl vania 50 e Cort^— American 100 .. I '7 July, 50 Union, preferred West Branch andSuFcjuehanna. 50 Quarterly do 2d prcf.. 150 do do common .. do Manchester ft Lawrence, No.247.100 Memphis and Charleston. No.278.2i lOO Mlchlgau Central. No. 267 Milwaukee and St. Paul. No. 258 100 do pref ...100 do Mine Hill & Sch llaven'No.255. .'» Montgomery and West Point Tl '71 Dec, May, pref. Susquehanna* Jan., 728.1TO Man.* Jnly, Aug, 1,025,000 iFeb. Aug. 1.175,000 Feb. 4,300.000 — miBcellaneons. 6. .150 llisslsslppl Central' do pref.lOO 80 Chesapeake and Delaware 25 Chesapeake and Ohio 50 Delaware Division* 100 Delaware and Hudson 100 Delaware and Rarltan* 1^. April 50 Lehigh Coal and Nav"., 50 Monongahela Navigation Co Morris (consolidated) No. 254.. .100 100 preferred do 50 Pennsylvania jQuarterly. 100 Illinois Central. April 8 Indianapolis, Cln. ft Lafayette.. 50 do pref.lOO '70 '70 , Feb., Mar., .Ian. O,0tlo.000 4,(«10,000 May, u,.*ow...^.v JearerBonvillcMad. ft In.,No.227l00 Kansas Paclllc, Mar. 25 ft do do May, 50 Huntingdon and Broad Top" do pref. 50 do LouTsv., Cln. do Schuylkill Navlgat'n (consol.)". 50 Jan., Erie, Jan. 28 do preferred Erie and Pittsburg, No. 255 '71 '70 ...... pref.. SO ilo do 1 ouis & Iron Mountain Louis, Jacksonv. * Chlcago".100 Sandusky, Mansfi'd ft Newark'.lOO Schuylkill Valley," No.255 50 Shamokln Valley ft Pottsvllle* . 50 Pacific, Mar. 18 Utlca and Black River, No.25'J..100 100 Vermont and Canada* Vermont ft Massachu., Jan. 21.100 100 Virginia and Tennessee do pref 100 do 10(1 Western (N. Carolina) West Jersey, No. 250 50 Worcester and Nashua, Jan. 21.100 --;--,-, , 1,203.216 18,808350 100 Fastern (Mass.), Jan.21 50 East Pennsylvania, No. 255 EastTenn. Va. ft Geor, No. 2S4.100 Elmira & Wllliam8port,*No.255. 50 do do Canal. IOC Connecticut River. Jan. 21 50 Cu-nberland Valley, No. 255 Dayton and Michigan* No. 263.. ."iO Housatonic, preferred 18. .'.OO Rutland, common 100 do preferred 100 St. Louis, Alton * Terre Haute. 100 do Union „ Nov 5tl Columbus and Xenia* 50 Concord 100 Concord and Portsmouth Conn ft PassnKipsIc, pf. No.281..100 (to Mar. Railway 100 :/> South CarolinaAprll, 15 South Side (P. & L.) 100 South West. Georgia." No. '220.. 100 Syracuse, Blngh & N. Y, No.252.100 lerre Haute and Indianapolis .. 50 Toledo, Peoria ft Warsaw 100 do do E.D., 1st pref.lOO W.D.,2d pref.lOO do do Toledo, Wabash ft Wc8t.No.255.100 Cleveland & Malionlng,* No. 247. 50 Cleveland and Pittsburg, Jan. 38 50 Colnni, Chic * In. Cen.*No. W7.100 50 Delaware* DolawarcLack.ft West.No.'255. 50 DetroitandMiiwankee, No. 249. 50 pref.... 60 do do 100 Dubuque and Sioux City* (,)gd., Sliore Line Jan. ft July. Mar. ft Sept Mar. & Sept Mar. ft Sept. Jan. ft July. June ft Dec. Jnneft Dec. April* Oct. April ft Oct. — May * Nov 2,653,7.';0 Feb., '71 Feb., 11 '70 D'C July ft '70 Feb.',' "71 Jan. * July Jan. ft July. Jan. & July Feb. & Aug, Quarterly. Jan.* July. St. May, T. 2,425,000 Richmond Richmond Rome, IVatcrt. & Jan. Sr. Nov. Feb. ft Aug. 769,600 Feb. ft Ang. 4,666,800 Ijune ft Dec. 15,000,000 'Jan. ft July. I Worces., Jan. 21. .100 Saratoga, No. 252 .100 and Danville No. 23.5.11X1 & Petereburg N0.2.S5.1OO ft Dec, Jnly. ft Feb. &'Aug. Dec, Dec, Dec, May ft 11 Jan. 4,959,020 2,488,757 482,400 3,629,800 7,000,000 33,493,812 6,001,200 2,400,000 30,401,600 1,099,120 1,597,250 9,520,850 1,793,926 2,123,000 3,000.0 19,714,285 616.700 202,400 1,500,000 2,000,000 Dec, '70 Dec, 50 50 preferred do Cedar Rapids and Mlssonrl* ....100 do prcf.. .. do Cent.Gcorgla & Bank. Co.5lo.2l3100 Central of New Jersey, No. 2.0.. 100 50 Central Ohio 50 preferred do do Last paid. Periods. ing. 847,100 S.000.000 2.700.000 4,300 (100 2.300.000 2,040,000 10,000,000 Jan'.&'joly. .Tan. 21 C»tawlssa,*No.255 11 & Providence Rensselaer scrip «1 Joint Co.'s 'M &'^ Atlantic, No. 251... 50 do preferred.. 50 Mar. W.&C. July. Juue& Dec 250...100 lOO 50 50 50 do do pref Philadelphia and Bead. Feb. 11. 50 Phlladel., ft Trenton," No. 255... 100 Phila., Ger. ft Norris.," No.255... 50 Phlladel., TViimlng.ft Baltimore 50 Pittsb. Connellsville, No. 255.. 50 Pitt8b.,Cin.ft St.L.,Mnr.4 60 pref. 50 do do do Pitts., Ft, guar" Mar. 11. 100 Portland ft Kennebec, No. 253" .100 do Yarmouth stock ccrtificlOO Portland, Saco ft Ports No. 276.100 -275 Pennsylvania & Camden and do Cape Cod, Old Colony & Newport, Jan. 21. IK' Orange, Alexan. & Manass lOO Oswego and Syracuse,* No. 252 50 Pacific (01 Mlfsoun) April 22... 100 '70 •71 '71 Jan., 16,550,862 1,650,000 7 239 535 pref.lOO do do '71 June* Dec. ;33,T00 \^ Oamden and Amboy* No. July, July. ft . JOO Boston and Albany, .Ian. 21 ._.100 Bost., Con. & Mont. No. 373. Boston, Hartford & Krle,No. 24i.l00 500 Boston and Lowell, .Jan. 21 Bostonand Maine, Jan. 21 Boston and Providence, Jan. .il.lOO BnfTalo, New York and Eric". ..100 Burlington and Missouri River .100 . On^ stand- PAH First dlT. 3,1'>5,000 50 J<o. 2ol our Tables, In Stock For a full explanation of this table, see ItaiUcay Monitor, on the preceding page. J"*" Albany & Susqueha'ina'--Allegheny Valley, Atlantic and Guff LIST. any error dlscorered COMPANIES. For alull explanation of this table, see Kctllwa!/ Monilor, on the pre- 20, 1871. 900,000 200,000 2,100,000 1,500.000 400,000 LAST DIVIDENDS PAID. June, 1870.. Oct., 1870.. 2."i4,6(XI 144,600 262,200 1,065,200 500 0(X1 l,'j(XVTO [Mayi'ToiquaVtefiy l,0(«i,iioo 74,>^,0OO Nov., '70, 89mi-annnal... 170.(«XI 106.700 1»I,«X) 797,320 888,100 750,000 1,170,000 73,000 Nov., '70, N'ov., '30 semiannual,,,, ouartorly 2S May THE CHRONICLR. 20, 1871.] CITY BOND _ H27 LIST. Amonnt , ror Ml cxpluiitloa or tlil> T(b|g M< oul* BkllroMl Monitor " praTlouilj. Uandtnt r«r AnoMni For an PzpUuiaflon of Ihla Table sss out. "Railroad Monitor " prt-Tlouly. slandtaf . Wlm mh*t Fwa- -^ » I AUxandrIa, Ri., 8<p„ *•• (ttiaJH).. Wto <;, rectotaroa tflc for KKAo. 3S CooBon bonds Auautla, Oa., Jan., Bonds (tl.lM.'RO) T'. for Tarlon* parpoiea BalUmor; Jan. I, (mM4,M)>:._ ^l T,]07,«U WntiT litan <:ont(iill4lMtrd S,000,OM MridprV wharf «4 WaUrworta.'p Water Works 1» Boonty rnnd,'(B ini ins ,., AohloSh).. (Ball. M1,«M 1 t ..lit: I.oaii. IMtti * iVAU ConneltovUlo KR.... loan of IRTO KiniilliiK Bangor. Me.,9»fi»,T«): City debt proper (new main *cT. water loan (Ches. IllU Reuo.). do do 1368»o8ton Hlgblands SterHnjf loan or 18T0 Brookluf, Feb. 1871 (*28;257.00O) rity & flull loiu) "49 loan, "SJ local .. do '61 Founti ave. do Wallahont Bay Bcilford ave Kent nvc. basin rto do do do do '66 '66 •66 '67 •67 •62 •67 '67 •69 to .1 bonds. conllnuooB AcseHNUK-iit fund bonds, contln'aun Central ave. sew<*r bunde, "TO Board of Ktlmrallon certificates, TO VharUfton, .S.C.Nov. '69 (|«.W7,000) CUy Vart. stock « 8 do bonds (conpon) ttj. J.AJ. •79- '81 J.4kJ. 1891 J. 4k J. J. 4k J. irni FiunllnK loan, « inxw) t i»,oool I mjm si9jno 7 183,000 27,000 z<o,noo 329,000 7 « 7 J. ft J. J. ft J. J. ft J. J. ft J. J. J. I. ft J. J. 4k J. J. ft J. J. ft J. 7 7 7 •ao-^81 139,000 7 J.aJ. 148 OOO 7 J. 1,300,000 J. ft J. 7,7Bv000 B.VUfiOO 7 7 7 3.000MU 7 4,0711,000 7 7 7 J. J. J. J. J. J. ft •nto'88 •71--^ 'e8to'9S y frd 18» do to Cln. & Hills. RR.'SOA *51.F to Little Miami RR. '44 A Eaton AHani.RR,'90A'51.G Covington A Lex. RR, '51 .H . ObloA MIssissIpnlRR, •42..I Marietta A Cln. RR.*61....M Scbool purposes, '45. A Common Fnndlng . floatiuK debt. . 3,538^0 •Soto's* •90to'»« '73to';S l,g.-S,000 XUIK •7»to'.i« 3,984,M) 3,000,000 t Purchase of wharf prop*ty,'55-'56>i School purposes. ^34 R«al e«tat« for Workhouse, *66. . Y Erection of a Workhons", tii. Y3 Orpb. Aeyl. gronnda for Park,*36.0 Erection of a Workbonae, *68....X Waterwork pnrpoaea, €3 Waterwork purposes C3 Common school purposes p-i Common Srhool purposes, •60-*61.P Purchase of wharf prop'ty,'S5-'S6.X Epls. Burv'K Gr'nds for Park. 'fO. .Q Exten.A Imp. of Waterworks. '17. rj Common . . ^ 100,000 soxno 6 « « mm) isoAn 7M0 msm « 98JI00 139,000 < 97JX» Ms^no 119^000 > A.ftO. 1871 J. ft J. J. ft J. J. ftD. 1878 187« 1878 1880 1881 188S F.ftA. J. ft D. J. J.* J. J. ft J. J. ft D. .7. ft 89J000 9 3I1AW 40,000 lifioa s Uff» 73-10 • 190/00 73-10 \saa» 71-M) 7S-I0 MfiOO 311/no UfiCO I I $ M.*N. H.ftN. M.*K. HMS. A.*0. < « F.rectlon of a XOfiOO 78-10 A.ftO. A.ftO. M.ftN. M.ftX. J.ftD. M.ftN. J. ft J J.ftD. A.ftO. M.ftS. Erection of anew Hoapltal KunditiK floatln^debt. *5^'54...,L Exten. A Imp. oiWaterworks '58.K do do 'M.v Orpb. Asyl. Gr'nds for Park. 'S8..0 Workhouse bonds, ISCS-TS. Ecweraife bonds, 1809 Gilbert ave, Enleston ave sewer S. C. Sept., Water Works Cotumhvi, T( A» 330M6 73-10 •0,000 75.000 1(»A)0 6 ( « nfi» 1(00 iioa last 7 190/0) 7S-I0 1S0A» 73-10 UM UVit. IN* IMi lOOuOOO 73-10 Fd'K bt!s.conv..Ian.*lQlntoT« ff*t.. Feb.. Tl (1347.300 :. .. "Se. Mo. * Glrard RR loan, coup.... W, Funding bonds, coupon *S5to *69, other bonds, coupon PetroU, incA.,.fan. •71 (11,336,790):.. Bonds, various purpoaea.. Water Work bonds guar, br city, City Han bonds. .••8>ro...,. ........ JerM«if, aty. May 1, 19 CM*J») :. IB65, J.* 199/m J. ft J. J. J. ft J. . 87,80B 1(7JOO n.goo N.V Col. savxio J.ftJ. J.ftD. lAum Sav. A.ftO. Vart. Mm MUW un J. 4k J. 390,730 790^ 'Nto'(8 Van. A.ftO. .V. •Tt-TJ TIlofQ lOtO'89 T. •ntcsi J. C. iBftia ia»4 899,800 3»,000 '57 ft '98. 3joo/no Ta.OOO '88, do. do. 990/100 1,138,4X7 3,748.(110 1.14/100 75/no 40/(n 75/ni 1JMI,000 i/ioo/no 3e(,900 800/100 35*,eoo ParUand, Apr.l 4/IOO/)OOi 94a.7l1W i/no/w) 738/m 90MH Municipal debt San Fmncitro July TO mfMJM) Bonds of 1891, (gold) do 1805, conp. (ffoM) S. Fr. ft St. *63, '84, N,T. 'aio'H T»to-n isr ato'« «i,'(0 M.ft N. •asio'vi 18*1 M.ft N. M.ft N. •T7ftV H.AN. IS*] M.ft W. lOft'.I J.ftJ. J.ftJ. •r.io'w do do do do do (lo do do do do (Kiftiffm rt.rb J8Bl.... Ste-n :a87 V»r. re(tJ*m*i* Vart. A.ftO. J.ftJ. H.ftM. . . . . . • do (cnrrency) do Sewer bonds 71-1904 Pitts. MUkN. Old bonds for city purposes ... Water bonds of JnBe,I8(7 (goM>.. Water, wliarf and harbor booda. ., Park bonds, 1868 (gold) Lafayette Park ID!* J.ftJ. J.ftJ. do ^! « ".O MUkN. MUkN. M.ftN. M.*N. iti: :. ' Uvl; AprU WK l*» MM , Western Psc.KK. '85, School bonds '(1(1- "S?, Judgment bomla '87, School honda, ISIt) Bacannak. fin.. Oct. lD(t3,S18,«40) :. VarlouR city bonds before war Funding bonds of 18(8 8*T- AltMnr* UoX RR- (1888).... e.i9,BB.(fo. (i8«() AagnaU ft teraoaab BR. ftclUiO) A. ISMph. Mo., Nor. iVSumu. Bdato 81. Jos. ft Den. C.KtLwb. Railroad bonda •JStols S,F.fte Vari. Jose RR., conp. (gold). Judgment bonds N. M.*N. A.ftO. A.ftO. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. ((4,71IJ0O) Central Pac. KK. .M.ft M.ftN. M.ftN. M,ftN, M.ftN. ((M,e4,33() 4*JS0,3» 189it,conp. laav M.ftN. Ix>aD to At.ft St. Law. RR... do to Port, ft Rochester RR^... Bonds to b'ding loan eom'stonert. do 18N M.ft N. M.ft N. M.ftN. PttUburgh. Feb. '71 (t3,78BJ»l) Water extension loan (conpon) Fnndcd debt bonds and certlAcates, conp. and registered \\ Compromise RR. bonds fconpoD).! 1, '89 m tinun 400.000 3,7V7/nO Bon(fs, 1S7D 1, '7! « 380/100 3SO/I00 '68 PhUniMphUl, Jan. 5 per cent bonds 6 per cent bonds •75* 370/no N. r. Cmtnty. (31^91,150) Court Hoasc stock. No. 1 and 3.... Assessment fbnd slock do do do Sol. subs, bounty Red. bonds Sol. bounty fund bonds Sol. subs, and Red. bonds. Sol. bounlv fund bonds, No.S Sol. boutity fund lied, bonds, No.3 Riot damages Rod. bonds do do Indem. bonds, 1 4k 3 Repayment of taxes at. 115,900 ColnrnhHt, Water loan bondt.. 1H» '69 (f8S7/)00): 1S55 Bounty bonds 1889 1888 1890 1880 1880 1889 1898 18(5 1897 1897 18(7 18(8 1900 M.ftM. « 37 18R J. ft J. 9s/no loo/no ll(,900 1889 1888 1888 1888 1888 M.ftB. A.ftn. M.ftB. J.ftD. F.ftA. 199,300 '67.... '6S...B3i 1881 1883 1884 1885 1888 1885 M.ftN. '49.0 do do do do "SO.E Funding floating debt, '47 A3 Loan Ui White Water Can»I/47..A new Hospital •i3to19 t . '% A. ftO. «.T, 1.800/100 514.700 1880 1865 do do do do do do do do bonds 1869 Tax Lunatic Asylnm stock 1809 Dock UM Vari, lOOAD relief 1880 wto-a 90O/ni . 1897 do do •74to'S3 iato^«i 87J00O do ,„ 5,147,300 City Cemetery stock '89 Vol. Soldiers F. A. fund bonds '«>-'98 09 to •99 S.Y. do do N.r J.ftJ. :.. '51 Cen. P'k atidltlonal fund stock 1850 Real estate bonds '60 and tx Floating debt fund stock '80 Dorks and slips slock '51 and "SS. Public education stock '53 Market slock '65 •81to'D3 J.ftJ. 3M,7» 190/n) do do do do do do do do 8 S0OJX« 10 8/i«8/m do do -ft J. J.ftJ. 3,100,10) '98- '97 ... do .... do do do do J.ftJ. <»9,5ir No 3 ft No 4,'!I0-'SS. Cen. P'k Imp. f^ind stock iim 1901 -'11 1915-'3t Q. J. J. ft J. . Loan do do do do do do do •esto-gu 1877 1879 J. J. J. ft J. ft J. ft J, st'k, Central Park fund stock •«to'9S ft ft ft : CInctwmtt, Marcb. 1870 (ta,030/»0) Fandintf float'nK debt, '45 C BoantloH to Volunteers 8 Bounties to Volnnteers T Aveo le sewer, Era'Mton "SS .Ba B'ding loan 10 ' M.*N. 133,000 l,3««,40O <»«".1«;,361) l,i;i Lyne hhgrg. J. i:JJ; J Water stock of '49, '54 and '53 do do of 'M and '57 Croton Reservoir bonds of 1864 do Aqueduct bonds of 1864 New Agueduct stock, 1865 •87 10^90 •71to^90 •71to^90 J. )'ort, April ft ( • 800,U< till '91) Water i»tock of '40 and '41 Crolon water stock of '4.1 and do do do ofJB do do do ofeo 1881 1881 do do Sowcrasre bonds do do River Improvement loan Manlclpal and Bcbool bonds do do 8. Park loan (not a bond of ChVo) Hew 1875 •Mto-TS A mm »,f7a/ati 1S70. (anlliorlzed) ,Jen'ert»on City, (debt ai^jtiiined) 'ttto'M J.* J. J.* J. J.* J. J. 4k J. J.* J. Vari. J. SM.OOi < 7 J. 4k J. : Old (corporations Ponchnrtraln RR of 1891 1873 IS75 1874 7 n,ooo 90,000 (,i,yr4,wu> .913.800) (81 /nnv Ann (pay. an'ly Waterworks Loan of 1869 One Million of 1868 FtlndlnK Loan of 1889 Si,O0O 40,000 vasm 73-'7« .1. 4t .1. .1. <7I -,i n^' AW; ,I.*J. S,13S;000 51,900 Chicago, Aprll';0 (|U,a62,TM} Wafer loan •73- TS u»v do do DKF (pay. sn'ly till •88), a>ii>,9o Bonds to Mob.* (U. Xorlh KR... Honda lo (Irand Trunk Railroad. 800 AD Wharf tionds aaojoin MoHlgomery, y(/n.,S<-p.°l»((sl9JI0OI: Bonds of[M8,N. ft V(. Ala. rfll .... VM/li lieu) Orleruw, Marrh ni (Ii'.--,I0I,I38):.| Consolidated debtt^fSMMWarplJedl 4.'W>A» do ao M'early to mt'st do 39(/nO do do ) and principal 884,000 Rallioaddebt tofim do do 75/XN> do do iin%fm do do 3»',000 « ( « 7 '67.."" Vanderbllt ave. Improve, crtfs. *e9. N. y. HrldKC loan, (rir A cp>, TO.. ProBpect P'lil'n (re&cp), 'SOto'Tl SewemKc dem'nd 6 S 313X100 90,000 . '87 do dn do T>7 « STifiOO 6S,00O *6I.. do ^'outh ScTenth Union street Urand street loan, 1,390X100 Bos. tixm Soldiers aid fiini! loan, '65. N-fl (i M & Vol. Flrenian'9 loan,"-*! National (j uard loan, '65 Atlantic ave. Iiupr. loao. *6! Third street do do Water •n-'79 TB-'SO Improvenrt S9 A Impr. ^-loan. TO-Tl Lon. 6 K.OOO IKfiU) do City debt i,M>,ni 3M,a)0 BSS,WO tfmjKo '57 'ST JToM/i-, mumie, Jan., dem'nd ns.K'oi Funding loan, 1810, rgold) Endorsed bonds. M. ft L. Rk. R.R "Tl-W •Sl-W •u-it a 688,(100 3a(/n) i,9a«/«o 3(93H a** Kit. IS- "79 •mfico 190.000 d« do Mt. Prospi'ct Square loan. Oowanns "—*-'-• Canal Bnihwick av. i,K8,(iai Jlshnitles, 1988 funded lntrr<-al MemphU, Tnn., Apr. 11 («S,1M.0a0j Various bonds Post bonds Parlnc bonds IS74 1894 '8B--B8 Val. m. UOM RK Bot. dem'nd i"" S 9 6 A.iti. KU.tl "68 IV,., Feb. "Jl t*9BI,48() Bondit rIty riiirpoaea Bonds Va. 4 Ti-nn. UK IMt Van. ixixm Vt*AI* hiwfiSb ImrlihHra. 1888 1890 •iOtoW Bos. iK.fth. Vail. Vail. Vari. 153. Drhuiii iHMiila, 'Oand'TB. For old llaMlllles, 1870 honds. endorsed by Lonlavllle. Bonds B6SJIS "55, WIIIIninburKh street loan. [)i>. Bait. J. : '50 Water Debt uf WiniamHburffh loan Brooklyn 4k ( n do J. A.4I0, 1 city notes fj. J.»J. A,4kO. J.* J. ^JSI . Sotfon (May, i9iO)<$l84«jaO) Wto '68, rarlona Trnst Funda .„ Mar. 8 '58. Renewal city debt. 83 to '63. city purposes to 'Ki, rt'crultliiR Ainds Sent, w, '(B, bounty to TOlanteera. Tl4 to'tifi. city purposes '66 to •G9. variutiN cityparposes Roxbury debt a!«»unied *46* '49, water scrip bondo *4« A *49, do do storllnK'58, J. 117400 RR 1865. 18K , inf, I'enobeoot * Kennebec BR. 18N, European * N. American iM>, Bangor & Plscataana RR Jnnc Rowsn's.x, wha'f.'M Blliaheth and P. Wharf property, Jail bonds, l«<»r mo , KnUomonicnla f6r V. W. Va. RK... do do York ft Cnm.RB do do Wc»t. Md. KK.. do do i:nlon UK 18W For old A.tV: M.kM. , W UH VU i,aauMu loan nou?*e loan ' . Various elty pnrposes, H-'M ... For hnprovemeni of streets, do do do t; For srhool honses 'CS, 18 ft 'iT, Water stock '87 iat« 1818 1890 I89S MB, ,,l.... W. T, M R. H. til t,. ft Ball. jTmj. do ,,w.,„.,l Subacrlp. lo atock, An«. "ntoit bouuty loan Exeiuitt Public Park (Drnld Hill) Park Improvrnienl mjmjm * For Jrfferaonrlllo hit aloei MO 1 Ht'lc dnr at pleaanrs after Julj, 18)0 Jail slork Xmisnus, x>., jan.-;i Alai, i.ti: F.ftA. m K.T. II T. « Tart. tttMB Vart. niaW ii.... m. ftNra.Minn.. Apr,*n (%mm.y: Revenue Bonda Preferred bonds .-^ Lake Snperlor ft Mhw. RR,... _.., St Paul ft Ch'rago RR < per cent bonds ^IIOT* •n-i* -aiftio THE CHRONICLE. 628 RAILROAD, CANAL and 1 2 of LIST. Immediate notice of any error discovered In our Tables. Bonds COMPANIES, AND CHARACTER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amonnt Railroads Out- When Where paid. paid. For a full explanation of this standing Table see "liailroad Monitor" on a preceding page. 3,800,000 J.& New York New Y'ork J. 1,'70J; Mortgage, 1863 Albany City Loan, 1865 id Mortgage, 1865 3d Mortgage, 1869 Alex., Loud, tt Hamp. (Oct. 1, )"69: let Mortgage, for t8,0UO,OOO) Allegheny Valleij (Nov., 'TO) General Mortgage 1st and ad Mortgage Bonds to State of Pa., endorsed AndroHcoggin (Jan. 1, "»l) l8t Mortgage (Bath Loan) AtlunUc li at. Went. (Nov. 1, '70) Ist Mort., 8kg fund (Pa.) Ist Mort., 8kg fund (N. Y.).... l8t Mort., Bkg fund (Ohio).... 1st Mort., skg fund (Buff.ext.) iBt 1,000,000 l.OOU.OW) 2,000,000 175,000 Tr,0J0 J. ft J. M.4N. 4 A. 0. M.&N. M,&N. 3,809.000 15 1, 1100 3,500,000 8,512,400 Mort. (Franklin Branch).. 2d Mort. (Penn.) 2d Mort. (N. T.) 2d Mort. (Ohio) Consolidated Ist Mort 1st 3,908,000 17,579,500 A Gulf (Jan. 1, "10) Consolidated Mort., free 1889 1888 1895 1885 1 81 J. ft J. New York A.&O. Portland. 1890 A.* O. A. ft O. A.& O. A.&O. J. &D. A.& O. A. ft O. J.& J. London. 1877 1879 1876 1884 1882 1882 1881 New York London, New York 7.250.O0O 3,000,000 of J J. J. ft J. 1S88 1888 ft 484,000 M.ftN. Port & Bos 1871 1884 1878 London, 863,250 579,500 1.710.500 3,722,6^0 8,872,000 458,500 140,000 '55. Potomac (Jan. 1, "70) Mortgase of 1869 (gold) J. J. A.ft O. J. ft J. J. J. 1875 1880 1885 1890 1895 1873 1885 ft ft M J. J. ft ^. London, 627,000 ft J. J. lialtimore. ft Marguet. (Feb. Income Bonds of 1865 and Belvidere Delaware (Keb. 1, 1,000,000 _ 400.000 260,500 204.000 150,000 '200,000 496,000 . Brad. A Pitub. (Nov., tlortgage Buff., J. A.ft O. Albany. 71'76 London. A.&O. Boston. 1871 1875 J. ft J. J. ft ft F. J. J. J. J. J. ft A. ft J. J. J. ft ft J. ft J. 866,(X)0 !Jan'v. 200,000 IB.OOOp.m J. J. J. J. ft ft A.&O. A.&O. A.&O. '70): A Pittsb. (IIov,l,'70): 600,000 1.0,00) , A 2,000,000 380,000 6,000,000 5,057,000 600,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 l,200,u00 900,000 . Convertible Bonds of ls70, Ist Mort. conv. on br. (37 miles) Burl. A Mo., in Nebras. (Jan., '70) Ist M. Land & RR conv. .tax free California Pacific (Jan. 1, '70) 1st Mort. (gold) Camden A Amboy (Jan. 1, '70) Dollar Loan for |800,00O Dollar Loan for »675,000 Dollar Loan for tl,700,000 .... Dollar Loan for »2,50O.O0O CouBol. Mort. Loan for $5,000,000 Sterling Loan £313,650 Bterlinr Loan (new) i369,200. . Dollar Loan (new) Camden A Atlantic (Jan. 1, '71) . . . , . Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1st Camden ABurltng. , Mortgage Central of Iowa (Feb., Ist J. ft.I. J. ft J. J.&D. B oston. Boston. New York Boston. New York 18' 5*' J. .!.& J. New York Boston. i894 Boston. 1873 1873 1879 New York New Y'ork New York New Tori New York 1919 1894 A Alton (Jan. 1, '71): fund pref.. 1st Mort., sinking 1st Mortgage M.ftN. 1919 ft New York BoBtou J. A.& O. J.& J. J. J. ft 4 J. Boston, J. ft J. New York New York A.&0. A.& O. F. * A. 867,0a) 4,666,100 1,518,066 1,846.000 154,000 M.& N. 490,000 600,000 J.& J. A.&O. J. ft D. A.&O. M.&S. 838,000 833,500 294,000 2d Mort^ income Chicago, Bur.AQuin. (Jan.,'71) Ist (Trust) Mort 2d Mort. (Frankfort), gold Trust Mort. (Burl to Peoria) Carthage & Bnr. RR M.,lax free Dix., Peo. ft Han. KR., tax free, American Cent. RR., tax free.. Peoria & Hannibal RR., tax free . 1,377,000 London. 1894 1889 1870 1875 18S3 1889 1889 1880 1894 187.1 1880 71) A.&0. J.& J. New^York 1884 1907 1,6UO,000 J. ,000,000 ft New York New York . J. M.ft S. Jan. 15. July 15. New York M.ftN. New York J. J. 500,000 M.ft N. N. York 1887 '«,8lil,(l00 605,000 M.*.S Chaileit'a ino •96-'9» 'TO-'SI New York 1877 Phlladel. 1872 1877 1893 1883 New York New York 8(X1,000 aw.ooo 600,000 1,260,001 960.0 ist do do 2'l ft J. 3,000,OCO J. ft J. 1,219 50(1 F.ft A. M.& N. J. J. J. M.& M.ft N. .Mil ',0(10 282,000 Mortgage r,< 0,000 1,500,000 2d Mortgage, guaranteed Cincinnatt AMartitlsv. (Jan.l,'70); Mortgage, guaranteed M.& J. N. J. ft M.ftN. J.& J.& J. J. J. ft I'. J. ft J. J. ft J. 660,000 65,000 J. J. ft ft J. J. 360,000 997.000 M.ft S. Uncin.,Piihm.AChic.(ApT.l,"!0): Mortgage, guaranteed 2d Mortgage Cincin.,Saml.A Clet>e.(,1alj TO): iBtMort. (Sand. & ind. IlB.).... iBtMort. (S..D. ftCln.BB) '55... 1st Mort. (Cin.,S.ft Clev.RR). '68 Cinci?inati A Zanesv. (July 1, '69) 1,051,851 850,000 637,000 2,001,000 Mortgage, new, S. F Cleveland. Mt. Vernon A Del. 1st Mortgage (gold) tax free.. '.Bt AMahon. (Feb. 700,500 487,900 91,000 . Cleveland A Pittsburg (Feb., '71): 2d Mort., for tl.200,000 3d Mort., for »2,000.000 4th Mort., for «I,200,000 Cons. SkgF'd Mort. for t5,000.00O Col.,Chic. A Ind. Cfnt. (Apr. 1.'69): 2d Mort. (Col. & Ind. Cent. RR.) Income B'ds (Col. & Ind. C.BR.) Constrn. B'ds (Cblcft Gt. E.RR) Income B'ds (Chic, ft Gt. E. RK) Union & l.offansn't. 1st Mort... ConB.lst M.SkgF'd for»15.000,000 ConBOl. 2d Mort. for |5,000,00(). 790.500 1,358.000 l,C96.0ai 528,000 821,000 1,243,000 4a),000 300,000 2,000,000 New New New New New New F.ft A. M.ft 8. J.ft J. York York York York York New York New York Boston New York New York NewYork Cotum. A Hocking ^(Feb., '71); iBt Mortgage, S.F., 1867 mile'.. IBtMort. of 1871, on Columbus A Xenia (June, '69): 1st Mortgage 1,300,000 118,00J W J.ft J. Connecticut River (Feb., '71): 1st Mortgage, sinking fimd, '58, Connec. A Ifissum. R. (Aug. 1,'C9) Sinking Fund Mortgage Notes (^i:oupon) tax free Connecting, Phila. (Nov. 1. '70): l8t Mortgage, guaranteed Cumber land A Penns[/l.{Ych. ,'71): J. ft 1905 190S 1909 New York I.RKT 250,000 BoatOD. D. ftD. ft 875,000 a y'r) guar, 710^10 Boston. M.ft 8. M.& N. 1890 1878 1876 '76- '77 Phlladel. 1,000,000 Mortgage 1880 J. New York J. J. 1878 1876 1873 New York I). 248,000 500,000 295,000 '71-'84 18.. 18.. 18.. 18.. M.& N. A.&O. A.&O. 1877 1900 1890 1873 1875 1892 1900 J.ft J. & 1895 1889 1899 New York New York M.& N. J.& J. M.& N. A.&O. 1893 '70.'9« M.&S. J. 1880 18R5 1877 '77- '31 F.ft A. . 1885 1883 1885 1885 1882 1875 1884 1878 1898 1915 1874 1871 1888 York M.ftN. '71); Mortgage Mortgage 1st Mort. (Hubbard Branch). let 2<1 J. ft D. J.& J. 1,500,000 .'^d (8. f.,»20,000 F.ft A. J.ft D. 1,300,000 A Ind. (Feb, '71): iBtM. (C.,C.&C.BR)t25.(i0Oay iBtMort. (Bell.ft Ind.RR.).... Y'ork A.&0. Brunsw. (July 1,'70): 1,250,000 1890 New S. 614,tX10 of IS.'iS 2d Mortgiice of 1865 3d Mor-„ '67(S. F.,»25,000 yearly) Cincinnati A Indiana (May, '70): 1S74 1874 1890 1892 Q.-F. J.* J. J. & J. 1st Mortgage Wiiciii., Jfam. l8t Mortgage iBt ft J.& 2,077,000 101,000 f25,000 S54,aiO 650,000 5,000,000 New York 1909 N. F.ft A. F. & A. F.ft A. 31X),000 855,(X10 1887 M.& (re .000 985,000 . New York New York New York Var. J. Chicago ft Southwestern : lBtMl'rec(Bd)iruarliyCRI&P.cur Ist M.ft N. 4 18t.(«J0 1890 1890 1879 1^89 1878 1878 I'.m 1890 1890 IKit F.ft A. J. 8,376,000 A Boston. 1,129,000 Chicago, R.I.A Pacific (July,'70): 1st ifortgage Chillicothe J. <>. J. 75.'..(1«. guar Mort.. guar. & pm 8,5iij.:7)0 St. P. 1st Mort., J. ft A.& J. 1R-2,I100 Mort. (Beloitft MadiBon BR) & J. ft 397,0IKI Equipment Bonds Equipment Bonds &J. J. J. J. J. J. 691,700 218,000 Extension Bonds. iBt Mort. (Oal.& Chic. Un.RR.) 2d Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un. RR.) MissisBippi River Bridge Bonds Elgin and State RR. Bonds ist Mortgage (Peninsula RB.) Cons. 8kg F'd B'ds, conv. 'till 'TO Frankfort. M.ftN. 1,000,000 18,000 . ft ft 1,000,000 . Mortgage (general) A.&O. J. ft J. A.ft O. 80'i,01« New Tork '00- •D4 1891 '70): 161,000 109,500 2,000,000 IBtMort. ,»kg fund, 180,000 a y'r, 1885 18S4 Boston. J. J. Danv.,Urb.,m.APekinlJnWl,X.,. Ist Mort '""irold) conv., S.F.. free Dayton A Michigan (Apr. 1, '70): 1899 ft A.&O. 1875 •K)-'9» Chariest. 791,500 18';6 J. J. 2dMori., 186:* Chicago A MilU'aukee(.T\ine\,'69y. Ist Mort. (C. & M. Rli.,45mllesl 2d Mort. (M. & C. RR.. 40 miles) Ist Mort. (C. ft M. RR.. 85 miles) Chic, A Mich. Lake Sh., (Jan. '71): Mort. bonds, new Chicago A Sorth west. (June l.'TO) Preferred 8kg Fund (on 193 m.) Interest Bonds (fund, coupons) 2d Mort. New York ft J. 3,026,000 941,000 Cumberland Valley.(Fe\>., Ist Mortgage 2d Mortgage Baltimore. J. J.& New York 1895 1895 J. J.& J. J. ft J. J. ft J. F.* A. M.&S. 160,500 4(10,000 60O,(X)O Chicago, Cin.ALouisv. (Feb., '11): Ist Slortgage, 1867 Chic, Danv. A Vincen. (Apr. 1,'69) 1st Mort. (gold) sinking fund.. Chicago, /oica A Seb. (Jan. 1, '70; 2d Mort., guaranteed 1860, lit 1875 1890 1890 251,000 2,837.000 2,500,000 C'.ntral Ohio (Feb. 11) : lit Mort. Cen;. Pii:iii,:orL\iHfor.(.litn. 1,'71): Ist Mort. (gold) 25,881,000 Subord. Lien Calif. St. aid (g'd) l,5ai,000 Conv. H'd8 (conv. Into D.S.Vds) 1,500,0(X) A Savanna/i (Oct. 1, '69) Mort. (guar, by 8. CuroUna) 1897 1882 M.ftN. / Mortgage (new) Phlladel. Phlladel. l,r,O0,000 ISTB 1W-4 . M.ft N. J.& J. Quincv A Warsaw Mort. (40 m.) Kcoknkft St. P, Ist M, 8. f. tax free Cleveland 1893 1875 1878 1879 1889 1894 F.ft A. F. ft A. 3,517,000 .1 308,000 2,4«l,«10 1,100,000 Ist Mortgage Clev., Col., Cm. 1877 1872 J. J .4 . Mortgage iBt M.ftN. A.&O. J.& J. & J J . ttra 1880 New York J.& 3(li.iil<i 9tl.l«i A Dayt. (Apr. 1,'70): 1SS4 1899 1899 J. 675.0110 l,700,t«IO 1865 1870 1870 Boston. 2,280,000 823,220 1884 1890 Boston. 2,100,000 736,000 iBt Mort. (gold) tax free, conv. Central of Sew Jersey (Jan. 1, '71>; 2d Mortgage loan) Ist Winona ft Co.)Jan.l,'71): 1st Mort. (on 31 miles, 1867) Catawissa (Hov.l.'IO'): Ist Mort Cedar FallsA ^¥frtre«ffo.(Jan.l,'71): 1st Mort.(C. F. to Waverly,14 m.) lBtMort.(W.toMlnn.Llne,62m.S Cedar Bap.AMissou.R.Ofii'b., '71): Ist Mort. (land grant) Cent. Br. of U. Pacific (Jan. 1, '69) 1st Mort. ( Atch. 4 Pike 8 P. RR.) 2d Mort. (U. S. loan) Central of Oeorgia (Feb., 1871): ('I. K. 1877 18a5 1887 Charlest'n J. 55,000 Burl., C. i?.* Jfi;me»o.(July 1. '69) IstM. (gold) conv. skg rd, tax fr Burl. A Missouri R. (Jan., '71) iBt Mort. (land & railroad) Bonds conv. intopref.st'k (2d 8) Bonds conv. into pref. st'k (3d s) Income Bds '-onv. to com.stock l»t ft M.&S. 2d Mortgage 2dMorf S. 600,000 14,000,000 8,000,000 7,349,163 3,000,000 Ist M., Buff, & O. Cr. Crosscut.. 1st M., Buff Cor. & Pitts, of Pa. Ene—Sec Lake S. * M. Erie (Oct. 1, '70>: Buffalo, X. Y. Ist Mortgage A F. ftA. 281,000 755,620 728,000 Mortgage (wharf purchase).,... Brunswick A Albany 1st Mort.(eoid)guar. by Ga.... 2dMort.,S.r Buffalo 745,000 ft New York Princeton M. t . Carry ftD. J. 499,.'i00 J. 2d M. (71m.&l«t'^2Hni.)conv.. 2d M. (71 m. &2d2a« m.) conv.. Sinking Fund Bonds Bost., Hart. A Erie (Dec. 1, '68) iBtMort. (old). l8t Mort. (new) let Mort. (new) guar, by Eric Floating Debt, Nov., '6? Mass. L. (see. by »4 .000,000 iBt M.) Boston A Lowell (Feb., '71) Convertible Bonds of 1853, coup Scrip Certificates Ist M.ftN- ( . Feb., "70): IBt Mort. (Agric. Br. KB.) of '64 Boston, Clinton tte Fltcl'burg., Bost., Con. A Montr'l (Apr. 1, '69) Ist Mort. (71 m.) Buff., J. ft J. 5.169,100 2rt iBt '71) Mort. of 18.52 (guar. C. * A.). 2d Mort. of 1854 3d Mort., of 1857 Blue Jtidge of S. Car. (Jan. 1, 70): Ist Mort.. guar, gold Boston it Albany (Feb., '71) : Albany Loan (Alb.* W.BtkbKe) Mass. Sterl. Loans (WeBt'nBK.) D 'liar Bonds (Western RR) A Fitc.liVg 1909 A.ftO. Ist Boet., Clint. J. ftJ. '71) 1866. New York 18W 2,000,OCC S.F.Cgd)lorlH5.000,000 , Balti. <t <c '/or. tittawa, Oswego & Fox B. V... (44 m ), lll.lSrHnd Trunk Mor 401,21X1 1,095,' Loan of 1870, £800,000. 2d Mort. (N. W. Va. RR.) of '53. W. Va. UR.) 1 V u. c't'i i\li.) guar, by bt. Mort. (Va. (.einral UK.) Sd Mort. (Vii. Central RH.) Income Mo!t. (Vn.CrMit. KK.).. Isl .u. Chicago London Var. A.ft O. A.ft O. 825,000 BlerliiiK Bay de Noo. paid. {Sept., '70 . Atlan. A St. Lawrence (J »n. '70): l8t Mort. (Port. Loan) skg fund 2d Mort. of April 1, 1851 Sterl, Bds of Oct. 1, '64 (5-20yrs). Sterl. Bds of Nov. 1, '53, £1(10,000 Baltimore tt Ohio (Oct. 1, '70) Loan of 1855, skg fund Loan of 1850 Loan of 1858 Baltimore Loan of »5,0O0,0OO.... 1st '70, ,< OIlio of '70, '76& '80. Chester A Ch. Br. June. (.im. l.'TO): Ist Mort.. sinking fund Chester Valley (Nov. 1, '69): J. ft M., /> Company BondB A.ftO. J. cr' «f.<.r. Funded Interest Bonds, coupon '71) 1-tM. (-iouth Pacific) g>ul L. Gr. (gold) on .WO.OOO acres 3d Mort. (N. Where paid. Cheshire. (Dec. 1, '691: Atlantic 2,000.000 341,200 Cbarlotteuu. A Aug. (Jan. )^l .Mortgage r. Wash'ton. : Sectional Bonds AUantic <t Pacip; (l-vb. When Railroads : Sunqitehan. (Oct. dr. be published next vreek. : Alabama, (ft Chattati. (Jan. *70): ftt and 2d M. (gd) guar, by Ala. Albanij irlll COMPANIES, AND CHABAC TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amonnt Ont- full explanation of this Btauding Table see " Railroad Monitor" on a preceding page. For a 20, 1871. AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND (tabacrlbers nrill confer a great favor by glvlns us Pasea [May 2,766,000 642,000 700,000 169,500 Mortgage 8d Mortgage Toledo Depot Bonda Dayton A Union (July 1, '69): Ist Mortgage 2d Mortgage Income Mortgage Dayton A Weitem (Feb., '71): Itt Mortgage lit Mortgage , , ' A.ftO. 1904 isoe A.&O. A.ftO. New York J.& New^Tork 1881 1884 1888 M . ft J. 8. A.ft O. 1906 M.ft S. New Tork '81-'94 140,000 135,000 252,446 M.ft 8. New^Tork 1R79 1879 IBTt 275,000 433,000 J.ft J. Hew Tork 19^5 i9(e J.ft D. J. ft D. J.*J. May THE OHRONlCi^P. 20, 1871.] 629 RAILROAD, CANAL AND MiaCKLLANKOUS BOND Sitbaorlben will Oat- Fort* mil expUnatlon of thU •Uadlof T«ble iM - KkllroMl MoDllor," oo a precodlOK PMfi< When Where, paltL paid. ooltnattnn of this ilantflna For Ballroadat Kia,ini tou,ouv I'.'iutU < 1. /.'If* .r . II r Hf, r'l UtMort. (I.m-I. Ut Mori.nkxr.i '.ill M-.rl. ill t Vnv. \v. -^ .i. . 1 A A I . Bon in on 1. 1 Det., m, SS m KU.l Wl.««l J. ft J. u.. 1 iinons., ' Hon uni! Jo, •!» (conilU'lv) Hterinix((iiik.« (ill». Kit.) Il'da OIU. liU.j ll'ita. Uollnr lOiik. l»t Mori. (Dolr. tc I'onllar Itlt.). 'Jil Mort. (Ut>T. k I'onllac Kit.). ol l» I A do 8d do BoDda of M.*N. i,uuu,uju 8 M.ft N. 1»l 1: D Isl do L»n.l Or.. ll«3 Lan». <f L. 7 J.ftJ. M.ftN. 4,l!IIO,0UU do Mori on whole line, 2d Mori. Dttnlt, WUulale 1st 139in New York New York 7 8 7 A.ftO. 7 M.ftS. 10 Varl. Varl. MAN. M.ft K. M.aN. N.V.ftDcl N.V.ftLon Sew York F.ft A. J. ft J. A.ftO. A.ftO. New York — i.aia,ouu 3,000,000 J.ftJ. M.ftN. M.ftN. 1889 1860 mllua dlvUlon). Q& 800.000 «0O,0OO J.ftJ. J.ftJ. 490,000 8«,sao A.ftO. J.ftJ. 188S 1888 J.ftJ. 290,000 420,000 Sterling, convertible DolUr, convertible Essex Kiillroad Bunds Mow Mortgage (See Phlla. 789,2110 * 214,000 eoo,ooo Q.-J. JTftJ. F.ft A. J.ftJ. M.ftS. Boston. London. Mortgage (old) Mortgage (ncw).....;^. Mortgage Bunds of ISTO. tUtabetluewH it Paducah jrhn.it meiiuip'UVeb. M)Utm. 5 per cent Bonds SrH Balltmv (Oct. 1, >W) Ut Mortgage Boston. 840,000 188.400 8,500,000 i,mm StOfiOD J.ftJ. J.ftJ. J. ft New York J. M.ftS. J.ftJ. A.ftO. PhilHdel. New York 4,000,000 6,000,000 4,441,000 M.ft gterllug convertible. 4,»H,4U M.ftS. London. 738,700 J.ftJ. A.ftO. J.ftJ. New York . K6,aoo lS(i,400 £I,IMU,(I0U.. 8. 1890 lnfO 1877 1879 1891 1875 ^l) Ut Mortgage 2d Mortgage Consol. Mort., free of Slate lax l»,a)0 l,7«t,00O •4 1882 I8WI 1898 . N.Y ftLoD J 2,000.000 Wluu.tu N.ll.Llne.HOm.) M. Hang ir t Wlnn..S.i lu..) IstM, nanjr.toWlun,(BangLlcu) Svaiuo. ittv<iMi/oril»n.(i)ct.l,"U>: U( Mortgage of 1852 (Ev. * 111.) Ut Mortgage of l»t (Ev. ft C). UtHort. (Rockvllle extension) SowMmtle^ Hetuterion tt yanAo, i 1899 gold 1,000,000 J.ftJ. N.y.ikLon. 1899 J.ftJ. M.ft N. F.ft A. New^York 703.900 190,000 1889 1889 1881 1,000,000 J.ftJ. M.ft M. New York New York 1897 881,000 424,000 800.000 230,000 8.<I2,000 - Ul Mo.-t^aifC niiU <t Pere Marquet. (Jan. 1, TO): 1st Mortgage, L. (i 2d Mortgage gd Mortgage ft FttulUng 1st Holly .Mortgage <t Ut Hon. a. F Orantt River Valley (.Ian., '71); 1st Mort. (guar.) for »l,()au,l)UU er«nriHe<rCo(M»liIa(C)ct.l,'69): . Mortgage Bonds guar, by State of S. Car.. CertlAcates, gnaranteed HarrlKb. <t Lnruxuter (Nov. 1, '70): Ut Mortgage, guaranteed Bartford il y. Bacenite^i.,11',: tst .Mortgage, lies yanniiial 2 Xaplet (Jan., 1870) ut .Mortgage. 18n UannliHil 3 aJottph (Feb.,lg;i): Land Grant Mortgage Klglit per cent Bonds Ten per cent lx>aa Mori, of 1K70, conv^tax free.... Ut Mort. (tiulncyftPalmy.RR.. 1st Mort. (Kan. C. ft Cam. RK.» Harlem K^unninn J. .t «sAti;/(Feb. Tl): Mort. (K. L.lfiMi m.) Mort. (Conu.,ll6XM m.) H«m|)/l«M(Nor. 1,'70): IfiOOJMH 1,51^,000 615,900 5.000,000 1,000,000 282,000 8a8;ioo 429,293 1887 1^88 t%,O0a yea riy. J AJO J.ftJ. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. New York New York 1899 Augusta. "iO-1i« New York New York New York Phlladel. J.ftJ. New York 839,000 M.ftN. 1,089,700 A.ftO. 1,8^,000 Varl. i,20o,oar 4,000,000 1st 481,000 1^74,900 1899 1888 1889 J.ftJ. 98.000 1,200,000 9ao,n)o 1S89 Cliarlest'n 81.'8« HTjOOO 1st Ut Mortgage HoMotoiuc (Jan. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. 700,000 Uart.. ttop. Ut Mart. L. O.. 8. F. (gold) Bmlton RIter (Jan. TU: Mortgage, sinking fund 8d mortgage MunUngd. <t B. 7bpJn.(Nav. Ut Mortgage 2d Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage liM. — J.ftJ. M.ft 8. F.ft A. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. 1873 1888 N.Y.ftBos New York N. Y.ftBoa 1881 New York 1872 1885 1877 1892 1888 Provlde'ee Hartford. 1876 1878 500,000 J.ftJ. Fblladel. 191.000 100,000 90,000 J.ftJ. F.ft A. Brld|jep'rl 8,400,000 J.ftJ. New York 2,000 J)00 188,000 J.ft D. New__York 4l8jn) 887 JOO A.ftO. ijmfioa tjmfiiio A.ftO. A.ftO. A.ftO. A.ftO. M.ftK. 1885 1875 tlUHOlK Central (.Ian. 1,^1): Ut Mort., Construction Ut Mort.. Construction Redemption, Isl ft 2d series Redemption, Sd •cries, sterling, Indtanap., Clna.<tIaf.(u^T, "W: 832,000 3,-ia)j)0u (Nov. Ut Mortgage, guar., tax tree .. 2d Mortgage, tax free Kant atv, iS. Jo. it Ct /H.Mar ll Mort.(St. J.ft C. BI.).conv Kan'. Cltii it Same A>, (Jan. "71 1st Mortgage, tax free Kansan rucltlr (Jan, "71) m F.ft A. J.ft D. i,5«o,a» A.ftO. f d. m Land Or. Mort.on ixxi.uoo acres Income B'ds (gen.) tio.otio p. m Land Or. Bds on '.f,(lul),«JU ai res Kalanuuoo it 8. Uuren, (Jan. "71) 1. 1 mort on 60m Keutuctg Central (Feb., ID: Ut Mor t (Cot. ft Lex.) 99 miles 1 Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1st Mortgage (exteoaloD) 2d Mortgage (extension) Income Lake Erie it Louimtllt (July 1.'69) 1st Mortgage Lake Sh.tjnch. South. (Jaae'xn: Bonds of October 1, 1869 1st Mort. 8. fund M. 8. ft N. I.. 1st idMortK.ige M.9 New York New York 1899 1899 1888 * e A.ftO. A.ftO. PhlladsL 10 7 10 7 M.ftS. N.Y.ftBo* ia J.ftJ. a»,»o J. ft J. 7 8 a J.ftJ. F.ft A. F.ft A. M.ftS. J.ftU. 720.000 10 M.ftN. ajODjooo 7 f M.ft N. F.ft A. 8 a 19U0U) 1,000,0.0 l,90njQ00 887.000 I9»,iOO do do Sept., 18« do April, 1868 do Dividend Bonds Cousolld Mortgage, 1870, coup do do reg Lake Sup. it Mlntutppi Mort. (gold) . „' Learen., Lawren. it OaMtn.,'i\) Ut Mortgage, 1888 Lehigh dt lackawan. (Dec, '7ti) Ut Mortgage, tax free Lehigh raltey (Vrc, -TO) 1st H. 1898 (exchange for new). 1st (new) Mort. (tax tree} 1868. 1st Mort. (Hazleton RR.) 1862... LUite Miami (Feb. '71): 1st 2,340,000 4,063,000 ••«*=•!!* 3:ii.ooo 4,375..'a« 7 J. ftU. J.ftJ. M.ftN. M.ftS. 7 7gd J'el.Tl iJUM.IM) «oo,im 7 PhlUdcL M s; 1871 New Jork tan BM.ftN.T 18(1 UM 1880 . Ut Mortgage 1st Mortgage, new Louim., an.dUxIng.i.tatri.'Ky, 1st Mortgage, Cln. Branch ad Mortgage 1st Morf, LoulsT. ft Frankfort. Loulavllle Loan LouUtrlUe it yaehrille Feb. -70): 1st Mort. (main stem) Louisville Loan (main stem).. Louisville Loan (Leb. Br.) Ut Mort. (Mempiiis lir.) 1st Mort. (Leh. Ilr. Riten.) 128/100 794,000 M.ftS. M.ftS. J.ftD. N*w_^^ ork 900/100 guojooo «UOilDO Hew York T9,'(95 J.ftJ. A.ftO. M.ft 8. M.ftN. A.ftO. soo/no J.ftJ. 2,000,000 9,298 A.ftO. M.ftN. M.ftN. F.ft A. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. A.ftO. A.ftO. J.ftO. J.ftJ. A.ftO. New Tork New Tork in* aooMO wo tUJXO 900,000 1/100,000 1/XIO,000 115/KO 3,0I4/1(V 864 AJU 100,000 300,000 300,000 8jUOO,00O 1888 New Tort iS uaa isn ISM 1874 I88P vm IS M.ft N. 187* J.ftJ. M.ft 8. 1,500,000 A.ftO. A.ftO. J.ftJ. 4/SOO/IOO J.ftJ. <J.-J. ifiOOJKO 800/no 988,000 S,4I3/)00 133 M.ft N. AU J.ftD. A.ftO. umjam M.ftN. J.ftJ. 783,309 iTs/ino I5U/U 1,900,1(10 F.ft A. M.ft N. New Tork Sew Tork tan i«a uas wa NewTock m taaa Phtla<l«L lan M M.a N. N*w__Tork 1.424 /ni 819/100 J.ftJ. A. ft '>. New York M.ft N. LoalsTUI*. 83jm> laaa Pblladsl. J.ftJ. A.ftO. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. i,iian;ooo 1888 Phlladel. Hn/m 8/)Oli/)0P . . 239/VO 3f7/ni 88/U) 333/ni l.aan (Leb. Br. Kxt.) CoDsol. 1st Mort. for t8,aio,oi». 1,200/100 JToom 4 Jlruntwick (Jan. I. •my. Ut Mort., gnar. by Oeorgi* . 10/nop.m . OtRInU (Jan. I. tl,100A» Loan (A. ft i«n 1900 1881 Ut M. Bangor Va Extension Bonds, 1890 (gold) . . Loan (gold) JfnrieUaitClnciHHiiU M.ftN. A.ftO. A.ftO. J.ftJ. i-tn i.Jta. 1.100,80(1 9T7/an 112. _^ WIS Nsw Tork Nsw Tork Il): K. RR.)... (P. ft K. KR.) u,100,aoo NYJjiaFr laaa •7i--» 1916 1880 ( . JMiu laa* •(fi M.ftN. 300/00 1st Mortgage^lnkiog fund Long AMnd (I8!D>: Ut Mort. (U. Point extension). 1st Mort. (Olrn Cove Branch).. J.ftJ. New Tork Mew Tork 840 00 2,69eA» Mort. (I)., .M. ft T. RR.) .... Mort. (C, F. ft A. BR.) 3d Mort. (C, P. ft A. RR.) 3d Mort. (C, P. ft A. RR.) Lake Shore bonds, April, 8i>9. Junction RK bonds, Dec, 1952. 1st Mort.(C. ft To). RRJ s'k'g rd 2d Mort. (C. ft Tol. RK.). ."..., BulTalu ft Erie. Nov., 1898 do do July, 1862 1st 1st 1899 l,O77j0DO lODjajt :) 2d Mort. (government subsidy) 1st Mort. (Leavenworth Br.) ... WBI F.ft A. A.ftO. A.AO. i.iov/oi J.ftJ. a.«»i/« i/BO/n) F.ft A. A. 11) Mortgage, sterling 2d Mortgage 8d llortgage 1st Mort. (Scioto &• .AN. Ba lllM iia. Lowloa. B«tllaa««. J.ftJ. ft Hock. RRJ. MemBhfSCharlMlonUalrt.'in: UIMortgsge UIM< Mortgage Tenn. State Loan Jttmpklf <« Utue n>ck (Jan. l.lOi Ut Mort. (on road and land) .. Arkansas Slat* Loan M , 2,770#n i : 1.1. A. London. ili. HKJKU 9UU,(U) A.ftO. 1875 1»!5 1890 1875 New Tork NawTork NewTork 1,«(I,(W do 00 Mo. Valley.(70Di).gold <:o do enr. Mort. of 1871 on whole llne.conv Ul Mortgage, dollar New York N.V.ftl.on New York J.ftJ. Mort. C. B.ft St. J.(92m In la) Mort 1st ft J.ftJ. aoDjino Wl >4JIU) UtMorl.SI. J.C. BI.(8aminMa) I8n V. 441,000 2,101 Br.).. ^0); 18T0 rhlIad«L aowTork SMjM) \JMJBO0 Mortgage (Newcastle LouUf Ills 13T7 I88S 1888 "TO): Ut Mortgage, 18(7 Ut Mortgage. IBM. Ut Mort. (I&d. ft Ctno.>.188S. Mortgage Street Connection Bonds UUle Hchui/ltiU (Jan., '71): 1, "71): Mortgage, sInKIng fDad 2d MorIlo iclnof I9W ., Uotuton <t nxa$ Cent. (Fob. Tl;: 1st 'id ft M.ftS. M.ftN. »a,ooo Oordonsviile: tax free (gold) H.W.,Jack<tSaiiina>m}i%i 1,'II): UtMort., guar 0<ora(a— Hands (May, "TO) Or. BapUU db Indiana (Jan.l, "^l): 1st 9Mortgage (gold) S goar 1st J. tt , Mortgnge, guaranteed M-ftW. A.ftO. A.ftO. J.ftJ. M.ftN. wijoco Anc(i'»i.(^liir.ft Ind, "(July l,'88): . tforthtiOe (Oct TO) Mortgage ^edertckJibura . Mort. (Cov. ft Lex.) 99 miles. yort. (Gov. ft Lex.) 99 miles. Xac4raiean.(t Aoom«A.(Apr,, 71): M.ftS. A.ftO. J.ft O. J. ft J. iS J.ft O. Mort. (Ind. ft Mad IKK.).... id Mort. (Jeffersonvllle UR).. 1st Mart. (J., M. ft Ind. RK). 'id Mort. do do Lonlsvllle (endorsed) Bonda .. JotM it Chicago (July I, -aP): Isr. Mort., sinking rnn<l guar... JoHet it y. /ndtnna (July l,'a8): 1st .Mori. 1st Mort. 1880 1878 M.ftM. ,71) tst 1st FkiladaL Ntw Tork Var Mai.it fniUanap. Apl. Jelt.. 'ia 19(10 New York 2d Mortgage, coavertlble ad Mortgage tth Mortgage, convertible Mil Mortgage, convertible. Buffalo Hrancb Bonds Flint Mort" 2d ii.ti Bjoooim .... (gold) I'd grant, s'k'g Mort. (gold), 140 1st Mort. (gold), 253.94 M.ftN. European A .V. Ainer J a». *T0 Land Orant B >ads (ta.x free) Mortgage l.a 1st iflmfioo I, U 1883 1908 Read.). SiMl J^iin. JkHl I«nn.,ru.it Qtorg(,JUi"H): SrU <t Autbure (Feb. INI M. on whole road, conv <aniM(o,TOit»'an4:M)i(NoT.I,'7U): 18<I3 1l-'74 1871 1H74 1878 M.ft*. 2d .Mortgage 1st New York New York Nn- York J Ut Mortgage ad Mortgage SoutltiMHt. (Feb.,11): Ut HortKaini, on 98 miles Ut Mort, s. I., pref. on S6 mllca. auclUM <t Coliimtiiu (Jan. 1, '71): UtMortgaga pattern Mau. State Loan, Ut lien *D. 1,490^00 JuiicMoii, "Hilla," l,C80,000 r.ftA. irH>'firir4(reb.l,'88') Jack. , lMm.it SagtnaK (Jan.l,*!!): 1st T».ono i IMMoiuagagur 2d Mort. guar AraMsm (Feb. 10) lit -... Coutract. Bonda M 18TJ 1898 : (lat diTlilon) i(M DtunwiMit .«. ins Sloax CUv (Dec.'W): <t Ut Hon. Ut 1898 (t liul. (Jiui.*71) HortgkHO Dubum 2,110,000 — Miih., ( J»u. ^l) Lai». Ui<) Murt.donU A iBl . 1875 1879 1879 1875 1»? 1873 1873 1878 188* 1878 1888 877,115 7 i,S'«,<sg 6ft 7 6 isctun 51,IIU) 7 100,000 I10,l»0 10S,1»1 Si-pt. I.ISW.- UortgaKti on Iteal EsUU, Ac. Oet Minntu Valleu (Feb. *7I): Ml Mort|fSKc> >»>• on >^'"> 1871 ir M.ftN. 7 l.VI,OUU New York Hew York KevTork Raw Twk A. 410. . IslMortgage, tax tree ironlon (Nov.,'))9): IstHurt.... a,aoo,n» iipons 1 ':o Ui'v iHdutmtft. TIT ,, >«xfres '^".•.••.'.= ioioa 1. ilibio.. Wni„ M.ft 8. D, 1 M Isi A.ftO. 1,IU. lGa3,JUU i:i:.i iico . iniiian'tu. lniHitn't„n .t 1871 J.ftJ. IWiUV 1, 'Tl'l: v: I .' , lira J. !.* .ftJ. .*J. 17VAU) 'll.! Wkra Monitor' '•ad VtUnctiri (Koli ,^l) Mnrlu.iu'.- Itutuli our Tabt**, r'gO. Rallroadsi UI tflaaavarad la COMFAMin, AND CRARAO. TKR or BBC'DRITUM IMUKI>. Amoant UOUfANIK8, AND UUAKACTKR OF SBCURlTlEa I88UBD Amoant S' LIST. > iniai«4la(« Bollca of mnj arror ooahr a srsat r>vor br bItIuk PaKsa 3 and 4 of Bnnda will ba pnblUhad NaxC waak. M.*X. lATiW M.ftN. J.ftJ. J.ftJ. New^Tork a w Tork laai THE CHMONiCLfe. 630 t € £ .) mer in c i a 1 i The following . week has been one compiled from Custom House returns, shows table, the exports of leading articles from the port of New York since 1, 1871, to all tlie principal foreign countries, and also the totals for the last week, and since January 1. The last two lines show total values, including the value of all other articles besides those mentioned in the table. January Pblday Niqht, May past 19, 1871. of considerable speculative and 00 OC O) (- CO 5 30 leading articles of domestic activity in the and export duce, a large, heavy prices, except for in pro- in (N I- (N •<»"» tomo o3jn Cotton^ Tobacco, subject to In foreign merchandise trade has been fraquent fluctuations. 5 i.§i: feverish, unset and Tobacco, with a and tied tone prevailing, done having been business Breadstuffs, Provisions New York. Bxportu or Iieadlnc Articles from ® mc COMMERCIAL EPITOMK. The [May 20,187L O ^9l5l-QO^- 21 r^ Vy^ 03 » ai di'S OS r^ CO dull, thus reversing the condition of affairs a short time since. Cotton, after several fluctuations, closes quiet at 15c for ^5 E-t ?* s cff« '* o so o oT to *-ia»»-» t- low middling uplands on the spot, and 15i@15fc for the Breadstuffs show an advance to |6 30@ next three months. $0 CO $1 57 AVheat closed shipping extra Flour. for at $1 than seller-, Lard $14. good fell lOfc off to I^S§ fc. was :8 35 • ^ -r or iOVi i SP? ,»«'« • ^_'„- rf :s -e -ooeo© ofg' -^'g- ''^g :SS 8|§S8 II si M o « • ©^CrTOoS -S • • • a- « • • :§ -8 :S :g day and to-day, but the close was dull; Cotton his been taken To London, by sail. Wheat at id Cheese, 403 Bacon, 30s. a ; •cs •^»oo5 • R (D (N ciS 00 r-«_ • coSs - 5 n To '^S •gfcrT 5*2S :29*"S55 'T^ao??©*^ ^ '•• '^-TeoVso S3 "5 Liverpool, by steam, 9d was paid yester- : :i|5 CCtO qjo* • too £!*?**• • S ^i.^^ ' • '^ "C* '^ '—t-'^SMQ -r-am .(CV 00Q«O OOSQ t-opo CO •» ; A 8f d, and Flour 2s 6d. 9d@7s to Cork few chaners have been made at orders and for direct ports on the for "* Petroleum charters have been Continent. Tobacco has been more in the market for active. Kentucky less active. little lugs and over 9;", medium and the A leaf. be awarded on the 31st 2,500 hhds. Virginia. sales •* ' *5* mostly at 6c and 8c for good French contract inst. for sot- »c- . ^00 • • is announced •.Sa : :S •g i : i : ! I :$?g : : -."S : : : .s o- ! .SSS : :§ : -SS :i : : is^g n is a to 9,000 hhds. Kentucky and Prices at the Western markets have ir » Oh "^ CO " L- »-» -. :8' t-o • have been 1,100 cases new State bv a receiver to a dealer, on private terms; 90 ditto, on private terms 300 ditto, part at 2 lo 50 cases new crop Connecticut and Massachusetts, on private terms, and 50 cases PennsylSpanish Tobacco active sales 500 bales vania fillers at 14c. Manufactured Tobacco sellincr Havana at 85c@$l 07^. •*-<oiao ill :ss m •« CO The : •V "^5 advanced .V@fc the past week. In Seed Leaf there has been more business, but it has imparted little tone or strength to the market. •-i^O 'Mrt ffscO-fl" The Regie buyer* have Leaf, and about 1,(500 hhds. have been taken, mostly Spain and Italy. Prices have ruled very strong at 5i@6c for Lugs, and 6i@9@lle fjr Leaf, but very :S * O rtrpS Freights have been active in the shipment of Grain, but tory. otherwise quiet. been :|§^§i •Sf«D'-< at lie, with July delivery. Os : 'rHtO^co 5t- prime Western steam, with for selling at 9^c, but at the close the former sdes at that price for June and ll^o for Bacon and Cut Meats have been nominal, but Hea\y dressed Hogs have declined close with more inquiry. Beef has to 6c per lb., the lowest figure in many years. remained quiet. Butter has declined 3@5c, prime State and Orange County selling at 28@30e. Cheese seems to have fairly opened for the new season at 13^@l4c for prime facfirm ?0'-< with prime mess quoted at $15, and prime at made city T^ V CO 55@ Corn has declined to '75@76c for for new spring. Western mixed. Groceries close firmer. Provisions have been drooping, with a marked decline in Pork and Lard. Mess Pork was pressed for sale, and declined yesterday to $16, at which there were to day more buyers so i-I".-* sales ; , 1., .a o 3 : : :S : :S ; o'gj" 1 ; • :§§23 fairly at steady prices. :|i 1 East India goods have been more active, Calcutta Linseed being taken freely at $2 35, gold, 60 days, to arrive, and several tliousand bales of Manila Hemp have been sold on the "its :S2 : •§»' • p 55 :R2* :S - 1 s '^ : :g : ;|sig||i iijiisp. '^ '^* ^S S^ :S :S : ;83 : :S :Sg ;i| SS -^ «o CO f-<v CO o spot at 1 Ic, gold, > Metals have been generally dull at previous prices ; Russia sheet, however, has sold more freely, but at decline, thoutjh the close is firm ; about 3,000 packs have been sold at 10|@ H-|c.i gold but some C Hops remain dull difornia have ar/ived week declined, but later on a better speculative demand prices advanced, closing at 24fc. for refined on the spot, and 14^3, for crude in bulk. Tallow has in g I- :2 -g : • : • : |^G< CO ^£^^J3^.0 i : :§ :i SI •O^StrQ^ a •MM : • and nominal for State, &c., and sold at 15@20j. Wool very firm and quiet for want of stock. Rosin has been fairly active and has advanced, closing at |2 55 for strained. Spirits Turpentine has declined, but closes very firm witii only about one hundred barrels in yard, and the business entirely in small lots from store at 58@60c. Petroleum early S . ^.SftS'' * £1 «o to Q <o t> »H CO C155 35^ ,-1 m 5? •Oi^^oc' Si e* 10 r 5« c ^g bOboSiM^^gggQ P-S :S as the been active at ^o, advance, olosing at 9@0|o. c* a a ; a Qj (ft »8S 2 ^b . » . : . 1 , : ,. UtLji6, 18714 oriRowicLk tttii Imporls or LeadlDK ArtlcUa, Thn following lalilo, compllod from Ciiitom Houm returot shows the foreign linporUi of certain loftdlnjj arlicloB of commoroa at thi« port for the liwt woek, tinea January 1, 1871, and for the eorresponding notlod In 1870 [TlKi qu«iitUy l« gtynn In padUftM wh«n not otharwiM paclflcA.] IPor thg BInca Jan. I, Bama ini. 1870. weak. uiu« and Karthauwar*Chlna Xarthanwara ,. >»» a«r ij«j iu.«n >,CH eiawirar* MM Uual, torn «:i Plata Hardware iMjia M,Mt 1870. Suns 3.XII 1I,(UU a.iia w 3,«) IMI Wasle IJ8B 1.0(7 3, Ml baits ? aa obaoeo Madder OUa, osfentlal.. > Oil, Olive aiw Opium I.IM 1.4!« 3,7 It 1.713 1«U 13,*'1 '.,3;i I6,3IN 1,«B W.UI1I 11.851 6.470 51 Pun bl C^uuny cloth Hair U9IUP, bales UlieM, dkc— Wluea 7«V indla rubber Acsal Unseed UolaMos 337,4M 494j;6 34,043 16.831 IS l.UR 601 Ml 63,774 67.760 43.814 84.767 19,763 23 448 230.W18 6^4,liS0 undraaaad Ao— 939,130 2I7,'<1* 497.446 839.898 413.735 3.089.609 3.790,«» 30.968 333,947 80,797 ijai Baltpatra »,8W i,wt 1»,4» W9 Kufltlc Logwood... 1.100 Manojtany... 71,011) Kseeipta of Domeatlc Produce for 41,440 99,8*3 163,S38 10,977 15,»77 191,680 11<,313 34,080 143.260 97,318 183.987 99.493 44>I6 T',M7 Cork 3:).iu> 3X337 304 1,610 Olager Pepper 4m Ti*.9M 137.JU 3«.4« 37.M3 Oaaaia W.VM 36,830 ra.»" 183,614 Spices, 13,«i S3, IDS S0SJ30 86«10l l.t74 llldes 3:;,3U Rice au :,oo4 3UJ>7 18,9U 1,4^ 8' unjaa 4M KJ8* Woods- Jewelry Watches 19J«1 Lemons KalsluB «,IS8 18.1H7 1.MI 843,14* Oraajces Nuts 4W W 13.351 Ac— FrulU, l;l,«i9 31 llldes, dressed. i;3.I38 fish l.UI 33,331 193,611 t«»l.n3 Corks Fancy goods.... 1,W3 MS Bristles :3,i« 7<l 4U,S2I l>,48 ^.IM 28M 10,081 1.0O4 8,370 Wool. bales Articles repof t*d 3.i)a> It; S6.0M by value— sa .. 391.64 48,43< ;^l(tara an ac 47,369 3,400 Wines, AcChain pag'a.bks •MS 11! boxaa* Bucars, » 9U mdlzo 7I.W7 884.IM 44,tOft 1,I97.9IM 1.8U7.19I *bbls l.SIV 9U Ouin, Arablo... IM.>16 1,3W 47,3(7 M,197 IVeek atnd alnce •Jte iw: rltau 9*1 16I.C3J 309.339 347.34J 4,lli4.40t 7^ 3tJ3« Iba.. '4 BxroaraB aiaos saT.iTo— aaonrra staosaBFT.t. 1.717 3.143 301.006 i,80« •.tl8 Hates 4,479 7,*;: 4,173 Oamblcr Omni, crude.... 3. niliM Bamr,, hhds, tea m BrlmHtont), tou Coelilueal Croam Tartar.. .... bara. Tin slabs, 7,!«3 time Wa ronn. 130 9* Lead, plfs Spelter Bteol Tin, boxes 7.7 7 3.a;t 4.»t KK Irou^ I7.4M ao.»iij Uuooa, bates Ml T.VU CoSaa, baxt IIM« .9iw>n Oulton baiat i.ini Ornxa, Ac— Bark, fornTlan aw ».»58 lllea Dowdort.^ 9.371 Jevetery, 1871. Cutlery Wu» vory weak, 681 From the foregoing ststemeat It will b4) seen that, eoinp«ra4 with tba correaponding we«k of last aeaaon, tbnre la an Incrffaan la tbanzportathia week ol 8l/i97 balno, while the aUicka to night ara 18,243 bales more than they wirn ni this lima a year ago. Tha fullnwlng ia oar usual tabin showing tha morSBSBt of eotlon at all the |ioru from Sept. 1 to .Mny 12, tha latasl mail dataa. do not include our telegrams to-night, as wa eanooi tasuis tha accuracy or obtain the detail nec^siiary by telegraph. *o- MatalB, butCODI Soda, bl-carb. Boda.sul Boda, aab Plax Bana tha BlBca Jan.!, time Olitn>, Olau Por Jannarr 1. receipts of domestic produce for the week and Biace Jan. 1, kud for the same tiino in 1S70, hare been as follows The Neworlaana.... 04413 33Uja* Savannah Texas *»I,I49' 490,K«1 3*1,1:6 itljn ... Florida North Carolina.. Virginia Other ports 13.19*' 30.731 a3,9a*i B4«lt the past week has flnctnatad eonsideraUr. there was an improvement of ^c. c\i\tAj nodar the inflnonce of the upward turn at Liverpool. This advanra •mtm conlinuod on Monday, Middling Uplands al the closn iM-ing quoted at 16) here, and at T\(\ at I,ivertKM>l. Tuesday, aMinugh Liverpool was quoted at 7* d J, prices here gave way \r, and the next day there was a further decline of \r., Middling Uplands closing that day at 15{c. Thursday, there was no change, but today the quotation returned to 15}, with mo<lerate demand, closing staady. The offerings during the week have been sutticicnt to meet the demand, though there has been ao pressure to sell. For fatore delivery the movement in prices has in the main corresponded with the fluctuations in spot cotton. Low Middling cloaed tonight at 15ic. for May, 15 5-16 for June, 153c. for July, 15|c. for August, and 15)c. for September. The total sales of this description for the week sre 84,600 bales, including 1,000 free on board. For immediate delivery the total sales foot up this woek 19,645 bales, including 8,230 for export, 6,030 for consumption, 1,365 fur speculation, and 4,020 in transit. Of the above, 41 bales were to arrive. The following are the closing quotations: last Kaw weak. &aheB...pk};s. an, Florida. time 3,866 This BInce Same weak, Jaa.l. time 10 'lO. 3,4371 Oil cake, pkgs.. OU. larJ.:.^.... Breadstuffs— Kloor.bbls. 8AI7 14,843 3US4 1.9 1> 1,838 1,013,413 Wheat .bus. 443,9-il 2,UOIJ,OJ4, Corn 2W,VB' 4,2I1.UI)>| Peanuts, bags. . 3,m.865l Provisions— 815.279 Hutter. pkgs... 10 998 142,1 1.26 1.011.262 14,163 6.4>3 r!,i6«I 1,099,171 OaU Sye garley. Ac. rass seed i8"ifj '.5.V5 •."nil 23.U:, ao9.39;[ 7.>9.«53, 3ll.5!0 14(>,03^ beans Peas 69.088 39,901 43,8« »i SSI :t'i.540 13,(3 901,851 319.5&1 123 93'i 1.291 'sis 1^ C. meal.bbiB Cotton. bales. Kemp., bales. Hides ....No. I0,6ill Hops. ..bales. Leather jldes 877 61,084 lAolasaeibbls. Nava: Storaac;r. turp.bb'. Spirits tnrp. 187.197' :a.6i3 l,062.2»2i 41,753. 2,091 :aii UjUIII 1.969 Kosln 10.29:1 174.016 9:^3 II.IU T»r Plteb Cheese Catmeats ?iS::::::::::: Beef. pkgs.. 55.459, 160.0:9 1J.K3I 1,038.5171 12.S.J1 3,jl.i 2<1.9U, 3!1.468 39,977 Lard, pkgs Lard, kegs.. Rice, pkgs 337 12t.l.SS 300 9.161 9.885 76.873 3.662 S,9li9 Stearlne, Sugar, hbds., Ac. ~ Tallow, "1 pkgs.... Tobacco, pkgs.. Tubuccu^ fihos WbUkey.bbla.... Wool, bales Dressed hogs Mo. 44,686 171,486 105.784 67.839 136,493 U15 1.366 11.993 4.374 449 surch 37,6*9 188,384 101.973 103.000 l«l.69l 112.424 81.371 35S 63JII 92.990 50,333 11.437 9,190 81,314 4,730 3SS U.992 {» 7.809 Sg,007 ?5,9J3 8,«>( l,i»3 8.880 9,981 41.347 14,093 88.169 23.157 90,114 1.426 27J19 65.418 Ordinary Oood Ordinary Low Middling par lb. OoodMlddllng COTTON. Fbidat, p. M., May 19, 1871. special telegrams received by us to-night from the Southern ports, we are in possession of the returns showing the receipts, exports, &c., of cotton for the week ending this evening May 19. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the total receipts for the seven days have reached 45,067 bales against 46,849 bales last week, 51,433 bales the previous week, and 56,685 bales three weeks since, making the total receipts since the first of September, 1870, 3,7 1."),'!.) 1 bales against 2,719,023 bales for the same period of 1869-70, showing an increase since September 1 this year of 990,431 bales. The details of the receipts for this week (as per elegraph) and the corresponding week of 1870 are as follows By . Kac'd this week at— Hew balaa Orleaoa Mobile Charleston 16.5« 4.782 3.543 4.731 6.107 3.318 Bavannah Texas Tennessee. 1870. Ac. 18T1. bale*. Virginia 194 91 98* 3,81* 9« 3«61 7*>3 9,391 3.6831 Total raoalpta Increase thia yaar.. Ufi» 49.IMI ijm .... I exports for the week ending this evening reach a total of 77,:584 bales, of which 37,728 were to Great Britain, 20^00 to Franto, and 18350 to rest of the Continent, while the stocks as made Below we give the exup thi.i evening, are now 3.35,792 bales. ports and stocks for the week, and also for the corresponding woek of last season, aa telegraphed to us from the various porta to-night: The Kxportad to— Weak ending -May 19. O.Brit Coatln'l 2A« m Savannah Texas 3.7J3 Same w'k weak. 1870. 47,075 5,231 7.11* 33.331 1^ 81* 9S»4 S.«2I 3.4St *»> *9«* t^ 30.0O> 5,225 Iloblle Stock. Total thU 4'ii3 ToUl 1871. Pl» Tot^l since Sept. 1... 3.1%% H2.3M 44.330 3.40J 45.490 38,462 4I<.0M H.nco 913 ~ 1870. I.5.008 8^091° ijnt Other poru I3M*>... 14H«.... IIJI*.... '.\%m.... ii«2:::: isxa'.'.!'. umS.... ».... «.... 16X«.... 1'6]J2:::; 16 17 17)4«.... : sales. 4.3(9 3.21* 3,871 Monday Tuesday 9490 rhuraday... Crlday 1.910 Ordinary. Mld<lllng. a.... I4X«.... I5X«.... :* 14!««.... 1*X*.... 135J2:::: «.... 14X«.... S¥t" 13K«... I4J4S6... 19 »..., 14 !IX».... 13 ».... 19 llJi:::: iix».... 11X».... 6t... _^lllli: For forward delivery the sales (including 1,000 free on board) have reached during the week 84,600 bales (all low middling or on the basis of low middling), and the fallowing is a statement of the bales. cu. 600. 300. .....14iii 900 700 2,300 600 .14 IS-ti UK 14 19-18 15 19 1-16 M\ 1,500 807 '.5 3-16 3,40D 1,5C0 1^200 515 •V'li 16)4 ilO I51-l8 80O 400 3U0 1,9,10 600 SCO 17,800 total 15 For June, bales. l.UOO 1.5a> 4,100 2,800 3,200 700 4.900 4.700 4.400 3,100 !;i5 9-ft 16 11,900 total 1>0.. ...M\ 300 .19 7-1* ....19H 400 .19 9-1* »0. 19 9-16 IJKO.. "X 15« 600.. 16 . \iH \i% 1116 1,000 19 lt-t« \i% 19X 1*0 19 13-16 Jnae. For July. 19 116 19 3-82 1*,100 19X UK 100 19 ».ll 15« 30O 300 \i% 15$ 19K toUl July. Por Angnat. 1,300 15X 300 Aognst, For Beptember. ....15X 19 7-1* 700 10 May. et* sou.. 4.3«).. 900.. 2,300.. 15X 15K 39,100 total bales. 15« 516 15H 19 »-l« 19X 600.. 15 15 1-16 Too a\ CU. 13X bales. cts. 14« 14 15-16 3J00 100 North Carolina 2.72 Hj Tezai. 13 19 Ml UX 100 100 M 3,000 tor Bcptem. Pur Decern bgr. IW 19 7>i* ISK 300 600 30* 14 19-1* 19 1,7.0 3,400 -....l** 1*0 jjS 1J»| 15X 1,900 1,400. 900 I«V :::::i8« .19 U-U 1,1(0 total Dec. sales during the week of free on board have reached 1,000 The particulars of these sales are as below bales. s. p. t. 300 free on board al Charleston p. t. 700 free on board at Calveatoa The following exchanges have beeit made during the week Kc. paIdtoexcbaD«e30OMa]rror3mjaae. ^ Kc. paid to eicbauia 100 Mai (or 100 Beptamber. l.awjiay (or l,«nJiilT, avaa tanua. The 10 Kec'd thta weak at— :8jui. Florida Orleana. Below we give the total sales of cotton and price of Upland*%\ this market each day of the past week Total Good Low Ordinary. jUddll 300 BkOklFTa acoiipTa lloblla. •.... i4Ka.... Ulddllnir Bales and prices For May, 1,715 *" ''•"'•• 1 The market Saturday VDlasd and Same Since Jan. 1. j,„^|j^ ' I!*.7» HoMla Charleston New York Other F' Praaaa Por'ga Toui. : This : : 1 Weather Retortb bt Tblkorafh.— Tha weather of the part week has been a great Improvement upon previous weeks. Ous telegrams received to-night show that it has been warm and dry throughout almost the entire avtU)n bolt. We notice one rainy day early in the week, reported at Columbus and Mobile, but with those exceptions nothing unfavorable in the weather is stated. Replanting, wlieri' it had become necessary, has therefore proceeded satisfactorily, and crop accounts are improving. A few weeks of such weather would do much towards repairing the damage done by the cold and rain of the |»st month, aflbrdlng, aa it does, an o|iportunity to clear out the grass and giving the plant From nearly every section It is rtiported that the a healthy start. we<-ds and grass had l)ocomo very troublesome. The thermometer at Charleston, Columbus and Mobile has averaged 73, at Montgomery 78, at Selma 80, at Macon 77, and at Memphis and Galveston 72. 69.787 IJ84.93S 338,73} 811,149 Chop Mail Rxtorts.— Last week w« lenl oat a large number . : , w : . of letters to each one of the Southern States inquiring with regard to the extent of land put down to cotton and corn this year compared with last year, and the present condition of the crop. have received very many replies, but not enough as yet to come to a definite conclusion for all the States. From Georgia and Alabama, however, our answers are more numerous, and enable us to reach what we believe to be reliable figures with regard to that We — Georgia. Cotton planting has decreased this year from 10 to 15 per cent, and corn planting has increased to j ust about the same extent. The present condition of cotton is very unfavorable this is the unanimous opinion. One correspondent at Columbus says the "continued excessive rains and cold frosty nights have created a necessity for replanting many cotton fields, and some of them will have to be replanted the third time. On high dry uplands, where a partial stand was obtained, the plant looks sickly and stunted; on bottom lauds we hear of no good stands as yet." Another correspondent at Macon writes that " the cotton on the gray lands has been considerably damaged by the late cold and rainy weather, wliile on the red lands it has fared somewhat better, but is overrun with grass." These extracts contain (as to the condition of the crop) the substance of all the letters we have received from the State. Another important point upon which all agree is that not exceeding twenty-fine per cent of the fertilizers purchased last year have been purciiased this year. Alabama. The estimates received as to the decreased cotton planting are wider for Alabama than for Georgia, some of them reaching as high as twenty-five per cent decrease. The best opinion, we think, would put it at about an average of 15 per cent. Com planting has increased about 20 per cent. The present condition of the plant is very similar to its condition in Georgia. A correspondent at Montgomery, who has kept a rain guage for several years, gives the following statement of the rain fall this year and last year ; — January fall of rain February fall of rain March fall of rain . 1870. 5-55 6-45 1871. 4-60 1100 615 Ap: ay to the 15th. 8-57 . Total 1870. 1871. 362 0-30 12-40 5-85 19-52 43-97 [May We We gave some of last year's growth we still have for export. figures on this point several weeks since, but a fuller statement will show the following result Estimated crop, as per Chronicle of April 29 4,185,000 Stock on hand Sept. 1, 1870 59,747 Total supply Consumed by Consumed by 4,244,747 806,000 95,000 2,763.236 275,000—3,939,236 spinners. North, estimated for year '* " spinners. South, Exported to May 13, 1871 Foreign engagements May 13 Total surplus for export and stocks st end of year bales 305,511 We see here that there remains for export and stocks at the end of the year only 305,511, in case the crop reaches 4,185,000 bales. The consumption of Northern spinners we have estimated at the same figure as last year. Should they see any reason for stocking up towards the close of the season, ibere would be just bo much These figures would not appear to afford less left for exiK)rt. much encouragement to those who are operating for a decline. — Gunny B.\gs, Bac4gino &c. The market for cloth has again quiet, and prices, though as before quoted, are entirely nominal. Bags show no improvement in either price or demand. No sales of lots are reported. Hemp has been more Sales are 500 active for Manila, and prices are in seller's favor. bales on spot at lOic, 2,500 bales at lie. and 500 bales inferior ex "Glenlyon" at lOJc , all gold. In other kinds we note no business. Jute is dull at 5^@0ic gold, as to quality. Jute Butts are in fair demand and the close is firmer held at 4^. The sales are 1,050 bales on the spot at 4i@4|c currency, the sales early in the week were at 30 days, but to-day were cash. become very — Movements of Cotton at the Interior Ports. —Below we — give the movements of cotton at the interior ports receipts and shipments for the week, and stock to-night and for the corresponding week of 1870 —Week endingShipments May ; , 19, 1871. Receipts. Augusta Columbus Macon . . . Montgomery... Selma Memphis.. Nashville .. 845 179 250 434 213 1,673 1,214 3,282 May — -Week ending Shipments. Stock. 19, 1870. Receipts. 941 373 639 393 341 - Stock. 965 8,941 1,752 13,880 3,597 3,020 4,500 1,811 10,531 1,563 8,840 1,793 4,526 1,656 5,885 4,100 15,888 4,935 6,168 15,499 38,911 8,325 11,932 69,326 813 656 450 !,017 1,307 1,057 763 566 13,432 7,031 8,0.';5 20, 1371. These totals show that the interior stocks have decreased during he week 10,875 bales (being now 20,415 bales less than for the same period of last year), while the aggregate receipts are 3,157 bales less, and the shipments 3,547 bales more than for the corresponding period of 1870. Visible Supply of Cotton.— The following table shows the quantity of cotton In sight at this date of each of the two past seasons: i871. 1870. Stock in Liverpool bales. 937,000 590,000 Stock in London 91,545 32,98:^ Stock in Glasgow 700 300 Stock in Havre 29,920 86,.520 Stock in Marseflles 15,600 12,550 Stock in Bremen 51,822 19il03 Stock rest of Continent 35,000 30,000 ifloat for Great Britain (American) 260.000 123.000 Vfioat for France (American and Brazil). 42,500 69,090 Afloat for Bremen (American) 41,972 23,467 Total Indian Cotton afloat for Europe*. 315,338 197,000 Stock in United States ports 335,792 317,549 Stock in inland towns 38,911 59,326 . . . . Total 2.190.100 1,559,888 and also all cotton * This item includes all India cotton afloat for Europe, afloat for Liverpool other than American. These figures indicate an increase in the cotton in sight to-night of 636,212 bales compared with the same date of 1870. The exports of cotton this week from New York show an increase since last week, the total reaching 13,095 bales, against 17,844 bales last week. Below we give our table showing the exports of cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last four weeks; also the total exports and direction since September \, 1870 ; and in the last column the total for the same period of tue previous year : Exports ot Cotton (bales) n-om Neiv York since Sept.l,lS70 WEEK KNDDiO r' V9'" 12,691 Other British Ports Total to Gt. Britain 22,464 12,691 493 13,880 11,9.35 536,660 22 12,1.38 964 11,957 548,798 257,521 445 205 4,847 17,488 605 3 650 5,452 17,486 20.609 6,600 21,306 35,163 17.636 4,862 51,575 57,561 1,185 493 Bremen and Hanover 1,125 812 380 Hamburg 12 Total to N. Europe. 842 prcT. year. 13. 13,880 Other French porta Total Frenclt time to date. May 6. 22,340 64 Same Total May ; — ' . t We have here an increase this year of 24.45 inches since the first of January. If to these figures we add a temperature some of the time below freezing, we shall reach a correct conclusion as to the present condition of the crop throughout the State. As to fertilizers used, there is the same decrease noticed for Georgia. shall next week hope to receive our advices from all the other states, and shall in the end be able to make up a table o( general results. It is hardly necessary to warn our readers against drawing the conclusion from the above that there is to be a very small cotton crop this year. A few weeks of clear, warm, dry weather would make a very material, and we might almost say an absolute change. All that can be said is that the planting has decreased about 15 per cent in these States that the fertilizers used do not exceed a quarter of the amount sold last year, and the present condition of the plant is bad. Surplus fok Export. In view of the unfavorable reports with regard to the growing crop which have up to this week been rereceived, it becomes of special interest to know what is the balance — : THE CHRONIOLE. 632 section. . . ii3 2^839 96 113 2,839 488 Spain Oporto& Gibraltar&c 256,557 2,363 All others. 763 Total Spain, Ace Grand Total 23,246 13,297 13,096 17,844 i,809 3,126 1,809 608,951 334,377 The following are the receipts of cotton at New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sept. 1, 1869: NXW TOKK. PHILADELPHIA | BALTIMORB BBCsiPTS rnoHThis This Since Since week. Sept. l.ijweek. jSeptl | New Orleans.. 337 Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Corolina. North Carolina. Virginia Nortii'm Ports. Tennessee, &c. 117,582 1,392 a3,.358 I.511I 17.3,800! 537 36 1,313 10,662 1,585 129,885 lis! 1,842! 312I 189.9791 13,425 5,2781 229,933 6-', 33,143 11,359 Total this year .... 766 680 916 15 958,722 2,222;2:M,851 13,979' 6.32,006 3,272 190,792 5,257 76r 146 13,984 200 12,311 5,377 433 50 54! 61,248: 78,888' 16,165 210l 12,673 1 344' 13,976 4 781 620 Foreign Total last year.. I 36,826, 7,611 568 This week. This Since week. [Septli 7,667 4,904 69 14 Snol 51,566 369 550 14,463 863 ' 1,479 116,726 1,589 I 203 31,714 52 .1' _856 84,640 42,881 — Shipping News. The exports of cotton from the United States the past week, as per latest mail returns, have reached 73,051 bales. So far as the Southern ports are concerned, these are the same exports reported by telegraph, and published in The Chron ICLB last Friday, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are the exports for two weeks back. With regard to New York, we include the manifests up to last Saturday night Total bales. Liverpool, per steamers City of Washington, 608.... France, 2,038. Colorado, 1,396. .. Java, 951 ... Holland, 2,497. Abyssinia, 954 per ships Prince City of Brooklyn, 745 ll,9S,^i Patrick, 1,035... Glenesk, 1,711 ^2 To London, per steamer Roxana, 82 96 To Continent via Glasgow, per steamer Caledonia, 96 445 To navre, per bark Geo. Henry, 445 21 To Marseilies, per bark Lucy Francis, 205 380 Hermann, 199 To Bremen, per steamers Bremen, 181 ii To Hamburg, per steamer Thuringia, 12 New Orleans 'To Liverpool, per steamer Darien, 2,156 and 6 bags per barks Stormy per ships Melrose, 3,027. .Tecumseh, 3,810 12,141 Petrel, 1,370.... Robt. Bock, 1,776 per bark ValTo Cork, for orders, per ship Gettysburg, 3,247 4,297 kyrien, 1,050 1,868 To Queenstown, per bark Sheffield, 1,853 Dr. Barth, .per bark 1,827. To Havre, per slilp Tranquebar, 4,010 New York— To . . . . . . . .• — . . — . Celeste, 1,932 . 7,769 : . : Maj20, — : .. . p«r b«rk Emllr Imi», 1(W. i.sn 749 To AmBtertlain, pur Hcliooner Chaa. 8. Bayllii, 1.900 Liverpool, per ablp HIaaourt, 9,161 UpUad aod 916 8«s Island To Barcelona, per brig lub'-lllta, 800 Upland. Satannaii—To Liverpool, per ship Taber, 3,908 (iilaiid and 8 Hen laland To Queenetown, for orders, por ahlp Albert Eilvv»rd, 5.f«)0 1'pland To Havre, per bark J. M. Moralea 1,960 Upland aud 31 Sea Island. To Bremen, per ship John Biinvan' 9,066 Upland To Antwerp, per brig Watoh. 994 Upland Tbxas— To Amsterdam, per hark Garislang, 799 Baltimore— To Liverpool, per bark Belginm, 887 Boston—To Liverpool, per ateamer Siberia, 180 To British ProTlticea, 9 t,8M 971 R,M8 1,900 Chahlkkton— To Total 9,877 MM 8.911 9.ano 1,181 9,066 99t 79D mn ion 3 (^aeens- Lon- Liver- Mar- Cork. town. don. 99 Havre, Ui 9I» 4,997 1,868 .... 7,789 .... .... 9,800 .... 1,981 BorBredeaox. men. Totzl. eeillea. SM .... 166 13,086 84.488 10,048 9,877 1,770 Savannah.. 8,377 3,911 Baltimore.. 887 897 Boston IW 171 9,066 10,981 Total.... 40,273 4,997 4,8S3 99 9.49$ 90S 16S 4,916 73.061 Included In the above totals are from New York 96 bales to Continent via Glasgow, and 19 b«le« to Hamburg; from New Orleans, 3 bales to Gel te, 1,6S0 bales to Amsterdam. 1.697 balea to Antwerp, 749 bales to Cronstadt, i^SM bclos to Barcelona, and 271 bale* to Vera Criu; from Mobile. 1. 20(1 bales to AmaterUam from Charleston, 800 bales to Barcelona from Savannah. 9H bale« to Antwerp: from Texas, 799 bales to Amsterdam from Boston 2 bales to other British Provinces. : ; ; tmo. MfTl. vn.im 9I.IMA l,881,«M 4.110 I7I.«I8 4,910 194.6S7 KkTF»"> W. Indian, Ac. Eaat Indian... . -•UmIu.- 1.549 7,987 d*M Tbli data work. American Bnulllas 141. laa M0,a84 17,11» I76,a88 901, nam .77.186 914,811 day. 807.800 l,*6B, 1870. 881.880 48.a00 1«,980 1*1,7ST 84,790 M HJPO 4i.«n li.no ll>,9W iiw,tn t,m Total 109 0911,888,070 1.169,478 8,981,118 9M.9I0 818.980 9m,nt Of the present atock ol coUOB in Liverpool 01 per ent !• American against 02 per cent laat year. Of Indian ootlon tba proportion is lH por cent, against \B.V) per cent. liONDON, May 6.— The demand has been Irrairalar. bnl at the drtsn the market in loniftwhat firmer. The following are tb« particulars ot import, deliveries and stocks 1888. Imports. January 1 May to Deli verles 4a,im 188,»48 81,98a BREADST(7FF9. FaiDAT p. M.. The market has shown a upward tendency slight WTl. 1870. bale*. 98.184 170,079 74,891 4 8toclui,Hay4 78,081 The particnlMB of those hipmants, arranged in oar n«aal form are as follows Chailceton. -tnport*.- LOM , Ifagdaltns, >7S Mamancla. 519 Vura Cruz, per achoontr Linda, 171 lIoBiui—To Liverpool, per ahlps B. C. Bcranton, 8,444. ..CiDterbar;. por hark JanUen, I,7"4 8,(196 pool. 11,935 . Tottl* Totkt* TW* i,7:o , To New York.. : 688 '..1 1 Ty Cfltto, per D«rk I'lwiquiilr AjcIIik 3 To Brrmpn. p«r BtoAmt-r Koln, 1.770 Tn AnMt«rd»ro, pnr hark HlorfunL l,tW To Antwerp, pir »hlp Dastniir 1,5*1 To Crunmadl, per bark turr Ann, 749 To Barcvlona, p«r bvka Oiympla, 1,M0 N. Orieana. 19,141 Mobile 8,W3 : . THE CHRONICLE 1871.) To BordMnx, . . 18,114 May 1», 1871 Flour and Wheat, but in the coarser stnfls prices have lieen irregular, the in whole closing unsettled. Flour has come forward freely by rail, and there is an nnnsoally large quantity on the canal, destined for tide-water, but prices have been ruling some time below the relative value of wheat, and some speculation, which, together with an improved demand for Great Britain and the British Provinces, caused an advance in the low grades of State and Western brands. In the course of Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday the sales of common shipping extras alone reached almut 30,000 bbls., commencing at |6<»6 20. and closing at |6 30@6 ,50, with better grades at $6 009 for this induced Gold, Exchange and Fiieiohts.—Gold has fluctuated the past week between lilt and 113J, and the close was 113. Foreign $6 65. Some of the medium grades experienced a |>artial advance. Exchanp^e market remains firm. The following were the last Superfine flours have been in brisk request, and family flours have quotations: London bankers', long, 110|@110i; short, 11049111, done better; so that the whole range of quotations advanced. and Commercial, 110i@110i. Freights closed at id. by steam Southern flours have remained quiet. Rye flour dull. Com Meal, and 9-;!3@ll-32d. by sail to Liverpool. at some decline, has sold freely, including l,.y)0 bbls. Southern By Telegraph from Liverpool. To-day the demand was leas LrvERPOoi, May 19. 5 P. M.— The market opened quiet and stcndv and closed and Brandy wine at $4 10 a $4 30. — a shade ea«ier, with salea of the day footin" up 12.000 hales, of which 3,000 bales were taken for export aud speculation. The sales of the week have been 108,000 bales, of which 19,000 bales were taken for export and 9f,000 bales on speculation. The stock in port is 937.000 bales, of which 562,000 bales are American. The stock of cotton at sea bound to this (.ort la 464,000 bales, of which 2(i0|000 bales are American May 12. May 5. May 19. t April 28. Total snles 81,000 89,000 78.01)0 100,000 Salee for export 16.000 17.000 M.OOO 19.000 Sales on speculation. 11,000 8,000 10,000 22,000 Total stock 966.000 951,800 994.000 937,000 5!l2,n00 Stock of American. 607,000 5«2,000 669,000 Total afloat 416,000 400,000 429,000 4,'>4,0OO . American 8(iO.0OQ show the daily closing prices of cotton for the week Mon. Tucs. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. t>i®... 7S(g>7)4 7>i@... 7X®7?< 7K®7X 7X®. 7H®7X 7X#7J< 7X@77i tH&V-i 7X@.. 75»@ table will Price Mid. TTplands. Orleans.. " Up. 340,000 930.000 967,000 afloat The following . ...& to arrive. ® (9 . & @... reference to —In these markets our correspondent in London, writing under the date of May 6, states Liverpool, May 6. The following are the prices of American cotton compared with those of last year: .—Same date 1870-> ^Fair & Mid. Fair. Good. ^Ord.A Mid-, g'd fair^ ^Gdjtfalr^ Sealsland 32 36 45 19 22 30 23 — & 93 91 18 13 Ord. G.Ord.L.Mid. 6 6S 6'/i 6 i^ 6 16-16 N.Orlcans&Texaa 6 6H 7,^^ 80 25 Mid. O.MId. M.F. 7x 8 Uplands 7 6-16 Mobile 7 5-16 7^ 8 22 19 80 M.F G.Mid. Mid. io;< 11 11 V nfi UX 11,V U^ IIX 8X The following are the prices of middling qualities of cotton at this date and at the corresponding periods in the three previous years: - 1868. 1809. d. d. Midland Sea Island 27 Upland. ..12H' Mobile... 13K 1868.1869. d. d. 23 19 11X 7 5-16 10J< 75-18 11^ 11 113-16 7 9 16 Orleans.. 12S' 19 tiince the commencement ol the tion and for export have been Taken on American... Brazilian Ggvptian. W." Indian.. . . . E. Indian.. Total 118-16 1871. 1870. 26 79-16 8 Midland Pemarabnco. E/Tptian... Broach d. d. Dhollerah... 12^ IIX 10)4 10)« 9X 9S 8J4 8H 1870. .1871. d. d. 7 llti »X 8X 8« 6X *>i 4H year the transactions on speculaActual .—Actual exp. from Liv.. Hull &, other exp't from outporta to dntcU.K. in 1871, 1870. <9H0 bale*. 176,545 16.861 4,aiM 730 300 885 61.970 159,710 106,7a bales. 30.413 17,200 1,399 3,090 70,444 7,900 19,480 447,300 158,430 967,430 806,06 192,599 658.480 93,430 85,71't 6.460 4.s,aeo the sales and imports of cotton (or the week and year, and also the stocks on hand on Thursday last .53. and in the past few days prices have declined 4c., clo8ingat75@76c. for Mixed, and 78@77c. for Yellow Western at which there is some revival ot export demand. Rye has remained without essential change. Barley quiet, the stock being exhausted. Barley Malt closes firmer. Oats met with a speculaprime Western sold at 66^<^7 in store, with choice tive demand White Ohio 72c delivered, but the close was very dull. Canada Peas scarce, and quoted $1 15 in bulk in bond. Corn has been dull, — The following Flour— 6 40O 6 6 80^8 com- Western, mon St. Louis. 6 . Southern shlpp'K extras. trade and Southern, family brands Rre Flour, super A extra Com 7 Flour, bbls.. C. meal, • . . 1 4 90 Peas, Canada IBS 1 TT •0 t 90 11 « 1 8 87 H 71 Rye 1 118 If 81 |0 « 8 10 Barley MiJt 1 KXW TORK. Jan. 73.1(18 i,oa»,i7i 2,997 99,364 9.006,004 4,911,810 1. Bxrom* raoa 1871. . time Jan. For the week. I. 1870. 1,013,413 196,540 9,4iM,88S 7,8n 8t8,»8 n.147 800,889 1.289,565 1,011,988 iBa,a68 1 40 market haa been as follows > Same . Since lib 01 1 11 1 week. Wheat, bush 442,951 " 990,506 Com, " Bye? .... Barlev,Ac " 18.579 " 142,120 Oats 1 935;OaU 18n. For the White in breadstnflk at this -KICIIPT* AT . 1 7 5 Meal, Western and The movement Ambcrdo 65 White California Com. Western Mlz'd, 9 00 Yellow, new 35 White 7 Extra and double extra Wostem A 60 869 tl . Snperflne Extra State Extra are the closing quotations Wheat, 8p Spring, bosh V bbl. $5 75® 6 15 Red Winter. 48. U8 8,814 870,417 16,8« 8,080 10,946 99,881 ttww Toaa.1870 , Since Jan. 1. Forth* Slac* Jan. I week. 715,799 86,419 41,518 9,884 4,019,001 40I,M1 i,iw.aM 101 90L4I8 ::;; 88,847 111,888 818,81* IMn 4.4lB,ai m,sn *"! Mr.R for Tn« CmONlCLK by prepared The followinir . ,^ r. * tables, ^: _ . „ . Grain H. Walker, of Uie New York Produce Exchange, ahow in sight and the movement of Breadstuffk to the latest mail datea -the i SALES, BTC, or AU. Trade. Amerleaa. .kalas.39,930 8,890 BrasUtaa Bgyptian 9,770 West Indtea, Ae. 681 7,910 Eaat Indian 54,310 DBSdUPnOH*. : this week. Total Same Kx- Specula- period 1870. 1871. 566,170 199.980 68.090 17.730 394.980 86,810 3.450 8,700 1,0.0 8,790 I Tatal three boat loads sold, for early arrival, at $1 bales. 142,700 The following statement shows evening and |1 ,52^1 .54 for June arrivals. Holders have been favored by an advance abroad and a higher gold preminm, which have been offset by an advance to 9d. for freight ti> Liverpool by steam. At the close of to-day's market the tone was less buoyant, under a partial decline abroad, and increased receipts at Chicago and Wilwaukee, and leading shippers bid only f 1 .56 for No. 3 Spring, and 1870. 1889, bales. 89,750 14.140 10,580 1870, bale*. ; Southern : spec, to this date—. 1871, bales. 58.990 8,300 3,700 1,010 26,430 Wheat has . ® European and Indian Cotton Markets. Stained but prices ruled very firm. arrived but moderately by rail or by canal, while tb^ Impatience or necessity of shippers has induced them to buy mote freely, paying daily a slight advance No. 2 Spring selling fW>m f 1 S4 on Tuesday up to $1 58 at the opening to-day, on the spot^ active, rirt. 190 8,990 tlon. Total. this year. 6.060 8,000 6t,4.'W S35.aM 10.110 9,790 71.580 79.780 90,690 807,980 30 60 7.990 17,590 640 1,750 10,800 17,650 89,680 l^SOMTQ 1,189,010 Average weekly sales. RKCKIFTS AT LAKK AND RIVER PORTS FOR THE MAT 1870. 94. TM" 18, 1871. 5.t)3l) rioar. Wheal. 8.9>>n hbl*. bsah. <1M lb«.) Kan 19.110 K,810 47,310 ._ Milwaukee... Toledo Chicago.. 98.491 WEEK KNDtNO (Sn lb* ) 90,485 Oil*. Bar!*;. Hft, .Corn. haab. kaak. bash. bash. (HSIb».)(IHIb<.if4Rlh*) (taiK* 888.911 1.110 u>,TM 1U,«8 10,810 MkIM mm M 488 4B8 1,141 JMf : : . : THE CHRONICLE. 634 Detroit Clereland Bt. LouiB 14,S76 5,600 22,550 36,S5S 26,880 66,765 101.930 99,048 637,545 569,353 971,271 716,673 14,182 10,450 146,152 18,472 3,063 2,148 78,607 8,052 2,052 282,681 250,195 380,131 368,061 301,217 322,676 22,322 31,739 33,868 7,019 5,094 26,697 19,283 15,768 21,612 12,243 6,613 20,622 •Doluth Totals Previous week Correspond'g week, '70. 103,71.3 '69. 112,978 '68. 87,062 '67. 72,041 916,661 940,613 632,486 616,527 673,234 1,059,798 7.30,018 308,387 No report yet. COMPAKATIVE AGGREGATE RECEIPTS of Flour 8nd Grain at the same ports from Jan. 1 to May 13, inclusive, for four years 1871. 1,582,419 1870. 1,774,539 8,202,317 13,054,321 3,994,543 683,293 366,505 8,467,034 8,996,168 3,412,130 722,110 291,589 26,300,979 19,889,031 Floor, bbls Wheat, bush Corn, bush Oats, hush Barley, bush Eye, bush Total grain, bosh 2,238,872 5,489,307 11,201,534 3,565,634 414,181 8,212,801 10,680,000 4,016,365 486,109 506,457 204,719 20,875,375 23,900,732 Flour and Grain from Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, Cleveland and St. Louis for the week endii'K May 13, 1871 Shipments of Flour, Com, Wheat, Week Rye, husi'. Barley, bush. bush 256,332 229,084 104,051 350,266 10,726 17,605 21,752 1,450 10,556 21,983 4,692 24,423 Oats, hbls. bush. bush. Week euding May 13, '71. 91,885 1,250,828 1,135,4.57 Week ending May 6, '71. 96,542 922,828 1,271,766 •Week ending May 18,'70. 96,955 1,280,707 4&3,121 ending May 6, '69.113 291 421,859 587,821 : (iree.i 7,994 Laguayra '.l.tJiO Other Sugar, Cuba.. Japan MVarlone pkgs. pkgs. 3.91i pkgs. 3,310 pkgs. 6,314 bags Porto Rico 2,250 mats Other Maracalbo.. 2.145 bags Imports this week at this port have 16,845 hhds., and 38,710 bags. Of Molasses 7,732 hhds. have arrived. In Tea the importa are 1,303,818 pounds of Japan and 503,579 pounds of Black. The stocks in New York at date, anc imports at the five leading ports since Jan. 1, 187) are f <ollow8 stocks m yew York 1mports at leading ports at date. since January 1. , : 1871. Tea Tea ' ports from Jan. 1 to four years. 1868. 1871. 1,254,186 bbls. Wheat IBTO. 1871. lus. (indirect Import) 'offec Rto Coffee, other Sugar Sugar Sugar , Pkgs. bags. bags. boxes. bhds. bags. hhds 87,914«1 73.916 37.789 66,055 10,827 666,478 217,495 1»»,788 260,862 878,262 143,154 2S,468 14,977 103.030 92,481 50,(174 212.068 6.106 3.'B,468 19.418 1870. 26,911.712 31,406 507.721 167,307 187,120 212,503 341,832 172,812 TEA. Comparative Shipments from the same Flour _ included 10,554 bags of Rio Coffee, 4,183 do. of Singapore, 1,469 do. of St. Domingo, and 1,530 The receipts of Sugar are 12,753 boxes, do. of sundry kinds. Molasses 13, inclusive, for 1,830 12,287 7,896 Jav:\ * St. Lonls not included. May Sugar, Brazil. .... bags. biES. Manila, &c.. .... bags. bzes. M'la8*es,i.>uba 4.840 hhds. bhds. Port) Bico. 2,120 bhds. 691 bhds. DemeraMl.. .... bhds. Other i.615 hhds. 2« hbds. "Hhds- inclade bbls. and tcs. reduced 532 b).gs. .. Cuba coffee Rio.... 1868. 1,399,577 1869. 20, 1871. arovmd as yet, and afford no indications of their projected movements. Mail orders are fair in the aggregate, but in most cases the call is for small invoices to carry buyers along for a week or two, until they are prepared to attend personally. The entries direct tor consumption, and the withdrawals from bond, showing together th^- total thrown on the iLarket for the weelt, were as follows Tea, black.... * [May bttsh. 7,469,285 Corn Oats 11 , 100,022 1,895.762 330,764 147,494 Barley Bye Total 11,729,188 20,943,327 13,634,454 About the only chan^ in the market is the development of an Increased and comparatively general demand for the long neglected Japans, with quite a liberal business consummated. Blacks have been alittle slow, but Greens fairly active, and on all grades full former rates were as a rule obtained without difficulty. Taken altogether the market seems to be in a rather more healthy condition than at the date of our last, and importers speak somewhat hopefully of a continuation of the inquiry on a steady level for several weeks. Jobbers have distributed fair amounts, hut mainly in small lots, as consumers and small dealers And it difficnit to depart from the old cautious manner of operating merely to the extent of positive wants. Sales of 6,500 Greens 1,000 Oolongs 1.800 Souchongs, and 9,500 Japans, besides about 12,000 pkgs, to arrive, the particulars of which are not generally made public, but supposed to be about one-third Oolong and the balance Japans. The imports this week include 355,972 pounds of Japan Tea, per " Belted Will," from Yokohama 880,027 lbs of do, per " G T Ray," from the same port, and 608,579 lbs of Black, per " Glanmorganshirc," from Foo Chow. The following tat)le shows the Imports of Tea into the United States (not including San Francisco), from January 1 to date, in 1.S71 and li-70: ; ; NOTK.— St. Louis Included only from March 24, and not included in previous years. RECEIPTS OP FLOUR AND GRAIN AT SEABOARD PORTS FOR WEEK ENDING Wheat, Flour, At bush. bbls. 71,837 32,717 26,108 15,810 19,972 27,680 423,518 10,378 411,439 51,300 27,000 Total 193,624 161,499 Previous week Week ending April 29. 187,944 Week ending April 22. .152,018 Week ending April 15. 160,343 Week ending April 8... 120,684 923,635 520,821 434,775 211,965 248,804 227,146 New York Boston Montreal Philadelphia Baltimore New Orleans . . Receipts at the same THK M4.Y 13, 1871. : Barley, bush. Corn, bush. Oats, bush. 218,526 46,012 68,835 81,000 14,000 145,772 163,625 23,476 12,699 4,466 275 37,900 40O 2,000 400 .309,044 252.8.'>7 178,852 17,565 20,892 12,976 14,375 24,300 50,258 6,400 8,214 3,806 l,20o 1,855 Too New Orleans, from Jan. 1 1871: Flonr, Wheat, bbls. i,443,453 bush. Corn, bush. 4,319,775 8,M3,-343 • Oats, Barley, Hye, bush. bu^h. bush. 56,988 435,582 3,015,043 bushels 16,370,681 Total Grain . . The Visible Supply of Grain, including stocks in store at the principal points of accumulation, and the amount in transit by rail and on lakes and on New York canals. May 13, 1871 Wheat, bush. In store at New York In store at Albany *In store at Buflalo In store at Chicago In store at Milwaukee In store at Dululh Jn store at Toledo Ib store at Detroit In store at Oswego In store at St. Louis In store at Boston •In store at Toronto In store at Montreal •In store at Philadelphia •In storeat Baltimore Rail shipments for week Water shipments for week On New York Canal — 212,758 889,900 533,388 938,000 Corn. bnsh. Oats. 169,808 30,000 606,600 696,578 294,926 55,000 240,800 273,758 224,791 99,888 309,778 23,308 May Total In store and In transit May 13,'71 " " M8y6,'71. " " tMayl4,'70. " " AprU29,'71.. April S»,'71.. . 6,812,259 7,071,961 6,861,483 6,995,680 7,085,436 Barley, bush. bnsh. 33,770 16,000 900 146,211 168,878 11,086 25,737 64,055 129,423 73,630 30,474 800 15,018 109,621 44,225 65,000 50.000 265,979 869,478 977,296 60^666 40,000 110,025 4,129,918 4,509,725 1,464,312 1,568,029 1,836,620 1,481,201 2,017,204 2,251,053 110,345 600,000 85,000 70,000 47,029 1,203,799 944,400 1 4,009,64>> 4,857,865 1,309 1,500 15,927 419 27.599 53,904 7', 500 10^711 15 31,007 14li,:307 73,450 :J36,772 418,329 805,641 410,183 •Bstimated. tBoston, Toronto, Montreal, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Albany not ineluded. 12,028.119 10,429.056 Japan. Total. 5.3«6,872 4,672.339 27,914,861 26,911.712 FRroAT Evening, May do not discover that this market has undergone any very decided variation on the general position since our last report, except that the slight hopes of an improvement in business previously entertained have not been realized, and the whole tone is flat and dispiriting. It is not only importers and jobbers at this point who complain of the dullness, but the same condition of affairs appears to prevail throughout the country, and there is a growing impression that either the accumulations in the interior were greatly underestimated, or a system of caution and economy has greatly reduced the consumption. Goods certainly appear to be offered cheap enough, and some of them at a great loss but not an invoice has been taken for weeks, except a positive outlet bad already been secured in the way of smaller parcels. The arrivals of Brazils have not been heavy, but in the absence of a counteracting demand the stock in first hands has increased, and the assortment is also better. Holders offer their samples at former rates, and are not indisposed to allow slight favors to buyers who will operate with freedom, but there is a refusal to grant any further decided concessions, as recent telegrams from Rio Janeiro still Indi cate light shipments and a range of cost leaving a con.-jiderable margin of loss on cargoes laid down here at the prices now to be obtained. At the outports the movement has not been very heavy, bnt there is still quite a number of little invoices selling to interior buyers in direct competition with New York. Java shows no new features, prices remaining about as before, and a fair amount of stock going to consumers from second hands. West India descriptions are dull, the recent purchases having about met the urgent wants of the trade, and though values are nominally unchanged, there is a tame feeling and many importers are anxious to realize on their pretty large stocks. Sales here of |6,570 bags Kio and 900 bags Santos, 2,000 bags Ceylon, 1,800 bags Costa Rica, 750 bags Maracalbo, 500 bags St. Domingo, and 1,050 bags St. Domingo were shipped from first hands to Europe. Sales at Baltimore of 5,490 bags Kio, and at New Orleans of 2,125 bags do. Imports this week have included 8,140 bags Rio Coffee, by " Rew" and "E Shun ;" 625 do Savanilla, by " Branch" and " Elizabeth ;" 4,183 do Singapore by " Sallie Brown ;" 1,469 do St Domingo, by " Ben Bolt" and " H H Thompson," and 905 do sundry kinds by the "Ocean Queen." The stock of Rio May 18, ana the imports since Jan. 1, 1871, are as follows New York, York InBags. „ Stock 73.fll6 1871 Imports " 19, 1871. The market continues in about the same general condition noted for a week or two past, with values scarcely changed and the supand probably the most unsatisfactory to owners on the list, and the movement in sweets has fallen off somewhat, owing mainly however to the filling of pressing orders, as holders are firm and refuse to name concessions on their goods. Interior buyers commence to drop in here aud there, bat tU«y appear to IjeJJ merely looking Coffee is in a very sluggish state, COFFEE. We Same date O-ROCERIES. plies as a rule fair. 10,519,860 11,610.317 1870 The indirect Importations, including receipts by Paciflc Mail steamers via Aspinwall, have been 10,327 pkgs. since January 1, against 31,496 last year. The receipts of Tea overland by railroad have this week amounted to 639 pkgs. 58,768 231,328 :W4,138 314,495 Green. " Black. 1871 4",666 2.5,000 574,045 565,402 590,589 746,168 861,776 699,544 ports, excepting Hyc. bush. InlSIO Phlla- BaltiNew Siivan. & Galdelpbia. more. Orlear». Mobile, veston 28,468 .... .... 270312 14,805 225,189 ... ~ 32,448 9,893 2I6.200 185.128 Of other sorts the stock at New York. Mav ports since January 1 , 1871, were «» follows ^New York-^ In bags „ ^ lava and Singapore Ceylon Maracalbo Laguayrn 18. stock. Import. Imp. 34,6V3 87,612 4,253 Other Total Same time, 1870 37,789 14,977 148,454 117,768 48,049 41,»90 Inolades mat*, and ;li 4,100 ISO. 760 S.WX) J2r!)0 20,602 7.600 3,045 46,361 666,478 507,721 imports at the several Bait.- N. Orle's Import. Import. Import. •3l!,847 • 76,6112 Ml.S'.M Total. lli;*! Boston PhUadeJ. 74 7.2S0 7.703 7,450 1,!S3 14,129 St.Uomlngo 9,915 2.00U 115,002 •i;96a 6,610 21,842 00 B2 16.ft20 Ac reduced to ban. 542 9.706 714 12,382 9,952 1,400 «.*)7 1,400 8,478 7210 217,495 119 167^17 : May : THB CHRONK'LR. foniHB OTMn m ollMnca 20, 1871.J baoyancy on lUwi notwl ImI wMk baa Onally dcTrlopcd Into ralhrr * t*in« frwllnn, and (t iilnioal anjr llnKt dncfi our Imviit prrrudinii report II conri*Rp|nn would hAvr. been nrc<MiM«ry In order tu veil with iiny cue The check 10 the or fretdum. Thr fAJIItiK nfT In thu drnianfl for thotr prodiirtlon rrilurc<l tha A'antfl of rcflnen* In M}nw cnm-* In nlmo^l nothing', hb lln-y found ttupiiIlt'N from old purrhatM mill on hand, nothwlthntanillni; llii' atti'mpla niaili' to krrp opcnilnna atrlrlly ulthln ih« inari;ln of ariual ucremlly, and nrlthrr Ilii' trade apeculatort* cornier; to thr rrllef, hnMnmw aaanmcd amall pniponlonx, with the nanal alack tone alwaya nollccahle on ancb occulona, but morr M|>e<'lally After Talure have been prerloualy on the advance. We do not diacover, how. ever, that Importer* have loetany ronHdence, or for that matirr bayera, aa pnrchaaea have been made for next nionth*a delivery on a baala fully e<|ual to ruling valuea at prt'^cnt The cnip 1" nnilouhti-dly nhort, the wanta of cniiKnmora In all probalitllty likely to reach nearly an averaRe, and though the arrlvala Jaat now arc rather larger and the at<Kk IncreaalnK, there la thou)cht t<> be no danger of an overalock nnlcaa, Inilced. valnea Khonid be run np b\gh enough to attract aupplle? from unui*ual aoureea. The offerlnsa dnrhif; the week wera at no time large, and embraced few samplea of gooda In atoro, aellera preferring to negotiate on landing parcola. Kcllnod koo<I« have moved with much loaa freedom than laat week, and with the production overrunning the outlet valnea decreaaed, with quite a competition at tlmea ahown by the varlona companlea to get rid of their aurplna. All gradea are now available, and •election! comparatively caay, though at the cloee the feeling la again quite flrm. The aalea of Kaw embrace 3,181 lihds. Cnba, l.iOi hhde. Porto Rico. 250 hhda. Dcmerara, !loa hhda. St. Croix, SO hhde. English laland, &c., 22 hhda. New Orleans, 60bbla. and 270 ceroona St. Domingo, and 6,408 boxes Havana. Importa at New York, and atock In Urat handa. May 18, were aa follows: or Cat>a, bxa. Imports this week... Block t'oba, tl.iM sametlme,-ra I17,8M 1^,M« I •• ll,l»9 «*» In flrat hands.. SametlmelSTO *hhds. baga. 3.7* ba«*. asTRo 10,148 »8! 31,7«8 31,78:1 aai,ii« IS,»K 14,7110 M,ar« I4»jtm 80,074 hhda. 1,077 37jn l\A» :i2,o«s S35,4«8 n,4gl 103/30 135*18 186» Other Uratll,Manlla,*c,Melado P. ttlco, 'hbda. Ijun •hhda. 12.793 129,(16 since .Ian. «J03 lOUM 83,08* Umona 685 flrmtr for Onafw, lad • food at aiietlon hav« terdJy kspt np wllb lbs are In only fair daaaad, kal prima and sell at tlt«M4 per hnndred. Haracoa BananM are of iMtln and srll well at $\ TII4M from vnaMla. Baracoa CeetmnU ssll slowly at tut per Ihonaand, ami Carthairena are dull at |M p«r Utoaaod. Domeailc dried a|>ple« have (M'eo firmer, owtag to lh« porelaaliig last *a«k to fill the California order, but at the cloaa the nmrket la very (|al«l. wtlh many sellers and few buyers. Blarkb<-rrlea are now all out of secood haada; the last lot of account brought iHHc.; alnce, they have aold at Hi Peaclxs of all kinds are scarce, bnt In no demand prices are nominal. Pitted ihsillas are firmer and In fair damaad. Plums are dull, "--r'-rriri nra slwty. >>i M qualify, . ; PeanuU not active. are again b<'comlng more active, the stock la tba 1^ becoming very low, and thera la more Inquiry from holders; atock Is said to be only one half of what It was last year. Domestic green apples are firmer and In demand. The stock In leehoassa Is redmead to about 5,000 barrels, and sales are at t7 50 for Knasetu. Craabarof Jobbers la I rles an- dull anil Maryland, and without a price. Strawberries are in bettar supply per quart for best. ; The and 550 ; receipts at bbls. New Orleans. New York, and stock in flrst hands. May Cubs, Imports this •hhds. S.SM week •• stnceJan.t " samstlmclSTD Stock In llrst " •• •hhds. •hhds. •hhds 9,28 1,447 IU,40i 3,1W 3,578 3,127 4,666 same time TO sime time W were aa follows Other N,0. ADVICSa VBOm PBOBDCINCI HARKBTa. Ans.'lleard A Co.'s usual telegram, datel China, Aarll If, without any fact regarding tea, aa the aeason at all the porta has closed, and no furlbsr quoutlons or stalistica may be looked for until the new opens. Tfa.— Messrs. i Date of Name ol aalllna inO-71. Teaael. .Ian. 21 l.'oyalMlnatrel.. Jan. SO Witch Banders Jan. 31 Feb, 5 Feb. 7 Feb. 6 Feb. 7 Fab. !5 Feb. 17 Solent ..Tokohama.'.! Stephen RIabop. Wbampua B. Nicholaon. .Foochow Sea Serpent .Hong Kong.. Jehn Xfcholson "* Shanghae. ... Stanlleld Hhangbae. 9,137 Imports of SOKKr Sc niolaasea at . Tukohama.. Lothair known to be afioat 3,200 WO leadliiK porta alnce Jau. !• ^-Holssses. -, •HBi Boston. Philadelphia... Baltimore New Orleans... ToUl Tea. Hyson, to fair Superior to flne.... 1870. gold. gold. gold, gold. gold. jo food do fair do ordinary Java, maU and bags Brown Inf. to com. refining fair to good 112,812 Jo do IS 18 «I3H 20 a22 aW Native Ceylon Maracaibe Lagnayra SI Domingo, Jamaica i gold. I8Hai7 gold. UK»i7 go.d. 14 alt bond.... gold. *vai6 gold. IS li mwA | 814a 9H I 8Va 9H •vaiOlt I0Sail)< do ISto 15.. do 16tol8.. II^aiVK do do New Orleans new V I do do B do do extra C Yellow sugars Crashed and grannlated ,.,.&tll( :-t'9'i< Powdered 11 IIKall? iixaii' uSail It^l> aW Blolaasea. ¥)» Cnba Clayed gall. Cuba 40i> trja centrifugal,, Xsi .11 English Islan da... •41 Rice. BaJgoon, dressed, gold In bond ()«• Sasala,laeases,..gold V a. do Cassia, in mats. Ginger. Bae3 and Al (gold) FRI7IT8. &c. do Mace Nutmegs, essks cases Penaag do probably be bought at $2 1.5 if the ofliT was made. Currants are In light demand at about former prices, at which only amall lots are changing hands. Prunes arc dull and favor the buyer. Sardines have not been affected by the large salsa of last week ; they meet with only a coiilil our quoutlons. Niila are selling slowly a good many have arrived in a poor and damaged condition, and find sale only in the anctlon rooms, at from S^c. per lb. for walnut. Pirectaekers are In steady though only moderate demand at our hist prices. African Peaants, on account of Ihe Karcityand bigll|irlO«aof domcUc, s«U well, a ' 81 31 . 1 8K# I 18 J)<1 Carolina 81 H , 31 14 I Zl 10 IS a 88 85 # 82 88 (new) *V '•!< Pepper, In bond " <ao'-:\ do Sin (fb Singapore t Snma'. a Ptaenio, jio Jamaica (go _- <l) 1 ! do ' I • In bond• io Clove*., do ''O In do bond Fraita and Nata. a Balslnsj9saaiessjsw»oialjao do Layer, 19t0. IP box. 2 45 I* do Sultana, V a Valencia, V » Ix>ndon Layer. tu do V j 2 50 ' do 175 vB. H Daiap rarrrs. «a. 00 do do Southern, do sll«eJ...._. Wcacern MISM II Sol • hn>}40 i>oifKsTic Apples, Stale tjlharriea common do Blaekberrles Cherries pitted Sicily, soft shell., Pecan Xots Shelled. Spanlab, Hlrkery Nnta a 4 a u a > a npar«d,>|is*hlv ivlca ;* « ... Peackas, pared Canton Olnger, case Almonds, Cangaedoo do Tarragona do do do do Karceloaa...... Fire Craaii best »t Smyrna Oarman Bnuliynis Fllbern. Slctlv African Peanuts Walnuts, Bordeaux Macaroni, Italian fm •- DatM Flga, a II a. Prnnelles dried market continues to be a quiet one. Pricea are comparatively lower than for many years, yet the trade have no confldaaea, and buy only such lots as they need for daily demands, and many of the Jobbers who carry a little more than needed for present wanta are nnderaclling Importers. Early in the week there was apparently more firmness in layer Raisins, hut later agaiu the market shows signs of weakness, and only Jobbini: lots can he at « • m « i -K 5«a Ikir, I Pmnea, Jrench Pmnrs, Turkish, demand I moiaises Currants, new Citron. IfSgbo'»> fair to Sop'r to flne. Bx. f. to finest. 8s apices. for wholesale parcels remains comparatively dull, a lot of 1,000 boxes * Cong.. Com. «o *» Hav'a. Box, DJ». Nos. 19 to a). l2«ai8K SMa 9 9^^ 9H Havana. Kox, white .2«J.JW 9xa lY Porto Rico, refining grades. Hav'a, Box, D. S. Nos.7to9... do 10tol2.. do do and dealers do not appear to anticipate any immediate improvement in business, as the trade are fairly stocked and require few Invoices, though In reality the general paucity of the supply In first hands Is the main cause of the slow movement. Additional arrivals have recently taken place, but they were pretty much all prerloualy sold, and made no actual Increase of stock. Values continue to hold their own 00 all qualities, and in some caaes are a trifie buoyant, .\mong the Jobbers the reporu do not indicate anything very large in the way of sales, but there is a fair retail distribution and full figures can be realized. ; *' talr flne fine to flne.^t.... . . sold at $2 50 i and barrels reduced to hbds. SPICES. The Foreign Souc. Ex do do isyait 16.028 1,623 148,754 do I Porto Rico UlfiS Oolong, (."ommoii to do Saperlor to [ a «0 i -n mm a SB a » ai a a" M fair to good gro'-ery. gro'-ery do 9xai('*!4 grocery aradea.... cnolce gToeerr... pr. tocTiolce groeeri lOSaiOJi llrazll.bags .... centrifugal, (tagal,hhds.4tbxs. hhds. 4tbxs. n5, Ij^ail 'Manila, Manila, baga Melado 4tia 7 7W White S ngars, A. 4^a Cuba Muscovado... 37d,2S2 ^Oiily Saltf^ H.Sk.ATw'kyKl.l.tofln «t 15 "" Uncol. Japan.Com. to fair.. 51 do Sup'r to fin.-.. <a do Rx. I. to flnesl. :j I l5.!,ai5K reflning 70010 272,503 I 14w9l4H prime .50,108 260.862 I Soarar. 3«,043 18i,lU I Coiree. Kto Prime, dnty paid 17,770 17 361 19.759 15,278 199,748 w 40 do SO a 75 do Kx. ftne'to finest. ... 80 al 1.5 Young Hyson, Com. to fair. 40 a 85 do Sn;>er.to flne. 60 «s fO do Kx.Aiietofineatl 00 «l 80 Gunp. & imp., rom to fair. 58 O 70 Sap. to nne.. W ai 00 do do Kx. fine to llnest.l 10 ai 4) Hyson Sk. * Tw C. to fair. 81) a 40 do do Sup. to nne. 45 a SO 129,61'J 'Inoludtnir llercija The market ^Doty nald- Common ^Bhds.— 117I. New York HiKhei. do do do do do do do 4,077 Sugar.' . The Following are RaiInK (Inotationa In First Uan<la On the Purckaae or Small Lola Prices are a Fractio Cuba, 1,791 U7l,70t 4,184387 PRICE* crRRKNT. 9,121 of suipir (Ine.lndiui^ Melaiio). and of Molassesat the leading porta January 1, 18TI, to date, have been as foUows -Boxea.- " . Mar. 33^80 The imports from . . bbla 223 1,227 1,JT3 ITS 16,281 From. -Yokohama... .Sban^hae... 84 1.152 47.7TO 53,316 hands " " 18, Oemersra, P. Rico, twm sell at 20iia0c. la Total bnt the supply Is so unu!>nally largo that holders are unable to gain a decided advantage. Syrups have sold with less general freedom, though commanding previons rates, but Sugar House Molasses finds an outlet about as fast as produced, and Is very flrm at 20c. In hhds., and 24c. in bbla. Sales of 618 hhds. Cuba Muscovado ; SJSO hhd><. Cnba Clayed ; &55 hhds. Porto Rico 225 hhds- praralta. Tba demand from )abtan. In freely, I.IM There has been aome Increase of the arrivals of foreign bnt largely on direct consignment to consumers, or of an undesirable qnality. and the market obtains no relief. Grocers and refiners are very well represented, and really seem not only wlllInK but anxious to operate with a fair amount of freedom, «ould they find the ncceseary assortment from which to make their selections, but importers have nothing of conitc<iuencc now to offer, and expect few lots to arrive, which keeps bUKlDCHti within a imrrow channel. On desirable goods the faellng is, of course, very flrm, and most of the trade have recently advanced quotations, even on medium stock, aa this begins to attract attention in the absence of anything better. Domestic has met with a few spasmodic calls, princiially on the fine and fancy qnalities, and these comnuinded full rates, MnMod K<mm>m Cat are firm la prle*. At the aueUon aala lu-day PalarBW Onagaa sold M |4 M#4 TB p«r hox,M4 da. Iximona at $3 Uft4 40. The sopply of Wsst ladla kinds la fall. Ptuapplsa na* nOI<ASSBS. Barbadoes . . . ..- B # ; 4H t t) II It «». M baab .... Peanuts. Vajc'd to rne\ do 2 90 paper shell SanUaea... t hi. box. Sardines V qr.lwx. I I do mm. to fMtr do do Wll. g'dloheal do W tU 1 Oroeers' Brass •n4l Mnndriea. '14a B|.Car6V^a"(^(tatJ' Borax 8al8o4a,Caak ; 8 cSiiphor.' iabbja.'.'.'*' ' OllstnsSoap«.„.rt... 3!< 4ve 8P » r , t '.i> ?aid. u " H a <M I* 41 # M said I M t\ r» a* ml U Manila cnld Oordags, \<aalU, MaadM. :tHa I* do do Larga alaaa. li ... do ( L Btxofn a*i Sic. Licorice Calahra "adder,.... lBdl(e,Miidraa iBIsal . .,„ II a 3 .... THE CHRONICLE. 636 THE DRY aOODS TRADE. The market has down M Friday. P.M., May 19, 1871 into the dull state peculiar to this the year, and transactions of season settled in any department are But few buyers have visited the market in unimportant. person since our last report, and the bulk of the sales are on mail These are coming in in fair numbers, and call for orders. moderate amounts of goods, though the trade is not so heavy as was generally look for. The demand from city buyers is fair, the continued warm weather having stimulated a good demand from consumers, and necessitated a more or less general replenishment of stocks. Southern houses have also been buying rather more freely for a few days past, in consequence of an improved retail demand there, but no important inquiry is reported from any section, and the sales remain of small assorted lots. The range of prices has been without notable change, and continues fairly firm on J[May all lines. Advices from salesmen in the west and southwest, are to the effect that the prospects? are considered favorable for a good retail 20, 1871. do 80 Indian Head 86 12, 36 10^, Laconia O 89. 12 do B 8!< Falls do « P^, 86 11 10, lodiao Orchard, A 40 12i. do 86 lOi, do E 8*^ lU, Medford 86 Lawience A 86 II, Lyman Nashua fiae O S8 Hi, do R 86 13, do E 40 14^ Newmarket A 38 lOi, Pacific extra 86 lli, do L 36 11, Pepperein-4 22i,do8-4 26, do 9-4 27i, do 10-4 32J, do 11-4, 87i, I'epperell E fine 30 12^, do R 86 \\i, Pocaeset F 30 8, Saianac fine O 33 Hi, do R 36 13. Stark A 36 Hi, Swift, River 36 8, Tieter 27 8. Blkacued Shektinqs and SaiaTiNGS sell fdiily at firm prices Amoskeag 46 16j, do and are uochauged in every particular. 42 15, do A 36 !4i, Androscoggin L 36, 15i, Arkwriglit WT H6 18, Ballou A Son 36 12i; Bartletts 86 14i, do 88 13), 87 11, 11, XX AA 36 13^ Boott B 36 13^ doO 30 36 18, Blackatone 26 8^, Clarke 86 17i, jjwight D 40 18, EUerton 10-1 46, Fruit of the Loom 36 16, Globe 27 6i,Qold Medal 36 13, Great Falls Q86 16 HiU'e Semp. Idem 36 15, Hope 36 13, James 36 16, Lons86 12^, New York Mills dale 36 16i, Masonville 86 16, Newmarket 36 18, Utica 36 Ul Pcpperall S-4 22i, do 10-4 Rli. Tuscarora 38 11, do B-4 25 do 6-4 »2i. do 9-4 47i, do 10-4 62i, Waltham 42 15^, da6-4 22i, do 8-4 27i, do 9-4 S'-'i, do 10-4 37^, WamButU 36 20. Printing Clotbs have shaded a trifle, but still sell freely at 7@7i for full 64'e, 6|@7 for seconds, and 6@bf for 60x64, epot and future Bates 10, do R XX X delivery. through June, with a pretty thorough clearing out of PaiNTS ere in good request, and prices are firmly maintained vitbout This will leave merchants in a good condition for the Fall change. American lU^, Albion solid 10^, Aliens 10^, do pinks 11, stocks. Dunnell's 11, Hamilton Atlantic 5^, trade, and there are indications already that the season will be an purples 10^, Arnold 8^, 11, London mourning 9i, Mallory pink Hi, do purples lOJ, Manchester active one. Collections are coming in freely as the rule, with only purple pink and 12^ do W fancy 12, lOJ, Mernmac D 11, no a few individual exceptions. Few suspensions have been reported Oriental 10^, Pacitic 11, Richmond's 10^, Simpson Mourning 10, thus far, the only important one being that of a shawl-importing Sprague's pink 11, do blue and White 10J,(lo sliiitings 9i, Wamsutta and jobbing house, with liabilities amounting to about $66,000. A HPkintkd Lawns and Pkbcales. Pacific Percales 22}, Lancaster settlement was effected with the creditors at 50c on the dollar. Cambric 14i, American Shirting Styles 19, Americin Uress Styles 18, Domestic Cotton Goods. The market remains about as last Merrimack 16}. Duiioell Dunnells Oriental 18, Atlantic 18. reported on all cotton fabrics. Brown cottons in the lower grades Lawns 12^. Pacifi'; 1,400 Funcy 14, do Solid Colors 15. do Organdies are very firm, and in some instances tend toward higher prices, 15, S,)rJguHs 1,400 12}, Victoria 1200 yl, Atlantic 1,400 12}, Man Chester 140O 14, do Piques 13}. although as yet few changes have been made. There is a short Chkoks.— Caledonia VO 23, do 50 22}. do 12 26}, do 10 21, do 8 17 supply of nearly all makes in these as well as the finer counts, but do II 22, do IB 27}, Cumberland II}, Jos Greers, 65 16}, do 65 18 distribution W — — — in the latter there appears to be less steadiness, and, as noted last week, standards are off ^c. Bleached goods are firm and unchanged. There is not much inquiry for any grade, and the sales effected are chiefly of small lots to fill depleted stocks and supply current wants. Colored cottons are in relatively fair request, and sell in small lots, but the aggregate movements are unimportant. Prints sell fairly in all desirable patterns of light colorings, demand is less spirited than at the time of though the our last review. Prices continue firmly sustained, and are likely to be higher during the fall season, as manufacturers claim that they cannot make dark work except at a loss, unless an advance is obtained corresponding with the rise in cloths. Domestic Woolen Goods. heavy weight goods since our —There has been a fair demand for last report, without any large tranTlie advancing in cassimeres or faced goods. sactions either Kennebeck Denius. 20, Lanark, So. , 2, 9}, Mi;dford 13, Mccli's No. — Amoskeag 26, Bedford 14}, Beaver Cr. A A 20, heavy 22}, Haymaker Bro. I2j(a);2}, Manchester Bin9. — — — 2U, Otis — A AXA much light, gives full prices, raw material as well as the fact that stocks are very firmness to the market, and goods are held at many instances an advance is asked. Holders while in and buyers are obliged to pay full prices. For seems to be less inclination than usual to make purchases in excess of actual requirements, and there are few buyers outside of the clothing trade. New goods in the lower grades are coming in freely, while few samples of fine goods are received, as yet, and no business is doing excepting in the medium and low cost fabrics. Flannels in gray mixtures of the lower qualities find ready sale at an advance on last season's priccg Fine goods of all classes are also higher, but are not especially A few sales of blankets to early buyers are reported by active. agents, but as yet no important transactions have been made. Foreign Goods. The leading features of the foregn goods trade remain unchanged since our last report. There has been a moderate sorting up trade in progress, and fair transactions are reported in thick dress fabrics and other goods especially suited to the late trade. Japanese silks and robes meet ready sale at unchanged prices, and continue firm, in consequence of the light stocks. The demand for silks is mainly for the medium-priced fancy stripes and checks, and for colored goods in the most popular shades. Foulards are not meeting very ready sale, and are offered at easy prices. Blacks meet a steady sale, but not in large lots, prices, however, are stiff and unchanged. Linens are quiet throughout, with a good degree of steadiness in values, in consequence of the favorable advices from the foreign markets. Woolens are fairly active in winter weights, and the agents for the principal makes are taking large orders for goods to import. We annex a t'ew particulars of leading articles of domestic manuiactu-e. our prices quoted being those of leading Jobbers BaotvN tSasiiTiNcs and HHiariNos of the beat makes are etill do not press sales, this reason there Jeans. — : c'ose to produclion, and excepting in the finer a good dfgree of stiffaess in pricec. do BS« 11, Atlantic A 36 12, do D 36 lOJ, doH, tfi 111 Appleton A 86 l';f Awusta 86 11, Ho 30 10, Bedford R 80 8 Boolt 84 9i, Co« mouwealth 27 8. Uraf'.on A 27 7i, Great trades ih.re AmoRkeaK A 86 the do , . 1 — — — ; ; — corded <lo 2'.'}. Lowell Comn:iny b io(;rain are quotorl at ?l fir super Carpets. fine, 2 mos. credit, or lesf ( per cent., iO days ; $1 15 fir extra super, and IM 42} for three-ply F»artford Company's $1 for meliurn superflne $1 15 for superfir • ; $1 42} for Imperial threp-ply, and i>l 60 assels $1 70 for 3 fr., $1 8) for 4 fr., and for extra three-ply; $1 90 for 5 Ir. — • ; IIUPOllTATIOIVS )F>lUVUOUI>S The importations of dry goods AT THE POKTOFJSEW at this port for the VOllK. week ending 18, 1871, and the corresponding weeks of 1870 and 18(59, have been as follows entered top omsumption for the week ENnmo mat 18, 1 71. May : — fold 21, Biites 9. EveAmoskeag 12, Androscoggin Newmarket 10. Orchard Imp. 10, Laconia Cotton Baos. American ¥29 00, Great Falls A J32 50, Lewiston $30, Ontario A *82 50, Stark A $32 50. Bkown Drills. Appleton 2}, Anifiskeag 13, Augusta 12}, Pacific 12}, Pepperell 13, Stark A 12}. Stripes. Albany 7}, Algodoa 16}, American 11@12, AmosUeag 17@I8, Hamilton 17@18, Haymaker Uy§ll, Sheridan A 9}, doG 10, Uiicasville A 12@1S, Whittenlon A 16. Albs^-iy S}, American 14}, Amoaksag ACA 29. do, Ticki.sbs. A 24, do B 20, do C 18 do D 16, Blackstone Kiver 14}, Oonestogs. extra 32 21, do dc 36, 25, Cordis AAA 23, do AUK 26, Harail ton 20 Swift River 13, Thorndike A 14, Whittendon A 25, York 80 21}. GiNGBAMS Clyde, 1 1^; Earlaton, extra, 18 Glasgow, 18; Gloucester, LancaHamjiden, 15; Hartford, 12; Lancaster, lb 11}; Hadley, 14 shire, 11}; Ptqua, 12}; Park- Mills, 14. MousBKLiNE Delaines. Pacific 18, Hamilton l.S, Pacific Mills printed armure8l9, do Imperial reps 22}, do aiiiliuc 20, do plain aj'oriel colored armures 18, do do Orientals 17, do do alpacas 21 dodo CottSKT retts IS}, Indiiin : prices in the 29. 1 (!oluraHan lii«9. , MamifacturcB do do do e' ifcel... C'ltton. ^llk.... flax.... To*. Value 714 894 682 Bin a85 $257,(151 24 ,413 $1,218,617 .3,512 445 9.38 3,433 1871.——. . Pkgs. $282,717 254,107 400,599 212,941 68,283 540,856 900,226 136,069 $1,378,514 Pnett. 730 1,313 63S Value. $2n5,&4<l SmM^ 655 479,714 224,688 237,248 4,.W7 $1,606,544 1,171 rROM WABEBOUSK and thrown into TBB HARKET DUBIKfl THE BAHB PERIOD. Manufacturers of wool cotton. do . 3-34 $111,902 445 220 60 396 .12,401 3(17 silk.... S!»,981 81 83,795 24,224 337 . do do 1870. . Valne. 8S1 904 Miscellan'-.de dry goods 300 inl-t.-'LAWM . Pkes. flax... Miscellaneous dry goods 1,239 2,249 Total Add ent'dforconso'ptn 3,438 $33'), 303 1,218,647 442 $]6.'),81S 105,4.(8 2«!) 74,2.39 1,664 77,740 71.908 23,852 74 375 8,919 103,453 64,791 38,049 2,924 3,512 $444,760 1,37^514 5,079 4,507 $158,894 $439,425 1,606,511 9 586 $2,045,969 Totalth'nuponm'rk't. 5,687 $1,553,950 6,436 $1,823,274 VNTBBBD POa WABKB*>rTSIV« DDBINO TBW HAM« PERIOD. 334 471 Manufacturers of wool.. 538 $176,595 $100,991 $165,343 do do do cotton. 272 30 37,824 75,589 52,929 276 66 390 13,73:3 5,279 76,068 99,999 69,829 42,531 $393,660 805 $287,066 3,438 1,218,647 3,512 1,378,514 6.418 4,607 $4,\3,S84 1,606,544 TolalcnlcrMaltheport 4,697 $1,612,207 4,317 $1,666,580 10,920 $2,059,808 Bilk.... ilax..., Miscellaneous dry goods 341 78 3;3,«55 l:iO 33,973 94,192 22,447 61 251 .321 is l)i, Total Addent'dforconsu'pln 1,2,59 : May 20, TU£ CHKONIOLB. ISIIJ 637il Financial. luauranos. Traniportation. 8KVBN-TIIIHTY OOLD LOAN ligUITABLE ClRBAT Of THK Northern LIFE ANSVBANOB NOCIKTV Southern Mail Route RR. Pacific OK TIIR UNITE!) HTATKA, BKCADWAV, MfcW YOKK. • $16,000,000 Aaa«l« over • 7,S00,000 lucome • • Wir.l.lAM C. ALEX AN'I)i;iI,Prealrt<int. IW KAFio PRooRya oy tbk wohk. Tlio biiildhii; of the Northern Tart Ac Railroad, \bot;un July \uhI), 1h hviuiz |>unlif<l forwarl with tfreat enertfy from l>oth i'Ximiiitli'ft of thu Itiiiv Several tUoUAaiiU inon «ro fnipluyctl in MiniR'Nota and on the Paclilc CoAst. Tht- ^'r.-i(i(' !^ in-.'irly enm pleted mllen westward frt»m l.ntf Snp'-rlor ' loud, tiuiiiH ari> ruuuluK over 130 iniU'-^ the mill tnic klavinj; IH rabidly nritL'ri liftue faittmi htirui-r of I>tikotii. IticTu.l of the St. Paul & Paciflc Road, tht- N.u th.ni i'adrtc Oomuanv now Uaa 418 milen of coinideted rooil, and Dv September next thU will be Increased to at 460 IIKSKY JAMKB B. Iivr ' 9IOBLLB~ALI. BAIL. I'llilanl. i;.>d VIcD-Praa't, >v. OMilIOK v^ SAM' !:i. ; NKW OBLIANH, nKKPHn, ARC ', Aolnary, h. . WILLIAM HaerHHrr. ALli..\ANO|i.U, Aaa'tSact'jr. Ii«tTe i least A mre MiaoellaneouB. Orleans. Mobil*. MeaB*M*,Ciauuoosa.H Atlanta, Macon, and lutermadlat* polaio. 560. Cooke A Co. coop INVESTMENT.-J*y niid Mlatingly recommend, ax now hl-IIui^', uiilt< aProllUble and perfectly Safu inventment, the PlrBt Mortgage Ltmd Urant Gold Bonds of the Norlhi>rn Parfflc Railroad Company. They have 30 yean* to run, bear Seven and Three-Tenths jK-r cent ({old intereHt (more than 8 percent currencyiand art* secured by flr^t and only mortKUge on the entuiic koah and ITS KgiTiPMRNT^, and alifo, aa fast aa thu Road !• comuh'tt-d. on ACRES OF LAND to every mile of Acr^w fortach Bond. are 23,000 500 tnu,k, or They and Interest are Gold: DenominatiunM.- Coupons^ $100 exempt fn>m payatHe In to $1,0U) $\.m) Tax V. 8. Prlnripnl ; H.*i:i-»it.red, #!(»(» ; J. 6ti Northern Pacific 7 Peppcrell SINKING FUND- The proceed)* of all »)le$> of Lands are ret^uired to be devoted to the r»-pur«iiai»o and cancellation of the First Mortage Bonds of thu Company. The Lund Grant of the Road exceeds Fifty Million Acres. This immense Sinking Fund will undoubtedly cancel the principal of the Com pany't* bonded debt before it falls due. With their ample security and high rate of interest, there is no investment, acceBBiblc to the people, which is more pkopitabi.e or OTHER SECURITIES. ~ All marketable Stocks and Bonds will be received at their biehest current price in exchange for Northern Pacific beven Thirties. Express cuakqes on Money or Bonds received, and on Seven-Thirties aent In return, will be paid by the Financial Agents. Full information, maps, pamphlet*, etc., can be obtained on application at any a^ncy, or from the undersigned. CO., PHizjkDELPniA, Nbw York, Wasuikuton Financial Afieutv By BANKS and BANK£KS geniraUy MOBILE Uiroughoul lolerniedlaie potuis. t Chai^ce cars for NashriUe and New Orleana. No change from tnts point to New Orleans. 1 Change cars for .Mobil*-, via M.A O. B. K<-AU Ball. {Change cars lor Mi-niplits. 'Change cars lor Vicksburg. Ttaoruillke Co., Cordis nilla. J. B. ITATKa, General Esatern Paasengar Ageat. & Turner Maiiufaccurers and Dealeri in COTTONSAILDUCK To And all AWNINO THBOUOH FARES-NEW YORK Vnlted States BantluB Companr. A tull supply all Widths and Colors always In stock 13 & IS LUpebard Street. FIrat Class Steerage TO SAN FRANCISCO. ... ...... $135 to $lSO 96O According to location of berth Thpse rates include berths, board, aod all neeeaaa- & 110 112 Illustrated Madison St., at New V»rk, In th« state of or business, April 29th, 1871 Cblcago. by Joamal of 'U pagea, as large of Railroad Companies to the community. This Journal is prepared espe latly for stockholders, directors andl officers of railroads, and all railroad employees. annam. In advance* & Moore, DodgeBANKERS, GOTERNmKNT SEOVBITIBS, BROADWAY. 4,908. WALL Loans and dUconnts STREBT, NEW YORK. John H. Tiivkxs, H. Dcrr, th« N. Y. Stock and Gold Ejctaaiigea. Menben ot Stooka, Bond*. Oold ud Qorernnnt 1,4*7 28 800,000 00 100.000 OO 'nttpd StatcB bonds toaecore circulation. rnltcd States bonds ana securlilea on band Other stocks Due from national banks Due Irani banks and bsnkers 1.00(1110 19'. 78 in 13.861 48 Dongbt and sold. ForeliD Oold and SllTor Coin, and Bun. coastantly on Imnd. int«rMl allowtd on Uevouta. 1m SM] and F. R. BiLBY, Acent. 00 BanktniE-hoase 85.1100 Current expenses Taies paid Pr.-mlnm8 Caiih Items Bzchanfces for clearlnc-honse Btl's of nattonal banks Bills of state bnnks Fractional currency Specie, viz; Coin Hold Treasury Notes Gold cbseka on other bank*, Lexaltenaer notea Clearlrg UonsecartUlcaCM )6A*< 28 7.888 3« 7.J«8 14 W JB^Jl iV.itS 04 U.98D 00 197 (Via Qneenatoira,) CABBYISe THE UNITED STATES MAILS. M 81.000 00 at,4t7 97 SMgiOOO THE LIVERPOOL AND GREAT WBSTKHR STRAM C' MP.\nT will dispatch one of ihalrSm- 1^9.00O 00 olaa* rull-power iron »4,n4,7;» 43 screw steajaablpa from PIER No. 48 NORTH BITER, EVERT WB0NE»9AT LIABILITIES. as followa; Capital stock paid Id NKVADA. Captain (1,000.000 00 Surplus Fund Discount ««»i«tao ........" i.. National Bank clrcnlatiou ouUtandlug.... State bank circulation outstanding DlTldends unpaid Individual deposits ,..ti.. Certmed checks «., , Due to national banks AM. Jnnel4, at 9 PJI.' MANHATTAN, Captalnrorayth..Junen.al laOK) W Cabin paaaa«e. (OBca No. 21 raocy. '•» Wl.4a I P.M. MO (Old. I>ieera«e paaaaga. l,8a8.iO< 81 mjKt > Mayll.al ll>AHO.0<pialn Price a«.8SI 81 tMJSBg (O 740 Green WVi'MINO.Capt. Whlner»j M-\y 91. at i P M K' BltA^KA, Capt. l.uar.l J as* 3. at > P.M.' MINN> S'iTTA.l ap T. F.FreemanJune 7 at 9WA.M *4,8I4 96 *<o to ToUl Liverpool, iFoR i>0 2,ill tl I0,M8 Total Broadway) BVeai^ For freight or cabin paaaage apnly to 15 7,7(7 IS wIIUiSs7oL'lotl. No. WaO-ct. ...»U74.7.-» 48 1, A. aiLBKRT. Cashier of "The Maiket NsMonsI Bank of New York." do solemnly swear that the above siatemant Is true, to the bast of my knowledge and belief. ^.. «-«« « .^. A. OILBBBT, Cashier. Muscogee HIANVFACTVBINO CORFANT, Correct— Atteit, anAV"--" Am Sworn before me, COLUMBD8, 1 1'. Til' Secarltlet tree to each adcit Medicine and atte"dance free. U. parture ot 15th touches at KINOSTflN. Ja. Steamer will leave Sau Frauclsoo lat every muotk for China snd Japan. F"r freiiiht ur passai* tickets, and all farther Iniorma'luo, .pply at the Company's ticket office on the wharf, foot if Canal st. |t,i7tC82 IB Due toother Banks and Baskcit Duff & Tienlcen, BANKBBS AND BROKBRS, on Sunday, then the day One hundred ponntis bacgage Interest* In fall previous. Kxcnange STOCK AND OOLD BROKERS, 15th and 30th of Baeh Blaath except when thoae da)S I : Instrated descriptions of Kntlrond Improvements—Articles both original and selected on railroad operation and civil andmechaofcal eiifflneertnE, and diseussTons of the relations 74 On York, at the close Overdralls pointments ot officers—Co ntraciB Let and to be Let summaries of Annual Keport«— 11- And deilen New UIVKU, loot of Canal Bireel, RESODBCES. EVKRl SATUKUAY. IT CONTAINS A Complete Record of Railroad News The Progreaa of New Roads— Elections and ap- Price ^4 per CHANGE OF SAILING DAYS. F teamers of tlie above line leave PI E K N.i. 42 NOBTR at 12 o'clock, nooo. Gazette, niARKET NATIONAIj BANK aatboaaof Silver AND JAPAN. afek' STRIPES." Alio, Agel'ta A. N. KEIiliOGO, 15 8 THBOVOH LINB California & China, klnda ot COTTON CANVAS. FELTING ntICK, CAB COVKHINO, BAOCilNO.UAVKNS DUCK. SAIL TWTNK8 *C. "ONTAKIO' SKAMLhSS BAGS, •' COMPANY PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP Polhemus, REPORT OF THE CONDIT ION OF THE Railroad Box 1M3 Cbanfce cars for Atlanta, Maeoa. Miwiaw—.y. Selma, nest Point, Knlauia, Mobile, SaTaanah. and * rles for the trip. PublUhed at P. O. »a 1127 laSt NK- OKLEANM lHllla., the country. Weekly 1199 IS'i a095 MO.S l'i;OMERY Boaton Dnck Co., Kranklln Co., JAT COOKE & NORTHERN PACIFIC RR. OOinP^NT to a 1 safte. will compel the early surrender of I'nited States 6 per cents. Many holders of Five-Twenties arc now exchanging them for Northern Pacific Seven-ThirtieH, thus realizing a handsome profit, and greatly increasing their yearly Income. The iia MACiiN mills, Laronla Co., EXCHANGING U. S. FIVE-TWENTIES. Buci'cf^H of the New Governnu-nt 5 per cfui Brinckerhoff, BT llKlbKiI MKMPHIS "J \CKHliN ATLANTA Loan BAIJE Bt 04 V Warren Cotton The POR 0(>l!li(>N»VII.Lil.... KNOXVll.l.K 74u •CLKVKi.A ^D aa i.\NOooA... lao tcH NASllVll.Lh UUl liOUlNlll 088 jURA.VIIJUNCT.UNUffl Tntjg, Coultnental • WASIIINOToN. Co., OtiK ronipHiiy. Bate* nil'K. Co., Coliinibia nfg, Co., A udrofico|[2ln mils, at ten pkr tent above are at all FAR, in exclmiif^f for Iht.- Company'a Lands, at their lowest rash price. Thia reudera them practically MUes. NEW TORK..„ BOSTON. PHIL ADELPUIA. Chealnat itreet •»?• STATIONS. .SSV YORK. AQSNrS FOR 30'« IMTKRE^T BRAKING UANU WARRAJiTS. M Franklin street Franklin atrect m lo *10,000. LANDSiinir-» FOR BONOS. mrivuMi' S.& E.Wright & Co., tn 4s New Vork At t.10 A.M. tor BI0BMON0,aa4 rolnts oaUMCeaM At (.W P.M. fron foci of Coittsndl street, via lev York and Pbilsd«>|^l» Dim, bjr aKKAl auOTM KK.> MAIL KUtlK TMAIN, ifir Klcbmoad, Kjw 5 Director!. "iJETT.) »ne 'in day of May. IfCl. TaoMAk HllCWOOI>, Notary FobW, Kew-York Coasty. OA., < asavraoTCBBasov SheeUncs, DrtlUaciit O.P. BWIFT.Preat. Varu* •»«,*«. W. A. SWIFT, i««. # Xr. : CHRONICLE TiiE 638 TLANTI A Bankers and Brokers OFFICE OF THE SPENCERIAN Co. Tors, January M, 1371. The Tnutees, lo conformity o the Charter ol the Company, submit the following statement of its affairs tbfi Slat December, 1670 Premiums received on Marine lit Kislis. January, 1870, to Slst December, Premium; o January, marked Policies not i 176 BROADWAY. NiW YOBi, January 12, 1S71. ^r"THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT OF .THE BUILDING, of the Company Is published in oonformltv with the requirements of Section 12 of its charter: Outstanding Premiums, January 1, affairs N«w on Insiu-ance COJnPANY. HOWARD Insurance Mutual Mutual Pacific C irom 1870.. »5.270,690 09 2,155,7i3 01 1370 Total amount of Marine Premiums „W70 $106,924 Premiums received from January 1 to December 31, 1870, inclusive 484,M0 »7 ,426,413 73 04 67 Total amount of Marine Premiums (591,761 71 This Company has issued no Policies, except on Cargo and Freight for the Voyage. No Rtaks bave been takea upon Time or upon Hulls or VesselN. Premiums marked off 1st off as Earned, during the period as auove $506,753 79 Paid for Losses aud Expenses, less Savings, &c., during the s ime period 345it55 70 Return Piemiums 42,670 03 Tbe Company has the followlue So upon LUe Policies have been issued nor upon Fire Rislu with Marine Rlslcs JSTO, to Slst December, 1st ^ Premium Notes & Bills Receivable January, »5,S98,7S8 55 18TO Losses paid during the same $766,990 73 175,133 84 $1,063,363 57 Ueiasurance and other Claims due the company, estlmatad at and State of States Stocl:, City, Banlc New and other Stoclcs a.SJ7,350 00 . Beat Estate and Bonds and Mortgages Interest Company, estimated the 317,500 00 and sundry notes and claims due Premium Notes and Cash in Bank Bills 339,35Si at Receivable 03 be redeemed and paid in cash to the holders thereof, or their leg^al represeutatives, on and after TUESDAY, the 7ih day ol Febraary,from which date Interest on tbe portion redeemed will cease. The Certlncales to be produced at the time of payment and caut-.elled to the extent p.ild. Dividend iu &crint of 1 vvKNTY PER CENT, is declared on the net amount of Karned Premiums for the year ending December Slst. ls7o, for which Certillcates will be Issued on and after TUESDAY, the 4tM day of April next A By order of TRi;»TEE8 John K. Myers. ..yi4,i83,9S3 43 MUnor, Martin Bates, Moses A. lloppock of the i9.sue of 1867 will legal representative8,on and after Tuesday ,theSeveutb will ceas<3. The which were Issued ail interest (in , containing all the 14 Numbers. artlsticsUy arranged and securely inclosed, sent by mail on receipt of 26 Cents. IVI SON,rRI. AKEniAN TAYLOR 136 and 140 Grand Street, CO, Sc New York. Texas Cards. JAUXS ABBUOKLK. BIBDON D. GBIBBLl. North Eastern Texas. Collections made on all accessible points by arruckle &. co.,° jauies BANKERS, Jefferson, Texas.. SWENSON, PERKINS & CO., N. Y. CorrespondenM. Upon THOMAS HALE, Moore & Wilson, certlQcatca John R. Waller. William A. HaU, Frani:l3 Moran, . BRYAN, TEXAS* promptly remitted . Oorreipoadents Id York— MeBsrs. W. P. Converse &, Co. Coll<^otlon8 New J. 0. KIBBT, W. TOM BOBSMBBKe 0, B. JOHNS, T. KTXKBTT. Tbeo. >V. Morris, Stephen c. Kouthmayu SecreUry, & C. R. Johns Co., AGENCY LAND TEXASBANKING & EXCHANGE, AUSTIN, TEXAS. Fire Insurance Agency, No. 62 WAIiIi STREET, NEW red scrip) for gold premluiua, U M. Mo:ir«,) BANKERS, there certtHcates to be produced at the time of payment and cancelled. SAMPLE CARP Emit lleiueman, Jehial Read, JOHN K. MYERS. President. WILLIAM LECONEY. Vlce.Pre6lden. be redeemed and paid to the holders thereof, or their on by Dealers generally. sale iS^ (Sncceaaors to K. Taylor, Adam T. Bruce, Albert B. Strange, A. Augustus Low, A. S. Barnes, Egbert Starr. A. Wesson. iDhn A. Bartow, Oliver K. King, Alex. M. Earle, Tuesday, the and after Seventh of li'ebruary next. of February next, from which date For t James B.W.Bull, Horace B. Claflln, W.M.Richards, Six per cent interest on the outstanding certificates of profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their The outstanding certiScates vented. William Leconey, Wm. T. Blodgett H.C.Southwlck, Wm. Hegeman, A. C, Richards, G. D. H Gillespie C. B. on to the real than anything hitherto in- the Board. 316,135 45 representatives, arc a nearer approximation 3,089.915 95 Total amount of Assets. legal They SITAN mm,!, the outstanding 1^66, will $8,343,740 00 Loans secured by Stocks, and otherwise. action of these Pens are owing to a peculiar process of Carbonizing, aud to the great care Uken in their manufacture by the most skilled and experienced workmen in Europe. 18,575 83 TIKlCATliSOFTHK COMl-AN V,OF THE ISSUEOF Torlt or Steel Pens. THE CELEBRATED durability and perfection o :$i,011,,00 40 FrFTYPEl«CE^TOPTHKOalBTANDINGCER- United nanulacturedby tbeOrlglnal Inventor 56,000 00 Certillcates of Profits will be paid to the holdere thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after TUKSDAY. th« 7th a y of^February. The Company has the following Assets, viz.: STEEL PENS, advance of SIX PER CENT INTEREST on Returns of Premiums and Expenses Miiiscriptlon Notes in PromI iims $76,5^85 417.918 88 372.510 00 Total Assets »a,253,590S» period : Unl ed States and other Stocks.... Lo ins on Stocks Drawing Interest. Rlslcs. Premiums mar Iced Off trom Assets CashlnBank disconnected 20. 1871. lustirance. InBuranoe OFFICX or THE [May YORK. sell real estate, pay taxes and adjust and money claims against the State and Federal Governments; mtike collections. Receive deposits and execute Trusts. Purchase and Titles, prosucutc Luiul such payment ol interest and redemption will be iu gold. A dividend of THIRTf-FIVKPerCent is declared on the net earned premiums of the Company, for the year ending Slst December, 1870, for which certificates will be Issued on and after Tuesday, the Fourth of iEtna Insurance Comp'y, L. Leonard J. HARTFORD, CONN. April next. H. CHAPKEAN, FIRE & MARINE INSURANCE Secretary. INCORPORATED TBDSTEKSl Henry Wm Providence Joseph Qalllaid, Jr. C. A. Hand, Benj.Babcock^ C. Pfckersglll, Lewis Curtis, Robt. B. Mlatum, Charles H. Russell, Gordon Lowell Holbrook, B. Warren Weston, Doyal Phelps, Caleb Barstow, A. P. Plllot, William B. Dodge, David Lane, James Bryce, Frederick Chauncey, K. L. Taylor, Geo. S. Stephenson, William H. Webb, Sheppard Gandy, Francis Skiddy. Charles P. Buraett Robt. C. Fergussoii. William E, Bunker. Daniel Wm. S. Miller "W. Dennis Perkins, Robert L. Stuart. Alexander V. Blake. JONGS, President. CHARLES DENNIS, Vloe-Prest. J. D. W.H «.«. B. MOOBE, 3d Vlce-Pralt. UWLMl/a Vtoe-Frest. I^OBT, Late Fort 9. Washington OF PROVIDENCE, ORGANIZED R. & I 1'rice. I QKORea W. JAOKSOX. Late Cashier 1st Nat. Bank 179 Net Assets (lUGAKIZEO Net Assets , J. 1. ALEXANDER, Agent. Abxhtb M. WXITB. M. Weith & Arentb, Late J.M.Welth&Co., IN SOUTHERN AND niSCE:£ii.ANCOUS StCIJRlTlES, DEALEKS No. 9 NEW STBBET. Loans NagotUitea First National Bank, Merchants National Bank. Orleans: Louisiana National Bank, Wlieless ft Galveston T. H. McMatiau St Co. : & Williams & Bostwick, 42 Excbange-place, NEW YORK, 1. 183 : Nos. 40 $200,000 00 $370,624 61 Casb Capital IVACO, TEXAS. 9. INSURANCE COniPANlf, R. Jackson, Repkrknoes and Cobbkspondknoh:— New Vork Wlnslow, Lanier & Co., David Dows & Co. ClnoinPratt, Bankers. American OF PROVIDENCE, & U ItANKKKS, New $200,000 00 $415,148 51 Casb Capital JAS. A. Fort natl 1. Burnham, Samuel L. Mltchill, James G. DeKorest, Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, WH, a. aallipolls, 1K4 INSURANCE COmPANT, James Low, B.J. Howland. Coit, CO., $600,000 00 ¥886,170 69 Net Assets D. Jones, Charles Dennis, W. H. H. Moore, TERMINUS OF CKNTKAL RAILKIIAU Groesbecfe, Texas. SPRINGFIELD, MASS. Casb Capital J, Co., Springfield By order of the Board, J. & RANKERS, INCORPORATED 1S19. Casb Capital $3,000,000 00 Net Assets 96,498,732 05 RANKERS AND STOCK, BOND ANIT GOLD COniniSSION BROKERS, Make liberal iidvances on Interest allowed on Deposit E. judson all First-class Hawley Secnritlesi & Co. Bankers, No. 60 WALL STREET, K. JUDBON Hawlbv, Alfbkd W. Bahtlbtt, Government New York' Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, Kl- 0» chanire and Mercantile Paper bought and sold COMMlSiiiON, Interest allowed oa ueposlts, which oiay be cheoksd for at il{ht. - May .. . K ). , 'tton •1 • iiicio»«is <m vcllow ...|IB ^U VM Croioui HtallaUelphU iroab Maatard aa«), TrtaaU. Olloaaala tin* IN oua l< uo II HniilOUD "Vel.li tub., prlinti iVeliti tuba, oriUnAry ^eiturit, t»rlui« ft ... ulr to prim* V » ffMrin. a .>perm. u.pkteut iCeartc IC AUiunitaUne ittOUne ....« M • S 11 tt CBlfBNT- # ibM ,^. 80 4U '^ IS 1 75 OAL- MewcuUegM, a;MOft .... ... Liverpool ||M cuLn«l .. ... Liverpool 5oD»e oAnofll ... ^ Anthracite. COPPBBbeathlDs. new .M .... report V m (^ 21 H« Ac, old raetai^ew Bolu.yeliuw metal rtillow uietal ualU AiuorlcMu lugut ..., A ao iz 33 19 23 34 Braztem'oM Jbeattilug. 00 ^ 16 ft 90 11 HA U Vlk Bolto ~ •ubi 900 botikl <lo .... .... vm Su -11 COCOAO&racftH VIM 009 - a t COFF£K.-8ee Bpeolal SheAtiiliiu.yel. 9 9 % .... .... ','.',', ... ... 21 C )BPAQK— MuillU (Urge and small size) „P«r lb T-.rred Manilla Sisal Hope, RusfliaBuit all 5uH sUee Sl« 9I8 Rope regular, qoarta, V gro. 48 9U 1st regular, ptntt 44 Mineral Fhlal su ,. ;: 13 COTTON—See special report. DRUGS AND UVRS— AlcoboL 80 I v » Aloee, Ciape Uoee. Soootrlne 7 4S Uam Annato, ifood to prime Antimony, reg. of.. .gold Argols.crude Irgola, reHned gold Irtenlc, powdered. ao AJaafoillda 38 . Balaam caplvl Balsam tola lUdsam Peru I . Camphor, reftned 01 $ m 3 7U 3U 7u 7U as w * 3 ... . 1 82H so a Cardamoms, Malabar .. CaatoroU Cbamomlle flowers, f » . Camwood Ma a 30 Wa ...gold, Fuallc, Cuba. " Fuatic, Tampico FoAtlc, Jamaica Fuatic, Baranllla Fuatic, Maracalbo V gold quint, bbl. gold Jaostlc soda Harraway seed «4SJK « 14 4 75 <am U) .... .... « w a » <« 4 Ml a • ? 3u a Vbbl. Ma . «4 87X 8X 'Jorlander seed Cochineal, Uondur..KOld Jooblaeal, Mexican. ** Uopperas, American .... Cream tartar, pr .gold Cabeba,JUstladlft. Sxtract logwood FenneUseed iTlowers, benzoin. .V oz. gold..V V>. moseng, Wes..ern Ulnaeng, Boatbern Gam Arabic, i>lcked Gam Arabic, sorts Gam benzoin Blaatlng(B).... V Keg 8 SOa i rifle Meal Deer BMrtlng.lolkcanUtra.llB la balea for shipping . V fi ulcorlce paste, Sicily . ulcorlce paittu, bp., solid Uoorlce pante, Greek. . . gold iadder, Fr. KXK.F? 4ap"*. large dake (anna, small Hake |iaurdir«4,C«i...,. . " " Vera Cru* Tampico Porto CsbeUo Maracalbo Bogota * " " " " Truilllo • KloHacha Cnracoa^ PartaaPUtt OOaiSS OS Chill 8X* 7 a 9xa a 2< a 24X a 24X a 23 ana 28)i 19 a .... 21 HH « a a .... 20 a .... 18 5 20)4 16 a 17 31 a 21H w x a • 3 90 9473 a nx a .... w a 43M » a a 31 « .;:; 11 12 • 14U • n • K •Ha M 60 sti I 00 OO fwO 000 180 00 1(0 ou 00 190 00 100 00 m UOOO 100 no 79 00 a ...a " ** Para •• Mlnaa Sierra Leone Gambia and Bleaau. " Zanzibar ** Bast India Stock— Calcnt. alu cow |ik gold Calcutta, dead green Calcutta, hutralo....<l » Manilla* Bat. bug.. «280> . a^ a . 93H a4 a9 90 10 «> 90a4O0O ..a49 90 a a a a case 1 19 .... gall Ochre, "ground. In oft Spanish bro.,iiry.V 100> Span. bro.,gr'drBOU.** 120 * ft.goM - t 29 WhlUng'.'Amer 1 95 »100» China.. V ft yermllllon, Vermillion irieste Plate*. I.e. coke. '.TT.. .... Vermllllon^AiueijCom. Ven^t. red PInmbwo. (S.OW CMnacIay... Chalk . cwt. I I 1 j gold Llabon " • Marsefllea Madeira... Maraelllea port " Ma!ag*.dry Malaga, aweet I •: i( •• Sicily. Madeira... .... Blclly... | " n n •• " i( V caak "•• 8*1 91 * do*. Amerlcan, Saxony Fleece V ft American, Full Blood Merino American Comblig ." 1.1-nlled California. Spring Fine, tmwaahed ! Uurry Caiiiomla, l*al] unwashed 4 4 | CUp— Medium Common, aowaah*d Fine, s 4 g Xitra,Pnlled bhort Extra, Pulled Snperflna Palled ^ Clip and Iiiimh* Me<llum SuUth Am. Merino, unwMh'ad South Am. Meatlaa,unwaahed Boutli Am, Cyrilova, waahed. Cape Good H p«, anwaahad. Texa., gn^ T«xas. iM gjiiui Texas,eo*ra« Texaa, Barry Texaa, WaaMrw Smyrna, nnwai bad To LtVBBTOOL * ft : a a a 9 95 !S*W • i "... 94 )| 19 98 98 8* _j " a n W M B Ig 86 ag |i V» Hta. ... V a. d. K< — bbl B. goods.* ton 90 "'" Floor Oil bo. Wheat..)-.* Beef... Pork... .. .. C'n.h*b.« b. ce. O »«. TaHATU: Cotton a UM PBTROUtDMIgtav.VgaU. KXa MS Tallow a 18 grav.(a.ord a IIM a KmmsV. iPdwW»*(ah1ig «• ....# .... » 0(d*r) • ... Wood*. SONKyPatrolaaBi iftngd prime, white, Cuba(dutyp'd)goldVgall.l 13 ai H a To MmLWDUB, V loot. (ah'ng order) HOP8T» BairF>A«one>>~ Bennad a. W. ijah. loiaj Cropol'ni(g'dapriine}*» 8 a 13 MaaaBr«Ba»tg«od» • rt Haptha, r«a9.,».1tgraT. do UN 399 V lb Baalduum WDbl !l.iS^ Heavy luoga. BavarlAU (Dew crop; a .... 13 11 ., ( — HORNB&£s^&sfr.-. »_ "5 » gmlL Bed,8Mn.* Cotton ioD.N'di' #95 W V.Vft Chalk, block .* ton. B*tTt«(. American. V » 7 FRSiaHTB- UK< - 96 80 99 79 ( |( ah*«t. I . L C. V k«z bmyrna. washed Douskol, waahad Donakol, unwashed (INti- 8 6 UO 8 FarUwhlta^ngVHOIh*. Chrome, yellow, dry.... '%• ft No I I .V KagUah Clty thin, obi.. In bbls.V ton .41 9Ua42 OC — 18 city. Btralta Claret Claret Litharge. .. .»» • • red,. Lead, white. Am., In oil. Lead, whlt«, Amer^dry Zinc, white, dry, No.l. Zinc, white JIo. 1, In oil. Zinc, while, French, dir Zinc, wh.. French. In oil Ochre, yel., French, dry 88 35 BMca WOOL- PAtNTS- ... and TIN- lOH 7Xa } »n» Man K a B a a — Anserlcan, prime, coantry TEAS-See special report. Burgundy port. 3 75 4 75 Unseed 10* TALLOW- Bherry Port pale extra pale V a- special report. M*"**!!* a.... 39 ii 11 WDTBS- 300 a890 285 a^as ...»» 16 9 19 9 apMlal report. 2 95 . . A cow BTA.AHlagr.klpVkgld * CottoD Seed Crude 44Ha " " yellow S2)ta Whale, crude Northern.. a Whale, bleached winter.. cs a 67H Sperm, crude 128 Sperm, winter bleached. 1 45 1 48" Lard oil, prime winter. 00 96 Hod oil SO S9H StralU SO NeaU foou, lubricating. 1 35 ai 35 cur. Upper Leather Stock— . ft -.Hyi*.!'"""**"*^.. TOBAOCO-Sm No.l N0.3 Olive, Mars'es.qta - RIoOrancIa 75 6 35 » 1* 85 39 Ollve,lneasks....«igalL Palm .> k " * " " " California (6d.) . OILS- 19 BUOAR-See PlaU*. Tarn* cok* >4 « American blister American cast Tool. " American spring American machinery ** American German.. " NAIL8Cut.4d««M " lobags West, thin, obl'g, InHlags :s 24 34 Am*.. V* gold. City •UuEhter ox Oua 20 OOa 'a 16 34 English, cast. Kngllah, spri^ •• English bflauer English machinery Inery Kngiish German " ai ao B9K N # M 19 a li 7 Z i« 10 S 17 li^^ M a' U u I STKEI^ PIAm. rbar. PlS«s.< 100 ^^ Whtakay ^hlakay do do .... a. do do a. MOLA8SK8—See Special report. OAKUM OIL CaKK- " " Island.. Orleans 90 4{ 5000a930U V \19 St. Croli, Sd proof, ein, dl€er«nt hraoda ~ DomstUc" nasMo gmora—Caah. Aleoho. leohol Alp*rei) 88 00 21 00 (io« 27 uv 0(Ja «> «0 Ooa 79 OO 00a 00 (10 OOa 49 OO OOaiX JO OOa 90 30 K-lnch sycamore di ** pruoi'. ' 1-tnch " 7K <k Wat Baltwl Udet- New .... .... 30a Oua Cherry boards and plank. 74 Oak and ash SO Maple and birch SI 9Uckwalnut !i . Bum —Jam., 4th Ma Bprnce boards and planks Hemlock bo'rds and plank Kxtra heavy pipe staves Heavy do do Light do do KxUa heavy hhd do Heavy do do Light do do Kxtra heavy bbl. do Heavy do uo Light .ight do do Co.. Otbei er foreign tbrands IB Houtliern pine 129 w bite pine box Iraards... :8 While pine nier. box b'ds 32 Clear pine Sfi " * ** Bahia Buenoa 98 Kockland, common. VbbL 1 Rockland. heavy 179a " " •• Sawtwleh » ... ... " LIMK- strained. UK cur. ....a poor .«oM 81 * Plnet.CasUlfonACo Marett* ett* Co Lege] erFrere* Tar, Washington.. V bbl. 3 45 Tar, Wilmington 3 96 Pltch,clty Spirlu turpentine. V gaU. .... Rosin, comniinon to good gold. ...a 104 gold 8 80 Iodine, resubllmed ... Ipecacuanha. Brazil ... Jalap, gold 4u i«edre Ueorwe paste. Calabria, Dry HIdea— Buenos Ayrea..VB gold " Montevideo " Bio Grande * Orinoco ** OalUomla " Bui Juan Matamorag a una — gold Savanllla 4u and 175 240 Tampico Pemambneo good damaged NAVAI. BTOK£S- HIDKS- , rough •• •' 7 tp '***'*' '***"• Benn***T.. Otard, Ilapny . Ught.... •• Hora* Bhoe, Td Copper rellow metal tonj279 00a289 00 Slaal Jute nataa, domaatle 8p!ri?»:^' Brandy— middle " Clinch 100 goldJMO " lO^d una a 3xa tu w ao w a a gold ITr. 9 79a 60a isa .... 28a 100 100a 109 Maranham Si Goiu Icowrle 9 V > Manila naM(,fhr^.VI00f«old s»' Knm .... .... .... .... $ |Q . . Orinoco, heavy in 1*9 Halneen light... " « lie C*nton,r».rld,Nol to sxdo I H common toaapar'r 7 91 middle. light " " " 3 9U Japao, MoiaaaesshookB,lncl. head'g apeclal a • keg 25 light., SUKar Shipping Haraeadba Gam gedda gold •xa Gum aamar 13 a Gam myrrh, Kaat India.. Gum uiyrrh, Turkey .... u a 0am Senegal ....a Gum tragat^anth, sorts. as « Gum tragaoanih, w. Madder,Dutch CLOTU.-See Dry Salted BKlea— ,. «... salts iakey Uyd. potash, Nurtu Klver V » 13xa 14X KKUrra— See special report. OltocKKIKS— See special report. Bahig Texaa Weaiern . . catch H aoa FLAX- MatamorM .. 4 80 .... wa V 4e middl* •• Callfarnl*. heavy. . i 25a • 30 8 < 00 6 00a 6 so Mackeral. No. 1, ahore 24 00a3< 00 Mackerel, No. 1, Bay 16 OOft^,. . 8 00$ 8 SO Mackerel. No. 2. Mac'rel, No. 8, Maaa., large. I ona • 90 9 SOaiO 23 Mackerel.ahore.No. 1 Mac'rel.No. 3, Maaa.,med. 7 SOa 8 00 Maokarel.No. 1, Rallr»z... JO 00a .... 24 00a» 00 Salmon, pickled. Mo. 1 Salmon, pickled V tee. 30 OOa^: 00 Herring V bbl. 4 OOa « 00 90 Barring, acaled . ...Vbox. fi •• " " gol« nMI**JI0.1,9,8,4*8.*B 191 TiMI**.r*.r**l«<l^ Tayaaama No. crop, heavy •' i .... a a CO »UOa 3UU0 LUMBER. STAVK8,*o- cor. Ploklwlaod »0«OB) light " ... Amer'n roach I.lns'-.d. " 13 00 Vbnah. Llos'di •l.lnN.r.*! I.ln.i'ed. C.l. (bagl> (la Pipe and sheet rongh alaughter neml'k,B.A.,*c., heavy . cnr. s: 30a eUNNY BASS Baf ** . gold imothy middl*.... 8)i V• lover lf^n»p. for* igo Oak, alaughter, heavT , Barwood.... •wood. I Kngllaa u*.WW Umawood Mm LRAO- ton.IW '• ton! Amariea ,, Sermaa Logwood, Lagnna nooa .... Logwood, Uoudnraa. 9900a woo Logwood, Tabaaco. aoooa Logwood, Bt. Domln^iold 18 1*00 Logwood, Jamaica........ 1* <o« Dry cod Plckledicale Ralls, —U 1 Bpaaiah Ma DYK WOUUS- Ra$, ^f.1ge&)'..W 110 «p *K* I'.Si LKATHKB- Ska Italian 1 . 18 1< 38 M ^ W a W • »l S Kussla, clean 2X« an9 20 » Mxa » a Kavena, light V pce.lB Kavena, hearr ,11 Boot«h,U'ck,No. l.Vyd " Cuttun,Nu. 1 1i HKMP« Amerlcan dressed. ISH» 45 m » W a ex. dry mu Sheet, Uoaala..... 87Ha itIH 3IKa Vlirl "^'ol.blae DL'CK GUNPOWDKB- 9 ^ d 38 ... 1 I "a .... j 1 common Bora* shoe.!!!!!!!!!'.!!!! So<la,Na*-Miaaii report under Cotton. , SUlorate potash 1 . . IS B 4 CanUiarldes « 100 ft.... Carb. ammonia. In bulk. — Gamboge 30 i NalI;ro<J!*V.'.'.'.V.V.V.'.»« 30 North Klver, 3 tu ftton gid Brimstone. Am. roll ^> Brimstone, llor aulphar. Uamptior, crude (in bonaj gold Uambier 1 American andieaaed Bleaching powder Borax, redaed Briiustouc.cru • 1|H :iark petayo , terries, Persian... gold " 1 earb. toda,N'casUe Bl diro. potasti Kpsom « Berrlng.Mo.l UORK&Ist ^19 18 dosaperaue 4» iM" Beona, Alexandria VerdlgriB, dry ^Ji!Z.*it^ll '^^ I flg. Aimrtcaa, Mo. I, Pig, Amanean, Mo.l Pig, Ainancaa Forg* Plg,grotcl, No. 1, Bar, r*aue(t,Bng. « Amar. Bar, Banna, Kaat India Shell Lac Soda aah (80 p. 0.) gold TapTooa m9 Bar, gwedrt, ordlnslt«a...l($ lOail) M " ~ Bar.reAned (aa to all*) !'»;a'^s « lOj lOM Bnlphata morphine,* oa S Tartaric aold (chryatal) gold V>. . oommou . . •TocBraiop*. ' » ngarlaad, Ixtd, W'a BngV •^arni dalrlaa, fair .. ^al* and Vail Vonad M IS qalekallTar uolnlne, ABorloma Benoka root Ch«M«— Uarftcmlbu fsold in I Ban*parllla,M«x. WMtarn.fKlr RoMDdala I «w ii'l gold Bal ammoniac, rei. ref. gold. Sal aoda, Nawoaatl*, cM 8ar>aparllla,B.J('d,ln D d . dalrlaa, I — riiuaphiiru. KO<(l. Truaalale potaata.Ainar BaUarattia iuia, hiklMlrkliu, cliolo*. lutd, hali-nrklot. rtlr.. arm 8l!.V.iar.':!..::::::::-.:J8 on papparrolDt, par* ...(«> ( ui: vitriol iioto l> dan) 1 CiMi ((<'l>l Opium, Turllvy 4 Hold Oiallc acid Bam. pawltd V .. . IBOV- !!8« lis Khubarb, China ButtarStMa. Orklni Factory prliua Factory fair Farm dalrlea, prime . . .. '« UUTTKU AND CHKKSB- Otilo . . Hnlcalla, bin*. Alappo. iold Oil anU ^' aSM ,rirKK»-»«««p«cl»ir«port. UKICKftCominoD bvd . . . IHK CHRONICLE. PRICES CURRENT. ASHKB— •• , . 20, 1871.] I iOOailM ' ruoVlBlONBfork, mm* f hbl(naw) Pattokwui! '.¥ . •! •! Mais'.! a a.... i9Ha , THE CHRONICLE. 640 Oottoa and Soathern Cards. Rigney Reese, AntHOKT 3. SNTDKK. EdwabdN. Snydkb. EstabUsbed JOHX ( conmissiON mkhchants. ON ALL ACCB9BIBLK POINTS IN SOVTSI C A K O li I N A , tiaage (or, in 41 S. New Tort 236 & SOUTH 237 TEAS, MATTING, LIQUORS, and Ei- BANKER AND BKOkEK, Charleston, S. C. BONDED GOODS Of every descrlptlOD. Dealers In Money, Kichange. Bonds, Notes, Stocks, and Real Fstate of every Tiine. Special altentlon Blven to safe and nrofltable Investments. Insurance placefl in ^roo(l Ciimiianlea at lowest rates. Arnold, of A. CO., approved mer chandlze. & Wright OMtMISSION MBRCHANT, AND Cotton Factor, MONTGOMERY, ALA. Hawks & Castleman, Wrlffht, In NAYLOR & Broivn No. e9 & Co., STREET, WALL NEW YORK, NEW TORK & Sons, Securities. Gold, Stocks, &c. Iionds of every description, bought and sold on commission. Freret, BROKERS, REAI^ ESTATELAND AGENTS AND GENERAL. For the States ot LOUISIANA, TEXAS, MISSIS 8IPPI, ALAllAMA. *c. „ „„ , . eS 8 1. CHAkLES ST., NEW ORLEANS, LA. Prompt attention given lo buvlng. selling and 13aB Ing of plantations and other real estate, paying or „ MANUFACTDRBRB OF CORDAQB FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC 192 FRONT 8TRKBT. NEW YORK John D wight & Buyers of Cotton For a Comnilatlon. FULKERSON, COTTON BROKER, 8TS. MISS. Befer to G. M. KLEIN, Cashier, Mississippi Yalley Bank, Vlcksburg. R. A. Young & Bro., COTTON & TOBACCO BROKERS, Petersburg, Ya. W. Burton, Jesse 41onMISSION MERCHANT, OFFICE WALL J. ST., 89 «8 ST, C. Rogers Peters '"'TK. Va Box 3102. Post Olllce & Co., dcC, New York. Sugar. & 90 Central Street. NAYLOR, BENZON CO, tc. 34 Old Broad Street, to orders for & OHAUVOBT TXBBABD . ALEX. XMXBSOir rOOTB, P. FISKB Vibbard, Foote & Co., 40 BROADWAY, NfiW^ YORK. Steel RaiJs, Lon- Ins. Co. Iron Rails, Old , FIRE INSURANCE. North American Fire Insurance Company Co. Boston NO. Branch Rails, Offices, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. In Ports ot Iron. New York and New Orleans. Bills 1429 Broadiray. INCORPORATED 1823. 3 Cooper Institute «J Railroad OFFICE 192 BROADWAY. of Exchange on London and circular Notes amounts to suit remitters or travelers. Sc .... $600,000 CASH CAPITAL SURPLUS ....... 295,237 00 93 Cash Capital and Surplus, July 1,1869, ' ' Insnres Property against Loss or Damage by Fire at usual rates. Policies Issued and Losses paid at the Office of the Companj or at its various Agencies in the principal he United State-*. cltie H. W. HLEECKER. President, WYLLIS IlLACKSTONE, Vlce-Prest.B F. H - KTER Secre'ju-y, ^' LD, General Agent. J. . P% INDIA tc DOMESTIC GUNNY CLOTH, Gannr Bags, Linseed, Jnte Butta^ Joseph B. Glover Steel Material for Railroad Iron, $795,237 93. Nxw York, COMMERCIAL BROKEK3, tCSTABLtSHra U43. & Globe SYCAMORE STREET, BBAVXB other AND AJfetsGoldS^^y^^'^y^'^ BAILITAY EaUIPMENTS. "^ AJfetsinihe U. States 3)000,000. Gilead A. Smith & Co., BARTHOLOMEW HOUSE, BANK, LONDON 45 Williai'^S^ AlTD SBLMA, ALABAMA, YICKSBURG, all *• well as Old Ralls, Scrap Iron and Metals. SUPER CARB. SODA, X«. II Old Slip, don Co., CORNER MULBERRY AND WASH INQTON Cast Bteel Frogs, and Co., MANUFACTURERS OF The Liverpool Dny Cotton, Grain, Ac, on Commission. S. CAST STEEL RAILS, CAST STEEL TYRES, S%LERATC8. Brothers, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA, H. PHILA., 308 So. 4th street 90 State street. street. whs give special attention Insuzanoe. & John HOUSE IN LONDON: USE. taxes, collecting rents, etc. [ohn C. Graham 99 CO., BOSTON, Railway Use. QoTamment & GOLD STREET, NEW YORK. Ifi the United States by onr Honse, Htnry Lav/rence COLUMBUS, GEO. Reynolds Pascal Iron VTorks, Pblladelphia. Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Weldi Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters' Tools, Ac. Rl« DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL. Represented stock Brokers aad Real Kstate Asents & Co., OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: Co., U. Castlehak, Davis al COMMISSION MERCHANTS, GENERAL N. Hawks. & Morris, Tasker OT CHINA AND JAPAN. Street, Mobile, Ala. PRICE WILLIAMS, Praa't. Board of Trade. S. HEARD Advances made oc consignments 32 Nortli Water D. ton England. Supply all Railway Eanlpment and undertake Railway business generally. 66 State Street, Bostooe A ENTS FOR ADOflSTINB BROKERS. Iron Ralls, Steel Ralls, Old Ralls, Bessemer Pis Iron, Scrap, Steel Tfrvs, boiler plates, Ac. AGENTS FOR The Bowling Iron Company, Bradford England. The West Cumberland UematUe Iron Co., Working Ever ett & Co. Son 8c EXCHANGE AND REAL E8TATB W. IMPORTERS OF Insurance at Lowest Rates. KAUFMAN, Price Williams tc NEW YORK. ST, Storage lor by A. C. Co., COB. OF WILLIAM ST. ST., sell Collections Made and promptly remitted CEDAR Bonded Warehouse GENERAL RAILWAY AGENTS ANiV MERCHANTS. Buy and Railway Bonds and Negoclate Loans Snyder, Son & Co., Railways. U. OTTON BDYIPTO, & Kennedy S. J. HOKTOOUBRT, AL&., EIXNXDT. HXHBT M. BAXIK. JOBHB.BABHXS 8. WiLIjIAM B. Mobkwood. 18S7. 20, 1871. Iron and Railroad Materials Misoellaneons. Co.. &r [May Abthvb Pabkbi BnrTLXT D, Hasxll, D. Hasell B. And Special attention to negotiating liallway. State and County an securities. BROADWAY ' Entrance on Tbomas Street BALDWIN LOCOMOTIVE WORKS' M. Baird OF LONDON. ssets $8,000,000, Gold CHIEF OFFICE IN THE U. S. and 43 Pine Street, Nos. 40 New York, .... Co., dealers In Rall^vay Iron, Equip. ment and Supplies. & Co., PHILA DEL PHIA. Imperial FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY & GENERAL RAILWAY AGENTS, All work accurately fitted ly Interchangeable. to gauges Plan, Material, and thoroneb' Workmanship' and Efficiency lully guaranteed. Ch«s T.Pairy, Wm. P. Heniey* M. Baird, Qeo. Bambam. Edw.H. Williams. Ed. Longstretn. (rinlsh TVui. P. Converse 4c Co., M Fine St., New York. AsesK