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Jiwifctf**

A

faitumj} p<mitw, and gnsMtauc* fmmiaf.
WEEKLY
NEWSPAPER, '

REPRESENTING the industrial and commercial interests of the united states,

Bankers and

Brokers,

8 Wall Street, New York.
Tnos&ct a General Banking Business, and give
nirtlcniar attention to the PURCHASE AND SaLE

OF GOVERNMENT,^ ATE

ON

BTJDeposlts received subject to check, at sight.

Wall

5

Late

Made and

change by

14 WALL

BANKER AND BROKER,

Charleston, S. C.

Leonard, Sheldon& F oster
BANKERS,

Street,

BROKERS,
New York.

Stocks and Bonds
BOUGHT AND SOuD ON COMMISSION.
A.DENIS’N WILLIAMS. I
J. P, WILLIAMS,
Member or the
I
Member of the
N.York Stock Exchange | A. York Stock Exchange.

Stout &

Loan.

to
ON

Dickinson,

BROAD

New

Principals only Dealt with.

New York.

S. G. & G. C.

Gold, Stock and Bonds
bought and sold on commission. Account# received
aud inte est allowed on balances, which may be
checked tor at sight same as at bank.
A. Y. STOUT, President Nat. Shoe and Leather Bank
J. B. DICKINSON, late President Tenth Nat. Bank.
PLATT K. DICKINSON, Member of N. Y. Stock ». d

Exchange.

Howard C. Dickinson, Member ol N.
Exchange.
JOS. S. STOUT.

AGENTS

BARING

&

Brown,

d8

Williams

PARIS, LONDON, BOSTON,

Credits for Travelers In
Exchange on Paris and the Union

Sc

R. T. Wilson
'

Co.,

Bankers and Commission Merchant*,

NEW YO :K

Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bount and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchant
otbers allowed! per cent on deposits
iae

7 WALL

Chase & Higginson,
-l

Government Securities, Stocks, Stat<
And Railroad Ronds,
...

Bay »td Sell

on

BROAD

STREET,

Commission the Bonds of the follow

lQtf Railroads:
RaAG?VrBU£LlIsGT0N AND QUINCY RAIL
BOapa'Nd iTS

ruirinr.

Southern Securities.
c

•

_

Caldwell 8c

Co.,

Duncan, Sherman 8c Co.,
No. 11 Nassau

St., New York City,

A0ND MISSOURI RIVER RAILROAl
per cent.

Telegraphis Transfers of Money to and from Lon¬
don, Paris, San Frauclsco, Havana, Ac.
Current Accounts

received on such terms as may b

agreed upon.

S.

E.

Bailey,

WALL STREET,
Buys and Sells
Insurance Stocks and Scrips; also,
Bank Stocks and other Securities.
«
SPECIALTY”
Cash paid at once for ihe above Securities; or they
"Will be Sold on comm.sslon, at Boilers option.
65

BANKERS,
2

73 WALL

STREET,

NEW

Henry

YORK.

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

BSP* Interest, Four Par Cent, allowed on Deposit*,

subject to Sight bralt.

,

BkajnCHES—8 per cent.

(IN

First-cl ass Securities,

STREET, N. Y.

STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD bought and sold on
COMMISSION ONLY.
OoLlKO f IONS made on all part* ot the UNITED
STATES and CANADAS.
Special attention given to

most liberal advances made on Cotton, Tob
•c.,consigned to ourselves or to our corresnonaent
Mmbts.K GILLIAT & CO., Livemo-1

6

Co.,

Vincent &

BANKERS Sc BROKERS,

BROKERS IN

BANKERS AND STOCK, BOND AND
GOLD COMMISSION BROKERS,

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR
Letters of Credit available and payable In all the
PRINCIPAL CITIES OF t HE WO.tLD; also In the
United States, Canada and West Indies.

Conover,

WILSON, CALLAWAY Sc CO.,

NO.

Bank ot London, in

YORK.

&

Exchange-place,

NEW YORK,

ISSUE

LATE

No. 44 BROAD STREET,

Europe,

Subscription agentB for the Chronicle In Paris.

BROKERS,

11 WALL STREET, NEW

to suit.

Bostwick,

&

Make liberal advances on all
Interest allowed on Deposits.

STREET, N. Y

ISSUE

same

BANKERS

BROTHERS Sc COMPANY.
NEW YORK,
STATE STREET, BOSTON.

Y. Stock

Bowles Brothers & Co.,
19 WILLIAM

FOB

5*1 WALL STREET,

Nos. 40 Sc 42

J. MUNEO BBOWN.

Bates

Ward,

Government Securities,

Co., No. 3 Pine Street.

mm T. BATES.

York.

STREET,

Cor. Exchange Place,

DESIRABLE REAL ESTATE.

MORTGAGES PROMPTLY CASHED.

STREET,

WALL

10

*

BANKERS,
25

Gold

WM. SINCLAIR, Jr., &

SECURITIES,

STREET, N. Y.

P. O. Box 4,208.

A, D. Williams & Co.,

Money

BROKERS,

GOLD

KAUFMAN,

C.

Brokers,

46 Wall Street,

AND

And dealers In

promptly remitted for, In New York Ex¬
A.

PULESTON, RAYMOND Sc Co.

STOCK

STOCK

GOVERNMENT

Barney, Raymond & Co.,
Bankers and

IN

CAROLINA,

SOUTH

B. D, FOSTEB.

0. H. BAYMOND.

POINTS

ACCESSIBLE

ALL

AND jtf AiLttOAD SECU¬

RITIES-

Dodge, Kimball & Moore
BANKERS,

Collections

& Go.,

Cammann

Bankers and Brokers.

kars.

Bar kers ana B=

Bankers and Brokers.

1,0. BlBKEY.

NO. 282.

NEW YORK, NOVEMBER 19, 1870.

VOL. 11.

BANKING HOUSE OF

Banker and

Meigs,

Broker, No. 27 Wall St.

Member ot New York Stock Exchange,
(Formerly cashier of Ihe Metropolitan Bank, and late
or the firm of H. Meigs, Jr., & Smith).
Offers his services tor the purchase and sale of Gov¬
ernment and all other Stocks, Bonds and Gold,,,
Interest allowed on deposits
Investments carefully attendee to.

IOWA)—8

BUmPLGiiPNAA^1) Missouri river railroai
Ni'.B .AtKa)—8 per
cent,
UN

BLmnr?IJ7v£T\ JOSEPH AND COUNCIiUrrS RA'LRuAD—8 aud 10 per cenu

uT0

BSKI^entE1'fcC0TT AND GULF BAH

“luifflLw1peS!*0® AND GALVE8T0:
.W»A^5frc.UKS0N m “*“Air 8411




Kountze

Brothers,

52 Wall Street. New York.
Deposits received from Banks and Individuals, sub
Jact to check at sight, aud Interest allowed thereon at
fOUR PER CENT per annum.
Collections made throughout the United State*, the
British Provinces and Europe.
Governments Securities bought and sold.

Theodore

Berdell,

BANKER Sc STOCK
8

BROKER,

EXCHANGE COURT. EXCHANGE PLACE,
Now York.

Stocks, Bonds, Gold, Government Securities, Ac.'

Jkc., bought aad Sold on
•d on deposits.

Commission. Interest all,

:

-

::

.

.

Bankers and Brokers.

Charles H.

Hkmby C. Hardy,
Member N. Y. Stock * Gold Exchange.
Fbkdxbick Hardy,
Member N. T. Stock Exchange.

C.

Hardy

BANKERS Sc

& Son,

BROKERS,
NEW YORK.

NO. 4 WALL STREET,

Welling,

15 WALL

Broker in Mercantile Pap
,
89 WALL STREET,
JAUNOEY COVET.
NEW YORK.
Governments, Stocks. Bonds, Gold, Sterling,
Loans negotiated STRICTLY on Commission.

18

NEW

BROKER,

STREET,

NEW

YORK.

Particular attention paid to the purchase and

sale of

Stocks, Ronds, Gold and Exchange,
SIGHT DRAFT
Four Per Cent Interest allowed on Dally

DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO

Deposits.

And

Balances.

especial

have

Securities

Southern

attention.

James C. King 6c Co.,

38

ST 1TB

Collections made on all Southern Points.

"STREET,

LONDON.
Sterling Credits,
IN COMMERCIAL
PAPER

And

Buy and Sell Massachusetts and New York
ttOCKB.
Government Securities

Stocks

>ought and sold strictly

Commission.

W

BROADWAY,

Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold and
Foreign Exchange.
Iasne Certificates of Deposit.
Interest allowed on current daily balances.
Collections made on all parts of the United States
and Europe.

ILHAMS
63 Wall

Knauth,Nachod&Kuhne
BANKERS^

Interest allowed on Deposits. Collections promptly
made. Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold on

AND

nSrrw18

also Cable transfers.
Purchasers
Country Bankers can be supplied with Bills of Rt
change, m large or small amounts, on the
cities of Europe, also with Tickets for
or to. Europe,by the GUION LINK of
Mail i1

nriiSSi
PassKft

principal cities of Germany, Switzerland,
England, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, Bel¬
gium, Russia, Italy, Spain, Denmark, &c.
lisue Letters of Credit for Travelers,
available in all parts of Europe.

ALEXANDER SMITH

&

CO.,

BANKERS,

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,
No. 32 Broad

Brown Brothers &
NO. 59 WALL

York.

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

and
of

promptly execute orders for ihe purchase or sale

Bank of British

)

Hob a ob Manuel,
>
Wm. H. Hutchinson, )

America.
Incorporated by Royal Charter.
AGENCY, 17 NASSAU STREET, NEW TORE
COMMERCIAL CREDITS
issued for use in Europe, China, Japan, the East and
West Indies, and South America.
JOHN PATON
PATON,
ARCH’D McKINLAY,

Daniel Dbew,
Partners.
Special Partner.

Kenyon Cox &
BANKERS Sc

Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK.

NO. 8 WALL

Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers in all
art* of Europe, etc., etc. Exchange on Paris.

TRAVELLERS,
ALSO,

Securities, Stocks, Bonds ‘ and Gold

on

LONDON.

PLACE,
the negotiation of

Tapscott, Bros. & Co.
86 SOUTH

Railway and other Corporate Loans.

Union and Central Pacific Bonds and Stocks a spe¬

cialty.

Lockwood &

of the world

MORTON, ROSE & CO

BROKER,
Government
Bonds, Exchange,
Gold and Stocks,
No. 44 EXCHANGE

CREDITS,

COMMERCIAL
Available in all parts

Particular attention given to

W. H. FOSTEB.

W. O. SHELDON.

w. B. LEONARD.

Credit for

BROKERS,

John Pondir,

In

John Munroe & Co.,

(issued and paid free of Commission) and letters oi

81 WALL STREET.

Co.,

NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS,

ISSUE
CIRCULAR NOTES.

BANKERS,

AMERICAN

.

\A&entl

Morton, Bliss & Co.,
General

bought and sold on commission.

6c

North

Securities.

Government

Munroe

Co.,

STREET,

Available in all parts of the world

Street, New York.

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES,
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS
and others, and allow interest on daily balances, sub¬
ject to Sight Drait.
Make collections on lavorable terms,

Kenyon Cox,

No. 40 Wall Street, New

Gulon & Co,

Liverpool.

Gold, State, Federal, and [Railroad

WILLIAM

OurselmwCn?
W)r‘

to

Alex. 8. Petrie Sc Co.,

Buy and Sell at Market Rates

all the

CONSIGNMENT?^

respondents.

ISSUE

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

DRAW IN SUIIIS TO SUIT

?

Commercial and Traveler* Credits

85 BRUHL.

BR JAD ST.

GoM

W°la

GuiON

London.

YORK.

5 BROAD STREET, NEW

late

TRAVELLERS ana COMMERCIAL
ISSUED, available in all parts of Europe &c
OF EXCHANGE drawn in sums to suit

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

Leipzig, Saxony,

York,

&

Bonds and

Street, New York.

Commission.

New

on

ADVANCES MaDE UPON

Evans, Wharton & Co.,

BOSTON

EXCHANGE ON

COTTON, and other Produce

BANKERS,
56

AND

(’ooke Sc Co.

EXCHANGE,

AND

BANKER

Stocks, Bond9, Gold and Government Securities
bought and sold.
Foreign Gold and Silver Coin, and fine Gold and
Silver Bars, constantly on hand.

NO

Brothers & £0>
Wall Street. New
York. **

sa

and

Worthington,

MEMBER N. Y. STOCK

STREET, NEW YORK,

on

N.

W.

BROKERS,

Wm. H. Duff,
John H. Tienken,
Members of the N. Y. Stock and Gold Exchanges.

Interest allowed

Blake

DEALERS

Duff & Tienken,
AND

Foreign Bills.

(Formerly, Welling, Coffin & Co., Philadelphia.) -

»

Reference—Messrs. Jay

BANKERS

[November 19, 1870,

=

Bankers and Brokers.

H.

CHRONICLE.

THE

642
a—

Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Issue Sight Drafts and Exchange payable in all
parts of Great Britain and Ireland.
Credits on W, TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool. Ad
yances made on consignments. Orders for Govern
ment Stocks, Bonds and Merchandize executed.

BANKERS,

Leonard, Sheldon & Fos ter

94 BROADWAY.
Transact a General

BANKERS,
No. 10 Wall Street.
■»

-

*

**i

-

i

;

•

,

»

..

.

-

t

-

t

•

}

-

and sell

desirable

Government, State, Railroad and other
securities, making liberal advances on

game, allow Interest on deposits, deal in commercial
paper, furnish to travellers and others Letters of Cre
di tcurrent in the principal cities in Europe.

R. L.
BANKER

road Stocks

and Bonds,

AND

BANKERS.
Issue Letters of Credit.
Draw Bills on Paris.

LITCHFIELD, DANA Sc STIMSON,
BANKERS

& CO*,

Rue Scribe, Paris “

and other

securities, on commission.

Buy and Sell Bonds and Stocks in London,
and Frankfort and negotiate Loans on same.

BROKERS,

Agency

No. 18 William St.

NO. S3 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

Coin.

52 Wall Street,
JAS. W. TUCKER

of Government and State Bonds. Rail¬

BROKER,

JP. O. Box 3)328.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold and
Silver Coin bought and Sold.
Special attention given to Merchants orders for

Tucker, Andrews & Co.

ness, including the purchase and sale

Edwards,
AND

Banking busi¬

Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on commission.

Accounts of Banks and Individuals solicited and
interest allowed on deposits.

>

Wm. B. Litchfield,
Lewis A. Stimson,
Chables H. Dana,
Walter E. Colton.
E. B. Litchfield, Special

of

rain

the

OF BRITISH
AMERICA,

BANK

p«»Ii

NORTH

STREET.
Demand and Time Bills of Exchange. WjW?
London and elsewhere bought and sold at cumm
17

NASSAU

rates, also cable

Transfers.

innd

.lgo'on

cSSSSfv&fColSmbte2Sd £? FrnncfBco. Bill*

J. M. WEITH.

Geo

A rents

J. M. Weith & Arent*,
Late J. M. Weith &

BANKER8,

PHILADELPHIA.
Transacts general Banking ana Exchange business
Including Purchase and Sale of Stocks, Bonds, Gold

•to., on Commission.




Co.,

DEALERS Ilf SOUTHERN AND MIS¬
CELLANEOUS

SECURITIES,

No. 9 NEW STREET.

Loans Negotiated.

collected, and otfer

tgoUK^nalneaa »«•«*■
McKJLNLAY. i

ARCH.

John B. Manning,
BROKER,
BANKER AND

NO.

(

BROAD

UnaMfl 1 .ftantlnn

trlVP.Tl lid

STB BE*1

■Dnntkahl

fiflCQrltt&t W11

THE CHRONICLE.

1870.]

^foTenaber 19,

Western Bankers.

Bankers.

Boston

Southern Bankers.

BANKING HOUSE OF

Richardson & Co., James T. Brady & Co.,
BANKERS,

Pase,
& >
1

'

-to

Street, Boston.

State

Commercial and Travelers

and

Excba?^ Credits issued

Billt of

on

(Successors to S. JONES

PITTSBURGH. PA.
UoNaeN.
i C«., t
gobert Ben«on
munrej* Co.
lpAKIS. Second National
TTfnrcuard, Andre Sc Co., j
Bank,
iJSotes available for Travelers in all parts of
Enrope

TITUSVILLE, PENN.,

and the Last.

Capital

Cobb,

Parker &

and

DEVONSHIRE STREET,

,INKERS, 36

boston,

and sell Western
ty bonds#
Bay

,

v

C. HYDE, Cashier.

City and Coun¬
>t~

OF

(200.000

secure

500,000.

Circulation

CHAS. HYDE Pres’t.

OF THE

(3,410.300

Bank, having reorganized as a National Bank
is now prepared to do a general
banking business.
Government Securities, Coin, Gold Dust and Bullion
bought and sold at current rates. Special attention
given to collections throughout the West
Jambs H. Bbitton, Pres. Chas. K. Dickson, V Pres’t
Edwabd P. Cubtis Cashier

Special attention given to consignments of Cotton.
Gold, Stocks, Bonds and Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, bought and sold.

Collections promptly remitted for
Orders solicited lor the purchase oi s<ties of
Produce
and Securities.
Prompt attention guaranteed.
New York Correspondents: Lawbenck
Bbos. &

J. W. Wheatley & Co.,
BANKERS AND

Morton, Galt & Co.,

Do a general
banking business. Cotton purchased
order. Collections made and
promptly remitted
for.
New York Correspondents— Messrs. Wm.
Bryce
& Co.
on

John A. Klbin, C. C.Flowbbebb. Gko. M.
Klkim
President.
Vice-President.
Cashier.

Mississippi Valley Bank,

150 West Main

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible

N. Y. Correspondent:—Bank of the Manhattan
Co.

Street, Louisville, Ky., dealers In
Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Government Bonds,
and all Local Securities. Give
prompt attention to
collections and orders for investment of funds.

E. E.

Bubbuss, Pres’t.

A.

FINANCIAL AGENTS

Individuals and

BROKERS,

Corporations, Estates and

negotiate Real Estate Loans, Com¬

mercial Paper, Railroad bonds and stocks, and other
Securities.
Befer

Samuel A. Gaylord &
Stock and Bond

SAINT LOUIS

Co.

STOCK

STREET

MO.

4.

Trust

Balers In Exchange,
Agents

Co.,

m

business

HEWrv'Tderhvrro

KaNRY L. DAVIS.

Financial and Trast

I

J

Cashier.

D. W. C. THOMPSON.

Heyd«nfei<KdTMu Ko?enbauin.
B?otU*

J•

O.Tldridge,

S.

J- Deering, F. S. WenH- L- Davis, 6. M. Plum,

wood» S. Hobbs, A. D. Moore, Tyler
NEW YORK
CORRESPONDENT:
*f«*t National Bank of
New York.

Gaylord & Co
THIRD
STREET,

'
ST’ L0UiS» M0,pecial attention to the Purchase and Sale

SSourFR^fiC RauRoad Securities.
Lind

Hawks &

Castleman,

Government Securities, Gold, Stocks, &c. Bonds
of every description, bought and sold on commission

Cubbedge & Hazlehurst,
BANKERS AND

BROKERS,

MACON, GA.
Make Collections, and do a

General

Banking and

REFER TO EAST RIVER NATIONAL BANK.

TH0?K.FERGUSS0N,
BANKER,

Special attention to collections.
New York Correspondent .—HOWES & MACY.

The

OF

ALABAMA.

City

Capital

-

-

-

JAS. ISBELL, of

-

(100,000

w*1^1 ^i83ouri

••

SAJHFEL a. GAYLORD

Scrip

Sc CO.

ALABAMA.

EXCHANGE, BANK NOTES AND COIN BOUGHT
Collections made
Southern States.

on

SOLu.

& E.

H.

NO.

126

GRAVIER

New

STREET.

Orleans, La.

Gold and Silver Coin,
Insurance Scrip,
Bank and Railroad Stocks,

Uncurrent Bank Notes,
Land Warrants,

State and City Notes,
State and City Warrants
United States Bonds.

Mutilated Currency,
commercial Paper,

Bought and Sold exclusively on Com¬
mission.

Particular attention paid to Settlement of State and

City Taxes.

Lancaster &
BANKERS
A>’D
CHANGE

R. H. SOMMSEVILLE.

Sommervilley

BANKERS A

BROKERS,

MONTGOMERY, ALA,
Bpeolal attention given to purchase of Cotton.

Levy,

BROKERS,

all accessible points in the

WM. Fowl kb.

Fowler &

•«

Wugbtnnd^oMon8^! Agricultural College
\
0Q tbemost favorable terms.




J- Perkins,
‘BANKER,
AND

L.

Talladega, President.

Correspondent—Importers and Traders National

T.

No charge for collecting cjty pan er.
Refers to Henry Clews & Co., 32 Wall Btreet, N.Y.

J

ARMSTRONG, Cashier.
JNU. W. LOVE, Assistant Cashier.
N.Y.

SELMA, ALABAMA,
Special attention to Collections.

Bank

WM. P.

EUFAULA,

OFFICE OF

oamuel A.

i

Son,

•

Wert*'

H. GASTLBMAM

Stock Brokers and Real Estate
Agents
COLUMBUS, GEO.

R. H. Isbbll.

OF SELMA.

Trustees:
|jonS;?tLghSiohu Cum-y. w. H. Sharp, J. C
rS cuink C- T* Hathaway, H.Barroi.

| tf to#

W. N. HAWKS

Brokerage Business.

MONEY TO LOAN,
Strong Vaults lor Sal© Deposits.

Eo. 323 N.

THE UNITED
STATES AND FINANCIAL AGENT.
C. Dbwbt. President.
„. A. v\ ilky. Cashier

BROKERS,

CHARLESTON, S. C.

STATE

INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS

0

CAROLINA.

BANKERS,

BANKERS,

Curili.

Macbeth,

Isbell &

CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO.

S

OF NORTH

TALLADEGA, ALABAMA,

California

I Wm

ALBX. MACBETH.

James Isbell.

BROKER,

:

J. M. Weith & Arents.

STOCK AND BOND

Hewson,

C*

Henry Clews b Co.,

Holmes &

Office No. 21 West Third Street,
Cincinnati, Ohio
M«rtoj All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs. LOCK'
WOOD & Co.. New York.

«1

S.

tW~ Collections of Dividends, Coupons, Notes
dbc.,
dec., receive special attention.

GEO. L. HOLMBS.

C.

al parts of the United States.

Raleigh National Bank

regularly with

Banking Houses.

on

DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF

Southern Securities of every description,
viz.; Un«
current Bank Notes, State, City and Railroad
Stocks,
Bonds and Coupons bonght and sold on
commission.
Orders solicited and satislaction guaranteed. Prices
current issued weekly and
exchanged

Key box

W. M. F.

BROKER,

CHARLESTON,

Howes & Macy,
Luther Kountze

Brokers,

THIRD

Kaufman,

Nkw Yobk Cobbbspondbnts

by permission, in CHICAGO, to

W. F.COOLB.VUGH, President Union Nat. Bank,
B.M. NICKERSON, President First Nat. Bank.

NO. 328 NORTH

C.

BANKER AND

Co..

Chicago, Ill.,

Will make Investments for

Bank,

WILMINGTON, N.

FOR SALE

LOAN

Walkbb, Cashier*

Collections made

Southern Bankers.

AND PARIS

&

A. K.

National

First

points tad remitted lor on day of payment.

AND REAL ESTATE

DEPOSIT,

VICKSBURG, MISS.

BANKERS,

GOVERNMENT bonds.

Field, King

BROKERS,

A BANK OF DISCOUNT AND

GOLD, SILVER and all kinds

CHECKS ON LONDON

Merchant,

Savannah, Ga.

This

CINCINNATI, OHIO.
Dealers In

AND

AMERICUS. GA.

ESTABLISHED 1837.

West Fourth Street*

Commission

MISSOURI.

Capital paid In

Anderson, Jr.

BANKER, FACTOR

STATE

In St. Louis.

,

& Co.,

Gilmore, Dunlap

Deposits

NATIONAL BANK

Western Bankers.

108 A HR

-----

Deposited with U. S. Treasurer to

Edward C,

& CO

Dealers In all kinds of Securities.
Special attention given to collections.

citron*,

Circular N

643

STOCK

Co.,
AND

EX¬

BROKERS,
No. 1113 Main Street, Richmond, Va.
BRO WN, LANCASTER Sc CO.,
No. 80 SOUTH STREET,

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.

LANCASTER, BROWN Sc CO.,
NO. 2

NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.-

THE CHRONICLE.

*,644

[November

Miscellaneous.

Financial.

Financial.

NEW

Loan.

Connecticut

BANKING HOUSE

New York. Philadelphia
Washington.

And

We Buy,

Illustrations.

YORK

Sell and Exchange at most liberal rates,

Bonds

Seven Per Cent

all

issue* ot

SUPERIOR AND MISSISSIPPI
RAILROAD COMPANY, and execute orders lor pur

and Bonds of LAKE

Grand

Beit

T
of

Elegantly

baclf

Them

Through Route

bSmK°$e m

wSJ

and

,

P4»

***

are'?vHy.’h^p?’]o°iy«lldrTBi®I
sanctimonious,PJ>ut full of1Sf!D,neltlle
in their

frolic, who

dS

Bayin.s and

ISSUED BY THE
^, ticuiai, jg a l.tiic aarliDff.

Stocks, Bonds and Gold.

J. 6c W. Seligman 6c Co.,

'

“to,*.

with black and gilt
and side dies
The many admirers of Mips
Wadsworth..,
pictures ol child me will heartily
ana beautllul volume,
whose fasclrntm111®
afford a i ich treat, not only to the
lime

OrihEM"
wicked nor

from New York to Boston.

a

as witmmd

v

^literal. as it is poseible for a ihree.vSSf*^'
,Thd bosk is issued in handsome holfda^-St^
children’s gift book, and may be heSiilK2SBfcri
ed to the

New Haven,

attention of

“rtopnASSSi

PUBLISHED BY THE

AMERICAN TRACT

Wil liman tic
CONNECTICUT.

RAILROAD CO. OF

purchasers,
also

Middletown and

TAY COOKE & CO.

s,

Bhouiders.^6015^6’ ’who'WtowSjfSroSmift

chase and sale of

WE NEGOTIATE RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL
LOANS, receive Deposits, subject to Check, allowing
interest, and transact a general Banking Business.

o

f&W' 3

ON THE

BONDS.

GOVERNMENT

A N
the

By Olive A. Wadsworth. Author
of Bill
etc., etc., etc.
16mo.
Tinted Paper. Seven han^.A

First Mortgage

and

STREET, NEW

WALL

20

HO.

PUBLICATIONS.

K IT,

or

Jay Cooke 6c Co.,

19

No. 164

SOCIETY,

TremontStreet,Baton,

Sent Post-paid on receipt of the price.

BANKERS,
“

BROAD ST., N.Y.,

NO. 59 EXCHANGE PLACE, COK.
•

Issue Letters of Credit for

Travellers,

Payable in any part of Europe, Asia, Africa, Austra¬

lia and America.
Draw Bills of Exchange and
transfers of money on Europe and

make telegraphic
California.

WM. A. STEPHENS

GSOEOS O TO YELK.

G. Fbanoib Opdyke.

BANKING HOUSE OF

Geo. Opdyke 6c
NO.

25

NASSAU

Co.,

STREET,

progressed steadily
during ihe Summer and Fall. More than threequarters of the line is finished ; trains »re runniog
regulariy between New Haven and Middletown,
and it is believed the whole will be open for through
business during the coming Spring.
The work

on

the Road has

The earnings on the section now
the capacity of the road to pay
above its interest liability.

in oneration prove
largely aver and

THE NECESSARY FUNDS TO COMPLETE
THE UNFINISHED WORK ARE SECURED,
WHICH INSURES THE BaRLY OPENING OF.
THE LINE, AND MAKES THE INVESTMENT
A?> DESIRABLE AS ON A ROAD ALREADY IN

OPERATION.

Bonds

can

be obtained of any

HATCH Sc

Bank

or

Banker, or

Foreign Exchange

NEGOTIATIONS of Loans, and
eftected.

SOUTTER &

Co.,

BANKERS,
No. 68 WILLIAM

or

STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,

FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bought and sold
on the most favorable terms.
INTEREST allowed on deposits either In Currency
or Gold, subject to check at sight, the same as with

the City Banks.
ADVANCES made on all marketable securities.
CERTIFICATES ol Deposit issued bearing Interest
COLLECTIONS made at all points of the UNION
and BRITISH PROVINCES.

Advances maae on

Railway

OF

The Directors of the Great Western Railway of
Canada invite TENDERS for the construction of the
SECOND DIVISION OF THEIR CANADA AIRLINE.
Plans and specifications for the Division, from
AYLMER to 81MCOK, will be on exhibition at the
office of the Chief Engineer, GEORGE LOWE RhlD,

approved securities.

Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated.

Esq., Hamilton, from the 8th to the25th November.

RANKERS,
66

WALL

Issue Letters of

Credit for Traveller

THBOrOH

Division Canada Air Line.*’

PRICE, Treasurer, &c.

WESTERN

RAILWAY OF

CANADA.

Europe, etc.,

IN ofADDITION TO THE SECOND DIVISION
the CANADA AIR LINE, Tenders for which

THK

already invited to be in on the
Directors of the Great Western
prepared to receive
are

CITY

BANK,

LONDON,

OB

Tenders for the Third

Messrs.HOTTINGUER A CO., of Paris
Also COMMERCIAL CREDITS and DRAFTS on
LONDON, PAhlS, and SCOTLAND.
ADVANCES made on Consignments. STOCKS and
BONDS bOHgbt and sold on Commission.

25th November, the
Railway are now

or

The Co-partnership under tnethis day formed
subscribers have firm name of C. H.

BANKERS AND BROKERS at 29 Broad Street.
C. H
J. P.

tfor.

1870.




KIMBALL,
HOWELL,;

Prom Rev. Henry Ward Beecher.
“'Were 1, in view of all the competitors that art
now in the field, io choose, I should certainly cboot

‘THE t.IViisG AGr.. ’... .Nor is there, in any llbrai?
that I know ol, so much instructive aid entertainlq
readiug in the same number of volumes."
“

'

TO

From the Nation, New York.
The best of ail our tc ectic publications."

From the Illinois State Journal
It has more real, soliu wortn, mure useiul Inform*
tion. than any similar publ,cation we know ol. Tin
ablest essays, the most entertaining stones, the fine
“

poetry ol the English language, are here gather*
together.”
From the Lutheran and Missionary, Phikuktyhu
An extraordinary va ue marks many ol ihetni
clet of this publication, because they are the proem
“

times.1’

now-a-days is equal to a first-class monthly. Forsoj
merit, it is the cheapest magazine m the land.
From the Christian Register, Boston, Aug., I8fl.
it has never borne the marks ol morec*reluin
search and wiser selection than it does now.
From the Chicago Evening Journal.
“
It stauos at the head of nineteenth-century mo

critrically considered.
Examiner, Richmond.
of inis country.
From the Chicago Daily ifepwMcan.
—
“It occupies a field fii td by no other periotuct
The subscriber to ‘ Littell ’ finds JHMeU inpoi“ JJ
however

From the Christian
It is the great eclectic

volumeioi
of Mg
who
thjrt j* ‘ ^
'i?J1'J"
tbewa

at the end of the year, oi.lour la'£e
reading as can be obtained m no other
pnsing selectio s Horn every department
Phil sophy. and belles-lettres.. Those
a THOROUGH 6oMPbND1UA] of *6
able and noteworthy in the ]*te™ry
spared the trouble of wading through
views and magazines published abroad

iia

of all compacted

^Published
ex" a

and concent

free'-tiff®

weekly at |8 00 a year,
gratis to anyodcgetnug

copy sent

bubscribers. Address,
LITTELL Sc GAY,

CANFIELD,

30 MILES.

|y Plans and Specifications will be

Engl

eer,

Hamilton,

on

on
,

exhi¬

and alter 28tli Novemoer. and

THURSDAY, DEC. 15th, 1870.
JOSEPH

PRICE,
Treasurer,

Hamilton, Ont.. Nov. I6th, 1870

J

The best Home
at

Chief

sealed Tenders marked “ Tender /or Construction of
3rd Division Canada Air Line,” must he in the hands
of the undersigned by 10 o’clock on the morning of

Chief Offices,

to it

its monthly contemporariM,
the spirit and freshness of its conte .ts."
From the Advance, Chicago, Sept., IffiO.
“Every weet-iy number ol "Littcli’s Living

An

a

KIMB aLL & CO,, for the transaction of business as

EXTRACTS FROM NOTICES.

Club of five N ew

bition at the office of Geo. Lowe Reid, Esq

CO-PARTNERSHIP NOTICE.

general itiieiligence and literary tarte.

find the essence

last Division

OF THE CANADA AiR LINE FROM

SIMCOE

Living writers.

It is therefore indispensable to every one who wlsha
so laep pace with the events or Intellectual prop«
of the time, or to cultivate in himself or his family

“

Chief Offices, Hamilton, Ont., 7th Nov., 1870.

GREAT

Pages

of re adirg-matter yearly; and is the ONLY COHPIL
ALTON that presents, with a SaTIbFACiORYCOk
PLETENES' as well ireshness, the best Esesje,
views, Criticisms, T ales, i oetry,fccieDtiflcfjalo^r»ph

ture,
.

STREET,

Available In all parts of

or moiethan

“

All Tenders must be in the hands of the undersigned
on the morning of the 25th inst., sealed
and marked “Tender for Construction of Second

JOSEPH

each,

great auvantage over

by lO.o’clock

James Robb, King-6c Co.,

ptges

Thousand Double-Column Of

Pacific, San Francisco.
‘•Its publication in weekly numbers gives

to Sight Dralt

Collect’ ^ns both inluia and foreign promptly made.

SATURDAY, it gives fifty-tw

sixty-iour

From the

Canada.

Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper.

EVERY

numbers of

tions of the ablest men ol our

Bonds*
all Negotiable

Check.

continues to stand at the head ol its cities.”

ISSUED

Ablest

NO. 50 EXCHANGE PLACE.

"Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments,
Stocks. Gold, Commercial Paper, and
Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject

Issued, ha*
Story' Chancellor Kent, President Adams, Hlgtortoi
Sparks, Prescott, Jbancroit, and Ticknor, Kev Hern
Ward Beecher, and many others ; ana it admittedly
“

BANKERS

STREET, NEW YORK.

Age,

than One Hundred Volumes have bees
received ilie commenaauon of Jew*

more

from the pens of the

Gibson, Casanova 6c Go.

Great Western

Living

cal, hustoilcal, and Political mlormatioii, from th«
entire body or Foreign Periodical Literature, ini

FOOTE,

sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Foub per

accounted for,
ORDERS promptly executed, for the purchase and
sale of Gold; also, Government and other Securi¬
ties, on commission.
INFORMATION furnished, and purchases or ex¬
changes of Securities made for Investors.

@Of wich

No. 12 WALL STREEt.

DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms, Banks
Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at

COLLECTIONS made on ill accessible points In the
United States, Canada and Europe.
Dividends
and Coupons also collected, and all most promptly

Littell’s

tavo

Bankers and Dealers in Government Securities.

fixed dates.

Country.”—Philadelphia Press.

PRICE, PAR AND INTEREST.

(Corner of Cedar street.)

cent per annum.

Frankly speaking, we aver that
Tke Living Age’ lias no
eqnalhtuy

Three

by sending to ourselves.

CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Issued, bearing Foub
per cent Interest, payable on demand, or after

*

For Tm Dollar!,

and Foreign

Club Prices.

Literature

Boston

Literate

LITTELL'S LIVKOAGE,

containing the cream ol
ture, and either one of
Home

W

Foreign Pen
the
below, will be seu

named
viz.,

address lor one year:

.

j
to

1

*mr

mantra
%

julM’ fcette,

(SJflwmwcmt
Railway ponitot, and insurance
WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,
A

representing the industrial

and commercial interests

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER ]9,

VOL 11.

Banks
and the

Railroads
National Bank Returns
National Banks of Each

645

Pacific 646

647
State—
Their Condition Oct. 8, 1870..
648
THE

Market, Railway Stocks,
0.8.Securities, Gold Market,
Foreign Exchange, New York

Monet

650

English News

650

News

65

Commercial and Miscellaneous

RAILWAY MONITOR.

j Railway News
Railway Canal

v;•

657

City Bank Wet C"
668
City Banks, Philadelphia Banks
Railroad Canal ‘and Ml81VAJ • * * * _659
mi CeUane‘
National Banks, etc
653 J ous Bond^fst
Quotations of Stocks and Bonds 666 ]
1
660-1
THE COMMERCIAL TIMES.
662 ] Groceries
663 J Dry Goods
6651 Prices Current

Commercial Epitome

stupendous fabric of our

banking

general prostration of business which has b€en so much
complained of has not caused so signal a falling off as might
have been expected in the accommodation sought from the
banks by the public. The loans and discounts are reported
at 712 millions against 716 millions in June and 708 millions
in the foregoing March.
On the other hand the individual
deposits are reported at 501 millions against 512 millions in
June and 516 millions three months previously. The specie
The

Changes in the Redeeming
Agents of National Banks
Latest Monetary <fc Commercial

BANKERS GAZETTE AND

NO. 282.

machinery.

THE CHRONICLE.
The National
Kr. Bontwell

of the united states.

1870.

sound elements into the

CONTENT 8.

iournal

$66
668
671

in consequence of the large exportation movement,
fallen from 37 millions in March to $18,460,011 at

reserves,

have

How much of this coin which has been drained off
from the bank reserves was the property of the banks does not
Breadstuff's
torrent
665 }
appear. The reports are defective in this particular, and we
would suggest to Mr. Hulburd the propriety of making, in
®l)c (tfljronul*.
his future reports, a discrimination between the coin which is
Ta*Commercial and Financial Chronicle isissued every Saluractually owned by the banks and that which is merely depos¬
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants1 Magazine
ited there for safe keeping by their dealers. The Clearing
with the latest news up to midnight of Friday.
House certificates are now only 19 millions, having fallen
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
from 21£ millions last June. The three per cent certificates
ForTn Oommbbcial and Finanoial Chboniol®, delivered by carrier
have, however, been increased almost half a million, and the
tooltysub8oriber8,and mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)
For One Year
;
09
For Six Months
6 00 tendency of these notes is to concentrate themselves more
Chronicle will be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued by letter.
and more in the banks of our chief cities, where they are
Pottagiis^ cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office.
VUUAM
WILLIAM B. DANA & OO., Publisher*,
DANA,
1
70HH
greatly in favor, as in case of need Mr. Boutwell would prob¬
tloyd, jB. }
79 and 81 William Street, NEW YORK.
Post Oftiob Box 4,592.
ably be willing to stamp them for Clearing House purposes.
Probably, however, the most important change indicated in
4©* Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Post
the tables before us is in the reserve of legal tender notes,
Office Money Orders.
which is down to $77,203,577 against 90 millions in June
last and 80 millions in the previous quarter. It is easy to
THE NATIONAL BANKS.
We give up a large part of our columns to-day to the elabo¬ account for this depression of the level of the greenback
rate quarterly statistics of the National banks, which will be reserve, but the efficiency and strength of the banking system
found unusually suggestive. These institutions and the system will be best consulted if a constant pressure be put upon the
under which they exist are entering on a new phase. The banks by the Bureau at Washington, keeping them continu¬
We do not know what financial
recent law for adding seventy-nine millions to the aggrgateof ally strong in greenbacks.
troubles may arise in either hemisphere during the next
outstanding notes have already developed an activity in the
organization of new banks, and the aggregate capital of the twelve months, and it is obviously the part of prudence to
hanks in the whole country is in consequence increasing. be prepared for every contingency.
The permanence and success of our banking system can
The addition as
yet is not large and amounts only to three
millions. The scrupulous care with which every application only be secured by cementing these institutions with the
is investigated
by the Comptroller prevents too great i apidity public confidence, and buttressing them with all the supports
in
organizing new and needless banks. This severe scrutiny we prescribed by monetary science and endorsed by practical ex¬
trust will not be relaxed either from political influence or perience. The new currency privileges conferred on the
personal importunity. The rapid virulence with which the banks by the law of July 8, 1870, will be sure to arouse in
war fever is
spreading iu the old world, and the financial Congress some opposition, and during the coming session the
complications which cannot fail to assert themselves both enemies of the currency system will doubtless employ them¬
here and there if the Franco-Prussian conflict should not be selves busily in the grateful task of exposing the shortcomings
speedily brought to an end, add very cogent reasons to those of any defaulting institutions. The time is past for u nursing”
of a more national and local character which urge us to make any weak banks, and Mr. Comptroller Hulburd intends we
our financial
machinery as perfect as possible, and to prevent suppose to pursue a less lenient 'policy than was found ex¬
by all the me^ns at command the intrusion of any un pedient a year or two ago. For this new severity his judi-

Cotton
Tobacco

,

*

B.

o,




present.

646

THE

[November 19,1870.

CHRONICLE.

Interest

cious

management in the past has paved the way ; and as the
banks are now for the most part in a sound condition, it
will be a comparatively easy task to keep them so.
By this means alone can the recent extension of the
banking system be carried into effect without danger. The
July Currency bill will make the aggregate of our bank note
issues 379 millions of dollars.

which may result from these

The inflation of the currency

paid by

Principal. United States.
$3,713,371
$27,286,512
1,600,000
801,808
25,8*1,000
3,261,767

Union PacifU
Do Central Branch....
Central Pacific
Western Pac flc
Kansas Pacific
Sioux Ci ty and Pacific.

Total

1,970,000
6,303,000

1,628,320
'

131,197
1,212,993
194,207

$64,618,832

$8,815,346

Interest

7,401

241,633
8,281

724,823
396

$2,412,683

From this statement Mr. Boutwell claims that the

sir*

perilous porations above-mentioned are under an obligation to D
rapidly, and with no calling in of the immediately into the National Treasury six millions and a
45 millions of three
per cent, certificates.
Still there will half, and he some time ago addressed to them a common]
needs be more or less of
expansion, and some of the weaker cation setting forth his views. To this claim the company
banks will need careful
watching to prevent their yielding to responded, by calling the Secretary’s attention to the law of
the temptations to inflate the
huge bubble of speculation till July 1, 1862, as amended July 2, 1864. Under this statute
it explodes. The office of the
Comptroller of the Currency the bonds were issued, and by its provisions the companies
during tne coming year will be no sinecure, and on the judg" claim that they are freed from the obligation of immediate
ment and
prudence with which he exercises his functions may payment. Here for the present the matter rests. The com.
depend in no small degree, not only the efficiency of our panies, we believe, have not refused to pay the claim put
banking svstem, but the safety and smooth operation of that forth by the Treasury. They have simply called the atten¬
complicated financial machinery by which the vast business of tion of the Secretary to the law, and left the matter for the
this
country is carried on.
present in his hands. While the case is under the considera¬
Our space forbids further strictures
tion of the law officers of the Government its probable issue
on the banks to day.
But we may resume the
prolific subject hereafter; meanwhile is anxiously discussed in Wall street where the securities of
we
append the comparative summary of the condition of the "the Pacific railroads are growing in popularity, and it is evi¬
banks at several
periods during the current year. It is well dent that the market price and the investment-value of some
of these securities will be very much affected if there is a fair
worthy of a careful examination :
BESOTJRCES.
prospect that the claim will be sustained for the paymentof
March 24,1870. June 9,1870.
Oct. 8,1870.
Loans and discounts
three millions a year to the Treasury more than had been
$707,005,884 64 $716,087,288 $712 767,453 32
Overdrafts
2,942,724 75
3,253,897
3,160,626 49
U
bonds to secure circulation
338 845,200
To give the materials for an unbiased and
339,106,3‘:0 00
340,S57,450 00 calculated upon.
U. S. bonds to secure
deposits.
16,263,500 00
15 381,600 00
15,704,000
U. S. bonds and eecu.
band
27,275,650 00
28,276,600
22,323,800 00 independent opinion in the case, we copy the two sections of
Other stocks, bonds and mort.
20,524,294 55
23,300,681
23,614,721 25 the law of 1862 which refers to the
Due from
redeeming agents
subject, and we enclose in
73,404,332 16
74,635,405
66,275,668 92
Due from other National
banks
29.505,688 11
36.128.750
33,948,805 65 brackets such amendments as were made to the statute
Due fr
other banks & b’k’rs
by the
10,238,219 85
10,430,781
9,202,496 71
Real estate,
furniture, &c
26,330,701 24
26,593,357
27,470,746 97 act of 1864.
Current expenses
The following are the sections referred to:
6,683,189 54
6,324,955
5,871,750 02
Promiutns
if it

as

were

made

new

issues will not be

so

more

e»

on

.

m

Checks and other cash items..
for Clearing-House
Bills of National banks
Bills of State hanks

Exchanges

Fractional currency.

Specie

Legal tender

notes

Clearing House Certificates....

Three Per Cent Certificates...
Total.

2,680,882
11,173,510
75,317,992
14,226,817
98,647
2,285,499
37,127,875
SO,379,978

39
22
22
00
00
02
16
00

19,911,000 00
25,765,000 00

3,076,456
11,384,979
88,926,515
10,342,5S2
112,555
2,184,714
31,099,437
90.710.751

2,491,222 11

12,473,107 57
79.089,688 39

12,512,927 00
63,506
2,078,178
18,460,011
77,203,577
18.136,000
26,330,000

21.403,000

25,925,000

00
05
47
00
00
00

..$1,529,147,735 85 $1,565,756,909 $1,510,713,236 92
LIABILITIES.

Capital stock
Surplus fand
Undivided profits
National bank notes
outstand*g
State hank notes

outstanding..

Dividends unpaid
Individual deposits
United ’'•tates deposits

Deposits of U.S.dish’ng officers
Due
to National ban'-s
Due to State banks and hankers
Notes and hills re-discounted.
Bills payable

Total

March 24, 1870. Jane 9, 1870.
$427 504,247 00 $427,235,701
90,229.954 59
91,689,834
43,!C9,470 62
42,861,712
292,509,150 00
291,183,614
2,279,469 00
2,350,126
1 483,416 15
1,516,815
616,058,085 26
512,135,010
6,424,421 25
10,677,813
4,778,225 93
2,592.967
109,667,715 95
115,456,491
29,767,575 21
33,012,162
2,462,647 49
2,741,843

2,873,857 40

Oct. 8, 1870.
$430,399,301 00
94.061,438 95

88,608.618 91

291,798,640
2,188,648
2,462,591
501,407,586
6,807,978
4,550,142
100,348,292

00
00
31

90
48
69
45

29 693,910 80

8,843,577 67
4,592,609 76

2,302,753

$1,529,147,785 85 $1,565,756,909 $1,610,713,236 92

MB. BOUTWELL

AND THE PACIFIC

RAILROADS.

We

lately called attention to the controversy which
Boutwell has begun with the Pacific railroad companies,

Mr.
rela¬

tive to the

payment of the interest on the six per cent cur¬
rency bonds issued by the Government to aid in the construc¬
tion of those railroads.

sixes.

These bonds

are

known

as

currency

Sec. 6.

And be it further

enacted, That far the purposes herein

mentioned, the Secretary of the Treasury shall, upon the certificate in
writing of said commissioners of the completion and equipment of forty

[twenty*] cousecutive miles of said Railroad and Telegraph, in accord¬
with the provisions of this act, issue to said Company bonds of the

ance

one thousand dollars each, payable in thirty years
date, bearing six per centum per annum interest, (said interest

United States of
after

payable semi-annually,) which interest may be paid in United States
treasury notes or any other money or currency which the United States
have or shall declare lawful money and a legal tender, to the amountof
sixteen of said bonds per mile for such section of forty [twenty*] miles;
and to secure the repayment to the United States, as hereinafter provided,
of the amount of said bonds so issued and delivered to said Company,
together with all interest thereon which shall have been paid by the
United States, the issue of said bonds and delivery to the Company
shall ipso facto constitute a first [second] mortgage on the whole line
of the Railroad and Telegraph, together with the rolling stock, fixtures,
and property of every kind and description, and in consideration
of which said bonds may be issued; and on the refusal or failure of the
said Company to redeem said bond*, or any part of them, when re
quired so to do by the Secretary of the Treasury, in accordance with
the provisions of this act, the sa d road, with all the rights, functions,
immunities, and appurtenances thereunto belonging, and also all lands
granted to the said Company by the United States, which, at the time
of said default, shall remain in the ownership of the said Company,
may be taken possession of by the Secretary of the Treasury, for the
use and benefit of the United States :
Provided, this section shall not
apply to that part of any road now constructed.
Seo. 6. And be it further enacted, That the grants aforesaid are
made upon condition that said company shall pay sail bonds at ma¬
turity, and shall keen said railroad and telegraph line in repair and
use, and shall at all times transmit despatches over said telegraph lme,
and transport mails, troops, and munitions of war, supplies, and public
stores upon said railroad for the Government, whenever required to do
so by
any department thereof, and that th-.* Government shad at al
times have the preference in the use of1'the same for all the purposes
aforesaid, (at fair and reasonable rates of compensation, not to excee
the amounts paid by private parties for the same kind of service,)
and all [one-half of the*] compensation for services rendered f r tne
Government eliall be applied to the payment of said bonds and in¬
terest uctil the whole amount is fully paid.
Said Company, may a?
pay the United States, wholly or in part, in the same or hlber bon «,
treasury notes, or other evidences of debt against the United States,
be allowed at par ; *md after said road is completed, uutil said 90D
and interest are paid, at least five per centum of the Det earnings
said road shall be annually applied to the payment thereof.

They amount to $64,618,832, and being the only
30-year Government bonds in the market they are in great
favor, and command a high premium. The controversy does
not affect the character of the bonds, which is undoubted,
nor the
obligation of the Treasury to pay the semi-annual
interest to the holders of the bonds.
The point raised by
Mr. Boutwell concerns simply the refunding of the interest
by the respective companies. Mr. Boutwell sets forth his
* As amended 2d of
July, 1864.
side of the case as follows: There was, he says, an under¬
It is foreign to our present purpose to prejudge the
standing when these bonds were issued that as fast as the
Government disbursed any interest the companies should while it is under the consideration of the proper authorities
immediately refund the amount without delay. This has not at Washington. ,And yet we think there is muck
the argument of the Companies in regard to one or
been done, and the account he presents is as follows;




force in
two0

November 19,

187ot]

647

CHRONICLE.

THE

Government

year

saves every

for

in direct" transportation

^rst place» they claim that Indian expeditions for interest and the transportation of mails
there was no “understanding” or secret deputation connected
much larger sum than is advanced by the Treasury
jjth the issue of the bonds; that the law from which we
the
Currency bonds.
In confirmation of these
jj8ye quoted contains the terms, and the only terms of the
to the impossibility of constructing the road
contract; that the faith and credit of the Government are without the privileges now called in question, they appeal to
pledged to this contract, and in reliance upon its privileges the discussions in Congress where it was over and over
josny millions of dollars have been subscribed by private again demonstrated, that the necessity for the road and the
persons and capitalists to build the roads in question. Now, benefits promised by it were sucb, that if the bonds were a
the

inv°lve(^ *n

points

a

on

statements

principle of interpretation
sense in which he knew the

contracts it is a fundamental
that the promiser is bound in the

as

instead of a loan to be repaid in thirty
years, still the nation would be amply repaid by the develop¬
promisee understood him. Applying this principle tolhe ment of its industrial resources, and by the creation of a grand
interpretation of the grant, they take the plain meaning of it highway to bind the Pacific States to those of the Atlantic in
to be substantially as follows:
That the principal of the a permanent bond of indivisible national unity. It is also
bonds shall, at maturity, be paid by the Company iu cash, remembered that the enterprise of building the transconti¬
but that the interest shall not be refunded by them to the
nental highway was so unpopular among capitalists, that
Government in cash. The only payments they are required
notwithstanding all the privileges offered, very little work
to make on account of interest on these bonds are such as are
was done, and very little capital could be raised till the year
specified by the sixth section, and consist, first, in transporting 1866, when some energetic men took hold of the scheme and
the mails and in rendering other services at the order of the
le it a rapid success by the force of their indomitable will
and resistless enterprise. To all these arguments, however, in
Government, and, secondly, in a cash payment of “ at least
favor of the privileges claimed by the Companies there is one
five per cent of the net earnings of the road.” If the terms of
this contract seem unfavorable to the Goverment the Com¬ response. If the law by a clear enactment expressly exempts
these corporations from liability to refund to the Treasury
panies claim that the money for construction could not, on the interest on the currency bonJl, as fast as the said interest
easier terms, have been obtained, and that without such con¬ is paid out, then and then only will the exemption be con¬
cessions as are now complained of the road would still ceded. Mr. Boutwell will withdraw his * opposition, and the

in

gift to the railroad

free

ma

They

buiUi.

to

have' been

add,

the controversy will be closed.

that

moreover,

NATIONAL

RETURNS.

BANK

of
with reports of the National
the 8th day of October, 1870. The returns
will be found in Tiie Chronicle

We are indebted to the Comptroller of the Currency for the following statements
reserves,
Banks of each State and redemption city at the close of business on Saturday,
of the cities are not included in the States of which they are a part. The previous returns
of July 23, page 102.
Table of the state of the lawful money reserve of the National Banks of the
as
condition at the close of business on the 8th day of October, 1870.

shown by the reports of their

United States,

States and

Territories,

Maine

Hampshire

New

.

/.

Vermont
Rhode Island
Connecticut..
New

Jersey.

Delaware

Reserve

Liabilities
to be pro-

Number
of
Banks.
61
41
42
160
62
81
231
54
151
11
IS
17
14

tected

liabilities

$12,781,420
6,812 677
8,833,576
54,740,:-:85
19,063,019
30,157,802
73,409,745
24,792,243

6
3

Georgia

8
2

3.248,717
576,812

4
2

1,181,073

Alabama
Texas
Arkansas

Ohio,

Illinois.
Wisconsin
Iowa,
Kansas...
Nebraska.

43
17
11
3
4

Oregon...

1

Colorado..
Montana.

3
1
1
1

the state of the

Albany..

Pittsburg

!.*.’***

Louisville
Cincinnati

Cleveland
Ohlca

Detroit

Milwaukee
St. Louis.

Leftvenwcith.....
-

Total




•

271,972
131,665

40,796
19,750

$60,660,626

$84,777,966

»

J

20.9-10

Banks.

29
16
13
8
2
4

to be protected by
reserve.

$72,900,450
9,481,877
44,744,979
16,346,989
18,278,456
2,403,867
2,697,649
1,384,383
7,958,177
5,441,613
21,074,656
3,963,338

qnired, 25 per
cent of
liabilities.

50,658

84,111
11,439

280,918
501,445

$18,225,113
•

2,370,469

11,186,245
3,836,747
4,569,814
600,842
649,412
846,096
1,988,294

liabilities.
29.6 10
89.
88.9-10
29 2-10

$21,620,271
3,700,468
13,963,920
4,487,721
4,774,702

26.1-10

656,769

27.8-10

990 833

594,097
448,048
2,225,497
1,433,227
6.469,387
1,278,216

22.9-10
82.
27.9-10
26.8-10
80.7-10

2,520,0S0

680,003

828,843

7,326 021
947,944

1,831.255

161

$216,369,924

H

192,696,891

_

6
®

6
14
3
4
7
2

-

1,360.403
5,268,664

491,997
426,953

1,020,681

25,003

779 458

382,440
89,722
140,594

10,000

422,364

s

463,269

47 905

120,201
162,401
29,300

600,566

5,456
12,280

6,775

4.057
£0,f 00

V -l

1

—l

$44,064,185

$2,890,000

$35,465,915

by the reports of their

Clearing

Legal

Specie.
$1,872,792
10,368
290,960

162,506
108,875
48,509
132,811
3,128

95,747

1,795
117,856
6 558

Tenders.

Three per

Due from

House

cent

redeem’g

Certificate?. certificates.

1 155,014
4,247,281
2,242,800
1,945,341
232,481
209,506

$9,561,189

345,000

5,520,000

2,190,093
1,285,679

375,000
600,000

1,707,915
1,619,486

225,000

155,779

1,620,000
•

*

•

•

501,000

260,780
5,000

236,298

1,221,710

•

•

•

.

3,722,256

,

.

190.000
.395.000

,

v

60,000

1,089,094

236,986

110,315
1*831

$54,090,981

$88,688,075

29 7-10

$2,966 506

$24,089,085

$2,121,000

$12,800,000

17,646,577

37,015,000

51,140,000

8.065

198,622

70,COO

•

709.500

522,549
313,593

agents.

$4,035,000

$6,151,340

1,986,534
225,875

54,945,220

582’608
28?,2-5 7
55,975

483.113

82.2-10
82 9-10
27.1-10
28.8-10

•48,174,228

1,561,(66
1,309,178

36,000-

753,901

$2,357,856
▼ »
J

to

held.

2,200,929

250,000
co, 000
65,000
40,0G0

1,347,912

18,716

of reserve
Deserve

258,870

75,000

2 106,190

841

13.5-10
27.9-10

,

849,806
46,968

2,993,940

9,845
13,309
84,848
7,450

18.6-10

4,001,109

25,000

231,500
542,218
39,849
159,351
26,523
317,447
568,597

15,614
1,328

24.1-10
44.1-10

906,578
6,73?,484
2,328,924

242,084

23,737
62,810
46,644

28.

1M,4I5

8,304,231
3,324,1c 6
4,119,287
329,268
694,904
349,924
963,865

990,406

80,000
30,000

518,593
495,160
409,564

17,107
86,996
12,728
277,884
1,670
10,126
35,025
51,705
131,806
110,405
21,787

20.6-10

$1,697,l (6

695,000

204,935

20,155
22,758

$5,000
20,COO
85,000
195,000
75,000
17»,000
225,000

1,862,(141
4,057,627

98,320
5,422
32,649
87,927

21 9-10

613,703

2,383,721
5,430,709

138,939

19.6/10
21.8-10
21.5-10
23 4-10

695,381
147,025

32,838

37,807
116,045
419,742

39.9-10
10.5-10
20 9-10
22.3-10
19.9-10
19.7-10
20.3-10

847,815
40,807
36,797
36,771

1,921,151
218,921

,

207,167

.

.

redeem’/?
agents.

750.000

471,408
712,468
4,263,150
1,348,229

39,793

Dae from

certificates.

$1,077,246

Banks of the United States, as shown
8th day of October, 1870.

46
7

..

Philadelphia.*.*. .*.

r

750,319

26,872

17.9-10

3,834,068
2,832,495
1,307,685
908,104
1,887,949
1,112,360

476,330
106,814
828,424
112,548
288,173

Tenders.

Specie.
$32,234

5,496,574

714 006

Three per
cent

lawful money reserve, of the National
condition at the close of business on the
of

Koston

741,675
4,151,114
2,924 111
2,093,212
1,001,081
623,636
1,315.632

2,189,494

^

Number

Redemption Cities.

963,081
103,135
470,846
39,632
618,491
1,105,067

56,419
443,355

712,090

,

table of

298.575

$404,337,512

Utah
Idaho

ESTotal.

619,625
1,203,146
932,311
718,674
514,643

212,036
487,m
86,522T
177,162

2,955,703
4,944,497
27,674,292
19,494,076
,13,954.746
6,673,875
4,167,572
8.770,217
4,760,039
3,175,535
'

3,789,960
6,670,875
14,934,682
5,550,116
8,970,234

388,349

376 129

13
13
119
69
67
38
28

11,398,751

617,862

Legal

22.1-10
19.7-10
20.8-10
19.9-10
22 1-10
20 3-10
22.4-10
21.1-10
28.
27.8-10
15.5-10
17.4-10
22 8-10
21.1-10
29.6-10

1,743,839

904.840

—Funds avail

*

liabilities.
20.7-10

1,608,686

1,325,036
9,211,058
2,859,453
4,523,670
11,011,462
3,718,836
6,703,376
403,229
661,989

44,689,173
2,688,195

North Carolina.,
South Carolina
,

$2,642,286

1,021,932

^

to

Reserve
held.

$1,917,218

by

reserve.

4,412,927
6,028,932
4,119,081
2,255,661
1,413,576

Maryland
Virginia
Vest Virginia..,

Per cent
of reserve

re¬

quired 15 per
cent of*

>
.

«

••

...»

15,000
455,000

10,000 ;•

99,822

838,040
581,932
2,234,275
689,109
491,685
332,125
114,822

$22,211,484
mmmm

[November 19,1870.

THE CHRONICLE

646
NATIONAL BANKS OP

EACH STATE—1THEIR CONDITION OCTOBER 8, 1870.
BESOURCBS.

Massa¬
Maine.

$11,859,985 01
17,207 50
8,879,750 00

Loans and discounts
Overdrafts
U.
bonds to secure circulation
U. 8. bonds to secure deposits
U. S. bonds and securities on hand .....
Other Btocks, bonds ani mor:gages
Doe from redeeming and reserve agents.
Due from other national banks
..
..
Due irom State banks and hankers
Real es ate, furniture and fixtures
Current expenses
Premiums
Checks ai d other cash items
Exchanges for Clearing House
Mils of wther national banks
Bills of S'ate banks
X racti'mal cu rency

6,877.000 00

300,000 00

1

440,550 09
169,900 00

2,713,250 00

1.768,550 00

203,503 00
238,326 03
2,82 -*,924 43

525,- 00 CO
100.850 00

281,443 63
990,405 70
124,401 17
45,591 82
112,:- 82 57
43,132 49

23,278 80
85,3S9 28
128,480 36

5/75,894 93
1,041,214 00

857,368 00

153 00

9,962 83

17,794 69
39,792 50
712.468 00

176,738 81

97,727 45
1,872,792 22
6,151,340 00

61,191 06
116,044 78
2,383,721 00

207,166 75
4,263,150 00

364 00

37 807 40

1,348,229 03

1,181 00
on

449,741 81

5,480,702

20,eob bo

4,035,000 00

195,00000

85,ooo oo

488,688 96

7,899,536 00

..

2,725,996 04
80,869,938 U5
201,207 00
518,220 53

401,204 89

929.484 17

4,266,520 00

5,994,485 00

34,670 96

9,983 26

2,817,621 39

2,663,585 97
97,102 35
107,819 46
45,124 86
15,574 C8

4,855,010 61

183,593 79
206,019 75

208,965 58

143 006 70

61,059 25

1,589 03

:

975 63

77,484 04

14 $12,844,168 63

t Exclusive of New

1.237,351 26
12,377,907 00

1 575,651 65

4,617.943 OC

17,279,614 CO

161,604 00
158,820 37

237,701 00
135,001 04

28.757,056 OO
421,147 OO

6,940,525 38
122,701 29
17,962 09
892,673 00
823,659 87

1,631,625 33
25,362,471 00

11,981,662 62

101.469 00

492,759 56

.

41,902,264 57
17,410 15
12,987,154 96

968,338 63
174,401 66
136,043 75

$18,081,463 40 107,548,494 36

79,728 55
41,375,973 8!

200.952 17
33,042 73
2.509,773 28

693 592 2!
162,290 95
3,625,359 OJ

392,650 11

1,573,770 2!
968,530 SQ

191,000 09

1,969,435 35

53,294 67

170,000 09

4,300 00

193 4 J

‘

22,230,713 63
5'9,583 67
275,889 47

9.767 88

28,083 06

”$24^619,319

26.286 00

23,051 00

48,124 00
76,729 25

895.109 8!

$142,536,408 11 $33,595,678 55 $64,673,890 *9 $125,707,801 31

York City and Albany
BE? OUKOBS.

Albany.

City.

5,910,815 14
6,503 28

167,969,157 54
•
112,928 40
circulation 140,8*6.550 00
700.000

bonds to secure
bo us to secure deposits ..
bonds & securities on hand
bonds ai d mortgages
deeming and reserve agems..

Due from r
Due from other rational banks
Due from State banks and bankers
Real ebtate, lnrniture and fixtures
Current expenses
Premia ms
CbecK s and other cash items

.

2,184.000 00

200,000 00
109,700 00
736,338 81

00

6,569,750 00
.

6,990,261 89

..

•

.

Specie

percent certificates

an:::-::::::::.::"-::::::::::: «8
42

Undivided profits..,.
10.039,181
National bank notes outstanding.32,94r,080

52
64
03

831,244 00
1,098 00
70,944 39
188,938 57

503,918
8,359
146,115
98,319

91,015
430,631
6,666,569
639,107
6,253
148,9 14

00
00
93
87

1,862,041 00

2,650,000 00

990 000 00

420,952 32

1,881,991 00
6,327,585 51

21,822 00
14,534 61
78,646 15

205,868 49

1,932,037 77
489 398 35

*

...

$42,557,111 99 $79,220,341 96

02
03
65
53

188,622
742,33 1

58

166,453
21,3 =>7

24
56
86
00
00
54

118,525
596,239
103,775

8,700 00
80,110 43
329,268 45

49,215 71

123,285 60

125,132 17

20 506 13
3,409 25

83,737 9S
18,M2 06

53,875 53

104,118 08

27/75 00

81,415 00

a

94" 00

2,135 00
9,471 70
5,421 85

1,835 00

204,935 00

17,243 32
82,«»9 16
518,593 CO

80,000*60

80,000 00

$28,610,302 55 $4,720,673 99

$7,628 081,76

44,513 00
162.500 24
’

375,000 00

LIABILITIES.
$1,428,185 00 $2,348 217 60
11,80 (.250 00 24,205,240 01 $16,255,150 00 $9,000,000 00
402,387 97
313,810 03
2,265,180 49
5,466,990 61
6,507,159 99
• 2,618,829 47
212,925 80
77,018 21
764,108 87
1.842,293 51
1,350,187 0T
1.881,315 51 10,984.561 00 6,650,065 00 1.186.021 00
1,748,103 00
12,0*29 00
9,237,176 00 30,544.414 00
14,816 • 0
59,451 00
89,041 00
112,055 00
158 879 00
32,283 97
K.060 10
30,835 79
86,7:3 37
113,318 00
91.312 65 36,366.348 62 8,553,451 43 1,325,555 57
2,532,120 *7
14,720,647 0 9 23,634,140 45
48,670 09
56,309 01
76,922 62
‘ 160.425 53
895,236 83
53,749 15
11,782 81
42,021 19
21,069 51 4,749/90 87
97,524 »
253,501 15
80 \ 983 57
86,985 71
2,008,261 01
1,9^4,683 00 1,147,710 68
33,'K)0 50
404,257 64
312. 10 71
379,323 78
5,000 00
15,000 00
79/69 76
85 00
58,715 93
899,725 70
8,600 00
13,615 00
85,005 92
.

.

$OT45MmT8 HufiujS 10 $48,557,111 09 $79,880,311 96 $76,113,891 66 $23,610,308 55 $4,726,673 99

Total..

t Exclusive of the City of

"•"Exclusive of Philadelphia and Pittsburg.

Washington.

...$17,069,159 92
and discounts...
10,46147
Overdrafts
8,007,5 0 00
U. S. bonds to secure circul’n.
400,000 00
U.S. bonds to secure deposits.
050 00
U. S. bdssecurities on band
807,780 98
Other stocks, bonds*mon’s.
Loans

1,619,486
825,749
100,633
604,689

Due horn redeeming agents.
Due Irom other nat. banks ..
Due from State bks &b’kers.
Real estate, furniture & fix’s
Current expenses

18
06
92
88

143,160 99

26,518 75
78,801 80
1,438,683 56

Premiums
Checks and other cash Perns.
Exc’a ges for Clearing House
Bills of national bauks

248,310 00
473 00
8,056 49

Bills of State banks

Fractional currency

_

108,876
Le^ai tender notes
1,945,841
Clearing House cerliflca’es..
60>,t00
Three per cent ceitificates...
600,OiO
• •

22
00
00
00

$1,401,588 70
.

17,889 07
970,0CU 00
200,COO 00
267.000 CO
21,083 60
155,779 33
73,4M 01
£8,745 94

291,804 19
82,688 14
6 224 05

51,740 46

lapita’ stock
$10,891,983
urplus fund
rndivide i profits
*...
801,663
rat onal bank notes ontstd g.
7,083,920

outstanding.
d

udividual deposits
1. 8. deposits
len’sot U.S. disburs’goffic’s.
)ueto National banks
)a .* to S ate banks & oank’s.

129,947
43,329
10,846,021

186,892

CO
Zo

78
00
00
57
82
12

2,117,840 75
360,018 34
bills rediscounted..
100,000 00

otes and
liils payable•

***••••

$33,945,338 H

76.335

2,483 COO
25?,COO

1,CC0
78.336
349,224
201,702
85,50)
847,646
65,158
32/86
106.353

218,593 00
5.909 00

200,«00 00

153,850 03
.166,525 93
263,354 57
238/25 42
68,756 12

195,728 72
34,402 97
3 '/GO 42

87,395 67
44,678
2,714
19,247
20,155

87,927 07
495,160 CO

CO
00
06

34
409,564 00

1^0.000

108,0 0
185,419

249.606 38

86,602 85
61,356 47
99,094 57

liabilities

$2,375,000 00 $2,116,400 00
302,401 75
224,541 H8
251,00) 00

C9,759 89

119.734 82

1,014*90

459,749 33
11,081 98

213,413 74
89,917 08

2,069,135 93
91,337 6t
66,502 49
124,587 98
71,213 23
54,601 14
100,000 00

97,69 i 00
364.331 56

82,000 00

•

2,721 33
17,107 15

234,500 00

$850,010 00 $1,081,100 00

1,887,952 00

214,427 99

50/58 47
2,354 27

8,743 41
3i',000 00

1,56',365 41
147,c74 23
15,747 03
57,010 46
8,509 34
157,875 00

8,432 00

14,03100

39,849 00

$1,815,000 00

238,600 0)

1,988 00

961,117 66

1,681,695 30
48,675 69
46.447 96

8,797 44
183.810 £0

200.506 00

$4,856,96*«

$400,OX) 00

$M»«jg
»J«

*

14.569 69
74,313 35
265,018 00
••***•*’

S
1,043,831 W
2,895

jj

311,793 56

165,354 57

1,073 98
7/47 85

93 $5,776,926 20

$1,074,216 43

836 705 71

86,898 11

60.000 00

43

20

480 00

$4,244,036 3* $9,522,464 03 $6,995,553 54 $3,518,550 38 $2,866,239

722 63
12,7 .7 70

£5,1'79 o7
86,996 10
642,218 00

294,887 97
1,147,671 00

60
69
00
00

29,292 78
187,121 41

189,581 »

121,0.6 83
79,102 15
333,000 00

77,924
71,248
105,000
36,250

82,102 98
26",779 97
36,360 So

46^66367

18,324 64

*

88 $2,866,239 93 $5,776,926

2,128,323 00

8,593,423 31

£0,034 W
13,820 25

844 00

10,962 63
22,762 64
*42,084 00

809,818 00

9,020 00

200 00
19.093 22

218,172 03

59,061 61

N. Orleans.

19
10
29
58

92,740 00

528,655 00

00
1,362,489 18
184,082 14

Alabama.

$525,777 12 $1,783,925 45
31,775 67
270 40
310,500 OO 1,208,000 00

44,4v 8 60
16 412 83

102,202 00

103,635 88

5*9/45

12,152 06

90,000 00

130,285 70

6,603 50

46,967 62
18,042 97

15,098 60
37,0'8 69
20,036 52

56,970 79

575 00

S. Carolina.

110,765
48,-64
5,527
79,760

$9,522,464 06 $6,995 656 54 $3,518,550

$1,050,000 00

Georgia.
28 $1,816 447 03 $2,478,408 82
25 893 15
12,954 49
95
1,546,000 00
374,000 00
03
100,000 00
10
1,000 00
00
2j>!6. o. oo
54,685 33
84
258 870 05

N. Carolina.

$2,860,707 96 $1,495,9:4
16,109
30,200 36
065,10 •
2,145,450 00

18,874**70

43,508 93
232,i8l 00

W. Virginia.

66,575 CO

$33,945,828 17 $4,244,036 32

Total

Virginia.
$4,685,180

$7,528,031 IS

Baltimore.

RESOURCES

Baltimore.

270,319 54
624,903 88

43.882 31

2,242,300 00

$78,113,891 66

1EO.OOO 00
221,100 00

148.928 11

ICQ,292 31

290,900 20

695,0' 0 00

-29,919 94
2,008,250 CO

60,000 (0

00
91
45
88
73
33
80
78
93
97
00

4,247,281 CO
1,620.000 CO
5,520,000 00

4,057,627 00

225.000 00

1,348,200 00

200,900
85,864
1,707,916
3-'9,780

538 699 84

491,417 22
114,719 43
604,862 66

345,000 00

16,225,168 70

1,442.377
1,285,679
2 445,713
554,794
1,788,224

93
59

1,862 15

7,704,500 00

976,050 00

00

1,155,014 00

241,961 99
'
55,947,453 65

Due to naio-al banks
Due to State banks and bankers
Notes and bills rediscounted..
Bills payable

691,000 00

2,037,600
1,160,910
4,119,288
1,806,347
808,8S7
1,405,( 97

806,239 34

81,848 86
10,357 68

167’Si?’'r£? 5a
officers

23,517.600 00

00
00

807,450 00
689.518 65

200,724 00

236,8t>0 6j

Dividend-* unpaid
Individual d ponits
United States deposits

.

49/52 30

10,363 77
13.289,700 00
225,0( 0 00

256,241 41

991,426 45
131,907 55
33,882 63

00

*35,959

outstanding

Delaware.
Marylaid.t
Pennsylvania.* Philadelphia. Pittsburg.
36,537,036 73 $36,947,918 84 $13,788,626 23 $2,222,337 28 .$3,061,91,6 86

8,324,136 02
1,163,351 89
273,025 98

$375,162,183,15 $15,012,746 10

Total

54
98

185,698 12
3.281 03
1,166 07
485,652 28
167,105 42

17,648,677 00
17,015,000 00
11.140,060 00

Legal tender notes
Clearing house certificates

21,160,828
56,098
10,685,450
8n5,000

U1.312 11

8,6*8 00
331,076 76
18,135,649 33

Fractional currency

New Jertey.

2,190,005 56
1,C01,9'4 19

12,617,724 05
2,472.529 86
7,883,189 04
1*282,525 00
921,01«j *5
2,322,033 92
62,533,329 ll
2,691,519 00

Exchanges for clearing house
Bills of other national banks
Bills of State banks

Specie

ft

$47,8'0,000 00 $20,364,800 00 $25,056,820 00 $36,362,741 00
$9,125,000 00 $4,835,000 09 $7,460,012 50 $39,222,003 00
1,997,674 19
5,080,016 99
10,271,813 19
0,613,059 80
9,652,877 29
1,030,522 65
727,676 66
1,531,030 49

Overdrafts
United States
United tates
United Rates
Other etocks,




73M)6'oo

43,808 04

115,792 42

65 09

471,40S 00

273,553 00

657.505 12

64,378 08
20,690 75
29 *,430 61

T

75,000 00
170,000 00
75woo.
$24^619,31914 $12^841468 63 $18,031,468 40 107,548,494 36 $142,536,403 11 $43,595,678 55 $64 673,890 49 $125,707,301ft
LIABILITIES

discounts.....

Total

172,756 00
4,490 00

1,647,369 04

13 00

26.871 68

666,687 38

400,195 55
110,063 86

114,931 00

New York

•

576,034 44

17
82

216 00

eVcojob

Exclusive of Boston.

tate bank notes
) vidends unpa

8,920 69

542,000 00
962.200 00
872,049 93
4.001,103 62
1,935 442 66
248,249 48
785,588 02
234,953 39
31,596 25

140,238 60

140,466 00

$63,531,114

117,644 74
19,769,100 00

26 >,0- 0 00

423,03' 10
9,561,133 63
3,714,911 53

84
45
17

New

York 8tate.t
55
505 151 77
33,200,250 00
1,595,500 00
1.434,550 (10
3.996,360 67
8,314.20 2;
1,941,301 98
632,338 69
1,925,241 64
628,580 28
233,963 58
2,205,667 24

90
49
66

83,184 75
82,334 43

....•«•••

Deposits of U. S d'sbursing

199.1 60 24

--

192 00

payable

Stite bank notes

192,874 10
21,978 66

v

$74,867,539 79 $22,821,935 04 $81 412 416 18

250,000 00

1,006.345
6,733,434
575,822
187,168
1,138 709
112,990
18,983
684,648

606.578 35

76,230 29

252,962 00

Deposits of U. S. disbursing officers.
Due to national banks
Due to State banks and bankers
NoteB and bills rediscounted

Three

4,877,000 00

216,269 32
61,815 68
18,869 72
287,240 17

Individual deposits
U. S. DepObits

Loan® and

43.495 53

14.199,604 CO

1,077,246 00

Natluna) bank note a^ntstandiDg..
State bank notes o-.sianding ..
Divid nd* nnpai ’

*

38,303 33

29,980,650 00
850,000 03

4.871 96

Capital stock
8urplu- fund
Undivided profits..

-

69,083 95

85,282,350 00

91,863 26

Total.

Total....

92,053 00

24,222 86

1,527,706 01

House ceitificates
Three per cent certificates

Bills

$7,674,296 39 $52,125,2'8 85

416,550 00
856,774 83

r

Connecticut.

Hampshire.
$4,975,021 69

470,<00 00

8pecie
Legal tender notes
C'learin

Rhode
Island.

City

of Boston.

chusetts.*

Vermont.

03

November 19,

THE CHRONICLE.

I8f0.]

649

RESOURCES

Texas.
Loibs

$614,003 36

discounts

and

deposits

bonds to secure

$171,686 86 $2,67>,6S5 34 $1,039,758 20 $3,222,938 96 $23,897,384 35
16,262 48
29,75009
16,567 60
44,251 20
313,993 34
200,000 00
1,975,200 00
917,000 00
1,744,300 00 14,542,70000
60,000 00
50,000 00
60,000 00
350,000 00
685,000 00
6,250 00
1,703 00
8,150 00
80,350 00
1,102,70000
64,196 19
1,600 00
17,000 00
155,548 79
500.647 26
11,438 68
260,918 08
198.622 19
501,441 54
2,200,929 43
16,877 10
74,558 22
160.512 86
34,844 26
553,215 73
18,949 38
103,843 71
60,393 85
119,476 56
600.648 89
17,679 65
126,998 19
22,859 18
207,810 99
1,019,592 85
5,593 95
16.577 60
25,713 91
69,229 96
292,928 34
30 65
22,678 99
63,035 75
48,265 94
5.557 78
11,732 00
1,369 i8
103,480 82
836,199 62

17,909 29
606,COO 00
176,000 00

jjsTbonde to secure circnl’n.

US

Arkansas.

800 00
25.438 90

bds&secnrities on hand
Other stocks, bonds* mort s
One from redeeming agents.

08.

Dae from
Dae fro®

34,110 80
61,617 48
20,309 62
26,464 33
25,713 16
4,931 65
4,002 66

other natM^aaks
State bks & b’kers

furniture* fix e

Beal estate,

Carrent expenses
Premiums

Checks a-.d

other cash items

House.
Rills of national banks.
BiHs of State banks
Richanges

for Clear.

3L606 00

notes

*66

lennessee.

*550*66

1M16*30

’*8ii‘9i

1,670 34
26,623 00

10,125 92
347,447 00

3,127 50
236,298 00

tes..

cent certificates..

5,000

$1,891,385 45

Total

Cleveland.

$5,634,735 89
9,303 79

714,000 00
309,50000
41,246 77
838,030 68
222,712 60
185,384 61
162,923 98

10S.495 76
.339 41
110.103 04

58,600 99
53,503 13
222,241 00

61,704 69

2,993,940 00

47,223 03
72,224-00

641 00

99,832 72

66

227,005 23

56,028 27

4,480 00

568,597 00

5,068,825 15
40,826 11
2,278,50000
800,000 00
10,000 00
7,000 00
531,931 68
294,646 72
69,474 72

3,428,000 00

428,285*00

35,025 39

Cincinnati.

13,355 91
95,717 27
1,221,710 00

250,000 00

4,863’03

.

Ohio.t

160,863 00
1,615 00
16,506 74

17,256 00

277^384 27
159,361 00

Clearing House certific
Three per

44,498

Louis vijle.

*

Fractional currency
Specie.... - •••••••

Legal tender

6,808 00

Kentucky.*

70,666'CO

1,75100
14,19? 67
1,795 00

709,50000

190,000 00

Indiana.

6,944,828 45
1,109,906 62
12,899,850 00
545,000 00
484,350 00
168,475 26
3,561,065 64
435,778 14

233,923 74
783,636 21
141,134 79
52,908 07
180,969 84

280,429’66
10,518 00

53,669 93

131,806 80
21,106,190 00

85*000**0*6

$620,069 55 $5,764,729 44 $2,654,761 63 $7,603,920 07 $48,622,498 22 $13,366,774 79 $10,078,886 92 $87,158,984 49
LIABILITIES.

Capital stuck.

borplus fund
Undivided profits..
National bank notes
State

58,059 07
386,412 CO

outsta’g

bank notes outstanai’g

Dividends unpaid

25? 29

616,b31 54
86,260 33

Individual deposits
United States deposits

$2,169,100 00
252,730 72

3,023 40

139,390 03
1,623 132 00

790,787 CO

1,295*66

178,740 00

103,896 88
68,437 59

91,524 35

25,054 92
1,953 65

32,838 97

Deposits of U.S. Dis.Officers
Dae to national banks
Due to State binks&bankere

50

43,909 90

rediscounted

Notes and bills
Bills payabe.

$1,891,385 45

Exclusive of City of

$959,000 00

221,565 44

81,804 96

1,361,203 73
27,f60 96
4,404 54

1.950,300 00

143,336 84

195,168 94
1,398,571 00

5*323

498,17581

$620,069 55

15,304,70000
3,203,719 66

153,790 61

76,674 59
98,630 87

202,577 50
551,418 89
82,134 47

144,495 74

44,867 28

00

5^200 00
3,159,518 61
117,117 76

650 00

3,503,793 28
89,571 85

78,691 48
214,472 86
139,17522
184,003 32
77,000 00

1,957,444 i4
277,226 93

174,1-58 91

12,406*66
$5,764,729 44

666,778 50
205,618 85
2,904,870 00

00
61
42
51
93
44
256,077 75

50

$3,800,000 00 $13,277,000 00
350,485 22
3,266,598 77
806,238 69
712,069 17
1,829,725 00 10,922,620 00
10,130 00
3,689 00

13,500,000 00

1,235,259 Cl

12,806,330
61,663
19,006
14,383,129
336,610
129,215
327,358

2,830,669 72

2,75066

Total
*

$200,000 00
36,212 61

It’,902*00

$525,000 00
50,499 29

-

678,666’66

333,568 98

15,347 13
7,965,970 70
326,338 48
264,499 38
192,118 88
191,935 98
2,000 00
19,447 05

$2,654,761 63 $7,603,920 07 $4S,622,498J22 $13,366,774 79 $10,078,836 92 $37,158,934 49

t Exclusive of Cities of Cincinnati and Cleveland.

Louisville.

RESOURCES

Illinois, *

$11,012,695

Loans and discounts

276,929

Overdrafts
U. S. bonds to secu re circul’n
U.d.bonds to secure deposits
U.S. bonds & secut’s on hand
Other stocks bonds & mort’s
Doe from red. & res. agents.
Dae from other nat.’l banks.
Duefm state b’ks & b’kers
Eeal estate, furniture,
Carrent expenses
Premiums

6,358,350
581 ..000
181,600
332,481
1,309,177
405,944
226,471
562,440
130,823

&c...

26,488

Checks and other cash items
Exch’es for Clearing House.
Bills of national banks
Bills of State banks
....
Fractional currency

230,754

72
36
00
00
00
36
75
89
87
22
79
56
31

Chicago.
$16,420,110 84
111,178 82

5,258,000 00
..

287,500 00
252,137 28
2,284,274 61
498,445 95
284,690 26
652,467 68
203,162 40
101,443 56
70,030 29

1,969,228 82

...

286,688 00

863,224 00

137 CO

Michigan, t

Detroit.

Wisconsin.}:

Milwaukee.

-

123,862 60

91,969 00

OS
110,405 48
1,347,912 00

49,615 72
117,855 91
3,722,256 00

169,347 30

37,043 00

74,468 00

753,901 00

65,000 00

395,000 00

40,000 OJ

23,495 94

20,138 99

224’012 Ob

36,214 00

6,558 08

522,549 00

23,787 32
422,364 00

60,boo bo*

35,bob *66

$23,496,068 39 $32,985,622 14 $12,346,163 09 $6,672,589 57

$6,716,290 14

21,787 17
-

65 00

49,792 49
62,810 19
1,020,681 00

8,065 01
313,693 00

is,boo

157,788* *0*0*

832 00

12,27*3* 61

23,085 75

Three per cent certificates..

Minnesota.

.

6 00

50,77?

Specie....
Legal tender notes
C earing House certificates.

Iowa.

$6,268,205 69 $3,260,866 09 $3,099,543 61 $1,397,892 06 $6,514,106 11 $3,144,317 37
101,975 15
24,379 08
52,774 89
155.972 55
12,016 66
74,420 08
3,858,800 00
1,193,800 00
1,823,550 00
735,000 00
3,769 150 00
1,741,50 ) 00
100,000 00
250,000 00
100,0'K) 00
200,000 00
300,000 00
306,000 00
37,500 00
131,700 00
32,800 00
164,200 00
71,550 00
174,152 08
*28‘,o66’6o
29,932 54
4,500 00
350,305 39
80,199 28
491.997 30
689,108 93
426,952 93
491,685 39
779,458 30
582,602 51
265,062 29
245,677 04.
179,381 69
58,128 79
184,746 48
150,370 78
83,616 91
9,310 27
28,250 12
133,039 91
24,032 19
83,832 23
325,213 41
113,518 14
99.3J8 71
142,815 55
344,646 34
157,403 61
76,268 91
21,567 60
41,058 92
15,850 32
150,684 78
60,317 86
8,689 82
14,750 O')
6,200 17
17,252 74
27,711. 04
39,323 42
123.998 42
51,4C0 75
20,782 08
75,463 65
146.972 90
116,108 71

16,259 71
46,643 79

483,113 00

25, bob’ 00

00

$3,763,781 76 $14,305,732 86

Missonri $
$2,067,042 82

29,816 39

1,162,900 00
100,000 00
89,950 00
819,853 64
287,277 40
92,046 67
83,008 17
119,825 81
31,627 60
38,762 85
45,843 98

159,674*

00

384 00
7,551 76

15,614 23
382,440 00

10,‘666

00

$7,296,202 42

$5,043,519 82

$3,802,000 00

$1,780,000 00
331,159 04
200,840 94

$1,160,000 00

18,000 00

899,283 16
458,521 37
3,214,016 00
2,176 00
2,362 19
5,247,734 87
123,206 48
182,898 21
86,432 00
99,066 92
103,036 66
85,000 00

$23,496,068 39 $32,985,622 14 $12,346,163 09 $6,672,689 57 $6,716,290 14

$3,768,781 76 $14,305,732 86

LIABILITIES.

Capital Stock

$6,570,000 00 $6,200,000 00
1,956,258 93
1,972,000 00

Surplus Fund..

Undivided profits

610,791
5,589,201
1,731
9,674
7,665.450

.

National bank notes onted’g
Btate bank notes

outstand’g

Dividends unpaid
Individual deposits
U 8. deposits
Deposits of U. S. dis. officers
Due to national banks
Due to State bnks * bankers
Notes and bills rediscounted
Bills payable...-,...
.....

CO

'

00
96

$1,750,000 00

84

00

1,066 00

00

1,237 00
13,942,793 93

32

246,891 52
105,469 89

.....

*

66
00

493.529 30

„

Total

$3,835,000
1,136,501
754,428 47
293,018
4,592,386 00
2,870,481

2,861,146 37

93,770 77

2,429,477 88
232,172 49

163 300 00

40,000 00

Exclusive of City of Chicago.

$1,785,000 00
437,726 05
241,119 18
1,582,935 00

383,000 00
206,524 62
1,026,289 00

$750,000200
179,511574
62,731 88
642,280 00

10,670 00

4 *365 00

41
13
21

2,492,125 70
158,537 51
405,878 73

2,499,972 98
45,653 57
28,860 04

81

136,802 67

1,365,206 04
124,242 68
236,287 91

19.335 56

107,066 34

38^109 31

297,313 52

83
87
00

3,789,572
14,541
23,220
45,159
41,747
282,183
3,000

t Exclusive of City ef Detroit.

*150

00

106,207 99

19,428 45

$ Exclusive of City of Milwaukee.

1,516,17500
1,395 00
1,960 43
2,986,245 24
144,959 10

277,064 58
140,110 18
864,834 00

’*693*66
2,827,266 17
82,741 47

111,701 34
53.S64 61

168,703 72

70,G82 52
90,590 80

*

'SOOOO

39,*587’i5

$7,296,202 42

$6,043,519 82

§ Exclusive of City of St. Louis.

RESOURCES.

St. Louis.

Loans and discounts
secure clrcnl’n

JJ. b. bonds to secure deposits

U. 8 bonds & secur’s on
hand
Other stocks, bonds & mort’s
Due from
red’g &res. agents.
Due from other nat'l

banks..
Due from State b’ks & b’kers

jhalejtate, furniture & fix’s
Current
expense a

rtemiuos

tt

Checks and other

cash items.

Rmha?g!!forClear* House
Smotherbanks banks
Mbof State national
Wional currency

«gal tender notes .*.’ .*. *. ’. ’. ’.*.’.*
force Per Cent
Certificates..

Total,

$348,503 15

35,724 06

Overdrafts

U. 8. bonds to

Kansas.*

$9,109,177 09

20,688 73
212,000 03
100,000 00

3,818,350 00
-

62,300 00

1,365,140 74
332,125 20
111,619 12
186,464 54
831,899 24
94,716 43
16 \837 62
25,814 15
365,010 61
817,635 00
1,140 00
15,613 84
110,314 61
1,089,094 00

9,850 00
20,527 97
55,975 31
3?,763 56
14,088 69
24,183 47
6,975 30
4,931 24

10,637
200,000
200,000
15,400
60,521

79
00

00
00
97
114,821 61
99,658 18
8,027 80
43,356 67
55,598 58

Nebraska.

$1,102,921 27
18,902
225,000
450,000
41,850
147,161
463,268
31,279
30,779
123,730
4,455

30
00
00
00
11
84

Oregon.
$315,042 51
7,591 35
00
00
00
44
71

200,000
60,000
64,550
44,958
47,904

85

820 09

87
96
83

66,120 49

10.500 42

1,700 00
? 3,404 75

Colorado.

$519,703 23
32,163
297,000
150,000
131,000
17,856
600,566
179,483
102,051
109,294
27,321

73
00
00

00
12
15
41
47
00
75

Montana.
10
73
00

$124,196
8,943
40,000
20,000

Utah.

Idaho.

$42,113 66
23,857 08
145,000 00

$57,061 97
11,574 72
75,000 00

00

5,744 51
4,057 22

20,000 00

280 18

30,500 00
2,633 53

5,774 95

10,758 91

96,590 81

15,786
4,205
9,175
54,883

22,744 41
1,187 96

62,566 59
18,478 82

87
01
19
37

358 29

25 77

15,591 18

47,604 64

26,502 79

20,057 23
6,045 25

39,525 00

23,140 64

42,029 00

40,000 00

4,187 83

10,112 34

5 258 73

621 35

1,230 54
99,822 00

31,288 02
9,845 25
145,494 00

4,731 37

1,328 31

13,309 05
120,201 00

84,848 00
162,401 00

7,449 82
29,300 00

6,456 00

$2,482,15310211 $341,664 76

$413,986 22

$257,751 08

$100,0C0 00
21,770 71

$100,000
7,000
2,272
63,125

....

9,625 00
21,677 37

31,904 00

22,389 48
149 91

’’450*72
•

89,722 00

455,000 00

.$17,987,976 25

Leavenworth.
$311,808 66

10,000 00

$1,055,841 74 $1,251,240 68

$2,900,109 51

$1,006,439 24

6,263 00

•

•

•

435 00
472 38
840 93

28 25

18,716 00
12,280 00

LIABILITIES.

$6,610,300 00

S^ssssssss^s3,S92’400 03
26,48i‘40
ifP°flts •;
H.8tat«8 deposits
dKV/H-S.Uis. Officers
United

s

K
Kandhnu»k^banker8
BKSiiLll8Redlscounted
waDle
-J.0W***

3,498,993 59

•

576,583 03

593 652 19
209,000 00

21,695 40
38,107 29
186,706 00

419,320 97
86,892 52
89,170 1 2
2,222 77
1,726 67

$200,000 00
63,065 60

179,000 00

$50.1,000
61,350
87,205
166,621

98,260 66
328,375 81

1,191,977 20

11.881 06

77.6^0 25

264,648 37
19,467 43
8,882 16

00
00
64
00

$200,000 00

$350,000 00

$100,000 00

5,000 00
46,611 43
96,330 00

72,500 00

410,000 00
1,703 96
35,930 00

62,730 54

254,000 00

123 77

124,143 00

$17,987,976 25

00
00
57
00

“266*66
214 062 09

413,988 86
111,566 68
153,133 04

265,787
109,023
279,177
4,608

59
70
82

70

1,552,555 68
83,266 41
31,329 11
21,961 95
53,809 48

118,145 52
84,618 80 >
27,125 51

1*4,240*97

147,829 02

68,539 74
►

•

•

• ♦

447 98

19,621 79

2,182,681 04

Exclusive of city of Leavenworth,




$210,000 00

147 11

16,066 66
$1,055,841 74 $1,251,240 68

$2,900,109 51 $1,006,439 24 $2,482,153 02

$341,664 76

$418,936 22

$257,751 06

11..770354234——'TTnhhee

[November 19,1870.

THE CHRONICLE.

650

CHANGES IN THE REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANES. known, many a soul in France will exclaim, with Gambetta that
The following are the changes in the Redeeming Agents of National France has been betrayed. The French Marshals have fought for
the Empire, and not for France, and the last disaster which the
Banks for the week ending Nov. 18, 1870.
These weekly changes are
nation has met with only confirms the assertion. A
correspondent
furnished by, and published in accordance with an arrangement made
of a leading provincial paper (The Manchester
Guardian), who
with the Comptroller of the Currency.
was in Metz during the seige, has just written an account of
some
REDEEMING AGENT.
LOCATION.
NAME OP BANK.
of his experiences in that city. He condemns strongly, and the
The
Commercial The Bank of New York National people of Metz also condemned, the reticence and inaction of BaIllinois—
National Bank...
Banking Association, New York zaine. When the fall of the Empire had been ascertained and
Chicago
the
City, approved in place of the Mer¬
chants* Exchange National jBank of Republic had been proclaimed, Metz was anxious to follow the
New York.
example of the capital. But the Marshal decided otherwise, and
The National Bank The Union National Bank of Chicago,
Wisconsin—
Menosha
of Menosha
approved.
stated that he had received no official news of the fall of the Em¬
New National Banks.
pire. He did not even officially know that there had been such &
He had received his command hom the Emperor
battle as Sedan.
List of banks organized since our last report, November 10:
Official No.
and, until the Emperor relieved him of it, he should hold it in bis
State National Bank of Springfield, Illinois. Capital $150,000. name. The
place-serving servants of the Empire have undoubtedly,
Shelby M. Cullom, President; Samuel H. Jones, Cashier.
German National Bank of Chicago, Illinois. Capital $250,000. from their incapacity, been the chief cause of the misfortunes of
Henry Greenebanm, President; Herman Schaffuer, Cashier.
First National Bank of Palmyra, Missouri. Capital $100,000. France, and it would seem strange therefore if the French should de¬
James M. Bates, President; H. G. Smith, Cashier.
sire to see the fallen dynasty at the Tuileries once more. This uq.
A list of all the banks organized has been published in the Chron¬
certainty with regard to the future naturally affects our Continental
icle, except those previous to September 22, which are now given to
trade for the worse, but it is a very satisfactory circumstance that
make a complete record ;

11..7706298——TThhee

National Bank of Springfield, Missouri.

Robert

Capital $100,000.

Mc&lhany, President; John C. Culbertson, Cashier.
National Bank of Maysville, Kentucky. Capital $300,000.
Wallingford, President; James A. Johnson, Cashier.

J.

what

we

have lost iu

our

French and German trade has been made up

increased demand from other quarters. The United States, and
of the Western hemisphere, have purchased bo
Merchants’ and Planters’ National Bank of Augusta, Georgia.
S. Bean, largely in our markets of late that our trale now shows no diminution
Capital $100,000. Thomas P. Branch, Vice President; Jos.
O&stiior
as
compared with last year. Foreign buyers have no doubt seized
People’s National Bank of Norfolk. Virginia. Capital $100,000.
J. C. Deming, President; William S. Wilkinson, Cashier.
the opportunity of buying considerable stock at panic prices, and it is
1,7C6—The farmers’ National Bank of Stanford, Kentucky. Capital $100,000.
J. H. Shanks, President: J. B. Ousley, Cashier.
partly owing to this cause that some improvement has lately taken
Monmouth National Bank, Illinois. Capital $100,000. A. C. Hard¬ place in the value of manufactured goods.
ing, President; W. F. Wiley, Cashier.
First National Bank of Gallatin, Tennessee. Capital $51,000. J.
Money has been in demand during the week. Some heavy mer¬
R. a. Tomkins, President; J. M. Tomkins, Cashier.
cantile payments have been met, and at one period, scarcely any ac¬
Seconi National Bank of Lebanon, Tennessee. Capital $50,000.
John D. Owen, President; Thomas J. Stratton, Cashier.
commodation was obtainable under the bank minimum.
There is,
Corn Exchange National Bank of Chicago, Illinois. Capital
however, a large supply here, and there are indications that it will
$250,000. B. P. Hutchinson, President; Orson Smith, Cashier.
First National Bank of Brodhead, Wisconsin. Capital $50,000.
further increase.
People are speculating just now as to what will be
Ephraim Bowen, President; J. V. Richardson, Cashier.
First National Bank of Shelbina, Missouri. Capital $100,000. the effect of peace on the money, bullion and exchange markets, but bo
John F. Benjamin, President; F. P. Jackson, Cashier.
Moniteau National Bank of Cali/ornia, Missouri. Capital $50,000. far as the present is concerned, it is certain that there are no buyers of
Samuel fl. Owens, President; JR. Q. Roache, Cashier.
gold for export, and as about £750,000 has just arrived from Australiai
it is more than probable that a considerable addition will be made to
Cateat ftlonctarp ana vftommtrcial €ngliflt) JJetna the stock of Dullion in the Bank in the course of next week. It is,
however, a favorable circumstance that the commercial demand for
RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON
The advances made by the Bank, notwithstanding
money is good.
AT LATEST DATES.
the war, are larger than they were at this time last year, and this may
EXCHANGE AT LONDONbe accounted for by the fact that buyers have been found to supply the
EXCHANGE ON LONDON.
NOV. 4.
vacancy caused by the war. At this period of the year the demand
LATEST
RATE.
ON—
TIME.
BATE.
DATE.
TIME.
for accommodation is invariably active, owing to the large require.
short.
Amsterdam...
11.17*@11.17*
3months. 25.37*@25.423tf
Antwerp
Hamburg
13.103tf@13.1024
44

44

Paris
Paris
Vienna

25.55 @25.65
Nominal.
short.
3months. 13.40 @12.45
44

Berlin
44
Frankfort
“
*
St. Petersburg
44
Cadiz
90 days.
Usbon
3 months.
Milan
44
Genoa
....

6.26*@ 6.27

119*@120*
30

@30*
49*@49*
52*@52*

2G.673tf@26.72X

New York....

44
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Valparaiso....

—

—

—

Pernambuco..

—

—

60 days.
Singapore
Hong Kong...
ti
Ceylon
it

4s. 5d.
48. 5d.

4 4

Bombay
Madras
Calcutta

Sydney

tt

,

tt

30

2 p. c. dis.
U 10 *d.
U 10 *d.
U 10 hid.

days.

3tf dis.

11.84 @
253* @

—

44

3 mos.

1363tf@136*

—

—

—

—

Nov. 4.

44
44

Nov. 4.
Oct. 15.
Oct. 10.

.

days.
t4

—

—

—

—

Nov. 4.
Oct. 8,
Oct. 21.
Oct. 17.
Oct. 10.
Oct. 3.
Oct. 12.
Oct. 20.
Oct. 11.
Oct. 1.
Oct. 31.
Oct. 4.
Oct. 29.
—

6.22*@
119

44

90

—

60 days.
—

60 days
90 days.
44

44
44

6 mos.
44
44

44
44

44
—

@

—
-

31
50.40

65*@53*
—

ment9 for

commercial purposes.

There is, perhaps, not the usual ani-

imatiou this year, but as enterprise is
could only have been anticipated. The

somewhat dead, a falling off
prices of money are as under:

1869.
1870.
Percent.Per cent.
Bank minimum.... 8 @
2jtf@..
..

Open-market rates:

30and

60days’ bills 3 @...

3months, bills..... 3*@3tf.

2*@3tf

1869.
1870.
Per cent. Per cent.
4 months, ba’k bills 3*@4
6 months’ ba’k bills 3*@4
4 and 6 trade bills.. 4 @4#

wm

2*@3
3 @3K

2*@3tf

—

—

109*
1 p. c. pm.
20 p. c.

21*
21 *@22
44*@45*
21@2l3tf
48. 63id.
4s. 5*d.
83tf@53tf p. c.
is. 10 %d.
18. 10 Md.
Is. 10*d.
—

I From our own Correspondent.]

London, Saturday, November 5, 1870.
Business has eomewliat

an

121

3 mos.

44
4*

by

in fact the greater part

-

'

—

—

Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro
Bahia

short.

44
44

44

(4

Naples

Nov. 4.

Jos.

The rates of interest allowed

houses for

deposits

by the joint stock banks

are :

..2

1870.
IK

..2

IK

..2*
..2*

IX

18G9.

Joint stock banks
Jiscount houses at call
Discount houses with 7 days’ notice.
Discount houses with 14 days’ notice,

The

and discount

IK

England is now

supply of bullion held by the Bank of

£3,250,000 more than at this time last year. In the reserve of notes
and coin there is an increase of £8,000,000.
The bank rate of discount

cent, lower. Wheat is 2s.4d. per quarter jdearer, and cotton
per lb. cheaper.
The following statement shows the present position of the Bank of
England, the Bank rate of discount, the price of consols, the average

is £ per

improved in tone this week in conse¬
quence of a growing belief in tlie return of peace, no great in¬ quotation of English wheat, the price of Middling Upland cotton,
of No. 40 mule yarn, fair, second quality, compared with the four precrease is, however, apparent, for the future is still involved in
ous
years :
great uncertainty. Intrigue has been evidently busy of late, and
1866.
1867.
1868.
1869.
18J°*
it is stated in many quarters that Count Bismarck would be glad
to see the Empire restored in 'France.
Yet, after the recent dis¬
rculation
-24,203,592 25,254,722 25.156,529 24,680,949 25,
lblic deposits
4,375,714 5,396,899 4.281,114 3,063,L5 ig
asters, and the capitulation of Metz, France cannot, it would seem,
therdeposits
...17,150,191 18,746,986 18,621,06d ^,628,752 18.18^
be willing to receive again the fallen dynasty, and there is every
jvemment securities 12,299,812 12,891,203 15,485c874 14,011,953 12.^
ther securities
19,330,391 16,788,612 15,728,291 15,721,616 W
evidence that a strenuous effort will be made to establish a Re¬
eserve
9,964,363 9,531.368
8.330,276 19,726,382
)in and Dullion
16,891,606 22,333.297 19,477,733 18,587,658 81,UW
public. It is thought that King William and his Minister will be
ink rate
4 p. c.
2 p. c.
2 p. c.
8 p. c.
»
jnsols
89#
94*
94*
98K
greatly averse to that form of government in France, as its sue
rice of wheat
54s. 9d.
69s. lid. 52s. lid.
46s. 2d.
cess would tend to the spreul of republican principles
in Ger¬
id. Upland cotton...
14*d.
8*d.
11s. *d.
19s. *d.
i mule yarn, fair 2d
«a svd.
many ; but France will be left to choose her own form of govern¬
Is. 3d. ^ **
quality....?.
IS.
8d. Is. %<L Is. 2d.
ment, and whatever may be the result, it is more than probable
Bills of exchange are in good demand* bat there is no
that, in the first instance, a Republic will be tried. When the
ild for export. Sovereigns, however, continue to be sent to Egyp
111>
whole story of Bazaine and the .seige and fall of Metz is made




an!

.

.

inquiry ^

THE

November 19, 1870„]

CHRONICLE.

$51

evidently, with the re-opening of the cotton season. Silver existing circumstances. On the whole Australian wool may be proj^very firm, and the [tendency of prices is upward. The following nounced to be in about the same position as at the low peri in
period
pkeg of bullion arefrom^the circular of Messrs. Pixley, Abell, Langley spring, 1869, that is, as far as the good, faultless descriptions are con-

oonnection,

'

GOLD
B.

per oz. standard.
do
do
.peroz.

gar Gold
do
fine.....

Reflnable

do

.

9
11

.

....

do
.do

73

.

frlStateasoldcoin

@—
<au-

—

....

silver.

Fine

standard.

P®r

containing 5 grs. g’d

do

do

the market.

8
8

d.
silver

d.

s.

9

77

...

do&niBh Doubloons...
Switb American Doubloons.

d.

77

..

.

5

Cast price)

Spanish Dollars (Carolus)
jive franc pieces

per oz.
per oz,
Quicksilver, £8 8s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent.
—

—

—

_• •

—

price. @—
10%

4

per oz,

—

.........

none

none

—
—

here.
here.

Continental money market presents no feature of importance.
ii Hamburg, however, the rates of discount are somewhat firmer.
The following are the quotations at the leading cities.
The

-B’krate-^ r-Op.

m’kt—.

1869.

1870.

1869.1870.
At Paris
Vienna

2%

Brussels... 2%

-

6

2%

5
5
Berlin
Vranklort. 4
Amet’rd’m 5
Turin...
5
...

r-B’k rate—,
1869. 187C.

5

4% 4
4
5
5
5

4

.

4%

Madrid.... 5

3%
3%
6

Hamburg
.

.

1869.

—

4

3%

8

6

6

St. Peters

,

burg.... 6

|

1870.

52V

5

4

-Op. m’kt—,

market more firmness is apparent, owing to the nego¬
tiations which are in progress for a cessation of hostilities.
So many
brief and contradictory telegrams, however, are received, that the mar.
beta become subjected to sudden changes.
There is nevertheless, a
better tone, and prices show more improvement as compared with last
week. The following are the highest and lowest prices of consols and
of the principal American securities on each day of the week ;
In the stock

(Monday. | Tuesday, Wed’ay. Thu'ay I Friday. Sat’day
Consols
92%-92%
0. 8.5-20’s, 1882.... 89%-89%
88
0.8. 5-208, 1884.
88%-88&
0.8.6*208, 1885
0. S. 6-208, 1887
90%-90%

92%-92% 92%-93 93%92%-93%
89%-89% 89%-89% 89%-89% 89% -89%
.

87

0.8.10-408,1904.... 87%-....

new

J premium.

...-88

87

-89

29%-30%

-89

30

-....

....-18% 18%-19

-30

high as 4 premium, and
3 premium.
some

29

as

low

as

With reference

engaged, particularly for the great Eastern

markets; but
ficult to establish
any decided advance equal to what has taken
and yam, and have found it

they find it dif¬
place in cotton
quite out of the question to sell cloth to-day at a
corresponding price to what spinners have demanded for yarn.
.^ssmning the armistice to he an accomplished fact, this market may be conaidered decidedly stronger
and prices dearer, although to a considerable extent
DMiness has to-day been
kept in a state of abeyance. Owing to this state of
uunp there is considerable irregularity in quotations. Some spinners have
ih
themselves of the opportunity, and, having accepted about one-half of
the advance
demanded by others, have sold rather freely; while others
who
we held out for still
higher rates have done next to no business.
low

or

competition, this can scarcely [be counted upon, and the last
four days have indeed shown
already a slight falling off in the

animation which marked the commencement of the
series.

proceed, and immediate requirements get supplied, the great
reduction in the competing power cannot but be felt more
severely, and
a further
depression is probable should the general circumstances remain
unaltered.
Peace would indeed

bring us increased spirit and confidence, but the
present but slender; and even were it concluded
at an early date, it is more than doubtfal
whether, in the present state
of France, it would soon bring us back the full amount of
that compe¬
tition on which this market so greatly relies. The first series of
1871
has been fixed to commence on the 2d of
February ; it is to comprise
the fresh arrivals up to that date, and the wools withdrawn or held
chances for it

over

are

at

from this series.

The

changes in the value of cereal produce have been unimportant*
steady, but as millers from the
north of England have been buying largely of late and have, no doubt»
accumulated considerable stocks, they have not made their
appearance
in any great number in the London market this week.
Feeding stuffs
are in demand, and prices have had an upward
tendency.
The following statement shows the imports and exports of cereal
pro¬
duce into and from the United Kingdom during last week and since
thh commencement of the season, compared with the
corresponding
On the whole the market has been

periods last year:
29.

-1870.--

Barley....,...
Oats
Peas
Beans

Indian corn.
Flour
Wheat

Barley
Oats.
Peas

Beans'
Indian

corn

Flour

-1869.

Imports. Exports.

...cwt.

Wheat

654,932
205,013
116,060
25,618
40,371
563,299
79,291

,

Imports. Exports
1,436,606
2,330
"

63,186
507

145,077
212,007
18,797
48,662
1,285
669,424
8,361
204,223
COMMENCEMENT OF THE SEASON (AUG. 28).
owt. 6,325,669 549,392
8,406,184
1,072.133
3,306
931,863
1,680,716 207,236
1,592,976
167,103
25,385
128,874
224,386
338
321,726
4,623,790 16,429
4,396,139
846,321 318,196.
1,288,846

240

1,525

884
539

157

434
220

63,527
2,222
3,809
2,138
24

2,029
3,290

Cngllsh Market i4eport»~l*er Cable*

daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver
pool for the past week have been reported by submaiiuo telegraph, aa
The

shown in the following summary :

London Money and
with the exception of

Stock Market.—This market closed flat, price*»
Atlantic and Great Western, showing a decline.
Sat.

Mon.

Tues.

Wed.

92%
92%

92%
92%
88%

92%
92% ~
S8%

87

87%

89%
86%

89%
86%

92%
92%
87%
86%
88%
85%

Consols for money
for account...
O. S. 6s (5 20’s) 1862..
“
old 1865
1867..

87%
89%

IT

87%

"

-■

.

si

1

ruins

...

Iliiuois Central shares.
Erie Railway

shares

..

Atl. & G. W. (consols).

in

As the

sales

SINCE THE

The announcement made yesterday afternoon that Count
Bismarck had of"
fered the Provisional Government of France an armistice of
twenty-five daysi
on terms which were likely
to be accepted, has considerably interfered with
business to-day. Neither buyers nor sellers have known
exactly bow to act.
Producers do not like to miss a good chance of
selling, and yet they have been
afraid to do so without getting a decided advance on
Tuesday’s rates. On the
other hand, buyers are reluctant to
pay an advance, and seem to think that
prices are high enough, even should the proposed armistice be ratified and
confirmed, and peace be the result. At present there appears to be some am¬
biguity about the proposed terms offered, and implicit confidence is not placed
in the conclusion of an
armistice, although the news has obtained general
credit. A fair general business has been done
during the last ten or twelve
and in some section of the market large contracts have been entered
days,
mto. These enable
many spinners to adhere very firmly to extreme prices, as
they are under no necessity of selling. Manufacturers are also on the
whole
well

With regard to the wool sales

three

-30

improvement, and

American cotton has risen about Ad. per lb. in value.
to the trade of Manchester, it is stated that —

-

to last till the 2d

19%-....|18%-19%

as

now
The tone of the commercial market exhibits

are

FOR THE WEEK ENDING OOT.

29

110*-....*110*-.... 110*-112 |ll2*-113

French loan has been

The price is

87

..

Atlantic &G’t West.
consol'd mort.b’ds 28 -29
Brie Shares ($100).. 18%-....
Illinois shares ($100) 1091-110*

The

-89

88%-88% 88%-.
88%-88% S8%-88%
90%-90% 90%-90% 90%-90% 90%-90%
87 -87% 87%-.... 37%-87% 87%-.

The sales

of December,
and, if the
present prices should be maintained, the great bulk of the available
wools will probably be offered.
But in the continued absence of all

French

1

no

Seiican Dollars

d.

s.

G% @

.per oz. standard.

cerned, for the inferior sorts are still
appreciably higher. Capes are
demand, notwithstanding the enormous stocks of the com
peting Buenos Ayres^on the continent; they command full
July closing
rates, and may be said to be at present the
relatively dearest wools in

in great

88%

110

111%

111

18%

18%

no
18

18%
30%

30

28%

♦

Thu.

Frl.

92%
92%
87%
86%
88%
85%
108%
17%

92%
92%

4

31%

87

86%
88%
85

108%
17%

31

31

progress, Mr. Helmuth
The daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort were—
hardly any French competition in the Frankloit...
95%
93%
92%
90%
present series; and
beariug this in mind, and considering that the
Liverpool Cotton Market.—See special report of cotton.
market is flooded to the extent of
220,000 bales, the result of the
Liverpool Breadmuffi Market.—The market for breadstuffs closed
wles, so far as they have proceeded at present, can
only be pronounced I generally quiet, prices generally showing Jan advance,
u
satisfactory as could possibly be expected. Prices have, on the
Sat.
Mon.
Tnes.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
s. d.
s. d.
s. d.
8. d.
s. d.
whole, maintained themselves on a level of the lowest rates of the last
s. d.

Schwartze remarks

that there is

....

two

or

three sale

days in July.

This is particularly the

case with the

good scoured wools, which are at all times in favor
with the home
trade, and suffer less from the absence of French
competition. The

lower scoured
sorts, at from Is. to Is. 2d., are rather cheaper, but it
muBt be borne in mind
that, as compared with good wools, they have,
lor the last
six or eight months, stood in an

Flour, (Western).... p. bbl 23 3
Wheat (No.2 Mil. Red)p. ctl 9 7
Red Winter
10 0

(California white) “

10 11

CorH(W.mx d)p.4801bsn’w 29 3
Barley (Canadian), per bush 5 0
Oats (Am. & Can.) per45 lbs 2 9
Peas.. (Canadian) pr 504 lbs 37 6

some

Port

lots still sell

and sell

more




37

0

9
6

eese,
Sat.
s. d.

0
Pork(Etn. pr.mess)D. bbl.. 105 0
Bacon (Cumb.cui)p. 112 lbs 60 0
Lard (American)
72 J
“
" 44
Cheese (fine)
70 0
Beef(ex.pr. mess) p. 3G4 lbs 105

105
105
60
72
70

d.
0
0
0
0
0

23 9
9 11
10 4
11
8
30 0
5 0
2 9
38 0

market closed

showing

Mon.
s.

23 6
9 11
10 3
11 2
30 0
6 0
2 9
38 0

71

6

0
0
0
0

Wed.
s. d.
102
105
49
70
71

6
0
0

0
0

24
10
10
11
30
5
3

40

9
3
9
8

9
0
0
6

quiet, prices,

a decline.

Tues.
s. d.
102
105
49
71

23 9
9 11
10 4
11 4
30 3
5 0
2
9
38 0

i

Thu.

Frl.

102
105
49
72

d.
6
0
0
0

71

6

d.
0
0
0
0
71 6

s.

8.

102
104
48
73

Really superior I Liverpool Produce Market.—This market remains quiet, the prices
request foi the home I of refined peteoleum showing a decline, while the prices of spirits of
satisfactorily than might be expected unde | petroleum and tallow show an advance.

as

well

as

three months ago.

Phillip Washed combing wools

market,

5
2

i.—'This

unexceptionally

favorable position. The
descriptions most directly affected by the
reduced competition are the Australian
greasy and the middling
washed fleece
wools, which usually form the bulk of French pur¬
chases. These
may be quoted Ad., and occasionally Id. lower than at
the close of
July; but even in their cases the decline is not general

23 3
9 8
10 1
11 00
29 3

....

are

in

some

•do
Pine Pale...
“
Petroleum (etd white). p. 8

lbs.
spirit ...per8 lbs
Tallow (America »...pll21bs.
“

8*
8*
u
« »
«

ta

Wed.

Tnea.
s. d.
5 3
14 0
1 6

Mon.
s. d.
6 3
14 0
1 6

s&t.
d.
5 3
14 0
1 6
e.

d.
5 8
14 0
1 6#
s.

8%
•

8*
9

London Produce and Oil Marketa.—These markets close

.

prices of Calcutta linseed showing
Lins’dc’ke(obl)p.tn£10 10 0
Linseed (Calcutta)...
'per 112

Sperm oil

1866.

The
wall:

■

Fri.

<6 rH 0 10 0 £10 10 0 £10 10 0
59 0
59 0
59 0

...79 0 0

Whale oil
30 10 0
Linseed oil., per ton.. 28 10 0

0
0
0

.7.7.

following is the treasure list, per steamer Alaska, from

’

32
79 0
36 10
28 10

0
0
0
0

6
0
0
0

32
79 0
36 10
28 10

32 6
79 0 0
36 10 0
28 10 0

6
0
0

Aaoi

p,D’

....$600 00
$600 00

.

59 9
32
79 0
36 10
28 10

*11,304,558

* ’'

T0tal

—Receipts and expenditures of the United States for the first ana

;

6

32
79 0
36 10
28 10

32 6

tt>

u

quiet, the

Thu.

Wed.

,

8ugar(No.l2 Dch std)

9

Same time in

1869
1868

decline.

a

59 9

59 9

8X
u aa

11*108,919

Total since Jan. 1, 1870.
Same time in

S* L-Ieaac8

Toes.
Mon.
£10.10 0 £10 10 0

Sat.

Previously reported

Thu.
Fn.
s. d.
s. d.
5 3
5 8
14 0
14 0
1 6* 1 51

as

[Novemberj}19,1370

CHRONICLE.

THE

652

^

ter of the fiscal year :

AND EXPENSES—FIRST QUARTER.

REVENUE

Imports

and

Exports

for the

increase in dry

1867.

1868.

1869.

41,008,189

$1,191,268
2,403,256

$1,164,943
2,988,017

$2,132,128
2,774,472

$8,594,524
215,530,745

$4,152,960

Previously reported... 214,826,880

256,961,253

$4,906,600
259,134,883

$218,476,362

$219,125,2.9

$261,114,213

$264,041,483

General merchandise..

2,641,293

Total lor the week..^.

43,649,482

Since Jan. 1

In

our

1870.

reportof the dry goodstrade will be found the importsof dry

goods for one week later.
The following isa statement of theexports(exclusive ofspecie)from
the port of

New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Nov. 16.
EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOB THE WEEK.

1868.

1867.

For the week

1869.

1870.

$5,137,914
161,471,616

$3,775,896
141,564,277

$3,890,927
169,157,261

$166,609,530

Since Jan. 1

$145,340,173

$173,048,188

$163,937,782

The value of exports from

this port to different countries [exclusive
of specie) since January 1, compared with the corresponding time of
last year, is shown in the following table :
SinceJan.l,

To
Great Britain
France
Holland and Belgium

1870.

Same time
1869.

$87,483,679
9,292,739
5,646,065
12.608,889
3,£98,701
3,655,779
5,147,442

Europe

Spam..
Other Southern
East Indies

Europe

$93,436,335

103,455

Germany
Other Northern

66,t29
2,348,899
1,982,239
4,134,204
4,956,770
852,480
6,753,460
1,207,112
2,437,772

China and Japan
Australia
Britisn N. A. Colonies
Cuba

18,636,379
3,895,248
2,652,536
7,134.857

1,836,930

Other Wertlndies
Mexico
New Granada
Venezuela
British Guiana

6,846,098
5,000,378

l,29o,158

Hayti

5,088,564
1,4*0,816

1,531,842

4,246,857
7,732,114

3,400,882
600,592

929,759
2,898,119

Diner S. American ports
All other ports
t he

$78,690

“

lace, Jacmel—
American silver

2,000

“

10—St. Allemannia, Ham¬

12—Schr Impulse, Mara¬
caibo—
American gold
12—St. City of Paiis, Liv¬

27 250

145,054
30,000

Total for the week

1869
1868

$410 134

64,7031235
$29,889,341
,.

1367

.

.

,

.

.

861.—

i1
J

68,207,430 |

..

1866
1866

10,000

American gold
Silver bars
Gold bars.....

Previously reported
v* Total since Jan. 1,1870
Same time In

.

$65,113,369

Sametime in
1860
1859

66,776,700

44435^444 j11858
56,623^627 j

26,492,161
35,215,667

21,1788, < 85

following shows the imports of specie at this port during the
past week:
Gold
8—Sr. San Francisco,
Bermuda—
Gold

“

M

Gold.
Nov. 12—St. Tybee, St. Do¬

7—St. City of Merida,
Vera Cruz-

10—Str

Morro Castle,

Havana—

Total for the week
.




$15,000
6,711

$64,424

mingo“

Silver...
Gold
12—St. Alaska,
Silver

Gold

1,550
836

Aspmw’l—
.-

488

7,660
;

$107,831,622

$115401^

842,438

$15,102,202

27,219,117
5,604,785
12,358,648
38,742,814

13,596,468
5.782,631
13,547,943
37,4:2,270

*39,496,450

$105,152,470

$85,480,514

$86,562,930

Navy
Pensions and ^interest..

$18,307,242
10,218,538
4,815,238

13,825,463

♦The civil expenses in 1868 include
terest expenses of 1870 include about

Bonds, canceled at
Taxation

$7,200,000 paid for Alaska, and the in.
$3,600,000 paid on the Sinking Fund
close of July under recent act of Congress.

of tlie

Erie and N. Y. Central

Railroads,-^

Washington dispatch of 16th iust. gives the following;
Jay Gould, President of the Erie Railroad Company, wrote to the
Internal Revenue Bureau that he had learned that an assessment had
been returned by the Supervisor against that Company for tax on the
gross receipts aod eavnings alleged to have been expended in con¬
struction, and asked that tne assessor might be instructed to afford
every facility for presenting such facts as were necessary to be stated
in a claim which would be made for the payment of the tax assessei.
Accordingly the Assessor of the Sixth New York District was in¬

investigation which had already been com.
provisions of section 14 of the Act of July,
1864, as amended, which would give the Company ample facilities for
presenting all the facts which they may desire bearing on the Com¬
pany’s liability to tax. And the Assessor has also been instructed to
take all steps necessary for making the proper assessment."

structed to proceed in the
menced according to the
,

TAX

ON

NEW

YORK CENTRAL DIVIDEN8.

The Internal Revenue Bureau has written to Assessor

Lathrop, at

Albany, respecting the assessment of tax upon what is known as the
Eight per cent, scrip dividend,” declared by the New York Central
Railroad Company in favor of its stockholders.
The Commissioner
says a due regard for the iuierests and rights of the government forbid
that an assessment should longer be delayed.
—The Lehigh Valley Railroad Company have just consummated an
important arrangement with the New York and Erie Railroad Com¬
pany by the laying of a third rail on both tracks of the latter road
which is of broad guage, from Waverly, the present terminus of the
L* high Valley roa i, north to Elmira, a distance of some eighteen
The laying of the third rail is completed, auitke Lehigh
miles.
Company will, on Wednesday Dext, ticket passebgers and deliver
freight through to Elmira instead of Waverly as at present.
—The sales of laud by the Union Pacific Railroad were for the

“

months of
September, 14,637 acres for

$55,731 55

...

October. 13,801 acres for.
T< tal sales t j date are 252,625 acres, for
Average per acre
Amount of Land Grant Bonds < ancelled to date
More Titan Three Thousand Pages a

49,815 34
1,148,144 66
-

4 54

641,000 00
Year•—Littell's Living

Age, being published iu weekly numbers of sixt)-lour pages each,
to its readers more than three thousand double column octavo
pages a year of the most valuable, instructive and entertaining reading
of the day.
“ History, biography, fiction, poetry, wit, science, politics,
criticism, art,:—what is not here V It is the only compilation that pre¬
sents with a satisfactory completeness as well as freshness, the best
gives

generally inaccessible Euro¬
quarterlies, monthlies and weeklies—a Literature embracing the
productions of the ablest and most cultured writers living. It is there¬
fore indispensable to every one who desires a “ thorough compendium
of all that is admirable and noteworthy in the literary world,/ who has
pean

a taste for the best literature, or desires to keep pace
tual progress of the age.
The Living Age is pronounced by Rev. Henry

$95,009

with the intellec¬

Ward Beecher, iht

Nation, New York, and other high critical authority to be the “beetof
all our eclectic publications
and we can do our readers no better ser¬
vice than by calling
in this paper.

their careful attention to its Prospectus,

—The well-known
bankers and brokers,

25,4;4,618
40,953,852 i 1855
39,690,402 1 1854
60,613,812 |11853
3,299,337 j11852

The

Nov.

T*882,181

49,147,138

literature of the almost innumerable and

erpool—

burg—
Spanish gold
10,000
10—St. Batavia, Liverp’l—
Silver bars
96,488

“

:

Nov. 11—Bk. Marie, Point a Petre—
Fjench gold
$10,702

9—St. Scotia, Liverpool-

^

“

1,558,519

following will show the exports of specie from the port oi New

Silver bars
10—fcchr. Vincent J. Wal-

“

4,073,506

947,537

York for the week ending Nov. 12, 1870
Nov.

539,029
1,238,066
3,021,423

3,446,777

Brazil

7,412.484

Grant.

$21,227,106 *

$5,808,002
158,129,780

Previously reported

$57,729,473

N. Y. Times

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOB THE WEEK.

Drygoods

1870-71.

$52,598,922
46,926,352
893,864

$95,392,8) i9

Week.—The imports this week show

goods and a slight decrease in general
merchandise.
The total imports amount to $4,906,600, against
$4,178,108 last week, and $6,272,080 the previous week. The exports
are $6,808,002 this week against $6,181,868 last week, and $8,856,168
the previous week.
The exports oi cotton the past week were 18,619
bales,against 18,867 bales last week. The following are the imports
at New York for week ending (for dry goods) Nov. 11 and lor the
week ending (for general merchandise) Nov. 12:
considerable

1869-70.
Grant.

$49,676, f 95
38,785,863
714,8’. 6

Julylto Sept. 30.

From customs
Internal taxes.......
Lands

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWfi.

a

1868-9.
Johnson.

6,265,516

0

having accepted

a

published

firm of Messrs. Puleeton, Raymond
Co.,
has recently been dissolved, Mr. J. H. Pu‘®eto°

partnership in the European house

of Jay

The business of the old firm will be continued
street under the style of Barney, Raymond & Co.
Co.

at No.

Messrs. N. t.

Barnpy, C. H. Raymond and E. D. Foster being the several partners
of the house.
The reputation of the old firm for integrity and ability
will, we believe, only be increased by the transactions of the ne
house.
—Messrs. Gibson, Beadleston A Co. of No. 60 Exchange Place, have
recently dissolved their partnership, and a new firm has ^eel? ^

ganized under the style of Gibson, Cazanova A Co., whose card will be
the fourth page of advertisements.
The antecedents of the
house, and its reputation, are such as to promise continued success for
it under the new style, j
seen on

__

November

THE CHRONICLE

19,1870.]

“Air Tine Railroad fco B08*-00.” 00 the New Haveo, Middle**gnd Willi man tic Railroad, has been pushed on so vigorously tha*
The

•^expected the line will be completed throughout and running nextjjw. p
^ave frequently called attention to the remarkably strong
SP1??*

be regarded

663
as an advance of fully
intimations that this

1 per cent, upon the late
change of tone is encour¬
aged by the witholding of funds from the market for speculative
objects, but, at the same time, it is not to be denied that the con¬
dition of exchanges at the pork packing cities may have sufficed
may

There

rates.

are

road occupies as a link in the most direct route be. to account for the firmer tone of the market. There seems to be
and New York, and the confidence in its substantial no
ground for apprehension of
drain of currency /to
^cter is best shown by the high price at which its bonds have been cities. Chicago has depleted any stock of wheat from the grain
c“a
4,200,000
its
dated in this market.
A few more of these bonds are still offered bushels
on October 31, to 2,679,000 bushels on November 14, and
Sessrs. Hatch A Foote, of No. 12 Wall street.
as
receipts from the Western farmers are falling off, it is not to be
The style of the banking house of the Luther Kountze, No. 62 expected that any large bulk will come forward between now and
Wall street, has been changed to Kountze Brothers, as will appear by the close of navigation. At present, exchanges on New York, at
Messrs. Kountze Bros, call Chicago, rather favor the remittances of currency to this city than
eference to their card on another page.
the attention of merchants and importers to their facilities for making otherwise.
collections in all parts of the United States, Canadas, South America
The following statement shows the present condition of the
tod Europe. Orders are also executed for the purchase and sale of associated banks, compared with the same date in the last two years:
P081'\

whici,

g08ton

fint-claes

securities

or

gold.

Nov. 12,1870.

—Messrs. Chase A Higginson, whose card appears on the first page,
die notice to the public in this way that thev are prepared to buy
ind sell oo commission the 8 per cent bonds of several western rail¬

Nov. 13. 1869.

$266,176,366
17,124.489
32,379.588

1251,189,557

Loans and discounts.

Specie

Circulation
Net deposits

$249,119,539

26,755,693
34.212,867
183,754,3 '6
51,095,661

196.629.937

Legal Tenders

Nov. 14,1868.

53,83 i.019

16,155.008

81,249,564
175,150,589

51,466.603

held in high estimation as investments, and which are
In the discount market the feeling continues easy, notwith¬
pot dealt in at the Stock Exchange.
They also execute ordere for all standing the
greater activity in call loans. At the opening of the
securities dealt in at the Boston Board.
week rates were a shade lower, but the market has since recovered.
roads, which are

Howell, formerly well known in the produce exchange and
provision trade has lately formed a copartnership with C. H.
Kimball, under the title of C. H. K mball <fc Co., as bankers and
brokers, at 29 Broad street. See advertisement.
—Mr. A. C. Kaufman, banker of Charleston, S. C*. is making a spe¬
cialty of collections in all parts of the State £of South Carolina. See
—J. P.

io the

There is still a great scarcity of prime commercial paper, but the
market is freely supplied with domestic bankers’ bills, some of
them connected with railroad enterprises.
Commercial, first class endorsed
“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

his card.

4 months.
6 months.

“

single names

—Banking House op Henry Clews A

Deposit accounts can be opened with us in either currency or coin
subject to check without notice. Interest allowed upon ail daily
balances at current market rates.
Checks upoQ us passthrough the
Clearing House as if drawn upon any city bank.
We draw Bills of Exchange, make telegraphic transfers of money
and issue credits available in all parts of Europe.
We issue Certificates of Deposit payable on demand or at fixed date

bearing interest and available at all money centers.
Collections made in any part of the world.
Clews, Habicht A Co., 6 Lothbury, London.
„

HARVIY FI8K,

A.

<-

Office of Fisk A Hatch,
Bankers and Dealers in Government
No. 6 Nassau f-treet,

8.

HATCH.

f

New

>•
York, Nov. 12, 1870
I3T THE FUNDING OF UNITED STATES FIVE-TWENTIES
into a first-class security, paying the same rate of interest (six
per cent
gold),and which cannot be called in under twenty five years without

the consent of the

holder, may now be effected at a clear profit of about
Twenty per cent, by exchanging them for the FIRST MORTGAGE
BONDS OF THE CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD
-market price to-day, 91—that is $910 for bonds of

COMPANY

$1,000.

The Central Pacific Bonds have the
both sides of the Atlantic, of regular
and

are

based

on

a

finished aud

stable and

advantage of a ready market on
quotations at the Stock Exchange,
equipped road, already placed on a

profitable basis.
Having originally negotiated these Bonds, and being thoroughly ac¬
quainted with their soundness and value, we have introduced them as
a
specialty in our regular business in connection with our dealings in

Government Securities, aod recommend them without hesitation to our
friends and customers
desiring to make investments or to fund their
five twenties
upon advantageous terms without reduction of interest.
FISK A HATCH.

1862

having been

as

Sat,
Sat.

Mon.

Tues.

Wed.

Thurs.

Frid.

88%

88%

83%

87%

93%

87%
92%

87

,95%
95%

London....
Frankfort

DIVIDENDS.
_

6Mowing Dividends have

been declared during the past week:
Per
Cent.

Company.

Wttra
tnion

(N.

H«a,,roads-

When
P’able.

market as might have been expected.
The higher range of gold
which has naturally followed the unfavorable foreign news has
had the effect of adjusting to a great extent the difference in prices
between the London and New York markets, and the decline here
has been only ^ (a)
per cent, on the issue of 1862.
Dealers, how¬
a very cautious feeling, in view of what may result
European complications, but there is no apprehension of
any further serious fall in prices, for at the present exceptionally
low rates, it is thought the market would he sustained to a large
extent by home investors, while any further fall at London and
Frankfort would be apt to be equalised with the home market by
an advance in gold.
At the same time, it would be the policy of
dealers to allow the value of bonds here to keep below the foreign
prices, so as to avoid any inducements to the return of a large
amount of bonds to this side.
At the offerings to the Government
on Thursday, upon its proposals to buy $1,000,000 five-twenties,.
the amount tendered was $4,735,250, which was less than mighthave been expected ; but the dealers generally fixed their prices
below the market quotations, and the amount taken was at 106.46
@ 106.50.
The following were the highest and lowest prices of leading
government securities at the Board on each day of the past week

show

from the

Saturday,
Nov. 12.

6’s, 1881 coup.
5
5

20’s,1862

.„.

coup.

20’s, 1864
5-20’b, 1865
5-20’s, 1865 n
5-20 8,1867
5-20’s, 1868

“
“
“
“

10-40’s,

Currency 6’s
*

113}^
108%
107%
107%
109%
109%
no'
406%

$2 00
20

Books Closed.

Dec. 1. Nov. 18 to Dec. 2
Dec. 1. Nov. 26 to Dec. 1.

Friday Evening. November 18.
statement was in some
specie portion of the reserve, there
aa increase of
$2,200,000, and in legal tenders a gain of $167,Wu, while the liabilities stood
$1,800,000 higher ; so that the surP us over legal reserve exhibited a
gain of $1,580,000; but, at the
time, the loans ranged $2,880,000 higher. During the week,
e
position of the banks has
probably not improved, especially in
®iegal tender line. The freer forwarding of pork has called for
^remittances of currency to Cincinnati, which will partly acfnrfh i ahardening tendencyrin the rates on call loans; which
cent ^
6 !?^er half of the week have been rather firmer at 5 @ 6 per
m
^

oft
0 lts

..

® Money Market.—The last bank
features favorable. In the

some few cases




money

Tuesday, Wednesd’y Thursday,

Monday,

Nov. 16.

Nov. 15.

Nov. 14.

Friday

Nov. 18.

Nov. 17.

113%
113%
1113%
1139*;
113% 113%
113%113% 118% 113%
107% 107% 107%
107% 108% 108 108% 107%
107
107%
107
*106% 106% 107
107
107
107% 107%
107% 107
...,
106*107%
409% 109% 109%
109% 109% 108% 109
109 109%
109% 109* 109% 109* 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 109%
no'
*109* 109% *109% 109% 109% 109% *109% 109%
106% 106% 106%
106%
106% It6% KX % 106%
*110% 111%
111% 111% 411% 111% *111% 111% 111
....

....

....

....

....

107%
107%

109%
...;
106%
411% 111%

...

....

....

....

....

....

....

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

The
lows:

prices of American securities in London have been
During the week.
,
Highest, Closing.

Lowest.
U. S. 6s, 5-20s, ’62
U. S. 6s, 5-208. ’67
U. S. 5s, 10-408
Illinois Central Railway
Erie Railway shares

37
88%
85
shares.... 108%
17*

88%
89%
87 %
111%
18*

87
88%
85
108%
17*

as

fbl

-

Since Jan. ±,
1,1870->
Lowest. Highest.
80%
91%,
I.

79
77 *

91

88%

99%
14*

118

22*
Bonds.—In this class of securities there was a moderate
but well distributed business, though the firmness noted at the
State

$4 00 Dec. 1.

Petroleum Corrmany

90%

In consideration of the extremely threatening aspect of political
affairs, causing a decline of f per cent, in consols, it can hardly be
said that our bonds have shown as great weakness in the London

,

(Sfrautte.

@7*
7%@10

follows, in the London and Frankfort markets:

-

&be Bankers’

60 days.
months.

3 to 4

@10
@ 9
@12

United StatestBonds.—The
declining tendency which has
been apparent for some time past in the prices of Government
bonds has been much increased during the past week, by the
advices from abroad, the course of the market for five-twenties of

ever,

: i e s,
Securities, )

8
9
7

4to 6months.

domestic

Co., 32 Wall St., N. Y.—

8

60 days.

“

Bankers’, first“ class foieign

BANKING AND FINANCIAL.

per cent
7 @....
7 @ 8

60 days.

“

is held ftt 7 pey cent,; which

early part of the week was not maintained. Tennessees were
pressed for sale, the old declining from 614 @ 60, and new from 60
@ 59. There was a fair movemont in North Carolinas, the price
of the old issues being carried up to 48f, the new being heavy and
lower, falling to 25£, and special tax to 19£. -New South Carolinas,
(July) issue, after selling up to 73, fell back to 71£, and October
issues to 69£.
Missouri 6’s declined from 92£ @ 91£. Old Virgin¬
ias (Coupon) ranging at 65£ @ 66, the registered selling at 50£j;
Alabama, 85 @ 102; Georgia 6’s at 81, and 7’s at 91.
The following are the highest and lowest prices of the most
active State Bonds at the Board on each day of the week:
Saturday,
Nov. 12.

6s Tenn..old...
6s Tenn.new...
68 N.Car., old..
6s N.Car., new.
6s

Virg., old....
S C, n, J A J

6s
6s Missouri....

61%

....

60

48%
“26% 26%
47*
66
73

....

91% 92

Monday, Tuesdav, Wednesd’y, Thursday,

Nov. 14.
6; %
61
59* 60
49
*48%
26
66"
*65
*
73

92"

....

*

ov

15.

.

61%
59* 59%
48%
,,,,

....

26
*65

71%
92

Nov. 16.

61%
*59%

59%

,48*

49
26
66

•

•

•

•

*

•

•

«'%

•

•

•

.

71%

»

«...

91* 92"

Nov. 17.
60
60%
59
59%

*43% 50
25% 25*
*64%
72

91*

Tiffs Is the price bid and asked, no sale was made at the Board,

72%
....

Frida}
day,

Nov. 11.
\
60%
59%
60

48% 48*

•63%

64

"

71*

il% 91*

s

’

5

-

-

•

•

,

Stocks.—The stock market

Railroad and Miscellaneous

affairs in Europe,

has partly sympathised with the condition of
and =the buoyant tone which appeared likely to result in,a
rise of prices has been checked, and the features of
been dullness and a decline of 1@2 per cent, which has
the prices of some of the leading stocks to near the
of the year.
a
Speculators have hesitated about selling
for they understand that stocks are generally held by strong

general

business have
brought
lowest point
for fall,
par¬

ties, and that to sell “short” at the present low prices might sub¬
ject them to a “corner.” There has been some selling on New
York Central, owing to an expectation that the company will be
compelled to pay internal revenue tax upon the 80 per cent issue
of scrip; the price, however, has not materially yielded.
The
more

Island,

Reading, Lake Shore, Rock

active stocks have been

Western Union Tele¬

Northwestern, preferred, and Pacific Mail.

graph, also, has again been active.
In regard to the discussion which has recently taken place as to
the obligation of the Pacific railroads to pay interest on the
Government bonds issued to them, the following extract from the
law authorizing the issue of those bonds, seems to show (as the
companies claim) that there is no obligation on their part to pay
interest except in Government transportation :
Se«. 5. * * And to secure the repayment to the United Statep, as hereinafter
provided, of the amount of said bonds so issued and delivered to said Company
together with all the interest thereon which shall have been paid ny the United
States, the issue of said bonds and deliverry to the Company shall ipso facto
constitute a first [second] mortgage on the whole line of the railroad and tele¬
graph, together with the rolling stock, fixtures and property of every kind and
description, and in consideration of which said bonds shall be issued, * * * *
Sec. 6. * * And after said road is completed, until said bonds and interest
are paid, at least five per centum of the net earnings of said road shall aleo be
annually applied to the payment thereof. * * *
The following were the highest and lowest prices of the active
list of railroad and miscellaneous stocks on each day of the last week:
Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesd’y Thursday,
Hridav,
Nov. 12.

N.Y.Cent&H.Ii
do
Harlem
Erie

scrip

92% 92%
87% 87%
*134
23

Reading
Lake Shore....
Wabash

135

23%

101% 102%

93%
52%
PittBburg
107
Northwest
79%
do
pref 90

Rock Island...
Fort Wayne...
8t. Paul
do

pref....

Ohio, Mississio
Coutral of N.J.
Chic. & Alton..
do
do pref
Panama

Clev., C,C. & I
Col.Chic. & I.C

Del.,Lack.,& vv
Hann., St. Jos.
do
pref

80
90%

114

113

60%

80%

32% 83
109% 109%

19
110
110
*

Mariposa pref..

10%

do Trust, cert.

*30

Quicksilver....
Pacific Mail....
Adams Expr'ss

....

59% 60%
60%

79%

93

108% 109

.

_

United States.

Welle, Fargo..

35

93%

51% 52%
*.... 106%
79% 80%
89% 90
113 ' 114
*94
94%
59% 60
80% 80%

*10'% 109% *109
115
116%
119
118%
‘72%
72% 73
80% 81
80% 80% 80%
19
19%
19%
18%
19%
18*
110% 110
110% 110
110% no
109%
*109% 110
*109% 111
119
119
*118% 119% 118
*136
136
13?% 135%
121
*120%
*120%
92
92
*91% 92%
4
4
4
4%
*3%
4%
24
24%
23% 24
41% 42%
41%
40% 41%
41%
10% 10% * iu%
10%
*

5%
41%
67%
45%
*33%

,

.

.

,

.

*

35

42%
67%
46%
....

41%

67%
47
34
34

•

•

“4

42
68
-

-

42%

*67%
^

» •

5%

42

♦ •

46%
*33%

*

-

*

*

•

-

73%
80%
....

110
....

136%

34

....

sale

34%
was

....

72%
80

4%

24%
42%
10%

^

109
105

•

•

•

•

^ *

CO

107

....

42
*30
*4

41%
67%
46%
35
*33

36

34

Chicago a1 d Alton
Michigan Central
Pacific of Missouri
St. Louis & Iron Mount.

$99,042
107,c99
74,224
31,943

$97,053 Toledo, Wab. & West... $91,382
110,766 Kansas Pacific (estimat) 73,817

42%

*30

36

*4%

5%

67
«...

36%
34

1869.

$85,274
....

Gold

Market.—The chief influence affecting the gold
premium has been the threatening relations between Russia and
the other signers of the treaty of 1856.
The fact of the price
having advanced from lll£@113£may be accepted as guaging the
apprehensions that our exchanges may be deranged by another
outbreak of war. The excitement in the room has been unusually
great, and the transactions on speculative account have been large.
The “ short” interest appears to have been diminished, and
borrowers have supplied their wants at 1@5 per cent. “ for carry¬
ing.” At the close the market shows great sensitiveness to any
indications of an aggravation of the European situation, and in the
event of war a material rise would probably occur.
The compara¬
tive impunity with which we have withstood the effect of other
outbreaks of war has, however, taught operators to moderate their
expectations of the fluctuations in the premium from these causes.
The Tieasury sold $1,000,000 of gold on Wednesday.
The exports
of specie during the week have reached nearly $1,000,000.
The following table will show the course of the gold premium
each day of the past week :
The

Open-

—Quotations.—
Low- Highest.
Ill

ing.
..111%
..112%
.111%
.111%

111%
110%
111%

est.

Clos-

Total

ing.

Clearings.

-Balances.
Gold.
Currency.

$1,648,567

1,536,824
1,051,081

$2,928,256
1,481,785
1,683,863
1,618,381
1,955,134
1,218,434

1,051,4)81
776,796

1,218,434
926,326

111%
112%
111%

Ill

111%

79,330,000

1,023.173

111%

119,060,000

1,102,866

112%
113%
113%

112%
112%

72,467,000
93,122,000

.113%

112%
112%

113

118,093,000

.111%
.110%

110%
110%

113%
111%

113

583,180,000

111%

250,699,000

.120%

110

123%

113

..41
Mondays
...51
Tuesday,
...61
Wedn’aay,
17... .113
Thursday,

Friday,

$96,108,000

1,197,768

Foreign Exchange—The market for
rather dull and without special feature of

foreign exchange w
importance during th*
early part of the week, but latterly has been much unsettled
though generally firmer, in consequence of the foreign complied
tions.
To-day, the leading drawers were all reluctant to entering
transactions, and the greater proportion of the business of tlie day
was done in the morning by a single House, interested
largely in
Cotton bills, in the afternoon, however, even this House was
unwilling to sell, and would have been a purchaser of commercial
hills had any been offering.
Previous to the important foreign news, the weight of
opinion
in regard to exchange had been on the side of lower figures at an
early day, in consequence of the large extent of the Cotton move¬
ment, as shown in the table below.
The total exports of Cotton from September 1, to date, would
produce $25,778,000 in gold, against $29,233,000 for the same period
of last year; this is on a basis of Cotton at 17c. for middling
uplands this year, against 27c. in 1869, and gold at 112 this year
against 130 in 1869, which are about the average prices.
The figures showing the total foreign commerce of the United
States, both exports and imports, for the first seven months of the
current year have just been compiled by the Statistical Bureau at
Washington, and are given below.
60
Paris, (bankers)
Antwerp...
Swiss
Amsterdam

ending Saturday, November 12, was as follows :

In banks Nov. 5

$14,899,646
Foreign imports
95,609
Gold paid out by Sub-Treas’y4,642,279
Receipts from California (ap¬
proximate)
109,963
SgJFTotal known supply

The following are
can coin:




$19,747,497

Withdrawn for export
Gold receipts into Sub-Treas..
In banks Nov. 12

$410,134
4,620,024
17,124,489

of withdrawals over

known supply

41

@
@

5.12%@5.11%
@5.15

....

41%

41 m

41%
!36%@ 36%
41*
79%@ 80%
72%@ 72

36 @ 36%

The cotton crop

movement has been as follows:

:por
/-Receipts of the week—. /—Exports of

'

the week-. /-Stock on hand-

21,701

1869.

1870.

1869.

16,326
4,S65

1370.

1869.

1870.

bays.
@110%
@
@

41%@ 41%
78%@ 79
72 @ 72%

Frankfort
Bremen
Prussian-thalers

New Orleans
Mobile
Charleston
Savannah
Texas
New York
Other Ports

$2,406,150

the quotations in gold for foreign and Ameri

11 231

9.022
8.652

103,927
41,580
27,850
70,619
18,031
47,500
33,000

108,705
32,983

342,507

272,006

5.908
2.338

9,920
23,917
2,822

18,041
6,774

Sept 1. .799,329

2,835
10,853
2,335

17,164
900

45,510
260,5(>0

*

the

the
and

the correspond¬
of the Bureau,

$2,051,486

$30,113,660
26,207,168

August 31,1870
August 31, 1869

August 31, 1870, the imports

15,916

.

$44,307,658
39,179,058
Eight months ended August 31,1870. 332,142,942
Eight months ended August 31,1869. 326,142,796
It will be seen from this table, that for
Month ended
Month ended

25,000

P
Domesticvalues.) (specie exports,
(specie exports, For. valuesj

Imports.

Periods.

16,089

47,947
25,361

306,010

ing periods of 1809. Mr. Edward Young, Chief
furnishes the following summary of its contents:

1,634,583
21,112,012
19,459,579

301,280,366

226,270,949

the eight months ended

exceeded the exports by only $9,750,of 1869 the excess of imports over

564, while for the same period
exports was $80,412,268.

principal articles
ended August 31,

following are the values of some of the
imported and exported during the eight months
The

1870:
IMPORTS.

$18,381,528; cotton and
of, $11,712,and steel
leather goods,
$7,142,165; manufactures of silk, $17,652,727; brown sugar,
$45,434,322; molasses, $10,879,661; tea, $12,343,027 ; tm and
manufactures of, $7,262,799 ; wines, spirits and cordials, $5,10o,659 ; wood and manufactures of, $6,136,172 ; wool (sheep s), goat s,
and camel’s hair, $3,864,771; manufactures of wool, &€., $2og?Animals, living, $5,104,943; coffee,

manufactures of, $18,015,619 ; flax and manufactures
422 ; hides and skins, other than furs, $9,570,633 ; iron
and manufactures of, $22,647,526; leather and

746,374.
DOMESTIC EXPORTS.

Wheat, $23,322,214; wheat flour, $11,771,247; raw cotton,
$152,525,181; manufactures of cotton, $2,499,532; pefro]p^>
$22,695,904; bacon and hams, $3,539,312; beef, $1,415,580;
cheese, $5,594,120 : lard, $3,773,700; pork, $2,252,758; leaf
tobacco, $11,298,642 ; wood and manufactures of, $9,417,ooy.
The number and tonnage of vessels engaged in the foreigntraa®
which entered and cleared during tho eight months ended Augus
31, 1870, and 1869, were :
-1869,
1870
Cleared.
Entered.
Num.
Tons.
Nnm.
Tons.

3,548.996

American vessels... 10,917

Foreign vessels

10,503

9,243,377

30,03b

The transactions for the

19 259

5,508,051

8,916,270

29,698 9,114,606 29.497 8,893,045 29,103
week at the Custom House and

Treasury have been as follows:
Receipts.
$306,000 00
324,000 00
427,000 00
471,000 00
277,000 00
327,000 00

3,533,616

Cleared.
Entered.
Tons. Num. Tons.
9,844 3,408,219
9,915 3,379,735

Nnm

5,694.381 19,100 5,611.950 19,580 5,513,310

19,119

Custom
House,

Total withdrawn and in bank. $22,154,647

Excess

."

,

8
110

5.17%@5.16%

Hamburg

Total

week

Days.
109%@ 109%
10S%@ 109
@ —,

London bankers
commercial

40% 41%

Union Pacific (estimat). 139,348

74,677
20,803

par.

Commerce and Navigation.—Monthly Report No. 2, of
Bureau of Statistics (current series), is in press, and exhibits
statistics of our foreign trade for the month of August, 1870,
the eight months ended the same, compared with

135%

earnings for the first week of November are as fol¬
1870.

premium.

869,968

made at the Board.

1869.

M4

™

709,874

lows;
1870.

@~-7i
J S6

Total from

10% 10%

*38

® 4 85

106%

42 '

*

™

87,655

4

....

@ 15 65

15 50

coinage)
1@2 p. c. premium.

93%
96

ll @ — 19)*

4
_

Specie thalers
i nV
Mexican dollars..
i
Spanish dollars
2@3 r> o
South American dollars P‘c’

282,313

92

....

46%

Patriot doubloons
American silver (old

—

81.818

*3%
23%

42

16 Off @16 25

Spanish doubloons

"*
—

623,056

•

*91%

5%

3 99 @ 4 00

<f

__

.*;*;*

English silver

Prussian thalers

®

__qr

Total for week.. .122,183
Prev’ly reported.. .077,146

r

*12')% 121%

42%

7 90
8 15

@
®

—

10,363

*

109% 109%
*105
*114
135

10% 10%

7 75
fr'OO

German X thalers
Prussian X thalers
X guilders

•

—

3,884

+

....

Sovereigns
Napoleons

American silver (new).
Dimes and halt dimes *
Five francs....
“
Francs

7,309
15,380

108%

*116%
70% 71
*80
80%

3% 4%
*24% 24%

premium.
-..$4 86 @$4S9
8 84 @ 3 88
4 p. c.

116

108
115

109%

114% 116
135% 136
121
92

122

34
#

118

gold (old Goinage)

25,0S2

“

....

American

36,672
13.526
14,539
27,556
7,201

18% 18%

5%
42% 42%
67%

....

86
87%
131% 182%
22
22%
100% 101%
92% 93
50% 52

22%
101%
93%
51.%
106
105% 105%
78
79%
79%
S9
89%
88% 89%
112% 112% 110% 112%
94
93% 93%
59% 59%
58% 59%
80
80%
S0% 80%

115

*4

68

Nov. !8.
92%

91%

87%
133%

116

85

5

....

67

132%
22%
100%
92%
51%
105%
79%

109%

....

....

Nov. 17.
92% 93%

3*2%
108% 108%

*

This is the price bid and asked, no

Railroad

....

101% 101%

....

A est. On. ‘J'el.

*

101% 102
93% 93%
52
52%
106%
80
80%
89% 90%
113% 114%
94%
59% 60%
80% 80%

117
*118
*72

116% 117
119
*72% 74
*80% 81

*

23
101%
93%
52%
106%
30%
90%

94

80

92% 92%
87% 87%

92% 93
87% 87%

T33
135
*133% 135
22% 22% 22% 22%

136

112% 114%

60

*3%
23%
41%

Am.Merch.Un

<2%
101%
93%
51%
106%
79%
89%

94

Illinois CentrT *137
Mich. Central. “120%
9-2
Morris & Essex

B.»Hart. & Erie
Union Pacific.

94%
52%

91% 92%
86% 87%

*133

Nov. 1*?.

Nov. 15.

Nov. 14.

[November 19, 1370,

CHRONICLE.

THE

654

,

Sub-Treasury.

-Receipts.--

Gpld.
$510,462 a5

Su ,

-

currency.

Payments.-—

Gold.
wm.

Currency.

™
423,932«
235,31.2 82

1,008,617 55
863,784 77

$41?,941 05 $1,069,503 92
1,112,961 13
475,912 10
195,700 67
326,834 61
170,674 49
858,989 74
1,386,553 19 1,439,837 84
560,056 54
268.655 60

1,321,241 50

Total...$$,181,000 00 $8,248,151 67

$4,371,935 83 $8,911,699 56

$8,601*550 84

Not. W..
14..
15..
16..

17..

18..

352,533 43
498,620 69
614.132 88

209,806 41
253,565 73

November 19,1870.]
!!.••••

Nov.

Balance,

61,008,663 63

City
Commonwealth

8,999,835 96

week.»* 3,911,690 66 3,601,550 84
banks.—The following statement shows

the

Associated Banks of New

the

York City for the week

Fourth
Sixth
Seventh

^dLng at the commencement of business on Nov. 12,1870:

Central
Bank of

AYBBAGK AMOUNT OF-

Capital

BlSKB.

Loans and
Discounts.
Discounts.

13,000,000 :19,659,600
2,050,000 5,562.800
3,000,000 6,317,500
2,000,000 5,391,200
1,500,000 4.387.600

fork.
Manhattan.
Merchants
Mechanics.
Kew

Union

America...
Phoenix

Tradesmens

436,400

1,099,800

892,600
542,474

442.900
293.900
1,256,138

3,031,958
2,118,165

1.235,000
j 50o 000

\\\\:..

®,257,495

800,000

,,414,346

Merchants fcxenau^ .
Sationai....

B“tcS; and Traders’.
Mechanics ana i

600,000

ggjig
1,000,000

oc®»“

Mercantile

9,589,000
21,157,593
8,106,600
2,448,722

3.384.200
1,800,740
5,342,610
1.974.200
1,651,145
2,405.000

422,700

PMjgV.'

2,000,000

Srrlc8n.::::::::: i:888:888

i

1,802,000

SS^litan' ”

4,000,000 J0,497,057

«»,ooo

1,495,311

5lS?et

1,000.000

2.762.100
2.627.100

SS
8t

Niches..

Rhoe

end Leather •

Exchange...
Continental.....
Corn

Erne r......
Atlantic
-

.!!!!! LOOO.OOO s.m.m
b^OO'.OOO
..... 1.000,000
2,645,700
8,866,381
• 2*29j®
2,374,000

-

Importers and Traders

,

.

Ameers’

Second National
Ninth National

■

999’999

1,000,000
250,000
2o0,000
1,000,000

Tenth National

Bowerv National

County

German American
Bull s Head

1,522.962

200,000
.00,000
200,000

Stuvvesant
Eleveith Ward

450,302
545,360
787,185
684,076

250,000

Eighth National
American National
s

1,3,55,000
5.540,000
8.533.500
4,468,800
1,122.909
3.929.500
1,041,517
1,233,300
2,189,824

1,000,000
300,000

York N. Exchange*

Germania
Manufactur

11.261.900

1,000,000

First National
Third National

New York

1.230.6CO
17,178,100

500.000
5,000,000
3,000,000
30O*WO

Manufacturers & Mer....
fourth National
Central National

500.00C
200,000
100,000

& Builders

960.800

527,488
5:0,636

1,263,844
632,761
802,578

873,720
311,300
129,047
667,201
260,904

790,851

851,396
1,827,700

5.736.600
5,893,080
6,881,900
861,332
2.721.600
1,387,460
4,954,260

4,598,902
1.797,100
268,424
736,500
298,560
1,2 6,592

596,50-0

2.346.100

173,523

1,421,895
1,961,000
1.110.899
1,609,000
5,049,951
1,143,687
2,077.142
1.696.100
1,093,600

347,060
S02.55S
456,000
1,062,714
302,132
249,418
428,550
457,000
779,100

2.391.500

209,000
701,OCO

1,290,700
2,176,059
2.290.200
1,004,680
1,207,040

646.800
201.320

370,700
220,594
2,25 J-jOOO
4,012,754

825,241

9,074,400
16,213,199
1,081,800

4:37,300

1-25,834
145,148
193,300
162.800

640,865
873,828
607.500

11,000
258,500
959,0C0
677
578,100 2,877,060 13.727.100
145,878 1,870,000
9,850,959
270,000
1.114.500
710,060
73,000
4,568,000
19.100
333,600 8.635.200
195,400
770,800
8.689.900
267.400
713.500
2,600
82,922
5,700
3,400

JgjJ.OOO

North River

987,750
809.0C 0

3 211,480

1,890
4,730
360.000
88,780
98,212
23,404
504,000
221,109
888,398 1,024,071
304,300
35,200
7,999
2,015

1,276,270
1,452,260
300.000
1,138,796
1,500,000 9,433,000
2,000.000 14.785,742
500,000
1,041,409
781,445
300,000
1,150,310
996.800

Mechanics’ Banking Ass.

New

2,335,474

.308:000
400.000

atf

442,813
488,642
258,570
195.700

289.510
150,551
189,853
13,100
750,824 1,910,213
34,413
131,009
62,234
3,978
517,200
171,600
748,800
75.200
810,400
87.900
5,744
61.900
157,565
672,180
70.200
238,000

2,184,884

500,000

747,572

259,.79
456,642
165,187
90,982
631,232
482,000
863,200 963.700
738,371 4,677,920
65,500
900,000
798,620
84,755
480,900
45,700
4,720
19,(360
1,177,283 858,750
139,300
130,200
23,246
5,975
4,000
142,000

1,222,588
4,504,281

St*”!: .jSSSS

331,900
1,841,676

2,965,266
3,850,475
1,482,307
1,679,178
4,502,229
2,108,819
1,355,207
1,646,879
1,117,400
685,244
2,088,689

2.929

943,520
3,254,126

200.000

reSnulV National

1,781,000
6.S22.184

510,000

58,371
11,900

\ 917,900

600,000

8,913.800

1,450

222,275
593,774
5t,5?5
885,031

300 000

910.800
1,658,000
847,600

480 900

414,056
683,611
24,491

5.299,04S

Exchange....

3,653,700
4,767,900

9,800

5.675.601

600,000

^

Fulton*.

Legal

Specie.
tlon. Deposits.Tenders.
$2,542,400 $884,700 $9,440,500 $2,057,200

8,271,385

3,000,000
1,800,000
1,000,000

Net

Circula-

Eighth

908.009

225,000
179,200

1.205,000
1,029,700
1,008,800
251,400
1,014.900
SOS,733
822,200
280,497

8.523.600

6,525
11,600
134,681

1,010,500
1,088,400

1,782,267
1,671,675

*’6,415

1,502
44,670
3,400

110,943
80,476

532,005
511,812
525,187
739,781
920,300
838,925

3,448
250,000
448,350

863,451

196,685

312,455
125,000

17,124,4S982,379,568 196,620,937 53,832,019
The deviations from the returns of previous week are as follows:
Loins
Inc.$2,882,400 | Deposits
Inc. $1,851,221
167,232
Inc 2,224 843 1 Legal Tenders
Specie
Dec..
83.970.200 266,176,366

Total

.

Circulation

The

5,057 1

Inc.

following

are

the totals for a series of
Circula-

Loans.

May

May
May
May
June
Jonc
VUUV
June
Jnnc

7.
14.
21.
28.
4
11.
11.
18
25
.

.

.

275,240,471

tion.

Specie.
81,498,999

33,444,641

.

.

Legal

*

Aggregate

Deposits. Tenders. Clearings.
217,802,218 50,108,922 701,060,926
659,260,160

33,094,113

.

.

217,522,555

219,083,428
219,725,468
234,332,355
233,965,513
227.555,701
220,819,300
215,074,494
205,531,318
201,966,700
290,691,553

57,215,525
5(5,S15,254
53,348,970
53,401,341
53,978,711
54,837,951
52,287,188
61, 76,262
50,353,286

537,223,2^
562.736,402
490,180,96-9

623,349,499
759,349,492
502,709,742
446,059,045
442,693,647

408.195.376

419,420,656
49,730,772 356,552.870
190,852.430 48,072,195 451,930,079
193,4 9,916 49,062,532 419,769,367
191,069,202 49,417,930 441,399,855
191,055,574 51,084,092 375,494,190
187,701,117 50,275,226 455,692,450
187,4S9,715 50 526.279 533,547,310
189,578,983 52,390,812 527.298,874
193,077,798 53,009,099 259,398.843
194,769.71(5 53,999,251 547.219.377
196,620,937 53,832,019 482,051,429
48,959,713

Philadelphia Banks.—The following is the average condition
oMhe Philadelphia Banks for the week preceding Monday, Nov. 14
Capital.

America
Farmers’ & Mech..
commercial
...

Mechanics’.....^.
Bank N. Liberties

.

Southwark

««uameton..

gnnTownsnip...
Western...
Maanfacturers’,...
Commerce..

Consolidation

Loan*.

Specie. L.

4,181,738 55,907
5,012,641 79,056
9,300
2,371,000
3,957
2,346,000
2,000
2,330,000
1.323.300 20,222
-250,000 1,120,999 4,810

1,000,000
2,000,000
810,000
800,000
500,000
250,000

500,000 1,815.418

400,000
570,150
250,000
1,000,000
200,000
200,000




1,256,609
1.568.300

-

883,968

1,000
4,008

4*909

8,453,000 82,000
8,863
1,335,431
1,168,410

913,930
1,103,406
637,000
309,000
601,000
337,100
304,000

190,885.

£37,802
275,000

238,136
744,000

360,912
215,04T

6,900

15,755,150 51,573,301

2,818,985
3,636,248
1,428,000
1,073,000
1,864,000
1,189,500

976,137
910.247
1 S70 521

901,100
6S5.803
2,400,000

717.726

•

568,000 1,735,000
538,000 1,252,000

800,000

790,221 11,818,145 37,110,917 10,781,966

Philadelphia

....

.

.

.

House, Nov. 14,

*750,000 $1,617,864 $19,524
1,500,000 2,780,373 21,211
8,283
Blackstone
1,500,000 2,438,055
7,139
Boston
1,000,060 1,9C 8,469
159
500,000 1,533,242 28,900
Boylston
2,357,330
Columbian...... 1,000,000
6,000
1,990,726
Continental..... 1,000,000
2,582,689 92,666
Eliot
1,000,000
2,692
039,020
200,000
Everett
2,660,954 57,674
Faneuil Hall.... 1,000,000
Atlantic
Atlas

600,000
Globe.
1,000,000
Hamilton
750,000
Howard
1,000,000
Market
800,000
Massachusetts..
800,000
Maverick
400,000
Merchants’
3,000,000
Mount V ernon..
200,000
Freeman’s

New

England... 1,000,000

North
1,000,000
Old Boston
900,000
Shawmut
1,000,000
Shoe & Leather. 1,000,000

2,000,000
Suffolk
1.500,000
Traders’........
600,000
Tremont
2,000,000
Washington ....
750,000
r 1,000,000
First

608,000
474,850
455,000
217,660
228,201
176,470

450*476

953,932

206,052
692,CCO
175,810

799,809

270,000

752,461
139,239
264,000 1,305,078
698,568
183,665
769,282
216,672
826,096
364,925
753,824
162,525
897,647
174,366
448,373
85,571
416,233 1,228,314
614,S93
97,030
192,000 1,333,133
991,050
157.657
585,808
118,285
568,704
89,774
918,140
256,211
256,547
109,402
1,1300,995 4,06(V63
352,197
90,411
895,317
338,232
739,091
236,700
567,712 1,357,322
703,279
37,672
907,819
211,824
399,914 1,557,575

10,000
25,957

1,464.694

7,000
1,S67,105
1,459,745 49,310
1,8-32,835 16,276
12,741
851,294
6.688.381 227,190
2,260
611,119
2,398,185 33,608
2,321,542 29,944

1,988,30'.)
2.207,432

147 179

2,649,814

44,361

31,582

3,920,506 48,048
45,547
3,081,840
1,032,488 29,910
3.282,606 216,639
1,850,(06 36,387
3,690,500 54,968

797,344
444,375
1,094,8:39
630,081
1,174,726
2,662,497
870,781
1,512,057
475,509

390,610
110,361
426.658
75,833
329,534

(Granite) 1,600,000

4,426,262

64,312

760,750

62,867

B’kof Commerce 2,000,000
B’kofN. Amer. 1,000,000

4,556,457

5,085

43,050
570 333

Second
Third

300,000

1,046,595

B’kof Redemp’n
B’kof the Repub.

1,000,000

City
Eagle

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

1,804,256 25,649
4,567,935 90,479
2.845.382
7*,890
1,664,524
1,839,176 10,015
3,748,564 291,859
3.078,205

7.800

Revere....

2,000,000

3,904,007

Security
Union

200,000
1,000,000

2,422,596

21,578
3,217
26,455

Webster

1,500,000

1,500,000

Exchange
Hide & Leather. 1,500.000

592,452

2,983,734

78,133

,

CirculaS
$443,TO?
797,92?

$481,059

$111,49)

1,971

1,477,902
2,549,976

...

332,992
557,949

204,500
250,386100,372

1,008,867
706,664
481,194

673,241

97,469

1,244,594

182,283
348,468

2,425,105

826,513

63,171
265,000

423.428

207,437

1,6S1,147

994,951

789,655
684,678
444,198

791,241
568,558

795,685

99,300

568,441

351,832
359,405
-

240,779

450,000
852,235
378.156

244,069

1,709,185

174,822

799.318
789,537

365,557
595.319
357,969
944,747
676,982
175,645

667,570
596.808
792,012

782,980
173,622
922,113

691,229
797.428
791,750

448,714
328,515
798,266
789,842
389,395
129,6(0
5138,139
469,650

24,864,324

107,274,5672,010,170 11,639,696 44,030,(50
The deviations from the retums of previous week are as follows>:
Loans
Inc. $897,319 1 Deposits
Dec. 120,075
Specie *.
Dec.
34,492 Legal tenders
DvC* 24,824
47,350,000

Total

82,6431
comparative totals for a
Legal

Inc.

Circu ation

The following are

Loans.
June
June

July
July
July

July

Total net

Tend.Deposits.Circulate
Philadelphia..;-.... $1,500,000 $4,850,0001379,000 $1,097,000$3,387,OOG $1,000,000
771,900
North
Banks.

Republic.

State

33,293,080 222,442.319 57,947,005 625,678,321
33,191,648 220,552,920 59.028.306
33,249,818 228,039,345 61,618,676 576,625,528
33,285,083 220,191,797 61,290,310 513,452,66 •
£3,142,188 220,699,290 60,159,170 572,132,054
83,072,613 219,932,852 58,120,211 498,872,680

278,388,314 32,453,906
280,261,077 84,110,935
279,550.743 32,72-,035
279,485,734 30,949,490
576
276,419 U(U 28,523,819
276,089,004 28,895,971
277,017,367 29,228,985
276,496,503 31,611,330
277,783,427 35,734,434
285,377,318 41,135.688
288,090,798 34,258,612
281,839,843 30,263,890
281,182,1 4 26,472,592
273.647,619 24,104,302
275,722,982 2 ,733,346
273,980.974 19,639,384
271,914,145 18,285,629

33,070,365
33,100,357
82,027,786
July 23
32,999,337
33,005,533
July 30.
32.943,144
Aug. 6.
Aug. 13.
32,909,166
Aug. 20
32,839,567
Aug. 29.
32,904,906
3.
32,736,625
Sept. 10. 271,790,731 18,718,309 32,897.168
Sept. 17, 263,408,700 16,517,151 32,750,726
8e -t. 21. 267,087,017 14,070,724 32,733,046
Sept. 30 266,286,001 13,v7v,98l 32,718,199
Oct. 8. 264,981,S29 12,597,641 32,593. <09
Od. 15. 265,275,790 11,610,703 32,067,705
Oct. 22. 265,665,396 11,948,113 32,517,036
Oct* 29 265,979,485 13,103,406 32.120,509
Aw. 6. 283,293.906 14,809,646 32,574.511
Nov. 12. 266,176,366 17,124,439 32,379,568

July 2.
3oly 9.
Jniy 16.

weeks past:

341.

e’ooo

1,000,000 2,108,000

2,G03,000

911,555
450,000
916,000
799,000
261,935
179,000
135,000
919,385
341,000
570,000

The deviations from last week’s returns are as follows:
Legal Tenders,.. Decrease. $289,765
Capital
Increase.
10,328
Loans
Decrease. $41,509 Deposits...*
Increase.
26,309
Specie
Increase . 133.382 Circulation
The annexed statement shows the condition of the
Banks for a series of weeks:
Loans.
Specie. Legal Tend. Deposits. Circulation.
Date.
42,997,076
10,571,585
15,441,522
2...
62,243,057 1,247,820
May
10,563,357
43,429,347
15,S51,265
9...
52,413,398 1,222,629
May
10,562,404
44,038,043
16,244,785
Er 2,234,603 1,164,012
16....
May
10,564,075
44,233,016
16,450,837
23....
12,500,343 1,049,943
May
10,560,378
45,117,172
16,789,102
923.948
30....
52,320,224
May
10,561,684
45,122,720
16,926,682
869,597
0
53,098,534
June
10,567,356
44,957,979
16,702,115
841,569
18....
53,588,2%
June
10,569,859
44,398,340
16,309,340
743,285
20...
June
53,647,408
10,562,882
44,351,747
7 23, *44
15.805.563
27....
54,283,879
June
10,556,277
44,609,623
15,401,749
917,270
4....
55,037.866
July
10,556,100
44,024,172
14,595,069
54,667,170 1,320,947
11....
July
10,553,981
43,835,846
14,223,9S0
54,294,723 1,266,800
18....
July
10.548.451
42,639,473
14.007,749
25....
53,942,152 1,214,046
July
10,563,297
41,943,366
13,472,647
53,725,868 1,162,567
August 1
10,562,197
41,178,654
13,119,176
August 8
53.742,364 1,064,368
10,564,548
39,428,357
12,365,681
781,537
August 15 ....
53,399,190
10,562,196
38,762,424
12,082,008
677,934
52,895.350
August 22
10.559,755
38,160,674
12,304,802
541,676
52,163,288
August 29
10,556,851
38,085,227
12,305,142
511,243
52,088,429
Sept.
5
10,559,446
37,468,821
12.116.563
498,506
52,031,193
Sept.
12
10,561,780
37,224,118
11,795,999
394,166
19
51,673,473
Sept.
10,576,683
37,186,636
11,862,374
341,983
27
51,362,551
Sept.
10,590,482
37,641,365
12,412,731
374,740
3
51,297,626
Oct.
10.691.452
36.808,407
12,286,778
352,643
51.265,457
10.....
Oct.
10,605,792
36,884,940
11,908,306
325,817
51,309,218
17..
Oct.
10,601,119
:.6,6S2,169
12,128,896
292,883
51,235,813
21
Oct.
10,656,17s
37,174.350
12 468,670
361,464
51,507,346
Oct.
10,755,669
37.100,589
IV,077,910
656,839
51,614,810
7
Nov.
10.781,960
37,110,917
11,818,145
790,221
57,573,301
Nov.
of the Boston
Boston Banks.—Below we give a statement
>--*v/******Q
}
National Banks, as returned to the Clearing
Specie. L. T. Notes. Deposits.
Banks.
Capital.
Loans.

4,066,800
2,750,820
376,000

65.100

5,417

Total

938,000

275,000

750,000

354,999

692,626

886,000 1,195,000
395,000 1,338,000
936,000 2,669,000
237 526
913,SCO
744,240
329,000
355,000
137,000
109.160
364,010
664,000
215,000

300,000 1,300,000 45,000
1,000,000 8,441,000 85,000
300,000 1,069,560
734,685
200,000
150,000
480,000
250,000
6S2.000 5,290

Third

$60,345,124 74 $9,770,219 44

18

mNov.
gjiimcex
•

804,959

887,839
190,910

400,000 1,238,845
300,000
903,027 15,000
500,000 1,634,000 20,000

...

Corn Exchange....
Union
First

f64,256,815 30 $13,371,771 28

rjpH« Haring

655

CHRONICLE.

THE

Aug.

Aug.
Aug.

20
27
4

11
18
....
25
1« •*.••
8......
15
22
19
5
7
12....

Aug.
Aug.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept. 19
Sept. 27
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

3....
10....
17....
24

31

Nov. 7
Nov. 14

106,454,436

106,416,987
106,839,304
106,997,278
107,817,458
107,714,221
107,935,376
108,133,260
109,096,614
108,500,573

107,106,644
106,848,334

Specie.
3,397,873
3,177,413

4,298,219

9,186,082
9,332,S5S
8,816,494

5,494,539
5,411,963
4,841,322
4,439,523

8,958,724
8,883,528

4,019,987
3,564,721

8,885,215
9,383,916
9,653,013

2.040,225

.

105,516,641
106,377,248

107,274,667

7,9S3,088

2,864,348
2,626,331

106,537,446

106,7t9,932
106,804.122,.
105,153,206 .

8,331,499
7,564,362

106,697,567

106,711,217

7,897,646
8,362,919

3,153 323

2,409,122
2,324,671
2,182,443

106,855,812

Tenders.

1,886*214
1.568,369

1,450,218
1,569,452
2,044,662

2,010,170

9,848,686
10,314,898
10,250,725
10.121,688
10,918,675

10,939,810

11.584,606

10,557,053
11,689,696

.

-

series of weeks past:
Deposits. Circulation.
38,647,292
25,175,753
25,135,654
38,899,529

40,360,389
40,723,085

40,226,979
29,722,324
38,537,730
39,2(17,033

38,271,247
36,972,703
35,957,745
36,470,515
36,360,263
36,688,104
37,135,31*2
38,265,578
40.938,300

41,588,981
41,696,8i6
42,092,375
44,110,125

44,030,050

25,180,686
25,189,796
25,178,204
25,149,758
25,156,721
25,119,410
25,059,111
25,150,653
25,088,616
25,021,849
25,037,946
24.995,959
24,949,841
24,934,153
24,954,046
24,971,034
24,501,944
25,090,857

34,889,148
34,864,3-74

656

THE CHRONICLE.

[November 19, 18735:

GENERAL QUOTATIONS OF STOCKS AND BONDS.

^

Til© Active Stocks and Bonds given on a Previous Page are not Repeated here.
Quotations
Cent Value, Whatever the Par may be. Southern Securities are
Quoted ftn a

are

made

Separate

STOCKS AND

SECURITIES.

New York Prices.
American Gold Coin

Bid, Ask.

STOCKS AND

Bid. Ask.

SECUBITIES.

STOCKS AND

Bid. Ask.

SECUBITIES.

RAILROAD BONDS.
Boston.
Chic. R. Island & Pacific
98* Old Col. & Newport Bds, 7, *77.
LT. S. GOVERNMENTS.
Morris & Essex, 1st Mort
100 iioi
do
do Bonds, 6,1876.. 95*
do
do
2d Mort
(Not previously quoted.)
Rutland, new, 7
77
....
do
do
113
convertible.,
fa, 1881, reg
Verm’t Cen., 1st M., cons., 7, '86 84*
113*
do
do
construction.
6s, 5-208, (1862) reg
do
2d Mort., 7,1891.
90
106*
35*
Cleve. & Tol. Sinking Fund .. QQ
68,5-208, (1864) reg
Vermont & Can., new, 8
102*
New Jersey Central, 2d Mort. 100* ioi'
6b, 5-208, (1«S5) reg
Vermont & Mass., 1st M.f 6, ’83.
do
do
new bds. 101*!
0s, 5-208, (1865, new) reg
! Boston & Lowell stock
138* *
.....101 HBoston & Maine
6s, 5-20s, (1867) reg
Pitts., Ft. W. & Chic., 1st M...
150
96 | 97
do
2d Mort
do.
08, 5-20a, (1868) reg
149
j (Boston & Providence
dodo
3d Mort. 91*; 93
5b, 1874, cou
152* 153
A Albany stock
Clevc. & Pitts., Consol. S. F’d. ....! 86 1 Cin., Sandusky & Clev. stock. 17*
58, 1874.r«flf
do
2d Mort
do
58,10-40e, reg
98* 100 ’Concord
78
106)4 106*
93
do
STATE BONDS.
do
3d Mort
Connecticut & Passumpsic, pf.
| 96
do
do
4th Mort
Tennessee 6s, old
60
78*: 79
60*
(Connecticut River
do
do new bonds
59* Chic. A Alton Sinking Fund.. ....( 99
j Eastern (Mass.)
121*
do
64
do
1st Mortgage... 102 I
Virginia 6s, old
(Cheshire preferred
90
do
92
do
do
do new bonds
Income
(Fitchburg
Ohio A Miss., 1st Mortgage.... 99* 102
do
do registered old....
50*
(Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette 6*
do
do
do
do
1866....
Consolidated.... 88
(Manchester & Lawrence.. 1
97
do
do
do
18G7....
Dub. & Sioux C., 1st Mort
(Northern of New Hampshire.. i09*
Peninsula RR Bonds
9C
82
Old Colony & Newport
Georgia 6s
97* 97*
St. L. A Iron Mountain. lst4M.
do
7s, new bonds
Ogdens. & L. Champlain
90*
North Carolina 6s, old
IX/ ct.
105* j
Ibb iUU1 t. 8s..
48*
do
do
107"
pref....
do
do
do ’
do Funding Act, 1866.
do
7 3-10
38*
lis"
(Port., Saco & Portsmouth
do
do
do 1868
do
lst'Mort..
Rutland
do
do
do
I. A M. d
do new bonds
do
25*
preferred
78*
do
do
do
do Special Tax
2d M
20
19
Vermont & Canada
103
Chic. & Milwaukeellst Mort...
South Carolina 6s
Vermont & Massachusetts
do
I Joliet & Chicago, 1st Mort....
do
new bonds....
7i*
Philadelphia.
do
do
.0
Col., Chic. & Ind., 1st Mort
April & Oct...
81* Pennsylvania 5s, 1877
103
do
do
Missouri 6s
2d Mort
65
91* 91*
do
Military Loan 6s, 1871 104* 105
do
Han. & St. Joseph. 91
92 - Tol., Peoria & Warsaw, E, D..
88*
do
Stock Loan, 6s, ’72-’77 105* 105*
do
Louisiana 6s
do
W. D..
72*
do
do
6s, ’77-’82
108*
do
do
new bonds
68
do
2dM..
Philadelphia 6s, old
100*! 101
New York & N. Haven 6s
do
98
6s, levee bonds
72
do
6s, new
102*
do
8a
do
Boston, H. & Erie, guaranteed
89* 90
Pittsburg Compromise 4*8. ..
Cedar Falls & Minn., 1st M
do
7s, Penitentiary
75
do
do
5s
74*
California 7s
Detroit, Monroe & Tol bonds.
do
112*
Funded Debt 6s
Lake Shore Div. bonds
Connecticut 6s
101
93*
do
do
7s
do
War Loan
Buflalo & Erie, new bonds
101
Water exten. 7s.
do
95
St. L. Jacksonville A Chic, 1st 92* 93"
Rhode Ialand6s
101
Alleghany County, 5
South Side Railroad bonds.... 85
Alabama 5s
do
do
80'
6s,’85..
North Missouri, 1st Mortgage.
do
8s
87* Belvidere Delaware, 1st M., 6.
do
do
9s Railroad bonds...
do
2d Mortgage. 63
61*
do
2d M., 6.
do
Jefferson RR, 1st Mort. bonds. 90* 91
Arkansas 6s, funded
64*
do
do
3d M.,6.
do
7s, L. R. & Ft. S. iss.
Camden & Amboy, 6 of ’75
do
MISCELLANEOUS BONDS.
7s, Memphis & L. R.*
do
do
6 of’83.....
93*
Am. Dock & Im. Co. 7, ’86
Ohio 6s, 1875
98*
do
do
6 of’89
do 68,1881
Long Dock Bonds
103
do
consol., 6 of’89..
'94*
W Union Tele. IstM., 7 1875..
do 6s, 1886
102*
Cam. & Bur. & Co., 1st M., 6...
100
Kentucky 6s
98
1st M., 7
(Catawissa,
Illinois Canal Bonds, 1870
NEW, OR RECENT LOANS.
100
.Elm. & Wll’ms, 5s
do
6s coupon, ’77
100
! do
do
7s, 1880
Bur. C. R. & M. RR, 1st M,7(gd)
do
do
1879
90
100
Hunt. & Broad Top, 1st M„ 7...
Ches. & Ohio RR, 1st M., 6,(gd)
do
War Loan
90
100
do
do
2d M., 7, ’75...
100
90
Indiana 6s, War Loan
jEv. T. H. & Chic., 1st M. 7s, g’d.
i do
do
Cons. M., 7,’95.

98*|

95*j
39*!

...

I$

'

...

•

•yt>

'3*

T>/J?0

€oV,8-

““

l0* M*. unend.,
J® 2dM„endorsed,6, ;90..
6, ’90.

i?°

Baltimore & Ohio stock

Parkersburg Branch..!!"' 180* l30*:

«

Central Ohio
do

ioi*

§6*

'

Cincinnati.

5s
6s
.!'
7-30s
Cin.. Ham. & D., 1st M.,
do
do
2d M., 7, ’85.
do
do
3d M., 8,77...'
Cin. & Indiana, 1st M., 7..
do
do

7,"80.

do
do 2d M.,7,1817."
Colum., & Xenia, 1st M.,7, ’90.
Dayton A Mich., 1st M., 7, '81.
do
do2d M.,7,’84.
„

do
do
3d M.,7, ’88..
do To’do dep. bds, 7, ’81-’94.

ItiOuisv.&Nash. R, 1st M, cons.,7

100*
Michigan 6s, 1873
do
6s, 1878
100
do
100
6s, 1883
do
7s, 1878
100
New York 7s, Bounty, reg
107
do
7e,
do
cou— 107
do
106
0s, Canal, 1872
do
106
6s, 1878
do
6s, 1874
106
do
6s, 1875
106
do
106
6s, 1877
do
106
6s, 1878
do
100
5s, 1874
do
100
58,1875

107
107

iLake Shore Consolidated, 7...
Montclair RR ol N. J. 7s, gold
Mo. & Mont. RR, 1st M. 8s, gd.
New Jer. South. RR,l6t M.7s..
N. O., Mo & Chat. RR, 1st M. 8s
N. Hav.,Mid. & Wil. RR.7S....I
N. Y. A Obw. Mid. R,lstM.7(gd)
Port Royal RR7s

RAILROAD STOCKS.

(Not previously quoted.)

Albany & Susquehanna
do
Water 6s
94
;
94* Chicago & Alton
93
do
do
Park 6s
do
preferred...
92*
103
do
do
do
Improvement 7s
scrip
101*
Chic# Bur & Quincy
Jersey City Water 6s
90
New York 6 per cent,
88* Clcv., Col.,Cin. A Indianap
*75... 83
Brooklyn 6s

97

—

do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

do
do
do

’76...
’78...
’87...

5p.c.,FL’n’68.

7’s

RAILROAD BONDS.
N. Y. Central 6s, 1883
do
6s, 1887
do
6s, real estate...

Col. Chic. & Ind. Central...

97*
98*

Dubuque A Sioux City
Erie Railway preferred
Hannibal A St. Joseph
do
do
pref..
Hartford A N. Haven

95

78*

89

90

¥

do
6s, subscription.
do
100
7s, 1876
do
7s, conv. 1876— 100*
do
78,1865-76
100*
Erie 1st Mortgage Extended.. 90* 100
96
do 1st Endorsed
98
do 7s, 2d do
1879
88
do 7s,3d do
1883
do 7s, 4th do
80*
1880
do 7s, 5th do
80*
1888
Buff. N. Y. A E. 1st M., 1877....

105"

Hud. R. 7s, 2d M. S. F. 1885

78,3d Mort., 1875
Harlem, 1st Mortgage
do
Con. M’ge A S’kg F’d.
Albany & 8usqtra, 1st bonds..

102

do

do
do

do
do

2d
3d

do
do

do
do

..

2d M. income..
Chic. A N. Western S. Fund...
do
do
do

do
do
do

Int. Bonds
Extn. Bds
1st Mort..

Han. A St. Jo. Land Grants.
do
do convertible
Lack. A Western Bonds,

do
do
2dM..
Tol. A Wab’h, 1st Mort. ext’d.
do
2d Mort
do
Equip. Bds
do
Cons. Convert.
Great Western, l8t M., 1868
do
do

IstM., 1888....
2d M., 1893....

Sulncj A Iowa, 1st M., 1890
1. A So. Tol., 1st Mort
Galena A
do

Chicago Extended
ao




Long Island

Marietta & Cin.,lst preferred
do
do
2d pref....
Morris & Essex
New Jersey
New York A Harlem
New York & Harlem, pref,
New York & New Haven
do
do
scrip
New York, Prov. A Boston...
Norwich & Worchester
Ohio & Mississippi, preferred.
Rensselaer & Saratoga....

Rome, Watertown & Ogdens..
Louis, Alton A T. Haute...
do
do
pref.

do

do

do

do

.

2d Mort,

26

38
39
20

Columbus & Xenia stock

Dayton A Michigan stock....
Little Miami stock

Detroit.
Detroit 7s
do Water 7s
Det. A Mil., 1st M., conv., 7, ’75.
do
2d M., 8,1875...
do 1st M., Fund’d cp, 7, ’75
do 1stM.,(Det.&Pon.)7,’71
do 2d M.,(Det.&Pon.)8, ’86

Louisville.

120

97*

l66*

Boston 5s, gold

96

100* 100*
99

79" Chicago Sewerage 7s
do
Municipal 7s

95"

-

91

Sewer Special Tax 6s

North Missouri, 3d M., 7,1888..
Kansas Pacificist M., (gold) 7.
do
IstM.(gold) 6, ’95
CO
1st M. (gold) 6, 1896..
do
1st M.(Leav.Br.)7,’96

LandGr.M.,7/71-’76
Inc. Bonds, 7, No. 16.

»

7s oi 1864. (-3.2
(too.
10s

do
do

Leading Southern
Securities.

>

River.

9i*;

do

bonds, 7s

>

do

10s

RAILROADS.

^

118*: Orange & Alex. RR 1st M. 6s..
56*
do
do
3d M. 8s..
115* Va. A Tenn., 1st M.6s...
200
do
4th Mort. 8s
111
Charleston* Sav.6s,guar....
124
do
7s
do
90
Greenville & Col.7s, guar.....
do
do
78, certif..
64* Northeastern 1st M. 8s.:
South Carolina 6s (new)
do
do 7s (new)
do
do stock

Georgia, 1st Mort. 7s

do
-stock'
•;•••••••••
Central Georgia, l6t Mort. 7s..
do
stock
do

103

92'

68,1900

Macon A Brunswick end. 7s.
Macon A Western stock
Atlantic A Gulf 7s consol....

Montgm’v A West. P. 1st M. 8s.

83*
92*
71*

Mobile
Ohio sterling
do
do
8s, interest..
do
do
stock
92
N. Orleans A Jacks., 1st M. 8s.
do
cert’s, 8b.
do
N. Orleans & Opelous, 1st M. 8s
Miss. Central, 1st M. 7s
85*
92* iMiss. & Tenn., 1st M 7s
72* East Tenn. & Georgia 6s.......

93

94"

94*

(N. W. Va.) 2d M.6s
3d M. 0s

Ohio, 1st M., 6
22* Marietta A Cin., 1st M.f 7, 1891.
do
do
2d M., 7,1896.
Northern Cent., 1st M.jguar) 0
do 2dM.,S. F..V85.
100
do 3d M., S. F., 6,1900
do fid M, (*,*£>0,7?

26*

do
do
No. 11
do
do
stock
North Missouri stock
Pacific (of Missouri) stock....

New Orleans 5s
do
>
consol. 66

1884

do

Water & Wharf 6s...
Park 6s
Park 6s gold

gold

new

Memphis old bonds, 6s
do
new bonds, 63

1890. Park 6s
Baltimore A Ohio 6s of ’75
do
do
6s of ’80
do
do
6s of ’85
do
do
Central

6s
Water 6s,

Atlanta bonds, 8s
Charleston stock 6s
Savannah 7s, old
do
7s, new

Baltimore 6s of’75
do
do
do

Louis
Jo
do
do
do
do

80

74*

do
do
pref.
Susquehanna A Tide-Water...
Baltimore.
97* Maryland 6s, ’70
do
6s, Defence

95
100

St

San Francisco.
89* San Francisco 6s of 1858. (^

Schuylkill Navigat’n (consol)

...

Wharf 6s

~

do
do

92*

Lehigh Coal and Navigation..

Boston.

Si*

92

Delaware Division Canal

.

83* Portland 6s
Bos., Hart. A Erie, 1st M.(old) 7
do
do
IstM. (new) 7.
Burlington A Mo. L. G., 7
Cheshire, 6
ioi’ Cin., San. A Clov., 1st M., 7, ’77.
Eastern Mass., conv., 6,1874...
do
do
Mort., 6,1888...

96*

Morris (consolidated)
do
preferred

BostonWater Power

84*

83"

ioi"

Lehigh Valley
Little Schuylkill
Mine Hill & Schuylkill Haven.

Northern Central
North Pennsylvania
Oil Creek A Allegheny

do
do

do

94

Phila., German. & Norristown
Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore.
West Jersey
Chesapeake & Dela. Canal

.'.

6s

preferred stock

Louisville 6s, ’82 to ’84
do
6s. ’96 to ’97
do
Water 6s, ’87 to ’89
do
Water Stock 6s, ’97.

St. Louis.

88*

CatawiSBa stock
do

72

(I. A C ) 1st M.,7,1888
June., Cin. & Ind., 1st M.,7, *85.
Little Miaml.lst M., 6,1888.....
Cin, Ham. & Dayton stock...

do
do
common.
Louisville A Nashville

102

Pennsylvania
Philadelphia Erie
Philadelphia A Trenton

Mariposa Gold

do

2d M.,6,1875....

Elmira A Williamsport
Elmira A Williamsport pref..

do
Trustees Certif.....
Quicksilver preferred

92*

'

M., 6,1905.

do

Jefferson., Mad. A Ind. stock..
Louisv., Cin. & Lex., pref

Pennsylvania, 1st M., 6,1^80...
do
do
Phila. &
do
do
do
do

1st

Ind., Cin. & Laf., 1st

L. & Nash, let M. (ra. s.) 7. ’77..
do Lor.. Loan (m.s.16, '86-’87
do
do
(Leb.Br.)8,’38
do IstM. (Mem. Br) 7, ’70-’75:
do l8tM.(Leb.br.ex)7, ’80-’85
do Lou.L’n(Leb.br.ex)6,’98
do Consol. 1st M.,7, 1898....

99

do 1st (nfew) M.,6, ’98.

.!i*

220*

Maine 6s
93*
87* 88* Massachusetts 68, Gold
do
68, Currency...
do
5s, Gold
New Hampshire, 6s
99*

do

Little Schuylkill, 1st M.,7,1877.
North Pennsyl., 1st M., 6,1880..
do
Chattel M., 10,1887.
2d Mortgage, 7
do
do
Funding Scrip, 7...
Oil Creek & Alleg. R., IstM., 7.

...

73

American Express
Wells Fango scrip

I

Ine. M., c,’79

Dayton & West., 1st M., 7,1995.

special tax 6s of ’89.
Jeff., Mad. A I,lstM.(I&M)7, ’81
do
do 2d M.,7,1873.....
do
do 1st M.,7,1906....
Louisv. C. A Lex., 1st M.y7, ’97..
Louis. & Fr’k., 1st M., 6, '70-’78..
Louisv. Loan, 6. ’81.
do
99*!

.

46*

Wilkesbarre Coal
Canton Co
Delaware & Hudson Canal
Atlantic Mall Steamship

June., Phila., 1st M., guar.6, ’82.

(Lehigh Valley, 1st M.,6,1873..

Debentures, 6,’69-*71
Erie, 1st M., 7,1887....
IstM. (gold) 6,’81
1st M. (cur.) 6, ’81
2d M., 7,1885......
90
85
3d M., 6,1920
114* 115
Philadelphia & Reading, 6, ’70.
’-16* 116*
do
do
6, ’71.
114
do
do
6, ’80.
151
152"
do
do
6, ’86.
80
80*
do
Debentures, 6.
do
7, *93.
92" 95*' Phil., do
Wilm.&Bal., 1st M.,6, ’84
48
47*
Westch. & Phil., 1st M., conv, 7.
105
106*
do
2d M., 6,1878...
do
115
114
West Jersey, 6,1833
1
167*
Wilming. & Read.,1st M., 7,1900
Chesa. & Delaw., 1st M., 6. *86..
Delaware Div., 1st M., f>, 78
Lehigh Navigation, 6, ’73
do
Loan of 1884, 6, ’84
do
Loan of 1897,6,’97
131*
do Gold Loan of’97,6,’97
do Convert, of 1877,6, ’77
Morris, 1st M., 6,1876
138
do
Boat Loan, S. F., 7, ’85
Schuylkill Nav., 1st M., 6,1872.
103
do
do
2d M.,6,18*2..
76
do
do Improv., 6,1870..
Camden & Amboy stock
90

St. Louis A Iron Mountain—

Maryland Coal
Pennsylvania Coal
Spring Mountain Coal

8i*

99
93
92

100
aoo
88
90
95

97*

St.

105
106

Del., Lack. & Western, 1st M.

92*
....

MISCELLANEOUS STOCKS.
American Coal
Consolidated Coal
Cumberland Coal

..

2d M. pref

95

85,\

Toledo. Wab & Western, pref.

99*
90*

Mich. Cent., 1st M. 8s, 1882
Chic., Bur. A Q. 8 p. c. 1st M...
Mich. So. 7 per ct. 2d Mort
Mich. S. & N I. S. F. 7 p. c....
Pacific R. 7s. guart’d by Mo...
Central Pacific Bonds
90*
Union Pacific 1st Bonds
81*
do
Land Grants, 7s. 72
do
Income 10s
72*
Illinois Central 7 p. ct., 1875... 106
Alton & T. H., IstM
do
do

100

.

107*
107*
107*
107* Pough. & East. RR, 1st M. 7s, gd
107* So. A Nor Ala. RR, 1st M. 8s, gd
107* St. Jos. A Den. C- R.lst M,8(gd)
West Wis. RR., 1st M., 7, (gd)

CITY BONDS.

90

97*

82-

Dayton A Union, 1st M., 7, ’79
do
do
2d M.,7.’79..

.

,

'

preferred"!!!!!!!

Cincinnati

...

...

92*

.

1

ii*

SECURITIES

*
(gold) 6,1900
Pitts. A
Connellsv., 1st M., 7. ’98
do
do
1st M.. 6
West Md, IstM.,
endorsed,6, ,(jo

^Boston

...

irt+&kSF*xT<

STOCKS AND

112 X 113

1 the

List

87*

Memphis A Charleston, 1st 7s..
do
do
2d 7s..
do
do
stock.

Memphis & Uttle R., l»t M,...

71*

J7ov6n}ber 19. 1870.1

THE

CHRONICLE.

&l)e Railtoag ittonitor.

657

lished in the Chronicle of
October

15, in commenting upon the earn¬
ings of Rock Island, compared with
September of the previous
year, the following
Bff* FTPLANATIO.V OF THR STOCK AND BOND TABLES imate figures of thiswords were used: “A decrease on the approx
1. Prices of the Active Stocks and Bonds ar«
' * 1869, ot $139 064,” year against the ascertained figures of September,
“Bankers’ Gazette” ante; quotations ot other seouriti” wUl be f® nd 0* thJ ^
showing to the most careless reader that the
figures
ceding page.
® pre- for this year were not complete.
_

Tfblea"0,a*,0nS °f SoUtl,er“ SecurlMe, are given in a separate
Jl p®av“^ ,,,S,,ra,,Ce S‘OCks are
“ the Banker.- Gazette
4 The Table of Railroad. Canal

It is the custom of all the
make a statement

raihoads which
report their
close of the

earnings, to
receipts for that month, from all sources. In the month, of the gross
case of
and OtTi*** «#
every road ex¬
cept Rock Island these statements
agree very
on the next page, comprises all Companies of which the stock is sold in
almost exactly, with the
nearly, in many cases
subsequent corrected statements, as
principal cities (except merely local corporations). The figures lltiS f the in the annual
published
reports.
In Rock Island,
of the company indicate the No. of the Chronicle in whiVk i i 8t
name
however, tor some reason un¬
known to us, and f >r which
pany was last published. A star (*) indicates leased roads ; in the dirideVd on?0™'
r=exlra;
x=extra B=stock or scrip.
iU me aivi(lend column an explanation, there has inquiries at the office have never obtained
sometimes been a
k
The Tables ot
Railroad, Canal and Other Bonds amount between
discrepancy of very large
in oil
the figures made
four rages, two of which will be
OCCUpy lu
public at the end of a
published in each number
In
the figures for the same
month, and
these pages**the bonds of Companies which have been
month as
consolidated are
frequently
iriven under the name of Consolidated Corporation.
The date given in brackets report.
This difference is rendered subsequently given in the annual
less apparent
immediately alter the name of each Company, indicates the time at
which the state¬ comparing the
figures in the monthly statements withby the practice of
ment of its finances was made.
In the “Interest Column” the
abbreviations are as figures of last
the approximate
‘ollows • J- & J.=January and July ; F. &
\ ear,
although the true and correct figures for that month
A-=February and August; M. & S.= have
March and September; A. & O.
April and October; M. & N.=May and Novem¬
ioug since been .ascertained and
published in the annual report.
ber. J Si D.=Juue and December.
Q —J.=Quarterly,
This custom oi
beginning with January;
q _Lf.Quarterly, beginning with February.
Q.—M.=Quarterly, beginning with uncertain quantitycomparing an uncertain quantity this year with an
la»t year, is
^The Table of United State* and State Securities will be company, and which renders theone which is not pursued by any other
whole comparison
t)Dhl*i8hed monthly, on the last Saturday of the month.
worthless.
*
The attempted
explanation in the above article is
7. The Table of City Bond* will be published on the third
quite unsatisfac¬
Saturday tory, as nothing could be more easily and
of each month.
The abbreviations used in this table are the same as
those in the
tables of railroad bonds mentioned above.
receipts on account of interest on loans, anddefinitely ascertained than
The Sinking Fund or assets
held by
«ach city are given on' the same line with the name.
$100,000 or $200,000 of
such receipts are
quite as acceptable to stockholders as
of receipts.
any other sort
^The Financial Report* of all principal ? Railroad
and
In
ether Corporations are published in the Chroniclers soon
compiling railroad earnings we have but one
as
issued, give a true and reliable
purpose, which is to
and indexed in the table of stocks on the next
statement, and when any
page, as stated above in statement of
Company issues a
its receipts for a
Note 4.
mcntb, whether approximate or
according to its nethod of keeping
exact,
books.?<fec., we present that state¬
Chicago, Rock I*land & Pacific Railroad
Earning*.— ment with the known figures of the same moa’h last
The Chicago Railway Review, of recent
date, has the following under son, and this is the
year for
the above head:
only intelligible way in which to give a compari¬
son at all.
compari¬
°

„

U.

,

•

_v

,

,

ro the Editors of the

„„i: j„a

i

New York, November 7, 1870.
: You are to be
comm-nded

‘

“

i

*

*

♦

The circumstance that some
C nnpanj
(perhaps
statement of gross
receipts fora pirticuhr month,unavoidably) issues
far above or below
its actual
receipts, is one which we can
hardly feel responsible for, and
the only thing in such a
case is to
publish the figures given, in com¬
parison with the actual
receipts of the cm responding period in the
vious year.
pre¬

Chicago Railway Review

for not. republishing the very incorrect
(so far as the mad above nam< d is con¬
cerned) table cf ‘ earnings for September,’ given bv the
C.-mmbkcial and Fi¬
nancial Chronicle of this
city, and blindly copied by your
railway contem¬
poraries. The false and injurious statement is
made that the
Island A. PatiflcKoad earned
Chicago, Rock
during September, 1S70, but $597,000,
1T16J64 in beptember, 1809,
against
figuring a decrease of $139,001! A similar blun¬
der (I will charitably term it) was made in
the report of the
comparative earn¬
ings for Au-just.
*
*
*
*
*
In h-‘ present
instance, inquiry
aUhe financial office of the
Company would have informed the editor that du¬
ring the months ■ amed there were inc’uded under this head
proceeds of in¬
terest on loans, swelling the
aggregate to about; eight times the
average.
monthly
“It would also have been
ascertained that, instead of a
decrease of
$139,064, in receipts from trafic and
travel, there was, in fact, in
September,
1810, anaclual increase of $18,613 77 over
Septembei',

olroid.”

*

(Signed)

1809,

on

the

shortly after the

same

mileage

Railway Financier.

a

—The Maine Central and
the Portland A
Kennebec railroad com¬
panies of Maine have made
tion of these roads under arrangements for the practical consolida¬

oue
management for greater
ecouomy in
expenses. The plan is to make the
Portland and Kennebec
road the trunk line from
Portland to Kendall’s
Mills, thence branching
off to Bangor and
Main Central road Skowhegan respectively. The broad gauge of the
ia to be
changed to the narrow gauge, to conform
with the other
road, and also to allow a
through connection to
As a part of the
plan the guage of the European and North Boston.
American
railway will also be changed, and the New
Brunswick section of the
line will

working

It woul i be
unnecessary to notice the above article
except for the
fact that it calls the statement of
Rock Island
earnings for September,
as
published in the Chronicle, a blunder, for as to
the evideut impli¬
cation that the
comply with the arrangement. This wi l leave
figures may be intentionallv false we do not think that
no broad
guage railroad iu the State
any of the regular readers of the Chronicle
would/believe such a Central, the Portland and excepting the G and Trunk The Maine
statement.
Keunebee, and the European and North
We have explained this matter
American Railway
of the
companies, will then probably
discrepancy in Rock Island Legislature for an act to
apply to the next
earningB several times, and in the
consolidate them in oue
very article referred to above, pub¬
company in law aa
they will s. on be iu fact.

—Central Pacific
18KG
1M.
(860 m.)

107/1

1870.

(742 m.)
331,568

212,604
218,982

313,325
386,888
521,036
632,025

391,808

485,048

668,270
656,080

f 729,274
| 783,099

1532,657

8511,854

g6>9,788
*579,642
1535 366

.

s

806,040

* 833,412
804,800

§

1410,000

I

1870.
(974 m.)

$587,442 $669,137
$664,587
536,165
524 693

663,391
709,644 644,374
568.282 ' 597,571
»572,561 640,974
626,248 778.260 695,253
759,214
519,714 696,228
163,779 841,863 645,768
861,357
“““

’**VV \rj

979,400
870,584
914,406P 862,171
814,413®

696,677^

1611,6208,823,489
(340 m.)

$276,116
275,139
267,094
279,121
303,342
f 384,564
A 104,012
g 558,100

*486,196

”503.745

1

1869.

(431 m.)

$343,181
315,098
388,726
328,390
345 832

402,854
351,044
493,231
506,623
468,212
397,515
340,350

1870.

(431 m.)
$293,978

Jail...
.Feb...
War...

323,825
344,366
334,653
395,044
411,986
421,485
501,049
498,635
r 463,212

.

April.
.May..
.June.

.July..
.Aug..
.Sept..

.Oct
.Nov

870.

(340 m.)
211,273
231,351 $180,366 $196,787
216,080
*6,905 221,459 218,234
262,149 214,409 253,065
204,619 218,639 270,933
217,082 223,236 f 246,266
194,456 192,364 I 249,987
287,667 275,220 '*>211,219
*7,122 292,803 S 300,971
283,329 328,044 g 818,957
2(4,W 298,027 el53,53l
233,861 254,896 1855,187




....

..

Bee...

1868.
(251 m.)

1869
(251 m.)

$92,433
81,599

$99,541

98,482

104,585

90,298

5,960,936

(25! m.)
90,177 ..Jan
98,275 ..Feb...
101,379 ..Mar..,

..

106,641

95,924

109,752

110.213

117.695

111,117 .Jane.

119,169
121,408

116,198
129,096

142,014
135,376
129,306

106,246

.April.
..May..,

,

111,127

.July...
..Aug
..Sep

118,407
182,998
153,531

..

..Oct....
..Nov...
..Bee....

110,837

1,391,346

.Year...

/-Pacific of Mo.-> Iron Mt.
1869.
(355 m )

1870

278,246
264.273
249,349
184,411

262,515
350,613
829,243
298,708
236,103

3,144,153

267,867
294,874
289,550
283,000
263,328
260,449

343,194
356,677
341,373

1868

1869.

(284 m.)

(284 m.)

$343,890
304,115
326,880
415,758
369,625
325,501
821,013
392,942
456,974
511,820

1870.
.

.

Jan..-

.Feb....
.Mar....

.

113,894
104,019 .April..
115,175
May.,,
116,242 Jane..
107,524 .July...
122,000 .Aug....
124,124 .Sep
127,069 .Oct
.Nov.,..
.

.

.

329.950

353,569
473,546
490.772

1870.

(284 m.)
,

337,992
829,127
380,430

412,03i!
406.283

363,187
826,*91
378,880

423,397

522,683

467,990 ^1024,045
S 1037,463

448,419
374,542

8 556,917
S 468,679

4,570,014

4,749,163

6,517,646

.

.

.

.

.

.Bee...,
.Year,.

$127,594
133,392

149,165
155,388
130,545
140,408

143,986
204,596
196,486
210,473
174,500

157,379

928,302

1869.

1870.

(210 m.)
$132,622
127,817

(222 m.)
$152,392

175,950
171,868
157,397

(210 m.)

172,216
172,347
155,tm
150,719

154,182
144,164

186,883
202,288

204,552
189,334
168,550

2,014,M2

158,788

167,305
175,453

3,128,177

/—Milwaukee ft St Paul.-* /-North
Missonri,186S.
1869.
1870.
1869.
18iu.
(820 m.) (825 m.y
(936 m.)
(404 m.)
(404 m.
$369,228 $451,130. $396,171
$119,721 $218,*)1
321,202
330,233
382,823
94,927
196,207
333,507
420,771
877,000
136,263
239,161
436,412
460,287
443,133
149,p 4
269,400
565,718
630,844
730,700
139,0 0
259,000
458,190
678,800

410,825
390,671

1868

93,160

$384,119
320,636
386,527
411,814
403,646
366,623

*

St. L. Alton ft T. Haute.—r-

(355 m.) (210 m.)

$194,112 $202,447 $102,760
207,302
289.272

*

Michigan Central.

1870.

108,461
95,416
108,413
126,556
121,519
125,065

.—Chicago ft Northwestern—>
—Chic., Bock Is.and Pacific
1868.
1869.
—Clev. Col. Cin. ft I >
1870.
1868.
1869.
1870.
(1 152 m.) (1,157m.)
1869.
1870.
(1,157m.) (454 m.) (520-90m.) .(590m) (390
$724,890
$892,092
m.) '
$706,024
(390m.)
$308,587
$351,767 $401,275 $204,112
807,478
830,286
753,782
201,500
297,464
319,441
850.192
449,6'4
180,840
1,142,165
858,369
218,600
276,431
645,789
500,393 239,522
1,094,597
1,112,190
929,077
244,161
301.952
388,385
443,300 247,061
1,211,149 1,268,414
1,177.897
246,046
316,708
449,932
507,990 241 456
1,180,932 1,251,950
1,154,529
260,169
378,436
( 523,841
529,512 259.408
1,076,673
1,157,056
274,021
1,080,946
341,885
,1455,606
462,400 253,367
1,251,940
1,037,973
1,246,213
249,355
668,380
« 632,652
1,507,479
556,100 339,610
1,805,672
1,275,171 ^558,386 £ 736,604
319,012
597,600 825,854
1,570,066
1,371,780
317,887
*591,209 1584,155
1,107,083
306,764
1,140,145
g 424,589
X479,236
1,001,986
273,305
845,708
S 433,434
1393,468
256,272
13,429,534 13,355,461
4,797,461
.

.Year..

-Marietta and Cincinnati-

1,294,095

—Ohio ft Mist
1869.
(340 m.)

**

4,508,642 4,681,562

—Wineis Central.

1868.

1868.

1361,700

5,749^595

^448

i OHO

(280 m.)

V409,568

[

1868.
1869.
862 m.) (862
m.)

MONTHLY EARNINGS OF
PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.
Chicago and Alton.

586,342
525,363
724,514
1,039,811
801,163

oeo

9

1868.
(523 m.)

$278,712

26'.136

257,799
286,82 r.
2U*52f
344

283,
4(4,208
4li0,203

429,898
323,279

399,438

150,416

208,493

160.149

396.724

155,586

229,099

231,662

908,313

264.690

234,962

96,550

*.25‘\668

Toledo, Wab.
i

755,737
636,434
661,026
808,318

e-

Western.

ionn

1869.

4 pm.

1870.

(521 m.)
$284,192

(521 rn.)

240.394

>—Union Pacific—
1869,
1870.
(1053 m.) (1088 m

293,645
295,298
818,699

342,704
311,832
312,529
348,890
810,800
460,246
470,720

422,368
823,378
434,283

275,000

340,892
848,632

591,420

322,756

528,52
600,18
589,23
-680,97

623,559
617,585
758,467

466.431

508,042
451,293

802.580

706,602

748,450
643,058
664,050

728,525

1,057,382
837,388
716,828

4,913,900

•

•••

MM

?

•

«*.»

[November 19,1870.

CHRONICLE

THE

AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Subscribers will conferva great favor by giving ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In
RAILROAD, CANAL,
»
...

For afall

Isi

Out¬

on

the pre¬

Periods.

paid.
Rate.

Date.

60
50

No. 255

preferred
50
Cedar Rapids and Missouri*
100
do
do pref.
Cent.Georgia* Bank. Co.No.243100
Central of New Jersey, No. 270. .100
Central Ohio
50
do

_

50

do
preferred
^harlotte,preferred
Col. & Aug.,
Cheshire,
_

No. 257. 100
—
Chicago and Alton. No. 248
100
d'o
do preferred 100
Chic., Burling. & Quincy. No.268.100
„

Jan. &

July
Mar., ’70

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

July, ’70
June, ’70

1.159.500
2,200,000 May & Nov
5,432,000
May & Nov
4.666.800 June & Dec
15,000_,000 Jan. & July
2,425,000 June & Dec
400,000 June & Dec

and

Chicago and Northwest.

™

No. 258* .100
do
Yarmouth stock certiflclOO
Portland, Saco & Ports No. 276.100
Providence & "Worces., No. 247..100

2,085,925 Jan! &* July
7,045,000 Mar. & Sept
2.425.400 Mar. & Sept
16,590,000 Mar- & Sept
1,000,000 Jan. & July
14,676,629 June & Dec,
20,370,293 June & Dec
16,000,000 April & Oct
3,500,000 April* Oct

July,* ’70

3*

’70
*70
’70
’70

June,
July,
June,
June,

Sept., 70 '
Sept, ’70
Mar., ’70
July,
Dec.,
June,
Oct.,
Oct.,

*70
*69
*70
*70
’70

May,’’70

Aug.!’’70

Nov., ’70
Nov., ’70
Oct., ’67

Nov’.,”’70

’70
’70
’70
*70

July,
Aug.,
July,
Oct.,

July,’ "’70

July, ’70

Dec.*, *69

„

July,
Juiy,
July,
July,
Nov.

’70
’70
’70
’70

,”’70

July, ’70
Feb., ’66

_

„„

50
50
50

Lehigh and Susquehanna

wYalle^v"0' 255
Little Miami, No. 247

17.716.400

Quarterly.

3,572,400 Quarterly.
2.646.100 Jan. & July
Little Schuylkill.* No. 255....”" 50
’ 50 3,000,000 Jan! ’&* July
Long Island, No. 252
848,700
Louisv., Cin. & Lex., prf No. 276 00
common
do
50 1,623,482 Jan. & July
8.681.500 Feb. & Aug
Louisville and Nashville No. 279100 2,800,000
Louisville. New Alb. & Chicago. 00
Jan. & July
Macon and Western
100 2,500,000
Maine Central
100 1.611.500 Mar. & Sept
8,130,719
Marietta & Cin., 1st prf. No.’250’l50 4,460,368 Mar. & Sept
do
2d pref..150
do
do
do
common .. 2,029,778
May & Nov
Manchester & ^awrence, No.247.100 1,000,000 June & Dec
5,312,725
Memphis and Charleston. No.278.2£ 13,225,848 Jan. & July
Michigan Central. No.267
100 7.665.104 Jan. & July
Milwaukee and St. Paul. No. 25S100 9.744,268
January.
do
do
nref
100 3.856.450 Jan. & July
Mine Hill &Sch IIaven*No.255. 50
Mississippi Central*
100 2,948,785
1.738.700
Mobile & Montg. pref No*.*2i6 *
Mobile and Ohio. No. 259
'*100 4,269,820 June & Dec
Montgomery and West Point.. !l00 1.644.104 Jan. & July
Morris and Essex,* No. 250
50 7.880.100 May & Nov
720,000
Nashua and Lowell, No, 247.... 100
2,056,544
Feb’.’& Aug
axTtan,0n2ga
Naugatuck. No. 195
100 1.818.900 Jan. & July
500,000
New Bed. & Taunton, No/247!! !l00
1,500,000 Jan. & July
New Hav. & Northamp., No. 247100
Feb. & Aug
New Jersey, No. 260
100 6,250,000

No-220’-100
*'*

scrip

?re^-L^ndon.IidrthernR..No.252.100
No. 243.! 100
N. Y. Cent. & Hudson

493,900
1,003,500

Jan. &

July

45,0.0,000 April & Oct
44,600,0:0 April & Oct
6,500,000 Jan. & July
1,500,000 Jan. & July
9,000,000 Jan. & July

do „ certificates..100
d£
York and Harlem. No. 197 50
50
do
do pref.
5* Y., Prov. and Boston No. 229.100 2,000,000 Jan. & July
& NewHaven.Na2tt.100
N.
300.500
Norfolk and Petersburg, pref.. .100
137.500 Jan! & July
do
do
guar. .100
New
__

^

d°
do ordinary
North Carolina. No. 267
.100
w

Northern of N.H’mpehire,No257100
50
Northern

Central.No.24$.....

Northeast. (S. Carolina).

NorthMissouri,

No.20i

No.259?!JOi

North Pennsylvania
Norwich & Worcester

* No. 247*100

fco.275... .100

nref 100
I&...!l00
ioo
*ii9fe,03c « Newport No. 7.100
Allegheny River! ro
M Colony




5,000,000

June &

Dec

May &

Nov

Sept. ’70
July, ’70
July, *70
Aug., ’70
Aug., ’70
Oct., *70
Oct., *70

3K
2X

Virginia and Tennessee
100
do
do
preif....,100

Sept.,’67

Jan., ’66

Aug! ,”’70

May, ’67
Oct., ’70

Sept., ’70
July, *70

Aug., ’66
July, ’70

Aug! ,”’70

July
July

3,051,800
2,000,000 April & Oct
19,944,547
8,810,705 June & Dec
4459.450 Quarterly.
4403490 Jan, A July

Feb.

Feb., ?70
July, *70

Dec., ’67

July, ’70
Nov., *70

Feb.’,’ ’’70
July, ’70

Aug’.,’ ’70
July,’*70

Oct., ’70
Oct., ’70
July, ’70

July, ’70
July, ’70
July, *70
July ,”’70

April*’70

Dec., ’70
Nov., *70

Aug., *70

Juy, ’70
Oct., ’70

June’,'"TO

Oct., *70

J

7.19

”i^
8
3

3

(g’d)
5

8*

‘Y

’69

July,’ ’’70
Jan., ’70

11-38

May, ”’70

3X

July, *70
June, ’70
Jan., ’69

Jan. & .July.
Jan. & July
Feb. & Aug.
Jan. & July

Jan., ’61
Aug., 70

July, ’70

Canal.

50
25
50
Delaware and Hudson
100
Delaware and Raritan
100
Lehigh Coal and Nav.,No. 256.. 50
MonongahelaNavigation Co.... 50
Morris (consolidated) No. 254... 100

Chesapeake and Delaware
Chesapeake and Ohio
Delaware Division*

1,175,000 Feb. & Aug.

pref.

Feb!, ’’67

2,002,746
2,907,850
1,100,000 Jan.’& July.

Tl 11 -Water

Jan., ’65

1,500,000
2,500,000
500,000

Mar. &

Sept.

June &

Dec.

2,000.000

Jan! & July

Feb. & Aug.
2,888,977 Feb. & Aug.

50
50

Union, preferred
West Branch and3>u'quehanna.

50
25
Cameron
Central
100
Consolidation Mil
100
Cumberland Coal & Iron.... 100
Pennsylvania
50

Ashburton
Butler

,

.

10

100

WilResbarre

100
25

Wyoming Valley
Gas.—Brooklyn
'

20
50
Jersey City and Hoboken... 20
Manhattan
50
100
Metropolitan
New York
50
50
Williamsburg
Citizens
Harlem

(Brooklyn)

16W[

Improvement—Canton
Boston Water

100

Power

Brunswick City

Mar., *70

Dec.',’ ;69
July,’ '69

100
100
100

United States
Wells, Fargo &

Co
100
Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
100
Pacific Mail, No. 257
100
Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25
National Trust
New York Life and Trust..
Union Trust
United States Trust

100
.100
100
100

Mining.—Mariposa Gold
100
Mariposa Gold, pref
100
do
do Trust, certif. ..

100
100

Quicksilver preferred
common
do

N. Y. &

500,000

Aug.,’ 70
Jan., ’70

3,200,000 Quarterly.
1,250,000 Jan. & July.
1,000,000
3,400,000 May & Nov,

Nov.,*69
Ang., ’66
Aug., ”70
Jan., 70
Aug., ’70
July, 70

1,250,000 Feb. & Aug.
Feb. &
Jan. &
Feb. &
386,000 Jan. &
4,000,000 Jan. &

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

Aug.
July.
Aug
July
July

July, *70

2,800,000
1,000,000 May & Nov.
750,000 Jan. & July

May, ’70

July, ’70

731,250

July, ’66

4,000,000

10,000.000
18,000,000
6,000,000
5,000,000
4,000,000
20,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
2,836,600
8,693,400
2,824,000
4,800,000
5,700,000

BROOKLYN CITY

Quotations by Geo. K.
NAME OF

Jan.’, ’70

PAR

ROAD.

TOO
•

w

100
100

Nov., ’69

Quarterly.

Dec.,

Quarterly.
Quarterly.

July, ’70
July, ’70
Feb.,

Bushwfck (Brooklyn)
Central Park, North & East
Coney Island (Brooklyn).

& ioo

Rockaway Beach...

July.

o

STOCK.

900,000
200,000

100
100

fe 100

400,000
254.600
144.600
262,200

LAST

June,

1870.

July!’1870!

* ioo 1,065,200
® ioo
500,000
r ■g ioo 1,200,000 ,May
Battery 2 ioo 1,000,000

Rivers

’70! quarterly.
May Ho’.s’smi-an’l...

748.000
Forty-second St. & Grand St.Ferry ■§ ioo 170,000
a 100
Grand Street & Newtown (B’klyn)
$ 100 106,700
Hudson Avenue (Brooklyn)
fc-100 194,000
Metropol i an (Brooklyn)
g, 100 797,320 July. ”10,
Ninth Avenne
S’ ioo 881,TOO

S«'!»nd Avenue
SIi' "lAvenue
Th

Avenue

Va

runt Streets

’70

juiy, 22
July, ’70

Jan.<& July.
Jan. & July.
Jan. &

’67

Sept.,’69

Jan. & July.
Jan. & July.
Feb. & Aug.

2,100,000
100 1,500,000

*!

Dock, East B’dway &
Eighth Avenne

July, ’70

& July.

PASSENGER RAILROADS
City Securities, 24 Nassau Stree.. ^
DIVIDENDS PAlD^

Brooklyn City
Brooklyn City and Newtown
Brooklyn, Prospect Park & Flatb.

Dry

Dec.V’70

Quarterly.

Jan.

Slstare, Broker in

Bleecker street and Fulton Ferry.
Broadway (Brooklyn)
Broadway and Seventh Avenue ..

Brooklyn and

85cts.

10,250,000

50

Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill

prices

Feb., ’67

Miscellaneous.

Coal.—American

prevtaiouhsguliyot&.oenn

fbouwnedil;

Feb .’,”’70

4,800,000
1,908,207

25

Navigat'n tconsol.)*.

do

Susquehanna &

Aug.,’70
Aug., ’70
Mav, ’67
July, ’70

50
50
50
50

Pennsylvania
Schuylkill

Aug., ’70

•Tan. & July.
Feb. & Aug

728,100

1,025,000

100

preferred...

do

1,983,563 June & Dec.
8,229,594
1,633,350 Fcb’.’& Aug
15,000,000 Feb. * Aug.
4,909,400 Feb. & Aug.
8,739,800 May * Nov.

Express.—Adams
Amer. Merchants’ Union

Feb., ’70

5
5
5
4

Aug., *70

Sept’.! ’66

June, ’69
July, *70

”4'

July, ’70
Aug., ’70
Jan., ’70

Jan. & July.
Telegraph—West.Union. No. 277.100 41,063’,100 Quarterly.
Pacific & Atlantic
....
25 8.000.000

Nov!,'’70

>

May, ’68

July, ’70

Sept.,’66

”4’

July, ’70

Feb.,’70

Feb., ’70
Jan. &
Jan. &

555,500

•

100 2,227,000
;.... 50 1,209.000
Worcester and Nashua, No. 247.100 1,550,000

Western (N. Carolina)
West Jersey, No. 250

Jan., ’68
Aug., ’70

155,000 May * Nov

7.771.500

1,500,000
2,000,000 Jan.-ft Ju’y.
3,000,000 Apr!
Oct.
4,000,000
847.100
3,000,000 Jan. & July.
3,000,000
1,831,400 Feb. & Aug.
2,300,000
2,040,000 Annually.

245..100
100
100
Haute. 100
do
do pref.100
do
10,000,000
St. Louis & Iron Mountain
2,478,750
St. Louis, Jacksonv. & ChicagoMOO
905,222
Sandusky, Mansfl’d & NewarkMOO
Schuylkill Valley,* No. 255
50 576,050 Jan. & July.
869,450 Feb. & Aug.
Shamokin Valley & Pottsville* . 50
685,200
Shore Line Railway
100 5,819,275 Jan. & July.
South CarolinaNo. 243
50 1,865,600
South Side (P. & L.)
100
Feb. & Aug
South West. Georgia.* No. 220..100 3,939,900
1,814,130
Syracuse, Bingh & N. Y,No.252.1O0
1,988,150 Jan. & July.
Terre Haute and Indianapolis .. 50
Peoria & "Warsaw
100 2,700,000
Toledo,
do
do
E. D., 1st pref.100 1,700,000
W. D.,2d pref.100 1,000,000
do
do
Toledo, Wabash & West.No.255.100 14,700,000
do
do
do pref.100 1,000,000 May * Nov.
86,745,000
Union Pacific
1,666,000 Jan. & July
Utica and Black River, No. 252..100
& Dec.
Vermont and Canada*
100 2,500,000 June& July.
2,860,000 Jan.
Vermont & Massachu., No. 247. .100
2,950,800

July, ’70

898.950

50 3,150,000
2*863,700

Ogdens. & L. Champ.*
da
do
•bio and Mississippi. No.
■V, .do
pref.
do
_

1,361,300
4,000,000
3,068,400

June & Dec.

Rutland,*No. 248
do
preferred
St. Louis, Alton & Terre

„

do

Rate.

April,’70
June, ’70
July, ’70
Oct., ’70

202.400 April & Oct.

Rensselaer & Saratoga, No. 252 .100
Richmond and Danville No. 235.100
Richmond & Petersburg No.235.100
Rome, Watert. & Ogd., No.

Feb!,’’70

...

.

Date.

Portland & Kennebec,

May,’ ’’70

Nebraska*. .100
No. 273.100
do No. 263... 100
pref....l00
«w.do-r,
Chic..Rock Is. & Pac.
Cin.,Hamilton & DaytonNo.263.100
382,600
Cin., Richm. & «hicago*No.263. 50 2.967.800
Cincin., Sand. & Clev., No. 278.. 50
428,646 May & Nov
do pref. 50 1,676,345
.
Cincinnati & do
Zanesville, No. 216 50 10.460.900 Feb. & Aug
Clev.,Col.,Cin.&Ind. No. 253..100 2,056,750 May & Nov
Cleveland & Mahoning,* No. 247. 50 7,241,475
uarterly.
Cleveland and Pittsburg. No. 255 50 11,100,000
uarterly.
Colurm, Chic. & In. Cen>No. 247.100 1.786.800
jiarterly.
Columbhs and Xenia*
50 1,500,000 May & Nov
Concord
50
850,000 Jan. & July
Concord and Portsmouth
100 2,084,200 Feb. & Aug
Conn & Passumpsic. pf. No. 281..100
Jan. & July
Connecticut River, No. 247
100 1,700,000 April & Oct
Cumberland Valley, No. 255
50 1.316.900
2,400,000
Davton and Michigan* No. 263.. 50
1,107,291 Jan. & July
50 16.277.500 Jan. & July
Delaware*
Delaware, Lack. & West. No. 255’. 50
452.350
Detroit and Milwaukee, No. 249. 50 2,095,000 December.
Jan. & July
-do
do
pref
50
100 2.142.250 Jan. & July
Dubuque and Sioux City*
1,988,170
d°
do pref...100 4,033,000 Jan. & July
Eastern (Mass.), No. 247
100 1.309.200 Jan. & July
50 3,192,000
East Pennsylvania, No. 255
East Tenn. Va. & Geor, No. 274.100
500,000 May & Nov
Elmira & Williamsport,* No. 255. 50
500,000 Jan. & July
do
tio
pref.. 100 70,000,000 Feb. & Aug
50 8.536.900
Erie. No. 252
do preferred
100 999,750
Erie and Pittsburg, No. 255
50
Jan. & July
Fitchburg, No. 247.
100 8,540,000 Jan. & July
4,156,000
Georgia. No. 259
100 3,000,000
Hannibal and St. Joseph No 241100 5,000,000
do
do
pref....100 3,300,000 Quarterly.
Hartford A N. Haven, No. 225.. .100 3,000,000
do
scrip....190 2,000,000 Jan. & July
do
100
Housatonlc, preferred
615.950
Huntingdon and Broad Top*.... 50
212.350 Jan. & July
50
do
do pref. 100 25.273.800 Feb. & Aug
Illinois Central. No. 248
6,185,897 Mar. & Sept
Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette!! 50 2,500,000 Jan. & July
Jeffersonville, Mad. & In.,No.227100 1,335,000
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 35,000.000 Feb. & Aug
Lake Sho.& Mich. South. No. 255.100 8,739,800 May & Nov

Chicago, Iowa

paid.

Periods.

ing.

100 2,488,757
482.400
252. 50 3,711,126 Feb. & Aug. Aug.,’ ’70
100 7,000,000 Jan. & July. July, ’70
100 33,498,812 May & Nov. Nov., ’70
Pennsylvania No. 244
50
Jan. & July.
Philadelphia and Erie,* No. 255. 50 6,004,200 Jan. & July. July, ’70
do pref
50 2,400,000 Jan. & July. July, ’70
do
Philadelphia and Read. No. 242. 50 29,023,100 Feb. & Aug.
Aug., *70
Philadel., & Trenton,* No. 255.. .100 1,099,120
Oct., ’70
Phila..Ger.& Norris.,* No.255... 50 1,597,250 April & Oct.
July, ’70
9,520,850 Jan. & July.
Philadel., Wilming. & Baltimore 50
1,793,926
Pitteb. & Connellsville, No. 255.. 50
2,428,000
Pittsb., Cin. & St. Louis, No. 255 . 50
do
pref. r>0 3,000.0- 0
do
do
Oct., ’70
19,665,000 Quarterly.
Pitts., Ft.W.&C.guar*. No. 249.100
Jan. ’70
581.100 Jan. & July.

„

.

a

Orange, Alexan. & Manass
Oswego and Syracuse,* No.
Pacific (oi Missouri) No. 256
Panama, No. 275

100 16,267,962 April & Oct Oct., ’70
250
100 1,650,000 April & Oct Oct., ’70
Washington Branch*
100 7,239,533
Parkersburg Branch
50 600,000 Quarterly. July!’’70
’70
Berkshire, No. 247
100 19,411,600 Jan. & July July, ’70
Boston and Albany, No. 247
100 800,000 May & Nov May,
Bost., Con. & Mont. No. 273
100 25,000,000
July,’ ’70
Bosont, Hartford & Erie.No. 247.100 2,215,000 Jan. & July
Boston and Lowell, No. 247
50G 4,471,000 Jan. & July July, ’70
Boston and Maine, No. 274
100 3,360,000 Jan. & July July, ’70
June,’70
Boston and Providence, No. 247.100
950,000 June.& Dec
Buffalo, New York and Erie*.. .100 1.252.500
Burlington and Missouri River .100
380,500
pref.100 5,000,000 Feb. & Aug, Aug.,.’70
do
do
Camden and Amboy No. 250
100 937,850
do do scrip of joint Co.’s ’69 &’70
877,100
Camden and Atlantic, No. 251... 50
731,200
July, ’70
do
do preferred.. 50
721,926 Jan. & July,

Augusta and Savannah*
Baltimore and Ohio, No.

„

Last

stand¬

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

For

PAR

Railroads.
r
2.241.250
Allegheny Valley, No. 251
3.691.200
Atlantic and Gulf
100 2.494.900
Atlan. & St. Lawrence* No. 225.10C 1.232.200
Atlanta and West Point. No. 279..100
733.700

Cape Cod
£ atawlssa,*

onr Tables.

DIVIDEND.

Stock
Out¬

Last

stand¬
ing.

explanation ofthistable,

Railway Monitor,
ceding page.

see

COMPANIES.

DIVIDEND.

Stock

COMPANIES.

.

...

H 100
100
100

750,000 May *70,
May

70

quarterly..
quarterly-*

seml-an l....

2h

H

a

W

&

o

I
CS
S

HH

td

C*
CD

•-t




is

Q

H

i—i

ts

W O

O

5zS

m

lr*

H

THE

660

CHRONICLE.

[November 19, 1870.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
Subscribers will confer a great favor by giving us Immediate notice of any error discovered In
Pages 1 and 2 of Bonds will be published next week.
COMPANIES, AND

COMPANIES, AND CHARAC-

CHARAC¬

TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED

INTEHE8T.

TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED Amount
Out¬
For a full explanation of this standing
Table see “ Railroad Monitor”
on a preceding page.

When

Rate.

Where

paid.

paid.

Princpal payble.

preceding

Tabl

ea*

I

INTEEEST.

.

iAmount

For a full explanation of this’gtandimr
Table see “ Railroad Monitor”
*
on a

our

q3

When

oa

page.

paid.

P?

Where
paid.

Railroads :

Railroads:
Mobile A Montgomery
1st Mortgage

(May 1/69):
1,200,000

8

M.& N.

New York

s

M. & S.

New York

1886

5.000,(XX)
3,000.000
(XX),000

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

N.
A.
J.
A.

New York

2,00>,000

7
7
7
7

1914
1891
1900
1889

1,546,000

6

J. & J.

New York

Morris A Essex (Jan., ’70):
1st Mortgage, sinking
2d Mortgage
Convertible bonds
Construction bonds

fund

hiashv. AChattanooga(Ju]y 1/69):
1st Mort., endorsed by Tenn —
Nashville A Decatur (Oct. 1, ’68):
1st Mort. (State loans)
2d Mortgage
Income (Tenn. & Ala.)

6
6
10

146,700

7

J. & J.

Bridgep’t.

1876

New York

1887

.7

J. & J.

New York

.1889

7

M.& N.

N. Haven.

1888

1,000,000

7
6

J. & J.
A.&O.

N. Haven.

1899
1880

400,000

New Jersey (Jan. 1 ’70):
•

!

(Del. & Rar. Bay)
1st Mortgage, tax free
New London North. (Jan. 1, ’70):

7

300.1XX)
450,(XX)
1UU.0U0

b

2,000,000

1st Mort.. extension
Convertible Bonds

A. Orl..J.AGt. North. (Feb.. ’70):
1st Mort. for $3,000,000 (1856)...

hew York Centr al (Oct. 1, ’69):
Premium Sinking Fund

41

2.741,000

8

5,946,689
1,514,(XX)
592,000

6

N. Y.&Lon
New York

1886
1890

New York

1883
1876
1883
1883
1887

162.000

6
6

6
7
6

M.& N.
F. & A.

New York

1,767,000
1,059,500

6

A.&O.

New York

it
it
i

l

1, ’69):

1st-Mortgage of 1853
Consolidated Mort. of 1863
New York A N. Haven (Apr. 1,
1st Mortgage .. .*.
N. Y. A Oswego Midland:
1st Mort. (gold)

44

1873
1893

O

'70j:
20,000p.m

York,Prov.A Bost.(Sep.l ’69):
1st Mortgage

7

J. & J.

194,000
1(X),(XX)
250,000
439,00)

6

7
6
7

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

7
8
8
8

•T. * J.
J. & J.
J. & J.
J. & J.

1875

Extension
New Bonds 1869

Norfolk A Petersburg (Oct. 1, ’69):

1st Mortgage
1st

Mortgage

Funding Mortgage

Id Mortgage for $500,000
North Carolina (April, ’70):
Mort. Bonds (various) ’67-’63...
Bonds of 1857
Northeastern (March 1, ’70):
—

.

..

\orwich A Worcester (Dec. 1, ’69):
1st Mort. (Mass, loan) s’k’g fund
Construction Bonds

Ogdensb: A L. Ch/im. (April, ’70):
Equipment Bonds (tav free)....
Ohio A Mississippi (April, ’70):
1st Mortgage (E. Div.)
1st Mortgage (W. Div.)
2d Mortgage (W. Div.)
Income Mortgage (W. Div.)

...

)

Consol.Mort.ster £ *or *6>800-ttX.
Oil Creek A Allegh. R. (Feb., ’70):
1st Mortgage
Old, Colony A Newport

(Feb., ’70):
Company Bonds
Company Bonds
Company Bonds
Orange, Alex.AManas.l Oct.l/69):
1st Mort. (O. & A. RR.) ia59
2d Mort. exten. (O. & A.) 1855.
..

3d Mort. exten. (O. & A.) 1858
4th Mort. exten. (O. & A.) i860
1st Mort. (O., A. & M. RR) 1867
Va. Loan (34y’rs) s’k’g Pd, ’58-9

Osage Valley (Jan. 1, *70):
1st Mortgage, 186-1 (5-20 years)

.

Oswego A Rome (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Income Mortgage

Oswego A Syracuse (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

°adflc of Missouri (Mar. 1, *70):
1st Mortgage (gold)
Mortgage Construction Bonds
Manama (Oct., ’70) :
1st Mortgage, sterling
2d Mortgage, sterling
General mortgage, sterline...,
Paterson A Newark (Jan. 1, ’69):

Mortgage, guaranteed

Pennsylvania (April,’70):
1st

Mortgage (Penn. RR.)
Mortgage (Penn. RR.)




a
a

1877
1877
1872
1893

8
8

M.& N.
M. & S.

ShoijsN.C.

£ OO
H OO O T-

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

Charlest’n

108,048

7
7
7

1869
1868
1875

6,000,000
4,(XX),000
5,000,000

7
7
7

J. & J.

New York

A. & O.
A. & O.

s'ew Yor..

2,275,000
360,(XX)
8 i 1,500

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

6

10
7

1,500,000

((
ii

ii

Philadel.
it
ii

1885
1877
1896

Annapolis

J. & J.
A.&O.
•T. & J.
J. & J.

Baltimore.

1,874,000

6
6
6
6
6

Irred
1885
1900
1877
1900

6

A. & O.

Boston.

400,000

7

J. & J.

New York

400,000

6

Boston.

124,500

7

J. & J.
J. & J.

1,779,(XX)
1,223,000
500.000

500,000

Q.-J.

J. & J.

8

2.050,000
850,000

537,000
221,500
2,758,(XX)
105, (XX)

44

ii

New York

1874
....

1877
1877
1879

London.

1872
1872
1874
1882
1898
1898

Philadel.

18..

Boston.

1877
1875
1876

New York

O.

J.
J.

....

7
6

4IX),(XX)
1,130,500
573,500
331,700
708,(XX)
249,962

44

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

7

1,388,(XX)
458,000
1,000, (XX)

J.
J.
J.

er

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

7
7
7
7
6

3,170,000

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

44

a

6
6
8
8

6

44

ii

ii
44

it
ii

7
4

200, (XX) 10
500,000
200, <XXJ

1

7
6

Richmond
Alexand’a
New York
44

1873
1875
1873
1880
1882

’92-'93

J. & J.

1

1

New York

1888

M.& N.
F.& A.

New York

1916
1891

44

198,500 !
375,000 !

7
7

M.& N.
M.& N.

New York ’70-’80
44
1885

6,5(xt.oou:

6

New York

7

F. & A.
J. & J.

A.&O.
F. & A.
A.&O.

London.

2,899,330

7
7
7

500,000

7

4,972,000
2,594,000
2,283340

<1,826,500
2,000,000

6
6
6
6
6

2/XX),000

•

A.&O.

524,773
93,847
740,958

!

44

44
44

1888
1880

1875
1872

1897

New York

18..

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

Philadel

Q.-J.
j. &u.

Philadel.

1880
1875
1875
1910

....

44

London
4

O.
O.
O.
J.
J.

Philadel.
Philadel.

6

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

6
6
6
6
5
7
6
7
7

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

O.
J.
J.
J.
J.
J.
O.
O.

Philadel.

6
6
6

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

Philadel.

7
6
7

F.& A.

Philadel.

7
6

J. & J.
F.& A.

19J0
1910

6
6

7

.

'

.

225,000
525,000

.

i i

44

44
44
(4

London.
44

Philadel.
44

J.

44

44
44

.

....

....

1877
1881
1881
1885
1V20
1870
1871
1880
1886
1880

’72-T
1893
1893

1884

'71-’76
1887
1900

....

....

....

Baltimore.
New York
-

1898
1889

••••

New York

8

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

10
10

J.&'J.
J. & J.

San Franc.

875,000

875,000
875,000
875,000
875,000
860,000
860,000
860,000
860,000
860,000
860,000
2,000,000
153,000
100,000
1,000,000

.

44

ii

44

1912
1912
1912
1912
1912
1912
1812
1812
1912
1912
1912
1912
1912
1876
1887
1874
1894
1894

New York

18..

Augusta*

6,,

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

Augusta.

1883
1895
18:3

6

J. & J.

Portland.

1887

650,000
350,000

7
7

M.& S.
J. & D.

Philadel.

1882
1884

150,000
450,000

7
7
7
7

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

New York

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

New York *87-’88
44
*75-’76
44
’75-’90
Richmond ’75-’90

7

229,200
361,300
31,115

400,000

....

6
6

Boston.

Reading A Columbia (Feb., ’70)

5C

l9t Mortgage 1862
2d Mortgage 1864
Rensselaer A Saratoga (Oct.l/69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
1st Mort. (Sara. & Whitehall)..
1st Mort. (Troy, Salem & Rutl’d)
Richmond A Danville (Oct. 1. ’69):
State Sinking Fund Loan
Bond guaranteed by State
Consol. Mortgage, coupon
Consol. Mortgage, reg
Roanoke Valley RR. Bonds
Richm. A Petersburg (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mort., convertible
2d Mort., coupon and reg
3d Mort. of 1865. coupon

2d Mortgage (gold)
St. Joseph A C. Bluffs (Jan.l,
1st Mort. (80 m. In Mo.)
1st Mort. (52 m. in Iowa)
2d Mort. (52 m. in Iowa)
St. Joseph A Denver City :

Mortgage (gold)'tax free...
L., Alt. A T. Haute (July 1, ’69):
(series A) sink, fund

.

1st Mort. (series B) sink. fund..
2d Mort. (series C)
2d Mort. (series D)
2d Mort. (income)
St. Louis A Iron 3ft. (Julyl, ’69):
1st Mortgage
St. L., Jacks. A Chic. (Feb., *70):
1st Mort. (guar.) 1864, tax free..
2d Mort. (guar.) tax free
St. Louis and Southeastern :
1st Mort. conv. tax free (gold).
St. Louis A St. Joseph (Apr. i, ’70):
1st Mortgage (g-old)

St.L.,Vand. A T.Haute(Jan. 1/70):
1st M.^skg fd (guar.)
2d M.skgfd (guar.)
St.Paul A /Vzc.,lstDiv j.Jan.1/70):
1st Mort. (10 m.) tax tree
1st Mort. (St. P. to Watab,80m.)
2d Mort. (land grant)

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

lstiMort., West. 1’e, for $6,000,000

2d M.,W. line (land) for$,3000.000
St. Parti A SiouxCitu (Jan. 1. ’70):
1st Mort. for $16,000 per lpile ,..

Sandusky,Mf. A Ne\o'rX LI an.' *70):
1st Mortgage, new, 1869..
,

500,000
600,000
161,600
1,298,000

127,600

6
6
6
6
6

408.500

‘

J.
J.
N.
N.
A.

ii
ii
44

1873
’80-’87
1886
1890

44

13,500

6

130.500
175,000

7
8

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

New York
N. Y. & E.
Philadel.

1875
1875
1870

9,000,000

7

F. & A.

N.Y.orLon

1919

1,500,000

7

....

782,800
405.500

7
7
7

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

New York

7
7

F.& A.
F.& A.

Boston.

400,000
329,000

10
10

J. & J.
F.& A.

New York
Sacram’to

1875
1881

10
7
10

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

Boston.

1893

1,500,000

8

F.&A.

N.Y.orL’n

1899

1,100,000
1,100.000
1,400,000
1,400,000

7
7
7
7
7

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

New York

1894
1894
1894
1894

New York

1892
1894
1898

591,000

New York

44
44

»i

’70):

1st

1st Mort.

400.000

44

1,400,000
500,000
150,000

Rockf., R. I. A St. Louis (Jan.1’70):
1st Mort- (gold) convert. Ixee..
Rock Isl. A Peoria (Jan. 1, ’<0):
1st Mortgage
Rome, Mat. AOgdensb. (Jan.1/70):
Sink. F’d Mort. (Wat. &H) W...
Guaran. (Pots. & Watert’n) ’53.
Sink. Fund Mort. (general) ’61..
Rutland A Burlington (Jan. 1/69):
1st M. (conv. into Rut. pref. st’k)
2d M. (conv. into Rut. com. st’k)
Sacramento Valley (Jan. 1» ’70):
1st Mortgage (gold)

St.
ii

Philadel.

7

...

875,000

.

Funded Interest, 1863
Portland A Rochester (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mortgage, 1867

1895
1888
1888

115,000

Mortgage, gold
Northern, N. H. (Apr. l, ’70):
Company Bonds of 1854
Northern New Jersey (Jan., ’10):
1st Mortgage (guaranteed)
Consolidated

2d

a

490,500
61,500
145,000

Funded Interest (certificates)
North Missouri (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mortgage of 1865
2d Mortgage oi 1868
31 Mortgage
North Pennsylvania (Nov. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
3d Mortgage
Northern Central (K«“b., ’70):
1st Mort. (State loan)
2d Mortgage (sinking fund)
3d Mortgage (sinking fund)....
3d Mortgage (Y. & C. RR guar)

1st

290,000

....

New York

J. & J.

4,000,000
400,000
2,394,100

.

New York '73-’78
it
1876
it
1881
1599

700.(XX)

Mortgage
2d Mortgage
1st

Consol. Mort.

157,000
303,000
43,000

A.
J.
N.
J.

Pittsburg A Connellsv. (Feb., ’70):
1st Mort. (new) free State tax..
1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.)
City & ' ounty loans
Pittsb.. Ft W. A Chic. (Feb., ’70):
1st Mortgage (series A).
1st Mortgage (series B).
1st Mortgage (series C).
1st Mortgage (series D).
1st Mortgage (series E).
1st Mortgage (series F).
2d Mortgage (series G)
2d Mortgage (series H).
2d Mortgage (series I)..
2d Mortgage (series K)
2d Mortgage (series L)
2d Mortgage (series M)
3d Mortgage
J
Bridge (O. & P. RR.) Mort., ’56
P., F. W. & C. construe bds’57.
Equip. Bonds of 1869, tax free
Placerville A Sacram. (Jan. 1/70):
1st Mortgage
1st Mortgage (gold) ..
Port Huron A L. Mich. (Mar.1/69):
1st Mort. (gold) for $16,000 per m
Portland A Kennebec (Jan. 1. ’70):
1st Mortgage extended, 1863....
Consolidated Mortgage, 1865...
.

1894

ew

Improvement

7

6,208.000
3,000 000
775,000

.

ii

New York

1,000,000
985,000

1st M. Steunenv. & Ind. re org.
Col. & Newark Div. Bonds

3,000.000

Subscription (assumed stocks).

J. & J.

2,500,000

Pittsb.,Cin. A St. Louis (Sep., ’69):.
1st Mortgage

1871
1885
1872

2,900,000

Sinking Fund (assumed debts)

18..

7

353,000

N. London
New York

ii

New York

381,800
102,000
2,497,800
147,000
182,400
288,000
1,086,300
2,266,000

.'.

1889

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

18..

8

convertible

J. & J.
A.&O.

8

Philadel.

3,000,000
2,000,000
3,000,000
3.598,000

'

New York

it

1890

Philadel: *70-’7l

1,000,000

do
do

1st Mortgage,
Loan of 1866
Loan of 1867

Harrlsb’ig

800,000

Loan of 1849
Loan of 1861
Loans of ’43, ’44, ’48 and ’49
Loan of 1857, convertible
Loan of 1836, sterling
Loan of 1836, sterling
Loan of 1868
Loan of 1868
Loan of 1870 ($5,000,000) conv...
Phila.. Wilm. A Balt. (Nov. 1, ’69):

1875
1878
1S37

Q’t’ly.

J. & J.

600,000

(Nov., ’69):

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

1,168,000

2d Mort. of 18 60

New York

7

A. & O.

1,000,000

M.& N.

7

60,000
300,000
291,700

Mortgage Bonds

Real Estate
Renewal bonds
New York A Harlem (Oct.

F. & A.
F.& A.
F & A.

6
6

K

3,000,000

hiladelphia A Erie (Feb. ’70):
1st Mort. (Sunbury & Erie RR.)
1st Mort. Phil. & Erie (gold)...
<‘o
do
do(currency)
2d do
3d do

5
6

Philadelphia A Read. (Dec. 1,’69):

J. & J.

500,000

.

•

New York ’90-’92
it
1887
Nashville. 1870

250,000

Mortgage, 1867

free State tax

1st Mortgage
Philadel. A Balt. Cent.
1st Mortgage

1890

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

600,000

Is iLoan
2d Loan
8d Loan
N. J. Southern

it

2,465.176
500,(XX)
205,000

Newburg A New York (April, ’70):
1st Mortgage guar, by Erie
New Haven & Derby (Jan. 1, *70):
let Mortgage
N. Raven A NorthampjFeb., ’70):
1st Mort 1869
Bond-* convert.,

14

6,082,538
1,114,224

Pennsylvania AN. Y. (Nov., '69):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Peoria A Bureau Val. (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Peoria Pek. AJacksonv. (J an .1 ,’70):

f

Naugatuck (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mort. (convertible) 1856
Newark A New York (Jan.. ’70):
1st

State works purchase
Short Bondu ('debentures)

1888

472,000

Montgomery A Eufala (May, ’70):
1st Si. by State of Ala

1,700,000

•

•

44

If

ii
ii

41
41

....

1880
’70-'74
1891
1863
1863

1882
1893

1894

4,000,000

7

F.& A.

2,365,(XX)
360,000

7
7

A.&O.
J. & J.

New York

16,000p.m

7

M.&N.

New York

1,000,000

6

M.& N.

New York

1193

York

1397
18..

York

1892

44

1,900,000
2,600,000

7
7

J. & J.
J. & J.

New

120,000
700,000
1,200,000

8
7
7
7
7

M. &
&
&
&

New

J.
J.
J.
J.

780,000

S.

J.
D.
J.
& J.

II

44
II
Ii

London.

1S95

1692
1892
18..
18..

New

York

New

York 1896

....

100,000

7

J. & J.

03/XX)

7

jr. & J.'' New York 1909

tBGaqpaheounzokegtirfdns’l
thajolvreene

Prices

November 19, 1870.J

THE CHRONICLE.
RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS

661
BOND LIST.

gabscrlbers will confer a great favor by giving

us immediate notice of any error discovered in
Pages 1 and 2 of Bonds will be published nextjweek.

CHARACSECURITIES ISSUED.

COMPANIES, AND
TBB OF

standing

'Sis page*
preceding

Wta

For a full explanation of this
Table see “ Railroad Monitor’
on a
preceding page.

2 >>

Where

n

paid.

/COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬
TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED.

c8

INTEREST.

Amount
Out¬

X

paid.

g

on a

Tables,

our

INTEREST.

Amount
Out¬

standing

When

Where

paid.

Rate.

paid.

Princpal payble.

Railroads:

Vicksburg A Merid. (Mar. 1, ’70):

Railroads:
Savannah A Charleston:

500

jSSSSS&trai-i
Mortgage

00

,J. & J.

New York

217,000
78,000

Memphis :
lstMort. (gold) guar, by Ala...
sam A Meridian (Apr. 1, 68).

J. & J.

320,000

snmfomeADali6n(Feb‘]i6j;

^iSorMAla. & Tenn. Rivers)
Wort.

Selma.

Gen!Mort. for $5,000,000, tax free

69):
.■•••
Sheboygan A F. du Lac (Jan.l, 69).
Sioux^Cityct Pacific (March, ’70):
Shamokin \. A Pottsv. (Nov.,
1st Mortgage guaranteed..

4 4

1872
1861

264,000
854 000

6
6

J. & D.
J. & D.

Augusta.

5
5
7
6
7
6

London.
Charlest’n

7

J. & J.
J. & J.
A.&O.
J. & J.
J. & J.
J. & J.
M.& S.

’71-’85
’71-’85
’69-’72
’73-’74
’88-’91
1892
1871

"l

F. & A.

New York

247,475
377,010
353.500

Domestic
Domestic Bonds (G.
Domestic Bonds (I)
:).
Domestic Bonds (K
"

41,000
80,000
415.000

Domestic Bonds ;s[>ei:i«
8. W. R.R. BanK Bo tids

1,500,000

J. & J.
J. & J.

New York
It

it

44
44

44
44

1898
1S98

New York

150,000

6

750,000
Mortgage .... — ..•••••
South Side, V 9. (Oct. 1,,’69):
258,000
Consol. M.( 1st pref.) for $<09,000
574.400
Conso). M. (<M pref.) for $651,000
407,800
Consol M ( titl pref.) for $540,000
800,000
Va. State Loan (suspended) —
2d Mort. Petersburg guarantee
81,700
3d Mortgage
52,400
....... ... .
Southern Minnesota (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, 10-20 years
20,000 pm
Southw. Pacific of Mo. (Jan. 1,’69):
lstMort. (gold) $25,000 per mile
Southwestern, Ga. (Aug. 1, ’69):
399,000
Company Bonds
300,000
Muscogee RR Bonds
Staten Island (Oct. 1, ’69):

7

M.& S.

8
6
6
6
6
6

J. &
J. &
J. &
J. &
J. &
J.&

•

1st

.

A. & O.

J.
J.
J.
J.
J.
J.

Boston.

New York ’84-’90
Petersb’g. ’84-’90
’96-’00
New York 1887
Petersb’g. ’70-’75
’62-’72

8

J. & J.

New York

1888

6

J. & J.

Boston.

1898

7
7

Var.

Macon.

’77-’80

7

J. & J.

New York

1886

350,000

7

New York

1874

528,000

6

J. & J.

Philadel.

’70-’75

500,000
250,000

6
6

J. & J.
F.& A.

Boston.

1875
1880

Mortgage
8yrac..Bingh. A N. Y. (Oct. 1, ’69):

200,000

6

jirr<Farut^aIe/nd;po/is(Feb‘.,'’7b):

1,707,050

7

Mortgage

Sullivan (Jan. 1. ’70):
;

’70):

1st

Mortgage Bonos of 1869
lo\.,Peona A Warsaw{ Jan.l,’69)
1st Mortgage (W. Div.)
1st Mortgage (E. Div.)
2d Mortgage (W. Div.)
Equlpnn bVs of IS 10 conv.S.F
lot., Wab. A Western (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mort. (Tol. & Ill., 75 m.)
IstM. (L.Erie. W.& St.L.,167 m.)
1st Mort. (Gt. Wtn, W. D.,100 m.)
lstMort. (Gt. W’t’n of ’59,181 m.)
1st Mort. (Quin. & Tol., 84 m.)..
lstMort. (Ill. & S. Iowa, 41 m.).
2d Mort. (Tol. & Wab., 75 ra.)
2d Mort. (Wab. & W’t’n, 167 m.)
2d Mort. (Gt. W’t.’n of’59,181 m.)
Equipment Bonds(T.&\Y.,'75 m.)
Consol. Mortgage (500 m.)conv.
hoy A Boston (Oct. 1, ’69):

348,000

“

New York
A. & O.

New York

1879

7

A. & O.

F.& A.
J. & D.

New' York

1879
1896
1894
1886
1880

406

900,000
2,500,000
707,000
1,771,000
500,000
300,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
2,500,000
600,000
2,700,000

6
6

J. & J.
J. & J.

New York

6

N.Y.&Bos. ’95-’99

6
7
10

J. & J.
J.& J.
A. & O.
M. & S.

1,600,000
1,600,000

6
6

J. & J.
J.& J.

2,240,000
4,063,000
6,803,000
600,000

Mort., guaranteed
Inion Pacific (Sept., ’70):

lstMort. (gold), tax free
2d Mort. (government
subsidy)
Land Grant Bonds for $10,000,000
Income Bonds
Onion Pacific, Cent.
Br.(J an .1 ,’69):
tot Mort. (gold), tax tree
2d Mort. (government
subsidy)
Onion Pacific, E. Div. (Jan.
1, ’70):
lstMort. (gold), 140 m..
lstMort. (gold) ,253.94 m
2d Mort.
(government subsidy)
1st Mort. (Leavenworth
Br.)...
Land Grant Mort. for $500,000
Income B’ds (gen.) $10,000
p. m.
Pacific, K Br. (May 1, ’70):

6

378,000
4,275,000

..

totMort. (gold),$25,000 p. m...
River (J an., ’70):
Mortgage 1868
Central (June 1, ’TO):
tot
Mortgage (consol.)
2d
Mortgage (consol.)
Equip. Loans of ’66 and ’67

New York
44
44

A. & O.
J. & J.

44

New York
44

41

4 4
44
44
“

44

44

1

44

Q.-J.

1st

1st

6
6

M.& S.
J. & J.
A.&O.

Camden.

612,300

7

7

44

44

1883
18%
1899

New York

...

18..

7

J. & J.

N.Y.& Lon

’84 ’85

500,000

7

A. & O.

New York

1888

200,000

J.
J.
J
J.

Baltimore.

1890
1890
1890
1890

*

1,800,000

6

Vari.

Mortgage

4,000,000

7

F.& A.

New York

18%

Mortgage

250,000

7

J. & J.

New York

1873

200,000

6

J. & J.

Philadel.

1888

789,300

7

A.&O.

Philadel.

1900

576,887
197,777

6
7
7

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

London.

New York

1881
1886
1897

Sistare, B

roh e

’69)

:

Mortgage,

new

1st

Mortgage

Wilmington A Weldon (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, sterling
Sterling Bonds
Sinking Fund Bonds of 1867

.

&
&
&
&

J.
J.
J.
J.

1st Mortgage
Broadicay A 1th Are. (Oct. 1, ’69);
1st Mortgage
!Brooklyn City (Oct. 1, ’69):
!
1st Mortgage
1

Brook.,Pt'os.P. AFlatb'h ((>c.l ,’68):
1st Mortgage
! CentralP.,N.A E. River(Oct.l,*69):
1st Mortgage
■

44

—

M.&N.

....

New York

1899

Philadel.

*93-’%

....

710,000

b

ns

y

G. K.

....

44

sau

Bleecker St.A Fulton -F.(Oct.l,’69):

1

44

44

1,200,000

Street Passenger R.R. Quotatio

Street.

694,000

7

J.&J.

New York

1830

1,500,000

7

J. & D.

New York

1884

J.&J.

Brooklyn.

1872

300,000

7

300,000

7

,

M.& N.

....

1878

6
6

7
7
7

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

J’el,’71

150,000

J. & J.

New York
44
44

44

44

Boston.

New York
44

New York
44
44

44
4ft

da

New York
Utica.
Boston.
Boston.

J. & J.
J. & J.

Boston.

386,000
114,000
293,200

A.&O.
A.&O.

New York

494,000
990,000

J.
J.
J.
J.
J. & J.
J. & J.

1,000,000
,

7

J.&J.

New York

18..

214,000

7

J. & J.

....

18..

700,000

7

M.& S.

New York

1874

7

J. & J.

New York

18..

7

New York

1873

7

A.&O.
M.& N.

....

....

167,000

7

J. & J.

New York

18..

350,000
200,000

7

New York

1877

315,000

7
7

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

250,000

7

J. & J.

New York

1890

.J.& J.

New York

1890

1st Mortgage
Eighth Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69):
| 1st Mortgage
42d st. A Grand st.F<?rn/(Oct.l,’69):
1st Mortgage
Real Estate Mortgages
Ninth Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69)’
1st Mortgage
Second Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69):

1887
1885
1875
1882

1st

1873
1878

’95-’99
87-’89

1895
1895
1895
18%
’95-’97
18%
’71-’76
1916
1899

Mortgage
Mortgage
Mortgage

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

ft

4

1886
1891

’76-’77
18S9
1883
1879

*

n

4

150,000

Mortgage

Third Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69):
Plain Bonds (t„v free)

1,500,000

44

1876
1885
1888

44
44

Canal:

Chesapeake A Delaw. (June 1,69):
1st Mortgage
Chesapeake A Ohio (Jan. 1, ’69):
Maryland Loan, sinking fund
Guaranteed Sterling Loan
Bonds having next preference.
Delaware Division (Feb., ’70) :
1st Mortgage
Delaware A Hudson (June,’70):
Registered Bonds (tax free)
Registered Bonds (tax free)....

6

2,(100,000

1,699,500

6
5
6

800,000
1,500,000
8,500,000

Philadel.

1S86

Q.-J.

1870

J.&J.

Q.-J.

Baltimore.
London.
Baltimore.

6

J. & J.

Philadel.

1878

7
7

M.& N.
J. & J.

New York

1877
1884

7
7

J. & J.
J.& J.

Philadel.

161,960
54,800
5,656,099
2,000,000
5,000.000
1,4%,879

6
6
6
6
G

J. & J.

Philadel.

6

7

A.&O.
A.&O.

1,361,000

6

J. & J.

Philade

1887

1,751,218
4.016,670

6
6
6

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

Philadel.

1872
1882
1870

6
6
6

J.&J.
J.& J.

London.
Baltimore.

J.&J.

6

M.& N.

Plilladel.

1883

6

J & J.
M.& N.

Philadel.

6

1878
1888

600,(XXI

Mortgage

J.&J.

299,000
298,500!

Dela. A Raritan : See Cam. & Am
Erie of Pennsylvania (Nov. 1, ’69):

6

J. & J.

Philadel.

1878

2,000,000

7

J.& J.

New York

1886

17,1X10

7

J. & J.

New York

1879

4,375,000

Loan of 1884
Loan of 1897.
Gold Loan of 1897
Convertible Loan of 1877
Morris
’70):;
1st and 2d Mortgages
Boat Loan, sinking fund

(Feb.

1st M ort. tax free g. by Pen. RR
Schuylkill Navigation (Nov.l, ’69):

Mortgage

Mortgage.
Improvement
Susq. A Tide Water (Feb., ’70):
Maryland Loan
Loan of January 1, 1878

308,500

1,000,000
1,250,(XXI

325,000

Union (Feb., ’70)

Mortgage

West Branch A Susq. (Feb., 70) :
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

tax free
Wyoming Valley (Feb., *70):
ist Mortgage

44

1890
1885

boy RR.
743,654

Bonds for interest

Lehigh Navigation (Nov. 1, ’69):
Loan of I8t3

1st
2d

2,089,400

782,250
239,425

..

Pref. Interest Bonds

1870

208,000
200,000
60,000

2d
3d
Consolidated convertible
Sixth Avenue (Oct. 1, ’69):

1st

515,700
174,500

1869
A Mass. (Feb.. ’70):

1890
1890
1871
1888
1890
1882
1878
1871
1893
1888
1907

N.Y.& Bos. ’72-’74

D.
D.
N.
N.

1,000,000

do

626,000

Pennsylvania (Fi b., ’70):

J. & J.

3,000,000
1,500,000

j Coney Jsl. A Brooklyn (Oct. 1,’69):
1
1st Mortgage
\D'yD'k,EfB'dwayABat.(Oc,.\,’W)\

1st

4,221,000

Ofcadk Black
1st

3,000,000

Q.-J.
Q.-F.
J. & D.
J. & D.

Miscellaneous :
Imp. Co.(Jan.l .*69):

1865
1873

44

1873
1884
1897
1897

44

41
44

1877

JerseyClty
41

44

t»

**

“

1876
1885

1886
1878
18D4

Amer. Dock cf*

Mortgage,




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

27,-'36,512
9,856,000
10,000,000

2d

ufSorta.
s<sfi«*«a)'MortTO(,e::::::::

7
'7
7
7

27,237,000

lrov Union (Oct. 1, ’69):
lstMort., guaranteed

BSe/(Feb-^:

F.& A.
F. & A.
A.&O.
F.& A.
M.& N.
F.& A.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.
M.& N.

500,000
360,000

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
3d
Mortgage...
Convertible Bonds.

’
Mortgage, sinking ftind
vSn^c^nXerti^le>tax free....

7
7
10
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7

300,000
300,000
650,000
427,000

..

,000

st

1st

1st

7
7
7
8

1,800,000
1,600,000
1,200,000

....

to*

400,000
1,000,000
316,500

i

200,000

Mortgage
SterUng Mountain (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
Summit Branch (Nov. 1, ’69):
1st

,6?

1873
.878

44

6

Western Union (Jan. 1, ’69):

1887

Philadel.

2,735,000
1,970,000

Whitehall A Plattsb. (Sept. 1, ’69):

1880

Brooklyn.

,

J.& J.
A.&O.

6
6

1st Mortgage (gold)
Government Lien
est. Pennsylvania (Nov. 1,
1st Mortgage, guaranteed

....

7
8

557.500

300,000
6,(00,000

Wilmington A Bead. (Feb., ’70):

Smith ShoretDtc. 1, ’69):

400,000

6

Wicomico A Pocomoke (Jan. 1,’70):

8

1875

400,000

Wil.,Chari. ARutherfd (Oct., ’69):

69):

New York

44

1890
1890
1890
1890

800,000

Mortgage, unendorsed

Vestem Pacific:

1899

F.& A.

44

6
6

2d Mort., endors. by Baltimore.
2d Mort., end. by Wash. Co
New' Mortgage preferred

i

7

Philadel.

Mortgage

1st

1874
1876

2,012,944
262.500

(Jan. 1/70):

6

300,000
250,000

subsidyj...

7

1,628,320

SSSBawfi'ffl-ii::::
Bonds (H)

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Suswa; (Jan. 1,

Western, Ala. (Jan. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, guar
Western Maryland (Jan. 1, ’70):
1st Mort., endors. by Baltimore

1872

Sr
J1 PS 1l

511,400

Mort., guaranteed

Loan of 1883
"
Loan of 1866,1st Mort
Joint mort. on C. M. M. RR, ’69.
West Shore Hud. Riv. (Oct. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage
West Wisconsin (May 1, ’70):
1st Mort. L. G

1887

Plilladel

1,102,000

7
7
7
7

849,000
129,000

Westchester A Phila. (Nov. 1, ’69):
1st Mortgage, convertible
3d Mortgage, registered
West Jersey (Jan. 1, ’70):

1839

...

New York
New York

F.& A.

700,000

South°Carol¥na [jan.lj ’70):

1st

1st

Newr York
J. & J.
J. & J.
A.&O.

683,500

Warren (Jan. 1, ’70):

New York

838.500
241,000
8,000,000

(Ala. & Tenn. Rivers).

Southern Cetdnti N V .
South AN. Alaba /wai.Jan.1,
1st M., end. by .\
$16,000p

N ew York

79,830
52,000
665,000

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

Mortgage .........
South Side, L. 1. (Oct. 1, 69).

1880
1870

4.

&

1st

1889

’69):

1st

2d MorMgovernm.
Somerset A, Kennebec
1st Mortgage

Vew York

Consol. Mort., 1st class
Conso Mort., 2d class
Conso Mort., 3d class
Consol. Mort., 4th class

.

778,000
119,000
778,000

112,444

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

ftd
•4

New York
44

*
4

44
ftl

1860
1S60
1859
1872
1884
1900
1865

1900
7i-’80

Bonds (guar, by C. RR. of *1. J.)
Cumberland Coal (Jan. 1, ’68):
1st Mortgage
Pennsylvania Coal: Mortg. B’ds.

Quicksilver (Feb., ’70)
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

500,000
1,000,000

(gold)

(gold)

?' & A.

592J500

J. & D.
J. & J.

7
7

Rochester City Water TForls:

■ill.,

N.

800,000

Mortgage Bonds (gold)

W. Union 7i)4g‘D \ •

>»y

Jl.&N

684100
.

....

1881

New York

1873

4ft

1879

44

188 1
187

New York

j

tBaGbpaneokrzs’gedtl.

tagQhouivroteeenain

Prices

THE CHRONICLE.

662

Commercial kitties.

The

[November 19,1870.

Export* of JbeadlnR Article* from New
York.

following table, compiled from Custom House
returns,shea
exports of leading articles of commerce from the
port of Ne,
Yo.k since January 1, 1810, to all the
principal foreign countries, and
also the total expert of the same articles for the
last week and
t K

COMMERCIAL

EPITOME.
Friday, p. m., November 18.

belligerent advices from Europe, and the effect which January
they liave produced upon gold and exch ange, have been the
leading influences in the markets for the past week, and they
may be said to have had generally a depressing influence,
except upon Breadstuff’s, which have been active and excited,
closing at a material advance in Spring Wheat and shipping
brands of Flour.
Cotton, after some advance has declined,
and closes lower. Groceries have been ab out steady, with
The

some

advance in Rice.

Tobacco

more

active, but at

since

1.

ih

■00a>Q000»Q»0<Mr-Ou

•

“
*o>

t

O os os toos Tf to t- a

.«

_

©•xj'moo^tji2ST223!so35

• r-t

l-drlCO

some

03 O

CO®
vi

decline.

*

Hides have had

I

moderate sale at full

prices. Leather,
however, has ruled weak. There has been a sale of 80,000
Mocha Goat Skins, but the other transac tions have been
trifling. Tallow has been active for export and firmer, on the
a

.»oc&t-oo

0*9

•
*

•©©

.

.52 |
'
•
3

CO rH

Ctrl

CO

s’

to

OtQtor—

■

•

r1«00

:

to <N SO Til

■
■

--t to to

“

•

:§ :
•

.

r1<©

r-M*

,196 199

‘net tact

*

*04

CO

: *«««i
I :82$<

r-4
'r-i

;ss!

•

•

-

»<

vi

4

to
C*

.t-l©*-«
*00003

.

•

•

•

T-t

advance in London.

■

fc^CO Tjl

•

'

Petroleum

inoootior*

.

fairly active, till in the last day or two;
(3
the transactions on Wednesday being about 25,000 bbls., but
£ a oj
the close is quiet. The transactions in Oil embrace 2,000
mSs"
bbls. Crude Whale at about late prices for home use. Men¬
,-5
§ S OO
haden Oil, owing to the season for its production being over,
> « S3 *■
has advanced to 47£c. Linseed Oil is verj dull. Naval
*0
Stores have been dull and drooping.
W I oT
*
There are no new features in metals, and prices are with¬
O
out essential variation; domestic Pig Iron closes weak. East
8 §8 : :
5 **
India goods are generally dull; Calcutta Linseed continues
to be pressed for sale at the late decline.
2
Hops are firm Sand active. The receipts since Sept. 1st are
5 S*
o:
only about 18,000 bales against 46,000 bales in the corres¬
ponding period last year, and the discrepancy is only partially
>;s : :
^ t-r • •.
adjusted by the falling off in exports.
Hay is steady.
n
Whiskey has been more active and steady. Fruits are sell¬
ing fairly. Fish bring steady prices on liberal sales. Pro¬
O £
visions have been only moderately active, and “ hog products”
show a general decline ; mess Pork closing at $23 50 on the
<1
spot, $20 50 for December, and $20 for January. Lard 14c. 5 ^• -a 888
£ jjo'm
for prime new Western steam on the spot, 13fc. for Decem¬
*S -O
ber, and 134c. for January. The hostile attitude of the great
:;;’
g
M 3
powers in Europe has thus far not given any strength to the 3 <1
hog products,” because it is anticipated that any increased
demand from that quarter will be more than lost in the
_

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diminished wants of the South. Beef remains steady. Butter
ind Cheese dull.
Wool is firm, with rather more doing; it may be
anticipa¬
ted that a general war in Europe would divert to us consid¬

co

03

erable supplies of fine
tion of coarser grades.

wool, but greatly curtail the importa¬

Freights have been only moderately active; and though
the room on the berth has been limited, such has been the
effect of the speculation in Breadstuff's, that
shipments have
been restricted, and rates barely supported. The arrivals of
grain will be greatly increased next week, when higher rates
are

looked for.

CO
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The receipts of domestic produce for the week and since Jan. 1
aid for the same time in 1869. have been as follows:

•

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.

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•

•

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This
week.

Ashes. ..pkgs.

Breadatuffs—
Flour .bbls
Wheat .bus
Corn
Oats

Rye
Barley, <fcc.
Grass seed

Beans
Peas
C. meal.bbl
Cotton.bales

Kemp..bales
Hides ....No

120

Since
Jan. 1.

6,782

136,694^

3,495,234
,193,198 20,624,142
154,799’ 7,826,641
•52,305 8,231,285
15,310
504,631
234,782 3,290,880
3,364
519,537
85,509
3,242
182,480
300|
4,147
170,140
631,000
2,507
8,712
355,007

83,575]

5,012!

Hops...bales.

50,852

Leather Aides
Molasses bbls.
Naval Steres-

69,673 2,190,306
1,529
15,487

Cr.turp.bbl.
Spirits tnrp.

6,561
61,481
462,722
46,393
2,292

Tar




723,

6®l

Same
time ’69,

8,127

This
week.
Oil

cake, pkgs...
Oil, lard
2,906,019 Peanuts, bags...
20,907,962 Provisions—
10,148.730
Batter, pkgs...
Cheese
6,938,015
Catmeats..
304,208
1,774,428
Eggs
Pork
21,040
89,053
Beef, pkgs.
58,026
Lard, pkgs
183,016
Lard, kegs.
553,043 Rice, pkgs...
3,572 Starch
352,386 Stearine
99,071 Sugar, hhds., &c.
2,484,703 Tallow, pkgs
19,336 Tobacco, pkgs..,
....

-

Tobacco, hhds..,
13,711 Whiskey, bbls....
58,175 Wool, bales
501,146 [Dressed bogs No
68,671
6,688

3,418
39

1,223

Same
Jan. 1. time ’69

99,980
4,762
67,311

~95J707
5.915

63,561

16,693 443,748 560,410
43,899 1,323,588 1,194,258
836
81,747
72,089
7,520 263,202 286,670
1,242
97,968
74,186
7,261
84,035
62,370
1,630
64,926
63.915
450
23,542
13,417
283

18,473

10,417 1,889,393
69
8,4469
15
825

3,700
359

2,809
2,053

600

15,363!
262,170
67,602
170,887
113,986
65,655

16,843
256,172
8,809
2,250
13,968
103,948
76,112
153,469
56,078
54,591

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CHRONICLE.

THE

19,1870.]

November

imports off

Leadlni Articles.

table,compiled from Custom House returns, shows

following

Mumimpofftsof certainleading articles of commerce atthie port
f3 HI laat week, since Jan. 1,1870, and for the corresponding period
h.

f

r?h9 nflantity

ft? a

is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]

6BS

The market the past week for spot cotton has been entirely under
the influence of the movements at Liverpool. In response to the

improvement in prices indicated by the cable dis¬
patches during the first half of the week, our own market advanced
until Tuesday, when the close was at 16£c. for middling Uplands ,
The next day there was no change, hut since then there has been,
steadiness and

09.31
0
the

249

China

1,631
1,567

Earthenware

Glass

609
292
41

Glassware....

plate..

Glass

Buttons

1,451

Coa].t°.n8--"-:
Cocoa,

bags...;

Cotton

bales

618

Coffee, bags.

577
717

powders..
Brimstone, tons

Blea

Cream

1,103

40
62

Tartar.

2,479

Gambler........

Gums, crude...
Gum, Arabic..

213
45
19

i

ao

er

97,454

26,681
809,428

15,591
17,640
17,225
6,929
3,206
20,777

week.

1870.

999
862
36
83
370
23

furs.

cloth

1.776

2.979

4.590
12,139
7,272

2,489

97,971

43
316
121
921

1,320
26,094
2S.995
5,521

85
13

bales....

3,797
1,074
505.192
136,098

Bristles
Hides, dressed.
mdla rubber
Ivory

Jewelery, &cJewelry
Watches

52,261

Linseed

70

Molasses

6,007
1,724

47,244

3,990

335

1,000

19,343

4,403
6,641

S,9S9
4,627
859,043

4,326 788,898
4,774 477,850 480.757
412,427 7.330,479 10452202
3,937 123,797 149, C46
19,131 854,195 1,074,940
86,557 5,260.68^ 3,583,087
93,929
3,770
93,296

Iron, HR bars.
Lead, pigs

Spelter
Steel

Su^ar^ hbds, tes

1,464

845,418
38,634

789,909
815,100

78

1,747

2,115

1,528
1,672

Wines
Wool, bales

643,396

1,500

Wines, &c—
Champag’e.bks

356,745

403

Tobacco
Waste

386,521

2,956

Sugars, boxes &
19,506
bags
25,473 Tea

608

5,762

69
158

5,258
Tin, boxes
Tin slabs, lbs..
119,401
17,312 Rag#
917,303

2,334

Same
time
1869.

117,803
239,035
25,680

107,505
167,638
46,514

400

41,155

Articles report’d
by value—
9,222
259 Cigars
110,846 1,252,978 $745,456
Corks
91,961 124,464
44,453
40*55i 2,133,110 1,889,466
762 Fancy goods....
77,318 Fish
2,988 298,151 645,419
34,596 Fruits, &c—
Lemons
35,408
7,726 657,122 464,408
791
799,253 716,544
1,811
Oranges
Nuts
40.874
514,391
596,453
5,519
Raisins.
60.359 884,378 701,918
5,634
7,768 Hides undressed 96,713 6,264,226 9,120.174
539,865 241,936
101,163 Rice
Spices. &c—
Cassia
182,610 180,128
1,447
39,272
48,793
16,322
Ginger
277,800 231,764
85,367
Pepper
250,144 184,818
2,592 Saltpetre
2,229

1 035

WoodsCork
Bustle

138,255
56,505
272,168
142,699

8,672

; r. eett

4,i44

Mahogany—...

9,112

Logwood

571,836
159,1781

regular decline until to-night, when the official closing quotation'
16c., with the market heavy at the decline. For forward
delivery there has been a good business at prices varying from
day to day with the changes in spot cotton. The close to
night was 15£c. for November, 15|c. for December, and 15£c. for
February, the total sales of this description for the week (indud
ing 1,850 bales free on board) being 58,050 hales. For immediate
delivery the total sales foot up this week 24,759 bales, including
2,431 bales to arrive, of which 7,047 bales were taken by spinners
2,032 bales on speculation, 13,172 hales for export, and 2,508 bales
in transit. The following are the closing quotations:
a

was

Hardware

,

8,163

2.863
5,380

33,133
1,577
88,554
48,661
31,432

30

'

11.959
54,561
478.211
17,020

453

1

Soda, bl-carb..
Soda, sal
Soda, ash
flax

Hemp,

4.926

237

Oils, essence...
Oil, Olive
Opium... .....

flair

12,193
44,784
312,000
20,826
8,291

7,830

^Bark,Peruvian

Gunny

Jan.l,

Metals, &c—
Cutlery

([ulna.

Since

For
the

Same
time
1869.

Since
Jan. 1,
1870.
week.

For

167,318
70,867
536,327

Friday, P. M., Nov. 18,1870.

special telegrams received by us to-niglit from the
Southern ports, we are in possession of the returns showing the
receipts, exports, &c., of cotton for the week ending this evening
November 18. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the
total receipts for the seven days have reached 122,183 bales against
132,065 bales last week, 106,406 bales the previous week, and 85,935
bkles three weeks since, making the total receipts since the first of
September, 1870, 799,329 bales against 709,874 bales for the same
period of 1869, showing an increase since September 1 this year of
89,455 bales. The details of the receipts for this week (as per
telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1869 are as follows :
iJy

Middling

16%©....

we

New Orleans

bales

Mobile
Charleston
Savannah
Texas

Tennessee, &c

bales.

25,032 Florida
9,022 North Carolina
8,652 Virginia

36,672
13,526
14,539
27,556
7,201

18,041
6.774

8,884|

7,309

Total receipts
Increase this year

1869.

442

230'
3,899
11,251

2,416

7,505

81,818

122,183
40,865

for the week ending this evening reach .a total of
87,655 bales, of which 81,287 were to Great Britain, and 6,368
to the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports, as made
up this evening, are now 342,507 bales. Below we give the ex¬
ports and stocks for the week, and also for the corresponding week
o flast season, as
telegraphed to us from the various ports to-night;
The exports

Exported to—
Week ending Noy. 18.
New Orleans.
Mobile

Charleston....
Texas.
New York...",’’”*.*’*'*
Other ports
”*

Total
Total since Sept.

i ”.’

G. Brit

19,311
11,231
9,920
22,012
2,822
15,991

Contin’t
2,390

Stock.

Total this Same w’k
1869.
week.

11,231
9,920
.

1.905

5,908

2,838
2,835
10,853
2,335

23,917
2,822

1,173
900

81,287
340,423

17,164
900

6,368
29,545

18,031
47,500

33,000

272,006

342,507

45,510
305,010

87/155
369,968

108,705
32,988
16,089
47,947
25,361
25,000
15,916

103,927
41,580
27,850
70,619

16,326
4,865

21,701

1869.

1870.

13*®....

<§>....

16%®....

16*0....

17

17%®....

@....

15%@....
16%®....

give the total sales of cotton and price of Uplands at
day of the past week :

this market each

Total
sales.

Saturday

2,581
3,375
7,876
5,515
2,604
2,808

Monday

Tuesday....

Wednesday

Thursday

Good

Middling.

15%®....
15%®....
15*®...*15%®.,..
15%@ ...
15%®....

12*®....
12*®....
13
13
13
13

Low

Ordinary.

Ordinary.

@....
@....
©...
@....

15*®....
15%®....
16%®....
16%®....
15*0....
15*®..

,

Middling.
16%®,...
16%@ ...
16%®....
16%®....

16%®....
16

®....

delivery the sales (including 1,850 free on board)

have reached during the week 58,050 bales (all low middling or
on the basis of low middling), and the following is a statement
of the sales and prices :
1
For November,
cts.
bales.
200

I

15* 1
‘
15%
16
-..16%

3,800
4,400
5,050

2,200

100
300

300
400

16 %
16%
16%

1,700

16 3-16

100

cts.

1,200

15%

700

15 11-16

15*

bales.

The

15 13-16

300
809

15%
15%

16,850 total Decern.
For

January.
15*
15 13-16

300

1,100

4,450 total Feb’y.

15%
15%

3,200

For March.
16
500
100
15%
500
..15*

300

100....=-.,.
..15 7-16

600

i

8,700 total January
For February.
600
400

15%

1,050
1,000
1,300

1,100 total March.
For April.
200.
15*

For Feb. & March.
100 each
15*

15%

during the week of free on board have reached
particulars of these sales are as below:

500 f. o. b. Mobile
200
“
200
«
“
200
“

Total free

on

cts.
.15 11-16

500

15 9-16
15%
15 7-16

1,000
2,000
2,600

15 9-16

The sales

bales.
100..

cts.

bales.

1,200

3,650

16 1-16
.15 15-16

6,650

For December.
•

Dales.

15

100.... ....1511-1

24,800 total Novem.

1870.

Rec’d this week at—

13%®....
15%@....
16%®....

16%®....
16*®....

®....

Good Middling

1 1,300

BE0BIPT8

1869.

13%©....
15%®....
15%©....

15%®....
15*®....
16

i

1870.

13

:

Texas.

84,746

COTTON.

Bec’d this week at—

peMb.

Good Ordinary
Low Middling

Below

New
Orleans.

Florida.

Ordinary

For forward

BB0BIPT8

Mobile.

Upland and

6*
15%
15*
14*

board at Mobile.

100 f. o. b.
350
“

450
300 f.

Charleston, N.Y.L.M.
“

1,850

14|£
p.

Total free on board at Charleston.
o.

b. New Orleans

p.

t.

reoeived
to-night indicate that the werther in the South has proved quite
favorable the past week. At two or three points we have reports
of moderate rains, but in most sections it has been cold and dry
We hear of killing frosts at Charleston, Mobile, Macon, Columbus^
Montgomery, Selma, Nashville, &c., and at most of the points
named a continuation of heavy frosts through three nights, with
the thermometer averaging for the week at Macon 53 degrees,
Charleston 55, Memphis 56, Selma 56, &c. At Galveston it has
rained two days, but the remainder of the week has been pleasant,
Weather Reports

with the thermometer

by

Telegraph.—Our telegrams

averaging 68.

Cotton Quotations at Liverpool, and the Prospects of
the Market.—In face of the warlike news in Europe, the cotton

foregoing statement it will he seen that, compared quotations at Liverpool have advanced during the week, and on
corresponding week of last season, there is an increase in Wednesday touched 9fd. This has been to some a cause of
^ports this week of 42,145 bales, while the stocks to-night are surprise, and by a few has been accepted as indicating a change of
70,501 bales more than they were at this time a year ago. The
view in Europe as to the probable year’s consumption. It will
following is our usual table showing the movement of cotton at
all the
ports from Sept. 1 to Nov. 11, the latest mail dates. We hardly be necessary to express our dissent to this latter opinion,
do not include our
telegrams to-night, as we cannot insure the since surely no one can claim that, with the war continued, or
with the war extended, by England and Russia becoming parties,
EXPOBTED SINGE SEPT. 1 TO— Ship¬
the European consumption is to he increased. Besides, we think
BECEIPTS
ments
SINGE 8EPT.1.
PORTS.
to Nor. Stock.
the true reasons for the upward movement are not far to seek.
Other
Great
Total. Ports.
1870.
1869. Britain France Forlgn
First.—There is one peculiarity in this rise in prices which is
42.495
38,180
8,300
91,560
182,764 207,213 78,386
1,494
16,307
21,860 41,586
69,977
important, and that is that the advance has been alone for spot
71.415 11,206
5,101
Charleston...
64,612
11,197
29,697
104,463
76,003 11,497
Savannah.
600
46,184
79,954
V»
76,986 cotton, or for near delivery. - Contracts for shipment from this
198,662 143,884 45,584
Texas......
2,089
14,127
6,901
18,622
37,326 2,089
113,086
45,500 side during this and the next two months could not at the same
19,136
4,797
8,477 108,289
1,211
3,579
time find takers at but little over 8d. Two conclusions may he
19,867
22,990
3,123
18,791
47,630
4,172 drawn from these circumstances.
51,802
55,747
1. Whatever the causes of the
Other ports...".']
10,000
4,970
2,885
8,519
5,621 2,085
upward movement are, they apply to and affect alone the prices
fotaiihlflyear.,
677,145
259,136
1,494 21,683 282,313 253,319 316,751 of the immediate present.
2. This upward turn is no ^evidence
-Total ttvear
that prices are to continue on that level.
628,056 169,875 58,887 31,738 260,500 23-4.672 248,531
From the

with the

.

f

,

T

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m

•

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T

t

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n

.

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tttf-

$&£!?““•••

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e

.

....




....

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....

664

THE CHRONICLE.
:

-

V

-

[November 19, 1870.

"

Second.—This, then, being granted, what are the inflences tend¬ week. Below we give our table showing the exports of cotton
from
ing for the moment to enhance prices ? It cannot, we think, be a New York, and their direction for each of the last fouweeks; also
fear of a short supply of American cotton during the next four the total
exports and direction since September 1, 1870; and in the
weeks, uni ass some new temporary demand has arisen. The figures last column the total for the same period of the previous
year:
of to-day show that there is now afloat (not including the sailings
Exportsof Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept,
of this week) of American cotton, 169,900 bales, and that the stock
1,
at Liverpool is 43,000 bales.
This supply will all be at Liverpool
WEEK ending
Same
before the middle
of
Total time
December,
allowing a consump¬
KXFORTED TO
t ct.
to
Nov.
tion of over 50,000 bales per week; and
Nov.
Nov.
the takings
mv.
as
25.
1.
date. year.
8.
15.
of American
during the past eight weeks have only av¬
eraged about 30,000 bales, it is clear that unless there Liverpool
13,190
14,776 17,557 12,492 105,853
'
67,538
908
is some new temporary call, the supply is
Other British Ports
1,024
2,436
ample.
156
But though the arrivals the next and succeeding weeks may
14,776 17,557 13,516 108.289
Total to Gt. Britain. 14,098
be large, the
67,692
Liverpool stock is very small, and with this
small stock there has arisen a demand for goods for China since Havre
5,131
Other French ports..
the settlement of the difficulties which were threatening
3
war in that
quarter has been announced, and this has resulted in a demand
Total French
5,124
from spinners to cover with cotton contracts made for such goods.
203
280
In this demand then coming on this small stock we probably have Bremen and Hanover
546
7,693
550
48
m
1,098
the chief cause for the advance. Yet, very likely, this alone may Hamburg
4,741
Other ports
295
1,843
2,138
not seem sufficient to account for the decided upward movement in
Total to N, Enrope
753
295
face of the prolonging of the war on the continent, and the
2,171
103
3,782*
threatened disturbance of peaceful relations between England
Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c
1,015
1,015
and Russia which has put United States bonds down to 88c.
If All others
bo, we may find further cause in the very fear of war with Russia
Total Spain, etc
1,015
which would naturally lead spinners to desire to stock up before
1,015
hostilities began. Cotton in the United States is not cotton in Grand Total
14,851
16,947 ! 18,867 13,619 113,0S6 SI
England, and with the outbreak of war may not Great Britain very
The following are the receipts of cotton at New York,
reasonably fear that we should follow the example of the Alabama,
Boston, Phila
which she has set us (most likely she exaggerates the danger), delphia and Baitim -e for the last week, and 9ince September
1, 1869:
and that the chance of getting the balance of our crop freely,
would therefore be in doubt.
The effect of this new phase of
NEW YORK.
BOSTON.
PHILA DELPHI
BALTIMORE.
the war would therefore be temporarily to put up cotton, and this RECEIPTS PROMThis
Since
This
Since
This Since
This Siicefeeling has, we think, been one of the influences operating on the
week. Sept. 1. week. Septl. week. Septl. week.
market during the week.
....

....

....

—.

....

....

....

....

....

..

.

.

•••

....

....

•

....

•••

.

..

A

In view of the above and of the uncertainties of the future, is it
part of wisdom to let our cotton go freely at every rise in
price until at least half the crop is disposed of?
•

not the

Gunny Bags, Bagging, &c.—The market for cloth has con¬
tinued during the week without life, and at the close prices are

nominally quoted £@lc

yard lower, but there have been no
sales at the decline.
We quote native standard 26@26ic, Borneo
26|@27c, and Domestic 26c. Bags are also as dull as ever; buyers
all seem to have sufficient for their wants.
The nominal price is
18c. Hemp is dull, and we hear of no transactions. Manila is
still quoted at 13c. Jute has shown a moderate business during
the first part of this week; 800 bales sold to arrive per “Asia,” and
250 bales from store; both lots on private terms, probably at a
slight decline from former asking prices. Jute Butts remain
about steady in price with a small inquiry. Sales in Boston are
reported of 400 bales at 3fc currency. We quote ibis market 3£c.
per

'■*

Movements op Cotton

at the

Interior Ports.—We have

made arrangements to receive hereafter in our Friday night
telegrams from the interior ports figures which will enable us to
present to our readers the entire movement at each port for the
week—receipts, shipments, and stock. This will enable every one
now

glance with what rapidity the crop is being marketed
sections, a fact which is not indicated by the simple
Below we give the statement for this week and the cor¬

to see at a

in different

stocks.

responding week of 1869:
/—Week

ending Nov.IP, 1870.—Week endingNov.18,1869.—,
Receipts. Shipments. Stock. Receipts. Shipments. Stock.

Augusta

8,130

8,146

8,640

4,149

Columbus
Macon

3,225
4,701

2,915
4,407

5,810
8,696

3,046
4,893

Montgomery...

3,300

2,896

7,100

Selma

4,325

3,083

7,281

20,534

16,378

2,279

2,229

Memphis
Nashville

2,983
2,485

10,900
6,994

3,090

13,527

3,148

2,267

11,891

2,005

1,119

5,159

19,187

8,391

7,697

1,796

1,412

1,013

11,651
1,174

New Orleans.
TexaB
Savannah
Mobile
Flonaa
South Carolina.
North Carolina..

Virginia

corresponding period of 1869. It will be noticed that the receipts
at Memphis are for the week 20,534 bales, or about 12,000 bales
than for the same week of 1869.
Visible Supply of Cotton.—The

more

following table shows the
quantity of cotton in sight at this date of each of the two past
seasons:

1870.
Stock in Liverpool
Stock in London
.

bales.

Stock in Glasgow
Stock in Havre
Stock in Marseilles
Stock in Bremen
Stock rest of Continent
Afloat for Great Britain (American)
Afloat for France (American and Brazil)...
Total Indian Cotton afloat for Europe
Stock in United States ports
Stock in inland towns..,

1869.

408,000
43,997
1,300
88,040
9,000
10,000
25,000

169,000
1,494
198,000
342,507
58,510

400

237,000
272,006

61,296

Total
1,354,848
1,282,468
These figures indicate an increase in the cotton in sight to-night
of 72,380 bales compared with the same date of 1869.
The

exports of cotton this week from New York show a decrease
sines last week, the total reaching 13,619 bales, against 18,867 bales last




7,-'63

6,606

64,220

6,207

3,179

•

7,685

Tennessee, <fcc.
Foreign

6,019

Total this year

28,430
20,960

Total last

year.

Last week’s
totals.

Shipping

346

:

328

3,108

8^995

1,464

6

4/220

1,983.

60,657
16,86*
36,139
4,216
25,155

528

28l>

74

251,785

7,114

41,639

187,511

5,406j

30,971

were

1,818

'iso

L686

‘830 5,750.

1,036

10,505

3,392 27,192?

1,165

9,027

3,060 25,549

....

_

errors) have been corrected in the

News.—The exports of cotton from the United States tl*

past week,
lar as

3^588

353

1,717 10,308

8,028

14

figures (in which there

955

7,7321
16,353

....

4,788

1,738

io|

1.728

4Qil

•

....

366^

,

3.282

....

1,926

....

502

750

a« per latest mail returns, have reachtd 51,125 bales.
the Southern ports are concerned, these are the same

So

exports
reported by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle last Fri¬
day, except Galveston, and the figures for that port are4he exports for
two weeks hack.
With regard to New York, we include the manifest
only up to Tuesday night, to make the figures correspond with the offi¬
cial week.
Below we give a list of the vessels in which these
sliipments from all ports, both North and South, have been made:
Total bales.

New York—To

Liverpool, per steamers Idaho, 8,598
Iowa, 1,650....
Scotia, 1,267....Batavia, 73 >
City of Paris, 1,848 ....per ships
Natrpore, 707
Tripoli, 1,390.. .Neptune, 1,231
Priuceton, 506 12,492
To Glasgow, per steamers Columbia, 374
Europa, 050
1,024
To Hamburg, per steamer Allemaniu, 103
103
New Orleans—To Liverpool, per steamers Alhambra, 2,011
St.
Louie, 3,819
per ships Jedburgh, 1,785
Endymion, 3,781....
Pocahontas, 3,420
per bark Nyi hon, 3,162
18,008
To Vera Cruz, per schooner Velr z Vera Crnz ina, 180
!80
Mobile—To Liverpool, per schooner Sangreal, 4:0
410
Charleston—To Liverpool, per barks rasters, 608 Uplands.. Enrique,
..

..

.

1,902 Uplands••**

Savannah- To

2,510

Liverpool,

per

ships Richard Third, 3,445

Constitus’aga, 1,413, all

Melose, 3,220 ...Koomar, 3,896

Uplands

15,998

...

Baltimore—To Bremen, per steamer Ohio, 230
To Amsterdam, per bark Aylestone, 170

..

Total

The

particulars of these shipments, arranged in
Liver¬

New York
N< w Orleans..
Mobile
Charleston..
..

Savannah.
Baltimore
Total

230
170
51,125

our

follows:

as

420,000
76,323
78,250
2,850
3,950
19,300
100,000
11,093

42,069

8(»5

North’rn Ports.

lion, 3,994

46,494
40,054 58,510 27,044 20,654
61,296
These totals show that the interior stocks have increased during
the week 6,440 bales (being now 2,786 bales less than for the
same period of last year), while the aggregate receipts are 19,450
bales more, and the shipments 19,400 bales more than for the

2,479

pool.

.

.

12,492
18,008

Glas¬

Bre¬

gow.

men.

Ham¬

burg.

1,024

Amster¬

dam.

10$

usual farm, are
Vera
Cruz.

'iso

Total.

13,619

18,lb8

410
.

.

410

2,510
15,998

2,510
16,90S

•

.

•

•

•

f

49,418

230

....

1,024

....

103

23)

170
170

....

180

400

51,135

By Telegraph from Liverpool.—
Liverpool, Nov. 18, 5 P.M.—The market has ruled quiet to.day. The sales of
^weekspeculation. 76»00U bales, in port is 40s,000 bales were taken for export, and
bav? been The stock of which 12,000
5,000 on
bales, of which 43,000 are Ameri¬
can.
The stock of cotton afloat bound to this port Is 319,000 bales, of which 169^00
bales

are

American.

NOV. 18.
Nov. 11.
Nov. 4.
76,000
67,000
110,000
‘9,000
12,000
5,000
24,000
25,000
5,000
14,000
9,mo
11,000
138,000
509,000
463,000
43,000
52,000
64,000
76,000
319,01)0
297,000
148,000
246,000
133,000
80,000
63,000
following table will show the daily closing prices of cotton for theweek:
Oct. 28.

Total sales
Sales for export
Sales on speculation.
Total stock
Stock of American...
Total afloat
American afloat.
The

PrlceMldd. Uplands....
“
•'
Orleans

“

“

Up. to arrive

9
9m

Tues.

Mon.

Satur.
9

9X 9X® 9X

9

9H& 9%

Wednes.

Thurs.

Fri.

9%

9m 9% we-"

THE CHRONICLE.

November 19,1870.]

665

Kentucky Leaf has been somewhat pressed for sale. The new
Freights.—Gold has fluctuated the past
110| and 113f, and the close was 113. Foreign crop is a fine one, and hoi lers of the old crop have been anxious
SEjianize market is quiet and steady. The following were the to realize. The sales of the week have been about 800 lihds., of
Annotations: London bankers’, long, 109£@109f; short, 110@ which 600 lihds. are for export, nearly all low grades, at 6@(tyc. for
oat and Commercial, 108£@109.
Freights closed at £@9-16d. by
Lugs and 7@7ic. for low Leaf, closing with the stock freely
and i@5-16d. by sail to Liverpool.
European and Indian Cotton Markets.—Id reference to these mai- offered, and the views of buyers of large lines indicated by very
floLD

Exchange and

between

k

i

correspondent in London, writing under the date of Nov, 6,
^Liverpool ^ov. 6*—The following are the prices of American CotioD compand with those of last year :
r-Fa'r <fc-^
G’d &—* ^-Same date 1869—,

|ete our

Description,
gea Island..
Stained
,

Upland
Mobil*. ••

Good.

r-Ord. & M d—.
fine.
Fair.
g’d fair
Mid.
12
15
17 -20 26 -48
21
23
7
8
9 -10 11 -12
It
12
Ord. G. Ord. L. Mid. Mid. G’d Mid. Mid. F.
d
12*
8
8*
9*
9*
9*
9
8
9*
12*
sx
9*
9%
8
9 7-16 9X
10
s*
9*
12*

80
15

N.O. & Texas.
The followiag are

date

the prices of middling qualities of cotton at this
1867:

aad since

1868. 1869. 1870.
24 d. 21d.
15d.

11* 12*
11* 12*
11* 12*

8*
9

Mobile..
Orleans

1867. 1868. 1869. 1870
Mid. Pernamb 8d.
10*d. 11 fed. 8*
9
10
6*
Egyptian. 6*
Broach... 0
7*
8*
5*
Dhollerah 6
7*
7*
5*

9*
9*
9 7-16

the transactions on specula*

Since the commencement of the year
tioo and for export have been :

bales.

260.280
69,930

gast Indian

65,431
10,327

6,410
268,728

653,630

388,260
667,039

Total.... 300,240

138,300

6,851
5,149
2H,810

373,623

455,671

791,850

5,870

2,250

..107,049

114,745

61,800
11,050
11,540
674,160

39.950

20,130

2,360

Indian...

bales,

192,600

86,880

14,420
Si?TPtian. &C.. 5,780

Brasilian

109,531
41,182

U.K.ir.
1869

date—*
1869.
bales.

this

to
1870.
bales.

1868,

bales.
170,620

160,640

American

export from
Liverpool, Hull and Actual
other outports
H> 1
exp’tfrom

this date-

r-Taken on spec, to
1870,
1869,
hales.

Actual

following statement shows the imports of cotton for the week
aodyear, and the stocks on hand on Thursday evening last:
The

SAXiBS, RTO., OF ALL DB80RIPTIOH8.
Sales this week.
*
Total
Same

,

Average
period weekly sales
year.
1870. 1869
1869.
port. tion. Total,
4.070 1,730 84,580 1,450,490 1,064,010 23,570 17,680
720
510 16,360
454.290
6,290 8,120
340,990
60
6 C60
320
153,230
192,290
3,480 4,030
210
1,180 1,550
5,820
62,930
83,860
1.030
922 140 1,358,200 11,690 14,910
19,320 8,170 47,650
Ex-

Trade.
American..bales. 28,480
Brazilian
15,130

Egyptian

Test

4,010

4,580
20,160

Indian....

East Indian.

this

Specula

74,010 25,460 10,7C0110,170

Total..

i mports—

To this
date
This
1870.
week

To this

.

21,557 1,348,059
8,264
348,447
151,149
4,366
637
69,470

.

.

Egyptian.

.

Total.
1869.

1,039,118

499,251
226,540
89,027
815,879 1,013,646 1 141,343

18,722

.

date
1869.
838/41

51,210 46,290

2,929,780 3,153,650

423,729
168.091
76,594

—StockB
Same
date
This
Dec. 81,
1869.
1869
day.
76.900
64.800
£0,6'0

28,210
13,260

65,8S0

20,330

24,370
26,560
6,130
203,800

7,330

19,420
304,070

819,020

£37,760
48,416 2,732,951 2,529,701 2,995,279 463,500 398,500
Of the pre.-ent stock of cotton in Liverpool, nearly 14 per cent is
American, against 7.76 per cent last tear.
Of Indian cotton the pro¬
.

portion is 65.50

per

London. Nov.

cent, against nearly 71 per cent.
tra ?e herd is

6—There cotton

the qu

otations have improved £ J. to £ I. per lb.
particulars of imports, deliveries and stocks :
1866.

Importi, Jan. 1

Bales. 236,629

to Nov. 3

Deliveries.;
Stocks, Nov. 8

312,955
127,711

;

very

firm

and

The following are the
1869.

1870.

129,209

552, 72

209,598
43.997

817,441
76,323

Havre, Nov. 4.—The stock of cotton is 88,040 bales, of which
47,909 bales are American, and 88,300 bales East Indian. 1,818 bales
East Indian cotton are afloat to this port.
TOBACCO.
Friday. P. M., Not. 18,1870.

There is an increase in the exports of crude tobacco this week,
the total from all the ports reaching 8,657 lihds., 836 cases, 160
biles and 850 hhds. stems against 660 lihds., 65 cases, 246 bales
and 23 hhds. stems for the previous
seven days. Of these exports
for this week 864 hhds., 216 cases, 160 bales were from New York;

2,787 hhds., 20 cases and 350 hhds. stems from Baltimore. The
direction of the shipments of hhds. was as follows: To Liverpool,

174; to Bremen, 2,642 and 350 stems; to Amsterdam, 468; to Lon¬
don, 68; to Glasgow, 138; to Gibraltar, 126; and the balance to
different ports. During the same period the exports of manufac¬
tured tobacco reached
were to

141,280 pounds, of which 77,229 pounds
The full particulars of the shipments from all

Liverpool.

the ports were

as

follows:
Oeroons.

New York

•

—

*‘.3,787

..

Philadelphia
New
Ban

Man’d.

Hhds. Cases. Bales.&T’rcos. Stems. Pkgs. lbs.
65 138,176
160
£a$
216

klrom

!&0re-***
Boiton

Hhds.

850

20

11)0

ii

8,104

....

Total...

ToSi !a1** -we<* •••"••••
10(41 previous week

q (iK~t

8,887
-The market for tobacco the

386
66

114

160
246
487

850
83
727

79
65

141,280
166,985
60,658

past week has been generally more
active, but prices have been pretty uniformly drooping,




figures.

sion caused

The war cloud in Europe contributes to the depres¬
by the excellent crop.

Seed Leaf has been inactive and unsettled.

250

cases

The sales embrace

Connecticut wrappers, part at 40c.; 150 cases do., in

job

lots, at 85@65c.; 50 cases Ohio at 16£c.

quoted firmer, with sales of 250 bales at 88c.@
$1 05, currency, duty paid.
Nothing new is reported in manufactured tobacco.
The following are the exports of tobacco from New York for the
past week:
Havana tobacco is

OF TOBACCO

EXPORTS

Liverpool
London.

133

Glasgow

Hamburg.
Bremen

Pkgs.

M&sufd,
77,219

*

*

*

#

'

*

•

*

*

•

•

•

10,560

40

22
126

Gibra’tar
Danish W. Indies...
Dutch W. Indies....
British N. A. Col...

YORK.

....

....

'

‘323

Oporto

NEW

Bales. Hhds.Btems.

’*44

68

..

FROM

Cases.

Hlids.
174

65

’
....

....

•

4

•

•

38

....

1

•

•

•

* *- '

.

•

•

•

♦

•

”79

•

•

10,670
8,442

1

1.814

• •

*

....

....

•

1,650
14,891

•

"38

British W. Indies...
British Honduras..
Cub i..

3

....

*

*

•

ft

*

•

*

•

5,475

»

«

....

*

9,499

"33

Hayti
New Granada
Venezuela

79
80

37
...

s,

m

*

»

•

179

•

8,642

....

....

125

Brazil
216

864

Total.

The direction of the
has been

as

160

188,176

65

foreign exports for the week from the ports

follows:

From Baltimore—To Bremen, 2,319 hhds. and 350 stems
.To Rio Janeiro, 20
cases....To Amsterdam, 463 hhds
To Msyagut z, 3,104 lbs.
From Boston—To Liverpool, 10 ) • as s ...To Barbados*, 14 boxes—To British

Provinces, 6 hhds. and 4 boxes.

BREAD8TUFFS.
Friday. P. v

.

November 18,1870

The market has shown much

speculative activity in Flour and
stuffs, the
movement and_fluctuations have not been important.
The receipts of Flour have continued very large, averaging more
than 20,000 bbls. per day, and holders have offered freely from the
wharf; but the demand has been active for speculation and export*
with an irregular advance in prices varying from 15c. to 40c., the
greater advance being on shipping extras from Spring Wheat.
Yesterday, several thousand bbls. sold at $5.40 to $5.50 for rejected,
and $5.75@$6, for fair to prime Western and State shipping ex¬
tras, and, to-day, very few sound extras could be had under $6,
with some holders firm at $6.25.
This gave a rather unsettled tone
to the market, and checked business.
The higher grades have not
fully shared in the advance, though not plenty. Southern Flours
have also done but little better.
Rye Flour has been rather more
Wheat, with

an

advance in prices; but in the coarser

salable.

*

*

excited, the advance being 14c. per bushel for
Spring ; some other qualities show little improvement. The
belligerent reports from Russia, and the danger which is appre¬
hended that she will declare war against Turkey, and thus dose
the Black Sea, have been the main causes of the excitement; the
advance in Liverpool and the export demand being barely suffi.
cient to support previous prices.
At to-day’s market new Spring
sold largely at $1 41 a $1 42, and amber Winter, $1 43 a $1 46,
closing strong, but less buoyant.
Corn ha3 arrived more freely; the supply of new by rail has
been considerable, and prices have been weakened thereby ; but
the close is firm at 80 a 85c. for new mixed, 86 a 89c., for old do.,
and 88c. for new Southern white. Rye has been steady. B irley
has been pressed for sale, and drooping at 90c. for two rowed
State ; $1 for Canada East, and $1 10 for Canada West. Barley
malt drooping.
Oats, with some speculation, dose firm at 60c. for good boat
Wheat has been

new

oads of Western.

The
Flour—

following

are

closing quotations :

Wheat.Spring,bU8n

$ bbl.$5 10® 5 40
5 90® 6 10

Superfine

Extra State
Extra Western,
mon to good

Orleans........

Francisco

low

com¬

5 85® 6 20

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
Southern supers

Southern,

extra

®

and

6 15® 9 00

family

®

California

Kye Flour, super
Corn Meal

6 25® 8 75

—

Red Winter
Amber do
White
White California

Corn.Western Mix’d,....

Yellow, new
White, new
Rye

1 43® 1 46
1 45® 1 70
1 75® 1 90

80®
85®
8<@
90® 1

69
88
PO

10

Oats

59®

Barley

90® 1 10
90® 1 10

Malt
& extra 4 25® 5 60
4 20® 4 65 Peas, Canada....
~

fl 12® 1 42
1 40® 1 41

63

1 05® 1 203

Tht movement in breadstuff's at
TOBK.

RECEIPTS AT NEW

,

duty if they so desire. Coffee has advanced gom*
what, but on other styles there is no important variation. Duty
reduction in

thia market has been as follows:
-EXPORTS TBOM NEW

-1870.
1870.»
Same
Since
For the
Since time .Tan. For the
week.
Jan. 1.
week.
Jan. 1.
1, 1869.

YOBK.-

1869.—

,

*

,

Since
Jan. 1

For the
week

135,694 8,495,934 2,906,019 48,809 1,725,873 42,977 1,285.780
123, &37
2,665
1,12»
70,702
183,016
4,147
170,140
Wheat,bushl,193,198 20,624,142 20,907,962 469,464 15,760,963 835,764 16,684,688
9,040 1,654,621
386.803
Corn,bush.. 154,799 7,826,641 10,148,730 19,926
144,060
92,431
Rye, bush... 15,310
504,631
304,208
78
134
Flour, bbls.

C. meal. bis.

Barkjy,bn*h. 234,783 8,290,880 1,774,428
Date, blush.. 262,305 8,231,285 6,938,015

[: f

i

hi i

"

tables, prepared for

The following

bbls.

bush.

419.735

Milwaukee
Toledo.....
Detroit
Cleveland

19,295
29,714

Totals
Previous week

120,316 1,026,688
126,515 1.355,812

87,829
99,494

27,634

84,790

7,600*

consumption, and the withdrawals from
bond, showing together the total thrown on the market for the
week, were as follows :
The entries direct for

Tea, black....
Green

Japan

17,445
4,933

211,803

73,546

Various

26,010

131,661

79,346

326.919

40,201
29,893

355,595

464,856
600,944

258.307

178,679
52,081
46,661

858,355

101,210

Java

Maracaibo..

20,022

29,025
94,206

h

-1

inclusive, for four years:

1868.

4,472,696

8,698,159

12,493,453
1,759,084

1,206,013

1,283,392

79,778,341

85,724,990

•

grain, bush

And from

1,630,952

1,969,543

bushels. 20,124,832

20,621,863
10,028,539
11,888,349
2,067,281

785,671

728 369

1,373,038

bushels.... 40.063,953

43,824,754

45,979,070

8,132,694
3,476,636

Barley

Rye

.

FROM

TOLEDO
NOV.
12.

CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE,
ENDING

WEEK

Flour,

Wheat,

bbls.

bush.

149.862 1,585,230

Week ending Nov. 12

Nov. 5
122,413 1,944,742
Week ending Nov. 13, ’69.119,384
631,406
Comparative Shipments of flour
Week ending

AND

CLEVELAND

Oats,

Barley,

bush.

bush.

321,119
114,018
45,708
337,770 126,908
31,82,
10,251
372,396 287,507
5,3?g
and gram from the ports of

1868.

Barley
Rye

GRAIN

“ IN

SIGHT,”

Wheat.
bush.

In
In
In
In
In
In

store a" New ifork
store at Albany
store at Buffalo
store at Chicago
store at Milwaukee
store at Toledo

2,439,530

Corn.
bush.

264,934

2,095,033

2S,7'K)

3,900

92,800

229,796

18,900
1,240,752

373,^54

441,200

753,000
325,( 05
147,698

68,434
2,089

In store at Detroit
In store at Oswego
538,668
In store at St. Louis.
111,761
la store at Toronto
82,738
ill store at Montreal
620,644
In store at Boston
9,957
Afloat on lakes for Buffalo and Oswego. 993,011
Afloat on New York Canals for tide waterl,607,120
Rail shipments for week—
97,766

Total in sfore and in transit Nov. 12. 9,221,346
“

“
“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

“

-

“

“

4‘

138,581
10,192

38,000
61,316
N1.073
'13,954

63,572

89,727
4,555

bush.

401,659
59,500
312,840
569,668
33,072
2.330

18,415
492,985
5,712
801,259

15.0JG

275

8.166

224,423
147,474
408,471

153,590

90,566

40,980
72,483
525,074
22,705

1,656,824
2,246,250
2,127,024
2,8-6,928
3,128,615
2,806,812

8,844,439
♦cor. week, ’69. 7,439,518
1,898,644
Oct. 29. ’70 10,630,793
4,217.576
Oct. 22. ’70.10,311,132
4,536,492
Oct.
15,*70.10,179,145
4,623,776
Oct.
8, ’70. 8,936,990
4,293,725
Oct.
1, ’70. 8,708,294 2,896,989 4,143,799
Sept. 24, ’70. 7,414,628 3,123,249 4,109,686
Sept. 17, ’70. 7,28‘,362 3,234,088 4,614,213
Sept. 10, ’70. 7,583,183 3,297,447 4,518,193
Sept, a, ’70. 7,325,679 3,589,136 1,046,517

2,561,878
1,85U,?53
2,556,348

2,286,263
2,513,281
2,315,508
1,968,886
1,581,003
191,313

1,297,535

for 1869 at Albany, Toledo, Detroit, Oswego, Sfc. LouU, Tor¬
onto, Moat real, and Boston were not included.

sold, if here, to a considerable extent, and there
looking around for Japans. Sales of 2,100 packages Green, 2,300 Oolong

GROCERIES.
Evening, November 18, 1870.

The volume of business continues

moderate, and most markets
under the above general head have rather a slow tone.
There is,
however, much firmness on bonded goods, in view of the pretty
small supplies and the fact that all buyers now prefer operating

parcel* upoa which they can take advantage of the coming




Green.

Japan.

Total.

16,051,931
17,655,045

9,104,.162

98,513,0
40,966,971

Aspin-

very

sundries:
The stock of Rio, Nov. 17, and the

imports since January 1 are as follow*:
BaltiNew Savan.A GalYork, delphla. more. Orleans. Mobile, veston. Touj.
18 892
8 980
5 579
48,596
18,892
8.980
5,579
7,900 gW
New

In

Bags.

Stock
Same date 1869

Imports
“

Phila....

....

603,576

17.200

....

73,416

409,259

3,200

644,944

In 1869

Of other sorts the stock at New

270,840

/-New York—, Boston

stock, import, import.

In bags_
Java and Singapore

t...,

Ceylon

8,539

Maracaibo....

Laguayra

Total
Same time,
*

*55,249
25,426

914

-

89,418

1869

36,866

95,441

♦56,244

....

20,112 }»
2,800 1W8

imports at tlte several

Philadel. Balt. N- Orbs’*
Import. Import, import.

•3,164

*3,118

*99i

1.917

15,757
21.125

4.109

1,917
1.246

10 i, 959

21,237

200
8,528

1,’(X»

37,222

118,762

York, Nov. 17, and the

ports since January 1 were as follows:

St. Domingo
Other

A

315.952

grades have again moved a little slowly, but the demand on the whole
fair, and on most qualities an advance has been fully established, im¬
porters and holders generally showing a continued confidence and refusing to
enter into negotiations likely to call for any concessions. The Rio Janeiro
telegram received early in the week was somewhat more encouraging for future
buyers, but as the effect of the increased purchases, and shipments on United
States account reported, cannot possibly be felt for several weeks along our
sparsely snpplied seaboard no weakening of values resulted. The assortment
available continues poor being largely made up of the medium grades, which
are not altogether adapted to the present trade.
Buyers as a rule are not much
inclined to operate greatly in excess of their early wants, hut a number of de¬
sirable parcels have been taken in bond to carry over into the new year. Jan
has been a little more active from first hands, and jobbers continue to sell fair
amounts, mainly of parcels to be shipped in bond to the interior on which the
duty will be paid after the revised tariff goes into effect. Values have remained
firm and good colory lots at all times commanded full bids. The movement of
West India grades Ms been moderate and uncertain, with about former rate*
current, however, and a comparatively uniform tone on all except invoice*
which cannot obtain the benefit of the approaching redaction of duty, and
these are mostly in buyers favor.
Sales of 9,740 bags Rio here, 1,300 *t
Baltimore, and 3,423 at New Orleans ; also at this port 1,100 bags Maracaibo, 426
bags Curacoa, 400 bags Manila, 150 bags Laguayra, 50 bags Savanillt, 3‘341 bag*
St. Domingo, and 3,300 mats Java.
Imports of Rio this week have included the following cargoes: “H. J.Bur
ton,” 4,200 bags; ‘‘Peony,” 7,000 bags; “John Boulton,” 4,500 bags; Tainman,” 5,000 bags. Of other sorts the imports have included 3,065 bags
Maracaibo, per “ Spring Bird,” 1,852 do, per “ Laura Pride,” and 104 bags oi

♦In aggregate

Friday

757220

Brazil

Barley.

123,152
278,584
195,814

557,067
530,636

13,356,677

was

1867.

Oats,
bush.

‘285;444

COFFEE.

12, 1870.

NOV.

66,933
202,934
10,788

13,134,142
10,177,734
importations, including receipts by P. M. Steamers via
wall, have been 97,374 pkgs. since January 1, against 34,642 last year.

65,718,654

Total

1,049,141

The indirect

380,844
815,571

1,511,044

*

413,701
529,631
761,218
288,361

Black.

32,192,368
23,025,836
9,303,985

Oats.

361.209

speculative feeling, but supplies are wanted by the regular

1870
1869

4,034,318
19,539,699

bags.

1,189,831

Japans.
Imports this week have included 8,241 pkgs, 6,099 of which were from A spinwall, per steamer Alaska.”
The following table shows the imports of Tea into the United States (not
including San Francisco), from January 1 to date, in 1870 and 1869:

383,657

1869.

78,416
6,950
100,335

48,596

89,418
89,437
87,095
379,629
11,216

hhds.

579,105

1870.

Wheat
Corn

pkgs.
bags.
bags.
...boxes.

1869.

40'SP’<«
34,642

and 150

Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, and Cleveland, from Jan. 1 to Nov. 12
Flour

1870.

chops of new Green could be
is some

bush

'

Imports at leading pork
since January l.

S8'«i5?5
97,374

hhas.

modification of the

Rye,

bush.

imports at the five leading

trade, and buyers can always be found on hand to a fair extent. Oolongs con¬
tinue to be the favorite grade, though there is no doubt that nice desirable

FOR

Corn,

iii'bhd!;

The market continues strong and uniform, and, the general state of trad*
considered, operators appear pretty well satisfied with the position. The busi¬
ness does not foot up quite as heavy as last week, and there is probably gome

45,896,851

7.549,120

Demerara..

Porto Rico.

673 hhds.
Other.,
.unn.
•hhds.
*
Hhds. include bbls. and tcs. reduced.

TEA.

9,857,972
2,203,105
1,055,657

Wheat

Total grain,

Sugar
Molasses

21,785,810
10,994,293

Corn
Oats

SHIPMENTS

(Indirect import)
Coffee, Rio
Coffee, other
Sugar
Sugar

1,900,846

22,323,576
12,484,896
6,431,083
1,356,830

4n6*hhds.

lbs.

Tea
Tea

1867.

1868-

1869.

1870.

Sugar, Brazil. 5,455 bagg
aga
Manila, &c..

M’las’es.Cuba

Stocks In New York
at date.
1809.
1870.

74,252,098

1,536,498

bbls.

Flour

bags.

ports since Jan. 1, are as follows :

12, for four years:

August 1st, to and includiug Nov.

1,307 mats.
935 bags.

Cu
uba
Porto Rico.
Other

201

1,043 bags.
4,233 bxes.
2,423*hhds.

Imports this week have included 20,700 bags Rio and 5,021 bags
Sugar and Molasses have

27,002,274
29,417,832
13,471,372
2,741,437
1,619.183

80,515,953

29,177,617

4,333,160

8,320,961

29,003,837
29,177,617
18,259,5'7
2,481,111
1,593,801

40,941,237

39,938,672
21,783,142
12,617,454

Barley, bush
R*e, bush
otal

1869.

3,399,125

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Oats, bash

"

1867.

1870.

Flour, bbls

Nov. 12

ports from Jan. 1 to

same

1,123 pkgs.
5,646 Dags.

Laguayra ..
Other
Sugar, Cuba..

of other kinds of Coffee. Receipts of
been small.
The stocks in New York at date, and

♦Estimated.

Comparative Receipts at the

2,051 pkgs.
1,533 pkgs.
724 pkgs.

Coffee, Rio....

8,632

200,415

151,116 1,055,615

cial condition.

(56 lbs

354 552

100,375
655,140
>67. 118,196 1.041,546

*66.

Rye
bush

308,107

*68

••

bush-

336,032

Oorrespond’g“ week, 69. 163,435 1.471,297
“

12, 1870.

(56 lbs.) (82 lbs.) (48 lbs )
205,256
109,995 45,350
4,013 10,258
5,794
1,700
71,475
113,888
12.520
3,238
6,194
13,800 13,000
4,900

(196 lbs.) (60 lbs.)
86,053 334,840

At

Chicago

•

in eight

Barley.

Oats.
bush.

Corn.
bush.

Wheat.

paid parcels continue to be much neglected, and values unsettled
rather downward, and a probability
approaches a number of odd parcels
will be forced off cheap. Rumors were current during the week
of the failure of a large grocery house, but the report proved
unfounded, and the trade generally^appears to be in a sound finan¬

with the tendency, however,
that as the end of the year

by Mr. E. H.

WEEK ENDING NOV.

Floor*

S:

47,941

Walker, of the New York Produce Exchange, show the grain
and the movement of bre&dstutfis to the latest mail dates :
RECEIPTS AT LAKE PORTS FOR THE

it

*650

2,370
24,420
the Chronicle

[November 19,1870.

CHRONICLE.

THE

606

6,950

Includes mats, &c., reduced to

20,081
44,204
24,198

8,508
557

274,117
221,699

65,309
40,440

bags.

t Also, 25,505

1,008

mats.

SUGAR,

unchanged will again cover the general position of aftiri0
market for Raw Sugars daring the current week. The trade as usualhave
extremely light, operators taking onjy a few small and unimportant

nfll«

Dali and

hilt Refiners

adbereisg to pr*viQi» policy calculate tilth

.

THE CHRONICLE.

UJjvember 19, IS^P l

667

Green domestic fruit* are selling well—Apples at low prices, as dealers do
positive necessities, which certainly do not Increase,
Inc
not think that they will keep well, and
prefer selling at a small profit to hold¬
*dlnlome quarters appears to bs falling off as the production becomes gradreduced. On the part of holders there appears to be no loss of confidence ing. Cranberries have shown more activity. Grapes are becoming less plenty.
n
We quote Apples, good lots, at $2 25@$2 37#;:
select do., $2 50@$2 62#.;
w d^xtreme prices are in all cases insisted npon, the strengthening influences
Cranberries, $10&$12 per bbl.; Grapes, 7(§H0c. perpound,
the very small arrivals, the falling off in the accumulation of hhds and
^ g and the almost certain delay in the appearance of the new crop, besides
FOREIGN ADVICES.
hi h'there is every reason to expect a first rate business when the demand
Tea.—Since our last report, we have two weeks later advices from Amoy
I C again set in, the cautious policy of buyers for months past having un- and Foochow dating to 12th September. At the former port the market was
decidedly more active the first part of the fortnight, at an advance of $1 to $3
d
btedly reduced the supply at all distributive points in the interior to a very
^
Eer picul at the close the demand was moderate, though holders still keeping
eneflt of the increased prices.
11 aggregate. A few hhds. of the new crop New Orleans have reached this
There had
“arket, and it is supposed that we will get a small supply this season, though houses were also been a good businessofdone at Foochow, though American
not purchasers. A lot
4.800 hf-chests were settled for the
bulk of the crop will undoubtedly'as usual find its way to consumers via
United States at prices about 5 taels
higher than for same Teas last year, and
which would cost laid down in New York—at quoted rates of
the Mississippi river. The effect of this has been partially discounted though
freight and
exchange, nearly 51c gold in bond.
the growth is large and may interfere for a time with the sale of foreign to a
The following shows the quantity of Tea afloat for the United States at
greater extent than anticipated. Refined Sugars are not by any means plenty, latest dates (not including San Francisco), and which has not yet arrived:

•rtant of tht most

,

is there

likely to be an increase of the supply, but there is more than

for the very light demand, and values have shown a soft tone
throughout. Refiners complain of the continued absence of margins, and are
^ging operations to a close for the season as rapidly as possible. The sales
of Raw embrace 2,678 hhds. Cuba; 227 hhds. Porto Rico; 75 hhds. Demerara
1,966 boxes Havana, and 315 bags Manila.
Imports at New York, and stock in first hands, Nov. 17, were as follows:
enough available

•

Cuba,

Cuba,

♦hhds.
m

bxs.

since Jan.

“

“

215,038
251,745

1 263,858

time,’69 865,964

same

Stock in

8,831

week...

ImDorts this

first hands..

P. Rico,

Other

*hhds.

*hhds.
366

....

31,617
29,623

86,339
35,200

Brazil, Manila, Melado
bags.
hhds.
bags.

67,794
119,143

37,095

89,437

,

....

414,289

18,674

348,851

686
578

379,629
202,934
23,494

66.933

42,405
MOLASSES.

Foreign grades generally remain at an almost complete stand, and the market
in a flat nominal condition. Occasionally a grocer can he induced to handle a
imflii lot of something very choice, hut such a fastidious taste is shown as to
quality, and so many concessions are wanted on prices asked, terms of pay¬
ment, etc., that the movement proves unsatisfactory to sellers and brings in
little or no profit. The medium and common grades meet with absolutely no
demand of a regular character, though one or two lots recently offered very
cheap were taken by refiners in a sort of speculative way to lay aside, with the
idea that the stock could he used eventually at a fair margin for profit, though

would only entail loss. Of domestic the supply has been
larger, and, all the offerings selling with a considerable amount of freedom,
Takes strengthened up somewhat. Receivers, however, have no desire to see
the stock accumulate as yet, and accepted full bids in all cases, with most of

-CARGO.

Date of

Name of
Vessel.
Edwd Hex*hert
Ocean Gem...
Chloris
O. Hutchings.
Mikado

sailing, 1870.
26
20
20
29
30
2
5
8
10
16

Aug. 18...'....
Aug. 24
Sept. 1
Sept. 3
Sept. 7*’“...
Sept. 9
Sept. 9

»

The receipts at New

York, and stoi
Cuba,
♦hhds.

Imports this week
“

11

80,026

since Jan. 1
same time 1869

“

93.222

Stock in first hands
“

“

“
“

same
same

m

hands, Nov. 17,

P. Rico,
♦hlids.
»

♦

8,107
8,057

1,946

8,165

time ’69
time *68

30

•

4,696
8,606

25,067
22,492

1,222

*

N. O.
bbls

1,299
11,315
14,482

^

16,056

18,705

150
• «•

Foocnow...

Amoy

The imports of sugar (including Melado). and of Molasses at the
from January 1 to date, have been as follows:
-Sugar.

Hew York....
Boston

Philadelphia..

*

263,858
21,023
30.541
49,970

.

,

1869.

365,963
82,616

48,309

82,061
61,840

66 962

Ba gs.
1870.
1869.

1870.

25,744

10,955

....

....

526,631

530,636

761,218

757,23)

1869.

142, S36
47,138
91,207
22,710
12,061

288,361

49.650

5,432

815,952

irregularity in values1 and a somewhat nominal range for quotations.
Bonded goods, however, are in demand and very firm, with some business
doing, especially in Pepper, but the particulars of transactions are covered
with bo much secresy as to prevent a knowledge of the
aggregate business.
The call is in part speculative, but embraces
quite a number of parcels taken
ly the legitimate trade to meet such wants as may arise within the next month

Topper.

Supplies,

as a

rnle,

are

moderate, and still under comparatively

easy

*

FRUITS, See.
There has been a healthy though not large business doing in foreign
dried
(except the auction sale of figs) since onr last, both the city and country trade
buying to meet their actual wants, which have been considerable. Layer
raisins have shown a further slight decline in prices, with free
offering, but
they close firm. Curranis have been about steady since onr last. Citron has
ihown considerable
activity at steady prices. Nuts are in good demand, and
leveral lots within the
past day or two have changed hands.
Sardines are
dull and nominally,
as we quote. To-day the attentiion of the trade has been
monopolized by the unprecedented fig sale ; over half a million pounds were
disposed of at prices ranging from 11# to 28#c. per lb., the latter price for
feacy. Messrs. T. R. Minturn, Brown & Co. were the auctioneers.
Foreign Green have been rather quiet since our last. Lemons are not in
much demand. West India
fruits are scarce, and if here would sell readily.
Tbe last
Oranges sold at $13@14 per bbl. Lemons sold at $3 50®4 50 per box.
Almelra Grapes have sold at auction
quite freely, but moat of them have been
n
P°ororder, and brought comparatively low prices.
The market for
domestic Dried has ruled quiet. Blackberries have shown
8 m°8^
activity, but are not higher. Unpeeled half Peachea are still scarce
wd wanted. Prime
pared are alao in demand. Apples have ahovm bo great




8,411,204

Shanghai...

82,109

1,435,715

8,847,616

14.3,697,495

1,390,165

1,485,715
9,669,286

loading 37,000 hags, Stock, at date, 50,000. Price 6H700. Exchange 22#d.
Showing an increase in stock and a slight falling off in shipments as
pared to previous fortnight, hut with prices still maintained.

-

com¬

^

PRICES

The

CURRENT.

Following

On

are Ruling ((notations in First Hands.
Purchase of Small Lots Prices are a Fraction

the

Higher.

s

Tea.

✓-Duty pald-

Hyson, Common to fair
do

55

Superior to fine....

do

Ex. flnelto finest

70
90

55

Super, to flue.

65

do
do

Ex. flnetoflnestl 15

Gunp. & Imp., Com. to fair.
Sup. to fine..

70
95

Hyson Sk. & Tw. C. to fair.

45

do
do

do

Ex. fine to flnest.l 25

do

Sup. to fine. 62

/—Duty pald-

H.Sk.&

65
85
@1 25
@ 60
@1 CO
@1 50
@ 90
@
@

Young Hyson, Com. to fair.

Rio Prime, duty paid
do good

Tw’kyEx.f.tofln’st 70 @ 75
Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair.. 70 @ 75

I

do

!

Sup’r to fine...
Ex. f. to finest.

do

Oolong, Common to fair....

80

@ 90
@1 15
@ 70
@ 95

95

60
75

do

Superior to fine....

do

{

@115

Ex fine to finest....1 05 @140

Bone. & Cong., Com. to fair. 69
do
Sup’r to fine. 75
do
Ex. f. to flnest.l 00

@1 70
@ 60
@ 68

@ 70
@ 90
@1 80

gold. 17k@17# ! Native Ceylon

...gold.
gold.
gold.
gold.

doordinary
Java, mats and hags

gold. 17#@19
16#@16# I Maracaibo
gold. 15#@18#
15#@15# Laguayra
...goid. 16#@18
14#@15
St Domingo, in bond
gold. S#@ 9
30#@23 I Jamaica
gold. 14 @16

Sugar.

Cuba, Inf. to
do

fair to

do
do
do
do
do
do

refining....
good refining....
com.

prime
fair to good grocery....
pr. to choice grocery...

centrifugal, hhds. & bxs.
Melado
moiasses

Hav’a, Box,D. S. Nos. 7 to 9...
do
do
do

do
do
do

do
do
do

10 to 12..
13 to 15..
16 to 18..

New Orleans new
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

V gall.

9#@ 9#
9#@10
...@10#

Hav’a, Box, D.S. Nos. 19 to 20.. 12#@18#
Havana, Box, white....
12#@13#
Porto Rico, refining grades.... 9#@10#
do
10#@10#
grocery grades.... 10#@11#
iux@n# ; Brazil, hags
9 @10#
9#@11# ! Manila, bags
8#® 9#
£ @ 8# ! White Sugars, A
@12#
do
3#@10
do
B
@12#
9#@ 9#
do
do
extra C
12#@12#
10 @10#
Yellow sugars
11 #@12#
10#@11# Crushed and granulated
13#@18#
11#@12% | Powdered
1S#@13#
..@

Cuba Clayed
Cuba centrifugal

62
34

20@
18@

English Islands

..

86@
20@

25@

27

20
45

Rice.

Raagoon, dressed, gold in bond 8 @ 3# | Carolina (new;.

7

@ 7#

Spices.
Cassia, In

cases... gold

Cassia, in mats...

V ft.

Mace

do

Nutmegs, casks
do

cases

47

@

49

47

do

Ginger, Rac a and Af (gold)

@

49

11 #@

13

1 28

Pepper, in bond
(gold)
ao
Singapore & Sumatra
Pimento, Jamaica....(gold)
“

@1 80

do
Cloves
do

1 00 @1 01
Penang....1 02 @1 03

Sales of 375 hales Cloves, 100 bags Ginger, and 2,300 bags Singapore

activity.

349,819

31,629

Yokohama.

much

•ontrol.

1,671,720

466,860

480

Molasses.

All parcels duty paid continue to attract only a moderate amount of atten¬
tion, and are as a rule freely offered by owners and on easy terms, causing

two.

8,838,587

466,860

Rio Coffee.—Messrs. Wright & Co.’s telegram dated October 24, reports
sales of Coffee for U. S. since 7tnof October, 44,000 bags, shipments 43,000
bags,

Including tierces and barrels reduced to hhds.
SPICES.

or

2.924,568
2,536,913

Yokohama.

Amoy.......
Whampoa..

leading ports

125,945
54,604
78,112
22.328
7,372

524.529
172,086

34.704

84,035

•

*Khds.——,

>

501,562
199.208

69,058
69,527
9.615

32,575
45,238
80,675

557,067

,

,

•

/—Molasses.

,

*Hb ds.
1870.
1869.
315.474
293,263

,

413,701

Baltimore
lev Orleans..
Total

.

es.

3,466,353
3,434,828

793,278

Riga, via

do fair

Imports of Sugar Sc Molasses at leading ports since JTan. 1

/—Boi
1870.

514,327

48,161
269,479
440,409

Coffee.

1,163
1,734
2,080

997

735,256

841,439
269,479
440,409
735,256

18 083

823,414
16,950

For Boston.

follows:

Other
♦hhds.

♦hhds.

^

-

were as

Demerara,

157,8i9

;

241,552
288,398
857,581
865,367
841,497
86,950
281J25
865,745
616,969
157,819

Yokohoma.

Shanghai...

the lots known to he en route for

first

241,552

70,000
281,125
865,745
616,959

Amov

Total afloat (and not yet arrived)
Total exports to U.S. ports, June 1 to Sept.
Total exports to U. S. ports, same time 1869

lbs.

S57*,53i

365,367

Foochow...

Suez..

Total,

lbs.

514,327

Shanghai...
Shanghai...
Whampoa..
Amoy

Benefactress;..
Str.

Japan.

288,898

Yokohama.

Ceres
Devana
Kelso
Joac. Christian
Str. Magdala,
via Suez....
Louisa*
Eleanor
Ariel
Mindet
Hudson

to work up now

this port, at all times available at an average
rate of about 85c. per gallon.
The transactions during the past week include
875 hhds. Cuba Muscovado., 100 hhds. Porto Rico, 50 hhds. Barbadoes, and
1,250 bbls. New Orleans.

Hiogo
Amoy

S.E.Kingsbury

Green,
lbs.

lbs.

From.

„

June 16

July
July
July
July
July
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.

Black.

in bond

do
do

in bond

do

10#@ 11#
25#@ 26
18#@ 18#
....@
8#
26 @ 26#
7
7#

Fruits and Nuts.

Raisins,Seedless,new V mat
do
Layer, 1870,
box.2
do
Laver, 1869, IP box
do
Valencia, IP tt
do
London Layer
3
V lb.
Currants, new
Citron, Leghorn

Prunes, Turkish, old
Primes, Turkish, new
Prunelles
Dates

@ 6 50
@
@
@
@

V lb.

Mgs, Smyrna

7#@
16 @
8

@

....

20

8
20

J Brazil Nuts
Filberts, Sicily
,
do
Barcelona

19)<@
18#@

Ivica

Sicily, soft shell..
Shelled. Spanish.
paper shell
¥* hf. box.

.

,

V qr,box.

31

@

Fire Crack, best No 1 V box

V lb.

Western

do

J

Southern,

do

common

prime

do

sliced

I

31

Sulphur
Saltpetre
Copperas
Camphor. In bbls
Castile

Soaps.,.,
Xptoxa Salts
-

@

2#@
4#@
10 @
1#@
72 @

Cask

11#®
fj

•»*

»»•••

15

@
@

6#@
@

4)
6)
8
23
9
10

19 @ 21
ll#@ 12),
Hickory Nuts
V bnsh.2 00 @2 50
Peanuts, Va.g’d to fncy do 1 75 @2 00
do
do

com.

V lb.

to fair do

125

Wll.,g’d to best do 3 25

Grocers’ Drugs and Snndrles.
Sic. Licorice
Alum
S#@
Calabra Imitation
Bl-Carb, Soda (Eng.)
5 @
Borax
Sal Soda,

S#@
6 @
7

Cherries, pitted
Pecan Nuts
•

7#

@

I Blackberries

36

....

13H@ 13
8 80@4 00

7 @

Peaches, pared
do
unpared, qrs& hi vs

....

32#

....

12#
11 @ 11#
3 8o@2 40
@

DOMESTIC DRIED ERUITfl.

....

32#@
@
@
@

..

Walnuts, Bordeaux..
Macaroni, Italian

| Apples, State
do

@
....@
80

9@
12

| African Peannts

9 00@ 9 50

Almonds, Languedoc
do
Tarragona

Sardines....

....

14
14#
75
11#® '11#
@ 42#
10 @ 11
13#@ 13#
@

CherneR German
Canton Ginger

do
do
do
do
Sardines

75

Madder

15
21

gold.
gold.l
gold.
Cordage, Manilla, # and #.
do
do Large sizes.
Indigo, Madras
do

Manilla.

@1 5o

@2 75
@
@
@
@1

11
10
80
21: rr.t.
21 @
@

12#
15
’•»
‘

21#
19
@2 50

Sisal
do Bed Cords

1 75

Juts

180 @3

(Is

16
38-

'Si:

Brown

THE CRY GOODS TRADE.
Friday, P.M., November 18,

prices

1870

quiet monotony of the trade remains unbroken, and the
departments are as light as is usual toward
the close of a season. Dealers in all sections have generally ob¬
tained their season’^ stock, and the^sales now are chiefly of small
lots to replenish broken assortments. As compared with its im¬
mediate predecessor, the trade of the current week has shown but
little improvement. There has been rather more activity in certain
fabrics, the out-of-town jobbing trade having ordered larger quan¬
tities, while the demand from dealers in this market has been fair.
The demand from consumers in the interior seems to improve as
the season wears on, and crops are marketed. This trade is some¬
what backward this season, but there is still a prospect of a good
trade before the close. In some sections of the far South, the sale
of many winter fabrics has been seriously interfered with by the
continued mild weather, and the prospects of a comparatively
short winter.
The unremunerative prices at which the bulk of
the cotton crop has been marketed, leave planters generally with¬
out surplus funds, which also has the effect of limiting purchases to
the actual requirements. There is not much complaint of a lack
of promptness in the part of buyers in remitting on bills due, and,
all things considered, the trade seems to be in a very healthy con¬
The

m ;i

-

Goods.—But few changes have occurred in

prices during the week, the general list having been previously
A few makes of medium and low grade sheetings and
shirtings, which were considered relatively too high, have been
marked down, and similar changes are likely to occur at anytime,
but the general list of prices seems to be no higher than are war¬
ranted by the present cost of raw material. In view of this, and
the fact that stocks are, in no ^instance excessive, prices are steady
and apparently well sustained. Prints are unchanged, and as the
prices current on standard goods are too low to admit of any profit
to the manufacturer, there is little probability of a further decline.
The standard goods now in the market are nearly all printed on
cloths purchased at 7$ to 8 cents. Adding to this the cost of
printing, freight and commissions, and^the fact must be patent
that to pay any profit to manufacturers, first-class work should be
selling at least $c. above the "present prices. From the present
condition of the cloth market, and the prices ruling on standards
and extras, there is a strong probability of considerably higher
prices at the opening of£the spring season.
Domestic Woolen Goods.—There is a fair business doing with
revised.

■g j>

’

-

|f;.

.1

and

Shirtings

are

in fair

maintained.

request, with

Amoskeag

12$

25^

dition.

Domestic Cotton

Sheetings

steady and apparently well

A
do B 86 12, Atlantic A 86 18, do D 11, do H
1,’*, Appleton A 86 18, Augusta 86 11$, do 80 10, Bedford
8, Boott O 84 11, Commonwealth O 2% 8, Gref«on A 27
Great Falls M 86 11, du
rf 83 10. Indian Head 86 18
do 30 11$, Indian Orchard A 40 13$, do 0 36 11$, Laconia
:) 39, — do B 37 1 $, Lawrence A
36 12, Lyman 0 36 11, di E 3«
13, Medfoiii 86 11$; Nashua fine O 83 12, do 86 13,do E 40 16$ New
market A 36 11$, Pacific extra 86 12$, do L 36 11$ Peppered
7-4 22$, do 8-4 25, do 9-4 29, do 10-4 34. do 11-4 40, Pepperell Efino
89 13, do R 86 12, Pocasset F 30 8f, Saranac fine 0 83 i2, do R
36 12$-18. Stark A 86 12$. Swift River 86 10, Tiger 27 7$.
Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings remain about as at the time of our
last review, with prices generally steady.
Amosbeag 46 17|
do 42
16, do A
86 15, American A 86 12$, Androscog’
gin L 36 15$ Arkwright WT 36 18, Ballou A Son 86 18$, Bartletts 36 16, do 38 13$, Bates XX 86 19, Blackstone 86 14$, Boott
B 36 14, do O 30 11, do R 28 8$, Clarks 86 19, Dwight D 40
18, Ellerton 10-4 45, Forestdale 36 15, Fruit of the Loom 86
16, Globe 27 7, Gold Medal 36 13$, Great Falls Q 86 16,
Hill’s Semp. Idem 36 16$, Hope 36 18$, James 86 16, Lonsdale 36 1ft]
Masonville 86 16, Newmarket 0 36 13$, New York Mills 36 2o'
Pepperell 6-4 25, do 10-4 89, Tuscarora 86 17$, Utica 5-4
do‘h-4 32$, do 9-4 51$, do 10-4 56$, Waltham X 38 11$, do 42 16
do 6-4 25, do 8-4 27$, do 9-4 82$, do 10-4 40, Wamsutta 36 19.
Printing Cloths are quiet and steady at 7c. for 64x64’s, on hand
and for delivery as late as January.
Prints have experienced but few changes in prices, and sales are
fair at the recent reduction.
American 10f, Albion solid 11, Albion
Ruby — Allens 10$, do pinks 12, purples 12, Arnolds 8$, Atlantic
6, Dunnell’s U$, Hamilton 11, London mourning 10, Mallory 11$,
Manchester 10|, Merrimac D 11, do pink and purple 18$, do W
fancy 12$, Oriental 11 Pacific 11, Richmond’s 1C$, Simpson Moure,
ing 10$, Sprague’s pink 11$, do blue and White Iff, do shirtings 10$,

36

movements from all

m

[November 19,18?0.

THE CHRONICLE.

668

7$.
Checks.—Caledonia 70 22$, do 50 24, do 12 26$, do 10 21,do 8 18
do 11 22$, do 16 27$, Cumberland 18, Jos Greers, 65 15$, do 65 18
Kenoebeck 20, Lanark, No. 2, 9$, Medford 13, Meek’s No. A i 29.
Denims.—Amoskeag 26, Bedford 14$, Beaver Cr. A A 23, Columbian,
Wamsutta

heavy26, Haymaker Bro. 15, Manchester 20, Otis AXA 24, do BB 21.
Corset Jeans.—Amoskerag 11$, Androscoggin 13$, Bates 9@ 0,
Everetts 16$, Indian Orchard Imp. 10, Laconia 11$. Newmarket 10.
Cotton Bags.—Ontario A $40 00, American $85@37 60, Androscog¬
gin $37 60, Great Falls A $37 50, Lewiston $35 00, Stark A $42 60.
Brown Drills.—Atlantic 14, Appleton 14$, Ameskeag 14, Augusta
14, Pacific 14$, Pepperell 13$, Stark A 14.
Stripes.—Albany 8$, Algoden 16$, American 12—18, Amoskeag
20-21, Hamilton 19-20, Hayrmker 13$-’4, Sheridan A 11, do G 11$,
Uncasville A 13-14, do B 18-14, Whittenton AA 22$.
Tickings.—Albany 8$, American 14$, Amoskeag ACA 80, do
A 24, do B 21,do C '0. do D 18, Blackstone River 14$, Conestoga
extra 32 21, do do 86 25, Cordis A A A 24, do ACE 28, Hamilton 21$
Swift River 13, Thorndike A 16$, Whittendon A 22$, York 80 22$.
Ginghams—Clyde, 11$; Eartaton, trxtra, 18 ; Glasgow,14; Gloucester,
13 ; Ha iley, 14 ; Hampden, 15 ; Hartford, 18 ; Lancaster, U; Laucaboth agents and jobbers, and the aggregate compares favorably
shire, 15 ; Pequa, 12$; Park Miil*,14: Quaker City, 14.
McSu-sseline Delaines.—Pacific 18@2'>, Manchester 18, Hamilton 18,
with that of a corresponding period in former seasons. The most
Tycoon reps 28-27 Pacific Mills printed arraures 19, do Imperial reps
popular seasonable fabrics are distributed by jobbers as the wants
of the retail trade require, and the stock held by jobbers is well 22$-27$, do aniline 22, do plain assorted colored armures 19,
Orientals 18, do do alpacas 21, do do corded do 22$, Merino A 82$ AA
reduced. In first hands the business is not spirited, as holders are 37$ AAA 42$.
'
'
Carpets.—Lowell Company’s ingrain are quoted at $1 for super'
not finding very active sale for the small quantities of heavy
weights which they hold, while it is as yet too early for a general fine, 2 mos. credit, or less 2 per cent., 10 days ; $1 15 for extra super,
and $1 42$ for three-ply ; Hartford Company’s $1 for medium super¬
demand for spring work. Clothiers continue purchasing, and some fine
; $1 12$ for superfine ; $1 42$ for Imperial three-ply, and $ l 60
of the larger cloth jobbing houses are placing orders for delivery f>r extra three-ply; Brussels $1 80 for 3 fr, $1 99 for 4 fr., and
as soon as possible.
The low stage of the water in the manu¬ for 6 fr.
facturing streams renders it impossible for manufacturers to pro¬
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY H00D8 AT THE PORT OF NEW YOKK.
duce very large quantities, but as the streams are rising there is a
The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending
probability of the mills being able to increase their production
17, 187 *, and the corresponding weeks of 1869 and 1868. have
soon, and the prospects for the future are said to be very satis¬
follows:
factory.
BNTBRBD FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THB WISE BNDIN6 NOT. 17, 1670—1870.—
Foreign Goods.—The demand for the most popular dress
-1869.1868.
Pngs. Value.
Value
fabrics continues fairly active. Continental goods are in only
Value.
Pkgs.
Pkgs.
907
$842,725
421
402
$149,831
$186,946
moderate supply, and the prices established earlier in the reason Manufactures oi wool,
287,968
1,154
63,829
233
129,861
do
cotton.. 461
397,724
541
are well maintained.
On certain styles of British goods, as sat163,498
238
393
do
141,0-6
silk....
241,231
1,821
70.546
teens and similar plain fabrics, there is a decided downward ten¬
845
569
109,464
do
flax
183,485
327
229
78,205
91,404
dency. These goods have not been so popular this season as was Miscellaneous dry gooae. 226
anticipated, and as the stock is rather large, holders are offering
1,466
$530,959
4,250 $1,408,122
1,851
$611,761
Total..
considerable concessions. Millinery goods are moving freely.
Black velvets and velvet ribbons have improved somewhat, and WITHDRAWN FROM WARBHOUSB AND THROWN INTO THB MABKIT DUBffS
THB 8AMB PBRIOD.
black ribbons are also in better request. Colored goods are with
$103,782
226
$85,866
328 $118,226
Manufactures of wool...
68 607
out improvement, and in some instances drag on the market.
do
cotton..
25,721
97
28,144
288 46,7*3
Linens are dull, but in the absence of excessive stocks prices are
48
53
47,706
68,627
do
silk
87,872

dodo

•

'i

.

$2

Nor.
been?*

.

fully maintained.

dry goods for the pa-t week, and since January
1,1870, and the total for the same time in several previous years
The exports

xre

shown in the following
■■■—

,

table

:

FROM NKW FORK.

Domestics.

pk;?s.
tv Total

for

wee <r.
i...
.

..

13,7*23
18,311

...

1868.

129

...

...

*2,424
1\643

Val.

$12,653
1,588,319
1,9 7.481
1,344,1)43
1,507,811

197

2,890
4,868

4,468
5,293

We

annex

manufacture,




a

our

•

•

•

•

•

FROM BOSTON

Domestics,

Dry Goods.
oackrtges.

*

•

—■——>

Val.
$42,857
921,178
9-6,355
1,409,202
1,175,254

•

•

•

•

6,043
6,244
7,699
7,449
4,367
32.697

pirticulars of leading articles of domestic
prices quoted being those of the leading Jobbers :

few

39,031
18,198

846

$224,411

913

$250,891

Addent’d for consu*;t’nl,851

611,761

1,466

Totalth’wstxpon m’rk’t 2,764

$862,652

2,312

Total

....

•

BNTBRBD FOB WAREHOUSING DURING

pkga.
11

185
290

66,443
3,289

do
flax
Miscellaneous drygoods.

Manufactures ol wool...
do
cotton..
do
do

178
51
434

1< 8,792

814
177
53
456

23

11,985

668

863

silk

flax
Miscellaneous dry goads.

$109,655
60,496

57,003

530^959

$755,370
THB BAMB

$122,446

,

644
369

l.«g

23,846

$838,784

4,250

6,932 $1,741,888

PBRIOD

48,151
62,005
109,385
22.636

•a
•s

$265,4*2

ss

^

Igra#

$847,931
611,761

1,563
1,466

$854,653

Add ent d forconsn’pt’n.1,851

L676
4,250

Total entered at the port 2,890

$959,692 H 8,038

$885,58)

aSPiwm*

Total

1,09

580,959

$406,121

669

THE CHRONICLE.

1870.]

November 19,

Transportation.

Life Insurance.

Miscellaneous.

GREAT

Cartwright & Warners

ASSURANCE
OF THE UNITED

-

Undervests,
Drawers,

.

-

-

-

Assets over
Income -

-

-

-

Route

Mail

Southern

STATES,

116,118,120,122 & 124 BROADWAY,

Merino

patent

EQUITABLE
SOCIETY

LIFE

TO

NEW YORK,

$12,000,000
6,000,000

NEW

ORLEANS,

AND

MEMPHIS,

MOBILE-ALL RAIL.

WILLIAM C. ALEXANDER,President.
HENRY B. HYDK, Vice-Pt esidenc.
GEORGE w. PHILLIPS, Actuary.
JAMES W. ALEXANDER, Secretary.
SAMUEL BORROW*,, City Manager.

Eli

n m

AND

hosiery.
a

urge

^

Leave New York
At 8. 0 A.M. lor RICHMOND, and Points on the Coast,
At 9. 0 P.M. from foot of Cortlandt street, via New
York and Philadelphia Line., by GREAT SOUiREli V MAIL ROUTE TRAIN, fur Richmond, New

Miscellaneous,

variety of
e w

State

Goods,

.

Arkansas

of

7 PER CENT BONDS,

ENDORSED BY THE

MEMPHIS Sc LITTLE ROCK

A.T

by

Swenson, Perkins & Co.,
80 BEAVER STREET.

Union Adams & Co.,
No. 637

THE PTAT E OF ARKANSAS Issues

Its Bonds In aid

thousand dollars per mile, lor the
payment thereof a sntclal lax Is collected annually
lor interest and sinking fund.
THE MEMPHIS AND LITTLE ROCK RAILROAD
133 miles long, Is completed and in running order 120
miles. The unfinished Bection will be completed in
of Railroads—ten

^

Broadway.

December next.

_

R. C. BRINKLEY, Pres’t.

Memphis and Little Rock RR.

J. S. & E. Wright & Co.,
NEW YORK.
BOSTON.
.PHIL ADELPHIA.

98494Franklin street
69Franklin street
841 Chestnut street

Miles.
NEW YORK

0
228
321

...

WASHINGTON....
GOr. DONbVIi-Ltfi.
BRISTOL
KinOXViLLE
*
CLEVE a A ' D
tCHATTANOOGA

...

.

.

I*

...

....

...

...

74823
850

NASHVILLE
i ORINTH

5GRAND JUNCTiONlll/7
MEMPHIS
«*J aCKSoN

ATLANTA
MACON

MONTGOMERY... ...1127
MOBILE
...1852
NE - ORLEANS.. ...1502
*

SOUTH.

'i irm
Lv 9 0 p.m.
<(
6.55 a.til.
12.55 p m.

Change cars for

0.00
i.li
5.55
II
8.l0
Ar o.iO
Lv 9.00
II
11.52
Ar 2.55
Lv .11.43
Ar 3.35
41
1 40
41
8.(0
l«
8.00
II
1010
U
44

GO ’GWOKTH.

Tiaie.
Ar

...m

pm.
j- m.
p.m.
a.ru.

am.
a.m.

p.m.

p.m.
a m.

p.m.

p.m
a.m.
a.m.

41

M
<1
41
41
M
41
14

44
II

44
44
44
4*
44
14

.

6.14
y.oo
12.45
7.28
11 15
6.27
4.45
6.00
5.44

a.m.

p.m.
p.m'
p.m.
M.LU.
a m.

a.m.

p.m.
p.m.
8.80 p.m.
12.15 p nt.
4.37 p.m.
7.25 p.m.
7.55 a.iu.
5.45 a.m.
5.30 p.m.
7.00 a.m.

Atlanta, Macon, Montgomery,

8elma, v>est Point, Eufauia, Mobile, Savannah, and

ESTABLISHED 1856.

intermediate points.
t change cars for Nashville and New Orleans. No
change from tnis point to New Or.eans.
i Change cars for Mobile, via M. & u. R. R*—All Rail.
5

Change cars for Memphis.
change cars for Vicksburg.

**

BROTHERS,

SEARS

J. R.

PRINTERS, STATIONERS,

STEAM

AGENTS FOR

60 *G

STATIONS.

RR CO.

For Sale at 70 and accrued Interest,

IJIREHELI XOW PRICES.

Orleans, Mobile, Memphis, Chattanooga, Nashville
Atlanta, Macon, and intermediate points.

YATES,

General Eastern Passenger Agent.

o

AND

Pepperell IHfg. Co.,

PACIFIC

Otis Company.
Bates

MANUFACTURERS OF FINE

Mfg. Co.,

Columbia Mfg.

Continental

«

Mills,
Co.,.

Boston Onck
Franklin

AWD

Companies.

Co.,

CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS.

Co.,

Thorndike

Co.,

Brinckerhoff, Turner &
Polhemus,

WILLIAM

45

NO.

Cordis Mills.

One door north of

STREET,

Wall-st., New York.

Having recently added to our business an entirely
OFFICE, our facilities in
this line are unequalled.
NEW STEAM PRINTING

Bankers’ and Brokers’ Account Books of all kinds

hand, and made to order, of best material.
i2F"New firms organizing will find at this establish*

on

Manufacturers and Dealers In

COTTON S AIL DUCK
"

China,

Touching at Mexican Porta

Banks, Stock and Gold Brokers,
Merchants, and incorporated

Warren Cotton

laconla

To California &

FOB THK USX OF

Mills.,

THROUGH LINE

ACCOUNT BOOKS

Co.,

Androscoggin Mills,

MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY 8

everything necessary for Counting House and
e at as low prices as good material can be

ment

Officer

furnir .ed.

And all kinds ot

COTTON CANVAS, FELTING DUCK, CAR COYER*
ING,BAGGING, RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES
*C. "ONTARIO’
SEAMLhSS BAGS,
"

FURNITURE.

On the 4th and 20th of Each Month.
Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal street
at 12 o’clock noon, as above (except when those dates
fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday;,
for ASPIN WALL, connecting via Panama italic ay
with one oi the Company’s Steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at MANZANILLO,

Al6o,

connecting at Panama with steamers for
SOUTH PACIFIC AND CENTRAL
AMERICAN
PORTS.
One hundred pounds baggage allowed each adult.
Baggage-masters accompany baggage through, and
utteud to ladies and children without male protec*
tors. Baggage received on the dock the aay beiore
sailing, from steamboats, railroads,-and passengers
who prefer to send them down early. Au experienced
surgeon on board. Medicine and attendance lree.
For Dassage tlcl ets or lurther information apply to
the Company’s ticket ottlce, on the wharf. loot of
Canai street.North River, New York. ,
F. R.

BABY, Agent.

AWNING STRIPES.”

Also, Agents

United States Bnntlns Company.

E. W.

Hutchings & Son,

RICH

13 & 15 Iilspenard Street.

Sc

99 Sc

BANKERS.

101

FOURTH

AVENUE,

CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS.
THE
WESTERN
LIVERPOOL AND
GREAT
STEAM C MPaaY will dispatch one of their firstclass full-power iron screw steamships irom

PIER No.46 NORTH RIVER,EVERY WEDNESDAY
gg

FORMERLY 475 BROADWAY,

Liverpool,

(Via. Queenstown,)

PLAIN

Furniture & Decorations

Stoker, Taylor & Co.,

or

MANUFACTURERS OF

Aiull supply all Widths and Colors always In stock

fOllnWB

•

COLO'..ADO, Cant. T. F.Freeman.Nov.V8. at 8 P.M
WISCONSIN, Capt. Williams
M
r* ov.80. at 12
NEakatKA, i attain Guam.......D c 2, it 1XU.M.
M.iNHATi AN,CaDlain Forsyth..••ec. 7. at & PAl.

.

*1

NA88AU

STREET,

in®QT?S^lme Bllls

on

NEW

YORK.

LONDON. LIVERPOOL,

flAUnmS?3 a°d DUBLIN. PA^IS. BREMEN,
f^ankfoLt-on-theVliiNNA, etc.

•»SSsSs and G0LU B0UGHT AND bold
COLLECTIONS

M.

K.

Near A. T. Stewart & Co.’s

Where

a

Mautel9, Pier and Mantel Frames and Wains
coting made to order irom designs,
\v ood

FACTORY, 46 AND 48 WOOSTER 8T.

Jesup & Company,
13 PINE

merchants,

STREET,

R«?otJate

Jersey
TOWN

7 per

ojf*2.or *****

for R«llro*d Co..,
Rail., locomotive,,

and undertake




Railways

freight

BONDS,

Authorized by act of the Legislature,

BJSitNAKD, SOMEtiSE 1' COUNTS',
In $!00s, $500 and $1,000 at 85 and Interest.
Interest payable semi-annually, January and July,
at the Americm Exchange Bank, New York, free of
tax. For full particulars apply to.

•

.

J. F. Mitchell,

COMMISSION

87

&

89

MERCHANTS,

Leonard Street, New

MANUFACTURERS

York,

AGENTS

For the Sale of

LAWRENCE,

BANKERS, NO. 1 WALL STREET
t.

or cabin passage apply to
WILLIAMS & GLION. No. <58 Wall-Bt.

C. B. &

and the issu* restricted to one-tenth tne assessed
valuation of the real esiate of the following towns:
NEW PROVIDENCE. UNION COUNTf,

PARKER Sc

connected with

rency.

Cent

BKDMINSTER. -OMERSKT COUNTY,

0«^ffor““d

MINNESOTA, rapt.T.W .Fre< manDec. 14,at JOXA.m.
IDAHO, Ciipt. Pifee..-.
i ec. 2l at 3 P.M.
...Dec. 28. at IOXP.ih.
NEVADA, Ca. tain Green
Cabin passage, $80 gold.
Steerage passage, (Office No. 29 Broadway) $80 cur¬
For

New
and

general assortment can be had at moderate

prices.

made In all parts of Europe.

bankers

NEW YORK.

COTTONS

AND

WOOLENS.

CHRONICLE.

THE

670

Iron and Railroad Material.

Insurance.

Insurance

[November 19, 1870,

JOHN

OFFICE OF THE

KiraiDT. HHNBTH. HM,,,.

Fire Insurance
NO.

ATLANTIC

WALL

62

NEW YORK.

41 CEDAR

GENERAL

Mutual

Co. iEtna Insurance Comp’y,

Insurance

HARTFORD, CONN.

Buy ud sell

INCORPORATED 1819.
W

HEW TORE, January

conformity to the

Th* Trustees, Ik

0. km

charter of the

Company, anbmlt the following Statement of it»
the tlet Deoemher, 1869*

on

Premium* reoclTOd on

let

Marine Risks, from

December, 1869.$6,090,637
on] Policies not marked off let

January, 1889, to tlst

Premium*

9

3,538,001 28

January, 1869.
Total amount of Marine

$8,628,639 06

Premium*

$3,000,000 OO

Cash Capital
Assets

affaire

$5,549,504 27

Blake,

nor upon

leaned upon Life

Premium* marked off from in

January,

Loeeea

n

183 1.

$200,000 00
$372,219 38

—

United State* and State of New

FAS. A. ALEXANDER, Agent

Yl*4

Tork Stock,

$70600 0
by Stocks and otherwise... 8,148,400 0

City, Bank and other Stock....
Loans secured

Beal Estate and Bond* and
Interest and sundry
the

\rs

M?

Notes end Claims doe

20708 81

Company, estimated at....—

Premium Notes and Bills

20308 0
08,797 0

Beoelyable

Cash in Banlu..

».

Total amount of

><•«••••:ee#s*e*ses

OFFICE

040806 N

THE

OF

Pacific Mutual Insurance

21000 0

Mortgages,....

To

COMPANIES.

Six per

oent Interest on the outstanding certificates

holders thereof, or their
and after Tuesday, the

profits win be paid to the

legal representatives, on
First of February next.

certificates of the Issue of 108 wffl

The outstanding

redeemed end paid to the holders

D<

legal representatives, on end after
of February aext,
on

will cease.

thereof, or their

Tuesday, the First

from whleh date all Interest there-

The certificates to he

produced at the

payment sad cancelled. Upon serttfloetaa
which were Issued (lured scrip) for gold premiums,

time of

such payment

of interest and redemption win

he Is

gold.

declared on the
net earned premiums el the Company, for the year
ending 81st December, 1868, for which aertlfioates will
*u and alter Tuesday, the Fifth of A^sfl next
A

dividend of FOBTT Far Oent le

CHAF9UN, seereuryb

TRUSTEES:

an!

facilltlel

Canada to our superior
for
orders at manufacturers prices, lor all descrintionan
both AMERICAN and FOREIGN

REMOTE

delivery, at any port In the
United States or Canada and always at tne verv low.
est current market prices.
Contracts will be made

payable in United or gold currency for AmerIcan?Jnd
In either currency States (at the option of the

buyer)
oreign, and when desired, we will contract to
supply roads with their monthly or yearly requirefor *

Order* for Foreign Rails, will he taken fortnuwnii
slon by Mail or through the cable to our

LONDON

COMPANY.

FOLLOWING STATEMENT OF THE
Company Is published in conformity
with the requirements ol Section 12 of its charter:
Outstanding Premiums, January 1,
1869
$104,463 46
CTTHE

affairs of the

Premiums received from J anuary
1 to December 31,1869, inclusive 611,290

80

$715,754 26
This Company has Issued no Policies, except on Cargo
and Freight for the Voyage.
No Risks have been taken upon Time

Jones,
Charles Dennis,
W. H. H. Moore,
Henry Coit,
Wm. C. Pickersglll,
Lewis Curtis,
Charles H. Russell,
Lowell Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,
Royal Phelps,

I

.

t

James Low,
B. J. Howland.

Benj. Babcock,
Robt. B. Mlnturn,
Gordon W. Burnham,
Frederick Chauneey,
R. L. Taylor,
Geo. S. Stephenson,
William H. Webb,
Sheppard Gandy,
Francis Skiddy,
Charles P. Burdett,
Robt. C. Fergusson,
William E, Bunker,
Samuel L. Mitch 111,
James G. DeForest,
Robert L. Stuart.

Dodge,

David Lane,
James

Byrce,

Daniels Miller

Sturgis,
Henry K. Bogert,
Dennis Perkins,
Wm.




as

est possible rates ol freights.

S. W.

&c., during the s ime
Return Piemiums

J. D.

JONES, President.

36,697 03

The Company has the following
Assets:

Cash In Bank
Uniied States and other Stocks....
Loans on Stocks Drawing interest.

$86,015 51
583,009 90
196,700 00

Subscription Notes in advance of
Premiums

46,000 00

Reinsurance and other Claims due
the Company, estimated at......

20,142 i7

Total Assets

$1,166,129 23

SIX PER OENT INTEREST
Certificates of Profits will be

the

outstanding
paid to the holders
thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after
TUEbDAY, the 1st day of February.
on

71

BROADWAY.

Gilead A.

The whole of the OUl STANDING CERTIFICATES
OF THE COMPANY, OF THE ISSUE OF 1865, will he
redeemed and paid in cash to the holders thereof, or
their legal representatives, on and after TUESDAY,
the 1st aay of February, Irom which date interest
thereon will cease. The Certificates to be produced
at the time of payment and cancelled,
A Dividend m berin of THIRTY-FIVE PER CENT,
free of Government Tax, Is declared on the net amount
of Earned Premiums for the year ending December
81st. 1869, for which Certificates will be Issued on and
alter TUESDAY, he 5th day of April next;

TRUSTEES

W. HIH. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pre’st.

Yice-Pres’t.

:

John K. Myers,
A. C, Richards,
G.D. H Gillespie.
C. E. Mllnor,
Martin Bates,

William Leconey,
Wm. T. Blodgett

Moses A. Hoppock
B. W. Bull,
Horace B. Claflln,
W. M. Richards,
A. S. Barnes.

Adam T. Bruce,
Albert B. Strange,
A. Augustus Low,
Oean K. Fenner,
Emil Helneman,
Jehial Read,
William A. Hail,
Francis Moran,
Theo. w. Morris,
Robert Slimmon,

H.

C.Southwlck,
Hegeman,
James R. Taylor,
Wm.

Egbert Starr,

A. Wesson.
John A. Bartow.
Oliver K. King,
Alex. M. Earle,
John R. Waller.
Stephen C. bouthmayd
JOHN K. MYERS. President,

wat^ILcLIA^

LECONEY,
THOMAS HALE, Secretary.
•ram** a

Vice-President

Smith,

Bartholomew Hon*e. opposite Bank
of England.

LONDON, E. C.

Railroad Iron,
Old Rails,
Bessemer

$865,725 41
234,561 05

Premium Notes & Bills Receivable

Rails, &c.

U. S. BONDS AND AMERICAN RAILWAY SECU¬
RITIES NEGOTIATED.

Correspondents In America:
Messrs. Jay Cookk & Co., New York, Messrs. Jay
Cooks & Co., Washington, Messrs E. W. Clams
& Co.,

Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgar Thomson, Phil*

deiphla

Morris, Tasker & Co.,
Pascal Iron

Works, Philadelphia.
Lap Welded

Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes,
Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings

and Street

Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

WAREHOUSES:

15 GOIjD STREET,

NEW YORK.

WORKS.

LOCOMOTIVE

BALDWIN

M. Baird & Co.,
PHILADELPHIA.
All work accurately fitted to gauges and thorough¬
ly interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship
Finish and Efficiency fully guaranteed.
M. Baird,
Ch-s T. Parry,
Wm. P.
Geo. Burnham. Edw. H. Williams. Ed. Longstreth.
Wm. P. Converse & Co.,
54 Pine St., New York, Agents
_

„

Woodward Steam Pump
Davis &
REAL

Freret,

ESTATE
85 ST. CHARLES

CHARLES DENNIS, Vice-Pres’t.

J D HEWLETT, 8d

824,344 50

period

Address

Hopkins & Co.,

NO.

$608,830 22

above

Paid for Losses and Expenses, less Savings,

STREET,

lor execution at a fixed price in Sterling or on com¬
mission at the current market price abroad when the
order is received in London; shipments to be made
at stated periods to ports in America and at the low¬

OFFICE AND

C. A. Hand,

Caleb Barstow,
h. P. Plllot,
William E.

npon Hulls of Vessel*,
Premiums worked off as Earned, during the
or

period

HOUSE,

58 OLD BROAD

HOWARD BUILDING, 176 BROADWAY,
Nnw Yobk, January 13,1870.

Joseph Gailliard, Jr.

J. D.

statia
eiecnttaj

ways and Contractors throughout the United

Total amount of Marine Premiums

oi

Railroad

We are always in a position to furnish all
sizes, natterns and weight ol rail for both steam and
home
roads, and in any auantities desired eli her for IMMR.

OF PROVIDENCE, R. I.

Cash Capital
Assets

The Company has the following Asset*,

j4i,a“d?rla,‘<t
Co.f&V,
gaguy,"1*»*"wm m

Railroad Iron.

COMPANY,

O R*G ANIZED

Returns of Premium*

$1,07,030 49

Company, Bradford England

VTe beg to call the attention of Managers of Ran

$200,000 00
$392,425 52

INSURANCE

$302084$

and Expense*

AGENTS FOR

American

paid during the eame

period

Serin.

QescrlPttOM0

$6,4'B0i 0

I860, to Slet December, 1889.

Rails, Steel Ralls, old Ralls

ton

179 9.

Cash Capital.
Assets....

d

Railway^ondu^and Negocl.t. Uu,«,

The Bowling Iron
Ing
The West'

Washington
COMPANY,

ORGANIZED

with Marine Blake,

CO,"

PROVIDENCE, R. I.

OF

Fire Blake die connected

ST

rs Alfn

plates, &c,

*500,000 00
$936,246 65

INSURANCE
Ho Pollclee hare been

RAILWAY AOEN
merchants.

IMPORTERS OF
Iron

Springfield

Cash Capital
Assets

Co..

STm COB. OF WILLIAM

Bessemer Pig
Iron,
Steel Tyres, boiler

FIRS A MARINE INSURANCE
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
INCORPORATED 184 9.

Providence

JOHN,.,^

Agency, J. S. Kennedy &
STREET.

New

BROKERS.
STREET,

Orleans, Louisiana.

Prompt attention given to baying, selling and leas
ng of plantations and other real estate, paying of
axes

collecting rents, etc.

Manufacturing Co.
76, 78 AND 80 CENTRE
...

•

STREET,

NEW YORK.

S1TEAM PUMPS AND FIRE

ENGINE8. H0TJW.
Heated vj

C) ‘ Churches, Public Buildings, «tc.
Steam, low pressure.

Mustard seed, Trieste...
Nntgalla,blue,Aleppo..

CURRENT.

PRICES

gjgffiSSS^S&SBUSSt
*1W

Ollanis
Oil cassia
Oil bergamot

20

19

28

IRON—

Pig,American,No. 1

_

gold 2 85

®
® 8 00

“
4 45

®

Oil lemon
2 90
Oil peppermint, pare ... 3 25
OU vitriol (60 to 68 degs) 2 00

B^S)ST®'S-See special report.
a

Common bard

#

@308
@ 3 50

Bar, Swedes, ordin.sizes.. 110 00®
Bar, Eng. & Amer., refined 80 C0@ 85 00
Bar, Eng. * Amer.,com’n. 75 00® 80 00

Bt®feffirkfn8Pfair.e.,.‘.26

7k®

Sarsaparilla,H.,g’d,in D’d
“
Sarsaparilla, Mex.

@ 36

i ^
** ?Lf SB
«

JSwScommoi'::. 108X| I4*
Ohio lair to.prime
@ 9X
30

!!!!!!!!

Adamantine

@

28

V »

1

7k

®
10 k®

Seneka root
Senna, Alexandria......
Senna, East India

80

fSBvfr

20

10k®
1 67k®

Shell Lac
Soda ash (80 p.

®

80

39

gold

Spanish

29

@

1* @ 16

Pipe and sheet
“

*® 1 90®

^Newcastlegas,

2,240 ft

....

9 50®

....

....

Jas <cannel
12 00®
TiiverDOol Souse cannel... *4 ou@
Liverpool

....
• •••

Anthracite—Auer, of Scranton, Oct 86
10,000 tons lump...
.3 7.><®3 90
12,000 tous steamboat.... 8 <9k@3 8-k
18.000 tons grate
4 10 @4 27k
12,000 tons egg
f ofJ&k'ik
28,000 tons Btove
4 9<^@5 05
12,000 tons chestnut
3,5 ®4 00
COCOACaracas
16 ® 18
Maracaibo (gold in bond) 24 ® 25

9k

®

Guayaquil do
do .... 8k @
COFFEE.—See special report
COPPERSheathing, new

^

9k

>2 @
*-2 ®
Braziers’
® 19
Sheathing, &c., old
Sheathing,yel.metal.new 22 @ ...
Bolts, yellow metal
21 ® ...
Bolts

...

...

22

Yellow metal nails
American ingot

®

22k®

22%

CORKS—
1st regular, quarts,
do superfine
1st regular, pints
Mineral
Phial

¥ gro.

55 ® 70
1 40 ®1 70
35 @ 50
50

State, prime

COTTON—See special report.
COTTON SEED-

Cottons’d, Up’d ¥ ton 18 00

Cotton s’d, 6. Is. ¥ ton
DRUGS AND DYESAlcohol

Aloes, Cape
Aloes, Socotrine

1 70

V ft

® 20 00
@ 1

®
®
®

80

24

.

16
75

50
15
13

Annato, good to prime
Antimony, reg. or...gold
Argols, crude
Argols, refined
gold
Arsenic, powdered. f*
Assafcetida
Balsam cupivi
Balsamtolu...

®

26
3

2K@

84

82
00
3 90

Balsam Peru
Baric petayo
Berriea, Persian... gold

44

*

....

Sfife!;1!
Rxrtact logwood

oz.

ttS,-:::*01.4--*

»•

....

„...

....®
1 v@

....

Jute

20

te^paato, Calabria.
4®or oe pnstg, Sicily..
48®?}c®PU8te,
Ucorice paste, fep.,8oii(i
cfreeS..,
J^?®r»-Uutch. gold

lik
50

80
..

68
2

60

«

46

@ 2 20

••

80

44

®

24

22 ®
81 ®
Ilk®

Tampico

Cut. 4d.@60d

...

Clinch
Horse shoe,

...

Copper

...

Yellow

“

1 20

cur.

“

44

45
25

29
12

“

Maracaibo
Maranham

Matamoras

"
“
“
“

Savanilla
Bahia
ChUi
Sandwich

14
14

“

Island..

15

44

18

Wet Salted Hides—
Buenos Ayres.. V ft
Rio Granae
California
Para
New Orleans

gold.
“
“
“

cur.

“

88
80

w

_

Minas

Cftlcqtta, dead green....
Calcutta, buffalo
V lb
Manilla* Bat.buff,.V ft

44

45

yellow

Straits
Near,8 foots,
PAINTS—

55

100

Litharge.
¥ft
Lead, red,
Lead, white, Am., in oil
Lead, white, Amer., dry.
Zinc, white, dry, No. 1.
Zinc, white,No. 1, in oil.
Zinc, white, French, dry
Zinc, wh.. French, in oil

....

22

16 @
14k@
13k@

17

@

Chalk

Chalk, block

14J

9

....
....

ilk
....

7

10 @

12
11

15

....

@

@

Refined

prime,
(sh’ng order)

...,

4 00®5 OQ

12

@

®
....@
9 @
¥ bbl 4 00 @

Naptha,refln.,65-78grav.

Residuum
PROVISION 8—
b
Pork* mess ¥ bbl

J

...

....

....
....

....

white,

Refined d.W. (Job. lots)

I

95

27

@8 00
@
6
@22 00

Crude, 40@48grav.¥ galL 12k©
Crude,40@47 grav.(s.ord. 18k®
Refined St’d white (sh’ng
23 @
order)

’

HORNS-

@
@

¥ ft
lk@
lk
¥ ton.22 00 @23 00

PETROLEUM—

...

...

19
@12

DC. TOO®

@

9k®
6k®

90

Barytes,American

Crop 01,70(g,d@prime)Vft 14 @
5

....

....

@

12

@
@1.40

9k@
9k®

Vermillion,Amer..com.
22
v'enet.redCN.C.) ¥ cwt. 2 25
Plumbago
China clay
¥ ton.21 50

20
40
82

20

47
68

Ochre, yel., French, dry
3 @
8k
Ochre, “ground, in ell
6 @
9
Spanish bro.,dry.¥ 100 ft 1 00 @ 1 25
Span.bro.,gr’dfnoil.¥ft
8 @
9
Paris white.Eng¥ 100 ibs. 2 00 @
Chrome, yellow, dry....
12k@ 28
Whiting, Amer. .¥ lOO ft 1 75 @ 2 00
Vermillion, China...¥ ft
75 @

m

@

@
©

@

57k@

.

...

HOPS—

Ox, Rio Grande
Ox, American

44

....

Cuba(duty p’d) goldVgall.l 10 @l 15
1869

@2 10
@4 00
@2 50
3 50 @5 00
pale...
5 75 @6 25
¥ ft
<k® 10k
3 CO
2 25

Vermillion, lrieste

HONEY

do

2 00

....

27 @ 28
19

....

Whale, crude Northern..
66 @
Whale, bleached winter.. 77k@
Sperm, crude
1 23 @
Sperm, winter bleached. 1 40 @
Lard oil, prime winter... 1 80 @
Red oil,
65 @ 70

@
@

Sierra Leone
cur.
Gambia and Bissau. “
Zanzibar
“
East India Stock—
Calcut. sit. cow Vft gold

.

extra

20
85
25
46

Cotton Seed Crude

10k@

.

pale

....

.

@

10k@

@
@2 80
@ 2 40
@
@ 47

....

...

City slaughter ox & cow
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio gr. kipV ttgld

....

Olive, Mars’es, qts ¥ case 4 50 @4 80
Olive, in casks—¥ gall. 1 82k®
Palm
¥ ft
9k®
Linseed
¥ gall.
85 @ 86

@

@
@

@

22

OILS—

12k®
12k®
11
11

....

...

@
@
@

@

ft

....

16k®
13

No. 1
No. 2

“

gold. 13 @ 13k
“

87 @

Pd (6d.)..

4 50
6 00
28

City thin, obl.,inbbls.¥ton.40 00®
in bags
39 0C@
West, thin, obl’g, in bags
@39 50

20k@
19

“

Dry Salted Hides—

00
00
00
00
00

87k®
23 @

5

strained, ¥280 ft
“

21k®
21
16
14

V 100 » 4 87k®

....

@
@

“
“
“
“
“

175
160
150
140
126
125
110
80

metal

OAKUM
OIL CAKE—

Truxillo
Rio Hacbe
Curacoa
Port an Platt
Bahia
Texas
Western

00

24 (0® 27 t’0
$210 009

Turpentine, soft ..V 280 ft
Tar, Washington..*} bbl. 2
Tar, Wilmington
2
Pitch, city
2
Spirits turpentine.^ gall.
Rosin, commmon to good

@

Bogota

00

23 Oo@ 80 00

NAVAL STORES-

@
....@
23 @
....@
20 @
20 @
20 ®
17 @

**
“

00

NAILS—

...

23

M

Porto Cabello
Maracaibo

Pernambuco

SSMSlte:;"S VI




'

California
San Juan
Matamoras
Vera Cruz

00

.

24k@

u
**
“
“
**
•*

00
00

.

Ilk®
7k@
5 @

25

OO

do
do
do
do
Extra heavy bbl.
do
00
do
CO
Heavy
do
do
00
Light
do
Molasses shooks,incl. head’g.2 50@2 70
Rum
de
do
4 50®....
Sugar
do
do
2 50@2 65
MOLASSES—See special report.

©

25

00® 89 00
00® 80 00
C0@ 83 00

Heavy
Light

00@295 00

Rio Grande
Orinoco

21

%
85 ®115
loffi'.Ve.ubUmed g0ld 3“ JJJg
*"’g0ld 1

gold

...

|!S^iiT”key— 42 ® «
sart ar®55
i^UnCUanha' Brazil

10®

Buenos Ayres..Vft gold
Montevideo....
“

8§

42 @

13

Dry Hides—

90
50
65

toStt::::::::.?.014 xHi

80

HIDES—

w
®

n^^^^Eaat India.*.

VXb

Tampico

4%

®

tefct:::::::::-"

50
00
00
40

240 00@245 00
gold.260 00®265 60

Italian

81*

....® 8 75
95
®
Western.ou ® 60
Ginseng, Southern
70
@
45 @
®
70
rabic» sorts
21k@

&)“fen8,
8??nicked....

American dressed..V ton.250
American undressed

....

3k
@

HEMP-

Russia, clean

Refined,

ft

pure

24
25
....

....

23 50 *24 00

@

....

SEED—® B°da

16

....@
9 @

Crude

....

•'•g0l<1

Clover

¥ ft

10k

@

....

Timothy
¥bush. 4 50> @ 4 75
Hemp, foreign
-k
@ 3 SO
Linseed, Amer’n rough i 10 @2 20
Llns’d cal. inN.Y.¥ bgs .... @2 10
Linseed, Cal. (bags) (in -

SILK-t0n)

g°ld

®

Tsatlee,No. 1,2,3,4 & 5.¥ ft

••••

9 00® 9 75
9 25® 9 50
8 25® 8 75
7 50® 7 75

Tsatlee,re-reeled

No. 1 & 2
Taysaain, Nos. 8 and 4

Taysaams,

Taysaams,re-reeled

@
9 25® 10

....

Haineen

00

Canton,re-rld^Nol to exdo 6 25@ 8 00
^

Ja|ian; common to snper’r 8 00® 10 00

Plates,for’n .¥ 100 ¥•gold 6 00 @6 12k
Plates, domestic
7 06 @11 50
SPICES—See special report.
SPIRITS—
Brandy—
,
^¥ gall.
Hennessy
gold. 5 50@18 00
Otard, Dupuy & Co.. 44 5 50@18 00
Pinet, Castlllon* Co 44 5 50©17 00
Marett & Co
44
5 50@10 00
Leger Freres
“ 5 50@10 00

foreign brands 44

Rum—Jam., 4th proof.
St. Croix,3d proof...
Gin, different brands

4 90@18 00

“
“

4 50® 4 75
8 50® 3 75
3 00® 5 25

44

.

Spruce boards and planks
Hemlock bo’rds ana plank
Extra heavy pipe staves
do
Heavy
do
do
Light
do
Extra heavy hhd
do

Sorting, in l ft canis’trs.Vtt 28® 1 00

Manila
Sisal

31

$
10
15
80

50
50

.

5 75@

....
....

45
35

SALT§‘ETRfe^8lltOI1’,,,g,d * 13*® 8 88

Other

115®
175®

60 0<J@ 61
Cherry boards and planks 75 00@ 80
Oak and ash
55 00® 60
Maple and birch
85 00® 40
Slackwalnut
100 00@125
k-inch sycamore
42 00® 50
1-inch
do
50 00® 52

14k

5 65®
5 25®

S6
33

Clear piue

FRUITS—See special report.
GROCERIES—See special report.
GUNNY BAGS—
Calcutta, light & h’vy, p. C. 13 @ 19
GUNNY CLOTH—
Calcutta standard....yard 27 @ ...
GUNPOWDER—
Blasting (B).... V 25 ft keg
@ ...

8 50®

“

light..
rough slaughter

Southern pine
$34
White pine box boards... 25
White pine mer. box b’ds 26

50

Meal
Deer

“

86

LUMBER. STAVES, &0—

....

Shipping
Keg rifle

middle

Rockland,common.Vbbl.
Rockland,heavy

....

V ft 18k@

42
40
44
42
44

crop, heavy
*r
“

LIME—

50
50

9 00® 9
28 50®
27 00@27
@34
6 00® 8
85®
25®

42

@
@
@
@
@

“

@ 15 00

00®27
00®22
00@
0 @12
00@12

North River, in bales V 100
ft for shipping
1

....

BpwmMiu:v:

Fennell seed
benzoin. *. ¥

8k

®
@
85
@ 1 02
®
®
45

27 ®
Bicarb.soda.N’castle"
4k®
Bi chro. potash (100 jbs)13 25 ®
Bleaching powder
4k@
Borax, refined
30k@
Brimstone,cru. ¥ton gld45 00 @
Brimstone, Am. roll ¥ ft
8#®
4 @
Brimstone, fior sulphur.
Camphor, crude
(in
_bona)
gold 20 ®
Camphor.reflned
69 ®
Cantnarides ¥ ft
200 @ 2
Curb, ammonia, In bulk
m
Cardamoms, Malabar... 4 00 ®
Castor oil
24 ®
Chamomile flowers, V ft
25 ®
Chlorate potash ...gold
29k@
Jsqstlc soda (100 lbs.).. 4 75 ® 4
Cutaway Beed
15 ®
Coriander seed
16 ®
tochlneal, Hondor..gold 66 ®

Cochineal,Mexican.
Copperas, American

72k

14 ®
70 ®
3k@

Alum

27
22
12
12
12

@

83
36

“

4 50@ 5 00
6 00® 6 50

.

® 22 50

....

Mackerel, No. 1, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2,
Mac’rel, No. 8, Mass., large.
Mackerel, shore, No. 2
Mac’rel, No. 3, Mass., med.
Mackerel,No. 1, Halifax...
Salmon, pickled, No. 1
Salmon, pickled
tee
V bbl.
Herring
Herring, scaled. ...Vbox.
Herring, No. 1

88

light

“

6 00® 7 50

¥ bbl.
¥ bbl.

Pickled scale
Pickled cod

middle....

44

“

80 00®

¥ quint.

Dry cod

“

44

FLAX—

70
40

@
®

12

cur.

Mackerel, No. 1, shore

oO

V ft

Sapanwood

....

....

“

57 5C@

gold

"FISH—

...

3 12k@ $ 9ft

40
@
Liv*p*l, Higgles.¥ sack 2 50 @ ....
Liv’pT fine, Worthingt’s 2 85 @ 2 45

“

“

@ 7 50
@ ....

....

T.........

“

“

.

cur.

..cur.
In bond
gold
p at.t
Turks Islands ..¥ bush.
Cadiz

“

“

@
@

..¥ 100 ft 7 00

Rangoon, dressed

“

“

V ton.100 00®
“
Fustic, Cuba. “
....®
Fustic, Tampico
gold 19 00®
“ 18 00®
Fustic, Jamaica
Fustic, Savanilla
“ 13 00®
Fustic,Maracaibo.... 44 16 00®
Logwood, Laguna.... “ 81 00®
Logwood, Honduras. “ 26 00®
Logwood, Tabasco... “ 30 00®
Logwood, St. Domin.gold 17 00® 18 00
Logwood, Jamaica
® 16 00
Limawood
Barwood

7 50

“

“

®
®

58

“

r-cash, Vft—>
Heml’k.B. A.,&c., heavy . 80 @ 31
middle. 29K@ £0k
light... 28 @ 28k
“
California, heavy. 29 @ 80
middle 28 @ 29k
light., 27 @ 28
“
Orinoco, heavy .. 28X@ 29
middle. 27k@ 29
“
“
light.... 26 @ 27
“
rough
80 © 82
44
good damaged... 24 @ 26k
poor
“
20 @ 22
Oak,slaughter,heavy
88 @ 42

...

CKS»Te

6 25

net.7 50

@3100
19
14k

.

RICE—
Carolina

@6 87k
@6 62k
@....
@8 00

LEATHER—

9k@

44

“

Bar

6 25

....

.80 00
¥ ft
17
14

Lard

...

DUCK—

Cotton. No. 1
DYE WOODS—
Camwood
.gold,

....

“

English

...

Ravens, light
V pce.15 00 ®
Ravens, heavy
17 00 ®
Scotch, G’ck, No. 1, ft yd
68 ®

..

Beef hams
Hams

gold.6 25 @6 87k

German

®
50
® 2 75

8
35

dry

ex.

Vitriol, blue

...

LEAD—

25
16

52k@

¥ ft.

Verdigris, dry &

30

60

Sulphate morphine,V oz
Tartaric acia (chrystal)

Tapioca

....

21k®

“

....

....

®

c.) gold. 2 25

Sugar lead, w’e

....

23 ®
14 ®-

97
100
T5
95

60@180 00
00@125 00
00®
00®
Rods, k@3-16 inch
85 OC@120 00
106 00@150 00
Hoop
Nail,rod
i..V ft
7 @
7k
Sheet, Russia
11 @ Ilk
Sheet, sing., doub. & treb.
4k@
6
Rails, Eng. (gold) ..V ton. 57 00® 59 00
Rails, American
70 00® 71 00

....

Salaeratus
Sal ammoniac, ref. gold.
Sal soda, Newcastle, g’d

State* half-firkins, cboice. 36 @ 40
State*.Ralf-flrkins, ordin’y 23 @ 24
Wetehtubs, prime...
g § g

KKKr::::::::::::

Scroll
Ovals and ball round
Band
Horseshoe

....

Sago, pearled

Beef, plain mess. .i..
Beef, extra mess

....

@ 2 25
Opium,Turkey ....gold. 3 75 @
Oxalic acid ........gold. -20k®
21
Phosphorus
62 ®
gold.
64
Prussiate potash,Amer.
29\©
Quicksilver
75 ®
Quinine, American
2 30 ®
1 18 ® 2 00
Rhubarb, China

19 50 -,@*1 00
24 75 @25 90
10 00 - @15 00
15 00 @17 50

Pork, prime
Pork, prime mess,

....

BTOBXPBIOXS.

....

4 75® 5 00
ai oo@ 15 00

81 00®
SO 00®

Pig, American, No. 2
....
Pig, American Forge
27 00® 29 00
Pig, Scotch. No. 1
84 00® 36 00
Bar, refined, Eng. * Amer. 75 00®

....

....

BRICKS-^

671

THE CHRONICLE.

1870.)

tforember 19,

Domestic liquors—Cash.
Alcohol (38 per ct)

1 70@1 72k
Brandy, gin & pure sp’ts in b 1 00® l C5
Rum, pure
......1 CO® 1 C5
Whiskey
86® 87

STEEL—

English, cast
English, spring...7
English blister
English machinery
English German

¥ ft

15
7
10

18
10
17
14
15

@
@
©

Ilk®
18
12

17

@
@
@

9

@

12

American blister
American cast
Tool.
American spring....
44
American machinery 44
American German..
44
SUGAR—See special report.
TALLOW-

@
@

9

,.
..

ll"
i2*
...

American, prime, country

and city.. ¥ ft
TEAS—See special report.
TIN—
Banca
Straits

8k@

¥ ft,gold

35k@

“

.

@ siji
@ sik
@8 87k
@8 00
@6 75

81
31

,

English
“
Plates, char. I. C..¥ box 8 25
Plates, I. C. coke
7 25
Plates, Terne coke
5 65
Plates, Terne charcoal.. 7 50
TOBACCO-See special report.
WINES
Madeira..,

9

@8 00

¥ gall. 3 50@7 00

Sherry

00

Port.........
Burgundy port

2

00@8 50
80@1 25

gold

Lisbon

44

Sicily, Madeira

Red, Span. & Sicily...
Marseilles Madeira...

2 20@3 50

44
44

2 00@1
90@l
70®
80@1
95@l

Malaga, dry.
Malaga, sweet........

44
44
“
44

....¥ cask
¥ doz.

44
44

Marseilles port

Claret
Claret

25
00
85

60
09
1 00@1 OS
32 50®...
2 40@9 06

WOOL-

Amerlcan, Saxony Fleece ¥ lb

13 @16

American, Full Blood Merino
American

47
53
38
85
25

Fine, unwashed

@44
@30

80
£6

No 1, Pulied
California. Spring

@58

40

Combing

Extra, Polled
Short fcxtra, Pulled
Superfine Pulled

@83
@32

@53

@42
@88

Clip—

Medium

Common, unwashed
26 @28
Burry
27 @30
* Caliiornia, Fall Cdp and Lamba—
unwashed
20 @22
Fine,

Medium
South Am. Merino, unwashed
South Am.Mestlsa, unwashed
South Am. Cordova, washed.

20
27
20
28
29

@22
@30
@26
@33
@82
80 @85
80 @S5
25 @28
10 @18

Cape Good Hope, unwashed.
Texas, fine
Texas, medium
Texas, coarse
Texas, Burry
Texas, Western
Smyrna, unwathed
Smyrna, was-hed
Douskel, washed
Donskei, unwashed
Sheet

17 @20
20 ©2s
-.8 @31
80 @32
17 @20

¥ ft

FREIGHTS— ,—steam.—,
To Livebpool: s. d.
s. d.
Cotton
¥ ft
k®9-16
Flour ....¥ bbl 29 @ 3 0
H. goods.¥
Oil

ton S2 6 @40 0
45 0

@
@...

C’n,b &b.¥ bu

Wheat..b.& b.
9k@
Beef
¥ tee. 7 0 @
Pork
¥bbl. 5 0 @
To Have* :
by sail.
$
Cotton
.....¥ ft
Tallow
¥ ft

9k@

10

sail.

<

s. d.

d.

b.

k@5-16

2
....@25 0
@30 0
@
8k
...@4 0
@g 0
c.

f

c.

k®
k
k®-...

Lard
Tobacco
¥ hhd. 8 00
Woods
8 00
Petroleum
5
To Melboubnx, ¥ foot
To San Fbanoisco, by Clipper

k®...!

®10 00
®10 00
® 5 6
<*>
27k

Measurement goods ¥ rt

Heavy goods

17k@
80
¥ ton 10 00 @12 00

Nails
¥ keg
Petroleum. .¥ c. ol 10 gall.

Coal.,,

••

@
5c
45 @
50
8 00 @10 00

[November 19, 1870.

CHRONICLE.

THE

672

Iron and Railroad

Cotton.
J.

C

4 CO.,
(Late of G. Falls & Co.)

JOHNSON

O.

OHAUNOKY VIBBARD,
KMKBSON FOOTS,

G. W. Abert,

Buyers,

o t t on

MEMPHIS, TENN.

40

COLUMBUS,

For a.

COTTON FACTORS &

Cotton

of

158 Common

Old

Street, New

Orleans.

RAILWAY EQUIFMENT8,

Consignments.

S. Fulkerson,

H.
baling

NIISS.

VICKSBURG,

K1EIN. Cashier, Mississippi
Bank,yicE8burg.

Refer to G. M.

80 Bsaver street, N.

P O. Box 5,754.

Y.

ThesaTies have been used m ire extensively than
any others, and last year <or more than oat-half
lie cotton buled li tne United States, and received

of all

be

premium at several State

MANUFACTURERS OF
COTTON TIES,
NEW fORK AND NEW ORLEANS
AND

PROPRIETORS

ENGLAND,

dealers in New Orleans
investigation as to the merits of the
various ties In use. They are made oi the best quality
of English Iran, nleely painted, put up in bundles of
by all of tne

uniform weight'and are
h ave entire satisfaction.

sold undir a guaranty to

m

For sale by

Post Office Box 8102.

89 BEA.VKB 8T.

O, B.
F.

BROKERS,

CLOTH,
Bags, Linseed, Jute Batts,
DOMESTIC GUNNY
Sugar.

Joseph B. Glover & Co.
30 Central

1843.

Established

W. VON

Rail way
Securities of all kinds

& Co.,
Johns AGENCY,
EXCHANGE,

deposits and execute

Trusts.

RANKERS,

HOUSTON" & TEXAS

CENTRAL R.K.,

Calvert, Texas.

AC.,

Slip, New York*

Adams & Hearne,
BANKERS,

Everett &
66 State Street,

Insui ance.

Imperial

Co.,

Bouton?

OF

Assets

OF CHINA

Advances

CO

AND JAPAN.

made on consignments of approved mer
chandize.

Wm. A.

Late

Fort & Trice.

York.
FIRE

Jackson,

BANKERS,

Fire Insurance

WACO, TEXAS.

WRIGhT & Co.,
Jl

COMMISSION
RIG

MERCHANTS,

DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL.

Represented in the United States

Wright, Brown Sc
No. 69

He nry

by our House,

WALL STREET, NEW YORK

Lawrence Sc Sons,

FOR EXPORT
1*2 FRONT

McKinnon,
Lyons, Fayette Co.

OFFICE 192

.

Columbus,

_

Colorado Co.

BROADWAY.

Branch Offices,

g Cooper

In.tltnte

4_1429 BrwdW

INCORPORATED 1823.

A. M.

T. Habdk,

Company

CASH

CAPITA!

- - - -

Co.,

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE




cobbkbpondknob:—New York:
Cincin¬
National Bauk.
Wheless <fc
A Co.

Refbbkncbs and
Winslow, Lanier & Co., David Dowa & Co.
nati: FirBt National Bank, Merchants
New Orleans: Louisiana National Bank,
Pratt, Bankers. Galveston: T. H. MoMahan

INSURANCE.

North American

Galllpolis, O.

Fort &

AND DOMESTIC USE.
STREET, NEW YORK

Harde &

Co.,

FORWARDING,
AND

U

Property against Loss or Damage

by Fire it

Policie89i88ued and Losses paid at tlhe

Agencies In the r
r. W. BLEECKER, President,

Company, or at its varlouB
cities in the United State-.

WYLL1S

GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

F.H. CARTER

COJLU3IBU0, T*!XA»»

*500,000 00

$795,237 93.
Insures

RECEIVING,

York.

William St.

45

Gbobgb W. Jackson.
Late Cashier 1st Nat. Bank

1OBT,

and 42 Pine Street, New

U. States 2,000,000

.

National Park Bank, New

THE U. P.

AjfetsGold, $ 17,690,3 90
AJfets in the

Calvert, Texas.
Draw on

$8,000,000, Gold

m

m

The Liverpool& Lon¬
don & Globe Ins. Co.

TEXA8 CENTRAL R.R.,

TERMINUS HOUSTON &

m

m

LONDON.

CHIEF OFFICE IN

AGENTS FOR

STINE HEARD St.

INSURANCE COMPANY

FIRE

Nos. 40

J. L. Leonard & Co.,
HEAD OF

Supplies.

negotiated on favorable terns.

BOSJESBBBG

TEXAS.
Purchase and sell real estate, pay taxes and adjust
Titles, prosecute Land and money claims against the
State and Federal Governments; make collections.
Receive

JNO. MCANBBNFYJE

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

AUSTIN,

Street. Boston.

SUPER CARB. SODA,

H. H. WALKBB.

DEALEBBIN

fALERATUS,

A D 017

Old Ralls, Scrap Iron and Metals.

TANNER, WALKER Sc McANERNEY,

LAND

MANUFACTURERS OF

N«. It Old

well

as

j. o. KIRBY,

JOHNS,

R.

orders for

oi Stocks.

BANKING &

John Dwight ot Co.,
•

give special attention to

JVO.F. TANNKB.

GALVESTON, TEXAS,
BROKER & INSURANCE AGENT.

TEXAS

CO.,

Railroad Iron,
as

Labatt,

BVBB1CTT,

C.

Niw Yobk,

COMMERCIAL

Sc

34 Old Broad Street,

made on Consignments of Cotton
in hand or Bill Lading therefor.

Dealer in all kinds

BENZ OX

NAYLOR,

STRANR,

J. C. Rogers & Co.,
IGinny

in

63

iff

INDIA Sc

Frogs, and all other Steel Material for
Railway Use.

Receiving

EXCHANGE

TYRES,

HOUSE IN LONDON:

Cotton Factor, Commission,
and Forwarding Merchant,
GALVESTON, TEXAS.

dealersc hroughout the country.

▼ALL »T.f

CAST STEEL
Caat Steel

Alfred Muckle,

Samuel K.

PHILA.,
208 So. 4th street

80 State street.

CAST STEEL RAILS,

who

WILLIAMS. BIRNIE & CO..
65 Beaver street, New York.
Sole Agents for ihe Atlantic States.

CO.,

BOSTON,

YORK,

BRYAN, TEXAS.

Liberal advances
and other Troduce

IX3T Entrance on Thomas Street

99 John street.

Correspondents
Collections promptly remitted.
t—Messrs. W. P. Converse & Co.
New York-

This is for the planter, the compress and the ship ;
the best and most convenient Tie manufactured. It

^ F

Supplies.

NAYLOR &
NEW

M. Moore,)

RANKERS,

SELF-FASTENING BUCKLE TIE.

Is recommended
after a thorough

&c., on Commission.

(Successors to H.

JOHNSEN,

6.

817 BROADWAY

Moore & Wilson,

AND

Co.,

Special attention to negotiating Railway, State and
County securities.

Texas Cards

fairs.

VIBBARD, FOOTS Sc CO.,
CHARLES

ment and

NORFOLK, VIRGINIA,
Buy Cotton, Grain,

&

And dealers In Railway Iron, Eauln-

Valley

Reynolds & Bro.

W. D.

Hasell

GENERAL RAILWAY AGENTS,

STS.

Far tale by

8WESSON, PERKINS A 00., Agxjtts,

Arthur Pabku

Habell,

B. D.

COTTON BROKER,
CORNER MULBERRY AND WASHINGTON

Rails,

AND

Bentley D.

Cotton.
Cotton.

Rails,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS

Liberal Cash advances maae on

Commission.

911,000 Tons Arrow Ties for

Iron

O.VMMACK.

Nalle & Cammack,

SELMA, ALABAMA,

Buyers

B. O.

KDWABD NALLB.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

3teel Raiis,

MisfiMippl.

John C. Graham & Co.,

FI«*
hDWAKD T00TI

Vibbard, Foote & Co.

BROKER

COTTON

Materials.

u.

GRISWOLD,

bLACK.STONE, VlCf

Secretary,

General Aient.

4

v