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V HUNT’S MERCHANTS’ MAGAZINE, ^ IPtt<) gkwsspiipetf, REPRESENTING THIS INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES [Entered, according to act of Congress, in tlie year 1882, by Wm. B. Da.na & Co., VOL. 35. THE and tlie with their securities. advance CHRCfNrCLE. Sub- Monetary and Commercial -A 13 English News Bank “Acceptances” of Checks 411 Commercial and Miscellaneous The Financial Situation 415 News RailroadEarniuys in Sept., and troin Jan. 1 to Sept. 30 41G THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE Money Market, Foreign Ex¬ Quotations of Stocks and Bonds New York Local Securities.... change, U.S. Securities, State and Railroad Bonds and Railroad Earnings and Bank Stocks 422 Returns Range in Prices at the N. Y. Investments, and State, City Stock Exchange 423 and Corporation Finances.. THE COMMERCIAL TIMES. Commercial Epitome 432 1 Breadstufts Cotton 432 | Dry Goods Treasury 419 421 424 425 426 427 437 43S The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is published New York every Saturday morning. [Entered at tlie Post OHice, New York, N. Y., as in second-class mail matter. | SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN For One Year (including postage) For Six Months do Annual subscription in London (including postage) Six mos. do do do ‘ ADVANCE: #10 20. 6 10. £2 7s. 1 Ss. until ordered stopped by a written order, or at the publication office. The Publishers cannot be responsible tor Remittances unless made by Drafts or Post-OHice Monev Orders. A neat tile cover is furnished at 50 cents: postage on the same is 18 cents. Volumes bound for subscribers, at $1 00. Subscriptions will lie continued Liverpool Office. in Liverpool is at No. ings, where subscriptions and advertisements will WILLIAM B. DANA. JOHN Q. FLOYD. \ S 19 & week since and of this amount the issuance of the 2 millions over came in on Meanwhile the Thursday. receipts of the Government have been at a even those accustomed to seeing very large figures, with the result of adding some millions to the Treasury balance during the short time that has elapsed since the first of the month, even after the dis¬ rate to astonish bursements for October interest and the called bonds presented. For the purpose of giving the reader an idea of the amount of money which has of the channels of commerce by the thus been taken DAILY RECEIPTS AND PAYMENTS BY U. Receipts. Dale. & 8. SUB-TREASURY. 1882. $ Oct. Government revenues are THE SUB-TREASURY. at present pouring into the Treasury in such a constantly-increasing volume that becoming a very serious question how to get them A few weeks ago and to threaten so it is out. they began to accumulate so rapidly great disturbance to the money market, that Secretary Folger was forced to take unusual steps to check the evil. He at that time in some measure the arrested growing stringency—in good part, however, by show¬ ing those who were attempting to manipulate money his willingness to use whatever power he possessed to defeat 1 1881. 1882. “ 2 “ 3 $ 1,245,854 s. “ 6 1,701,955 1,901,838 1,748,012 2,807,057 1,000,752 “ 7 2,670,278 44 8 44 9 “ 4 “ 5 “ S. 3,522,490 2,707,513 10 44 11 a -| o Total The - Payments. 1881. Post Office Box 958. OUR REVENUES AND out Government, we have prepared the following table, showing the receipts and payments by the United States Sub-Treasury in this city, daily, from October 1 to October 12, inclusive. GO., Publishers, William Street, NEW YORK. 81 quarter of a year’s interest in 3^- per cent per annum, J of 1 per order, might therefore have been presented for redemption ; yet only 9 millions altogether had made their way into the Treasury up to yesterday morning, 5 Brown’s Build¬ be taken at the of the copies paper supplied at Is. each. WILLIAM B. DANA A and 15 millions The office of the Chronicle regular rates, and single NO. 903. (equaling at months) was to be given without con¬ sideration for the exchange. And how has this worked ? cent for the three This is the third The Chronicle. TERMS OF Washington, D, C.| SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1882. CONTENTS. Our Revenues in the office of the Librarian of Congress, S. $ $ s. 1,576,642 2,234,866 1,091,378 1,561,542 1,001,618 1,472,986 2,058,760 931,730 8. 8. 3,484,910 1,860,595 2,107,069 1,663,701 1,454,266 3,389,172 3,008,339 1,760,505 1,838,921 1,120,747 972,450 S. A 2,054,160 1,802,143 8. 2,949,670 1,052,096 1,496,870 1,312,130 933,995 1,107,719 1,370,091 2,291,292 1,447,046 22,725,201 13,706,863 18,541,526 18,775,205 772,097 large receipts this year, and the heavy gain over previous year, can not fail to attract notice. In the that purpose. But he did not accomplish much in the way twelve days of last year the receipts were les3 than 14 providing an outlet for his increasing revenues. At million dollars; in the the corresponding period of this ygar moment, the accumulation is not doing any consider¬ they over millions. were 23 able Allowing for gold deposited harm, as the exchanges at some of the out-of-town the with the Assistant-Treasurer for silver certificates trans¬ ferred to interior points, which item we are informed on this centre ; yet it is clear counts only in the receipts and not in the payments, the that the present large payments into the Treasury cannot total receipts this year are diminished some 2 million l°ng be continued without seriously interfering with the dollars, but even then there remains an increase hee working of the money market. of 7 millions on last The year. As is well daily receipts at known, the Secretary, on Sept. 23, issued his the moment would therefore seemaverage to be nearly caU for 25 If million millions of extended fives, and immediately dollars, counting in Sundays, and about 2 millions offered to redeem them daily, without rebate of interest to the counting only working days. The payments during this amount of five million dollars weekly, This was certainly time have also been heavy, and yet they were insufficient to 0 ering a liberal inducement points have turned somewhat Measure to lessen the drain to in our the favor so bondholders as to in a part counterbalance the large revenues received, so that, as inti- THE 414 R CHRONICLE. I Vol. XXXV. ; with the daily requirements of brokers, so insignificanTin above, about 2 millions (deducting transfers) have been added to the balance held by the Sub-Treasury on Oct. amount, that our last week’s discussion did not make their mated r 11 ' Last year, during these inished over 5 millions. 1. The fact of chief 12 days, the balance was dim¬ special mention necessary. importance shown by the above is that Comptroller Knox in submitting points with reference to “ acceptances” to the But the recent action of certain Treasury funds keep accumulating despite the Secre¬ Attorney-General, has given this whole subject fresh The step taken by the Comptroller is, We tary’s most earnest efforts to diminish them. It certainly interest. Congress meets soon •seemed as if with the ordinary payments and the liberal presume, simply a prudential one. and it is wise to be fortified with an opinion of the offer made to redeem bonds, that he ought to have been successful during the first half of October in securing Attorney-General with regard to the legal force of the that end. On the first of the month $7,389,000 fell due section of the Bank Extension bill in question. Those for interest, on the third the 116th call for millions who framed the provision supposed that, under the fiat matured and there were outstanding over 11 millions of of a law, they could stop the practice which was thoroughly extended sixes previously called, while the 117th call for interwoven with our business methods, as speedily as they ‘25 millions was to be anticipated at the rate of 5 millions could snuff out a candle with their fingers. The result up to this time is they have merely changed the name not the weekly;—yet notwithstanding all these liabilities and the ordinary expenses of the Government, money went in nature of the act. Another similar effort, we may presume, will be made at the coming session of Congress, with what faster than it came out. It is quite likely, We have often represented how important it was that effect can only be known by the result. Congress should provide some method of keeping its reve¬ however, if the animus hitherto shown continues to exist, that the experiment will be repeated until the ultimate nues which would not be so disturbing to business inter¬ ests. This cast-iron Sub-Treasury system did very little event is, a change to the State system by a number of our We have never been able to see how such a harm in olden times, when our receipts and disbursements banks. for the twelve months were very small; but now, when change will benefit the country, and hence do not under¬ he actual revenues average for the whole year 8 or 9 stand the motive influencing the majority of those who millions a week, and other transfers to a large amount favored such legislation. Mr. Knox’s three questions which he has asked the are constantly necessary, even the temporary withdrawal To the first (as of these funds under the Sub-Treasury law, has become Attorney-General are quite cleverly put. to whether a bank has “the legal right to accept checks a very serious tax on the commerce of the country. “drawn upon it unless the drawer has the amount stated •Congress should see to it that this is not prolonged through “in the check actually on deposit in the bank”), we its inaction. the may presume, from. he thinks he will receive ah tary’s powers are very limited. A transfer to the deposi¬ tory banks of the amounts held for bonds not presented, the calls for which have matured, would be a very natural and unobjectionable act ; but the difficulty is, there is no law authorizing it. The only resource Mr. Folger seems to have is to purchase bonds in the open market to the ■amount of his weekly surplus. This, perhaps, would be the best device under the circumstances for equalizing the is that the asks “ “ “ “ bank has the whether, in case a So the Comptroller next bank has the power to make right. acceptance, “would such an acceptance at a time when the money was not on deposit to the credit of the drawer be a liability for money borrowed, and as such such “ a -affirmative answer—that an required to be limited to one-tenth of the paid-in capital of the banks, as provided by Section 5,200 be United States Revised Statutes ?” The provision of the Revised Statutes referred to it would be very unpopular, as it would make the Government pay (Section 5,200) is the one limiting the liabilities due any national bank, incurred by any one firm for money bormore than par for the bonds it redeems, and might also possibly put up the price of bonds until the banks were rowed, to one-tenth of the capital stock of such associ¬ Under this section a bank with half a million cap¬ induced to dispose of their holdings and so disturb our ation. national bank currency. Of course, to meet an emer¬ ital would, of course, be restricted to a certification of gency, Mr. Folger would most likely adopt the plan, but fifty thousand dollars to each dealer, if the construction we doubt very much whether he would feel justified in suggested by the Comptroller is the correct one. The whole question would turn therefore on the interpretation continuing it. It is clear, however, that the Secretary should present this of the phrase, “ money borrowed whether that can be whole matter to Congress and urge upon it some speedy construed so as to cover an acceptance would seem to be action as a temporary relief at least. After that let the doubtful. An acceptance is a liability on the part of the wiser heads among our legislators devise and mature a acceptor, but in what sense could it be called a loan ? No plan which shall not involve the continuing of the Sub- cash credit is given or can be given in the customer s Treasury arrangements. They were useful when first account, by reason of the transaction. The acceptance is devised, because they served a good purpose without simply entered as a debt, which is cancelled or paid by the checks subsequently deposited. working harm, but have become unbearable now. But the final question is less easily disposed of. It is111 effect whether the acceptance of any number of such checks BANK “ACCEPTANCES" OF CHECKS. In some remarks we made with regard to the National to an amount exceeding in the aggregate the amount of Banks last week, we briefly referred to the question of the bank’s paid-in capital, be in violation of section 5,202 of the Revised Statutes. The section ■ referred to in certifying checks. ~We have so often written on that subject, and at so great length, probably few of our read¬ this last question (Sec. 5,202) provides that no associa¬ ers interpreted our words as meaning that in mercantile tion (except in the manner specified in the section) s a transactions certifications were never used. Still, as one at any time be indebted or in any way liable in an amount As Vne daily accept writer at least seems to have drawn such a conclusion, we exceeding the amount of its capital. simply add what we have so often shown, that such uses ances of some of these banks reach a. total many times of certified checks are many and important, but, compared their capital, at first sight it would s^em as if all such conw receipts and payments ; and yet in some quarters {' tlie~ succeeding questions, that meantime, however, the question arises what shall be done with the present accumulations. The Secre¬ In OCTOBER THE 14, CHRONICLE. ^fthhiTln8 prohibition. The section in question does not however state what will be the effect on the acceptances of capital, though the natural inference that the excess would be void for want of authority to execute them. At all events under Sec. 5,239 it would seem that the franchise wrould be forfeited in case the directors knowingly permitted the violation, and the directors themselves would be personally liable for all damages sustained in consequence. But how far or when any of. the banks violate this • n out in excess ' 415 be sent from other parts of the Continent without .beingThe apparent indifference manifested reported by cable. by the directors of the Bank sterling to figures so is undoubtedly due the rate of interest near to of England to the fail in gold-importing point the fact that so long as the keeps down to 3^ per cent in in London, there exists a constant and strong natural influence tending to throw upon Paris or the Continent any calls for gold Paris, and is held at 5 per cent which may be necessary don is concerned, this for this market. So far as Lon¬ provision would be a question very difficult to prove. Of arrangement could hardly be course the mere fact that acceptances go ‘ through the improved; and as the condition of the Bank of France is Clearing House on any one day in excess of capital is no a very strong one, it would not be at all surprising if the evidence that the amount of liability outstanding was at existing difference in interest rates were to continue, even any one time of the previous day in excess of that capi¬ in case the exports of gold from Paris reached a consider-, At 3 o’clock when the bank closed, the indebted¬ able amount. The tal following shows relative prices in Lon¬ ness had been wholly canceled by checks deposited by don and New York of leading securities at the opening' each customer ; and through the day we presume every each day, indicating the profit in cable transactions during institution giving “ acceptances” to stockbrokers their customers not to requires the week. to make deposits from time to time, and leave the settlement Oct. to the close of bank hours. Thus it is possible that the day’s total acceptances might many times exceed the capital, and yet at no single period the amount in excess of credits exceed that capital. THE FINANCIAL SITUATION. There has been no unfavorable Erie 2d Oct. 10. Oct. 11. Oct. 12. Oct. 13. Lond'n N.Y. Lond'n orices.* prices. prices.* prices. prices* prices. prices.* prices. prices.* prices. U.S.4s,c. 11804 U.S.3H3 9. 100 70 43 82 N.Y. Lond'n N.Y. 119 118 70 11934 11840 119 10014 42*4 100 70 ,100* 100 70 100* 100 10021 43-41 con. 10021 111. Cent. 139 13 139 142 05 S. Y. C.. 133 05 13234 033-4 133-78 43 43-41 4334 100* 141* 133* 03* 100 70 10034 141* 14303 134 27 133* 63* Lond'n N.Y. Lond’n N.Y. 118-40 119% 119 19 119* 100* 100-00* 100* 4317 42-90 42* 42* 100-21. 100* 10012 100* 99-(0i 14570 13354 145* 144-78 144* 133* 134-00 132* change in the situation Reading 31 871 31-80+ 31-80+ 31-741 02* 31 504 62* this week. Money is in good supply; foreign exchange is Kxch’ge, cables. 4-80’4 4'80* only slightly firmer than it was recorded in our last; rail¬ 4-80* 4*80* 4-87* Expressed in their New York equivalent. road earnings continue to show a decided gain upon the Reading on basis of $50, par value. * Ex-interest. large totals of 1881 being even in excess of the increase in mileage; while business is fairly active and very prom¬ Money at the Stock Exchange on call has ruled as high as ising. In the stock market, however, the same influences 10, and was for a brief period as low as 1 per cent this week. noted last week have brought about a lower range of The highest rate was on Tuesday, and is claimed to have prices, but the decline is chiefly in properties which have been the result of manipulation for the purpose of influ¬ long been classed as “ fancies,” and therefore the deprecia¬ encing the stock market. The lowest figure recorded was tion in their market value has no particular, significance. on Thursday, when the supply for the time seemed to be Up to Wednesday the exchange market continued abundant, the over supply being very largely due, however, without especial feature. On Wednesday the tone im¬ to a decreased demand arising out of the oversold condition of proved a little and on Friday the asking rates were the stock market, which is shown by the borrowing demand advanced by a few bankers, but the movement was not for nearly all the active stocks. The daily disbursements general, although sterling was quoted as firm. This from the Treasury have not been large, as until Thursday new movement was due to a better demand for remit¬ the redemptions of bonds were very light. On that day a tances, probably to meet maturing sterling loans, but block of $2,100,000 came in from one of the up-town sav¬ the supply appears to have been sufficient to satisfy the ings banks, and this is the first large lot that has been inquiry. The new bills on the market are easily traced to received since the redemptions commenced at the Subthe good buying there has been in progress of leading Treasury under the last call. The reason for the stocks for European account. Illinois Central has been surrender of these called bonds it is not difficult tardy to give. liberally bought for Amsterdam, while Erie, New York It will be remembered that the 117th call covers a part of Ontario & Western, Lake Shore, Illinois Central, New those which were not converted into 3 per cents—the York Central, Northern Pacific preferred, Union Pacific, residuum, as it were, of that movement—and it is reasonable Western Union, and other shares, have been quite freely to suppose therefore that they are well scattered or held by purchased for London. Judging from the strength dis¬ parties who were not only not disposed to convert but them, played by the London market for these securities it seems who are not directly or indirectly interested in Wall Street a fair conclusion that these foreign con¬ purchases will operations or in the money market. Many of them tinue at least until there is a material rise in the rate of undoubtedly were originally bought more for their the Bank of England. Commercial bills are not pressing security than for the revenue to be derived from on the market to any great extent except in the form of them. Again, some may be held by institutions, as futures, bills for the produce now going forward was the case with the two million sent in on having been contracted for Thursday,, sixty or ninety days ago. The Conti¬ the rules of which require action on the of. the Board part nental demand for breadstuffs is good, and it is stated of Trustees before surrendering securities. It is evident, that a large number of cargoes consigned to Cork for therefore, that if it should be necessary for the Treasury orders were sent to the Continent during September, Department at any time to give effective relief to the which will in part account for the supply of French and money market, bonds must be purchased instead of called other Continental in for exchange on our market. redemption, even if the Department thereby is Francs continue close to the gold-importing point; it is required to pay a small premium for them. The possible that Treasury specie has been already shipped hither from operations for the week, exclusive of the receipt of France, as last Saturday we were advised of the export of $1,000,000 United States notes from Washington, have |I00,0QQ gold from Amsterdam, and resulted in a gain, which is a loss to the consignments may banks, of ♦ + THE 10 [Vol. XXXV, CHRONICLE. Consisting of— The following indicates ment, including Treasury transfers. $4,779,713 60. Receipts at and Shipments from N. Y. Gold Dale. Qold. ■ Shipped. Received. $1,770,000 15u,000 $ j ,575.<*00 23,000 Currency Treasury the interior move¬ Duties. 935,000 transfers $2,855,000 Oct. 6.. ? r “ - 9.. “ 10.. *• 11.. “ 12.. B. S. Gold Silver Cer¬ Notes. Cert if. tificates. $17,000 37,000 $432,2-19 68 $133,000 $20,000 -107.125 91 97,000 237,000 115,000 28,000 86,000 21,000 106,000 117,000 140.000 65,000 39,000 210, COO 785,873 056,728 356,318 517,138 00 95 20 41 47.000 87,000 $226,000 217,000 390,000 307,000 106,000 173,000 $763,0Q0|$251,000 $637,000 $1,455,000 Total.i .to,155,734. 33 showed a better con¬ dition of the institutions than really existed. Assuming RAILROAD EARNINGS' IN SEPTEMBER, AND FROM JANUARY 1 TO SEPTEMBER 30. this to be the case, and bearing in mind that a large The pleasing monotony of a continued increase in railroad amount of called bonds was payed for by the Treasury the The only really new fea¬ latter part of the week, the following will help to explain earnings remains unbroken. ture is that with the beginning of the movement of the to-day’s bank return. new crops to market, the increase is becoming more gene¬ Net Loss. In'o Banks. Out of Banks ral and more pronounced. In July the excess footed up $1,779,711 $1,779,714 $ Sub-Treasury operations, net... 1,991 thousand dollars,, in August it rose to 2,323 thousand, 1,252,000 2,855,000 1,603.000 Interior movement and now in September we have an increase of over 3,000 Total $1,603,000 $7,631,711 $6,03 1,7 1 i thousand. In July there were 14 roads reporting a de¬ The Bank of America paid out $350,000 gold on ac¬ crease, in August 13, and in September only G. The ratio of of the banks during week, and received count associated the gain for the latter month is about 14 percent, while for August it was but 10, and for July but 9. Of course the nothing in return. The stock market moved upward so rapidly on Monday gain'in earnings was made on a larger mileage this year, and until Tuesday afternoon that many supposed the long- but mileage has increased only 104 per cent, while earnings talked-of general advance had begun and that there was have increased 14, leaving the average earnings per mile Further¬ really an end to the dull, depressed, declining market which this year $623, against, $’G05 per mile in 1881. has so long prevailed. On Tuesday, however, the condition more, the improvement was recorded'in spite of the draw¬ became less favorable, being influenced first by activity in backs still experienced on account of the short crops of money and reports of cutting of rates in the West, and last year. The following table shows earnings and mileage aggravated by free sales which were claimed to have been of each individual road. E.VRVIXbS A\l) MILEAGE IN’ SEPT EM HER. traced to one of the leaders in the market. Since then the Mileage. Cross Barn ings. course of prices Las continued more or less downward, the Name of road. Increase 1882. 1881. 1881. greatest decline being in certain of the fancies. The fall 1882. Decrease. in Richmond & Danville and Richmond & West Point $ $ $ 1,820 1,790 + 146,666 Terminal is said to have been caused by the refusal of A tell. Top. & S. Fe 1,302,535 1,155,869 1,539 1,539 + 116,657 1,759,291 1,642,634 Baltimore & Ohio 564 659 + 39,638 banks to loan upon the properties. The decline in Denver Burl. Ced. Rap. A Nc. 261,439 221,801 146 146 + 1.157 31,883 36,040 Cairo A St. Louis 300 385 +15,950 & Rio Grande was due to persistent attacks made upon Central Branch U. P. 84,293 100,218 + 283.697 3,101 2,722 2,474,000 2,185,303 Central Pacific 238 238 it by speculators, and the drop in the Omahas and in St. Char. Col. & Augusta. +9,437 55,373 61,810 430 517 + 57,921 247,111 305,065 & Ohio.. 840 817 Paul was caused by reports of a rate war between these Chesapeake + 106,319 771,790 881.109 Chicago A Alton 220 230 +21,862 150,915 172,777 Chic. A Eastern 111 335 roads. The South westerns yielded readily to the pressure Chic. A Gr. Trunk!... 335 +70,129 131,322 I 201,151 + 305,330 4,333 3,900 1,950,000 1,641,670 Chic. Milw. A St. Paul. of free sales, indicating lack of support, and the rapidity 2,197,053 2,292.677 + 204,376 3,371 2,941 Chicago A Northwest. 985 1,070 373,370 + 109,627 482,997 Chic. St. P.Miun. AO. with which they fell gave color to the rumor that Mr. 342 363 + 9,819 158,436 168,285 Cm. Ind. St, L. AC1P. 144 141 +9,793 40,213 50,000 Ak. A Col Gould was operating for a decline. 322 The strongest stocks Clove. 322 +54,694 235,663 290,357 Col. Hock. Val. A Tol. 963 1,160 + 6,019 589,287 595,306 I)env. A Rio Grande.. were the trunk-line properties, Illinois Central, Union Paci¬ 110. —10.226i 87 47,519 31,293 Des Moines A Ft. 1>... ! 226 226 + 15,784 122,419 138,203 fic and Western Union, the latter being influenced by the Detroit Laus’g A No.. 900 902 296.240 + 20,890 317,130 East Tenu.Va. A Ga.. 283 233 + 22,547 323,353 345,900 annual election for directors. The strength displayed by Eastern 114 157 + 5,265 70,080 75,345 Evansv. A T, Haute.. 318 315 +26,088 155,255 181,313 Illinois Central is no more than might be expected for Flint A Pere Marq. 219 225 + 95 31.881 31,786 Gr. Bay Win. A St. P. 323 432 + 74,157 120.196 such an excellent property, managed so conservatively and Gulf Col. A Santa Fe. 191,653 292 292 24,093 + 215,103 239.196 Hannibal A St. Jos... 919 919 -2,917 616,411 613,491 openly as to gain the confidence of prudent investors at Illinois Central (Ill.).. 402 402 + 2,307 182,437 181,744 Do Last week’s bank return probably , GROSS ■ oi .... i • .. (Iowa lines).. home and abroad. England return for the week shows a loss of £292,000 bullion and of 2 11-1G per cent in the proportion The Bank of France- reports a of reserve to liabilities. decrease of 9,350,000 francs gold and of G,050,000 francs silver. The following indicates the amount of bullion in the principal European banks this week and at the corres¬ ponding date last year. The Bank of Oct. Bank of England Bank of France Bank of Germany Total this week 12, 18S2. Oct. 13, Gold. Silver. Cold. £ & & 1881. £ 21,074,313 21,191,775 39.151,172 45,196,249 123,980,057 18,281.568 6,352,250 19.056,750 6,411,875 19,244,625 66,760,822 64,440,871 51,406,650 67,338,3 IS 67,333.807 64,397,020 52,252,099 67,688,501 previous week The above gold and silver division of the stoctcor coin of Of Germany is merely popular estimate, as the Bank itself Information on that point. Total Silver. the Bank gives no Assay Office paid $70,220 through the Treasury for domestic bullion, and the Assistant The urer received the Ind. Bloom. A West... InternT A Gt. North.. 273,100 217,932 350,835 277,296 Iowa Central J 112,824 99,610 160,282 152,196 118,421 12 1,2*50 41,522 41.313 Kan.City Ft.S.A Gulf. Lake Erie A Western. Little Rock A Ft. S... Little Rk. M. R.ATex. Long Island Louisville A Nashv.-.. Milw. L. Sh. A West-. N. Y. Elevated. N. 5. A New Engl'ml. Non hern Pacific Texas A Pacific Tol. Delplios A Union Pacific Burl.. Wab. St. Louis & Pac, 519,332 625,133 210,262! 160.031 198.681 230,008 338.490 Metropol. Elevated.. Ohio Centra! Ohio Southern Peo’ia Dee.AEvausw. Rich. A Danv St. L. A.AT.II. m.line. Do do (branches).j St. L. Iron Mt. A So... St. Louis A San Fran.. St. Paul A Duluth St. Paul Minn. A Man. Scioto Valley 213,621 951,566; 65,013; 613,701 801,116 Mo. Kan. A Texas Missouri Pacific Mobile A Ohio 789,700 119,377 38.511 65,521 333,000 131,830! 82.779! .. —2.S26 + 1,800 + 27,413 23,600. 25,4.00 211,034 1,107,935 83,012 + 156,419 225,321 299,573 -- 260 1,000 2,919,112 1.682.382 2,841,357 •185.736 52.610 315,-790 67,666 1,490,028 sir! 5281 -50,2311 —20,290 + 51,687! +38,917! 11,877 1,698 + 6,000 + 4,890 + 10,395 +15,835 + 57.711 + 5 1.707 708,325! , 275! 26.631! 70.222! 327,000 129,981; 66,384' 279,064 65,096 328 2,025, 1,840 1,220 +255,3371 + 60,991! .330,805 119,803 832,776 5 1,357 470,613 92,610 207 318 385 168 170 + 531,363! 58,383) 721.160 731 211 302 385 168 170 328 + 17,999 69,369 + 176.283 218,977 544 650 0-4 + 25,168 + 73.539 + 13,134 + 11,861 + 27,916 11 394 1,298 212 128 251 757 195 121 — 723| 6611 1/5, + 317,010 1,020! 1,717 + 121,823 + 24,914 + 104,755 + 192,351 13 14 18 + + 796 506 132 1,054 500 3,714 3,423 356 972 212 123 213 757 195 121 686 635 1 to -855 132 soo 435 3,346 3,031 wool 40 1 SubTreas¬ following from the Custom House. in each year, September 30. Ttiree weens only of September t For the four weeks ended *■ ♦ Figures for 1882 are actual will be. what approximate and claimed to 3 be much oeiow ai JNM& October THU 14, 5582.J (JHllONlOLli. 417 Th^iiicrease is pretty well distributed, almost all sec¬ together with an enlarged volume of passenger traffic, is tions participating in the improvement. Northwestern adding largely to railroad receipts. Toledo appears to roads, however, again lead. This is the more note¬ have profited most from the augmented receipts of wheat, worthy that these reads are as yet deriving compara- since, its corn receipts being very small, there was no loss tively little benefit from the movement of this year’s crops. here to wipe out the gain in wheat. At St. Louis, corn, They are too far north for winter wheat, and spring wheat oats, barley and rye all exhibit a decrease, but this was to does not move to any great extent as early as September, a great extent neutralized by the increase in wheat. For a minor while corn goes to market still later. In August the point, Peoria, as in previous months, has suffered Southwestern roads were most prominent, not so much on more, comparatively, than any other point embraced in their own account, (though they made large gains) as our table. Corn is its most important cereal, and of this because the Northwestern roads had fallen behind. In it ’received only 374,800 bushels this year, against September the Southwestern roads did not quite maintain 1,329,700 bushels last year, making its total receipts of all the improvement of the previous month, and the North¬ kinds of grain but 1,261,850 bushels, as compared with western roads, instead of a falling off in several cases, have 2,409,075 bushels in 1881, or a diminution of about onein almost every instance very much better earnings than a half. Probably this accounts for the loss of $4,698 in the year ago. In illustration of the latter remark, the Chicago earnings of the Peoria Decatur & Evansville road. As already remarked, Southwestern roads, & Northwestern and the Chicago Milwaukee & St. Paul, though they which both recorded a decrease in August, have this did well, fell somewhat behind August in point of improve¬ month over half a million increase between them. Among ment on last year. The St. Louis & San Francisco, the other roads in that section the Chicago St. Paul Minne¬ St. Louis Iron Mountain & Southern and the Missouri apolis & Omaha increased its gain of $17,000 in August Kansas & Texas all have smaller gains this month than to $109,000 in September, and the Burlington Cedar Rapids last, as have also the trunk-line connections, such as the & Northern its gain from $13,000 to pretty nearly $40,000. Missouri Pacific and the Wabash St. Louis & Pacific. The St. Paul Minneapolis & Manitoba and'the Northern As to the latter, it is to be said that the disparity in mile¬ Pacific still continue to make heavy gains. Roads run¬ age between the two years is no longer so great as it was. ning South and Southwest from Chicago and which carry Hannibal & St. Joseph also has a smaller increase in earnings a large amount of winter wheat to that city, did quite well in September than in August. Atchison Topeka & Santa in September. The Chicago & Alton gains $100,319, and E’e, on mileage only 30 miles greater than last year, increased the Chicago & Eastern Illinois on smaller earnings has its September earnings $146,000, which also is somewhat about the same ratio of increase. The Illinois Central, on below the gain in August. On the other hand, roads the other hand, while it records a small improvement on down in Texas which connect with the Southwestern lines its Iowa lines, offsets this by a slight loss on its Illinois made greater improvement in September than in the line. The movement of wheat over all the Illinois roads month preceding. This is true particularly of the Inter¬ must have been heavy; and yet the increase in this cereal, national & Great Northern and the Texas & Pacific, and if the figures of receipts at the principal Western points applies as well to the Gulf Colorado & Santa Fe. Aside can be taken as a criterion, was insufficient to counter¬ from an increased volume of general trade, these Texas balance the heavy loss in corn, as the following table will roads had a favorable element in a slightly larger cotton show. movement,Texas differing in this respect from almost every RECEIPTS OF FLOUR AND GRAIN FOR FOUR WEEKS ENDED SEPT. 30. other Southern State, cotton being this year very back Flour, Wheat, ward all over the South, which entailed a large falling off Corn, Oafs, Harley, Rye, bbls. bush. bush. bush. bush. bush. in earnings upon many Southern roads. To give the Chicago— v 1882 1881 .... .... 191.947 203,252 Milw'kee— 1882 183.522 .... 1881 202,800 St. Louis— 1882 250,411 1881 126,91(3 .... .... .... Toledo1882 1881 214,700 499,027 136,028 6(31,103 325,820 2,397,770 1,148,022 120,085 1,514,295 481,487 047,431 89,094 290,704 99,539 170,933 13 4j035 2,942 23,032 .... (3,006 15,(575 50,723 879,303 .... 1882 1881 Peoria— 1882 1881 .... .... 682,409 3,009 191,218 10,974 52,700 5,194 30,200 .... 4,845 33,350 17.200 12 4.321 18,500 209,134 .... 359.187 350,060 25,320 64,974 143,778 09,944 5,500 116,500 47,180 128,800 32,475 61,142 reader some idea 374,800 1,329,700 742,100 853,775 as to how the cotton movement compares in the two years,we have had prepared the subjoined table showing the receipts of cotton at the Southern outports during September, 1882 and 1881. RECEIPTS OF COTTON AT SOUTHERN FORTS IN SEPT., 13,037 18,102 39 33,581 1,841 1,000 1,000 05,853 450 Galveston bales. ludianola, &c New Orleans Mobile Florida Savannah ' .... Duluth— 555,102 305,205 403,781 210,413 53,450 50,950 2,711,420 848,883 .... . 511,741 050,922 3,097 Clevel’d— -±882 1881 4,185,(531 2,674,444 1,233,315 11,404,299 1,498,370 .... Detroit— 1882 1881 4,533,177 35,800 78,950 30,500 155,750 Total of all 1882 070.115 11,079,210 5,423,973 1,474,622 1,202,327 502,503 1881 032.083 4,92 4,735 14,89(3,784 3,408,869 1 ,o i> 1,582 812,859 Brunswick, <fcc Charleston Port Royal, &c Wilmington Moreiiead City, etc Norfolk City Point, «fcc . 1882. 1881. 73,739 4,05 4 45,938 22,804 72,G37 3,309 90,302 312 395 82,713 1,3 44 100,026 1,095 52,502 53,470 24,785 24 14 9,340 10,901 430 292 19,714 4,507 44,943 12,628 319,001 421,149 1882 AND 1881. Difference. Inc. Inc. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. . . .. .. ... ... 1,102 1,285 50,304 1,981 83 ... 17,913 Dec. 351 Inc. Inc. Dec. Inc Dee. Dec. 968 10 ... 1,615 144 . ... ... 25,229 8,001 .... .... Here we see that while the receipts of wheat this Total The Dec. ...102,088 falling off in the total movement at all ports is having risen 102,000 bales, or about 25 per cent. But it is New Orleans from 4,924,735 bushels to 11,079,216 bushels, a gain of that suffered most, for instead of receipts of 93,000 bales, 6,700,000 bushels, and there was a further gain of one mil¬ as in 1881, it had this year only 46,000 bales, a I033 of lion bushels in oats,the receipts of corn fell off from 14,896,- over 50,000 bales. This backwardness of the crop—espe¬ 784 bushels tom,423,973 bushels, a loss of over nine million cially in Mississippi—accounts for the heavy falling off in bushels. At Chicago, especially, was the loss severely felt, for the earnings of the Mobile & Ohio, for although the the corn receipts dwindled from 11J million bushels to 4-4 receipts of cotton at Mobile indicate a decrease of only million bushels, a contraction of seven millions, against about 2,000 bales, this does not by any means represent which wheat and oats increased only about 4J- millions. the loss to the Mobile & Ohio. That road drains Western That the Chicago roads show a large increase in earnings, Mississippi almost exclusively, while Mobile’s receipts are respite the smaller grain movement, is positive proof of drawn not only from this source, but from the districts in great industrial activity and business expansion, which, Alabama as well. Now it so happens that while the were more than double those of - last year, year Mississippi shows a heavy decrease, that this at least should be recovered during the lastTthree from points in Alabama shows a large gain, making the months oft the year. The Burlington Cedar Rapids & Northern is the total movement at that point misleading as to the move¬ only other Northwestern read in our list and this continues to record gains on last ment over the different roads. Thus for the first 29 days of year, being for the eight $201,786 ahead of 1S81 months ; but it should .September the Mobile & Ohio brought to Mobile this year only 3,495 bales, while in 1881 it brought no less than be remembered that in the early part of the latter year 13,110 bales; on the other hand the Mobile & Montgomery its net earnings were very much reduced by snow and ice (Louisville & Nashville line) draining Eastern Alabama, and generally severe weather. Union- Pacific reports an increased its receipts of 3,939 bales in 1881 to 12,278 increase in net of $265,855 for August and of $652 861 bales in 1882. As a rule, however, most Southern roads for the eight months on its main line and branches. The large gain by the Pennsylvania was commented probably had a smaller cotton traffic this year, so that the upon generally good exhibits of earnings made by them are all by us when the figures were first published, two weeks a^o the more gratifying, and afford renewed evidence of the The Northern Central, another Pennsylvania road, rela¬ tively does even better, having increased- its net earnings prosperity which the South is at present enjoying. For the first nine months of the year our statement of from $94,335 in August, 1881, to $371,221 in August ■earnings is nothing less than satisfactory. Of the fifty-two 1882, and being now for the eight months $273,179 As compared with 1880 the increase roads in the table, but seven record any decrease, and the ahead of 1881. for total decrease on these foots up no more than $690,054 — the eight months is as much as half a million dollars. The while the other 45 aggregate a gain of $27,466,501, leav¬ Philadelphia & Reading does not vary its figures of last ing a net increase on all roads of about 26 J million year much. For August there is a small loss on the Rail¬ ^dollars, which is certainly a handsome sum, considering road Company and a small gain on the Coal Company* how short all crops were. Annexed is our usual table and for the eight months this is reversed, the Railroad showing a slight increase and the Coal Company a slight allowing the figures of individual roads. movement from GROSS EARNING8 FROM JANUARY Name 1382. of Road. Atoh. Tod. it Santa Fe./. Burl. Cedar Rap. Ac No... ■Cairo & St. Iambs •Cent. Branch Union Pac. •Central Pacific ■Chesapeake Ac Ohio Chicago Ac Alton Chic. & Eastern Illinois. Chicago it Grand Trunk. Chicago Milw. it St. Paui Chicago it Northwest Chic.St.P.Minn.itOniaha. Cin. Ind. St. L. it Cine.*. •Cleve. Ak. it Col Col. Hock. Val. it Tol Denver it Rio Grande Dos Moines Sc Ft. Dodge. Detroit Lansing it No. Flint it Pere Marquette.. Gulf Col. it Santa Fe Hannibal it St. Joseph... Ill. Central (Til. line) Do (la. leased lines). Indiana Bloom, it West.. Int. it Gt. North Iowa Central Kail. City Ft. S. it Gulf.. Lake Erie it Western .. Long Island Louisville <t Nashville... Milw. L. Shore it West'll. Mo. Kansas it Texas Missouri Pacific Mobile it Ohio Metropolitan Elevated.. New York Elevated ..New York it N. England. Northern Paeilic Ohio Central Peoria Dee.it Evansville. Richmond it Danville St.L.A.it T. II. main line. Do do (branches).. 'St. L. Iron Mt. it South’ll. St. Louis it S. Francisco St. Paul it Duluth 8t. Paul Minn, it Man Scioto Valiev Texas it Pacihe Toledo Delphos it Burl... ... . Union Pacific. Wabash St. L. it Pac Total Net increase * Thrive weeks only of Net 1881. $ 8,559.348 1.002,290 $ 10,412.108 1,970,083) 272,7 56 722,947 17,003,092 2,031,221 5,100,704 1,305,053 1,193,008 1,541.23 U 1,091,548 14,lOO.OOO! 12,010,533 17,272,007 15,633.590 307,010 2,091,101 4,772.031 255,101 1,172,774 2.817,390 1.084,900 309,729 1,099,018 4,168,273 290,921 1,002,022 1,540,505 1,353,809 915,304 1,579,200 001,273 1,035.375 4,932,140 1.338,327 1,805,819 1,828,859 5,135,141 1,307,703 1,910,421 2,158,934 1,870,62** 079,870 1,100,018 348,132 1,224,40 4 1,085,557 1,773,815 9,32 (,031 017,03 :> Increase. $ 1,852,850 373,737 309.491 033.910 IS,933,61th 2.402,421 5,318,13 4 3,494,194 1,920,527 371,203 351,780 112,045 449,080 2,089,402 1,038,411 070,798 143,899 57,881 395,053 003,761 ... 170.152 192,696 254,091 203,001 29,370 44,002 288,314 108,250 123,840 44,005 240,04!) 1,041,492 1,533,190 8 122,410 429,011 3,843,290 1,200,024 5,059,7 11 1.324,599 2,049.445 2,419,0*50 2.54 0,78.5 4,880,140 773,301 2,144,813 2,007,915 2<-0.4 45 274.853 472,*70 4,870,100 2,600,942 2,209,518 74-), 130 458.414 580.502 501,030 2,151,893 2 80,71 o 81.872 8 4,157 1.090,005 54 4,902 81,308 4 3/3.1 85 2,530,050 980.904 020,210 5,140,903 2,550,904 740,518 0,11 6.80 1 393.332 3,340.570 058,902 21,1 11,219 12,285,011 218,024 530,4*9 1.024,498 1,843,000 5,221,053 2,279,4 11 505,112 3.230,459 309,902 2,787.0.30 400,89 4 1^,973.010 10.391,883 Among Southern roads the Chesapeake & Ohio is again conspicuous for its great growth in earnings. The net $ for August this year were $172,845, while last August 30,738 they were but $47,773, and for the eight months they 89,037 foot up $615,276, against $235,774 in the corresponding period of 1881, an increase of pretty nearly $400,000. The Elizabethtown Lexington & Big Sandy, a link in the Chesapeake & Ohio system, had $17,500 net for August, and $91,096 for the eight months. As said in our previous :: review, the fixed charges on this line at present are calcu¬ lated to be less than $10,000 a month. The Louisville & 35,760 Nashville has larger net than in August 1881, but the gain is small, there having been a heavy increase in expenses. 50.109 Nashville Chattanooga & St. Louis has earnings about the same as in August a year ago, while the Norfolk & Western has added over $16,000 to its net of August, 18S1, and is now only $11,409 below last year on the figures for the eight months. The following table exhibits the gross and net earnings of all roads that jvill furnish monthly exhibits for publication. 299,899 Decrease. * * * GROSS AN1) NET EARNINGS TO LATEST DATES. A Name. i, 4*63 74,090 27 235.400 2,882,404 83,370 552,940 192,008 2,138,203 1,893,128 Do Operating' 690,054 and with two exceptions—Chicago Bur¬ lington & Quincy and Des Moines & Fort Bodge—they all report larger net earnings than a year ago. The Chicago Burlington & Quincy has a much smaller decrease than in either of the three months immediately preceding, and in its case, as well as in that of the Des Moines k Fort Dodge, the cause for the diminution is to be found, without doubt, in the great contraction that has taken place in the movement of corn. The Chicago Burlington & Quincy is now $534,000 behind 18S1 in net, but a part of , 1881 Big 1882; 1881J Sandy..1882! do 1881 Louisv. & Nashv Do do 18->2 Net 201), 112 381.454 j 2,173,945 28.242 9)1,47'. 51.4:>0 54.204 25,087 20.9 O 30,701 Net Earnings * 557.302 31.993 425,815 1,714,591 * 2*9,858 135,949 557,031 71,042 1,380,495! 355,245 172.845 2,097.359! 815.273 1,7-4,0771 47,7/3 235,774 12.807,47s! 5,751,791 1,110.592 1,182,407 970.200 Gross Earnings * 43.701 75,212 Aug. 81. 0.238,274 80,008 243,402 i (If. 17,385 13.100.850 7.240 20.303 223.808 17.500 305.401! 91.090 I ........ 8.214,604 3/'-27,894 7,170,841 2,574,749 448,3)4 090.212 3 13,738 1881; 870,193 551,529. 321,004. Marq. Houghton & On..1882! Do do 1881; Nash. Chat. & St. Louis 1882 100,4031 155,085 55.98'! 110.415 48.053 107,032 1881 j 10-.317 100.011 100,757 08,293 07.500 1882i 222,100 188)' 190,122 607.188 498.008 100.540 90.725 115.020 99,397 1,304,028 290.207 403.073 371,221 91,335 3.823.842 3.000,880 80,300 02,3)0 18,000 Penn, (all lines east of Pitts. & Erie) 1882 4.671.179 Do do 1681. 3,809.978 2.638,319 2.305.474 860 504 |31.47L 1882 1881 4 -0.329 303,849 233.911 418 I 2.522. 243,257 2,318, 920.903 738.813 Philadelp’a& Reading. 18*2 1 975,993 1881 2,0 ;0,9*7 1,025.907 997,221 13 533. 12 973. 5,759.657 5,732,067 Phila.it It&ad. C.& iion.1882 1.015,808 do Do 1881, 1,521.439 1.393,994 1,309,93 > 9,309/ 8,331. .1S82, 2,827.904 1,220,495 18,802. 59,792 4 4,749 1,011, Do do Norfolk & Western different sections of the country, 40,010| 149,708' 137,470 208.009 215,085 202,858 .. 1 72,009 2 ■ 4,920 2,080,858 do * 47.001 1881 Des Moines & Ft. D.. Do do Eli/,. l.ex.& Do * 91.42) Quincy... 1882 do Chic. Burl. & Do a more generally favor¬ able exhibit than has been the case for a long time past. j No..l«S2 16611 Chesapeake & Ohio... .1882 year. from I Buffalo Pitts. & West..18*2 16*1 Do do Burl. Cedar Rap. & Do do earnings for August make We have the returns of 19 roads Gross Jan. 1 to iigust. Earnings Expenses. Earnings 103,761 199,284,012 172,514,105 27,100.501 September in eaeli decrease. 1 TO SEPTEMBER 30. Do do Northern Central Do do 18S2 s 1881 Oregon & California.... 1882 Do do 1881 Phila. & Erie Do Do do do Union Pacific Do do 18811 Utah Central 1)0 do 1882 188) West Jersey Do do 1,030.000 108.394! 120877 1882 102,310 19*,240 ISf'i 174.548 89.850 71,924 109 103 281,725 1,216.010 1,397.972 1,433.053 509,183 552,090 604,32-2 818,231 1.471,238 1,193,039 j j 29 141, 778 902 080 ,945 11.870.0T5 LI,932,629 594.024 6)2.33o 8,582,060 365197 303.848 THE 14, 1882.1 October Jan. 1 to September. NAME. Gross Net Operating Earnings Expenses. Earnings Richmond 4 Divine..1SB2 j July. NAME. , Do do JUKI l)o do 1881 inc]UdinK $llO.B77l $30,500 53,285 $80,177 j *185,283 77.502 00,550 202,875 $ Jan. 1 to July SI. [ Expenses. Earnings. Earn i ngs, jfivansv. $ 2,530,050 2 451.803 Net | Operating Gross Net Earnings Earnings i ISO 000 1W1.000 Sept. 30. Gross $ 147.0001 180.000! $ $ 833.000 827.000 CHRONICLE. Gross Net Earnings Earnings $ $ 7,274 1,758,220 000,457 $17,3(59 for taxes, ami repairs on steamers and wharves. is 419 regarded to the as a prominent feature in commercial circles, is duegreat caution which speculators are accustoming them¬ selves to. The remark applies to the financial w-orld. companies are being introduced to public notice, and a general desire to operate cautiously has therefore manifested same Fewer The rates of discount now current in this country are likely therefore to work adversely to our commerce, and, unless there should be any active revival of the demand for gold for exportation, which is regarded as improbable, we may expect the money market to remain in its present comparatively easy condition. The following are the present rates for itself. not money : pXouctavyf (Commercial gugUslt Jlettis Per cent. Bank rat© 3 months’ bills AT LATEST DATES. 30.;| EXCHANGE AT LONDON-Sept. The EXCHANGE ON LONDON 3 mo8. Short. Hamburg... 3 moa. i Amsterdam AniBtenhiin t Berlin it Frankfort... St. it 20-71 2071 ! Sept. 30 £12*0% a>12-4 ® 20-74 ® 20*75 ! £-0-75 ® 12-1114 «;25*G5 j 23»ifl<z>23'q« ! f’hecks 25-20*4 <z>25-31 q 3 moa. 2 5 • 5 21 v @ 25*57 bj 25-07 ^ o»2G*02)2 tt 4G S)4G18 ! u 4G a>4(>q i Madrid Cadiz 20-70 25*00 — Petersb’g 12 3 12-Gq i t Paris Paris Genoa L2-.V*8 Date. t a Lisbon New York... 5l7i6®5L»ia . Bombay.... GOdays ti Calcutta.... Hong Kong.. Shanghai.... Is. 7iv,d. ls.7t°i0d. * j Sept, Sept. Sept, Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept, Sept. Sept. Sept. ! Sept. Sept. .... our own Rate. Short. 12-14 Short. 30 30 30 30 30 “ tt a it ti tt 30 30 Long. 30 Short. 30 30 tt *4 20-43 20-15 20*45 1 1*92 25*28 243,« 25*28 2^30 47*20 47*20 29 Short. 30 4 moa. it 3u tt 30 ti 4*81 la. 77sd. la. T-iLjod. 3s. 9®8«l. 5a. 2%d. correspondent.I London, Saturday, Sept. 23, 1882. The money market is r egarded as being in a condition of uncertainty, and there are many who still believe in higher rates of discount. The question of an advance was, from some unaccountable cause, discussed this week, but the directors of the Bank have made no alteration, and none was needed. The official quotation remains therefore at 5 per cent, but in the open market the rate for the best three months bills does not exceed 4% per cent. A difference, therefore, of % per cent, combined with other features to be alluded to, tends to the conclusion that dearer money, in the immediate future, is scarcely possible. This week’s Bank return is somewhat more favorable, the note circulation having been diminished by ^117,920, while the supply of bullion has been augmented to the extent of £136,291. The total reserve has, therefore, been increased by £254,211, and the proportion of reserve to liabilities has risen from 3918 to 39*77 per cent. Since the Bank return was published there has, it is understood, been a further im¬ provement in the position of the establishment, but the process of recovery is decidedly slow, and the Bank of England is not in a strong position for the period of the year. There who contend that the advance in the Bank are some the rates of interest allowed by the joint- deposits: rcr cent. c Joint-stock banks Tone. 3d Sex»t, 30 [From 1 ..... ! Vienna Antwerp it Latest Rate. Time. are stock banks and discount houses for ' On— following Per cent. 4 mouths’ hank bills 4% <z) 4% 0 months’ hank hills 4 (4 «'4% 4 6 months’trade bills. 41aS»51a Open-market rates— 30 and GO days’ bills. EXCHANGE AT LONDON AND ON LONDON R4TBS OF Open-market rates— Discount houses at call Do with 7 or 14 Annexed is 3h> 3h> 3% ; days’ notice statement showing the present position of the England, the Bank rate of discount, the price of con¬ sols, the average quotation for English wheat, the price of mid¬ dling upland cotton, of 40-mule twist, fair second quality, and the Bankers’ Clearing House return, compared with the threea Bank of previous years: & ' 18Q1. 18S2. 1379. £ £ 26,054,590 26,621,530 6,629,804 24.409,254 15,377.851 17,575,975 27,725,940» Circulation Public deposits Other deposits Govern 111’t securities Other securities Res’ve of notes & coin. 26,077,000 5,245,075 23,194,356 11,682.205 23,957,891 11,410,925 Coin and bullion in both departments.. 21,737,935 23,309,728 - 1880. & ■ 5,401.873 25,487,406 14,557,649 21,"91,450 13,005,138 6,003.043 31,479,076 16,336.224 10,099,077 17,326,317 22,374,587 23,323,607 35,100,527 53 4 2bj p. e. 977a 42a. lid. 59 q 2 p. c. Proportion of reserve to liabilities Bank rate 39*77 5 p. c. Consols Eng. wheat, av. price. Mid. Upland cotton... 41% 4 p. c. 99% 99% 44s. 5d. 51a. 5d. There has been 7d. lid. 0V,<L 25,277,000 111,139,000 69,752,000 7-V,d. 7i;cd. No. 40 Mule twist ioqd. Clear’g-lioii8e return. 100,909,000 1 no 97% 47s. 4d. 10%d. 9 h>d. export demand for gold during the week, been sent into the prices are weaker,, and all arrivals, amounting to £273,000, have Bank. The silver market has been dull, and and Mexican dollars have attracted very little attention. Council bills have been disposed of at Is. 6d. the rupee. India Dur¬ ing the last ten days about £210,000 in silver has been shipped engagements have also been entered into for for¬ ward delivery. The following prices of bullion are from Messrs.. Pixley & Abell’s circular: to India, and gold, fine per oz. per oz. gold, cent. 20 dwts. silver Spanish doubloons South American doubloons United States gold coin German gold coin d. 3. GOLD. Bar Bar per per per per - oz. oz. oz. ‘W oz. d. SILVER. Bar silver, fine Bar silver, contaiu’g Cake silver Mexican dollars Chilian dollars 5 grs. per oz. standard, per oz. stand., gold, per oz., - Quicksilver, £6. rate last 3. 77 9 ® 77 1OV0 'w 73 10 73 i) fi 7 G 3b® standard. standard. - last price. 51 7s last price. 52q per oz. 56 last price. 50yi<j per oz - Discount, 3 per cent. Thursday week to 5 per cent, if not injudicious, was a The following are the current rates for hasty step. Although this view is shared by a few, it is not the foreign centres: one entertained by the majority, and it is becoming more and Rank Open at the leading money * more a evident that the movement judicious, The German one. necessary, and therefore and Dutch money markets remain firm, and are dearer than our own. There are also some uncertainties regarding the future gold movements between this country and the United States, and these facts produce firmness in the market; but on the other hand, the rates of dis¬ count in Paris are very easy, and should necessity demand it shall be able to draw gold from that market. The necessity hasnotyet arisen, but the Bank of France rate is only 3/£ per cent, and Paris is now the cheapest money market in the world. fie position of the Bank of France is an exceptionally strong one, and the course of the Paris we ^crly watched, market is, therefore it dependsgreat’y the London money money as upon market during the summer months. A prominent result of the advance m the Bank of England rate of discount to 5 per cent has been the check which has been §>wen to speculative The present rates of discount 0 not interfere with legitimate trade, and hence there is no cause for grievance; but monetary uncertainties usually keep speculative action in. check, and this seems to have been the case at the present time, for, while genuine business has been ma ing uninterrupted progress, the want of animation, which Market. rule. Pr. ct. was a Paris Brussels Amsterdam Berlin Pr. ct. 3% . ... 5. Hamburg... Frankfort... Vienna • T T . t 4 3h2 4% 4% 4% 3% Open MarketPr. ct. Madrid and other Spanish cities. 4 4 Bank rate. Pr. ct. St. Petersburg... Geneva Genoa. Copenhagen , 4b 6 4 5 4 4*a 6 4 5 4 hj The wheat trade has remained dull, and sales have been difficult, except by submitting to lower prices. The supplieravailable are very large, and there is no necessity for millers purchasing beyond their actual wants, as there is more probabil¬ ity of prices declining than advancing. A reference to the table given below shows that our imports of wheat and flour, as well as the deliveries of home-grown produce, are, for the first three weeks of the season, largely in* excess of previous seasons, and consequently the weakness of the trade is easily accounted for. Sir J. B. Lawes, who has enterprise. for many years past written upon yield of the wheat harvest, and whose figures are regarded trustworthy, has just issued his usual statement. He arrives at the conclusion that we shall require to import daring the season about 14,000,000 quarters of foreign produce. Respecting this year’s crop he presents the following figures: the as very r THE CHRONICLE. 420 Mean Mean Un- Farm yard manured, manure plot 3. plot 2. of of plots pilots 3, 2, <£ r-Artific'l manures* 7,8 iVo<7. Plot 8. IVo*9. cC 9. 7, 8,9. of Dressed Corn per Acre. 37 3134 32% 35% 31% 31% 26% 28% 35% 38% 36% 35% yrs.’52-71. 14% 36% 33% 32% 35% yre.’52-8l. 13% Bushel of Dressed Corn—lbs. Weight) 60 5934 58% 59% 59% 58% 59% 59% 59% yrs.’72-81. 57% 59 5S38 60 59% y rs.’52-71. 57% 60 59% 58% 59% yre.’52-81. 58 Total Straw, Chaff, &c., per Acre—Cuds. 56 ~ — 934 63% — 35% * 51% 23 40% 2834 36% yr8.’72-81. 8% 41 % 13 41 % 35% 33% yrs.’52-7I. 13 32 33 3934 41% yrs.’52-81. 11% i <1882 11 Av. 10 yrs/72-81. 10% Av. 20 Av. 30 26% (1) 23% (2) 28% (3) 27% (1; 34% 31 36% 34% ■ 3882 Av. 10 Av. 20 Av. 30 1882 Av. 20 Av. 30 (1) Equal to 25% (2) Equal to 22% (3) Equal to 27% (4) Equal to 26% 59% 50% 58% 5S% 58% 59 59 56% 34% 35% 24 39% 38 28% 27% — Av. 10 50% bushels at 61 lbs. per bushel. per bushel. bushels at 61 lbs. per bushel. bushels at 61 lbs. per bushel. bashels at 61 lbs. [VOL. XXXV. middling upland cotton, No. 40 mule twist, fair 2d quality and the Bankers’ Clearing House return, compared with the three previous years : 1882. 1881. 1880. £ £ 1879. £ 20,310,535 Circulation 26,133,875 Public deposits 5.100,709 Other deposits 23,895.915 Governm’t securities. 11.682.205 Other securities 24.341,156 Res’ve of notes & coin 11,543,900 Coin and bullion in both departments.. 21,932,775 5.076,209 24,961,655 14,512,519 21,5 so, 2 20 12,503,691 23,069,226 £ 26.965,730 7.153,116 28,988,915 0,479,526 24,470,185 31.088,807 5,377,841 10,832,592 18,611,369 17,451,499 16,178,671 20,815,958 1 28.144,401 34 7«o ' ad 58% Proportion of reserve to liabilities 39\*3 Bank rate Consols Emr. wheat, av. price Mid. Upland < <ilton .. No. 40 mule twist 5 p. 41% 50% 100% 1 p. c. 99% 42s Id. 61%a<1. 43s. 5d. 77i,;d. 42s. lid. 6% i. 10 %d. 10%d. c. ...... Clearm^diousc ret’n. 129,401.000 2% p. * 87,702,00,> 2 p. c e. 97% 98% 46s. 5d 6%(i. 9%<1. 82,452,00© 102.920,000 The general trade of the country still rules extremely quiet* quantity of wheat dow estimated to be afloat to the but there is a fair degree of steadiness apparent, especially in United Kingdom is 2,000*000quarters, against 2,050,000 quarters the wool trade. The public sales, which are just concluding, last week, and 1,865,000 quarters last year. Of flour the total have been fairly attended, and they indicate that the demand is 172,000 quarters, against 152,000 quarters last week, and for woolen goods is upon a satisfactory scale. It is well known 116,000 quarters last year—making a grand total of wheat and throughout the United States that for a series of years our flour of 2,181,000 quarters, against 1,93J,000 quarters in 1881. summers have been very brief, and consequently only very few Of Indian corn the supply afloat is 137,000 quarters, against have resorted to light clothing. Hence, the demand for woolen 139,000 quarters last week, and 294,000 quarters in 1881. goods has been maintained to its full average extent, while The . The following return shows the extent of the imports of cereal produce into the United Kingdom during the first three weeks of the season, compared with the corresponding period in the three previous seasons: IMPORTS. Wheat... cwt. i Barley Oats Peas Beans Indian Flour 1882. 1831. 1830. 1879. 6,233,903 3,352,674 186,282 933,959 5,716,236 4,829.577 385,047 869,649 54,783 73,789 1,171,004 811,335 corn 357,520 1,013,379 27,136 123.897 24,661 2,115,829 648,410 3,268,851 655,951 80.530 436,701 663,040 29,271 103,302 1,447,193 512,000 . there has at the same tkne been 1882. Imports of wheat.cwt. 6.2.83,903 Imports of flour. 811,335 Sales of home-grown produce 2.081,800 1881. 1380. 1879. 3,352,671 618,110 5,716.236 655,951 4,829.577 512,000 1,707,120 1,517,950 ,.749,303 9,127,033 5,708.501 7,920,137 6,090,830 wheat for season, qr. 45s. 10d. Visible supply of wheat 53s. 7d. 42s.9d. .... goods. there Silver has declined in value, and Mexican dollars have Bank. been sold at recent are quotations. The following prices of bullion from Messrs. Pixley & Abell’s circular: GOLD. s. gold, fine per oz. standard. gold, eontain’g 20 dwts. silver... .per oz. standard. Spanish'doubloons per oz. Bar Bar South American doubloons United States gold coin gold coin German Bar silver,fine Bar silver,coutain’g Cake silver Mexican dollars Chilian dollars d. per oz. 73 9 per oz. 76 3%® rd per oz d. (t. standard. 511%# ft) per oz. standard. 52%# ft. * per oz. 5 grs.gold d. s. 77 9 ® 77 10%® 73 10 @ SILVER. per oz. per oz. perqz 56 ft) .... — 5O%0® — ft — Discount, 3 per cent. Quicksilver, £6. Total diminished consumption of Three months only of the year remain, and as ar^ not at present any indications of an active revival of business, and as the money market is in an uncertain condition, it is not expected that any important feature will present itself. There has been no export demand for gold, and all the suppli es which have arrived from abroad have been sent into the cotton The following quantities of wheat and flour are estimated to have been placed on the British markets since the commence¬ ment of the season; the return also gives the average price of home-grown wheat for the season, tlie visible supply in the United States, and the estimated quantity of produce afloat: a Exchange business has been far from active. The un¬ certainty which exists with regard to the future course of the » in the TL S.... bush. 13,600,000 19,500,000 14,800,000 17,927,000 money markets keeps speculation in check; but prices are, in Afloat to United King¬ many cases, high, and this is an additional reason for the cau¬ dom qr. 2,181,000 1,981,000 tion which prevails. A feature during the week has been a renewed demand for electric light shares, the value of which London, Saturday, September 30, 1S82. has decidedly improved. It may be observed, however, that The money market opened this week with a very quiet ap¬ the electric light is being less extensively used in the streets of pearance, and the rates of discount were decidedly easy, at London, the experiments of last winter having failed to give about 4)i per cent for the best three months bank bills, but as general satisfaction to the Corporation. the close of the week, and of tlie quarter, was approached, a The number of failures in England and Wales gazetted dur¬ firmer tone prevailed, and the quotation is now 4% to 4)'z per cent. American exchange, owing to the dearness of money in ing the week ending Saturday, September 23, was 159, against New York, has been less favorable to us, and this has been a 176. showing decrease of 17, or a net decrease in 1852 to date of 709. The number of bills of sale published in England and prominent reason for the renewed lirmneS3of the market. The ; Wales was 652, against 513, showing a decrease of 261, or a net German money market also retains a firm appearance: but j The number published in Paris is easy, and until there is some movement at that centre decrease in 1882 to date of 1,871 there will not probably be much change elsewhere, at all events Ireland for the same week was 2 4, against 33, a decrease of 9, * in Europe. During the next few days the open market rates of being a net decrease to date of 293. The wheat trade has remained very quiet, but, the New lork discount will probably steadily approach those current at the | Bank of England, but any further change is not expected to | market being reported somewhat firmer, there has been perhaps take place until the Paris market assumes a firmer position. rather more steadiness during the last few days, but no anima¬ The Bank of France is still strong, and is keeping in check the tion has manifested itself. The supplies of produce offering are still liberal, and an important feature in the trade, causing upward movement in the value of money elsewhere.'but someheavy demands may soon be made upon it, an 1 :h irectors depression, is that Russia:] wheat is being pressed for sale by the Russian banks, wli> .have been making considerable may be compelled to increase their terms. Th ■ L>1! . ; are a ..a:.c.-s to ih * iarnmrs fo some time past. Grhirka wheats the present quotations for money: 1 viselling at 36s. to 40s. per quarter, and other Russian Percent, j Open market rn* • Bank rate -1 months’ bank hi;).5 < wheats are low in value in proportion. \ g. Oar imports continue Open-market rates— ' 6 nnurig b ink bid u,a»n a large scale, and liie supplies of produce afloat to tins 30 and 60 days’ bills 4 a: 6 mac; ittniclc 4 %*? 4 % I 3 months’ bills 4%®4%i country are liberal. The following rates of interest are allowed by the j hat stock j According to the Bullclln ties Hallos the harvest* m France banks and discount houses for deposits: amounts this year to 112,400,000 hectolitres, or 9,OCX),000 hecto¬ Per e>-of. j litres above that of an average year; but the specific weight is Discount houses at call []C j below the average. The total yield in bread is thus estimated Bo with 7 an i 1 i days’ notice 3% j at 73,943,200 kilos as compared with an average of 76,298,200 Annexed is a statement showing the present position of the kilos. It is estimated in thii country that, during the season Bank of England* the Bank rate of discount, the price of now current France will have t® import from abroad about consols, the average quotation for English wheat, the price of 1 8,000,000 quarters of wheat. Av’ge price of English Stock 45s. KM. - . , . • . . . , . THE 14, 1882.J October CHRONICLE. EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. following quantities of wheat, flour and Indian corn are estimated to be afloat to the United Kingdom: The qua. , ^ At-present. 1,900,000 Wheat LcstweeJc. 2,009,000 1 <0.000 Last year. 1,945,000 131,000 172,0(10 1879. $8,525,621 256,865,194 309,790.852 Total 40 weeks $266,601,750 1882. 1881. 1880. 1879 of wheat.cwt. 7,753,023 Imports ofliimlA Hour LTOWn l,00o,8~l 4,638,205 7,5 40,094 899,206 854,966 G,522,308 720,712 produce 2,973,620 2,515,413 | 2,453,000 993,460 Total. tl ,733,364 8,052,824 10,348,060 8,211,470 of home-grown „ Sales _ a. 41s. 2d. 4os. 1H1. h) Unit’d bush. 13,o00,000 of wheat 19,300,000 14,200,000 17.366,000 United Kingd'm.qrs. 2,140,000 2,076,000 States Est. supply 4os. < , ,, , I AS TOUTS. ...cwt. Wheat Barloy 1882. 1881. 1830. 1879. 7,753,923 573,870 4,638,205 409,633 1,277,826 7,540,094 626,079 1,303,060 43.437 64,745 115,902 4,314,876 854,966 6,522,SOS 617,814 1,122,198 42,915 161,4 47 1,850,150 720,712 1,080,OSS 71,012 101,992 Oats Peas Beans 206,275 2,729,418 899,206 1,410,894 Indian corn.... 1,005,821 Flour Eucliidi iHarlcet llaports-Fer Cable. The daily closing quotations for securities, &c„ at London, and for breadstutfs and provisions at Liverpool, are reported bj cable as follows for the week ending October 13: London. | Sat. Silver, per oz d. Consols for money Consols for account Fr’cli rentes (in Paris) fr. U. 8. 5sext’n’d into 3*2$ U. 8. 4129 of 1891 U. 8. 4s of 1907 Erie, common stock 51% 5D%« 81'75 81-75 103% 122 115% 122% 43% 136% d. Flour (ex. State.. 100 lb. 12 6 Wheat, No. 1, wh. 8 11 “ s. Cal. white 51% 1001116 43% 144% 65% 32:% 136% Sat. Winter, West., n Wed. 101 % Liverpool. Spring, No. 2... Tues. 1001% 0 lOOi:%0 100% 103% 115% New York Central. Mon. 51% 100710 142 hi Illinois Central Pennsylvania 0538 Philadelphia A Reading. 32% Mon. .<?. 12 d. 6 8 11 “ “ 9 0 9 0 8 '5 “ 9 l 3 8 9 6 5 2 9 Corn, mix., West. “ Pork, West.mess..p bid Bacon, long clear, new.. Beef, pr. mess, new.pte. 6 97 72 90 Lard.prime West. $ cwt. 6 1 Cheese, Am. choice, new 56 o 0 0 0 0 97 1 72 90 6-4 , ' 56 0 0 0 0 0 Thurs. 5in13 LOO 101 101%« % Fri. 511110 10 L%0 101% 101710 81-72%} 81-72% 81-62% 817u x i 01 % 103% 103% 102 115 % 116% 116% 116% 122% 122% 122% 122% 4 4% 44 % 44% 43% 146 147 149 149% 66% 66% 66% 66% 32 % 324s 32% 138 137% 137'' 137*% Tues. Wed. d. 12 6 8 11 .9 0 8 6 s. d. 6 12 8 11 9 0 8 6 9 4 s. 9 7 97 72 90 64 !56 2 0 0 0 0 7 97 72 90 63 56 0 () 1 0 0 0 6 0 Th urs. s. d. 12 6 8 11 9 0 8 6 9 4 7 1 97 0 72 0 0 90 (13 0 | 56 0 Fri. S. (1. 12 6 8 10 9 0 8 6 4 9 7 97 72 90 63 56 0 o 0 0 3 0 rr-sx-rsatjriswmc Com m c v c ia 1 a iulIlX i sccl 1 au e o a s IX c va s. Aational Banks.—The following national banks have lately been organized: 2,788-The First. National Bank of Stanford, Kentucky. Capital, s. Mocker, President; J. W. McAlister, Cashier. -,<80—The Iliilsboro National Bank, Illinois, Capita!, $50.Ouu. ('has. $25<>,()00. J. A. Ramsey, President.; George M. Raymond, Cashier. 90—The .First .National Bank of St. -Cloud, Minmvsol >. Capital, $50,000. Janus A. Bel!. President : J. (i. Smilii. Cashier. « Imports and Exports for the Week:—The imports of last week, compared wit ii those <>f the preceding week, s : < w .< Jlhedecrease in both dry goods and total general merchandise $8,181,793, against %• 10,231,260 the p- *• ceding week and £10,203,506 two weeks previous. The ext> tor the week ended Ocr. 10 amounted to #6,392.5:21. airji.ist $7,604,027 last week and 5 %2<3,26 l two weeks previous/ following are the imports at. New York tor lhe week end in (for dry goods) Oct. 5, and for the week ending (for genera merchandise) Oct. i>; also to*a.Is since the beginning of first imports were January: I'UREHsN IV. COSi S. Tor Week. 187;). hry goods $1.9 ( 1.277 \ «ea'f incrMisJ/’ 4 ,'j J .vr NEW IORK. 1880. 1881. $ l .<46,24 (> $2,214,456 7,387 6.191,012 $6,281,631 5. I -:Q-> $2,222,104 45, / 57 5,959,689 $63 1.0,258 $7,958,192 $8,-181.793 $74.001,009 I*i 0 2,0 17.01 5 weu’imor’dijjH mer Giso. J 175.303.6UJ 2 78,288,685 249,189,108 Total..- Since Jan. floods,. , ^°tal In nf ° a 40 8nep? 1 , . weeks °Ur reP°rt °f the dry goods ?°nds for f!ne \ 2 ow*n^ Jacb6 j.om ending / Great Britain France Imports. 1.35 1 $390,919,600 trade will be found the imports later. 1 Yeck $ Since Jan.l. $106,498 2,526,150 83.160 South America All other countries. O.OSSj 253,642 237.1501 2,200 $33,802,7341 $2 55,8 42 411.796; 708,095 2.153,023 2.74^,893 Silver. Great Britain France $53,200 $7,364,437 Germany West Indies Mexico South America All other countries. Total 1882 Total 1881 Total 1880 401 232 826,201 97,669 291,179 30,217 1,297,094 $1,352,427 44,983,226 32,694,437 $. $26,279 1,001,150 216.500 1,208 128,004 17,171 894,653 819,223 106,359 813,655 $53,200 26,993 $9,412,916 170,246 820,386 8,362,932 4,082,636! $6,454 $2,002,7 L9 28,131 2,211,771 4,046,164 148,183 Of the above imports for the week in 1882, $244,920 American gold coin and $4,437 American silver coin. were Western Union Telegraph.—At the annual meeting of the stockholders of the West. Union Telegraph Company on Thurs¬ day, Messrs. John Pender and Henry Weaver, of London, were The only other new members of the board were Percy R. Pyne in place of the late Moses Taylor, and G-eorge F. Baker, President of the First National Bank, who has been prominent during the past few' months in connection with the management of the Mutual-Union Telegraph Com¬ pany. The only vacancy caused by retirement was that of James H. Banker. The number of directors was increased by one. The new board is constituted as follows : Norvin Green, Thomas T. Eckert, E. D. Morgan, John Van Horne, Augustus Schell, Harrison Durkee, Jay Gould, Russell Sage, A. B. Cornell, Sidney Dillon, Cyrus W. Field, John Pender, Henry Weaver, Percy R. Pyne, Robert Lenox Kennedy, Hugh J. Jewett, J. Pierpoot Morgan, Frederick L. Ames, E. D. Worcester, William D. Bishop, C. P. Huntington, George B. Roberts, Zalnion G. SinP» mons, Samuel Sloan, Erastus Wiman, Amasa Stcne, George J. Gould, Chauncey M. Depew, James W. Clendennin, George F. Baker. The total vote was 637,724 shares out of a share capital elected directors. of 800,000 shares. —The directors of the Western Union met on Thursday and elected the following officers: Dr. Norvin Green, President; Gen. Thomas T. Eckert, Vice-President and General Manager; Augustus Schell, John Van Horne and Harrison Durkee, VicePresidents; D. II. Bates, Acting Vice-President and Assistant General Manager; J. B. Van Every, Acting Vice-President. All the other officers hold filled over. The Executive Committee was follows: Norvin Green, Thomas T. Eckert, Edwin D. Morgan, John Van Horne, Augustus Schell, Harrison Durkee, Jay Gould, Russell Sage, Alonzo 15. Cornell, Sidney Dillon, Cyrus W. Field and George J. Gould. as —Attention is called to th ard of Messrs. Cahoone & Wescott in the advert is:u r columns of the Chronicle. This firm is composed of experience rl business men, and they make a speeia ty of government; negotiation of time loan*. bonds investment-' securities and the Havin also a member of the firm on the New York Stock Exchange, and sell all stocks and bonds current tin on are prepared to buy the Board. —The thirty-fourth report of tin-* Hongkong & Shanghai Bank¬ ing Corpora ii >n has been received by the agent in this city, Mr. A. M Townsend, showing the figures given in the Chronicle of Aug. 26, by telegraph A steadv increase is observable in the deposits, which now stand at. $37,740,444. The current- quota¬ tion for the shares (SI25 paid * is ‘<292 50, or 134 per cent premium. * —The usual monthly dividend of $50,000 (for September) has been declared by the If >m >*take Mining Company, payable on the 25th insfc., at rlie office of L.ninsbeiy & Ha g gin, 18 Wall . Street, —The Deadwood-Terra Mining-Co. as n ounces its 23d dividend (for September), amounting to $30,000, payable at the office of Lounsbery o: Haggin. Auction Sales.—The full swing j Messrs. Adrian II. Muller & Sun: 283,509,065 a statement of the exports (exclusive rf P(>rt of New York to foreign ports for the October 10, and from January 1 to date : $29,652,192 $89,925,2 16 $107,1 10,535 j$2 49,309.61 2 $380.935.70o! $339,11 our Tl Exports. Gold. Twtal 1882. Tolal 1881. Total 1380. the extent of the imports of grain and flour into the United Kingdom during the first four weeks of the season, compared with the corresponding period in the three previous seasons: _ EXPORTS AND IMPORTS OF SPECIE AT NEW YORK. afloat to the The following return shows v,ee£ in following table shows the exports and imports of specie York for the week ending Oct. 7, and at the port of New since Jan. 1, 1882 : Mexico 52s. 3d. Visible supply n $202,152,342 Indies price of English woeat for season .nrs. Av’gc —,.' $318,316,173l$297.816,906 Germany West trade: 6c flour $6,502,524 255,559,818 • additional particulars regarding the wheat are some 1882. $5,530,912 292,279,994 Since Jan. 1. Annexed - The 1881. , $9,736,556 The imports 1830. For the week... Prev. reported.. fndianconi:::::::: >37,000 137,500 217,000 following return shows the quantities of wheat and flour which have been placed upon the British markets during the first four weeks of the present and last three seasons : 421 were sold at auction by Shares. Bonds. [ Ban It of America 162 $509 City of Mobile, Ala., Mercantile Fire Ins. Co.. 7<: Bend, due 1906 45 % Tradesmen's-Nat. Bank..! 1-1. $17,000 Moose Mining Co. 1st Firemen’s Ins. Co ' o% mortgage 10s, dm* 1885, 109 Manhattan Gas-LiAit Co.216 Scot., '82, coupons unpaid 9% 10 Star Fire Ins. Co 70% $17,975 Moose Mining Co. 1st 3 N. Y. State Agricultural mortgage 10s, due 1885, 4 20 7 5 Society 20 Sept., ’82, coupons unpaid ME CHRONICLE. 422 to-day: Savannah, buying selling dis.; Charleston, buying % dis., selling (a}4 dis.; New Orleans com., $1 50 dis.; bank, none*S* Louis, par ; Chicago, par; Boston, par@10 cents prem. Quotations for foreign exchange are as follows, the highest York at the undermentioned cities llxc jlkuikcvs7 (&alette. dividends: The following dividends have recently been Per cent. Name of Company. aunouuoefl: ! Payable. j When 5 5 Balt. Sc Ohio—Main Stem Washington Br.... Long Inland (quar.) Do NEW 1 Nov. Nov. Nov. FRIDAY, OCT. YORK, prices being the posted rates of leading bankers: Books Closed. (Days inclusive.) Oct. i Mailroadff. 1 Oct. 21 to Oct. 31 21 to Nov. 1! 1 (Tot. 13, lSS\J-5 1 I*. M. lias week, The Money Market and Financial Situation.—There been a perceptible relaxation in the rates for money this and not only are call loans easier, hut also time loans and com¬ mercial paper. The effect of the better monetary situation, however, lias not been shown in the stock market and the tone has been irregular, feverish, and for the most part weak. When the Fall season opened everything was looking favor¬ strong and healthy stock market and all started olf with bright prospects. But presently there came a check to able for a by tight money, and a certain bear influence began to creep over the market from some quarter that was hardly accounted for to the satisfaction of the old and knowing ones. Even to this time, if we cut off the break in Louisville & Nashville, there is hardly a forcible reason shown for the prolonged weakness in stocks, as the movement in such speci¬ alties as Richmond & Danville and its olf-shoots can not be regarded as having any great significance, since they have never been widely distributed and have no general support from the market. There are many who believe that behind all the the animation the surface is the hand of Mr. Gould, and to sustain this opinion they point to the articles in his newspaper, the New York World, where column after column has been devoted to persistent attacks on Louisville & Nashville, Denver & Rio Grande, Northern Pacific, and possibly some others. It has been supposed that Gould wished to hammer these stocks in order to get a hold causes appearing and also run between the on same his Mexican National road, which will terminal points—Laredo and Mexico City—as Mr. Gould’s Mexican road. The Louisville & Nash¬ ville, with its lines to Memphis and New Orleans, would make a grand Eastern connection for the Gould Southwestern sys¬ tem. Whether or not this supposition is correct, it is a most natural one under the circumstances, as people will believe that where there is so much smoke there must be some fire; and while the World has been smoking out the companies above-named with all its facile powers, they believe that Mr. Gould has been firing on them at the Stock Board. To some ^extent, however, in forming this opinion the wish may be father to the thought, as there are many who would be glad see Nil*. Gould held responsible by the public for the existing depression in stocks. Railroad earnings are all that could reasonably be expected, and the returns given at much length on another page for the month of September and nine months of the year make a very to handsome exhibit. The money market has worked much more easily this week, and only for a short time on Tuesday were rates on call higher than 7 per cent and then they ran up to 10 per cent. On stock collaterals the prevailing rate has been G@7 per cent and on government bonds 4<w5 per cent, with some loans at 3 per cent. Prime commercial paper is more readily sold now at 607 per cent. England statement on Thursday showed a* de¬ l'or the week of £*202,000, and the percentage liabilities was o2;4 against 3d 6-10 last week; the The Bank of in specie crease of reserve to discount rate remains at 5 per cent. The Bank of France lost 9,8.70,000 francs gold and 0,050,000 francs silver. The New York City Clearing-House banks in their statement of Oct. 7 showed an improvement in reserve of $2,559,250, Sixty Days. 13. Prime bankers’ sterling Prime commercial bills London. on Documentary commercial Paris (francs) Amsterdam (guilders) Frankfort or firemen (reichmarks) $4 82 Napoleons 3 St X X Keichmarks. X Guilders 4 74 3 90 Span'll Doubloons.15 55 Mex. Doubloons..15 •One silver bars 1 Fine gold bars ... Dimes tic % dimes. — .. @$4 80 d 3 8S d 4 78 d 4 00 4 84 5 23% do 22 *2 a 39%d> 94j4 d 4 *5% #4 8(!i Cjd4 85 4 84 40 91 % di 841, 19Y'a>5 1 40 (D 40‘-J 951* d 955 gold for various Silver %s and bjs. Five francs Mexican dollars.. Do uncommere’l. — 99%<2> — 93 — 87% — 85 d 45 d 15 05 12% 7? 1 13% par^^ prem. U. 8.trade dollars U. 8. silver dollars — — coins: - par. 95 — d 88 % s7 4 83 d 70 English silver 4 75 Priis. silv. thalers. — 08 d 15 70 90%$ Demand, 4 81 ct> 4 82 4 SO 'w\ 80*2 4 7!)’-e<2> 1 80 Coins.—The following are quotations in Sovereigns - w - 99% t 99 % -i - 9958 par par per cent bonds have demand long good all the week. The bonds have been changeable, and fluctuated considerably, with some free sales by foreign bankers. It was claimed that the Ohio election had an effect on government bonds, but it was not clear that this was the depressing influence. The closing prices at the N. Y. Board have been as follows: United States Bonds.—The 3 and been in 6s, continued at 3%.. J. & J. * 5s, eon tinned at 3%.. Q.-Feh. *100 *8 100 *8 4%s, 1891 reg. Q.-Mar. 112% 112% 1 12 *2 *112% 4bjs. 1891 coup. Q.-Mar. reg. Q.-Jan. *118% 119 4s, 1907 Is, 1907 coup. CJ. Jan. *118% *118% 130 6s, cur’cy, 1895.. reg. J. & J. *130 *131 6s, cur’cy, 1896..reg. J. A J. *130 *132 6s, cur’cy, 1897..reg. J. Sc J. "130 *133 6s, cur’cy, 1898..reg. J. <fe J. 130 *134 130 6s. our’ey. 1899..reg. J. & J. * * * * . * Tins is the price Oct. 12. Oct. 11. Oct. 10. Oct. 9. Oct. 7. Interest Periods. on on the Louisville road, and either to get into Denver, or else to break down the opposition of Gen. Palmer, on the Denver & Rio Grande, 1.V0L. XXXV. .... *100% *100% *100% *100% *113 *113 113=% 113 ‘113 113 % 113 *113 119% *111)% 119% *119% 1 19 b, *130 *131 *132 *133 *134 119 *130 *131 *119% *119% *130 *131 *132 *134 *135 *132 *133 * 1 31 bid at the morning board; no .safe was State and Railroad sales of State bonds, Oct. 13. *130 *131 • *131 *132 *133 made. Bonds.—There have been very few and Teimessees old are quoted to-day at 49l4@50, and the compromise bomls,at about 58,a (50. Railroad bonds have fluctuated widely on some of the speculative issues, while other bonds have been very steady. The Richmond & Danville consolidated mortgage 6s sold con¬ siderably between 94 and 95, and the debenture bonds have been active the past two days between 60 and 02G. For the purpose of investment or to hold for a while, it appears to be a good time to purchase some of the bonds on the list and pay for them, and it is well for buyers now to look at the market sharply and see where the decline in stocks occasions a good opportunity to pick up bonds. Railroad and Miscellaneous Stocks.—We have bail a rag¬ ged stock market nearly all the week, and this too, in spite of the much better tone in the money market. At the close to¬ day nearly all the list was weak, led by the Southwestern Gould stocks, which sold at 4iV4' for Texas & Pacific, 105;4 for Missouri Pacific, 341# for Wabash common, and 34;s4 for Kansas & Texas. These stocks were apparently let down 06% for preferred, without much at¬ and the conclusion was drawn that a weakening elfect on the market was the object sought to be accomplished. This final coup at the close to-day fits in.well with tlie remarks made above at the head of this article, although it is not certain that a similar course will be pursued for a single day in the future. Indeed, if our market is to have a sharp upward turn, it might just as easily start to-mor¬ row as any other time, so far as outside circumstances have any bearing upon it—such as railroad earnings, the money tempt to support Iliem, making a surplus reserve of $471,825, against a deficiency of market, &c. $2,087,425 oil Sept. 30. There have been some stocks exceptionally strong, such as The following table shows the changes from tire previous Erie and Illinois Central, the latter on reports of a stock divi¬ week and a comparison with the two preceding years: dend of some sort, and both these stocks have a strong support from London. The Vanderbilt stocks as a class have also been IS 80. 1881. Differ nces fr'm 1882. fairly sustained in the general weakness, and the Northwest Cel. Oct. 0. 8. Oct. 7. previous Loans and dis. $31 1.495, lOu 50.403, 000 Specie 1^ 908. 500 Circulation... 286.181. 500 Net deposits 21,613. 600 Legal tenders. . Legal reserve. Reserve held. Surplus xceelc. Dec. $4,901,900 Inc 1,980,600 Inc 108,700 $326,123 56,53 l 9001 400 00,092,200 18,579,700 301,018,000 2,447,400 Dec. 33,200 19,867 100 29“,897 900 14.856 800 * «11.850 1.917.400 $74,724 175 71,391 200 $75,253,400 79,021,800 $471,825 fne $2,559,250 df.$3,333 275 $4,308,400 Deo $71.5 15, 375 Deo. 72.017, 200 fne. 12,029,000 Exchange.—There has been more firmness in foreign ex¬ change, which is attributed to the comparatively moderate supply of commercial bills. The buying of stocks and bonds on foreign account has been free on some days, but upon the whole it is probable that the foreign markets have been a little frightened by the decline in stocks here. To-day on actual business prime bankers’ 60 days’ sterling sold at 4 81 @ 4 81 \o, and demand bills at 4 85;J%Y«4 80, with cable transfers 4 86*2@4 87. The actual rates for Continental bills are as fol¬ lows : Francs, 5 2323^ and 5 19»a'@5 ; marks, 94 and ; and guilders, 39^g@39;^ and 39;8@40. @9f The following were the rates of domestic exchange on New Reading is time past in and St. Paul stocks have yielded but moderately. also very well supported, as it has been for some this market and Philadelphia. To-day the reports among the laborers on the Northern to hammer the stocks and also Louisville & Nashville, sifice the issuing $3,786,487 new stock of a strike made use ot Oregon-Transcontinental. Pacific was annual report and the notice by the company, has been pressed down to 53}£ tins afternoon. The widest fluctuations have been in Richmond & Danville, of which went to 57 this morning, and its branch company Richmond & West Point Terminal, which sold-at 31. We not heard of one new point, as a matter of fact, these companies, and the railroad is said to be interest and 8 per cent dividends; but so closely are hat J made against earning all i s they he by a comparatively few parties that the offering of %u shares is enough to knockoff the prices if some of the cliq not ready to step in and take it—and just now the cliqi are does not seem to have been ready. All the phases of the market some strong parties are of their stocks. . T point to the conclusion 11 trying to shake moderate holders o t , THE 14, 1883. J October PRICES AT THE N. Y. STOCK EXCHANGE bANUK IN DAILY STOCKS. Saturday. Oct. BAlMiilADS. Cedar Rep. A No.. De 2d pref..... fThiraaro A Alton................ Do Northwestern Chicago St, Do „ Paul Minn. A Oin. Pro* Cincinnati Sandusky A ( lev... Cleveland Col. Cin. A I ml Cleveland A Pittsburg guar... Co! ambus ChiefA* I n (hi lent raj Delaware Lackawanna A West Denver & Bio Grande Dulmoue A Sioux City Fast Tennessee \ a. A Ua Do Pref Evansvil o & Terre Haute Fort Worth A Denver City Green Bay W m. A st. Paul — Hannibal A St. Joseph. 64*8 73-V 90 V 26 39 28 4 122 7b 142 4 Pre‘ .Pre*-ChicagoRock I si. A Pacino.... Chicago St. L. A New Orleans. 64*12 13934 139*4 1307g 107*4 1094 Pan ...... 30*4 Oct. 12. Ocfc. 13. 27*4 26*8 25 123 1414 162*^1634 1324 133 4 *49*4 70*8 9034 72 34 91*8 *26 39 4 *27 4 26 4 814 6534 6^4 72*8 9134 67 74 92 pref.... Do .... Long Island Louisville A Nashville Louisville Now Albany A Chic Manhattan 1st Dc pref....- Manhattan Beach Co Marietta A Cincinnat 1,1 st pref. 2d pref. Do M'tnpliis A Charleston Metropolitan Elevated Michigan Central Milwaukee L. sh.A WeBt.,pref Minneapolis A St. Louis Do pref.. Missouri Kansas A Texas Missouri Pacific Mobile A Ohio Morris A Essex Nashville Chattanooga A St. L. New York Central A Hudson New York Chic. & St. Louis... . Do pref. 60V *51*4 108 4 108*4 108 34 50 82 4 34 4 70*8 71V 8*4 514 53;*8 *934 "o'lj ’•'16 17 71 73 91*8 91*8 82 4 51*8 106*4 108 54 54 83 4 84*8 138 139 *138 *46 81 78 52 84 80 8 4 9*8 134 4 137 53*8 54 7e 89 89 9*4 10 4 *164 17 *45 81 52 83 66 51 88 20 51 88 *18 52 93 96 50 4 52 93 97 *8 50 4 31 304 69'V 70*4 35*8 364 106*8 107 *19 22 53 131 4 14 78 53 78*4 79 89 10 90*4 17 108 V 110 V Do Ohio Southern pret... Oregon A Trans-Continental.. Panama, Trust Co. certificates Peoria Decatur A Evansville.. Philadelphia A Reading Pittsburg Ft. Wavne A Chic... Rich.& Ailegh.,srck trust cits. Richmond A Danville Richmond A West Point... Rochester A Pittsburg Rome Watertown A ugdenab. St. Louis Alton A l one Haute Do prof. St. Louis A s:ui Francisco Do pref Do 1st pref. St. Paul a Duluth Do pref. . 93 51 314 32 71 71 7e 36 >4 37 107 10734 20 20 *1234 124*n Do pref. MISCELLANEOUS. American District Telegraph American Tel. A Cable Co • 182 26*8 26*4 27 *4 55 4 56 4 8 7e 94*4 564 48 93 17 38 *4 38 4 16 4 89 90 4 31 62*4 19 85 39 24 181 26*8 Telegraph Oregon Ran way a .\av. <Jo Pacific Mail Puliman Palace * Cat"*.’!!!!!*!!! ~1110" 1 °l.. ox-certific’s.. Sutro Tunnel 63 56 4 3,510 40 4 i V 81 82 144 4 43 82*8 15) V 5)0 46 *44' 156 43 7a 88 i’11 ‘*49*4 *5*6" 49 87 4 92 99 4 52 32 72 4 37 31*8 *182 27 4 65) 41 05 *19 50 51 4 92 48 *86 .... *98*4 99V 518*4 51 51 31*8 32 72 4 50 4 30 V 70 4 5,679 6,000 38,750 24,440 34;V 105*8 17 38 V 92 4 56V 49*g 1734 39’V 17*8 39>b 90 91 4 17*4 91*8 89 32 4 64*4 35*4 25*8 79 37V 26 V 46 4 43 400 307 5,410 27 *8 27 Vi 56 56 V 48 -8| 17*4 39 V 48*8 92 34 17 V 38 4 39 90 89*8 89 4 94 V 27 V 9JV1 56 48 92*4 16 4 17 V 3,6*5*6 56 ( 4 33,713 156,565 5,093 5,330 ijVir. 314 6*3 4 69 4 32 24 4 32 63 4 73 35 25 4 *25 ) 34 *3*634 62 4 136 62 V 136 60 31 24 71 40 4 24 7a 36 4 89 29*4 3*6" 61V 623, 20,720 65 31 34 24 V 23 4 5,665 30,600 2,72*6 “ 500 208 61 4 Jo 93 4 00 46 *4 j 46 66 66 V 4 t 41 *334 43 4 '43*8 .1 127 127 88 ! 88*4 89 41 113 *23 157 4 158 107 V 35 65 35 72*8 40 714 71 4 10*4 41 V 1 13 *4 11 3 V 42 *6113 V 25 26 27 43V 43 4 128 89 128 89 V 43*4 65 V 9 42 ! SI l ! 300 ; 100 47 *43 44 I 125) 130 V 88 V 89 V . 35 70 -11 113 20 13 1»3V! 107 V 35 4; 34 *8 6534' 63*8 45V 1 '-4 108V V '414 71*4 41 113 4 25*4: 42 V 5,600 99. loo ! 1,200 308.090 35 19.070 65 4 O 35 9, x id) j i 352 ! 714 ("J 41 41 3,067 1,700 1124 113 20 4 22 2,925 *3*8*4 41* 130 130 ■ 130 88 V 89 *4 88 130 89 Mar. 8 133 50 6 84 Feb 55 4 Aug. 72 * e}}*< fargo A Co rwlVl,L.A H1 n i N a. ConsolidationM> Coal Homestake Mining Ddtle "!!!”! Pittsburg Mining *27 4 *274 17 4 *27 4 17 4 17 4 SSCi'fiSS4"1"1”* Ontario savor Mining*!!"!*"! gw vanlacoal *110 *5)5 70 *130 47 38 Jan. 10 4 49 4 *8 4 42 *l6” *19** Excelsior Minina: Now central Coal.! Robinson Mining. jUverOlitr Mining.. J J 130 June27 139 23 97 17 4 10 4 42 *84 *40 4 4 *18 10 4 45 4 *u 21 price-* bid aud asked—no sale was made at the Board. t Kx-pnvilege. 200 100 200 156 1334 1824 1014 1294 116 V 140 117 130 131', 147 4 129 1484 40 88 51 33*, 19 15 91 41 4 81 *1094 684 13 23 21 33 64 64 350 121 100 1404 574 054 1354 03 1104 1174 59 4 *594 24 15 93 120 1204 Sept. 8 644 30 4 704 54 1144 394 131 102 155 96 130 4 39 V 524 80 4 964 60 844 une O an. 3 Oct. July 28 23 ;<j J 1 ti an. 98V Sept.25 May 9 39V duly 26 01 67 4 Jau. 7 Due 18 37 V 6 l 83 190 200 o 7 V 27 V 50 74 V 142 35 80 99 V 171 1 22 174 V '1%2 50 •).» 50 V 39 77V 85 14334 39 55 55 8\*4 Sept. 9 127 Jail, o 7 Feb. Fell. 15 4 Mar. 22 July 25 20j 92 Sept. 14 Jau. 16 13i 464 Jan. 25 43 Mar. hi 66'gJan. 26 79V Feb 211106 4 Jau. 17 90 26 68 IDS Feb. 15! 39 J ulv is 26 Jan. 19| 96 Sept 21 70 “2 J an. 26i 166 V Sept. 12 88 V 31V Mar. pi 55 July 2^ 41 V 10 V Feb. 15 19 July 21 15 10 1 V Oct. 5119 V J an. 16 105 *« 23V * VJ 45 2,920 ! 37 1,204 117 70,950 ■ 76 ‘u ! V 212 87 1024 334 484 364 Aug. 15 12 60 165 ’123 20 Miniiur- are the 132 404 45 112 127 30 19 Mar. 6 36V Sept. 7 59 Feb. 25 77 Sept. 11 26 V Mar. 11 424 Aug 2 86 V Apr. 21 112 4 Sept. 12 12 June 6 35V -I an. 2 1 119V Mar. 13 128 Aug. 14 50 Oct. 2 87 4 Jan. 14 123 V May 1 138 Aug. 4 10 4 May 25 17 V Aug. 30 27 May 27 37 V Aug. 30 100 May 15 105* 4 J an. 27 33*4Juno 7 43V Oct. :o 67 Mar. s 87 V Sept.15 une uue 10; 39 V Aug. 9! r ■ • 71V 1 '• J1 an. 11 Jan. 28 j Fell. 1 Oet. Sept. 29 2| Mar. 131 i '« M ar. 30 102V Mar. 1H1119V Aug. 1 / 20 Oet. 12, 30V Aug. 1 7.80S 38 *8 4 *42 The.^c 141 96 70 90 90 24 1014 July 27 127*4 142 Feb. 2 82 954 Tan. 18 V 32 4 131 Sept. 12 107 J an. 20 66 1134 88 Aug. 3 76* 41V Mar. 11 31 69 38 ! American United States >110 14141*139 111 *95 96 i 5)6 96 *70 4 1 *69 4 71 130 ;4 130*4 *130 133 714 82 >• Jau. 31 Jail. Jan. 131 90 70 *125 II334 73V 38 13134 60 96 *4 74 V 35 67 89 V 62*4 77 3 115*4 190 39 1-- 120 V Sept. 15 K5V 42 V 89 V 31 131 Apr. 24 Juno 5 145 93 Mar. 11 1 Oet. 4 33 V 6 4V V 1 138 142 *95 *8 96 45 69 50 16 July 22 414 Sept.15 29 Sept 15 1454 Aug. 16 141 Aug. 128*4 Sept. 14 4 *4 Sept 150V Sept 12 175 Aug. 16 140*4 Aug. 11 Feb. 23 Feb, 24 114 V Aug. Mar. 9 59 July 654June 7 92V July | 33V J 1,212 J2 4 Apr. 10 Apr. 18 27 16 May 25j 40 57 Oct. 13-250 31 Oct. 12 263 22 V Oct. 21 30 20 Jan. 3 40 20 *y Mar. 81 50 55 Apr. 23,477 20,560 56,020 ho 5*8 35 Jo Jan. 136 125 4 68 29 V 97 4 44 30 July 28 J line 9 51 V Mar. 11 222 400 57 80 4 20 V 32 V HI** 164*4 190 25 V 43 V Feb. 27 23 V 26V 70 Sept. 12 53 32V 51 Sept. 1: Sept.14 64 ’g 88 V 11V June 7| 25 V Jan. 11 21 37 7, 27 Fell. 23: 42 60 July 18 35 904 Mar. 9 112 Aug. 4 97 V 120 16,673 277« 46 V 91*8 97*8 July 28 Feb. 23 51V Aug 24 60 4 168 Feb. 17 184 204June 9i 31 V 18 July 221 24 44*4 Mar. 8 60 28V Mar. *»' 54 V 66 V Feb. 23i 100V ‘***7*8 4' 1824183 56*4 41 22 112,926 1,720 48V 71 41 4 49V 88 1834 23,405 4,208 57 49*4 95V 64 V 49V 18 V 14*8 56*4 I 87 V 49 4 88 41* 29 **, 100 42 V 86 4 49 94 V 17 *8 39 V 112*8 112 V 1123.1 113 V 43 56V 132 4 i()*74 loijv i<>8*4 ii)‘s" i'o'jjv [).}” 35 35*g| 35V 36 4; 35*4 36 V 63 63 7,900 57 45 42 4 43 35 35 111 1 1 1 *8 62 62 4 53 4 55 V iVf v {13i*i! *91 157 V 15734 158 4I 155);,s 162-V 45 144V 31 s',6'66 5 I *4 487fe 94*8 17*4 40*4 45 81 84 37*4 Jau. 4 97 4 Feb. 20 Low 85 4 Feb. 2 68 4 Oct 10 30 July 2 l 7 140 Oct. 13 104 ‘4 52 3 June 7 21 V 181,708 116 *4 A pr. 24 150*4 256.128 51 4 Oct. 74 7 V 125 82 Apr. 15 96 4 11,662 8 June 12 16 Jail. 14 2,100 154 June 7 26 4 Jan. 18 68 May 12 86V Oct. 13 40 42 Oct. 12 Oct. 13 8 Feb. 15 16 Jail. 18 47 110 Feb. Sept. 4 Hj 2,300 76 M ar. 2 111*4 Jan. 9 1,000 61 Mar. 11 92 4 July 25 18,579 127 V Jun. 4 14 6U Oct. 12 2,000 36 Mar. 8 49 4 Sept. 15 2,770 234-Inno 12 45 J illy 26 79,625 98 June 6 120*8 Mar. 30 3,800 49 4 Feb. 2 4 65 Sept.15 136,083 534 Oct. 13 100V Jail. 3 200 57 June 5 78 Sept.20 700 43 Apr. 21 60*8 Fob. 11 200 98 4 Jan. 28 874 Oct 11 300 17 Oct. 3 37 Mar. 30 8 May 1 15 4 Jan. 16 4 9 4 Jan. 3 Apr. 11 2,400 44V.Tune 7 82 V Jan. 18 228 81 *4 July 6 93 Oct. 4 48,880 77 Apr. 18 105 Sept.23 800 08*4 55 28 43 81 *38 V *58 *4 *5)5 Jo 35 5)3 4 42 244 124 27*4 74 41*8 700 20 125 V 182 4 182 314 32 4 32 63 63 4 63*4 134 4 134 41*135 86*4 *80 43 ( 92 98*8 514 v 63 54 V 9 *4 16 86*4 146V' m 87 4 28*4 24 V 42 57 4 90 79 I 82 125 53 V 53*4 53*4 133 4 134 132 34 132*4 133 4 15 1«» *8 15*4 14*4 15 3 1 V .1-5*4 31 32*4 32 4 3 1 4 100 110 *100 no *100 110 43 4 2 '8 43 43*4 4234 43*8 87 87 4 87 87 8 ;v 87 V 544 164 32*4 03'a 63 4,133 2,810 56 *8 15V 27 July 19 64V June 5 19,838 124 83 4 *89 9 344 SeptIS 95 4 Sept 4i 804 Sept 9 U27 July 5 142,086 104 4 Jan. 4 1,410 118V Apr, 14 33,515 44 4 36 V 37 111 *8 112*4 63 63 55 V 56V V . Colorado Com A Iron Delaware A Hudson Canal Mutual Union 112V 112 V 2,613 ‘4 9V 9*4 132 4 133 V 53 V 53 V 25 V Oct 13 84 V June 10 60 Jan. 6 67 June 10 44 Feb. 23 15 Feb. 18 21 Mar. 9 127 4 Mar. 11 *3*1*6 85,025 56 83 4 Highest 194 Mar. 9 27*4 Apr. 18 ’ "47*4 *5*6 v "47** ”4S*V 105*8 106 Lowest. 86 6,030 1,310 161*0 162 131V 132 V "5*6" "58** 44 15,600 123 123 142 4 143 4 143 4 144 4 162 162 4 132 4 133*8 72 4 72 4 72*4 73 4 36 36*8 374 30*n 30*8 107*8 108 4 107 107*8 107 V 107 V 20 4 20*, 54 4 . ... 44 37 4 51 54 *90 93 98 4 100 64 54 32 32 4 98*4 54 .. St. Paul Minneap. A Manitoba Texas & Pacific Toledo Deiplios A Burlington Union Pacific Wabash St. Louis A Pacific 44 37 9034 26V 38'V 108*8 109 V 83*4 *83 4 82 80*8 141*4 142*6 141*4 144 *87 4 *90 97 51 83 S()*6 123,440 28 112 130*4 130 4 105 V 107 52 83 82 52.825 72 *27 *140 .... 130 4 131 16 *4 ' *9*1*5 100 38*8 *9*4 16 4 52 84 *50** *5*6' 1324 132*8 133>4! 14 V 14*8 14 7h 31*8 * 1 V 32 3 2 ».41 9134 16*4 * 06 V 25 4 39 29 141 140 **9 17 *87 4 18 88 4 18 91*8 26*8 89 10*4 124 47 4 30.825 *6*0*0 ’ **49** * 52 pref. New Y'ork & New England— New York New Haven A Halt. New York Ontario A Western. Norlolk A Western Do pref Northern Pacific Do pref Ohio Central Ohio A Mississippi 27*4 71*8 90*8 8’7a" 94 *9*8 " *9 *4 1354 136*4 133 V 135*4 54*8 55 4 53*8 55 *45 *83 138*4 138*8 139 141 43 .42*8 43 43 4 ^5 35 4 35 4 36*4 110*8 111*8 111 112*4 60 4 62 61 4 62 4 54 *4 56 r8 56*4 57 4 66 Week, Shares. * 26 39 *27 4 *83*4 *84** 83 " 8*4 7o 65 V 67V *34*4 "3*434 *3*4*4 06**4 514 New York Elevated *100 110 *100 110 New York Lake Erie A West. 4134 42*4 42 4 42 34 Do 28*8 664 .... 107 133 ^ 135 4 68 26 4 26*4 26 4 26*8 39 *4 39 39V 39*4 39 28 4 *28 29*4 -2734 294 *139 4 141 141*0 141*8 *140 131 131 131*4 132 13141324 109 110*8 110*8 111*8 110'8 111 124 124 125 V 125*4 *124 4 125 144 14 5 7e 144 *4 145 *4 145*8 145 164 16 i *8 164 164 4 163*4 1H3V 133*4 134 133 4 134 133 133 50*8 106 >4 107 52 52 664 .... Houston A Texas Central Illinois Central Indiana Bloom’n A W est., new Lake Erie A Western Lake Shore Friday, Oct. 11. 29V For Full Range Since Jan. 1, 1882. Year 1881. Sales of the 78** *7*8 130 Burlington A Quincy Chicago A 27*4 WEEK, AND SINCE JAN. I, 1882. PRICES. Wednesday, Thursday, Oct. 10. 28‘e LOWEST 80 70 4 90 4 26 38 4 *27 4 Central Pacific.:.. ChicagoDoMilwaukee A St. 27 80 63 rSiwF.il.Wtnnea'o'ta: PhicaKO Tuesday, Oct. 9. 27 AND 423 FOR THE *75** *76' - Burlington HIGHEST Monday, 7. 26 V AtcSJ* Topeka '& Santa Fe . N. V. A it Line, pref. Boston CHRONICLE. 15) 94 2 V 153 May 19149 *s Jan. 10 120 Feb. 18; 974 Feb. 25*i 62 V 98 J line 8 80 *4 J ail. 26 1 51*2 79 Feb. 24 T32 142 Sept. 6 112 28 Mar. 14! 36 V 15 V J an. 171 19V 1 *h J une h| 2*4 1 *4 J line (L 2 4 13 26 May 33 Jan. 40 HO Jail. 245 8 (let. 14 *4 42 Oct. 62 V 4 V (let. 19V 18 Oet. 37*4 1 V 4 Aug. < n-t. 4 6V *4 J an. 2V 23 13*2 May 1 June 2 Mar; 1 v, Feb. Jan. 16 Feb. 4 30 14 Mar. 27 IV V 17 V 32 V Jan. 25 Jan. 20 Aug. 14 Jail. 43 29*4 16 240 12 53 Jan. 14 Jan. 19 Apr. 5 July 13 J an. 4 Feb. 3 Apr. 4 Sept.15 8 3f> 38 V 254 21*4 75 V 17V 27 25 1 4 4534 V 18 2 2V IV 7 14 7 35V 13V 7 4 CHRONICLE THE 424 QUOTATIONS OF STATE AND RAILROAD BONDS [Vol. XXXV. AND MISCELLANEOUS SECURITIES. UONDS. ! STATE Alabama— 3 to 5, 1906. 3 to 5, small Class 11, 5s, 1906 Class C, 4h, 1906 6s, 10-20s, 1900 Class A, Class A, Michigan— 6s, 18K3 j 7a, 1890 97 82 100 32 4 33 27 6s, funded, 1899-1900 ... 7s, L. Rock A Ft. 8. ias. 7s, Meraii.A E.Rock RE 78, L. R.P.B.&N.O. Rlt 7s, Miss. O. AR. R. RR. 7s, Arkansas Cent.RR. 20 30 23 "20"j 23 "1*5" 10 Connecticut—6s, 1883-4.. Georgia—6s, 1886 Do 105 105 113 . 125 1)0 do 6a, gold, reg., 1887 6s, gold, coup., 1887 6s, loan, 1883 6s, loan, 1891 6s, loan, 1892 6s, loan, 1893 1 ii'7' Louisiana— 7s, consol,, 1914 7s, small 102 Do 101 107 107 4 108 4 110 115 iod 106 ’87 Do Funding 110 110 • . ...... . ...... 6 64 7 7 78 77 75 1910 2d, 7s, 1885 i (Stock Exchange Prices.) Ala.Central—1st, 6s,191» Alleg’y Cen.—1st, 6s, 1922 Atch.T.AH. Fe—4 Vi, 1920 Sinking fund, 6g 1911. Atl. A Pac — 1st, 6s, 1910 Balt. A O.—1 st, 6s, Prk.Br. *107 Bost.Havtf. it E.—1st, 7s *54 : ! '97*4! . i" Bur. C. Rap.it No.—1st, 5s 10 Minn, it St. L. — lst,7s,gu *120 *105 IowaC. it West.—1st,7s "10 0 j 1st, 5s, 1921 *io4 fd. 6s, gold, series A, 1908. 6a, gold, serioa B, 1908. 6a, currency, 1918.. Mortgage 0s, 1911 Chicago it Alton—1st, 7s Income 7s, 1883 Sinking fund, 6s. 1903 89 4 53 ir ...... ^ Eliz.C.A N.—8.1’.,deb.c.6s 1st, 6s, 1920 \ ! Eliz. Lex. A Big j| C.Rap.Ia.F.itN.—1st,6s Central Iowa—1st, 7s, ’99 Char. Col.it Aug.—1st, 7s « 109 109 2d,^extended 5s. 1919 .. 3d, 7s, 1883 , 4th, extended, 5s, 1920. 5th, 7s, 1888 1st cons., goid, 7s. 1920 1st cons., fd. coup., 7s. . lteorg., 1st lien, 6s, 1908 Long Dock b da, 7a, ’93. Butf.N.Y AE.—1 at, 1916 N.V. L. E.AW.-Now2d 6 2d, consol., fd. cp., os... R u f. A 8. W.-M. 6s, 1908 Ev.A T.II.—1st. cons., 6s. "|II j 104 4 89 V 5 4 41 100 i 121 100 4! 114 4 1154 * 118 Riv.—1st, 7s 2d, 7a, 1900 St. L. Jack, it Chic.—1st *ii54 La. & Mo. 123 *106 130 100*‘4 1014 .. iiu" ...... 133 100 97 ;; 96 115 Fl’tAP.Marq.—M.Gs.1920 i 100 112*2 112 i 100 j 100^4 2d, 7a, 1897 Arkansas Mr.—lat Cairo A Fulton—lat Cairo Ark. A T.—1st Gen. r’vA 1. gr., 5s, 1931 St. L. A Ron A T. H.-lst. ' .. 10 4 j 61 4 Belleville A N. Y.A New | 1st, 6a. 1905 X. Y.C. A8t.L.-lat,6a, 1921 Nevada Cent.—1st, 6a N. Pac.—G.l.gr.,lat,cp., 6a Registered 6s, 1921 N.O. Pac.—lst,6s,g. 1920.. Norf.AW.—G’l., 6s,1931.. 90 **93* 113 Gal.liar. A 95** 1137tj 107 108 1064 107 106 1107 77 4! 774 111 11164 1104 1004 122 1104 1104 1104 108 4 109 110 A ' HU Dakota Ext.—6s, 1910.. Mill’s ITn.— 1 at,6s, 1922 St.P. A Dili.-1st, 5s, 1931 *100 99 80. Car. Ev.— 1st, 6s, 1920 90 2d, 6a, 1931 Hav. l)iv.—6a, 1910 Tol. P. AW.—1st,7 s, 1917 Towa L)iv.—6a, 1921 90 4 103 107 106 75 85 82 4 *87 108 4 68 85 83 90 90 — Ind’polia Div.—6s, 1921 Detroit Div.—6s. 1921.. 104 j 104 *4 8.Ant.—1st,6s 103:,4. ! Cairo I)iv.—5a. 1931 2d, 7s, 1905 *91 90 4 OO'b Wabash—M. 7a, 1909... Gr’n Bay W.AS.P.—1st,6s '82 4 100 [ 102 7g i'08 41 Tol.A W.—*lst, ext.,7s 107 4 GuIf.Col. A 8. Fo—7a, 1909 108 Mi88.R.Bi’ge—Ist.s.f.Gs i'02" 102 4 Han.A St.Jos.—8s, conv.. 1044 106 Ohio A Miss.—Consol, s.f. 116 1st, St. L. Div.,7a, ’89 102 C.B.it Q.—8 p. c., let, ’83. 103 4 127 4 128 i Consol. 6s, 1911 Consolidated 7s, 1898.. 116 j120 2d, ext., 7a, 1893 Con8ol. 7a, 1903 120 109 112 4 101 2d consolidated 7s, 1911 Equip, o’nds, 7a, 1883 Hous.AT.C.—1st, l.gr.,7s. 5a, sinking fund, 1901.. 106 101 j Consol., conv., 7a, 1907 100 1st, Springtield I)iv.. 7a 119 4 120 4 Ia. Div.—s. F., 5a, 1919. 1st, West. Div., 7s 1 Ohio 111 Gt. West.—1st, 7s, ’88 106 8434' 1st, Waco A N.,7s. Central—1st,6s, 1920 S.F. 4a, 1919 1024 83 85 2d, 7a, 1893 1st, Ter’l Tr., 6s, 1920.. 2d consol., main line, 8s 120 48,1922 j 1st Miu’l Div 6s. 1921. Q; a T.—1st, 7s, 1890. 2d, Waco A N.,8s, 1915 4a, 1921 ;;**.*; "994! Oliio So.—1st, 6a, 1921 Han. A Naples—1st, 7s General, 6s, 1921 C. R. I. &P.—6a, cp., 19i7 i‘26 102 *125 St.L.ICC.AN.—R.e.7s *104 Oreg’nACal.—1st,6a, 1921 Ilous.E.A W.Tex.—1st,7s 6a, reg., 1917 107 100 ioi Oiu. Div.—1st, 7a. .. 108 Panama—S.f. sub.6s,1910 111. Cent — Sp.Div.—Cp.Gs *111 Keo. A DeaM.—la,g.,os 116 Clar’da Ur.—6s, 1919 Peoria Dec. A Ev.—1st, 6s 104 4 104 34 1164 Middle Div.—Reg. 5s.. *108 Central of N. J.—1st, ’90. 85 96 1 98 St. Chas.Rr.~lst, 6s Evans. Div., 1st, G.a, 1920 ! C.St.L.AN.O.-Teu. l.,7s 113 let consol., assented,’99 1084 109 No. Missouri—1st, 7s *118 Pac. Railroads.— 1104. Conv., assented, 1902.. 1st, consol. 7s ,1897.. 115 114 VI14 4 West, Un. Tel.—1900, cp. *117 107 120 108 1 Cent. Pac.—G., 6a 2d,1907 Adjustment, 7s, 1903... 100 4 102 I 117 San Joaquin Branch.j *108 *i"0434 106 1900, reg ... Leh.&W B.—Con.g’d.as 93 Cal. A Oregon—1st, 6s 104 4 105 N.W. Telegraph—'7s,1904 Dub. A Sioux City, 1st. *100 Am.D’kd; Iiu.—5s, 1921 104 Mut.Un. T.— ',F.,6s, 1911 State Aid bds, 7s, ’84 Dub. A 8 C., 2d Div., 7a 116 C.M.A St.P.—1st, 8s. P.D. 131 4 134 j i'20 Land grant bonds, 6s. 103 4 104 | Ced. F. A Minn.—1st, 7s * KSpring Val. W. W.—1st,6 s 2d, 7 3-10, P. D., 1898.. *12’J34 112 4 119 114 West. Pac.—Bonds, 6s Ind. Bl. A W.—1st prf.,7s iiOregon RR. A N.—1st, 6s *108 lai, 7a, $ g.. U. D., 1902 *1214 89 *1‘,2 124 90 i So. Pac. of Cal.—1st, 6s 1033s!. 1st, 4-5-Ga. 1909 ■II let, LaC. Div., 1893 .... 1 122 *7 i> Union Pacific—1st, 6s.. 1154 1154 INCOME BONDS. 2d, 4-o-6s, 1909 let, I. A M., 1897 *122 Land grants, 7s, ’87-9 110 | East’n Div.—6s, 1921... 944 95 --(Tnterest payable if earned.) 1st, I. A I)., 1899 1 117 4 Ala. Cent.—Inc. 6a. 1918. 125 Sinking funds, 8a, ’93 Indianip. D.ASpr.—1st,7s 100 let, C. A M., 1903 117 4 Alleg’v Cent.— I nc., 1912. 124 *50 70 i Registered8s, 1893 ..1 Consol. 7a, 1905 2d, 5s, 1911 107 *191 106 41 Collateral trust, 6s Atl. & Pac.—Inc., 1910 Int.it Gt.No.—1st,6s,gold 2d, 7s, 1-84 1*101 82 *124 83 V 84 Kans. Pac.—1st, 6s,’95 110 Central of N. J.—1903 — 1st, 7s, I A 1). Ext.,1908.*124 Coupon, 6s, 1909.. 109 110 "109 4 Col. C. A I. C.—Inc. 7a, ’90 i1 1st, 6a, 1896......... S.W. Dir., 1st. 6s, 1909,'10‘J jlKent’kvCeu.—M.6s, 1911 Den.Div.,6a,as’d, ’99 108 4! 108 34 Reorga’11 Tr’st Co.Cort. jLake Shore A Mich. 80.let, 5a, La. A Dav., 1919/ '94 65 108 1st consol., 6s. 1919 103 *4' 103 4* Cent. Ia.—Coup. deb. ctfa. lets. Minn. Div.,0s, 1910 i 108 1 100 117 4 i 20 '"104 C.Br.U.P.—F.c ,7s, ' Ch.St.P.A M.—L.g.inc. 6s ’95 }.... Cleve. A Tol.—Sink. fd. 1st, H. <5: D., 7s, 1910 .. 1 i 93 *105 -'2. 110 Chic.A E. 111.-111c., 1907 '*80" At,C.AP.-lst,6s,1905 New bom Is, 7 s, 1886 Ch. A Pac. Div.. 6s, 1910 10U | 110 92 At. J. Co.AW.—1st, 6a DeaM. A Ft. I).—lst,inc.,6a 92 3y 9 2 34i Clove. P. A Ash.—78 lstChic.it P.W.,o8,192 1 ! Det. Mack. A Marq.—Inc. #1 Bull'. A Erie—New bds. Oreg.Sliort L.—1st, 6a "99 V1100 Miu’l PD. Div., 5s, 1910 i 39 104 4!.... Ut. So.—Gen., 7a, 1909 E.T. V. AGa.-1 nc.,6s, 1931 Kal. it W. Pigeon—1st. C.AL.S ip.Div.,5s, 1921 .!....! El. C.A No.—2d inc., 1970, Exten., 1st, 7a, 1909 10034 C. A N’west.—S. fd. 7s, ’85 4 l 126 i Mo. Pac.—lat cons., 6s. 102 G. Bay W.A St.P.—2d, inc. * Interest bonds, 7s, 1883 ! 103 4 1 113 4 114 Iml.iil. A West.--Ine.,l 919 3(1,78,1906 Consol, bonds, 7s, 1915. 131 % 135 j Consol., coup.. 1st; 7s i‘26' 130 i 1054 106 126 of 108 Pacific 1 12 uq 4 Consol. Inc., 6a. 1921... 6s Mo.—1st, Extens’n bonds, 7s, ’85 * Consol., reg., 1st, 7s ... 1 113 123 109 Ind’a Dec. A Spr’d-2diuc. 2d, 7s, 1891 Consol., coup., 2d, 7s. let, 7s, 1885 | 99 4 125 Trust Co. certificates S.F.—2d,6a,cl.A Consol., ieg., 2d, 7s... } 124 Coupon, gold. 7s. 1902.. 126 4 j St.L.A *90 1264 Int. A Gt. North.—2d iuc. 3-6s, class C, 1906 Long I si. It.—1st, 7s,1898 120 Reg., gold, 7s, 1902 ■92“ 2d assented, 6s, 1909... 97 4 97341 1114 1st consol, os, 1931..... ! 3-Gs, class B, 1906 Sinking fund, 6s, 1929 . 110 ! Leh. A Wilkesb. Coal—’88 Louisv.it N.,—Cons. 7 s, ’98 114 4; 115 lat, Gs, Peirce C. A O. Sinking fund, reg 1. 50 ! 100 Lake E. A W.—1 nc. 7s, ’99 Equipment, 7s, 1895. Sinking fund, os, 1929 , ‘*99" 94 A 2d, 7s, gold, 1883 80. Pac. of Mo.—1st.. *103 4 Ceciliun Br’ch—7s, 1907 i 104 ! Sinking fund, reg Sand’ky Div.—Iuc.. 1920 45 8(4 94 Laf.Bl.AMnn.-Inc.7a,’99 N.O. A Mob.—1st,6s 1930 ! Iowa Midland—ist, 8s. *1“(> { Te x. A Pac.—1 st.Gs, 1905 100 78 90 Mil. L. 8. A W.—Incomes E. 11. A N.—1-t, 6s, 1919 | Consol., 6s, 1905 Peninsula—1st, conv. 7 s j 95 70 62 90 4 Income A I’d gr., reg. Mob. A O.—1st pi t', debeu. 1 90 General, 6s, 1930 Chicago A Mil.—1st, 7s 122 4 2d pref. debentures Pensac’la Div.—6s, 1920 1st, RioG.Div.,6a, 1930 'si 4 82 "WinonaA St. Pet’r— 1st 107 *j Pennsylvania EE.— 129 3d pref. debentures St. L. Div.—1st, 6s, 1921 i *97 2d, 7s, 1907 95 98 4' *46 113 Pa.Co'a guar. 4 4s, 1 st c. -4tli pref. debentures.... Mil. A Mad.—1st,6 2d, 3s, 1980 70 121 120 *9534 123 4 N.Y. Lake E.AW.—Inc.6a Nasbv. A Dec.—1st, 7s. 1 115 Registered, 1921 C.C.C.A Ind’s—1st, 57 1 121 Pitt.C. A 8t.L.—lat c.,7s N. Y. P.AO.6—1st ino.ae.5-7 Consol. 7s, 1914. let, guar. (5641,7s, ’94 2d (3GO), 7s, 1898 2d, guar. (188), 7s, ’98 6238 1074 109 8. Ill.—1st AMan.—1st,7s 2d. 6s, 190!) st. P. Minn. Eng.—1st, 7a 1 62 — ! 1 109^8 2d, pref., 7s, LS9 4....... 2d, income, 7a, 1894 j i 20 13 registered 1st, reg., 1903 Hilda.R.—7s, 2d, s.f., '85 i'o's j I’ex.Cen.— 1 st,s.f.,7s, 1909 92:{4 93 '4 ist mort., 7s, 1911 Can’daSo.—lst.int.guari Tol. Del. A Bor. —Main, 6s Harlem—1st, 7s, coup.. iiu' < 1st. 7a, reg., 1900 1st, Dayt. Div., 6s, 1910 1 X.Y. Elev’d —1 st, 7a, 1906 116'a 117 lat, Ter’l trust, 6-», 1910 N. Y. Pa. AO.-Pr.l’n,6s,’95 Va.Mid.—M.inc., 6a, 1927 58* Wab. St. L.A P.-Gon’l, 6s j N. Y. C. A X.-( I ou. ,6a, 1910 Chic. Div.—5s, 1910 Trust Co. Receipts *105 ...... Missouri Kan. A Tex.— Gen. con., 6s. 112 98 5*9*! "95” 8.—6s... Erie—1st, extended, 7s... 80 56 *2 50 13 ,.. Rich. A Danv. — Cout’d.— Debenture 6s, 1927 Atl. A Cb.—1st, p.,7s,’97 Scioto Val.—1st, cons., 7a St. L. A Iron Mt. —1st, 7a 116 105 Cons., 7s, 190 4-5-6 63 2d, income, 1911 ! II. A Cent'. Mo. — 1 st, ’90 107 ! Mobile A Ohio -New, 6s. 109'“2 Collat. Trust, 6s, 1892.. Morgan’s La. A T.—1st. 6s *96" """ 1115'Nash. Chat. ASt. L. — 1st,7s 2d, 6s. 1901 103* * X. V. Central — 6s, 1883... 6s, 1887.. *108 6s, real estate, 1883 .... '1034 | 6a, subscription, 1883.. 135 N.Y.C. A H. —1st, coup. ■ j 56 Guaranteed .7s, 1910 Pac. Ext.—1st, 6s, 1921 8’t b w. E x t.—Is t •*;* Rems. A Sar. — 1st, coup."*138" 137 1st, reg., 192L ,.. Denv.it Rio Gr.—1st. 1900, 11334 11434 97-4 974 1st consol., 7s, 1910 . .. 1 1 )en v.So. 1 *.A Pac.— 1 st.7 s. | 102 4:103 4' 91 91 ■> Dot. Mae.A Marq.—1st,6s band grant 3 4s, S. A... i 115 j E.T. Va.A G.-1st. 7S.1900 113 1st cons., as, 1930 ! Divisional as, I960 1 1 100 ; 2d, 7s, 1891 1st,cons.,guar.7a,1906 i 34 34 BONDS. Miuu.ASt. L.—1st,7 s, 19271 Iowa Ext.—1st,7s, 19091 ...... ”34" 50 51 50 61 small Do Do .1 ioi 4 ^ Registered Funding 5s, 1899. !i 118 1 Del. A 11.—Coutiu’d— Pa. Div., reg., 7s, 1917.. Alii. A Susq.—1st, 7s... 49*2 49 49 V, District of Columbia— 3 65s, 1924 Small bonds 108 6a, 1880 8 105 1892-8-1900... C’mp’inise,3-4-5-0s,l912 Virginia—6s, old 6s, new, 1866 * 6s, new, 1867 6s, consol, bonds 1 6s, ex-matured coupon. | 6s, consol., 2d series 1 6s, deferred ! Rhode Island— 6s, coupon, 1893-99 new, 6 6s. new scries, 1914 ...! 65 Railroad Bonds. 6s, Ask. 103 1 6 4 64 class 2 class 3 • 12 12 Bid. South Carolina— 6s, Act Mar. 23, I860) non-fuudable, 1888. ^ Brown cousol’n 6s, 1893 Tennessee—OS, old, 1892-8 :::::: act*, 1866-1900 Do Do Consol. 4a, Small Ohio— RAILROAD Chea.it Ohio—Pur. m’y . 10 10 15 15 4 Special tax,class 1, ’98-9 108 108 103 118 119 120 - . A. AO eonp. off, J.AJ. coup, off,A.AO. Do 1868-1898 New bonds, J.AJ., ’92-8 Do A.AO Chatham RR New York— iot* 7s, new, 1886 7s, endorsed, 1886 7b, gold, 1890 old, J.AJ 6s, old, A.AO No. Carolina RR., J.AJ. SECURITIES, N. Carolina— Ga, ^ 6a,due 1882or 1883 .... 6s, duo 1886 6s, due 1887. 6a, due 1888 6s, due 1889 or 1890.... Asyl’m or Univ., due’92 Funding, 1894-’95 Hannibal A St. Jo., ’86 85 Aslc. Bid. SECURITIES. Missouri— 1014 Arkansas— - 1 81 .. Ask. Bid. SECURITIES. Ah k. SECURITIES. — 84 lio' 103 • , ...... 103 105 1054 109 90“ K - - t - -r . -r ' - . 75 - _ im j , | .. 4j 87 50 j ' .... . 74 ... J ! 1 j*n’9 .... .... 4i‘ 25' 59 60 - .. .... .... ' ' 87 54 50 50 79* 45 ...... • ,-i 109 110 4 101 102 1930 St.P.AS.C.—lst,6s,191t No. W is.— 1st, 6s, Chic.A E. 111.—1st,s.f.,c«r. Col. A Green.—1st,6s, 2d, 6s, 1926 Del. L.A \V.—7a, conv. ’92 Mortgage 7s, 1907 Syr. Bing. AN. V.—1st,7s Morris A Essex—1st, 7.2d, 7s, 1891 Bonds, 7s, 1900 i 1st, consol., guar., 7s Del. A H.—1st, 7s, l88i. 1st ,ext. ii'.s" i'i-i” 140 115 ...... j 118 "123 1 i’15 124 107 ,7s, 1891. 115 1st; Pa. Div.,cp.,7s,1917j * No il23 price Friday—these i'o'iv 'lbl4 , Louisv.N.Alb.AC.--1 st.Gs, Mauhat.B’ch Co.—7s,1909 * ! 139 113 1st reg., Sandusky Div.,6s, 191Ui ! 98 ; Uaf.Bl.AM.—1st. 6s, 1919! 102 4 103 S8**! A ;;;;;; 1 107 4 108 4 *1 14 are ! | j 104 1 N.V.A M.B’ll—lst,7s,’97! Marietta A Cin.—1st, 7s. 1st, sterling. — 90 j j Melrop’lit'n El.—1 st, 19081 1004 101 4 j 92 81 2d, 6s, 1899 1 —Con.,7s,19021 128 V Eqniptn'L bds., 8s, 1883. 1 iMich.Cent 6s. 1909 I | 1931.... I Jack. Lan.A Sag.—6s,’91; Mil. A N o.— 1st, 4-a-Gs, 19! Oi Coupon, 5s, 1931 94 Registered, 93 as, Mil. L. 8. A W.-1 st ,6s, 1921: 91 101 latest quotations made this week. Pitts. Ft. W. A Cli.—lsl 2d, 7a, 1912 \ 3d, 7a, 1912 Clev.A 1’iUa.—Cons. s.f. 4th, sink, fd., Ga, 1892 Col.U.A I.C.—1st,consul 138 135 16 126 127 109 120 34'125 Small Peoria D. A Ev.-111c.. 1920 Evansv. Div.— i nc., 1920 Rocli.A Pitta. —Inc.,- 1921 Romo W. A Og.— Iuc., 7a. So.'Car. Rv. — 111c.,6s, 1931 8t. Louis I. Mt. A 80.— i 12*9' 2d consol., 7s, 1909... 1 st,Ti ’st Co.ctfs.,ass'd i 1 MOhio Cent.—Income, 1920 j | M in’l J)i v.— I nc.7s, 1921 1 Ohio 80 —2d inc., 6s, 1921 Ogdens.A LA\—Inc., 1920 7a, 1900 2d, 7a, 1913 2d, Tr’st Cq.ctfs.jasa’d 1st, Tr’t Co.ctis.suppl. H.—lst,g.,7s 2d, 7a, 1898 2d, guar., 7s, 1898 Pitts.B.A B.—1st,6s, 1911 St.L. V.AT. Og.—Con., 1st .jllioeli.A Pitt.—1st,6s, 1921 iiticii. A Al.—1st, 7s, 1920 98 1014 lticli.ADanv.—Cons.g.,6a 9a Romo W.A 1st, 7s, pref., int. aeciim. l!8. 41 78 70 47 60* -90 ac.c’mulative *80 jjSt’gl.ARy.-Ser. B., inc/94 j Plain incomes 6s, 1896. u.Sterling Mt.Ey.—!nc.,’95 !St. L. A. A T. II.—Div. btls ! i Tol. De 1. A B. 1 no., 6s,l 910 105 83 Dayton Div.—6s, 1910.. '*934 94V ,Tex.ASt.L.-L.g.,iuc. 1920 71 *10 394 2d, 6s, int. . TOO 37 80 37 58 25 24 CHRONICLE THE 14, 1882. OCTOBER Ouotatioiis iu Boston, New York. Local Securities. Insurance Stock last. IJjink Stock COMPANIES- Bid. - Chatham Chemical Citizens’ ••• .. .... Continental...... Exchange Corn East Riverv......... Eleventh Ward*.... Fifth Fifth First Avenue* Fourth German German • • Germania*. Greenwich* Hanover............ Imp. and Traders’..' Irving....... Island City* Leather Manuftrs’. Manhattan*... . . Marine Market ;12S 30 1127 140 240 Mercantile Merchants’ Metropolis* Metropolitan Mount Morris* Murray Hill* Nassau* New York '. New York County... N. Y. Nat’l Exch’ge. Ninth North America* North River* Oriental* Pacific* ,265 Kings Count y (15kn.) 25 Phenix Produce* 20 50 Knickerbocker j 140 151 100 120 133 93 Lafayette (Br’klyn). Lenox Long Island (B’klyn) Lorillard Manufac’rs’A Build. Manhattan Mcch. & Traders’... Mechanics’ (B’klyn). Mercantile Merchants’ 125 "uiH Ito 171 120 145% , !.... jl*2 Montauk (Brooklyn) Nassau (Brooklyn).. National New York New York New Y^ork New York I:... 112) i 140 150 50 100 People’s* .LsJc. L6O4 iio People’s 100 100 100 Phenix Relief 10214 100 40 50 100 50 100 .. City . Republic 132 Rutgers’ 130 Standard Star 100 Union United States Wall Street West side* .. . 100 100 Fire & Boston. North ltiver Pacific Park 1*6161- Cooper 8t. Nicholas Seventh Ward Second 8hoeand Leather... Sixth State of New York.. Third 100 Equitable Sterling Stuyvesant 151 Tradesmen’s United States VVestohester 150 104U Williamsburg City.. 147 105 190 175 170 140 115 125 95 220 220 75 90 117 50 17 10 !00 153 Hi 210 ln0 195 155 125 140 40 ICO 230 A ' hoo 115 185 110 111) 250 60 1 !5 140 75 ! 4-3 100 50 50 25 100 15 50 50 100 50 50 100 30 30 40 50 100 25 50 25 100 100 25 50 50 50 50 50 35 100 100 100 50 25 25 100 20 50 50 50 100 25 50 100 100 25 25 25 10 50 1120 j 120 * 4 < 4 7 ) 55 14 7 1;*0 80 103 70 75 103 50 105 60 13) 130 65 105 110 150 100 140 93 5 60 175 100 180 117 150 85 108 140 65 75 M0 LOO 70 50 L05 70 25 L20 12) Ex 112 do do Nebr. 6s 102 60 107 75 140 75 10 65 184 106 190 125 175 115 145 75 85 15') L15 75 60 120 Lt 6? Income. do Day’n a, Brooklyn Gas Light Co CttIzeus’Gas Co (Bklyn) do .. bonds Manhattan Metropolitan bonds N. Y Mutual, HaSBau, Brooklyn do scrip People’s (Brooklyn) Bonds of New York ... bonds 315,000 1,850.000 750,000 4,000,000 2,500,000 750,000 5,000,000 1,000,000 700,000 4,000,000 1,000,000 375,000 125,000 466,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 3,000,000 750,000 L500.000 1,000 Metropolitan, Brooklyn 100 100 Municipal ao Fulton Var. Var. A. & O. F.&A. J.&J. J.&J. M.& S. F.& A Var. 50 50 * Williamsburg do 2,000,000 1,200,000 1,000 Bonds....5. Central 25 20 50 20 50 100 500 100 25 Va-. 100 10 Jersey City & Hoboken New York Period 1.C00 Harlem do Par. bonds Mnnlclpa 100 Date. c 7 1898 105 do 160 210 175 107 100 55 90 117 43 105 85 75 55 3 Aug., ’82 74 July, ’82 5 Aug., '82 6 Aug., 3 DC., V> 3 Sept., ’81 34 M«y, ’82 5 May, ’82 34 Jan., ’76 Quur. Var M.&N. M.&N. •J. A J. M.&N. Var. F.& A. 107 70 110 100 170 216 •so 110 7 1034 56 95 118 46 107 90 85 57 104 1897 6 1900 &c 3 Aug., ’82 ■4 Feb.. ’82 6 ' 101 1900 24 July, 82 70 4 ’82 180 Aug., 6 105 1888 Quar. A.fc O. M. &N. M.&N. !8d 110 70 .... , n-o 60 Concord Connecticut River Conn. & Pr-Rsiimpslc a. U 101 161 Fitchburg Flint & Pere Marq do pref x Fort Scott & Gulf, pref common. (io Iowa Falls & Sioux CHy I Lit).e Rock & Fort Smith ... Maine central Man on ester A Lawieuce... Mar. Hough. & Out — do pref Nashua* Lowell ! 884 89 50 Met mortgage Seventh 1st mortgage.... Broadway & ••••• Av- St k Brooklyn City—Stock 1st mortgage Broadway (Brooklyn)—Stock -Brooklyn Crosstown.—St’k .. .. 1st mortgage bonds.... Bpshwick Av. (B’klyn)—Stock. Ceptral Pk. N. * E. Kiv.—Stock » Consolidated mort. bonds.... Christopher * Tenth St.—Stock Bonds Dry Dock E.B.* Batt’ry-Stock 1st mortgage, consolidated .. Eighth Avenue—S%ock 1st mortgage 42d St. * Grand St. Ferry—St’k 1st mortgage Central Cross Town—Stock 1st mortgage. Houst.West St.& Pav.F’y—St k 1st mortgage 1 Second Avenue—Stock 3d mortgage Consol, convertible Extension — • Sixth Avenue—Stock 1st mortgage Third Avenue—Stock 1st mortgage Twenty-third Street—Stock. 1st mortgage - Tllis ccldmn I 100 1,000 | 100 694,000 J. & .1. J.&J. '2,100,000 Q-J. 1,000 ,1,500,000 10 2,000,000 300,000 1,000 100 200,000 100 400,000 300,000 1,000 J.&D.- Q-F. M.&N. * 54% 2 7 June ’81 103 7 r 34 Aug., 82 206 1,000 100 1,000 100 1,000 100 500 100 1,000 1,000 oOO&C 1,000 100 203,000 748,000 236,000 600,000 200,000 250,000 500,000 1,199,500 150,000 Q—J. Q—J. Q—J. 7 I 102 j Oct., ’82 |Oct., ’82 1888 ! Oct., ’82 jOct., ’82 J.&J. 7 Jan.. ’811100 M.&N. A.&O. 6 7 May, ’82 240 M.&N. J.&J. J.&J. A.&O. 1,050,000; M.&N. 200.000 M.& S. 750,000 M.&N. 500,000 J. & J. ,2,000,000 6 6 7 74 60 20 51 Brook.... r544 Q-F. 1,000 fe ,000,000 J. & J. 100 600,000 F. &A. 1,000 250,000 M.&N. shows last dividend on sto:ks, but Apr.,’93|ll0 7 July. ’94 July, '82 Apr., ’85 Nov., ’88 145 119 02 35 i.... 61%' 65 -. Sept..’83jl70 Mar., ’82 255 July, ’001110 Aug., '82 270 .July, ’901110 . pref. do Companies West Chester consol, pref.... West Jersey West Jersey* Atlantic CANAL STOCKS. io84 265 115 Aug.,’82 1484 May, ’OJillO the date of maturity of bonds 1904 .... 4i% 44% . .... do pref... RAILROAD BONDS. i Vo Allegheny Val.,7 3-10e. 1396... do 7s, E. ext., 1910 do Inc. 7s, end.,c.’9L Belvldero Dela. 1st m.,63,1302. 12% 122 US 47 121 do ‘2d m. 6s.’35.. 104 do 3dm. 68, *37.. .104 Camden &Am c-' ts.coup.Hs 101 do 63, coup., ’89 do mort. 6s. ’o', 1 11b Cam. & Atl. 1st m. 7s, e-.. 1S93 00 2d m. 6s, 1904.... 102 do t ons., 6 p. c Cam. & Burlington Co. 6s,’97. toil Catawlssa lstt7st conv., cp/cS do chat, m., 10s,’88... . ,, . . 126 • . t * . f ... ... .U1. 1!7. *a 114 ! do mort. RR., rg .’97—'414 do cons. in.7s, rg.,191!... 117%; do Gr’nw’d Tr.7s, rg.,’92 -lorris, boat loan, reg., 1885.. 'ennsylvaula 6s,coup-, 1910.. ichuylk. Nav.lst ra.68.rg.,’97. ..107 1 w do 2d m. 6s. reg.. 1907 MISCELLANEOUS BONDS. jo ; Penn. Co 6s. reg uH!? 6 do do do do Per share. 44s, ... reg.,19211 00 co ip., 19211 ^bll.&R.Coal&lr’n deoJs,92*i do deb. 73. coa.ofl; do mort., 7s, 1892 4 la'tlmore 6s, 1SSI, quarterly. do 6s, ‘.886, J do 6s, 1890, quarterly... do 6s, park, 1890,Q.-M. — — • 70 do do stocks. ( t • 108*4 114% 115 'Ho 6s,exempt,’95,M.&S. 6s, 1900, Q.-J 68.1902, J.&J do 53,1916, new lorfolk water, 8s t .... 6s, 1893.M.&S railroad Schuylkill Navigation 180 CANAL BONDS. J.& Nesquehonlng Valley Lehigh Navigation.......... Pennsylvania 115 80 It 6 gen.tn.78, cp., 190.; I ;ties. & Del.. 1st m., tis, 1885 Lehigh Naviga. m.,6s, reg.,’So 103 do do DuluthR.li.Com I !i03 BALTIMORE, Norfolk* Western, com... do do pref.. United N. J. f do Mlnehlll do Kyra.Gen.& Corn’.,1st,76,19 .’ ) , do prof. do pref Little Schuylkill .. .... 80% pref « ,... Lehigh Valley Paul & 95 ^ .A 514 Etintra* Williamsport 1 41 do do pref.. 1 58 Har. P. Mt. Joy & Lancaster. Huntingdon & Broad Top .. st. I .... . ... 24 J’lv.1900.10? Oct., *82 144 Pltt8.CiU.ASt. L. 7s, reg., Mi* do do 7s, cp., 19 > ... 18% Catawlssa 75 ! 644 644 Pennsylvania ! 22 Philadelphia & Erie Ill Pliila. Germ. & Norristown Pima. Newtown & N. Y— S2% Puiladelphla & Reading 1 32 '32*4 Philadelphia & Trenton 1190 Phlla.Wilmlng. & Baltimore.1 Plj&r.sb. Cin. & St. Louie, com. I % July, ’82 190 190 105 100 150 500,000 J & J. 6 6 100 1,800,000 O—j. 142'4 J.&D. 7 IDec.1902 117,4 1,000 1,200,U00 100 650,000 F.&A. 24 Aug., ’83 1)6 J.&J. 7 1*98 1106 250,000 1,000 100 1,200,000 Q-F. 4 Aug.,'82 210 oOO&c June,’931115 900,000 J.&D. 7 100' 1,000,000 Q-J. 3 Oct., ’82 210 100 .. ! 900,000 \ ; ‘92% 66 & Western.... pref. do 74 Texas & Pac. 1st 'ii.,fie,g..l9)‘r do D v., 1830 Iiio G 85 do COI1B. ill.,be,g., 1905 do lnc.& 1. gr.,78 1915 67 *95 iiUnion* Tltusv. iBt m.Ts, ’90. United N.J. cons. in. 6s,’91 ,113 Warren & F. 1st m.7s, ’96 117 West Chester cons. 7s,’9l. West Jersey 6s, deb,,coup.,*' i’lrt do 1st in. 6a, cp..'y--do 1st m. 7a,’99 113 do cons. Hs, 1909 liOjU'ilOU W. .lereey* At . 1stm 5s, cp. 1204 Western Penn. KK. 6s,ep.’9>. ^ 6s P. B.,’96. ,.| I *•* do 494 Allegheny Valley do 1st pref do ‘21 pref Delaware & Bound East Pennsylvania lot) 7'. 7s, It. C., L'3>" 7s. coup. off. ’> 8unb. Haz. & W.,1st 111.,5s,’2- I';;: 25 do 2dm. 63. .938 ^ , PHILADELPHIA. RAILROAD STOCKS.+ do scrip, 1882 i Sunbury & Erie 1st m.7s,’97 i1-0 96 pref Atlantic 1 274 i Rch.& Danv.con3.int.6s,L) 5 ! Shamokin V.& Pottsv.7s, 19 ’ 130 & Nashua ao (O do Plttsb. Tltusv.& B.t7'.oj»..’0i I 22 do I, 424! 135 112 Camden & ; 94%; 95 :;Pliil.Wilm.&Balt ,4s,Tr.ceri? ! 120 1121 95 7*4, 110 Buffalo Pitts. 102 121 do COiiV. do . Connotton Valley Eastern (Mass.). Eastern (New Hampshire)... Central imn.m.,6',g„ LlsO gen. m. 6-, g.. C.Po J.u. in.,7s,coup.. *96 dab. coup., l>93*.... do c >up. off, :."9 do 274 Ctn.Sandusky & Clev <io l.u no ... Bleecker St. & Fult. Ferry—St’k debentur i.s.reg.... 106 Jo- ;io2 1554; Northern Central North Pennsylvania [Quotations by fl. L. Grant, Broker, 145 Broadway.] 7s. reg., 190' 1244 m.7p, cp., 1903. i 55 preferred Il'.O Revere Beach & Lynn Tol. Cin. & Sc. Louis 7. Vermont & Massachusetts . May, *82 105 24 July, ’82 65 gen. m. gen. 92 1064 .. 994 ;1054 634 .••• :160 5 . do 1906 ,106 Perkiomen 1st in. 6s,coup.,’87 Plillu. & Erie 2d -a. 7s, cp.,’6.i 114 do cons. mort. 6?,-92e do 5s,! 920 1024 os yo Phi!a. Newt’n* N.Y., 1st, ’9 122 PU11.& K. 1st in.6s,ex.due 19;U do 2d m., is, cp.,93. 1118 do cons. m..7s,rgM iSil,! 1264 127.4 do d> cp., 1911.1*' do con“.m.6s,g.L;ol3il 904 i 91 17241.... - 125 Bid. Ask. * 99 105 63 AtchLon & Topeka & Albany Bo.*.to t C i i. & Fitch Boston A Lowell Boston & Maine. Boston & Providence Chesnire preierred Chi.-. & W. Michigan Wisconsin Amount. 123 ! 134 l8t.38.Cp.JS9.' 7s, reg., 1910.. do cons.m. 6s. cp., 1905. do do 5’, reg., 191 Pa.& N.Y.C. & RR.78, S9ti Main L Worcester Gas Companies. '77% I* 774 80, 11 Wull Street. 1 do ,*!o do 114 1324 City Railroad Stocks and Bonds. [Gas Quotations by Prentiss & Staples, Broke: I iio D.j Rutland, Gas and iii. ... Boston 140 100 120 i con. in., 6a,rg..1923 do do 6a,cp.,19d3 Little Schuylkill, 1st m. 7«,’'2 N. O. Pac., let ill., 6s, 1920 North. Penn. 1st m.6s, ep.,’35. do 2d m. 7s,cp.. ’96. 122 1134! do L 90 do . STOCKS. 60 115 70 110 150 do do 2d Inc. co 80 10O 118 5s Sonoi a 7s T. Ciun. & St. I .. 84 64 60 Valley, 7a Rutland 6s,1st mort 153 ! 60 103 mi 83^ Southern, 6s do Old Colony, 7s old Colony,6s Pueblo & Ark. 210 85 110 Nebr.4s 89 ... 150 , 7a, g Md, ’90. — 6'» f 120 '14/4 80 80 Nebr.63 m. cons. m. Norf’k&We.'t.,gen. m.,Is.19311 Oil Creek, 1st tis, coup., 1L2.. j ,\ew York & New Eng. 6s R5%|!06 11HG ao 7s 1164 Pennsylv.,gen. m. 6s. rg., 194 do gen.m. 6s, cp.. 19.0 New Mexico & So. Pac. 73... 113 do cons.m. 6s rg., 1905. tguenstmrg & 1.. Ch con. 6 . !28'» 80 , 5s, 1395 Ithaca* Athonstst g d. 7s.,’Si* Juuctlon 1st mort. 6-<, ’82 do ‘2d mort. 6b, 19np Lehigh Valley, 1st,6s, reg.. •o . L)3 1 H. & B. T. 1st 1144 i.asitrn. Mass., 4^s, new. ... Fort Scott & Gulf 7b dart ford & Erie 7s K. Cltv Lawrence & So. 5s... l\;iM. CUV. St. JO.&C. B. 18. Little R’k & Ft. Smith,7b,1st Mass Central. 6s Mexican Central, 7s 125 90 110 --Is A cp UK Harrisburg 1st mor* tis, ’8 L. do Cal* ornla 7s, Ififf), r.& ... many 7s do 85 new Delaware in..Gs.reg.&e > p ar Del. & Bound Br., 1st, 7s. 1905 1125 East Penn. 1st mort. 7e. '33 : Easton & Amboy, 5s, 1920 ... E1.& W’msport, tst .11. Ov, 1911:115 do 5s, perp ' 24 .. ioo Catawi-.ea 114 Chicago Burl. & Qulncv D.Ex Conn’s Pasaumpslc, 7s Cunnott n Valley. 6s — j Bid. SECPHITIES. IjUhartiers Val., 1st m.7s,C,.i90: H9M do 68 ioston & Lowell 7s d > 6s 'ostou & Providence 7s Liri. & Mo., land grant 7s- 2o0 ! 80 374 Niagara J.V7 'A 150 .104 Republic Tradesmen’s 30 50 100 40 100 30 Jefferson 100 100 100 100 100 100 70 30 25 Park 100 Importers’ & Tr’d’rs Irving 25 25 100 50 50 100 100 Merchants’ Exch’ge 70 — Firemen's Firemen’s Trust Franklin* Emp,... German-American.. Germania Globe Greenwich Guardian Hamilton Hanover Hoffman Home Howard ISO 100 Mechanics’ Mechanics’ & Tr’drs’ 20 Eagle Empire City Exchange Farragut 1119 .175 .. 107 • . 17 Continental 151 150 75 100 100 25 100 100 50 50 100 50 100 American* Exchange* 25 25 Broad way Brooklvn ! Citizens’ I City I Clinton Columbia 1 Commercial 50 Gallatin.. too Bowery *150 25 100 100 100 100 Fulton ' 50 American American Exchange 133 25 100 100 25 100 25 100 100 100 100 25 rs’| Chase City Commerce.. 1(55 loo 100 100 25 Am. Exchange.. Bowery Central UOSTON. -l iusiou & America1* Butchers’ * Drov Bid. Ask Ask. ! & Topeka 1st vn.79 i *and grant7s Atlantic & Paeili -,6s io Income.. Jostori A Maine7s Pi LICE. Par. Com pa nils. Par. (*) nre\ not National. i Marked thus Broadway..-.-... 1 Tit ICE. Philadelphia ami Baltimore. Bid s::<U.ruiTiB-i. [Quotations by E. S. Bailey, Broker, No. 7 Pine Street.] lJst. 125 1;J Ii'j*4 — 1135 Par. 100.195 tail. & Ohio 126 no 1st pref do 2d pref do Wash. Branch. 100 8 do Parkersb’g Br..50 50 4orthern Central 50%! 10 Vestern Maryland 50 40 Central Ohio, common 50 Pittsbu g & Connelisville... railroad bonds. 101 Vtlanta & Cliar. lsts 74 do Inc .. 103% . Salt. & Ohio 6s, 1885,A.&O. Jolumb.a & Gree .v. lsts.... do do 21s. .. W. Va. 3d m.,guar.,’85,J&J PIttsb.& ConneUsv.7s,’98,J*J Northern Central 6s, ’85. J&J do 6s, 1900, A.&O. do 6s, gld, 1900, J.&J. ;jen. Ohio 6s. 1st m.,’90.M.& S. \y. Md.Os.lst in.,gr.,’90,J.&J. do 1st m., 1890, J. & J... do 2dm.,guar., J.&J.... do 2d in., pref do 2dm.,gr.by W.Co.J&.i do 6s, 3dm., guar., J.&J. Mar. & Cin. 7s. ’91. F. & A ... do 2d, M. & N 8s. Sd, J.&J do Richmond & Danv., gold, Cs. Union RG. 1st, guar., J. & J.. do c niton eudopsed. 104% 106 122 105% 114 1C8 1164 127 1284 994 ICO 5641 57 116 103 Virginia & Tone. 6s do 83.... 116 109 ; 104 THE CHRONICLE. 42i> RAILROAD Latest Week or $ Jan. 1 to Latest Date. 1881. 1882. Mo I 1882. $ 1881. $ < K.CFtS Pacitic. SeptembT.(2,474,000,2,185,303! Cliarl.Col. & Aug. IstwkOet. tl3,300 t9,700 1,602,206 309,494 742,993 Europ’n A N. A 2d wk Mexican i 152.48 ti 4,929,430 11,287; 255.1 6 i 290.921 37,830! 1,172.774; 1.002,622 842,193 26,1 69 i 867,555 32.5.353! 71,400' 38fS09, 7•■‘.08: j 47,81-: 368,155 10,774! 194.6331 337 .81*.•'' 10,903 306,93(5) 1,546*505! ■3.296,5-10; 91 5.30 i 263,055 1,353,869 '8,097,837 5 1,000 21.3 4*1 6135,194 ■ i 101,322' 112,82 l 48.*) 42 4 1,248 44.3423,60 41,522 25,400 55,80 48,117 23.5,“ (H* 07,7-51 e 280,855 141.000 36,0221,62) 18,450 27.607 1,329.6 45 1,53*1.313 9,603,889”, 8.358,110 ooi.ooii 649.795 31.173 633,29 5 18,414. 666,085) 25.365 14-1.773 171.00- 447,125 126,009' 4,518.558 3.960.905 161.62.5 5.833,7 40: 5,018,065 : 160.031 Mctropol. Elev L2 dys Oct. 85,740 N. Y. Elevated.. 12 dys Oct., 122,182 Nashv.Cli.A St. I August : 168,304 N. Y.AN. Eugl’d! 1th wk Sep 71,270 N. Y. I'a. A Ohio August 403,893 210.262, 1,324.-509 84.174! 2,13 9,194 97,300 2,5 41,818 . 163.317' 1,62 L I 98 1,927,174 2,242.513 1,21(5,0 4(1' 70,0*1 2,54 0,78/ 462,523; 3.530.09" 222,16 667.488! 226 3 tr, 34,105 0.000! Tradesmen’s.. Fulton Chemical Merch’nts’ Exch. Gallatin Nation’l Butchers’&D-ov. Mechanics’ & Tr. Greenwich Leather Man’f’re Seventh Ward State of N. York. American Kxci) Commerce Broadway . Mercantile Paoirlc Republic Chatham People’s North America. Hanover Metropolitan 66 i’, 273 1,033,706- 1,689.375 12,521 143,605; 78,531 646,11 ’ 5.135,141 4,932.1 10 182, 137 1.3(57,703 1.3 <8,327 5.8,96!) 1.910,121 1.8(55,819 7(k(5! 5 ] 2,260,25' 1,941.235 679.875 8 18.132 90,6 i<\ 42.407 1,224.1(54 1,100,615 38,873: 1,085,557; 1,041,402 120,19 1,397.972 2,067,915 3.623,303 106.12:6 1. 438.653- 1.364,626 408.0)8' 3,823.8 4 2 3,600.6*(5 131,861 5,* )06,8 »5 2,792,803 7 4.5,130! 15,325, 458,414 6,487 260,478: u! v 2H2.s7.' Oregon imp.Co 1.758.22c Oregon R.AX.C* A ugiist.... 40o,80U| 453.3(54 3,156,600' 2,637,067 Oregon A Cal... August i 80,301Pennsylvania August.... 1.671.170 3,809.978 31,471.1 t (5 29.14 4.235 Peoria Dec.AF.x Uh wk Sep 21,660' 21.017 5*6.502 501,6 50 420.320 Philadclp.A Era August 303.8 40 2,522.600 2,318.54 c .. .. August.... 1.075.093 2,000,087 13.533,04 S 12,073,801 l ,6 1 5,208 1,521,430 August 0.300.032 8.381.152 . ’ st wk Oct. 1 67.90! 41 h wk Sep 111) wk Sep 1st wk Aug 1 st wkOct. 1st wk Oct. 11 h wk Sep t62,0'H- 41,607 22,800 5,004 1 1st wk Oct. July ,! une June June - <;,.// 11290,706 ii 178.357 1137.202 70.8 22 112.020 August 1st wk Oct. l st wk ()rt. 2.514.703 186,692 5,32 4,740 5,408.315 65,687 20.020 118.2-* 11,40.5 2.629.2i)8‘ 2,315.128 505,112 3.554.747 43,0(52 18,013 78,304 40,311 i 105.50 ! 12,007 130,576 1st wk Oct. 2,603,050 036.904 626.210‘ 127,78 1 19,317 ....... 740,518' 6,3 14.3(5 4 405,420! 664,478 1,000.6(55 544,002 3.1,3 7 j] 1,0*3,283: ]i 1.324.270 i|356 5*31 ..... 81.411 76,521 IS. 60 4 72(5,607 3,1.53,100 678,270 720.023 2,864,151 485.408 ScptembT. 2,049.112 2,344,357 21.111.210 18,973,016 120.877 August 102,31(5 1,011.006 August.... 27,200 August.... \Vab.St.l..A Pac. 1st wk Oct. West Jersey August.... Wisconsin (’.*10. 2d wk Sept 136,053 3(58,011 100,2 46 18,fi3(5 * 32,664 272.210 862.8*6. 131,834 801,615 320,283 12,653,022 10.721.171 174.54* 778,902 68(5,945 1(5.-183 Includes Great Western Road since October. t Decrease due to lateness of cotton crop. i Freight earnings. § Northern Division. || Included in Central Pacific earnings above TI Erroneously reported at $14,204 last week—should be $54,264, -above. as U. S. Sab-Treasury.—The following- table shows the receipts and payments at the Sub-Treasury in this city, as well as the balances in the same, tor each day ot the past week: Balances. . Receipts. $ Oct. “ “ *• “ 7 . 9 . 10. 2.767.513 25 11 2,949.660 5 4 1 .<-52,006 00 . 12. 13. Total.... * "3,676.278 01 3,522.490 OO 4.465,325 41 18,433.872 21 Payments. $ 1,454.266 56 2.054,150 81 1.802,143 0 i 772,097 03 ■ 1,107,719 OO 3,215,953 15 Coin. Currency. ' $ 89,713,330 14 91.154,761 92.130,4(55 9 4,2*3,02 > 94,209,335 95,606,767 03 3o 7! 81 42 3 4.081.271 4. LOS. L 74 4,007.8 to 4,122.852 4,1 40 860 (H 10 gO 10 3,003,350 75 10,406.333 56 Indu les ^1,000,000 yold certiflcatos received from Washington. 83 .... Citizens’ Nassau Market St. Nicholas.... Shoe & Leather Corn Exchange.. Continental... Oriental Marine 903.000 1,090,600 8.327.40G Fifth Avenue....! German Exch. ..I ! Germania •J. S. Nat Lincoln Nat ] Total 131.409 342.3)0 102.500 137.409 6-8,000 879.400 206.100 593.200 24,4.90 45,000 1.015 3 )6 90-1.000 890,000 1.547.390 2.53S 3 iC 99,900 15*,009 7,435.230 833 3;X' 7.2*6.700 3.306.400 S41.9)0 2,5 ‘ S.Ooo 23»),900 1,178,6.90 385.100 411.0)0 2.250,000 96.800 245.9i)0 172,(;m 3.0.-2.uo<, 9.-53,000 1.983.*00 2,493.1(90 031,700 91.5.X) 2.472.200 2-5.100 89.0,> 254.00O 190,000 1*0,100 1.79-J.50C 2.598,0,),'. 450 0,96 448 « w 41W.IP0 2.025.200 2*2.(((K> 501.800 8.768.01)0 18.217.1(90 1H,019.2(X 1,431.300 1.479.900 834.2(K 15 872,000 8.531.000 3.674.000 5.129.9 »0 161.001 297,000 1.910.500 2 337 690 2.847.300 2.405,00C 2.3 ) 1.000 4.820.400 178.600 5.707.7ijG 2.156.500 1.555.700 33.990 579.900 3.399.000 17.6:8.600 15.390.400 1.493.000 1.555.500 1.048.300 14.ba2.70C 8,012.000 3.174.0-K) 5,712,7oC 13.125.000 4,430,400 3.351,4 ‘P 731.1(90 83.4 oti 174.900 111.6,90 270,s00 25.8 0 194.8 '(•■ 890.0)0 3,144.600 1.215.000 677.000 928.000 82i.0,)() 852.290 807.100 970,9 K) 105.300, 703.900 2.836,590 550,3 )0 155.700 232.0190 5.629.500 . 1,393.000 1.847.200 1,7)36.900 2.520.300 4.729 800 1.867.900 19.8-90 22 MOO 66,700 1,230,^00 54,200 800,000 1,048,0.-0 165.700 154,600 1.563.200 - 732.4)0 269,306 450,000 8.75-1.400 4.800 669,200 O.l-O.BOO 266.100 1,317,100 45.0C0 225.000 809,900 297.006 90,000 600.000 443 390 033.000 5.b89 2,90 1.050,000 1.614.100 14 235.0,90 541.7. ( 49.10 440.0K 165.80- 916.400 331.HOC 58 6 X) 090 45,000 5,400 2.6' 2.-*00 196.069 464,000 1,12*5 1.713.400 269 906 220 300 2,126.8i)0 180,0C0 2.112.100, 5 806 6i)01 1.926 5 91,800 0) 1,738.4 0; 1,928 3 (t! 4,623.100! 449,00*9 45,000 1,117,2 ))ii 60.962,700 314,495.100 50,403.6-90 21,613,60' '86,181.599 18 9 )R,500 following returns of previous week the totals for two weeks are Specie. L. Tenders. Deposits. * i * Dec. *2 447.400 Inc. 103.700 : Sept. 31....319.397.000 4S.42J.000 21,043,800 233,628,900 7....314.495,100 50,103.600 21.613,6)0 233.J81.500 Oct. Boston . 0,. are Loans. * Specie. & 118,311.900 146,573.200 6,319/00 3/47,300 68,841,100 (5,*05,000 3/14,800 88,518,3)0 1 deluding tiie item “ Circulation. Ajj. Oiear * * 18.799.800 1011.393.337 18.908,509 1124.3)0.217 the totals of the Bimoa.banks Banks.—Following L. Tenders. $ follows: are as Dec. $4.90’,900 1 Net deposits Inc. 1.980.600 1 Circulation Dec. 33.20C 1 Loans. t 1S>2. * 2.600 523.090 321.700 2.7,0,90 91.700 191.000 2.-3 100 1.746.300 Legal tenders ' 281.7-90 7si, »oe 243,400 123.000 5)4.5.90 4..300.'KK> Specie ** 2,911 00!! 2.140 8*> 1.466.100 b 0.000 1,023,7,jQ 2.542.700 1.14 7,000 3 229.200 9.9:4.000 1 l.O.i 4.800 3.955.7(H) 5.O80.200 2.180 2;>j 2.548 3(K 8.382,liX 3.256.500 796.800 103.600’ 207.3-90 Loans and discounts 1882. Oct. 2 800,066 14,957,400 729.400 300,000 100,000 200,000 200,000 500,000 Tae deviations from The 2.000 14.400 267,6)0 5.383.200 6.004.600 2.-08,500 5.447.80C 12.762.000 200,000 750,000 1,100 8.149.1100 6.394.2)0 1.503.000 1.291.400 321.700 197.900 6H4 800 1,596.000 17,5*4.690 2.552.300 250,000 6/38 500 140.300 10 860,000 6.-26.000 2.867.300 188.300 I3.6i9.oon 400,000 1,500,000 5,5^6,200 576,6fK.i 377.500 468.300 335.600 277.000 126.000 1,094.600 3.244.500 5,833.000 65.000 119.390 3.6*3.500 4.281.500 1.51-8,300 Park 2,000,000 Wall St. Nation’l 500,000 North River 240,000 East River 250,000 Fourth National. 3,200,000 Central Nat.; 2,000,000 Second Nation’l 300,000 Ninth National.. 750, OOf First National.. 500,000 Third National.. 1,000,000 N. Y. Nat. Exch..! 800,000 Bowery National N. YorkCounty.. lerm’n American Chase National.. 748.900 tion. I 8 390,000 725.000 515.000 608,000 1,105,<>00 233.800 653.200 128.000 360.000 813,000 1,890,500 261.300 293.800 l4.801.30G 3,270,800 300.000 Importers’ & Tr.. . Phila.A EeadinDo Coal A Ir. Kiehm.A Ihmv. St. L.Alt'. A T.H. Do (brehs.) St. L. Ft. rt. A \\. St.L.Iron Ml. AS St.L.ASan Fran. St. Paul it 1 )ni.. St. P. Miun.A M. Scioto Valley... §So. P to. Cal... 3 H> So. I >i v. So. Pac. of Ar... So. Pac. of N. M. South Carolina. Texas A Pueitie. Tol. Del. A Burl. ... Irving 305. IOC 1 1 2,00.6 Sept 4,320.757 ] 150.090] 18 ',744 70.42 J *‘\nron 309.729 2,091,101] 1,699.0 L: 63.3 54,50.:] Norfolk A West August.... Northern (Vnt.. Augusr Northern Pacitii i st wk Oct. Ohio Central It ii wk Sen Ohio Soul hern Ith wk Sep 1,828,859 1,684,960 1,607,974' 1,422,146 115,041;i 59,937! Cent.. M wk Sept Mil.L.Sh.A West IstwkOet. Minn. A St. Louis 1st wk Aug! Mo. Kan. A Tex. 1st wkOct. Missouri Pacific. 1st wk Oct. Mobile A Ohio.. ScptembT 83,9501 3,610,417] 2,901,34(5 957,260! 836,786 73.3 15. HannibalA St Jo 1st wk Oct. Hous.RAW.Tex July Illinois Cen.(111.nSeptemb’r. Ho (Iowa) SeptembT.) Ind.Bloorn.A W.jlthwk Sep Infc. A Gt. North.! IstwkOet. SeplombT. A Gull 1th Avk Sep L. Erie A West’]) 4th wk Sen. L. R. A FL8mith Soptemb’r., E.Rk.M. Riv.AT. Septemb’r. j Eong IsliimL... 1st wk Oct.j Loufsv.A Nashv 1st wk Oct J Louis. N. A A (Ti. August ...i Mar.Hough.A O 120,292' 158.43(3 227,740. 47,023) Gr.Bay W.&St.P. 1th wk Sep GulfColAS.ui.Ff SeptembT City 116.223! 125,(572; 1(58,28." j 228.419; j Inly Evansv. cv T. II. SeptembT Flint A I’. Afari].[ Ith wk Sep; Gal.liar\ASan a! August i Grand Trunk !8e.pt. 16 ..! 5,466,704 581,069 i 84,012 1 1,210 157,390! 0.719 47.27.5l 27,480' 3L5,9 0| 78,21 lj TI 54.261! ] 2.078.390 13,160,850 1,193,008 1,120.510 367,610 Mechanics’. 2,000,000 2,000,000 1,200,000 3,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 600,000 300,000 1,000,000 1,000.000 800,000 200,000 200,000 600,000 300,000 800, OOO 5,000,00!) 5,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 422,700 1.500,000 450,000 200,000 700,000 1,000,000 500,01 K) 3,000.000 600.000 500,000 500,000 500,000 500,000 1,000,000 l,000,0i;0 * 1,7'2,000 76*,MX) 925,200 485,000 429.400 8.633.000 7.261,000 6.810,800 7.5 .0.000 4.K 6.800 9.0S2.700 3,305,000 6.6<«.300 2.KS1.000 1.7 1.200 2,000,000 2,050,000 New York Manhattan Co Merchants Circula¬ other than U. S. Tenders. « Union America Phoenix , 12,692) Net dep’ts Legal Specie. 425,815 368,018) 14.609,000 12,378,556 521,843) 17,853,076! 16.155,439 15,16")' 119,7 41 i Loans and discounts. 8,559.318 9(5,878! 47,169; 2.499,302| Chesap. & Ohio. IstwkOet.! 218,161! 185,174; 5.818.4*4] Chicago * Alton 4th wk Sep Chic. Bur. A Q..| August 2,086.85812,173.9 15-12,867,479 1. III util U'lr Si>n, da a.ri6; 3rA 1 30A flrS3 35,63 44.456, Chic. A East. Ill.]4th 51 1,305,653 wk Sept 34.962! Cliic.A Gr.TnniK Wk. Oct. 7] 1,592,503 51,269} 503.000 Capital. 473.017 18,983,619 17.063,092 Central l)et. Ban. A No..] Ith wk Sep Duh. A Sioux C list wkOct. Eastern iSeptemb’r ■ E.Tenn.Va AGa 1st wkOct.i Eliz. Lex. A B.S August j Average amount of Bank*. 68,187' 73,794 497.381 Ala.Gt.Southorn August.... Atch.Top.A S. Fe SeptembT. 1,302,535! 1,155,869! 10,412.198 91,422! 557,302 72.009, Buff. PittHb.&W.;Aagust 81,7 L3i 67.853' 1,976.033 Bur.Ced. R. A No. 4th wk Sep 8.411? Cairo A St. Louis 4th wk Sep 272.756 6,978j ContT.Br.Un.Pac.'lstwkOot j 20.747j 20,048! 631,657 Chic. Mil & St. P. 1st wkOct.l Chic. A Nortliw. IstwkOet Ch.St.P.Min.AO 1st wk Oct. CHii^*. A IV.Mich.i August : Cin.Ind.St L.AC !3 wks Sept; Cincinnati South! August i Clev.AkrouACoi; ttli wk Sep. Coluinb.AGreen.! 1st wk Oct ! Col. Hock. V.AT.; ith wk Sep Connotton Val. '2 wksSe.pt. Den v. A Rio G r J l st wk Oct.! Des M. A Ft. I>. ; till wk Sep New York City Banks.—The following statemnnt shows lha condition of the Associated Banks of New York City for the week ending at the commencement of business on Oab. 7: EARNINGS. Earnings Reported. [Vol. XXXV. Deposits.* Circulation. A<ju. Clea J $ f 61,570/63 83/83/13 3o.19J.400 3), <il,10J due to other banks.” Philadelphia Banks.—The totals of the Philadelphia ban^s are as follows: Loans. $ 79,185,913 73,05 <,583 1882 Oct. **2. 9 Deoosits. * L. Tenders. J A'jq. Clea Circulation. " * 18,067,216 70,519,453 9,6:0/51 17,331,512 60, >15,929 9,711,3 4 ) . * 60,054,683 67.908,5)4 Unlisted Securities.—Following are quoted at 33 New Street: Bid. Am. Pc-nsac. A At. stock Do ex bds. and si’k*121-2 Bust. II. AE., newHt’k ’8 Do old *2 Buff.N.Y.A Phila. sub.s. Continent’! Cons..Sop c Cal.AC.C’ual AD’ck pf Do 20 .... com Dcnv. A N. Orleans... 35 Dell.A R. G. R’y cons.. IJu1^ Dei: v\c R. G. W. bonds Do stock •Edison Electric L. Co - Ind.Dcc.A3p.com... Do 1J8 5 Is,(is,fund Iin;-. Co., ex. 85 35 71 500 Tbi new 43 *2 Intm nat. Mex. Nat. bonds x5Gq Do stock. I o Mid. Mil. of N.J. stock. in Do A homls.... 7 Do B bonds.... 4 ]4 Mich. AO. subs. 30 p.c N. Y. Cli. A St.L. eiptip N.Y. L.A W .5 p.c. stlc.. 83 Do 1st mort 100 N. Y. A Scran, cx-priv N Y. W.Sh.A B.Sp.c.bds Do ex-Jan. ’83 ep. (jl\ X. J. Southern "North River Const. Co. 75 Out. AW. subs., 35 p.c. 61 Oregon Imp. Co. 1stm. 00 Do stock 82 Or-\g. Sh-L.sul9s.70 p.c L)o subs. $10,000 block ex 4 0 :U 57 8) 14\ p. c Do 100 p. ct Ohio C. Riv.D. lsts Do River incomes. Pensac. A Atlau. bds.. 00% 61 IS 65 31 .... Rich.A Al.AO. C.subs. and ex bds. A stck Rich. A Dan. ext. subs. 45 Do deb. subs., $2250.115 Selma 11. A D. lsts,st’pd 1 Do clean Do 2d M.stamp. 1 Do 2d M., clean. it Do inc.inortg. bds. •*8 St. Jo. A West, stock.. St. Paul rights 'liifl 75 Tex. A Col.Imp.,60 p.c. 05 Tol. Cin. A St. L. lsrs. 64 Do income bonds 15 Do stock 1312 95 U. S. Electric Light Vicksl). AMeiV'-om.st’k Free List. American Elec. Light. AH.A P/jlks.,30p„c.... 3% Atlantic A Gt. We/t... 2% Do prof Do 3d mort.. 1112 Brush tliumin’g Co ... Chic. A Can. So. bonds. 35 Dcs M. A Ft. Dodge pf. Do Do stock. Kan. A Neb. 1st mort. 60*' 2d M. 20 Do Lebanon Springs 1st.. 7*4 N.Y.AGr.L.2d ino.bds. N. Y. A O. Iron A Steel 1st mort. bds Do Do stock. ii* * Pitts. A Western St. Jo. A Pacitic 1st M. 60 23 Do 2ds Wiscou. Cent. com.... 18 . 105 102 85 . 62 14 80 ■ 65 110 4 S5 01 014 614 ls4 74 * Tre.ilium. t • ... .... 102 6i’»ia 19 16 .... 9 .... Oreg.1Traus-Con. bonds sues. 40 Asked. Bid. Asked. Railway Imp. Co. * *4* - 3 1214 ...» • 40 . ... .... .... .... .... .... 40 Assessment paid. October THE 1892.1 14, CHRONICLE. 427ap Par Jinrestnxeuts Northern Pacific IIR. Co.’s AND STATE, CITY AND CORPORATION FINANCES. Investors’ Supplement contains a complete exhibit of the of States and Cities and of the Stocks and Bonds f Railroads and other Companies. It is published on the last Saturday of every ether month—viz., February, April, June, The Funded Debt are and is furnished without extra subscribers of the Chronicle. Single copies October and December, August charge to all regular sold at $2 per copy. pjvf. stock Anglo-American Telegraph Co.’s stock and other miscellaneous securities, In small lots, consisting of telegraph and nuiroud stocks, bonds and scrip Value. $0,000 Mid, . ' Value... $8,050 54 1,102 Total (market value) $8,133,553 The foregoing list does not embrace the large amount of stocks held by this company in telegraph companies whose lines have been leased by this company, and the greater part, and in most instances the entire stocks, subsequently purchased, and the telegraph properties substantially the Western Union system. Among these may be enumerated $3,903,300 of the stock of the old American Company; $043,500 of the Atlantic & Ohio; $2,3S1,000 of the California State; $125,000 of the Chicago & Mississippi; $629,000 of the Franklin; $100,350 of the Illinois & Mississippi; $1,457,500 of the Pacific & Atlantic; “ merged*into $390,475 of the Southern & Atlantic; $119,750 of the Vermont At Boston; $530,550 of the Washington & New Orleans; $1,1)00,000 of the South Western; $204,400 of the Missouri At Western; and Western Union Telegraph Co. miscellaneous stocks of sundry smaller companies, amounting to over $1,000,000, all having a marketable value, and amounting (For the year ending Jane 30, 1SS2.) in the aggregate to over $12,550,000. The stocks of the United States Company, $0,000,000; the The annual report of the President for the fiscal year ending Jane 30, 1SS2, was presented at tlie annual meeting this week. Atlantic & Pacific, $14,000,000; and the American Union, The income imd expenses for the year are compared in the $10,000,000, and $5,000,000 bonds of the latter company, which were directly capitalized into this company, by the issue of its following table with the year 1880-81 18S0-81. 1881-P2. stock in exchange therefor, are, of course, not marketable $403,255 $127,-58 Surplus at beginning of year. assets, and therefore not included in either list. Over $3,000,000 14,060,806 ending Jane JO. 17,114,165 Gross revenues of the years ei of stock and $375,000 of bonds of the Mutual Union Telegraph $17,241,423 $14,164,061 Company, which are a marketable asset, are not included as Expenses (including leased line rentals and 8.420,165 such, because they were not finally paid for and taken into the 9,990,095 taxes) accounts of the company until after the expiration of the year $7,245,328 $6,043,896 for which this report is made. These together aggregate over sixty millions of stocks aud' Front which there was applied : bonds of other companies, including those that have been $4,798,473 $3,732,633 For dividends 427,091 427,455 absorbed by this company since the beginning of 1800, besidesFor interest on bonds 40,005 40,037 For sinking fund appropriations over ten millions expended in the direct construction of new lines. Of the securities, over eight millions in value, as per fore¬ $1,200,094 $5,265,662 $1,979,666 $1,410,546 going table, are classed as salable, and the proceeds thereof may Leaving a balance or be realized whenever they can be more profitably invested. For new property there was appropriated during the first “During the year, and dating from the first of January, quarter of the year $315,425, deducting which, leaves surplus 18S2, the company has entered into contracts with the Gold & June 30,1882, $1,(3G4,240. The revenues for the year 1831-2 {Stock Telegraph Company and with the International Ocean do not include the surplus funds in the treasury of the Ameri¬ Telegraph Company to manage and operate the lit.es, property can Cable Company, which were ,taken over with the lease of and business of those companies fora term of ninety-nine years, that company, subject to certain unadjusted liabilities, which guaranteeing to the stockholders quarterly dividends at the have not been fully ascertained. rate of six per cent per annum, and being entitled to all the “The management has determined, as published in the quar¬ revenues. These agreements are substantially, but not strictly, terly statement of March, 1882, that from October 1, 1881, all in the form of leases.” The earnings of these companies f-.r >ix outlays for construction and investments in new property which months and of the two American cables one month of 1832 were included in the Western Union earnings, assisting to sweii the go into the plant shall be provided for out of surplus assets in the treasury other than the cash surplus of current earnings. amount beyond the earnings of 1881. As no sales of any part of such surplus assets have been made, STATISTICS. there has been advanced as a loan to the account of construc¬ The following table exhibits the amount of lines operated, tion and purchases, to meet the outlay for these objects during number of offices, number of messages sent, receipts and profits the remainder of the year, $835,67(5 from the cash surplus as for each year since 1806: above stated. It has long been the established policy of No. of Mes Net Miles of Miles of No. of English corporations, founded on sound principles, to provide Otlices. sages Sent Wire. Line. Years. Receipts. Receipts. for extensions of the plant with additional capitalization in 8 1865-66 $ 75,686 2,250 37,380 5,879,282 6,568,025 2,024,013 85,291 2,565 stock or bonds, leaving all the net revenues above current 1866-67 46,270 ANNUAL REPORTS. “ “ . .. expenses, interest and sinking fund, applicable to dividends. But the surplus assets of the company, in the form of marketa¬ ble securities in the treasury, beiDg more than sufficient to likely to be made for will not be necessary. This policy places the question of continuing at least the present rate of dividends beyond possible contingency, with a probable increase of this rate when the board shall deem it wise meet any constructions or purchases some years, additional capitalization to make such In a increase.” .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. showing the for sixteen years, Statement ” an exhibit is made “ General 1867-68 50,183 1868-69 52,099 54,109 1869-70 1870-71 56,032 1871-72 62,033 1872-73 65,757 1873-74 71,585 1874-75 72,833 1875-76 73,532 1876-77 76,955 1877-78 81,002 1878-79 82,987 1879-80 85,645 1880-81. .110,340 and disbursements of the company from July 1, 1860, and making out a balance of $2,082,384 on June 30,*1882, over and above the scrip dividend of $15,520,590 in 1881. The report then says: “The assets which have been revenues purchased and paid for out of the net revenues, are the schedule at their cost value. stated in .. 1881-82. .131,060 97,594 104,584 112,191 121,151 137,190 154,472 175,735 3,219 3.607 3,972 4,606 5,237 5,740 6,188 6,404,595 7,934,933 7,004,560 7,310,018 9,157,616 10,646,077 12,444,499 14,456,832 16,329,256 17,153,710 7,138,737 6,565 7,072 7,500 8,014 8,534 9,077 327,171 10,737 29,215,509 32,500,000 12,068 38,842,247 179,496 183,832 194,323 206,202 211,566 233,534 3 i 7,637,448 8,457,005 0,333,018 0,262,653 0,56 1,574 10,031,083 0,812,352 0,861,355 18,729,567 21,158,941 23,918,891 25,070,106 10.060.640 12,782,804 14,303,543 17,114,165 2,041,710 2,7-4.8,SOL 2,227,065 2,532,661 2,730,232 2,757,062 2,506,020 3,220.157 3,300,509 3.1 10,127 3,551,542 4.800,110 5,833.037 5,008,270 7.1 LS,070 Louisville & Nashville. (For the year ending Jane 30, 1882.) and income account for the fiscal year were given the Chronicle of October 7, on page 403. The follow¬ in “The company has other large and valuable assets, which ing extracts from the report of the President and Secretary were not purchased and paid for at a fixed price, but which were taken over under contracts with the several companies absorbed should be read in connection with the figures already published: .LENGTH OF ROADS OPERATED. by lease, or amalgamation ; and which therefore had no specific cost value at wrhich they could be entered into the general “The last annual report stated the aggregate length of the accounts of the company. These are included in the following roads operated by this company June 3u, 1881, at 1,872 miles. list of marketable assets in the treasury of the company, In the month of July, 1881, the company purchased the entire June 30, 1882, with their marketable value as nearly as can be capital stock of the Louisville Cincinnati & Lexington Railway ascertained. Company, and on the first day of November, 1S81, took a con¬ Stocks or Bonds. Par Value. Mid. Value. veyance of its railway and other property, and incorpor¬ Gold & Telegraph Co.’s stock $1.0 i3,800 $1,866,018 ated the road and property, with its leased roads (in Internationl Ocean Telegraph Co.’s stock 1,558,176 1,023,100 American Speaking Telephone Co.’s stock 1,200,000 all 237 miles', into the Louisville & Nashville system. The 1,200,000 600,000 Owensboro & Nashville road (thirty-five miles', which this Metropolitan Telephone s.v Telegraph Co.’s st’k. 400,000 Gold & Stock Telegraph Co. of California, st’k. 431,250 287,500 Bell Telephone Co. of Philadelphia, stock 375,Ov o company had previously operated as a part of its system, was, 125,000 on the first of July, 1881, turned over to the Owensboro & Nash¬ 300,000 Philadelphia Local Telegraph Co.’s stock 300,000 Dominion Telegraph Co.’s stock 288,300 ville Railroad Company, in which company the Louisville & 288,300 Southern Hell Telephone & Telegraph Co.’s st’k 178.700 Nashville Railroad owns a large majority of the capital stock,, 178,700 118.600 14",GOO Telepli. & Telegr. Constr’n Co. or Detroit st’k. aud it is now operated by that company. On the first of Jan.,. Cent. Dist. & Print’g Telegr. Co. of Pittab. st’k 136,000 136,000 Am. Dist. 261,400 130.700 1882, the Cecilian branch (from Louisville south forty-six miles) Telegraph Co. of New York stock... Brooks Underground Telegraph Co.’s stock 1*5,000 was turned over to the Chesapeake Ohio & Southwestern Rail¬ 100,000 Gold A; Stock 65,300 65,300 —,.—Telegraph Co’s bonds way Company, under a lease for ninety-nine years, at an annual Boston District Telegraph Co’s stock 60.230 150,575 rental of $60,000, with the privilege to that company of pur¬ ' ■ 43,750 17,500 of stock ^°^B)ei'cial Telephone Co. Troy Bell Telephone Co. of Canada stock 37,200 chasing at $1,000,000. 37,200 Am. Dist. 27,000 45,000 Telegraph Co. of Baltimore stock... The length of the roads operated by this company June 30, 22.000 Commercial Telephone Co. of Albany stock... 8,8U0 Western Union Telegraph Co.’s stock 18S2, is as follows. 17,587 20,100 „ ‘ ' ‘ ‘ ' ---- .. -- The earnings THE 428 Miles. Owned in foe or through tlie ownership of the en¬ 17*30 110*30 33*80 Memphis division 259*10 Westport (narrow) Southeast A St-Louis Mobile A Montgomery New Orleans A Mobile Miles. | 5*00 j Pontchartrain. tire capital stock— L. A N. RK., main stem... Bardstown branch Lebanon-Knoxville br’nch Richmond branch Henderson division Pensacola di vision Pensacola A Selma div Louisville Cin & Lex Louisv. Harrod’s Creek A CHRONil’LF. Mobile A Montgomery Railway, 29,397 shares, $2,933,700* N n bile A Texas Railroad, 40,000 shares, $4,000,000: Southeast ASt Pnilivfiv QUOD ftOSO.OOO? P(mtnh!ii*t.p»tn D,, ;i.......1 * ^ •M>U1B tJ»0' 1,577*95 185*23 135*22 45*00 72*00 175*00 11*00 103*00 Operated under lease— Nashville & Dec... 119*09 South, div'. Cumber¬ land A Ohio 30*58 North, div. Cumber¬ land A Ohio 28*00 pledged, $18,529,700; total stocks and bonds value, $28,102,700. These trust bonds were sold at ninety cents net The discount of $1,000,000 has been charged Shelbyville branch. 19*00 Louisv. UR. Tr. Co. Glasgow branch 4*00 10*50 ... Selma div. Western RR. of Ala 50*00—201*17 South A North Ala. RR. 188*88 180*00 141*00 Total 2,023*00 Miles. Nashville Chattanooga A St. Louis Railway Owensboro A Nashville Railway Co 521 43 Georgia Railroad and dependencies, in which the Louisville A Nashville RR. Company is iuteiested Company of Georgia as joint lessee with the the surplus account of the company and for whose benefit the bonds were issued.’' FLOATING Total of all roads operated and controlled 3,233 changes in the bonded The mortgage debt of the company is as follows: Reported June 30, 1881.. Trust bonds, issue of March 1, 1882 L. C. A L. IP way Co.’s first mortgage bonds, assumed L. C. A L. R’way Co.’s second mortgage bonds, assumed.. L. C. A L. R’way Co.’s general mortgage bonds New Orleans A Mobile division second mortgage bonds... did provide in fuli for these necessary expenditures. The com¬ pany has therefore incurred additional floating debt, and there should be no d*day in improving the property and increasing not its earning capacity.” The il-aiing debt appears the various items have been ° in the general balance sheet and compared with 1881, as follows: 1380-81. sundry railroads and persons Rills payable Rills and pay-rolls unpaid Interest <luc .July 1 and Aug. 1 5927*8 343,943 33,947 430*716 36*877 991,810 887 0V) 1,205*707 $3,111,728 $3,980,329 GENERAL REMARKS. 10.000,000 $10,000 $327‘n“> 1,201,723 732,529 513,900 Total 04 Redeemed mortgage main office Redeemed Memphis Clarksville A Louisv. lids.. Redeemed New Orleans Mobile A Texas Com¬ pany, debentures Pledged with trustees as security in part of the trust bond issue of March 1, 1882 : Lebanon-Knoxville branch bonds Pensacola A Selina division bonds Louisville Cincinnati A Lexington railway bds. 1881-8° $1*18,089 Rack dividends $19,991,840 2,900,000 892,000 3,208,000 1,000,000 partly to those roads The company has made expenditures during the year for additions and improvements to the roads and equipment and advances to dependent companies. The bonds marketed Pensacola «v Atlantic Railroad Co Dividend due August 1. BONDED DEBT. the dollar partly against DEBT. Due 1,205 on iar “ Oil Total The following statement is made of the debt during the fiscal year: pledged’ “ The Louisville & Nashville RR. Company is interested in the following roads, as owner of a majority of the capital stock of the company operating the same, outside of its own system. Central RR [Voi.. xxxv; In regard to the year’s business the President says: “ The net results of the year did not come up to the expectations based on the first six months’ business, which justified a dividend of three per cent (paid February 10, 1882). The fixed charges of the last half-year were larger by $260,000 than for the first half, consequent on the additions made to the property to increase its earning capacity. In the spring of 1881 much business had 32,010 3,000,000 been lost for want of 1,500,000 fact, the equipment was largely increased, especially during the months of December, 1881, aud January, February and March, 1882. This company’s one half interest in the Georgia 1,248,000 3,208,000 — 8,988,010 $55,993,830 2,000,000 adequate equipment; and, in viewpf that railroad lease involved an outlay during the year of $110,000 excess of the revenue derived therefrom. This amount was in expended for betterments, which, it is believed, will increase the earning capacity of the road and return to the company the money so expended.” * * * “ While' the result of Total $58,117,778 has not been as satisfactory as was expected, there operations “The Louisville Cincinnati & Lexington Railway Company’s is nothing to excite distrust in the future. The Georgia Rail¬ bonds included in above statement were assumed by this com¬ road derives about sixty per cent of its revenue from local pany in consequence of its ownership of the entire capital sources. The Car trust liens. Louisville A Nashville Railroad Co Car trust liens, Louisv. Cincinnati A Lexington R’way Co. 123,918 country tributary to its line shows signs of healthy growth, and the reflex can not be otherwise than happy. The expenses for the year just closed have been unu¬ sually heavy. The exhibit submitted shows that expenditures as per last annual report, have been retired, and $1,000,000 six of every description other than for account of the ‘ Athen Ex¬ per cent bonds issued by the Louisville & Nashville Company tension’have been charged to operating expenses. The value in lieu thereof, secured by a second mortgage on the New of improvements, or raGwr 'betterments, made during the year, Orleans A Mobile road. amount to $207,370. This sum, plus the cash value of material Besides the above additions to the funded debt of the com¬ on hand, increases the amount to $365,395. If the value of pany $2,000,000 car-trust certificates have been issued, bearing date Apfil 1, 1882, and maturing from 1883 to 1889. These car- additions made -and material on hand be considered proper assets, the result* of operations for the year just closed will trust bonds were executed and given in payment for a large show a profit on the j-a-p* instead of an apparent loss.” amount of rolling-stock lately purchased by tile company. In the tables They run through a period of seven years, payable in equal ber of miles published in the Chronicle last week, tlie num¬ operated at the. end of the fiscal year 18S1-S2 amounts semi-annually.” should have b -en “given as 2,023, instead of 3,233. The miles DEBT AND STOCK PER MILE. operated at tlie close of each of t he last four years, and the The mileage of roads owned by the Louisville & Nashville equipment of the c unpany, were as follows: Railroad Company, on which its bond and stock debt is based, 1 <73-80. 1878-79. 1 880-81. 1381-82. stock and property of that c unpany. The $3,000,000 debenture > of the New Orleans Mobile & Texas Railroad Company, as reorganized, outstanding June 30, 1881, “ “ is as follows Miles owned : Miles. Owned iu fee Owned in f<*e (nor completed) Owned outright, through capital stock f)(»l * _ <> > 729 Miles le.i H 'i. .vc TotaToncrated ....... Locomotives Pass., umii, e\p. e;cs.. 9UG s-O 312 390 " 1.138 434 1,578 450 972 1,-4 > 1,872 2,028 18(> oq 0 367 112 212 31 1 2 15 274 9,592 5,50 S 7,35 L 1,718. Freight and all piher c: U-*. 3,311 ! J'ev i/ii.'e. In conclusion the President- remarks: “Besides thy amounts Total capital stock Total mortgage debt $1 8.133.513—$10,555 58,117.778- 33*82J Total yl"<*;< and bond debt $79.25 ] ,*2'jl—$ 1J expended in tlm purchase of the Louisville Cincinnati & Lexingt«.»u'Railway, and the cons!ni.e‘i>-n of the Lebanon-Knoxville ,3^ [ branch extension and the Madisnm ille branch, large expendi¬ tures have be**n made during tim year for steel rails, locomotive reported June30,1 -SI, the company had treasury unmarketed, as stated in the last annual rep >rt $1,500,000 Lebanon-Knoxville branch bonds and $1,248,000 Pen¬ engines, freight cars, pa-songm* (*i*aehes,, depots, wharves, terminal facilities, etc,” * '**' '■* “ Rhe stockholders should, however, remember that wlmu the large purchases of the rail¬ roads and capital '-Rock <4 other c-unpauK-s were made in 1879, 1880 and 1881, this company ha 1 but little cash capital, and •the purchases were .hence made on credit, the roads purchased TRUST BONDS. “Of the bond issues in its sacola A',Selma division bonds. On November 1, 1881.it issued . “ Bern(Is— 1,5c() L. A N. IIR. Co., Lebanon A Knoxville Branch, ! $7,000,000 bonds, secured by general mortgage on its Louisville Cincinnati & Lexington railway, of which $3,792,000 bonds were retained by the trustee under the mortgage to retire tlm being at the time in had c .c.diri.-n; .owl that to pay for the Louisville Cincinnati & Lexington Railway Company’s first and property purchased and to pul. the roads in proper shape for second mm tgage issues, and $3,208,000 of bonds remained in active business mires'-arily requir.-d large outlays of money. But in view <<f the growing piMsperby of the country at. large, the company’s treasury to be marketed. Finding it impossible and in tlie depressed condition of the market forsccuiifies especially of the rapid development of the vast resources, through¬ mineral and agricultural, of the country through which our out the year to market any of these bonds at satisfactory lines their connections immediately pass, we are confident and prices, the company negotiated an issue of $10,000,000 trusr of a successful future for our* bonds, pledging as security therefor the following bonds and company; and for the profitable stocks, in which those above referred to will be found included, results of the fiscal year 1882-83 we have abundant promise in the excellent crops, especially in the Southern country, where to wit: our interests-chiefly lie.”* $l,50o,<; ex era 1. i: O00y 1.2'4s L. A N. HR. Co.. Pensacola A Selma Division, $1,218,900; 2,(x7 L. A N. RR. Go,, Mobile A Mou! yomery Division, $2,077.000;' 3,208 J.. A N. RR. Co., Louisv. ( in. A Lex. Railway, $3,208,000; 1.000 Assets— Pensaftola A Atlantic, $1,030.000; total bonds pie<lyeil, $9,033,000. Road,e<iui]>mynhAc. NY* ef:s. I .on. Gin. A Lex. IL’y Co. - 15,000-shares preferred, $’ .590,- Timber a: quar. hinds 000; 10.000 shares common. $1,000,000; S. A X. Alabama R. R Co Stocks owned 20.000 shan s pretened. $2,000,000; 1,850 shares common, $135*000;' Bonds owned “ ONCE AT CLOSE ! 878-73. i * ! $ 1,805,(51 8 938,178 1,595,891 1.522,810 OF EACH FISCAL TEAR. 1879-80. 1880-31. $ 1 s81-8*2. $ 32,705,932 52,023,723 91,593,923 922,109 7,520.200 3,123,708 822,745 9,495,807 3,598,090 1,010,798 1,161,338 763,638 THE 14, 1882. j October 1878-70. 1879-80. 1880-81. $ $ $ Htks.ABcla.licUlint1’,l 650,233 507,047 acctH. rt’Cj iv. Materials, fuel, c^c.. Cash on ha*1" • • * • - funds ... Knox Bxlen. Bon.& 60,523 179,158 456,209 574,798 1,191,870 ,*1,238.517 579,836 1,276,041 329,343 501,121 676,159 317,769 469,639 1,114,041 'IMal assets LutbilUiM— Stock * • - B’ndslHeeSui' mi ni) Iyouisville bonds 31,468.518 47,297,529 71,310,274 8^,464,122 9,052,050 17,336,770 9,059,361 30,978,520 18,130,913 16,951.810 850,000 18,133,513 301,512 Bills payable........ All other dues Auc ts 1 #2,475 220,322 Interest Dividends .... Pcnsa. & At. Mort. on ...... ... building... Miscellaneous 1,261,723 931,515 321,839 34 •152,965 543,900 (io’ooVi 50* ()0() 40,000 32,230 29,949 3,644 3,909,759 1,123,970 Total liabilities— 31,468,518 47,297,529 71,310,274 Including balance due for trust {For the year ending June 30, 1SS2 ) From advance sheets of the annual report the following* abstract is made up. Mr. William Butler Duncan, President, remarks that “there is no floating debt beyond the current are liquidated on or be¬ The company has, fore the 15th of the month next succeeding. however, guaranteed an advance of $100,000 on account of the Cairo extension over and above the amount realized from the sale of the bonds issued for its construction; but said amount is amply covered by securities specifically held in trust. construction of this extension has cost somewhat The than more was expected, owing to the exceptionally bad weather through which the work was done, and the total cost in cash of the extension, with the terminal additions, was $040,000.’’ * * The road and equipment have been fully maintained. “The present indebtedness on account of the equipment thus far added by means of the car-trust is $50,405, which, with the in¬ terest thereon, will be met by monthly payments of $854, charged as paid in operating expenses. There will be added during the coming year eight mogul engines, contracted for with the Baldwin Locomotive Works, at an aggregate cost, de¬ livered, of $100,000, to be paid for by sixty monthly payments of $1,050 each, to be changed in like manner as paid in the operating expenses.’’ * * * “The receipts from sales of lands have somewhat increased, exceeding anv previous year, and amounting to $52,005, as compared with $49,336 last, year.” In conclusion, Mr. Duncan says: “While the results of the past year’s operations ha.ve been unsatisfactory, tlie causes therefor are simply explained by short crops and disastrous floods. Not¬ withstanding all these disadvantages, equalling in combined effect those of the memorable yellow fever year, the net revenue has largely exceeded the fixed charges, and we have reason, consequently, with increased facilities, to enter hopefully upon the new and unburdened .year.” HOAD AND EQUIPMENT. 1879-89. Totalmiles owned and operated.. Loceniotives Other 75 77) and express ears. r 40 4 3 1,072 1.131 80 cars 68 own; at to >; a a>>SI) FRSCAL RESULTS. Operations— Passengers 1879-80. carried. $398,217 1,772,9*1. $110,127 1,701.503 c 1 13,11 5 1 70.187 earnings $2,281,010 $2,377,817 $2,161,274 $126,906 $170,307 505,263 575,* 1.0 $187,950 Kurni'iys — Passenger.. Freight..; Mail, express, Ac gvo>s Optraliii'i exploit st’s— hiainfcnance Maintenance 1 oi’ way, &c:.c. of equipment’ rausportmion Taxes y. 339,910 598,1 89 20.51 L expenses * •Miscdlaiictnu; A *,318 08,014 Total $1,459,050 Kftt earnings Per cent-of op. exp. to earnings. - yearnings on mortgage bonds on incomes ■*Mnl fibhurserru-nt s Palanee CUN’URAL UA LANCE $824,966 63-39 65-71 550,25* 4 174,441 $1,602,145 $502,129 71 03* 1830 -S1. 1381-82. $82-1,966 $815,531 $502,129 $ \ 20,000 3.89,50 0 $ 120,000 40*,009 $456,000 $309,500 $828,000 $ur.$15,166 Dcf.$12,609 $562,000 OjK EACH 106,000 ftuv. 129 fash on iws^ts... hand...... ^Organiisatioii trust “ 2364) Hi 374,0.(46 160,431 • debt Total liabilities 59,039 582,873 110,797 153,041 96,144 ’8*4,590 $5,320,600 v 16,250,000 38,053 64,337 78,124 50,4Q6 108,925 153,041 106,351 $22,398,178 $22,416,669 $22, 170,437 Gull Colorado & Santa Fe Railway. (For the year ^ ending July 31, 1S82.) The number of miles of road operated July 31, 1882. was 43 3 Line purchased extending from Cleburne to Dallas, taken pos¬ session of August 1, J 882, to bo included in financial state¬ ment of the year 1883 53—433 Under construction, Alvin to Houston 23 Under construction, Eastern Branch 44— 67 Total mileage constructed and being constructed, exclusive of sidings.. 550 Which can be divided as follows; Main line. Galveston to Lampasas Fort Worth Division, Temple to Fort. Worth 274 128 Northeastern Division, Cleburne to Dallas Eastern Division, Somervillo to international A Gt. North. HR Houston iA*vision, Alvin to Houston 53 72 23 “ At the time this report is being written, the grading on the Eastern branch from Somerville to Navasota is about 'com¬ pleted (30 miles.) The iron bridge to cross the Brazos River is i n route, and the road to Navasota may be completed by Dec. 1. A large force is engaged in grading the Houston branch, and with favorable weather Houston will be reached by the middle of November. We have all the iron, fastenings, ties and other materials on hand and paid for to complete all the road we have under construction.” Tlie directors also determined to purchase the Chicago Tex^u & Mexican Central Railway, extending from Cleburne to D&9ra, a distance of fifty-three miles. The transaction was closed in tlie last days of July, but the entries do not appear in the books of the company until August. The cost of the road does not, therefore, appear in the present statement. Posses¬ sion of the road was taken Aug. 1, 1882. As there is a very large business centering in Houston, the a branch road to that point from directors determined to build Alvin, on the main line, a distance from Houston of about twenty-three miles. This will give Houston of about fifty-one miles. “ a line from Galveston to W« will also receive tion made with an increase of business from the connec¬ the Texas & St. Louis Railway at McGregor. This road extends miles wjre operated, all owned by the company, road from Areola to Houston having been dropped 1882. OI-HUATIONS FOR I 111 FISCAL Cross Earn nr as 327,755 325,851 297,185 40,423 ENDIN'(4 VF.AR CAHIU) WITH .JULY- SI, the leased March 15, 1832, AS COM- .18"0- 8 i. 1 8 MM. — Pnsscn.C'!- receipts Frokrlu receipts $201,289 978,5 15 Trier ease. $95,702 Mail service Lx message 19,159 12,10 > Telegraph receipts Miscellaneous cm nings. 8.6*19 333,111 13.049 5,3 >0 5.725 30.CS 9 20,749 $1,251,075 $173,638 Total $7 Opera In if/ Expenses— OoMom t,:nc t runsportation. $253,130 Nit! ear 26,527 76.280 } 3,779 $525,684 wings $102,156 1 IS. 6 'at Motive, power Maintenance of ca:s Maintenance of way Genetal espouse..-. Total FLSC4L VC A ! 1879,80. 18*0-81. 1 8 31-32. buildings, equip., Ac... i$20. l.->9,2 1 l $20,8 12,281 $ 20,812.231 807,44 7 Apartment 817,654 795,892 19.4 58 '9.080 9,080 owiaed, opst 1 19,0.27 71,052 128,201 n<i '• °unts-receivable .... iS Pi,i?8i)iT1^ 52,535 47,687 Car trust Profit end loss—General Do Special Do Band Departm’t. 9,026 1 879-SO. AT ClLOSS Assets— 58,782 295,5* ! ACCOUNT. , ^isburse.'mtoils—" interest J $1," 62,4*6 $815,351 • incoor: Realfit;s>_ interest .3 0,950,91 L 60,493 $5,320,600 16,250,000 59,104 67,854 • 1 1,312,655 364,130 Freight (tons) mileage $5,320,600 10,250,000 .. through one of tlie richest portions of the State, and we have made arrangements with its management to exchange ^business on a mutual satisfactory basis. The New York Texas & Mexican Railway, connecting with us at Rosen¬ berg, was opened for business to-Victoria on July 15, 1882, and 1881-82. 527 this will also give us increased business ” The report refers to the bad year 1881-2 as follows : 75 16 “Owing to the continued drouth, the wheat, corn and oat 1,227 crop yielded no surplus for transportation, and the cotton crop 80 for the whole State, as estimated for the year ending August 31, 1882, was 878,854 l*ales, as against the year ending August 31, 1381-82, 1881, 1,260,247 bales. The total number of bales reaching Gal¬ 305,952 12,109,125 veston for the year ending August 31, 1SS2, was 412,860 bales 5 15,*: 54 as against the year ending August 81,1881, 694,661 bales. Tlie 75,1 8 4,555 total receipts over our road for the year ending July 31, $ ! 0 J ,702 18s2, was 184,037 bales, as against July 31, 1881,2)8,187 bales.” 1,017,942 On the first of August, 1831,245 miles were operated, of J 1 1.610 * which 19 were leaded, and on the first of August, 1882, 430 10.408,635 332,552 80,100,7 65 ... Tolsu 1880-81. 259,6-0 253,900 Passenger mileage Freight (tons) moved -w. 506 - PftMeiurer, mail Freight cars 1880-31. 506 43,125 annual report of Mr. Geo. Sealy, the President, states 1,265,707 that the balance sheet does not cover the full value of assets of 30.000 “ The State of Texas owes us about 409,000 acres 36,877 the company. of land, and we have about 20,000 acres of land along our line 777,501 tf)f road, together with town sites at all stations, whicii belong *xo your company, and which are worth at least $150,000 more 82,464,122 than we have paid for them. bonds. of the month of June, which 50,406 24,039 The Mobile & Ohio. expenses on 1881-82. $22,398,178 $22,416,669 $22,170,437 Bills payable All other dues and accounts 430,716 33,947 3,492,004 Protit and loss Total. 850.000 605,000 592,729 1,711,301 485,222 account..... Income 896,313 1,049,291 74.0.8 19 17,535 Liabilities— Stock Funded debt <seo Supplement) Interest 18SO-81. 194,184 58,087,778 613.600 - U. S. Q. M. accounts Car trust “ A ” Miscellaneous items. 1,419,279 50,000 .... Debentures 14)55/750 70,000 jligcellaneoiis.' * 1,7133)53 1,257,973 trust Our 1879-80. $ 806,995 743,885 4 310.844 810,018 421,873 429 1831 82. 9 527 878 Bills A So. & No.Mn.KK.. Nash. A Dec. KK-Otlicr roa<l». - CHRONICLE. . $255,751 SUC is lies— Av, hunUK r of miles of road operated. Lo earnings. Proportion of expenses Tons of freight carr-ied Tons eyrried one mite Average rate per ton per mile .. 63,529 n 7,422 91,400 30,802 41,142 31 ,‘t 84 12,704 $310,955 $287,271 $440,117 $186,366 1880-1. 1881-2. 212 259,639 501 66 p. o. 3 17.1 76 26,329.142 39,561,051 2'5ets. 2'5ots* 67 p. c. CHRONICLE, THE 430 Number of passengers carried.... Passengers carried one mile Revenue per passenger per mile Gross earnings per mile.... Operating expenses per mile mile 1880-1. 1881-2. 62,280 3,525,561 2\6cts. $3,007 15 109,000 6,095.190 3'3ets. $3,463 17 2,244 85 1,218 31 2,470 21 1,196 94 - Net earnings per INCOME ACCOUNT 1881-82. $140,117 Net earnings.. Payments from Income— Annual interest on bonded debt Rental of leased lines Insurance on company’s propo r Advertising payment of interest $291,900 13,453 13,091 39 12,895— 331,384 1(8,733 State, county and municipal taxes Balance surplus $140,117 GEN REAL BALANCE JULY 31, 1882. Dr. ] Cr. Cost of road, equip., &c.$9, 227,466 ' Capital stock j Bunded debt Real estate and right of 272,358 1 Pay rolls ami vouchers way , 71,9*2 : Bond coupons (outTelegraph line Material and stores 53, 500 ! standing) 80.140 i Sundry creditors Fuel 145,734 ! Connecting roads Bills receivable 4 Sundry accounts Balance due, by siation masters 214,143 | 32.283 Income account $-3,480,900 5,5o5,000 177,845 13,440 768,939 6,343 191,222 $10,143,781 45,872 i Cash $10,143,781 ! GENERAL INVESTMENT NEWS. Atlantic & Pacific —Four hundred and live miles of track west from Albuquerque have been finished. Only 159 miles intervene between the end of the track and the Colorado River, and of this 115 miles are wholly, and the balance partially, graded. The end of the Southern Pacific extension is within 160 miles of the west , [Vol, XXXV.- Tracklaying on the company’s Cincinnati & Georgia line wascompleted last week by filling the gap between Dallas, Ga and Hill’s Creek, 6% miles. Through trains began to run ovej the new line from Chattanooga to Atlanta, Macon and Bruns¬ wick, Oct. 9. The new line extends from Borne, Ga., through Atlanta to Macon, 161 miles, completing this company’s connection with its Macon & Brunswick read, and forming a line of 347 miles from Rome to Brunswick. From Chattanooga to Atlanta the company’s line now competes directly with the Western & At¬ lantic, and from Atlanta to Macon with the Central of Georgia. From Oct. 9 the Georgia division extends from Macon to Oolte¬ wah Junction and Cleveland, Tenn., and the northern end of the Alabama division is at Rome instead of Cleveland.—Pailroad Gazette. citizens contended that a finan¬ two per cent on the $6,000,001 unnecessarily expensive luxury. The Elizabeth City Debt.—The cial agent, who should receive debt, or $120,000, was an city authorities,however,have appointed Messis.Louis Fitzgerald and Stewart L. Woodfoid as financial agents, and it would seem desirable for the citizens to make diligent inquiries as to the services to be rendered for this fee of $120,0( 0, and whether any division of the money with other parties is to be made. It would also be well to ascertain whether there were not plenty of able and honest men in the State of New Jersey who would readily have attended to the business, and quite efficiently too. for $10,000. * Erie.—The Times reports that-judgment has been entered in favor of Henry A. Vatable and others against the New York Lake Erie & Western Railroad Company. The plaintiffs were holders of 300 shares of stock of the old Erie Railway Company. Prior to the sale of the franchises and property of that corpor¬ ation, under a judgment of foreclosure, the reorganization agreement was made by which the defendants as successors were bound to deliver its common stock in exchange for Erie bank of the river, and 40 miles of the 160 are graded. common stock and a payment in gold of $4 per share, with Baltimore & Ohio.—At the directors’ meeting of the Balti- interest from March, 1877." The plaintiffs applied to the New more & Ohio Railroad cash dividends of five per cent for the York Lake Erie & Western Railroad Company for the issuance half-year were unanimously declared on the stock of the Main to them of 300 shares of its common stock, offering in return Stem and Washington Branch, payable Nov. 1. President Garrett 300 shares of Erie stock and the sum of money provided for by presented a statement of the earnings of the main line and the agreement. Their request was denied on the ground that branches for September last, which showed a total of $1,759,291, the time for them to become parties to the agreement had as against $1,642,634 for the same month of the preceding expired by limitation. This plea was overruled by Judge year, being an increase of $116,657. President Garrett stated Lawrence, before whom the suit was tried in Supreme Court,. that after payment of five per cent cash dividends upon the Special Term, about a year ago; The findings of law and fact common stock more than $600,000 remained to be added to the in the case were not settled until last month, and the deeree surplus fund, which is not represented by stock or bonds, and was not signed until last Thursday. Messrs. Coudert Brothers which on the 30th of September, 1881, amounted to the grand appeared for the plaintiffs, and Messrs. Shipman, Barlow, total of $42,258,680. Larocque & McFarland for the defendant corporation. Carolina Cumberland Gap & Chicago.—A report from Georgia Railroad.—At Augusta, Ga., Oct. 10, at a meeting of Aiken, S. C., says that a consolidation under the name of the the directors of the Georgia Railroad Company, a resolution Carolina Cumberland Gap& Chicago Railroad has been effected was passed ordering the stock of the company to be taken off by the Atlantic & French Broad Valley road in South Carolina, tlie New York Stock Exchange. The rental of the road fora the Cumberland Railway of Kentucky, the Morristown Cum¬ half year—$300,000—was paid promptly by the lessees, the berland Gap & Ohio of Tennessee, and Morristown & Carolina Ry. Louisville & Nashville and Central railroad companies. Gen. Gov. Hagood, of South Carolina, is President, and a number of Alexander resigned from the directory of the Georgia Company prominent South and North Carolinans and Tennesseeans are-di¬ on account of his being President of the Central Company, and rectors. Authority was given for the immediate issuance of first State Treasurer Spear was elected to fill the vacancy. and second mortgage bonds, and stock certificates,which will be Louisville & Nashville.—The following communication printed at the earliest date practicable. Altogether the bonds from Mr. C. C. Baldwin, President of the Louisville & Nashville and stock to be issued will amount to $17,000,000. Headquar¬ ters will be established at Aiken. The construction party will Railroad Company, were sent to the N. Y. Stock Exchange: To the President of the yew York Stock Exchange: be the Atlantic & Northwestern Construction Company of New “Notice is hereby given that 30,800 shares of the capital stock of the York. The construction party agree to build 100 miles of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, being stock originally sub¬ road a year. scribed for by and issued to the city of Louisville under ordinance of said adopted Nov. 13, 1855, with, the stock dividends thereon, are Carson & Colorado.—This narrow-gauge road, which is al¬ now city active stock in the said company, the said city of Louisville having ready built from Mound House, Nevada (on the Virginiarand disposed of the same, and that the same will be registered on the books Truckee road, ten miles from Carson City), southward about of the transfer agency of this company in New York on and after Nov. 180 miles, is to be extended some 250 miles more to Mojave, It), 1882. l lie capital stock of this company, as now registered, adding such amount, is the sum of $21,213,513. on the Southern Pacific, thus opening up a great mining re¬ Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the stockholders of tlie gion on the east side of the Sierra Nevada. The road is owned Louisville & Nashvilie Railroad Company, held at the City of Louisville on the 4tli day of October, 1882. a resolution was adopted increasing by Senator Sharon and other men of means. the capital stock of the company from the sum of $21,213,513 to tlie Chicago Iowa & Dakota.—A dispatch to the St. Paul sum of $30,000,000; the object for which such increased stork is to be Pioneer-Press from Hampton, Iowa, says : “The railroad to be issued is to provide for the wants of the company by taking up out¬ debts of the company and for improvements and extensions of known as the Chicago Iowa & Dakota Railroad Company, which standing the property of the company. Such additional stock, as tlie same uiay is being so cautiously manipulated to completion by Judge Pot¬ be disposed of. to the amouut of $3,786,487, making the capital stock ter, who was formerly President of the Iowa Central, has been as registered $25,000,000, will he registered on the books of tlie ventilated but little. This road seems to be the centre link to transfer agency of the company at New York on and alter Nov. HL 1862. No further issue of such increased stock will be made umu a chain that will develop into a line of considerable magnitude. further notice to the Stock Exchange, nor uniil the same shall nave At present the road is being built from Gilford, Hardin County, been first offered to the stockholders of the company.” to Forest City, a distance of eighty miles. The city of Louisville originally took 10,000, shares of theIt is being laid with sixty pound steel lails, and its roadbed and bridges signify L. & N. stock for its advance of money towards building that something more than a local line. The track is already laid to road. Scrip dividends of 10, 40 and 100 per cent increased the Eldora.” 10,000 shares to 30,800. This stock was never reported in state¬ Deliver & Rio Grande.—President Palmer telegraphed on ments of the company’s capital, and the company refused to Tuesday from the end of the track, Western Colorado : “I have allow the city to vote on it. An act was passed by the last ridden here over the works frcmtbe end of our track in Utah. Legislature of Kentucky authorizing the company to pay <4* The entire gap of about 200 miles is lined with men and teams the city loan in government bonds, and take up this stock, finishing up. Three thousand men are employed. The Den¬ which they have done, and now make application to list it* ver & Rio Grande tr^ck will reach the Utah border in two The company’s capita! stock has in fact been $21,213.513, so months. This completes the Denver & Rio Grande portion. that the* new. stock authorized .Oct-4 was really7 $S,7b6,4S7» The Denver & Rio Grande Western in Utah will finish earth¬ instead of $12,000,000. work about the same time, leaving then only 90 miles of track¬ Massachusetts Central.—The Boston Advertiser says : ‘‘Ihe laying to be done, which will continue at the rate at which directors of the Massachusetts Central Railroad expect to have rails are manufactured for us by the Colorado Coal & Iron Co., their statement to the bondholders finished in the course of two namely, a mile and a half daily.” weeks. The condition of affairs has, it is said, been found to do Fast Tennessee Virginia & Georgia.—Track is now all laid very much worse than at first supposed. The line ^etweea on the cross branch from Ooltewah, Tenn., to Red Clay, 11% Boston and Jefferson, which was turned over by the contiacto miles. cThis b.ranch has been built to give the new line to to the company as fully completed, needs five new bridges an -Atlanta and Brunswick a direct connection with Chattanooga. other improvements, which will cost in the aggregate fan/ “ “ Ocro*3^ 1HE 14, 18^2 J Excessive land damages, legal controversies and ©ther causes will, in all probability, still farther swell this sum. The directors have already advanced $15,000 to keep the road in ©Deration, and are not inclined to do any more. It is now evi¬ dent that the crisis in the company’s affairs is near at hand, and that it must very soon be determined whether the road shall go under the sheriff’s hammer, or be continued under the '$100 000. present management, with ample funds to complete it and place paying basis.” Memphis & Charleston.—The road will soon be transferred to the stockholders. The first mortgage bonds in the company’s treasury have been sold at 120, and the proceeds have been more than sufficient to pay the bonus of $400,000 to the East Tennessee Company. The new stock will be taken by a pool, in ease the stockholders do not avail themselves of the privilege. The road will begin operations under the stockholders, with no floating debt, and with a surplus in the treasury.—Kiernan's. Milwaukee Lake Shore & Western.—The report of this company for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1882, submitted to the Railroad Commissioner of Wisconsin, makes the following exhibits for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1832, and Juue 30, it on a 1881: Total income Operating expenses Excess of income Taxes Net earn imrs Interest on debt i- - - Balance for tlie year The ; 1832. 1381. $303,270 $491,963 480,409 316,861) 4,9)5 311,955 174,901 352,246 139,7 4 2,757 136,946 121,963 $137,054 $11,932 following is the general balance sheet at the close of the fiscal year: Assets— Cost of road and equipment $10,431,925 Capital stock (preferred) in trust Material and fuel on hand 55,749 89,717 9,929 Beal estate. Cash in Milwaukee '. Dae from agents, conductors, express company and United States Government Vieux Desert and Lake Superior Railway Total Liabilities — 20,443 26.261 20,577 $10,654,603 V Capital stock Funded debt V Income bonds : Dae for construction Northern Division and Pelican branch Other liabilities, including unpaid vouchers, pay-roll, etc... Income account Total $6,000,000 3,348,<>00 500,000 228,336 211,619 366,617 $10,651,603 Mobile k Girard.—For the purpose of extending this railToad from Troy to Elba, in Coffee County, Ala., the stock¬ holders have voted to issue $250,000 bonds. New York Slock Exchange.—The governors of tlie Stock Exchange have admitted to dealings at the Board the following additional securities t Michigan Central Railroad.—An additional issue of $2,030,000 bonds secured by the consolidated mortgage of May 7, 1892, under which mortgage there lias been before issued $8,000,003. The bonds now listed bear 5 per cent, interest, and are due May 1, 1002, aud will be known as “Consolidated 5s.” Fort Worth & Denver Railroad.—An additional $1,950,000 first mortgage bonds and an additional \$1,400,000 capital stock, in shares of $190 each. Oregon Short Line Railroad.—An additional $2,000,006 first mortgage 6 per cent bonds and $4,000,000 capital stock in shares of $100 each. Broolvn Batii & Coney Island Railroad.—$200,000 first.mortgage 6 per cent bonds, due August 1, 1912. Columbus Chicago & Indiana Central Railroad —Purchasing Committee’s receipts, to he issued in exchange for outstanding first mortgage bonds, $1,019,000; for Union Trust Company .certificates, $11,859,000 ; for income and second mortgage (convertible into iucome) bouds, $10,00 j,000; aud for common stock, $15,000,009. New York begun to Susquehanna & Western.—This company has through passenger trains over the new exten¬ Two Bridges, N. J., on the old main line to Middle- run sion from town, to Gravel Place, Pa., where connection is made with the Delaware Lackawanna & Western road. The distance from Two Bridges to Gravel Place is 50 miles. the road will have a It is expected that considerable coal traffic. Northern Pacific.—The Northern Pacific has purchased from the St. Paul Minneapolis & Manitoba Company the line from St. Cloud to St. Paul, thus securing a direct and independent route to St. Paul and Minneapolis. In return the Northern Pacific cedes to the Manitoba Company the Casselton branch, leaving that •traffic. company in undisturbed possession of the Manitoba Ohio & M:ssi pi.—The following is the' exhibit for Sept, filed in the United States Court by Receiver Douglass: receipts. <• 1881. Pash hand September 1 ‘Lash from station agents ^ on 745 .$573,051 $627,259 .$255,465 $23,739 . . American Express cos Total/. disbursements. vouchers previous to November 18, 18 76 vouchers subsequent to November 1 /, 1876.. 4.48,773 6.806 , i 1882. $49,788 516,478 11,971 47,419 1,603 from'conductors individuals, railroads, etc cash £Iom from Adams aud v $86,603 . 30,121 . -Pay-rolls.. Arrear « ges cash on hand October Total , holders pose of 1 . . 128,112 20 1,519 187,653 1,143 245,821 $373,051 $627,259 4,854 151,702 Cincinnati, Oct. 12, the annual meeting of. the stock¬ of the Ohio & Mississippi Railroad was held for thepurelecting three directors. There was no opposition to & CHRONICLE 431 the following, who were elected: William McClintick, Chillicothe, Ohio ; John M. Douglass, Chicago, and Charles E. Beecher, Cincinnati. President McClintick submitted his annual report, briefly reviewing the action in reference to reorganisa¬ tion, which was for the issuance of 5 per cent coupon bonds to the amount of $16,000,009, secured by mortgage. This action was approved at a stockholders’ meeting April 6, 1882, at Flora, Ill., by a large majority, but the actual issue of stock and execution of the mortgage was deferred untii after the present meeting. The company is now ready to take this step, and it . will remain for the board to determine the time and manner of issuing the bonds and placing them on the market. The report of the earnings and expenses for the year ending Dec. 31, 1881, shows the net earnings to have been $3,959,053. For want of a quorum no action was taken on the issuance of bonds. Palisades RR. (N. J.)—A meeting to promote the construction of a railroad along the Palisades was held this week. The road is projected from the New Jersey State line to either Weehaw- ken or Hoboken. If the latter terminus is selected it will be about twenty miles long; if the former it will be sixteen and one half miles in length. The road will be of a single track of the standard gauge. Its cost lias been estimated at about $300,000. It will be built by the Palisades Railroad Company, which was organized a year ago under a special charter, with a capital stock of $500,000. The directors are John S. Lyle, William Walter Phelps, S. V. White, George S. Coe, W. S. Opdyke, William 0. Allison, H. W. Banks, E. A. Brlnkerhoff and William B. Dana. Mr. Dana is President, Mr. Coe is Treas¬ urer and Mr. Allison is Secretary. At the meeting in this city a considerable portion of the capital necessary to construct the proposed line was subscribed. A committee was appointed to solicit further subscriptions. Railroad Construction (New).—The latest information of the completion of track on new railroads is as follows : Atlantic Sc Pacific.—Extended from Williams, Arizona, west 23 miles. The Central Division is extended from Claremore, lnd. Tor., west by south to Tulsa, 33 miles. Brighthopo.—Extended from Chester, Va., east to Bermuda, 10 miles. Chicago Milwaukee & St. Paul.—the Hastings Sc Dakota Division is extended from Millbank, Dale., west 10 miles. The Okoboji Branch is completed from Spencer, la., north to the Okoboji Lakes, 17 miles. On the James River Branch track is laid from Mitchell, Dak., north to Letcher, 15 miles. Chicago Sc Northwestern.—The Watertown Branch is extended from Clark Centre, Dak., west to Redllold, 43 mile3. I) *nvc,r Sr. Rio Grande.—The Blue River Branch is extended from Wheeler, Col., to Frisco, 7^ Miles. The Utah Extension is extended west to Delta. Col., 5 miles. Gauge, 3 feet. Denver Sc Rio Grande Western.—Extended from Pleasant Valley, Utah, eastward 51 miles. Gauge, 3 feet. Last Tennessee Virginia & Georgia. —The Ooltiwali Branch is com¬ pleted from Ooltewah, Tenn., to Red Clay, 11*2 miles. The Cincinnati & Georgia line is completed by laying track between Dallas, Ga., aud Hill’s Creek, 6^ miles. Gauge. 5 feet. Galveston Harrisburg & San Antonio.—Extended westward to Pecos Crossing, Tex., 19 miles. Leavenworth Topeka Sc Southwestern.—Completed to a point fortytwo miles west by south from Leavenworth, Kan., an extension of 14 miles. Louisville Sc Nashville.—A branch is Ky., west to Providence, 16 miles. completed from MadisonviUe, New York Lake Erie Sc Western Coal Sc Railroad Co.—Road completed from Crawford Junction, Pa., southward to Johnsonburg, 29 92 miles. New York Susquehanna & Western. Extended from Warrington, N. J., to Gravel Place, l*a., 14 miles. Ottumwa Sc Kirkvillc—Completed from Ottumwa, la , northwest to Kirkville, 12 miles. Pemigewasset Valley.—Track laid from Plymouth, N. H., north to Mad Hiver, 5 miles. Pennsylvania.—The Sugar Camp Branch is completed from the Tyrone Division to Sugar Camp Mine, Pa., 33* miles. The Vance’s Mill Branch, is completed from the Redstone Branch to Vance’s Mill, 2*2 miles. Pittsburg Sc Western.—The Parker Division is extended from Butler, Pa., southwest to Baldridge, 7 miles. Gauge, 3 ft. Reno City Sc Eld red.—Completed from Eldred, Pa., south to Row City, 12 miles. Gauge, 3 ft. Savannah Florida Sc Western. -Track laid on the Florida Extension from Live Oak. Fla., south to Rowland’s Bluff, 24 miles. Gauge. 5 ft. Sioux City & Pacific.—The Nebraska division is extended from Thatch¬ er, Neb., westward to Valentine, 6 miles. Toledo Cincinnati A St. Louis.—Extended from Fillmore, Ill., wost to East Siioal Creek, 10 miles. Track laid between Stewardson, Ill., and Ramsay, 30 miles. Gauge 3 feet. Union Pacific.—The Grand Island & St. Paul branch is extended from St. Paul, Neb., northwest to North Loup, 27 miles. Utah Sc Northern.—Extended from Silver Bow Junction, Montana, north to Deer Lodge, 30 miles. Gmge, 3 feet. This is a total of 491 miles of new railroad, making 8,031 miles thus far this ye <r, against 5,340 miles reported at the corresponding time in 1881, 4,135 miles in 1880, 2,507 miles in 1879, 1,122 miles in 1878, 1,548 miles in 1877, 1,740 miles in 1876. 903 miles in 1875, 1,1 “0 miles 2,897 miles in lti73 and 5,147 miles in 1872.—Railroad in 1874, Gazelle. Sonora Railway.—Mr. C. C. Wheeler, General Manager of Topeka & Santa Fe, states that the Sonora Rail¬ way (Guayinas extension of the Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe) will be completed Nov. 1 next, and will be ready for business through to Guaymas shortly afterwards. About 175 miles of the Southern Pacific are being used by the new line. The com¬ pletion of this line will give the Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe a through route to the Gulf of California. Texas & St. Louis (Narrow-Gauge).—At a meeting of the stockholders of the Texas & St. Louis Narrow-Gauge Railroad, held in St. Louis, October 11, the proposition to increase the capital stock of the road in Missouri and Arkansas from $4,850,000 to $15,000,000 Whs unanimously adopted. —The Texas & St. Louis Railway Company in Missouri and Arkansas Construction Fund has called upon the subscribers for the final instalment of 10 per cent, payable on October 16 to the Central Trust Company of this city. Certificates are to be presented for indorsement, and the bonds appertaining to this instalment will be delivered by the Trust Company when, countersigned.- Notice will be given when the balance of the securities due subscribers are ready for delivery. the Atchison _ THE 132 CHRONICLE COTTON. IJItc Commercial jinxes. COMMERCIAL . EPITOME. Friday Night, Oct. 13,1882. autumn-like, giving an impulse to business that had begun to drag. The money market is easier, and exchange, though dull, is a little lirmer. At the The weather has become time there has been [Voi. XXXV. more check to Friday. I\ M., October 13, 1882. . The Movement of the Crop, as indicated by our telegrams from the South to-night, is given below. For the week ending this evening (Oct. 13) the total receipts have "reached 206,136 bales, against 179,883 bales last week, 136,479 bales the previous week and 77,223 bales three wreeks since ; making the total receipts since the 1st of September, 1882; 682,976 bales, against 795,643 bales for the same period of 1881, showing a decrease since September 1, 1882. of 112,667 bales. speculation in breadstuffs Mon. Sat. Tues. provisions, and a more liberal export movement is in pros¬ Wed. Thurs. Fri. Receipts at— Total pect. Therefore, the position of trade may be regarded as Galveston 2.823 6,006 5,117 4,788 10,557 3,629 32,950 much improved, with a good promise for the future. Indianola, &c. 815 815 There has been a generally firm tone to the provision market. New Orleans... 2,939 12,537 2,081 0,742 7.240 31,379 2,840 5,002 2,489 1,271 2,483 1,798 The speculation in lard has not been large, but for export the Mobile 4,049 17,092 Florida 196 106 movement has been satisfactory. To-day pork on the spot sold 8,630 Savannah 1,666 9,681 6,023 6,581 7,631 10,215 quite freely at $23 3750 for mess ; October options 401 Brunsw’k, See. 401 4,779 quoted $23@$23 25 ; November, $22 50@$22 75. The lard market Charleston 4,910 6,804 5,247 4,136 5,096 31,032 Pt. Royal, &c. 732 opened weak, but soon recovered on advices from the West; 732 539 829 705 092 1,209 718 Wilmington.... 4,692 prime Western sold on the spot at 13‘12%@13*20c., closing at the Moreh’d C.,&e 437 487 latter; refined for the Continent quoted at 13T2%c. ; South Norfolk 4,299 3,644 3,533 0,358 5,371 3,724 26,929 American, 13 50c.; for future delivery November was sold at 11,177 11,177 City Point,etc. 230 1252/^c.; December, ll*90@ll*97/l2C.; seller year, 11‘95@ New York 81 311 621 430 418 417 402 320 lT97%c.; January, 11 70@ll-77%c.; February, 1172%c.; March, Boston 2,608 118 118 ll'70@lla75c.; April. ll*75c.; May, 1167^@ll'77/^c. Bacon Baltimore 961 153 •40 805 40 Philadelp’a, &c. 2,002 was nominal at 14%@15e. for long clear. Beef hams dull at $17@$18. Beef rules quiet but steady at $23@$30 for extra Totals this week 21,231 49,519 27,136 29,132 32,664 46,454 206,136 City India mess. Butter is firm for the fine qualities, but low For comparison, we give the following table showing the week’s grades are plenty ar.d weak. Cheese was lowered to-day to 9% total receipts, the total since Sept.l. 1S82, and the stocks to-night, @12%c. for good to fancy. Tallow is firm at 8%c. for prime. and the same items for the corresponding periods of last year: Stearine quiet at 13%c. for Western and 13%c. for City. 1881. 1882. Stock. Receipts to The grocery market has shown few, if any, points of interest This Since Sep. Since Sep. Th is Ocl. 13. 1882.. 1881. Week. Week. 1, 1881. 1, 1882. during the week. Business has been slow and the general tend¬ ency of prices slightly downward, though no important changes Galveston 109,354 133,076 19,976 62,284 68,453 32,950 610 can be noted. 4.692 815 Indianola,&c. 6,351 To-day Bio coffee was quoted at 9c. for fair car¬ 183,146 72,471 151,260 101,653 49,804 goes, with small sales on that basis; mild grades received only a New Orleans... 34,379 Mobile 46,757 8,007 18,021 50,220 11,315 17,092 jobbing attention. Refining grades of molasses are nominal, Florida 307 Til 196 509 in the absence of sufficient offerings; 50-test Cuba quoted 30@ 8avannali 169,343 40,215 155,332 36,163 75,033 59,679 33c.; old crop New Orleans quoted 40@60c., and the new 55@ 662 2.870 401 Brunsw’k, &c 1,745 65c. Rice is steady at 2'60@2'62)£c. for Rangoon in bond. Charleston 101,401 31,032 110,174 24,910 50,366 52,966 29 Pt. Royal, &c. 732 150 10,150 1,092 4,659 Raw sugars were again dull and inclined to easiness; fair to 23,099 5,251 19,121 12,297 4,692 9,721 Wilmington.... good refining, 7%@7}<c.; 96-test centrifugal, 8%c.; refined 273 M’head C.,&c 487 1,056 1,403 steady and in fair demand; crushed, 9%c.; powdered, 9%@9%c.; Norfolk 93,813 26,929 65,008 £6,454 17,298 20,561 6,321 24,936 granulated, 9 3-16c.; staudard “A,” 8%c.; “off” A, 8%@8%c. 21,364 City Point, *Src 11,177 311 1,346 1,847 4,757 41,032 92,912 Kentucky tobacco remains very quiet; sales for the week are New York Boston 11,030 9,268 4,407 3,500 2,608 1,510 only 200 hhds., of which 175 for export and 75 for home con- Baltimore 118 1,091 4,965 11,899 2,239 5,981 sumption. Prices are quite nominal; lugs 6@7%c.; leaf 7%@12/J£e. Philadelp’a,&c. 2,002 893 10,744 5,113 2,481 3,722 Seedleaf continues in good demand, and sales for the week Total 206..13C 795,643 356,157 499,650 682,976 191.056 amount to 3,977 cases as follows: 1,600 cases 1881 crop Penn¬ In order that comparison may be made with other years, we sylvania, 6%@ 17c.; 200 cases 1880 crop do., 10@20c ; 700 cases give below the totals at leading ports tor six seasons 1881 crop Wisconsin Havana, 10@19c.; 101 cases 1881 crop Wis¬ 1882. 1881. 1877. 1880. 1878. 1879. consin seed, 12^c.; 826 cases 1880 crop State flats, 8%@14c.; 450 Receipts at— cases 1881 crop New England, 14@50c.; 100 cases 18S0 crop 2 4,802 20,592 Galvest’n.&e. 20,275 19,119 25,307 33,765 New Orleans. 42,541 49,864 29,792 41,612 34,379 16,933 Ohio, 4%@6%c ; also 450 bales Havana, 8S@$1 20. 14,849 13,689 17,092 11,315 15,783 3,527 Naval stores have been advanced by reduced stocks here and Mobile Savannah.... 36,163 40,215 26,392 33,272 39,344 35,918 stronger advices from the primary and foreign markets. Spirits Charl’st’n, etc 31,764 24,969 33,588 27,071 32,893 20,536 turpentine to-day was quoted at 51@5i%c.; strained to good Wilm’gt’n, &c 5,896 5,179 5,524 7,024 G,S92 5,796 strained rosins $1 92/<2@$l 95@$2. 17,681 42,662 32,775 30,633 33,106 27,834 Refined petroleum has Norfolk, &c.. same a and .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ' .... - .... . . . .... .... .... .... .... ■ .... .... .... * • ...... ...... ...... ’ » - - ' declined to 7%c. for 110 and 8%c. for 70 test, owing to lessened demands from exporters, caused by a small supply of tonnage. Crude certificates have had a good speculation, the sales averag¬ ing 6,000,000 bbls per day, and prices have been in the interest of holders; to-day the sales were at 96%@95%c., closing at95%@ 95%e.;- November options 96%c., December 9S%, January $1 00%, February $1 02%. Ingot copper steady; 200,000 lbs Lake sold at 18@18/|c. Steel rails have been more'active; 15,000 tons sold for 1883 delivery at $45. Hops are very strong and in active demand for export and home use; free sales of choice new at 70c. cash, closing with a number of holders All others.... Tot.this w’k. 5,636 9,854 8,983 8,428 7,503 790 206,136 191,056 210,307 181,714 160,233 135.054 682,976 795.643 903.125 762,061 685,839 397,429 Galveston includes India .ola; Charleston includes Port Royal. &c.; Wilmington includes Moreiioad City, &c.; Norfolk includes City. Point, Since Sent. 1. The exports for the week ending this evening reach a tota were to Great Britain, 17,903 to France and 19.977 to the rest of the Continent, while the stocks as made up this evening are now 356,157 bales. Below are the exports for the week and since September 1, 18S2. of 101,399 asking 72c.; old State, 63@68e. • •Ocean freight-room has been only moderately active, due to the small supply of tonnage; with the exception of a slight irregularity in Liverpool berth room, all rates have remained firm. To-day grain was taken to Liverpool by steam at 4%d.; hops ll-16d ; Hour 15s.@17s. 6d.; bacon 27s. 6d.@30s.; cheese 35s.@40s.; cotton 3-16@7-32d.; grain to London by steam quoted 7d.; do. to Glasgow by steam taken at 4%d.; do. to Avonmouth by steam, 6%d.;do. to Rotterdam by steam, G%d.; do. by sail to Lisbon, 1354c.; do. to Palma de Majorca, 5s. 3d. per quarter; do by steamer (November) to the Mediterranean, 5s. 5d.; refined petroleum to Hamburg, 3s. 714d.; do. to Oporto, 4s.; do. to Bristol Channel, 3s. 4l.>d.; crude do. to Barcelona, 4s. 4%d. • bales, of which 63,429 Week Ending Oct. 13. Exported! to— Exports from— Great Brit'n. France Galveston Conti¬ Total nent. Week. •••••« 22,881 New Orleans.. 7,291 From Sept. 1.1882, to Oct Exported to— . ... . • . 30,082 Great Britain. Frame Conti¬ nent. 13,1S52< Total. 18,238 4,36(5 22,602 48,199 830 69,666 20,587 * Mobile.. Savannah T .... Charleston ”.... 4.330 • 4,912 5,603 9,350 10,575 1^,77 5 5,307 9,850 5,07? 715 13,482 13.4S2 3,051 16,271 79,812 1,913 4,076 4.991 „ , 4,912 5,075 5,003 9.350 7,050 17.121 300 8,1)58 Wilmington.. Norfolk.. 13,182 New Yorir 12,005 Boston 4,070 Baltimore 3,073 Philadelp’a.&c 3,051 13,713 -* 3,057 18,031 10,529 Total 03,429 17,903 19,977 101,309 217,254 37.930 45,433 Tornl 1HR1.. 52 059. 1 >>.009 21 6'*3 217.3fj S 41.2^7 49 372 * Includes exports from Port Koval, 93 352 15,942 24,275 13,482 104,019 13,713 26,394 10,520 ”300,622 ~ioS.027 "7%=, CHRONICLE. and February, 1882, large additions to eur port (missions during previous weeks of a per January Iu ^iots THE 14, 1882.] OCTOBEB were male, for * f tUo City Point, Ac., rooe ti0^ movement. Consequently we lrivc now weekly and raonth’y tables of receipts from Sept. 1, 1831, is82. and incorporated the omissions in the weeks to which ed our The Sales and Prices of Futures are shown by the follow¬ ing comprehensive table. In this statement will be found the daily market, the prices of sales fur each month each day, and the dosing* bids, in addif'on to the dailv and total sales. re7p^ j tho T belong instead of inserting them in bulk in December and January. 'In addition to above exports, our telegrams to-night also *riv e 03 special ri nreoared for our r Runrar an U>£ ^ — '*3 r+ 13, at— Great Shipboard, not cleared—for New Orleans... Mobil® Obarneton Now 7,950 33,082 7,000 22 666 <rf S3 c-*-- — • : ^^.0 ; l • a ; n . m CO 1 1 t 1 • S3 • >—« i ^: 10 rr • 1 ■ ; a: a K* cp ® V cb - p SU SO P OTjapS rre p s o3.£g, a> ® C5 » Gc 10,750 46,127 13,777 118,413 237,711 45,603 58,139 20,014 22,798 21,869 23,073 16,397 10,702 103,913 114,802 395,737 342,750 : : S^'P O • - S-O p • mm © ; V? . ^ j h-‘ t-* 00^1 Mi coo* CO 0 o» CO CO 0 e O* OO OO ccoo COOL. COi h-* ; qico 90 0 -J CO CD 10 CO b-* h-4 )-• CO OO O O coco XM- •X CO cox 01 0 0 6 co CC O' |_i i-u 1 ©05 M- Vo OOo 0 CC-COO OOo X CO O CO 0 a- coco -1 X r- caused T?0 c 0 Foreign advices being better, stocks, especially of a. t—* M CO i-* c 0 X O attention from operators YTesterday there was renewed depression, under the large receipts at the ports. To-day the opening was quite depressed, but the close steadier in tone, though somewhat irregular as to prices. Cotton on the spot has been more active for export, with a steady demand for home consumption. Quotations were advanced l-16c. on Tuesday, and again on Thursday, the small stocks giving holders the advantage, without reference to the course of futures. To-day the price was steady, but there was less doing for export, and the close was quiet at ll^c. for middling upland. The total sales" for forward delivery for the week are 495,600 bales. For immediate delivery the total sales foot up this week 10,176 bales, including 5,50S for export, 4,368 for consumption, 300 for speculation and in transit. Of the above, 700 bales were to arrive. The following are the official quotations and sales for each day of the oast week. O Sat. Mou Tnes Ordiny.$a> 87s Strict Ord.. 9J1« Good Ord.. 10l8 Itr.G’dOrd lo'hfi 87b 9uig u ll3ib 11% MonjTuos 9% 9% 9% 6 9% 9*6 9he 9% 9*16 9*,g 9% 9*16 9*l6 9% 10 100i6 10a8 11 10% hy 10% 10% 11% 11% 101316 10131( ;!lO% 11% 1|11% Hl°16 11% !111*48 'll7!,! U‘%6 I 11*16 11% 107,6 101316 1013le 10% 11% 11% * 1G 11% 11 °1G 117,6 11% Hu16 H*1G 11% 1176 Hll16 lin16 11% 1178 11% 1115ie 12%6 12%6 12% 12% 127,6 1 * 1G 12*16 13% 13% 13%g 13% 6 13% 6 11% 11716 11% |l11uig ^%G 11% l‘-U,6 12%6 1216 12% 12*16 12*16 112% 13% 13^,6 1ilS&ie 1338 ! Ordin’y.$ft> Strict Ord.. Good Ord.. Str. G’dOrd Low Middy Th. 9% j-G%G lUie Btr.L’wAIid 11% ! 9 67‘« 97ig 10% 1011x8 11% U%6 13 Li Wed 1 9%c. 9% 9*%e 9710 ! 9% 10% i 10'16 10% 10U,g 10% 101^X6 11% 1 1%g 11% 11°1G 'H71G 11% 11% 11% 11**16 H1:%6 lt1516 12 • 12 ,42% 123,6 12% :12% 121%6 13% i 13% 137,6 STAINED. Sat. good Ordinary a fl>. Strict Good Ordinary Low Middling.... * Tb, 8% 9°io Middling....f... Wed 9% 9’* 16 911,6 9% 10% 914 9ii16 10i5]6 10i5lb 11% 11% U%6 11716 113s 1112 llUlG 1 1 iin16 iu%6 12 111^16 % 12316 12% 12t%6 12% 137,6 13% 12 1 —31 e 11% %1% 8% 97,6 8% 97,6 8*16 9% 10% 6 10%6 10% 11 ll H%G 11%6 101^,6 1015]p 10% MARKET AND SALES SALES OP SPOT AND TRANSIT. 8POT MARKET CLOSED. ?.at • -fSteady .-Steady...,:. " jte:fcat ^y. Ex¬ port. Spec- Tran¬ Total. sit. sump. uTVn 1,042 616 1,800 1,200 775 75 Total 8 *0 Con- GOO 741 560 654 7S0 1,033 4,363 deliveries •riven above on which they are are • 300 .... .... Sales. 1,642 87,700 1,657 80,800 2,360 77,000 1,854 101,900 1,555 73,000 1,108 75,200 300 .... FUTURES. 10,176 495,600 Deliv¬ eries. - 200 200 300 200 200 1,100 actually delivered the day pre reported. ... . I1 1 66 MiOtO GO rc. 1—1 1 ©r 1 ©7* *-•0* M- h-O M*M0 7*0 OOo OOo COCOO oo 66 O'X OS CO CO OCX (—H* l-'r-. 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CO •— r—‘ Mi Mi dr 6 dr dr d< 4 ox -J -J Mi 1 *-*o d» d' 6 dr O' a co Mirf^ ) O M Ci X HMOI M- Mi Mi hi 0 Mi M* M -i k—l v* 66 MiX M* Mr-L h-4 hi 7* -J '—1 ^ 1 © Mi^'or hi i 0 tVO' O 4 CO d'Ct 1 10. 1 b+ *—* ^ MM3 dr O ©9 ^ - * M — 0 d*6° 66.0 c.c to O to to X CO tO 05 O' -ro Mi Mi Mi M Mi Mi Mi '— M Mi Mi M- M* Mi hi h- Mi hi hi Mi 66 6 66 66 CO 05 XX -4 -1 <J\ V- M-Ot M- O’ i © 1 © HMo Mi 05 XX 1 © <0 Mi Mi ' ! @ O ^ J k—4 — 1 © 1 © — % 05 05 66^ Mi -5 M- Mi , ^ 1—. 0 77C |^C5 7*7 0 0 C5 05 Or -l Cl ■/> -J05© 7*7*0 05 7* 1 0 1 O -'i -*j 0 6 O CO CO O. Or CO O o: 7 S hi 1 ! © MM1*) — M* 05 05 • O C5 1 © 01 1 ©r* ►—4 »—4 M O'! -J oc 1 ©CO ^4 t-* Mi Mi Or O tVd'O d’ O to to 6 Mi Mi ao 1 © «o 0 0 M- Mi )V —4, © ^ »— 7*7*0 CO O M- Mi fe © H-* 2- O r~+ . 1 ©*v *-* C7 t—l 1 ©M Mi Mi c; Mi Mi M- — |_1 Mi • ►.* r-4 h- 1 ©r* Mi M* mM- 0 H-4 1 © *4 mmL 1 © 05 “ ^CT3 v-j Mi -4 0 05 © X M* f“i O Mi hi * *-* Mi O 11 Mi Mi Mi m- 0 10 O rO O G3 • 6 0 0 -O' CO 6d 0 1 ©.*- HiC MMQ to to Qa -s 'to 1 - M- Mi Mi O' M*Mv Mi s 1 ©.^ C5 -1 r—4 O 05 66 0 H4 ^7? to r-1 0 660 H- Mi Mi Mi Mi 1 © •—•’t—i 7*0 11 ^0 Mi 0 0 Or M M Mi M- X . - Mi O 1 Mi Mi 0 1 CO *—CJr to O' C 05 Mi Mi C. or CO-( 1 © 0 Mi h, Mi 4 »—• 1 ©9 ri |t*C Mi Mi hi 66 ww 0 if. ^i O O MlcO Mi Mi 6, Jr 8- 3 CtC5 to M* Mi hi M-h-M HMC to ^ Mi Mi | O 6 6 0 1 1 ©i^ 1 © -4 Mi tO X Mi •—» to Mi CO Mi Mi to — Mi hi COCO CO to i © >v hm'b Mi 0 M- H Mi 0 to M hi X 7*7*0 Mi M O* X I ©9 H M ^_o CO /J tV V M-i M-i M< % 3 11 OO3 M- f— 8 7*0 a 1 O'T? O -(CO O O to MM C-1 “* 7*0 1 1 ©O 05 M 6 M CO 6 -io Mi OX M-* 0 0 M M 0 r— ^ ©r I 1 ©oo Mm^i *-■ — 0 Mi M* M Mi 75 OO 1 ax | S» )V MMi*^ a w 4 66 <1 w 0)0 to *sl — a1 9o VM Mi * % M-o 1 1 OO 0 9% d'^co OOo cocoO M Mi r-i |123i6. 8*16 1 S"-1 CA to % O 8% 66 % 0 to 1 © 0 60 O' co^ M CO 95ie COCO )*-Oto 1 S' ►- CO CO M« 0 Fri. coco C- CO r-» •—• OO ct>»v X Til. 00 f— 112 12li16i2li16 13<1<; 13<1(J MO 66 ! 10 % 10i%6 10% OO — M- M j Fri. I 9U16I 107 if. 10% Tli. 9q M011 Tues Wed 10 10 FrI. 00 obcoO O CO 0 O' 10 12% 9 Middling... J1%G 11% Good Mid.’ 11^ 11*316 Btr. G’d Mid 12 Midd’g Fa 12% Fair.... Frt. M —1 66 107m 11 - Wed 10% O-J M* Mi to M Sat. iitfoa. Tae*> j 815ig 10% 11 11 ha Sat. mV COo - Mi <— M r-4 to T TEXAS. NEW ORLEANS. UPLANDS. o-* h-* r-* OO O or, cc CO -* OOo the distant deliveries attracted more for the rise. » ! ®oo K- 005 OCo 00 o ^ During Tuesday and Wednesday prices were advanc¬ American cotton, continued very small. Under these circum¬ stances there was a demand to cover contracts, which, with reduced offerings, caused a material recovery of values, and 't 00 CO 0 OCX O' O' slightly lower closing for the early a V O' z considerable increase in the movement at interior towns, together with dull foreign advices, caused a material decline. On Monday the opening was stronger, but the large receipts at the ports 0 1 i~‘h COo “* O CO Cv tv 1 ecs 1 &W % MM-t0 0 0 0 CO -1 'I >-* >— I sr 11 CO —1 0 h-4 r-* a Fair.. M I & CO 0)2-0 speculation in cotton lias been fairly active during the past week, opening depressed and then advancing. On Sutur davthe very favorable weather reports from the South and Middlin' p sr- - I ©i5 The Oct. 7 to Oct. 13. 2 7,369 '47,759 1880 ing. 3- p 50,533 30,4 10 5,000 1S9JL months. ® a> P tr a> a rf • • 0 • ® P £ SB • g 2^1 43,466 8,007 None. None. 250 None. Other ports Total Total None. None. 2,785 16,000 8,571 2,667 6,200 1882 1,500 2,000 None. York Total 8,185 24,500 31,844 9,929 42,181 None. 1,500 5,400 3,507 2,650 15,271 17,09!) 7,279 Galveston Norfolk 29,005 7,«33 None. None. None. x - M-t . ^ '; Slock. Total. 720 None. 5,181 3,900 3,100 Coast¬ wise. 1Foreign None. .... gavaur.ah j Other B ■ -3 France. Britain. ^ ^ PrtO “-P Leaving Oct. a o o B- 30 CD ~ P“ x " — . a <t> a a> .T> on a 3 3. o p • On 2^! 2. <- by Messrs. Carey, Yale & use Street. Q teas i. CD O shipboard, not cleared, at We add similar figures for New York, which the ports named. *re *1 fX> following amounts of cotton on the 433 O 05 05 O September, 1832, for September 500,200. 11-lOc.; Monday, 11 10c.; Tuesday ll-15c.; Wednesday, 1120c.; Thursday, ll-15c.; Friday, ll*l5c. ★ Includes sa’e a iu Transfera-ble Orders—Saturday, have been made during the week: The following exchanges •28 pd. to exch. 100 Nov. for .Mar. •23 pd. to cxch. 400 Feb. for April. 33 pd. to exch. 1,000 Jan. for Apr. 52 pd. to exch. 100 Nov. for May. The Visible Supply of I ‘17 pd. to exch. 500 Nor. for Feb. | *01 pd. to exch. 200 Dec. for Nov. I -07 pd. to exch. 300 Dec. for Jan. | *05 pd. to oxch. 1,000 Noy. for Jan. made up by cable and Continental stocks are the figures Cotton, as telegraph, is as follows. The Saturday, but the totals for Great Britain and the afloat for the Continent are this week’s returns, and consequently brought down to Thursday evening; hence, to make the totals the complete figures for to-night (Oct. 13), we add the item of exports from the United States, including in it the exports of Friday only. of last Stock at Liverpool Stock at London bales. Total Great Britain fitock . 1882. 1981. 1830. 1879. 130,000 591,000 396,000 216.000 81,300 44,300 45,900 61,075 517,300 63^*300 441.900 277,075 CHRONICLE THE 434 Stock at Havre Stock at Marseilles bales. 1881. 1880. 1879. 113.000 1,000 149,000 4,300 57,500 7,640 93,000 1,034 28.000 36.000 33.900 10,840 3,300 17,000 4,000 1,800 26.389 last year, 22,822 1,283 are 34,500 8.200 40.000 26,300 18,800 12.200 1,500 2.210 1,000 16.100 2,150 2,300 18,200 15,800 6.905 Total continental ports.... 207,200 287,750 160,531 164.073 Total European stocks.. 724.500 923.050 602,431 441,148 177,000 169,000 98.000 71.000 106,219 286.000 Stock at Bremen Stock at Amsterdam Stock at Rotterdam Slock at Antwerp Stock'at other oonti’ntal ports. .. India cotton afloat for Europe. Amer'n oottom afloat for Eur’pe x Egypt,Brazil .Ac. ,aflt for E'r'pe 16,000 232.000 17,000 20.000 229,354 27.283 Stock in United States ports Stock in U. 8. interior towns.. 356.157 499.650 457.255 366.217 .81.227 United States exports to-day.. 21,000 169,159 10,100 121.895 19.000 32,000 .. 72.519 creased the same towns have been 15,396 bales less than the following table isprepared for the purpose of indicating the actual movement each week from the plantations. Receipts at the outports are some¬ times misleading, as they are made up more largely one year than another at the expense of the interior stocks. We reach therefore, a safer conclusion through a comparative stateme 1 like the following. In reply to frequent inquiries we will add that these figures, of course, do not include overland receipts or Southern consumption; they are simply a statement of th a weekly movement from the plantations of that part of the cropwhich finally reaches the market through the out-ports. , Week 144.000 Continental stocks 92,000 169,000 American afloat for Europe.... United States stock 458,000 356.157 United Stateeinterior stocks.. United States exports to-day.. 71,000 67,000 244,000 72.549 169,159 21,000 10,100 286,000 457,255 121,895 19,000 e riding— 851.706 1.512,909 1,198,150 July 10.151 0,120 52,505 58.277 28.270 3,082 366,217 Aug. 4 8.982 8.091 17,818 13.002 4,815 4,811 44,324 38.800 52.441 24,440 801 48.273 21,093 3,167 20.538 6,350 12.352 33.(168 45.371 16,535 3,264 17.636 1 798 85,078 33,471 40.492 14.327 20,926 30,199 10,144 40,722 23,032 32,712 24,231 39,302 15,526 16,519 53,652 28.0S8 46,422 57.410 41.323 72,012 94.052 67,707 83,600 29.081 49,512 51,674 75,452 19.115 115,067 112.094 52.108 81,227 11 41 I 8.390 21,123 42.082 44 8 01,117 •4 15 10*2,090 1 ft 22 44 29 130.413 112,293 77,223 172.221 134,750 136.479 18 32,000 846,798 145,000 98.000 90,531 71.000 17,000 20.000 97,073 106,219 27,283 436.050 379,431 436 650 854,706 1,512,909 1,198,150 846,798 Liverpool stock London stock 81,300 115,200 177,000 16,000 44.300 Continental stocks Lidia afloat for Europe Egypt, Brazil, Ac., afloat 631,500 Total East India, <fec Total Amerioan Total visible 143,750 pt. 61.075 1,536,206 1,948,959 1,577,581 1.283,448 supply Price Mid. Upl., Liverpool G%d. — G\d. 6716 d. 61116<L jgTThe imports into Continental ports this week have beer 41,000 bales. The above figures indicate a decrease in the cotton in sight to-night of 412,753 bales as compared with the same date of 1881, a decrease of 41,375 bales as compared with the corres¬ ponding date of 1880 and an inci'ease of 252,758 bales as com¬ pared with 1879. At the Interior Towns the movement—that is the receipts for the week and since Sept. 1, the shipments for che week, and the stocks to-night, and the same items for the corresponding period of 1881—is set out in detail in the following statement: H © © ® * S * tctci © S§j Sgj g £ *— Sgi 35 CO *> * CO CC l C CO © O’ C. © ►© t— k- ID 10 © *vl © O' CO © to M » ^ si "X r _ Ct c+ * c© ® " * ^ —. g|g. c/i*" ti- • • ■ : x . * • 0 : : o: • 0D : • i > i • I , X < as X < o jxr U > I S-o00 ? Ofc 3.“ J5 - *5-0 ; *<: © K © - © X — -♦ 0 H = p a’?®*’£s P * Z © C 5 * y. c cr to to to to a !—‘ t- M K fa. to CD © © cc c: rco CC © © C © tO 10 © © © OI © C H- |4- C. K © *© « O’ © CO CK to a. CD to © © C -1 © CO K ©-J cc-i »*—►—©• a. CD i-* CO © o tf-M -1 2- © o to 00 x w i—1 o*2*IT* cc © © a -1 to © u © O’ C 10 it- N, © »: - | rfX or 0 O’ a. 10 ^ O 'X 0< § a rt o *—* tot; co--toco 0 0 CO tO C. O’ to © i-* 0 00 © © CO © 00 O’ 0 r- bo © 0 © c" be © to 0 o. © O' © a 0©co©0^t0O’Co»-*Koc'O'a O'0cci— © cccoc»-©ccacac.©-4©0i-<iCDato00 cc h- *M§- o* --Ci CjO» o* •to Ci CO to *-* to © or. k cc r: cc <1 an © *0 C r— to --J © © © ** © © to CO I-* to c* 0» tO©WtOCO00 00 O’ © © CO w © <11: © © CO QD <1 0 WOD<t©©tO0Oi to tc©©0O'too’-4©0©ODCcoroo;toa-4 ©03 •vt^tO'OC0©©00-4©O'O’X 0OCX©© M wek. This to 0© M © O’ 00 © O’ O' •© Oi *>J C-* CO tfk O' to N. If. Oi O’ O'O0CJCDlCoVlc CO 0 o ©0— © 0 o 26,406 to to —to 182. O’000©O» ©be It- <j© — aotoo*or O’ to © © © © © os <t O’ c O’ 0 a. © © 0^C©©©0©©>—©0tO0C0©CDO’ — 0© *-*© 0 00 Vcwo-Vj «-i ©<X 000 C <1 © 0 © to -4 —J to OD 103,6 4 0 0 * 0 CO a>010 0 0300 CD© 0jO©COO>CO0<l co © qd O'ot © 0K. co uVc’aa ©ao ac co 0 ©QDtC©0*-O’©O’O-OiQDC. O’©-J©0QD 0©©to©-4©a©toswoo’-'twto©w & 0 to © 0 to CO O’ © OD O' © O’ 0 CO © 05 to co0co©©oo0©0o'0©a©0to©0-i © 0 0 © 0 to C. © O' WO* 0© o«toa0^io’0 O’ o 0 0 © ©© wek. This >5 O’ CM -4 Co Cc 0 . > *2- 0 Or to .0© 0 to 199.094 174,810 179,883 123,509 155.559 210.367 191,050 200.136 147.913 190,561 plantations since September 1, in 1882 1881 were 946,779 bales; in 1880 were 1882. 8,672 11,962 8,894 2,780 985 1.438 29.985 162,607 140,620 88,093 46 622 190,684 155.503 153.118 76,8”2 229,272 205,843 210,128 95 675 231,771 The above statement shows—1. That the total were 232,058 224.94* receipts from the 762,166 bales; in 1,012,200 bales. That, although the receipts at the out-ports the past week 206,136 bales, the actual movement from plantations was; 224,949 bales, the balance going to increase the stocks at 2. were Last year the interior towns. tions for the were week were the receipts from the planta¬ 232,058 bales and for 1830 they 231.771 bales. Amount we same of Cotton in sight October 13.—In the table below^ give the receipts from plantations in another form, and add to them the net. overland movement to October 1, and* also the takings by Southern spinners to the same date, so as to • give substantially the amount of cotton now ' : in sight. 1882. Receipts at the ports to October 13 bales. interior stocks in excess ot Sept. 1 on Oct. 13. CS2,9"G Total receipts from plantations Net overland to October 1 Southern consumption to October 1 702,1 (hi sight October 13 Weather Reports Cc r— to 13 77,808 103.779 96,331 124.526 1881. 79,190 1881. 795.643 151.136 17.080 940.779 30,890- 28,000 20,090 807,810 997,67a It will be seen 1>3' the above that the decrease in amount in sight to-night, as compared with last year, is 189,823 bales. &3 to O M H- CO to ft4 Total in to f- <1 6 Oct. ' 18n0. . 00 LC CC' V-i CTJ CO © CO w tr ® 5! * ff - *-$ p 1C tf r cr' 0 c __!S — £ - _ 5’ 2 5" ® E 5' Rec'pts from Plant’nt. 1881. 152,000 45.900 133,000 1882. 1880. East Indian,Brazil, dtc.— 292.000 1881. 10,859 II 1882. 1880. 28 25 Total American St’k at Interior Towns. Ports. Receipts at the 229,354 70,000 144,000 232,000 499,650 RECEIPTS FROM PLANTATIONS. follows; American— Liverpool stock week Plantations.—The the from : 1,536,206 1,948.959 1,577,581 1,283,443 Total visible supply Of the above,the totals of Amerioan and other descriptions are as same and since September 1 the receipts at all the towns 103,071 bales less than for the same time in 18S1. Receipts 981 XXXV The above totals show that the old interior stocks have in¬ during the week 18,545 bales, and are to-night 96,61© bales less than at the same period last year. The receipts at 1882. Stock at Barcelona Stock at Hanmurg IVol 0 to 0 CO 0 O'© © © 03 K. © O’ to 03 0 to 03 0 0tq to O’"—to 00 0<I 03 ©0©©©0tO0 CO O'O’-J0©©©©00©Oi0O’tO0OJ0W © 0 <1 to© ao® 0 Telegraph.—Our telegrams show sections of the South the past week, but it has not been anywhere severe except along a portion of the Atlantic coast. Picking has in general made good progress during the week. Galveston, Texas.—We have had hard showers on two days' of the past week, but they were confined to tlie coast. The rainfall reached one inch and thirty-nine hundredths. The position is unchanged; crops are splendid. Average ther¬ mometer 79, highest 85 and lowest 73. Indianola, Texas.—It has been showery on one day of thej past week, the rainfall reaching forty-two hundredths of an inch. Picking is making good progress. The thermometer' has ranged from 73 to 87, averaging 80. Dallas, Texas.—It has rained tremendously on three days of the past week, the rainfall reaching two inches and thirtythree hundredths. The rain has interfered somewhat with picking. The thermometer has averaged 71, the highest being. by that there has been rain in many 89 and the lowest 53. 00 to © 0 000 © O’ © OO0 tC 03© to© 0 CO CO to OD © -1 tc t; cc c io 00 © 0 C-J0OOO3 ©0 00 O'0<tO'O3©©O3O>tOODCX*—0©©O30-4 OOtO©©©tvU.0 0©0tOtO©O«0©^i0 to — 0 0 O’ 0 03 CO * 0 to O’ to © © o; CO OtO00tO0 0 wlo 00 O'OD 33 O’© M Co 0 Ml-1 po to ►—* h- H**-* £>• V- cc©*-. b»>u wp N>X ©r-0G|f>.© u - c - •«- cc tf* C0t©CHfc3tU0DC^KtCOtCCi*-t©©0CO3C'“O» oe OD tC W W JO © <J b»© cc •si i® K< 0*4 O* ©»*•©» 00 a. © CO ►“* O*—O c oo co co © © © »^ © *- *- This year's figures estimated. cc cn *- o> 8 ? t® *. © © co r-S- Brenham, Texas.—We have had hard rain on one day of the past week, but no serious damage has been done. The rainfall reached seventy-five hundredths of an inch. Prospects continue excellent. The thermometer has averaged 84, rang' ing from 71 to 97. Palestine, Texas.—The weather has been warm and dry during all of the past week. The crop is splendid, and pick' October 14, 1863. J THE CHRONICLE. making good headway. Average thermometer 73, high¬ est 86 and lowest 61. Huntsville, Texas.—We have had a hard shower on one day of the past week, but no serious damage has been done. The rainfall reached eighty-seven hundredths of an inch. Pick¬ ing is progressing finely, and prospects continue very favora¬ ble. The thermometer has ranged from 65 to 89, averaging 77. 435 Oct. irtg is Weatherford, Texas.—The weather has been warm and dry past week. Crop accounts are more favofable, and during the picking is day of the past weak. Crop accounts are more favorable. Good prog¬ ress is being made in picking. The thermometer has ranged 64 to 91, averaging 78. JjuVdvj, Tex ts.—Telegram not received. New Orleans, Louisiana.—It has rained on two days of the Below high-water mark .... Memphis Nashville Shreveport Vioksburg Feet. 12 6 2 10 9 Feet. 13 13 0 9 15 Inch. 11 7 6 1 4 • Inch. O 6 8 2 11 New Orleans reported below high-water mark of 1871 until Sept. 9, 1874, when the zero of gauge was changed to high-water mark of April 15 and 16, 1874, which is 6-10ths of a foot above 1871. miking good progress. The thermometer has aver¬ aged 69, the highest being 85 and the lowest 52. Belton, Texas.—We have had a shower on one from New Orleans Oct. 13, '81 V2, '82. or 16 feet above low-water mark at that point. Comparative Port Receipts and Daily Crop Movement.— A comparison of the port movement by weeks is not accurate as the weeks in different years do not end on the same day of the month. We have consequently added to our other standing tables a daily and monthly statement, that the reader may constantly have before him the data for seeing the exact relative movement for the years named. The movement each month since September 1, 1882, has been as follows. past week, the rainfall reaching thirty-three hundredths of LIP3 In January and February, 1882, large additions to our port an inch. The thermometer has averaged 77. Shreveport,« Louisiana.—We have had generally fair receipts were made for omissions during previous weeks of a portion of tlieCity Point, &o., movement. Consequently we have now revised our weather during the past week, with light local rains. The weekly and monthly tables of receipts from Sept. 1, 1881, to Feb. 1, .rainfall reached one inch and forty-five hundredths. The 1882, and incorporated the omissions in the weeks to which theybelon/g thermometer has ranged from 63 to 86. instead of inserting them in bulk in December and January. Vicksburg, Mississippi.—It has rained on one day of the Tear Beyinning September 1. past week. The weather has been clear and pleasant. Pick¬ Monthly Receipts. 1880. 1882 1881. 1879. 1877. 1878. ing is active. Columbus, Mississippi.—It lias rained on one day of the 458,478 Sept’mb’r 326,650 429,777 333,643 288,848 95,272 past week, the rainfall reaching fifty hundredths of an inch. Pero’tage of tot. port 0910 07-80 06-67 06-49 0219 The thermometer has averaged 75, ranging from 56 to 89. receipts Sept. 30 Little Rock, Arkansas.—It has been cloudy on two days of This statement shows that up to Sept. 30 the receipts at the the past week, and the remainder of the week has been fair to ports this year were 103,121 bales less than in 1881 and *clear, with rain on two days. The rainfall reached one inch 131,822 bales less than at the same time in 1880. The receipts and forty-three hundredths. Average thermometer 70, since September 1, 1882, and for the corresponding periods of the live previous years have been as follows: highest 83 and lowest 55. Memphis, Tennessee.—We have had light showers on three 1882. 1881. 1880. 1879. 1878. 1877. The rainfall reached sixty-six days of the past week. 95,272 hundredths of an inch. The thermometer has ranged from 56 rot. sp.3o 3^0jbo() 429,777 458,47s 333,643 238.848 8. Oct. 1.... 19,012 35,186 20,785 23,599 13,941 to 83. averaging 70. 8. 2.... 30,981 31,901 21,495 23,233 9,741 Nashville, Tennessee.—It has rained on two days of the 8. 36,637 3.... 25,177 35,016 17,537 12,179 4... 27.147 39,051 25,734 25, UO 21,131 10,720 past week, the rainfall reaching twenty-five hundredths of an 8. 5... 32,469 25,535 33,555 22,862 12,903 inch. The thermometer has averaged 73, the highest being . “ “ “ “ 83 and the lowest 57. Mobile, Alabama.—It has been showery on two days of the rainy to-day. The rainfall reached thirtyone hundredths of an inch. Picking is making good progress. The thermometer has averaged 75, ranging from 67 to 87. Montgomery, Alabama.—The weather has been warm and dry during all of the past week. We have had no rain since September 10. Picking is progressing finely and the crop is being marketed freely. Crop accounts are each day more favorable. The thermometer has ranged from 57 to 86, aver¬ aging 74. Selma, Alabama.—It has rained on two days of the past week, and the balance of the week has been pleasant. The rainfall reached thirty-nine hundredths of an inch. Picking makes good progress, and the crop is being marketed freely. •Average thermometer 73, highest 88 and lowest 60. Madison, Florida.—Telegram not received. Augusta, Georgia.—We have had a slight sprinkle on one day of the past week, the rainfall reaching but five hundredths of an inch. Good progress is being made in picking, and the staple is being marketed freely. The thermometer has aver¬ aged 73, ranging from 61 to 84. Macon, Georgia.—It has rained lightly on two days of the past week, and it is now cloudy. Average thermometer 72. highest 83 and lowest 58. Columbus, Georgia.—We have had no rain during the past week. The thermometer has ranged from 69 to 83, averaging 77. Savannah, Georgia.—It has been stormy on three days of the past week and the remainder of the week has been pleas¬ ant. The rainfall reached three inches and thirty-one hun¬ dredths. The thermometer has averaged 73, the highest being past week, and it is 79 and the lowest 02. Atlanta, Georgia.—Telegram not received. Charleston, South Carolina.—We have had rain on two 'days of the past week, the rainfall reaching four inches and sixty-four hundredths. The thermometer has ranged from 63 to 81, averaging 73. The following statement we have also received by telegraph, showing the height of the river3 at the points named at 3 o’clock October 12,1882, and October 13,1881. “ 6.... 36,417 “ 7.... 2 L,231 " 8.... S. “ 9.... “ 10.... 23,398 43,081 33,710 25,374 25,164 37,355 8. 25,809 25,800 8. 44,049 21,335 24.369 18,609 49,519 8. 30,580 23,504 27,136 42,439 8. 35,6 21 21,523 19,304 18,399 3. 24,966 22,539 27,622 25,343 21,302 41,177 8. 14,875 10,210 “ 11.... 29.132 21,339 12.... “ 13.... 32,664 46,454 26,969 26,211 33,937 37,697 34,515 21,819 “ 682,976 Percentage of total port rec’ots Oct. 13 753,838 829,493 613,343 550,919 278,978 16-07 1414 12 86 12 39 06-42 Total This statement shows that the receipts since Sept. 1 up to to-night are now 75,862 bales less than they were to the same day of the month in 1881 and 146,517 bales less than they were to the same day of the month in 1880. We add to the table the percentages of total port receipts which had been received to October 13 in each of the years named. India Cotton Movement from all Ports.—The figures which Friday, of collected for wi, and forwarded by cable each ire now shipments from Calcutta, Madras, Tuticorin, Carwar, &c., the enable us, in eonnectiou with our previously-received report from Bombay, to furnish onr readers with a full and complete‘India movement for each week. We first give the Bombay statement for the week and year, bringing the figures down to Oct. 12. BOMBAY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS FOR FOUR YEARS. Year 1882 1881 1880 1879 Shipments this week. Shipments since Jan. 1.- Great Conti¬ Brit'n. nent. Great 7,000 2,000 1,000 Total. Britain Conti¬ nent. Total. Receipts. This Week. Since Jan. 1. 3,000 10,000 757,000 608,000 1,365,0(10 5,000 1,632,000 859,000 5.000 1.176,000 6,000 6,000 311,000 548,000 852,000 3.000 1,088,000 2,000 4,000 359,000 493,000 816,000 3,000 4,000 250,000 350,000 600,000 10,000 According to the foregoing, Bombay appears to show a compared with last year in the week’s receipts of bales, and an increase in shipments of 4,000 bales, and the shipments since January 1 show an increase of 508,000 bales. The movement at Calcutta, Madras, Tuticorin, Carwar, &e., for the same week and years has been as follows^ —crease CALCUTTA, MADRAS, TUTICORIN, CARWAR, Shipments this week. Year. Great Britain. 1882 1881 1880 1879 2,000 3,000 Conti¬ nent. Total. 2,000 3,000 RANGOON AND KURRACHBE. Shipments since January 1. Great Britain. Conti¬ nent. 303,000 190,000 204,000 156,000 73.000 81,000 107,000 202,000 Total. 459,000 263,000 285,000 309,000 CHRONICLE. THE 436 from the ports other than Bombay is 2,000 bales less than same week last year. For the whole of India, therefore, the total ship¬ ments this week and since Jan. 1,18S2, and for the corresponding The above totals for this weeks and periods week show that the movement of the two previous years, are as follows. EXPORTS TO EUROPE FROM to all Europe from— i 459,000 All other p’rts. 852.001 285,OOu ending Oct. 12 and for the three total movement for the week to date, at all India ports. Alexandria Receipts and Shipments.—Through arrangements we have made with Messrs. Davies, Benachi & Co., of Liverpool and Alexandria, we now receive a weekly cable of the movements of cotton at Alexandria, Egypt. The following are the receipts and shipments fbr the past week and for the coiresponding week years up of the previous two years. Alexandria, Egypt, 1830. 1S8L. 1882. October 12. Since Sept. 1. This week. N. OiTaris Texas.... 5.227 Savannah 5,397 33,162 0.253 1,710 26.307 ...... 5,000 ...... Since This Sept. 1. week. Baltimore. Since This Sept. 1. week. Sept. 1. 21,550 34.431 . - - „ . _ ....... , 7,297 2,305 834 * . 2,7li 3,910 13,597 1,114 1,200 3,405 ... interesting comparison of the This last statement affords a very This wed:. Philadelphia. Boston. New York. Receipts Mobile Florida. 7,000 1,137.000 8,000 1.122,000 10,000 1,824,000 Total Since Jan. 1. 4,000 3,000 859,000 203,000 0,000 2,000 10,000 1,395,000 Bombay This week. Since Jan. 1. This week. Since Jan. 1. This week. York Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore for the past week, and since September 1, 1882: from— 188). 1881. 1882. The Following are the Receipts of Cotton at New ALL INDIA. Shipments [VOL. XXXV. 16 . S.OarTina N.Oar’lina ...... 1,221 397 . .... — 5,272 671 6,229 9,909 346 973 3,144 3,738 5,955 8,100 6,473 This year. 25,827 136,253 11.975 23,125 2,477 10,737 12,087 28J554 112.029! 10,293 21,527 2,352 6,467 21,844 6,929 Virginia.. North, pts Tenn., Ac. 12,538 3li 1.847 747 Foreign.. Last year. 23,733 2,785 .... ...... 422 1,640 5.890 News.—The exports of cotton from the Shipping United latest mail returns, have reached the Southern ports are concerned, these are the same exports reported by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle last Friday. With regard to New York, we include the manifests of all vessels cleared up to Wednesday night of this week: week, So far States the past as per 74,132 bales. as Total bales. Liverpool, per steamers Erin, 2,983—Ger¬ Republic, 1,915 Servia (additional), manic, 2,548 400 Seytbia, 2,375 Wisconsin, 2,081 12,305 To Hull, per steamer Romano, 200 200 New York—To Reoeipts (cantars*)— Exports (bales)— To Liverpool Sept. 1. :::::: Europe Total This week. Sept. 1. Since Sept. 1 2,500 GG7 7,000 1,855 4,000 2,501 3,607 8.855 2,500 6,501 3,000 — 55,500 Since This week. Since To Continent 40,000 100,000 172,550 j 4,000 This week. * ! 4,000 This week.... 8ince Sept. 1 A. oantar is 98 lbs. There have been no exports from Egypt thus far this season ; by in our cable of Sept. 29, we were an error caused to report receipts and though there were none. exports for that week, for the week ending 4,000 cantars and the shipments to ail Europe This statement shows that the receipts Oct. 12 were bales. were received from Manchester to-night states that the market is very quiet at a slight advance. We give the prices of to-day below, and leave previous weeks’ prices for comparison: ColVn 8*4 lbs. 32s Cop. Twist. s. A’g.ll 9*2 'SIO^ 13 97s “ 25 93s ® 978 Sept. 1 938 ® 978 “ 8 93q 'cb 97g “ 15 93a ® 97b “ 22 93a ® 97e “ 29 93s ® om Oct. 6 95ie-911is “ 1& 938 ® 9% «» 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 of d d. 0 0 0 7l16 l1^®? 4*2 ®7 41e®7 4ki®7 10k> 10kj l()Lj lO1^ ®7 9 ki®7 lka®7 8 9 1 Cop. lwist. TJpl Is d. s. 6 ®8 6 @8 6 @3 3 32s Hid. Shirtings. d. a. * 7^8 7*6 7 7116 G7s 6% Uplds d. s. 5ka®7 878 ® 9*2 6 87b a> 9*2 6 87s h> 9k) 6 87e ® 9*2 6 5k)®7 5kj®7 5 Lj ® 7 5k)®7 93» 9*8 ® 93i 9*8 ® 934 9 ® 9 59 6 6 6 6 9 7 s. Shirtings. 91e 6 9% 6 S7a ® 9Ja ® 731(i d. 8*4 lbs. CotVn Hid. a) 6 6 6 6 9 ®8 ®S ®8 ®8 ®8 d. 8 0 8 Lj d. 634 7 613j6 Ski 8kz 8 k) (51316 0 0 734 0 0 678 67ift decrease, as compared with last week, bales, against 22,445 bal s last week. a th^ total reaching 16,271 Below we give our usual table showing the exports of cotton from New York and their direction, for each of the last four weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September 1, 1882, and in the last colu mn period of the previous year *. The form, particulars of these shipments, arranged in our Exported to— Sept. Sept. 20. 27. Oct. 4. Oct. 11. 8.720 11.638 16,710 12,305 Liverpool. Total to Great Britain Sept. 1. year. 200 500 54,536 1,150 9,020 11,638 16,710 12,505 79,842 55,686 301 Other British ports Total since ,Same period pr&vTus 1.122 1,017 1,338 715 79,342 7,056 7,337 Other French ports 1,122 1,047 1,030 1,783 1,338 715 325 100 1,804 1,996 5,311 4,994 1,150 5 OSx 5 907 50 2,393 '550 350 400 Total to North. Europe 2,863 2,818 3,501 2,740 15,322 Spain, Op'rto, Gibralt’r,&c 601 Total French Bremen and Hanover .... Hamburg Other ports 7,056 4’923 7,387 806 follows: are as New York.. 12,305 N. Orleans. 11,130 Charleston. 5,500 Savannah.. 5,367 Texas 8,419 Baltimore.. 9,757 Boston 2,407 Pliiladelp’a 1,525 Total... 59,110 400 305 14,130 4,406 880 5,500 5,307 8,419 3,326 9,757 Bremen Amsterd* Ham- dam (0 Hull. Havre, 715 200 ' Vera bury. Antwerp.Genoa.Cruz. 2,316 305 400 830 4,406 2,144 2,407 1,525 74.132 asual Total. 16,271 19,416 5.500 5.367 3,326 2.144 ...... . ... .c. „ m • ■ m . m . 2,407 KB m 11,745 11,901 1,525 200 5,12 L 305 1,230 4,490 3,326 74,132 give all news received to date of disasters to vessels carrying cotton from United States ports, &c.: Herder, steamer (Ger.), from New York, October 5, for Hamburg, was Below we wrecked at Long Beach, 3 miles west of Cape Race, on Monday morning, October 9. The passengers, crew and mails were saved and forwarded to St. Johns, N. F. The Herder ran a3horc during a dense fog and will in all probability be a total loss. The steamer was given over to the salvors, and about 2,500 packages, consisting of lard, cotton and cooked meat in tin cans, had been landed up to the evening of the 10th. Included in the cargo of the Herder were 050 bales cotton. The steamer went to pieces night of the 10tli. Mount Lebanon, steamer, before reported. The steamer Mount Lebanon arrived at Halifax on October 0, with loss of propeller, and commenced discharging cargo preparatory to adjusting a new one. Cotton ending- 1,935—Samaria, . Livervool. Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since sept. 1.1882. Week steamers Missouri, Total 7*16 7?16 per Philadelphia—To Liverpool, per steamer British Crown, 1,525 734 Cotton from New York this week show the total for the same Liverpool, 1831. 1882. The Exports Eduardo, 1,731 Leonora, 2,942 Oranmore, 3,457— Bremen, per steamers Koln, 2,010 Ohio, 128 (addi¬ tional) 715 1.996 350 To Boston—To 472 Manchester Market.—Our report d. To Havre, per steamer Pereire, 715 To Bremen, per steamers Elbe, 1,150 Rhein, 810 To Hamburg, per steamer Gellert, 350 To Amsterdam, per steamer Stella, 400 To Genoa, per steamer Archimedo, 305 New Orleans—To Liverpool, per steamers Gallego, 5,200— Hayt an, 4,380 Legislator, 2,500—Warrior, 2,050 To Havre, per steamer Flachat, 4,400 — To Antwerp, per steamer Billow, 880 Charleston—To Liverpool, per steamer Chancellor, 5,500 Up¬ land Savannah—To Liverpool, per steamer Cydor.ia, 5,307 Upland.. Texas—To Liverpool, per steamers llesper, 4,017 Flos, 3,802 To Vera Cruz, per steamer James A. Gary. 000 per bark Velox, 1,320 per schooner Fred. .T. (.'oilins, 1,400 Baltimore—To Liverpool, per steamers Austrian, 1,027— freights the past week have beeu as follows: Liverpool, steam d. sail...®. Do Havre, steam Do sail c. sail c. sail...®. Amst’d’m, steam.c. sail...®. Do Tues. Wednes. Thurs. 14®516 14®516 34$51« 34®516 *4®5I6 Fri. .... .... 916* .... 91<3* .... 916* .... .... 916* 916* 9I6* .... Hamburg, steam, d. Do Hon. c. Bnemen, steam, .c. Do Satur. Baltic, steam....®. .... .... 916* 916* °ie* .... .... .... 9ifl* 9lrt* . . . . . J2* V k2* V .... .... .... .... 932* 932* 932* °32* .... .... .... V .... 9ld* .... V .... 932* .... - - • • .... 38* ^8* 38* 38* .... .... .... .... .... %* .... 893 All other 11,707 305 * Total Spain, Grand Total &c 601 893 305 1,799 13.606 15,503 22.415 16,271 104,019 sail c. Barcel na, steam.c. sail...c. Do 1,494 305 Do 74,730 — V V 34* •V 34* •••* .... .... .... .... .... Compressed. Liverpool.—By cable from Liverpool, we have stocks. &c., at that statement of the week's sales, the following port: THE 14, 18S2.] OCTOBER Sept. 22. HftlesoFthe"week bales. ... which exporters took which speculators took.. Of Of Sales which American 40,000 4,80" 4,400 50,000 4,oOo 61,000 4,900 750 500 2.300 26,500 37.500 7,800 40,000 539,000 518,000 0,100 3,800 5,100 5,300 136,000 219,000 191.000 103,000 nt 27,000 23,000 21,500 157,00(i 20,500 172,000 30,500 14,500 185,000 35,000 44 000 70,000 48 Actual. .... which American .w, 1,000 w— b 0 15,000 30,000 217,000 111,000 of the Liverpool market for spurs ami furaros each day of tli week emlik? Oct. L3, and the daily closing prices of spot cotton, have been as follows: The tone Saturday Monday. Tuesday. Wednes. Spot. Market, l 12:30 P.M ) Firm, Firm. G1 * 7 MifLUpMB AiJj.Orl’us 16 10,500 1,000 Sales Bpec.&txp. Steady. OHiG Glim 7 7 12,000} Good demand Ilarden’g. Friday. Mod. inq. freely freely met supplied 0*4 6*4 0**16 7 10,000 1,000 l,00u‘ Thursd’y. 7116 12,000 1,000 7*16 12,000 1,000 10,000 1,000 futures. 1 Market, 12:30 p.m. j 1 J Market, 5 P. M. Weak. Steady. Steady. Firm. Quiet. Flat. Dull. Flat. Stoady. Dull and easier. Very dull. Dull. The actual sales of futures at Liverpool for the same week are given below. These sales are on the basis of Uplands, Low Middling clause, unless otherwise stated. Saturday. Delivery. Oct. t336g,'g)88f., Delivery. d. Dee.-Jau'... G2O64g;i804 d. g/39^ d. jau.-Feb Oct.-Nov. 023^4^25^4 ® “464Sy2:J64 02i fi4 Nov.-Dee Delivery. June-July ..62864®2764 Oct. 02i64 ...02104 1964®iy64' Nov.-Dee 0l7g4 Feb.-Mar ...62204^2iP4 Feb-Mar Gi^* Mar.-sApr.. .G23(;4®2204 May-June 02464 May-June ..626rt4-&25g4 j June-July 02664 'Cb'&Qi'a 37(.4 ® ®19e ASi1864 Monday. Oct May-June ..F>256i^2461 @3004^3404 June-July.. Oct.-Nov 021^4 July-Aug 03064 -S)22g4'<2/2l04 Oct 035fi4 Nov.-Dee ...6i%iaU764 Dec.-Jan OiOgj Dec.-Jan O1^ May-June 02364 Jaii.-Feb 0it64 June-July 6‘-'5g4 Mar.-Apr 62ou4 Oct 03404 63564^3(564 i Oct.-Nov | 62064 0i664 Nov.-Dee Jan.-Feb 0i664 0i8,.4 I Mar.-Apr May-J une 62264 02404 O2&04 June-July 1 July-Aug , j Tuesday. Oct 63504^3404 ®3%4®3*<j4 Oct.-Nov.. .620fl4 a) Nov.-Dee.. -Oio64-®1504 Dec.-Jan.... 0 4 w i 564 Jan.-Feb 0 io64 Feb.-Mar ® 15P 4 July-Aug 024^4 0i664 Feb.-Mar. Jan.-Feb 016c4 Mar.-Apr.. .Oi3(.4 ® 1764 May-Jnne.. 02264®2ifi4 June-July.. G2a04®2264 01634 G2261 May-June .G3764\ Oct.-Nov.. 022«4<»3?«4 *64 Nov.-Dee.. 01^04,®l°t 4 Dec.-Jan.. ...01804 Jan.-Feb ..017(.'4<^ IS.-j Feb.-Mar 019,34 . Mar.-Apr.. Apr.-May Oct Oci.-Nov Nov.-Dee Dee.-Jau 02104 0)2004 i0.2304 Mar.-Apr Apr.-May . ..0-,Je 4 .. .. July-Aug Jan.-Feb Feb.-Mar 02004 June-July. May-June .. (*23G4^2i(.4 02804 June-July ..(12604 2)2704 Dec.-Jan 0*964 OI604 0*804 02604 025e4 6-1804 01804 02004 v 61^4 | Oct.-Nov. 01834 j Dec.-Jan 024Q4 Feb.-Mar.. 62561 | Mar.-Apr . .. 62204 G17g4 01904 0*904 Friday. nC^'w ^3o64®346 Oct.-Nov... Feb.-Mar.. Nov.-Dee Dec-Jan.. Jan.-Feb. Indian and also affected corn was early in the week by buoyant speculation; but like that I Dec.-Jan | 615e4 0i&e4 62i«4 622g4 02504 6**04 Jan.-Feb May-June j June-July | July-Aug Dee -Jan in an active wheat, it subsided Wednesday, and the feeling since has been one of depression. regular trade is very small, and the leading influences are wholly speculative, relating to deliveries iu the next three months for May. Very little Southern or State corn arrives, and spot prices are for the most part nominal. To-day there ou The renewal of speculative excitement; No. 2 mixed 75%c. 70^c. for December and file, for May. Rye has been quiet, with prices favoriDg buyers. Prime boat loads sold at 77c. Barley has shown a downward ten¬ dency, with considerable sales of Canada at $1 for No. 1 and $1 06 for bright; also two-rowed State at 80@82c. Buckwheat is as yet nearly nominal. Oats have declined materially in the past few days, especially for future delivery, the indications pointing to liberal supplies in the near future. To-day there was a firmer market, with sales of No. 2 mixed at 41%@42c. for November, and 42%@ 43c. for December, closing at top prices. The following are closing quotations: was some for November, flour. No. 2 spring...$ No. 2 winter bbl. $2 00® 3 15® Superfine 3 25® 8pring wheat extras.. 4 50® do bakers’ Wis. & Minn, rye mi x. Minn, clear and stra’t Win ter skipp’g extras. Patents 0 00® 5 00 ® 5 50® 4 00 ® 0 95 ® 3 3 4 5 7 0 7 4 8 25 75 25 City shipping extras. $5 50® 5 85 50 South’ll Southern bakers' and family brands sfcip’g extras. Eye fiour, superfine.. 25 00 50 85 75 5 50® 7 25 4 75® 5 40 3 60® 4 00 Corn meal— Western, &o Brandywine, 4 10® ® Buckw’t flour. 100 lbs. 3 75® 4 20 4 30 4 CO GRAIN. Wheat— Oats— 90 1 00 91 1 09 85 76 78 Spring.per bush. Spring No. 2. Red winter Red winter, No. 2 White C#rn—West, mixed West. mix. No. 2. Western white State yellow Western yellow.. ®1 10 ® ®1 11 el 10 @ 1 13 ® SO ® ® ® ® 36 42 ® ® Canada No. 1 Canada bright... Canada No. 2 State, 4-rowed... State, 2-rowed... .... 73 42 53 401*3 ? 46 40 *3 2- Barley— 79*3 78 S3 2 82 75 09 75 95 Boat loads Buckwheat Mixed White No. 2 mixed No. 2 white .... 76^® ... 1 00 1 05 95 95 80 ® ® 1 20 1 05 1 15 ®1 30 ®1 10 ®1 20 ®1 02 ©1 07 ® 97 98 84 Barley Malt— 77 ®1 00 Canada State, 2-rowed... State, 4-rowed... (From the “ New York Produce Exchange Weekly.") Receipts of flour and grain at Western lake and riv-**' for the week ending Oct. 7, 1882 Wheat, Corn, bbis. bush. bush. Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Cleveland 8t. Louis (tats, bush. Barley, bush. Rye, bush. (5 Gibs.) (32 lbs.) (48 lbs.) 04.478 1,155,947 515,085 108.718 1,195 3,072 2,265 48,402 194,727 337,494 290,045 00,970 316.223 10,050 45,673 479,194 201.597 100,358 59,400 312,940 15,050 40,004 500 3,497 50,058 12,531 1,4*2 17.095 14,488 102,348 2,020 74.401 1,225 4,000 3,360 714,234 143,100 175,750 12,050 Duluth...' Total.. 234,015 Same time ’81. 212,296 -- Total (GO lbs.) p >r*s : Flour, (196 lbs.) At— Peoria .6i7e4®1GC4 Mar.-Apr... 61804® 1764 May-June 022(j4 June-July.. 02404-3,2304 July-Aug ..02604 Nov.-Dee 01^04 strong position. To-day the market was steadier; 10% for November, $1 11@$1 11% for December and $1 12%@$1 13 for January, closing after Change at the higher figures. Chicago .. Jan.-Feb— 02404 0)2304 '® 22t4®23b4 May-June iHOv.-Dec...' 0i8r-4 June-July a Oct 080,34 a)40,54 Nov.-Dee 02464 Dee.-Jau 020g4 Jan.-Feb OioC4 J une-July (510^4 < June-July 620e4 Oct 02ib4 Nov.-Dee.. ......02264 Mar.-Apr Thursday. Oct...630e4@38t.4®376| Oct.-Nov. maintained Rye—Car lots Wednesday. Oct impossible to stimulate tlie foreign markets. The reaction, however, was but slight, as the Western markets No. 2 red winter $1 0,500 459,000 229,000 Total import of the week Of which American Amount afloat. Of 40.59b 437 been found Oct. 13. 20,500 9,900 4,000 Actual export... Of Oct. 0. •150 American Totalstock'-Estimated. T 0? which Americau—Estun'(i Sept. 29 CHRONICLE. receipts at 4,904 1,500 3,103,000 738,007 1,374,152 3,198,811 same (56 lbs. 5,900 21,050 927,302 079,099 153,919 826,192 293,930 365,082 ports from Dec. 26,1881, to Oct. 7, 1882, inclusive, for four years : BREADSTUFF S. Friday, P. M., October 13, 1882. Tlie flour market has been fairly active at very full prices with a slight upward tendency early in the week, which has latterly been lost. Shippers more liberal scale, and been on have been buyers on a arrive large proportion of the receipts have through shipments from the West. Rye flour and a inside prices. The wheat market was advancing early in the week, but the activity was mainly speculative the regular row rise late limits; received more in response to the course of the The higher prices had the effect of checking business; experts especially were kept within nar¬ and a on Wednesday'afternoon decided check. the speculation for the Stocks have begun to rapidly than the bull party had counted 1879-80. 4,785,922 5,083,139 53,203.245 45,439.629 62.543,217 35.425,340 111,070,909 33,817,011 6,822,855 74,809,138 78,300,040 24,952,221 Bariev.... 6,193.857 9.. 2,250,947 2,733,605 59,002,714 125,790,053 29,579,470 5,639,930 2,311,320 160,305,610 199,266,131 222.884.553 187,826,990 .bush. tVheat Corn Oats Rye. .. . Total grain ... 1878-79. 5,984,025 3,715,566 accumu¬ upon. It has .... Comparative receipts (crop movement) at same ports from July 31, 1882, to Oct. 7, 1882, as compared with the previous three years .bbis. Flour at Astern markets. 1880-81. 6,836,501 somewhat cornmeal have also been rather firmer, but buckwheat flour, under a material increase of supplies, has declined, with sales to 188-1-82. 5,872,501 bbis. Flour SVheat.... Corn . bush. Oats Barley.... Rye Total grain... : 1882. 1881. 1880. 1,602,967 1,718,410 1,410,500 1,338,200 26,111,989 35,109,405 11,552,018 3,034,200 1,419,400 34.871,263 22,460,823 13,375,461 2,004,347 1,037,243 16,016,206 40,173.855 8,303,397 2,207,569 1,734,278 57,687,788 68,495,305 77,227,078 70,569,5(53 27,918,591' 13,352,141 - 1879. 7,890,154 3.543,288 1,804,025 Comparative shipments of flour and grain from the same from Dec. 26, 1881, to Oct. 7, 1882, inclusive, for four ports years: ,5 i e > Flour . 1879-80.' 5,843,619 3,631,591 5,518,763 271.359 53,978.421 2s.502.863 41,438.581 90,321,700 55,803,092 106,152,087 23,462,126 2,686,759 63.401,916 ..bbls. 42 bush. Wheat... Com •Cat.9 2,201,770 bbla. S 3.528,642 190,358,830 159.162.428 IT eek Oct. 7. 1879. Week Oct. 11 146,765 232,929 122,315 125,525 654,658 215.531 18 4,473 286,500 962,010 164,275 100,656 109,726 Total Rail and lake Wheat, 2,138,130 1,870,814 Sept. 30...221,015 Sept. 23... 194.631 816,117 Sept, 16... 193,939 wks.819,614 8,888.549 3,422,529 81..667,404 Receipts of flour and ended Oct. 7: 632,320 428.230 673,841 291,716 Oats, bush. bush. ,545.052 87,550 525,363 190,300 317,704 65,625 6.400 2/200 312,632 9,877 6,663 207 7 500 5/950 12,600 19,100 31,600 6,395 6,503 774/235 Total week... 332,576 2.692.679 Cor. week ’81.. 211,650 1,589,708 2,055,30 4 436/250 80,807 466,397 86,150 bbls. 14 9.499 1 AtNew York Boston Philadelphia... 90,534 1,100 25,694 23,670 Baltimore New Orleans... 25,735 33,-i.OO 491,400 16,364 217,645 Portland Montreal bush. bush. 5 4,000 33,486 ..bbls. If; 1880-81 9,831,577 7,818,064 76,533,108 87,612.087 22,363,584 116,876.601 26,102,358 22,193,78;) Oats 2.431.039 2.382,808 1.175,506 115,609,093 190,072,093 Barley Kye 1,170,631 Total grain 1879-80. 1881-82. 8,836,098 bush. 63,411,195 Wheat Com Hayti Indies.. Brit.N.A. Col. West Oth.countries 26 082 500 65,063 69,901 111,698,995 90,033,741 - 17.996.S19 2,089.143 1,593,571 87.244,115 17,410,143 2,036,292 3,59 i, 185 235,289,903 221,693,730 Oct. 7, 1SS2: bush. bbls. From— New York Boston Portland 90,534 1,173/254 45.523 93,000 Montreal 18/237 Philadelphia.. 3,395 10,305 273,343 241,642 7 14,207 Baltimore New Orleans.. I £flf Wheat, Flour, . Corn, Oats, bush. bush. 209,070 23,476 Pew-, Rye, bush. bush. 6,531 1,035 12,357 830 325 4,876 250 237,717 6,781 32,439 .... .... .... .... .... 307,47s 524,799 364,760 1,500 10 605 .... • 23,250 144 550 2 40 250 571 232 53 168 50 20 134,320 155 35,625 207,790 3/20t 88,623 100 28/291 5 6,963 .... .. 2.3 111 . 3/298 2,748 i 4,940,009 1.768 5,471,089 903 951 3,5.58 16,332 12,125 2,550 1.893 853 390 24,772 13,140 3,039 13,387 4.811 2,492,943 3,109,148 2,505,370 2,371,156 347,105 174,032 DRY GOODS THE TRADE. Friday, P. There was only a moderate movement M., October 13, 1882. in dry goods the past week, and the volume of business was somewhat disappointing to commission merchants, importers and jobbers alike. The demand at first hands was comparatively light, and almost wholly confined to small parcels of seasonable goods necessary for the renewal of broken assortments. The jobbing trade opened fairly, but closed quiet, owing in a measure to the generally unfavorable condition of the weather which retarded in no slight degree the demand for consumption. Some addi¬ tional orders for spring goods (such as clothing woolens, white to Oct. 7, goods, dress fabrics, etc.) were placed for future delivery; bat such cases were exceptional, and by no means large in the 1878-79. 3,155,102 aggregate amount. Foreign dress goods were m >re freely seaboard ports for week ending Exports from United States ports Cuba 5,000 ports from Dec. 26, 1881, compared with the previous three vears Flour.. 8. Aiu’b 53,100 ...... . Central Am.. 14,000 Total receipts at same 18S2, as Mexico Rye. Barley, Corn, bush. 12,500 145,000 • 158,280 108,930 ...... 21,00o 59,889 50 10 65,200 85,000 457 5oo .... 100 92 • ‘240,420 186,810 220,900 511,100 Tallow lbs. 1,665,192 2,254,500 .... 50 • lbs. 119.194 .... .... Brazil the week Wheat, Flour, .. 63,414 Cheest, lbs. Rye. 3,899,145 3,811,008 9,109,532 3,017,539 grain 264.000 11.200 30 105 150 .... Copenhagen.. Port.ifcMd.pts 2 seaboard ports for 126,500 Bacon, bush. 17,679 66,853 155,291 82.697 138,717 125,593 90,633 153.087 at 2,036,747 .... . Total week Prev’s week 771,350 805.113 1.065.859 1,262.447 1.157,682 75 4.400 2,528,614 2,350,991 4w’ks 1,077,185 lbs. 383 .... Hamburg.... 1.817,672 bush. bush. Lard, 1,297 .... Bremen 96,521 Barley, bush. bush. 228 15 .... . last four weeks: Oats, Corn, bbls. Marseilles Amsterdam.. 275,992 1,772,487 shipments from same ports for Week Flour, endina— bbls. 7... 210,029 Oct, Tot., 4 3,254,165 1,516,559 ......... Beef, bbls. Havre 444 937 ! Pork, ... 439.136 561.036 219,946 559,327 1,682,194 727,515 158,452 Barley Rye Glasgow Hull Bristol W. Hartlep’l. Leith Newcastle 1880. Week Oct. 9. 417,065 ....bush. Wheat Corn Oat* 18,109,6-0 3.556,972 1881. Week Oct. 3. 1882. Flour Liverpool.... lake and river ports for the shipments from Western weeks ended: To— 70,865,218 2,254,766 129,803,465 165.060,868 Total grain Rail 28,631.337 2,992.357 1,676,893 2.819.052 •Barley ... %tyo%... . I 1878-79 1880-81. C,820,592 1881-82. LVol. XXIV. CHRONICLE. THE 438 and a public sale of "gold medal fabrics ” was attended with fairly satisfactory results, the more staple goods having been disposed of at good aver¬ offered through age the auction rooms, prices. Domestic Cotton Goods.—The exports of domestics light, the shipments for the week having continued been only 1,182 packages of which 795 were shipped to Great Britain, 174 to Brazil and the remainder (in small lots) to other markets. There was a continuation of the quiet demand lately experienced by commission houses, and the jobbing trade was of lessened pro¬ and Prices are nominally unchanged in first hands, Total for w’k 167,994 3,098.927 24,647 137,559 leading makes of both plain and colored cottons are fairly 925,231 97,150 1,182,233 Same time ’81. the moderate supply, but outside brands of The visible supply of grain, comprising the stocks in granary steady, owing to and brown bleached goods are a trifle easier and in ample at the principal points of accumulation at lake and seaboard ports, and in transit by rail and water, Oct. 7, 1882, was as supply. Print cloths were quiet and lower, with transactions follows: extra 64x64s at 3 ll-16@3;?iC., and in 56x60s at 3 7-16c. Prints Rye, Barley Oats, Corn, Wheat, bush. bush. bush. bush. bush. In store at— ruled quiet in agents’ hands and less active with jobbers, 124.781 805 666/271 2,442,146 New York 1,292.38" 42,000 60,000 82,000 140.Oi 0 420,000 Do. afloat (est.) there was only a limited inquiry for ginghams and cotton dress 11 1.000 40,500 62,500 1.000 59,000 568,481 portions. 1.865 12,357 in 1$ 1 j! rf it ii| iis. fj] If"; ■ h ||; 11 j* & ; 11m Albany 715,438 2, ,-O.M 86 189,984 Buffalo Milwaukee Duluth Toledo Detroit : t f.\' 1 } - y.; no id 163,832 2,15 4,188 4,792 562,138 29.821 17,536 5,631 32,155 90G 150.000 153.380 110,513 12,206 Montreal 8 4,340 350,039 4,443 211,000 33,570 Peoria Baltimore Down Mississippi. On rail On lake On canal Tot. Tot. Tot. Tot. T it. Oct. 24,731 52,896 50,000 Indianapolis Kansas City 6,222 566 62.453 42,575 107,761 57,648 274,300 321,820 Philadelphia 123,146 385,199 435,312 8t. Louis Boston Toronto Oswego P 11 1 - Chicago ■ 49 d and j* 187,080 691.765 13,137 239.755 175. S14 96,000 17,698 47,569 137,000 2,379 618.749 235.014 2,317,788 2,430,257 1,216,962 7, ’32.13,916,219 65,000 38,768 159,514 190,000 53,301 27,830 2,597 848 6,234 250 70,113 3,114 355,204 493 226.355 2,616 85,955 18,000 10,703 235,531 12,148 315,000 50.853 16,000 76,400 9,597 3,668 654,658 261,495 63,000 5.676,554 5,067.012 1,213,033 564,843 Sept. 30, ’32.13,149,613 6,650,5015,519,557 328,534 Sept. 23,’82.13.287,051 6,700,538 5,766,702 195,054 Sept. 10, ’82.13.636,830 6,705,689 6.157,097 119,920 Sept. 9, '82.12,780,612 6.594,036 6,010.641 Tot, Oct. 8, ’SI.20,169,347 28,rioVsYo 1,922,309 5,’759,91*5 ! 60,629 following are i MNhl—* tm<£ L — - expectations. Heavy cassimeres were were heavy worsteds and overcoatings. Spring suitings were in irregular demand, but some barely realized mostly quiet, as cassimeres and leading makes were reported, and prices were fairly sold up, and was only a moderate call, but special styles were sought for in lim¬ ited quantities for the renewal of assortments. Satinets con¬ tinued sluggish and Kentucky jeans and doeskins were in light Light-weight worsted coatings are well steady at opening quotations. For cloakings there maintained. with consid¬ in dealt but there was a steady hand-to-month demand for flanne s, and felt and cloth skirts were fairly active in some quarters.. Foreign Dry Goods.—Business has been mostly quiet wit importers, and, while prices of the most staple fabrics are air J Soft wool dress goods and suitings met popular makes are sold ahead of production, as are many styles of sackings. Worsted dress goods were 1,052’599 moderate demand, and shawls and carpets were lightly in, 590,575 726.062 760.785 725,136 709,169 the exports of provisions from New Tork, Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Montreal, Portland and New Orleans, for week ending Oct. 7, 1S82, and their distribution; The has fair sales of Exports of Provisions. V /■ Domestic Woolen Goods.—The demand for clothing woolens goods. request. erable sales, and THE 14, 18855.] OctoiBB CHRONICLE. 433 maintained, there is more disposition to grant concessions upon Receipts of Leading Articles of Domestic Produce. makes of silks, fancy, dress goods, &c. Plushes and The following table, based upon daily reports made to th colored velvets continued in good demand and steady, and New York Produce Exchange, shows the specialties in millinery goods and ribbons were in fair request. articles of domestic produce in New York forreceipts of leading the week Linen goods were in light request, but laces, embroideries,* with ending Tuesday last (corresponding with the week for exports), gloves and hosiery were distributed in small parcels to a fair also the receipts from Jan. 1, 1882, to that day, and for the aggregate amount. Silks sold very poorly in the auction corresponding period in 1881 : rooms, but cashmeres found ready buyers at fair prices.certain Importations of Dry Goods. Week Ashes Beans & p-51 s a . 1 »*•» 0 • x • s • 5 : \ • • . . ! ! ! j © ?r © c <-*■ • ^ • -I-* ©no re-4 4.© M- • 5 : as a_, •o: c-t*; . ! : : | : 0 : <© Cotton X’ . a. : ©i X 03 M tO to ©t X C. X |0 h* M -1 M M CX to ©i ©t © © M -1 ^4© M M© o -4 OO c ey> c a m m -i ©1 OO M © X *■ lvXCn©M $ M > 0 X X rO W 3; ©l ©©' -1 M CM O w tc CC CJt <X©I t. x ©i to x a © X -4 tO ©1 f~> — O © to MM* X M c> — X ©tb Cx-4 V -1 tCCCO X O-i i Z.T to © to-l ©to w C |L ; •3: io — 2 x to CJ OC CO ©I mgd a PS c 4- ® m © c-to ©to-4 -1 w •— © iO w © 0 tr- lO MX MO 4. ©O' C.-1 M H xw -1 © t o © ©l ~ < © © ’■© o M J- — '/ Leather ct to© O'to © OGH -IX w -4 M to to -4 M— V C M -4 is O to ©i ► p R P M m Molasses Molasses Naval Stores— 03^3 © © 03 3 b -4 © M W ©1 X C © © © © © M -4 tO ©1 C © h-» ^ x 2: -X 03 ©' r; K OQM ©t © ©t M ©MMX M © M © X C © r- © © COM MX-4 c o co © ob WO*MX W Hj CCOO © M M C -1 M © tO tO -1 X M w 00 • M M 03 —1 2c to ©' C -1 X % ft -1 HtjMU © Z M-4 ©I © 05 Turpentine, spirits. !Z CD ^-1 ©1 © © © ©7-MM -4 X M to © X ©© X X © 1 t— ©1- -1 1 © iT©* . M H M M tO tO ©i 00 -I ©1 M *0 M ©to 03 oo© 03'M — -1© 1 K M tox © © ©i <J ©. © » 1 M CO tO-J to to to 0 Provisions Pork Beef.. Cutmeats ©MO M t© M x o: x to ©' C -4 M to o © © M-* M M to 00 ©1 QO©t-*ioX to © C ©1 © O ©' H M X X X K Om Cheese w to -J ©MO UH CM OtO w w cc oo Ci M <J~* MM -J X —1 M X OO ©© cx O to ►- w r o © tv X tO w. Ilf. coo — OOM c oo O -*4 ? >-* X© s X M ft :'-Q — *** ©1 ©oo CM to MX c c -J © M © M © © © © M 85 .5* X M © tO C © 03 ©l X ©i — X-4-1 CD c M©'-l©-X Vi 03 M 03 © X -3 M © © © cc cc >“* © oo © © -4 X X M —1 © X -1 MM © © © M m vi © ©•£* Mr- M X -4 © © ' • m M Xto c •X M 0 Xr- MMCJIMU ■x X© M -* 00 W -J O' O ^ Ow CO X 6c if-M -IO-IX-* C. 0C ©I -1 to X© M -4 MOO C- O © ©t M cC c M Wir- © X ©t c to ooo M -4 © © © ©' c x to c ^ tc CC ^ tC JJ tc oo Cl to p-* © W * MO -1-4 oo I X M M W ft-* © ©1 to -J to c M to X M ©1 © -4 © © -4 tO M © © 'X © *- Sugar & s to 41,335 Glas§.... Class plat Coal, tuns. 47,080 47,448 2,31 Bark, Per ,034,700 8,046 19,011 29.213 Blea. pow Cochineal 3,332 Gambier Gum, Ara 15,020 Indigo... Madder, <! 0,528 0.928 Opium.. Soda, bi-e 45,448 417 Oil, Olive 330 9,830 34,928 Soda, sal. Soda, ash Flax.... 09.493 6,416 PUT8....] Hair ‘ Heme Hide! Brist Hides India 1881. i Metaisj Ac— lion, pig... 2 48,680 210.681 317,565 0,227| 9,535! Buttons... £otton,bal Drugs, &e- 1882. 367,516 41,7821 Glassy art Cwoa, ban Coffee, baa M “ 11,293 1,398 4,467 5,433 4,096 483 94,331 5,816 830 baskets.. Wines 523,428 2,557,080 2,279,902 721,916 59,516 941,729 47,314 _ 200,452 1G0,091 193,886 54,333 37,931 $ $ 1,577,819 1,355,258 1,323,938 565,554 446,101 1,281,706 . ... .... 5,723' 52,176 2,509 1,392 913 Ginger.. Saltpetre... 173,427 Woods— 67,261 Cork Fustic 5,411 746 .. Pepper.... 37,428 314,220 290,762 ..... Logwood .. Mahogany. 62,601 99,172 77,293 100,946 30,554 876.804 1.1 80,963 1,804.730 12,244 5,211 571.437 28,996 3.53 L 238 952 220 98 80 1,018 3,523 1,657 4,246 4,100 Leading Articles 36,620 740,860 1,039,622 476,979 267,621 182,153 33,371 43.549 85,75 1 13,91 1 1,055 4,077 30,582 484,003 2 23.797 35,453 46.866 102,590 16,872 9.323 16,092 40,39 1 1 ©2,214 105,235 85,598 72,990 2,665 156.222 9 1 7 7,172 of Domestic 81.090 Product). upon Ashes, pots Ashes, pearls bbls. bbls. lbs. Breadstuff's— Flour, wheat Flour, rye Corn meal Wheat Rye Oats Barley 3,7(9,275 1,360 bush. bush. bush. bush. 839,652 2,701 8-L,7 i 0 29.471.599 159,621 1,4 i 2 6,531 1,056,7.0 123.505 6,558 ... 830 1,291 20,537 1,182 Cotton.... Domestics 1 rales. Hay bales. bales. pkgs. bbls. bbls. a: \.bu Rosin Tar Pitch Oil cake Oils— Whale.. bbls. bbls. bbls. cwt. Tallow 33,277 53,143 530.013 808.221 395,149 15.349 192,3 IS 25,830,765 44,457 53,151 440,654 650 108,881 41,507 3,618 22,361 2G5 236 166 19,567 256.174 9,630 152,616 9,154 6,082 r* 1 10,319 4 JL 109,853 68,859 22,234 35 5,2.3 4.134 31,580 1,638,197 1,983,703 80.391 400 163,067 185,879 248.248 312,044 206 31.411 299,170,096 266,804^805 bbls. 1,486 bbls. tierces. 126,155 310 31,307 35,724 150,688 36,045 * bales and lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. bbls. lbs. hhds. cases. Tobacco,manufactured, lbs. Whalebone 287,792 7,126,340 33,301,738 7,602,998 Tobacco, leaf Tobacco 1,075 253,163 2.614 gals. gals. gals. gals. gals. Sperm Lard Linseed Petroleum-. Provisions— Pork Beef Beef 260,685 386.869 2,594,285 tons. a 52,371 58 pkgs. x. 195 10,378 bbls. Caudles Spirits turpentine I,16t> 76,077 bush. Naval Stores— Crude turpentine <jnr time last };- ar. bblst bush. Hops S ..bbls. Corn Coal Since Jan. 1 1882. 601 49 Peas 66,803 394.879 587,484 104,343 580,580 ending Oct. 10. Cutmeats Butter Cheese Lard Rice - 809,721 115,551 578,172 363,407 1,7 06 75.893 reek ^ 158,080 1,732,733 1,GS7,215 1,630,291 1,341,027 Nuts 1,178,977 715,330 Raisins 1,769,318 1,005,017 Hides, undr. 15,040,734 15,482.861 Rice 814,701 162,560 Spices, &c.— Cassia 137,429 66,929 .. 1.880 569,563 Champ’gne 43,630 Wool, bales. 1,032 Reported by 5,111 value. 38,198 Cigars 64.2131 Fancy goods 6,197 jFish 8,216 Fruits, &c.— 1,759 Lemons 5,475 Oranges 2,120 0,775 71,547 1,800 177,586 tcs., & bbls. j Sugar, boxes 36,349 Wines, &c.— 237,571 2,708 1,065 83,249 Lead, pigs. 30,174 26,766 Spelter, lbs 15,719,750 1,637,281 Steel 1,579,630 865,320 Tin, boxer. 1,7 51,631 1,276,685 Tin slbs.,lbs 13,747,359 12,398,914 Paper Stock. 180,332 142,029 Sugar, hhds, 23,056} and bags... 16,709 Tea 3,920 Tobacco.... 240,005 Ivory Rlt. bars 922 Custom House returns, shov » leading articles of dom-stio produce for the week ending with Tuesday last; also the oxp) ria from the 1st of January, 18S2, to that day, and for the cor¬ responding period in 1881 : I 20,608 . 2 462.472 7,002 ..pkgs. following table, based 15,550 20,750 the exports from New York of all ! Ac. China.. Eaithenw 2 349,010 8,686 ..pkgs. pkgs. ...bbls. 65,020 100 500 ..bales. The 1.415 1 1,714 1,359' 26,837 boxes & cases. ..hhds. ' fiiuiia, f . Beeswax ' 80 365,735 . JEs ports at M [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] 1881. 418,8 42 2,607 7,821 ...bbls. hluls. .pkgs. Sugar Tallow Tobacco Tobacco Imports of Leading Articles. The following table, compiled from Custom House returnsj shows the foreign imports of leading articles at this port from Jan. 1 to Oct. 6, 1882, and for corresponding period in 1881: 1882. 66,074 2.672,496 1,210 84,47 6 3,199 ft ^ M 50,969 22.c50 ..pkgs. Wool X ©1 © -1 to -1 © © to © 169.611 90,361 360 .. ....No. Whiskey >—‘ r.82,9 | v? 20.891 865.590 73,765 118.292 39,748 59.445 2 230,996 117.913 3,443 52,977 528,615 23,338 Steariue ^ © X cc XM 5 ..kegs. Rice © © © © © 14,035 ..hhds. ...bbls. Spelter M to ©1 M © M ...pigs. tes. <k bbls. Hogs, drtssed ‘ p . Lard Lard •C} © 3 ©• C CO © -4 73,911 ..pkgs. ..pkgs. Butter • © X © M © 00 X w w .sides. — to ©» M'J p b mmMm -3 © © C m 10 ©• ©> © M. to r- x © © - to to M ^"-1 ©l © © ©CO-4 — ©1 i or © X© 9.335 653,253 23.880 200 . Eggs ©> QO -1 1 *25 X ..bales. 710.910 38,4O7.05O 12,924,7393,825.396 192,039' 3,977,8.31 456,218 22,695 ..pkgs. Peanuts © © 2,2-19 ...bbls. .galls. ..bush. Oil, whale b p 0 ** rC X No. 938,356 13 -a79,sU3 ...bbls. Oil, lard M C X m ©1 ©1 M ©X w 74,700 3,277 164,218 11,673,712 888 bbls. ...Ibis. ...bbls. Pitch Oil cake S1 M M ..bags. ..bags. 3,106 1 Tar $ M 219,363 245,648 118,056 ...bbls. Rosin 0» © W ©1 CO 03 X X -4 ©1 X w s M gj K w Cl * «©. 37,419,?• 13 Turpentiue, crude. ...bbls. r-^5 © X W ©t -4 m > X W to m or 1m M to 10 CO 'D 00 . 30,190,383 . Lead X 00 1,333,314 1,072 Hops b -3 tO ©X tC D* CC C1 CC 7. © 4,292,716 ..bush. 3,660.525 110,323 ..bush. ..bush. .bush. ..bush. ..bales. ...bbls. Hides Hides — O -4 w rC ^ XM 162,154 4,684 . Cotton seed oil Flax seed Grass seed oc * X w oo • M r.OOMXM ©i -1 M*m -4 <© • , ; i . © —1 M M M- -4 Barley ; MM M-l Oats Peas CM to CO V' CO CO W ©i ©* CO 00 © OH -1 x 01 co« • — c to M X©N •k! iO V © © : Ci rc K © .bbls. 4.553 31,400 Corn... © <rf : ©1 M 1-1 M M tc m VI1 ID W ICtO -1© Oil . © K> .Jtoxc to r. 67,211 Rye 03 SF «=i Of? p; I to to tc to CO to to M 00 P ►nx ©i to c to M c© CO : • • »•:::» ■ -j § ODO^P © • e* ft o *s 0 : ®e e. 1 Sh §1 c a Same timelust year.. 1832. 30,253 .. Wheat Since Jan. 1, 82 324 ...bbls. Corn meal a 3S ©o A.bbls. Breadstuff's— Flour, wheat ft QtO ending Oct. 10. importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Oct. 12, 1882, and since January 1, and the same facts for the corresponding periods of 1881. are as follows: The lbs. 3,252 1,545 1,741,385 117,374 1,851,630 3,211,478 183,269,168 5,516,575 82,436,962 129,489,980 368 192,560 17,328,195 15,517 737 678 197,397 6,793 83,576 . 37,430 5,379,143 183,590 119,044 29 213 42,711 303,675.323 16,287,8 IS 112,666,517 177,233,425 19,019 39,016,285 71.145 43.529 4,6)3.670 88,863 LOUISIANA. MONROE, Solicitor amt Attorney. Counselor, Practices in the District Circuit and Supreme Courts of the United States and of the State, in all classes of eases. Has no nt her business, and de¬ votes his personal attention iuo .ll! his tiinecuc/attirelu to his profession. Refers to Rank ot Monroe. Dan Talmaoe’s Sons Sc Co O YORK. NEW STREET, BROAD Warren T. James. cash or on Stocks, Bonds, Ac., bought and sold for margin. factors, nu.i.tats MERCHANTS IN AM> COMMISSION John S. James Sc Co., Commission Stock Brokers, John S. James, Member N. Y. Stock Exch. ~ Company YORK, H (.) M W. Farmer, W. 16 [ V 0 c. xxxv. Cards. Commercial Financial. No. CHROMIC)EE. THE 4'iO 119 BROADWAY, Filty-Flglith Semi-annual Statement SHOWING THE 31 CASH CAPITAL $3,000,000 Reserve for Unearned Premiums York, 108 Bay Street, Savannah, 00 Surplus 1,967,087 00 209,459 97 1,661.572 10 Cash Assets $6,833,719 07 Reserve for 10, 12 & 14 East Bay, Charleston, 41 tV 43 North Peters St., NEW OF OFFICE, CONDITION OF T1IE COMPANY ON THE FIR^tT DAY OF JULY, 1882. RICE, 90 Wall Street, New Insurance v, Net N. Orleans. Unpaid Losses SUMMARY OF ASSETS he Randall Sc Wierum, 50 e i PLACE, EXCHANGE Bonds, Brokers in Railroad Stocks and GOVERNMENTS Jc FOREIGN EXCHANGE, Otto C. Wierum CHA8. K. Randall, Member N. Y. Stock Exchange. Bliss, Fabyan 'Sc Co., SELLING AGENTS FOR LEADING BRANDS BROWN J. D. Probst Sc Co., STOCK BROKERS BOND AND No. 52 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK. 8tock8, Railroad Bonds, Governments and Bought and Sold Miscellaneous Securities Boston,, Philadelphia, New York, SHIRTINGS AND SHEETINGS, BLEACHED AM) PRINTS, DENIMS, TICKS, DUCKS, &c. Exchange. INVESTMENT IN STOCKS AND SHARES WITH A RISK. MINIMUM BOOK, just EXPLANATORY post free upon application. OPERATORS IN STOCK EXCHANGE SECURI¬ TIES should test this system, by which large profits are realized, and the possibility of losses reduced to minimum. Kllerton New J. UNION Mutual Life Insurance Co. White Bug, Co., Hills, ESTABLISHED Sears 1855. Cole, & Xo, 1 WILLIAM Columbia “ & The $6 264 215 57 - Pcutli Losses Paid - - Dividends Paid - - 13,725 SQUARE.) Paid Death Losses, since N III A R L Y MILLIONS. eTdcWITT, President. HENRY 1). SMITH, Secretary. NICHOLAS J)E GROUT, Asst THOMAS A. FOSTER, Medical Sec’y. Director. MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY BOSTON, Mass OF NEW YORK. F. Herring’s Safes. TS8E IN OlAJU’iOS RECORD ALL GREAT FIRES. S. WINSTON, President. ISSUES EVERY DESCRIPTION ' OF LIFE c£- END 0 WMENT P 0 LI OILS Rates Lower than other ORGANIZED APRIL Companies. 14TII, 1842. , ASSETS, $95,000,000. Steamships. DUCK, CAR COVERING, LAGGING, RAVENS DUCK, SAIL TWINES, AC., “ ONTARIO ” SEAMLESS BAGS, “AWNING STRIPES.” Only Direct Line to France. GENERAL Also, Agents BUNTING FOUR JOHN And all kinds of UNITED STATES 1) 0LLARS. A::d for Divideuds, Pope Mljg. €o., tM2 Washington St., COTTON SAIL DUCK A full Organization, MIL LION SE VEX Bicycles. Dealers in FELTING - 678 545 53 6,876.901 76 3,996.411 27 force, insuring Policies In $24,083,551. Hiding School, 214 E. 34tu_St., Near Third Ave Co., CANVAS, MAINE. Surplus (N. Y. Standard) New York Brinckerhoff, Turner COTTON PORTLAND - DANIEL SHARP, Vice-President. • England. Manufacturers and - STREET. doctors, lawyers, ministers, editors, merhauls, Ac., Ac. Send 3-cont stamp for elegantly illustrated 30-page catalogue to CO., Commercial Cards. & - Thousands in daily use by DRAPERS GARDENS London E, - . ORGANIZED 1849. A&scth PRINTERS. Supply Banks, Bankers, Stock Brokers and Corpo¬ rations with complete outfits of Account Books and Stationery. P£r“ New concern* organizing will have tlieir or¬ ders promptly executed. (HANOVER Gazette—“The system recommended by Messrs. Gutteridge & Co., i* easy to comprehend and safe.” Jolm Bull—“An easy and apparently safe system, worthy of public confidence.” Court Journal— An excellent, way of speculating, ably set forth ” Civilian—'“An interesting book. This system com¬ mends itself as being a very safe one.” News of the TTorW—“ This book is well worth reading. One can¬ not do better than retain tlieir services.” SWORN BROKERS, No. 7 MAI N E OF Civil Service GUTTERIDGE HARTIN, President. H. W ASHBURN, Secretary. directors’ Office Saratoga Victory Hl’g. Co., Hosiery and Yarn Hills. opinions of the press. W. $6,838,719 07 CHAS. J. Co., Atlantic Cotton Hill*,' Peabody Hills,, Clileopee Htg. Co., STATIONERS AND published, gratis nd a Total 15 Chauncey Street, BOSTON, Street, 931,850 00 128,500 00 Ocean Hills Railroad, Mining, and other Stocks, Bonds, etc.. bought and sold on Commission. E.A. MAURI AC, Member N.Y. Stock M. M. UOWLAN1 SYDNEY BISHOP. AND MIDGE, SAWYER & CO., AGENTS FOR No. 7 Wall Street. SPECULATION R. 43 & 45 White NEW YORK, BROKERS, AND BANKERS Co., 1,803,737 44 8,092,750 00 (market value of collater’ls, $1,505,912'. 1,007 450 00 80^074 91 82,142 23 80,499 49 Drills, Sheetings, <fe., tor Export Trade. Joy, Lincoln & Motley, iNCE" $100,215 00 Interest due on 1st July, 1882 Premiums uncoll’ct’d & in h’nds of agts. Heal estate Towels, Quilt*. White Goods an«l Hosiery. SUCCESSORS TO E. A. Mauriac & Cash in Banks.' Bonds and mortgages, being first lien on real estate (worth $8,106,500) United States stocks (market value) Bank& RR. stocks A bds. (market value) State and municipal b’ds (market value) Loans on stocks, payable on demand TRANSATLANTIC CO. NEW YORK and HAVRE, From Pier (new) 42 North River, foot of Morton St• Travelers bv this line avoid both transit by Ln8I,sj| Railway and the discomforts of crossing the Channel Between COMPANY. supply, all Widths and Colors, always in stock. No. 109 Duane Street. In a sufali boat. 1A v . xr Wed.,Oct. 18.10 A. AMERIQUE, Santelli Wed., Oct. 25, J 1. AJ. Vi LEE DE MARSEILLES • •• Price of Passage—(Including wine): To HavreLABRADOR. Joncla....*: Rope. IRON age, of superior quality suitable for MINING AND HOISTING PURP03ES Inclined Planes, Transmis¬ sion of Power, &c. Also, {Galvanized Charcoal and |BB for Ships’ Rigging, SusIpension (Guys, large Bridges, Derrick B'erry Ropes, Ac. A stock constantly on from which any de¬ lengths are cut- hand sired FLAT STEEL AND IRON ROPES for Mining pur- Tigci manufactured to or- poses der. HA«Otf JOHN 4 3 X>r r nici’ v ay, CO., New York* $80; second cabin, $00; steer¬ $26—including wine, bedding and utensils. Re¬ turn tickets at very reduced rates. Checks drawn o Credit Lyonnais of Paris in amounts to suit. FOR MARSEILLES, Touching at Cadiz, Gibraltar a BarcelonaFirst cabin, $100 and STEEL AND CHARCOAL HERRING & 251 & 252 Broadway, New CO- York. The following steamers will leave for Cadiz, Gibraltar, Barcelona and freight and passengers: ,, Chronicle Volumes WANTED. 1, 2, 4, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 10, 17, 18, 19, 22 and 26. Volumes . Rates of Passage—For Cadiz and First cabin. $75 and $90; for Barcelona -First cabin. $80 and $100. Steerage, wj and Marseilles *32. Through bills of lading issued to Meffiteminea^ Ports, including Barcelona, Algeria, / lLn‘9’ d ConLeghorn, Naples, Messina; also, for lrieste and to stantinople. ; N. B.—No freight taken for LOUIS Gibraltar. RE BEBIAN, Agent, wa. Apply at Publication Office, 79 & 81 William St. New l ork ai Marseilles, taking ft Howliiar Green*