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■THE jmmermj ^Umanr^i (Btommewiat Wr.m$, faitorajj proito*; and Insurance fournai $mkm’ A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, THE industrial and «f,prfsf.nting OTDYKB. G. Francis WM. A. STBPHBNB Opdykb. BANKERS, BANKING HOUSE! OF & Co., Geo. Opdyke NASSAU STREET, 25 NO. (Corner of Cedar street.) DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms, Banks Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Foub per cent per annum. Dickinson, Stout & New York. Cor. Exchange Place, Government Securities, Gold, Stock and Bonds bought and sold on commission. Accounts received and Intesest allowed on balances, which may be checked for at sight same as at Bank. A. V. ST< >UT, President Nat. Shoe and Leather Bank J. B. DICKINSON, late President Tenth Nat. Bank. PL a IT K. DICKINSON, Member of N. Y. Stock at d Gold Exchange. Howard C. DICKINSON, Member ot N. Y. Stock Dodge,Kimball & Moore RANKERS, Ser cent Interest, p >yable on zed dates. accounted for. ORDERS promptly executed, for sale of Gold; also, Government ties, on commission. And dealers in P. O. Box 4,203. 5 Exchange. BANKERS, JOS. S. STOUT. STREET, N. Y., 19 WILLIAM Credits for Travelers in Ward, S. G. & G. C. ISSUE Exchange on New York. BOSTON, PARIS, LONDON, Europe, Paris and the Union Bank ot London, in sums to suit. AQENT8 FOR BARING BROTHERS Sc COMPANY, 5WALL STREET, NEW YORK, •48 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Subscription agents for the Chkoniclb in Paris. J. MUNBO BROWN. JAHXS T. BATES. Conover, & Brown, Bates Sc BANKERS Williams Vincent & BROKERS, 11 WALL STREET, NEW Co., BANKERS Sc BROKERS, YORK. 7 WALL John S. Barry & Co., STREET, N. Y. STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD bought and sold on COMMISSION ONLY, COLLEC t'lONS made on all parts ol the UNITED STATES and CANADAS. Special attention given to Southern Securities. BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 31 Broad & Martin Runyon, Successors to W. B. Mott Sc Co.. Bonds, Stocks and other Securities SOLD AND ONLY ON COMMISSION Special attention given to the negotiation of busi¬ paper. R. T. Wilson & Nos. 40 Sc 42 Co., STOCK BROKERS, ST., Dealers In Governments Bonds bought and sold on Coupons bought at Market 40 WALL NEW YORK, and Specie. Stocks and Commission, Government Rates. Collections made In all parts of the l nited States aud Canadas. Accounts solicited and interest allowed on Deposits. A. F. B. MARTIN, w. b. mott, Special. ENOS BUN YON. No. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds aud Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchant Bankers and others allowed 4 per cent oa deposits lbe most liberal advances made on Cotton, TobD«c?o ®c., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondent Messrs. K GILLIAY & CO., Liverno-1 Stoker, Taylor & Co., BANKERS. NASSAU STREET, AND CIRCULAR payable in all the PRINCIPAL CITIES OF THE WOULD; also in the United States, Canada aud West Indies. Telegraphic Transfers of Money to aud don, Paris, sau Francisco, Havana, &e. Current Accounts received on NEW FRANKFORT-ON-THE- OucfesllON.3 “dG0LD B0UQHT ANDS0LD COLLECTIONS parts of made In all Europe, Credit for Traveller Available iu all parts of Europe, etc., through RANK, CITY Negotiate Bonds and Loans for Railroad Cos., Contract for Iron or Steel Rails, Locogaotlves, Cars, etc. and undertake all business connected with Railways thb LONDON, ' OK , Messrs.HOTTINGUER Sc CO., of Paris Also COMMERCIAL CREDITS and DRAFTS on LONDON, PAKlS, and SCOTL AND. . ADVANCES made on consignments. STOCKS BONDS bought and sold on Commission. Theodore MERCHANTS, 12 PINE STREET. STREET, WALL J esup & Company, YORK. and Time Bills on LONDON. LIVERPOOL, and DUBLIN. PA&S. BREMEN, BERLIN, M. K. such terms as may be James Robb, King &Co., RANKERS, Meigs, Member oi New York Stock Exchange, (Formerly cashier of the Metropolitan Bank, and late of the firm of H. Meigs, Jr., & Smith). Offers his services tor the purchase and sale of Gov¬ ernment and all other Stocks, Bonds and Gold,,. Interest allowed on deposits Investments carefully attendee to. from Lon¬ agreed upon. Broker, No. 27 Wall St. BANKERS AND EDINBURGH maan, VIENNA, etc. Banker and St., New York City, ISSUE CIRCULAR NOTES Letters of Credit available aud Isnue Letters of Bankers and Commission Merchants, First-Class Securities, Duncan, Sherman & Co., 56 Henry BROKERS, COMMISSION and Berdell, STOCK BROKER, EXCHANGE COURT, EXCHANGE PLACE, BANKER Sc * New York. Stocks, Bonds, Gold, Government tic., bought n.id Sold on Commission. ed on deposits. : •!. jfil YORK, STOCK, ROND AND Mike liberal advances on all Interest allowed on Deposits. LATE WILSON, CALLAWAY Sc CO., Exchange-place, NEW RANKERS AND GOLD Bostwick, & No. 11 Nassau Street, New York. Liberal Cash advances made on Cotton shipped to New York aud to our Correspondents in Liverpool. STREET, WALL 10 the purchase and and other Securi¬ eflected. gAMBURG, 3 Leonard, Sheldon&Foster demand, or after Bowles Brothers & Co., INFORMATION furnished, and purchases or ex¬ changes of Securities made for Investors. HIGrOTIATlONS of Loans, and Foreign Exchange 21 BROKERS, GOLD GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, 14 WALL STREET, N. Y. bearing Four COLLECTIONS made on ill accessible points In the Dividends United States, Canada aud Europe. and Coupons also collected, and all most promptly ness AND „ CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT Issued, BOUGHT and Brokers, Bankers STOCK STREET, BROAD 25 NO. 279. OCTOBER 29, 1870. Bankers and Br kets. Bankers and Brokers. GiOBftK commercial interests of the united states. NEW YORK, VOL. 11. Mi Securities, &c.t Interest allow, 54ti Bankers and Brokers. Hkkby C. Hakdy, Member N. Y. Stock & Gold Charles H. Exchange. Hardy BANKERS & & 39 WALL JAUNOBY COURT. BROKERS, NO. 4 WALL STREET, Welling, Broker In Mercantile Son, NEW YORK. Foreign Bills. Blake (Formerly, Welling, Coflln & Co., Philadelphia.) Member is. Y. Stock Exchange. C. [October 29, 1870. Bankers and Brokers. Fbedeeick Hakdy, H. cMoNicik the 52 Paper, STREET, AND NEW YORK. 28 ST4TE Governments. Stocks. Bonds, Gold, Sterling, and Loans negotiated STRICTLY on Commission. Tienken, W. and brokers, 15 wall street, new York, Wm. H. Duff, John H. Tienken, Members of the N. Y. Stock and Gold Exchanges. Bars, constantly Interest allowed on NEW 18 EXCHANGE, ANB STREET, Particular attention BROK NEW : YORK. paid to the purchase and sale ot Stocks, Roods, Gold aud Exchange, Deposits. DEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO SIGHT DRAFT And Four Per Cent interest allowed on Daily Balances. BANKING HOUSE OF Southern Luther Worthington, BANKER hand. on N. MEMBER N. Y. STOCK Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Government Securities bought and sold. Foreign Gold and Silver Coin, and fine Gold and Silver Kountzf, Securities have attention. Collections made especial ali Southern Points. on ’ Deposits received from Banks and Individuals, sub Ject to check at sight, and interest allowed thereon at Evans, Wharton & Co., - /OUR HER CEN T per annum. Collections made throughout the United States, the British Provinces and Europe. Governments Securities bought and sold. BANKERS AND 5 BROAD Caldwell 6c Co., STREET, NEW on YORK. Taussig, Fisher & Co., BROKERS, BANKERS AND No. 32 Broad Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES, James C. King 6c Co., BANKERS, Make collections and of on favorable terms, promptly execute orders for .he purchase or sale Kenyon Cox, Horace Manuel, Wm. H. all parts of the United States ) > Knauth,Nachod&Kuhne BANKERS. Hutchinson, ) Daniel Drew, Partners, bpecial Partner. BRJAD ST. RANKERS & all the principal cities of Germany, Switzerland England, France, Sweden, Norway, Holland, Bel¬ gium, Russia, Italy, Spain, Denmark, &c. l»sue Letters of 4'redic for 'travelers, available in all parts of Europe. Co., & CO., No. 40 Wall Street. New York. DEPOSITS received and interest allowed at best Current Rates. GOVERNMENT and STATE SECURITIES, GOLD RAILROAD BONDS, STOCKS, etc., bought and Sold on Commission. ADVANCES made upon approved Securities. - Munroe AMERICAN NO. 7 RUE Loans Negotiated. Co., SCRIBE, PARIS, NO. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers In all Europe, etc., etc. Exchange on Paris. arts of W. C. SHELDON. W. H. FOSTEB. Leonard, Sheldon&Fos ter BANKERS, No. lO Wall Street. Buy and sell Government. State, Railroad and other securities, making liberal advances on same, allow Interest on deposits, deal in commercial paper, furnish to travellers and others Letters of Cre dit current in the principal cities in Europe. desirable steaK CONSUME Nr? to of Ourselves or Cor ^or' Guion & Co, Liverpool. Co., STREET, Available in all parts of the world Bank of British North America. Incorporated by Royal Charter. AGENCY, 17 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK COMMERCIAL CREDITS Issued for use in Europe, Cbina, Japan, the East and West Indies, and South America. JOHN PATON, ARCH’D McKINLAY, JAgent8 Morton, Bliss 6c Co., ISSUE (issued and paid free of Commission) and letters of Credit foi TRAVELLERS,: ALSO, COMMERCIAL CREDITS, Available in all parts of the world on MORTON, ROSE & CO l John Pondir, LONDON. BROKER, In Government Bonds, Exchange. Gold and Stocks, No. 44 EXCHANGE PLACE, Particular attention given to the negotiation of Railway and other Corporate Loans. Union and Central Pacific Bonds and Stocks cialty. « Lockwood & ' ■ a - spe- *T Co., Tapscott, Bros. & Co. 86 SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK. Issue Sight Drafts and Exchange payable In all parts of Great Britain and Ireland. Credits on W. TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool. yances made on Ad Orders for Govern consignments. ment Stocks, Bonds aDd Merchandize executed. BANKERS, 94 Transact a BROADWAY. General Rankins busi¬ Tucker, Andrews 6c Co. 52 Wall Street, ness, Including the purchase and sale road Stocks securities, on BANKERS, John Munroe & Co., W. B. LE0NABD. NO. 59 WALL JAS. W. TUCKER & and Bonds, bankers. and other Issue Letters of Credit. Draw Bills on Paris. commission. CO», Rue Scribe, Parish of Government and State Bonds. Rail¬ & be supplied with Bills of Fr Brown Brothers 6c BROKERS, BANKERS, ana can Kinai on commission. , COLLECTIONS made, Country Bankers change, in large or small amounts, on the cities ot Europe, also with Tickets for Passa-efrom or to. Enrope.bv the GUION LINK of Mail ’ Securities, Stocks, Bonds land Gold bought and sold DRAW IN SUHIS TO SUIT SMITH tu/tc CIRCULAR NOTES, 85BRUHL. ALEXANDER CRFnrrc pSrchSS 31 WALL STREET. Government Leipzig, Saxony, AND WILLIAM General Kenyon Cox & York, COMMERCIAL in all parts of Europe &c OF EXCHANGE drawn in sums to suit’ also Cable transfers. ^ rcnasers Securities. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Foreign Exchange. Issue Certificates ot Deposit. Interest allowed on current daily balances. New ana ISSUED, available Gold, State, Federal, and [Railroad BROADWAY, on BANKERS balauCcS, sub¬ ject to Sight Drait. Collections made and Europe. Guion ISSUE Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, and others, and allow interest on daily 56 6c Street, New York, Commercial and Travelers Credits Orders for Purchase and Sale of United States Se¬ curities, Stocks,Bonds aud American Gold, Promptly executed at the usual Comujissiou. jy Interest, Four Per Cent, allowed on Deposits, subject to Sight Drait. NO 93 Wall TRAVELLERS Commission. BANKERS, WALL ILLIAMS London. Deposits. Collections promptly Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold on made. W BROKERS, STREET, NEW YORK. Interest allowed COMMERCIAL PAPER Buy and Sell Massachusetts and New York state StocKS. ie Government Securities Stocks Bonds and Gold jought and sold strictly on Commission. Alex. 8. Petrie & Co., C BOSTON Sterling Credits, IN ADVANCES MaDE UPON COTTON, aud other Produce respondents. 52 Wall Street. New York, 2 7 And DEALERS bankers STREET, EXCHANGE ON LONDON. Reference—Messrs. Jay Cooke & Co. Duff & Brothers 6c Uo. Wall Street. New York. , , _ , .. Buy and Sell Bonds and Stocks in London, Pans LITCHFIELD, DANA & STIMSON, BANKERS AND and Frankfort and negotiate Loans on same. BROKERS, Agency No. 18 William St. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds bought and sold on commission. and Gold BANK OF Wm. B. on individuals solicited and deposits. Litchfield, Lewis A. Stimson, Charles H. Dana, Walter E. Colton. E. B. Litchfield, Special J. M. WEITH. Geo Abents 17 Late J.M. Weith & CELLANEOUS No. 9 NEW STREET. Loans Negotiated, STREET. payable in at current tes, also cable Transfers. ... Demand Drafts on Scotland and Ireland, also on ir.ada, British Columbia and San Francisco Bids •llected, and other Hanking business transacted. ^ T , . iScH.FMCTg^LAY.iAgent8- John B. Manning, Co., StCl/R.TIES, NASSAU Demand and Time Bills of Exchange, indon and elsewhere bought and sold J. M. Weith & Areiits, DEALERS IN SOUTHERN AND MIS¬ NORTil BRITISH AMERICA, Accounts of Banks and interest allowed the of J NO. BANKER AND BROKER, 6 BROAD STREET. and Special attention given Southern Securities information concerning then furnished. October 29, 1870.j GMRONiCLk THE Southern Bankers. Western Bankers. Boston Bankers. BANKING HOUSE OF Page, & Richardson 8c Co., James T. Brady 6c Co., Street, Boston. nf 1,1118 u I (Successors to S. JONES & CO Exchange, an.d Commercial Credits issued on and Travelers LONDON. AND Robert Benson Ittunroe & Co. >1*. 4 It IS. Second National available for Travelers in all parts of Europe aud the East> #200,000 ----- Co., HYDE, Cashier. CHAS. HYDE NATIONAL BANK OF THE OF MISSOURI. AGENTS FOR AUGUSTINE HEARD A CO., 07 CHINA AND JAPAN. made on consignments oi approved ohandize. Pres’t. Cobb, BANKERS, 36 DEVONSHIKE STREET, BOSTON, Bay and sell Western City and Coun¬ ty bonds* #3,410.300 This Bank, having reorganized as a National Bank is now prepared to do a general banking business. Government Securities, Coin, Gold Dust aud Bullion bought and sold at current rates. Special attention given to collections throughout the West James H. Britton, Pres. Chab. K. Dickson, V Pres’t Edward P. Curtis Cashier Morton, Galt 8c Co., Street, Louisville, Ky., dealers in Foreign and Domestic Huchange, Government Bonds and all Local Securities. Give prompt attention to collections and orders for investment of funds. Street* Bankers. Kaufman, BANKER AND GOVERNMENT BONDS. points and remitted for C. A. Dealers in GOLD, SILVER and all kinds BROKER, John A. Klein, C. C. Flowep.ree. Geo. M. Klein, Presiuent. Vice-President. Cashier. Mississippi Valley Bank, ON accessibia on day oi payment. LONDON ' AND N. Y. Correspondent:—Bank of the Manhattan Co. E. E. Burruss, Pres’t. PARIS Southern Securities of every description, viz.; Un* Notes, State, City and Railroad Stocks, Coupons bought and sold on commission. Orders solicited and satislaction guaranteed. Prices current issued weekly aud exchanged regularly with £2?” Collections of Dividends, dec., receive special attention. Gaylord & Co. NO. 323 NORTH Brokers, THIRD SAINT LOUIS Hewson, on al parts of the United States. Raleigh National Bank OF NORTH CAROLINA. DEPOSITORY OF THE UNITED STA'IES AND FINANCIAL AGENT. C. Dewey. President. . A. V> iley, W. N. HAWKS Cashier ALEX. MACBETH. Macbeth, H. CASTLEMAN Hawks CHARLESTON, S. C. 4 James Isbell. STOCK BUtOKEK, Son, Castleman, Government Securities, Gold, of every description, bought and Stocks, &c. sold Bonds on commission Cubbedge 6c Hazlehurst, BANKERS AND BROKERS, MACON, GA. Make Collections, and do a General Banking aud Brokerage Business. REFER TO EAST RIVER NATIONAL BANK. R. H. Isbell. Isbell 6c "Office No. 21 West Third Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Nefer to: All Cincinnati Banks, and Messrs. LOCKWOOD & Co., New York. 6c Stock Brokers and Heal Estate Agents COLUMBUS, GEO. STOCK AND BOND BROKERS, Key box W. M. F. J. M. Weith & Arents. geo. l. holmes. MO. : Henry Clew3 & Co., Holmes 6c STREET Bank, Collections made Coupons, Notes &c., New York Correspondents Howes & Macy, Luther Kountze Stock and Bond Walker, Cashier, National First A. K. current Bank Bonds aud FOR SALS Samuel A. DEPOSIT, VICKSBURG, MISS. Banking Houses. CHECKS Messrs. Wm. Bryce — DESIGNATED CHARLESTON, S. C. at all Correspondents WILMINGTON, N. C. Southern CINCINNATI, OHIO. MADE New York & Co. Cotton purchased promptly remitted A BANK OF DISCOUNT AND 159 West Main Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., COLLECTIONS Do a general banking business. on order. Collections made and lor. BANKERS, Western Bankers. West Fourth BANKERS AND BROKERS, AMERICUS, GA. ESTABLISHED 1837. mer J. W. Wheatley 6c Co., STATE In St. Louis. Capital paid in Parker & Special attention givon to consignments of Cotton. Gold, Stocks, Bonds and Foreign and Domestic Exchange, bought aud sold. Collections promptly remitted for Orders solicited for the purchase oi bales of Produce and Securities. Prompt attention guaranteed. New York Correspondents: Lawrence Bros. & Deposited with IT. S. Treasurer to secure Circulation and Deposits 500,000. C. 108 & 110 Bank, Street, Boston, 66 State Merchant, Savannah, Ga. TITUSVILLE, PENN., Capital Everett 8c Commission ) ■' AND idrances Anderson, Jr. BANKER, FACTOR AND PITTSBURGH. PA. Marcuard, Andre & Co., > rl,.nJar Notes Dealers In all kinds of Securities. Special attention given to collections. Bank The Citf Circular Edward C. BANKERS, 70 State Din. 547 Trust Co., THOfKFERGUSSON, TALLADEGA, ALABAMA, California BANKERS, BANKER, Special attention to collections. New York Correspondent:—HOWES & MACY. STATE BANKERS, Dealers In Exchange, Ag -nts c in for I j Sale The Cashier. - Bank ----- of New York, OFFICE OF Gaylord 8c Co the^V6 8pec*a* attention tp the Purchase aud Sale Kansas Pacific Rail Road Securities. •Missouri “ “ “ mrtilMl33onri “ boSrtitS^W8 ^d Agricultural College Scrip ue t and sold on themoBt favorable terms. Land SAMUEL A, GAYLORD #100,000 N.Y. Correspondent—Importers and Traders National Bank. T. NtY. tfc CO, H. 6c E. Levy, BROKERS, NO. 126 GRAVIER New Orleans, La. Gold and Silver Coin, Insurance Scrip, Bank and Railroad Stocks, Uncurrent Bank Notes, Laud Warrants, STREET. State and City Notes, State and City Warrants United btat>s Bont.s. Mutilated Currency, commercial Paper, Bought and Sold exclusively on Com¬ J. Perkins, "banker, A, AND Collections made Southern States. L. Talladega, President. on SOLu. all accessible points in the R. H. Sommerville. Wm. Fowler. Fowler 6c mission. Particular attention paid to Settlement of State City Taxes. and ALABAMA. EXCHANGE, BANK NOTES AND COIN BOUGHT No. 323 N. THIRD STREET, ST. LOUIS, MO. of J WM. P. ARMSTRONG, Cashier. JNu. W. LOVE, Assistant Cashier. E U F A U L Samuel A. No charge for collecting city paper. Refers to Henry Clews & Co., 32 Wall street, Bank Hobbs, a. d. Moore, Tyler NtW YORK CORRESPONDENT: First National Capital JAS. ISBELL, of : W. H. Sharp, J. C. Hathaway, H. Barroi Rosenbaum, J. O. Eldridge, S. *ln^r^ C.J. Peering, F. S. vVeuB- Cummings H. L. Davis, C. M. Plum, ackwo°d> C. S. City OF SELMA. liLia!shtl, Johu Currey, otuiHon, Samuel Grim. C. W. Cmriis ALABAMA. Deposits. D. W. C. THOMPSON. Trustees OF Financial and Trust Business INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS MONEY TO LOAN, Strong Vaults ni?vm48l^e2lt* HENRY L. DAVIS. SELMA, ALABAMA, Special attention to Collections. «1 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. Sommerville, BANKERS & BROKERS, MONTGOMERY, ALA, Special attention given to purchase of Cotton, Lancaster 6c Co., BANKERS AND STOCK AND CHANGE BROKERS, No. 1113 Main Street, EX¬ Richmond, Va. BROWN, LANCASTER Sc CO., STREET, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. NO. 30 SOUTH LANCASTER, BROWN Sc CO., No. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK, THE CHRONICLE 548 [October 29,1870, Iron and Railroad Financial. Financial. Material. JOHH8.KKOTKDT. BANKING HOUSE State Arkansas of OF 7 PER CENT Jay Cooke Sc Co., New York, Philadelphia and Washington. We Buy, Sell issues ol NEW STREET, WALL 20 No. YORK anil Exchange at most liberal rates, all BONOS. GOVERNMENT LAKE SUPERIOR AND MISSISSIPPI RAILROAD COMPANY, and execute orders lor pur chase and sale of and Bonds of BONDS, ENDORSED BY THE 11 MEMPHIS & LITTLE ROCK RR. CO. & Co. CEDAB ST., COB. OP WILLIAM GENERAL RAILWAY ST AGENT* Swenson, Perkins 8c Co., 80 BEAVER STREET. Buy and sell Railway Bonds and NegociataT Memphis and Little Rock RR. goclateL°an»to Railways. IMPORTERS OF Ralls, Steel Ralls, Old Ratu Iron THE STATE OF ARKANSAS issues its Bonds in aid of Railroads—ten thousand dollars per mile, for the payment thereof a special tax is collected annually for interest aud sinking fund. THE MEMPHIS AND LITTLE ROCK RAILROAD 133 miles long, is completed and in running order 120 miles. The unfinished section will be completed in December next. R. C. BRINKLEY, Pres’t. ’ ANo merchants. For Sale at 70 and accrued Interest, by Stocks, Bonds and Gold. RAILROAD AND MUNICIPAL »,OANS, receive Deposits, subject to Check, allowing interest, and transact a general Banking Business. J. S. Kennedy Bessemer PI* iron, „ Steel ’ Tires, better plates, AGENTS FOR The The ton England. ’ ” Railway business X1UU v,0*» Working ~ geDerafty!*1*16111 “« ”»<««« all WE NEGOTIATE TAY COOKE & CO. New Jersey TOWN J. 8c W. Seligman 8c Co., BANKERS, Issue Letters ol Credit for Travellers, AND 50 POUNDS ENGLISH RAILS Authorized by act of the Legislature, and the issue restricted to one-tentn the assessed valuation of the real ebiate of the following towns: NEW PROVIDENCE PATTl'''"' at 0rleanB; jiona.ana HEYERDAHL anl ,lao w SCHONBERG 32 Pine BKDMINSTER In $100s, $500 and $1,000 at 85 and interest Interest payable bemi-annually, January and July, at the American Exchange Bank, New York, free of tax. For full particulars apply to PARKER Sc Payable in any part of Europe, Asia, Africa, Austra¬ lia and America. Draw Bills of Exchange and transfers of money on Kurope and BONDS, hfpp & C0„ Street, New York. HERNAKD, SO BROAD ST., N.Y., NO. 59 EXCHANGE PLACE; COK. For Sale. Cent 7 per To COMPANIES. LAWRENCE, BANKERS. NO. 1 WALL bTRRET make telegraphic Railroad % California. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE MAR 1£ET NATIONAL BANK in New York, in the state of New York, at the close of business on the 8th day of October, 1870: We beg to call the attention of Managers of Rail ways ami Contractors throughout the United States and Canada to our superior facilities for execute So^ImbTic^SoSn*01 a“ deKrW”“ Db.—RESOURCES. BANKERS, PHILADELPHIA. Transact general Banking ana Exchange business including Purchase and Sale of Stocks, Bonds, Gold etc., on Commission. a Loans and discounts Overdrafts United States bonds to secure circulation. United States bonds anus curitiesonhand Other stocks, bonu6 and mortgages Due from other national banks Due from other banks and bankers $2,229,290 ' 3,877 600,000 100,000 1,000 00 158,190 39 28,071 73 35,000 00 Banking-house Current expenses Taxes paid $12,646 20 8,277 23 20,923 14,125 84,863 285,920 *0,42u Premiums Checks and other Cash items Exchanges for Clearing-house Soutter 8c Co., !f No. 53 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. TDealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds* Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable Securities. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Dralt or Check. Si Advances maae on approved securities. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collections both inland and loreign promptly made. Foreign and Domes tic Loans Negotiated. ■ McKim, Brothers 8c Co., No. 47 Wall BANKERS Street, New York. AND Bills of other national banks Bills of btate banks .f ractional currency (including Specie, viz.: Coin.. Cold Treasury Notes BANKERS, BROKERS, DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and Sold exclusively on Commission. Interest allowed on Deposit Ac¬ counts. Gold Checks able in gold on 69 37 00 00 48 00 17 51 00 150 o0 nickels).. other banks pay¬ position to furnish all sizes, pat-1 rail for both steam and horee roads, and in any quantities desired either for IMME¬ DIATE OR REMOTE delivery, at any port ta the United States or Canada and always at the very low¬ est current market prices. Contracts will be made payable in Dnited States currency for American, and in either currency or gold (at the option of the buyer) for foreign, and when desired, we will contract to supply roads with their monthly or yearly require¬ ments. orders for Foreign Rails, sion by Mail or through the 5,806 67 $3,107^66 65,200 lO Railroad Iron. We are always In a terns and weight of LONDON 8c STOCK NO. 3 James, BROKERS, BROAD 17,992 72— Bought and Sold on Commission. FURNITURE. oroncom-l $4,145,366 31 $1,000,000 00 346,619 73 S. 324 427 00 2o0,000 00 Total Cr-LIABILITIES. Capital Btock paid up .' Surplus Fuud Discount $28,258 10 Exchanges 86,300 38 - Interest Profit and loss W. 683 84 22,116 Ol 10,280 95 NO. 520,878 00 7.500 00 1.759.978 40 schedue) 149,809 52 12,353 79 285,000 00 Uncollected Checks $4,115,366 34 I, A. GILBERT, Cashier of “The Maiket National Bank of New Y^ork,” do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. Directors. ) State of New York, County ol New York: Sworn to and Subscribed before m«, this iSch day of Octo¬ Thomas Hinwood, ber, 1870. Notary Public, in and for the County of New-York. Gibson, Beadleston & Co Hutchings 8c Son, MANUFACTURERS OF RICH Sc PLAIN Furniture 8c Decorations 99 Sc 101 FOURTH FORMERLY 475 Near A. T. Stewart & AVENUE, BROADWAY, Co.’s; NEW YORK. NO. Railroad Iron, Old Rails, Bessemer STOCKS, BONDS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES FOREIGN EXCHANGE and GOLD bought and sold on the most favorable terms. INTEREST allowed on deposits either in Currency or Gold, subject to check at sight, the same as with the City Banks. ADVANCES made on all marketable securities. CERTIFICATES ol Deposit Issued bearing interest COLLECTIONS made at all points of the UNION and BRITISH PROVINCES. BANKER NO. 33 WALL Where a general assortment can be had at moderate prices. v\ ood Mantels, Pier and Mantel Frames and Wains coting made to order from deGigns, FACTORY, 46 AND 48 WOOSTER ST, Edwards, AND BROKER, STREET, NEW YORK. P. O. Box 3,328. Government Securities, Stocks, Silver coin bought and Sold. Rails, &c.| U. S. BONDS AND AMERICAN RAILWAY RITIES NEGOTIATED. Bonds, Gold and Special attention given to Merchants orders for j Coin, f SECU¬ Correspondent* In America: Messrs. Ja-s Cooke & Co., New York, Messrs.JnI ClabhJ PhlliJ Messrs E. W. Co., Philadelphia, Mr. J. Edgab Thombox, Cooke & Co., Washington, & deipliia Morris, Tasker & Co. Pascal Iron Works, Philadelphia LapWeldeij Iron Tubes, Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. Manufacturers of Wrought 50 EXCHANGE PLACE. R. L. opposite Bank I England. LONDON, E. €• of A, GILBERT, Cashier. THOMaS r.OWE, BROADWAY. Bartholomew House, 1,890 00 Due to national banks (as per schedule)... Due to other Banks and Bankers (as per R. BAYLES, ) JOHN M. BRUCE,Jb., > 71 Gilead A. Smith, Less amount on baud. 1,924 00 Amount outstanding State uank circulation outstanding Dividends unpaid Individual deposits 1,611,408 50 Certified checks 148,569 90 Correct—Attest, Hopkins & Co., 61,333 90 Circulating notes received lrom Comptroller 522,800 00 BANKERS E. W. STREET, for execution at a fixed price in Sterling mission at the current market price abroad when the I order is received in London; shipments to be made I at stated periods to ports in America and at the low f est possible rates of freights. Address Legal-tenaer notes Three per cent certificates STREET. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS, BONDS. GuLD and all issues of the Union and Ckntbal Pacific Railroads HOUSE. 58 OLD BROAD ' Total Corne 1 will be taken for transmis¬ cable to our OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: 15 GOLD BALDWIN YORK. STREET, NEW LOCOMOTIVE M. Baird & WOBK*>.| Co., PHILADELPHIA. All work accurately fitted to gauges ly interchangeable. Plan, Material, and thorouelj w Kwra)4 BfflCleSfUT.l?-!”avra“teWm,P. H-3 Geo^Bur’nham. HS. fcxSTui** Wm. F. Convert© Sc Co., 54 Pino St., New ^es l {ante’ fcetk, dommenM gland. Working i> ‘dertake all A ItaitwMj Panitor, amt feurancc fmtnutL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER. REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS Oh THE UNITED STATES. 1LS HEBE, rive NO. 279. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1870. VOL. 11. at both cfCO., law for CONTENTS. New York. increasing the issues of bank notes. dence is also in THE CHRONICLE. The Cliques and the Money Market The Banks and the Currency iS. Bureau The Present Condition Alabama Claims rers of Rail lited 6tatei 550 of the 550 attitude favorable to ease, the forces at work in the money Mills of the United States Ch ;nges in the Redeeming Public confi¬ and altogether market have a direction opposite to that deserved by the group of speculators who have manipulated the market with a view to bring about monetary trouble. Last year we had a series of similar at¬ tempts, the earliest of them being signal failures and involving Agents of National Banks .... Monetary <fc Commercial English News Commercial and Miscellaneous Latest News Consumption of Cotton in the THE BANKERS GAZETTE AND RAILWAY MONITOR. r executing criptions o 549 an in heavy pecuniary loss. Backed by an im¬ mense capital the “tight money men” went forward, and National and State Securities... 556 Railroad, Canal and Miscellane¬ National Banks, etc though defeated again and again, their persistence was at Bond List 564-5 559 Southern Securities THE COMMERCIAL TIMES. length rewarded, and they did accomplish what they wanted. 570 Commercial Epitome 666 j Groceries Then as now there was an easy money market when these 572 Cotton 567 J Dry Goods 575 Tobacco 569 | Prices Current. reckless speculators began their operations. Then as now the Breadstuff# 569 i natural tendency was towards monetary ease. And this tend¬ ency was not reversed until for several weeks and after $l)e Cljrontde. repeated failures and losses, the vast capital and prodigious Thk Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ influence of the party were obstinately concentrated in one day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine of the most desperate and hard-fought struggles ever recorded with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. in the annals of the Stock Exchange. jThis memorable TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. struggle in the money market occurred last year, but its JorTra Commxboial Financial Chronicle, delivered by oarrier course was almost forgotten in the exciting terrors of the to city subscribers, and mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) For One Year A $10 00 For Six Months Still it was suggestive 6 00 great gold panic, to which it soon led. 7^Chbomclb wiU be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued by letter. in itself and among the lessons it illustrated was this that in wfageisX) cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. WILLIAM DANA, f WILLIAM B. DANA A 00., Publisher#, the money market there is so much sensitiveness that succes¬ John rLOTD, JR. f 7P and 81 William Street, NEW YORK. Post Office Box 4,592. sive assaults directed with tact, daring, obstinacy and capital, 1®'* Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Post by powerful, experienced, rich cliques, may, and probably Quotations of Stocks and Bonds Money Market. Railway Stocks, (J. 8. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks, Philadelphia Banks Railway News..; Railway, Canal,etc.. Stock List. 560 661 662 563 their promoters _ ie 1 sizes, pattand hone rfor IMMEsort to the very lowil be made lerican, and f the buyer) contract to rly requiretransmit-: or E, or on com-1 d when the I I low-f to be made .at the Co., ous and - b. o. TH, ie Bank I - will succeed after a time, however Office Money Orders, the disastrous may be they experience at first. .Whether this result will come out of the contest now going on remains to be seen. Events CLIQUES AND THE MONEY MARKET. For almost a year Wall street bas scarcely had a spasm in seem to indicate that so far the scheme of the tight money the money market produced by purely artificial causes an clique has failed. It will probably, if tried, fail again and defeats THE &c,| , SKCU-J AY cat dessrs. Jat I W. ClabkiI PhllJ SON, Co.j| )lpbli< ,ap Welded | i Street >ol*,. speculative tion of outside thorouei rkmanshipl P. Henxejj ,ongstreu ri, AgeD«| Such phenomenon has, however, just occurred, and whether it has culminated or not is by no means certain. On Tuesday the first symptoms of t is Bpasm made their appearance. For two or three successive days there has been some return of ease, but whether the o. jects have been accomplished or not which the clique have in view is a question about which the leaders of the movemen are very careful to keep their own counsel. As such a.spasm is amenable to no general causes, and depends on the wil o tbe ring of speculators who control it, there is little use m attempting to forecast its course, its results, its violence, or tbe date of its probable termination. Enough is. known, however, to apprise us that this monetary trouble is engineered in direct opposition to the general course to w ie the money market tends were it relieved from, the pertur a manoeuvres. money w are influences. present. a Ah the conditions of ea J Capital seeking employment is abund¬ Whether its originators have4 the capital and the persistency and the generalship to make it a success, or whether indeed they have any settled inten¬ tion of venturing the attempt is a question which can be solved only by watching with care' the events of the coming again. skill and the week two. or The only point Qf interest in the money market connects and with Mr. Boutwell’s policy of itself with the Gold Room hoarding coin. for some interest, Last week the foreign firms, who have had gold lent at high rates o to the sudden determination to call in their time several millions of came became so scarce that borrowers were obliged to pay as much as £ or £ per cent a day for ac¬ commodation. This scarcity was relieved to some extent from the Treasury, Mr. Bout well having begun to prepay the Gold in consequence loans. November interest. This relief, however, is not very swift. the books for receipting tbe registered interest ar New York Sub-Treasury, the payment will be Still, as supply exceeding the demand. The currency is the likely to receive no contracting influence, and the prospect though an interval of time has been required to ' . at rather that there wilj be a schedule coupons, which constitute the heavy ,isMtated, * gradual expansion under the new the payments, ant, the - THE CHRONICLE. 550 amount of the November interest on the National debt is is claimed that the $23,851,629, of which $1G,9S0,279 are due on coupon bonds and $6,871,350 on registered bonds. The disburse¬ ment of such a large amount of coin will tend to replenish the scanty supply and to relieve the market, but in view of the too ample hoard of coin in the Treasury vaults it is much regretted that Mr. Boutwell did not during several weeks past give up his plan of allowing further accumulation while the drain to foreign ports has been going on. THE BANKS AND THE CURRENCY BUREAU. Some of the National Banks have been [October 29,1870. inasmuch as from banks national safety of the deposits would be diminish by the proposed law they would be driven doing business under the safeguards of IJa system, and would be sent into depositories That this objection is made in good faith doubt whatever, and it certainly deserves the best ^ thereS° consider8 secured. no ation of the authorities at is assumed of not Washington before the responsibilit * recommending to Congress any sweeping hibitive enactment. There is also this pj be said about such tend to to prohibitions, that; if injudicious, they overweight our banking system, and to make it unpopular with an influential class of financial men, whose goodwill and support are too valuable to be lightly lost. Still, as we have had frequent occasion to point out, there are abuses in regard to this prac. tice of paying interest on deposits, and a remedy for some of them ought not to be difficult to find. complaining of the report which has been asked of them by the Comptroller relative to their earnings and to the aggregate of interest they have paid on deposits. The objections raised by the malcontents are two—First, that the Comptroller is acting in an It will be observed that we have inquisitorial manner in calling for such a statement; and> argued so far as if there secondly, that there is no law authorizing the call. Neither of were no express law, authorizing the Comptroller of the these objections appear to be well founded. One of the currency to add at his pleasure any questions, however fundamental principles of banking legislation is that it pro¬ unusual or inquisitorial to the ordinary list of queries for the vides for the fullest publicity in regard both to the operations quarterly or monthly reports. Mr. Hulbard claims that there of the banks and to their interior condition. For the first is such a law, and his view is officially set forth in a letter time in the financial history of this country we have a dozen from which we make the following extract: Whatever information may be desired or more of expert accountants employed as permanent officers concerning the banks is provided for in the law of Congress approved by the Treasury, and entrusted with the duty of going ‘An Act regulating the Reports of National March 3,1869, entitled, Banking Associations/one periodically through every bank organized under the National provision of which law is, that “ the Comptroller shall have power to call for special Reports Currency Law, to examine and report as to its situation and his judgment, the same from any parti ular association, whenever, in shall be necessary to a full and doings. No one pretends that there is anything inquisitorial knowledge of its condition and another is, that ‘ each complete National Bankiog Association or intolerable either in this supervision or in the fact that full the amount of each shall report to the Comptroller of the Currency dividend declared by such association, and the reports .under oath are required from all the 1,609 banks amount of nett earnings in excess of said dividend, which report shall be made within ten days after the declaration of each now in active dividend,’ Ac., operation in the United States under the <fcc. The information concerning the amount of interest paid on de¬ National system. In view of these thorough explorations it posits was, as you know, asked fo? for a special purpose; and the Comptroller’s it is conceded is not a little singular that the introduction of two important law mentionedright to ask forprovision was in the firstinprovision of the above. This inserted the law ex¬ new questions into the last quarterly report should have given pressly to enable the Comptroller to obtain any special information re¬ National umbrage in any quarter, or should have provoked any desire garding the Each bank Banks which might be deemed necessary or desirable. is requested to report the amount of earniDgs to avoid giving the required facts. Even had no express law since its organization, because it has been found impossible, without “ enforced amount a full disclosure of the aggregate earnings, and the paid as interest on deposits, there is so evident an this information, to make the reports of dividends required unler the second provision of the law mentioned above, of any practical use. The foregoing, I think, disposes of the statement that the iterm aBked for relating to earnings and interest on deposits, are Dot provided form harmony with the principle of publicity in the statement any law.” asked by Mr. Comptroller Hulburd that we are not surprised The rumor is current that it was the Secretary of the that the banks generally exhibit no disposition to withhold Treasury who insisted on having these reports from the books the information. Accordingly we find that no less than about the 1,471 of these institutions had given their reports a week ago, and the remaining 138 are almost all in the far West and South, and had hardly had time to respond,.though their reports are rapidly going in. It is also a suggestive fact that all the banks in this city have answered fully and satisfactorily the questions about which so much needless trouble has arisen. This voluntary full compliance is in every way gratifying, for in his forthcoming report Mr. Hulburd will probably so analyze the figures as to illustrate some of the vicious aud unsafe practices which have crept into our banks, and he may also prove the charge which has so often been made as to the great irregularity with which the taxes fall on certain classes of national banks as compared with others. Another object which the Comptroller has been supposed to have in view is to urge Congress to pass a law prohibiting the payment of interest on deposits. The habit of such payments has grown inveterate among our New York banks up and become during several years. Their country correspondents now expect interest on the deposits they keep in New York for reserve, and on the balances resulting from their active busi¬ ness. These country banks are so hungry after the extra profits thus resulting that it is believed they would remove their deposits in a large part from national banks if interest should be stopped. These balances would thus find their way into private banks and other institutions that would be glad to attract them by promising liberal terms. Hence i payment of interest deposits. The reason attridemanding these returns is a re¬ markable one, and will scarcely be accepted as correct. He intends as we are told to ask Congress to relieve the banks from the payment of interest on deposits, and if he succeeds in removing the burden he will turn round to the banks and urge upon them that now they are set free from the payment of these vast sums for interest they can afford to take a hand¬ some amount of the new government bonds at four or four buted and a to on Mr. Boutwell for half per cent. THE PRESENT CONDITION OF THE ALABAMA CLAIMS. Facts have this week been international case of the published which set the great Alabama claims in a new light. It heaviest sufferers by the depredations of our commerce was a marine insur¬ ance company in this city; that this company, finding the negotiations between the two governments to be tedious and very unpromising in practical results, determined to ascertain whether any direct ^settlement of its claim could he made with the British government alone; that on informal inquiry at the Foreign Office in London, an unofficial, but trust worthy assurance was received that Great Britain would at once give attention to the claims if the consent of the United States to this mode of settlement could be obtained; and that, on application for this consent to the State Depait ment at Washington, at first and for a long time no answer that one of the that famous scourge of appears October 29, obtained, but at 551 THE CHRONICLE. 1870J last the consent in question was per¬ feeling shown by the trespasser is not regarded as ac¬ cruing to the injured party, but as forming a separate interest to be dealt with |jby the nation as a whole. But however valid this claim may be, it depends upon the privaie claim of which it is but the extension, and apart from which it can have no existence. The question for the Government, then, hostile emptorily refused. explanation has been given by the government of its refusal; but the history of the negotiations on the subject discloses what is doubtless the reason of it. The United States have always considered the entire case against Great is this: Shall the United States permit the demands they Britain, concerning the ‘defects in her neutrality during the make upon Great Britain for a national reparation to fail by rebellion, as a national affair, to be adjusted by public dip¬ lomacy. The Alabama claims are a'part of this case, which, consenting to the adjustment in detail of the private claims taken as a whole, is thought to demand something more than upon which, as a whole, those demands are founded ? The Government regards its case including all these private payment of damages to private citizens for their injured claims, and adding to these its own more vague and loose property. In this view, as expounded by its most extreme advocate, Senator Sumner, Great Britain ought to pay to grounds of complaint, as a much stronger one than the mere the owners of ships and cargoes destroyed by the Confed er. aggregate of the private claims in themselves; shall it permit this one comprehensive case to he frittered away in the ate ships that sailed from England all their losses; and besides this, ought to make satisfaction to this nation for a settlement of ^the several individual injuries which enter into series of injuries, beginning with a premature recognition of it? a the rebels as moral support belligerents, followed up by giving them the of national sympathy, and by permitting the shipment to them of arms and supplies, and reaching its cul¬ mination in the neglect to pi event the fitting out and sailing of Confederate war vessels from British ports ; nothing less than an ample acknowledgement of wrong and a forma| apology, together with a money payment or a cession of ter_ ritory, in comparison with which the mere reimbursement of plundered merchantmen would be a trifle, cau be regarded satisfactory by statesmen of this class. In its formal cor¬ respondence with the British government, our Executive has our as never stated its claim in such a form as this; but it has dis¬ tinctly and repeatedly made a claim for reparation, not in the name of its injured shipowners and merchants alone/but in the refusal of our Government to In this view of the case, settlements with its citizens to which it should not be a party, is seen to have a certain consistency of its own. If the demands of the United States, as formulated in the well-known speech of Mr. Sumner on the ClarendonJohnson treaty, are to be maintained, it is certainly impossible to regard the claims of the individual citizens plundered by the Alabama as more than a subordinate incident of the great national account to be settled with Great Britain. If even Mr. Seward’s more moderate position is still to be held, and we are to persist in requiring satisfaction for the hasty procla-, mation of neutrality, as an expression of hostile sympathy, then the whole question of British neutrality-during our war consent to any must he retained in the hands of the Goverment,-to be dealt It is impossible to consent that which it regards as national, and has even refused to submit Great Britain shall treat with our injured , '■ s directly, for the issues pending between the nations to arbitration by an the settlement of portions of her debt selected at her plea* impartial tribunal, unless Great Britain would consent to sub¬ sure, without abandoning, in a measure, the ground which mit, as part of the case, the question whether or not the baste the United States have assumed in this controversy from the its own name. It has demanded satisfaction for wrongs with as an affair of State. Queen proclaimed her neutrality between the beginning. But if the consistency of the Government must two belligerents is an evidence of unfriendliness toward this be maintained, it does not follow that all, the burden of main¬ country, which forms a distinct claim for reparation. Now taining it ouodit to fall on the victims of the Alabama, whose with which the it will be observed that ia all the varied forms in which claims are thus delayed. If the Government, for public rea¬ the claim for a sons, prevents these citizens from collecting their private national compensation, they rely entirely upon wrongs of a dues, does it not owe them compensation ? When it deter¬ sentimental character; upon a misdirection of sympathy or mines to forbid the payment of these claims by Great Britain, of moral influence, and not upon definite and substantial acts. it ought to pay them itself; to buy them of the owners, and The only damage done to us by the English people or gov¬ make them its own; and then it-can fairly take its own time ernment, which is susceptible of being measured or distinctly and manner for pressing them on the attention of Great Bri¬ traced, is that done to private property by vessels of war tain, bearing the loss incurred by its own delay, and winning which they permitted to be fitted out against u.s. If this the profit obtained by adding to the specific claims]the whole claim were once removed from the controversy, by any weight of its own grievances. means whatever, all that remains would be too Such is the view which the claimants themselves take of vague to be a subject of dispute. If the government should permit the the duty of their government to them ; and it is difficult to actual claims of shipowners to be settled with Great Britain, find any satisfactory objection to it. There is, indeed, another apart from all public considerations, the whole case which our way in which the action of the government in refusing its diplomatists have been so long urging at the Court of St. consent to the separate settlements proposed might possibly James, would lose, as it were, its core aud substance. he explained. It has been supposed by many jurists that The question, like most others in internatioual law, has its whatever claim the United States may have against England counterpart in the civil administration of justice between for a breach of neutrality, no private shipowners can have citizens of the same State. If a man wantonly injures an¬ any claim against her for damages done to them by the other’s property, he may be compelled to pay exemplary Alabama. For instance, Dr. Bluntschli, of Heidelberg, per¬ damages; that is to say, the damages will not be merely for haps the first authority in Germany on international law, has the loss he has inflicted, but will be heightened by the con¬ just published in the Revue de Droit Internationale (No.III., sideration of the malice or gross disregard of his neighbor’s for 1870) a calm and admirable survey of the whole case, and rights which he has shown. If the injured man should ac¬ he argues strongly that if any reparation is sought before an cept, m such a case, private compromise, giving him an international tribunal for defects in British neutrality it must equivalent for the harm actually done, he would thus waive be by the government of the United States as complainant. aoy claim for higher damages. In the Alabama affair the No court would listen, he says, to the suit of a victim of the relations of the parties are more complicated, not only because Alabama for damages against her builders. Their defence the additional claim resulting from the supposed malice or | would be, “ We did ywa no harm; we built the instrument Senator Sumner and his followers press a 552 THE CHRONICLE. [October 29,1870. that injured you, and sold it; but made no use of it, and are assurances on this subject, that G reat Britain will cheerfull not responsible for the use made of it by the purchasers.” To audit and settle their claims, our Government is the 1 this defence, Bluntschli thinks no answer could be made, and power on earth to object that this is not legally if the British subjects who built the vessel cannot be held and that the claimants have no rights except such as Us liable, how can the government, whose only responsibility, at diplomacy may create for them. These considerations are most, is derived through thera^and consists in neglecting to too obvious to be overlooked by our Government in its deci interfere with them, be any more so ? But although private sion of so grave a question. We may therefore infer with shipowners have no claim against Great Britain, he says, yet confidence that its refusal to permit a separate settlement of the United States government has a claim for the breach of the private claims was not dictated by any regard for the in neutral obligations involved in|its neglect ; and this claim our terests of the claimants themselves, but wholly by national government can fairly press in the form of a demand that the considerations; that is to sav, that our Government believes sufferers by the rebel ships sent from England be paid for all the retention of these claims in its own hands to be necessary their losses, and that a new and more stringent rule of neutral in order that other grievances of a broader and vaguer charduties be formally adopted by both nations for the future* acter may be urged in connection with them. And this is the settlement which Bluntschli desires and It becomes most importent, then, to understand what these recommends for the whole case. Now if this doctrine be true, grievances are. But it is very difficult to obtain a statement and be held by the government of the United States, may it of them which has any judicial value; that is to say, which not be supposed that its refusal to commit the interests of if it were proved throughout, would support a definite claim for reparation. The people of the United States had private claimants into.their own hands is caused by a desire causes to save their claims from rejection ? That it sees no hope enough of irritation against England during our civil war. whatever of any reparation for them, except as an' agreement The public journals there were generally wilfully blind to the between the two nations, and in satisfaction of a national principles here contended for. The public men were strangely cold in their expressions of sympathy even for wrong ? suffering, and But this supposition will not bear a close examination. In were cynical in the extreme in their criticisms upon our peo¬ the first place, it seems to us that Bluntschli is hasty in deny ple and their cause. The nation most neafly connected with ing the equitable claim of private citizens against England ; and us by race, by language, by commerce, was the first to repel that his illustration proves it. He calls it a complete defence us cruelly when, in our time of sore trouble, we looked by the builder of the Alabama that he did not use this instru¬ abroad for moral support and friendly feeling. The loudest ment of destruction himself, but furnished it to those who did talkers and most popular writers rejoiced in the overthrow, use it. But this is no defence at all, either in criminal law or as they regarded it, of our national institutions, and mocked in equity, if the builder knew the purposes for which it would at our hopes of restoring their integrity. All this gave, in be used. If I know the intent of a criminal to commit mur¬ our eyes, a sinister appearance to every act of the British der or arson, and deliberately put in his hands instruments in Government, and multiplied immeasurably the resentment order that he may'use them in his crime, I am equally guilty felt against it for whatever could be construed as a proof of with him, whether in the court of law or in that of conscience. unfriendliness. When, in addition to all this, English mer¬ And if the British government, by its responsible officers, con¬ chants were seen eagerly buying the loans of the Confed¬ nived at the act of furnishing the instrument in question, wil¬ eracy, and British shipbuilders sent out armed vessels which almost destroyed our commerce, the people of this country1 fully neglecting to enforce its own openly acknowledged duty and professed will, by preventing that act, it is difficult to see must have been either less patriotic than they are, or else how it can fail to be directly responsible to those who suffered more forbearing and enduring than human nature ever was had they not, for the time, judged the course of Great Britain by the consequences. Even if this were not the case, yet here was a distinct violation of the duties of a neutral, as Blunt with some severity, and regarded what she called neutrality schli himself shows, in not preventing an act done by British as something very like concealed and not very brave hostility. subjects, by which the subjects of a friendly state were injured. This feeling has proved lasting ; the irritation of long and Surely, then, it is for the British government to assume the unsatisfactory negotiations between the two Governments whole liability to these sufferers, and to act according to has intensified it, and it is only within the last two years that its own policy and laws in exacting or not exacting an the general indignation at what, we regarded and still regard equivalent from those of its own subjects who have caused as unfair and unworthy treatment from those on whom we the trouble. had the strongest claims of friendship, has so far passed away Again, let it be admitted that Bluntschli’s doctrine is true, that the American people can look calmly at the case in its and that the whole case is one between the two Govern¬ legal aspects. But it must be remembered that all these reasons for re¬ ments, of which the interests of private persons are but an inci¬ dent, it must still be remembered that this has never been the proaching the British nation, and especially its ruling aris¬ doctrine of the United States Government, nor of any promi¬ tocracies of birth and wealth, with blindness and injustice nent American statesman. Neither in any official paper from towards us, do not, in any court or by any law, constr the Department of State, nor in any speech in the Senate, do tute a claim for reparation. Our government can demand we remember to have seen a doubt from the government of Great Britain satisfaction only for expressed that the injured shipmasters are legally entitled to compensation ; while, in wrongs for which that government as such is equitably and almost every survey of the case yet published in this coun¬ legally responsible; and speeches in Parliament, articles in the public journals, the tone of talk in society, the transac¬ try, the doctrine that they are entitled to it is explicitly affirmed. But again, even if the theory ol Bluntschli were tions in the Stock Exchange, and the shifting currents of .the theory of every man in this country, and no one imagined public opinion, are not matters for which the government of that the Alabama claimants have any direct right to dam¬ a free country can be called to account. Let it be true, as ages from Great Britain, it would still bo true that Great Mr. Sumner suggests, that the British people by these means Britain has the power to waive her strict legal defence on actually extended important moral support to the rebellion, this point, and to consent to pay the damages equitably, weakened the war sentiment in the loyal States, and seri¬ just as if undisputed public law required it. Now if the ously prolonged the war ; yet these are indirect and remote claimants are justified in believing that they have satisfactory consequences which have nothing to do with a legal claim for necessar^ - f October 29, 1876.] THE CHRONICLE. however justly they may be urged as indications of the defects in British society and civilization. After all the counts in the long indictment of Mr. Sumner against England are weighed, there are precisely two of them, and no more, which set forth tangible acts for which the British govern¬ ment can fairly be dealt with as responsible, the Queen’s damans* proclamation of neutrality and the escape of rebel cruisers from English ports. To permit the latter was a breach of neutral duties, as is now admitted by British statesmen and publicists; and the British government itself appears to be ready to give satisfaction for it by paying all the actual damages which can be proved to have been its result. Our government refuses this, in order that it may press the claim lic 553 if there were much against them. Here then is no authority against them, and whatever our feelings may be as to the motives which governed the public men of Eng¬ land in 1861, it must be admitted that the question of law is decided, and that the Queen’s proclamation is not a ground of complaint on the part of our government. There remains, then, no good reason for longer delay in the settlement of this irritating controversy. The owners of prop¬ erty destroyed by British ships under the confederate flag have a right to reparation from the British government. It is the duty of our government to see that they obtain it. The right is now acknowledged by all publicists of note, in Eng¬ law, land as even well as elsewhere, and Great Britain is believed to be with some grievance of their ready to meet it honorably. If the adjustment of the claims should be be defeated or longer delayed by any false notions own; and this grievance cannot possibly be any other than of consistency on the part of our own government, it will be the neutrality proclamation, regarded as an indication of a a misfortune, not to the claimants alone, but to both the hostile spirit; or, at best, as a mistake, the results of which were pernicious to us. Remove from the whole case the con¬ nations, whose friendship is disturbed by the protracted con¬ sideration of this proclamation, and the payment to American troversy, and through them, to the cause of civilization. shipowners of all damages inflicted on them by English cruisers under the rebel flag, will put an end to the long con- CONSUMPTION OF COTTON BY THE MILLS OF THE UNITED STATES. treversy and prepare the way [for the perfect restoration of friendship between the two nations. We have received from B. F. Nourse, Chairman of the Statistical for these damages in connection Now this is exactly what the recent elaborate discussion of Committee of the National Association of Cotton Manufacturers subject has thoroughly done. The Queen’s proclamation, and Planters, a copy of their annual report issued on the 12th of recognizing a state of war between the United States and this month. It will be remembered that in our annual crop report we gave some figures received from this association based upon their revolted citizens, as belligerents, and forbidding her sub¬ partial returns; tbe complete statement which they nowT make public jects to take any part in it, was signed May 13, 1861, some only confirms what was then published. The following are the the days after [President Lincoln’s proclamation declaring a blockade of the Southern coasts was published in England. Supreme Court of the United figures they give, based upon returns, representing over 83 per cent* spinning power of tbe country. , States, in May, 1863, The decided that the war had existed from SYNOPSIS OF RETURNS TO OCTOBER 1, 1870. the time of the Presi¬ proclamation, and that all the rights and liabilities of belligerents, in matters of seizure and before prize courts, had dent’s accrued to both sides from that date. of the cotton The highest legal tri¬ Average Otherwise per Mills. Looms. State. 19 Maine 9,776 1 ,082 N. Hampshire 37 438 8 Vermont Mass^ch’setts 128 Rhode Island. 83 62 Connecticut. 43 New York.... Cotton Spindles. Yarn. 446,680 686,336 21,346 52,149 2,304,813 16,394 9,467 943,790 4-1,213 424,669 126,334 261,662 20,602 33,972 24 26 * 29 X 28% 34 ’ used. Spun. Spindle. 53.56 56.15 46.31 49.85 41.32 49.21 43 51 28 78 68.10 47 09 175.03 21,924,551 33,537,216 988.599 114,919,627 33,996,698 22,205,773 3 8,005 150,000 438,145 , T T 31* 158,800 sanctioned the very declaration of 18,476,502 33* 1,3:9.882 9,195 40 14 4,899,048 1,438 3,200 question, as a matter of fact. Mr. New Jersey 19 6,34) 17,830,708 19,000 Pennsylvania. 37 387 3 970,006 23* Mountague Bernard, the calmest and most impartial of Eng¬ Delaware 8 755 11* 5,951,374 Maryland lish authorities upon public lawr, strongly argues that this Ohio 40 90.78 5 13,270 10* 1,704,(00 700,000 112.48 444 2 14,488- 13* 1,631,368 declaration was true; was timely, not premature; was strictly Indiana 460 7 32(.08 2 150,000 Illinois 126,500 62 96.72 1 20 6?,ut'0 Miunes >ta.... 6* within the province of the Queen’s government and in accord¬ Missouri 154 07 2 235 11* 1,952,998 12,676 ance with the friendship due to this country. His argument North 50.87 451 124,211 293,193,467 28* 5,762,988 3,213,032 lias never been answered, but has now been explicitly con¬ Virginia 106.58 687 20.738 2,210,332 6 14* 1 >* 102.60 293 12 2,105,385 20,521 N. Carolina.. firmed and accepted by the first publicists in all the leading S. Carolina.. 5 125.26 699 29,933 12* 3,757,723 142.89 12* 17 57,266 8,151,853 1,348 nations. The Revue de Deux Mondes for September 15 has Georgia 384 117 03 4 14* 15,612 1,827,892 Alabama. 136 150.20 766,000 3 5,100 8* Mississippi... an admirable treatise on the whole subject of British neutral¬ 46. 100 2 9* 226,256 4,9?3 Texas 516 10 170.69 1 88,074 Arkansas ity during our war, from the [pen of M. H. Blerzy, in which Tennessee 53S 478 84 24 64 6,392 5 11* 186.55 2 981,980 10* 5,264 the wrongs of this country in the matter of the Alabama are Kentucky 124.23 57 12* 166,275 20,656,473 3,711 fully recognized and our claim for damage? sustained; but he South.. RECAPITULATION. admits that M»*. Mountague Bernard is unanswerable on the 50. S7 454 124, vll 28% 293,193,467 5,702,98S 3,213,032 North....,. 12* 20,656,473 - 124.23 57 166,275 3,711 subject of the proclamation, and believes that ripe reflection South 52.93 611 127,922 313,819,940 3,213,032 5,929,263 28* among Americans will do away with all disposition to make Total it a ground of dispute. Herr Bluntschli, in the Revue de 106 mills, having 418,101 spindles, which reported last year, have Droit Internationale, throws all the weight of the highest not reported this year; and 27 mills, having 150,765 spindles, German authority in the same scale. Mr. William Beach which did not report last year, have now reported. The mills not Lawrence, a jurist second to none in America in international reporting in either year prior to October 1, are of small capacity; wTith very few exceptions. questions, declares in the last (French) edition of his com. mentary upon Wheatou’s International Law that the British 430 Northern mills, \n liich for 1869-70 repoit 5,744,142 spindles 291,405,864 poundt consuming and French proclamations of neutrality “ are but corollaries Reported for 1868-9, 5,591,8S9 spindles, consuming 286,708,540 “ O' ihe acts of the United States an increase in consumption of 1.67 per cent, or 4,787,324 41 government.” And now the Showing spindles of 2.72 per cent. and in North American Review for this month, in a thorough analy¬ 63 Southern ibilla, which fjr 1869-70 report 158,243 6pindles ep ndles, consuming 19,907,066 44 sis of our claims from a 18,751,811 14 patriotic point of view, by Dr. T. D. Reported for 1868-9, 158,197 spindles, consuming.... Showing in consumption Woolsey, the President of Yale College, and author of our Together,un increasewhkh for 1869-70of 6.26 per cent, or. . 1,155,255 44 483 mills, report 5,902,385 spin¬ most popular text-book of international law, accepts the doc¬ dles, consuming 311,402,930 “ bunal in this country thus the British government in . — ... .. . ... 1 .... . ..." . .... .... . - trine of Mr. Mountague Bernard, that in such cases as that before us, “ the recognition of belligerency ought not to be withheld, as being These authorities on are the whole an advantage to the sufficient to decide any question world.” of pub¬ 305,460,851 44 an increase in consuTption of 1.95 per cent, or... 6,942,279 44 Reportei for 1868-9, 5,750,070 Showing and In - spindles, consuming spindles of 2 65 per cent. The returns of cotton ».. 4 used in cotton mills “ otherwise than fo r spinning” wTere not enough to afford a satisfactory ratio of con - THE 554 CHRONICLE parison with last year’s figures, which are adopted for this year without change. The ratios thus obtained applied to all the cotton mills> North and South, reported and uureported, with the following results reckoned, as last year, in bales of 466 pounds each. Mills. Spindles. Bales used. 738 5,851,779 748,153 109 South,. 262,221 69,067 Used in cotton mills but not for spinning 31,744 Used outside of cotton mills, as in wooden mills, uphols¬ tery, &c Totals..,. Against Showing an fttttat lilonetarp anir Commercial 847 881,564 in 1869-70 7.114,000 844 6,763,557 increase of 350,443 spindles and 17,310 bales. The daily dosing quotations in the markets of London and Liver pool for the past week have been reported by submuiue telegraph shown in the following summary : *M London Money and Stock Market.—This market doses quiet with no material change in prices. ’ Bat. 32,600* 864,254 in 1868-69 mills, having 6,851,770 spindles, produce yarn averaging in size No. 28|. A fair average product from all the mills upon that number of yam is 4£ skeins per day (of eleven hours). In ordinary years, 300 working days in the year should he reckoned, leaving 65 days for Sundays, holidays, &c. This year’s work has been reduced, both by tlie long strike at Fall River, and by the loss of water power from the drouth ; so that no more than 290 working days can be counted for the average of all the Nor¬ thern mills. Waste, at the rate of 19 per cent, of the weight of yarn produced, is about the same’as 16 per cent, of the gross weight of raw cotton used ; and that| rate is^used in the following calcu. lation. The 6,851,77ff spindles, each producing 44 skeins per day, for days, will give for the y ear J3,444,817,690 skeins, equal,5in No 284 y&rn> to 292,461,219 pounds. Add for* waste 19 per cent of the weight of yarn, 55,567,631* pounds, making the equivalent in raw cotton of 348,028,850 pounds, equal to 746,843 bales of 466 pounds each, against 748,153 bales, the quantity shown by the mill returns. Other practical tests sustain the same result, divesting it of all Then reasonable doubt. The consumption per spindle in Northern mills—50.87 pounds— against 51.13 pounds last year, confirms the opinion held by the trade, that the average fabrics produced this year were lighter than for the year ending August 31, 1869, and much lighter than for the year preceeding that, when the rate was 59.57 pounds per spindle, or 15 per cent, more than during the year just closed. Low prices, active trade, good profits, and the consequent full working of mills (largely on heavy goods) in 1867-8 explain the difference between the weekly consumption of that year, 17,000 bales, and the weekly quantity this year, less than 15,000 bales, under oppo¬ 92% 89 87% 114 ' 18% 29% 90 87 114 18% 29% following table shows the average weights of bales as re ported from the mills (465,72 pounds), the result varying very slightly from the average last year (465.34 pounds). SHOWING THE GROSS WEIGHT OF COTTON BALES, AS REPORTED BY MILLS, SEPTEMBER 1, 1870. 114 18% 18% 29% 29 Consumpiion Mills. State, Bales. 4-1,541 Maine New Hampshire 34,545 Vermoni Massachusetts. .... ... 6 79 *,197 193,440 58,*18 29,-54 .. ...23 33,038 7 8,861 18,619 1,725 3,734 2,912 .. Pennsylvania . ... Delaware .... Maryland .... Indiana Illinois .... .... Total 15 2 4 1 1 ...160 Cor sumption l ounds. weight Pounds. 20,835,553 95%@95% .... 95% 95^ showing Sat. d. Mon. d. 24 0 9 l 10 3 11 0 s. Flour, (Western) 8. bbl 23 6 Wheat(No.2 Mil. Red) p.ctl fl 1 p. 10 1 (California white)' 44 10 10 Corn(W.rax d)p. 4801bsn’w 29 6 Barley (Canadian), per bush 5 0 Oats(Am.&Can.)per45lbs 2 9 Peas.. (Canadi an) pr 504 lbs 36 6 • Tnes. s. d. 24 9 10 11 29 29 0 5 0 2 10 36 6 5 2 36 Wed. Thu. 8. d. 24 6 9 10 10 3 11 7 29 9 5 0 2 10 36 6 0 1 3 0 9 0 10 6 ®* 6. 9 10 11 89,903.817 27,02 ‘,000 13,816,328 17,8*1,612 4,130,746 8,542,527*’ 820,005 2,101,782 3,371,368 320 150,000 436,574 203,406,703 Fri. g. 4 3 2 6 0 2 10 d. 9 10 11 29 5 2 , 9 3 2 9 0 10 Liverpool Provisions Market.—This market closed quiet, the prices showing an advance, while other prices remain unchanged. of lard 44 Cheese (fine) of Mon. s. d. Sat. 8. d. 112 b 107 6 53 0 73 0 69 0 Beef(ex.pr. mess) p. 8G4 lbs Pork(Etn. pr.mess) d 304 lbs Bacon (Cumb.cut) p. 112 lbs Lard (American) 44 44 44 112 107 53 73 69 6 6 0 6 0 Tues. 8. 112 107 53 74 69 Wed. d. 6 6 0 0 0 Tim. d. 6 8. 112 107 63 74 69 Fri. d. 8. d. g. 74 69 0 0 74 69 6 0 0 0 0 6 Liverpool Produce Market.—This market remains quiet, the prices spirits of peteoleum showing a decline, while the prices of common rosin show advance. an Sat. Mon. Tues. Wed. d. s. d. s. d. 8. d. 4 9 5 0 5 0 5 0 14 0 14 0 14 0 14 0 1 6% 1 0% 1 6% 1 6% 1 0 11 11 11 43 0 43 0 43 0 43 0 Thn. s. Rosin (com Wilm.).per 112 lbs 44 Fine Pale... do Petroleum (std white) .p. 8 lbs. 44 spirit .. .per 8 lbs Tallow (America 112 lbs. .p Fn. s. d. s. 5 14 0 0 5 14 1 d 0 0 6% 1 6% 11 43 0 11 0 43 quiet, the prices of sugir showing an advance, while the prices of linseed oil show a decline. Sat. Mon. Lins’d c’ke(obl)p.tn£10 10 0 Linseed (Calcutta)... 59 9 Toes. Wed. Thu. * Fri. *£10 10 0 £10 10. 0 £10 10 0 £10 10 0 £10 10 0 59 9 69 9 69 9 59 9 59 9 Sugar(No.l2 Dch std) 112 lb 32 0 0 0 81 Whaie oil 36 10 0 Linseed oil. .per ton..29 5 0 36 10 0 36 10 0 36 10 0 29 29 29 Sperm oil 468 456 449 465 15,844,366 988,599 18% 29% advance. an per Average 88% 87 London Produce and Oil Markets.—These markets close The Fri. 92% 92% 89% 89% 88% 90% 88% 90 87% 114% Thu. 92% 32% Liverpool Cotton. Market.—See special report of cotton. Liverpool Breadstuff* Market.—The market for breadstuff* closed generally quiet, prices, with the exception of barley and peas, site conditions. Rhone Island Connecticut New York New Jersey Wed. 92% 92% 89% 88% 90% 95% Red Winter 290 Tues. 92% 92% 92% 89% 88% daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort wert- Frankioit 4 ▲ TABLE Mon. Consols for money 92% “ for account... 92% U. S. 6s (5 20’s) 1862.. 89% “ “ “ old 1865 88% 4i “ “ 1867.. 90% U. S. 10-408 87% Illinois Central shares. 114 Erie Railway shares .. 19 Atl. & G. W. (consols). 80 . The Northern Cnglial) English Market Reports—Per Cable. are North [October 29,1$70. 81 32 0 0 0 0 0 81 32 0 0 0 0 0 81 32 0 0 0 0 0 32 6 81 0 0 81 32 6 0 0 36 10 0 36 10 0 29 29 0 0 00 COMMERCIAL AMD MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. 464 467 469 466 459 475 561 471 469 465.72 The foregoing are the principal figures of the report. We should preferred to have given the report entire, but a want of spac prevents. A statement of the crop made up from these figures will be found in our cotton report of to-day. have Imports and Exforts for the Week.—The imports this week show slight decrease in dry goods and a large increase in general merchan¬ The total imports amount to $6,310,229 against $5,018,214 last week, and $6,852,685 the previous week. The exports are $4,337,068 this week against $8,196,133 last week, and 14,574,389 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 14,851 bales, against 12,6*27 bales last week. The following are the Imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) Oct. 21 and for the week ending (for general merchandise) Oct. 22 : a dise. FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NSW TORE FOB THE WEEK. 1870. 1868. 1869. General merchandise.. $1,252,259 1,465,695 $1,459,083 3,640,023 $1,618,658 2,807,173 $2,229,196 4,081,039 Total for the week.. $2,717,854 $4,999,106 203,056,665 $4,425,831 244,054,549 $6,310,229 243,379,471 $208,055,771 $248,480,389 $249,689,700 1867. Dry goods CHANGES IN THE REDEEMING The following AGENTS OP NATIONAL BANKS. the changes in the Redeeming Agents of National Backs for the week ending Oct. 27, 1879. These weekly changes are furnished by, and published in accordance with an arrangement made with the Comptroller of the Currency. LOCATION. Virginia— Alexandria Indiana— ., Indianapolis Indiana— Lafayette.... Illinois— Chicago.. Illinois— Sterling .. are NAME OF BANK. REDEEMING AGENT. The Citizens’ Nat’l The Citizens’ National Bank of Balti¬ Bank (new).... more, approved. The Citizens’ Nat’l The Ninth National Bank of New Bank York, approved in place of the Fourth National Bank cf New York. The Second Nat’l The Third National Bank of Cincin¬ Bank nati, approved in addition to the National Park Bank of New York. The Corn Exchange The Continental National Bank of Nat’l Bank (new). New York, approve id. The First National The First National bank of Chicago, Bank (new) approved. Previously reported... 203,509,290 Since Jan. 1.......$206,227,144 reportof the dry goodstrade will be found the lmportsof dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive ofspecie)from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Oct. 26: In our EXPORTS PROM NSW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1887. For the week Previously reported Since Jan. 1 , 1869 $3,997,794 , $4,337,058 $3,339,694 182,159,391 156,125,800 144,755,201 $152,211,148 $135,499,085 $160,123,594 $149,092,259 exports from this port to different countries (exclusive specie) since January 1, compared with the cori The value of of 1868. .$4,946,163 147,264,935 THE October 29, 1870.] CHRONICLE. Since Jan. 1, 1870. $77,932,463 Attain Same time $86,824,810 8,480,110 ... ... 1869. gXnd and Belgium.. =. 6,322,710 4,691,775 it',195',019 16,788,086 0?hfrSoafflern Europe giflt Indies. jV812,401 8,895,248 2,607,175 4,746,391 103,455 1,193,515 6,479,729 Australia 1,483,950 *•• • •••• "““nW “ SSw Northern Europe.. ......... Chin* and 3,398*701 ... ........ ‘ Japan BritienN. A.Ooloniea 66,029 2,348,999 1,822,013 3,658,688 4,474,425 3,839,012 169,360 1,745,186 .... Caba flayti 835,023 5,202,152 Mexico New 1,207,112 2,343,145 539,029 1,193,202 2,669,728 3,799,668 1,837,284 3,266,183 553,010 aSerS.'American ports 6,316,995 2,643,649 3,300,449 869,199 Granada Venezuela British Guiana 8S4 486 ports All other The following will show the exports of specie from the port of New Oct. 22, 1870 : York for the week ending Oct. 18-Schr. Joe Kelly, Cu- Oct. 20—Str. Calabria. Liver¬ poolSilver bars Oct. 17—Str. City of Port an Prince, Port an Prince— American silver.... Oct. 22—Str France, Liver¬ raCoa— American gold American silver— 6,000 | 19—Str. Wisconsin, Liv¬ erpoolForeign silver Oct. 19—Str. Tybee, Porto Oct. 45,500 9,354 400 Foreign gold 29,395 American gold Silver bars Gold bars 134,278 20—Str. Alaska, Aspinwall — American silver— .... $556,180 60,686.669 Previously reported Totalsince Jan. 1,1870 1| Same time .$28,393,797 j 1860 . ,. ■ . . . . . •••> . 1863.. . i 43,042,672 54,180,135 24,253,204 36,422,507 37,214,859 43,526,273 3,294,452 | 1858• 1 I 1857 1856 1855 j in $41,062,911 61,129,128 ••••«« .• 22,915,tils •.»•••■••••! . The 1854 | i 1853 11852.. 22,242,779 following shows the imports of specie at this port during the past week: 0ct.21-Str. South America, Oct. Para Total for the week $189 22—Pallas, Belize....... $4,511 '. $4,700 8,489,011 Previously reported. Total since Jan. If 1870 The $8,493,711 following is the treasure list per steamer Arizona Irom wall. Ribon & Munoz Perez & Olmrrio Aspin- $76,920 I Rotholz Brothers 11,920 Wells, Fargo & Co 250 $500 | 580 Bibon & Munoz Total $90,170 | NationalTreasurv.—The following forms present tain a summary of cer_ weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom House. 1.—Securities held by the U.S. Treasurerin trust for National bank and balance in the Treasury : Week For Coin ForU.S. endiog Circulation. Deposits. May 14..342,269,550 16,410,000 May 21..342,362,550 16,310,0 0 May 23..342,299,750 16,284,00J June 4..342,227,750 16,281,000 June 11..342,224,550 16,3:44,000 June IS..342,273,050 16,434,000 June25..342,268.050 16,434,000 July 2..342,278,553 July 9..342,328,050 July 16..342,028,050 July 23..342,022,050 16,4(12,500 16,891,500 16,341,500 16,316,500 July30..342,109,050 16,316,500 Aug. 6..342,017,550 16,366,500 Aug. 13..341,970,450 16,364,500 Aug. 20 342,270,300 16,366,500 . Aug.27..342,705,300 16,366,500 Jept. 3..342,348,300 16,341,500 Sept. 10.312,044,850 16,311,500 ^-Bal. in Treas.- Total. 1 8.... 15.... 22.... ... UCt. Oct. 257,495 26,650,275 27,005,715 27,246,915 27,645,575 28,010,7v5 28,349,145 28,635,055 29,052,098 355.440 241,200 398,460 365,380 338,420 267,910 421,000 338,250 Coin. 358,679,550 105,783,000 358,702,550 107,285,000 358,583,750 107,549,360 358,511,750 108,126.523 358,558,550 108,284,421 358,707,050 353,702,050 112,133,056 358,6sl,053 358,719,550 118,735,843 358,369.550 113,000,900 358,338,550 105,600,000 358,425,550 358,384,050 105,000,000 358,334,950 358,636,800 120,395,920 369,0(1,800 103,384,531 358,989,800 99,768,335 358,386,350 98,498,178 358,261,350 99,281,082 358,615,750 9?,290,420 356,945,350 358,942,450 98,481,014 359,574,450 98,131,000 359,828.050 99,507,000 cer¬ tificates Currency, ouist’d’g, 11,555,000 35,436,500 9,357,000 86,755,500 13,27 J,704 36,208,0(10 20,471,337 .35,451,800 20,713,994 84,671,000 21,974,626 34*,823,566 35,197,843 36,283,500 31.000,000 40,700,000 30,500,000 40,700,000 27,286,088 ,154,()1S 2S. 303,578 247,950 759,5(0 360,000 299,390,529 299.625.409 299,390,064 299,435,629 299,538 229 299,560.149 28,662,518 28,983,168 29,106.368 29,829,9t,8 30,277,618 39,658,518* 320.650 423,200 423.6(H) 300,089,639 447.650 3<H),165,516 318,037 29,370,135 380,900 300.262.409 Oct. 471,330 29,841,465 249,150 30,907,068 3u0,831,009 8.—Fractional currency received from the Currency Bureau bv U. S. Treasurer aad distributed weekly ; also the amount legal tenders distributed: destroyed, and Fractional Currency. Leg Ten Received. Distributed. Destroy’d Dietrib d 39,000 1,810,059 621,100 894,468 604,0n0 796,539 531.200 1,814,047 497,500 861,803 812,700 32‘,631 604,000 156,745 726,763 620 959 583,500 657,760 448,8 0 1,513,636 762.5(H) 378,755 585.900 245,000 745,50) 952.891 605.200 1,3*4,072 733.000 812,516 605,373 1,634,629 298,500 238,195 250,529 413,| 00 552,493 41 O’500 519,430 557,0 0 292,503 612,400 359,962 599,000 830,141 667.161 584,‘•00 620,000 221,348 520,000 335,33* 767,500 513,114 753.500 1,520,591 1,(85.500 898,269 599.200 3,888,724 418,000 779,506 495,600 1,976,153 482,000 471,922 588,800 602,158 458.008 430,215 729.900 3,584,989 420,000 719,590 493,100 1, St 14,859 419,500 262,293 664.300 1,092,128 409,000 806,015 500,000 1,475,773 442,500 167,337 583.200 4,079,543 441,000 1,393,159 512,874 896,293 423,000 280,509 507.500 3,079,728 552,500 455,444 683.200 2,118,560 * Weekending. May May May May , 7.... 14 21 28. June June June June 4..., 11 18 25 July July 2 9 16 23 80 6 13 20 27 3 10 July July July Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Sept. Sept. 17 Sept. 24 Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. 1 8 15 22 Atlanta and West Point Railroad.—The earnings of the At" tor the fiscal years ending 30’ lauta and West Point itailioad 1869 and 1870, were as follows : From passengers— From freight From mail From express FromU. S. Government, &c June 1869. 1870. $130,9-6 41 $151,353 07 203,231 85 8,649 96 6,240 44 13,556 95 't Total 25,496,3:38 33,410,823 | . $61,242,749 1859 66.840,470 1 Sametlmeln 1868 1867... 1866 1865 17,500 132,363 *6,060 92,042 Total for the week ^ 8,000 City of Brook¬ lyn, Liverpool — pool- Oct. Sept. Foreign silver Oct. 22—Str. Russia, Liver¬ Silver bars Oct. 6,348 pool- Plata— American silver.... American gold Oct. 19—Str. $60,00C Ang. 20 Aug. 27 Sept. 3 Sept. 10 Sept. 17 Sept. 24...., 555 296,700 38 8,649 97 9,163 40 2,082 77 $362,665 64 $467,956 68 $59,810 39 569.715 55 96,477 01 82,996 56 19,609 23 T, ICO 00 Expenses, viz.: Conducting transportation Motive power Maintenance of way Maintenance of cars Taxes, &c 76,412 28 73,012 42 8,722 93 4,614 31 ... Total Earnings less expenses From which deduct New locomotive New cars $222,572 33 $140,093 31 extraordinary engines expenses ; _ in 1869-70 $275,898 35 $192,058 23 : $27,000 00 6,000 00 Re-roliing and purchase of iron rails. 20,uuu (JO— Balance net profits 58,000 00 $130,058 23 In 1868-69 the extraordinary expenses were $20,931 49, leaving the balance of earnings at the close of that year $119,161 82. The per¬ centage of ordiuary expenses to gross receipt^ iu 1869-70 is 59, against 61.3 for the previous year. The groi-s earnings shew an increase of $105,290 97, and the net profits an increase of $19,896 41. The assets and liabilities at the Company July 1, 1870, were as follows: ASSETS. Road outfit and real estate Bills receivable Supply fund Due $1,200,281 51 26,327 20 2,5C0 (X) . by agents and connecting roads Cash on 52,706 42 70,368 56 hand Total. $1,352,163 69 LIABILITIES. Capital stock Bonds of the $1,232,200 00 32,000 00 Company Dividends unpaid Due to 1,520 00 3,844 03 82,599 66 agents and connecting roads Profit and loss Total $1,352,163 69 President,Hon. John P. Kiog ; Directors, R. Peters, John E. Robin¬ 39,103,662 88,249,666 son, L. B. Lovelace, W. B. Berry, F. Phinizy, John F. Moreland ; Gene¬ 37,897,596 33,818,500 1 ral Superintendent, L. P. Graut; Secretary and Treasurer, W. P. 34,249,704 7,612,480 37,615,824 28.424.820 35,576,449 24.342.820 34 274,821 21,317,000 30,855,940 16,798,000 Orme. —The directors of the Portland and Ogdensburg to issue bonds to the amount of $800,000, Railroad have voted payable iu not exceeding Oct. 1.842,833,850 16,111,500 thirty years, at an interest ot six per cent., principal and interest to be Oot. 8.8*2,960,950 15,981,500 26,348433 payable in gold, secured by mortgage on the road. This vote is sub¬ OCt. 15.813,592,950 15,981,500 25,260,000 12,386,000 ject to Oct. ratification by the stockholders. It is estimated that it will cost 22.343,921,550 15,906,500 21,583,984 12,508,000 nearly $3,000,000 to build aud equip the road to the Slate line. **7“National bank currency issued (weekly and aggregate),in return Friends of the road seem to be hopeful. It is expected that cars will wr bills destroyed and mutilated bills returhed (weekly and aggregate) run to Steep Falls before December, twenty-three miles from Portland. with the amount in W* H*341’919’850 Sept. 24.343,384,^50 16,341,500 16,261,500 circulation at date: Week {“M J»Vl4...... ....... Jiuaell —The r-flotes issued for ret d.-> r- Mutilated notesbomed.— Current week. Aggregate. Current week. Aggregate. 291,170 251,520 255,500 813,610 279,9 i0 281,770 !?*•••• *4 *.158 313,810 Wj 2 275,010 yj y 2 178,245 ffyl8 333,505 229,710 238,235 174,610 22.799.225 202,000 23,050,745 289,400 23,306,245 23.619.855 305,341 286,480 225,930 29:\750 802,900 801,326 23,585,255 24.150.855 24,395.013 24,729,685 25,004,695 25,182,940 25,516,445 25.755.225 25,984,935 26,223,170 813,150 26,397,780 281,500 473,200 98,365 327,0'0 169,000 845,006 23,027,446 23,316,846 23.622,187 23,908,667 24,134,597 24 224,437 21,729,247 25,030,573 25,503,773 25,602,138 25,915,283 26.152.288 26.321.288 26,666,839 27,715,400 , Notes in Circulation 299,543,682 299,512,563 299,447,712 299,474,842 299,506,024 Richmond and York River Railroad extends from Richmond, Va., nearly due east 88 1-3 miles to West Point, at the head of York River. The earnings for the two years ending September 30, 1869, and 1870 have been reported as follows : 299,406,084 1870. expenses $63,966 69 43,370 47 $86,051 62 61,136 00 Net income $15,596 22 $24,915 62 Working 299,504,062 299,302,982 298,467,446 299,269,006 299,348,886 299,389,241 299,404,721 299,637,864 299,437,049 1869. Total earning During tion and a part of the first year the road was in process of reconstruc¬ a part was not operated. —Messrs. Williams A Bostwick, bankers and slock, bond, and gold brokers, 40 and 42 Exchange place, notify the public through their card on the first page of the Chronicle that they will make liberal on all first-lass securities and allow interest on deposits. advances THfe 556 ckkokicLk —Among the cards of Southern banking houses to be found in our advertising columns will be seen to-day the card of Mr. T. J. Perkins, banker, of Eufaula, Alabima* Mr. Perkins deals in exchange, bank notes, coin, <fcc,,and makes collections on all accessible points. —Messrs. Isbell Son, bankers of Talladega, Ala., give special attention to collections. Their correspondents in this city are Messrs. Howes & Macy. St., N. Y.-— be opened with us in either currency or coin of Henry Clews & Co., 32 Wall Deposit accounts can subject to check without notice. Interest allowed upon ail daily Checks upon us pass through the if drawn upon any city bank. balances at current market rates. Clean g House as We draw Bills of Exchange, make telegraphic transfers of money and bsue credits available in all parts of Europe. We issue Certificates of Deposit payable on demand or at fixed date bearing interest and available at all money centers. Collections made in any part of the world. Clews, Habicht <fe Co., 5 Lothbury, London. A. S. HATCH. HARVEY FISK. Office of Fisk cfe Hatch, Bankers and Dealers in Government No, 6 Nassau street, New The Funding of Securities, York,-Oct. 27, 1870 ©> U. S. Five-Twenties into a first-clas3 security, of interest (six per cent gold), and which cannot be called in under 25 years without the consent of the holder, may} now be effected at a clear profit of nearly twenty per cent by exchanging them for the First Mortgage Bonds of the Central Pacific Rail¬ cent ner large gain in specie, arising from the payment of the November interest on the public debt. The following statement shows the present condition of the associated banks, compared with the same date in the last two years: Oct. 23.1869. Oct. 22,1870. °£t-24,18<58' $249,395,073 $26;,665,396 return by a Loans and discounts. deposits Legal Tenders Net The following is the and State Banks of the selling tc-day at IlOf, an! the Central of the forme: will buy $1 000 of the latter, and leave nearly $200 for use or for reinvestment; or $5,000 of the former, paying $300 in gold annually, will buy $6,000 of the latter, paying $o60 in gold annually, and leave a balance in cash of The five-twenties of 1867 are $90. , 175.798 919 52,390,812 Circulation 52,037,604 9.558 583 3',193,938 1^6,052,847 56,711,434 quarterly statement of the National Banks City of New York : National Bank®. r. Liabilities. Liabilities. June 9,1870. Oct. 8 1870. $73,033,300 27,614,900 Capital profits Net Circulation Due banka $263,579,188 19,399,701 34,204 435 11,948.118 32,517.036 189,578,^33 Specie ° depositors Unpaid dividends Due $73,035,000 27 521 500 82,288.300 124,265,400 1,‘256,900 59,401,300 117,301,800 33,132.900 33 758.200 State Banks. Liabilities. Liabilities. Ju e 25, D70. Sep. 24.70. $12 129 800 5,222,200 $12,888,200 5,027^6 508.500 3.810000 63700 2739.400 36.540,809 27,120.200 118,500 959,200 237.100 $342,210,900 Loans and discounts Stocks Real estate Due from banks Cash items and bank $310,829,100 $59,170,500 $47,957,500 Resources. Resources. Resources. $176,993,400 60,'98,600 7,646,900 15,6^2.700 5,795 6 >0 22,769,900 $167,684,800 56.000,100 7,741.900 15,063,400 $34,961,'•00 2,609,200 1.257.400 2.390,790 Resources. $34,765,000 2.846,400 Pacific is 2,371,800 11.040 900 2.947.400 46,126.500 107,700 3,954,600 148,950 8 500 77,600 1,832,700 4,756,200 7,500 .$342,210,900 Specie Legal tenders 96-<,300 13,135,700 $310,829,100 $59,170,500 $17,957,500 Overdrafts 4 with the interior have not been of a character the aspect of the market. With the West there has been no important movement of currency either way; but some small amounts have been sent to the South and the East. The discount market is steady. The amount of mercantile paper offering is not large. In anticipation of the close of navigation, The exchanges calculated to change completed, thoroughly -built, well-manage d there is rather more produce paper on the market, but the road, doing a large business, and earning an immense revenue. The of first class commercial paper are quite limited, and Bonds are well and favorably known, and constantly dealt in, both here steady at subjoined quotations. and in the chief financial centers of Europe, and they can be disposed Commercial, first class endorsed 60 days. 4 months. “ 6 months. of at a quoted market price with the same facility as Government single names.. .todays. 4 to 6 months. bonds, and are datly quoted at the Stock Exchange. 60 days. Bankers’, first class foieign.. domestic .3 to 4 months. Having originally negotiated these Bonds, and being thoroughly ac¬ The Central 1,299 700 52,874.800 notes. Total Co. Pacific Bonds at 9t £; $1,000 over The last bank statement showed an increase of *1 snoooo in legal tenders and $300,000 in specie, making a total increase of lawful money amounting to $2,100,000, while in the liabilities requiring reserve here was an increase of *1 f>50 000 • thus the statement Bhowed an important gain in 5(®6 Totals ’ paying the same rate road rush to pay off loans and secure collaterals. The market has to. day assumed a steady feeling; money has been in abundant eup. nly and borrowers on call have readily supplied their wants at a strength ’ which is likely to be further augmented in tomorrow's BANKING AND FINANCIAL. —Banking House [Ootober 20, 1870* a “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ .... “ “ offerings rates are per cent. 7 @ 7*@ 7X 8 @10 8 @9 9 @12 7 @ 7* 7*@1Q quainted with their soundness and value, we have introduced them as United States Bonds.—The bond market still suffers from a specialty in our regular business in connection with our dealings in partial over supply of stock. There is no demand from Europe, Government Securities, and recommend them without hesitation to our although the markets are well sustained, and domestic holders friends and customers desiriug to make investments or to fund their are still disposed to change their bonds for first-class railroad five twenties upon advantageous terms without reduction of interest. bonds, and other sound investments paying a higher rate of in¬ FISK & HATCH. terest than Governments. This tendency was apparent in the large offerings to the Treasury on the occasion of its purchase $2,000,000 of Five-Twenties this week, the total offered being <Elie excess of $8,000,000. The recent notification by the Secretary of the Treasury of his purpose to attempt an early negotiation of the DIVIDENDS. new loan authorized at the local session of Congress, appears to The follow:n2 Dividends have b^en declared during the past week: When Per have checked the demand for this class of securities, as it indicates Books Closed. Company. Cent. P’able. the probability of investments in Five-Twenties being at Railroads. an early day. To-day, prices advanced at London £@f per cent, Nov. 1. 5 W Nov.lU. Oct. 25 to Nov, 11. the reason assigned being the fall of Metz, which is regarded as Cleveland & Pittsburg 6 Nov. 1. Nashua Mr. I.nwpll calculated to precipitate peace. The market here, however, was Ranks. ^ov. 1. 4 rather weak than otherwise, the advance at London being set of Nov. 1. Oct. 26 to Nov. 2. 4 American Exchange National Nuv. 1. Oct. 25 to Nov. 1. 5 by a fall in the price of gold of about The market is Nit. Mechanics’ Baaking Aesocia'ion— Nov. 1. 5 against a further decline by the expectations of a demand for Sov l. Oct. 26 to Nov. 1. G Dmou Nati nal reinvestment of the November interest now in process of disburse Friday Evening. October 28. ment, the Secretary of the Treasury having ordered its prepayment The Money Market.—Early in the week the money market to be commenced on Monday last. a of in Bankers’ <©autte. disturbed sustained the . lock up money, in the inter¬ The following were the highest and lowest prices of leading clique operating to break down the money market. The government securities at the Board on each day of the past agent in the operation was the New York branch of a Canada Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, Wedne^d’y Thursday, Friday. Oct. 22. Oct. 24. Oct. 2o. Oct. 26. ^Oct. 27.^ Oct. L bank, which, after having sold a large amount of its bills and used was disturbed by an effort to week: est of a gold proceeds in manipulating very successfully the gold mar¬ ket, sold the gold and engaged with the clique to hold the cur¬ rency proceeds off the market for a stated period. The effect of the first movements in this scheme was to put up the rate on call loans to 7 per cent on currency ; but the prompt exposure of the plot brought a weight of opprobrium on the bank which in¬ duced it to abandon the programme after having “ tied up ” about $2,500,000 of money for one day. To-day it was reported that measures are in progress for testing the legality of these operations in the courts; and under an apprehension among borrowers from the bank that collaterals in its hands might be attached, there was the 6’8,1881'coup... 5 20’s, 1862 coup 5 20’s, 1864 “ 5-20*8,1«65 “ 5-20’s, 1865 n “ 5-20 8, 1867 “ 5-20’s, 1868 “ 10-40’s, “ Currency 6’a * 112 !}}£}!;% nfxiif* #niKi w in* IW% mm 1W%IW% 110% in# 111*111# 110*110# iii*11% 11%%.}!?*m L!?KJi2 ii2 110% *i:o% no% 110% *ito% no% ue% *uo% 110% 106% 106% 106% *110* lOKimd ’110% 110% >/ nfli: tio% *iio% iio% ljWjjgj *iio% no% *iio% im% :io% 110% Jo* 106% 106% 106% 106% **06% 106% » m2 mu mu *ili% iii% «ni5 m2 »lii% in% m% 111% "in *il 1% lii% m% *110% *110% no% 106% no% iio.% i io% This Is the price bid and asked, no sale was made State Bonds.—Stats bonds have been at the Board. entirely devoid of spec¬ ulative interest during the past week, and the market closes with¬ out animation. The transactions were limited and confined al¬ most exclusively to investment purchases. The most active issues were the Tennessees, the old ranging at 62£(a63t, and new at October CHRONICLE. THE 29,1870.1 point of interest were the Missouris, which were firm at 91@91J. The North Carolina issues were neglected, Next in being noted in the old at 48, new at 27£, and few transactions a 557 Balance to credit of income account. May 31,1870..— Net earnings June, July, August and September, 1870. $541,424 29 1,578,450 40 Total net earnings, as of September 30,1870 The following is a summary of the amount of Government bonds . - “ ... • “ “ fcTenn.x.c 6sTenn,ne«\.. feN.Car.. old.. jgN.Car., new. jgVirg.xc..... 8g la., levee... 6s Missouri.... Tuesday, Wpdnesd’y Thursday, Monday, Fridav, 9 H... 44 63 *62% 60% *48% 27% *63% *87% 91% 60% 49 *62% 62* 60% 60* 48 27% *27 65 *.... .... 91% Oct. 25. *87% 91 • • *62 • 62% 62% 62% 62% 62% 62% 60% 60% 60% 60% *48 48% 48% “48 *27 28 *27% 28 48 28 65 • • 91% • 65 • *63 .... • 91 *91% 91% 4 • • 60% 60% 60% 60% *48 48% *27 28 • *48 63% 63% *87% 88% 65 *87% Oct. 28. *62 62% Oct. 27. Oct. 26. 64 *88 *27% 27% July .. Vi 44 9i% Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market shows rather more activity, but with some irregularity in prices. Certain stocks appear to have been considerably oversold, and a few prominent operators thus “ short,” appear to have acted in concert for breaking the market. One clique has combined for the Railroad and of locking up money, but as will be seen from our remarks the money market, the scheme failed, and the stock market was 11 l,356,0o0 813,500 1,817.000 2,252,500 2,229,400 249.500 1,920,259 1,689,150 759,2L0 Oct. Oct. ' CM,700 4 4*836,000 4 554.500 617,500 4,139,805 2,3.35,500 4 2.918.000 385,00) 269,700 233,000 466,000 546,003 ' 274,500 210,500 104,400 272,000 <>ct 4,056,450 6 730,550 4,188, 00 149.500 349,500 2.3'5,109 1,988.550 5,846,505 5,531,760 8,947,400 8,632 200 4>27,500 151,500 370,500 1,553,800 Total amount. 245 000 292,000 2,163.850 Oct at Stock 226.000 369 000 816,000 544.500 53 ,000 1,743.000 1.919,000 Sent. 446,500 497,000 438,200 247.500 1,$71,000 3,174,800 purpose on 2.442,500 2,117,500 1,957,500 997,000 2,171,500 2,961,500 21.... 28... 4.. 44 65 91% *91% 91% 91% 48% 3,641,5*0 1,613,000 1,792,500 2,795,200 2.459,000 2,338,500 16... 16 23 30... 7 Aug. Oct. 24. Oct. 22. 242,500 375 0 0 572/00 481,500 358,500 374,0'0 484,000 - 3,158,900 3,592.700 2/ 22,500 2,659,850 3,14»/00 3,107 050 2,312,800 2,489 250 2,167,500 1,515,250 The Gold Market.—In the gold market, the chief events of the week have been the prepayment of the Novemberjinterest on the Public Debt, commenced on Monday last, and the fall of Metz consequently little affected. The market is under the control of the larger holders, who show no anxiety to realize, but find it possible to make moderate profits out of those who sell upon the reported this morning. The effect of the interest payments was anticipation of lower prices. The more active stocks have been first to break the power of a clique, which for two weeks had ex¬ New York Central, Lake Shore, Rock Island, Northwestern, St. acted exorbitant rates upon loans of gold, and next, to weaken the Paul, and Western Union Telegraph, the latter having failed to premium. The market, however, appears to he at present very maintain the speculative rise of last week. Cleveland and Pitts¬ largely oversold, and consequently the relaxation in the lending burg shows more activity, and is now quoted without the dividend rates has not been what might have been expected from the in¬ of 2* per cent recently declared. creased supply of gold on the market; the rates on gold loans have The following were the highest and lowest prices of the active ruled for the latter half of the week from “ fiat ” to l-64tli of 1 per list of railroad and miscellaneous stocks on each day of the last cent per day. The fall of Metz, accompanied with an advance in week: * bonds and consols at London, and being construed as decidedly Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesd’y Thursday. Fridav, favorable to the hastening of peace, caused the market to open Oct. 22. Oct. 24. Oct. 25. Oct. 26. Oct. 27. Oct. 28. weak this morning, and prices have ranged N.Y.Cent&H.R 92% 92 V 91% 92% 91% 92% 92% per cent below 91% 92% 91% 92% do 87% 87% 86% 87% scrip 86% 87% 87% 86V 87% 86% 87% 136 the prices of yesterday. A free advance in foreign exchange dur. 185 Harlem 133% 134% 133% 133V 133% 133% 133% 133V Erl *22% 23% 22% 22% 22% 22% 22% 23% 22 22% 22% 22% 100% 100% 99% 100% ing the week has somewhat checked the downward tendency in Beading 99% 100% 100 " 100% 99% 100% 99% 100-4 93 Lake shore.... 93% 94% 98% 94 98% 93% 98% 93% 93% 92% 93% the 53 54 Wabasli 52 premium. The Treasury sold $1,000,000 gold during the 52% 58% 52% 52% 52% 52% 52% 51% 52% *105 V 107 108% 100% *106% 107 ‘103% 105% *103% 104% 104%x 104% 80 80% 81% 30% 80% 80% 80% 80% 80% 80% 79% 80% do 59% 88% 89% 88% 88V 88% 88% pref 59 38% 88% 87% 88% Bock Island... 111% 111% 110% 111% 110*111% 110% 111% 110% 110% 109% 110% 93 Fort Wayne... 98% 93% 93% 93% 93% *93% 93% 93% 93% 93% 93% Bt. Paul 03% 63% 62% 63% 62% 62V 62% 62% 62% 62% f0% (2% d> 81% 81% 80% 81% pref.... 80% 81% 80% 81 30% 80% 79% 30% 32 Ohio, Mi88isslo 32% 83% R2% 31V 32% 31% 32% 31% 32% 31% F2% Central of N.J. 109 108 108 108 109% 108 109 108% *108% 108% *108 108% Chic. & Alton., 114% 114% 114% 114% 114 115 115 115% 115% 115% *115% 117% do do p>-ef 115% 115% 116 116 116 116 116 116 116% 116% 116 do Pittsburg Northwest do. Panama 114 79 81 *18 scrip. Clev.,0 ,C. & I Col.Chic.& I.C 114 79 81 ' *114 77" 77" 18% Del.,Lack.,&'-V 108% 109 Hann., St. Jos. 108% 108% do pref *115% 17% 81 18 108% 109 108 109 .... Illinois Centr’l Mich. Central. Morris & Essex B.,Hart &Eric Union Pacific. West. fin. i el. Mariposa pref.. do Trust, cert. 187 121 Quicksilver.... *5 do 11 nref. 43'* 41% Pacific Man.... Adams Expr’ss 35 *5 67% 67% 43% 43% Am.Merch.Un United States. 36 Wells, Fargo.. 37 35 42% is% .... *38 37 •This is the price bid and asked, .... *8 Objcago & Northwest’n. Okie $125 4’5 go & Rock Island. * Pittsburg.. Lafayette.. MUwankee&st. Bt. Louis & Iron The ... Paul.. Mt.*.". 318,198 155,900 64/69 *.... .... ii* 43" 66% 66% 43% 43% 33 no sale was made at the Board. Second week—. 187 ‘. 1869. $136,141 $122,294 300,719 310,993 140.600 180,2'7 $!11, 66 301,647 148.965 53,090 51.119 77,415 61,759 35,229 102,507 82,311 21,967 . 203.636 37,410 103,745 202 /25 follows: are as .—Third week—\ 1870. 1869. $107,612 44,717 101,694 231,958 $128,985 over* 1869 197,692 21 ‘,184 8 ,310 Expenses. May to Net Income. $30,502 83 $524,132 65 $604,635 53 ending September 30, 1869 and 1870: &£Xonth8' w.v.v:v:::; y.v.v.::;:: 118% 123% 11 349,936,600 1,870,755 642,027 1 * 111% T - t 1,531.998 1 571,817 1.551.145 1.551.145 1,823,906 T“t Operating expenses, interest, rents, <tc. « $3,649,128 05 8,082,021 60 ma a 567,106 45 $11,600,000 4 700 4,078,149 590,317 Withdrawn for export Gold receipts into Sub-Treas.. In banks Oct. 22 : $556,180 4,078 149 11 948,113 Total withdrawn and in bank. $16,582,442 Excess of withdrawals over $16,273,166 $30‘vJ76 known supply the quotations in gold for foreign and are -Ameri¬ coin: gold (old coinage) premium. $4 87 @ $1 90 3 84 @ 3 88 c. D “ Sovereigns Napoleons German X thalers Prussian X thalers X guilders Exports of “ 7 75 7 95 3 90 15 90 15 50 @ 7 90 @ 8 '0 @ 4 00 @ 16 20 @ 15 60 coinage) 1@2 p. c. premium. American silver (ne^-- — Dimes and half d^es “ — ”* 1 ® ~~ *9H 4 75 @ 4 85 — 70 @ — 71 Francs Kntrllsh *uver pruKuun thalers. ~ Sm^ie thalers xrcxican dollars 104 <§> 1 f6 1 02%<g> 1 03% 2<§>3 p. c. premium. Spanish dollars South American dollars par. Treasure from San Francisco.—The following the exports for the first nine months of the current 18 *8. $1,662,035 41 1,057.399 88 52 88,580,000 112% 110% Net Income. $1,103,525 47 . 1,578,450 40 174,924 93, To England To France To China To Japan To Panama 1869. 1870. $18,824,609 3,726,341 519,988 3,979 009 earn- $’ ,922,630 89 2,416,763 54 *?75^5! 64,109.000 53,258,»’00 $2,966,315 1,092,408 3,495,590 -- statement sboVVS The following is the comparative statement of earnings and expenses of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway Company for he four months f0Ur months, 1869.. 927.160 2,8 6,021 1,162,844 1,391,520 1,870,755 425,886,000 Total known supply Patriot doubloons American silver (old ,66 ,16 < 42 Gross 81,959,000 111% In banks Oct. 15 Spanish doubloons statement has been furnished of the Earnin $2,465,278 general movement of coin and bullion at New York, in the ending Saturday, October 22, was as follows : following $10 869/40 $10.434.*26 9.4-1.506 8 V25 364 1.598,831 4,493,SS6 2 450,377 190.408 4,399 941 1,363 119 352 439 47 >,000 &46(X>7 - $28,144,408 225 497 1,038 368 1,184,597 $30,488 766 237,000 To other countries. $ 6,723/54 following shows the comparative description of the exports, of treasure during the first nine months of 1870 and 1869 : The 1870. Gold Bars Silver Bars Gold Coin Mexican Dollars Gold Dust Legal Tender Silver Coin Total... i I n it] gl If ■ -Balances. Gold. Currency. 98,938,000 113 Foreign Imports Gold pai<l out by Sub-Treas’y. Receipts from California (ap¬ proximate).. The ? n 1869. -$7.57 ,230 ’ . 8,864 785 7 218,792 ' $11,445,177 9,053 156 6,9 9,612 2,778.259 _ 3,043,559 6 606 13,284 $26,783,255 ;|i , 111% ..112% ..113% 4 55,082 83,851 Total Clearings. $89,042,000 The week ■n , Jan. 1,1870. to date'..120% American age and expenses of the Union Pacific R. R. Co., from September, inclusive, 1869 and 1870 Total’ —Quotations.— Low- HighClosest. est. ing. ing. 113 112% Saturday, Oct. 22. ...112% 112% ..1 2% 112 “ 24.. Monday, 111% 112% Tuesday, “ 25.. ..111% 111% 111% 111^ 112 Wedn’day, “ 26.. .-111% 111% 112% Thursday, “ 27.. ..112 112% 111% 111% Friday, 111% “ 28.. ..111% 111% 111% Open- Current week of the gold premium course / can 48 363 IIS::::;:;*:::: 35 37% 37% .... 54,584 36 392 9 ... 33,248 106,428 20/269 following official Gain of 1870 74 each following table will show the day of the past week : .... 42% 42* 42% 43% 67% 67% *67 67 67 67% 43% 43% 43% 43% * 43% 43% *36 *36 36% 36% 36% *37 39 *37 38% *37% 65.257 Jjjrtetta & Cincinnati.. Mkhigan Central 74 .... latest weeks reported in October ixiLuu 74 42% 43% -First week1870. 1869. « 72 *80% 81% 81% 17% *17% 18 *17% 18 17% 17% 109 109% 108% 109% 108% 108% *108% 109 *108 *108 109% 109% 109 108% 108 108% 115% 115% *115 115*115* *115 *136% 137 *136 136% *135% 136 135% 185% *120% *120% *120% 121 120% 120% 92% 92% *92 92% 92% 92% *92 92% 4 4 4% 4% *3% 4 24% 24% *24% 24% 24% 24% 23% 24 89 40% 39% 40% 89% 89% 38% 39% 9 8 10% 10% 9% ,10% 10* 84 34 *30 37 *.... 9 87% “5 ' *5 *5 6 *4% 5% .... 67% 67 V 43V 48V 37% 38% *37% 39 Earnings for the 81 The .... *136% 137% ‘120% 121 * 92% 92% 92% 4% 24% *24% 24% 41% 89% 40% 11 11 11% “ ”*.! 76 81 81 18 week. .... 137 121 92% 4% 24% 40% 76 80 V 77% 78 *81 n $2,119,874 69 special tax 22£@22f. Virginias were strong on sales of the State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds sold old registered sixes at 50£, the old coupon 63£@64£, and new at Exchange for the past and several previous weeks : $ South Carolinas were dull at 68 for the January and July isWeek Government State & Company sues. Alabama eights were selling at 100£. The remainder of ending— Bonds. City Bonds. Bonds. 5 May 3,915/00 1,373.000 558.000 the list was without any movement of moment. 12 3,862,750 1,059,500 67»,515 19 687,000 438 900 2,791,500 The following are the highest and lowesf'prices of the most 26 2,376,200 903,000 353,000 June 2 active State Bonds at the Board on each day of the week]: 2,725,950 1,008,600 3'5,0 0 Saturday, u; 23 598 1 219,865 49,0(0 a i & \ ; -I Foreign Exchange—Has been firmer and advanced per sterling bills. The rise appears to be due mainly to the fact that large remittances will have to be made within the next two weeks on account of the November coupons sent for collection by foreign bondholders, while there is no considerable supply of cent on cotton bills. a Days. 109%® 110 wears. London bankers “ commercial Paris (bankers; ]09}4@ 109% l03-£@ 109 @ @ @ Antwerp 5.10 @5.12)* 5.05 @5.07)* 41%@ 41% 36 @ 86% 41%@ 41% 79%@ 79% 72%@ 72% @5.16}* 5.15 Swiss Amsterdam @ 40%@ 86 © 41 @ - Hamburg Frankfort Bremen Prussian thalers 78%@ 71 41 36% 41% 79 71% The transactions for the week at the Custom House and Sub- Treasury have been as follows Custom 22.. 24.. 25.. 26.. : -Sub-Treasury. Receipts.-Payments. House. Oct. fOctober 29, 1870. THE CHRONICLE. 558 Receipts. Gold. $258,000 ('0 $604,978 42 $999,935 11 $1,225,971 74 301,000 f ft 1,049,405 95 1,014,771 246,847 79 466.873 91 213,055 54 163,115 30 48,549 89 27.. 28.. 271,OKI 00 347,DCft 00 803,000 00 454,000 00 Gold. Currency. 48»/So 53 780.867 96 1,843,943 01 681,357 83 2,650,650 45 1,122,129 76 608,749 13 323,242 42 . . . i)ct. 0< t. Ocl. 8 264,981,829 15. 265,275,790 22. 266,665,896 $1,144,266*53 “ *“ " 332,479 39 95 89 72 09 Total...$1,994.0)0 00 $5,575,167 07 $5,244,599 27 $3,635,389 73 $4,893,154 57 Balance, Oct. 21 62,257,934 91 7,483,527 12 Paym*ts during week.. 3.635,389.73 Balance Oct. 28 4,-93,154 57 $64,197,712 25 $7,834,971 82 New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the ooudition of the Associated Banks of New York City the week for ending at the , comniencement of business on -AVBBA6H SiVKI. Capital New York Manhattan.. Merchants’ Mechanics Union .... A tnerlca ... Phoenix City Tradesmen’s Pulton Chemical Merchants’Exchange.... Nationai Butchers Mechanics and Traders’. Greenwich Leather Manui. National SeveDth Ward, National. State of New York American Exchange Jommerce Broadway Ocean Mercantile Pacihc Bepublic Chatham People’s North American. Hanover Irving Metropolitan Citizens... Nassau Market Bt. Nicholas. Shoe and Leather .. . Corn Exchange... Continental Commonwealth.. Oriental Marine Atlantic Importers and Traders’.. Park Mechanics’ Banking Ass. Grocers’ North River East River Manufacturers A Mer... Fourth National '’entral National v fee- ->nd National National ‘’onal Ni-P-fhFirst nal Exchange Third NafK. New York Tenth National. Bowe»-v National..... nil Head Sew York County...**. s * // Btuvvesant— Eleve ith Ward. .* Eighth National American National Oct. 22, 1870: Total net Manufactur s A Builders $3,000,000 $9,278.0(0 $1,910,100 $895,700 $7,983,500 $1/77.000 '2,050/00 5,747.400 812,200 10,100 8.503.500 869/00 3.000,000 895.000 5,991,1(0 587,800 3.747.700 1/90,7C0 5. «5‘.TOO 2,000,000 851,500 542.579 8.799.700 728/00 1.500.000 260,700 4/52,800 481,700 1.845,600 478.400 8.1-98,592 3,000,000 (£9,038 1,450 6.537/71 1,648.658 221.383 1.300.W0 3.7W/F8 510,000 829,254 2,795,527 528,011 1,000.000 5.307.750 538,000 4,098/97 21,783 i/00.000 2,987,480 717,162 1,476,772 529/82 2.231.919 609,000 179,196 1,671,618 508/69 300 000 6.340.S51 352.765 8/37,645 878,104 21,852 1.235,000 2,848.174 445,314 2.182.278 751/15 1 500,000 149.992 3.2-8,099 4(«0,0C5 1,173.126 858,947 800.000 2.451.500 53.500 255,200 1.739.700 412/00 600.000 195.700 1,819 540 25,730 1,119,400 380,690 200.000 2.929 1,032.007 765.260 122,929 260.748 3.164,124 319.886 600,000 2,012,925 652,698 166.100 46.991 500.000 1,250,745 740.664 213,360 317.400 482 000 4,480,4'0 2,000,000 3.497,890 1/50,160 445.6'0 9,909 0 0 5,000,000 964,500 5,028.200 1/31,200 366,784 4,814.970 10,000,000 21 47..24 5,425.(87 4,480.968 6.448.1(0 1.000,(too 67,900 900,000 5.189.700 1,734,000 1.0O0.000 53,883 2,4-33 234 797,900 800.077 252,785 3.234.800 479,100 1,000,000 46,800 2,499/00 654.400 4,7:30 422,700 1,858,620 12,410 1,465,930 307,600 551,450 5,467,713 2,000,000 858,150 4,274, 71 1,006.012 2.0 .’5.500 450,000 62,609 130,3(0 2,282.800 534.900 55.851 412.500 1.616,716 5,975 179.644 1,453,751 4,057 1.000,000 2.758,000 68,0 0 2,155,000 257,000 291.267 2.187,795 1.000,000 169,713 343/16 1,225,394 1.9 >3.000 500.000 13, 00 189,601 1,808,000 538,000 4,000.000 10,620,601 1,101.027 1,960.296 5,189,037 752/93 26,362 1.54 ,749 400,i500 131,591 1,216,706 821/30 1.000.000 52,727 2,292.(;83 8,978 2.960.279 301,123 2.898,700 519,800 101,200 1,000.000 1,772,600 466/00 746/00 2.589.200 44.600 1,000.000 1,016,400 424,100 847/00 3.501.800 13,100 1,500,000 2,294.800 790/00 45.365 1,900.000 2,7W,100 5,744 1,4-26.977 817,000 67.093 3.926.812 570,851 2,000,000 2,245,959 689,000 750.000 238,500 2,361,300 92,000 2/34.(00 649.900 1.294,610 300,000 4,190 4,740 1,018.520 214/20 360,000 48,280 400.000 1,55(5,370 899,950 1/21/90 32.989 1.096,481 98,574 300.000 217.308 781/47 9,692.000 106,000 505,000 9/77,000 2/86,000 1.500.000 959.428 15,988,460 496,698 2,000.000 14.835,220 4,088,100 25.600 308.600 1,040,200 1,163,900 500,000 549.900 2,015 704,620 5,056 300,000 578.710 143,769 25,105 11,000 1,170.151 400.000 940/81 197,185 7/00 258/00 942,0 0 594,200 350,000 251/00 2.5(0 677 500.000 1,279,50*1 953/90 224.800 634,700 2.889,300 13,536/00 5,000.000 17,123.900 3,760,700 11,002,400 161,610 1,885,000 9/64,620 2/82,450 3,000,000 1,389,451 270,000 1300.000 1,176,101 355/60 760,(00 5.442.090 71,000 4/28,000 1,143,000 1,(K)0,000 17,:300 334,900 3.587.500 3/98,700 500,0(10 1,112,000 4.462.'U0 43,200 773/00 8,700,300 1,115/00 1,000,000 268,700 1.201.200 1,500 244.000 300.(100 784,400 30.COO 901,601 3,8 40.101 3/24,200 1,(-05.600 1,000.000 7.317 1,181,723 2-25,000 970/45 293,720 250,000 520 1.174,200 179,600 842,200 1,042,800 69,606 1,956,109 1/74,424 226,029 200,000 5/90 6,415 oo.ooo 1,641,370 1/21/50 463/35 416,511 2/96 '•00 83,479 543.430 3V,460 TOO, 488/50 25 ,(KO 768.712 3,160 514/14 211,182 256,*** 28/70 "75.239 700.710 448/30 296/91 500,00<.‘>W 1,200 955,000 * 75.000 832,750 German American —“ 83.970.200 Total 2*15/65 /96 ll>v* 11332/17,036 189/78,983 52/00/12 The deviations from the returns of previous Inc $*«9/06 ! Deposits.. I«o«ns.... 337 405 Legal Tenders .Inc Specie.... . Dec. Otrc-ulatlou The following are May May May May Jnne June June June Loans. 7. 275,210.471 14. 278,383/14 21. 280,201,077 28 279.550.743 4 279,485,734 11. 270,419 576 18 270,089,004 25 277,017,807 2. .276,490,501 9. 277,783,427 10. 285.377.318 23. 280.091,798 . . . . July July Juiy July July 30. 381,939,843 6. Aug. Aug. 13 Aug. 20 Aug. 29. . . 281.ISM 4 278.647 019 275,722,982 273,980,974 °ek are as > Inc. follows. $9,089,268 1/61,538 450,000 the totals Specie 31,498,999 8*2,453,900 34,110,935 82.728,035 30,949,490 2\523,8I9 28,895,971 28,228,985 for aseries of weeks past • Aggregate, Legal Uirculation. tion. 83.444,041 33.293,980 33,191,648 33,249,818 33,285,083 33,142,188 8 .072,643 33,034,113 31,011,330 33,070,365 35,731,434 3-3,1(81,357 41,(3 >.688 82,027,786 34,258.012 32,999,337 Deposits. Deposits 217,302,218 222,442 319 220,552.926 228,039,345 226,191,797 220,099.2W 219,932,852 217,522,555 219,083,428 219,725,468 234,332,355 233,965,513 30,263.890 33,0*15,533 227,555,701 20,472,592 32.943,144 22(1,819,300 24,104,302 32,9(19 106 215,074,494 2 ‘,733,316 32,839,567 205,531,318 19,039,384 32,901,906 201,906,700 CleariDgs. Leanngs 701,060,926 659,260,160 69.023.306 625,678,321 61,018,076 576,625,528 61,290,310 518,452,66 60,159,170 672,182,05* Tenders. 50,108,922 57,947,005 58,120,211 57,215,525 56,S15,254 53,348,970 53,451,841 53,978,711 54,837.951 52,287,188 51, <76,282 50,353,286 48,959,713 Loans. Capital. .. 381,000 1,070,000 582,000 1,828.000 3,220 4,8'i0 1.0(H) 425,200 1,212/00 2,321,0< )0 2,811,000 1,350,90ft 1,123,976 1,-<60,600 1,833,175 1,562,000 250,000 842,437 5/40 3,335,000 1,418,350 1,184,017 20.000 198,415 886,361 268,000 236.102 895,000 7,745 317/87 917,058 1,256,109 3,008 243,479 340,749 849,095 775,967 657,667 1,213,000 1,3'3,000 2,782,000 962,283 740,088 270,000 336,000 185,000 211,000 348,271 603,000 627,000 219,836 242,750 1/81/00 586,000 453,000 1,237,000 600,790 800,000 500,000 250,000 250,000 600,000 40C,000 Penn Townsnip... Western Manufacturers’.... B’k of Commerce.. Girard Tradesmen’s 200,000 300,000 400,000 800,000 500,000 S0-,000 1,000,000 Consolidation City Commonwealth... 915/02 1,740,000 1,325,000 3,306,000 300,000 1,037.800 7c6,016 200,000 480,000 150,000 260.000 672,000 925,000 275,000 750,000 2,392,000 1,000,000 1,963,000 Corn Exchange.... Union. •••••••»•• First Third Fourth Sixth. Seventh... Eighth Central Bank of 2,763 2,000 570,150 Mechanics’ Bank N. Liberties. Southwark Bepahlic. 287,000 3,787 .... • A • • . r 918,807 846,41/ 12,000 « • • • • • 340,300 # • 225,714 132,000 .... 107.000 7,300 .... 2,000 1,351 448,208 207,125 694,000 175,962 2,414,000 274,000 1,044,000 17,000 177,180 676.623 261.000 8,000 227,040 1.370,076 977,133 189,916 . 475,850 456,000 218,185 855,8X8 210,615 450,000 216,000 797,000 262,471 179,000 16,755,150 61,235,813 292,883 12,128,896 86,682,169 10,601,112 The deviations from last week’s returns are as follows: Total AMOUNT OF- Loans and Circula¬ Net Legal Discounts. Specie. tion. Deposits. Tenders . Germania 12.597,641 32,598,209 187,701,117 50,275,226 455,692,450 11.610,708 82,967,705 187,489.715 50 526.279 11,948,113 32,517,036 189,578,983 52,390,812 533,547/10 527,298,814 Specie. L. Tend.Deposits.Circnlat’* Philadelphia $1,500,090 $5,037,000 $64,000 $1,055,000 $3,144,000 $1 GOft OfS Vnrfh America 1000 000 4 4U(i OQS s90 North 56,823 993,820 Otlfilliw V 1,000,000 4,239,490 fifi ft‘2S 2,982,124 Farmers’ & M«ch.. 2,001,000 4,834,441 74,236 1,038,153 8,336,867 713/18 2,841,000 2,200 616,000 611,000 Banks. •» $67,833,101 98 $12 728,1 6 39 18,285,629 32,736,625 290,691,658 49,730 772 1C 71ft SCO 82,897,168 196,852.430 18,718,309 S9WQ7 1fift -JQK ftr.0. 49ft 48,072,195 16,517,161 82,750,726 193,4 9,916 49,062,532 451,930,079 419,769,867 14,670,724 32,733,046 191,06(-,202 49,417,936 13,272,981 32,718,199 191,055,574 51.084,092 441,809,855 375,404,190 Philadelphia Banks.—The following is the average condition of the PhiladelDhia Banks for the week preceding Monday Oct. 24, 1870 : i, Kensington Currency. 271,796 271,536 412,211 2,460,833 Sept. 8 271,914,145 Qont Sept. 1ft *y?1 7Qfi *75>1 10 271,796,731 Sept. 17. 268,408,700 Se t. 24 267,087,617 Sept. 80. 266,286,601 498,872,68V 537,228,27* 562.736,4“' 490,180,9t4 623.849.49 759.849.49 502,709,74 446,059,04 442,693,64 408,195,87 419,420,66 Capital Loans Increase. $73,415 Specie Decrease. 82.934 Legal Tenders... Deposits Increase. $220,590 Decrtase. 189,080 Circulation Decrease. The annexed statement shows the condition of the Banks for a series of weeks.: Loans. Date. 9 May May May 62,243,057 52,418,398 52,234,608 62,5(10,343 62,320,224 68,098,524 53,588,296 53/47,4(8 54,288,879 55,087.866 54/67,170 54,294,723 53,942,152 9 16.... 28 80 6 .. 18 20 27 - May May June Jane June June 4 July 11...*.. 18 25 July July July 53,725,888 August 1 63 742,364 August 8 August 15 63,399,190 62,895,850 52,163,288 52.088,429 52,031.198 51/73,473 61,362,551 51,297,626 August 22 August 29...... Sept. Sept. 8ept. Sept. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. 5 12 19 27 3 10 17.. 24 51.265,457 . 51,309,218 51,235,813 , Specie. Legal Tend. 15,441,522 1,247,820 1,222.629 15/51,265 16,244,785 1,164/12 16,450,837 1,049,943 923.948 16,789,102 16,926,682 869,597 16,702,115 841,569 16,309,340 743,285 15,805,568 728/ 44 15,401,749 917,270 14,595,069 1,320,947 14,223,980 1,266,800 14,007,749 1,214,046 18,472,647 1,162,567 13,119,176 1,064,368 12,365,681 781,537 12,082,“08 677,934 12,804,802 541/76 12,305,142 511,248 498,506 12,116,563 11,795,999 894,166 84 ,988 11,862,374 12,412,731 374,740 352/43 12,286,778 11,908,306 325,817 12,128,896 292,833 Banks. Atlantic Atlas Blackstone Boston Bovlston Columbian Continental Eliot Everett Fanenil Hall.... Freeman’s Globe Hamilton Howard Market as 1,500,000 1,600,000 1,000,000 500,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 200,000 1,000,000 600,000 1,000,000 750,000 1,000,000 800,000 800,000 Maverick 400,000 Merchants’ 8,000,000 Mount Vernon.. 200,000 ... New England... 1,000,000 North 1,000,000 Old Boston 900,000 Shawmut Shoe A Leather. 1.000,000 1,000,000 State.... 2,000,000 Suffolk 1.500,000 Traders*. 600,000 Tremont 2,000.000 Washington.... 750,000 First 1,000,000 Second (Granite) 1,600,000 City Eigie 800,000 2,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 1,000.000 1,000,000 1,000,000 Exchange Hide A Leather. 1,500,000 Revere Security.. Union Webster ■ioul... Deposits. Circulation. 42,997,076 10,571,585 43,4-9,347 10,563,857 44,038,042 10,562,404 44,233,016 10,564,075 45,117,172 10,560,878 45,122,720 10,561,684 44,957,979 10,567,856 44.398,340 10,569,85ft 10,562,88a 44,351,747 44;609,623 10,556,277 44,024,172 10,556,100 10,553,981 43,835,846 10,648,451 42,639,473 41,943,366 10,563,297 41,178,654 10,562,197 10,564,54s 39,4'.?8,857 38,762,424 38,160,674 38,085,‘227 37,468.821 37,224,118 37,186,636 37,641,365 10,562,19# 10.559,75# 10,556,85i 10,559,44# 10,561,78o 10,576,68# 10,590 48® 36.808,407 36,88",940 10/91,459 10,605,79 a (6,682,169 10,601,11* we Specie. L. T. Notes. Deposits, Circula $444,000 $6,767 $107,703 $399.1 IS 789,398 23,532 123,595 .751,790 2,682,064 794,710 9,337 28 \ 167 1,415,986 3,319,667 588,046 9,438 176,407 684,699 1,971,022 Loans. Capital. $750,000 $1,548,026 Massachusetts.. Third B’kof Commerce E’k of N. Amer. B’kof Rederap’n B’kof the Repub. Philadelphia give a statement of the Boston returned to the Clearing House, Oct. Boston Banks.—Below National Banks, 24.1870. 4,680 2,000,000 200,000 1,000,000 1,530,000 47,350,000 2,270, i 02 1,951,354 2,566,828 628,515 2,564.346 1,471,586 2,623,219 1,412.166 1,823,358 1,498,594 1,835,013 938,503 5,918,674 629,508 2,832,842 2,350,415 2,057,433 2,165,255 2,531.673 3.762.894 3,054,126 1,044,895 8,172,647 1,919,169 3,625,279 4,712,580 1,017,184 4,626.388 99.186 473/75 1,206,983 546,887 362,784 1,468/86 17,799 208,000 95,981 5,107 22,266 20,612 181,143 114,700 268,634 698,588 857.000 241,461 441,700 686,075 960,334 381.627 1(1,000 . 8/75 174,610 1,095,736 86,4(6 632,377 861,524 370 6,418 14,959 133.3S0 49,472 11,103 66,059 25,910 25,338 148,709 80,678 43,720 27,766 6,600 2 389 2,887,513’ 1.683.894 1,985,956 10.783 14,882 246,529 5/34 14.792 2,994 1,616 74.793 403,535 956,400 88-',2(9 351,928 597/02 245,231 570 362,981 164/65 15,608 86,371 2,881,140 8,042,600 195,054 43,500 396,500 18,743 1,761,957 4,479,496 8,686,276 3,078,749 8,744,636 594,589 681/97 915,375 142/92 16*968 10,466 58,970 2,(33 783/38 667,153 798,830 703,466 846,000 38,900 1,740,790 2 689 891,187 706.126 1,281,863 58.318 684,002 240,075i 081,063 S56,0':6 1 371,309 ’973,437 382,629 384/79 933,883 774,603 105,265 871,075 72,838 431,140 1,223,881 696,008 2 90,000 682 800 1,710,054 871,010 460,461 2*2,333 225.957 871,402 6>-7/H4 466,100 840,203 713/53 465,028 16-.057 820,060 124,578 1,314,414 179,796 261,926 2,H7/85 41,275 305.42-1 943/37 156,590 1,728,123 105,160,2001,450,018 10,939,810 790,104 41U91 41,090,800 04, 176,736 798, lfl 788,029 868,871 698,776 867,890 951/90 704,667 176,271 670,060 695,061 786.000 785,980 174,882 947,790 696,876 794.071 797,488 442,644 338,356 795,192 794,787 897,288 129,000 639.506 491,906 501/4* October 29, 1870.] THE CHRONICLE following are comparative The Loans. totals for aseries of weeks * W • 'nly 4 oiy * l" m Lug,‘ «tug. 16.. ing• LOg. *9*. JJ iept. 6... ept, W.. «pt. 19... ept. 8... let. 8,475,528 106,901,480 106,454,436 106,416,987 106,839,804 106,997,978 107,817,458 107,714,221 107,935,376 108,138,960 109,096,614 108,500,578 107,106,644 106,848,334 106,855,812 106,697,667 106,711,217 106,537,446 J3.. 20* rune 'one ane Specie. 107,151,710 nne 8,534,848 3,397,873 3,177,413 4,298,219 5,494,539 9,776,281 9,560,009 5,411,963 4.811.322 4,439,523 4,019,987 3,664,721 3.153.323 2,864,348 2,626,331 2,409.122 2,32»,671 2,182,443 2.040,225 1,886,214 106,769,932 106,804,122 105,152,206 1.568,369 1,460,218 past' Legal Tenders. Deposits. Circulation. 40,218,620 25,139,278 38,901,202 38,647,292 38,899,629 40,360,389 40*723,035 40,226,979 29,722,824 38,537,730 39,267,033 38,271,247 36,972,703 35,957,745 9,186,082 9,332,858 8,816,494 7,897,646 8,862,919 8,968,724 S,888,528 8,331,499 7,983,088 7,664,362 8,886.215 9,383,916 9,653,013 9,848,686 10,314,803 10,260,725 10.121,083 10,918,675 10,939,810 86,470,515 36,860,263 86,688,104 37,135,312 38,265,578 40,938,300 41,588,981 41,696,326 25,146,390 25,175,753 25,135,654 25,130,686 25,1S9,79S 25,178,204 25,149,756 25,156,721 25,119,410 25,069,111 25,150,653 25,088,616 25,021,849 25,037,943 24.996,959 24,949,341 24,934,154 24,964,046 21,971,036 24,501,944 SOUTHERN SECURITIES. Quotations from N. Y. Stork Exchange^ and also by J, HI. Weith Sc Arents, 9 New Street, and A. C. Charleston, South (Many quotations 44 5s 139 148 York Manhattan Merchants Mechanics 118% Ocean in 140 135 Union America City Phenix North River.... 150 ^ 160 200 120 117 Park ill 120 Market Nassau HO Shoe and Leath. Corn Exchange. 125 159 166 & Merch 100 7s, new Louisiana 6s, ex-coupons... “ new bonds First National.. Fourth Nation’l Ninth National. Tenth National. Eleventh Ward. Oriental Gold Exchange. Bankers & B.As 130 170 102 102 106 44 106)* 130 108 68 .. 101 STOCK Capital. COMPANIBS. /Marked thus (*) are not 1 National.) c2 Amount. Periods. P80Q America* AmericanExchange Atlantic Bowery Broadway. 5 6 4 4 5 City Commerce — Currency East River Eighth EleventhWard* Fifth Grocers’ Hanover Harlem* Importers & Trad Manufa< turersA Builders' LeatherMannfact’rs Manhattan* Mechanics’ Mech. Bank. Asbo. Meehan. & Traders* Mercantile Merchants’ Merchants’ Exch Metropolitan Mutual* Nassau*... National (Gallatin) New York New York County. New York Exchange ^ ®'xc^an8e*'- • Ninth North America* North River* Ocean Oriental* Pacific* . Park Peoples’* Phoenix Republic. Security*’ ’ * * * ’ [ ’ 8t.Nicholas’. ... ” o!10® Leather StateofNewYork. !!!!! ^niou Square.’ * *.*.*. west Side*.. 600,000 May and Nov... 1,000,000 May and Nov... 8,000,000 Jan. and inly.. 1,235,000 Jan.and July... 4,000,000 Jan. and July... 2« .'0,000 1,000,000 May and Nov AprilandOct... 1,500, Jan. and July... 3,000, 200,000 Tan. and July... 800,000 Jan. and J nly... 600,000 Jan. and July.. 1,000,000 Jan. and July. 1,000,000 Jan. and July... 400,000 Jan. and July... 1,000,000 Tan. and July... 800,000 Jan. and Ju y.. 422,700 Feb. and Aug.. 2,000,000 Jan. and July... 412,500 Jan. and July... .. • 45 61 71 674 60 72 72* 78“ 6v 61 65 65 81 82 50 70 44 44 44 4 d o 44 44 44 44 ► ... 44 6 ft 60 Selma and Meridian 1st a S3 44 *3 <D July ’70 Jan. ’70 July '70 5 May '70 4 6 Oct. ’70 July 70....... July '70 8 July 70 8% July’69 July ’70... 8 6 July 70 3X July '69 July '69 July ’70 4 4 6 Nov.’70 4 7 5 4 5 ■ 70 • - • • 65 . • 73 * $ SS 90 65 56 27 88 65 44 116 90 94 108 S8 . 44 . . . • 354 65 68 69 45 “ 77 ... 2ds 6s Sds 8s 44 • 4ths8fl.. • • • 44 74 76 74* 2ds6s... 4th, 8s.... 44 75* 73 82 Virginia Central lsts, 6s 1 2iuls, 6s 3ds, 6s 78* ... .... 83 75 83 82« 76 73 4ttn8s fund, int.Ss Rich. «& Pam lsicocB’d6s. 44 Pie 'mont bra’h lsts 8a...,.... Southside, 1st mtg. 8».,.,,.. 78 • • • » a a ^ ^ • • ♦ » « • • • “ 4*' 2d 3d m. 6s.... 4th m. 8s 44 m. guart'd 6e.. c o.... ... Petersburg 1 m 8e 7s Kichm. &. Petersb. 1st m 7s 44* 44 2dm. 6s 44 44 3d In.'S? 86 44 41 44 Fre'ksb’g & Poto. 44 44 44 44 80 82 6s. 7s 69 .... 75 conv 4 82* 84 $5 ... Important Railroad Decision.—The Secretary decides that when a Railroad Company tiles a map of of the Treasury the l*ne of the route duly certified to as the actual survey line, there is no power to cause it to change said route because it may interfere with another grant of equal date. If the road, however, is not laid out on the moat favorable route between the termini as ordered by the Act, it may then become subject t<» official investigation. If, when the grants are each of the same date, and the limits conflict, ihe grantees will be made equal partners, and will take the same jointly without reference as to which road may have first filed the map of the definite location ; and further that when application is made by a railroad compary for laud for a station, sidings, Ac., as may be allowed by the graut, the company should file a map showing the section of the sub-division, with the position of the buildings, supported by au affidavit of their exist- 6 tence, and also 6 f,: Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad.—At a recent meeting of the stockholders of this company at Richmond, Ya. resolutions were passed authoriring i loan of $800,000 to extend the 6 ...6 6 ..4 100 200,000 100 1,000,000 Jan. and 100 1,000,000 Tan. and 40 1,000,000 Jan. and . .. 4 6 6 .6 as to the area • 68 86 74 37 57 37 6s Virginia. Orange «fe Alex., lsts6b,. Norfolk & 90 85 • 68 72 55 stock • • 844 754 7s « 85 44 7t stock • 74 13 . • 50 bv State Tenn. 98 Macon and Western stock 44 Augusta bonds endorsed. 39 93 Memp. & Charleston lsts, 7s 44 . 70* 72* 74 Virginia 6s, end S' 8s Southwestern RR., 1st mtg. 4* 44 67 70 65 69 Tennessee. EftstTenu & Georgia 6s.... 79 . 61 , »• . 44 ... 6 4 4 Savannah <fc Char. 1st M., 7s.. South Carolina Railroad 6s.. 44 44 7s.. 44 “ stock North Eastern 1st mtg. 8b.. . ’4 2d 48s... “ 44 3d 8b... 44 stock Cheraw & Darlington 7s -lue Ridge, 1st Mortgage .. 44 Georgia. Georgia RR. 1st mtg stock Central RR. 1st mtg. . 50 , , 73 44 4 6 5 5 6 , Bonds, 7s, guaranteed 44 m. 45 *fc Savannah, 6, guaranteed by State S. C.. 44 Mobile & Montg. RR, 1st m.. a Charleston 65 63 61i Va. & Tenn lsts 6b, S4 S8 gtock o> cS 4 62 cjpartemburg and Union 7b, guar’d by State S. C 63 8s,interest 2 mtg, 8s , 40 Memphis & L. Rock endorsed 65 Montgomery and Emalla 1st Ss, gold bonds, endorsed by 10 stock... Greenville and Columbia 7s, guar, by State S. Carolina. Certificates, guar, by 8. C.... 44 State of Alabama Mobile and Ohio, sterling 80 75 44 Orange & Alex. Sb Man. lsts 1 st. end Income. 4 4 50 South Carolina. 44 73 Montg’ry & West P. 1st, 8s.. 44 90 52 49 Char!., Col. & Aug., 1st M.,7s 60 8s 86 IstM., Ss... “ Railroad Securities. Alabama. 4 44 44 72 69 O Wilmington, N. 44C.,6s 60 2nds, 7s stock.. Memphis and Ohio 10s “ 68 new,Funding 7s 60 70 70 83 cb. & Ruth.IstM.end “ 5 Nov.’70 July ’70 Ju y ’70 1,800,0(H) Jan. and July... July ’70 100 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’70 100 250,000 100 1,000,000 Feb. and An Ang. ’70 100 6(H),(KH) Jan. and July July ’70 1(H) 800,000 Jan.and July July ’70 100 1,500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’70 100 200,000 Jan. and July.. I uly ’70 100 2,000,000 May and Nov... May ’70 Is consold, 8e Wilmington 76 IDs 6 May ’70 July... July ’70 July... July ’70 July... July ’70 50 1,500.0(11 May and Nov... Nov. ’70 100 200,000 100 200,000 Jan. and July 73 7s Petersburg 6s 8*> 100 Oct. ’70 500,000 ..Quarterly 100 5,000,000 Jan.and July... July 70 80 600,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’70 100 200.000 25 200,000 May and Nov.. May ’70 40 300,000 Jan. and July... July 70 100 1,000,000 Jan. and J uly... July ’70.. 100 500,000 100 1,500,000 Jan. and July... 50 600,000 Jan.and July... July ’70 100 109,000 50 600,000 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’70 50 2,050,000 Feb.and Aug. LAug. ’70 100 500,000!Jan. and July. July ’70 y Jan. and July... July ’70 100 400,000 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’70 26 2,000,00() Jan. and July... July ’70 60 500,000 May and Nov,.. Nov.’70 25 100 50 50 100 26 100 50 100 100 100 100 100 100 50 50 25 50 100 25 20 85 4 North Carolina. Weldon 7s.... 50 15 66 58 Kicbmoud 6s Savannah 7s, bonds . Manufac. & Merch.* Marine Market SST"*’- 5 4 4 60] Securities. Norlolk 6s 3fc 4 5 5 4 4 July’70....!.**.5 Irving Third....' 10 4 ki 62 58 44 4 44 60 54 44 6 .. First Fourth Fulton Germania* Greenwich* otuyvesant*.... 6 . Commonwealth Continental Corn Exchange* Tenth 4 8 .. Citizens’ second 5 . 2d 44 8s & Term. 1st m.7s N. Orleans & Jackson lsts,8e 44 44 cert, 8e 4 44 stock.. N. Or. Jack'n & Opel.lets, 8s 4s Alexandria 6s 44 44 68 50? City 44 *** 1866 1867 79 68 78 67 86 75 7 Mississippi Cent. 1st mtg. 7? 62 J 49$ “ 77 65 76 .. 62] iNashvilleds New Orleans 6s 44 consol. 6s 44 7s •4 Railroad 6s... 5 .. 68 67 registered stock, old ‘ 44 44 44 80 50 15 Mississippi and Lou- 65 641 ... 3 .. Boll’s Head* Batchers & Drovers Central Chatham Chemical seventh Ward. 3,000,000 Jan. and July. July ’70 500,000 Jan. and July... Jan.’67 5,000,000 May and Nov... Nov ’10 800,000 Jan. and July... July ’70 250,000 Jan. and July.. July ’70 25 1,000,000 Quarterly .. Oci. '70.. 25 200,000 Quarterly... Oct '70 25 800,000 Jan. and J nly July '70 100 3,000,000|Jan. and July July ’70 25 450,000jJan. and July.. July 70. 100 300,000 ev. tw<» months Sept l 25 400,000, Jan. and July... July 70 100 1,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. 70 100 10,000,000 Jan. and July. July '70 100 750,000 Jan. and July... July ’70 100 2,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’70 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug.’7'i 100 100,000 Aug. ’70 25 350,000 Jan. and July... July ’TO 100 Jan. and July... July ’70 250,000 25 200,000 Jan. and July July ’70 100 150,000 Jan. and July... July '70 100 100 100 75 100 American 65 , Last Paid. _ 224 89 Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds —. 75 Charleston, S. C., 6s, stock.. 45 44 7b, Fire Loan Bonds Columbia, S. C 6s 68] Columbus, 44 7s, bonds 55 Fredricksbnrg 6s 70 Lynchburg 6s 75 Macon 7s, bonds f-9 Memphis 6s bonds, old 44 6s, 44 new 59 Memphis 6s, endorsed 6" Memphis past due coupons. 60 Mobile, Ala., 5s, bonds — 8S, 44 801 Montgomery 8s Dividend. 27] 80 66 Atlanta, Ga, Ss, bonds LIST. 40j 83. 64 44 BAN K . 22* 5s 44 155 . . 6s, i:ew 44 “ .. • 27) Virginia 6s,ex-conpon 107fc 108 78 49 . 6s, new bonds.... 44 .... 77 4S • 78 isiaua. 72 South Carolina 6s, old 44 6s, new,-Tan &Juiy 44 6s, April & Oct... 44 reg. stock — Tennessee 6s, <.x coupons... 44 125 87* Fm.d ng Act, ’66. do 1868. donewb’ds.. do Special l ax. 44 68 73 70 6s, Levee..., “ 8s, Levt-e “ 7s, i emtentiary... 44 8s, Texas & N.O. Rb North Carolina He, old... .. 106 67 “ 44 Manuf N Y. Nat.Exch Central Nation’l 104 108 140 118 Grocers East River .. Importers & Tr. 156 130 140 Peoples loo .. 744 .... “ “ 40 78 76 33 35 76 ... 44 Bid. Askd &4 120 Atlantic New Y. Countj\ 106)$ .. 103 .. 122)$ . 114 Citizens 116 73 170 Irving Metropolitan Greenwich .. Butchers*Drov .. Mechanics & Tr. 130 National U5 Merchants’ Ex.. 101 Leather Manuf.. 175 Seventh Ward... Ill State of N York . Commerce Pacific Chatham N. America Hanover • • Continental St. Nicholas Marine Commonwealth. Exchange, ill 107X Republic Tradesmen’s.... 152 Fulton.. 70 126 Mercantile Am. ^ Asso 180 250 Bio Ask - .. Georgia 6s, old 6s, new. 7s, old 44 Sew necessarily nominal.) ‘ 44 Bid. Askd are Kanlman, Carolina. tJidi As*. ( 1 Macon and Augusta stock... o: 101? Macon <fc Bruusw’k end b. 7s 70 72 iAtlantic and Gulf 7s bonds 81 I “ 41 stock.... SI 1 iSavannah, Albany.* Gulf 7s 90 9!*:i bonds, end. by Savannah.. 90 94 j Pensacola <fc Georgia let m7s “ “ 70 72 2dm 8b. State Securities. Alabama 8s Quotations of New York Bank Stocks. Bid. Askd. 140 Mech. Bkg 150 Broadway 55 9 required. road from Brook’s station to Q lamico, where connections will be made with the Alexandria and Freilei ieksbtpg..railroad, which will make a continuous road from Richmond to Washington. The work ou the whole line is under contract and rapidly progressing, and will be com¬ pleted in twelve months. When this connection is completed trains will ruu through from liichmoud to New York without bieak of bulk or change of cars. 660 THE CHRONICLE. [October 29,1870, GENERAL QUOTATIONS OF STOCKS AND BONDS. The Active Stocks and Bonds given on a Previous Page are not Repeated Here. Quotations are made ot the Pet Cent Value, Whatever the Par may he. Southern Securities are Quoted In a Separate List. STOCKS AND Bid, SECURITIES. American Gold Coin Ask. STOCKS AND Bid. Ask, SECURITIES. STOCKS AND Bid. Ask, SECURITIES. 111% (Not previously quoted.) 6s, 1881, reg 68, 5*20s, (1862) reg 68,5-208, (1864) reg 68, 5-20s, (1VS5) reg 6s, 5-20s, (1865, new) reg 68 5-208, (1867) reg 6s, 5-208, (1868) reg 5s, 1874, cou 5s, 1874. reg 5s, 10-40s, reg «• 113% 113% 108 108 108% m-x no % , no% 106% 106% Albany & Susqueh, 1st M., 7... do do 2d M.,7... 90 92% do do 8dM. Atlantic & Gt. West., 1st M., 7. do do 2d M.,7. Baltimore & Ohio 6s of ’75 do do 6s of’80 do 68 of ’85 do do (N. W.Va.)2dM.6s do do 3dM.6s 94** 93% 94% do do 87 2d M., 6. 3d M.. 6. do do (Not previously quoted.) Arkansas 7s, L. R. & F. S. issue. do 6’s California 7s 67 66 I GO jiol* Connecticut 6s do War Loan Illinois Canal Bonds, 1870 do 6s coupon, ’77 do do 1879 do War Loan 1100% 100 * Indiana 5s Kentucky 6s 99 Maine 6s 7. 7. 28** Buff., N. Y. & Erie, 1st M., 7... 90% Burlington & Mo. L. G., 7 Bur., Ce. R. & Min.,lstM.,gd.,7. Cam. & Bur. & Co., 1st M., 6 Catawissa, 1st M., 7 97 Maryland 6s, ’70 do 6s, Defence 102% 103 'Massachusetts 6s, Gold do 6s, Currency... do 58, Gold 100 Michigan 6s, 1873 9i** 95 92% 92 92% SO* * S7 95 83 ... C^dar Falls & Minnesota Central of N. J., 1st M., 7 do 2d M.,7 do do do (new 7 Central Ohio,IstM.,6 Cent. Pacific, 1st M., (gold) 96 93 97% cousol., 6 of’89.. Camden & Atlantic, 1st M., 7.. do do 2d M.,7.. 100 25** do IstM. (new) do 1st M.,n.(guar) do 100 100 100 100 87% 86% 55* Camden & Amboy, 6 of ’75 do do 6 of’83 do do 6 of’89 Morris & Essex, convertible.. do do construction. 89 N Y. Cent., Prem. S. F., 6, ’83.. 91% do Sink. Fund, 7,1876. 100 do Subscription^, ’88. 89 do Real Estate, 6,1883. 89 Renewal beta, 6, ’87. 89 do N. Y. & Harlem, 1st M., 7,1878. 103 co do cons. M.. 6, ’93. N. Y. & N. Hav., 1st M., 6^’75... North Missouri, 1st M., 7,1S95 . do do 2d M., 7,1883.. do do 3d M., 7, 1888.. North Pennsyl., 1st M., 6,1880.. 96 * do Chattel M., 10,1887. 110 do 2d Mortgage. 7 do Funding Scrip, 7... loo** Northern Cent., IstM. (guar) 6 do do 2dM., S. F.,6,’85. do do 3d M., S. F., 6,1900 67% do do 3d M. (Y. &C)6.’77 do do Cons, (gold) 6, lPOO 93** Ohio & Mississippi, 1st M.,7, ’72 99% do Income M.,(W.Div)7, ’82 do Consol. M., 7,1898 87% Oil Creek & Alleg. R., 1st M., 7. 60 Old Col. & Newport Bds, 7, ’77. do do Bonds, 6,1876.. Pacific of Mo., 1st M., (gd) 6. ’83 84 do 7s (guar) 1880... 95 Pennsylvania, 1st M., 6,1 80... 103 do 2d M., 6,1875.... 101 do Debentures, 6, ’69-’71 95 Phila. & Erie, 1st M., 7,1887.... 100 do IstM. (gold) 6,’81 90 do 1st M. (cur.) 6, ’81 88% do 2d M.,7,1*85 93% do 3d M., 6,-1920 Philadelphia & Reading, 6, ’70. 84 do do 6, ’71. 100 do do 6, ’80. 97% do do 6, ’86. 100 do Debentures, 6. 82 do do 7, ’98. 95 8* 90* * Bos., Hart. & Erie, 1st M.(olu) 7 State Bonds. 93 95” Belvidere Delaware, 1st M., 6. do do 92% 84% lo6% 83 91 l* 6.. Cheshire, 6 Chic. & Alton, 1st M., S. F., 7.. 102 ‘ do do 1st M.,7... do 6s,1878 (101 do do 2d, Income, 7... 90% do !101 6s, 1883 Chic. Bur. & Quin., 1st M.,8..-> 111 do 7s, 1878 ,100 do do 1st M., conv., 8. do 7s, WarBountvLoan 100 Chic., & Milwau., 1st M.,7, ’73. 90** Missouri 6s, Han. & St. Jos 91 98 Ch. & Nor’w. pref. S. F., 7, ’85. 96 New Hampshire, 6s 100 96 ' do do Int. ~ ‘ ‘ Bds., 7, ’83.. New York 7s, Bounty, reg.... 107 ;i07% do do 1st M.,7,1885.-... 93% do 7s, do cou.... HOT do do Exten., 7. 1885... do 6s, Canal, 1872 |105 107 Phil., Wilm. & Bal1st M., 6, ’84 do do 1st (Gal. & C.Un) 7,’85 99* ; 102 do ll.5 ! 107 6s,1873 Pitts. & Connellsv.,lst M.,7, ’98 do do 2d do 7, 75. 96 do I If 5 (107 6s, 1874 do do 1st M., 6,1889 92* do do 1st M. (Penin.) 7, ’98. do 6s, 1875 (105% 103 do do Consol. S. F., 7,1915.. 90% Pitts., Ft. W. & C„ 1st M., 7,1912 do 6s, 1877 ,105% 103 do do 2d M.,7,1912. Cliic.,R’k I. & Pac., 1st M.. 7’96 97% 98% do 6s, 1878 105% 108 do do 3d M.,7,1912 Cin., Ham. & D., 1st M., 7,* 80... 90 I 92 do ■101 5s, 1874 88 Rutland, new, 7 do do 2d M.,7,’85... 87 do !100 5s, 1875 St.L.,Al.,&T.|H., 1st M.,S.F.7.’94 do do 3d M., 8, 77... 95 Ohio 6s, 1875 83 ' 84** do do 2d M., 7/94. Cin. & Indiana, 1st M., 7 do 6s, 1881 i:02 !105 do 2d M., Income, 7 83 I 84 do do do 2d M.,7,1877.. do 6s, 1886 St. Lou & Iron Mt 1st M., 7, ’92 (103 ) .... C., Rich. & Ch.,lst M.,gnar.,7’95 103 Pennsylvania 5s, 1877 St. L., Jacks. & Ch., 1st M., 7 ’91 do do 2d do Military Loan 6s, 1871 104.... Cin., San. & Clev., M.,7,1889... South’Side-. 1st M., 7, ’77. do Stock Loan, 6s, ’72 ’77 106 (107 96 Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw: Clcve. & Pitts., 2d M.,7, ’73....' do do 6s, ’77-’82 107%: 109 1st M.(W.D) 7,’96.. do co 3d M., 7, ’7a.... 96 Rhode Island 6s 100% .... 1st M., (E. D.) 7, ’94 do do 4th M., 6, ’92... .... Vermont 6s 100 2d M. (W. D.) 7, ’86 do do Cons. S. F., 7,1900. Col., Ch. & In. Cen., 1st M.,1908. 78% i 78% Toledo, Wabash & Western : IstM. (T. & W.)7 ’90 do 2d M.. 7,1909. do 1st M. (L E. W. & St. L.) 7, ’90 City Bonds. 93 Colum., & Xenia, 1st M., 7, ’90. 92 88 Dayton & Mich., 1st M., 7, ’81.. 86 Baltimore 6s of’75 91% do 2d M.,7, ’84.. 82 83 do do 18*4 j .... ! , .... 92 95 6s, 1900 1*90, Park 6s 93 Boston 5s, gold do 95 6s 100 Brooklyn 6s . do * do do do Water 6s Park 6s 93 Improvement 6s City 7s Chicago Municipal 7s do Sewerage 7s 98% 6s 7-30s Detroit 7s do Water 7s Jersey City Water 6s Louisville 6s, ’82 to ’84 do 6s, ’96 to ’97 do Water 6s, ’87 to ’89.. do Water Stock 6s, ’97. do Wharf 6s do special tax 6s of ’89. New York 6 per cent, ’75... do do do ’76... do do do ’78... do do do ’87... do do 5 p. c.,FL’n’68. do 7’s 98 85 88 102 99 99 91 75 73 80 76 76 75 96 96 96 % 102* Philadelphia 6s, old do 6s, do do Funded Debt 6s do do do 7s Water exten. 7s do .. do Portland 6s ... ... 86 98 76 76 6s, ’85 San Francisco 6s of 1853. »• 84* do 7s. 90 do 108. p-~ 100 St- Louis 6s 86 Jo Water 6s, gold.... 94 do new 94 do Water & Wharf 6s... 86 do Park 6s 88 do Park 6s gold 93 do Sewer Special Tax 6s 86 ••• c New or 76* * 75 82 i< 79 79 103 102 74 90 95 80 80 95 86 94 95 95 95* 94 90 90 92% 90 97% 95 100 100 100 Osw.Mid.E,lstM.7(gd) Belma.Marion & Mem. RR: IstM., endorsed, 8, (gold). St. Jos * Den. C. 100 . R,lstM,8(gd) 97% West Wls. RR., 1st M., 7, (gd) 90 Dubuq’e &. S City, 1st M., 7, ’83 Mass., conv., 6,1874... do do Mort., 6,1888... East Penn., 1st M., 7,1888 Elm. & Wil’ms, 5s Eastern do do 7s, 1880 Erie Railway, 1st M., 7,1877... do 2nd M„ conv., 7, ’79. 82 72 58 92 93* * 100 do 3d Mort., 7,1883. 86 do 4th M., conv , 7, ’80. 80% do 5th M., conv., 7, ’88. 79 105 Han. & St. Jos., L. Gr. M.,7, ’81 do 106% 107 Convert., 8s Hud. River, 2d M., S. F., 7, ’85.. 104 do 3d M„ 7,1875 102% Hunt. & Broad Top, 1st M.. 7... do do 2d M.,7,’75... do Cons. M., 7,’95. do 106 Illinois Central, 7,1875 69 71 Ind., Cin.&Laf., 1st M.,7 do 84 (I.&C ) 1st M.,7,1888 83 90 91 Jeff., Mad. & I,lstM.(I&M)7, ’81 94 do do 2d M.,7,1873 95 do do 1st M.,7,1906.... ?8% WX 62 June., Cin. & Ind., 1st M.,7, ’85 60 90 June., Phila, 1st M., guar.6, ’82 85 84 Kansas Pacific 1st M., (gold) 7 86 Lake Sh & M. S.. (new) 7,1870. 97% do do IstM., S.F.,7,’85. 101% do do 2d M. (M. S.) 7, ’77. 97 97% do 1st M. (D., M.& T.) 7, ’76 99* do IstM. (C.&Tol.) 7,’85 do 2d M. (C. & Tol) 7, ’86. do Dividend Bonds, 7 92% do do 1st (new) M., 6, ’9*. 97* do do lstM.,Hazelton,6. 85* Little Miami, 1st M., 6.1883 Little Schuylkill, 1st M.,7,1877. 100 Loulsv. C. & Lex., 1st M., 7, ’97.. 84% 87 Louis. & Fr’k., 1st M., do Louisv.Loan.6. ’81. 81 L. & Nash. 1st M. (m. s.) 7, ’77.. 94 do Lou. Loan (m.s.)6. ’86-’87 76 do do (Leb.Br.) 6,’86 76 do IstM. (Mem. Br) 7, ’70-’75 94 do lstM.(Leb.br.ex)7, ’80-’85 9! do Lou.L’n(Leb.br.ex)6, ’93 75 do Consol. 1st M.,7,1898 90 Marietta <fe Cin., 1st M., 7,1891. do do 2d M.,7,1896. 75% 6,*i0-*78.. Memphis & Charleston, 1st.... M., conv., 8, ’82. li7 ' Mil. & St. Paul, 1st M., 7,18 3.. 93 96 89 98 90 93% i do do 2d M.,7,1884.. do 1st M. (Ia. & Minn.) 7, ’97. do 1st M. (P. du C.) 8,1898. 2d M.. 7.3,1898. do Morris & Essex, l6t M do do 2d M...... Schuylkill Louisv., Cin. & Lex., pref. 65 33 100 do do common. Louisville & Nashville Marietta & Cin., 1st preferred do do 2d pref. Manchester & Lawrence Mine Hill & Schuylkill Haven. New Jersey New York & Harlem.,..., New York & Harlem, pref...,. New York & New Haven do do scrip. New York, Prov. & Boston... Northern of New Hampshire. Northern Central North Missouri North Pennsylvania Norwich & Worcliester 94 104 94* 94 100 88* 85% 95% 83 9 133 104 115 28 111% 155 142 iiz* 84 18% 85% 90** 107 do’ 75 80 97% 82 77 87 85 90% 92 79% 80 74 24 preferred St. Louis, Alton & T. Haute... do do pref. 56% St. Louis & Iron Mountain.... 46% Toledo. Wab & Western, pref. 73% Union Pacific 23% Vermont & Canada 68 Vermont. & Massachusetts 120 West Jersey City Railroad Stocks. Ferry... Broadway & Seventh Av Bleecker st. & Fulton Brooklyn City Central Park, N. & East Rivers Coney Island (Brooklyn Drv Dock E. B’dway & Battery Eighth Avenue Forty-second st. & Gd. st. Fer 60* 90% do 2d Mort., 7,1891 do Equip Loans, 8 Vermont & Mass., 1st M.,6, ’83 Westch. & Phil., 1st M., conv, 7. do do 2d M., 6,1878... West Jersey, 6,18S3 West Md, IstM., endorsed. 6, ’90 do 1st M., unend.. 6,’90.. 2d M., endorsed, 6,’90. do Wilming.& Read., IstM. ,7,1900 Canal Bonds. Chesa. & Delaw., 1st M.. 6. ’86. Delaware Div., 1st M., 6, ’78 Lehigh Navigation, 6, *73 do Loan of 1884, 6,’84 Loan of 1897,6,’97 do do Gold Loan of’97,6,’97 do Convert, of 1877,6, ’77 .. Monong’a. Nav., 1st M., 6, ’87.. Morris, 1st M., 6, 1876 Boat Loan, S. F.. 7. *85 Schuylkill Nav., 1st M., 6,1872. do 2d M., 6,18-2.. Improv., 6,1870.. Susque. & Tide Water, 6, ’78... Union, 1st Mortgage, 6,1883... do do do do Second Avenue Sixth Avenue Third Avenue 98 86 25 50 198 25 40 70 150 100 85% 88 82 95 77 77 96 93 76 Home Petroleum National N. Y. & Alleghany Northern Light 86 95* 90 90 97 92 60 91 91% 70 126 30 52% 30 45 75 no 75 84 88 90 92 25 67 32* 70* 15% 33 20 20 40 **50 40 67 70 1 90 2 50 10 100 ..... Second National.... United Petroleum Farms United States mining 25 70 Stocks. Gold— 91 80 88 J 82% 83** 88 89** 78 78% 84* 77 86 73 71 American Flag. Bates & Baxter Benton Gold Black Hawk Gold Central Gold Consolidated Gregory Grass Valley Gunnell Gold.. La Crosse Gold Liberty N. Y. & 73% Eldorado Rocky Mountain 19 Quartz Hill.... Symond’s Forks.. Smith & Parmelee Gold 60 149% 8% — 4 136 148% 146% 148*' li6" 28 llx preferred preferred 77% 50 83* * 150% Quincy. .. 90 82% 103 73 151 92 S3 104 135% 35 Detroit & Milwaukee do do pref..... Dubuque & Sioux City 122 Consolidated Coal Cumberland Coal Maryland Coal 87 28 22C 35 Pennsylvania... Spring Mountain 64 Wilkesbarre Gas—Brooklyn. Citizens (Brooklyn) Harlem Manhattan—. j Metropolitan New York 2Vw^—Fanners^LiOan & Trust New York Lile & Trist.... Union Trust..... United State® Trust. ....... Miscellaneous— Brunswi’k City Land,.-. ... Canton Co. • • • • • • Atlantic Mail Steamffcip.. pf. 80 Miscellaneous Stocks. Coal— Americas1 127 149 Central Onio Eastern (Mass.) 23% 106 Pithole Creek 126 Boston,Hartford & Erie Columbus & Xenia Concord Connecticut & Passumpsic, Connecticut River.. 51% 47% 1 75 Rynd Farm 90 Albany Chic. Bur & 03% 85 102% Susquehanna. Cincinnati, Ham. & Dayton. Cin., Sandusky & Clev 30* 75 80 119% 119% 64% Lehigh Coal and Navigation.. 64 Washington Branch Parkersnurg Branch do Cheshire 111% 114 100 206'* Delaware Division Delaware & Hudson (Not previously quoted.) Boston & Lowell Boston & Maine Boston & Providence Camden & Amboy Catawissa do preferred 115 180 Minnesota Copper Walkill Lead .....••••• Walkill assented (lead;...... Alleghany Valley Boston & .5 74 112 Canal Stocks. Chesapeake & Delaware. Wyominsr Valley, 1st M Railroad Stocks. Albany & 75 121% 121% 52% 52* Philadelphia Erie 91% a* 103 73 73 2dM. (Gt. West’n Baltimore & Ohio 103% 104 96 1R0 103 114 Philadelphia & Trenton 84% Phila., German. & Norristown 156 Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 111 113 Port., Saco & Portsmouth Rensselaer & Saratoga 83 Rome, Watertown & Ogdens.. 118 96% Rutland 1st M. (Quin. & Tol.) 7, ’90 1st M. (HI. & South. Ia.) 7, ’82. 2d M. (Tol. & Wab.) 7 78. 2d M. Wab. & Western) 7,71. 87% Dayton & Michigan 02% 42 78 70 88 Pennsylvania 94 67% 40 77 Old Colony & Newport Pacific (of Missouri).. Panama 88% 86 79% 81 Ogdens. & L. Champlain do do pref... Ohio & Mississippi, preferred Oil Creek & Allegheny River 96 102 105 85 67 Long Island & Mich. Cen., 1st JTIlftcellane’us Bonds. Am; i)ock & Im. Co. 7, ’86 Long Dock Bonds W. union Tele., IstM., 7 1875.. do do 2d M.,7,1881 Det. & Mil., 1st M., conv., 7, ’75. do 2d M., 8,1875 do IstM., Fund’dcp,7,’75 do 1st M.,fDet.&Pon.)7,’71 do 2d M.,(Det.&Pon.)8, ’86 82 83 f*0 162 of ’59) 7, ’93 85 85% Morris (consolidated) do 79 preferred 80 Equipment Bonds. 7, ’83., 83 Schuylkill Navigat’n (consol) Consol.-Mort., 7,1907 do do pref. Union Pac., 1st M. (gd) 6, ’95-’99 82% 83* 166* Susquehanna & Tide-Water... do Land Grant, 7,1889 73% Union preferred do Income 10s 08* Petroleum Stocks. Un. Pac., E. D., 1st M.(gd) 6. ’95 90 co Bennehoff Run 1st M. (gold) 6,1896.. 74 81 do 1st M.(Leav.Br.)7, ’96 92 Bergen Coal & Oil Brevoort do Land Gr. M., 7, <71-’76 70 100 do Buchanan Farm Income Bonds, 7,1916 25 31 94% 97% Central Verm’t Cen., 1st M„ cons., 7, ’66 84% 85 SO 70 97 99 94 83 85 75 86 97 Lehigh Valley, 1st M., 6,1873.. Recent Goans Bur. C. R & M. RR, 1st M,7(gd) Ches. & Ohio RR. istM.,6,(gd) Ind’polis, Bloom’ton & W, 7 gd Louisv.&Nash. R, 1st M, cons.,7 Lake Shore C onsolidated, 7... Lake Supe’r. & Miss.. 1st M., 7. Montclair RR oi N. J. 7s, gold N. Hav.,Mid.& Wil. RR,7s.... N.Y & 87 90 103 100 ICO 64 5s Alleghany County, 5 do 99 102%; 102% new Pittsburg Compromise 4%s. 8* 100 Cincinnati 5s do do 98 100% Dayton & Union, 1st M., 7, ’79. do do 2d M.,7 ’79.. do do Inc. M., 6,’79. Dayton & West., 1st M.,7,1905 do do IstM., 6,1905. Del., L. &W. 1st M.(L.&W.)7,’71 do do IstM., S.F.,7,’75. 81 82 Little 86% ' do do 3d My 7, ’88.. do To’do dep. bds, 7, ’81-’94. 48 133 Indianapolis, Cin. & Lafayette 18 Jefferson., Mad. & Ind.... 26 28 Lehigh Valley 115% 116 103% Little Miami IM .... 92%; 92 AO 47% 182% Fitchburg 97%' 93 96 54 Hartford & N. Haven . 7T%j Elmira & Williamsport do do pref.. Erie Railway preferred..,,.. 9i% 93** vv, 92 Bid. Ask Railroad Stocks. (Not previously quoted.) Railroad Bonds. Railroad Bonds. U. S. Governments. do do STOCKS AND SECURITIES 122% Mariposa Gold American Express Mer. Union Express Wells Fango scrip BoBton Water Power 68% 69 SO 4 43% 48% 2% .... CHRONICLE. THE 1870] October 29, J870. June Hailtwa^ ittonitor. <j-fje Prices of the September Active Stocks and Bonds are given In the To'al Increase flankers’ Gazette” ante; quotations of other securities will be fonnd on |/SiaSatIons Total net earnings, as 41 65 27 $1,578,450 40 474,924 93 $3,082,021 60 $541,*424*29 1,578,450 40 of September 3». 1870 $2,119,874 69 annual meeting in Louisville. Ky., on the 12th in?t., the following resolution was unanimously adopted : Resolve i, That it is the ssnse of this meeting that the charter of the Louisville ard Nashville RaiLoai Compiny ba so amended that here¬ after there shall be nini di ectors, w!io shall hold office for three years, the members of the directory first elected after the passage of such amendment to divide themselves by lot into three equil classes, the seats of the first-class to be vacate ! at the end of one year, of the second at the end of two years, and of the third at the end of three years on the retiring of the first class, and annually thereafter three directors to be elected to fill tin vacant seats And the present direc¬ tory is hereby requested to make timely and jaoper application to of the stockholders of this company KThe Tables of Railroad, Canal and *m>v in all, four pages, two of which will be published Other Bonds in each number. In "Menaces bonds of Companies which have been consolidated are frequently The date given in brackets faeriunder the name of Consolidated Corporation. Immediately arter the name of each Company, indicates the time at which the state® In the “Interest Column” the abbreviations are as and July; F. & A-=Febraary and August; M. & S.= March and September; A. & O. April and October; M. & N.=May and NovemhaT. J. & D.=June and December. Q.—J.=Quarterly, beginning with January; q 17 Louisville and Nashville Railroad.—At" the _ of its finarces was 47 34 83 92,181 51 567,106 45 May 31, 1870 Net earnings June, July, August and September, 1870 .... Insurance Stocks can be made. Table of Railroad, Canal and Other Stocks, an nATt oaire, comprises all Companies of which the stock is gold in any of the si The figures just after the name SSitJtf citiesn(except merely local corporations) Vthecompany indicate the No. of the Chronicle in which a report ol the Cominv was last published. A star (*) indicates leased roads; in the dividend column rjfra* s=stock or scrip. t .$4,060,472 00 $350,296 96,359 865,176 566,618 98 B lance to credit of income ac -ounr, The Snows: $778,9S7 933,013 662,336 692,663 13 8S 89 10 Decrease.’.’... of Southern Securities are given in a separate reliable prices of I* $1,189,284 1,034,392 1,227,512 1,259,282 July.... August KV?LANATION of the stock and bond tables 7 561 made. J. & J.=January _lp’=:Quarterly, beginning with February. Q. —M. —Quarter^, beginning with Table M6°*Themonthly, of United States and State Securities will be the last Saturday of the month. secure such an amendment. 7 The Table of City Bonds will be published on the third Saturday ofeacb month. The abbreviations used in this table are the same as those in the H. D. Newcomb, R. A. Robinson, G. W. Norton, Thomas J. Mar¬ tables of railroad bonds mentioned above. The Sinking Fund or assets held by tin, W. B. Caldwell, W. H. Smith, and James Whitwo»'th, having re¬ each city are given on the same line with the name. ceived 60,869 votes, all that were cast, were unanimously elected di¬ rectors. Weekly Railroad Earnings will be found in Bankers’ Gazette on nnblished a on From the report ( f the President w hich was presented, we learn that the gross earnings of the road for the past fiscal year were $2,954,658 80, against $2,881,188 65 for the fiscal year ending June 80, 1869, an increase of $573,620 25. The net earnings for the year previous page. Railroad-Earnings and Union Pacific Expenses. -The following official statement has been furnished of the earning* and of the U. P. R. R. Co., from May to September, 18b9 and ending June 30, 1870, were $1,142,183 88, against $1,031,676 70 for the year ending Juue 30, 1S69, showing au increase of the net earn¬ 1810: Net Income. Expenses. Earnings. 1870. ings cf the last year over the previous year of $110,450 67. $S02.586 09 $179,640 61 $322 945 48 Idle bonded debt of the company, June 30, 1869, was $8,713,600. May 419,151 81 327,298 20 Of this amount there have been redeemed during this fiscal year 613,058 44 388,359 38 254,708 06 July 664,050 83 349,329 93 314,7*20 90 $235,600, leaving the bon U:d <Lbt of the company June 30, 1870, August 728,5 :0 93 286,153 16 412,362 77 $8,478,000. September This sum includes bonds of the City of Louisville, with¬ out mortgage and consolidated mortgage bonds unsold, to the amount Total .$3,584,666 30 $1,922,630 89 $1,662,035 41 of $981.000—making the total mortgage debt at ibis date $7,497,000. 1869. $797,918 49 $512,276 39 Seven per cent cash dividends have teen declared upon the stock of May • $285,672 10 June 706,602 69 534,675 72 171,926 97 the company during the fiscal year. 623,559 96 July 508,421 66 115,138 40 expenses • .. .. .. .. . .. . August September Total $(,504,163 42 $80,502 83 . Gala of 1870 over 1869 465,443 26 425,946 61 617,585 38 753,466 90 . . . There have been redeemed bonds 152,142 12 332,520 29 $2,445,763 54 $524,132 65 Expended $1,067,399 83 $604,635 68 Gross Opera ing expenses, June $1,251,950 1,157,056 1,037,973 1,305,671 July August September 64 38 2,045,553 21 790,606 83 836,534 86 $4,752,653 52 Total 75 $3,649,128 05 75 “ 49 17 92 89 $1,103,525 47 $1,354,383 16 to be larger and more The gross earnings of the Central Pacific Railroad Comp my, between San Francisci and Salt Lake, have already exceeded $800,000 per month, or at the rate of nearly $10,000,000 per annum; and of this vaet sum ab5ut 50 per profitable than its early friends anticipated. Income. $275,517 111,503 247,366 469,137 351,"30 83 5»3 107 09 Total —•The business of the Pacific Railrooi proves Net interest, rents, &c. $976,433 15 $235,500 00 178,845 24 on Additional rolling stock and depot grounds. following is the compara the Chicago and Northwest¬ ern Railway Company for the four months of the fiscal years 1869-70: Earnings. .... Lebanon Branch Extension so.ith of Lebanon Interest paid daring the same period. Chicago and Northwestern.—The five statement of eiruiogs and expenses of 1869. daring the yea;-, of tin mortgage , cent is net earnings. For laneous other News, Railroad previous on a Items, Commercial see and Miscel- page. MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. --Central Pacific 1889. . Chicago and Alton.— * 1870. 11582,657 i 6511,854 $6 9,788 579,642 685866 1410,000 (280 m.) $276,116 275,139 267*094 $343,181 315,098 279,121 328,390 313,325 386,888 521,036 632,025 485,048 556,080 1869. 331,568 218,982 891,808 f568,270 1868. (742 m.) (350 m.) 112,604 f 729,274 j 783,099 £0«,'‘40 f 384,564 A 345 832 402,854 404 012 351.041 493,231 606,623 468,212 897,615 840,350 ^4S6,196 833,412 « 508.745 V409,568 l::: 1861,700 6,749^395 1 334,653 1868. <W4 m.) 624 693 663,391 644,374 697,571 695,253 759,214 645,768 861,357 870,584 • .Dec.... 1,107,083 1,001,986 13,429,534 .Nov 681,040 696,677 6208,823,482 1,294,095 ..Jan JJ1.680 696,228 841,863 979,400 914,406 81^,413 r’7^i° A 1869. Mississippi. — 1868. 1870. (840 m.) 311,973 331,351 266,906 252,149 294,619 217,082 194,466 £W,122 $3,329 2’G,686 283,861 (340 m.) (840 m.) $180,366 $196,7S7 216,080 221,469 214,409 218,689 218,234 253,061 270,933 f246,266 223,236 I 249,987 192,864 0211,219 275,220 S 300,971 392,803 §318,957 828,044 398,027 264,896 1264.089 129.096 142,014 185,376 129,306 ...Mar., l ..April. ...May.. 110.213 .June. 111,117 111,127 July.. 118,407 ...Aug 182,998 ...Sep... . .Oet... ...Nov... ..Dee... .. Year. .-Pacific of ULo.s Iron Mt. 1869. ‘ 1870. 267,867 294,874 289,550 283,000 268,828 184,411 262.5'5 260,449 350,613 298,708 236,108 8,144^63 843,194 856,677 98,160 Feb... . 113,894 . •Mar... 104,019 . •April. 115,175 May., 116,242 304,115 326,880 415,758 369,625 825,501 821,013 406,283 403,646 366.628 863,187 826,891 878,880 329,950 410,825 390,671 4,570,014 4,749,163 511,820 467,990 388,385 449,932 .June, . 107,624 r July.. 122,000 . •Auk... 124,124 . Sep... . • .Oet..... Nov... .Dec... • (210 m.) $127,594 133,392 149,165 155,388 130,645 140,408 143,986 204,696 196,436 210,473 174,500 157.379 1869. 1870. 1868. (210 m.) $132,622 127,817 (222 m.) $152,392 .158,788 172,216 172,347 155,081 150,719 (521 m.) $278,712 265,136 257,799 175,960 171,868 157,897 154,132 144,164 186,883 202,238 204,552 189,351 168,559 • , 167,806 2h0,82t 2tu.62£ *98 344 283,883 4f 4,208 -Clev. Col. Cin. AI 1869. (590 m) (890 m.) $401,275 $204,112 449,6-4 180,840 600,893 239,522 443,300 247,661 507,9 0 241 456 (390 m.) 269.408 263 867 274,021 556,100 597,600 3:09,610 f 523,841 A455,606 §632,652 S584,155 T479,236 1.393,468 249,355 319,012 317,887 273,305 256,272 5,960,936 201,600 218,600 244,161 246,046 260,169 325,854 300.764 3,128,177 o736,664 '7,25n,668 1869. (521 m.) $2£4,192 240.394 342,704 311,882 812,629 348,896 810,800 450,246 470.720 -Eorth Missouri.—, J870< 1«69. iNlr. (936 m.) $396,171 (404 m.) $119,721 882,823 877,0(0 443,133 730,700 755,737 636,434 661,026 808,318 94,9<7 136, (<(.'« in. $21 ,101 106,207 18t9 - 239,161 139,J 0 269,400 259,000 R0,416 208,493 149,1 4 196 724 160.149 165,586 229,099 231,662 264.690 ... 1870. (521 m.) 275,000 293,645 295,798 •—Union Pacific—• 1870. 1869, (1053 m.) • • s • (1088 m) 528,529 500,139 689,238 • 6SQ.973 802 580 746,450 318,699 840,892 591,420 348,082 706,602 322,756 466.431 628,559 617,585 508,042 758,467 4I»0,203 4519,898 328,279 ........ 422,868 823,3 >8 1,057,*32 837,888 399,488 434,288 4,252,842 5.709.180 664,050 728,525 716,828 4,013,200 643,068 # # . • «i•• Year 923,862 2,014,548 •** 1870. 529,512 462,460 (520-90 m.) $351,767 319,441 645,789 (820 m.) (825 m.) $369,228 $451,180. 321,202 330,233 833,507 4*20,771 436,412 460,287 565,718 630,844 678,800 458,190 428,397 586,842 522,688 525,863 -710.24,045 724,614 6,517,646 .... 1870. .—Milwaukee A St. Panl.-^ lg68> (284 m.) (284 m.) $384,119 337,992 329,127 320,636 386.627 886,430 411,814 412,a3.) 353,669 473,546 490.772 448,419 374,542 392,942 456,974 > 1870. 1869. (284 m.) $343,890 1868. . 207,302 289.272 278,246 264.273 249,319 4,797,461 1869. St. L. Alton A T. Haute.—-Toledo. Wab. a Western.— 1870. (355 m.) (355 m.) (210 m.) $194,112 $202,447 $102,760 .Jan... 329,248 I . ...Feb.. 1,391,345 J&S9 778.260 .. 1868 110,887 . 106,641 M9,752 117,695 116,198 801,952 929,077 316,708 1,177.897 1,154,529 3?8,4o6 1,080,946341,885 1,246,213 568,380 1,273,171 C; 553,386 *591,209 £424,5>9 e433,434 —Michigan Central. o (251 m.) 90,177 98,275 101,379 106,246 98,482 108,461 95,416 95,924 108,418 126,556 121,519 125,065 119,169 121,408 276,431 858,359 13,865,461 1,570,066 1870. $99,541 90,298 104,585 1868. (1,157m.) (454 m.) $706,024 $308,587 753,782 297,464 1,157,055 .Year.. Tee 1870. 1,087,973 1,305,672 1,371,780 1,140,145 845,708 • (251 m.) 81,599 1887,442 $659,137 $654,587 640,974 1,094,697 1.211,149 1,180,982 1,076,673 1,251,940 1,507,479 June. 411,986 421,485 July.. 501,049 Aug.. 498,636 .Sept.., Oct.... 1869 (251 m.) $92,433 £$551 850,192 April. 395,044 .May.. • -Marietta andCincinnati— > (m #».) ffj,443 709,644 JIJSOO 568,282 IHar... • (1,167m.) $892,092 830,286 1,142,165 1,112,190 1,268,4'4 1,251,950 $724,890 807,478 Feb... 323,825 844,866 1869 (1 152 m.) Jail... • 4,508,642 4,681,562 ^aSllnc<,5 Central. 1888. 1869. 1870. 5&165 1868. (431 m.) $293,978 388,726 s' 558,100 * 3 (431 m.) 308.342 Chicago A Northwestern—. r-Chic>>Bock Is.and Pacific 1870. » 1 1 I » > • «IS M * 562 a THE CHRONICLE. [October 29,1870. • RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. U Subscribers will confer a K: COMPANIES, great favor by giving ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In DIVIDEND. Stock COMPANIES. Stock Out¬ Out- stand- ceding ing. Date. 2,241,250 8,691,200 2,494,900 ! 1,232,200 >! 733,700 16,267,862 1,650,000 7,239,531 .. Parkershnrg Branch Berkshire, No. 217 600,000 19,411,600 800,000 J 1/ it ill l i vl It T»1 I 25.000.OtH) j O* "«r Boston and Lowell, No. 217 5<X'- 2,215,000 Boston and Maine, No. 274 4,47i,000 Boston and Providence, No. 247. 3,360.000 Buffalo, New York and Erie*... 950,000 Burlington and Missouri River 1,252,500 w « explanation of this table, see Railway Monitor, on the pre¬ ceding page. Rate. Jan. & July. # April & Oct. Quarterly. Jan. & July. May & Nov. • prof. Mar., ’70 2 4 July, ’70 June, ’70 - 3^ Oct., ’70 Oct., ’70 do scrip | 5,000,000 of.joint Co.’s ’69 <S Jan. & July. .Jan. & July. Jan. & Julv. J une & Dec. July. ’73 July, ’70 May, ’70 IX 5 3 July, ’70 4 5 5 July, ’70 July, ’70 June,’70 „ 3>* do do A - -r - preferred Cedar Rapids and Missouri* do do pref.. Cent.Georgia & Bank. Co.No.2l3 Central of New Jersey, No. 270.. Central Ohio Yarmouth stock certiflclOO Portland, Saco & Ports No. 276.100 Providence & Worces., No. 247..100 Rensselaer & Saratoga, No. 252 .100 Richmond and Danville No. 235.100 Richmond * Petersburg No.285.100 Rome, Watert. & Ogd., No. 245. .700 Rutland, No. 248 100 do preferred 100 Mav & Nov. preferred Charlotte, Col. & Aug., No. 257 Cheshire, preferred Chicago and Alton. No. 248 do do preferred - .“5" “3k May, ’70 Feb., ’70 4,666.800 .1 mie & Dec. 15,000,000 .Ian. & Julv. 2,425,000 .1 une & Dec. do "5' July, ’70 5,432,000 — 400,000 June & Dec. St. 4 July," ’70 do do prof. Cincinnati & Zanesville, No. 250 May & Nov. May, ’70 8 10,460,900 Feb. <fe Aug. 2.056,750 Mav «fc Nov. 7,241,475 Quarterly. 11,1(H),0(H) Quarterly. 1,786,800 Quarterly. 1,500,000 May & Nov. 350.000 Jan. & July. 2,084.200 Feb. & Aug. 1,7<H),(HH) Jan. & July. 1,316,900 April & Oct. 2,400,00) 1,107,291 Jan. & July. 16,277.500 Jan. & July. Aug., ’70 May, ’70 N ov., ’70 3X sx 2K 2X Shore South South South 5 5 5 428.646 1,676,345 No. 253.. 1 Cleveland & Mahoning,* No. 247. Cleveland and Pittsburg. No. 255 Colum.,Chic.& In. Cen.*No. 217.1 Columbus and Xenia* Connecticut. River. No. Cumberland 247 Valley, No. 255 Dayton and Michigan* No. 263.. Delaware* 2 4 4 do pref.. do do Eastern (Mass.), No. 247 East Pennsylvania, No. East Tenn. Va. & Geor Elmira & Williamsport, do do Erie. No. 252 do preferred Erie and Pittsburg, No. 500.000 » ) • * ) ) do do ) pref. 1 do do scrip. Housatonic, preferred Huntingdon and Broad Top*. do Illinois Central. ) • • do pr No. 248.. 1 ) .. l Lackawanna and Bloom6burg LakeSho.& Mich. South. No. 255. .. » Lehigh and Susquehanna Lehigh Valley, No. 255 Little Miami, No. 247 Little Schuylkill.* No. 255 Long Island, No. 252 Louisv., Cin. & Lex., prf No. 27*5 ) • i i do common Louisville and Nashville No. 215 ( Louisville, New Alb. & Chicago. Macon and Western ) Maine Central Marietta & Cin., 1st prl. No. 250 do do 2d pref..: • do do » ) 1 i common I Michigan Central. Dec., July, Juiy, July, July, ) No. 205 Mil waukee and St. Paul. No. 258 do do pref Mine Hill & Sell Haven* No. 255. ' Mississippi Central ‘ 1 ) ... > Mobile* Montg.pref No. 216.. Mobile and Ohio, No. 259 Montgomery and West Point Morris and Essex,* No. 250 ) ) ) ) Nashua and Lowell, No, 217 Nashv. & Chattanooga No. 220. Naugatuck. No. 195 1 > ) 1 Jersey, No. 250 do scrip.. 1 l) do pref ) 0 0 ) ) ordinary . ) J 0 Northeast. (S. Carolina). No. 201 do 8 p. c., pref do North Missouri, No. 259. 1 North Pennsylvania Norwich & Worcester * No. 217.1 Ogdens. & L. Champ.* No.275 1 do de pref.l do do pref.. Mid Colony & Newport, «<o. • ) 0 J 0 ) 9 4 7s +-> 2M 4 8 3^ IX 4 4 P cr (3 O a p <2 3K r» 1 43 3 1% 4 Jersey, No. 250 4 5 1,983,569 8,229,594 1,638,350 15,000,000 4,999,400 Lehigh Coal and Nav.,No. 256.. 50 8,739,800 Monongahela Navigation Co.... 50 728,100 Morris (consolidated ) No. 254.. .100 1,025,000 do preferred 100 1,175,000 50 Pennsvtvania 4,800,000 Schuylkill Navlgat’n (consol.)*. 50 1,908,207 do 50 2,888,977 pref. 50 2,002,746 Susquehanna & Ti le-Water Union, preferred 50 2,907,850 West Branch andSxiPfuehanna. 50 1,100,000 Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill c Sept.,’66 ’70 * 100 Wyoming Valley Gas.—Brooklyn Citizens Harlem 3 5 3*7 S. *70 7*8s. July, *70 8H 100 25 (Brooklyn) 20 50 Jersey City and Hoboken... 20 Manhattan 50 Metropolitan 100 New York 50 Williamsburg 50 Improvement—Canton ,16X lOO Boston Water Power Brunswick City Nov., ’70 Feb., ’70 July, ’70 Aug., ’70 *70 Julv, Oct., ’70 Oct., ’70 4 .' Wells, Fargo 100 100 & Co 100 Steamship.—Atlantic Mall Pacific Mail, No. 257 100 100 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 National TruBt... 100 New York Life and Trust.. .100 3 April ’70 June, ’70 May, ’70 1,361,300 4,(XXi,(XX) 3,068,400 June & Dec. 5,000.000 May <t Nov. 898,950 155 .(XX) May & Nov. 7,771,500 . 8 4 3 ’70 ’70 .... ..... 3.150.000 2,363,700 Jan. & July. 3.051,800 Jan. & Julv. 2,000.000 April & Oct Feb.. ’70 Aug., ’70 ’70 Juy, Oct., ’70 T - ^ „ 5s'. ‘ 5 3>X 4 c June, *70 Oct., *70 J y» "JO do do Quicksilver 3* 2H 8 July,'’70 "5 Aug. Feb. ”3 H • & 5 3* ’69 May,' '68 Annually. • • t "7 ^ • July, *70 Aug., ’70 Jan., *70 Aug. "t* 5 Feb. & Aug. Aug., *70 4 Jan. & Jnly. July, ’70 6 Jan., ’70 ii-is J May & Nov. May, ’70 '3> Jan. & July. June & Dec. Jan. & July. July, ’70 June, ’70 “3 4 Jan., ’69 2 Jan., ’64 Aug., 70 July, ’70 5 4 June* Dec. Feb. & Feb. & Feb. & Aug. Ang. Ang. May & Nov. Jan. & July. Feb. & Aug. Feb. & Aug. Aug., ’70 Aug., ’70 Aug., *70 May, ,’67 July, ’70 "4 — 5 5 3 3 "5" Aug. Aug. Feb., ’67 Feb., ’67 July. Jan., ’65 '5' 1,500,000 Mar. & Sept. 2,500,000 500,000 June & Dec. Mar., *70 4 Feb. & Feb. & Jan. & Feb.',' Dec., ’69 2,000.000 Jan. & July. 10,250,000 500,000 3,200,000 Quarterly. 1,250,000 Jan. & July. 1,000,000 3,400,000 May & Nov, 1,250,000 Feb. & Aug. 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug. 1,200,000 Jan. & July. 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug. 386,000 Jan. & Jnly. 4,000,000 Jan. & July. .2,800,000 1,000,000 May & Nov. 750,000 Jan. & July. 731,250 4,000,000 July, ’69 6 100 Trust, certif. .. preferred 100 common 100 Nov.,’69 Ang., ’66 Aug., 10 Jan., ’70 Aug., ’70 July, ’70 July, ’70 Central Park, North & East Rivers July, ’66 Jan., ’70 July. Quarterly. Quarterly. Ninth Avenue Sr ”»nd Avenue Sf* '«Avenue Th r Avenue Va ruutstreetf^rooklvn.) STOCK. lOO 900,000 200,000 2,100,000 1,500.000 400,000 254.600 144.600 262,200 1,065,200 500,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 748,000 170,000 106.700 194,000 797,320 881.700 750,000 1,170,000 - 100 100 8 100 ” 100 O 100 fc 100 £ ioo 100 •e •3 G 3 t 100 100 100 100 100 g.100 § ... "s' 5 5 5 • ••• Sept.,’70 5 • • •• ~2 r July, '70 3 Dec., ’67 Y1 Nov., ’69 Sept.,’69 July, *70 July, ’70 Feb., ’70 July, *70 July, *70 2,324,000 Jan. & July. 4,300,000 5,700,000 « 100 Coney Island (Brooklyn) Dry Dock, East B’dway & Battery >■£ 100 Eighth Avenue Forty-second St. & Grand St. Ferry Grand Street & Newtown (B’klyn) Hudson Avenue (Brooklyn) Metropol t an (Brooklyn) 6 T 5 4 10 5 5 8,693,400 Ferry. Brooklyn and Rockaway Beach... Bush wick (Brooklyn) "5' previously. thqpuoategine bfopwruiceenilsd; The .... Jan. & PAR .. 0 ► May, *70 July, *70 18,000,000 Jan. & July. 6,000,000 Quarterly. 5,000,000 4,000,000 Quarterly. 20,000,000 Quarterly. 1,000,000 Jan. & July. 1,000,000 Jan. & July. 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug. 1,000,000 Jan. & July. 1,500,000 Jan. & July. 2,836,600 NAME OF ROAD. Broadway (Brooklyn) Broadway and Seventh Avenue Brooklyn City Brooklyn City and Newtown Brooklyn, Prospect Park & Flatb. - Jan., ’70 • It* :::: RAILROADS. Quotations by Geo. K. Sistare, Broker In City Securities, 24 Nassau Bleecker street and Fulton 85ct5. Aug.,’ 70 N. Y. & BROOKLYN CITY PASSENGER T July, ’70 ’70 100 Mariposa Gold, pref do ’70 July, Julv. July, July, 100 Mining.—Mariposa Gold ........100 5 4 4 4 4 5 4 July. Feb. * Apr! 3 (g’d) T 25 3.000,000 100 10,000.000 Araer. Merchants’ Union United States 8X 5 4 3 5 Jan. & Tu’y. 3 ’70 Telegraph—West.Union. No. 277.100 41,063,i00 Union Trust United States Trust Dec., ’67 Julv, *70 Oct. Jan. * ...... Express—Adams 5 ’69 *70 ’70 50 50 10 Wilkesbarre Pacific & Atlantic 8s. 3«. 50 100 100 Coal.—American 25 Ashburton 50 Butler 25 Cameron Central 100 Consolidation Md 100 Cumberland Coal & Iron.... 100 4X Sept.,’66 ■1* ’70 miscellaneons. 4 Feb., ’70 Oct.',' "’70 J an. 555,500 Jan. & Jnly. 2,227,000 Jan. & July. 1,209.000 Feb. & Ang. 1,550,000 Jan. & Jnly. 50 25 Delaware Division*. Delaware and Hudson Delaware and Raritan SK July, ’70 4 5 5 5 4 Canal. 2X 4 3 5 . Chesapeake and Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio ao 5 4 5 100 100 100 50 pref Worcester and Nashua, No. 247.100 2 Nov., June, July, Feb., Feb., do Western (N. Carolina) West 3M Aug., ’70 137..MX) Jan. & July. 19,944,547 3,310,705 June & Dec. 1 4,259,450 Quarterly. 9 4JM&420 Jan. & July. a 3^ July, ’70 l,5(X),(XX) Jan. *t July. 9,(XX),(XR) Jan. & July. 2,(XX).(XX) Jan. & July. 300.5IX) . 8>* 7 Aug., ’66 & Aug. & July. «fc -Inly. & Aug. . ’69 ’70 ’70 *70 ’70 July, *70 2,056,544 . Px 0 Sept., ’70 1,733.700 4,269,820 1,644.104 June & Dec. 7.880fl( X) Jan. & July. 120,000 May & Nov. t 3 5 May, ’67 Oct., ’70 4,460,368 2,029,778 1.000,(XX) May & Nov. 5,312,725 J une & 1 »**c 13,225,848 Jan. & July. 7,665,104 Jan. & July. 9.7 44,268 Jannary. 3,856,450 Jan. & July. 2,948,785 ( u C3 Aug., ’70 New London Northern No.243..1 0 1,003’500 Jam <fc July. N. Y. Cent. & Hudson R..No.252.l ' 15,0 O.(XX) April & Oct. do do certificates..! ' 44,600,0 0 April & < *ct. New York and Harlem. No. 197 0 6,5* X),(XX) Jan. & July. do a> <D a> Mar. & Sept. Mar. & Sept. Virginia and Tennessee a 5 4 Jan., ’68 Aug., ’70 Sept.,’67 Jan., ’66 2,500,(XX) 1,335,(XX) 35,000.000 Feb. & Aug. 8,739,800 May & Nov. 17,716,400 Quarterly. 3,572,400 Quarterly. 2,646,100 Jan. & -July. 3,(XHJ,000 848,7<K> Jan. & July. 1,623,482 Jan. & July. 8,681,500 Feb. & Aug. 2,800,000 2,500,(XX) Jan. & J nly. 6,250.1 XX) 493, IK H) 8 Jan., ’70 Aug., ’70 Aug., ’70 Oct., *70 Oct., *70 July, ’70 & -July. & Ang. Mar. & Sept. Jan. & July. Feb. Jan. Jan. Feb. ’70 *70 *70 Sept. ’70 July, ’70 212,350 Jan. 25,273,800 Feb. 500,000 1,500,(XX) P 5 3^ pref.100 Utica and Black River, No. 252..100 Vermont and Canada* 100 Vermont & Massachu., No. 247. .100 ao ’70 ’70 Feb., ’66 615,950 1,818,900 • 0 . do Union Pacific 43 70,000.000 Feb. & Aug. 8,536.900 999,750 3,510,(XX) Jan. & July. 4.156,000 Jan. & July. 3,(O',0(H) 5,000,000 3,3(Hl,(HM> Quarterly. 3,000.000 2.000,(XX) Jan. * July 1,611,500 8,130,719 T May, ’70 July, ’70 Mav * Nov. 500,000 Jan. & July. 6,185,897 9 a July, ’70 .. pret. „ July, ’TO 2,095,(XX) December 2,112,250 Jan. «fc -July. 1,988.170 Jan. & July. 4,033,000 Jan. & July. 1,309,200 Jan. & July. 3,192.1 KM) y*...., Fitchburg, No. 24f. Georgia. No. 259 New v May, July, Aug., July, Apr., do > April,’70 June, ’70 July, ’70 Oct., ’70 869,450 Feb. 5,819,275 1,365,600 3,939,900 1,314,180 1,988,150 2,700,000 1,700,000 1,000,000 14,700,000 1,000,000 36,745,000 1,666,000 2,500,000 2,860,000 2,950,800 "4' *70 July, ’70 July, ’70 Aug., *70 Oct., ’70 July, *70 635,200 Jan. & July. CarolinaNo. 243 50 Side (P. & L.) ..100 West. Georgia.* No. 220.. 100 do ‘"s' 452,35*1 do Rate. July, ’70 May, ’70 576,050 Jan. & July. 50 100 . Railway Syracuse, Bingh & N. Y, No.252.100 4 Oct., ’67 Line Terre Haute and Indianapolis .. 50 Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw 100 do do E. D., 1st pref.100 do do W. D.,2d pref.100 Toledo, Wabash & West.No.255.100 . do Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100 Shamokin Valley & Pottsville* 8 5 Sept., 70 Sept, *70 Mar., *70 July, f70 Dec., ’69 June, *70 Oct,, ’70 Oct., ’70 2,000,000 3,000,000 4,000,000 ai7,ioo 3,000,000 3.000,000 1,831,400 2,300,000 2,040,000 10,000,000 2,478,750 905,222 Sanduskv, Mansti’d ^Newark*.100 Schuylkfll Valley,* No. 255 50 3 1 Jan. & July. Mar. & Sepf. Mar. & Sept. Mar- & Sept. Jan. & July. June & Dec. J une & Dec. April & Oct. April & Oct. Aug.,' 202.400 April & Oct. 1,500,000 June * Dec. do do do pref.100 St. I ouis & Iron Mountain St. Louis, Jacksonv. & ChicagoMOO 1.13 5 June, ’70 July, '70 June, ’70 June, ’70 2,085,925 7,045,000 2,425,400 16.590,000 1,000,000 Chicago and Northwest. No. 273.IOC 14,676,629 do do pret 1" 20,370,293 Chic.. Rock Is. & Pac No. 263... 1 16,000,000 Cin., Hamilton & DaytonNo.263.1 3,590,000 Cin., Richm. & <*'hicago*No.2(>3 382,600 Cincin., Sand. & Clev., No. 247.. 2,967,800 Clev., Col.,Cin. & Ind. Date. do v 377,100 731,200 721,9*16 Jan. & July. 1,159,5**0 2,200,000 May & Nov. preferred.. Cape Cod Catawissa,* No. 255 Aug.,‘"’70 Feb. & Aug. 937,850 Camden and Atlantic, N<>. 25!... do Last paid. Periods. . 4 5 380,500 Camden and Amliov No. 250 do ing. Orange, Alexan. & Manass .100 2,488,757 Oswego and Syracuse,* No. 252 50 482.400 Feb. & Aug. Pacific (of Missouri) No. 256....100 3,711,1' 6 Panama, No. 275 100 7,000,000 Jan. & July. Pennsylvania No. 244 50 33,493,812 M ay & Nov. Philadelphia and Erie,* No. 255 50 6,004,200 Jan. & July. do do pref 50 2,400,000 Jan. & July. Philadelphia and Read. No. 242. 50 29,023,100 Jan. & July. Philadel., & Trenton,* No. 255.. .100 1,099,120 Feb. & Aug. Phila.,Ger.&Norris.,* No.255... 50 1,597,250 April & Oct. Philadel., Wilmlng.* Baltimore 50 9,520,850 Jan. & July. Pittsb. & Connellsville, No. 255.. 50 1,793,926 Pittsb., Cin. & St. Louis, No. 255. 50 2,423,000 do do do pref. f0 3,000.0' 0 Pitts., Ft.W. & C. guar*. No. 249.100 19,665,000 Quarterly. Portland & Kennebec, No. 253* .100 581,100 Jan. & July. • V- do dividknt*. stand¬ . Mar. & Sep. Jan. & July. June <fc Dec. April & Oct. • . do Tables PAR Atlan. & St. Lawrence* N< Atlanta and West Point. Nc Augusta and Savannah* r For a full Periods. page. Railroad*. Allegheny Valley, No. 251. .and Gulf Atlantic i paid. Last onr 100 « 100 100 100 ( 75,000 LAST June, 1870. July", i870." "May "’TO," quarterly May Street. DIVIDBNUS PAID. ’70,seml-an’l.. July. *70, auarterly May’70, semi-an 1.. May 70 Quarterly. NATIONAL AND STATE ^ INTEREST. Amount denomination. Outstanding. Rat*. doffa6rUt Mar. 2/01), yearly j. Sin < do do ),iS«»r.f ^•A’rrb-fot^::: ®5.20’8(act ’64), «?•'•• Mar.3, , WS» Ms Joue 5o 6-20’s (act 5,130,0.16 do July. 945,000 Jan. & July Jan. & July do 171,375,650 92,942,450 113.162.250 381,017,600 58,051,200 May & Nov. do May & Nov. 51,046,500 do May & Nov do Jan. & July do Jan. & July do Jan. & July do do Jan. & July do Jan. & July 9,366,500 30,311,750 5,940,000 ““dSr68((actdou“edV58)>;S:.. 14,060,000 6,075,000 947,000 t"af6Tctdo“nedo'6l));o,P»::: 130.633.250 lO-4O’0(act Mar.3,’64),r^. Loan: do Mar.&Sept. 63,934,050 percertt. LegalTender c< tiflcates (act of Mar. 2, 67). 'Three do 64,618.632 ( do do ),cm Bearing Currency Interest— Pacific KR. B’ds(J ul.r62&Jul.2, Navy Pension July )cpn... 260,497,100 do ( do Jan. & 56.831,550 130,945,200 75,133,500 201,878,400 83,643,100 SO, ’04), <y>«. jWs(actMar.3,’65,,^.;; J5,0’s(actMar3,’O^)S;.. Mar. 8, ’65),reg... 1 Marked thus * >ue. ’70) $7,870,400: Jan. & 168,000 (extended) do * ( do )..... Sterling Bonds (extended).. do do do do do New Bonds New Bouda, 1870, Fold Endorsement for RR’s (about) Arkansas (April., ’70) $4,425,000 Bonds of 186!t Litt eBock & Ft. S., Act. ’68 ... Calipornia( April,’70) $4,122,500 Civil Bonds of 1857 (gold) do of 1860 “ do Soldiers* Relief Bonds “ „ ... July Bounty Bond a... “ C0NHBCTi’T(Apr.l’69) $6,674,992 WarBonds(May, 61)10or20y do (Oct.,’6l) 10or20y do do do (Nov.,’63) 20 years do do (May,’64) lOor 20y do (non-taxab.)(May,’65) 20y Flokida (Feb., ’69) $500,000 : Bonds, per act March 12,1866.. Illinois (Nov. 30, ’69) $5,124,996: Ill. & Mich.Canal sterl'g.coup do do sterl’g. reg Internal Improvement {new). Interest Bonds of 1847.. Interest stock of 1857 Refunded Stock bonds Normal University bonds.... Thornton Loan bonds War Bonds Military Loan... ILhntucky (Oct, ’69) $3,307,177 Bonds of 1841-’42 Bonds of 1843 Bonds to North Bank of Ky Bonds of 1843 Bonds for Military Purposes. Bonds held by B’rd of Education . Louisiana April ’70, $14,085,300: July Apr. & Oct. Jan. & July do 133.500 424.500 1863, Relief of State Treasury ... 1865, Levee Bonds 1867, do do 1870, do do 1886, Fund*ng Coupons do do .. . bhreveport Charity Hospital... Penitentiary Bonds.... •oPund Floating Debt, &c.... J869, .. of 1863 Beauty Loan of 1863 War Loan of 1864 Municipal War Debts assumed... Marvland (Oct., ’6!)) $12,692,938: thos. & June* Dec ’96-’98 Jan. & July May & Nov. 1872 1874 100,000 176.000 . Jan. & 1,519,000 75,000 734,000 3,909,000 July May &Nov. Feb. & Aug. Jan. & July 767,221 429,400 1,607,811 various. 989,500 176,000 **9i 3,666 66,900 211,000 94,000 316,000 1,648,283 750,000 2,553,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 495,880 80,000 134.000 100,000 7-30 250.000 3,000,000 800,000 525,000 475,000 2,832,600 8,084,400 o < Jan. & July do do do do Mar. & Sep. Jan. & Juiy Jan. &July Balt. * ISusq. R. R. Loan Riilroad & Canal Loans 35,204 269,000 1,938,217, 1389 April & Oct Various. ,287* S. F: $ ’ Mar. & Sept Jan. & July Various. Various. J. J. & F.A. |’86-’88 Mar. & Sept F.$942,50o! Various. do Mar.& Sept Feb. & Aug. June &Dec. Apr. & Oct. $7,228, Jan. & do July do do J.,A ,J. &o do do Jan. & July do $100,000 May & Nov. 110,000, Apr. & Oct. 165,000 94,000 Jan. & Lunatic Hospital. Luuatic Hospital &c., Loan (West.Mass).. General Statutes ■oon ... . 50,000, 150,000, 1890 1890 1890 19<»9 1910 do July 3nne & Dec Jan. & July ’70-’78 1871 1883 1880 1889 1889 413 . 1890 1865 1890 1890 ’65-90 1890 70- 90 1S83 1873 1872 73-’74 73-’74 1874 1870 1870 Jan. & July do 7.V83 May & Nov July 1890 1879 Jan. & July do 1877 1878 1872 do ex I* 403,000 100,000 540,000 2,475,000 5,567,000 1,614,000 500,800 899,200 600,000 1,000,000 do do do do do 13376245 * 1 1,721,400 12.600,000 do do do do (new), reg.* . ... sterling........ J.,A.,J.&0. do > do do Jan. & July do J.,A.,J.&0. As.$27,72 Jan. & Jnly Apr. & Oct. Jan. & July Apr. & Oct. do S. F., $160. Jan. & July do do do July ’70-’78 ’84-’89 ’70-’74 ’70-’84 ’86-’96 ’97-’02 270. 1877 18 7 Will. 1878 1872 1873 1874 75-’77 1875 Will 1874 4,6f.O ’68-’98 ’68-’9S 1900 1899 1898 43 do do do do 1870 1879 1882 1882 1877 1878 1871 182 1872 1877 1677 1882 1882 Mar.&Sept. Apr. & Oct. Jan. & Jnly Feb. & Ang 1882 1883 1893 1894 Jan. & July 1870 1868 77 ’90 ’75-’79 1897 1888 1888 1888 1,483.815 Jan. & July 400.000 466.000 Apr. & Oct. 340, (MX) 820,750 Tennessee, $41,000,000:' Sterling bonds (old) coupon* Jan. & July do do S.F. $8,417, Jan. & July do do do 1872 7'-’86 726,950 Funded Interest (new), coup* Apr. & Oct. $1,644,929 ’89-’90 *74-’89 ’72-’89 1876 1876 ’7:i-'86 176,156 Rh. Isl. (April, ’70) $2,916,500: War Bonus of 1862 1,10°, 000 239,000 do do of 1863 736,000 do do of 1863 do do of 1864 841,000 8 Carolina(Nov.’69)$6,988,434: Interest in Fire Loan Stock (act. ’38)....... 304,443 484.000 do stg (lien on B’k S. C.) State House st’ks (acts ’56-’63). 2,275,000 Blue R dge KR bJs (act ’54) 1,000,000 1,282,971 New bonds—funding (act ’67).. Conversion bonds of 1868. 332,(00 Funded bills bank S C I 1,246,400 Bonds issued in 1868 800,000 . Jan. & July Mar & Sep. ’77-’89 May & Nov 90,400 Vermont (Keb., ’69) $1,427,000: War Loan Bonds, coupon do do reg Virginia (Jan., ’70) $45,660,348: Dollar Bonds (old), coupon*... do do (old), registered* July 1887 ’74-’78 Jan. & 9.237.050 ( Jan & .. ’82-’90 400,000 4,907,150 92,850 7,909,600 Bonds loaned to RR’s., etc. Bonds endorsed for RR’s., etc* Funded Interest (new bonds) * State Bonds (debt proper).... * do ( do do '....* do do do )....* Int. unfunded July ’69 & Jan. ’70 Bank of Tennessee Notes 15 009 1870 1875 1881 1886 1871 1,515,677 1,600,000 4,095,309 2,400,(XX) 2 do do do do do do do do m 3,918,000 Stock Loan (1867; do 1,589,000 3,000,000 112,00u Military Loan (1861) S. F. f 5,735, Jan. & July do do do do do 447,000 2,85a,000 3,085,00 a 1878 ’41-’71 7,000,000 coup* f (1853) May & Nov 100,000 M 1,129,420 do do Jan. & 84,000 Coupon Bonds (1852) do do do Apr. & Oct. Jnly *’^’^1! 800,000 2,442,400 5,451,800 2,168,000 1,373,(XX) 900,000 . do do 192,000 1,189,780 do do do New Bonds RR. (special tax)* Ohio (Jan. 1, ’70) $10,016,581: Loan due after 31st Dec., 1870 . do do ,81st Dec., 1875 do do 80th June, 1881. do do 31st Dec., 1886 Domestic Bonds (Union Loan) Oregon (6ept,’66) $176,150: Reliefand Bounty Bonds | Penn’a (Dec 1 ’69) $32,662,878: Stock Loan (of 1840) Inclined Plane (1849), 1872 1893 |'69-’U6 do 18S8 ’8$-’90 do 1,878,000 21,<>60,000 registered. Funding Bonds* (new) 853“. May & Nov. Almshouse Loan do 1873 1870 1871 ’79-94 1886 1907 1910 3,026,791 100,000 do |’76-’89 1853 r71-’72 the South State House Loan., I’86-’87 S.F. $1,287, Apr. & Oct. Mar.&Sept. May & Nov. do |’78-'86 18«0 1880 1880 , ’71-’86 ’69-’71 1,936,000 593,400 Bonds for rai’roads, etc.*.... | 1874 var. do 1883 1894 1894 1894 Jan. & do N.Carolina(Oc1.’69)$29.815,045: |’68-’74 1871 5871 1871 1878 1878 do 1882 ’71-’76 77-’78 200,000 125.000 400,000 (Oct. 1869) $43,265,306: General Fund Bonds do do Canal Fund Bonds do do do do do do do do do ”1] General Fnnd Bonds do do do Canal Fund Bonds 1883 do s. F. 1,950,836 KA88ACHTj8.(Oct .1,’ 69) $27,939,420: itate do . Sep. ’70-’72 ’88-’90 ’91 ’9-3 1890 1871 1877 1900 of 1864 N. York do Mar. & 554,180 966,500 2,952,400 1,399,800 1,002,900 Bounty Fund Bonds,coupon... 500,000 Apr. & Oct. Apr. & Oct. Apr. & Oct. • •• ■ • -■ ••• * 1885 1,865,385 773,000 2,288,88S Relief of 1877 1880 1833 1884 do O. Cana' Loan ( terling) Canal (sterling) •*alt. v Ohio R. U. (stetling)... Railroad and Canal L ans Bounty Loan N.Jersey(Nov.30,’69)$8,096,100: War Bonds of 1861 (tax free).. of 1863 (taxfree) “ |’74-’84 884,000 do ofJufyl, 19C0 April&Oct. : Sasq. A Tide W. |’99-’00 do do do May & Nov. ........ |’71-’81 |’72-’82 1,000.000 Boenf* Crocodile Navi Co. Relief of P. J. Kennedy 1890 Jan. & July do do 86[000 Charity Hospital do Jan. & : Bonds to various railroads. |’86-88 1889 2,138,000 134,311 694,000 45,000 103,COO 516,800 Bonds issued from ’61 to ’69.. do do Jan. & July Jan. & July 4,425,000 1,500,009 982.426 ... *UNK(Jan. 1, ’70) $3,100,900 Civil Loan Bonds, 1855-61 War Loan of 1861 do do Jan. & July 1872 1883 1886 1886 1886 •• May & Nov. Jan. & July J- 3,143,096 (strl’g; Southern Vermont RR. Loan.. Eastern Railroad Loan Norwich & Worces. RR.Loan. Bost IJartf. & Erie RR.(st» rl ). Michigan (Jan. 1,’70)$2,408,000: Renewal Loan Bonds Two Million Loan War Bounty Bonds Ste Marie Canal Bonds Minnesota (June, ’69) $300,000: State Buildings Loans do do (new) .. Sioux War Loan 1862 Mississippi (Jan. 1,’61) $ State Bonds (Banks)* Missouri (Jan. 1,’70)$21,694,000: State Bonds T. Bonds of 1867-68.... Bonds to North Mo. RR Bonds to Cairo & Fulton RR.. Bonds to Platte Co RR Ponds to Iron Mountain RR... Pacific RR S. w. Br. Pacific RR S W. Br. Pacific KR (guar)... Hannibal & St. Joseph BR Nevada (June 1, 1869): $558 760, Bonds 6f 1867 I N. Hamp. (Oct. 1, ’69) $2,749,200. War Debt of July, ’61-’62 do of Sept. 1, 1864... . d<> 1866......:i 1895 June & Dec. 4,379,500 4,000,744 3,506,000 Troy & Greenf. RR. Loan(st’g) do do (home) do do (sterling) 1888 18S8 1874 1874 1871 1871 1904 1904 Due. Payable. 60<>,000 888,(XX! 200,000 do do pal Rate 164,00'i 220,000 3,000,000 do do do do do do (sterling) . War Loan (currency) Western Railroad Loan (strl’g) 1887 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 State Bonds Grobqla (Jan., 70) $6,014,500 Western & Atlantic RR. Bonds do do do Western <fc Atlantic RR. Bonds do do do Atlantic* GulfRR. Bonds.. (Jan. ’70; $1,341,675 May & Nov. 1,941,000 473.800 712.800 82,500 z 800,000 2,000,000 2,600,000 805,000 do Kansas for Interest Bounty Fund Loan 45.135,000 14,000.000 Pund Alabama (June, State Bonds In default Union Fund Loan do do do Coast Defense Loan 1881 1881 1881 1881 1881 1881 1882 1882 1884 1884 1885 1885 1885 1885 1887 State Secnrltie*. ' are Loan, funding Public Debt.... Back Bay Lands Loan 13,285,000 0 f)al iiutHlaiiding Princi¬ INTEREST. Amount DENOMINATIONS. 1;18W*- "national SECURITIES. |Princi- Payable. 563 CHRONICLE THE 1870.] October 29, 28,430,000 2,196,000 3,948,599 1,706,000 239,166 1,898,640 6,800,(n K) 1,700,000 1,227,000 201,000 11,108,000 21,865,578 1,865,000 3,472,000 8,225,842 466,250 Jan. & July do Feb. & do do do Ang ‘ , do do do do do do Apr. & Oct. Jan. & do do July - Apr. & Oct. do do Jun & Dec. do Jan. & July Long. Long. Long Var. Var. Var. ’71 ’78 ’71-’78 Long. do Long. Jan. & July do Long. Long. -Jan, & July 584 THE CHRONICLE* § RAILROAD, CANAL Subscribers will confer a [October 29,1870. AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. great favor by giving as Immediate notice of any error discovered In our Pages 3 and 4 of Donds will be published nextfweek. '*• OM For full a Table on a see Out¬ explanation of thii standing “Railroad Monitor,’ preceding Rate. page. When paid. Princpal payble. Where paid. Railroads: . PANIES, AND CHARAC TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount INTEREST. Amount Railroads: Charlotte Cot. A Aug. (Jan. 1, ’70;: 1st Mortgage Alabama A Chattan. (Jan. ’70): 8,800,000 Mortgage, 1863 Albany City Loan, 1865 2d Mortgage, 1865 3d Mortgage, 1869 Alex., Loud. A Hainp. (Oet. 1, )'6i 1st Mortgage, for $8,000,000).... Allegheny Valley (Feb. 1, ’70) : General Mortgage , 1st and 2d Mortgage Bonds to State of Pa.. endorsei Androscoggin (Jan. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage (Bath Loan) Atlantic A Gt. West. (Nov. 1, ’69): 1st Mort., skg fund (Pa.) 1st Mort., skg fund (N. Y.) 1st Mort., skg fund (Ohio) 1st Mort., skg fund (Buff, ext.) 1st Mort. (Franklin Branch).. 2d Mort. (Penn.) j 2d Mort. (N. Y.) 2d Mort. (Ohio) Loan of 1850 Loan of 1853 Baltimore Loan of 1855. 2d Mort. t. (N. W. Va. RR.) of ’53. ;N. Sd Mort. t. (N. W. Va. RR.) of ’55 Balti. A Potomac (Jan. 1, ’70): „ 1st Mor'gage of 1869 (gold).... Bay de Noq. A Marquet. (Feb. *70): Income Bonds of 1865 and 1866 Belvidere Delaware (Feb. 1, ’70): 1st Mort. of 1852 (guar. C. & A. 2d Mort. of 1854 3d Mort., of 1857 Blue Ridge of S. Car. (Jan, 1, !70 1st Mort.. guar, gold Boston A Albany (Feb.,’70): Albany Loan (Alb.& W.Stkbge) Mass. Sterl. Loans (West’ll RR.) Dollar Bonds (Western RR).... Bost., Clint. A Mtchb'gCFeb., *70): 1st Mort. (Agric. Br. RR.) of *64. Boston, Clinton & Fitchburg Bost., Con. A Montr’l (Apr. 1, ’69): 1st Mort. (71 m.) (71m.&lst22><[m.)conv... (71 m. J. & J. New York 1889 7 6 7 7 J. & J. New York 1888 1895 1885 1 81 175.00C & 2d 22% m.) conv... Sinking Fund Bonds Bost., Hart. A Erie (Dec. 1, ’68): 1st Mort. (old) 1st Mort. (new) 1st Mort. (new) guar, by Erie.!! Floating Debt, Nov., ’69 Mass. L. (sec. by $4,000.0001st M.) Boston A Lowell (Keb., ‘70): Convertible Bonds of 1853 Scrip Certificates Mortgage (whart purchase)!!!! Brunswick r California Pacific (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mort. Ml! (gold) ...... Camden A Amboy (Jan. 1, ’70): Dollar Loan for $800,000 Dollar Loan for *675,000 Dollar Loan for *1,700,000 Dollar Loan for $2,500,000 Consol. Mort. Loan for $5,000,000 Sterling Loan, £313,650 Sterling Loan (new) £369,200.... Dollar Loan (new) Camden A Atlantic (Jan. 1. ’VoV” 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Camden ABurling. CbJJan.i.’^O): 1st Mort. (for $350.000) 4* Wash’ton. 4,000,000 7.3 J.& J. New York 185,000 7 8,500,000 * .... - . . v .... .... 6 A. & O. Portland. rz London. 17,579,500 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 A. & O. A. & O. A.&O. A.& O. J. & D. A. & O. A. & O. J. & J. A. & O. 2,000,000 7 J. & J. 8,512,400 3,908,000 1 841,200 .... 825,000 .... 44 New York London. 44 44 New York London. 44 New York- 1st 1st 210,000 Var. A. & O. A. & O. 140,000 6 6 6 6 6 6 J. & J. & A.& J.& J. & J. & 527,000 6 J. & J. Baltimore. 1909 125,000 8 A. & O. Boston. ‘70-’71 1.000,000 499,500 J. & D. New York M.&S. F. & A. Princeton. 745,000 6 6 6 1877 1885 1887 4,000,000 7 J. & J. Charlest’n 1884 500,000 1*619,520 758,500 6 5 6 J. & J. A. & O. A. & O. Albany. London. ’70-1-6 ’69-’71 1875 400,000 260,500 6 7 J. & J. J. & J. B oston. Boston. 204,000 150,000 200,000 4%,000 7 6 7 6 F.&A. J. & J. New York 600,000 14,000,000 8,000,000 7,849,163 7 7 7 M.& S. J. & J. J. & J. 404 200 1,095,776 484,000 863,250 579.500 1,710,500 5,000,000 458,500 M.&N. J. J. O. J. J. J. J. & J. J. & J. Baltimore. 44 44 44 4 4 44 44 Boston. Mortgage, 1867 ; Chic., Danv. A Vincen. (Apr. 1,’69): .... 44 1st Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un. 2d Mort. (Gal. & Chic. Un. J.&J. Boston. 1899 55,000 866,000 6 J.&J. Boston. 1873 1873 1879 3 6 6 ^Jan’v. A. & O. Equipment Bonds 1st Mort. New York New York 1919 1894 7 J.&J. New York 1896 7 J. & J. New York 1886 7 7 7 7 M.& J. & M. & A. & New York 1873 1882 1886 1898 7 J. & D. M.& N. 7 7 N. J. 8. 44 O. 44 M.& N. A.& J. & J. & A.& J. & J. & 2400,000 8 J. & J. 2,260,000 7 828,220 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 867,000 4,666,100 1,518,066 1,846,000 154,000 490,000 500,000 44 O. J. J. O. J. J. J. & J. A.& O. A. & O. F.& A. M.& N. J. & D. A.&O. M. & S. .... New York 44 New York New York Boston. 44 4 4 44 44 Boston. New York New York 44 44 6 4 44 London. 44 1877 1872 1919 1893 1875 1878 1879 1889 1894 1894 1889 1870 1875 1883 1889 1889 1880 1894 .... .... 7 7 J. & J. A. & O. Camden. Philadel. Philadel. 64 1873 I860 F.& A. 294.000 7 7 A. & O. J. & J. New York 1,296/XX) 7,600,000 7 A.& O. New York 1916 1^000 1/500,000 6 6 M.& N. J.&J. New York 1895 1895 Mortgage 786,000 7 M.& S. New York 1875 7 J. * J. New York 1889 Mortgage 900,000 600,000 7 7 7 6 F.& A. M.& N. F.& A. M.& S. New York 6 7 7 J.&J. J.&J. J. & J. 6 j J.&J. 6 M.&.S. 1,900,000 2,500,000 25,e8l,000 Subord. Lien Calif. St. aid (g’d) 1,500,000 Cobv/. B’ds (conv. into U.B.trds) 1/500,000 2d Mort. (TT. 8. loan) 25,881,000 Chariest. A Savannah (Oct. 1, ’69) st Mort. (guar, by b. Carolina) 505,000 46 ’69-’97 1882 1885 1907 44 61 44 Baltimore. 1870 1875 1890 1890 New York ’95-’99 44 1885 1884 46 W99| !('!ufle:: a (Beloit & Madison RR) Winona & St. P. 1st Mort., guar, do do 2d Mort., guar. Chicago, R. LA Pacific (July, ’70); 1st Mortgage Chicago & Southwestern : lstMfree(gd)guar byCRI&P.cur Uiillicothe A Brunsxo. (July 1,’69): 1st Mortgage p o* a) jC -»-> c o 'O a P a o A. & O. A.& O. 7 7 8 8 8 8 1,700,000 44 7 600,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 1,200,000 900,000 675,000 44 RR.) RR.) Mississippi River Bridge Bonds Elgin and State RR. Bonds 1st Mortgage (Peninsula RR.).. Cons. Skg F’d B’ds, conv. ’till ’70 Equipment Bonds, .... 7 J.&J. 10 M.& N. 7 M.& N. 856,000 2,400,000 1,100,000 M.& N. 3,026,000 941,000 400,000 600,000 800,000 738,000 600,000 1,000/XJO J. & J. J. & J. M.& S. M.& N. J. & J. J. & J. J. & J. A.& O. J.&J. 1880 1872 18M 1876 ’98-’94 Boston. ’70-»80 New York 1877 Philadel. 1872 1,000,000 1,807,000 985,000 200,000 985,000 855,000 New York 1877 1898 A. & O. 7 1883 New York 1883 Frankfort. 1890 New York 1890 1879 If-89 1878 1878 1879 Boston. J.&J. New York 1887 A.&O. New York 1909 J. & J. F. & A. New York 1880 1892 M.& N. Var. , 188-1 1890 8,000,000 6 Mort. (gold) sinking fund... 18,000 pm Chicago, Imca A Neb. (Jan. 1, ’70); 1st Mort., guaranteed 1860 592,000 2d Morr., 1863 218,000 Chicago A Milwaukee(JvLn%\, ’69); 1st Mort. (C. & M. RR., 45 miles) 897,000 2d Mort. (M. & C. RR., 40miles) 182,000 1st Mort. (C. & M. RR.,85 miles) 1,129,000 Chicago A Northwest. (June 1,*70): Preferred Skg Fund (on 193 m.) 1.249.500 Interest Bonos (fund, coupons) 755,000 1st Mortgage (general) 3.592.500 Extension Bonds 184,000 1875 1880 1885 1890 1873 1885 1884 1899 1899 791,500 1st o New York gold Peoria).. 1st 1865 Boston. 1870 New York* 1870 Boston. 1889 Boston. (Trust) Mort Peoria & Hannibal RR., tax ft-ee Keokuk& St. P, 1st M, s. f. tax free Chicago, Cin.A Louisv.(Jan. 1 ,’70): Boston. ’70-’71 Port& Bos 1871 London. 1884 / *•' 1878 New York 1895 New York 1900 J. & J. 500,000 Dix., Peo. & Han. RR., tax free. American Cent. RR., tax free.. .... 6 6 6 6 paid. ' Carthage & Bur. RRM.,taxfree 1890 Where J.&J. J.&J. J.&J. 500,000 Mort., sinking fund pref. 2d Mort. (Frankfort), Trust Mort. (Burl to M.& N. J.&J. 300.000 Mort., sinking fund Mortgage 2d Mort., income Chicago, Bur. A Quin. (May 1, ’70): 1st J. & J. luu.ooo 206.000 983,(XL Chester Valley (Nov; 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage Chicago A Alton (Jan. 1. ’70): 1877 1879 1876 1884 1882 1882 1881 1883 1895 7 paid. M.t ’70, S.F.(gd)for$15,000,000 Cheshire (Dec. 1, ’69): Company Bonds of ’70, ’75 & ’80. Chester A Ch. Br.Juncjitm. 1,’T0): 1st When 2,000,000 .... 1890 425,000 F.& A. (Feb., ’70'': 3d Mort. (Va. Central RR!) TncnmeMort. (Va. Cent. Rli.).. State Loan (Va. Central RR.)... .... 6 Central Ohio (Feb. *70): 1st Mort. Cent. Pacific of Califor. (J an.1,’70): 1st Mort. (gold) A- Ohio Kit.) guar, by tet. 2d Mort. (Va. Central RR.) . 7 Mortgage e isf Ajl. ( Va. L.’t’i 1896 236,500 Mortgage (new) 1st 1898 Central of Iowa: 1st Mort. (gold) tax free 16,000 pm Central of New Jersey (Jan.1,’70): 1st 2d 44 885,000 Catawissa (Nov. 1, ‘69): 1st Mort Cedar Falls A Minneso. (Jan .1 ,*70): l6t Mort.(C. F. to Waverly.HmA 1st Mort.(W. to Minn.Line,62m.) Cedar Rap. AMissou.R.(Jan.1,’70) 1st Mort. (land grant) Cent. Br. of U. Pacific (Jan. 1, ’69). 1st Mort. (Atch. & Pike s P. !RR.) 2d Mort. (U. S. loan) Central of Georgia (Feb., 1870): 1st A. & O. M.& N. M,& N. 200,000 Albany ; * 1st Mort. (go'd) guar, by Ga.... 15,000j.m 2d Mort., S. F Buff., Brad. A Pittsb. (Nov., ’69): ’ 1st Mortgage 580,000 Buf., Corry A Pittsb. (Nov,V,'’69): 1st Mortgage 700,000 Buffalo AErie: Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.). 100,000 Comp. B’ds (B. & St. Line RR.). 200,000 Comp. B’ds (Erie & N’the’et RR) 300,000 Comp. B’ds (Buff. & Erie RR.).. 3,000,000 Buffalo, N. Y. A Erie (Oct. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage 2,000,000 2d Mortgage ! 380,000 Burl., C. R.A Minneso. (J uly l7’69) • 1st M. (gold) conv. skg f’d, tax fr 6,000,000 Burl. A Missouri R. (July, ’70): 1st Mort. (land & railroad) 5,057,000 conv. into pref. st’k (2d s) Bonds conv. into pref. st’k (3d s) Income Bds conv. to com.stock Convertible Bonds of 1*70 Is*" vort. conv. on br. (37 miles) Burl. A Ho., in Nebras. (Jan., ’70) 1st M. Land & RR conv..tax free 44 7 77.0J0 A Bonds M.&N. Chrscet'eai .... ) Consolidated 1st Mort Atlantic A Gulf (Jan. 1, ’70): Consolidated Mort., free Sectional Bonds Atlan. A St. Ixiwrence (Jan. ’70): 1st Mort. (Port. Loan) skg fund. 2d Mort. of April 1,1&51 Sterl, Bds of Oct. 1, ’64 (5-20 5 Sterl. Bds of Nov. 1, ’53, £1(X Baltimore A Ohio (Oct. 1, *69) Loan of 1855, skg fund 2d M. 2d M. 8 1,000,000 1,000,000 2,000,00( let INTEBEST. Out¬ For a full explanation of this Table see “ Railroad Monitor” standing on a preceding page. New York 1874 44 1874 44 J.&J. F.& M.& F.& F.& F.& M.& A. N. A. A. A. N. 1898 New York 1885 1883 1885 1885 1882 1875 1884 1878 1898 1915 1874 1871 1888 354,000 650,000 614,000 7 7 6 7 7 7 10 7 7 7 8,376,000 7 J.&J. New York 1896 5,000,000 7 M.&N New York 1899 500,000 8 J. & D. New York 1889 1880 1885 2,077,000 101,000 825,000 J.&J. J.&J. M.& S. Q.-F. A.& O. M.& N. J.&J. J. & J. M.& N. Cincin.,Ham. A Dayt. (Apr. 1,’70): 1st Mortgage of 1§53 2d Mortgage of 1865 3d Mort ’67(9. F.,$25,000 yearly) Cincinnati Alndiana (May, ’70): 1st Mortgage 1,250,000 5011,000 282,000 M.& N. J. & J. New York J.&J. New York 1877 2d Mortgage, guaranteed Cincinnati AMartinsv. (Jan.1,’70): 5' 0,000 New York 1893 1,500,000 J. & D. J. & J. J.&J. New York 1895 560,000 65,000 J.&J. New York 1895 1889 350,000 M.& s! F.& A. J. & D. New York 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Ci ncin., Rich m.A Chief Apr. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed 2d Mortgage Clncin., Sand.A Cleve. (July ’70): 1st Mort. (Sand. & Ind. KR.) 1st Mort. (S.,D. & Cin.RR) ’55... 1st Mort. (Cin.,S.& Clev.RR), ’68 Cincinnafl A Zanesv. (July 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage Clev., Col., CTn. A Ind. (Mar., ’70): 1st M. (C., C. & C. RR) $25,000 a yr 1st Mort. (Bell. & Ind. RR.) 2d M. (J. P. & C. RR) due Oct.’70. 1st Mortgage, new, S. F Cleveland. Mt. Vernon A Del. 1st Mortgage (gold) tax free... Cleveland A Mahon. (Jan. ’70); 1st Mortgage 8d Mortgage 1st Mort. (Hubbard Branch) Cleveland A Pittsburg (Jan. 1, ’70): 2d Mort., for $1,200,000 3d Mort., for $2,000,000 4th Mort., for $1,200,000..... Cons. Skg F’d Mort.for $5,000,000 Col., Chic. A Ind. Cent. (Apr. 1,’69): 2d Mort. (Col. & Ind. Cent. RR.) Income B’ds (Col. & Ind. C. RR.) Constru.B’ds (Chic.& Gt. E.RR) Income B’ds (Chic. & Gt. E. RR) Union & T.oeansn’t. 1st Mort... Cons.lst M.SkgF’d for $15,000,000 Consol. 2d Mort. for $5,000,000... Colurn. A Hocking V. (Jan., ’70); 1st Mortgage 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, ’58. Conner. A Possum. R. (Aug. 1,’69): Sinking Fund Mortgiy?e Notes (Counon) tax free Connecting, Phila. (Nov. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Cumber land APennsylfFeb., ’70): 1st Mortgage 2d Mort. (skg fund, $20,000 a y’r) Cumberland Valley (Feb., ’70): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Danv., Uro., Bl. APekinCJ ulyl ,*69): 1st Mort 'gold) conv., S.F., free Dayton A Michigan (Apr. 1, ’70): IstMort. ,akg fund, $30,000 a y*r. 2d Mortgage 3d Mortgage 4ft 1877 1900 1890 1,300,000 7 M.& N. New York 365,000 681,000 176,500 1,637,000 7 7 7 J. &D. J.&J. A.&O. New York *71-’85 1,500,000 7 J. & J. New York 1900 F.& A. M. & S. New York 1873 1876 1873 716,500 488,300 101,000 44 '70-’99 1870 44 . J.&J. 44 M. & S. M.& N. 929,000 1,457,5 0 1,105,250 .404,000 New York 44 44 J.&J. M.& N. J.&J. 821,000 1,243,000 400,000 300,000 2,000,000 1893 44 New York M.& N. 44 A.&O. J.&J. 44' 44 J. & 1). 1873 1875 1892 1900 18.. 18.. 18.. 18.. 1905 1908 1909 A.&O. F.& A. New Fork A.&O. New York 1897 M. & S. New York 1890 250,000 M. & S. Boston. 1878 500/100 J. & D. J. & D. Boston. 295,000 1,000,000 6 M.&S. 44 44 1876 *76-77 Philadel. *00-'04 875,000 769,000 M.& S. M.& N. New York 161,000 109,500 A.&O. A.&O. Philadel. 44 1891 1888 1904 1908 York 1908 A.&O. New 2,766,000 642,000 700,000 169,500 J.&J. M.& S. A.& O. M. & S. New York 1881 1884 New York ’81-’94 M.& S. Newark 1879 1879 1879 275,000 1st Mortgage Delaware (Jan. 1, ’70): 1st Mortgage bonds Guaranteed Bonds 1,051,851 ft* 140,000 185,000 252,445 Depot Bonds. Dayton A Union (July 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Income Mortgage Dayton A Western (July, ’69): 1st Mortgage State Loan Bonds 988,000 TI-W 44 J. & J. 1,300,000 Connecticut River (Feb., ’70): Toledo 7 #4 248,000 Mortgage, S. F., 1867 Columbus A Xenia (June, ’69): 1st 400,000 44 J.&J. J.&J. New York 1905 1905 Philadel 1875 1876 1875 2,000,000 440,000 /. Intension Mortgage Bonds..., 500,000 170/100 100,000 100/K#1 7 J.&D. J.&D. J. J. J. J. & J. & J. & J. & J! 44 If qpuraeotvgioiunsly bftowphuriecnieelds The ¥m biftoMcLfe Ootober 29, RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS lOND LIST. Subscribers will confer a great favor by giving ns immediate notice of any error discovered in onr Tables. Pages 3 and 4 of Bonds will be published next week. COMPANIES, AND CHARAC¬ charac- i T£B OF SECURITIES ISSUED| Amount companies, and £T8 full INTEREST. INTERE8T. TER OF SECURITIES ISSUED. Amount Out¬ explanation of this standing © When Where. $ “Railroad Monitor” on a preceding page. Table paid. paid. u !Xpl 05 Table £p- on a see “ Railroad Monitor’ standing © 1 When preceding page. « Where paid. 33 paid. Railroads: Ironton (Nov.,’69): 1st Mort — Jack.,Lans.dk Saginaw (Jan.l,’69): *lst Mortgage Railroads s 2d Nov. 1/69): RR.) RR.) A 1st , i West.) free.. Furnf^cf Coupons •• • r««a<Feb. TO): 1863 Land Gr., 1863...... do (Jan. 1, 69): division)..... nubuqe dk Sioux City 1st Mortgage (1st Construct.Eonds (2d division). Binkfne Fund Bonds, conv Sufi Southwest Jan. 1/70): 1st Mortgage M;& N. M.& N. J. & J. M.& N. M & N. M.& N. M.ffi N. A.&O. F.& A. 2,310,000 4,690,000 8 8 A. & O. A. & O. New York 300,000 660,000 900,000 7 7 7 J. & J. J. & J. M.& N. New York 450,000 EMtlpmwfivania (Feb., ’7^: previously tqhpuoategine bfopwureicnielsd The Sterling it 44 convertible, £800,000., (Feb. 1, ’70): J.;& J. New York J. & J. F.& A. J. & J. M. & S. Q.-J. Boston. London. Boston. M.& S. Philadel. J. & J. J. & J. M. & S. J. & J. A. & O. New York 1880 1876 1890 1880 2862 M.& N. M. & S. M. & S. A.&O. J. & D. J. & J. M. & S. New York J. & J. A.&O. J. & J. New Y ork New York Philadel. * 4 44 44 London. Erie dk Fittsburg 1st Mortgage of State tax. European dk N. Amer ■ J an. ’70 Land Grant onds (tax free) 1st M. Wian.to N .B.Line, 60 m. 2dM.Bangirto Winn., 55 ra lstM,“ 1 ' Consol. Mort., free 6 J.[& J. . „ „ 44 44 N.Y.&Lon. 1, ’70): 1,000,000 N.Y.&Lon. 1899 J. & J. M.& N. F. & A. New York 1889 1889 1881 7 7 8 10 44 44 J. & J. New York 0eoi\ M.& N. J. & J. M. & S. M.& N. New York Or. Rapids dk Indiana (J an.l, ’70): 1st Mortgage (gold) guar Grand River Valley (May 1, ’68): 1st Mort. (guar.) for $1,000,000.. 1887 1888 $25,000 yea rly. 44 M.& N. New York J. & J. J. & J. New York 1889 Augusta. ’70-’86 1899 7 J. & J. New York 1899 8 J. & J. New York 1886 7 7 J. & J. J. & J. New York Greenville dk Columbia(Oct.l,'M): 1st Mortgage Bonds guar, by State of S. Car.. Certificates, guaranteed 1886 Charlest’n ’81-’86 1888 .... Harrisb. dk Lancaster (Nov. 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Hartford a; N. Haven (Feu., ’70): 1st Mortgage, 1853 Hannibal dk Naples (Jan., 1870): 1st Mortgage, 1868 Hannibal dk St. Joseph (Jan.18/70): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Eight per cent Loan.... Tenner cent Loan Mort. Bonds. 1870. conv.tax free 1st Mort. (Quincy & Palmy.RR.. 1st Mort. (Kan. C. & Cam. RR.)) Jart.,Prov. dkFishklll (Feb. ’70): 1st Mort. (R. I., 26.32 ra.) 1st Mort. (Conn., 96.04 m.) Hemp-field (Nov. 1, ’69): Mortgage 1st Mortgage, sinking fund.... 2d Mortgage Houston £ Texas Cent. (Feb. ’70': 1st Mort. L. G., S. F. (goli) 1866. Hudson River (Jan. ’70): 2d Mortgage, sinking fund Sd Construction ... 1st & 2d series.... Redemption, 3d - erics, sterling. Indlanap. Bloom'ton dk West 1st M. (gold) Convert., tax free. irnanap Cinc.dk Laf.<M&y, ’70) 1st 1st Mortgage, 1867?............. Mortgage, 1869 1st Mort. (Ind. & Cine.). 1858.... Indian Crawf.dkDanvdUayl'm U Mortgage (gold) .FLice;mea(Feb.l/69) m Mortgage guar 2d Mort. guar Ism Southern (Feb. ’70): 1st Mortgage, tax tree New York 1899 New Y ork 1872 1883 ® JG Mortgage Macon d: Brunswick 1st Mort., guar, by Georgia Maine Central (June 1, ’69): J. & J. New York 1896 7 F.& A. New York 1895 10 J. & J. New York 1899 7 F.& A. Philadel. 1897 6 6 6 M.& N. J. & D. A. & O. Philadel. 6 M.& N. New York 795,500 7 7 A. & O. Philadel. 7 7 F.& A. M.& N. M.& N. 7 8 6 6 A.&O. J. & J. J.&J. F.& A. 7 J. & J. New York 1891 7 7 J. & D. M.& N. New York 1885 44 1875 7 7 7 A. & O. F.& A. A. & O. ‘.Philadel. 1870 1875 1895 2d Mortgage (370 miles) ... 1st Mort. (E. £>iv., Palmer) 1st Mort. (Iowa & Minn.. 220 m.) 1st Mort. (Minn. Central) 1st Mort. (P. du C., 235 miles)... 2d Mort. (P. du C., 235 miles) Milwaukee City Milwaukee and Western Mineral Point (Jan. 1, ’70): 7 6 6 6 A. & O. A. & O. A. & O. A.&O. New York N.Y.& l.ou New York London. ) 3.000,000 7 A.&O. New York 1910 ) .) ) 7 7 7 F.& A. J. & D. A. & O. New York 1399 1899 1888 [> 1,500,000 7 [) 0 0 1,000,000 F.& A. New York 1908 — .... 7 J & D. 19C8 II • 1 44 New York A. & O. New York 7 7 l Memphis dk Little Bock (Jan. 1/70): 1st Mort. (on road and land) ... Arkansas State Loan J.&J. New York Michigan Central (June. ’70): 1st Mort Convertible, sink fund 1st Mort Convertible 1st Mort Sterling,! non-convertl 1st Paul (Jan. 1,’70): Mortgage (370 miles) Mortgage Mississippi Central (Sep. 1, ’68): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage ) 7 7 8 7 ► 7 ) 8 7.3 7 7 ) 320,000 10 ) 8 II 14 T* II 14 II Boston. Interest Bonds, sterling luoome Bonds. *4 Bangor. Boston. London. Baltimore. 14 44 41 J.&J. A. & O. M.& N. J. & J. • • • • F.& A. F.& A. M. & S. J.&J. .... New York ttTt London, New York II 41 II .... New York II ’69-"77 *86-’87 1886 ’70-*75 1870 ’80-’85 1893 1898 1881 ’90 *91 1874 1870 *70-’71 1891 1891 1896 1896 1880 1885 1890 1890 1897 1882 1882 1872 1893 1884 1874 1897 1898 1898 1873 1891 •••• New York 44 1873 1876 II 1892 New York 7 8 A.& O. New York J.&J. Memphis. 10 J. & J. Boston. 7 F.& A. New York 6 1,000,000 1897 1900 1881 .... M.& N. F & A. J.&J. 7 Tenn. State Loan Mississippi it Tenn. (Oct. I, ’69): 1st Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage Missouri B.,FtS.it GulfiJan.1/70): 1st Mortgage for $5,000,000... Missouri Valley : 1st Mortgage (gold) Mobile dk Girard (June 1, ’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage, endorsed Mobile dk Ohio (Jan. ’70): 1st ortgage, sterling 1st Mortgage, sterling Interest Bonds New York New York 7 Hock. RR.) Memphis dk Charleston (July 1 ,’70) 1st Mortgage. 2d Mortgage. 1st 7 7 II 6 7 7 7 i 1877 1890 1893 1899 II Louisville. 6 1883 fi A.&O. A. & O. M.& S. 1877 1885 1888 r J.&J. A.& O. M.&N. M.& N. J. & J. M.& N. A. & O. 7 6 i 1873 1898 1872 8 8 6 Brldgpp’rt New York II New41York J. & J. .... 44 M.& N. 7 7 44 1899 14 8 7 Milwaukee dk St. 4* 1886 II Tenn. State Loan. 18.. 1875 1875 1890 1875 II II New York Philadel. 44 41 M.& N. J.&J. J. & J. J. & J. 44 J.&J. II 7 7 6 6 1892 i 44 2d Mortgage 1st Mort. (Scioto & 1876 1876 ;• 44 6 i New York Baltimore. Provide’ce Hartford. ) ) ) 7 41 - A. A. N. N. J. & J. J. & J. ) Q.-J. 44 F.& F.& M.& M.& 7 7 2,600,000 7, 4* 7 7 7 7 (P. & K. RR.) $400,000 Loan (Maine Central).. Marietta dk Cincinnati (Feb. ’70): 1st Mortgage, dollar 1st Mortgage, stex*ling J. & J. J. & J. F. & A. J. & J. .... 44 F.& A. A.&O. F.& A. J. &D. A.&O. J. & J. New York 1879 1885 1877 1876 1874 1880 1892 1885 41 1875 1880 1885 1890 1871 7 (P. & K. RR.) 7 7 8 10 8 8 10 l 1893 New York 44 6 6 6 6 1st Mort. 2d Mort. 1888 1872 1885 18S2 New York 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 $1,100,000Loan (A. & K. RR.).. ..... 44 J. & J. 44 A. & O. M.& N. M.& N. F.& A. J.&J. J. & J. A. & O. J. & J. A. & O. A. & (). J. & J. 10t000p.m M.& N. 14 New York 7 500,000 J. & J. A. & O. M. & S. M.& N. J. & J. (Jan. 1, ’69): 7 44 1880 .... 7 7 7 7 10 1 1st Mort., Louisv. & Frankfort. Louisville Loan Louisville dk Nashville (Feb. ’70): 1st Mort. (main stem) ; Louisville Loan (main stem)... Louisville Loan (Leb. Br.) 1st Mort. (Memphis Br.)... 1st Mort. (BardB own Br.). 1st Mort. (Leb. Br. Exten.) Louisville Loan (Leb. Br. Ext.) Consol. 1st Mort. for $8,000,000.. 1873 1881 1883 44 » * • * 1,489,000 Mortgage, sinking fund New York New York 1874 44 1862... J. & J. 1 7 7 44 44 7 6 Mortgage Redemption, M.& N. 1883 mortgage Consolidated Mortgage Illinois Central (Jan. 1. 70): Construction 7 Philadel. Buntingd. dk B. Top Jft.(Feb. ’70): 1st Mortgage 2d 6,500,000 J. & J. 500,000 Houeatonic (Jan. 1, ’70): 1882 1900 6 .. 1st Philadel. Philadel. 3d .... 8 7 4,000,000 A. & O. A. & O. Long l8landl\V>~0): 1st Mort. (H. Point extension).. 1st Mort. (Glen Cove Branch).. 1st Mortgage, new Louisv., Cin.dk Lexing.(July 1/70) 1st Mortgage, Cin. Branch 1880 44 44 7 615.5C0 80U,(X0 6 6 1st 1897 7 F-, tax free (gold). 500,000 Little Schuylkill (Jan., ’70): Fredericksburg dk Gordonsville 1st Mort. S. Ft.W ' 1st .. (new) Mort. (tax free) 1868.. J. & J. 7 1865 1893 1st Mort. (Hazleton RR.) Little Miami (Feb. ’70): 1st Mortgage Evansville, Henderson dk ls-Mo Ua/e Flint A Fere Marquet. (J an. 1st Mortgage, L. G 2d Mortgage 3d Mortgage Flint & Holly Mortgage Flushing dk Northside : 1st Mortgage.. New York Mortgage (Newcastle Br.).. J & J. M .& S. J. & J. for new). 7 7 7 extension) Nashv 1874 7 7 7 do • reg.. Lake Sup. dk Mississippi: 1st Mort. (gold) for $4,500,000... Lawrence (f eb. ’70): 1st Mortgage Leaven., Lawren. it G«2.(Jan./70) 1st Mortgage, 1S69 Lehigh dk Lackawan. (Nov.l, ’69): 1st Mortgage, tax free 6” (Ev. & C.) 800,000 1,200,000 800,000 250,000 do gold. x 1882 Dividend Bonds Consolid Mortgage. 1870, coup, Evansv 1st Mortgage 1st Mortgage of 1854 1st Mort. (Rockville New York New York 1899 44 44 - 1881 1873 1906 1882 J. & J. 1882 1890 1893 44 44 J. & J. 1st Mort. S. fund M. S. & N. I... 2d Mortgage M. S 1st Mort. (D., M. & T. RR.) .. 1st Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.)... 2d Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.)*... 3d Mort. (C., P. & A. RR.)... 1st Mort.(C. & Tol. RR.) s’k’g Td 2d Mort. (C. & Tol. RR.) 1877 1879 1883 1880 1888 1891 1875 44 44 8 s Bonds, 1869 44 New York N. O. O. O. 8 1st Mor t (Cov. & Lex.) More. (Gov. & Lex.) Mort. (Cov. & Lex.) Lackawan.dk Bloomsb. (Feb., 70): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1st Mortgage (extension) 2d Mortgage (extension)...... Income Lake Erie dk Louisville (July 1/69): 1st Mortgage Lake Sh.& Mich. South.(Nov.*69): 1888 44 1897 1894 .... 441,000 Kentucky Central (Jan. 1, ’lO): 1883 44 M.& A. & A. & A. & 2d Mortgage, tax free .......... Kansas Pacific (Jan, ’70): l.fb ul. (gold) I’d grant, s’k’g Fd. '69-’74 1872 1874 1876 1888 44 7 7 7 6 Junction, "Fhila.” (Jan., ’70): 1st Mortgage, guar., tax free 1908 7 7 7 ......... New York 612.000 397,000 1,961,000 150,000 41 M.& N. 1st 1883 A. & O. J. & J. Yar J. & D. Mortgage, guaranteed Junction, Cine.&Ind.”(Julyl/69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1883 1894 1888 44 7 7 t 1st 1877 1898 7 7 7 7 7 7 6 convertible Bonds (4 41 6 7 8 7 5 495,900 Mortgage (old).. Mortgage (new) Elizabethtown dk Paducah........ Elm.dk Wil'nisp't. (Feb. iO)lst m. 5 per cent Bonds...... Erie Railway (Oct. 1,’69): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage, convertible 3d Mortgage .••••••■• 4th Mortgage, convertible..... Buffalo Branch it 7 Railroad Bonds Mortgage, • 1 1887 1878 500,000 500,000 2d Mort. (Jeffersonville RR)... 1st Mort. (J., M. & Ind. RR).... Louisville (endorsed) Bonds ... Joliet dk Chicago (July 1, ’69): 1st Mort., sinking fund guar— Joliet dk N. Indiana (July 1, ’69): 1873 1873 1871 1886 1878 Now York New York Mortgage Jeff., Mad.dk Indianap. (Jan., 70): 1st Mort. (Ind. & Mad. RR.j tt 7 Sterling, convertible Dollar, convertible . 5th It 7 7 1st lien Essex J. & J. (1 18.. J. & J- 400,000' 2d Mort 1875 1875 1875 1875 (4 Pnlladel. Mortgage Is 1899 New York 7 8 7 377,115 7 1,511 639 6&7 6 150,867 51,000 7 150,000 7 8 250,000 100,000 7 1,500,000 State Loan, II 5 5 6 6 6 ...... ••• Mass. New York IS 1,495,000 M.&N. 7 8 8 Jamestown£Fi'anklin(Nov .1/69): 1871 1875 1881 New York M.& N. 7 628,525 tS?ngf(ffi&b«a.RR?B;d3 SoVt^etn&PinSRU.)-. MM°rt(D6t J.t. Pontiac lilt.). laf J. & J. A.&O. M. & S. 7 7 7 2,500,000 ',000,000 Funded Coupons 1st Mortgage, 564,000 1,111,000 1,633,000 2,500,003 eatern 130,000 7 .... (8 8 6 8 .... .... Mobile. London. Mobile. London. 1899 18., .... M.& N. M.& N. M.& N. 1876 ’SI-’W M.& N. M.& N. Mobil*. 1882 1882 1883 1838 previously, thfophqwuauotgeeniielnd prices The THE CHRONICLE. 566 Export* of I-oadlnff Article, from New York. ®he Commercial ® i tn £ 0. The following table, compiled from Custom Houee return.,.ho* exports of leading articles of commerce from the w'v.'V.'V'w'W'*. the COMMERCIAL EPITOME. Friday, Trade circles have been disturbed, and p. m., [October 29,1870. port of N«. York since October 28. January 1, 1810, to all the principal foreign countries, and also tbe total export of the same articles for the last week and «««, prices of leading January 1. staples subjected to considerable fluctuations, in consequence of the various rumors respecting the prospects of peace in Europe, and latterly by tbe progress of the war. Cotton and Breadstuff's opened excited and buoyant, in view of the prospects of an early peace, to be followed by a rapid decline when these prospects were dispelled, with some recovery today on the fall of Metz. Groceries have been firm, with a moderate demand, except a decline in Rice. To¬ bacco has been active for Seed leaf and Spanish. Hides have met with a fair demand, at steady prices ; stocks ;are very small. Leather is in better supply but firm. Skins ^re quiet. Tallow at ^c. decline has moved off quite briskly, c*co oo t-Hh 00© t* a <3 St* © ro —.cy © ia 1 T-I ,-( © —t R U t-*^ »-t o © _ GO CO CO os cy —7 to WOn a. c»ro ^ co t- to I *- R rrt t-©©_t*TH©©t*<©©tJI© rococo l-Wn»C<?HOn00OtOO5IQ © © cfr-Tcfotf t~GO rliOrttcOnnlnH Wnn cf .H © COn t* ’O' *"• O T* JS’-'eoro-wtoSSSSSt* rocy CO * 4J £73!**©t- sjsP 28§§ ooT cd ©_T* >7* © ©"co © © TO OS © © H S 05 os as t- i— co -yc os ro cy os ro CD 05 © CO t* 00 C* © A . • . Or C— CO • • ^ » r Zi * CO act • • co • • cy t* © 05 > Ih ’ cf ” cy ©ao >1 (h THOM r r © .<om into co cy © —« nstt* WWlOOTjlO Cf cy ro © ■*» SO 05 5 S O ^ © r-i ;enoiowci ! 85 •r«5!S • * CO o hv §§©£§*' :55® .Sq5 .,r,cy enotior-l . .^J, 1 , .©© . ,5j OO • T-I . . ■ © t- ifljoowiflf co to . t-© ro 05 0 ■n 05' ^ Oh 3Q m05qoqo • • S 8 T*-ooro^»-nn^(§|r*MJWjg s m ~ O O * •COlOno5«'NH3to^w 5 -o> in1- m * H •o 22 K *° $2 $21« •iOOnOO«tOnrt • . • : '•»-* rH _ . o L- o and closes firm. Petroleum been dull has 9a and drooping all the week, but showed rather, more firmness and life to-day. Oils have not been active, but rule quite firm. Naval Stores have declined ; Spirits Turpentine yielded under large receipts, and 1,000 bbls. sold to-day at 43@44c. per gallon. Rosins have de¬ clined 10c. under advauciug ocean freights. In East India goods, except a considerable movement in Linseed at full prices, part to arrive, which was made early iu the week, « ■ T-H C5 ro © -t-coro y ro r-t O* • t* • • O* © R t-© I0 5 2 £ 0»t-O0 ~ © rococo • £-Ot* • <u ^ o fl « © 0 > 2 . :gg! ■05 • • o* • «© cy © © r-i • & to . • V :s M . • CO • * of ■•*«« 04 ® CO 1^ Tt< -w oo© . ro ro • • * ** , _ ”!*• * ro • ' S5 » . ti • o • .o -WH co A o ‘ yfooo©©©©© .Z|o©©cy00 «®in . .vc- t* ■ . ■ * r^oo *o os 'cfcoot .co^^i • ©Wr-^ © r-t • Wrlrt CO CO r-t»o_ >— o9 It *0 CO© ^ . 08 t- rr* S cO 00 : • f 5 .-(N . • K . : • © ©ro • i iSS; oT © ©»© *rrt ri /-i © • • ■ ©©i-'5'»©oyr-icy0-r. cy c* r-^cy ©. cy © CO ri © t-I CO 8 g : § : 9 o ' ^jT © © 0* « a • : en i22®®3©cy oocy ro oo :g :S :< i . • OO • "S’ • i < CO o© • «Soo ©«y 00^ of •©r-©oo© • • • • tt > - eo .S 'tDOOra iT.t•Tt'cycyrrt i ' o © cy ^ V. Jr? 3 5 been dull and weak. o»2 © ■ (?♦ "cr1 a> » © oo ro © co o * cy co ••-•<?* rt< r* Cgj oT ■ C* . « . • -w< • ■ . •« • Tji- * ■ co cd ◄ p S5 ◄ a? o ■ • • iS to *, • • • ro©^*©35oo ro tji ^ © • cyr-« • • m © c- oy .-7 © © O © © ■ ■ ro © ■yf © co ro © © ro t- OHrtftCf.'Cl t—rliH oo ay »-«t- ©ro © -t co ac • cyia©r-wj» . .©©u»o© co r-t t- © © • »r- ir cy cy cy • • •Mrtrlr-t- tO r-l . © © © t-* 00 « ■ © r-l .©eoc»co •« 00 C» • rt* 00 c- T-I O Ot-COC CQ ©5 in <n ■ r-* ro ro cy © cy »o ©os moderately active, but the leading hog products have declined, as the prospects improve for a £ &• R t-.wrt o large packing the coming season. Mess Pork closes at 5Q rJ $24 7o@$20 on the spot, and $22, seller December. Prime a s i : Western Lard, J6c. on the spot and 13fc. for December ** H Bacon is yet unsettled. There has been some movement in i S 50 : : Beef for export to Great Britain. 3 S' The export movement of o ^ Cheese has been checked by the dull accounts from Liver¬ © cy ;S8 s pool and the extreme views of holders. Butter rules very 3S2, | OH ” firm, especially for fine qualities. Wool is in good demand, and prices rule very firm. .£ Freights have been active, especially in the shipment of breadstuff's, and rates have advanced, closing at 9@lOd. for B » wheat by sail and steam to Liverpool; cotton £d. Pe by steam, 2 and small vessels 7s. per quarter to Cork for orders. Petro¬ 5 S • o« M • O* f-t O •g SS00 ►» lO © cy —< -CMf * cy © • * :K©©©cyro^S^°°2S? ro © ro ro <m cf o »"©«H ■ >> 05 ■®r?‘??'^00©»gt-fcj < WHOJCO^TH aT-w £ S*° New Provisions have been Ob Oirl © • ■© ' 5 h of last week. t «a ® o Layer Raisins have declined to $3 per box ; other fruits unchanged. Hops are doing better with some export demand. Hay is steady. Whisky has lost most of the ad¬ 'OiO©©5iN3j. :s © r-1 r-t ■d large speculative movement in Injot Copper, amounting to nearly five million pounds, and prices are higher, closing at 21f@22c. per lb. Other metals have vance cy ■ g . there has been little done. We notice © • • >-• O • aS ,-1 H at O : - . ; l- ' to M oq © a © > • ® active ttdcelpt* of Oomeitttc Produce Week for the ® aud since © Jan. 1. 0 as receipts of domestic produce for tbe week and since Jan. aid for the same Ashes. ..pkjrs. Breadstutl'a— Flour .bbls. Wheat .bus. Corn Oats Hye Barley. &c.. Grass seed Beans Peas C. meal.bhls . Cotton, bales. <Beiup ..bales. Hides ....No. Hops...bales. ^Leather .sides Molasses bbls. $4 aval Stores- CJr.turp.bbl. Spirits turp. Rosin Tar. pitch 1 Since Jan. 1. 116 6,423 93.065 3,124,695 478,551 17,352.103 237,66<! 7.355,830 213,015 7,548,586 7,778 419,811 297,842 2,614,797 974 41,421 1,70s* 78,823 849 180.752 1,887 25,826 31 2,833 1,28 < 160,884 583^80 2rr>67 335,419 41,426 52,088 2,021,605 •• 13,311 6 3>9 8,346 6,)/26 411 109 57,886 441,852 45,845 2J92 • ••! T-i . ■ © • • t-© © cy • • wi ^ oo rf © o* rr ■ ■ © r— © • © © • © oo • H • • cy© icycy© • oo © • Trt » . • ••• .c< > > ro ro . . . .^<c r•05 00 . • R © .«v cy' oo co ro .o® ® . <0 • OO Tfl S5 © ef ’ © o« ©' 522 c* * 5 ro iC1 © . . • ■ © . rH .00 . T-i . yf ® W © © co • m .cy © © • Trt • • Tf «o £§ © . © • “ cy . . cy .05 . :8 : roro©«2 : • Same time ’69. This Oil cake, pk^s.... Oil, lard 2,538.506 Peanuts, bags.. 16,735,2 0 Provisions — 8,555,839 Butter, pkgs.... Cheese 5,287,096 . Cutmeats 268,‘46 610,499 Eggs Pork 20,159 81,701 Beef, pkgs 46,315 Lard, pkgs 176,281 Lard, kegs 491,8 6 liice, pkgs Starch 3,485 .331,415 Siearine 70,770 Sugar, bhds., &e.. 2,263 500 Tallow, pkgs 19,401 Tobacco, pkgs... Tobacco, bhds... 12,807 Whiskey, bbls.... 55,334 Wool, hales 471,659 Dressed hogs No. 65.991 6,070 , S® :S : ’ M o O .. W 1 § Since 2,711 91,599 15,997 88,259 9,500 65,798 4,572 633216 387,080 505,064 42,682 1,169,353 1,083,655 159 79,416 70,321 6,319 242,552 274*596 S R tJ 94,on 65,822 61,796 72,358 51,5.2 21,415 11,965 1,001 15,362 3,180 1,882,5:3 22 8,567 15,144 243,106 8,339 2,‘255 11,835 98,730 75,154 139,213 631 585 151 11,337 4,008 739 251,714 65,977 2,273 162,031 945 64 109,096 65,510 :§ :g ; • • . cy 'gSgS-SSS CO_iO c* 00 CO ©_ *t-©rot' Wri’ - coy «> 00 ro © ro ihOhH »q C- yji r-i 00 -J .©o 00 • S-| • • rl T .y OO ’t- rocf • :5 ro cy cy ■ : T—. • : ■ t- © . -X) ■ ac © • ro © ■ m • : :§S : pi . • . st c © r- -y © © 8*. ro ’ ©' : ©2g :Sf2g -ctti-i © :§j3 .t- ‘ri t— TJ1 cy © ©. cy oo -S i* ~ r-I^J •?; ..it*( • ro -5 < :S!3 -S •«f S H oo ro co yf* © © ro ro t? © 00 © ■ © © H© ro-w SI g" 0»©>-i t- CM * •nO • r-l © xi ^3 roi ab <1 1Mb OB X3 -a r-T i~- t- « © © © i-l rl J:c © rt T-. © St 1-W © o »©©y*cy j ro t-oo 0 > st T-. cm cy '^?©©cfS?rH©ro © nyo © ro tji « y •© <?« t-o wt n *v _ • I * l I • : • • k • : : * ; R H xi * H 2© 0 0 0 0 0 13.0 J3 CO 05 © • * * • ■ ’ 61,253 100,795 54,591 • wfofs ' 1,752 1,929 oo © © ryl tH OT © rfo> 2 l O > • .wr ro ■ © -s* • 35 690 • ;s :S$ . T-! Same week. Jan. 1. time ’69 7,663 © yJi r- © .© © . w « s tune in ! 869. have been asfollows: This week. cy early in the week. 8 fhe itT 1 I* were IS • • * Pi © oo. leum charters © •'O «3 e«®5; : • • cy > •co i-i>o 05 05 : : •• • ® * iJor^Doio® 4““^^g§Sg eg ** s *: ; aj ^ r-l r-l &: 0 JH : r-l : .... • . RR®^ii®d* Ab.Tt-'iifajCql - T-1 . . . • •7. rlllli l«s ■e-<8 : : • .b» • 0 R CO R R „ ! • . - R U THE CHRONICLE 29,1870.] October Leading Article*. imnArti of 567 We have had extremely variable market the past week. revival of the peace rumors, accompanied with better accounts from Liverpool and the small amount of avail¬ able cotton here, gave an upward turn to prices,which did not cul¬ minate until Tuesday night, when middling uplands touched 17£c. Wednesday and Thursday these high rates were not sus¬ tained, and Thursday night middling uplands had returned to 16fc. But to-day, with the confirmation of the taking of Metz and the surrender of Bazaine’s army, hopes of an early peace have been strengthened, and there has been renewed activity, with an ad¬ vance of about |c., middling uplands closing to-night strong at 16£c., against lfi^c. last Friday. This advance has been estab¬ lished notwithstanding the weather has been very favorable for tbe developing and gathering of the crop and the receipts at the ports have been free, the more general opinion being that with an early peace, at present prices, all our own crop will be required, be it large or small. For forward delivery the market has also an Early in the week the week. Same time 1869. Since Jan. 1, 1870. For Same time 1869. 0. 037.421.90 ui*90 an(* Earthenware— Metals, &c— Cutlery anna, 5,117 248 26,681 19,676 China 768,686 1,720 2,968 »arthenw&re... BUM 11,309 42,910 323,748 18,828 7,716 4,766 91,501 338 - 291 433 55 Glafsaware.. Glass plate Buttons roal, tons ,bags...... 137 Peruvian, powders., stone, tons 252 282 52 Tartar.. ! 453 61 3,596 5,394 10U m 1,737 6 304 202 78 30,501 1,410 6,282 2,967 1,392 87,554 47,346 30,534 .333 135 2.611 4.391 sence.... ve 1-carb... al ,sh 80 7,8m5 7,003 4,771 91,091 eased, 8 339 er 707 1,170 25.184 26,976 63 4,598 112 18 3,498 1,045 427,233 38.... , 9,540 Tin, boxes.... 2',911 22,S20 158,861 3,471 Tin slabs, lbs. 1,326 15,707 Spices, &cCassia... 259 Molasses., 4,366 been very active, and the fluctuations have in great part corre¬ sponded with the movements in the market for spot cotton, though less marked except for October delivery. The opening was at 15|@16c., touching on Tuesday 17^c. lor October and about 16$@ 2,038 944 537,429 153,519[ 134,004 Cork 5,516 121,998 162.968 811 51,734 4,515 252.518 66,351 480,718 1,262 *•.«••••••• I ustlc Logwood.,., Mahogany..,. 122,S44 84,29 16|c. for the other months, receding again until Thursday, when 15$c. for November and December and recovering to-day to 16^c. for October and 16^c. for November, December and January. Tbe total sales of this description (not including free on board) reach 70,800 bales, the details of which are given below. For immediate delivery tbe total sales foot up this week 21,189 bales, including 2,892 bales to arrive, of which 8,173 bales were taken by spinners, 2,291 bales on speculation, 7,710 bales for export, and 3,015 bales in transit. Thp following are the closing quotations : sales were made at 16c. for October, and Upland and 228.844 86,313 Woods- # 3,638 6,226 182,610 39,017 277,800 250,144 Ginger 32,718 Pepper 2,592 Saltpetre fee— ' 4.138 746,365 826,710 462,943 450,622 6,565,169 9,203,121 115,345 138,597 814,641 1,015.890 5,032.613 3.361.399 88,391 88,717 . 2,910 26 crude.... Arabic... 88.324 16,989 Rags 886,021 Sugar, htads, tes & bbls 2,246 1,303 380,202 347,574 Sugars, boxes & 13,247 bags 5,979 614,887 749,169 24,037 Tea 15,139 834.606 803,385 18,698 Tobacco.... 2,027 35,341 34.425 5,756 Waste 147 1,639 2,036 1,6114 Wines, &c— 33.515 Champag’e.bks 2,571 115,517 97,219 608 Wines.... 3,298 217,213 162,814 2,746 Wool, bales 222 24,106 44,360 5,264 Articles report’d 9,022 by value— 246 Cigars $34,209 1,174,470 $684,993 44,244 Corks 3,487 89,016 122,038 706 Fancy goods.... 56,146 2,018,410 1,747,605 Fish 75,828 5,563 282,204 606,496 33,320 Fruits, &c— Lemons... 33,336 4,742 634,639 442,538 1,680 Oranges... 670 796,729 696,450 Nuts 5,238 2.032 456,588 587,694 5,320 Raisins.... 8,691 650,008 670,612 7,495 Hides undressed 188,534 7,640,428 8,574,219 101,163 Rice 11,998 526,378 241,936 18,298 er 155 186 .... Steel 5,069 107,835 14,586 16,813 15,922 6,861 1,470 Hardware Iron, HR bars Lead, pigs.... Spelter 7.676 7,829 100 bales &c.— 11,093 50,626 407,973 15,755 a 179,673 89,185 176,758 COTTON. New Florida. Ordinary Good Ordinary Low Middling' per Orleans. 13%®.... 15%®.... lb. Mobile. 13%®.... 16%®.... 16%®.... 13%®.... 16%®.... 17 17%©.... 16%®.... Middling Good Middling 16%®.... 17%® Texas. 1 ~14%®^7 16%®...;- (Hi.... 17%®.... 17 X®.... Below we give the total sales of cotton and price of this market each day of the past week : 16%®.... 17%®..;. 17%®.... 13 ®.... Uplands at Total Good Low Friday, P. M., Oct. 28,1870. Ordinary. sales. rtliddli g. Mid lliug. Ordinary. jjy special telegrams received by us to-night from the Saturday 13 @.... 3,O70_ 15%®.... 16 ®.... 16%®...". Southern ports, we are in possession of the returns Monday 14 ®.... 3,037 17 ® 16%®. showing the Tuesday 17%© 2,882 13%®.... 16%®.... 16%®.... receipts, exports, &c., of cotton for the week ending this evening Wednesday 17%©. 16 ®.... 5,222 13%®.... 16%®.... 16%©.... October 28. From the figures thus obtained it !3 ®... 1,758 16 '©.... 15%© appears that the Thursday— \ 16%® Friday 5,220 13%®.... total receipts for the seven days have reached 85,935 bales 15%®.... 16%®.. 16%©. against 82,428 bales last week, 76,704 bales the previous week, and 68,940 For forward delivery the sales have reached during the week bales three weeks since, making the total receipts since the first of 70,800 bales (all low middling or on the basis of low middling), September, 1870, 437,622 bales against 450,421 bales for the same and the following is a statement of the sales aud prices : period of 1869, showing a decrease since September 1 this year of For October bales. ets. bales. Cts. j bales. ets. bales. 12,799 bales. The details of the receipts for this week (as cts. 3,700 .16 800.:,.... per 16% 1 i 700.. 15% 1,800 16 3,000 600 ..15% !5% ! telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1869 are as follows: 2,00!) 300.. 15% 200.../... .15 15-16 16% 1,800 300 BX0B1PT8 RECEIPTS Bec’d this week at— New Orleans Mobile 1870. bales 1869. 20,374 10.604 10.605 28,923 Charleston Savannah Texas 150 kOO 800 800 .... Rec’d this week at— 23,676 Florida 7,4211 North Carolina 11,291 Virginia bales. 4.925 3,817 2,913| 1S69. Exported to— G. Brit New Orleans... Contin’t Total this Same w’k week. 1869. 500 650 600 2,418 .. ... .. ... .. 85,935 5,887 Stock. 1870. 800 80,048 1869. 200. 7,400....’... 15% 16 1-16 2,800 16% 16% .16% 16% 1,300 1.400 100 200 16 9-16 16% 16% 4,300 300 S,OoO 17 8,404 The exports for the week ending this evening reach a total of 41,832 bales, of which 36,075 were to Great Britain, and 5,757 to the,Continent, while the stocks at all the ports, as made up this evening, are now 231,802 bales. Below we give tbe ex¬ ports and stocks for the week, and also for the corresponding week of last season, as telegraphed to us from the various ports to-night. Week ending Oct. 28. ... 2.000 550 6,832 Total receipts Increase this year 108 2,908 18,450 1,764 Tennessee, «fec 1870. ... 1.000 17% 17 3-16 ... 17% 17 1-16 For November. 1,950 ....16% 2,300 ....16% cts. 15% 1 .....16% 16% 400 400 15% ..15 9-16 .15% ... ....15% ....15% ... .. .16 ..16V 16 4,450 total January ...15 9-16 2,(*X’...... ....16% .15% ... For December. bales. ets. 200 10th.. ....15% 1,900 2,600 1,500 16% IV 00.... ....16% j 80,150 total Novem. 18,100 total October Dales. ...16% . For H*l 1,400...... 15% ..15% .. 16,510 total Decern. 100 10» 2 0 200 February. 100 For January. 400 4(*) 1(H) ....‘.16% 200. 900 total 16% 1,100 16% 16% 16% ...16% .... 7(0 100..'..... 50 SCO . 16% f«% 15% i6 ... 16% 16% Feb’y. For Mareh. .17 mo... 500... .16% 600 total March. The sales during the week of free on board have reached 2,100 bales. The particulars of these sales are as below: 400 f. o. b. Charleston p.t. “ “ 200 Nov. 15.... 14% 550 f. o. b. Mobile 15 200 “ “ ....Nov 15 250 f. SU) 20j o. b. Mobile. 14% p.t. If 13-16 Weather Reforts by Telegraph.—Our telegrams received to-night report for the week continued pleasant and favorable 2,256 Savannah.. *600 13,132 weather throughout the South for the 13,732 7,582 57.154 Texas...;.. development and ingather¬ 843 New York....'.! 8,281 14,898 ing of the crop. The only point from which we have 14*,201 16*487 2,286 11,041 28.500 Other ports 19,000 any notice 172 227 399 of rain is Mobile, and that 150 14,000 11,094 only to a limited extent, in the early Total.. part of the week, the subsequent days being clear and 36,075 5,757 41,332 50,570 231,802 176,681 .Total since Sept,, i!.! 14:4,558 pleasant, 25,737 the thermometer 169,295 168,803 averaging for the week 76. Selma and Mont¬ From the foregoing statement it will be seen that, compared gomery, of the same State, both report warm and dry weather with the corresponding week of last season, there is a decrease in during the entire week, and the picking progressing finely, the thermometer averaging at Selma 78, and this week of 8,738 bales, while the stocks to-night are Montgomery 80. Like conditions may be said to be true of ,bales more than they were at this time a year ago. The Georgia and South Carolina, oilowingr is our usual table showing the movement of cotton at as indicated by our telegrams from both the outports and interior ports of those States—warm, dry weather j 0 not delude our Sept. 1 to Oct. 21, the latest mail dates. We thermometer at Charleston t“e ports from prevailing, with the telegrams to-night, as we cannot insure the averaging 70 ; at Macon, 68; at Colum¬ accuracy or obtain the detail bus, 71, &c. From Nashville and Memphis our necessary by telegraph. dispatches are equally favorable, stating that the crop is developing RECKIPT8 EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO— promisingly, Ship¬ with no rain, the SINCE 8KPT.1. ports. temperature being high for the season, and at ments Great Other to Nor. Stock. Memphis the thermometer averaging 74. From Galveston we Total. 1970. 1869. Britain France Ports. Forlgn learn that the severe storm which we reported last week did not 8.3,815 117,391 28,165 work the injury expected, and has been M.bU°er!e““ 1,494 1,311 30.567 30,970 56,718 32.865 followed4 by a week of 41,667 1,762 2,325 4,087 Charleston.! 2,1*15 26,382 63,159 warm, fair weather, with the thermometer 48,608 4,511 oavannah 4,511 37.767 averaging 74. Our 22,629 111,214 86,366 10,241 weather reports have been received 10,241 55,408 43,898 7,415 to-night by telegraph from 18,807 4,163 7,454 7,161 every important point An the South except New Orleans 4.1S1 62,440 1,213 63,653 (where 28,000 661 2.055 Mobile Charleston....’.! . 6,260 2,310 2,169 475 8,429 2,785 23,999 68,415 31,771 23,681 4,699 65,439 20,083 13,008 33,159 .... ftt ... r teg*:::::::::: m-tf - r .... our .... Other ports this year.. -hfol Itffl YHTm 11,883 23,564 4,950 351,687 .... 12,462 40,945 2,946 4S4 .... 187 107,583 1,494 5,036 870,873 75,876 26,752 15,605 .... 10,954 20,567 651 .... 114,118 161,431 *9‘9 2,997 10,000 203,457 118^83 161,883 164,719 telegraph arrangements are on these points as yet incomplete), they strengthen our opinion of the importance of the system are establishing. We shall extend it until we are satisfied and we that it gives us a complete weekly record of the conditions of the temperature and weather throughout every portion of the cottou growing sections of the South, THE CHRONICLE. 568 Crop Estimates.—Much, is about the being foolishly said just now probable out-turn of this crop, and we see that the Agri¬ very cultural Bureau has been adding another of its guesses to increase the general uncertainty. In its previous report it intimated that rior [October 29,1879, ports at the close of business to-day, and add those for i corresponding periods of last year for comparison*8 week and the 18B9.--LL 1fi7n 1870 Oct 28. Oct. 21 Oct. 21 4,690 Augusta, Ga 6,715 4’690 5C865 5,320 likely to secure from 3,500,000 bales to 4,000,000 bales Columbus, Ga 5,194 4,211 3,435 this year, and in its present report it says that up to October 1st Macon, Ga 5,920 5,312 8,070 the prospect was that the result would be a crop exceeding 3,500,4,750 Montgomery, Ala 5,698 , 7,148 000. Since October 1st, however, the weather appears to have Selma, Ala. 4,783 4,078 1,790 been unfavorable to the bureau, and it states that the indications 8,229 Memphis, Tenn 10,524 5,712 instead of pointing to an increase over last year of a third of a 1,505 Nashville, Tenn 1,696 405 million bales render it probable that the present crop will be no larger than the last, and possibly a quarter of a million smaller. Total.. 40,530 32,775 41,903 31 con Still by way of hedging it adds that it may rise to 3,500,000 bales. The foregoing shows the interior stocks have increased during Now, our own information is quite the contrary of that given the week 7,755 bales, and that they are now 1,073 bales less tha by the bureau. On the first of October we inclined to the opinion for the same period of last year. that the weather had been such during the season, and the plant Visible Supply of Cotton.—The following table shows tha had developed in such a way that the total yield would not exceed 3,250,000 bales, and might very likely be less. Since that date the quantity of cotton in sight at this dateusof each of the two past seasons. As no advices have reached to-day from Liverpool conditions have been very favorable, in some respects more so than we continue the figures of last week for stock at that port^nH last year (instead of unfavorable as the bureau states), and if the American afloat for Great Britain: a cotton is opening as evenly as last year, and the weather continues 1870. 1869. satisfactory, and the freedmen keep at work as well, we shall have Stock in bales. 509,000 Liverpool 428,000 Still it is too early to give any definite to raise that estimate. Stock in London. 25,762 59,060 figures, and we only refer to the subject to correct any erroneous Stock in 1,600 Glasgow 500 impression which this official report may have left, and to add that Stock in Havre 112,980 71,620 in any event a crop approximating to 4,000,000 bales (a favorite Stock in Marseilles 11,800 3,400 estimate with many) is not possible this year. Stock in Bremen 11,050 3,800 With regard to the improved appearance of the plant one very Stock rest of Continent..' 15,000 20,000 reliable correspondent writing this week with regard to South Afloat for Great Britain (American), est... 69,000 49,000 Middle and Western Alabama states " that the weed though not Afloat for France (American and 1,935 9,874 large is unusually well fruited. Almost as far as the eye could Total Indian Cotton afloat for Brazil)... Europe 325,000 471,000 reach the fields were white with the fleecy staple, although they Stock in United States ports. 231,802 176,681 had already been picked over once.” This same correspondent, Stock in inland towns 40,530 41,603 however, and others in other portions of the South report apathy among the laborers who have contracted to work for a share of Total 1,355,459 1,333,738 the crop, since at present prices their share has been already paid These figures indicate an increase in the cotton in sight to night in wages and consumed. It is possible that this apathy and the of 22,121 bales compared with the same date of 1869. election excitement which is now beginning to show itself may The exports of cotton this week from New York show an increase result, under the influence of the present low prices, in a much less careful and thorough picking of the crop than during the since last Week, the total reaching 14,851 bales, against 12,627 bales last week. Below we give our table showing the exports of cotton from previous autumn when prices were so satisfactory. New York, and their direction for each of the last four weeks; also Consumption of Our Mills and Crop Reports.—In the the total exports and direction since September 1, 1870; and ic the Chronicle of to-day will be found the report of the manufacturers’ last column the total for the same period of the previous year: association, and it is very satisfactory to find that it contains a complete confirmation of the Chronicle’s annual crop report. Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1870 Whatever may be said by others, there is and can be but one Same WEEK ENDING Total time method of arriving at an accurate statement of the crop, and that to EXPORTED TO prev. Oct. Oct. is the one we have adopted—of giving the receipts at all the Oct. Oct. date year. 25. 4. 18. 11. Southern outports and adding to them the overland movement. This overland movement can only be made up by catching every 10,630 11,600 12,010 13,K0 61,028 23,519 Liverpool 008 105 bale of cotton as it crosses the Mississippi and Ohio rivers. 254 But Other British Ports 200 1,412 after making up the crop in this manner, we have, with these mill Total to Gt. Britain. 10,6c0 11,759 12,264 14,098 62.440 38,624 returns and the export figures an extremly satisfactory way of 3,713 Havre trying or proving the results reached. For instance: 3 Our crop report figures were (bales) 3,154,946 Other French ports The consumption of mills, according to this report, is: 3,716 Total French North, spun in mlils 780,753 266 203 63 4,555 Bremen and Hanover South, spun in mills 69,067 947 550 3,915 97 300 Hamburg South, home spinning , 9,500 Other ports. Used otherwise, North and South 31,744 we were . .... ... • .... • Total to N. Europe. Total consumption, to North and South, according report Now if we add to this the Difference of stocks in ports Burnt, as per Chronicle We will find that the total crop, mill returns, is (bales) according to Total Bagging, &c.—There is nothing whatever doing market, and prices have declined, and at the decline are weak and nominal; probably a round lot could be purchased at even lower rates than we quote. In Boston, 800 rolls were sold We quote nominally 26|<®27|c. for native, 27@ for Borneo. Bags also continues quiet, and not a single transaction in this market is reported except some 75,000 empty linseed bags at 21}(&&2c.; there are no more to be had ; and in Boston 500 bales, to arrive by the “ Anahuga,” at 11c., gold, in bond. We quote on spot 18@18£c., currency. Hemp jute and jute butts are dull, and prices remain nominally as before quoted. The only sale reported is 500 bales Manilla hemp, in Boston, ex “ Peruvian,” at 13c., gold, sixty days. private terms. 28c. for domestic, and 28@29c. we give the figures received to-night, showing the stocks of cotton at the Spain, etc 3,149,119 Towns.—Below « .. 753 363 8,470 1,213 .... .. . . 11,866 10,630 .... .. •••• .... .... *«• .... .... .... 14,851 12,027 50,810 63,653 The following are the receipts of cotton at New York, Boston, Phila. delphia and Bnllirve for the last week, and 9ince September 1. 1869: in cloth in this Stocks of Cotton at Interior 97 .... Grand Total 47,403 4,172 comparative stocks of cotton held by them on the first of Septem¬ ber this year and last year. They state, however, “that so few answers were returned that no fair or safe conclusion can be drawn as to the actual quantities.” They think that there has been a considerable decrease; and this would agree with our own idea, and just about balance our estimate for increased stocks at the interior ports north and east of the Ohio and Mississippi with amount in transit over Northern railroads, Sept, 1, as stated in the Chronicle’s crop report. It will be borne in mind that any such increase of stock at Cincinnati, Providence, &c., and any amount which had crossed the Ohio and Mississippi but was intransit to the East, would be included in our total crop. on .... .... « .... Ml others We thus see that the two statements differ only about four thousand bales. The statistical committee of the manufacturers’ association attempted to obtain from the mills, figures showing the Gunny Bags, - • Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar &c 891,064 2,178,917 27,563 Exports to foreign ports Exports to Canada, per railroad t » • inte¬ NEW PHILADELPHIA BOSTON. YORK. RECEIPTS PROM- Sept. 1. week. Septl. New Orleans. 3 903 33,2'M 2,762 Texas 1,045 6,187 4,890 46,123 602 502 Savannah Mobile Flonaa .. Virginia North’rn Ports. 727 Tennessee, &c. 2,432 1,531 345 3,296 1,513 ♦ 8,064 2,305 3,276 1,267 6,i47 1,515 * - • . « • 673 * 10 9,386 14,6001 2,594 9,593 536 1,405 327 Foreign .... Since 6 .... .... 3*059 1,481 .... .... *• 36,811 This Septl. week. Septl. .... .... South Carolina. North Carolina.. Since This week. Since This Since This week. BALTIMORE. • 5,270 7,341 2,070 . • • .... .... 218 60 .... 1,332 356 .... l‘i39 .... 1,212 3,588 123 593 1,359 5,870 845 3,820 .... -w——— » i- , Total this year Total laet year. 28,641 157,839 3,783 23,597 2,498 7,654 18,026 125,631 5,57lj 16,095 991 6.972 5,020 15,942 3,516 UrOLD, EXCHANGE AND F lvElOttTB.— UOiu week between lllf and 113, and t he close Exchange continues firm. was 1111The folio wing were the last quota London bankers, long., 109£@109£ cial 108f@109. Freights closed at sail to Liverpool. Shipping * 1 short, 109|@110,:, 4d by steam and o-ioa vj of cotton from the United States returns, have reached 40,610 ba es. concerned, these are the same Pi . News.—The exports past week, as per latest mail far as the Southern ports are reported 15,630 by telegraph, and published in the Chronicle a> day, except Galveston, aud the figures for that port are the e P two weeks back. With regard to New York, we include e only up to Tuesday night, to make the figures cial week. Below we give a list of the vessels id which mente from all ports, both North and Souths hay# been made, . , correspond with th(t theie tup no, for last ison: Total bales. ikivn 1,524....France. BKiow - 5,320 3,435 8,070 7,148 1,790 5,712 Total The the past as follows: Nobile 428,000 59,060 1,762 - 71,620 burg. men. 550 • • • • • — • , • • The following week: 3,718 3 8,716 4,656 3,915 8,470 3 1 60,810 a, Phila. ,1869: dam. Total. 14,851 , • 14,835 4,087 - 2,325 1.516 .... g .... 4,970 ,, 130 .... 550 2.0»0 521,000 151,000 334,000 28,000 203 2,325 321 130 40,610 “ “ “ Orleans U Oet 7. Oct. 14. Oct. 21. 78,000 14,000 3,000 538,000 153,000 294,000 69,000 15,000 5,000 565,000 99,000 24,000 9,000 509,000 76,000 130,000 23.000 .... .... table will show the daily closing prices of cotton for the 9 p. to arrive. . Mon. Tnes. fm 9 9 ©.. 9*©9* 9*©.. ...© . ©94 ©.. Wed. si©.. 9 ©.. ' ..©... Thn. 81©.. 8i©.. ...©... the exports of tobacco from New York for tbe EXPORTS or TOBACCO London Falmouth . Hhds. 52 16 FROM Bales. NEW YORK. Ceroons. Stems. M&nurd, 122,55*2 40,062 450 Glasgow Cook (for Bremen Cases. 78 orders) 634 398 277 Hamburg Gib altar British N. A. Col British W. Indies..... 50 6,900 282 6407 3 Cuba 9 Hayti *272 New Granada Total 1,913 2S1 The direction of the 499 277 50 175,521 foreign exports for the week, Lem the other ports, has been as follows • From Baltimore—To Rotterdam, 818 To Amsterdam, hhd§., 100 do. stems 500 hhds To Liverpool, 173 hhds To Demerara, 4 hhds To bt. John’s, P. R., 25 bales. From Boston—To Calcutta, 306 cases To Melbourne, 1 hhd., 100 half boxes and 30 ha f tierces To Port-au-Prince, 1 0 hhds .To St. John’s, N. F., 1 box—To other British Provinces. 4 hhds. and 5 cases. From Philadelphia—To Barbadoes, 40,169 lbs. leaf. From New Orleans—To Grand Cayman, 12 pkgs,...To Ruatan, 1 box. From San Francisco—To Honolulu, 28 cases. * 1 . Friday. P. M, October 23, 1871. For breadstuff^ the market has been very unsettled the past week, and closes flat and drooping. receipts of flour have considerably increased, but these were Monday and Tuesday by an active export and speculative demand, based upon the prospect of an early restoration of peace in Europe, accompanied by an advance in good lines of extra State to $6 per bbl., at which several thousand barrels, part for future delivery, were sold. But the explosion of the peace rumors caused buyers to reduce their bids 10c. per bbl. on Thursday, without be¬ ing met by holders, although the. market was visibly weaker. The decline on wheat at the West enables millers to lay down flour here at a larsre profit under present prices. At to-day’s market holders were generally steady, though in some cases there was more dispo¬ sition to meet buyers, and the close was unsettle !. met increase in the exports on of crude tobacco this week, reaching 3,453 hhds., 620 cases, 524 bales, 292 ceroons and 150 hhds. stems, against 2,182 hhds., 244 cases and 74 bales for the previous seven days. Of these exports for this week, 1,913 hhds., 281 cases, 499 bales, 277 tierces and 50 hhds. stems were from New York; 1,495 hhds., 25 bales and 100 hhds. stems from Baltimore; 5 hhds., 311 cuses and 15 bales from Boston; 40 bhds. from Philadelphia, and 28 cases from San Fran¬ cisco. The direction of the shipments of hhds. was as follows: To Liverpool, 225; to London, 16; to Bremen, 398; to Rotterdam, 818;to Amsterdam, 500; to Falmouth, 450; to Glasgow, 78; to Wheat has followed much the same course as flour. Daring the Cork, for orders, 634; to Gibraltar, 282, and the balance to differ¬ excitement in the early part of the week new No. 1 Spring sold up ent ports. During the same pe.iod the exports of manufactured to $1 38, Amber Winter at $1 42, and old No. 2 Milwaukee at tobacco reached 175,621 pounds, of which 122,552 pounds were to 25, but the decline since has been Liverpool. The full particulars of the shipments from all the ports vance in ocean freights, but mainly rapid, owing partly to an ad¬ caused by the weakening of were as follows: speculative confidence, which the belligerent turn of affairs and the Ceroons. Hhds. Man’d. rapid accumulation of stocks in our markets have produced. At Kxpdtnisweek from Hhde. Cases. Bales.&T’rces. Stems. PJ lbs. to-day’s market the non-arrival of tows down the Hudson checked 281 499 1,813 277 50 175,621 business at 25 1,495 100 30@l 33 for new Spring No. 2 and No. 1, and Boston.... 5 311 15 201 $1 34(g|l 35 for Amber Winter, at which the market closed with Philadelphia **.’ more buyers than sellers. • newOrleans. 13 B&n Francisco 28 Corn has become very quiet, but the demind appears not to be in excess of the Total supply, and prices have been weak. Oats, though 620 624 292 150 214 175,621 Total last week..*.! .V 244 74 2,182 sparingly offered, have been barely steady. Rye is dull and un¬ 31 99,598 Total previous week.. 469 507 1,406 64 120 1,642 158,972 changed. Barley has been pressed for sale, and prices show some further decline, being 3c. lower on the finer qualities* but at the close 1» have been as follows : much strength is exhibited, except for very choice qualities. Can¬ ada peas remain nominal. KK0RIPT8 AT NEW YORK SINOK NOVEMBER 1. 1869. an „ ,_lvt # m m m .... • .... • • • • .... • * • 0 0 0 9 ’ • 8,069 are ; BREADSTUFFS. 85© ..-©■ the total from all the ports .... Septl. cases The . Since following past week Fr. Friday, P. M., Oct. 28,1870. There is The 8S© TOBACCO. L, WO 88,624 dam. .... •... 68,000 13,000 Uplds..... 8?©ui Ohio and Pennsylvania, 163 Connecticut Seconds, 80 cases Massa¬ are Amster- Rotter- .... . Sept^ 30. Sat. PriceMidd. 17c; also 601 Manufactured tobacco is in good request at full prices. 191 130 American. Total sales Sales for ex port biles on speculation; Total stock Ohio at Connecticut, 37 cases chusetts, and 40 cases Pennsylvania Fillers, all on private terms, making the total sales for the week 2.174 cases. Spanish tobacco has also been more active; the sales embrace a line of 600 bales I. Cut Yara, to arrive, on private terms, and in a jobbing way about 500 bales Havana at 85c @$1 05, as to quality. 4,970 Bt Telegraph from Liverpool.— Ltvxbpool, Oct. 28—Noon.—The market opened firmer. The sale? of the dayare ifitimated at 12,00i) bates. The sale-* of ihe week h've been 99,000 bates, of which 24,000 b iles were taken for export, and 9,000 f«»r speculation. The stock in port is estimated at 509,000 bales, of which 76,( 00 bales are also 105 , .... • 908 in the 28,619 .... .... 1,405 35,089 • .... .... 101 • . .. bame time prev. year. 2,825 1,546 203 . • Stockot American... Total afloat American afloat.... increase . Bre- ..... 1,546 4,970 Total... Ham- gow. 908 pool. mouth. 13, t90 13,430 1,405 Baltimore... 500 dee last an from 1,405 1,762 usual form, our cases Liverpool Glas- .... 1869. s; Fal- Liver- Nw Orleans.. (•night 13,430 40,610 particulars of these shipments, arranged in )rt and 333,738 F. Has- . -erpool, 49,000 9,874 171,000 176,681 41,603 Valley 3.547... .Cordelia Woiterdam than 3,400 3,800 20,000 660 SU3 Amsterdam, oer schr. Ann Burr 1,700—per bark Manderin, 625,. 7-«t0n—To Liverpool, per bark Gran ton 1,546 Upland To Liverpool per bark Kentvllle 4,970Upland.. bmttmobb—To Liverpool pt r bark Hochelago. 191 ieroina, 130 * To Rotterdam per ship, fl< ^ during 179 569 cases 13.190 908 N*?2S Serb irks M. A. McNiei 2,947.... Carrie l,438....H. 55®1*667... .Belle, 1,376 'TftKftlmoath. for orders, per bark St. Peter, 1,405 vlfitr-To Liverpool, per bark Celeste Clark, 1,762 "iiiSo vo 3,649 steamers Britannia, 300 ... Indi a, 60a per steamer HammODia. 560 par TrtBremealper steamer Union, 203 -Z-SSSams—TO Liverpoo1, per ships Assam 405 *ws CHRONICLE. Liverpool,per steamers City’of Antwerp, 1,095....Siberia Wisconsin, 4.425 ...Russia, 471....Calabria, 1,037....City of Oct. si! 88 THE 29,1870.1 Oetober . m • m .... . 3,688 693 6,870 3,826 15,942 15j63p the past Foreign Nations: Sommer- 5-16d by tatee tbe B’ le . export* last Friports for manifo*1 the lie offi* ibip* This week—, hhds. pkgs. From Virm.a. O ^‘timore.. ?®.f Orleans O *c QA 4(V> Other.. • Total. Previously—, hhds. • • ka 1 nrt laU • Itft© 1 Qtt i.Kft 1 .... • 4,120 • 61,576 ^-T’lsin.l hhds. Q fUU\ UQQ IhJOoCJ 1,445 1 an 758 .. 1 O pkgs 412 1 ! JL & QQQ jUvuJ Mo 143,231 The pkgs 134,486 2,042 ’ 1,445 412 kv i nra 0 4, W 12,278 «... 63,270 448 149,661 The market has been fairly active the past week, especially in Seed Leaf. Kentucky tobacco presents *Med last week there was Q^gotiations lor peace in a no new fair features. At the decline demand, although the fuilure of Europe checked business for shipment. Flour— following Superfine Southern, family extra | Meal ... WheHt,Sprlng, busli $1 08© 1 30© 1 84© : 1 45© 1 75© Red Winter Amber do White 5 65© 6 15 White California 6 25© 9 00 © ... and California Bye Flour, super* extra Corn,Western Mix’d,.... Yellow, new White, new Rye © Barley 4 00© 6 50 M«t 4 50© 5 10 Peas, Canada RKOHirrg AT NEW YORK. . 1870. For the week. Flour, hhls. C. meal. his. • 98,065 1,887 79© 85© S5© 85© 50© 6 10© 9 25 Oats * Same Since time.lan. Jau. 1. 1,1869. 3,124,695 160,884 2,588,506 176,^81 Wheat.bush. 478,551 17,S52,1C8 16,735,280 Corn,bush.. 287,662 7,355,830 8,555,839 Rye, buoh... 7,778 449,811 268,646 Barley,hush. 297,842 2,614,797 610,499 bush.. 913,015 7,W8,585 5,287,000 1 S3 1 82 1 36 1 70 1 90 82 88 90 97 58 95© 1 15 - . 1 00© 1 20 1 06© 1 20 The movement in breadstuffs at this market has been sales have been about 600 hhds., of which about one-half for •Jport and the balance for home use, prices ranging from 6^ to 12^c. &S?ed Leaf we have to report an active speculative movement 4tnong dealers in Ohio Leaf at very lull prices. The sales of the lee^ eiBbrace 900 case* Ohio at 19c., 175 eaaes Ohio at 16c.# and com to good Double Extra Western and St. Louis Southern supers Corn closing quotations: ‘ $ bbl. $5 30© 5 60 5 80© 6 00 Extra State Extra Western, mon are as follows: -EXPORTS FROM NSW YORX.- 1870. For the Since Jan. l. week. 88,969 1,596,077 789 66,615 1869.For the week Since Jan. 1. 21,519 1,164.577 114,595 356,329 14 583,115 823,824 15,629,133 1,667 356,205 1,952 1,635,045 92,431 139,876 .. 849 - . 134 1,537 , 19.311 ' W 47M CHRONICLE THE 570 The following tables, prepared for the Chromolk by Mr. E. H. Walker, of the New York Produce Exchange, show the grain in sight and the movement of breadstuiFs RKOKIPT8 AT LAKE PORTS FOR Flour. bbls. (196 lbs.) At Chicago 22, 1870. Barley. Oats. Corn. hush. Rye. bush. bush- buBh. 311.775 5,042 144,899 88,861 65,152 6,420 3,SCO 29,350 39,859 205,890 129,500 6,935 63,125 17,400 • . • • . .. 120,587 1,630,551 391,889 812,208 170,769 53 i,950 336 503 500/63 283 558 424,994 409.731 854,293 100,190 198,981 63,102 40,8'’6 126,174 508,977 755,138 80,206 60,949 Correspond’^ week, 69. 145,428 1.576,951 , 41 ’68. 148,292 1,388,205 ’67. 159,649 1,668,500 (l ♦Estimated. Comparative Receipts at the same ports from Jan. 1 to Oct. 22 1870. Flour, bbls....; Wheat, bush Corn, bush Oats, bush Barley, bush Eve, bush The stocks in New York at ports since Jan. 1, are as date, and imports at the five leading follows : SMCKS to New York 1870. Tea...... import) Coffee, Rio Coffee, other.... Sugar... Sugar Sugar 3,343,048 25,858,369 28,192,893 28,357,658 11,280,458 15,668,737 1,176,083 2,21J,323 1,184,610 1,444,357 23,371,618 77,863,728 73,543,444 67,675,305 36,129,684 20,767,316 . 11,869,164 4,011,980 1,098,298 . . .... 73,674,432 . August 1st, to and including Oct. 22, for four bbls. 12,244,700 2,579,088 1,519,314 years ; 1867. 1,614,432 1,512,580 bushels. 16,118,934 17.512.021 6,533,294 17,476,395 9,208,580 7,484,404 3,135,453 612,956 11,329,867 5,218,183 773,649 629,587 18,155,154 9,437,046 8,631,300 Total grain, bushels.... 33.945,046 35,463,302 Wheat Corn Oats Barley Rye SHIPMENTS FROM SAME Flour, PORTS FOR Wheat, ending Oct. 22 96,519 1,603,950 105,289 1,318,919 ending Oct. 15 Week ending Oct. 16,’69.124,192 1,200,316 Shipments of flour 2,040,7C6 40,006,561 39,270,047 ENDING Corn, bush. IVeek Week Comparative 1,800,403 1,223,594 WEEK bush. bbls. 10,297,499 OCT. 955,791 22. 37,259 Dags. boxes. lihds. 90,550 48,337 bags. 455,625 hhas. Oats, Barley, Rye. bush. bush 868,094 260,593 324,695 430,063 427,740 599,716 34,140 967.499 ‘284,963 539,869 520,409 394.237 520,509 669,819 138,618 10,824 14,250 40,967,164 88,866 1,099,160 334,216 74,410 16,916 107,884 77,736 47 703 " bags. 636.661 286,786 TEA. A reduced aggregate of business appears to be about the only really new market, an unsettled doubtful tone still prevailing, and few buyers appearing unless forced to secure supplies, or attracted by somethin^ unusually cheap. On fine qualities of old crop there is a reasonable amount of steady, and some grades are held with quite a show of firmness; but the new crop appears to have no regular basis of quotations, and is offered according to feature in this the humor of holders. A good of the trade anticipated a more liberal but are in doubt as to the probable tendency of values. The line trade has been moderate, and confinedclarge!y to the filling of orders from regular customers. The invoice sales include 2,250 pkgs, Green; 4,000 Oolong; 8,400 Japans; 9,000 Oolong to arrive, and 3,500 Green, do. Imports this week have included only 453 pkgs. many The following table shows the imports of Tea into the United States (not including San Francisco), from January 1 to date, in 1870 and 1869: Black. 112.086 240,682 16,051,931 17,655,045 Japan. 9,104,562 Total. 38,513,170 40,966,971 10,177,784 The indirect importations, including receipts by P. M. Steamers via Aspiuwall, have been 88,866 pkgs. since January 1, against 34,140 last year. 52,53s 26,107 Green. 13,356,677 13,134,142 1870. 1869 , busb. - 1869. 38,513,170 pkgs. Molasses aUe_a_dir,g pom January 1. since 1870. movement towards the close of the year, 1,153,057 - 1,158,962 27,960,535 1868. 1869. 1870. Flour 2,932,645 Imports 1889. lbs. ... Tea (indirect 1867. 1868. . 3,994,702 .... Total grain, bush.. And from 1869. 3,021,589 healthy tone have been fair. inclusive, for four years: . pretty Imports this week have included 4,400 bags of Rio, and 11970 bags of other kinds of coffee. Receipts of sugar and molasses 48,292 126,Bi8 1.911,879 Totals Previous week a Details of the recent hurricanes in the West India Islands have been received, and though of strengthening nature have caused no excitement. 1,916 11,200 imparts to the market. 6,5t7 24,716 1,6)5 3,718 18.858 from the Blow movement of goods *• (56 lbs.) (32 lb«.) (48 lbs.) (56 lbs. 562.949 6,600* : WEEK ENDING OCT. 804,492 23,511 Cleveland THE Wheat. bush. (60 lbs ) 44,064 24,'»02 21,610 Milwaukee Toledo Detroit to the latest mail dates [October 29,1870.. 39;22o 18,72^ COFFEE. The general market has shown rather and a quiet feeling, and developed few grain from the ports of really new features of striking interest daring the period under review. Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, and Cleveland, from Jan. 1 to Oct. 22 Brazils have not been sought after with any freedom, partly owing to the ab¬ sence of any very desirable assortment in first hands, though mainly to the inclusive, for two years : 1870. Flour bbls. 3,158,976 Wheat Cora Oats bush. 30,303,427 18,184,792 10,192,804 2,434,920 1,389,135 Barley Rye .... Total 62,595,078 GRAIN “IN SIGHT," 1868. 1869. 3,672,167 29,554,585 21.752,026* 8,4*16,063 333,520 785,254 60,890,452 ocrr. 22. 1870. Wheat. Corn, Oats. bush. In store a4 New York.. In store at Buffalo bush. bush. 1,812,391 424,612 1,733,209 451,052 2,017,794 237,300 260,100 757,722 928,700 26,418 60,313 63,f85 126,616 327 19,481 87,649 154,043 108,507 57,748 13,326 600 10,000 180,591 283,666 276,533 234,573 439,592 346,363 126,533 74,478 In store at Chicago* la store at Milwaukee 1,332 000 In store at Toledo 7('4,868 In store at Detroit.. 198,309 In store at Oswego* 359,745 In store at st. Louis 102,096 la store at Toronto* 113,236 In store at Montreal 508,900 In store at Boston 4,722 Afloat on lakes for Buffalo and Oswego. 1,222,248 Afloat on New York Canals for tide waterl,745,760 Kail shipments for week 49,536 l Total in store and in transit Oct. 22.10,311,132 cor. week, ’69. 7,516,550 “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ 44 “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ 41 Oct. Oct. Oct. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Aug. Ang. 15,'70.10,179,145 8, ’70. 1, ’70. 24, ’70. 17, ’70. 10, ’70. 3, ’70. 1867. 8,936,990 8,708,294 7,414,623 7,285,362 7,583,103 4,408,008 27, ’70. 7,213,682 20, ’70. 7,256,655 2,800,928 3,876,551 3,128,615 2,806,812 2,895,989 3,123,249 3,234,088 3,297,447 3,5^9,136 4,058,893 4,269,369 4,536,492 2.0)6,405 4,623,776 4,293,725 4,143,^99 4,109,686 4,614,213 4,518,193 1,046,547 3,752,410 3,324,391 Bariev, bush. 297,095 272,262 765,94T 101,379 2.330 19,379 153,166 4,556 179,603 10,7! 4 30,662 62,877 328,486 38,807 2,286,263 1,099,221 2,513,281 2,345,508 1,968,886 1,581,003 191,318 1,297,535 568,173 350,717 ♦Estimated. Note.—At the corresponding date, 1869, the stock in transit and in store at Chicago. Milwaukee, Buffalo and New York, aggregated 7,516,550 bn wheat 3,876,681 bn corn; 2,055,405 bu oats and 1,099,221 bn barley. fact, that jobbers are not receiving enough orders for distribution to warrant the handling of any very large supplies. The regular steamer arrived soon after our last with a comparatively small cargo, and the quality as usual prov¬ ing very fair* was disposed of without much difficulty, and pretty full prices ob¬ tained. A few outside lots were sold at an unimportant reduction; but as a rule, importers do not appear quite so anxious to operate as last week, being somewhat reassured by the recent telegram from Rio Janeiro, and the fact that, notwithstanding the general apDearanee of dullness, the aggregate sales for the week here, and at Baltimore, reach about the average consumption. Java con¬ tinues quite dull in first hands, and the jobbing trade has also become rather quiet, hut the desirable supplies appear to be so well concentrated, that holders feel rather indifferent in the matter at present, and refuse all negotiations, look ing to a modification of values. The West India grades have met with some demand, but not in proportion to the receipts, and the continued additions to the supply, and the indifference of buyers are the cause of uneasiness to holders.- It would probably be quite difficult to induce the naming of any lower prices, yet the tone is weak and unsettled, and current quotations more Sales have been made during the week of 20,228 bags Rio; or less nominal. 3,068||bags Santos; 2,425 bags Maracaibo; 1,500 bags Laguayra; 200 bags Costa Rica; 250 bags Jamaica, and 200 bags St. Domingo. At Baltimore, sales of 24,270 bags Rio. ^ Imports this week have included the following cargo of Rio: “ Bore,” 4,w Of other sorts, the imports have included 3,250 bags Maracaibo bags. per “Cato Annetta,” 2,030 do. #^r “ Impulse,” 3,310 do. per “ Sea Bird ;’ 900 bags St. Domingo per “ V. J. Wallace,” and 2,480 bags Laguayra per “ A. B. . ^ Patterson.” The stock of Rio, Oct. 27, and the imports since January 1 are as follows. New Savan.& GalPhila- BaltiNew In Bags. Stock _. Same date 1869 Imports “ in 1869 We again without decided changes to note on the majority of articles embraced under this heading. Some little speculative feeling prevails on Spices, operators anticipating but little change are in the cost to after the reduction of the .... ....* .... 8,200 Of other sorts the stock at New In bags Java and Singapore Friday Evening, October 28, 1870. 74,410 561,562 617,200 27.773 27.773 15.700 392,332 249,765 .... ...... 3,000 96 252 74 068 ^-New York—, Boston stock, import. import. St. llomingo Other 1,000 11,394 Total Same tim ,1869 47,703 16,916 250,934 221,114 Laguayra c t 8.539 25,951 819 5,000 o,w» 1,000 31,332 19 666 York, Oct. 27, and the imports 51,967 25,426 95,872 17,601 37,351 23,217 Maracaibo low- delphia. more. Orleans. Mobile, veston. 37,259 ports since January 1 were as follows: Ceylon GROCERIES. York, *Includes mats, &c., reduced to bags. W. j^o 4,000 y.!» 14,712 1,0 967.4M 2,803 .... at the several N. Orle a import, import. *3,118 Phlladel. Balt. import, *3,164 *52,459 557 ’400 *991 1,892 61,524 40,440 15/757 4/09 1,892 1,246 500 11,693 8,508 21.125 !••• 1,008 384.216 284,963 t Also. 19,558 mats. SUGAR. ! tariff, and desir¬ Raw sugars in a general way are in much the same position previously no ing to secure parcels in bond to carry over ; but aside from this though the accrued advantage for the week is mainly in favor of t e ®e ivf the demand is strictly a legitimate one, and as before based largely interest. The reduced and concentrated stock alone were sufficien ^ upon the most urgent necessities of the hour. The arrivals as a rule holders confidence to insist upon extreme figures, and in addition to I details of the West India hurricane were of such a character as to can have been moderate, and stocks in first hands are further slightly further withdrawal of samples. The actual damage to the cane in ® reduced, which with the generally strong financial condition o:* tanzas and Cardenas districts it is thought will prove comparative y » ’ holders, keeps values pretty well up to the former level, and aside the destruction of manufactured stock in warehouses will check presen consumers j October 29,1870 ] -hy at tone the injury done machinery so delays the grinding oftthe new crop as considerable inconvenience for several weeks, and importers are stimulated accordingly. During the early portion of the week the demand was very slack,- and business at times almost at a complete stand, but subsequently a better call prevailed and a considerable amount of stock changed hands,part said to be on out-of-town orders. Buyers, however, are still operating through sheer ■necessity, not through choice, when enough sugar is secured to satisfy the most argent wants there is an immediate withdrawal of bids. Refiners still complain, not only of a want of margins, but of an absolute loss, and say that if with the present reduced production and expenses they can make no money’, they must shut up shop at once if any further increase of the cost of Raw takes place. The number of refineries has increased to such^an extent of late years, that Combinations are hardly possible, and the competition to sell and intropile*, and India to canae l nature i 11,970 nolasses leading ding ports nary 1. 1869. 40,967,461 - 34,140 284,963 539,869 520,409 636.661 308,839 eally new and few omething imoantof t the new bxs. •hhds. 1.407 Imports this week... 14,129 since Jan. 1 253,480 “ same time,’69 358,164 liberal >re largely to Ufonilo Brazil, Manila, Mo Melado Other •hhds. 935 Rico, 85,897 34,515 Stock in first hands.. 90,550 Same time 1869 107,884 “ 1868 30,403 ude 2,250 and 3,500 Pinrt •hhds. 561 213,586 247.037 " probable P Cuba, Cuba, :ording to quoted below. Sardines have been leBs active, though at the close we hear of considerable sales st 18%c. gold. Almonds and other nnts are quiet. We have heard of no important sales. With large arrivals of lemons and only a small demand, prices have declined, though at the close there is more business doing. At the auction sale to day new crop Messina lemons sold at $5 00(ft5 10, and Malaga at $2 453270 per box. After, at private sale, 1,500 boxes Malaga sold at |3 per box, and 1,000 boxes Messina at $5 per box, also considerable sales of Almeira grapes at $6 50 per keg for very choice. West India fruits have been very scarce. Cocoannts are higher. A lot of Aspinwall bananas came in and sold at about the prices btained for the last. * The Domestic Dried market has ruled quiet for all kinds since our last report. Apples of medium quality have sold better than any other, but the supply is good, and no change in prices can be noted. Prime pared Peaches have also met with some inquiry, out no sales of magnitude are reported. Unpeeled and low grades of peeled are dull, but the former are generally held with confi¬ dence. Blackberries are somewhat unsettled; buyers would take hold at 9<2i9% hut there are no sellers below 10@10%c. Plums have shown some movement at 17c., and close steady. Raspberries are firm, but few are coming in. Peanuts are in fair demand; the stock on hand of Wilmington is Pecans are in some request at 12@14c.; sales have beenlight; prices rule firm. made of prime at the • . s brands keeps the margin largely in buyers favor, particularly when is as slow and uncertain as at present. The first of the new crop Domestic has arrived at New Orleans, and sold at ll%@12%c., fair and centrifhgal. Some of the Southern advices begin to cioak a little in regard to the crop; but as yet, there is every reason to look for a liberal yield. Our market closes to-night moderately active and firm, with prices much the same higher price. In the Domestic Green market there is no as last quoted. Refined Sugars have continued to sell moderately with some particular variation in prices. Apples sell very well at former ruling low prices, but stocks do not accumu¬ irregularity on values, though during the greater portion of the week buyers late: $2 50 per barrel is the outside price for select; common sell as low as $1 had the advantage. The close is not very firm. Sales of Raw include 5,217 per barrel for sound. Cranberries meet with a very fair demand, mostly for the city trade, at $3 50@£4 hhds. Cuba; 600 hhds. Port Rico; 115 hhds. Martinique; 75 hhds. English per crate; occasionally a nice lot in a small way brings $3 25@$350 per crate, but it is too high for a quotation. Island, &c., and 3,373 boxes Havana. Imports at New York, and stock in first hands, Oct. 27, were as follows* FOREIGN ADVICES. P. dace new the consumption 967.499 , THE CHRONICLE. bags. 29,698 28,834 hags. 66,594 119,143 48 337 877,191 hhdB. 18,674 241,639 455,625 138,618 39,322 77,736 51,856 Rio Coffee.—Rio de Janeiro, Oct. 7.—The following telegram is from States since September 22, 42,000 bags ; price of American lots, 61160): stock, 40.000 bags; cleared for the United States, Atlantic ports, 9,000 bags ; loading: for the United States, 49,000 bags. Flour, Richmond, 82,1000; Baltimore, 31H000. Exchange, 22%. Shipments of Coffee to the United States: Joseph M. Wright & Co.: Purchases, coffee for United 349 609 1868. 53.778 1870. 138,020 1C6,954 July August MOLASSES. The volume of business 'Date's (not 1869. 45,011 92,369 88,742 98,282 June 96,12!) 129,098 probably foots up somewhat smaller than at the date Total 298,772 234,000 311.062 of our last report, but the rather encouraging tone of the market then noted Monthly average 78 / 00 99,600 103,700 Total January 1 to Aug.31 still continues, and in a few cases slightly better rates have been obtained. The 712,452 770,622 804,519 Vessels sailed for U. S., Aug. 24 to Sept. 24 153,340 bags firmness is confined entirely to choice parcels of grocery goods or fine cargoes Vessels cleared and ready for sea Aug 24 -. 13,273 “ Vessels loading or about to load suited for boiling, as these are becoming quite scarce, and there is no proba¬ 82,979 ** PRICES CURRENT. bility of an immediate increase. Still refiners are complaining of the absence of margins on their productions, and the Trade are not inclined to stock up The Following are Ruling Quotations in First Hands. very freely, as the domestic crop will be likely soon to take the place of foreign On tlie Purchase of Small Lots Prices are a Fraction for distribution to consumers. The medium, common and inferior grades are Higher. still without any demand that can be depended upon, and would Tea. willingly be ,-Duty paid parted with at low figures. Southern advices indicate a splendid crop of cane Duty paidHyson, Common to fair 55 @ 75 H.Sk.& Tw’kyEx.f.tofln'st 70 © 75 and a probable large yield of molasses. The first of this season’s do productionSuperior to fine.... 80 @ 95 Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair., 73 © 78 do Ex. flne'to finest 106 @1 30 some sixteen barrels—arrived here do Sup’r to fine... 80 © 90 during the week, brought through by rail, Young Hyson, Com. to fair. 55 @ 60 do Ex. t. to finest. 95 @1 15 the first attempt of the kind known, and due to the enterprise of one of our do Super, to fine. 70 @1 03 Oolong, Common to fair.... 62 © 73 do Ex.flnetoflnestl 20 @1 50 do 75 @ 95 Superior to fine city firms. It was sold on Thursday at auction for $1 12@$1 20 per gallon, the Gunp. & Imp., Com to fair. 75 © 90 do Ex fine to finest... 1 05 ©1 40 do ’ quality very fine. The wholesale transactions during the week embrace 200 Souc. & Cong., Com. to fair. 60 © 70 Sup. to flne..l 06 @1 30 do Ex. fine to flnest.l 40 @1 75 do hhds. Cuba Muscovada, 165 hhds. Cuba Centrifugal, 1,150 hhds. Porto Sup’r to fine. 75 © 90 Rico, Hyson Sk. & Tw C. to fair. 55 © 63 do Ex. i. to flnest.l 00 @1 30 do and about 100 hhds. other styles in small lots. do Sup. to fine. 65 @ 68 The receipts at New York, and stock in first hands, Oct. 27, were as follows: Coffee. . Total. 38,513,170 40,966,971 ia Aspin- oped few r review, to the ab- ily to the ) warrant ived Boon nal prov- prices ob;betas a . Cuba, ;ek, being i fact that, Imports tills week “ lea for the since Jan. 1 time 1869 “ rather “ " iona, look vith some ditions to “ “ 10.522 same time ’69 same time ’68 from January 1 to date, have been ,—Boxes. 1870. 1869. Philadelphia.. bags Costa ,er sales of New Orleans.. per “A.B. . • 15.61U 17,794 • 4,596 8,418 9,440 14,194 bbls 2,280 25 959 . 1,583 • e . • • s • 258,480 20,651 follows: Sugar. as •Hhds. , 1869. 1870. 309.842 289,450 , , 358,168 81,820 32,575 Baltimore * 42,396 38,944 78.367 539,869 520,:.09 65.150 81,522 60,989 83,116 5,432 394,237 bags Rio; Bird;” 900 • N. O. Imports of Sugar & Molasses at leading ports since Jan. 1. The imports of sugar (including Melado), and of Molasses at the leading ports ng of any tiona more Maracaibo Other •hhds. 413 •hhds. 1,448 2,034 2,145 7,831 10,264 asiness to ore,” 4,400 Demerara, 24,688 21,711 89,983 Stock in first hands •at holders P. Rico, •hhds. ?8 79,740 same Java con•me •hhds. 610 28,731 48,979 Including tierces 67.505 68,197 9,615 520,409 /—Molasses. , Bags. > , —> ■•Hhds.—-n 1869. 1870. 1869. 463,264 420,367 155,689 124,734 54,557 77,976 22,179 7,840 137,717 46,635 286,786 308,839 25,744 669,819 49.650 10,955 636,661 are 11 786 The retail distribution has not willing to meet this outlet freely, indeed in some cases offer rather easier terms. The invoice sales reported embrace the spot and to arrive: about 25,000 piculs Pepper; 250 following in bond, on piculs Cassia; 158 bags Pimento; 100 cases and 1,000 bags African Ginger; on spot, duty paid, 500 cases Cassia, Nutmegs, and 300 bags Pepper. FRUITS, &c. Owing to large arrivals of new fruits, and a pressure by importers to sell prices have given way. At the auction sale yesterday buyers would not take ho’d, and only about 1,000 boxes were placed at $3 10 per box for layers, which broke the market, and. later in the day and to-day a fair trade has been done, by jobbers to fill up their much reduced stocks, at $ 3 per box. Importers say, however, that rather than job at this price they will hold in store. Currants *ro rather scarce at the moment, but large quantities are on the way. Advices from producing countries, however, are unfavorable, owing to damage by raiqs, Of Turkish prunes there have been no heavy arrivals, they continue to sell well at-former prices. Citron sells only in a jobbing way, at the prices gold. gold. ordinary ....gold. Java, mats and bags gold. i Native Cevlon @16% l Maracaibo' @15)4 J Lagnayra 14%@14% St Domingo, in bond 16 15 20%@22% Jamaica ....gold. 17%@lft ..gold. 15%@18% gOtd. 16%@18 gold. S%@ 9 ..gold. 14 ©16 Sngar. Cuba, Inf. to do do do do do do com. fair to good prime refining.... refining.... fair to god|d grocery.... pr. to choice grocery... centrifugal, hhds. &dxs. Melado moiasses.. Hav’a, Box,D. S. Nos. 7 do do do do do do do do do to 9... 10 to 12.. 13 to 15.. 16 to 18.. 9%@ 9% Hav’a, Box, D.S. Nos. 19 to 20.. 9%@10 Havana, box, white @10% Porto Rico, refining grades..... do 10%@10% grocery grades 10%@11% Brazil, bags 9%®11 % Manila, bags 5 @8% White Sugars, A do do B S%@10 do do 9%@ 9% extra C......... 9%@10% Yellow sugars !0%@11% Crushed and granulated 11%@12% Powdered t ... 90,722 SPICES. There has been a much better and more general demand since our last, and the wholesale market shows a decidedly healthier tone than for a long time past. The movement is in part speculative, and the interest centres largely upon parcels in bond, the idea being to carry over to the new tariff, under the impression that the reduction in duty will have scarcely a perceptible effect upon the distributive rates. Holders of desirable parcels are very stiff, as to the stock of Cassia it is simply impossible to reachat anything like the figures buyers are now willing to pay. Several comparatively large movements are reported and hinted at, particularly in Pepper, and on this article the purchases have been for a longtime quietly making with a view to concentration, and the sales are now for the first time made public. There does not appear to be any parcels of magnitude available on the spot either here or at Boston, and from all accounts there is hut been very heavy and sellers gold. 17 @17% good Fair ,w_ , 12%@!S) 9%@10% 10%@I1% 9 @10% 8%@ 9% @12% @12% 12%@12% 11%@12 13%©13% 13%@13% Molassea. 22,306 and barrels reduced to hhds. little to arrive. Prime, duty paid do 1870. 146.107 84.704 Rio do do do New Orleans (new) V Porto Rico (new) Cuba Mnscovado (new) Cuba Clayed (new)..... <f) gall. 1 O0@l 20 J Cuba centrifugal 20 20 45 18© 35© 65 Old 25© 20© 20@ 37 31 English Islands (new) Crop Cuba If 21 Rice. Radgoon, dressed, gold In bond 3 Cassia, In cases.. .gold V tt. Cassia, In mats... do Ginger, Race and Af (gold) Mace do Nutmegs, casks do 47 47 12 128 7 Spices. 49 | Pepper, in bond 49 | Pepper, Singapore © @ © 13% @130 95 Penang....1 00 cases @ 3% | Carolina (new) (gold) Sumatra Pimento, Jamaica do 1 CO tl 02 j . do Clove*... (gold) in bond do do © 7% 10%© n% 25%© 26 25%© 26 18%© 18% 3% 25%@ 25% Fruits and Nnts. Raisins,Seedless,new # mat. ...,@ 6 50 Brazil Nuts do Layer, 1870, # box.3 00 @ Filberts, Sicily do Layer, 1869, IP box..2 70 @ do Barcelona do I African Peanuts Valencia,# n> 14%@ do London Layer 75 © 3 Walnuts, Bordeaux ¥* lt>. 12%© Currants, new Macaroni, Italian „ .... .... ....© 9 © 12%© Prunelles Datos J'lga, Smyrna # a. Cherries German Canton Ginger Almonds, Languedoc do Tarragona do do do do Sardines Sardines Ivlca Sicily, soft shell., Shelled, paper Spanish. shell # hf. box. V qr, box. ! iSre 44 12% 10 ....© ....© ....© 33 @ ....© @ @21% * # Western Southern, prime do 19 19 5 6 15 unpared, qrs&hlvs Blackberries Cherries pitted Pecan Nute 16% • • ■ # Cask 2%© 4%@ 10 © l%@ Sulphur Saltpetre Copperas Camphor. In bblB Caitfle Soaps BpsomSalts © 35 36 do do .. 72 @ ll%@ . ... @ 32 2% 4% 17 6 21 *3 # bush. Hickory Nuts Peanuts, Va,g’d to fncy do 2 00 .... com. to fair do 1 50 Wil..g’d to best do ,2 50 Grocers’ Brass and Sundries. 8%© 8% 81c. Licorice Bl-Carb, Soda (Eng.) 5 © «% Calabra Imitation 81 3% ^ sliced Alum Borax Sal Soda, @ @ common Peaches, pared .... . do do do do is * 4 00© DRIED FRUITS. Apples, State ....© ....© 7% 16 ® 20 8 © .... ...@ 9 50 18%@ Crack, beat No 1 V box 1>OME8TIO Madder ; Indigo, Madras 15 21 gold. 11 . II Manilla 61sal do Bed Cords Juta do 22 8 10 © 22 14 ® 2 35 @2 10 @1 75 @3 50 © © © @1 ©1 © 175 1 50 i* @ @ © @ gold.i 10 gold. 80 ' Cordage, Manilla, % and %. 21%© i do do Large sizes. 21 © do i2% 11 %© 2 35@2 40 ©' . .... Citron, Leghorn Prunes, Turkish, old Prunes, Turkish, new 9% 9© 13%@ .... .... 16 8S 12% 15 15 22 21% 19 ©2 50 @2 THE CHRONICLE 572 do 80 10, Friday, P.M., October 28, 1870. improvement in the dry goods trade at the though the business since our last review aggre¬ gates but little more than for the previous week. There ore more buyers in town now than for some time past, yet the number is much smaller than is usual at this stage of the season. The unusu¬ ally small number of buyers from the interior in our market during the month is the subject of very general remark among wholesale dealers. This is generally the most active month of the fall season, and brings us buyers from all sections. The excessively mild weather has interfered materially with the distributing trade of a decided close of the week, but few orders are received the West and Southwest, and dealers in those sections for from goods to replenish the stocks pur¬ September. The South bought only moderate amounts eirly in the season, delaying their heavy purchases until there was an actual demand for consumers, in consequence of a lack of sur¬ plus funds. The ravages of the yellow fever in the far South have kept back the retail trade, which should now be in progress, and Southern dealers report that their stocks are but little broken. chased in The principal demand on our merchants, at the moment, is from city and near-by dealers, and this trade is still light, in conse¬ quence of the continued mildness of the weather. however, there is some improvement in the trade, dealers are anticipating a D 11, do H 12}, Appleton A 86 18, Augusta 86 iu Bedford R 80 8}, Boott O 84 11, Commonwealth O 27 8, Grafton A 27 8, Great Falls M 86 11}, do S 88 10}, Indian Head 86 13. do 30 12, Indian Orchard A 40 13}, do O 86 11}, Laconia 0 89. — do B 87 11}, Lawrence A 36 12, Lyman 0 86 11, ch E 8ft 12}, Medford 86 12, Nashua fine O 38 12, do 86 18},do E 4015}, New market A 36 11}, Pacific extra 36 12}, do L 36 12}, Pepperell 7-4 25,do 8-4 2'7}do 9*4 30, do 10-4 37}, do 11-4 50, Pepperell Efine 89 13}, do R 86 12}, Pocasset F 30 8£, Saranac fine 0 83 12 do R 36 18. Stark A 86 18, Swift River 86 10, Tiger 27 7}. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings have experienced a general decline during the week, and are selling rather mote freely in con¬ sequence. The current quotations are fairly firm. Amoskeag 46 17}, do 42 16, do A 86 15}, American A 36 12}, Androscog¬ gin L 86 16 Arkwright WT 86 18, Ballou A Son 86 18}, Bartletts 86 15, do 38 181, Bates XX 86 19, Blacbstone 36 14}, Boott B 86 14, do O 30 11, do R 28 91, Clarks 86 19, Dwight D 40 18, Ellerton 10-4 45, Forestdale 36 16, Fruit of the Loom 86 17, Globe 27 7, Gold Medal 36 18}, Great Falls Q 86 16} Hill’s Semp. Idem 86 15}, Hope 86 18}, James 86 15, Lonsdale 86 16 Maeonville 86 16, Newmarket O 88 13}, New York Mills 86 20' Pepperell 6-4 27}, do 10-4 42}, Tuscarora 86 171@18, Utica 5-4 25 do 6-4 82}, do 9-4 51}, do 10-4 66}, Waltham X 33 11}, do 42 16} do 6-4 25, do 8-4 30, do 9-4 35, do 10-4 40, Wamsutta 36 19. Printing Cloths are quiet and steady, with 84s nominally firm at 6}@6$c. for standards and extras, on hand. Prints are selling more freely, with quotations unchanged and more steadily maintained. American 11}, Albion Bolid 11, Albion Ruby 11}, Allens 11}, do pinks 12, purples 12, Arnolds 9, Atlantic 6, Dunnell’s 11}, Hamilton 11}, London mourning 10, Mallory 11} Manchester 11}, Merrimac D 11}, do pink and purple 13}, do W fancy 12}, Oriental 11} Pacific 11}, Richmond’s 11}, Simpson Mourning 10}, Sprague’s pink 12, do blue and White 11}, do shiitings 11, Wamsutta 7}. Checks.—Caledonia 70 25, do 50 24, do 12 26}, do 10 22}, do 8 18, do 11 22}, do 16 27}, Cumberland 13, Jos Greers, 55 15}, do 65 J8, Kennebeck 20, Lanark, No. 2, 9}, Medford 18, Mech’s No. A 1 29. Denims.—Amoskeag 26, Bedford 14}, Beaver Cr. A A 23, Columbian, heavy25, Haymaker Bro. 15, Manchester 20, Otis AXA 24, do BB 21. Dorset Jeans.—Amoskeag 11}, Androscoggin 13} Bates 9}@i0, Everetts 15}, Indian Orchard Imp. 10, Laconia 12, Newmarket 10. Cotton Bags.—Ontario A $40 00, American $35@37 60, Androscog¬ gin $87 50, Arkwright A $ , Great Falls A $37 50, Lewiston 137 18, do THE DRY GOODS TRADE. There is October 29,1870. As noted above, at the close, and, good trade for the remainder of the^ season. Domestic Cotton Goods have been the leading feature of the market, and are selling with comparative freedom since the marked reduction in all staple lines. The most notable change of the week wcs in gingham?, several brands of which were reduced l@‘2c. Amoskeags, Bates, and Lancaster are now sold at 15c, Glasgow at 14c, and Namaski at 14}c. These goods have experi¬ enced very few changes within the last year and a half, and for a long time pa-t the prices have, we are informed, been paying the manufacturers an immense profit. Prints have not been changed, and to all appearances a decline is less probable now than it was a few weeks since. When Prints were first advanced to 11} cents, early in the season, the change was based upon a rise in print cloths to 6}c. Cloths are now held at t>£ to 7c, and the pro¬ duction fs not sufficiently large to cause an accumulation m manu¬ facturer’s hauds. This, and the fact that the season for printing dark colors will soon be over, gives printers confidence in their ability to sustain prices, on all staple brands, and even in the absence of a heavy general demand, dealers are not inclined to make concessions in prices. Should the trade improve, therefore, during the coming month, as there is a fair prospect of its doing, the general belief seems to be that there will be no general decline in the price of standard prints. , 50, Stark A $42 60. Brown Drills.—Atlantic 14, Appleton 14}, Ameskeag 14, Augusta 14, Pacific 14}, Pepperell 12}@18}, Stark A 14. Strifes.—Albany 9}, Algoden 16}, American 12-13, Amoskeag 20-21, Hamilton 20-21, Haymaker 13}-14, Sheridan A 11, Uncasville A 13-14, do B 18-14, Whittenton AA 22}. do G 11} Tickings.—Albany 8}, American 14}, Amoskeag A C A SO, do B 21, do C 20, do D 18^ BlackstoDe River 14} Conestoga extra 32 24, do do 86 28, Cordis A AA 24, do BB 15, Hamilton 22} Swift River 14, Thorndike A 16}, Whittendon A 22}, York 80 24. Ginghams—Clyde, 11}; Earlston, extra, 18 ; Glasgow,14; Gloucester, 13 ; Hadley, 14 ; Hampden, 15 ; Hartford, 18 ; Lancaster, 16 ; Lanca¬ shire, 15 ; Pequa, 12}; Para Mills, 14; Quaker City, 14. Mousbeline Delaines.—Pacific 18@20, Manchester 18, Hamilton 18, Tycoon reps 28-27} Pacific Mills printed armures 19, do Imperial reps 22}-27}, do aniline 22, do plain assorted colored armures 19, do do Orientals 18, do do alpacas 21, do do corded do 22}, Merino A 82} AA do A 24, 87} AAA 42}. quoted at $1 for super¬ ; $1 15 for extra super, and $1 42} for three-ply ; Hartford Company’s $1 for medium super¬ Domestic Woolens are destitute of new or notable features. fine ; $1 12} for superfine ; $1 42} for Imperial three-ply, and $i 60 The trade throughout has been quiet, and the movements are light for extra three-ply; Brussels $1 80 for 8 fr., $190 for 4 fr., and $2 in the aggregate. Cloths in light weights are in moderate demand, for 6 fr. but the business iu this line little les3 active than is a reported Fancy oassimere* in tasteful styles of heavy weights find moderate request, though sales are confined to small lots. Prices are unchanged on all woolens, and remain generally a even in the absence of Foreign Goods show an are little shown in the following table : FROM NEW « Domestics. pktrs. Total for week. Since Jan. 1, 1870. ametime 1889... “ “ 1868... 44 “ 1867... 44 44 1866... 44 44 1860... 129 ... . .. ... .. ... We .. 13,413 18,092 21,719 10,2.7 5,890 7S.570 few Val. , 1,255,234 4,410 4,248 1,342,424 5,039 1,080,294 57 2,552 • r . - m Company’s ingrain less 2 per cent., manufacture, a our NEW YORK. importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Oct. 27, 1870, and the corresponding weeks of 1869 and 1868, have been as ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING OCT. Pkgs. Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. do silk do flax Miscellaneous dry goods. : Domestics, pkgs. 7,404 6,849 4,108 81.90J Value. 1145,17&3 FROM 169 71,118 275,791 107,278 71,284 1,667 Total WITHDRAWN $672,154 WAREHOUSE AND 1870. Pkgs. Value 819 819 $298,966 447 133,594 447 183,694 482 362,254 482 862.254 Value. Page. |355,g 189.989 1,028 1,008 545 1,066 180,038 495 158,207 2,927 $1,164,841 4,131 757 422 THROWN INTO 87*.* 487,^202! 178 $1,475,! THE MARKET DURING THE SAME PERIOD. 483 166 72 464 64 462 170 $174,089 51 $170,258 61,315 66,521 Manutactnres of wool... do cotton.. do silk do flax 501 88 49 236 drygoods. 75 55,048 19,856 949 $331,040 672,154 1,239 2,927 1,164,841 1 coneu*pt’nl,667 4,131 lV Totalth’wn xpon m’rk’t 2,616 $1,003,194 4,166 $1,580,201 6,225 $1,843,374 Total Add ent'd for 15 6,025 6,955 438 269 293 498 27, 1870. 1869. 1868. $183,529 19,616 52,991 48,468 94,375 83,150 do do do Miscellaneous , cotton.. silk 467 144 70 530 78 $153,113 *$455,360 36,918 81,432 flax . 441 255 93 548 460 1,797 2,927 255 156 18,509 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE Manufactures 01 wool... 112,660 pirticulars of leading articles of domestic 17,534 dry goods. prices quoted being those of the leading Jobbers : Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are in relatively fair demand, TotAl 1,289 $401,657 672,164 1,667 and the recently revised quotations exhibit a good degree of Add ent d for consu’pt’n.1,667 Jingoes*, Amotkeag A 36 13 do 3 36 12}, Atlantic A 36 Total mteredittboport 3*.966 $1*0737811 annex are iO days The FROM BOSTON Dry Goods, packages. t or IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF Miscellaneous FORK. Val. $5,328 860,524 866,781 1,354.107 $16,564 1,548,905 1,955,476 credit, follows: active trade. improvement, in a jobbing way, and dealers are sold out of desii able autumn goods. The demand for heavy dress goods for late wear is not heavy, though comparing very favorably with that of a corresponding period of past years. Cloakings s^ll slowly as yet, but it i3 considered too early for an active traffic in these goods, and trade is about equal to expecta¬ tions. We find no material change in valuer*. The exports of dry goods for the past week, and since January 1, 1870, and the total for the same time in several previous years a mos. was few weeks since. firm, Carpets.—Lowell fine, 2 094 47,899 18,(J01 $367,775 SAME PERIOD. 431 228 61 471 136 $159,591 1,164,841 L827 4,131 $438,882 1,475,599 $1,630,309 &4W $1,913,$ $162,719 69,524 86,762 128,687 17,826 $465,468 63,801 94,976 104,579 15,885 29, 1870.] j October THE CHRONICLE. Miscellaneous. Wright & 573 Life Insurance. Co., OFFICE OF EQUITABLE LIFE 00HItnssloN MERCHANTS Transportation. ASSURANCE Virginia & SOCIETY OF THE UNITED Air Line, STATES, 116,118, 120,122 & 124 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, RItj) DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL. Represented In the United States by our House, Wright, Brown & Co., Assets over Income - No. 69 WA LL STREET, NEW YORK Henry Lawrence & Sons, - 303 $12,000,000 - SHIPPERS 6,000,000 - O for points WILLIAM C. ALEXANDER, President. HENRY B. HYDK, Vice-P; esident. GEORGE W. PHILLIPS, Actuary. JAMES W. ALEXANDER, Secretary. SAMUEL BORROWE, City Manager. BROADWAY. herewith notified that Freights will be received on and after SATURDAY, 22d last., are in Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia, .Alabama Mississippi and Arkansas River. GREAT Miscellaneous. and domestic €JSE John Dwigiit be Co., MANUFACTURERS OF MEMPHIS, CARS, PEARL Leave New York STREET, Pump ESTABLISHED IN Orleans, Mobile, Memphis, Chattanooga, Nashville Atlanta, Macon, and intermediate points. 185 7. 76, 78 AND 80 CENTRE STREET, YORK. 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KINAHAN CORNWALL IS, > a.111. 1. 44 44 5.45 a.m. 5 JO p.m. 7.1 0 a.m. COMPANY S China, uckif)£ at Mexican Ports CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS. Oil the 4tli and 20th. of Each Mon tin. in America, Thk Best Paper Publised for the Banker and Broker, the business anti professional man, the sportsman and the general reader. The Financial, article will be found both valuable and interesting The new York ALBroN circulates more largely than anv other weekly journal of its cIhss among the For 10 copies, 44 AND Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, loot ol Canal street at 12 o’clock noon, as above (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then Editor and Proprietor. on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting via Panuina Railway with one of the Company’s Steamships irom Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at MANZANILLO, Also, connecting at Panama with steamer? for SOUTH PACIFIC AND CENTRAL AMERICAN PORTS. One nundred pounds baggage allowed each aduli. Baggage-masters accompany baggage through, and attend to ladies and children without male protec¬ tors. Baggage received on the dock the any heiore sailing, from steamboats, lailroads, and passengers who prefer to send them down early. An experienced surgeon on board. Medicine and attendance tree. For passage ticl ets or turther miormation apply to the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, iooi of Canal street, North River, New York. ary, Companies. ** 44 YATES, To California & Sparkling, Varied and Independent rooms Banks, Stock and Gold Brokers, Merchants, and incorporated 44 a.m. p.iu. p.m. p.m. 12.15 p.m. 4 37 p.m. 7.2.» | .m. Pas?enger Agent. STEAMSHIP The New York Albion: LITERATURE, ART, POLITICS, FIELD bPORTS, FINANCE BROTHERS, 44 •1.15 6.00 5.44 3.30 THROUGH LINE Publishers. Banker*, Brokers and Merchants* The most 44 $8 00 WOLCOTT Ac MARMADUKE, To 44 ♦Change cars for Atlanta, Macon, Montgomery, Selma, West Point, Euianm, Mobile, Savannah, and J. 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Ar 6.19 a.m. 44 0.0O p.m. 44 12.45 p.m* 44 7.28 p.m. 44 11 15 a.m. 44 6.27 a.m. ... printed upou book paper, and in of the art. It gives a full and accurate statement of the markets of all the leading commerci 1 cities in the United States, furnished by SPECIAL REPOR¬ TERS—a feature entirely original with the JOURNAL Arrangements are being perfected, whereby a full statement in regard to the county Bonds of tne State of Missouri, will be published at the JOURNAL, thus ANNUAL Manufacturers and Dealers in WALNUT STS, ... rpBE JOURNAL embraces 82 large A MERCHANTS, MANUFACTURERS and GO’G SOUTH. Time. Lv 9.0) p.m. ... NORTHWEST CORNER THIRD "■ At 8.40 \.M. for RICHMOND, and Points on the Coast, At 9,20 P.M. from foot of Cortlandt street, via N>-w York and Philadelphia Line., by GREAT SOUTH¬ ERN MAIL ROUTE TRAIN, for Richmond, bew OPPOSITE PLATT. Manufacturing Co. C. B. & AND MOBILE-ALL RAIL. OLD RAILS Ac METALS. 218 NEW ORLEANS, SUPPLIES, STREET RAILS A Slip, New York, Woodward Steam NEW RAILS, RAILROAD AC., Route TO John J. Roberts, AND STEEL Mail Southern ENGLISH A AMERICAN IRON SALERATUS, ,%*«. 11 Old _ General Eastern Agent 152 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK SUPER CARB. SODA, as usual at Pier 37 .North C. E. EVANS, manufacturers OF CORDAGE fob export Tennessee F. R. or (Via BABY, Agent, Liverpool, Queeuaiowii,) CARRYING THE UNITED STATES MAILS. THE LIVERPOOL AND GREAT WESTERN STEAM COMPANY will d spatch one of their firstclass full-power Iron screw steamships from PIER NO.46 NORTH follows: RIVER, EVERY WEDNESDAY as MINNESOTA. Capt. T.W.FreemanNov. 2, at l^P.M. IDAHO,Captain vvlnneray ........Nov. 9, at 3 P. u. NEVADA. Captain Green ..Nov.I6. at 12 M COLORADO, Cant. T. F.Freeman.\ov. 8. at 3 P.M WISCONSIN, Capt. Williams ov.30, at 12 M* MANHATTAN,Captain Forsyth..Dec. 7,at 3 P.M. . Cabin passage, $80gold. Steerage passage, (Office rency. No. 29 Broadway) $80 For freight or cabin passage apply to WILLIAMS & No. 66 GUM, cur¬ WalUt. , fHte chronioLk. 674 Insurance. Insurance Fire Insurance OF*ICE OF THE NO. ATLANTIC Mutual WALL 62 Agency, STREET. 8 Per Cent per Insurance Comp’y, Co. iEtna HARTFORD, CONN. Cash NEW YORK, January IN •a the 81st Assets tho charter of December, 1869 s Premiums received on Premiums on] Springfield December, 1869.86,090,637 INSURANCE SPRINGFIELD, MASS. INCORPORATED 184 9. 80 Cash Pplloles not marked off 1st 2,888,001 38 J January, 1889... $8,628.639 08 Total amount of Marine Premiums Capital Providence ORGANIZED I $2,902,345 48 RAILROAD COMPANY, NOW FOR SALE BY THE OF PROVIDENCE, R. I. These 188 1. $20 >,000 00 .$372,219 38 Assets 1A8. A. ALEXANDER, Agent TiS4 DENVER CITY UNDERSIGNED, COMPANY, Cash Capital The Company has the following Assets, AND JOSEPH ST. $200,000 OO SUR1NCE _ $1,237,630 49 >500,000 $392,425 52 ORGANIZED Returns of Premiums Expenses GOVERNMENT TAX, OF THE American Losses paid during tba same period $i 179 9. Cash Capital Assets.... $8<l1SJ91f A 1889, to 81st Deoember, 1889....,,. S. Washington COMPANY, PROVIDENCE, R. I. OF Fire Risks disconnected Premiums marked off from 1st January, U. $936,246 65 INSURANCE with Marine Bisks, GOLD, CO.9 $500,000 OO Assets J No Policies have been Issued upon Lift nor upon Annum The balance ol the issue of FIRE A MARINE Marine Risks, from 1st January, 1889, to 81st FREE FROM $3,000,000 OO $5,549,504 97 Capital tha Company, submit the following Statement of its affairs and Financial. INCORPORATED 1819. Tha Trust tec, la conformity to 29,1676. NEW YORK. Insurance 6 Bisks, I October are 30 Year a Bond, issued only Sinking Fund upon completed a road, and bear Eight per cent interest in United States and State of New York stook. ........$7,856,290 80 Loans secured by Stocks and otherwise... 8448,400 00 Baal Estate and Bond* and Mortgages,.... 210,000 00 City, Bank and other Stock 807,568 $i estimated at...._ 9,513459 80 Premium Notea and Bills Receivable 083,797 88 Caah in Bank* $14,468,508 94 Total amount of Assats THE OF Pacific Mutual Insurance gold, payable on the 15th August and 15th February, in New York, London, COMPANY. Claims due Interest and sundry Notes and the Company, .OFFICE HOWARD BUILDING, 176 BROADWAY, New Yoke, January 13, 1870. tae^THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT OF THE is published in conformity Section 12 of its charter: Outstanding Premiums, January 1, 1869 $104,463 46 affairs of the Company with the requirements of or Frankfort, and These bonds are free from tax. are in denominations of $1,000 and $500 coupons or and Premiums received from January 1 to December 31,1809, inclusive 611,290 80 an secured by registered, absolute and only Total amouut ol Marine Premiums Biz per oent Interest on the outstanding certificate* holders thereof, or their representatives, on and after Tuesday, the profits Will ba paid to the et legal First of February next. Tha outstanding certificates of the issue of 1886 will and paid to the holders thereof, or their M redeemed legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, ef February naxt, on from whlsh date all interest there¬ Upon certificates Issued (la red scrip) tor gold premiums, payment and cancelled. which were such payment of Interest and redemption will be tn gold. ▲ dividend of FORTY Per net earned premiums of Cent Is declared on the the Company, for the year ending 81st December, 1869, for which eertlfleetee will of A^dl next be tasued on and alter Tuesday, the Fifth Ny order of the Beard, J *H. CHAPMAN, tMTIftlfi TRUSTEES: J. D. Jones, Charles Dennis, W. H. H. Moore, Henry Coit, PickersgUl, Lewis Curtis, Wm. C. Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston Royal Phelps, Caleb Barstow, A.P. Piliot, WUliam E. Dodge, David Lane, James Byrce, Daniels Miller Wm. Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, Dennis Perkfrs, upon Hulls ol' Vessels Premiums worked off as Earned, dui lng the or period as above Paid for Losses aud Expenses, less &c., during the s ime period Return Piemiums the First The eertlfleetee to be produeed et the will cease. time of $715,754 26 This Company has issued no Policies, except on Cargo and Freight for the Voyage. No Risks have been taken upon Time Joseph Gailliaid, Jr. C. A. Hand, James Low, B. J. Howland. Benj. Babcock, Robt. B. Minturn, Gordon W. Burnham, Frederick Chauneey, R. L. Taylor, Stephenson, William H. Webb, Sheppard Gandy, Francis Sklddy, Charles P. Burdett, Robt. C. Fergusson, William E, Bunker, Samuel L. Mitcbill, James G. Deforest, Robert L. fctuart. Geo. S. The A CHARLES DENNIS, Vlce-Pres’t W.H XI. M ORE, 2d Yice-Pre’st. J. D HEWLETT, 3d Ylce-Pres’t, * *.. $86,015 51 583,009 90 190,700 00 Premium Notes & Bills Receivable 234,561 05 Premiums 46,000 00 Reinsurance and other Claims due the company, estimated at 20,142 <7 Total Assets $1,166,129 23 descriptions of Rolling Stock and length, the largest portion of which is completed and successfully operated in daily running of regular trains, the earnings of which are now in excess the interest liabilities bonds. TRUSTEES A. S. Barnes, Egbert Starr, A. Wesson. John A. Bartow. Oliver K. King. Alex. M. Earle, John R. Waller. Has $1,500,000 already been expended upon this road from Stock Subscriptions and Do¬ nations, and in addition to this pany United Superior Lands valued at $8,The Company is entirely free have States of 000,000. from debt. mend the Com¬ a Grant from the We unhesitatingly recom¬ them, and will furnish Pamphlets* Maps and all information. President, WILLIAM LECONEY, Vice-President TT A * Stephen C. Kouthmayd JOHN K. MYERS. c : William Leconey, Wm. T. Blodgett H. C. Southwick, Wm. Hegeman, James R. Taylor, Adam T. Bruce, Albert B. Strange, A. Augustus Low, Dean K. Fenner, Emil Helneman, Jehial Read, William A. Hall, Francis Moran, Theo. W. Morris, Robert Sllmmon, B. W. Bull, Horace B. Claflin, W. M. Richards, this issue of on The whole of the OUI STANDING CERTIFICATES OF THE COMPANY, OF THE ISSUE OF 1865, will be redeemed and paid In cash to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after TUESDAY, the 1st day of February, from which date Interest thereon will cease. The Certificates to be produced at the time of paymenc and cancelled. A Dividend in serin of THIRTY-FIVE PER CENT, free of Government Tax, Is declared on the net amount of Earned Premiums for the year ending December 31st. 1SG9, for which Certificates will be Issued on and after TUESDAY, he 5th day of April uext, G. D. H Gillespie C. E. Mllnor, Martin Bates, Moses A. Hoppock on of Over the outstanding paid to the holders thereof, of their legal representatives, on and after TUESDAY, the 1st d^v of February. John K. Myers, A. C, Richards, This road is 111 miles in Equipments. the Subscription Notes in advance of SIX PER CENT INTEREST Certificates of Profits will be all $865,725 41 . 1HJMAS HALE. Secretary. PRICE 97>* AND ACCRUED INTEREST IN CUR¬ RENCY. Davis & REAL J.D. JONES, President. 36,697 03 Company has the following Cash in Bank Uni ed States and other Stocks.... Loans ou stocks Drawing interest. „ $608,830 22 Savings, 324,344 50 mortgage upon the entire line, including Frrret, ESTATE 85 ST. CHARLES New Orleans, BROKERS, IV. P. CONVERSE & CO., No. 54 Pine Sirect, New Y STREET, Louisiana. Prompt attention given to buying, selling and leas ng of plantations aud other real estate, paying of axes collecting rents, etc. TANNER & CO., No. 49 Wall Street, Neff < * THE CHRONICLE. 1870.] October 29, Mustard seed, Trieste... Nutgalls,blue,Aleppo.. prices cukrent. iffis.ort *1« » 6 15 ®725 M6BWAX-.. 32 * B 32X @ BSSADST^FFS-See special report. BRICKS- ...VM 5 80® , 5 25 ^ 00@ 15 00 28 00® 30 00 common hard Croto?8,* Via fronts" 19 28 Oilanls .' gold Oil cassia “ Oil berfr&mot Oil lemon Oil peppermint, pure ... Oil vitriol (60 to 68 degs) Opium,Turkey Oxalic acid 20 @ @ @ 3 00 @ IRON— Pig, American, No. 1 Pig, American, No. 2 Pig, American Forge Pig, Scotch. No. 1 Bar, refined, Eng. & Amer. ... 2 35 ... 445 290 @ ... @308 3 25 @ 3 50 2 00 @ 2 35 ....gold. 8 37}$@ 8 50 ;;;;;;; 26 ^’fiSSkins, choice. m @ 35 @ 42 Bar, Swedes, ordln. sizes.. 110 00@ Bar, Eng. & Amer., refined 80 00® 85 00 Bar, Eng. & Amer.,com’n. 75 00® 80 00 . Welsh tubs, prime25 Weishtnbs.wdinary 30 Western,prime.... Jg 22 Western, twr wife:v.v.v..?* 32 a5 @ 27 :ikl ® 80 Senna, Alexandria 23 Senna, East India 14 Shell Lac 39 Soda ash (80 p. c.) gold. 2 25 Sugar lead, VV’e 21 }$@ morphine,& oz 60 @ Tartaric acid (chrystal) Scroll Ovals and hall round Band Horse shoe Rods, %@3-16 inch . Su^hate dairies; common ... 8*g 9* 10 @ wy* Ohio tair to.prime CABLESilrm, patent go $ a> ■;••• ifentine:::::::: CS2I«Te 1 28 29 * ® 16 .-»» 190®.... ^Fawcastlegas, 2,210 lb ,§ .... KSS gXSKSUr.". -1S:::. .... 12*000 tons steamboat.... I6.u00 tons grate 12,000 tons egg 3 79}$@3 4 10 @4 27}$ 87g ff — C?2acas Vft Maracaibo (gold in bond) do Guayaquil qo 17 @ 19 25 @ 27 9 @ 9}$ .... COFFEE.-See special report COPPERSheathing,new qn v ® Bolts Braziers’.... 9i ® .... 19 .. Yellow metal nails ingot .... ... . 21*@ CORKS— 1st regular, quarts, do superfine V gro. 55 140 35 Ut regular, pints Mineral 50 Phial.. -1 12 COTTON—See special report. COTTON SEEDCotton s’d, Up’d V ton 18 00 @ 20 Cotton s’d, 6. Is. & ton 22 00 @25 DRUGS AND DYES— Alcohol 1 77}$@ 1 •Aloes,Cape V lb 14 @ Aloes, Socotrine 70 @ Alum 3}$@ Annato, good to prime 50 @ Antimony, reg. of...gold 15 @ Argols,crude 13 ® ' Argols, refined gold 24 ® „„ , . Arsenic, powdered. “ 2}$@ Assafoetiaa 34 . .... @ @1 ® @ @ „ , •••• @ .@ 22 ® 24 @ 22 @ Sheathing,&c., old... Sheathing,yel.metal,new Bolts,yellow metal 4merican •••• _ <0 <0 50 70 3* 80 — .... 25 3 4}$@ ibs)13 25 @13 37}$ Bleaching powder 4 3%@ Borax, refined 30)$@ 313^ Brimstone, cm. $ ton gld45 00 @ Brimstone, Am. roll flft 3}$@ Brimstone, flor sulphur. Camphor, crude (in 4 ..gold 20 Pickled scale Pickled cod Camphor, refined Canth&rides $ ft Carb. ammonia, in bulk Cardamoms, Malabar 69 2 00 .... .... @ Tampico Jute Drv Hides— Buenos Ayres.. Vft gold ... “ “ Porto Cabello Maracaibo “ “ Bogota “ .... 5}$@ Fennell seed Flowers,benzoin..V 6ambier...,gold..tf Cpboge oz. ft Ginseng, Western Ornseng, Southern Gum Arabic, nicked.... Gum Arabic, sorts Gum benzoin....,.; Spkowrie Gumdamar... gold "... Gum myrrh, East India.. Gum myrrh, Gum SenegalTurkey.... Gum Gum tragacanth, Borts.. tragacanth, resublimed 90 50 50 45 21 60 28 14>^@ 28 42 42 28 ?.... Ucorice paste, Calabria. Sicily... Ucorice paste, Sp., solid yc®rlce Paste, Greek... J‘dder.Dutch gold Madder. Fr. EXF.F7 “ Manna, large Manna,small flake flake MuiUrdseed,Cal,,,,... 3}$ 30 44 60 3* 95 60 70 70 22 85 30 24 32 31 ll}$@ lo2@ 1 70 i is 9 ® S “ “ cur. «* Dry Salted Hides— Rio Grande.. California.... Para New Orleans 81 46 45 33 55 “ “ “ cur. City slaughter ox & cow Upper Leather Stock— B. A.&Riogr.klpVftgld Minas Sierra Leone err Gambia and Bissau.- “ Zanzibar “ East India Stock— Calcut. sit. cow V ft gold Calcutta, dead green.... Calcutta, buffalo.... ^ ft Manilla & Bat. buff., f) lb .... 14« * 19 @ 20 @ 29 ^ @ .. 50® 75® 65@ ^5® .... .... .... 5 11X @ ....® 25 @ 25 @ 23 @ @ • i9' 20 2L 21 21 16 22 21 17 13 17 @ @ @ @ @ @ 25 }$ 13 14 14 17 13 13 15 13 @ @ @ @ 11}$@ 10}$@ 11 @ 19 88 26 @ @ @ 19 16 12}$ 12}$ 12 ii* vy* @ 16}$@ 14)$@ 13 @ 12 20 40 38 Cropol ’70(g’d@prIme)fMb 12 @ do 1869 Bavarian HORNS— j Ox, Rio Grande Ox, American 5 VC. 33 17 15 13}$ 13}$ @ ® .. 7 00@ .... 4 OQ®0 0Q .... ft ... 16 ....@ 9 ® 9i$ 4)$ 4}$® Slackwalnut 42 00@ 50 00 1-inch do 50 00@ 51 00 SDruce boards and planks 28 0u@ 30 00 Hemlock bo’rds and plank 20 C0@ 27 00 Extra heavy pipe staves $210 009 Heavy do do 175 00 Light do do 160 0-) Extra heavy hhd do 150 00 do Heavy do 140 00 do 125 00 do Extra heavy bbl. do 125 00 do Heavy do ....110 00 do Light do 80 00 Molasses shooks,incl. head’g.2 50@2 70 Rum do do 4 50@.... Sugar do do 2 50@2 65 MOLASSES—See special report. NAILS— Cut. 4d.@60d V 100 ft4 87}$@ Clinch 5 87S@ Horse shoe, f*d (6d.).. V ft 23 @ 37 @ Copper Yellnw metal 22 NAVAL STORESTurpentine,soft ..V 280 ft @ Tar, Washington..V bbl. 2 20 @ Tar, Wilmington 2 35 @ Pitch, city ‘2 25 @ Spirits turpentine. V gall. 44 @ Rosin, commmon to good strained, V 280 ft 1 95 @2 “ No. 1 2 50 @3 “ No. 2 2 15 @2 “ pale 4 00 @5 “ extra pale 5 00 @ OAKUM ft 7}$@ OIL CAKE- 4 50 6 00 28 , T6atlee,No. 1,2,3.4 & 5.V ft 9 Tsatiee,re-reeled 9 Taysaams, No. 1 & 2 8 Taysaam.Nos.S and 4 7 Taysaams,re-reeled 2 25 2 40 45}$ 05 75 30 00 10}$ Olive, In casks V gall. V ft Linseed V gall. Cotton Seed Crude “ @4 80 @ 86 50 68 78 23 .. Palm - yellow Sperm, winter bleached. 1 Lard oil, prime winter... 1 Red oil Straits Neats foots, 1 PAINTS— @ 88 @ @ @ @ & 57 52}$ 62}$ 70 80 1 25 47}$@1 50 25 @1 30 © 70 @ @1 40 65 55 ... 00 V ft 9),® Load, red, 9}$@ Lead, white, Am., in oil @ Lead, white, Amer.,dry. 9&@ Zinc, white, dry, No. 1. 6}£® Zinc, white,No. 1, in oil. 9 @ Zinc, white, French, dry Zinc, wb.. French, in oil Ochre, yel., French, dry Ochre. “ ground, in cfl Spanish bro., dry.V 100lb 1 Span, bro., gr’d In oil. V ft @ Paris white.EngV 100 lbs. 2 25 @ 2 Chrome, yellow, dry 12}$® Whtting, Amer. .V l00 lb 1 75 @ 2 Vermillion, China...V ft 75 @ ii}$ Y' 12 11 ‘8}$ 9 25 9 37}$ 28 00 ... 90 Vermillion, Amer., com. 22 Venet.red (N. C.) V cwt. 2 25 Plumbago @ 95 3 00 §27 @ 6 @25 00 Chinaclay V ton.24 00 V ft 1)$@ 1}$ Chalk, block V ton.22 00 @23 00 Barytes, American 12 @ PETROLEUM— Crude, 40@48 grav.V gall, Crude, 40@47 grav.(s.ord. Refined St’d white (sh’ng order) prime, white, (sh’ng order) Refined S.W. (job. lots) Naptha, refln., 65-73 grav. 11}$@ 16 @ 11* 23}$@ @ @ 9fc@ Residuum V bbl 4 00 @ PRO VISJON S— Pork, mesa (west) v bbljft GO ® C0@10 50® 10 25® 8 25® 7 25 00 75 50 @ @ 6 50@ 8 00 8 00® 10 50 Haineen .... — Plates,for’n .V 100 V.gold 6 00 @6 12}$ Plates, domestic 7 06 @11 50 Brandy— gall. Hennessy gold 5 50@18 00 Otard, Dupuy & Co 5 50@13 00 Pinet, Ca8tilIon& Co “ 5 50@17 00 “ Leger Freres Other foreign brands Rum—Jam., 4th proof. St. Croix, 3d proof... Gin, different brands Domestic liquors—Cash. 5 5 4 4 3 3 “ “ “ “ “ . 50@10 50@10 90@18 50® 4 50® 8 00® 5 00 00 00 75 75 25 Alcobol (88 per ct) 1 82}$@ 1 85 Brandy, gin & pure sp’ts In bl 00® 1 C5 Rum, pure 1 00® 1 C5 Whiskey 92 91® STEEL— English, cast English, spring English blister English machinery English German V ft 15 7 10 @ @ @ 11}$@ 13 American blister 12 American cast Tool. 17 American spring “ s 9 American machinery “ 12 American German.. “ 9; SUGAR—See special report. TALLOW- @ @ @ 11 @ @ 12 S*@ 9 American, prime, country and city.. V ft TEAS—See special report. TIN— Banca Straits V ft .gold 36 “ @ 32}$@ 31}$ @ English “ Plates, char. I. C..V box Plates, I. C. coke Plates, Terne coke 8 25 7 25 5 65 S3 “ @8 87}^ @8 06 @6 75 @8 CO Plates, Terne charcoal.. 7 50 TOBACCO—See special report. ; V gall. 8 50@7 00 75@9 00 2 00@8 50 Burgundy port gold 75@1 25 Lisbon “ 2 20® 3 50 Sicily,Madeira “ 1 00@1 25 Red, Span. & Sicily... “ 90® 1 00 Marseilles Madeira... “ 70® an Marseilles port “ 80® 1 60 Malaga, dry “ 95® 1 00 Malaga, sweet “ 1 00® 1 06 Claret.. V cask “ 32 50®.... Claret V doz. “ 2 40® 9 GO Port .... WOOLN. Y.& 0.,Pa. West. &Va. “ 50 35 2 20 @ SILK- Sherry City thin, obi., in bbls.V ton.40 00® in bags 37 5U@ West, thin, obl’g, In bags.. .39 50@40 00 case @2 25 .... Linseed, Cal. (bags) (in Boston) ....gold WINESMadeira .... Olive,Mars’es.qts V ® 10}$ @ 4 75 @ 3 00 @ 2 20 Hemp, foreign Lins«ed, Amer’n rough 2 10 Marett & Co 100 00@125 00 Light 10 Vbush. 4 50 Llns’dCal.inN.Y.Vbgs " Cherry boards aud planks 75 00® 80 00 Oak and ash 55 00@ 60 00 Maple and birch 35 00® 40 00 %-inch sycamore ...V ft Timothy SPIRITS— White pine box boards..'. 25 00® 80 00 White pine mer. box b’ds 26 CO® c3 00 Clear pine 60 00® 61 CO Refined 17 12 40 @ SPICES—See special report. .... Chalk Cuba(dutyp’d)goldtfgall.l 10 @1 15 12 11 1 75 @ @ @ @ @ @ .... Vermillion, irieste 27 @ pure Crude...» Nitrate soda SEEDClover 6PFLTER 22 39 41 41 40 44 42 44 Litharge. @ @ @ @ @ @ @ Refined, 26}$ Rockland,common.Vbbl. 1 15® Rockland,heavy 175® LUMBER, STAVES, &CSoathern pine $34 90@ 39 00 “ 21}$ 20}$ 45 35 50 25 Canton,re-rld,Nol to exdo Japan, common to super’r LIME— Whale, crude Northern.. Whale, bleached winter.. Sperm, crude 1 23 * 12 12 “ 29 27 32 @ @ @ @ @ OILS— 23 19 @ @ @ @ @ @ 12>$@ 3 30 ... HOPS— .... “ middle light.. rough slaughter “ 18}$@ 21 20 gold .‘.V bush. @ 8 00 @ 7 00 SALTPETRE— 29" . . 50 75 Liv’p’l, Higgins. V sack @ Liv’p’l fine, Worthingt’s @ 2 30 Liv’p’l fine, Ashton’s, g’d 3 00 @ S 12}< 29}$ . HONEY- 45 25 29 M *• “ “ Wet Salted Hides— Buenos Ayres.. ft gold. .... .... Truxillo Rio Hacbe Curacoa Port au Platt Bahia Texas Western • @3 70 @ 8 50 @ 2 20 @ @ @ @ @ Matamoras Maracaibo gold. Maranham “ Pernambuco “ Matamoras “ Savanllla “ Bahia •« Chili •• Sandwich Island.. “ 95 @ 115 gold 3 50 Ipecacuanha, Brazil Lwdve Licorice paste, & @ @ ® @ .... .... w. iirtLr-t—«old Hyd. potash, Fr. and .JP* Iodiue, 30 @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ 32 I3k@ gold Ttunplco .... 10 15 25@ HIDES— Vera Cruz 17}$ .... Epsom salts... .... li>$@ 7}$@ “ M “ *» ** ” .... Exrtaotlogwood 8 00@ 9 00 28 50@ 27 00@27 50 @34 00 5 50@ 7 00 45 40® 1 10® 1 20 — @ @11 oo American dressed..%? ton.250 00@295 00 American undressed....# @ Russia, clean 840 00@245'00 Italian gold.260 00@265 (K* Manila 13 @ 13K Vft Rio Grande Orinoco California Ban Juan @ 21 @ @220 4 00 9 0‘j@ 9 50 River, In bales ^100 Montevideo.... @ Castor oil 24 @ Chamomile flowers, n 27 - @ 50 Chlorate potash ...gold 34 @ 34}$ Jaustic soda (100 lbs.).. 4 80 @ 5 0J Carraway seed 15 @ Coriander seed 16 @ Cochineal, Hondur..gold 63 @ 70 Cochineal,Mexican. “ ....@ 63 Copperas, American 1 *® 2 Cream tartar, pr .. .gold 30*@ Cubebs, Edst India 18 @ 20 Catch ... .... Hurting, in t ft canls’trs.fl lb 28® 100 Sisal “ . 5 50@ 7 00 4 50® 5 00 7 50® 8 00 20 0U@22 50 21 U0@22 00 @1100 3 5 5 5 xlJLMir— middle.... light crop, heavy ‘r .... P .... bona) “ ... Meal Deer ... “ . Mackerel, No. 1, shore Mackerel, No. 1, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Mac’rel, No. 3, Mass.,large. Mackerel, shore, No. 2 Mac’rel, No. 3, Mass., med. Mackerel,No. 1, Halifax... Salmon, pickled, No. 1 Salmon, pickled ^ tee Herring V bbl. Herring,scaled. ...V box. Herring, No. 1 FLAXState, prime n> 26 80 24 20 38 39 39 36 36 36 rough good damaged poor “ Oak, slaughter, heavy.... .... .... — middle. light.... ... cur. 80 00@ ry^^or sJliPPinff — 82 “ “ “ .... In. bond SALTTurks Islands Cadiz 30 @ @ @ 28}$@ 27}$@ .. “ .... .... 18 00@ 17 C0@ 16 00@ 9 nuint. # bbl. V bbl. 29 28 27 “ “ .... Dry cod..... North light... light.. Orinoco, heavy “ 32 00@ 26 00@ 30 00@ 16 00® 18 00 @ 16 00 cur. 57 5C@ gold .... @ 15 00 F^anwood.... cash, Vft 30 @ 31 <9 }$@ 30}$ 23 @ 28}$ . middle. “ “ Shipping Keg rifle Bi carl), soda, N’caBtle" Bi chro. potash (100 i Fustic, Jamaica “ Fustic,Savanllla “ Fustic,Maracaibo.... “ Logwood, Laguna “ Logwood, Honduras. “ Logwood, Tabasco... “ Logwood, St. Domin.gola Logwood, Jamaica 6 30 California, heavy. “ middle “ @ @ @ .cur. V 100 ft Rangoon, dressed. @6 35 @6 62}$ @.... @8 00 net.7 50 “ 7 50 “ “ 00 @ GUNNY tfLOTHCalcutta standard....yard 28 GUNPOWDERBlasting (B).... ^ 25 ft keg @ @ 85 1 00 @ 1 02 3 90 @ Barkpetayo ’—@ 45 Berries, Persian... gold 27 @ 31 Balsam capivi Balsam tolu Balsam Peru “ 00 68 53 Calcutta, light &h’vy,p.c. 80 16 75 “ Bar 6 30 Heml’k.B. A.,&c., heavy Camwood....gold, V ton.100 00@ “ Fustic, Cuba. “ @ Fustic, Tampico...... gold 19 00@ GUNNY BAGS- ^ “ Pipe and sheet GROCERIES—See special report. 00 90 gold.6 39 @6 35 English “ FRUITS—-See special report. 40 Spanish German • @ .... ...10 00 @15 00 15 00 @18 00 31 00 @32 00 V ft 17 @ 19 16% 16}$@ - “ Limawood Barwood SKcKut::::::::l?^Ilw LEAD- “ DYE WOODS— .... .. DUCK- Ravens, light V pce.15 Ravens, heavy 17 Scotch, G’ck, No. 1, ^ yd Cotton, No. 1 “ @ . LEATHER— @ @ 85 50@130 00 ...100 00@125 00 95 00® 95 00® 85 CC@120 00 105 00@150 00 7 @ Vft 7}$ Nail, rod Sheet, Russia 11 @ 11}$ Sheet, sing., doub. & treb. 4V@ b Rails, Eng. (gold) V ton. 57 00@ 59 00 Rails, American 70 00® 71 00 52}$@ VltrtolrLVery.&eIdry 97 Hoop ” 8 Farm 90 25 16 50 2 50 @ @ @ @ @ Beef hams Hams Lard RICE— Carolina .... — gold. 20%@ Phosphorus 62 @ go'd. 64 Prussiate potash, Amer. 29\@ Quicksilver 65 @ 67 2 30 @ Quinine, American thubarb, China 1 18 @ 2 00 Sago, pearled. 734@ 7J4 ala< Salaeratus 20 @ Sal ammoniac, ref. gold. 10X@ Sal soda, Newcastle, g’d l 7b @ SO Sarsaparilla,H.,g’d,in D’d @ Sarsaparilla, Mex. “ 10}$@ Seneka root Pork, prime mess Beef, plain mess Beef, extra mess .... 00® 00® 29 00 50® 86 00 00® SI 27 32 75 -...,....$1 GO @22 00 Pork,prime. 32 00® 8TOBBPBIOBB. ~ st«te 57 24* 26 XXX XX.. X No. 1 No. 2 Coarse V ft. 52®55 53@53 45®48 51@53 Combing Combing, unwashed Extra, pulled Super California— 42@45 42@45 50@55 Spring . 42@45 40®42 40@40 38@40 4b@50 35®40 88@40 85@42 Fall 43@50 45® 48 ... clip. clip. X2 to A P or XXX 3t>@33 20@24 BorXS 25®28 2<@23 S or X4 20®23 Bu’nos Ayres Merino, unwashed 1S@20 25® 28 Mestiza, No 1, unwashed 22@24 “ 22®24 No. 2 “ 19® 22 Nos.3&4 “ A2 or 17@20 28® 82 26® SO 17® 19 1S®17 3S@85 00^00 88@S5 20@22 Cape, Syrian, washed unwashed.: Mexican “ Texas, fine Texas, medium Texas, coarse ZINC— Sheet V ft FREIGHTS— ,—steam.—, To Livbbpool: s. d. s.d. Cotton V ft }$@$-16 9}$@ . d. L@5-i6 Flour ....V bbl H. goods, Oil 10 sail. s. d. s. ....@ 2 9 2 S®.... v ton 27 6 @35 0 17 6®25 00 45 0 C’n.b&b.Vbu Wheat..b. & b. @ @... 9}$@.... @.... ' 8}$®,... BeefV tee. 66 @ @4 6 Pork V bbl. 4 9 @ @3 6 ToHavbb: by sail. $ c. 9 c. Cotton V ft * Tallow...... ...Vft Lard *•••-*’ }$@— Tobacco V hhd. 8 00 @10 U) Woods 8 00 @10 00 Petroleum 5 @ 5 6 To Mblboubnb, V foot @ • To San ... Fbancisco, by Clipper Measurement goods V rt Heavy goods. V ton Nails ..Vkefc. Petroleum. -V c.oliQgall. I, -«« 13 8 00 @ 85 @15 00 @ 50 45 @ 50 «... @ 8 04 .... CHRONICLE. THE 576 Geo. E. G, W. Abert, Redwood, COTTON Iron and Railroad Cotton. Cotton. BROKER COTTON BUYER, [October 29, l&fo, CHAUNOEY VIBBABD EMERSON 40 Mississippi. Mississippi. Company 3teel Columbus, Miss. «4 Williams Johnston A Co.- Mobile, Ala. Henry Hall, Hopkins & Co., Roddy Bell & Co., - about all New York City. shipment controls market Nalle & Cammack, COTTON FACTORS & COMMISSION tt Cnas. Our of Liberal Cash advances maae on ing and Insurance facilities. Bills Bast Tkrougk Lading given to all points Nortk, and Soutk by Bail. J. C. COTTON Cotton Reynolds & Bro. H. M. Moore, BANKING, COTTON BROKER Sc Jotton Cotton. YORK, 80 Baaver street, N. Y. These Ties have been used more extensively than any others, and last year iOr more than one-half of all he cotton baled io cue United States, and received he premium at several State fairs. Dealer in all kinds ol Stocks. C, R. JOHNS, F. C. R. JOHNSEN, OF AND NEW ORLEANS SELF-FASTENING BUCKLE TIE. who give WILLIAMS. BIRNIE & CO., 65 Beaver street, New York. Sole Agents ior ine Atlantic States. For sale by dealers throughout the country. Purchase and sell real estate, pay taxes and adjust Titles, prosecute Land and money claims against the State and Federal Governments; make collections. Receive deposits and execute Trusts. J. L. Leonard & Co., HEAD OF HOUSTON & TEXAS CENTRAL R.L., Calvert, Texas. Adams & . Hearne, BANKERS, TERMINUS HOUSTON & TEXAS Draw on National Park Bank, Cloth, as well as Old Rails, Scrap Iron and Metals. JNO.F. TANNER. BAGGING, 63 ROPE, On hand and for sale by CENTRAL R.R., Railway Supplies. Insurance. Imperial Jackson, C O., STREET. Post Office Box 8102. coeurspondenoe:—New York: Winslow, Lanier & Co., David Dows & Co. Cincin¬ nati: First National Bank, Merchants National Bauk. New Orleans/Louisiana National Bank, Wheless & Pratt, Bankers. Galveston: T. H. McMahan & Co. OF LONDON. Assets J. C. Rogers & Co., New York, Linseed, Jute Butts, Sugar. Joseph B. Glover & Co. Harde & BROKER?, INDIA Sc DOMESTIC GUNNY CLOTH, SeTABLieuD 1842. - SO Central Street. Boston. Lyons, Fayette Co. Co., FORWARDING, AND AJfets Gold, $17,'690,39c AJfets in ihe U. States 2,000,000 William St 45 INSURANCE. North American Fire Insurance OFFICE 192 Cooper BROADWAY. Institute Sc_ 1429 Broadway, INCORPORATED 1823. CAPITAL lSH - - - - 931 Damage fcy FW nlicies issued and Losses paid at the opany. or at its various Agencies In the pruwv ea in Property against Loss or the United States. W. President, uLACKS'I'ONE, Vlce-PM® BLEECKER, WYLLIS I. CARTER COLUMBUS, TEXAS, Company Branch Offices, K GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Street, New York. The Liverpool& Lm don & Globe Ins. Co. mures RECEIVING, $8,000,000, Gold - - - CHIEF OFFICE IN THE U.S. A. M. McKinnon, T. Habdb, Columbus, Colorado'Co. IGunny Rags, INSURANCE COMPANY FIRE New York. BANKER^, References and COMMERCIAL MCANEBNEY,JR BROADWAY, NEW YORK, WACO, TEXAS. 89 beaver ST. JNO. DEALERS IN I George W. Jackson. I Late Cashier 1st N at: Bank GalJipolis, O. Fort & IRON TIES AND TWINES. wall st., H.H. WALKER. FIBE Wm. A. Fort, Late Fort & Trice. CLOTH, WATER CO., Railroad Iron, Calvert, Texas. 144 TYRES, special attention to orders for TEXAS. BANKERS, This is for the plantar, the compress and the ship ; the best and most convenient Tie manufactured, it is recommended by all of the dealers in New Orleans after a thorough investigation as to the merits of the various ties in use. They arc made ot the best quality of English ir:m, nicely painted, put up in bumiles of uniform weight and are sold under a guaranty to h a ve entire satisfaction. Sc PHILA., 208 So. 4th street Steel Material for Railway Use. Nos. 40 and 42 Pine TIES, CARTER CO., CAST STEEL Cast Steel Frogs, and all other Johns & Co., AUSTIN, AND B. BOSTON, 80 State street. j. C. KIRBY, W. VON ROSEN BEES • LAND AGENCY, BANKING & EXCHANGE, VIBBARD, FOOTE & CO., J. Thomas Street. Securities of all kinds negotiated on favorable term EVERETT, TEXAS BALE on CAST STEEL HAILS, Labatt, EXCHANGE BROKER & INSURANCE AGENT. SWENSON, PERKINS & CO., Agents, DOMESTIC Entrance NAYLOR & Forwarding Merckant, STRAND, GALVESTON, TEXAS, For Sale by BORNEO * p cSSS!ti£2g2Z*° uegolIatln8 RaUway' 8««« 817 BROADWAY Factor, Commission, Receiving Samuel K. Cotton. Gunny Eantn. TANNER, WALKER Sc McANERNEY, 1,000 Tons Arrow Ties for baling ENGLAND, NEW VORK ment AGENTS, Railway iron, and Supplies. 9 BEN/ON A 34 Old Broad Street, Liberal advances made on Consignments of Cotton and other uroduce in hand or Bill Lading therefor. MANUFACTURERS And dealers in Co NAYLOU, GALVESTON, TEXAS. AND & HOUSE IN LONDON: Alfred Muckle, and COTTON Hasell 99 John street. BRYAN, TEXAS. For a Commission. PROPRIETORS Arthub Pabkk GENERAL RAILWAY NEW Texas Cards Cotton G. B. D. Buy Cotton, Grain, &c., on Commission. SELMA, ALABAMA, CHABLES EQUIPMENTS. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA, CO,, John C. Graham & Co., P 0. Box 5,724. RAILWAY Bank, Vicksburg. Buyers, of Mississippi Valley Refer to G. M. KLEIN, Cashier, MEMPHIS, TENN. Buyers MISS. VICKSBURG, Rails, AND WASHINGTON STS. CORNER MULBERRY AND W. D. JOHNSON & (Late of G. Falls & Co.) BROKER, YORK, Old Consignments. H. S. Fulkerson, Correspon¬ dence solicited. NEW Bentley D. Hasell, Ample Bank¬ skipping promptly. & Co. Rails, Iron Rails, Orleans. 40,000 bales annually. We have fooS sdwabd MERCHANTS 158 common Street, New necessary facilities for compressing and B. O. O.iMMACK. EDWARD NALLE. Banking - ALEX. P. Pibkv BBOASW4T, REFERENCES: Columbus Insurance and , FOOTS, Vibbard, Foote COLUMBUS, Columbus, Material*. Secretary, Mils WOLD, General Agent. All