View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

%
m

$fmm*»l

jauto’ feftif, (toiMttiiit
faitwag ptowtoi, and Insurant
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,
REPRESENTING tiie industrial and commercial

Bankers and

:n. c. fahnbstock
BDWABD DODGE,
PITT COOKB.

MOORHEAD

Cooke & Co.,
BANKERS.

Sts.,
New

! corner Wall and Nassau

Philadelphia.

Fifteenth Street,
Opposite Treas.

Washington.

and

No.

of Wall Street, in this city.
Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.*
New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington
House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will

HIT,I, and

NASSAU

No. 32 Wall

STREET,

DEPOSITS received from Individuals, Firms. Banks,
Bankers and Corporations, subject to check at
sight, and interest allowed at the rate of Four per
um.

fixed dates.

COLLECTIONS made on all accessible points in the
United States, Canada and Europe.
Dividends
and Coupons also collected, and all most promptly
Accounted for.
ORDERS promptly executed, for the purchase and
sale of Gold ; also, Government and other Securi¬
ties. on commission.
INFORMATION furnished, and purchases or ex¬
changes of Securities made for Investors.
NEG -TIATIONS of Loans, and Foreign Exchange
effected.

partners.

give particular

Fisk

SECURITIES O

&

Hatch,

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN

GOVERNMENT

.

Co.,

SECURITIES.

it tight or Sixty

Day*; also, Circular

NEW FIVE TWENTY

Notes and Let¬

Persons

Central Pacific

Certificates

No. 32 Broad Street,

Collections made

everywhere promptly.
bought and sold.
State, City and other Corporate Loans negotiated.
United States Securities and Gold

Our business conducted the same as that of a bank-

James Robb, King & Co.,
56 WALL AND 59 PINE STREETS.

Near©* late
United states, State, City, and Railway Bonds.
Issue
Letters of Credit to Travellers in Europe.

Advance

and cltlea af

Telegraphic ordeni executed for the Purchase

ai^

York.

Make Collections on
and

QjU*UXS E. MtLXOS.

fkworable terms,

promptly execute orders for the Purchase or

Gold, State, Federal, and

sale

Railroad

Securities.

Gardner,

BANKERS

AND BROKERS,
STREET, NEAR WALL, NEW YORK.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
nought and sold
exclusively on Commission.
NO. 5 NEW

upon current
m

upon

balances.

James Gardner,

formerly of Georgia

•

Ragland, Weith & Co.,

IN

SOUTHERN and MIS¬

CELLANEOUS SECURITIE i,

KOS. 15 NEW

17

•

STREET

M. K.

Geo. Arents

J. M. Weith & Co.,
dealers

NO.

NASSAU

STREET.

Bills of Exchange bought and sold. Drafts for €
and upwards issued on Scotland and Ireland, payable
Drafts granted on and bills collected in
on demand.
the Dominion of Canada, British Columbia and San
Francisco.

Specialty.

T;A.h°yt,

Late

AGENCV OFTHEBANK OF BRITISH
N OKTH AM ER It)A.

WALTER WATSON.
)
CLARENCE M. MY LEE A, fAECilD. McKINLAY,
)

Agents.

deposit and interest allowe

uce-Pres’t. Gold Exchange,
Exehan<rf»
M. Weith,

AND

70

BROADWAY.

Loans Negotiated.




cent per annum.

Drexel, Winthrop& Co,
NO. 18 WALL

Commercial

STREET.

and Travellers’

EXCHANGE
At

,

Credits,

ON

PARIS

Sight at Sixty Days.

bought and s^ld on Commission.
Advances made at current rates.
Interest at lour per cent per annum allowed on de¬

posits.

Warren, Kidder 6c Co.,
BANKERS,
ST., NEW YORK.

No. 4 WALL

Bonds, and Gold promptly sxs
FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO W*I

Order* for stocks,

eutsd.

Waltu H. Busni.

a

Money on Deposit, with an allowance of four per

aud Gold

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and
others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to
Sight Draft.

of

Gold

Consignments of Cotton.

Receive

Stocks, Ronds, Government Securities

New York.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates,

LONDON.

W» of Stock* and Itands In London and New

Money received

issued bearing interest at

BANKERS AND BROKERS.

Europe and the East.

Hoyt 8c

of Deposit

market rates.

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

London.)

inlltbl* u all the principal towns

Lm P. Boston.

Railroad First Mort¬
lloads,

gage

AND THE

UNION BANK OF

keeping accounts with us may deposit and
City Banks.

Available in all the principal Cities of Europe.

BURNS Sc CO.,

(SB Old Broad Street,

BONDS OF 1SG5 AND 1807.

Certificates oi Deposit issued, Deposits received and
Collections made.
Also, General Agents for

Traveller*’ Use, on

L. P. MORTON,

cent interest allowed on all daily balances

Into the

YORK.

EXCHANGE,

ters of Credit for

Street, New York.

SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES

STREET, NEW

STERLING

Co.,

draw without notice, the same as with

on

Buy and sell, at market rates, all descriptions of
United States Securities, and give especial attention
o tiie conversion of

BANKERS,
X BROAD

,

Currency or Coin.

NO. 5 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK

L.? P. Morton &

&

BANKERS.

orders for purchase and sale of stocks,
bonds and gold, and to all business oi National Banks
jay Cooke & co.
1.1M6

of

attention to the purchase

EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT

Clews

Henry

(Corner of Cedar street.)

ill Issues; to

March

Co.,

CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT issued, bearing Four,
per cent Interest, payable on demand, or after

Department.

corner

We shall

2i

cent per an

connection with our houses in Philadelphia
Washington we have this day opened an office at

be resident

Geo. Opdyke 8c

>

In

1 Nassau,

BANKING HOUSE OF

NO.

BANKING HOUSE OF

Opdyke.

G. Francis

Four per

’

.

Wm. A. Stephens

George Opdyke.

York.

3d Street,

114 South

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

Brokers.

jiY OOOKK,
WM. 6.
H, 1*. COOKS*
D.

No,

NO. 171.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1868.

VOL. 7.

ay

interests of the united states.

sa

deposits, subject to check at sight.

Tapscott, Bros. 6c Co.,
EUROPEAN RANKERS.
86 SOUTH STREKT & 23

BROADWAY, NEW YORK
Drafts and Exchange for any amount
payable in all parts of Great Britain and Ireland
credits on W, TAPSCOTT & CO., Liverpool, and ad¬
vances made on consignments to them.
Issue Sight

J esup 8c Company,

BANKERS AND

12 PINE STREET.

Negotiate

Bonds and Loans
Contract for
Iron or

for Railroad Cos.,

Steel Ralls, Locomotives,

Cars, etc.,
snd undertake

ail business

Rider 6c

MERCHANTS,

connected with Railways

73

Cortis,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK
Successors to

SAML. THOMPSON’S

NEPHEW,

and

ABM. BELl

s<>ns.

Sterling Exchange business. Drafts on Englan
Ireland a id Scotland.
Bankers furnished with Sterling Bills of Exchange,
and through passage tickets from Europe to all parts
of the Umtea States.




THE CHRONICLE.

418

Go., Drake Kleinwort&Cohen

&

BANKERS.

_

Wall Street. New York*
Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery

all

issues of

STOCKS

STATES
INCLUDING

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881.
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
“
“
1864,
6
6
44
44
1865
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
8-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
Per Cent Currency Certificates.

Aew York State 7 per

cent. Bounty Loan.

&

Deposits subject to Sight Drat

Check.

approved securities.
Special facilities foi negotiating Commercial Paper.
Collect* *meboth inlind and foreign promptly made.
ForeiflDti *.nd Dome 3 tic Loans Negotiated.
Advances made on

John J. Cisco & Son,
BANKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK,

Issue Certi \cates of Deposit
imterest. payable on demand.

BUILDING.

Execute

promptly orders for the purchase J and

Bay and Sell Government and

sale

other Securities on

commission.
Make Collections on all parts of the
and Canada.

United States

Special Agents tor the sale of the First Mortgage
Railroad Company.

Bonds of the Union Pacitic
John Bailkt,
Late Bound &

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
44 WALL STREET.

sion.
THE FIRM OF

BANKERS,
No. 24 Mroad Street,
Is dissolved by the death of H. Gilliss, Esq.
The business will be continued by the surviving
partners, C. H. H YKNEY ana J. L. SKAKLErf, under
the name and style of

Harney & Searles.
They receive deposits subject to sight draft and

allow Interest thereon.
Issue Certificates of Deposit
and execute orders for the put chase and sale of Stocks

Bonds, Gold, and all classes of Government

the principal cities of the

BANKERS

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
GOLD, &c.

No. 12 WALL STREET.

City, circulation), under
I. T.

Organized March 11, 1867, (with
Act of Congress approved June 3,1864. Capital, $100,000.
Authorized Capital, $500,0001
B. M. DU RELL, Pres.
C. W. MOOKE, Cashier.
New York Correspondent,—National Bank o North

of Good Hop

United State

Eaterprl

STARR, President
Fire Insurance Company, Philadelphia.
J. HINCKLEY CLARK, Banker, Philadelphia
GEORGE F. TYLER, Philadelphia.
WILLIAM MOORHEAD, Banker,
Philadelplua.I
HENRY D. COOKE, Banker, Washington,
E. A. ROLLINS, Commissioner InternalReveci

Washington.
WM. E

principal places in Idaho Terri¬
tory promptly attended to. “ Telegraph Transfers,”
Sight and Time Exchange, for Gold or Currency, can

purchased on this Bank, of National Bank North
merica, New York City;. National Bank of Com¬

be

merce.

Boston, Mass.

Edward Lambert & Co.,
NO.

12

WALL

STREET.

54 William

JOHN D. DEFREES, rubllc

Street.

Officers:

j

CLARENCE H. CLARK, Preside
HENRY D. COOKE, Vice-Preside:

AHEERICAN

VO. 7 BUB SCRIBE,

PARIS,

JAY COOKE, Chairman of Finance and Exectl

AJTD

Committee.

STREET, NEW YORK,
Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers bk sB
NO. 8 WALL

parts of Europe, etc.,

etc.

EMERSON W. PEET, Secretary and Actuary.
FRANCIS G. SMITH, M.D., Medical Director.

Also Commercial Credits,

S. G. & G. C.
AGENTS

Ward,

The advantages offered, by this

BROTHERS & rOMPANY.
WALL 8TREET, NEW YORK.

28

It is a National Company,
Of Congress, 1868.
A Paid up

LETTERS OF CREDIT
ELLERS.

It Furnishes Larger

FOR TRAV¬

It is Definite and

BANKERS,
STREET,

It is

BANKERS,
WALL STREET.

DEALERS

GOVERNMENT

IN

OTHER

Certain in its Terms.

Home Company in Every Locality.

from Attachment.
Unnecessary Restrictions intbeij

Its Policies are Exempt
There are No

Every Policy is Non-Forfeitable.
Policies may be taken which pay to the in.4
their full.amount aud return all the PremiuJ
that the insurance costs only the interest o:J
~

Co.,

No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6

a

annual

NEW YORK.

Lockwood &

connmouL paper.

of Premium.
Insurance than other Co^

cles.

Winslow, Lanier 6c Co.,
27 PINE

Special]

nies for the same Money.

^Government and oilier Securities*
Bought and sold at the Stock Exchange on usual
Allowed on Deposits.

Chartered by

Capital of $1,000,000.

It offers Low Rates

STATE STREET, BOSTON.

Interest

Co]

pauy are:

FOR

BARING
66

Printer, WashiDgto)

EDWARD DODGE, Banker, New York.
H. C. FAHNESTOCK, New york.

John Munroe & Co.,
BANKERS,

payments.

Policies will be issued that

will pay to the In.4

One-Testi|

during Life an Annual Income of
Amount Named in the Policy.
No ExtrarRate is Charged for Risks upon

theL

of Females.

AND

SECUBITIES.

Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency,
aubiect to Check at Sifht. Gold loaned to Merchant*
and Bankers upon favorable terms.

It Insures not to

Secure Dividends, but at soL

Cost that Dividends

will be Impossible.

coj

AGENT IS WANTED in every
applications from competent parties fori
cencies, with suitable indorsements, should
*essed to the Company’s general agents

A LOCAL

Day & Morse,
Elf
S

RANK

AND

BROKERS

id

5

NO>TWALL STREET, NEW YORK.

StocIy<4 Bonds, Gold and Government
Securities, Bongtit and Sold
on

v

T

”'v

tj
onlyioj

spective districts.
pamphlets, and full
pplication at the office of the Company

of Gold and Currency
/Tokaok J. Morse.

NO. 1

NASSAU

General Agents

for New

Co.

7b

lTork State

New Jersey.

w

inibf

STREET.

Jay Cooke &
Hankers,
£fc. 3(t_
| S tJVtCL&A.CLU. fft.,

1

particularsrij

Circulars,

Commission.

Interest allowed on deposits
subject to draft.

Applications will be received
City of New York.

for

acd.NVj

Individuij

cies in the

managers :

CDQeaLetA. in. flL. iff.

SfeeiititifA
and Jffatei-Qn. fp^rJiancic, and
m-e.nr.Le.LA. afi tTftaele. an.d t&aLd
$3Leh.an.g-eA in. Lath. eitieA..
flzeea.un±A. af JfffankA. and.
/$.anfeeLA. Leeeiu.ed an LiLetaL
telmA.

SPECIALTY

Secretary!

CHANDLER, late Assistant

America.

Collections on the

Directors:

Philadelphia

FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF IDAHO

Boise

of

RATCHFORD

F.

Securities.

Hatch, Foote & Co.,
AND DEALERS IN

Board

JAY COOKE, Banker, Philadelphia.
CLARENCE H. CLARK, Banker,

James G. King’s Sons,

HARNEY A CO.,

GILLISS,

BUILDING

LETTERS

Commission.

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

PHlLADElPBJ

FIRST NATIONAL BANK

Treasury, Washington.

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

Bailey, Buckingharn& Co

‘*1,000,0

BRANCH OFFICE

EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.
SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW
STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD.
AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

Issue

*

Co.,

ELLERS.

bearing four per cent

Negotiate Loans.
•f Go d.

AMERICi|

Capital.

CREDIT FOR TRAV-

LETTERS OF

and allow interest at the
on daily balances, sub-

sight.

STATES OF

WASHINGTON, D.C.

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,

_

j ect to check at

UNITED

in the United

Travelers abroad and

For use in Europe, east of the Cape
West Indies, South America, and the

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

Receive money oil Deposit
rate of 4 per cent per annum

AND CIRCULAR

CIRCULAR NOTES

States, available in all
world; also,

WILLIAM STREET, NEW

BROWN, BROTHERS & CO.’S

Comp;

OF THE

RANKERS,
CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS.,

For the use of

BANKERS,

NO. 59 WALL

Duncan, Sherman &
OF CREDIT,

SOUTTER & Co.,

or

Life Insurance

issued for the same purposes.
SIMON DE VISSER,
Exchange Place, New York.

26

VERMILYE & CO.

Interest allowed on

National

the London House

Compound Interest Notes of 1864
1865 Bought and Sold.

Securities.

LIVERPOOL.
The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys
the United States, is prepared to make advances
m shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwcit & Cohen
jDndon and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
^adits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies. South America, &c, »Marginal credits

2d, & 3d series

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

NO. 53

The

LONDON AND

No. 44

UNITED

Insurance

Financial.

Financial.

Vermilye

[October 3,

I>. G

J. U. OR VIS.

E. W.

CLARK & CO.,

eneral Agents

for

wH,Tl

Pbiladelp*
Southej

Pennsylvania and
Jersey.

JAY COOKE &

CO.,

Wafrhln
Columbia, M

eneral Agents for District >
Delaware and Virginia.

October 3,

1868.]

THE CHRONICLE.

419

MILES

8 2 0

Fic ancial.
BANKING HOUSE OF

OF THE

Pacific

Union

SOUTTER &

Railroad

Co.,

53 WILLI AM

STREttT,
New York, Sept. 25,1868.

To Holders of North Carolina

finished and in operation. Although this road is built with great rapipity, the
work is thoronghly done, and is pronounced by the United States Commissioners to be
fiist-class in every respect, before it is accepted, and before any bonds can be issued upon it
Are now

The

public Treasurer authorizes

Bonds*

us to announce that

the State of North Carolina resumes the

regul ir pay
the Public Debt of the State on
the 1st day of October, proximo.
Coupons maturing on that day will be paid at this
tnent of interest upon

Rapidity and excellence of construction have been secured by a complete division ol
an i by ristributing the twenty thousand men employed along the line for long dis
It is now probable that the
tances at once.

'

office.

Past due coupons and past due bonds, with
added from date of maturity to Oct. 1st, 1S68,

labor

funded into

a

thirty

year

interest
will be

six per cent bond, dated Oct

1,1868.

Whole line to the PACIFIC will be

The

funding will be done in the city of New York at
office, and in the city of Raleigh, at the office of
the Public Treasurer, and will be commenced as soon
as the new bonds can be made ready for
delivery.

completed in 1869.

this

The

Company have ample means of which the government grants
and all necessary timber and cth r maerials found along the line of its

the right of way
operations ; al o
12,800 acre* of land to > he mile, taken in alrernate sections on each side of its road; abo
-United States Thirty-year Bonds, amounting to from $16,000 to $48,000 per mile,
according to the difficulties to be surmounted on the various sections to be bui't, for
which it takes a second mortgage as security, and it is expected that not only the interest
but the prim ipal amount may be paid in services rendered by the Company in transport¬
ing troops,.mails, &c.

SOUTTER & Co.

Proposals.
NOTICE

Local Business

only, dur

ng

the

year

RAILROAD

CONTRAC¬

TORS.
Office New' York & Oswego Midland )
Railroad Company,
Oneida, N. Y., September 14, 1868.
Scaled

>

)

Proposals will be received at the Office of the

Company in Oneida, N. Y., until the 30th day of Octo¬
ber, 1S68, at noon, for the Grading, Masonry and

Bridging of ttiat portion of the New York and < isweMidland Railroad, extending from Sidney Plains to
the village of Waiton, in Delaware County, a distance
of about 22 miles. Also, for ti.at port on of the line
from Westfield Flats to Cfentrevilie, in Sullivan coun¬

THE EARNINGS OF THE UNION PACIFIC
or

TO

RAILROAD, from its Way
ending June 30th 1868, amounted to over

ty, a distance of about 25 miles.

FOUR MILLION

DOLLARS,

which, after paying all expenses was much more than sufficient to pay the interest upon
its Bonds. These earnings are no indication of the vast through traffic that must folow
the opening of the lice to the Pacific, but they certainly prove that.

FIRST

MORTGAGE BONDS

*Propo-als wi 1 also be received at the same time and
place for the Grading, Masonry and Bridging of the
•‘eilii Branch extending from the Main Line at Wal¬
ton to Delhi, in Delaware county, a distance of about
16 miles.

1 he Company will entertain
separate prop*.sals for
Bringing only, both on the Main Line and Branch.
Plans, Profiles and Specifications will be ready for
examination at the office ol the Resident Engineer, in
the village of Walton, for that portion of the line in
Delaware county, including the Delhi Branch on and
after the 20th day of October next, and also at the
office of the Resident Engineer in Miadletown, Orange
ounty, for that portion of the line in Sullivan county
-

upon

such

a

property, costing nearly three times their amount,
ARE ENTIRELY SECURE.

The Union Pacific Bonds

thirty years, are for $1,000 each, and have coupons
They bear annual interest, payab e on the first days of January and July at
the Company’s office in the City of New York, at t* e rate of six per cent in gold. The
principal is payable in gold at maturity. The price is 102, and at the present rate of
gold they pay a liberal interest on their cost;
run

attached.

A very

important consideration in determining the value of these bonds is the length
of time they have'to run.
It is well known that

long bond always commands a much higher price than a short
thp next thirty years, the rate of interest in the
United States will decl ne as it bus done in Europe, and we have a r ght to expect that
such six per cent securities as these will be held at as high a premium as those of this
Government, which, in 1857, were bought in at from 20 to 23 above par. The export
demaud alone may produce this result, and as the issue of a private corporation, they are
beyond the reach of political action.
It is safe to

one.

assume

Contractors who may desire to examine the work,
will receive all necessary information at the respec¬
tive offices of the Resident Engineers above named.
D. C. LITTLEJOHN, President.
W. B. Gilbert, Chief Engineer

North Missouri Railroad
FIRST ITIOKT'.AGE

30 YEARS «EVEN PER CENT BONDS
INTEREST PAYABLE JANUARY AND JULY,
NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE IN NEW YORE,

AT THE

The Road Is completed and In operation from ST.
LOUIS to BRUNSWICK, on the Missouri River, and
to ATLANTA, in Northeast Missouri, 242 MILES.
The entire

Company believe that their bonds, at the present rate, are he cheapest security
market, and the right to advance the price at any time is reserved. Subscriptions

will be received in New Y rk

length of road which will be completed
YEAR, 382 1-2 MILES.

in NOVEMBER OF THIS

a

that durin

The
in the

at the same date.

Amo uni In Actual Cash

Construction lo
The

expended in

date, «11,3 4U.oo<».

only lien upon the Road is this First Mortgage
$16,000 PER

of Six Millions, and which Is LESS THAN

MILE,
i ins
sas

.

Roaa

connects wun

tne Union Pacific at Kan

City, already completed westward 850 miles, and

with the Iowa Central and the Cedar Rapids Railroads
in Iowa, forming by the Iowa Central a direct connec
tion with St. Paul, and by tne latter with Dubuque.
It runs through the choicest agricultural and coal
lands in the State of Missouri, and by its connections
will have the finest and most populous portions of
Iowa and Minnesota tributaries to it.
The road now
completed is constructed in the most substantial man¬
ner

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

curity, and

At the

Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau Street
AND BY

Messrs. E. D. MORGAN &
H

John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 59 Wall Street.
And

by the Company’s advertised agents throughout the United State1.

Remittances should he made in drafts or other
will, be

sent

will look

to

free of charge by return express.
for their safe delivery.

funds par in New York, and the Bonds
Parties subscribing through loca agents,

them

F.

CO., New York.
VAIL, Esq., Cashier National Bank of Com

THftrT.fi.

JAMES

LOW, Esq., New York.

J. H. BRITTON, President National Bank of th«
State of Missouri, St. Louis.
J. R. LiONBERGER,
St. Louis.

JOHN J. ROE, Esq., President State
Savings
tution, St. Louis.

just been published by the Company
giving fuller information than is possible in an advertisement, respecting the Progress of
the Work, the Resources of the
Country traversed bp the Road, the Means for Construc¬
tion, and the Value of the Bonds, which will be sent free on application at the Company’s
Offices, or to any of the adveriised agentj.
JOHN J,

Sept. 14th 1868.




CISCO, Treasurer New York.

Inst?

Jameson,Smith& Cotting
16 Wall

A PAMPHLET AND MAP FOB 1868 has

President Third National Bank

Street, New Y ork.

For

Sale,

WUNDERLICH’S PATENT TB4VELING BCJRKAU.
The above is one oi the most complete and durable
Trunks in the market. Being particularly adanted to
the use of students, &c., as it can be arranged as a

portable Bureau it desired, containing all the usual
compartments of the best manufactures. Will sell at
the expiration of 10 days to the highest bidder. For
iurther particulars ana examination of model apply
to
E. E. TIFFANY* CO,,
15 Wall street, New York.

[October 3,1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

420

Financial.

Western Bankers.

Boston Bankers.

THE

Page, Richardson & Co.,
MERCHANTS,

of.

BANKERS Sc

FOREIGN EXCHANGE,

DEALERS IN

BONDS,

GOLD AND

70 State Street, Boston.
TRAVELLERS’ CREDITS issued on London and
Baris available in all parts of Europe.
LOANS OF STERLING made to Merchants upon
favorable terms.
DEPOSITS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY received,
subject to draft at sight aud interest allowed.
ADVANCES made on consignments to Liverpool
and London.

Sayles,

Dupee, Beck &
STOCK
NO. 22

BROKERS,

STATE STREET, BOSTON.

HENRY SAYLES.

JAMES BECK.

JAMES A. DUFEE.

313

$500,COO

H. F. Fames, President.
M. D. Buchanan, Cashier.
H. F. Eames—Director
Ottawa* Ill.
Wm. 11. Ferry—Director

AUSTIN.

DRAFTS, &C., AC.
AND REMITTED FOR Ox* DAY OF

UnionBanking Company
4th Sc Chestnut Sts.,
PHILADELPHIA.

N.E. Cor,

INGTON.

Government Depository

Vice-Pres

collections on all accessi¬

MAURY.

.

MAIN ST.

Sterling Exchange, Gold
State, City and Railroad

ROB’T T. BROOKE-

Company,

■

CANTON, OHIO.

Special Attention given to the collec*
tionsof'Banhs, Bankers and
Merchant**.
Jos. Hutcheson.

CO.

W. B. Hayden.

Hayden, Hutcheson &Co
,

N O

on all

CARONDELET ST., N. ORLEANS.
General Partners.- J. L. Levy ; E. Salomon, formerly
28

& Co.

Commendum.—E. J. Hart; DAvidSalo-

points.

Do

a

1

3'

BANKERS,
S

HIGH

.

Bankers.

108

Sc

110

Co.,

West Fourth street.

CINCINNATI, OHIO.
Dealers in

GOLD, SILVER and all kinds oi

GOVERNMENT BONDS.
COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible
points and

remitted for on day of payment.

CHECKS ION




LONDON AND PARIS
FOR SALE.

Official.
Board of

Orleans.

No. 22,
1
12lh Sept., 18CS.)

Mate

of the act of the Legislature of the
entitled “An Act to enable the city

By virtue

of Lousiana,

DOLLARS, ($1,000,Ow)

provisions of an Ordinance ot the
No. 1,013, approved 11th September,

Council,

^SEALED

ot

of money to meet ns
approved September■5th.MM

Orleans to procu: e a loan
current liabilities.”
the amount ot ONE MiLLlON
and pursuant to the
New

Common
1

the Con¬

Commissioner# of

solidated Debt of New

PROPOSALS will be

received at(this office

1868, at 12 o■ ciock. m..
portion of a series oi

until the lOtli day of October,
for the purchase of all or any
Bonds, to be issued as follows :
’e in one year,
100 Bonds of $ 50 each, pay;
do.
do
100
do
200
do.
do
10U0
do
225
in two years,
do
50
do
100
do.
do
100
do
200
do.
do
1000
do
225
in three years,
do
50
do
100
do.
do
100
do
200
do.
do
1000
do
225
in four years,
do
50
do
100
do.
do
100
do
200
do
1000
do
225
Said bonds to be dated 1st October,
the otlice oi the City Treasurer,
the rate ol TEN per centum per annum,

)°be dated°lst

STREET,

COLUMwUS, OHIO.
General Banking. Collection, and Exchange
Business.

1868, payable at

LNlERKbi JJ
dUidea mio
coupons attached thereto, said coupons bun.-, m o
payable semi-annually, on the 1st oi April. and
October of each year, at the olhee oi the Cit> Tre
at such bank in the City oi New Orleans as tne
n1ir.
Comptroller may direct.
The proposals to he indorsed ‘‘Offer for the pur
chase oi bonds of the City of New Orleans,
addre.s
ed
(). De Buys, Secretary, and to be opened
adjudicated to til i highest bidder, at the date abt>\
mentioned.
sj nowith

rer. or

.

Bankers and Brokers.

to

Mansfield,
Freese
Brownell,
Banker® and

&

,

Commission Merchants,

STREET, NEW YORK,
T7. S. Bonds, Coin, Stocks, Grain, Flour, and Pro¬
visions Bought and Sold on Commission only.
Liberal advances on consignments. Particular at¬
tention given to collections. J? our per een*, interest
allowed on deposits.
J. L MANSFIELD,
Vice-Pres. 1st Nat. Bank Decatur, Ill.
J. L. BROWNKhL,
Pres, of the Open Board Stock Brokers, N.Y.
I. M. FREESE & CO.,
Commission Merchants, Chicago, Ill.
FREESE & COMPANY,
Bankers, Bement, Ill.

J

L..

Brownell & Bro.,

BANKERS Sc BROKERS,
28 BROAD STREET, NE W YORK,
<•'
Stocks, Bonds. Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Banke s and Individuals receiv¬
ed

on

favorable terms.

References:

J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mech.Banking
C. B. Blair, Pres. Merchants’ Nat. Bank

Ass., N.Y

Chicago.

.

Board.

Comptroller.

Treasurer.

JOHN A. O’BRIEN,
Chairman Finance Committee,
Chairmen

.

.

right ot ieiusi 0

CONWAY, Mayor.

J. O. LANuRY,
W. 8. MOUNT,

A1Ull.mpn

,

Board ol Aldun
Finance Committee, Board of Assistant Al

dermen.

Attest:—O. Die Buys, Secretary.
Bids for the above loan will be

-

.

,

n.

received bj tueuu
dersigned until the 4t,h of October.
FRIEDMAN Sc SALOMON
59 Exchange Place, New York.

Gibson, Beadleston&Cos,
,

.

reserving the

fhe Commissioners
any or all bids.

JOHN R.

NO. 50 BROAD

Gilmore, Dunlap &

Nassaubtreet.

’

DEALERS,

Western

No. 19

September 16, 1868.

City Hall, Room
New Orleans,

Sons,

Isaac Harter &

J. L. Levy &AND EXCHANGE
Salomon,
BROKERS
mon, of New York.
Collections made on all

of this property, aud its manage¬
fully warrant us.in unnesitatingly recommend¬
ing these Bonds, as in all respects, a first class
security.
J. B. ALEXANDER & CO.,

ment,

New York.

BANKING HOUSE OF

P. Hayden.

K1CHMOND, VA.
and Silver, Bank Notes,
Bonds and Stocks, &c.,

of E. J. Hart

to issue at present
secured under this
which we are now authorized to sell, iu
purchasers, at ninety and accrued iuterest.

morigage,

^Advances made on Consignments. Eastern orders
for all Western products solicited. Prompt and care¬
ful attention given.

Co.,

nought and sold on commission.
Deposits received and Collections made
accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent, VEliMILYE

in

dividends.
It is the purpose of the Company
only a snia.l portion of their Bonds

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Chicago, 111.,

Government Lodi

BANKERS & BROKERS,

Partners

.....$100,000

M. Freese & Co.,

I.

several
Government.

R. H. Maury &

STOCK

of

Dement, [111.,

connected with the

MAURY.. xJAS. L.

faltered
description.

which has

RANKERS,

President.

and Financial

Full information with regard to
st all times cheerfully furnUaed.

There is no railroad Corporation in America whose
bonds should more fully command the entire confi¬
dence ot capitalists than this
never
in the payment of its obligations,
every
The net earnings of the road are more than lourlold
the interest on ns present bonded indebtedness, and
the stockholders have received eight per cent cash

lots to suit
Personal knowledge

tion to

No. 1014

Bank,

rity the present indebtedness—thereby making this
the only aud first mortgage, on a road costing
DOUBLE THE AMOUNT.

business transac¬

Age..t of the United States.
We hay and sell all^lftsftes of
Govenment Seen Titles
of the moat favorable terms, and give especial atten¬

Departments of the

at the Bank of America in

provides for the regis¬
the books of the Company
York, by any holder who
may desire this security against loss by theft or other¬
wise ; and also that $2,50u,uo0 oi the bonds shall be set
apart lor the express purpose of retiring at matu¬
This mortgage

New Y'ork.

tering of these bonds on
and at its agency in New

A Regular Banking and Exchange
ted. li.-S. Bonds aud Coin bought aud sold. Capi¬
talists can make desirable Real Estate Investments
through our House. Correspondence solicited.

OF WASH¬

H. D. COOKE (of .Tar Cooke & Co.),
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

H.

eight millions ot dollars, in denominations oi one
thousand each, payable thirty years irom 1st ot April
1808, aud bearing sev. n per cent interest—Coupons

payable April and October,

Isaac Freese, Pres.
J. L. Mansfield,
T. W. Freese, Cashier.

Washington.

KOB’T

oi'

Collections

Capital

in

Bankers.

FEIST NATIONAL BANK

0 **

Puxnett and Jkni1 s B. Alexander, of the city
New York, as Trustees, upon its entire lines ot Road
with all its rolling stock, property, franchise and
come, to secure the prompt payment of its bonds for

DECATUR, ILL.

Freese &

Southern

$C9l^9U0

the above old indebted¬
ness, and of extending its connections Southward
this Corporation has executed a mortgage to James’

MUSSELMAN, President.

All other Banking Business in Philadelphia
trusted to us will receive our prompt attentijn.

M

finished and running 367 miles
monthly increasing earnings, and a moi-buun!

ble points

MOODY, Cashier.

44

1,536,718 04

with
debt of only $2,450,000.
For the purpose of retiring

Manager.

Piompt attention given to
in the Northwest.

227,203 21

earnings

Net

President.

Banking and

OF

time....

$1,30!),514 83

$2,228,609

Road and branches

Company

National

First

^

JUNE, 1868.

in-'

J- Young Scammon
Robert Reid

PAYMENT, Bi THE

Business

Interest Account same

promptly attended to.

NOTES,

E. *.

30TH

Earnings
Running Expenses..

OF, CHICAGO.

Brokers.
CHAS. H. OBERGE

ACCOUNT NO. 7. FISCAL YEAR ENDlYr

Gross

of boots and shoes.

Marine

The

General

N. C.

INCOME

OCTOBER,

of America m New York,

At the Bank

of First National Bank of

S. \V. Ransom, manufacturer
Bacon Wheeler (retired).

Philadelphia
COLLECTED

INTEREST PAYABLE APRIL AND

Henry H. Taylor, Farm Machinery Warehouse.
E. F. PuMfe., of E. F. Pulsiier & Co.
Wm. II. Kretsing* r, lumber merchant.

PHILADELPHI A.
J. BELL

of National City Bank of

FIRST MORTGAGE 30 YEAR 7 PER
CENT BONDS,

Uiica, N. Y., and Chicago & Northwestern RR. Co.
Albert Keen—Director of Michigan Southern and
iv ortliern Indiana RR. Co. aud oi Henry and Albert
Keep.
Alfred Cowles—-ecretary and Treasurer and Director
of Chicago Tribune Co.
P. if. Westfall, oi Merchants, Farmers and Mechanics
Savings Bank.
Henry \V. King, of Henry W. King & Co.
N. O. William*, oi Fitch, Williams & Co.
11. Z. Culver, of Culver, Page & Co. ,

WALNUT STREET,

Commission Stock

Wm. H. Ferry, Vice-Pres.
Gko.L.Otis, Assist. Cash.

DIRECTORS.

Oberge,

&

Chicago.

Capital

Philadelphia Bankers.

Austin

Louisville and Nashville
Railroad

RANK

NATIONAL

COMMERCIAL

BANKERS,

YORK. .
gtocfc,
^„ieni
which we t

XCHANGE PLACE, NEW
Govermr nt Securities, Stocks^Tioncs
bought anus^id, ON hi on Commission,
Miring stout-- v- ooid Boards, oi
.

her

lowed on
Interest allowed on Deposits.
Dividends,!
Liberal advances on Government and
uuvci uiucu,»uu
Information cheerfully given to
Executors etc., desiring to invest.

vancePs°onn

„

„

.

Refer by

.

,

.

permission to

other Securitie
men

Professional me
c Messrs. Lockwood
CO.. | <• dABnky, Morgan ®

*HIII

*ammm*ja| &
®imeo, §taifamt} Ponitor, and fwottrance

lattto’ fctftto, Commercial

WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,

A

representing the industrial and

commercial interests of tiie united

states.

3,1868.

NO. 171.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER

YOL. 7.

have noted in

THE CHRONICLE.

.

..

t

421
422

423
421,

Hampshire
Review of the Month

Chants

in

Redeeming

the

National Banks
Monetary and Commercial

Agents of

Latest

English News

Commercial and Miscellaneous
News

TIIE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND

426

426

usually recover
desolation and

427

energy

433

to

obstacles, must be

in the Anglo-Saxon

all conditions a

COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Cotton
Tobacco

Money Market, Railway Stocks,

surprising to those who
history the tardiness with which nations
from the effects of great wars. Poverty,
bereavement appear to have roused that

other formidable

CONTENTS.
The Commercial Recuperation of
the South
Labor Congresses at Home and
:
Abroad
Debt and
Finances of New

journal

rise above

blood which gives the race under

superiority over circumstances, and an ability

discouragements.'

The promptness with which

ignored the past, and gave itself to the work of
Groceries.,
437 recovering its lost fortunes, augues well tor its future pros¬
428 Dry Goods
National Banks, etc.
415-6
sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange
431 I Prices Current
perity. The new status of the negro has been accepted as
Commercial Epitome
482 j
an accomplished fact, and a spirit of fairness and considera¬
THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.
443
tion has been showrn toward the freedmen beyond what
Railway News
441J ous Bond List
444
Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
442 j Southern Securities
444
Railroad, Canal and Miscellanej Insurance and Mining Journal
might have been expected, the planter having admitted them
to a virtual copartnership in the results of their joint enter¬
&I)e €i)ronicle.
prise. Within three years after the actual emancipation
Thk Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ of the slaves, we find negro labor systematically organized,
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, the colored population earning a comfortable subsistence,
with the latest news up to midnight of Friday.
and their labor yielding a remunerative return to employers.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
The labor system of the South under its new conditions,
For The Commercial
Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier
to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)
For One Year
$10 00 indeed, promises to become a source of progress which in a
For Six Months
6 00 few
years will compensate the South for all the material dis¬
The Cnuo
will be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued by letter.
Negro labor is already proving to be
rostage is 20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office.
asters of the war.
Dana,
j
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers.
John o. floyd, jit.
cheaper under freedom than it was under slavery; and this
j
79 and 81 William Street, cor. of Liberty.
Post Office Box 4,502.
fact foreshadows an early development of industries in that
The peculiar
Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Post section which hitherto have barely existed.
TJ. S. Securities, Gold Market,
Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks. Philadelphia Banks

434
435
4*6

Breadstuff's

the South

...

.

and

icls

wiLLrAM

B.

Office Money Orders.
of the Chronicle for the six months ending
1* 1868, and also previous volumes, can be had at the office.
Bound volumes

THE COMMERCIAL RECUPERATION OF

July

THE SOUTH.

country in a condition more utterly
disorganised and devastated than that in which the South

Rarely has

war

left

a

physical qualifications of the negro for labor in hot climates,
together with his limited wants as compared with the white

him to render a given amount of work for a
lower compensation than will be accepted by the whffe
workman; nor does there appear to be any good reason for
supposing that the competition for colored labor will early
modify its cheapness.
It is easy to see how this fact is likely to conduce to the

laborer, enable

spring of 1865. The most vigorous of its
white male population had been slain or maimed ; its labor development of those industries which requiremuscle
than skill in the laborer. There is, for instance, a broad
system was disorganised ; its plantations a barren waste,
basis for a profitable iron trade, which is already in course
through the lack of contrivances, or from the blighting march
Iron ore of excellent quality
of armies ; its cities were desolate, and its ports destitute of ’of successful development.
exists in the South in abundance, and is easily obtainable on
shipping; its canals and its railroads were in a state of com¬
parative ruin; its capitalists were bankrupt, and there was prominent thoroughfares; while the requisites to its manu¬
Charcoal can be
facture are available at a very low cost.
neither confidence nor credit to command the use of outside
.capital; stocks not only of merchandise but even of the produced there at 5 cents per bushel, while Northern manu¬
was

found in the

rather

commodities essential to subsistence

had become

well nigh

abject ruin has
rarely been witnessed in any country, and the case appeared
all the
hopeless from the fact of one-third of the whole
population having but just passed from a condition of slavery

exhausted ; in short a

condition of more

more

lo that

of almost

helpless self-dependence.

of about 15 cents for the same
material. Negro labor for mining and reducing the ore can
be procured at the rate of 75 cents per day, or about onethird the wages paid in the North.
Considering that charcoal
and labor are the main elements of the cost of producing
iron, it is evident that there is here an ample basis for suc¬
cessful competition with the iron trade of other sections.

facturers are at an expense

with the present posi¬ Nor has the South been slow to discover the strength of
of the inherent
its posi tion in this respect, for even now they have a number
vitality of that section. The recuperation effected within
three years; in the face of political derangement* and many Jof furnaces m full blast producing profitably ft

To compare this condition of things
tion of the South affords a striking evidence




422

.

-

m

THE CHRONICLE.

[October 3,1868.

quality of iron, which is readily sold in our markets. Their impression of new population will contribute much toward
coal deposits also afford similar inducements to that branch the ultimate
development of the country.
of
We have deemed it proper to direct attention to these
mining. The large forests afford «a foundation for the
production of lumber at a cost much below that producec features in the condition of the South because of their favor'
by white labor at the North. So long as the negro popula able bearing upon the commercial prospects of the
country
tion were under the absolute control of a class devoted at large.
almost wholly to planting
and disinclined to manufacturing,
colored labor was
LABOR CONGRESSES AT HOME AND ABROAD.
practically unavailable for developing the
resources of the mine and the
forest; now, however, the
During the past month two important assemblages of the
negro is free to use his labor wherever it may be most so-called “working-classes” have been held, the one in
wanted ;J and there can be little doubt that
capitalists will Europe, the other in America. We describe these as assem¬
be found
ready to employ it largely in the development of blages of the “so-called” working classes, because the title

these hitherto

The

severe

neglected

is not

resources.

practiced by all classes of the South,
has already effected much in the
way of recuperation. Every form of personal and domestic
expenditure has been cut down to a point consistent with
the lowest endurable
degree of comfort. This curtailment
has been
necessary to provide the means of cultivation and
production ; and already so much has been effected through
■uch economy
that, in spite of the heavy losses on the cot¬
ton
crop of 1867, the planters have been able to raise the
crop of this year almost entirely upon their own means
instead of depending, as
formerly, upon the advances of the
factors. This achievement is
important, not only for the
evidence it affords of the
vitality of the planting interest
and the
enlarged share of profits it retains on the planters
hands, but also as establishing a condition of things which
will render the cotton
grower much less dependent than
formerly upon outside capital, and as foreshadowing the
ultimate abolition of the system of credit
upon which the
whole production and trade of the South has
usually been
conducted. It may, we think, be regarded as a fact
already
demonstrated by experience that free labor will be
cheaper
to the
planter than that of the slave. The negroes, as a rule
economy

once

since the close of the
war,

only a misnomer in itself,
results from and leads to a

but a misnomer which at
profound misunderstanding

of the relations between the classes who

assume

it and the

rest of the

community.
Congress of workingmen,” for example, which excludes
all the farm laborers of the
country, is obviously no real
congress of “ workingmen ” at all.
Not less absurd is it to
bestow such a title upon a
congress in which neither the
lawyers, doctors and writers of a country are represented,
A “

nor

yet its mercantile classes.

the workers

not

In this nineteenth century

only everywhere, as they have always
been, in the majority, but the non-workers constitute, even
in the most
retrograde countries of Christendom, an almost
infinitesimal proportion of the
population, and exercise a
scarcely perceptible influence alike upon the social and upon
the political world.
It is difficult, indeed, to extract even
from the muster-rolls of .the “Third
Congress of the Inter¬
national Association of
Workingmen” at Brussels, or the
National Labor Union ” at New
York, an exact and exhaus¬
tive definition of the words “ labor ” and “
wrorkingman ” as
used and understood by these bodies.
But in a loose and
unscientific, though intelligible way, it may be said that
these bodies represent that
portion of the population which
even now work with much
regularity, and as the country brings into the general social economy no other capital than
becomes more settled politically, and the reward of
industry its skilled industry in some mechanical trade. Two main
will, without doubt, stimulate them to render an amount of motives conspire to bring this portion of the
population into
effort greatly in excess of all former
such associations, the one desirable and
experience.
creditable, the other,
The recuperation in the
we
transportation facilities of the
think, neither intelligent in itself nor likely to be of last¬
South has also been far more
rapid than might have been ing potency. We may call these motives the instinct of
expected. This recovery is due, to a considerable extent, co operation, and the passion of combination.
to the assistance rendered
by the government in furnishing
By the instinct of co-operation we mean the disposition of
rolling stock at the close of the war, but mainly, however, workmen whose intelligence enables them to forecast the
to the very
necessities of the country which the rapid devel¬ future, but whose resources do not permit them easily to
opment of wealth are making apparent. At the close of the assure themselves against its
chauces, to form alliances
war the railroads were in a state of utter
dilapidation. The among themselves with the object of providing mutual guar¬
owners had no resources for
repairing them or supplying the antees against those chances. This disposition gave birth in
required rolling stock. With a certain promise of an ulti¬ the middle ages to the famous
“guilds” and “ brotherhoods,”
mate recovery of traffic,
the roads have been bought up or the influence of which, both for good and for evil, is still felt
leased in this condition on favorable
terms, and placed in in many of the more important mechanical trades. One of
fair running condition.
The result has been a large im¬ the most striking forms in which this
disposition has ever
provement in the traffic, and in many cases the resumption
developed itself exists and flourishes now in full vigor in the
of stock dividends.
It appears from a return in our issue of Russian Aittelschiks. In
these communaled corporations
September 12, that 1,333 miles of road in Georgia earned, eachi ndividual makes himself
responsible not only for the
Last year, $5,287
per mile gross, or $2,160 net, which is well being, but for the well
doing of the rest of the body cor¬
over 10
per cent net on the cost oj the roads, and that divi¬
porate. How high a standard of probity and of capacity was
dends were paid to the stockholders
ranging from 2£ to 10 gradually set up by the great trade corporations of mediaeper cent per annum. This fact illustrates the rapid
recovery Europe we know; and it is to this day a notable fact in
of the railroad interest.
France that the “ carpenters,” who of all the mechanics of
Much, however, remains to be effected before the South France have preserved their
corporate organization in the
3an be considered in a sound and
healthy condition. While fullest vigor, are also of all the mechanics of France those
i
large amount of formerly cultivated land remains waste who furnish from their ranks the smallest contribution to the
ind plantations can be bought at one-third or one-half
their annual quota of crime. “ It is almost unheard of,” says an
ralue before the war, there is
clearly a sad lack of resource able French writer on these subjects, “ that a carpenter
or
bringing up production to its former dimensions. The should be found in the criminal dock of one of our courts.”
learness of real estate, however, is
steadily attracting enter¬
A new and modern form taken by this instinct of co-ope¬
prising, active men of the North to settle there; and this ration results from the modern development of machinery*




“

are

423

THE CHRONICLE.

October 3,1868.]

as
progressive
establish, by wrestling upon those workingmen”failures ofown “socialistic”
with
the
truths The
Contributions of capital, workshops and factories, which they politicians of France in 1848, undoubtedly did more than
by contributions of skill and industry. This form all the lectures
delivered before the “ Societie d’Econo'
0fco-operation is one of the salient facts of recent social
Politique” to disenchant the intelligent “ workingmen ’’
.history. ^ has assumed much more important proportions of France, in regard to the existence of any royal or repub¬
[in Europe, and particularly in Germany and the North of lican roads
satisfactory adjustment of social burdens
[England, than in this country. But it was shown at the and advantages. And it is noteworthy that the one political
Congress of the “National Labor Union,” in this city, that purpose which was most clearly and most earnestly urged
single branch of industry, that of iron-founding, no by the delegates at Brussels upon their constituent classes,
fewer than eleven co-operative workshops have, within a few
the eminently sound, conservative and co-operative
years past, been successfully established in different parts of policy of a reduction of the European armaments. The
!
mean

,

the

their

the “

economy

co-operation of mechanics to

.

on

ever

mie

to

a

in one

was

the country.

delegates to the American Labor Congress were hardly so
of Workingmen,” rightly or wise so enlightened, we think, in their development of a
wrongly so styled by way of exclusion, may bring to light political plan. The project of forming a “ workingman’s
the advantages of the spirit of co-operation, help to point
party ” involves, we think, more damage to the intellectual
out the perils and abuses to which it is liable, and generally
health than benefit to the economical interests of the “work¬
instruct both the workingmen themselves and the rest of the
ingmen.” But it is one thing to plan a political party, and
world in regard to subjects connected with this spirit, it
another thing to create it.
There being in reality no such
must be conceded that they will do good, great good, and
antagonism between capital and labor, either in this country
only good.
elsewhere, as there is assumed to be by the’ planners of
Is it otherwise with the other, which, in some cases, also
“ labor party,” there can be little doubt, we think, that the
is the stronger motive to the assemblage of such Congresses,
native good sense and character of American “ workingmen ”
the “passion,” namely, as we have called it, “of combina¬
will rap;dly detect this fact, and so suffer the “ Lab^r Party”
tion?” By this we mean the desire of a body of workmen
to die before it is well brought into the world.
whose intelligence exceeds their command of material
resources, to compel the rest of the community into forming
DEBT AND FINANCES OF NEW HAMPSHIRE.
widithem relations which it appears to them would be more
Previous to the breaking out of the late war New Hamp¬
profitable and more equitable. This desire found its su¬
preme expression in our times in the action taken by the shire was free from debt and had small liabilities. The sue:
so-called “workingmen ’ of Trance during the French revo
cessive calls for men to till the national army and recruit the
lution of 1848.
Its ordinary formula is a protest against naval and marine forces necessitated large expenditures, which
the “tyranny of capital over labor,” its ordinary outcome in could only in part be met by current revenue, and hence
political matters, the demand for such legislation as the other large sums were raised on bonds and notes. Probably
“Eight Hour Bill,”, now a law in this country by act of the total expended in bounties and relief exceeded $5,000,000,
Congress. We need not go back over all the terrible and of which $3,490,204 was outstanding at the close of the last
all the preposterous incidents of the French revolutionary fiscal year, June 1,1868.
The following table exhibits the
outbreak of 1848 to set clearly before our readers the character and amount of this debt in considerable detail for
to which this “ passion of combination” then led the three last years at that date comparatively, and shows
So far as

.

the “Congresses

or

or
a

excesses

$3,909,918 to

subjected to its sway. These excesses were that in two years it has been reduced from
cruelly expiated in the severity with which French society $3,490,204, or by $419,714 :
—Outstanding June 1,'1868.
1867.
chastised their culminating extravagance, the “ insurrection
I860.
of June.” The recollection of them has been perpetuated in Six per cents, i-sued under act of June
1801: dated July 1, lSfl; interest Jan. 1866
$
$100,000 $
the classes

the

capitalist classes of
regarded everything
demonstration made by the intel¬

of vague terror with which the
the Continent of Europe have ever since
sort

approaching to a political
ligent mechanic classes. That the excesses of 1848, however,
were not without their
salutary uses is shown, we think, by
the tone of such Labor

been held in

Congresses as these
Belgium and United States.

It is true that in both
uttered

as

to the basis

fbe “
workingmen

a

which have just

of wild talk was
social order, and that in both

certain amount

of the

” exhibited a

disposition to expect im¬

possible things from governments and from political machiDery. But this is true of other classes in the community,

It would be hard, we pre¬
sume, to find a more complete contrast between the condi¬
tions of any two classes of men than exists between that of
the
“workingmen ” and that of the brokers in Wall street.
Yet the days are not very far gone into the past, in which
Congress was seriously entreated by brokers and bankers to
keep the “ gold market” quiet and regular by acts in such
ease made and
provided. And the safety of the “ working¬
men” and of society is furthered, we believe, rather by the
utterance of the incorrect theories fermenting in the heads of
tlie former class, than by their suppression in speech leading
to their dissemination in desire.
No possible number of
Congresses ” held by statisticians and economists, would

as

weB

as

of the

workingmen.

^

effect in impressing




the truth’?

Six per

cents,

issued under act of

rand July;

payable Jan.1

100,000
97,200
92 O' 0

100,000
100(00

18S4
1839

do
do

do
do

do
do
do

follows

do
dj
do
do

outstanding
payable

Total funded

92,000
100,000
100,000

100,000
100,000
100,000

100,000
100,000
110,000

109,000

100,000
110,000

100,000
110,000

278,000

1869

,

450.0C0

4~0,000

150,000

150,000

150.000

500,000

•

500,000

500,000
t

1867
1868
1870
... 1871
1872
1873
1874

300,000
0,000

2

....

-

-

-

.

....

,

234,100
116,000

•

•

•

•

250,000
250, (M’O
162,500

157,500
2"0,000

135,000
210,000
250,000

$1,291,ICO $1,194,100
600,000
428,000

do
do

do

Bonds of Sept., 1864
Bonds of Jan. 1,1866
Bonds of Oct. 1, 1866
Total bonds

(

97,200

100,000
100,000

of July,
interest April
as

100

100,000
100,000

100,000
100,0 0

issued under act

Six per oents,
1866; dated Oct. 1, 1866;
and Oct.; payable Out. 1,
do
do
do
do

Notes

10 ,<'00

August,

interest March
1, as fallows ..
do
do
do
Eiirht per cents, issued under act of June,
1885: dated Jan. 1, 186b; interest Jan.
1864; dated -ept. 1,1864;
and Sept.; payable Sept.

94,900

94,900
100,000
100,000
97,200
92,0 0
100,000
100,000

1867
1868
1869
1870
1871
1872
1873
1874
1875
1876
1877
1878

$1,099,300
600,000

80.000

500,000

..

and floating debt

500,000

500,000

1,387,600

1,257,500

$2,222,100 $3,681,700

$3,456,800

$3,909,918 $3,791,337

$3,490,204

....

1,687,818

109,637

33,104

cents, which
become due January, 1869, none of these liabilities bear over
six per cent.
All interest is payable in currency. Thera
paid to creditors for coupons and interest last year tha
political following amounts i for coupons $224,361, and interest ort
With the

were

exception of $500,000 in 8 per

41
3
42
THE CHRONICLE.

424

$1*7.163—total $241,524. The payments on these
accounts will be about $20,000 less in the year 1868-69.
The
amount of debt due at the close of the fiscal year 1867-68
notes

and that will mature

during the

year

1868-69, is as follows
$100
100,000
250,600

Bond overdue and uncalled for
Bonds to become due Ju'y 1, 1808
“
“
October 1, 1868

These has been the hesitation

degree of ac'ivity.!

amon*

long as the abnormal condition^?
values exists, and iu some branches of trade holders have had
to
meet this feeling by a partial concession in prices; but
upon the
whole, the month’s business has been satisfactory. The West has
which cannot but show itself

so

large amount of goods, and the South has been more
Januaiy 1, 1869
500,000—$850,100 fully represented than at any period since 18G1. It may perhaps
he safely assumed that domestic manufacturers have realized
Notes due anrl nncalled for
5.200
very
Notes to become due prior to February 20, 1S69
28,201— 03,404 fair
profits upon their products recently marketed. The trade in
Total due and to become due
$8S3,504
foreign goods, however, has been somewhat irregular as to its results
The Treasurer has in bonds of 1866
$242,500
And is authorized to issue notes
201,177— 533,677 There appears to have been an over supply of some classes of
dry
Balance
$340,82
goods, owing to heavy consignments from Europe; and, at the
auction sales, large lines of fabrics have realised but little over the
—to be provided from surplus revenue and by new loans.
gold cost, leaving a heavy loss to the consignors. The crop moveANNUAL RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES.
ment has varied somewhat from that of the same month of last
taken

a

revenue

of New

Hampshire is derived chiefly from

White t’e receipts of grain at the lake ports have been
taxes on properly, railroads and savings’ banks.
The follow¬
unprecedented, the quantity sent oast has been much less
than in September of 1867, the grain merchants here being cautions
ing shows the receipts and disbursements of the last flsca
at making heavy purchases at the late current prices. Western
year:
DISBURSEMENTS.
RECEIPTS.
$135,461 21 holders, however, somewhat moderated their views; and as the New
$624,816 SI Ordinary expense*'
State taxes
97,707 04 York Central and Erie railroads have much reduced their
203,284 64 Extraordinary expenses...
Railroad taxes
freights
Savings’ bank taxes.
77,227 65 Dividends to towns..!.... 156,915 l2S
S les >»l public lands
37,019 24 during the month it is to be expected that the next few week3 there
25,(00 00 Literaly fund
242,388 19
Interest on deposits, &c...
2,4s5 8 > Interest on bonds, &c
1,102 00 Principal debt
Miscellaneous
828,539 50 will be a material gain in the Eastward movement of produce.
18,684 72
Loans
527,404 00 Cash June 1, 1868
This de:ay in the forwaiding of grain to the seaboard has had a
Cash June 1,1S67
55,424 48
Total!
1,516,745 38 somewhat direct bearing upon the course of the money market.
Total
1,516,745 38
The lightness of the supply of grain bills made at New York
TOWN DEBTS AND ASSETS.
and Buffalo has tended to keep down the loans of the banks, the
The report of the State Treasurer for 1867-6S contains a
result being that, for the greater part of the inouth, demand loans
statement of the debt, assets, rates of taxation, etc., in each
have ranged at
per cent, a much easier condition of things
year.
almost

May 1, 1868. This exhibit is too voluminous foi than prevailed in September of 1867. Discounts of prime paper
our columns ; and in its stead we give the following aggre¬
have been generally done at 6£@7 per ceut.
Wall street firms en¬
gates in each county. The debts here.spoken of are not mil¬ gaged largely iu stock operations, as a precaution against a repeti¬
itary, each town having had its advances returned by the tion of the stringency expeiienced a year agr, have borrowed large
State, nor have we any description of their character or pur- amounts on stock and bond, during the month, at 6@7 per cent, for
from 64 to 90 days, and fliese loans having materially reduced the
posec:
Tax pp 11-,
,-Tax p $100 *al—.
demand for call loans, have partially contributed to the ease in the
Lowest. llig best. Low. lliirli.
Assets
Debts.
Counties.
Rockingham
$1,332,156 57 $218,008 59 $1 38 $5 00 $3 29 $9 22 rates upon demand transactions.
At the date of the last bank
5 34
8 19
1 33
9
101.675 99
Strafford
688,373 02
5 67
1 55
2 36
3 72
statement, the banks were, income respect^, iu an easier position
52,997 »7
490,070 59
Belknap
4 08
9 50
1 86
3 96
53.050 11
Carroll
447,609 63
thau at the corresponding period of last year, as wi 1 appear from
6 26
1 20
2 61
2 88
Merrimac
1,246,505 03
153,211 99
town as

of

-

o

447,251 45

342.634 38
f 5.275 62
58,264 85

1,058,223 04
303,263 90

170,4 4 19
52.854 41

1,237,129 26

Hillsborough
Cheshire
Su livan
Grafton
Coos

554,685

22

1

25

1
1
0
1

20
32
87

1

6 0
3 85

$0 S7

97
40

00

8
2
3
2
2

o

53

08
4S
60

7
6
5
14
1)

$2 10 $14

2 95
2 70

$6 00

•

88
17
10
52

40

i

$7,826,267 71 $1,258,107

Total

the

highest rates of taxation

found in Graf
County—the town of Grafton exhibiting the, lowest, and
town of Thornton the highest rate.
In relation to the

The lowest and
ton

c: m

are

above returns the Treasurer remarks that “ the assets
reliable.

are

not

Some selectmen

giving only such as are available,
species of property and - claims.
Some include the highway tax in their rates of taxation, and
others give only the money tax.”
This explanation may, in
some
degree, explain the wide difference in the rates given in
while others

include every

the table.

savings’

banks.

The

following are the names of all
the State and the amount of deposits
Deposits,
$1,463,637 57

Banks

Amoskea?

62 009 00

Ashueot
Carroll County
Cheshire Pi o. Inst

145*< 92

City Manchester
City Nashua

291,335 2?
443,647 22

onnecticut River
Dartmouth
Dover Five Cents
Exeter
Gome Five Cents
Manche ter
Meredith Bridge
Merrimac River

<

...

65

858,730 54
1*5,028
110,271
143,231
134,041
33,446

39
12
16
81

i

the Savings’ banks in
therein June 1, 1868

Banks.

[ Milfo d Five Cents

Na-hua
New Humpshire...
New Ipearch
Newmarket

Norway Plains
Peterborough
oittsfie d
Portsmouth
holiinsford

Dep' si
...

s. r

$144,681 69
597,5’3 32
493,444 30
90,200 00

the

following comparison :

26
61
46
00

265,601 3t

57
997.936 18

County « f Strafford

731,486 00

Somerswurth

2 8,S67 09

8u livau

208,973 h3
*41,072 80

835,678 13

Wilton

15,942 99

speaks well for New Hampshire to have it recorded that
the entire default in the receipt of taxes in 1865 amounted
only to $5 61 ; in 1866 to $11 88, and in 1867 to$l,046 56.

Sept. 28, 1867.




9.

...

10
11...
13 ....
15...16...-.
17
13

19
21
a

a

26

jS

....

29
3)

First..
Lmvest

Higher
Range
Last...,

The

securii
shares'
in the

Dt

Tnesdj
Wedn’j
Thursd

Friday.
Sat’dij
Monda]
Tn’sda;
Wednes
Toured

Friday
Saturda

Mondij
Taesda
Wednei
Thors.,

Friday,
Haturdo

Mouda]

The

ending

31,100,000
181,4' 0,000
55,900,000

75Ji@

sudden increase
iu the demand tor money, apparently due, to some extent, to arti¬
ficial efforts to tighten the market, uuder which the rate on call
loans advanced on the 30th to 7 per cent, and in exceptional cases
even 7 per c nt m gold.
United States securities have been quiet, so far as respects the
operations of investors. There has, however, been m ch specula¬
tive activity, growing out of an expectation that the market would
react from the lute unusual y high quotations.
Large “short
ales have been made under this idea ; but the supply ot bonds
being in the hands of one or two leading firms the sellers have been
at the mercy of holders, and prices have b en maintained until near
the close of the month, when there was a decline of f to li per
cent.
The following are the comparative prices of bonds on Sept.
30,1868, an! Sept. 30, 1867;
Sept. 30,

eariiin,

202,000,000
63,500,000

deposits
Ligai tenders
At the close of the

month, however, there was a

Sept. 30,
1868.

113%
112%

United States Sixes 1881 coupon3
United States Five-twenties 1862 coupons
“

“

1864

“

“

“

1865

“

“

“

1865
1867

“
“

109%
109%

“

“

...

..."

Sept

The

a eons

hands

prevai
ard t(
to 31

slight;
the foi
Classi
Bank g

Railroai
Coal

Mining

Improv’

Tefegrai

Steamsi

Eipr’gg
ToU

2867.
1M

113%
109

109%

The

closing
at

the

107%
107%

and Se

during the month have largely ex¬
ceeded those for the corresponding period of 1867, as w 11 be seen

fiailro
Alton &

from the

Chicago

,

107%

(new)
..

108

The transactions in bonds

following statemmt:
BONDS

SOLD

AT THE

N.

1867.

Classes.

Y. STOCK EXCHANGE BOARD.
186S.
Inc.

U. S. bonds...

$17,340,000

U. S. notes
St’e &city b’ds

2,297,800

Company h’ds

1,692,750

$23,892,150

$6,552,150

10,058,000

7,760.200

841,000

1,658,300

817,300

$22,171,550

$35,608,450

$13,436,!KK)
6,820,810

152,044,630

158,865,440

The

do

do

UeC’

daily closing prices of the principal Government securiti
JfThe course of trade and finances during September, though not at the New York Stock Exchange Board in the month of Sep¬
in some respects what has been expected, yet affords some cause for tember as represented by the latest sale officially reported, art
granulation. The merchandise markets have exhibited a very fair shown in the following statement f
'

7

34,000,0' '0

12,6a0.0i)0

specif
Circulation

-since Jan. 1....

REVIEW OF THE MONTH.

1
2
3
4.....
5

$251,900,000
9,500,000

Total—September
.

month.

$271,200,000

Total, 28 institutions, and $1U,297,035 53 deposits,

It

Sept. 26, 1868.

Loans and discounts

25,436 36

311,3rd)
177,430
21,924
1,078,394

pay o f

very

“

The

be

[October 3,1868.

Chicago,
do
d)
do

do

peve.,(
do
pi
do &
do &

| el-, Lado

/

trie...

do pre

October 3,1868.]
1S81.-W

myerg
ion of

113 #

iad to
st

1862.

Reg.

Coup.
,

114

114#

113#

Ill#

108

108#
108#
108#
108#

113#

l1-3#

ha8
113#
...

.

■

113#

114#
114#

.....

114

113#
113#
H3#
113#
llo#
113#

H3#
113#

109#

HI#
HI#
111#
111#
111#
HI#

109#

111

ioo#

110#
111#

ioif#

109#

113#
114#
113#

111

114#
115#

110#

114#

109#

.

114

1'

......

114

111’*.

in"
114#

...

114

113#
112#

113

112#

Highest....

irni

ioo#

109#

102#

#

112#

Last

111#
109#
111#
1#
109#

109#
109#'
110#

2

.....

108#

105

108#

109

108#

105#

109

ICS#
108#

105
105

108#'

108#
108#
108#

109

109#
108#
108#
108#

109

109#
109#

109

ioo#

105
105
105

109

105

109
109

108#
109

109#

109

m#
ill#
in#
in#
lio#
110#
110#

9#

109 #

108#

309
In!)

109#

114#
112#
114#

First
Lowest...

Range

113#

ios#

105#
305#
305#

ill #

no#
110#

115

107#
308#
108#
108#

iii' * 108#

110

113#

in

iio '

114#
1H#

114

iii#

109#
109#
109#

—,5’ s, 10-40

1867. 1S68. yrs .C’pn.

new.

109#

109#
113# 109#
113#- 10.)#

113#

114

1865.

114

the

more

-G’s, (5 ■20 yfe. ) Coupon
1844.

109
109

,

109#
109#
1(1!)

104#

105

104#

ioo"

104#

109#
109#
109#
109#

109#
10 <#

109#

ioi#
105

104#
104#

109

108#

108#
108#' 108#

109#
10!)#

108#

108#

108#
108#
307#

108#
1 8#

109#
109#
108#

108

107#

109#
1#
107#

a

104#

108#
108#
109#
1#
108#

Vi

1#
108

105#
104#
105#
%

104#

COURSE OF CONSOLS AND AMERICAN SECURITIES AT LONDON.

York

Cons Am. securities.
for U. S. Ill.C. Eric
inon. 5-20s sh’s.
shs.

Date.

the

3,

Consi

Date.

94
94
94

....

Wedn’y

Thursday...

71#
71#

91#

30#
30#

72

91#

31#

72#

94#

Friday
Sat'day
Monday
Tn’sday

91#

securities
Ill.C. 1 Erie
sh s. jslv’s.

for
inon.

91

31

(Iloli day.)
94

Wednesday..

71#

91

30#

91
94
94
94

....

72
72

91#

30#

91

Tuesday...
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday

jSaturday
Monday
[TufS'lay

94# I
94#

...
....

.

.

Thurs

94#
94#

72#

91

72#

94

Friday
Saturday....
Monday

Wednesday.

71#

72#

90#
90#

SO

31#
32#
33#
32#

93#

33#

94

O Vtf

95#
95#

32

90#

94#
94#
291 94#
94#

31#

95#
5

3#

„

91#

84#

90#
4#

Dng J
30# Last....
SO#|

102

3 >#

17#
95#

73*

94#

29#
50#
20#
31#

The

closing prices of Five-Twenties at Frankfort in each week
ading with Thursday, were as follows :

1,1867.
100,000

Sept. 3.
75ft@75#

300,000
100,000

410,000
300,000

call

cases

to 3 months’ time.

ts the
c

would
hart ”

The

ou

the whole active.

transactions for

Classes,

Railroad

1,819
1,446,063

44

Coal

2 been
.

4.151

jtotng “i<>;5«i
10,561
Impr°v’nt11
Telegraph “■

11,059
11,659

1,637,129
2867.

110#
113#
109

109#

107#
107#

ly ex*
e

seen

The

following

^ing prices

been

Dec

Increase.

2,188

15,401

Railroad Stocks—

[Won & Terre Haut
1°,
Pref
do

19,615
81,498
110.074

1,730,629
14,544,OlS

Clos.

378

27,753

136

138#

Dec.
,

J§t. Eastern.
Northwest’n

®

40

82#

40
83#

do pref. 81# 83#
Wg
* Bock Island, llo# 112#
£e‘p«?1,,Cln-& Iud* 88
88
2; ial?f8v* & Asnta. ioo
ioo
do

*t>

17 I
40
80

79#

97#
81

97#

57,144
40,852
64,606,




«8^

73#

142
144

73#

40*

S4
84

90#
91#
104#

102#
81#

98#

68

70

72#

158#
158#

*40*

118#
80#
92#
47#

72#

Ido m
1
m

82
98

23

119

118

pref

83#
83#
lul#

22#

86#
101#

98#

Uo

142
145
17L
40

S3

....

....

77#

65#

....

9*4"

84
63

96

94#
65#

....

13*4*

132#

132#

120

124

120

122

125#

lh*

130#

143
!)!

‘>2
2!)
89
364

141
92

369

123
140
92
28
78
360

T26#

140

10#

111#

107

.

•

121

119

132#
145
91

36#
7##

28#
78
358

2!)#
89

91
114

53#

63#

114
83
iso
61

73

73

73#

78

80
180

«...

HI
92

'

28#
78
3(0
109 '

89#

95#

51

93#

114

114

SO
ISO

83
180

-

53#

59#

73#

7S

—

American Coal
‘Cumberland Coal

45

45

30

29

Del. *fc Hud. Canal Coal. 1 1
200
Pennsylvania Coal
Pacific Mail
101#

Atlantic do
Union Navigation

.

200

104 Vf

19#

15

17#

15#
45#
10#

8.14

301#

127
..

107
21

8#

pref

48

11#
b#

T

7

Manhattan Gas.........
West. Union Telegraph.
Bankers & Brokers Ass.

113#

27#
15#
45#
11'

48

Quicksilver

127
....

19#

4

17#

.

131

101 #
20

101#

27#

33**

29#

128

200

98#

15
27

..

1 o.ver

200

35**

29#

127

10#
8#

do

118#

83

133#

.

dopiet.

21#

22#

•

21

20

....

15#

15#

46

49#

....

....

....

15
46

15
46
.

....

.

,

.

*7*
x0

3?

.*35*

*33*

99

105

99

31#
105

Express—

American

45#
52#

United States
Merchant’s Union
Wells, Fargo & Co

45#

40

53

46

21#

46#
24#

26#

Adams

27#

41
1SV
24#

46
...

...

gold premium bus steadily declined from 14“>£, at the open¬
ing uf the month, to 141 £■ at the close, the change being apparently
due mainly to the low lutes of
exchange following the large exports
of bonds in July and August, and to the
prospect of the grain and
cotton exports realizing a larger amount than those of last
year.
The receipts ol treasure from California have
s'ightly exceeded
those of

September last year, while the cxpoits of specie have been
about $2! O,t)00 less than then.
The following formula will show the movement of coin and bullion

during the month of September, 18G7 and I8G8, comparatively
GENERAL MOVEMENT

OF

In

banks,

near first

82

101
so¬

los#
122
lOi
97

52#

70#

63#
22#
141
144

*38*
81

83#
100#
79#
96#
81#
100#
118#
80#
92
46
68

Clos.
4.3

63#
23
150
151

*40*
08

88#
102#
79#
96#
84#
102
1>2
101
93

46#

70#

AND

BULLION

Receipts from California
Imports of

and million
Coin interest paid
Redemption of loan of 1&47-’4S

supply

Exports of coin and

i

Total withdrawn

ss

2,841,944
896,9 9

554.799

3,333,13!)

616,180

549,400

549,400

..

$
1,302,471
9,496,163

of wiilidsawals

$1,009,097

$9,186,498 $9,ISO,498
..

...

.......

12,603,483

$

$

$302,259
$
$
1,302.471

3,107,320

$3,417,085

Derived from unreported sources $10,798,634

The

Decrease

$

23',504

342,160
2,716,959

$14.244,625 $15,253,722

Excess of reported supply

:

YOt K.

Increase.

$12,942,151 $24,440,220 $11,498,066
$2,27' ,S0l
$1,974,272
11,967,824
1 3,279,450
1,311,6 6

ullion

Customs duties

Exc

NEW

2,611.440

coin

Total reported

AT

3863.

$7,271,595 $16,815,773 $9,514,183

$7,381,519

following exhibits the fluctuations of the New York gold
September, 18GS.

market in tne month of

COURSE

L w.
43

COIN

1867.

1,806,737

46#
65#

'45#

urities
trie

64
225

.

93,500

Open. High.

87
103

85

f Sep-

03
213

Toledo, Wah. &’Western

Boston Water

....

iis

....

S4
64

*8*0

Miscellaneous

51#

....

*77# *97#

83#

80

do

146

51

so#

....

*76*

76

84

Rome «fc WatertoWn

do

143#

iii)-

85#

107

Sroniugton

2,041

43
64

21#

107

89#

140#

....

iii)’

84#

310

to

'S
OJ

Date.

t,o

j

Lowest.

OF GOLD AT NEW YORK.

&b

.5
tfi

S

'E

Date.

_o

5

145
Tuesday
1 144# 144#! 145
Wednesday.. 2 115
144#; 145#' 144#
Thursday..
3 144# 143# | 144# 144
Friday
4 143# 143#! 144# 141
Saturday
5 114# 144# 1144# 144#
Monday
7 144# 114#! 145
144#
Tuesday
8 144# 144# 114# 144#
144# 144# 144#; 144.#
Wednesday.. 9
Thursday... .10 144# 144# 144# 144#
Friday
11 143# 143# 14)#' 144#
.12 14-# .144
Saturday
144# 144#
Monday
14 144# 1143# 144# 143#
Tuesday
15 143# 143# 144# 144#
Wednesday. .16 141# 1144 % 144# 144#
Thursday.. ..17 144# ,144# 144# 144#
Friday
18 (143# 144# 144# 144#
Saturday
19 144# 144#' 144# 144#
Monday
21 |144# 144# 144# 143#
.

..

88#

87

*

Specie in banks at end

:

August
Open. High. Low.

iio

121

124
122
90

338

51#

....

108#
90#

appc»r from

of all th ) railway and miscellaneous securities quoted
[at the New York Stock
Exchange during the months of August

®

1!!)#
SS#
106

..

OQ

hod September, 1868

*2S

28

2d pref,

do
S. & N. Ind.
Mil. & P. du Clrn, l<tpr
dr
do
vd pr
Milwaukee & St. Paul..
a«>
do pref.
Morris & Essex
New Haven & Hartford.
New Jersey
do
Con Hal
New York Central
do
<fc N. Hawn.
Norwich & Worcester..
Ohio & Mississippi
do
do
pref

table will show the opening, highest, lowest and

18#

d, are

have

1,461,464
3,773
38,317
13,700

tt

’,692,750

*5#

36!)

40,646
45,468

Sept,
ept. 30,

1868.

n;
76,759

■

.

28

Michigan Central

The

the month

1867.

thnk shares

bonds

Li P*

75#

m;8

slighty in exc'ss of the same month of 18G7, as will
the following-statement of sales at both boards:

ila-

1 near

Month.

Sept.. 24.

75#

increasing
earnings of the roads have encoitrag d outside operators to buy, and
a considerable amount
of stocks has probably passed from the
hands of the cliques info the hands ol
temporaty operators. The
prevailing tendency of speculation has been toward higher prices
ard to secure this the
cliques appear to have borrowed freely on 2

artin

Sept. 17.

The stock market has been

jrease
1

Fept. 10.
75#

ID#

4

Cinciu., 1st pref.

do

110

124
122
87

124
122
90
90
142
146

The

20#
33#

90#

J-g

31

93
93

9(#

30#
90# 30# I
72
90# 30# I Lowest
(Iloli day.)
j Highest
72
94
90# 29# Range
9‘# 70 3/ 90# 30#
94
91
72
30# Low ) 0th..
94# 72# 90# 30# Ilig
c..

Thursday...
Friday ...»
Saturday....
Mond,y
Tuesday....
Wedney.....

91#

94#

.

Ind. & Cin innati

Mar. &

124
122
S7
^7
310
135
51

•

•

84
83

151

Mariposa

t

Taesdy

Illinois Central

Third Avenue

lei)

•

.

-

108

307#
107.#

•

Pitrsb., Ft. W. & Cltica. 110#
Reading
9J#

closing prices of Consols for money and certain American
securities (viz U. S. GJs 5-20’s 18G2, Illinois Central and Erie
shares) at London, on each day of the month of September are shown
io the following statement :

irket.

do
pref
Hannibal & St. Joseph
85#
do
do pref.
86
Hudson River .1
140

Panama

The

had

425

Harlem

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES AT NEW YORK.

PRICES OP

>n

THE CHRONICLE.

of

a

|

Tuesday

22
Wednesday ..23
Thursday
24
25
Friday
Saturday
26
Monday
.28
Tuesday
29
Wednesday.. 30
....

■^cpt.
“

...

60

Openi’g Lowest.

Cfi

r3j

41
44

44
44

.

.1S68.... 144# 141# 145# HI#
1867....
I860....
1865....
1864....
1803
1862,...
...

44

Closing.

143# 142# 143# 142#
143
14;# 143# 142#
142# 141# 142# HI#
142
141# 142# 142#
142# 142# 142# 142#
142# 141# 142# HI#
141# 141# 141# 141#
HI# 141# 14.# 141#
141# 141
146# 143#
147# 143# 147# 1146#

144# 142# 145
191
254#
127
126# 143#
116# 116# 124

245

—

—

—

S’ce Jan 1, 1868 133# 133# 150

144
193

—

141#

the principal European markets daily in the month
September, 1868 :
-

days bills

on

,

-

HI#
122#

426
COURSE OF

!

109% @169%
109% @109%

12
14
15
16..
17
IS..
19..
21..
22..
23..
24..
25..
26
28..
29..
30..
.

109
109

.

II

.

-

u

@109%
@109%

10.V%@109
108% @4' 9
108% @109
10>%@10)
108%@103%
108% @108%
108% @108%
108%@10S%
108% @108%
108% @108%
108% @108%
108% @108%

.

GJ)

i.

1868.

40% @10%
40% @10%

40%@4 %
40%@40%
40% @40%
40% @49%
40%@4>«%
40% @40%
40% @40%
40% @4>%
40% @40%
40% @40%
40% ©10%
40% @10%
40% @40%
40%@4 ■%
40%@4o%
40% @40%
40% @10%

516%@515
516% @515
510%@515
516%@515
516%@515
518%@516%
518%@516%
518%@510%
518%@516%
518% @517%
518% @517%
518% @517%
518%@517%
518% @517%

79%@79%
79% @79%
79% @< 9%

79%@:9%

79%@.9%
79%@7@%
79%@79%
79% @79%
79 V, @79%
79)4 ©79%
79% @79%

Berlin,
cents for
tlialcr.

71%@71%
71% @71%
71%@71%
71%@71%
71% @71%
71% @71 %
71% @71 %
-11 >,@71%
71%@71%
71%@71%
71V @71%
71 %@71 %
71%@71%
71 >,@71%

35%@35%

S5%@35%
35%@35%
3 %©35%
35%©35%
35% @35%
35% @35%

35% @35%
35%@35%
35%@35%
35% @35%
79 % @79% 35% @35%
3 %@35%
79 V, @79%
79% @79% 3*%@35%
71%@71%
79% @19% 35%@35%
71%@71%
19% @79% 35% @35%
71% @71%
79% @79% 35%@35Jh
71% @71%
79 @79% 35% @35%
520 @518%
71% @71%
79 @79% 35% @35 Jo
520 @518%
71%'@71 %
35 % @35%
40% @10% 79 @79%
5 0 @518 ‘4
35% @35% 71%@7'%
79 @79%
520 @518% 40%@40%
35%@35%' 71 %@71%
79 @79%
520 @518% 40% @40%
35% @35% 71% @71%
40% @40% 79 @79%
520 @518%
71% @71%
40%@40% 79 @79% 35% @35% 71%@71%
520 @518%
35% @35%
40% @10% 79 @79%
5.0 @518%
35%@35% 71% @71%
520 @518% 40% @10% 79 @79%

@79%

@515

40% @40%

79

521 %@515

’l08%@109%

40% ©41 %

78), @73%'

520

Sept.
1867. 109

Amsterdam. Bremen. Hamburg,
cents for
cents for
cents for
rix daler. M. banco.
florin.

518% @517%
518% (o 517%
518% @517%

10S%@’09%
2..
10S%@109%
1
3..
108%©109%
10 <%@109%
4..
5..
109%@109%
7..
109% @104%
8.
109% @109%
9..
1.09%'@159%
16..
109%©109%
11.. 109% @109%
1..

(60 DAYS) AT NEW YORK

EXCHANGE

Paris.
centimes
for dollar.

London.
cents for
54 pence.

Dave.

FOREIGN

@110

REDEEMING AGENTS OF NATIONAL BANES.
The following arc the changes in the Redeeming Agents of National
Banks for the week ending Oct ber 1.
These weekly changes
furnished by, and published in accordance with an arrangement made

CHANGES IN THE

are

with the

Comptroller of the Currency.
AGENT.

REDEEMING

RANK.

NAME OF

LOCATION.

I October 3,1368.

CHRONICLE,

THE

responding period in 1867, and the probability h that, although we are
good price, the flatness recently existing will be very
prejudicial to our imp- rtations in the immediate future. There seems
to be no doubt that the production of wheat in the world this season is
still offering a

dear as in 1867-8;
mind that we have now had

sufficiently great to prevent bread from being so
but, at tlie same time, it must be borne in
a series of tlroop ng marl ets for several n onths,

and, consequently,the

decided

question of profit

foreign grower does not consider the
a
so
as
to necessitate immediate action.
The new crop is, therefore, sent
forward slowly, and as the home grower perceives that our
tions are falling off. he is a holder rather than a seller of wheat. During
tlie last few weeks many farmers bavj been compete I to sell in con¬

importa¬

payments they will have to make at Michaelmas
payments shall have been met
is that supplies of home-grown wheat will come tardily

sequence

of the heavy

for rents,

and

niv

oo in.

impression

But when those

forward.

that leads me to think that the tendency of
rather than lowTcr rates during the winter
months is connected with the recent drought. We hv.ve had two
droughts ibis year, one of which was very protracted, while the other
lasted but three weeks. Tlie first drought lasted during the whole of the
summer months, and as the heat was intense, the pastures were quite
dried up, and the graziers suffered heavy losses from the scarcity both
of food and water for their cattle. During the first fortnight cf August
the weather was changeable and a fair amount of raiu fell throughout
the country. The rain upon the dry and hot earth h id a wonderful effect
upon vegetation.
The grass rapidly recovered, and the
per¬
ceived no necessity for hurrying tneir stock to market, but the rain
which then fell has been succeeded by a month of dry, and occasionally
hot weather, the consequence of which was that grass was again be¬
Another circumstance

will be to higher

wheat

graziers

apprehension was felt respect¬
ing the future. Vegetables of all kinds have become very dear, so
much so, indeed, that many families have dispensed with them, and
there
every possibility, nay, a certainty, that throughout the
Catest illonctarji au£> (ttommevcial (ffngltsl) JTnoa
winter, vegetables will be dearer than will suit the views and pockets
consumers.
I mention therefore, that with dear meats and
KATES OF EXCHANGES AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON
LATENT DATES.
dear vegetables, the consumption of bread, per head, will be considerEXCHANGE AT LONDON—
EXCHANGE ON LONDON.
ab’y above the average, and fur this reason, combined with the fact
that the !ate fall in the price of wheat is naturally checking our importatioos, and may be affirmed that the quotations have seen their lowest
@
point until the spring. The drought has again broken up, and the
Amsterdam...! short. ii.iy%@ii.io% Sept- 18. | short.
@
decidedly moist. The market gardeners will neceeweather is
@25 15
Antwerp
3 months
9%@
National

The First

New Yo;k.
Le lt<, v,

Bank

"

.

The Albany City National Bank
dhion to the Otiural National
N. Y.

""

,

in ad-

coming scarce,

Bank,

and

a

certain degree of

‘ ■” "

seems

of most

AT

SEi'T. 18.

LATEST

RATE.

ON—

RATE.

TIME.

DATE.

11.98
25.25

13.10%@13.10%
25.37 >, @25.42%

Hamburg

Paris
short.
25.22% @25.30
Paris
3 months. 11.80 @il 85
Vienna
tfc
0.27%@ 6.27%
Berlin
31%@ 32
St. Petersburg
48% @48%
Cadiz
51 %@ 51%
90 days.
Lisbon
3 months. 27.80 @27.85
Milan
27.80 @27.85
Genoa
27.80 @27.85
Naples
New York....
Jamaica

3 mos.

—

13.

25.40

-

—

25.22>;@ —
25.25 less. 2 p. c.

-

,

Havana

Valparaiso....
Pernambuco..
60 days.
Singapore
Hong Kong...
Ceylon

Bombay
Madras
Calcutta

30 days.

Sydney

4s. Cut.
4s. 6d.
1 p c.
Is. 11

dis.

%</.
Is. 11%cA
Is. U%d
Y p. c. dis.

56%

Sept. 12. 30 days,

Sept 16.
Aug. 27.
Aug. 31.

24.

Aug. 28.
Aug. 1.
Sept. 1
Aug. 0.
a ug. 30.
Aug. 7.
Sept 9.
Sept. 8
Sept 10.
Aug 2.

109 %

60 days.
90 days.
60 days.

6 mos.

1 p. c.

18%@19%
45%@h>
18% @18%
4*'. 4%cL@ —
4s. 6>,cL@ —
1%@>% !>• c.
11% tl-

1*.

60

days,

high
following statement shows the imports ani exports of wheat and

price.
The

during the first two

r

presented themselves
of a portion of
the recent fall in the quotations.
People seem to be becoming alive to
two facts: 1st, that although our crop of wheat is a large one, it is very
far from adequate to our requirements; while, in the second place, the
heavy fall in the British markets iu the value of wheat, during the last
three month*, is checking to an important extent our importations from
the great wheat-growing countries of the East and West.
The effect
of the fall in prices in June to July last is now being severely felt.
The statements of imports for the first two weeks of the current season
show that we have already received 600,000 cwt. less than in the cor¬
One of the few commercial features that

and

have

a recovery

weeks of

compare! with 1867 :

present season,

WHEAT.

—.
Imports
1867-68.

.

1866-67.

cwt.

cwt..

Week ending
“

'

*

-Export?;-'-'
1S07-68.

1S66-67.
cwt.

cwt.

12

764,138

617,293

459,302

8,136
2 %405

16,459

1,521,403

Sept. 5
“

Total

1,076,600

37,541

33,799

44,690

441
HI

757,274

FLOUR,

Week

ending Sent. 5

“

regard to the general state of business no improvement can be
reported. In all departments the greatest quietness has continued to
prevail, and, in some instances, the tendency has been to contract, rather
than to extend, operations.
The cheapness of money has had no
favorable influence, and as the merchants are restricting their transac¬
tions within very narrow bounds, so their monetary requirements are
exceedingly few. The discount market is still over-supplied; the
bankers find great difficulty in employing their surplus balances, and
hence the rates of discount remain low.
Ar.d, at the present moment,
no limit to such a state of affairs can be perceived.
firmer market for wheat,

the United Kingdom

the

li>,d.

1% p c.

With




exertion to re-plant, 1 ut as the expense of keepiDg
the summer by means of irrigation has been so
sell their produce at a profit, except at a

is 11 Yd.

Correspondent.]
London, Saturday, September 7 9, 1868.

a

use every

vegetables alive during
very great, they cannot

n@n%p.c.
18% @ —

Is.

| From our own

this week is

sarily

flour into and from

Aug.

Rio de Janeiro
Bahia

32% @32%

3 mos.

now

“

12

46,893
33,379

-

52,861

97,551
285
2,749
In the value of cotton rather an important fall has taken place
At one period, owing to a great desire to sefi on the
the week.
of holders, American produce showed a decline of as much as
lb., but on the receipt of less favorable intelligence from the
respecting the crop, the tone became firmer, and a portion
was recovered.
To-day American cotton is about |d. per lb. cheaper
than on Saturday last.
The stock of cotton in Liverpool and
including the supplies of American and Indian produce
be afloat to these ports, now amounts to 1,257,120 bales,
1,342,860 bales at tlis date in 1867. The quantity of Indian
afloat i3 as much as 747,100 bales, while at this period last year
was only 384,5 PO bales.
In the manufacturing districts busines? has been very quiet.
Manchester the buyers of goods have not operated in excess of
actual requirements, but during the last few days, owing to the
in prices at Liverpool, producers have been asking rather more money
for their fabrics.
In the iron trade there has been less activity, owing
t j the circumstance that the Canadian and Russian orders for the cur
rent season have now been completed.
The wool sales have progressed heavily, and it seems probable tb»
by the time the sales are concluded, which will be on Saturday
Total

80.272

during
part
|d. pef

South
of the fal
London*
ascertained to

against
cotton
it
At
their
advance

next

October 3,1868.J

THE CHltOJN l( JL.ii.

427

bale3 will have beeu withdrawn. As the supply of wool,
IDii&lisIi Market Reports—Ter Cable.
jD |jje market is bo large, and as foreign buyers are operating to a very
J lie
daily educing quotations in the markets of Loudon and Liver
moderate extent, the trade are still masters of the situation, and, con¬
pool lor the past week, have been
reported by submarine telegraph as
sequently, no recovery has taken place in prices. The fall, as compared shown in the
following summary ;
with July last, varies from Id. to 4d. per lb.
The supply of the fn r
London Money and Stock Market.
Consols have obtained better
qualities of wool is very limite d
pi ices than those ruling last
week, and close the week steady at 94£
Grapes are very abundant, and are < f very line quality. The vintage of
foi both money and account.
United States
the present season will no doubt bear comparison with that of 1858, and
Five-Twenty bends have
been firmer, and have
gained § per cent from the opening price Illi¬
of former remarkable seasons.
nois Central shares have been
active and advancing,
The money market remains extremely quiet.
The supply of money
opening at 93 and
Erie shares opened firm at 32J, and after
j3 very large, and .consequently the open market .minimum does not closing at 96.
advancing to
became veiy flit, and declined to
exceed 1$ per cent. The requirements of the commercial body arc
31L but at the close were a
ii.t:c better, the last
price being 81L United States Five-Twenty
comparatively few, and there is no prospect, of any speedy improve¬
bonds at 1*raiinfoit have been
firm, in sympathy with the London mar¬
ment. The market is, in fact, almost featureless, and large supplies are
still in want of profitable employment, The following are the quota¬ ket, arid close at Vl-J.
Fri.
8a t.
Mod.
Tuee.
Wed.
Thu.
tion?, compared with tlmse of last year.
Oum-nis f»>r money...,
910
910
910
about 40,000

—

.

.

are as

1867. 1868.

20

4
Berlin
4
Frankfort. 20
Amst’rii’ui 20

The

1867.

2#
4

...

4
20

4

4

20
*4 \S

money

The

At the

Hamburg
St.

—

20-3

2

7

0%

l3i

S0

—

—

.

Tetb’g.

6-t \y.

d.

s.

9

0—

Spanish Doubloons
.per oz.
South American Doubloons..
do
last price

11

.

0—

.

do

(3
6

d.

076
074
0-

,.p.

.

led)

750

910
740
950
410

95,0
42

7G-0

cl.

bid

p.

ctl

480lbs

p.
fl
ok

Mon.

.per oz.

do

containing 5

standard.

;old

bush

5

0

5' Vi

5

per45lbs
pr504 lbs

5

0

o

0

D

Fine Cake Silver

46

0

46

0

46

The fluctuations in the value of Consols

during the week have no j
important. At one period, in consequence of the King of Prussia’s
rather defiant speech at Kiel, the market was
depressed, but, on the
whole, the tone has ru’ed steady. Annexed are the highest and lowest
prices on each day of the week :
been

Weekending SepTlO Monday. Tuesday Wed’y.
Consols for money

.

930-91

940-910 91

Thur.

91

__-9-10

United States

Five-Twenty bon Is have been firmer, owing to the
Republicans in the Maine elections. Erie Railway shares
have somewhat improved in value.
Atlantic and Great Western Rail¬
of the

success

way securities have beeu

and Illinois Central Railway
high as
shares exhibit a
slight improvement in value. The highest and lowest
quotations on each day of the week are subjoined :

Weekending Sep.

as

19-Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday.

72 -72)e
J;,s-5-20’s..
71)0.... 72 -72.X 72 -72)8 720Atlantic & G’t West,-,|710-72
era consol’d
0171/48
bonds; 38 -.... 380-.... 370-48)8
380wie Shares
($100).. 290-400 400-.... 4) -400 400-.... 30)0410 31 -31)a
Illinois Bharcs
91
90 -91
($100)190091
900-•
900-....
-..

Advices from Frankfort
good demand, but that an
hai entirely

.

•

-

-

-

state that United States bonds

Of Gil.

L

Oil

attempt to introduce Missouri Pacific bonds
failed, owing to the heavy losses experienced in former

The

following statement shows the present position of the Bank op
England, compared with the state of its resources at this date since
It also exhibits the minimum rate of discount, the

date since 1865:

1805.
£
.

ttwatedeposits..
wyernment securities
W«r
.

.

.

,

...

securities

oeserve....
Coin ana
million! .V
Bank rate

Consols..




!

21,843,863
6,870,869
13,567,577
10,384,209
21,332,428
7,550,781

14,219,812
4 p. c.

890
44s. 7(1.
19d.

2a. 20d,

Sal.
s. d.
102 6

Beef(ex. pr. mess) p. 401 lbs 102 (3
RorkfEtn. pr.met»s)o2001bs 90 0
Bacon (Cumb.cui) p. 112 lbs 00 0
Lard (American)

“ ' 11

72

yaru

1SG6.
£

1867.
£

23,932,216

21,237,770
7,974,897
19,165,910
12,895,272

5,551,717
16,921,755
11,711,724
22,123,554
7,906,816
16,224,516
5 p. c.
89

47s.

130d.
Is.

70d.

17,216,262

15,792,022
24,498,447
’

2 p. c.

price of
at this

11

57

23,645,455
3,975,728
19,309,767
13,790,131
16,124,020
10,966,580
20,775,992
2 p. c.

94-940

61s. 3d.

55s. 5d.

90d.

0
9
8

0

5*6
4

45

d.

i

li

Mon.
H. d.
102 G

0

90

5
4

6
0

Thu.
d.
6
9
12
7
43 9
s.

27
10

5**6

0

6
0

45

1 The

4

6

45

mairket

0

'i2
57

0
0

57
72
57

Tues.

0

closed

Wed.

d.
102 6
90 0
57 0
72 0
57 0
s.

0

57

0

0
0
0

Thn.
8. d.

>

d.

p.

102

102

6
0
0

90
57
72

6

57

0

*
l

9J
57
72
67

0
0
0

0

London Produce and Oil Markets. —The market for naval sto:es has
uled quiet without change of quotations.
Tallow and Su_ar have

shown

activity, gaining Is on the former and Gd. on the latter.
better, especially sperm, which has advauced £6 daring
the week.
Linseed has gained £1, arid Whale 10s. Calcutta Linseed
was advanced Gd. on
Tuesday, which, however was not sustained.
some

Fri.
p.

Komii (com Wihn ).per
do
Fine Pale...

d.

p.

Siit.
d.

Mon
p. d.

p.

5

9

5

5

9

5

9

15
26
1

0
0

15

15
26

0
0

15

0

26
1
1
46

0

112 lbs

41
Sp turpentine
(std white).p. 8 lbs.
spirits....per8 lbs
Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs.
I etroloum

Clover seed (Am. red)

“

Sugar (No. 12Dch std) pll2 lb
Fri.
Liusee 1

(Calcu! ta)

£<

.

.

46
52
45

•

0

9

1

1
46
52
35

Sat.
0 £0 62 0
0 12
0 95

.

26

00

“

5 0

0 0
0 3 0 10 0
0 3-8 0 0

per

Latest:

Consols

9
0
0

60 :
4
6
0
9

i
i
46
52
55

60
4
6
0

9

Tu.
d.

52
36

Wed.

s.

d.

9
0
0

5
15
26

0
0

6.X'
<x

1

60

4
6
0
4

1

8

47

0
0
4

Til.
£0 62 0 £0 62 6
12 5 0
95 0 0
30 10 0
38 0 0

d.

5
15
26

Mon.

12 5 0
93 0 0
40 10 0
38 0 0

,

lO0d.
Is.

20d.

Friday

Evening,

October

52
36

Wd
£0 62 ! 0
12 5 0
94 0 0
■

41 10 0

48

0 0

9

1 61
1
47
52
■

4

3
0
0

36

3

Th.
£0 62
12 5
95
0
31 10
38 0

0
0
0
0
0

2.

quoted at this hour at 94^ for both money aud account.
Five-Twenty bonds are firmer at 74, and Railway shaves higher
at 96f for Illinois Centrals, and 324 for Erie.
Liverpool Cotton Market—See special report of cotton.
Breadstuffs close dull with Red Wheat at lOe. 7d. per.centa1.
Provisions are firm without change.
In the London market Sugar is quoted firm but
unchanged.
are

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
Imports

Exports

Week.—The

imports this week show
dry goods aud in general mer¬
chandise, the total leiog $4,098,601 against $5,613,175 last week*
and $1,222,255 the previous week. The
exports are $2,686,708 this
week, against $2,599,006 last week, and $*,163,024 the previous
week.
The exports of cotton the past week were 1,839 bales, against
2,410 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for
a

and

considerable

for the

decrease

both in

Of

Th

p.

U. S.

1868.
£

910
Is. 2d.

d.
27 6
10 9
12
7
55 9

23
10
12 ’
56

ir

90

4

Cheese (line)

continued in

Consols, wheat, middling Upland cotton, aud No. 40 mule

Wed
p.

...

years from similar investments.

1865.

4

Liverpool Provisions Market.—During the early pait oi the week
Pork was firm, but later became
quiet. Lard has ruled firm, and
Bacon, Beef aud Cheese quiet. The only changes from last week are

-....

...

<

Oils have been

Friday.

-9IX 91)09 IX

u

d.

'0)4 0 Vi C0~
5
5)s 04 IDs 0—

oz.last price.

76%

d.

0

5

per

\

were—

70-0

.

s.

0
(i

per

5

do

31#

Tttes.

d.
28 0
10 11
12 8
46 0
s.

23 0
10 11
12 8
46 0

!

e.

96

(dun, 3d., and Peas Id.
quotations. The market

;

same

SILVER.
s.

94*
940
rsya

....

700

Bat.
s. d.

•

d.
28 0
It
0
12 8
46 0

vbit.e) “

GOLD.
s.

94

nominally at the
Fril

nothing of importance lias occurred. There
is scarcely any demand tor gold for
export, and the silver market is
extremely quiet, liar silver is chiefly in deman 1 for the Continent.
Mexican dollars are dull at a decline of |d. per
ounce.
Annexed are
the prices of bullion :
77
77
75
74
76

440
490

While Cal torn ia Wheat, Id.

;

In the bullion market

.per oz. standard.
do

:;40
390

750-76

Wheat, 3d.

week.

.

74

daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort

Jdarl -y an i Oats arc
close ! heavy.

fjreign exchanges have not materially varied during the present

Bar Gold
do
Refi liable

720
940

910

910
730

940

Liverpool Cotton Market.—Sec special report of cotton..
Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—The market for Flour, Wheat, Corn
and Peas has tended downwards, and
quotations at the close are off a
little from the opening
prices Flour has lost Gd., Red Milwaukee

On. m’kt—
1867
1868.

20-0

911:

‘

73
94
52 0
39

Frankfort

...

2

910-0

..

r—

..

20-3
10-2

10-2

20

r-lJ’k rate—,
1867. 1868.
Turin
5
5
Brussels
4
20
Madrid
5
5

18(38.
1 7'-l2

2-20
*

10(?)>2
2 04

under.

r-B’k rate— r-Op. m’kt—,
At Paris
Vienna

tor ;u count...
If. S. (*>• (f> 20V) 1862..
till: oisCentral shares.
Krie Railway shares

1867.
186-!.
Per cent. Per cent.

30and60 days1 bills \%%V/A 10@10 6 months’ ba’k bills 10(5)2
3months, bills
10@10 10©.... 4 aiul 6 trade bills.. 2 04
4months,ba’kbills 10<§H0 10@1 0
On the Continent much quietness continues to prevail in the
market. The changes in the quotations have been unimportant

leading cities the rates

910

“

18(37.
1808.
Per cent. Per cent.

si

ill

428
m

goods) Sept. 25, and for the
general merchandise) Sept. 26 :
ending (for dry

week

FOREIGN

YORK FOR THE

IMPORTS AT NJSW

1866.

1865.

$1,894,054

3.168,452

2.644,602

$5,f02.5( 0

.76810.,

week

$4,575,MM
221,881,297

$4,098, G01
182,795,523

goods for one week later.

2,200,101

$190,011,111 $186,894,124
found the imports of dry

$138,839,335
$226,460,263
report of the dry-goods trade will be

Since Jan; 1
our

1868.

$1,898,500

$4,114,806
185,896,305

Previously reported.... 133,836,329

In

WEES.

1867.

$1,862,594
2,252,212

Dry goods
General merchandise...
Total for the

week ending (for

$1,931,364

strong banking house, under
the firm name of James Robb, King & Co. The partners of the firm are
Mr. James Robb, Mr. Edward King, and Mr. James H. Robb, names
too well known to require a word of comment from us as to the char¬

NEW YORK FOR

of the firm.

acter

co-partnership is announced, under the firm name of Smith,
Henry ez Sheffield, for the transaction of a general domestic commissiou
business—principally in cotton and tobacco. Messrs. Smith and Henry
A

new

Townsend,

heavily engaged in'Soutbern trade.
attention is called to the card of the Commercial

so

Particular

list of officers
busi¬

and directors

1866.
1S67.
IPS*.
1865,
$2,892,5*:9
$3,320,103 $2,(586,708 ness
$2,042,566
....
114,9 8,834
143,280,217 133,572,310 120,291,712
Attention is called to the advertisement of the
Since Jan 1
'...$117,801,363 $145,32S,7S3 $136,902,503' $122,9Sl,48(j patent, for the travelling bureau, one of the most
The patent will be sold by Messrs. E.
The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive invented.
15 Wall street in a few days.
specie) for the past week, and since January 1,

week
Previously reported

sale of Wunderlich's
complete trunks ever
E. Tiffany C.».,of

compared with the
corresponding time of last year, is shown in the following table:
-1868.This week. Since Jan. 1.

To

$1,877,894

7,031,000
3,9-5 203

121.079

3,893.271

12.245.974

300,816

100,695

1,586 320
1,800,855
4,525,’ '61

16,056.117
1,385,116

14,019
511,336

2,260,516

14,625
140,342
171,965
17,425
137,355

1,875,741
3,6*5,915
5

1S1,744

2,646.801

51,774
69,994

France

Holland and Belgium....

Germany
Other Northern

Spain

Ocher Southern

Europe

301,276
,

#

13,566

Europe.

Indies
China and Japan
Australia
British N A Colonics
East

..

Cuba

Hayti

Other Wert Indies
Mexico
New Granada..

Venezuela
British Guiana
Brazil
OtherS. American ports.
.
All other ports

101,029

074,147
1.219 192
6.091.522

2,353,33!)
2,822,876
1,142,847

199,113

ITolsatia, Paris- $61,496
Silver bars

“

“

86,209

8,000

2,392.210
840,955

41,752

from the.port of New

American

DIVIDENDS,

12,134

The following

PER
NAME OF

-

-.0,-0
1 Same

.$ 42,151,819

I 1859

.

1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853.
1852

53,691,493
22,i>75,763
35,278,801
32.517,027
42,813,139
3,279,814
39 353.374

Ha

103<4](J

St. Croix,

Silver
21—St. Merrimac,

20,951 pi;i6

32.977,072
27.479,955

24,379.869

“

Janeiro—
Gobi
21—St. Arizona,
Gold

“

5C0

Aepinwall,

450

Previously reported

Co

Vera Cruz,

2,COO

5 8,5.615
$5,875,196

J. -feW. Seligman & Co.
31,86147 Eugene Kelly & Co
134,805 53

James McNider
Chas. Dossier & Co
Total

The

150 00

|

arrivals of treasure from san

ment of the year, are

“




.

Office

October 2,1SG8,

P. BL

statement was of a more

generally anticipated.

$7f>!,(i00; but as the

The deposits

specie portion of the

$2,000,000, there was an

employed
private
lenders have in many cases obtained 7 per cent and a commission
7 per cent in gold. Some of the banks have found it necessary
take in
portion of their 3 per cent certificates for redemption*
Sub-Treasury having received about $1,500,000 within the last*

their

57,300 CO

banks have had little to lend, and have
ba’ances for the past four days at 7 per cent, while the

on

$409,035 18

to

two

$410,435 18

sudden change

have arisen at

all from preparations

market does not appear 'to

for toe

quarterly bank state¬

banks, at the date of the
conservative condition, the

ment; for the
in

807,071 19,128,658

19,978,028
20,500,745
20,964,672
21,677,994
22,139,250

22,945,601

23,647,600

a

very

for speculative purposes, to tie up a
amount of currency ; and there seems to be no room
doubt that such is the fact. Money has been
have combined,

24,037,495
24,870,120
499,376 25.369,496
365,756 25,735,252

715,000 2 :,450,252
625,000 27,075,252
399.748 27,475.000

830,405 27,805,405 I

409,035 28,2:4,440

in the tone or the

last weekly statement*,, w ere
legal reserve being: ab out
$17,000,000 over the lawful requirement. Nor has it besnicai ised
by the banks making any remittances of moment to other- aeefci on?,
there having been comparatively no movement of that ohara* oter.
It is very generally understood in Wall street that certain pa rties

feince

At date. Jan. 1.
118,109 18,321,586

849,312
522,721
463,927
713,319
461,256
806,351
702,000
389,895
832,625

days.

I bis

Francisco since the commence¬

shown in the following statemeh:

a

the

1,000 00

& Co

Date.
Steamship.
At date. Jan. 1.
$989,464 $989,464 June 27.San.deCuba
22.Arizona
951 7<>5 1,941,170 June29.11.Chauncey
Feb. l.H. Chaunceyl,298,584 8,239,7?3 July 5. .Oc’n Queen
Feb. 9.Rising Star.1,255,333 4,495,087 July 15.Rising Star.
Feb.20.Arizona
.1,568,161 6,063,248 July 22.Arizona....
Mar. 2.H.< hauncey. 1,551,270 7,571,680 July25 San.deCuba
Mar.ll.Rising Star. 476,147 8,047,827 July 29.H Chauncey
Mar.22.Arizona ...1,168,719 9,216,666 Aug 6.Oc’n Queen.
Apl. l.H. Chauncey. 864,698 10,081,304 Augl2.G’ding Star.
A pi. lO.Oc’n Queen.l,175,754 11.257,058 Aug 15.Rising Star.
Apl. 22.Arizona
948,020 12,205,078 Aug22.Arizona....
Apl. 28 H.Chauncey 466,909 12,671,987 Aug 29 Alaska
May 6.0c’n Queen. 727,849 13,399,832 Sept. 5. Oc’n Queen.
May 22. Arizona... 1,177,496 14,577,336 Sept 8 Dakota
May 28.H. Chauncev 618.040 16,195,872 Sept.12 G’ding Star
June 6.0ceanQeen 996,820 16,192,192 Sept.14 H.Chauncey
June 11.Rising Star 657.610 16,849,705 Sept. 20.Arizona...
Jane 13.Guid’gStar 290.723 17,140,426 Sept. 28. Alaska.. ~
J&A6 ft. Arizona.., 1,O0W1 18,808,476

decrease of

Office

<

106,400 09

since

Date.
Steamship.
Jan. 9.Rising Star

Companys

Oct.

Company? Oihce

Oct. 10

CLOSED.

The down-town

ASFINWALL.

$250 00 | Wells, Fargo

a

deposits was down

$19,551

Total for week

’

$78,668 18

FROM

Company3 Office
Compauys Office

BOOKS

increase in the cur¬
rency portion of $1,250,000. The legal tenders were $185,000
lower, which was much bel w the decrease anticipated. Not¬
withstanding, the present week opened with a more active demand
for money, which has steadily increased, producing a stringency
little short f what wu3 experienced at this period of last year*

4,163
6,3SS

:
....

Oct,, 15
Oct 1.

Fompanys

than was

favorable character
showed

California.—The steamship Alaska, from Aspinwall, arrived at this port Sept. 2S, with treasure for the following
Moritz Me . er
A. Belmont &

PAYAELE

Oct. 10

I 4

Market.—The last bank

The Money

Treasure from

Dabney, Morgan & Co

WIIKRE

Friday,

S0J52’»70

Total since January 1,1868

consignees

WHEN

pay’ble

15.207,759

Silver
Gold
25—St Nevada,
Gold

Rio

declared during the past week:

30,216.057

«...

25—St Morro Cast e, Havana

$6,050

ilroadf.

hanks.
Flip’s Tp ad
Gailatin Na ioi.nl Punk..
Insurance.
North River

follows:
Sept. 21—Brg Gipsy,

CENT.

Ogdeiisburg, prof

$57,859,461

this port during the week have been as

imports of bpecie at

COMPANY.

Iltirlson Kiver

time in
.........

Dividends have b -en

2,000

65,998,947

1866
1865
1«f>4
1863
1862.
1861

The

1,200

Gold...

Previously reported
-.

Bankers’ ©alette.

®l)c

10,000

$104,469
jfjua,

Sametimeiu

Treasurer.

2,7*4,458

week

nW“1

H. H. Boody,

2,786.916

ampton-

Total foi the

exchange at market

'securities received in

rates.

2.253,811

112,506
92,450

other

Governments and

542 091

36,073

British Co’d
20—Sckr Grasmere, Para,

“

7,333

cent., and in

1,552,606

89,577

Foreign silver ...
26—City <>i' Boston, I iveipool —

“

the bonds pay an income of over 10'per
the.estimation af the company they are the cheapest first-,
class security offered in the market.
Pamphlets giving fuller information may be had at the office.
present price of gold

At the

1,700,813
2,287.832
2.087,548
4,-251 444
1,024,172
5,309,565

54,811

Interest Payable in

and

interest in currency.

11.331

American gold..
24—St. Wc;cr, Bremen—

“

Mississippi, llio

Janeiro—
Doubloons
23—St. MissLsippi, Para—
American gold ..
24—St. WVser, bouih

1,142,814
5,215,219

1,103.0! 0

80,7-3
94,9*5
33,M1

Sept. 22—St.
23—St

’

3,042
57,357
307,650
193,585

465,494

York for the

“

8,002,078

130,507

1,315,-AH

following will show the exports of specie
week ending Sept. 26, 186S:

The

$72,467,106

$58.851,*45

$982,913

?

..

•

Gold.—The First Mortgage
Fifty Year Ssven per Gent Sinking Fun i Coupon Bonds of the Rock¬
ford, Rock Bland and St. Louis Railroad Company, principal and inter¬
est payable in Gold Coin, free of Greenback tax, and are for sale at the
office of the Company, No. 12 Wall street, at 95 per cent and accrued
Principal

-1807.-—
Since Jan. 1.

19.000

Britain..,

Great

Week.

National

Chicago, which will be found on page four. The
includes the names of some of the most prominent
“
men of the West.

Bank of

THET WEEK.

For the

of

distinguished firm of Henrys, Smith &

members of the former

were

ofspecie)fron?
he port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Sept. 29:
EXPORTS FROM

formition of another very

We notice the

of the exports (exclusive

following is a statement

The

[October 3,1863.

CHRONICLE.

THE

1

for reaso naole
freely bom owed

the currency thus received af
the process again repeated
produced. If all that ia reported,

against securities and gold, and
collateral for further, leans, and

the.effect desired was

considie cable

-ed as
until

true,

October

3,1808.]

THE

CHRONICLE

30.

429

banks implicated in these operations. These ir¬ 50pt.
764 24S,479
961 2,027 1,200 2.S75
9.900 18,441 284,647
174 286,332
519 7,800 2 00.) 3.820 16,870 21.976 339.521
regular proceedings have cause 1 some inconvenience to the banks in
530 290.770
690 11,200 1.500 3,354
19,518 21,401 4-1,963
486 365,006 2.029 10,500
their preparations for the quarterly statement, and to-d:iy a certain Oct. 24......,
7.500 1,307 15,5)6 ) 23.0 <1 431,929
1....
259 308,496
694 11,400 1,C50 2,759 22,637 28,397 376,292
amount of loans have been called in as the result.
The following is a
summary of the amount of Government bond
It being anticipated that the state of things thus produced will
and notes, State and
City securities, and railroad and other bonds
prove but temporary, the discount market has suffered but little. sold at
Regular Board for the past and several previous weeks :
The strictly me cantile banks are able to accommodate the wants
Weekending
Governments
State <fc
Total
Company
*
<jf their customers at 7 per cent; and as ihere is but little paper at
Friday.
j Bonds.
Notes.
Citv Bonds.
Bonds.
amount.
July
2
5,223,750
81,500
5,983.000
229,4 00
11,520,750
present offering, made again.-t either merchandise or produce, prime J uy 9
7,410,500
40,500
109,000
2,347,000
9,907,000
16
July
3 449,900
names ore readily negotiable at 7 per cent.
2.59 \0G'
130,500
229,090
6,3 9,400
23
July
6,576.750
25,000
2,6' K), 500
204,000
9,383,750
The following are the quotations for loans of various classes :
July 30
3,703,300
25,000
3,9 50,0'>0
7,975,3 ■(«
417, MK>
there are certain

Percent.
Callloans
Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills, 9

Good endorsed bills,
4 months
do
single names.

@ 7

months

^

3 &

ug.

Aug.
A u g.

© 7*

5,841,850

27........

10

United States Securities.—The market for Governments has

Sept. 24

market. The dispo¬
sition to sell has predominated, and a large amount of bonds has
been thrown upon the market by speculative holders, the parties
who for seme lime past have firmly kept up
prices offering no re

Oct.

The

Gold

3,747,50(1

....

.

.

.

315.000

2,047,59)
1,352,500

....

229,500
276, "00
169,000
346,5' .0
2'8,5(H)

1,058.400
1,532,500
2,327,600
2,404,000
1,521,000

.

.....

....

....

5,138,300
3,049,650

1

money

1,750

7.441,300
8,407, f 00
7,742,000
7,517,750
4,111,400
4,89 ,050

Sept. 3
Sept.
Sept. 37

8

,

.......

20

© 7
7

Lower grades

sympathised with the condition of the

6
13

Aug.

Per cent

7

»

....

*5

9.90)5,100
9,758,300

10,036,000
8,969,400
9,096,750
6.687,400

272.300
553.00)

305,000

2,341,000

7,215,309

5,695,650

Market.—Gold has been week.

7.633,350

The activity in_

money has forced a considerable amount of gold upon
under which the price declined at one time to

the market,
13.r)£. At this
sistance to tLe decline. The large amount of outstanding
short ” figure, however, there was a good deal of buying, and the price re¬
contracts have consequently been recovered, one of the late main acted to 140, closing steady at 139f. An effort was made early in
supports of the market being thereby taken away. To-day, how¬ the week to produce a scarcity of cash gold, which resulted in a
momentary advance in the lending rate to -J- p^r cent per day “ for
ever, there has been a good deal of buying, and prices have advanced
borrowing.” Upon these efforts being relaxed, the market became
f@f per cent on the opening figures. 'The depression appears to
have reached its lowest point, and speculators are
buying for a easy, and loans were made at 5@7 per cent “ for carrying.”
The fluctuations in the
fresh rise. The advance of bonds to-day at London to 71 lias a
gold market, and the business at the Gold
Board during the week
reviving effect upon the market, as indicating an unexpected eonfi*
closing with Friday, are shown in the fol¬
lowing table :
dence iu bonds through the polit c.il vicissitudes of the
country.
—Quotations.
Themaiket closes at -£@1 per cent below our last
Open- Low- lliirn- ClosTotal
quotations.
Balances
ing.
est, est.
ing.
The following are the closing prices of
clearings. Gold. Currency.
leading securities, com¬ Saturday, Sept. 26.... 142# 142}; 142#. 142# 85,0S4,000 $2,662,355 $3,286,632
Monday,
“
28.... 142# 14)# 141# 141# 58,913,000 1,3)1,166 2,248,884
pared with preceding weeks:
TuCi
—

,

Aug. 23,
u.s. 6’8,18S1 coup
u.s 5-20’s, 1S62 coup
u.s. 5-20’s, 1864
“
..
u. s. 5-20’s, 1S65
“
u. s. 5 20’8,1865, July cpn
u.s. 5-20’s, 1867, coup. ...
u. s. 5-20’s, 1808,
“
.

u.s. 10-40’8,

Railroad
shown

an

treme st

“

11434
114#
110

114

113#
10! »3*

Hi Yt
111#
108#
108#
108#
108#
1083*
108#
108# x.c.iu4#

..

..

Sept. 4. Sept.11 Sept.18. Sept.25

.

J14%
mx
10!)#
-Ill#

1143b

114#

111#
HI#

113#
10!)#
llo#

10!)

1)8#

loo#
10)#
104#

108#
109#
104#

110

10!)
10!)
10!)
105

Oct. 2.

113#
112#
100#
HO#
108#
108#
108#

activity and firmness singularly inconsistent with the ex¬
ingency in money. The cliques have prepared themselves

for any emergency

in the money market by time loans, and have
consequently sustained prices with much firmness. It is presumed
that (he parties who have combined to
produce a stringency iu ?lie
money market have dore so with a view to encouraging “short”
8ales of stocks, and have at the same time
kept up prices as an ad¬
ditional inducement to such operations. The fact of this
view
being entertained has induced considerable caution iu selling for
future delivery, and the
probability is that the “shorts ” outsiand*

ing have

not been much

Wedn’
Thurs
F
Current week
142# 139# 142#
Previous week
144# 141# 141#
Jan. 1 ’68, to date.... 133# 133# 150

The movement of coin and

104#

Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market has

and

increased

ending

on

Saturday, Sept. 26.

Withdrawals in

excess

Specie in hanks
Specie in banks

on
on

of reported new

Actual

Canton Co
Mariposa pref....
New York Central

Hudson River....

•

Pittsb.
Clev.and Toledo.

f^wSSS^
Wayne
Central

Ohio & Miss

The

shares,

106#

16

Aug.
4,

30
6

13.
20.

27.

102#

108#
•

•

•

29

87
10*

22#
45
11

....

10#
123#
46#

•

33#

•

W

21#
47#
114#

11#
127#
50#

128#

140

141

92

94

85#

95#

84#

84

130

48#

83#
118

85#

88# x.d.85#
103
101#

10 #

85#
85#
102#
3 OS#

33

141

•

140
90

86#
86#

49#

80#
1U1#

90

8!)

90#
104#

89#
102#

83#
88#
103#

107#

no .i

108#

109

23#

29#

....

146

0

29#

at both the Stock Boards for the
past

q:::::;
23.

83#
83#

....

84#

•

•

•

29

’

28#

statement shows the volume of transactions in

and several previous

389
369
611

1,254

Sad.
283,817
197,735
194,822
297,385

963
842
443
681

357,168
188,102
270,052

366

188,603




175,948

Min¬

Im-

Coal.

Tele¬

Steam

ing. pro’t. graph. ship. Other. Total.
1,646 9,250 5.200 6,411 22,230 33,681 362,646
640 4,500 2,950 3,130 15,035 9,407 233,726
219 2,000 1,700 7,520
5,220 9 652 221.740
156 2,475 2,470 4,986
6,250 10,187 325 164
619 1,200 2,001 1,786
6,469 14,035 203,075
39
900 1,300 4,310 11,189 10,547 386,2!i9
421 1.00C 1,600 5,574 13,330 11,859 221,523
917 3,800 3.200 10,276
9,890 35,065 333.791
1,044 1,000 1,100 3,559 9,638 13,337 218,638

'

2,536,726

$14,665,742
12,603,483

$2,062,259
sources

474,467

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

Total
Balance in

as

follows

:

Custom House.

Receipts.
$174,145 01
703,554 73
622,828 34

N.

630,140 67
490,805 11
385,143 53

$3,306,617 39
Sub-Treasury morning of Sept. 21

Deduct payments

Snb-Treasury-

Payments.
$3,077,064 91
1.113,276 99

Receipts.
$4,141,463 28
1,009,879 91
1,555,174 25
1,507,245 93
1,861,156 43
1,595,610 48

1,146,788 74
705,057 94
1,140,385 75
765,040 71

$7,917,615 04

$11,670,530 28
91,330,485 60

$103,001,015 78
7,947,615 04

during the week

Balance on Saturday evening.
Increase during the week ...

$95,053,400 74
8,722,915 24

Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $513,000.
in the

receipts of customs

were

Included

$194,000 in gold, and $3,112,617

in Gold Certificates.

The

following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since Aug. 8 :
Weeks

Custom
House.

Ending
Aug. 8...
Aug. 15...

2,493,373
2,829,150

Aua. 22...

2.904,486

Aug. 29...

Week ending- Bank.
“

101

•

46#
92#
85#

ns#
8 #

142
29

..

following

weeks:

•

99

fort

.

140

86
•

85#
99#
80#
80#

Northwestern..
R mois

•

...

126#

83

Central

46#

136
91

93

Mich. Southern..

.

125#
47#

135

Reading

C ey. and

....

124#
46#

Erie

Michigan

•...

....

....

21#

..

21

supply

3,564,995

of

reported supply
Supply received from unreported
excess

$023,800

3,400,526-

Decrease of specie in banka

“

....

$739,435
19,551
164,814
$104,469

Saturday, Sept 19
Friday, Sept. 26

“

21

port for the week
shown in the following formula:

..

“

21
46

wa3 as

this

Reported new supply thrown on market
Withdrawn for export
Withdrawn for customs

“

2c#

bullion at

,

in New

Aug. 14. Aug.21. Aug.28. Sept 4. ‘Sep. 11 Sep. 25.

139#

receipts from California
Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports
Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury iu New York.

“

Cumberland Coal
Quicksilver

139# 667,987,000 IS,551,647 25,501,755
144# 453,472,010 9,726,963 14,917,478

Treasure

curing the week. The chief Treasury have been
\fork Central, Erie, Reading, North¬
western, and Rock Island. Prices do not generally vary much
from our last
quotations, though the changes are generally upward. Sept 21
22
The following were the
23
closing quotations at the regular board
24
compared with those of the six preceding weeks :
25
26
movement has been

,

3,039,881

Sept. 5.
Sept. 12'...
Sept 19...
Sept 26...

2.880,544
3,112,961

.

2.832,584
3,306,617

<

-Sub-Treasury

—»

Payments. Receipts. Balances.
35,126,667
32,072,336
73,988,272
14,336,441
19,638.389
84.290,221
9,834,009
11.430,480
85,S76,692
7,722,332
14,009,491
92,103,852
15,I"8,272
16,453,903
87,439,483
9,846,084
11,708,789
89,302,188
7,M9,1S5
91,330,480
9,347,483
7,947,615
11,670,530
95,053,401

Chi anges in
Balances.

Dec.
Inc.
Inc.
iuc.
Dec.
Inc.

Inc.
Inc..

3,053,333
5,301,941
1,586,471
6,287,156
4,724,309

1,862,708
2,028,295

3,722,915

Foreign Exchange.—Transactions have been limited, owing to
the fluctuations in

.

gold and the expectation of a lower gold premium
have

the period of the payment of November coupons. Rates
been rather weak until to-day, when the market strengthened.

near

THE

480
following are the

Sept. 25.
Sept. 18.
10S ©l(i.x%
1083/ 108#© 108#
108#© 108%
108%© 109
109%@ lUiLVi
109 @109#
109#© 109%
709#@ 109#
5.18%@6.16% 5.1S%@5.17# 5 20 @5.18%
5.17#@5.10#
5.16#@5.14% 5.16%@5.15
@5.1.s% 5.30 ©5.18% 5.22#@5.20
5.20
5.20 @5.18% 5.29 ©5.18% 5.22# @5.20
85#©. 35%
85%© «h%
35%@ 35%
40% © 40%
40#© 40%
40#@ 40%
40 #@ 40%
40%@ 40%
40%@ 40%
79 © 79#
79.#© 79%
79#@ 7ii
Sept. 11.

©108%
108#© luS%
10S%© 109#
5.20 @5.18%
5.17#©5.16#
5.22# g>5 20
5.22# @5.20
35#@ 35#
108

10S #@

London Comm’l..
do bkrs’ lug.
do shrt.
do

Paris, long
do short

Antwerp
Swiss

Hamburg
Amsterdam
Frankfort
Hremeu

71#© 71#

71#© 71#

Berlin

Central
Bank of

Canltal.

Banks.
New York
Manhattan

Loans and
Discounts.

$;>.0(X),O()O

Capital

2,<>50,000
’ 3,000,000

Merchants’
Mechanics
Union

2,0o0,000
I,500,0o0
3,000,000
i,300,o00

Amevica
Phoenix

7,092,531
5,913,500
3,905,031
3,078,399
4.120,933

4,230,391

1,000,000

City

1,000,000 2,999,060
Fulton
000,000 2,110, i j3
Chemical
:i0(),ooo <j 473,113
3,111,259
Merchants’ Exchange.... 1,235,000
1,500,000 3,019,014
National
Butchers’
300,000 2,710,890
Mechanics and Traders’.
000,000 2.343,7t0
Greenwich
200.000 1,058,149
3,187,781

Tradesmen’s

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

Broadway
Ocean

Mercantile.
Pacitio

000,000

500,000
2,000,000
5,000,000
10,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
422,700

Chatham

People’s
Nortli American

1,000,000
1,000,000

Hanover

aOo.uofl
4,000,000

Irving

Metropolitan

400,000
1,000.000
1,000,01)0

Citizens
N assau
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather

»..

Exchange

Corn

300,000
4(H), OU0
300,000
1,500,000

Oriental
Marine
Atlantic
Importers

and Traders’.

.

Manufacturers &
Fourth National

.

Central National
First

1,000,000

New

Tenth National
New

York Gold

300,000

1,000.000

Exch’gt

200,000

Bull’s Head

:uo,ooo

National Currency
Bowery

250,000

National.. ;•

Sf.nyvesant .
Eleventh Ward

Eighth National

„

Banks for

821,114

5,190,8 00.
0,280,908
4,090,993
3,118,029
2,713,311
1,010,123
8,025.395
2,107,180
,220,772

2,101,140
1,354.094
1,465,000
4,995,150
1,245,035
3,024,941
2,004,720
1,359,183
2,897,500
1,1)1)3,14.)
3,301,798

*,119.192
132,390
1,050
57 i ,3‘Jf)

758,183
947,815
0,500
555,201

81,879

300,00)

633,000
835,803
430,000

1,005,838

878,020
3)1,488
027,922

517,400
1,031/00

19,000

270,000
918,800
401/09
794,030
203.813
910,100

415,507
5,840
7,079
0,150

7,250
90,000
225,000

25,282
88,731

49,803
1,87.4

3,000

250, C 09

Drc. *2,< 162,259
luc .
6,073

Circulation

Circnla-

lion.

Specie.

Loans.

3. 281,945,931
11. 284,147,708
.

.

.
.

*

Legal

Deposits. Tenders,

11,954,730
19,235,343
20,399,031
20,804,101
20,502,737
24,784,427
22,953,850
19,768,081
10,949,108
16,815,778
10,150,942
14.605,742
12,603,483

:

55,000
128,349
221,013

Washington

Capital

...

Loan*. Specie.

•98,443
160,320
82,593
255,216

805,593

750,000

148,715
1,400
41,286
3,743

...

....

750,(MX)

6,912

300,000

3,396
22,522
12,295
6,0-5

857,077

5,lSl,15r
1,876,859
5,235,328

Exchange

Clearings.

525,040,095

2,083,705

Everett

Not

18,617

478,186
471,591

200,000

Security

1,126
3,917

2,831,122
2,462,458
2,829,770

1,000.000
1,500,000
200,000

Webster...

12,134
13,129
45,5S2

3,141,616

1,000,000

Union.....

*

1,802,086
2,060,412

Leather. 1,000,000

Revere

received.

2,093

Dec $1,451,192

Specie.

100,110,830 1,617,638

6

.

3

101,493,516

1,198,529

102,380,05S

13
20....
27

756,254

102,430,433 1,521,393
785,641
102,408,771

“

10

“

17

“

2t
31

103,86^,680
103,956,603
103,624,691
103,550,020

7

103,853,110

“

Sent.
u
“

310,000 2,512,000
.

4,000
5,733

..

B’k of Commerce..

Girard
Tradesmen's

Consolidation
City
Commonwea.th
Corn Exchange....

...

400,100 1,389.979
237,000 1,087,741

500,000 1,912,000
30 ,000 1,520,000

1,000,000 3,766,000

,

-

939,000
650,000
520,100
2S9,017
321,000
571,958
340,000
283,515
1.252,000
270,157
834/19
498,463

1,798,000
2,087,000

250,759

1,499,000 10,582
250,000 1,328,788
500,000 1,203,415 15,012
400.000 1,446,972
1,419
570.150 1,608,000
250,000
970.434
1,000/00 3,5b«/0U0 14,000
200,000 1,237,800 6 001
300,000 1,102,012
....
250,0! 0

Western

Manufacturers’

800,000 2,655,000
500,000 2,527,000

'752,000 1,683,000

869,220

1,434,300
908,455
1,045,287
1,636,499
1.029,2-3
956,419

3,003,000
822.739
857.739

1,008,997

542,000 1,600,000
1,000
439,000
2,326 1,308,000- 1,783,000
3,009,000

622,000
478,660
460,000
218,802
170,180
228,170

0,715
418,912
219.255

587,000
181,725
270,000
356,883
213,000
450,000
227,000
796,000

929,413
910,728

14
21
28

102,921,733
...

102,472,930
101,021,744

634,963
664,696
779,192

642,829

14,032,447

300,000
996,045
735,50)
179,250
711,505

706,840
519,307
949,461

220,833
67,000
229,300
344,091
2)9,411

1,005,001

783,741

2,041,331
1,004,873
1,130,730

323 834

316,700
321,683
53,314
58,400

278,.386
246,873

595,750
788,072

796,300
174,035
965,569
598,435
799,142

786,000
457,000
341,925
708,650
790,669
394,466

547,646
492,246
99,645

130,000

39,127,659 25,150,081

follows:

notes

.....Inc.
... Dec.

Dec.

566,189
584,509
33.967

series—Circulation.—
of weeks

15,107,307 43,458,654
15.743,211 43,116,765

8133,063 14,975,841
748,714 13,774,330
642,793 13,466,258

.

1,459,960

TencTers. Deposits.

767,819 15,843,796

594,285

649,878
759,168

751,910

Legal tender
Deposits

15,469,406
15,837,748
15,796,059
15,753,958
15,654,580
16,310,323

355.911

534,010

returns are as

Legal

170,715
790,942
793,019

6-15,724 3,224,617
811,284
180,333.
454,068 1,678,006
1,072,833 2,036,010
509,659
61,879
969,917 2,393,406
489 381
325,912

36
comparative totals for a

Loans.

Aug.

848,959

Circulation...

...Inc.
following are

-

“

6,697

from last weeks

Loans

July

1,819,170

374,9*9
638,635
665,433

Same as last week.

Capital

Specie
The

1,865,797

149,918
389,607
132,000
442,172
215,181
261,872

42,300,000 101,021,744 642,829 14,032,447

The deviations

“

3,781
25,263
7,500

2.547.497

1,(MR),000
1,000,000
1,000,000

Eagle

978,996

453,939
135,000

21,266

2,(XH),000
1,000,000
1,000,000
l,(MXi,(XK)

City

386,472
245,240

43,574

3,516,746
1,942,356

2,000,(KM)

145,3*0

612,500

49,029

242,610
441,248

708,167
306,613

532

3,481,116
3,2-2,087
1,338,822

2,000,000

..

182

Third
B’k (/‘Commerce
B’k of N. Amer.
li’Jc of Redemp’n
B’k of theliepub.

L. Tend. Depos.* Circuiat’n

.

.

Kensington
Penn Township...




6,716
1,452

BANKING AND

_

Commercial
Mechanics’
Bank N. Liberties
Southwark

First

4,070

1,715,582
884/17
5,658,360
581,518

400,00!)

..

rth Am;

Union

1,109,192
1,461.131

800,000

ladelpli
•mers’ A

1.019.755

800,000

1,561
2,179

4,192,855
3,679,101

Aggregate

352.683

7,930

455.938
105 630
390,000

1,241,635

1,228,182
2,448,705

1,000,000
Second (Granite) 1,000,000

Hide <fc

424,105
410,010

2,233

First

27,0.2
293,514

354,165

139,250

1,000,(KM)
460,000
1.000,000

.

.

1,440,075

145,000
448,000
201,107

74.200

...

Trcmont

538,207

788,492
786,982
597,871
446,393
784,718
444,557
798,335
597,542
355,233

617,200
672,949
623,454
561,914
809,503

222,357

12,982

1.500,000
600, (MM)

Total net

Banks,

547,535

1,413,087

2.297,500

500,000

..

....

345.373

301,833

$140,075

1,600,000

1,000,000

..

,..

.

Deposits. Circnla.
$446,903
$501,725

L. T. Note;J.

1,453,361
2.226,030
1.314,602
2.480,351

500,000

Suffolk
Traders’*

“

28,1868

..

1,000,000

000,800

of weeks past :

10,620.53;
10,607,94

2,319,023

34,032.466 221,050,806 72,125,939 591,750,394
34,008.202 224,320.141 08,531,542 505,402,409
July 18. 282,91%490
34,004,111 228,130,749 71/47.545 487,109,1487
July 25 280,345,255
.33,903,373 220,701,002 72,235,580 419,134,199
Aug.
1. 279,311,057
33,957.305 228,104,807 73,038,001 587.004,381
Aug.
S. 279,755,780
34,074,374 231,710,492 74,051,548 482,533,901
Aug. 15. 277,SOS,020
34,114,087 223,501,087 72,935,481 010,308,552
Aug. 22 275,245,761
34,137,027 210,435,405 09,757,045 480,785,062
Aug. 29. 271,780,720
34,112,139 210,334,046 07,757,370 470,036,175
Sept. 5. 271,830,096
34,170,419 207,854,341 65,963,773 493,191,072
Sept. 12 272,055.690
34,139,920 205,4S9,070 03,429,337 518,471,552
Sept. 19 271,252,090
31,044,093 202,824,583 03,772.700 020,105,094
31,050,771 202,008,334 03,587,570
Sept. 20. 271,273,544
Philadelphia Banks.—The following is the average condition
uf the Philadelphia Banks for the week preceding Monday, Sept.

duly
July

..

..

...

Total.

the totals for a series

The following arc

41,227,127

15.511
283
11 255
3.250
355

750,000

312,129

903,711

43.955,531

Specie.

Shawmut
Shoe & Leather.
State

878,252

374,201
602,1 74
881,429
444,458

10,622,581
10,622,316
10,613,974

15,857,032
io,oas,854

$1,539,221
2,098,743
l .ooo/HJi)
1,000,000 2,768,062
1,778,058
750,000

...

1,502,820

1,887,849-

16,310,505

40,003,150
45,279 109
44,730,328

17,610,825

2,261,354
2,475,698
1,811,455
1,885. Ill

1,518/50

10,622,247

statement of the Boston
the Clearing House, Monday, Sept

Loans.

Capital.

..7 3,000,0(10
200,000
Mount Vernon..
New England... 1.000,000
1,01)0,000
North.
900,000
Old Boston

800,881

1,018,789

returned to

Merchants’

4,713,882
4,087,079

1,705,700

10.623,646
10,622,751
10,624,772
10,623,360

45,150,620

Banks.—Below we give a

..

Maverick

202,085
218,172
223/88
200,412

075,435

45.637,975

Circula.
10,625,426
10,626,214
10,647,852

10,875,409

234,552

55,403,286

Massachusetts..

572,413

5,118,003
4,805,484
3,042,807

55,020,710

Market

4,517,303

883/20

164,007
396,530
185,186
382,208
222,900
209,053
197,207

55,640,740

Fanenil Hall..
Freeman’s....
Globe
Hamilton
11 o ward

771,074
195,913
011/82
383,385
2,101,88 L

93,68.8'
41,885
0,852,785
490,990
129,702
048,102 1,025,000 10,802,070
209,054
1,191,213
4,110
830,703
09,714
10,500
1,304,018
11,298
20,830
077,285
2,790 283,500
098
905,890
9,052
11,333/77
277,070 2,901,805
13,019,203
50,587 1,73.3,000

...

12,582
of the Philadelphia

10,604,202
10,747,440

395,886
187,281

54,674,753
55,151,724
55,255,474
55,084,008

Eliot,

1,300,000

1,527,212
1,221.953

388,252

182,524

54,341.163
54,592,015

Boyle ton
Columbian...
Continental...

240,000

1,150,003

417,500
175,000

45,583,220
10,855,894
17,402,177 ' 47,2 5,867
45,048,718
17,792,508
46,039,377
17,819,300
45,985,616
17/14,195

233,996

53,791,596
53,994.618
54,024,355

Banks.
Atlantic
Atlas
Blacks lone
Boston

173,441

2,510,805

10,015

210,127
5,592

593,000

Legal Tend. Deposits.
44,824 398
10,443,153

Specie.

28, 1868.

Total

Specie

Loans.

53,653,471

National Banks, as

82.520,200 271,273 ,514 12,003,483 24,050,7 71 202,003,331 63,587,570
s of previous week :fre
iollows :
The deviationslVom the return
Do post f 8.
Dec.
$750/19
Loans
Tnc
$2'. ,413 Legal Tenders.,..Dec.
l:-;5/2l
r

a

Boston

292,980
1,019,532
1,601,470
6,115,212
1,619,234
1,110,510
833,604
521.518
1,017.986
590,060

880,407
3,905,785

188,811

40,101
107,035
57,535

485,106
155,897

2,232,918

2,263,000
1,276,000
796,000

37,345 | Circulation .......Increase .

shows the condition
series of weeks.

Date.

324,534
493,100

1,990,500
1,788,138

bin 1,120.

23,398
125,857
55,400
43,363

3,702 ,315
3,848 ,344
957 ,105
2,901 ,ooo
1,231 ,331
1,782 ,812
205 ,908
79t ,040
471 ,212
5or ,323
i,ii( ,590

500,000

National
National
YorkN. Exchange

Third

„

333,0(10

251,4.8
13,711

1,144 ,181
5,751 ,2.-:2

1,(MM),000

-

132,078
0,003

9,000

900,802
900,575
1,47: 1,403
1,0)0,319

300,000

Second National
Ninth National

T

'■ 17,'i 51

5:-,; 10
2o,890
97,381
95,580

500.000
1,220,317
5,000,000 17,257,431
12,95: ,!M)3
3,000,000

Mer...

987,701

^

040.758 5,908,885
59,579
900,000
798,830
129,011
481,507
20,045
133,777
2.9,075
7.9,833 848,729

8,020,922

350,000

177,131
331,000

311,787

15,04; .372

400,000

205,015

113,025
39 i,b73

3,08' ,811
2,758 ,718
4,270,000
2.89U .198
4,110,015
o,0io ,517
1,118 ,015
1,001 ,8 70
1,38 ,109

500,000
800,000

Mechanics’ Banking Ass
Grocers’
North River
East River

219.001

,,

035,000

I Legal Tenders.. .Increase. 1S1,822
Increase. 271,596

£152,424 Deposits

Specie
Increase .
The annexed statement

duly 6
July 13
duly 20
July 27
1.491,290
Aug. 3
1,891,500
925,852
Aug. 10
727,139
Ang. 17
1,017.001
Aug. 24
700,000
437,167 Aug. 31
707,033 Sept. 7
815.518
Sept. 14
1,751,038 y ept. 21
951,921
Sept. 23

770,550

1,710

515,000

459.163
33.027
120,031
18,900

1,802,320
4,031,3X5
2,101,531
1,495,070
2,200,51)4
2,417,524
1,1590,000
10,: i • 8,0; >3
1,007,517
2,383,385

2,000,000
750,000

Continental
Commonwealth

15,738

204,300
195,720
3,507

•108,530

211,851
1,173,205
314,105
542,517
30,871
200,509

3.281,542

1,000.000
1,500, (HR)
1,000,000

152,272
439,700

507,519

274,540

1,190,589
5,137,019
10,315,(559
24,410,930
5,771,409
3,003,420

2,000,000
450,000
412,500

Republic

Decrease.

Loans

26, 1868;

1,329,550
0,130,733
4,314,053
2,407,539
7,570,030
2,899,910
3,152,110
1,703.021
2,110,773
5,328,103
•3,015,012
1,119,807

10,%9
891,714

135,000
219,000
238,000

648,000

16,017,150 55,463,2S6

..

Net
Legal
Circnla*
Specie.
lion. Deposits. Tenders.
;2.310,200 !j)«13,olb $7,420,181 *1,8)5,578

300,195
822,72 i

261,261
132,400

321,000

*

Banks.—The following statement, shows the
condition of the Associated Banks oi New York City for Hie week

commencement of business on September
AVERAGE AMOUNT OF

3,000

1,000.000 1,867,000 11,500
300,000
921,000

.

909,700
594,850

234,552 16,038/54 44,227,127 10/07,919
This column includes amounts due to hanks.
The deviations from last weeks returns are as follows r
♦

Total

New York Ctty

ending at the

Republic

Exchange

79 @ 79#
71% © 71%

71#

71 %@

275.000 828,000
750i000 2,830,000

Eighth

40%@ 40%
40# @ 40%

244,000
182,400
95,000
217,000
217,000
743,000
491,000
237,000

300,000 1,064,Q00 10,387
225,000
637,000
150,000
461,000
250,000
853,000

Third
Fourth
Sixili.
Seventh

closing quotations for the several classe
of foreign bills,compared with those of the three last weeks
Oct. 2.
The

[October 3,1868.

CHRONICLE.

43,876,300
43,580,894
43,389,523
44,962,268
43,702,501
42,361,049
41,214,607
40,891,745
40,640,820
39,712,168

39,127,659

National.

State,

144,®

25,214,100
25,216,184 141,538
25,218,727 135,799
142,450
25,254,906
25,016,492
25,197,164
25,182,658
25,214,556
25,193,091

25,196,084
25,183,876

25,184.048

25,150,081

FINANCIAL.

Thirty year Six ?er
Cent Gold Bond-) of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, based opM
the most valuable portion of the main line to and from the Pacific coa3t(
To Careful

Investors.—The First Mortgage

shared by no other
corporate securities. More than 350 miLs are now completed, and the
thiough line will be finished within a year. The local traffic k
already very large and growing. The bonds can be had at 103 0
<& Hatch,
accrued interest in currency. For sale by
Bankers, Ac., No. 6 Nassau st., N. Y.

are

believed to possess

advantages

and assurances

whole

Fisk

October

3, 1868.J

THE CHRONICLE.

431

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK
EXCHANGE,

REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK

ENDING FRIDAY, OCT. 2, TOGETHER
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS
IN THE SAME WEEK.

STOCKS AND

Satur. Mon.

SECURITIES.

Tuea.

•

V 6U

hurt:

i

Week's Sale?

| Eri.

American Gold Coin (Gold Room).. 142% 141% 141% 141% 140% 139%
National:
114
United States 6s, 1881
113% 112% 113
coupon. 114
do
do
H2%
Os, 1881. .registered.
do
do
113% 1113
6@, 5-20s(’62)coupon. 114
,112%
—

—

—

do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
-do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

6s, 5-20s do regist'd
Os, 5-20s(’64) coupon
6s, 5.20s do regist'd
6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon
6s, 5.20s do regist'd
6s, 5.20s (’65 n.) coup
6s, 5.20s do regist'd
6s, 5.20s (1867) coup.
6s, 5.20s do regia'd
6s, 5.20s (1868) coup
6s, 5.20s do regis'd
6s, Oregon War 1801
6s,
do. (iy'rly)
6s, Pacific R. R., is.
coupon
5s, 1871
5s, 1871 ..registered.
5s, 1874
coupon.
5s, 1874. .registered.
5s, 10-40s ...coupon.
5s, 10-40s .registered.

JI2K

'108% 1(18%
109% 1(M>4 |!09%

—

—

no
no%
1
109%
109% 109% 109% ,110%

—

—

110%

—

109

103% !108%

—

-

ios% !10S% :ios%
—

—

109% 109%

1

—

Jl0S%

—

—

—

—

108%

—

—

—

—

—

—

!

California, 7s
Georgia 6s.
do
do
do

—

Registered, 1800
do

do

91% j

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Indiana bs, War Loan

—

—

—

—

—

—

—~

—

97

5,000

'—

Kentucky 6s, 1868-72
Louisiana 6s

—

—

—

—

1*1%
95

93

52

70%

43%
70%

47% | 46%

49

49%

Week's Sal*

No.

500
642
143
150
50

16,618
22,663

37,367
40

1,061
19,975
4,366
320
305
114

62,645

71

930

139

2,200

50

do

—

do
pref.
Hudson River
100.‘40
Illinois Central
100}l45
Ind. and Cincinnati
-Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st pretlOO

140

145%

2d

do

83%

S3

ICO

'113%

100
.100

..

693

51%

pref 100

Michigan So. and N. Indiana

146

84% I 81%

119

83%

83%;

95% i
100 93% 91% 91% 91
94
do
94% 94% 94%.
do
preP.-lOu
,
15%
Morr-s & Essex
100
! ——
65%
64;
New Haven & Hartford
New Jersey
1(H)
New York Central
126 % 129 ! >28%
100 ; 29% j 129%
New York and New Ilaven
100^41
Norwich & Worcester
—.
Ohio and Mississippi
28% I 28%
28% | 28% i
100!
do
do
pref..
—
.100) Panama
Ktil!
loo.
i —
111’
*109 '08% l C9
7a
j no
Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic. 100
94
■i.
93% j 94% '■i 5%
Reading
50 94% 94
Milwaukee and St. Paul

1127%

•

—

—

5s

—

—

—

—

23,001

—

—

—

—

—

|1‘ 0

100

do

—

—

101

100

Michigan Central

—

—

—

—

War Loan

do

—

—

do 1877
do 1879

do

—

—

pref....

—

191%

102
122
101

(21%

j 121

—

|

—

6s,cou.,’79,aft.’60-62-65-70

do

:

—

—

—

:

1

jl32% j

—

—

—--

—

117,i CO
46,000

(

1

1

—

Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860

i

!

.

do

Erie
do preferred

—

i

Harlem

j

.

)

50
.....

do

1

101%

Cleveland and Toledo

Hannibal and St. Joseph

1

State :

7s (new)

10,000

103% !i09% (')•:% 104% Il03%

—

Alabama 8s
do

—

1

OO

100

Delaware, Lackawana and West
Dubuque & Sioux City...
do

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

■

—

—

—

—

—

—

1

—

:

....

Eri.

Wed. Thurs»!

$1 SI, 000 Central ol New Jersey
122
’122% 122%
122% 123
100 123
5,000 Chicago and Alton
152
150
.100
598,C00
do
do preferred
100
19,850 Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO
170
546,000 Chicago & Great Eastern
—
6,0.-0 Chicago and Northwestern
100 89%'j —
88%
87% 88
486,000
do
do
S8%
87% 88% 89
pref.100 8'.)%' 8S
8,600 Chicago, Rock
Island and Pac 100 1( 2% >1%; 101% 102% :03
103%
236,500 Cleveland, Col. Cin. and Ind
100
j
; 79%
—
Cleveland. Painesv.& Ashtabula 100
99% ! 93% | 96%
635,000 Cleveland and Pittsburg
85 7s 34% 85 k
86%
50 85%: 86
6,000
85,700
34,000

•

—

—“

—

—

!08% (>03%

iOS

—

—

—

100

—

-08

—

—

—

{108% 107% ,198%;I 108%
—

—

j

1

—

109

end Erie

Mon. Tnos

Satur.

.

,109

—

SECURITIES.

Railroad Stocks

„

Boston, Hartford

,

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

STOCKS AND

‘

i

—!

—

1(0

10,845
3, SCO
8,960
182

47,266
43

14,2(.0
25

.

Michigan 6s, 1878
:
do
7s, War Loan, 1878
92
Missouri 6s,
do
6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.)
do
6s, (Pacilic RR.)
New York 7s, 1870
do
69,1873
do
59,187-1
do
7s, State B’yU’ds(coup)
do
do
do
(reg.)
*77
x70
North Carolina,6s
do
6s (old)
do
75% 75
6s, (new)
Ohio 6s,1870-75
Rhode Island, 6s

—-

—

—

—

.

—

92

-

—

—

92

91%

84,000
35,000

—

"

—

—
■

do

—

—

——

—

—

74%

'

51

6s, (new)
do

—

.

—

73%

74
—

—

—

—

520,000

—

!oo%

-

—

—

-

303,000
770/100

69%
—

52,000

—

—

12,000

—

Registered

Municipal:

Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan

96%

—

96%

90%

6,000

—

do

6s, Pnrk Loan
Kings Country, 6s
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan

Commerce
Continental

—

—

No.
100

121

—

—

—

—

—

—

—
—

20

—

—

,100

—

—.—

—

—
—

—

—

—
—

1'

—

Hanover

102

r,‘

123% 123
—

105

100
100 113
Manufacturers & Merchants.... 100
Metropolitan....
50
Mechanics
100
Merchants
50
Nassau
100 107

1

14

25

—

Irving

20
16

—

—

—

105
—

—

—

-

14
15
12

—

—

101

—

—-

141

—

—

—

10

—

100
100

...11’111.1
..

100
100

21
—

—

-100
100
100

L

Miscellaneous
Jew.—American

100
Stocks:
100

Ashburton
Central

Pennsylvania..

—

Pacific Mail

33

-

.

500
194

--

128

127

225

225

128

129

100

.100
100
100

—

250
800

230

15

Pow. 20

—

34

34%

in

15

47

46

47

47%

1,350

34%

33%

34%

34

2,759

112% 112

22,637

52
49
23
50
31

8,405

110% 108% 107

—

100

irust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust 25
axpress.—Adams
100
Ame.ican ./
500
Merchants’ Union,.... .100
United States
100 50
!/• „.
eij s, Fargo & Co...... 100 29%
^i-ai^r-Manposa Gold
100
Mariposa preferred
100
„<*H'ctti,ver
ioo

51
46

23%

— :

48

30%

29%

5%
12%

—

xiscManeom—Bankers & Bro. Ass
New York Guano........

50% 62%
46
48%
23% 24%

48

—




—

.

50
50 225

telegraph.—Western Union...
steamship.—Atlantic Mail
Union Navigation

—

„r.

Brunswick City Land....—
Canton...
100

°ary

—

—

20

—

50

“Citizens
Manhattan

7 ,

—-

100

160
100

Cumberland
100
Delaware and Hudson...100

Improvement.—Boat. Wat.

—

!

T°“«>

58%

Railroad Ronds:
American Dock and Iaiprov. Co.7s
Bufla’o, N. York & Erie, 1st mort.

95

>

■

50
30

—

—

12%

12%

52%
49

23%
48%

30%
5

13%

662

9,540

4,000
5,450

—

200

14%

10,400
800
90

21%
—

—

229

3,000
—

—

Income..

Chicago,Burl’ton & Quincy, 8p. c. 111% 111
Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort 81
Chicago & Milwaukee, 1st mort...
Chicago «fc Northwest.., Sink. Fund
do
do
do
do

7,964

—

Central of Nt w Jersey, 1st mort...
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund,
do
do
1st mortgage...
do

59;
—

do
Interest b’nds
do 10 p. equipment
do
1st mort,
do
consolid’ted
.

Ill

3,000
5,0C0

—

<>
—

.

95

95

95

95

102

95
—

94%

90,000
6,0; 0

5,000

87%

do
do
4th mortgage..
do
do
Cons, mort lxis
Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund
do
do
new 7s

Col., Cin. & Ind. Central 1st
Delaw’e, Lackawan. &West,lst m..
Dubuque & Sioux City, 7s convert

80%

\Y7

SO:

47,000

3,000

i

——

—

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 1871#

do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage, 1880
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Great Western, 1st mortgage, 1888.
do
do
2d mortgage
Hannibal and St. Joseph, conv. bds

5,000

95
*89

92%

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72
do
Cons’lidated& Sink Fund
do
3d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869.
do
2d mort, (S. F.), ’85 104

7,000

102%

i02%

1,000

11,000

79% 79%

i°i

Illinois Central • onds
119J
Lackawanna & Western, 1st mort.

120

.

—

•

Shoe and Leather
State of New York

59%

,

—

.11.1100

Ocean

Phenix
Seventh Ward

108

—

100
100
100

Ninth
North Ame ica

72

—

—

—

lOO

Corn Exchange
Fourth

60

Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort..
do
do
3d mort, conv.

100

..

60!

preiloo

do

Chicago, R. I. and Pac, 7 percent..

—

:

Commonwealth

61

.100

100
90

Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort

New York 7s
do
6s 1876

Bank Stocks
American Exchange
Hank of New York
Bank of Republic
Central..
Chatham

do

do

■

x70%

—

53%

527,000

—

*65%

■—

■

4,000

*00

100

I
!

—

pref.100
—

—.

—

—

*70%; *69
*68% *69
*70
69% 69% 68% 67% 68%
*53%
*54
*53%
—

Virginia 6s, (old)
do
do

—

—»—■

—

—

—— —

—

do

Toledo, Wabash and Western.

—

l0S%

l0S%
*15% *75%

—

■

—

do

—

....

do

Third Avenue

—

—

42,b20

,

-

-

—

Tennessee' 6s ‘68
do
6s (old)
do
6s, (new)

Stoniipgton
ion
St. Louis, Alton »fc Terre Han‘e.100

12,861

—

■

—

—

——

—-

—

——

-

1

——.

—

,

101

18

Mariposa, 1st mortgage, new
Mariposa Trustee lu ctfs
Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72
do
do
8s, new, 1882

18
40

Toledo &

do

do
do

do

2d, pref
income.

Wabash, 1st mort.,

do
do '

do

mortgage,
do
equipment..
Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st E.D
do

do

Western Union

do

—

93%

83%
h03

87%;

W D

Tel., 7s Bonds...

—

—

103
—

87%

—

—

—

93

—

5,000
1,000
1,000
5,000
32,000

5,COO

2,000
6,000
3,000

—

l.OCO

S4%

6.(00
1,000
1,000

S4

5 000

84
91

S4%

3,000
1,010
15,000
3,00C

5 000

95

84%

ext..

2d

00%

lG0

do
do
2d mort.,7s... 93
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort..
do
do
2d mort
do
do
8s Is-1 mort 103
do
do
7 3-10 conv
do
do
1st Iowa Div 92
Morris and Essex, 1st
mortgage...
do
do
2d mortgage....

New York Central 6s, 1883
do
do
6s, 1887
do
do
6s, 1876
New York & N. H. bonds,
6s
Ohio and Mississippi, 1st
mortgage
do
do
consol, bonds
Pacific R.R. 7s gnar’dbyS. of Mis
Peninsular, 1st mort
i
Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne & Chic., lstm.
do
do
do
2d mort.
do
do
do
3d mort.
St. Louis, Alton & Terre H, 1st m.

—

115

Michigan Southern, SinkingFund.

8,000
7,0(0
2.000
1,000

96

Mariposa, 1st mortgage, old

do
do

10-1%

104% 1C4%
120

[October 3,1868,

CHRONICLE.

THE

432

Arttcles from New i ork,

ExporiKof Leading

following table,compiled from Custom House returns,shows ths
exports of leading articles of commerce from the por of New York
since January 1, 1868. The export of each article to the several port?
The

Commercial ©imeg.

<E!)e

the amount *n thcla-t

the pant week can be obtained by deducting
number of the Oftronjclk from that here given :

for

COMMERCIAL EPITOME.

CKO-'W-fCOf-CCl-OO-^-^” O —5 Ct t- C» CO i- Cs
Ct
t'"iOTrG't,-<cncCCiSOC:CseD<
emj kcs sc rti ct co -*> or oo c»
lO 30 W — C LO r. Si CO -* CO i—
*"
w
wt *“ v'1a — 'V/-T a*Cr£-i*T rA
vt
f*> eo co"tp <•->*
rr
S> t-T ^s* m CO S: CSS
SC;
t-h t- -r srf 7
ofof sc" cf
so
«H Ctco CC SC SO T* rH ~
"
ri
G^CC''' TI-XaOW’«'
fi TfrlirHOOHSOJ
SO
Ct
r-t • t* CC rt

The incertitude
of

noticed in our last, and

prices, the result of

2.

the unsettled state

0 3
’S
“

drooping.

»—<

t<f

ct

the
the

o
XT'

inactivity is still the rule.
Cotton has advanced on a scarcity for current wants.
Breadstuff's have been drooping, but close more active. To¬
bacco is dull and

« ct-(»
c
—Tof~<rcc cfxf vferze sxf of cfcf so so cfcf c ct oo so if >8 . l.'
Ct t- Ct 2 ^ 10
^ SCSCttoi
t- ^

'

'

C£>

close, although
ah

—

rJD

Continue, and

the decline in gold, still

business the past week has been small for
But there is some improvement in tone towards

the volume of
season.

-j

-

.—

Friday Night, Oct.

J
"©

SC

Ct O

0-0 o

~

30 fr C
-r ■/ cc

~

^

.

'

-I

L'i CO

t-

Cr T-i

*CGO

CO

— _!

c> o
<71 <71 71

"T - O

,

'■ft,

ri

rf

C* c» >0 o> so Vi tcr ? -o i-

!c

or {-

C» SC I-

•

CO

t*

Groceries have been but mode¬

flat.
The'general market presents rather a dull tone, buyeis being
unwilling at present rates to operate beyond immediate wants.
-A good steady jobbing trade however, particularly for barreled
pork, and lard, induces a firmer feeling on the part of holders,
who, finding the reduced stocks easy to control, are not free
sellers except at full figures. There appears to be a better
desire lo operate in the new crop for future delivery on the
part of both buyers and sellers; City Prime Mess has been
sold', for December at §25, and several transactions have
recently been consummated, though great secrecy is preserved
in regard to terms, as many of the sellers have not as yet
contracted for their hogs. Gutter and Cheese have taken a

yr

.

T>

u~

»'n -•* o» ct

T^sa

si
’

c;

<77 ir --1 Ti

w

•

■cxc-.sl’.-f 3C
—j. -x Tf
-f
si

S'. VG Oi C' i-i

CC 7*

I- r -o r 71 h

Tj TH

•

w

71 Tf SO : ; r4 r: J- -Z '
Tf
or:

• ^ Si W 71
'^^

77 rt

• c- t**<

.

.C17*

rately active, and close

i!'

;

.

CS CO T-I

r*

.
.

.

•2 -»o(

o

• to

' cf
it?

-f <?» oc f-

-

f - ”

tlO

•

77

CO

T-,

_r

.

30
7 ■'S’

—

r-t

V*

r

«-

g

-K

CO

.3-1
• CO

•

.

•

.so
• 77
• «?<

r-

..

*

or

—

r-l

lo 'f

/)

.G {-

•

•

.

G?

.«

.

LG CT3

-O O
sy LG t-i

Ol If (/l A)

|H.

m co io

-f

,

i-;h
^ «

‘

TT {- St

‘

•

•

55

'

.

CO

• r-l

•= Gi

•

:

,

•

*t-£& .SOIGo
O 7(

•‘22rJ2:
Tf I— O

.

Z7S>'?.%

•

.

.

lO

'

o —I t- K
SO V)
CO ^ -o C - '+t”32 Cr-1

»G

G.’-' 1

03 t-1 CO

irr

Tf

M

O

1(0 J — ,T>
sy rr i—

o

o

—

*f

'

o

sc

so

so c * t-h

SO Si

.

1

OO o S3

“

^

a -

-rr'

Bombay Linseed at about

‘Sol

•

•

C' {—

•

•

/}

•

Ol

U3 03

j—

■

°7r-(

t-1

'* LO

■/1-1

!*

J? I"

■

•

si

-f

r-.

I.G

O

oi

•

• t- lo

-ionci

r'

of of

lO lO or ^
sc c: ct -o- f- 'r

•

<

-,~|.G)

•-

It
^

C
o

Wool has ruled

■

f3t SO lO T-I CS
t- so CO -r so
cs T-i
Ol so

32 Ti
V

•
•

—

r-> Zi
uj 40

’S ’ csf

r- O
=

-

C*

^2 r-T

10 co lo

gr os

’

Ct so

’

.

17 ks I

^

ci 'H,rH | ^

s'L ^

-i1 -* ea

'. th

rt

rr; iO
cr '
n't

.

!

oi to

os

•

r:

,

^ .TTCtcco
V
Tf
T-I

-

t* Ct

•

*

CO

^

to

y © so
oi sc —i
.

.

.

; i - uo

.

.

,

"

CO T*

■

SO

a
Tf

SO
‘

.

•

;

Tf

•ICO

C» C3 SO
co r o

t- so in

■

^

‘

-

.

ct

ot ot

;

cr>_

-

c»

c#

■
■

-t< 30 C3

J

w

•

.OlOOrlH-l
30* S.
——* . i .’H
C l,
riLG -

cf cf

^^

-CO

•
•

of '

•o'

c» 03 2

'

~

- -

03

SO —1

-to

LO

SO

ss,'*I"1 *° • V t-„
^5
ft
S

cf of of

cr't-

CO

T-l

•

CMSO-o

•<?<

f-

.

SO -o

SO >• C> »0 1- - .
so T-i 'T — Cl c» o

—

.

c»
CO

•e-«GOo

•

CO'— 1—<GO—

•

cf

so

CO l- oo

ct -r so to

lg -_o rt*

*

:®oP'

sale to-day of

high rate of ocean freights.
firm, with more movement in foreign.
Hops have been active. Hay has slightly declined. Whiskey
has advanced to §1 50, excise paid. Fish are dull.
Build¬
ing materials are dull.
_
'
Freights have been active. The Liverpool steamers Lave
been tilled up with Wheat; 8d.@9d. for this week, and lOd
for next, with some shipments by sail at V.Vd.@8d. Hie Glas¬

•

af

co r- co

and

•

cri-o
Tf -f

CC 'N

•

§2 25, gold. Metals
have been quiet, except for Pig Iron, which has had a free
sale, both Scotch and American. Petroleum has been
advancing since early in the week, and Refined sold to-day at
31 @31 Jo. for October delivery in Philadelphia.
Kavnl
Stores have experienced some decline under the fall in gold

•

CQ

'

steady.
India Goods have been dull, except a

5,000 bags

Lf ^

.

•

leading to some large sales.

C7 Si T«

•

•
CO CO lO CC ^
•CO'*
1C m

•t-hI

b' Ci

T C5 r-^

I

•

given way a little,

.m

St i& CO ©

.

I— CO

o

Leather and Skins
East

J- -/)

I

t

u-_

ZZ

y-1 t-i

•

downward turn.
Hides have

rf c»r st
r- -f -»
Ol-H

oo

,
‘

A

'jj

»

oo

:

:

-Cl LS H

Ct

’

CJj

c cr cc e
x oi c C
r-l ot X O

,

l?

■

i

l

m

5?

sc

steamer got 12d. for Wheat, and a vessel to Cork for
orders, 7s. per quarter. Petroleum charters include a vessel
of 4,500 bbls. to day, from Philadelphia, to a direct port on
gow

the Continent at 0s.
Domestic £#re«tue© for tit©

Receipts off
The

Jaw? JU

receipts of domestic produce

and for the

same

week.

Since
Jan 1.

4,017

4,443

Breads! nil's—

81,337 1;242,939 1.512,145

it Flour bbls..

Tlosin
Tar
Pitch
Oil cake,

65

Cotton, liab s.

(■!

Copper, bbls..
opper, plat’s
Dr’d fruit,pkg
Grease, pkgs.
Hemp., bales..
Hides, No....
II ps,

bales..

Leather, sides
Lead, pigs ...

0,502 410,510
300
13,738

Spirits turp.




.

457,05:: Starch

9,007 Stearine

202

4.881

12,940 Spelter, slabs.

22,3 0

10,145| bbls
09

1,880 400,f 83
3.340
12,102

25,0001.020.035
0,037

31,013

.

14,707

No

Pice,
386

1,301

8,436
40,543

7,054

50,523

bush

....

71
2.161
736

1,333
1,886
....

S7S
20.952

■

1G

•

CO

so tp

t-T

•

30

i

— I-

-3,Ct
<£- 00

n

•

‘O 30 3

C-

r-l

-f

•

122.311
29.183
111.177

so CO

•
•

.
.

185,831

r3^r-

cs
.

30

iC '0

r-l
.

-I? 35

-Coo

•

CO

• Ct

•

C t-

•

OS rH 10
X Ct lo

If
S3

ss

ct

s> -o

—- oi t*
so --

Po
'os so"
;

.

AO

'

—o:»^e-2;sosoos —At^oo222^j£r5^tc’^’"
•or-isftcf.ocoxn:£r'>,t*S2?^?^i2~r7S2loot'^tc5,,i
-rosOrt- r-,os »o,viaOrWy,c®-« ”
^T
cf rfet 2 scfo? a £: COG^ a,
c» S S 0
"2?
•rrxot'TTH

' r-T 03

CO

1

JO a: 03
!

-XI

SCI

A x: oi

03 5i

*i B

« * ® g g ® g
H fl -C JO -f GS

,

a^ort^-;^g'

;saaa =
JO JSJG
JD
.

B

«3 B « B

7s

,

'^^jO^i^O,

!

BJ

:

• o
r-l

B ai

1 ^ —■

txr2.

tx

tc

g
©

®-B IB 00 IS «

a a a

o

§2

w

tc ai

aT

C o
-

ss

© J *

.

.

a,

; «

•

•

;

.

•

.

}->»

■

>,

131,751
83,367

.

a

,

•

Lh

TS1

©

s

©

•
: a © «
© T3
*.K! V- C
.

•

1 ©v

*

^

•

1,759
2,387

14,428

2

79,873

«

|5

0D

r,s«

T—*

'*

O 1(5 0)

•

1*

t*

o

7,331

76,864

•

co' io

i.O

81,472
'

90,661

•

r

^•co

■

•

o •

CO CO;

£ t- j3,

Ct

H

so
o SO

H

T2

so

•

•

O
1.0

111.697

•

.

:

cf t-T cf GO

rf •

lO

CC

•

909.818

68,663
42,? 97
25,753

rough,
•.

—

GO X hO SO

2,801

•

•

SO

•

108,280

9,310

r-i

0,T-(

5,678 141.223

*

Tallow, pkgs.
254,804 Tobacco,pkgs
5.705 Tobaf co,hhds
1,843^507 Whisky, bbls.
14,250 Wool, bales
Dressed hogs,
08<

.

8.94!

25,1S4 sugar, hhds.&

47
32

Cl

10,256

,80

O

•

392,175

8,865

.....

•

.

12,939

11,474

191)
25 4

..

3,777

Molasses,hhds
and bblo
Naval St ires Crude trp.bbi

I Lard, ke-s
6,085/bice, pkgs.

.

x

3,313
775,618

.

8,272

h*

-

g■

—

<r.' o

5,067
61.667

....

B. W.flour,pug

n rr

-t1 r-

17,085

-

Buckwheat &

**C r

’

so t- i*'

time ’67
252.238

8,160
49,626

gWheat, busli 145,2070,0‘21.067 3.050.01X8
25
7,996
Corn
.157,56815.257,745 10.002,781 Oil, lard .
13,829 497.075
.Oats
1j7,905 5,618.494 3,008.8521Oil,petroleum
25,264
205,201
230,005 Peanuts, bags
Rye
Malt
3,073 5.0,8?1 380,022: Provisions—
305,050 Butter, pkgs. 22.200 331.736
0.080 513.505
Barley
17.089 74 \ 209
548
50,015 j Cheese
Grass seed..
83,523
593
67,818
SI,8"4: Cut meats...
Flaxseed...
2,015 53.521
3,774 119,345
25,-202
28,711 Eggs
B ans
357 100,098
*711 231,040 203,425 Pork
Peas..
86.758
47
1,300 113,112
54,066} Beef, pkgs...
C.meal, bbls.
1,147 69,957
S’JO 220,7-4
221,466' Lard, pkgs..
C.meal, bags.

•

y-1- so t-

8 a me

8ince
Jan. 1.

351,733
1,932 28,146
926

so

t-

•

pkgs

—i

■

•

This
week.
25.334

.

•

.

Tt< oi tc -r> so

.

.

follows:

Same
time "in

330

Allies, pugs..

for the week and siuce Jan. 1

time in 1867, have keen us

Tin's

Week and since

.ss-j

.go-e'aCftSfQWo

•S»a° I
27*
K-d

.

TD

<n

o

•

©

.

o!

ri

© »-

2
a
s?
o

ra

3,964

:o
1A

f;

o-

•

•S©

5

o

C O

e-ipt^h

i

Receipts and Exports

Leading Articles.

Imports of

Custom House returns, shows
leading articles of commerce at this port
and for the corresponding period

0,373

300,301
447.002
081,004

203.152

0,193

24,795

21,417

3,050 j Waste
.....
43
871
34,352 Wines, &c.
558
11,310 Champ, bkts
63,304
Wines
397
74,005
3,812
2,581 Wool, bales...
028
22,730
3,S67 [Articles reported by value.

4,783
ICO,0 0

540,207
303,010

333

p’wd’rs

Cr Tartar...

Gambier
Gums, crude
Gum, Arabic

411

....

2,1 6
3,032
8,005
510

38

Indiuo

156

Madder
Oils, ess....

070

Oil, Olive...
Opium
Soda, bi-carb
Soda, sal....
Soda, ash...

Ill

Flax
Ears

Gunny
Hair

27

50
8
14

India rubber..
Ivorv

217

ft!

•

r*

60.838

30,890

00,723
26,572

73,036
44,323

144,840

1,880

0,027

44,009
40.405

10,010

110,022
195,8X9

155,825

78,320

100,378

~

.1,S)S

830

2,270

310,420

311,000

715

Woods.Fustic

Logwood

...

Mahogany..

received by us to-night from each of
in possession of the returns show¬
ing the receipts, experts, Ase., of cotton fur the week end¬
ing this evening Oct. 2. From the figures thus obtained
it appears that the total receipts for the last seven days have
reached 34,G07 bales, (against 29,281 bales last week* 19,330
bales the previous week, and 11,009 Tales three weeks since,
making the aggregate receipts since September 1, ISOS up to
this date, 99,877 bales, against 49,074 bal es for the same
By special telegrams

,

*'

•

•

•

•

•• • •

•

•

•

•

....

....

•

•

•

•

.

•

•

•

I

|
401

7,030,

.

•

*

•

•

•

8,217

780

1,448

055

1,148

....

....

....

....

«...

....

7,832

....

....

055

v

...

....

7,000

200

1,542

401

OsO

10,760

142

735

7,070

19,294 77,593

has been as active as

the limited

3,342

270

The market this week

....

....

19,498

04.8S3

supplies would admit, and prices have steadily advanced, mid¬
dling uplands closing to-day at 26i@27c. This improvement

of demand over the

be wholly due to an excess

appears to

supply available for immediate use. Lots to arrive have been
freely offered at prices below our quotations, and without find¬
ing purchasers. Our spinners, however, have been obliged to
buy from day today to an extent about equal to the receipts;
and as our stock is now reduced to almost a nominal figure
prices have necessarily advanced.
Sales for the week foot up
12,731 bales (including 100 bales afloat), of which 8,905
bales were taken, by spinners, 1,977 bales on speculation, and
1,749 bales for export, and the following are the closing
quotations :
New
'

-

Upland &

$ E>

'

.Ordinary

Good ()rdinary
Low Middling

-

Middling.

"Mobile.

23 @23>£
24 @24>£
25)/@26
2G)/@27

23)-.t@23 %
24&@2»^
25?.,@20)*
26?4@27>4

we

Upland &
..

25><@

Friday.

Texas.

Orleans.

25)*@
25%@—

20 @
24 @...

20-'4@27^

...

25%@—
20 @ ...
26 @20X
20 >£@
20^@27

Monday..:!
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday

market

New

Mobile.

27 . @27^

Florida.
_

23%@24X
24}4@25>f
20>4@26^
27)*@27X

23’£@24
24^ @25
20 @26^
27 @27X

middling cotton at this

give the price of
day of the past week :

Saturday

Texas

Orleei s.

Florida.

1S08.

the Southern ports we are

5,811 30,873
9,841
1,336
1,966
2,388
7,722 5,204
2,167
438

1,001

•

,

1S8

.

each

Friday, 0 P.! M., October 2,

•

at

2,5 Pi
1,468

.

Below

COTTON.

•

STOCK

PORTS.

1

12,241

170,008

Cassia

Ginger
31.03s
Pepper
2,0 5 Saltpetre.....

21

40

Spices, &c.

7,503

802

Jewelry

714,507

Cigars

1,100

0 553
22,134
1,185

Jewelry, &c.
Watches....
Linseed

2 050 I

.CS0

00

Hides,dres’d

855

218,700

30,8401 Cork 8

35,593

4,050
2,210
-807
43
84

Hemp, bales..
Hides, &c.
Bristles

357,839

£20,538 £449,707 $310,702
143,372 208.131
571|Fancy
703 123,780 Fish goods.. 45,420 045,1X8 2,045,090
3,328
201,578 442,087
01 889
34.080 20,'435 Fruits, &c.
10,803 338,242 302,6(12
28,051 27,152 Lemons
1,521
413 517,703 050,009
Oranges
1,200
Nuts:
4,005 484,037 544,050
3,395
4.083 28,144 Raisins
3,079 0 2,05x 500,019
8.815
3,837inides,undrsd, 30,508 4,854,578 7,035,052
4,015
10,335 753,200 428,705
101,140 03,010 j Rice

2

cloth

'

38,021

078
744
2,371

2.001 [Tobacco

4,80S
1,145
12,403

50
58

Cochineal...

341,700

504,247
3,070,700 3,035,3 ’4

3,049

10,1931 Tea

7,520
300,282

092,305

...

tcs&bbls..
19,423 Sugar,bxs&bg

23,038
5,220

Brirast, tns

201,220

11,040

0,407|

2,900

4,52^,510 3.501, 37

<4,144

hhds,

1S07.

124,422

Total.

for’gn.

3,001

31,200

20,782

..

Blea

1. Britain

63,27i

2,700
4,414

.

0,505

„

Total this year..

80
57

..

Sugar,

108,000

BHIP-

NORTH.

France Other

.

.

Same time last year

1,104

Molasses...

Earthenw’e.
Metals, &c.
China
110
7,225
Cutlery
37.378
Earthenware 1,017
Hardware...
Glass
54 241,303
Iron,RRb’rs
Glassware
S1
20,027
Lead, pigs..
Glass plate
5,127
05
4.518
Speller,lbs
Buttons
121
5,087
Steel
8,074 ,82,8 5 143,814j Tin, boxes..
C'oal, tons
Cocoa, bags...
00)
30,207 J4,7001
Coffee, bags
15,020 S24,170 692,047 Tin slabs,lbs
031
j Rags
Cotton, bales.
4
772
318
1 230

Great

since

43.510

the
Jan. 1,
1808.
week.

China. Glass &

Drugs, &c.
Bark. Peruv

PORTS.

33,776
10,59.9
2,400

1807.

1 TO—

.

m’ntsto

N.Orleans, Soft. 25.
Mobile, Sept. 25..
Charleston, Sept. 25
Savanna
Sept. 25.
Texas, Sept 18
New York, Oct 2..
Florida, Sept. 25.
N. Carolina, Oct 2..
Virginia, Oct. 2...
Other ports, Oct, 2.

Since

the
Jan.l,
week.
1808.

otherwise specified.]
Since
For

8EPT

EXPORTED SINCE

rec’d
SEPT.

[The quantity is given in packages when not

Sept. 1, and

of Cotton (bales) since
Dates Mentioned.

Stocks at

The following table,compiled from
the foreign imports of certain
for the last week, siuce Jan. 1, 1868,
in 1867:
For

433

THE CHRONICLE.

3,1868.]

October

26)£@....
26>^@27
27 @

20>4@....
26)<@20;£
26

-

26)*@....
20?£@...v
20?£@....
26?£@27X
27)*@
27)*@27X

exports of Cotton this week from New York show a
decrease, the total reaching 1,830 bales against 2,410 bales last
The

give our table showing the exports ofCotton
from New York, and their direction for each of the last three
weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September
1,186S; and in the last column the total for the same period
period in ISO7, being an excess this season over last season of of the
previous year:
’
*
50,203 bales. The details of the receipts for this week (as per ExportsofCotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1868

Receipts.—.
Received this week at—
ISOS. 1807.
New Orleans
bales. 17,(48
3,202
Mobile
4,364
3,777
Charleston
3,480
2,003
7,137
Savannah
5,949
Texas..-.
2,271
78
727
280
Tennessee, &c
.

Received this week at-

Florida'
North Carolina-

bales

01
471

.

212

3^,007

Total receipts
Increase this year

18,405
10,202

stocks for the week, and also for the
corresponding week of last season, as telegraphed to us by
own correspondents at the various ports to-night:
give the exports and

our

Oct. 'i.
New Orlear
Mobile

,

Exported to
.
Contin’t.

G’t Brita n.
..

4,700

1,905
r....

Total Same week
1807.
this week.
G,005
.

• .

•

....

•

•

•

•

....

.Charleston

®®oo

Savannah..
Texas

••••
•

•

•

«

....

.....

690

New York.
..

..

1,104
0,494

60
200

2,111

....

.

,

.

.

....

,

Stock
1808.

20,201
13,000

2,444

7,832

1,304

112

7,(00

2,550

78,091

0,070

foregoing statement it will be seen that, compared
with the corresponding weak of last season, there is an increase
in the exports this week of 0,109 bales, while the stocks to¬
night are 1,448 bales less than they were at this time a year
ago. The following is our usual table showing the movement
of cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, according to the latest
mail returns. AVe do not include our telegrams to night, as
we cannot insure the accuracy or obtain the detail necessary,
by telegraph.

Total to N. Europe

and Gibraltar

7,030

1,495

401

400

401

142

....

340

16

214
244

351
584

....

....

146

16

458

735

.

.

The following are

328

*328

....

|j

328

328

2,410

i
!

1

1,839

8,217

|

2,3)1 I 1,007

—

j

....

!

....

i

::::

j

::::

Total Spain, etc

last week, and since Sep¬

delphia and Baltimore for the
1, 18GS:

tember

,—Boston.—,

Receipts from—

Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

.........

Since

Sep. 1.
1.335

r-Philad’phia.—,
Last

week.
....

r-

Baltimore.—%

Since

Last

Sep. 1.

week.

192
..

.

*20*6

....

.

..

....

*

*

*

....

Total receipts

Reshipments.

bales.

«

-

•

....

•

•

•

•

287

2,457

23

143

1,545

4,137

*5

*5

o

.

.

.

....

*266

*462

....

26

223

•

• •

-

132

1,012

h]
j

•
■

16
•

•

33

94

...

.

....

....

3

....

.

Sep. 1.

”73

*872
....

if

Since

*

”

.

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

*

1,2:15

5,721

Boston, Phila¬

the receipts of cotton at

Last
week

j;3 it

...

290

.

All others

few Orleans
Texas
Savannah
Mobile

4,844

82

Hamburg
Other ports

Grand Total

■

7,030

214

Hanover

Spain, Oporto

date.

400

1

From the




20.

time
prev.
year.

}

1,804

1,007

1

Total Frencli
Bremen and

to

1,864 ; 1,195

22.

I

2,004

Havre
.
Other French ports

2 201

80,139

Sept.

Other British Ports

Total to Gt. Britain..

Sept.

I

1,607

,

2,004

Liverpool

10,512
2,553
8,900

Total

Sept.
- 15.

Sept.
8.

1807.

38,148
12,437
2,790
5,900
4,584

756

8,005

EXPORTED TO

100

823

Virginia

Same

WEEK ENDING
4

ISO'

1803.

exports for the week ending to-night reach a total
of 8,005 bales, of which 0,494 were to Great Britain, and
2,171 bales to the Continent, while the stocks at all the ports,
as made
up this evening, are now 78,091 bales.
Below

Weekending

we

of 1807 are .—Receipts.
as follows:

The

we

Below

1

telegraph) and the corresponding week

week.

167

•

•

.

]

m

.

2

4

378

"”739

li
i!

-434

THE CHRONICLE.

[October 3, 1868.

Shipping News.—The exports of cotton from the United

pressed for sale, prices have suffered a considerable decline
since tl
of
week, as per mail returns, have reached attracted last. week. Of late, however, the lower quotations hay6
buyers, and, consequently, the total sales of the
4,143 bales. Below we give a list of the vessels in which to 83,6 0 bales, of which speculators have t<ken 10,073 week amou t
bales,exporte^
19,6 10 bales, and the trade
these shipments from all the ports, both North and
South, American produce showed a54,050 bales. At one period of *the week
decline of fd., and East Indian of
have been made:
^d b t
at the close the fall in the former is confined to
f-d., anJ in the latter?
Exported this week from—
Tel. per lb. Brazilian produce has declined £u.‘, but Egyptian has
Total bales
New York.—To Liverpool, per steamers
rulH
Louisiana, 540 bales ....City
firm, and the finer qualities, which are scarce, have realised an
of Boston 84
Russia 368— Nebraska 269
improve”. 1,495 meut of Id.
Palmyra 234
To Hamburg, per steamer Cimbria 16
perl'-. The prices of American cotton, compared
'
16
with
To New Granada per—328
those of last year, are subjoined :
328
Baltimore.—To
close

States the past

—

.

Liverpool,

bark Wroodland, 432
Sh:p Yeo 672...
Bremen, per steamer Baltimore, 200
New Orleans.—To Liverpool, per bark Fille de
l’Air, 1,C3J
To

per

1,101
200

-

particulars of these shipments, arranged in
form, are as follows :
Liver-

From
New York
Baltimore
New Orleans

pool.
1,495
1,104

Ham-

our

4,143

usual

New

burg. Bremen. Granada. Tot’l
16
323
1,839

3,599

....

200

1,000
16

200

328

4,143

The Crop.—Tli8
very

large receipts which we are now reporting
by telegraph, cannot be taken as a fair indication
of the total crop.
They show, however, what we have all along stated*
"that cotton is more forward than usual.
This Js certainly a favorable
fact.
Up to this date probably much more has been secured than at
the same period last
year.
When we hear, therefore, of damage fiom
and rust and

rain, it is well to remember that

the start is better

than in 1867, and if we have a return of fair weather with
the prospect is still good for an

a

late fall

increased yield. Reports this week
continue, however, unfavorable. Leas raiu has fa’ien, but the weather
is still unsettled.
We hear fewer complaints of
worms, except in
South Carolina and Georgia, where
they are reported in sections hitherto
k

free of them.

The accounts from Texas are better.
By Telegraph from the South and Europe.—The

eign ports, none; coastwise, 7,081 bales.
bales.

fallowing des¬

week 5,919

bales; exporfs, to for¬
Middlings 24#@25e.; stock, 5,900

Charleston, Oct. 2.—Receipts for tbe week 3,480 bales; exports foreign
none; coastwise, 2,311 bales; Middlings nominal at28#@21c.; market active
;
stock, 2,790 bales.
Galveston, Oct, 2.—Receipts of the week 2,271 bales; pales, 1,979 bales
stock, 4,584bales; Good Ordiuary, 15#c., holders asking higher figures.
Mobile, Oct. 2.—Cotton is in good general denim d ; market opened at inside
and closed at the outside figures; sales,
1,500 bales; Middlings 23#@24e.;
receipts490bales; exports 129 bales; sales of the week, 4,750 bales ; receipts
3,777 bales ; exports, foreign, none ; coastwise, 113 bales ;
stock, 12,437 bales.
Freights, steam, % ; sail 1116; coastwise %.
New Orleans, Oct. 2.—The market is
active, and prices have advanced
Middlings, 24#c. ; sales 2,600; receipts, 3,977 bales ; sales of the week 20 000
bales; receipts, gross, 17,600; net, 17,018 bales ;
exports, coastwise, 8,964 bales,
Liverpool, 4,700 bales; Continent, 1,905 bales. Stock on band 38,148 bales.
Liverpool Cotton Market.—The cotton

market, with the exception
of one or two days
early in the week being dull, (attributed to unfavorable
news from Manchester), has ruled active and
buoyant. The sales have
been large, and the price is
fully fd. better on both descriptions. There
was some business
noted] in cotton to arrive, late in the week, at 9£d.
for Middling Uplands.
The trade reports'from Manchester still con¬
tinue unfavorable, the market for
goods and yarns being quoted flat
The total shipments of cotton from
Bombay, from the 18th to the 26th
inst., reached 6,000 bales.
Fri.

Bale? sold
Pri,*» Midd.
*•

44

10,000
Uplds. 9%
Orleans
10#
Up to ar
.

44

44

Sat.

Mon.

12,000

15,000

9%
10%

10

10%

New Orleans
Texas...

The

following

date since 1865:

U%-..
11%-..
11%-..
11%-..

10%
10%
10%

-28
-15

30
17
•

-60
-18

•

Tues.
12,000
10-#

10#-#

Wed.
15,000

10%-%

10%-%

Thu.

15,000
10%
10%
9%

..

and

1865. 1866.

Mid. Sea Island 34d.
Upland... 19
Mobile...: 19
Orleans.... 19#

Middling Orleans, 10§d.*

The sales of the day have

reached 18,000 bales.
The Cotton Brokers’ Circular contains the
following statistics :
total sales of the week
ending last evening were

-..

Annexed is

kets,

our

states :*

12#
cotton at this

13#
13#
14

1865. 18G6. 1867
Mid. Pernamb 18d.
14#d 9d
10#
Egyptian. 16
7 *
10%'
Broach... 11%
$
5#
10%
Dhollerah 11#

9%

9%
9%

5#

1fir.fi

10
9

8

0&

4

showing the stocks of cotton in
London, includin' the supplies of American and Indian Liverpool and
prodiice ascer¬

tained to be afloat to those
Stock in
“

ports :

ioim.

Liverpool

Bales

London....
American cotton ailoat

1868

836,650

452,350
747,100

1,342,860

Indian

108,63)
13,000
384,580

1,257,120

44

Total

Since the commencement of the
year
been to the
following extent:

r-Taken

on

1867,

^-Actual export from
Liverpool, Hull and Actnal
other outports
exp’tfrora
to this date-^
K’gdom in
1868.
1867.
1867.
bales.
bales.
bales.

1866,

bales.

244.090

bales.

67,09)

52,920
Egyptian. &c.. 39,000
West India, &c 5,260
East India, &c. 115,860

9,250

117,509
17,060
13,020

7,190
2,260

123,809
-

82,230

189,346

54,540
7,706

3,190

55,480

2,000

speculation and export have

spec, to this date—,

bales.
American
Brazil

55,670

63,399

227,900

87^740
12^590

9.352

10,431
217,255

11.527

22,660
664,150

339,010

Total.... 457,190
141,270
233,000
443,741
612,664
1,015,040
The following return shows the sales and
imports for the week
and year, and also the stocks on hand on the

evening of Thursday last:

SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
Sales this week.
Ex- Specula-

r

Trade, port.
American..bales. 18,500 6,150
Brazilian...
10,270 2,200
Egyptian
2,490
230
West Indian....
1,420
170
East Indian...., 21,370 10,760
Total

tion.

5,400
320
140

54,050 19,510 10,070
.

This
week.
American
Brazilian

2,860
1,590

Same

36,340

To this To this
date
date
1868.
1867.

495,382
137,511

1868.

,

,

Total.
1867.

This

day.
142,990

11,840

20,450
5,li,0
3,200
1,650
14,530

51,190

44,930

1,690

Stocks
->
Same
date Pec. 31.

1867.

103,420

129,690

66,030

38,990
13,640

225,380
447,4C0

350,778 433,946
148,758 197,788
88,694 107,047

112,200
26,100
10.530

952,0261,26-4,160

160,530

42,900
28,280
365.630

452,350

836,650

696

West Indian
East Indian

' 862

Total

62 840

34,011

625,082

1867.

27»,060

40,684 2,403,0442,622,4403,223,276

Egyptian

1867.

23,790
10,110
3,760

S3,630 2,965,8502,447,130

1,8931,082,2091,082,7811,220,335
3,222

Average
weekly sales.

period

194,550 134,970
81,810
78,410
905,210 925,640

Imports

t
.

Total
this

Total.' year.
1867.
30,050 l,2t*2,5501,036,170
12,790
501,730 271,940

....

4,210

*

Of the

present stock of cotton in Liverpool 31 £ per cent is American,
against 32£ per cent last year. Of Indian cotton the proportion is 354
per cent, against 43f per cent.
London, Sept. 19.—At the close prices for cotton on the spot show
a decline of £d. to £d., but at one
period of the week the fall was as
much as |d. to £d. per lb. During the last few dajs the demand has
ru ed active, more
especially for cotton afloat. The following are the
particulars of imports, deliveries and stocks :
1866.

Imports, Jan. 1 to Sept. 17

Bales.

1S67.

280,337
208,303
106,905

176,137
131,402
108,631

arrive, 8fd. per lb., cost and freight.
Jan. 1 to Aug. 17 have been:

1868.

131,451

179,822
55,660

change. The clear
Ready Dhollerah i8
Sawginned Dharwhar, to
The shipments of cotton from

...

...'

926,960
144,589
21,885
36,612

1,039,290

Falmouth, for orders

Bales.

1863.

947,702
6d,453

31,135

To Great Britain
Continent

1,130,106

.
„

China

Total

sea

581,000 bales, of which only
The market for yarns and good-i at Manchester is
reported quiet.
and

*1

12#

statement

a

bound for this port is estimated at
6,000 are from the United States.

JSuropean

15

1867.

The

95,000 bales, of which
17,000 were taken for export and 9,000 on speculation. The stock on’
hand is estimated at 424,000
bales,including 107,000 American.
The total stock of cotton at

9%
9%
9%

1867. 1868.
lGd.
24<1.

20d.

an

Middling Uplands to arrive 10|d.

30
,

>’/8

-..

..

Oood.

17
13

03'

.

p. m.—The market has been active and
[ Deliveries
buoyant to-day Stocks, Sept. 17
advance of £d. per lb.
There has been considerable business
Bombay, Sept. 16.—The market shows but little
done in cotton to arrive at 10£d. The
closing authorised quotation8 ances since the 8tli inst have been 14,000 bales.
were as follows:
Middling Uplands, 104d;
quoted at Cfd. Comptah, to arrive, 7fd.

Latest—5

with

16
12

the prices of middling qualities of

are

1868,

:

Savannah, Oct. 2.—Receipts for tbe

....

*

patches from the Southern ports contain some matters of interest not
given atove. We also add the European telegrams for each day of the
week, and the Liverpool cotton brokers’ report of yester lay, with the

closing rates

Mobile

1,304

....

from week to week

worms

8%- 9#
8#-9#
S%-9%

....

26
13

10#

10

....

Upland

24
12

....

1,000

Total

4

,

Sea Island

Stained

Total exports of cotton from the United States th's week...
.bales.

The

1,000

,-Fair & ,-G’d &
Same flnfp
r-Ord. & Mid—, g’d fair—
fine.—., Mid.
Fair.

Description.

Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these

TOBACCO.
Friday, P. M., October 2, 1863.

mar¬

correspondent in London writing under the date of
Sept. 19

There is

very decided decrease in the exports
tobacco this week, the total at all the ports reaching
a

of crude
only 366

hhds., 203 cases, 1,000 bales, against 3,268 hhds., 554 cases,
891 bales, 100 tierces, 46 hhds. stems for the
previous seven
For latest news respecting the
Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph dia~ days.
Of these exports 256 hhds., 101 cases, 987 bales were
Batches at the& Financial Chronicle. in a previous part el this paper.—[M from New York; 110 hhds, from Baltimore; 67 cases and 13
close of our London letter
0KKIBK4L
Liverpool, Sept. 19.—Most descriptions of cotton having
been

*




1868.]

October 3,

Black work—common

good and fine
Bright work—common and medium
good and fine....
MONTHLY

....

York
Baltimore
New

110

.

i3

67
35

Boston
San

•

Stock

•

•

....

57

•

•

Total this

week

3,268
3,920

.

.

1.000

203
554

366

.

ioo

891
412

521

5

7

usual table showing the total exports
of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their
direction, since November 1, 1867:
Exports) of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬
ber 1, 1867.
Below we

give our

Steins,

Cer’s

Great Britain...
Germany

Belgium
Holland

Cases.

18,116
28,828
1,288
12,383
4,252

To

2,305

559

18,033
1,363

18,956

10,749

&c

Spain, Gibralt.

Mediterranean
Austria

1,782

East

•

29
1
14
37

5,188

710
726

7,798

91,900

30,056

35,222

•

t

•

•

6

25,154

30,265

513

175

942

3,835

4,500

41

85

Francisco

Virginia
Portland
Total since

Novi.

.

The market

,

2r<l
11

,

•

,

.

310

....

...

35,222

30,056

,

.

•

•

14,600

3,692

generally rules quiet, with

3,015

302

...

2,813

•

705
172

.

•

•

20

...

•

...

....

10
7

91,900

...

•

452

—

3,168

160
80

....

....

453

524

2,343

prices weak. Ken¬

trade, with
little—
and nearly

tucky leaf has been in fair demand from the home
sales of about 200 hhds., but exporters have done very
taking only about 100 hhds. Prices are weak
nominal.
We present revised quotations below.

Crop

continue favorable.
Seed leaf has been selling only to the
nave only to notice sales of 150 cases

accounts

at

Lome trade, and we
Connecticut wrappers
200 do do 55@56c., 50 do do 60c.; 500 cases

35@50c.;

Ohio fillers at

5f@6^c.

•

the
II

Spanish tobacco continues fairly active; the sales of
300 bales Spanish at 95c.@$l 10 ; 14 bales

week foot up
Yara $1 20.

the
of the

Manufactured tobacco is much wanted, but such are
obstacles to business, interposed by the administration
internal revenue laws, that very little can be done.
Kentucky Leaf (hhds.)

Heavy.

Light.
Lugs

^

Medium

do.

9#@10

8 @9

10#@12#
13 @14

9#@10
10><f@12

Common Leaf..

Good Leaf
Fine do

....

Selections.

Seed Leaf— Old erop.

Connecticut 1865 crop,
1866 “

“

“

>

•

running lots

“

Light.
12X@14
15^16
17 @18

selected wrappers
and 1866 fillers
New York assorted lots
-Pennsylvania wrappers, 1865and 1866
assorted lots
.
“

“

“

“

“

.

Ohio assorted lots

New York,

Lew

Connecticut wrappers......
seconds
“

,

State

i

Pennsylvania and Ohio fillers
Crop.
.

“

fl ewrapptrs
Ohio assorted lots

26 @27

Pennsylvania assorted lots

Spanish.
..

Common

Havana.

H?°d




Yara.

80

@85

92X@100
.105 @110

lent
II cut

Average lots

58

19,212

791
19
.6,071 hhds.
340

5,405
24,617
29,906
27,698

Total stock
Same time, 1867
Same time, 1866

receipts of tobacco at New
1 have been as follows:

The

Nov.

RECEIPTS AT NEW

YORK SINCE

1. 1867.

NOVEMBER

....

73,277

2,021
2,878

5,525

176

31,592

678

Baltimore
New Orleans.

9,682

350

From

2,17S

765

267

19,732
2,337

46,440

following are the exports
past

-T’lsin.Nov.lhhds.
pkga
75,085
9,990
5,719
2,061
785
2,878
19,908
31,922
2,337
261

Previously
hhds.
pkga

This weekplrgE
bhds.
308
l,810
192
40

Virginia

The

York this week, and since

101,656

of tobacco from

week :

New Yoik

•

EXPORTS OF

YORK.*

TOBACCO FROM NEW

Hhds.
64
145

Liverpool
Bremen

Cases.

•

37

34

....

a

•

20
....

•

*

-

•

Cisplatine Republic
Indies

*”l

Danish West

256

_

_

.

....

810
480

153,850

....

101

^
.

795

•

2

.

.

6,061

5
o

Lba.
man!.

•

930

50

10

New Granada
Melbourne
Africa
British Honduras

•

....

2
42

Colonies.

Bales.
•

....

...

Hamburg
British West Indies
British North American

103,834

47,118

987

....

161,996

256
The exports in this table to European ports are made up from man*
tests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the cargo.
The direction of the foreign exports for the week, from the
ther ports, has been as follows:
From Bal imore—To Liverpool, 100 hhds....To Demerara 7 hhds... .To Spain
3 hhds
To Havana 6,548 lbs. manufactured.
From Boston—To Callao 46 cases and 13 boxes
To St. Pierre Miquelon 21
cases and 15 boxes
To British Provinces 29 boxes....To Hayti 13
Total for week

*

bales.
From San Francisco—To

Yokohama 85 cases.

BREADSTUFFS.
Friday,

The market

has been dull

and depressed

Oct. 2,1868, P. M.

throughout the

irregular decline in prices.
The receipts of flour have been somewhat restricted, but
Heavy.
15 @16#
receivers have pressed sales from the wharf; and as buyers
17 @20
21 @22
have had no confidence in prices, they have shown a slight
but daily decline.
The decline in gold, and some stringency
7c. @llc. in the
16 @30
money market have also contributed to the prevailing
25 @55
@8 depression. There has been some English demand for Extra
6
8 @16
18 @85 State at $7 50@$7 75, but the high rates prevailing for
9 @14.
8 @15 freights have prevented anything of moment being done. The
6#@ 7 facts, however, are plain that receipts are smaller than last
and
while exports
35 @70 year,there isprices materially lower, of stocks; and are larger,
as yet no accumulation
18 @25 and
upon these

8 @25
17 @13
35 @50
10 @12

“
fillers
assorted lots

28,514
4,802

1,006
Stock in Brooklyn inspection warehouse, Oct. 1,1868

Lbs.

pkgs. Maufd.
9,003
419
75,510
9,940
3,979
250,910

hhds.

6

21,297
2,217

6,411

Total

Total

Bxs &

Stems

~64

19

934
143

Total.

Delivered since

for the

48,277
32,673

....

18,344

Received since

Ohio, Ac

which the

ports from

Cases.

9,614

7*535

14,600 1

3,692

2,843

Tcs. &
cer’s.
Bales.

New Orleans

776,553

Md.
61
5

820
114

4,153

.

inspection—Stock Sept. 1,1S68

Brooklyn

407^494

175
41
923
129

....

1868, hhds

189.770

61

+ .

.

Stock Oct. 1,

.

Other

following table indicates the
above exports have been shipped :

Philadelphia

12,234

8,335

.

Total
Delivered since

1,263.766

1,406

....

The

Hhds.

39*135

65
507

..

93

8

2
33
105

74,299
13,404

685

780

1,262

23,7il

43
206
113

.

....

715

6

From
New York
Baltimore
Boston

.

....

....

60

.

234

....

Mexico
Honolulu, Ac....
All others

3an

.

....

....

168

4
366
295
895

Novi

....

....

•

....

1,190
1,228

....

Indies

Total since

.

1,065

Jhina, India, Ac.
Australia, Ac....
B. N. Am. Prov..
South America...
West Indies

•

101

146
6

1,914

57

228
860

....

•

15,577
4,400

...

....

....

....

203.645

545

TOBACCO INSPECTION

YORK

| Re^ive^Bince1.808,. h.hds*.' 7.* ‘.' *.' .* * * 22,497o
2<2,io

1,214 1,388,27

1,771

110

Va.&N.C, Ohio.
19

Ky.

lbs.

7

IN THE NEW

221
324
168

WAREHOUSE.

Manfd

A bxs.

1,493
1,269

36

565
218
25

12,547

Italy

Pkgs.

hhds.

Bales. & tcs.

Hhds.

5,902
3,616
6,985

.

7,999
66,011

•

....

517
296

10,127
4,225

bales

STATEMENT OF STOCKS

MONTHLY

163,544

46

67

378
144

....

57

..

Yara, Sagua.

Cuba.

5,490

,

Stock Oct. 1, 1868,
Same time, 1867
Same time, 1866

....

•-

Francisco

SPANISH TOBACCO.

4,637

Sept. 1, 1868, bales

Total
Sales and reshipments to Sept. 30

„

6,548

,

....

,,,

,

....

#

•

•

.

STOCKS OF

Received since

161,996

....

....

....

....

.

(STATEMENT OF

Havana,

Man’f
lbs.
hhds. Pkge.

Hhds. Case. BaleB. Tcs.
987
101
256

25. @80
15 @30
40 @85

.'

“

Stems,

.

19 @25

and medium

“

the sa
period the exports of manufactured tobacco reached 168,544 lbs;
of which 153,850 D a. was to Melbourne. The full particulars
of the week’s shipments from all the ports were as follows :
Export’d this week from

Manufactured (fiscs, in bond.)

|

ofhhds.
hhds. to

Boston. The direction of the shipments
was as follows: 164 hhds. to Great Britain, 145
Germany, and the balance to different ports. During

bales from

435

CHRONICLE.

THE

75
105

85

@ 80
@115
@ 90

week, with an

quite steady.
Wheat has arrived much less freely than was expected;
but lower gold, higher ocean freights and lower quotations
from Liverpool have had a depressing influence, and prices of
Spring have given way materially. But at the
the close is

the

previous accumulations were

concession the

partly cleared off the

436

THE CHRONICLE.

[October 3,1868.

market; and millers coming in to compete with shippers, one cargo of Laguayra at this port. The arrivals of
sugar and
yesterday and to-day was fully equal to the sup¬ molasses are
quite insignificant at this port, and very small at
ply, and holders have been able to make a show of steadiness ;
any of the ports. - Full’ details of the imports at the
there are some who look for still lower
prices, but the pre¬
seveial
vailing impression is that quotations have “touched bottom.” ports for the week and since Jan. 1 are given below under
There is a slight
hilling off in receipts at the principal the respective heads. The totals are as follows:
Western markets, prices
This
having apparently declined to figures
From Jan 1 to
dateat which farmers are not
week.
18(58.
18(57.
willing to sell ; but some failures Tea.
lbs.
81,595,681
33,323,(100
704
among operators for a rise have caused large quantities to be |
•pkgs.
18,5.94
17,5(55
Coffee, Rio.
PnftVpUniroCt.irap0r^!‘‘‘.’V.*.’7.”V.7.?a
.nags
3,370
thrown upon the market. No. 2
S(;ii,590
85 5,53(5
Spring closes here at$l G5, Coffee,
8,450
.bags.
314,020
and at
boxes.
4,063
4153,1535
Chicago &1 37, firm. The purchases for shipment the Sugar.
300 871
hhds.
2,558
5539.867
week in
the demand

1tV*0

...

past

.

this market amount

Only

to

small portion of the

a

about 300,000 bushels.
have been sent to store.

bans.

4,410

.lihds.
bbls.

598

.

receipts
Corn has been dull;
prices are considerably above export
orders, and, as the stock in store is already liberal, there is an
unwillingness to send to store. Consequently, prices have
almost daily declined; with the downward
tendency,the trade
has purchased
only to supply immediate wants. Receipts at
the Western

42(5,515

842,129
385,811
10,925

....

05,484
320,017
0,155

TEA.

In

Prices for green teas have been firmly supported and close
strong.

Japans and blacks there baa been nothing worthy of note, and prices
without any particular change.
In all kinds the sales have beeo
very light, including|4,782 half chests of green, 4,250 do
Oolong and
806 do Japans.
The only imports of the week were 704 pkgs. by
steamer from Lonare

markets have been

small, but the close is flat.
quite large. The latest prices for
prime mixed are &1 14@$1 14£ here, and S9c. in Chicago.
don. No further advice* from China are at hand, and our usual
table of
Oats have been without
important change, though subject shipments and imports being unchanged i3 omitted.
to
slight fluctuations daily. At to-day’s market the receipts
COFFEE.
were
large, and seven cargoes of new Western sold at 73c.
For Rio coffee of the finer qualit'es there
has been a good
afloat, closing heavy. live has been selling only in a
jobbing demand throughout the week, and prices for these have been geneway, and prices are nominal, .barley and barley malt, as well
as Canada
rapy well sustained, the lower grades have been little sought for. Of
peas, are not in sufficient supply to permit prices
the 6,00 j bags of Rio advertised for sale at auction, tx steamer
to be fixed.
MisaisThe receipts

The

to-day

following

Flour—

were

closing quotations:

are

'

Corn

Superfine
Extra State

Western,

com¬

7 40® 8 00

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
Southern supers

8
8

75® 13 00
(55® 0 50

0
0

85®14 00
U0®11 25

6

Californa

R.ye Flour, fine and super¬
fine

bus'n.

25® 8 00

and

extra

per

Red Winter....
Amber do
White

4"® 8 00
7 So® 8 50

to good

Southern,
family

$5 50®
4 60®
2 05®
2 25®
2 40®
[Corn, Western Mix’d new 1 11®
Yellow
....@
1 White—
1 17®
jRye
1 45®
Oats, West, cargoes new
72®
Barley
1 85®

7

Shipping R. hoop Ohio.
Extra
mon

Meal

^ 1)1)1. $0 40® 7 00 Wheat, Spring,

*

.

1

AT

1867.
For the
Since
week.
Jan. 1.

128,760

.3-4 310

.

FOREIGN EXPORTS

FROM

NEW

1S.56)

163,210

53,182
139,493

«ii)ce J*ui. 1

A. €ol.week..

7,283
151,644

sinceJau. 1

....

113

In S

141,293
42,744
.

core at

have been received at New York.
The stock of Rio coffee Sept. 30,
in 1868 and 1867 were as follows :

Rye,

AND

Since
Jan. 1.

1,726.240
219,000
6,472.965
15,273,180
304,725
1,05 ’.,135

5,798,020

SINCE

Barley.

1"4,506

1

JAN.

Oats,
bush,

busli.

Corn
bush

15,452

3,599,511

5,199,704

N ew

9,174

972
90

33,416

16,614
42,198 5,424,027
129,153 6,6b3,293

2,000

535,100
20,0(0

174,730

Buffalo

51,108
32,787
38,457

27,090
48,413

16,198

12,733

66

439

4,511

27,174
524,123
12,595 551,921
53,126

:

Sept. 21,

Sep). 28,

1868.

Wheat...

bush.

1867.

431,000

578,0n0

792,000

Corn
Cats

5332,000
143,000
58,000
37,000

388,(00

Barley
Rye

Sept. 30,

1868.

66,000

75,000

72,600
312,200
146,700
131,500

Total.
184.819

584,744

•New York-> Boston Philadel.

Balt.

N.Orle’s Total-

Stock.
Stock.

In bags.

Import, import, import. import, import, importimport. import,
oi oo-o
*54,394
75,772
+1,411
21,378
100
10,188
10,188
*1.948
*1.1148
9,704
u,(U4
11,562
15,901 ’ 82,924
33
82,957
30,332
6,129
30,8532
21,328
52,160
*«-«•<
nr, AAA
1^070
1.514
42,593
27,414
14,979
207
38,790
12,058
2,686
34,018
1,379
.....

....

....

Singapore

.

.
.
.
....

Maracaibo

....

Laguayra

....

....

•

....

—

Total

36.113

*

Includes

241,718

40.550

17,740

73,525

....

90

Now Savan. & GalOrleans. Mobile, vestou.
11,000
9,000

more.

inlWT. 5115,967

94,972
21

Balti

del.

5,600
88,'>33
80)1,590
194,360
2,800
9,5536
63,371
13,081
322
11,200
19,730
188,735
815,536
59,582
Of other sorts the stock at New York Sept. 30, and the imports at the
several DOfte since Jan. 1 were as follows :

Imports
“

90

500

Phila-

In Bags.
York.
Stock
/
Iff7,119
Same date L»7. 63,000

-

56,636

and the imports fro n Jan. 1 to date

,

186,8:34

46,067

207

1,379

21,5328

314,022

....

mate, &c., reduced to bags.

t Also

49,528 mate.

SUGAR.

from

Philadelphia
Baiuiuofe

2 000

388,630
433,6535
23,885
29,730
394,400

WEEK

bush.

Wc*t Ind. week.
6,131
1,915
since Jan. 1
149,104 79,481
3,300
Total exp’t, -week 24,064
4,214 154,5 6
since Jan. 1, 1868 665,282
205,640 3,671,339
same time, 1867.
457,357 114,5386
623,528
Since Jan. 1
Boston

85,780

3,445,545

FOR THE

Flour, C. meal, Wheat
bbls.' bbls. ’ bush.

To

£t. Urit. week

For the
week.

236.S35
467,945

YORK

.

65® 1 85

1868.

169,795
3,0535,130
11,125,110

.

2 00

follows:

\

1,499,080

850

.

..

NEW YORK.

,

Corn meal, hbls.

as

50
85
SO
80
70
15

1 20
1 55
73

®

The movement in breadstuffs at this market
has been
RECEIPTS

,

Malt
Peas Canada

6
1
2
2
2
1

sippi 3,660 were sold at prices ranging from 18£ to 23$, averaging 9ic
gold in bond. The prices realised were considered to be fully up to
the current market rates for coffee of similar
quality. The market
closes very quiet. Holders and buyers alike awaiting the arrival of
the next Rio telegram. In other kinds there has been a fair demand,
but nothing of note has transpired.
Sales comprise 1 1,903 bags of
Rio, 2,282 do of Laguayra, 1,266 do of Maracaibo, and 210 of Costa
Rica, and 200 do government Java.
Imports of the week have been very small of Rio, includingonly one
^urgo per “Johann Carl” at Mobile of 3,370 bags.
Of oth t sorts 3,219
bags of Laguayra, per “ A. B. Patterson,” 2,015 of St. Domingo, per
“Oliver Cutt*,” 2,662 do, per “ La Cayenne,” and 614 bags of sundiies

The week closes with

very quiet market in raw sugar, neither re¬
purchasing to any extent. The formcr are fully
supplied and have a dull market f their finer products, and the latter
are anxious for concessions which holders have hitherto beeu unwilling
to make.
Owing to the firmness of the importers there has been but
a slight decline in prices, -$ fully
covering the extent of the fall; Kefined sugars are slow of sale and slightly lower.
Sales of the week
include 2,499 hhis Cuba ; 638 do of Porto Rico ; 64 do of other kind3,
finers

or

the trade

a

are

and 8,623 boxes.

GROCERIES.
Friday Evening, October 2,1868.

There has been less demand
natural consequence

face of the decline in
as
the quotations are
are

course

of the two

preceding

generally remain pretty firm in the
gold, sugar being an exception to tbis?
a

fraction off since

our

last

report.

decreasing, and the prospect of firm prices-,

influenced

as a

of the liberal business done in nearly

every branch of the trade in the
weeks. Prices,
however,

Stocks

prevailing this week,

so




imports of the week

very light, though the receipts of
At all the ports for the week

are

above those of last week.

are

the receipts foot up 4,063 boxes, against 844—and 2,558 hhds., agamst
3,966 last week, making the total receipts to date 413,485 boxes and
530,867 hhds., against 809,874 boxes and 426,515 hhds. to same date
last year.

Details for the week

r-—Cuba

,

Portland
B LOLA
Boston
•

Stocks

are as

•

•

*

••••

•

•

«

18

>
>

av

:

Cuba

,

bags.

...

•

follows

P.Ri.Other Brazil.

At—
bx’s. hhds. lihds.nhds.
744
N. York
963

4,410
aav

|

Atboxes,
Philad-1... 1,445
Baltimore
N. Orleans 1,874

a..

—

—

~

i

Sept. 80, and imports since Jan. 1, 1868,

far

by the stocks; seems to be good.
Imports of the week have been very small. There have been
no direct
impositions of tea, only one cargo of Rio coffee^
and that at Mobile, but considerable lots of St.
Domingo, and
as

The
boxes

Other
,

At—
N. York stock
Same date 1867

Cnba.

*

PRico.For’n, Tot’l,
*hhds *hhds. *hhds.

36,344
61,390

68,719

Imp’ts since Jan 1.198,591 254,021

Portland

,

b’xs. *hhds.

do

.

18,518

-

7,209

36,522
327

45,774
22,347 312,-89
2,234
9,770

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads.

>

P. Rico, Other
lilids. hhds.

hhds.

500

321

513

243

were as follows:
Brazil, Manila N

O.

bgs. &c bgs, hhds.
'

'

SO,784
29,494

53,405 188,254

153

437

THE CHRONICLE.

1868.]

October 3,

Molasses.

-

22,252

413,135 419,528

70,443

Boston

do
NcW Orleans do

philadelplna
Baltimore

time 1807

game

1868.—Receipts, exports and stocks at
jnd Matanzus have been as follows:
Total export
Rec’d this ^Expts to U. S —,
Hatani,

,

week. Since Jan. 1.

week.

Tear.

J563...
lSti7...

....

1866...

....

....

'

....

,

Since Jan.l.

27,102

260
262

Havana

Stocks
boxes

227,136
178,444
265,700

1,466,451

13,542
4,7:3

361,102
309,882
347,088

5,813

4,355
1,887
4, <33

....

1,228,463
1,151,810

aggregate receipts of the week are quite insignificant. The
receipts at all ports foot up only 598 bhds. against 2,249
The total receipts at the ports since Jar.. 1 now reach 885,811 hhds
against 3 .0,017 hhds. in 1867. Details for the week are as Deme- :
Porto
Hhds.
Porto Demc-

last week

wo

i

cent

York
Portland

Cuba.

♦Ilhds at—
New York, stock

10,424
111,301
51,328
38,409

Irap’tssince Jan. 1
“

Portland

“
“

Boston,

Philadelphia

Porto
Rico.

336

944

17,656

.

212

29,663
26,207

252,465

.

.

.

1,181

2,315

17,969

Includes barrels

....

5,614

314,707

*

9,138

380

bbls.

6,576
2,281
2,U68
....

....

....

••••

10,925

385,811
320,017

30,349
41,345

10,668
'

9,483

hogsheads.

and tierces reduced to

SPICES.

Trade has been

trado.

regular demands of the jobbing

active in fillingjthe

Prices are firm but

unchanged.

21

28

88*

©

-

1

J

Raisins,Seealess. .fyt *cask
do Layer
box
do Valencia ..<$lb

©

S3©

Daitn Fruit—

23 ©

Provence

Sago.
Tapioca....
Macaroni, Italian

Shelled

33 ht. box
$ qr. box

17*©..

THE DRY

©

21 © 22

lb

Apples new

...

Blackberries

1 * © 15
45 @ 50
SO © 31

Sicily, Soft Shell

© 12*

II*© 32
©

Pear.

11 ©

Almonds, Languedoc

11 © 22

13 © 13*

Filberts, Sicily
Walnuts, Bordeaux.

16*

©39
13 © 13*

Dates
do
do
do
Sardines
Sardines

Brazil Nuts

11 j© 121

lb

Currants
Citron, Leghorn
Prunes, Turkish

\3 lb

Figs,Smyrna

8 25©

4 12*©

9*© 10*

31 © 22

25 © 28
12 © 15

Peaches, par- d new
Peaches, unpared
.

GOODS TRADE.
October 2, 1868.

the week lias been on a satisfactory scale,
branches of the dry goods trade. In domestics, how¬

The business of

foreign foreign.
289
14,741
159,513
18,796
651
55,359
52.629
8,270
739
76,732
23,397
2,242
18,181

rara.

20,278

75,049

“
“

Baitinure
New Orlear s

L48

4,023

24*

©
27}©
..

(gold)

Cloves

P biday, P. M.,

since Jan. 1, 1868, were as follows: O
N.
Total.
Other
Deme-

30, and imports

23*©

(gold)

Pimento, Jamaica.(gold)

12

.

Boston

Stocks, Sept.

..

peppei and

and cloves, 20;

ad val.

follows

N.

© 6$

Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds,
Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, l; Shelled Jo, l*, Filberts and
Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits,

Cuba. Rico. rara.Other

Philad’a
Baltim’re
N. Orle’s

42

Fruit.

of Barbadces.

Cuba. Rico. rara. Other.
50
403

40 © 42

do Clayed....
Bat bailees..

..

95 © 1 00

Nutmegs,No.l....(gold)

was

at—

©

111©

(gold)

Mace

trade very
market has
beeo gradually strengthening, and eloses with a* f tvorable an aspect 119
it has borne at any time since our last report.
Irquiry, whi,*h of late
confined to the lower grades, include now the better qualities also
and sales are effected without difficulty at full prices. Sales include
968 hhds ef Cuba, 22 > do of Porto Rico, 216 do of Demerara, and 107
The

..

48 © 70
42 © 55

Ginger,race and Af(gold)

decline in gold has not seemed to affect this branch of
riifavorably. ‘Without any amount of sales, the tone of the

at

gall.

Duty: mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia
pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents $ tt>.
Pepper,
Cassia, in mats-gold $ lb
51©
52

The

flhds

$ gallon.

Spices.

MOLASSES.

do

8 cents

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

Havana

Sept. 28,

week.

:

........

40.912 530,867 65,615 276,514
83,890 426,515 23,255 72,229

....

Duty

107

12,204

247

485

Total import..... 309,874 342,645

7,210 83,260
5,000

6,164 67,309
1,057 70,824
8,863 57,871

7,217
3,645

60,810 53,928
50,64*3 66,122
2 >,082 26,776
60,492 11,472

-

FRUITS.

in most
ever, we

have no great increase

of activity to report, and job

made a conc^-ssion’of 4- cent on standard sheetings
in order to effect a distribution of their surplus .stock. This
reduction in face of the continued steadiness of cotton ap¬
hers have

parently proves that present prices are mainly governed by
the supply and demand, and no improvement in quotations
can be expected until the stock in second hands is reduced
With the cautious policy adopted by buyers, it will be diffi¬

this distribution until a late stage of the seasonso that tfcere is but little likelihood of a higher range of prices
n the immediate future.
Prices continue to be very irregular

cult to effect

quotations in first hands are almost nominal. It is
to be regretted that the production was not curtailed when
the
partly, doubtless, to the decline in gold. New Malaga Raisins have cotton was ruling at its highest point, as in that case the
me upon the market, realizing good prices.
Prunes have come in manufacturers would have escaped a material loss, aud the
freely, at d notwithstanding a good demand, have fallen off. Domestic trade in this important branch would have been of a more
dried are quiet. State and Ohio Apples are not yet in the market*
remunerative character to dry goods merchants.
Southern are in good supply.
New peeled Peaches are scarce ;
The exports of dry goods for the past week, and since Jan
unpeeled do are abundant. Mediterranean green fruit is jobbing at the
rates current at dates of our last report.
West Indian green fruits has uary 1, 1868, and the total for the same time in 1867 and
beeD received per steamer only, and in limited quantities.
Prices are 1860 are shown in the following table :
Iu

foreign dried there is no especial features to note in the course of
week’s business. Prices have generally settled somewhat, owing

and the

c

Annexed

f

the ruling

are

quotations in first hands.

Duty: 25 cents per

lb.

Ex fine to

...

finest.1 40 (ft. 1 65

Y’gHyson, Coin, to fair .... 80 @1
do
Super, to fine. .1 15 (ft 1
Exlinetofinest.l 45 ©1
do
t unp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 05 ©l
do
Sup. to fine.l 25 @1
do doEx.f. tofinest.l 65 @1
H.Sk, JtTw’kay,C,to fair. 65©
do
do Sup. to fine 75©

do Ex f. to fin’st 85 ©

do

85 ©1 05
Superior to fine.... 1 10 @1 35

Hyson, Common to fair

Brazil..

10
4)
75

20

55

Sup’rto fine.

do
do

90

70
80

90 ©1 05

Ex f. to finestl 25 ©1

50

Coffee.
Duty: When

imported direct in

ordinary

American or equalized

Java,

mats anl bags

vessels from the

of countries this side the
American or equalized vesad*valorum in addition.gold 17 © 19$

gold 13 © •31
.... .gold 21 © 231

.....

St. Domingo

Jamaica

gold 14*© 16*

...gold 14}@ 16
...gold 14 © 14*
....gold 14*© 15*

Sugar,

^I^ffard'uotreined
centsW lb
.nd on Melado 2% cents per lb

No J®

Duty: On raw or brown sugar, not above
wMte or clayed, above No. 12 and not above .
3#; above 15 and not over 20, 4 ; on
do
Porto Rico, tr to gd ref.^ lb. 11*© It*
do
do
do
grocery. 11 J© 12*
do
do prime to ch. do
12}© 13}
do
Cuba, Inf. to com. refining . 10*© 10*
do

refined, 5;

do fairtogood
do ..
do fair to good grocery..
do pr. to choice
do
..
do centrifugal
do Melado

11*©
11}©
12}©
10 ©

11*

2w,ft,Box,D.S,No8,7to ». J0i© 1H




do

do
do
do
do

do 10 to 12
do 18 to 15
do 16 to 18
do 19 to 20
white ....

12 Loaf
Granulated
12} Crushed and powdered. ..«►
13

7J© S*

Africa
Live:

Soft White
do Yellow

11*@ 13
12S© 13$
13f© 14t

14|© 15*
14;© 15*
. © ..
15*© 15l
..

©151

14*© 15*
,,,.13*© 14*

pkgs.

cates.

13,947
1,785
43,702

pool
C-inaaa
Granada
Smyrna

New

St. Pierre

British Provinces....
Total this week..
Since Jan. 1, 1868..
Same time 1867
1
“
I860....

We annex a

place of its growth or production; also, the growth
Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in
8el8, 5 cents per Id.; all other, 10 per cent
Native Ceylon
Rio, Prime, duty paid ...gold 16*© lp* Maracaibo
do good
gold 15*@ 16
do fair
gold 14}© 14* Laguayra....
do

Cispatine Republic..

,

Domestics. Dry Goods

Val. packages.

$412
2,663
1,075
663 102,891
1
15
21

Hamburg

r-Duty paid95
Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair.. 85 © 95
do
Sup’rto fine.l 00 @1 05
do
Ex f. to finestl 10 ©1 20
70 © 85
Oolong, Common to fair.
do
Superior to fine... 95 ©1 20
do
Ex fine to finest ..1 35 ©1 65
Souc & Cong., Com. tofair 70 © 80

r-Duty r aid—

pkgs.

Exports to

Tea,

do
do

FROM BOSTON.

FROM NEW YORK.~
-Domestics.—. D, Goods,

uncharged.

900 $107,040

16,802 '692.963

8,6791,155,694

140

3,557
4,676

$59,434
1,180,640
986,365

76,053

few

manufacture, our

127

7,126
6,503
30,e91

particulars of leading articles

prices quoted being

of domestic

those of the leading

obbers:

dull at the
opening of the week, and jobbers finding that it was difficult to more
standards, even at the late concession, made a still further reduction of
£ cent, and we thus find standards at 154 cents, with cotton at 26* for
middlings. At the same period last year the price was 16 * for standards
with middling at 20 cents, but a month later the quotations were 15£
for goods, and 19 cents for the raw material. On June 22, 1867, mid¬
dlings were 2G-* cents, and Atlantic A was then held at 17* cents.
These comparisons show that the price of cotton is for the time without
influence on that of the manufactured article, but that the question is
mainly one of supply and demand. Agawam 36 inches 12, Amoskeag A 86 15, do B 36 15, Atlantic A 36 15£, do II 86 15, do
P 86 12*, do L 86 12£, do V 33 13, Appleton A 3 5 15R Au¬
gusta 36 14, do 30 121, Bedford R 80 10£, Boott H 27 11, do O 34 12,
do S 40 18^, do W 45 18, Commonwealth O 27 8*, Grafton A 27 8,
Great Falls M 36 13, do S 38 —, Indian Head 36 151, do 30 14, Indian
Bbown Sheetings and

Shirtings.—Brown goo Is rule!

THE CHRONICLE.

438

Orchard A 40 15, do 0 86 13$, do BB 36 12, do W 34 11$,
do NN 36 14$, Laconia 0 39 13, do B 37 13, do E 36 12$, Lawr ence 0 86
15, do E 86 14, do F 86 13$, do G 34 12, do H 27 11,
do
do
E
L

•1

H

’

!i

.!

LL 86 12$,
J 30 121,

Lyman 0 36 13$, do E 36 15, Massachusetts BB 36 12$,
Medford 36 14$, Nashua fine 33 13$, do 36 15, do
89 17, Newmarket A 12$, Pacific extra 36 15, do H 36 16, do
86 12$, Pepperell 6*4 29, do 7-4 32$, do 8-4 40, do 9-4 45, do
10-4 60, do 11-4 65, Pepperell E fine 39 14, do R 36 13, do O
33 12, do N 80 11, do G 80 13, Pocasset F 30 10, do K 36 12$, do 40
15, Saranac fine 0 33 13$, do R 36 14$, do E 39 16$, Sigourney 36
10, Stark A 86 15,Swift River 86 12, Tiger 27 8, Tremont M 83 10$.
Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are quiet, but in slight demand,
the large amount of goods placed out “ on memorandum ” having a de¬
pressing influence on this branch of trade. Quotations have been very
unsettled, but at the close we note a batter feeling, in sympathy probably
with the firmness of cotton. Amoskeag46 20, do 42 16, do A 36 16$, AndroBCOggin 36 17$,Appleton 36 16, Attawaugan XX 3614$, Atlantic Cam¬
bric 36 25, Bailout Son 36 14$, do 33 12$, Bartletts 36 15$, do 33 14, do
80 18$, Bates 36 18, do B 33 14$,Blacketone 36 14$, do D 36 13$. Bobtt
B 86 14$, do C 38 14, do E 13$, do H 2811, do O 30 13, do R 27 lJ,doS
86 14, do W46 18$, Dwight 36 20, Eilerton E 42 20, do 27 9$, Forrest
Mills 86 —, Forestdale 36 16, Globe 27 8$, Fruit of the Loom 36 17$,
Gold Medal 86 15, Greene M’fg Co 36 12$, do 30 11$, Great Falls K 36
15, do M S3 14, do S 31 13, do A 83 16, Hills Semp. Idem 36 17,
do.38 15$, Hope 36 14$, James 86 15$, do 38 14$, do 31 13, Lawrence B
86 14$, Lonsdale 36 17, Masonville 36 17, Newmarket C 36 13$,
New York Mills 36 25, Pepperell 6-4 28, do 8-4 42$, do 9-4 60,
do 10-4 55, Rosebuds 36 —, Red Bank 36 12$, do 32 11$, Slater
J. & W. 36 16, Tuscarora 20, Utica 5-4 32$, do 6-4 87$, do 9-4 62$,do
10-4 67$, Waltham X 33 13$,do 42 15$, do 6-4 28,do 8-4 42$, do 9-4 60,
do 10-4 65, Wam9utta46 30,do 40$ 27$, do 36 22$,
Washington 33 11$.
Brown Drills are scarce.
The demand is fair, and prices are well
maintained. Amoskeag 18, Boott 17$, Grauiteville D 17, Laconia 18,
Pepperell 18, Stark A 18, do H 14.
Print Cloths were depressed last week at Providence,but the sales
were 82,000 pieces, an excess of
12,000 over those of the previous week.
The closing price of 64x64 extra was 7$ cents.
Prints are quiet, the
inquiry being restricted to the most tasteful de¬
signs, or small assorted lots to complete stock. We quote Wauregao
and Victory at a decline of $ cent, and there is such a mass of poor
work hanging over the market that a similar reduction maybe
expected
on some other makes.
It is a questionable policy that dictates that
the good coloring and choice
designs of one mill shall be sold at a sacri¬
fice, because another manufacturer is obliged to reduce his rates io
order to effect a clearance of poor stock.
Allens 12$, American 12$,
Amoskeag 12, Arnolds 11, Oocheco 13$, Conestoga 12$, Dunuell’s 13,
Freeman 11, Gloucester 12$, Hamilton 12$, Home 8$, Lancaster 12$,
London mourning 11$, Mallory 12$, Manchester 12$, Merrimac D 13$,
do pink and purple 14, do W 15, Oriental 12$, Pacific 13, Richmond’s
12$, Simpson Mourning 11$, Sprague’s purple and pink 13$, do blue and
white 15, do fancy 13, do shirtings 13$, Victory 9$,
Wamsutta 9,
Wauregan 11$.
Ginghams are in limited request for the best styles ; others are ne¬
glected. Allamance plaid 19, Caledonia 14$, Glasgow 17, Hampden
—, Lancaster 18, Manchester 13$.
Muslin Delaines cf good design are taken in small assorted lots.
Plain are quiet.
Changeable tints are in favor with the trade. Serges
are moving freely, but complaints are made that there are too many
high colors in comparison with more sober tiuts on the market. Armures 21, do plain 21, Hamilton 20, Lowell 29, Manchester 18-20,
Pacific 2C, do Serges 25, Piques 22, Spragues 18.
Tickings are in limited demand. Albany 10, American 14, Amos
keag A C A 33, do A 2/, do B 23, do C 20, do D 19, Blackstone
River 17, Conestoga 25, do extra 30, Cordis 30, do BB 17, Hamilton 25,
do D 20, Lewiston 36 31$, do 32 30, do 30 27$, Mecs. and W’km’s 29,
Pearl River 29, Pemberton A A 26$, do X —, Swift River 1-7, Thorn¬
dike 17, Whittecden A 22$, Willow Brook 27$, York 30 25, do 32 31.
Stripes are dull.
Albany 10, American 14$, Amoskeag 22, Boston
15,Everett 13,Hamilton 22, Haymakei 17, Sheridan A 15,do G 14, Uncasville dark 14$, do light 16$, Whittentou A A 24, do A 22, do BB
17, do C 15, do D 12, York 22.
Checks are quiet. Caledonia No. 70 27$, do 60 25, do 10 24, do 8
19, do 11 22$, do 15 27$, Kennebeck 26, Lanark No. 2 12, Park No.
60 16, do 70 20, do 90 27$, Pequa No. 1,200 12$, Star Mills 600 12,
do 800 16, Union No. 20 26, do 60 27$.
Denims move very slowly, buyers waiting probably for some conces¬
sion on rates.
Amoskeag 29, Blue Hill 14$, Beaver Cr. blue 27$, do
CC 19, Columbian extra *9, Haymaker 18, Manchester 18$, Otis AXA
27$, do BB 26, do CO 21, Pearl River 27, Thorndike 17$, Tremont 20.
Cottonades are active and firm. Far. AMec. Cass 40, Lewiston 39,
New York Mills 31$, Plow. L, A Anv. 37$.
Corset Jeans are in good request. Amoskeag 13$, Bates 10$,
Everetts 15, Lacoaia 14, Naumkeag 14, do satteen 15, Pepperell 14,
Washington satteen 15.
Cambrics are in limited demand at the concession in rates; Silesias
chow no change since our last review.
Pequot cambrics 9$, Superior
8, Victory H 8$, Washington 9, Wauregan 9$, Blackburn Silesias 16,
Indian Orchard 16, Lonsdale twilled 14, Victory J twilled 14$, Ward 16.
CeTTON Yarns continue in the same groove as reported for some time
pact. The demand is very small, but the stock is not even equal to
the requirements, and this accounts for the firmness of prices.
Quota¬
tions remain

unchanged.

Cotton Bags have been offered at a material decline without leading
to any large increase of trade.
Americans sold down to 35 cents, and
others in proportion, but at the the close there is a better feeling, and

87$ cents is now the asking rate. American 374, Lewiston 45, Stark A
45, do C 8 bush 65.
Foreign Dress Goods continue to move freely, and prices are gener¬
ally well maintained. The trade will be better when the fashion for
ladies suits become more settled. For the moment dealers are afraid




(.October 3,1868.

to

buy more than is absolutely requisite for
and mousselines delaines are being pressed
rates.

°

stock purposes. Merinoea
for sale at slightly lower
-

Domestic Woolens.—There is a fair demand still for
fancy cassi
meres of good
design and make, and of these fabrics there is m> excess
In medium makes prices are not so firm, but
goo 1 styles of dark work
at low prices are readily taken by clothiers at
satisfactory rates. Cloths
are

quiet.

Overcoatings in demand at firm quotations.
reports from the British manufacturing districts
the following extracts from our exchanges:

The latest
found in

are to

be

Manchester, Sept. 19.-—The market closed last week with an inani¬
depressed appearance, and in the resumption of business on
Monday, no signs of improvement in tone were visible. Indeed, pro¬
ducers showed increasing anxiety to effect sales, and to induce
purchases
were willing to
accept lower prices for both goods and yarns. On
Tuesday this had the effect of somewhat stimulating the demand
and a fair number of offers were made, but at rates in most cases rather
below those spinners aud manufacturers were prepared io
accept, and
they consequently did not lead to more than a moderate aggregate
trade.
On Wednesday, buyers purchased again with rather
gieater
freedom at Tuesday’s lowest rates, particularly when it became known
that an improvement has taken place in the cotton market, and a
fair business resulted in bofli goods and yarns.
Yesterday producers
advanced very generally their quotations, and so far that has
naturally
restricted business.
Only a small trade has been done to-day, and the
market closed hardly so firm as earlier inthe day.
In cloth, the
transaction has been limited, owing to the higher prices asked
by
mate and

manufacturers.

Liverpool.—The market

was

much

depressed in the early part of th e

week, the demand, though fair in extent, being quite inadequate to the
pressure to sell, particularly in American, and on Tuesday prices be¬

very irregular, with a considerable decliue. The low rates at¬
tracted the attention of buyers on Wednesday, when an increased
business was done, with more steadiness, and to-day the sales have
been large at advanced prices, but the quotations still show a decline
of about $d per lb in most descriptions.
For Sea Island there has been
came

limited demand at unchanged prices.
In American a strong determi¬
nation was manifested to realise in the commencement of the week,
and a decline was submitted to of fd per lb, and eveu more in some
instances.
Yesterday and to-day prices have partially recovered, clos¬
a

ing fd per lb below last Thursday’s rates. Brazil cotton has shared in
the general depression, but is again in better request, and closes $d. per
lb. below last week’s quotations.
Egyptian nas been in fair request,
and prices have been steady.
The flue qualities being very scarce
command au advance of about Id per lb.
East India descriptions were
flat and pressed tor sale up to
Tuesday, last at an irregular decline in
meat instances of about $ J. per lb.
Prices have since partially recover¬
ed, with au increased demand, but quotations still close about $d per
lb below those of last week, except for saw ginned Dharwar, which is
scarce and wauted.”
The imports for the week have been 40,684 bales,
and the present estimated stock here is 452,850 bales, against 836,650,
whilst the quantity reported at sea is 2,010 bales from America and
488,000 from India, against 13,000 from America and 866,000 from
India last year.

Nottingham.—The demand for yarns is rather quiet, and there is no
alteration to note in prices.
There is a fair inquiry for silks, which

firm at late rates.
Brown nets continue to meet a very dull sale
at about late quotations.
In some branches of the lace trade there is
a fair amount of business
doing for the time of year, the present beiog
are

usually a dull season. Th^hosiery trade, in both the home and ship¬
ping departments, is quiet.
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY 000DS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK,
The importations ui ury goods at this
port for the week ending Oct
lj 1868, and the corresponding weeks of 1866 and 1867, have been is

follows:

ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR

THE

WEEK ENDING OCTOBER

-1866.

,—--1867.-

Pkgs.
Value.
Manufactures of wool... 1,294
$575,331
do
cotton.. 598
174,033
do
silk...
1200
220,382
do
flax
560
158,278
Miscellaneous dry gooas. 590
167,354
Total
WITHDRAWN

FROM

WAREHOUSE

AND

—1868.

*

Pkgs. Value
1,518 i
703
198,133
709
598,668
964
218,964
343
130,651

Pkgs.
Value.
1,284
$462,298
395
1014,781
449
189,140
711
164,891
321
136,536

3,C42 $1,295,378

THROWN

4,237 $1

$1,262,596

3,160

INTO

1, 1868.

THE MARKET

DURING

THE SAME PERIOD.

Manuiactures of wool...

581
156
115

$271,641

do
flax....
315
Miscellaneous dry goods.
42

77,202
4,112

613
188
102
654
113

$544,629
1,295,378

1,670
3,160

do
do

cotton..
silk

Total
1,209
Add ent’d forconsu’pt’n 3,042

50,477

140,117

Totalth’wnxpon mak’t. 4,251 $1,839,907

$248,205
64,120
97,651
96,118
8,182
$504,276

1,262,596

4,830 $1,766,872

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME

Manufactures of wool...
do
cotton..
do
silk
do
flax....
Miscellaneous dry goods.
....

548
232
82

353
83
56
191
59

$255,203
64,163

481

79,306
141,399

113

32,211

Total
1,456
Add ent d lor consn’pVn .3,042

$141,930
22,499
56,482
45,602

.17,086

$572,193

742

$283,699

1,295,878

3,160

1,262,596

TeURentered at the port.4,498 $1,867,576

>

8,902 $1,546,192

878
250
71
368
19

$294,224

1,586
4,237

$552,012
1,707,516

67,372
88,762
83,876
17,808

5,823 $2,259,558

PERIOD.

1,095

$366,355

310
84
698
28

20,090

2,215
4,237

77,335
90,368
141,351

$695^499

1,707,516

6,452 *3,403,015

18(58. j

October 3,

AMERICAN SILKS;
manufactured by
Cheney
Brothers.
WaciimcTui»t,
Sewing

Manufacturers and Dealers

Handkerchiefs,

SPECIAL PURPOSES TO
AGENTS:

ORDER.

AWNING STRIPES.-

“

and Organzinc*,

United States

Secretary.
CLARK, Asst. Sec.

J. GOOD NOW,

Banting Company.

WM. R.

supply all Widths and Colors always In stock.
59 Broad Street, New York.

NEW YORK AG

The Hope

NEW YORK.

WARREN STREET

Benjamin,

IS

End,^Glasgow.

Net

Tills Company

JAM

SILKS,

GREAT

SATINS,

REDUCTION

VELVETS,

TRIMMINGS <fcC.

AT 34 RE A

INSURANCE.

FIRE

American Fire
Insurance Co.,

DE STREET, NEW

YORK

WALKER STREET
Sole Agents

for

NEW YORK,

170

Commission Merchants,

198 & 210
SCOTCH AND

CHURCH

STREET,

172

AND

J. M. Cummings &
DISTILLERS

COMMISSION

Offer for sale,

rom

their own

& CO,

Belfast.

»

WHISKIES,

and other first-class Distilleries,

Ken¬

Queen Fire Insurance Co
AND LONDON.
OF LIVERPOOL

Banbridge.

William H. Ross,

Co.,

George Pearce &
70 & 72 FRANKLIN

STREET, NEW

YORK,

Importers of

Soda,
GENERAL AGENTS FOR LITTLE WOOD & CO.’S
WASHING CRYSTAL.
35 CEDAR STREET, NEW YORK.

Soda Ash,

A LOT

OF

.BAVARIAN HOPS FOR

SALE.

Johnli Dwight &York,
Co.,
Old Slip, New
N%

White Goods,

States
COMPANY,

INSURANCE

LIFE

.

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

$2,300,000

ASSETS
|y*New and

important plans of Life Insurance
JOHN

Nicholas

have

See new Prospectus.

this

been adopted by
Company.
Profits available after policies
and annually thereafter.

have run one year
EADIE, President. 1

De Groot, Secretary.

MANUFACTURERS OF

SALJERATUS,

Laees and Emb’s,
Linen

SUP CARR.

Ilaudk’fs,

British and Conti nental.

SODA,

AND SAL

SODA.

Hanover Fire Insurance
COMPANY,

AGENTS FOR

HORSPORD’S CREAM

No. 45

TARTAR.

JENKINS, VAILL & Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF

PEABODY,
46 LEONARD

STREET,

DRY GOODS COMMISSION
Bole Agent* tor

COTTONS AND

MERCHANTS,

the laleof

WOOLENS,

FOR

EXPORT AND
102

DOMESTIC USE,

FRONT STREET,

Hebbard,

CORDAGE

NEW YORK.

Strong 6c Co.,

SILVERSMITHS.
NO. 17 JOHN

Of Several

Mill*.

- ~

STREET

WALL STREET.
July

Cash




GEORGE ADLARD, Manager.
Secretary.

United

&c.

Bleaching Powders,

$1,432,340 -

Surplus

Special Fund of $200,000
Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany
United States Branch, No. 117 Bboadwat, N. Y.
_

DEALERS
Caustic Soda, Sal Soda, Bi-Caib

£2,000,000 Btf.
1,893,220

•

Hoffman &INCo.,

Henry

President.

BLEECKEK, Vice Pres

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

IMPORTERS AND

AndF. W. HAYES & CO.,

JAMES W. OTIS,

Authorized Capital
Subscribed Capital
Paid-up Capital and

tucky.

Sole Agents for

DICKSONS’ FERGUSON

YORK,

IN BOND,

AND IiYE

white goods,
THREAD

Co.,

BOURBON

FINE

PATENT LINEN

against Loss or Damage by

Urited States.

cities in the

MERCHANTS,

BROAD STREET, NEW

58

July 1st,

Fire at
Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of the
Company, or at its various Agencies in the principal
Insures Property
he usual rates.

AND

DUCKS, DRILLS,

;linen checks, &c.,

245,911 93

Capital and Surplus,
1868, 8745,911 93.

R. W.

IRISH LINEN GOODS,

SPANISH LINEN,

PfiRIUMERY, AC.
WILLIAM Sft’REET, NEW YORK

GOODS,

FANCY

Importers A

THIRD

....$500,000 OO

Capital. -.

Cash

Indigo, Corks, Sponges,

Ginghams, Ticks, and Balmoral
several makes.

Hughes & Go.

AVENUE.

Surplus

DRUGS,

Skirts, of

George

Cash

of

Importers aud Jobbers

Agents for the Sale of
Fine 6-4 Scotch Coatings ; Oxford, Cadet, and Fancy
Jeans, B. & W. Checks and Fancy Tweeds; Shirting
;

Schieffelin & Co.,

W. H.

Also,

Flannels

COOPER INSTITUTE,

INCORPORATED 1823.1

GREER’S CHECKS.

JOSEPH

BRANCH OFFICE 9

MERCHANTS.

COMMISSION
21

Mitchell,

J. F.

C. B. &

M . HAILEY,
MANUFACTURER.

.

BROADWAY,

114

OFFICE
C

President

JACOB REESE,
E. MOORE, Secretary.

Cloths, North

Oil

Floor

Loss or Damage by
favorable as any responsible Com¬

Insures against

OF

IN PRICES

RIBBONS.

o

CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y.

83

150,000
1868.$60,281 98

Surplus, July 1,

FJh’e or terms as
pany

RUSSELL, Sole Agent.

THOS.

IMPORTER OF

CLOAK

BROADWAY,

Cash Capital.

AND MACHINE

UNSURPASSED FOR .HAND
SEWING.

WALKER STREET,

A CO’S.

Jr.

CLARK,

Company

Fire Insurance
OFFICE NO. 92

Mile

DRESS A

ALEXANDER, Agent.

JAS. A.

Spool Cotton.
JOHN

STREET.

PARASOLS,

UMBRELLAS AND
Nob. 12 & 14

ENCY

WALL

62

NO.

Manufacturers of

*

VELVET

499,803 55

Liabilities

4

37

$5,052,880 10

1,186S

July

Assets

,

EDWARD II.

E. M.

President.

L. J. HEN DEE,

.

H, D. Folhbmus, Special?. Bpenoeb Turner,
A. BKINCXBBHOrr, Theodore Polhemus.
Byrd & Hall,

ARNOLD «fc SOIV, York.
102 Franklin Street, New
CHENEY & MIEIjIKEN, Street, Boston.
Otis
LEONARD BAKER Ae CO., Philadelphia.
210 Chestnut Street,
CHASE, STEWART & CO.,
10 and 12 German Street, Baltimore.

$3,000,000

CASH CAPITAL

Also, Agents
A full

HARTFORD.

OF

INCORPORATED 1810.

FELTING DUCK, CAR COVER*
ing, bagging. Havens duck, sail twines
AC. « ONTARIO ” SEAMLESS BAGS.

Silk*

Company,

Insurance

In

And an hinds of

Silk Warp Poplins,
Silk Press Goods,
Belt Ribbons.

FOR

./Etna

COTTON SAIL DUCK

OP.GANZINES FOR SILK MIXTURE CAS3Ipoulards and Florentines,

SILKS

-v

TheodorePolhemus& Co.

FLN'fi

pongee

Insurance.

COTTON CANVAS

Trams

439,

■

Commercial Cards.

Goods.

Dry

CHRONICLE.

THE

capital

Surplus...,
Gross Assets . ..
....
Tota liabilities....
BENJ. S.
Rem sen

1st, 1867.

$400,000 00
206,634 79
$606,634
50,144

WALCOTT Presi

Lane, Secretary.

Christy Davis,
PURCHASING

,

WOOL
No. 58,

BROKER

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,!
Exchange Place.

Cor. of

S

440

THE CHRONICLE
Financial.

Steamship Companies.
PACIFIC

STEAMSHIP

Mail

COMPANY’S

Central

THROUGH LINE

To

California,

It

'

jOn the

TIMES

A

STATES MAILS FOUR

North

WILLIAM A. WHEE

Mercantile Insurance Co
LONDON

Leave PIER 42 NORTH RIVER, foot of Canal street
F
12 o’clock noon, as above (except when those dates
UQfall on Sunday, and then on the preceding

Saturday),
—•for ASPiNWALL, connecting via Panama Railway
with one of the Company’s Steamships irom Panama
f
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at AC API LCO.
Departures of 1st and 10th connect at Panama with

steamers for SOUTH PACIFIC and CENTRAL AMER¬
ICAN PORTS. Those of the 1st touch at MANZA¬

NILLO.
One hundred pounds
baggage allowed each adult.
Baggage-masters accompany baggage through, and
attend to ladies and children without male
protec¬
tors. Baggage received on the dock the
day before
Bailing, from steamboats, railroads, and passengers
who prefer to send them down
early. An experienced
surgeon on board. Medicine and attendance free.
For passage tickets or xurther information apply at
.the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of
Canal street, North River, New York.

50 WILLIAM

The T radesmens
NATIONAL

,

RANK.

CAPITAL.

$1,000,COO

SURPLUS

470,000
BICIIA RD' BERR Y. President.

ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

THE

Company

OF THE CITY OF NEW

.

fillip

STEAMSHIP

MONOPOLY.

YORK,

CALIFORNIA,

VIA PANAMA RAILROAD.

New Sailing Arrangements
The 5tli&20thof

SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq
AYMAIi CARTER, Esq
DAVID DOWS, Esq
EGISTO P. FABBRI, Esq
SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN,

the

day before when these dates fall on Sunday,
from Pier No. 4G North River, foot King st., at noon.
OCT 5.—Steamer SANTIAGO I)E CUBA, connect¬
ing with new SteamslRp OREGONIAN.
OCT 20.—Steamship GUIDING STAR, connecting
or

with new steamship NEBRASKA.
These Steamships are expressly fitted for this
trade,
and are unsurpassed for Saietv, Speed, Elegance, and
Comfort, and their rates tor Passage and Freight w ill

always be

as low as by any other Line.
For further particulars address the
Pier No, 40, North River, New York.

undersigned at

I). N. CARRINGTON, Agent.
WM. H. WEBB, Fresulent.

-

CHARLES DANA Vice-President,
No. 54 Exchange Place, N.Y.

comprising many
gentlemen of large wealth and financial .-experience,
who are also personally liable
^depositors lor all ob¬
ligations of the Company to double the amount of
their capital stock.
As the NATIONAL TRUST
COMPANY
receives
deposits in large or small
amounts, and permits them to he drawn as a whole or
in part by CHECK AT SIGHT and WITHOUT NO¬
TICE, allowing interest on all daily balances,
parties can keep accounts in this Institution with
special advantages of security, convenience and
profit.
M. Kktohum.
George Phipps.
Tnos. Bk&knap, Jr.

KETCIIUM, PHIPPS Sc BELKNAP,

Mnfg. Company,
Manufacturers of

SHEET

BRASS,

GERMAN SILVER PL ATED
BRASS BUTT

METAL,

railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and

exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercantile
paper and loans in currency or gold negotiated. Inte¬

BANKERS

FIRE

AND

Lamp Trimmings,
And Importers and Dealers in every Description ot

BANKS- RS
NO.

S

WALL

AND

Our

$1,614,540 78

This

Is

WILLIAM S. FANSHAWE

Co.,

BROKERS,

NO. 39 WALL STREET.
Annual Financial Circular
1868

for

now r ady, and will be forwarded free of
charge t
parties desiring to make investments through us.

Comoany having recently added to its previous

assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000, and subscrip¬
tion notes in advance of premiums of $.300,000, continues
to issue policies of insurance against Marine and In

and

Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected
rom Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en
tied to participate in the profits.
MOSES H. GRINNELL, President.
JOHN P. PAULISON

Vice-President'

Isaac H. Walkeb, Secretary.

T

emple

&

Marsh,

BANKERS AND BROKERS.
Dealers In Government Securities,&c. on
Commission.

No. 9 Wall

Street,

cor. New.

R. T. Wilson &
LATE

S.

Y O R K

Foreign Excliange.

BANKERS AND

49 WALL STREET.

Capital and Assets,

NEW

Securities,

Thomas Denny &

(INSURANCE buildings)

Incorporated 1841.

Thompson’s Nephew,

EUROPEAN
PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE OFFICE,
73 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Drafts on England, Ireland & Scotland
Bankers furnished

with

Sterling

Exchange and

through tickets from Europe to all parts of the United
LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR

ELLERS.

TRAV¬

sterling Exchange at Sight and Sixty Days
upon
ALEX. S. PETRIE Sc CO.,
Order, tor

Williams &




C<3.,

WILSON, CALLAWAY Sc CO.,
Merchants,

NO. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchants
Bankers and others allowed 4 per cent on
deposits.
The most liberal advances made on
Cotton, Tobacco,
&c„ consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents.
Messrs. K. GILLIAT & CO., Li verpool
'

Ever

ett

28 State

&

Co.,

MORGAN & Co., Banker*.

Capital and Surplus 92,000,000.

Gko. M. Coit, Sec’y.

PHOENIX

Geo. L. Chase, Pres't

FIRE

INSURANCE

CO..

HARTFORD, CONN.
1
Capital and surplus $1,200:000.
W. B. Clark,Scc’y.
H. Kellogg, Pres t
OF

SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND MARINE
INSURA NCE COM PAN Y,
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
’

Capital and Surplus $700,000.
J, N. Dunham, Sec’y.

E.

Freeman, Pres

CONNECTICUT FIB K INSURANCE CO
OF HARTFORD, CONN.
M.

Capital $27 5,000.,
Bennett, Jr„ Sec’y.
J. B. Eldredge, Pres’t
in current money.

WHITE

ALLYN Sc CO.,

Agents,

NO. 50 WILLIAM STREET.

Homoeopathic
Mutual Life InsuranceCo
Of the

City of New York,

231

BROADWAY,

This

Company offers to insurers all the advantage
hitherto afforded by any responsible Company in re
speet to terms and plans of insurance, and, in addition
to low* rates on ordinary lives, it makes a still further
reduction to those using the
Homoeophatic practice.
Persons about to insure are invited to give our
proposals a careful examination.

DIRECTORS.

D. D. T. Marshall. 157 East 34th Street.
Hon. Stewart L. Woodford, Lieut. Gov. State N. Y.
Jas. Cushing. .Jr., of
Leroy W. Fairchild & Co.
Edward E. Kamos, of II. B. Claflin & Co.

Elisha Brooks, of Brooks Bros., 468 Broadwav.
lion. Ricli’d B.

Connolly, Comptroller of N. Y. Cit

Robert T. Bew ail, of Sewall
Pierce, 62 Broadw ay.
George G. Lake, of Lake & McCreery, 471 Broadway.
Hon. Richard
Kelly, Pres’t of 5th National Bank.
John Simpkins, 29 Wall Street.
Wm. C. Dunton, of Bulkley. Dnnton & Co., 4 John Bt,
Peter Lang, ot Lang & Clarkson, 4 Front Street.
Wm. B. Kendall, of Bigelow Carpet Co., 05 Duane St.
Hiram W. Warner, late Warner &
Loop, 332 5th Ay

Charles L. Stickney, 209 Bowery.
William Rudde, Publisher, 550 Pearl Street.
Thomas B. Aston, 124 East 29th Street.
G. B. Hammond, Tarrytown, N. Y.
D. D. T. MARSHALL, President.
JAMES CUSHING, Jr., Vice President.

ELIZUR

WRIGHT,'Consulting Actuary.

E. A. STANSBURY, Secretary.
A HALSEY PLUMMER, Assistant
Sec’y.
STEWART L. WOODFORD, Counsel.
EDWARD M. KELLOGG, M. D.,

JOHN W.

MITCHELL, M. D..

Medical Examiners.

<A. COOKE

HULL, M. D., Medical Director.

Agents and Solicitors wanted.

Send fo

cul

A U GU STINE

HEARD

on

&

CO.,

consignments of approved
chandize.

Co.,

OFFICES:
O. 135

BROADWAY, NEW YORK, AND 151 MON
TAGUE STREET, BROOKLYN.

Capital

...$2,000,000 00

Aaaets, July 1, 1868
Liabilities..

3,730,981 60
126,453 15

mium on Risks in the City, equal
heretofore paid as Brokerage.

OF CHINA AND JAPAN.

Advances made

Home Insurance

Desiring to deal directly w'ith its Customers, this
Company will hereafter make a rebate from the Pre¬
to the Commission

Street, Boston,

AGENTS FOR

executed

Guion,

.

Banker* and Commission

London,

7i Wall Street, New Term

&

Gandy &Co

INSURANCE COMPANY
HARTFORD, CONN.

NO.

BROKERS,

STREET,

Gold and

COMPANY.

S

Lounsbery & Fanshawe,
RICHARD P. LOUNSBERY.

Sun Mutual Insurance

U.

Chittenden

NEW PLANS AND LOWER RATES.

Government

Manufactory, Waterbury, Ct.

ns,

DEALERS IN

Esq,.

OF

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
No. 14 WALL FTREET

And

NO. 4 Beekman street & 36 Park Row, New York,

deposits.

[Frank & Ga

Gilt, Lasting, Brocade, and Fancy Dress Buttons,

Photographic Goods.

on

Aymar&cS
C?
Chaunce!
Cey

Losse promptly adjusted by the Agents here,
andpal

Government securities, railroad and other bonds

HINGES,

Kerosene Oil Burners

BROKERS,

No, 2 4 Broad Street, New York.

rest allowed

of

of David Dows &
of Fabbri &

Hartford

James Merrkll, Sec.

The Capital of ONE M LLION DOLLARS is divid¬
ed among over 500 shareholders,

& fn

of E. 1). Morgan & (V

WHITE, Assistant Manager.
LORD, DAY <te LORI), Solicitors.
DA BN F \

„

Scovill

Dabney, Morgan

T?C^ALLYN?' \ Associate Managers

CIIAS. E.

SPECIAL DEPOSITS for six months, or more, may
be made at five per cent.

BANKERS AND

of

of S. B.

Receives deposits and allows FOUR PER CENT.
INTEREST on daily balances, Subject to Check at

Franklin

12,695.000
4,260,635

SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq..of Sheppard

Sight.

Every Month.

GOLD):

$40,000,000

or Currency at
option of An
p
Losses promptly adjusted and
paid in this Countrr
New York Board of Management*
"
C1IAS. H. DABNEY, Esq.,Chairman.

CHARTERED BY TIIE STATE
Darius R. Mangam, Pres,

(IN

plicant.

-

COMPANY.

7 OPPOSITION TO

THROUGH LINE TO

CAPITAL AND ASSETS

Income
Policies issued iu Gold

Capital,One Million Dollar*.
NORTH AMERICAN

BRANCH,

STREET, NEW YORK

Subscribed Capital
Accumulated Funds

NO. 336 BROAD WAT.

BARV, Agent.

1809.

Annual

291 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

National Trust

EDINBURGH,

UNITED STATES

William II. Sanford, Cashier.

Month.

AND

ESTABLISHED IN

CK, President

,

British

AND

S3,OOO,OOO

Canadas.

MONTH.

P. R.

THE

Bank,

Has for sale all descriptions of Government BondsCity and County accounts received on terms most fa
vorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United States an

l«tf 9th, 16th and 24th of Each

the

National

Capital

AND

CARRYING THE UNITED

Insurance

31S BROADWAY.

Touching at Mexican Ports

,

[October 8, 1868.

mer¬

CnAS. J. MARTIN, President.
A. F. WILLMARTII. Vice-President.
D. A. HEALD, 2d Vice-President.

J. H. WASHBURN, Secretary.
GEO. M. LYON, Asst. Secretary.

T. B. GREENE 2d Asst. Secretary.

October

—The Board of Directors of the

ftfje Railtuatj Jttonitor.
the reported
leudiDg railroads

for five weeks in 1867 and 1868 :
Miles ot

Week.

Railroads.
Atlantic & Gt. Western
“

“

h, “
|
1st, Sept,
2d,
“
1
3d,
“
J

507
l

l

7*
“

“

»

“

2d,

“

“

3d,

|
t
}- 1,152
1

4th, “
1st, Sep.

“
Chicago,

S ’

“
“

j

R. left & Foe .1st, Sep. J
“
3d,

“

“

“

“

Michigan Southern....
“
5

“

‘

3d. “
1st, Sep.

94,630
93 991

110,402
1? 1,379

|

|

-j

524

“
“

j
Milwaukee & St. Paul.. 1st. Sep, ) 820
2d,
“
>(7:45 in 1
I 1867)
Toledo, Wab. & West ..1st. Sep. )
(
“

«

2d,

3d.

“

“

“

■“

“

»

“

“

}■ 521 <
)
(

“

“

4th, “
1st, Sept.
“
2d,
3d,
“

128,.VS0

^-Earn. p m—*
1868.
1867.
237
186
275
253
222
210
225
254
251
263

336,351
355,397

198
392
265
277
307

260
394
302
291
308

149,800
146,100

277
323

333
2S8

68,342
92,571

263

239

332
329

324
309

299,789
453,625
348.570

87,918
88,367
10:, 316

387
390

310
383

•

115.105

189
233
233

173
193
208
206
219

172,199

213,400
227,400

177
234

250
277

S4,576

113,466

162

93,677
90.960

94,498

179

100,350

174

218
381
392

1*0,871
97,729

173
1S6

90,894
101,341

97,211
122,367
122,218

109,113
108,297

U30 668

\

1-

ISO H
|

J

97

2! 2

30.415

22.321
21.508

171

319

21,569

174

119

21,026
3-,229

125

—'The Trustee^ of the Southern MinuesotaR iilroad Company say
foundation whatever for the newspaper item, that
their io.id has been purchased by the Chicago and Northwestern

Rafroad Company.

—The com et it ion on freights between the Illinois Central and the
Chicago and Northwestern railroads has ceased, an arrangement be¬
ing made for the same tariff by both roads.
—The New York Tribune says :—The Mariposa grants have pas¬
sed into the hands of n w patties, with promise of succe sful termi¬
nation of the difficult! s of the old company. The property at pre¬
interests
old

(507 m.l

(507 m.)

$504,932

$361,137

i

.Jan—
Feb
itiarcU

$394,771.
395,280.
318,219
421,033,

377,852
438,040
443,029

408,864
388,480
394,533
451,477
474,441
462,674

—

.

.

.April..

3S0,796
400,110

355,447 .May...
352,109, J une..
341,200. .July...

475,257
483,857

407,888. Aug...
.Sept...

459,370

528,618

526,959
541,491

.Oct

uni:

These doubts have been all retire!, and he title, which have een
in litigation or years, have been perfected, and the entire franchise
has been absorbed in the deed of trust.
The Trustees have the
power to issue new certificates in
stock no to exceed §1,000,000.

following is an abstract of the annual statement of the
Haitiord, New Haven and Sprin, teld Raihoad Company :
KECETTS?.

From passengers
From freigh s
>mm expenses.
From m 41 service
From rents

...

' 1868.
(775 in.)
(775 m.)
$906,759 $1,031,320..-Jan ,
917,639
Feb..
1,139,528
...Mar..
1,217,143
..April.
1,122,140
...May.
1,118,731
..
..June..
1,071,312
.July..
1,239,024
...Aug
1,444,745
Sep...
Oct...
1,498,716
1,421,881
Nov..
...Dec...
1,041,646

(798 m.)
$1,185,746
987,936

1,070.917
1,153,441
1,101,632
1,243,636
1.208.244
1,295,400
1,416,101
1.476.244
1,416,001
1,041,115

..
..

569,250

.Year..

1867.

884,684

338,858

884,401
429,177

496,655
429,548
852,218

$305,857

311,088
379,761
891,163
358,601
304,232
312,879
428,702

(521 m )
$371,04i
339,736.
3S1,497
455,983
400,486,
863,530.
301,500.

1559,982
480,986
662.163

»9,80<i
682,51»
633,667
552,378
648,201
654,920
757,441
?79,935
555,222

.

Mar..
.

April..
..May...
.June..

....Oct....
m.Nof...
Dec...

370,757

..

.-.Year

..

684,189
771,103

590,557
586,484 611,914
507,451 601,246
587,381 571,8:34
606,217 653,281
609,037
781,801
690,598
573,726

Estimated.




1S67.

(692 m.)
$1,086,360
895,887

(692 in.)
$901,571

(708 m.)
$519,855 ..Jan.
488,088, ..Feb.

1,135,745
1,190,491
1,170,415
1,084,5.33
1,135,461
1,285,911
1,480,929

467,754. .April.

.May,

543,019. .June.
576,458 ..J uly.

7b4,138. ..Aug..
...Sep.,

J

uly.».
Aug., .
Sept.*,

1,201,249

(692 m.)
..Jan...
$
-

..Feb..
..Mar
.

.April.
..May..
.June

..July..
..Aug..
...Sep..,

Year..

14,143,215

.Oct...,
Nov...
Dec

...

,.V«1

4,105,103

.

108,461
95,416

98,482

95,924
108,413

126,556

121,217

.

.Feb..
..Mar..

.

.

.April.
..May..

.

.

•

(210 m.)
$127,594. .Jan...

174,152
168,162
171,736
156,065

149,165. .Mar...
155,388. .April.
130,545. .May...
143,211 .June..
*170,000 July.

204,590

$368,484.

456,143
702,492
573,234
129,069

4.552,549

1,101,773

414,604

412,933

330,373

..

0

766,617

oc

438,325

.

458,094. .June.
423.200. ..July.,
522,545. ..Aug..
O
...Sep..,
..

••

QO

,

...Oct.
.Nov..,
..Dec
.

...

5,6S3,609

Year

.

.

.

Aug...

.Sept...

212.226

204.0 J5

.Oct...
,N«v:...

177,364

171,499

.Dec....

3,251,520

2,207 930

8-094,975

0,789,8*)

365,372
379.367

336,066
272,053

3,380,583 3,459,319

$40,415
40,703

April.

39,198
49,231
70,163
77,33 >

283,833

.

J une.
J uly.

43,333
86,913
102,686
85,508

30,392
40,710

481,208

.Aug..

6U,b9S

Sept...

84,462
100,303
75,248

126,490
119,607

54,478

54,718

814jO?8

774.9C?

292,385
260,529
293,344

307,948

194,455

287,557

27.006

317,052

204,741

322.521

$39,679

263,259

351,759

284,729
282,939
240,135
234,633

45,102
36,006
39,21*9

265.793

354.830

277,423
283,130
253,924
247,262
305,454
278,701
310,762
302,425
281,613

..Jan.,
..Feb..
.Mar..

(521 m.)

200,793
270,630

3S2,996
406,766

279,647

-Western Union.--

$237,674 $278,712

309,591
364,723

219,064

4326,236

1867.

194,167
256,407
270,300

304,917
396,248
349,117
436,065

$242,793

(340 m.)
$211,973
231,3a
265,905
252,149
2)4,019
217,082

(180 m.)

$226,059

329,078
304,810

267,541
246,109

1868-

1867.

(157 in.)

(521 in.)

325 691

Mississippi.—

1866.

1868.

1867.
(521 rn.)

316,433

392,942

4,260,125 4,371,071

(340 m.) (340 in.)

435,629, .April.
565,718. ..May..

..

369,625
325,501
321,013

308.649

.Jan...
350.884, ..Feb.
333,281 ..Mar..

£
3

3133,952

429,166

(82 J in.)

$319,765
240,756
261,145

32(5,880
415,758

284,977
313,021
398,993
464,778
506,295

365,196
335,082
324,986
359,645

I860.

(7:15 m.)

305,081

•'

(2S5 m.)
$343,31*j
304,315

362,783

Ohio &

(510 in.)
$253,483
208,302
196,092
229,615
513,110
506,54S
379,610

369,358
365,404
350,564
751,739

337,158
343,736

..Oct..
.Nov..
.Dec..

.

1868.

316,268

S

1867

(285 in)
$304,097
283,609
375,210

.July.
Aug..
.Sep..

.

..Year

401,892

308 S91

366,200

493.649

.June.

.

•

1,258,713

(285 m.)
$2S2,438
265,796

.Jan.

.

.

...

•

3,415,400
0351,600

281,900
362.800
288,100

Michigan Central.—
1868.

.

•

257,230
209,099

1866.

1867.

1866.

133,392. Feb...

219,160
230,340

3,466,922

..

-Toledo. Wab. & Western.-*

1868.

149,342

172.933

Year..

.

.

1866.

.

220,788

£ 558,200

.—Milwaukee & St. Paul.-

935,857

167,099
166,015
222,953
198,884
244,834

S‘517.702

£42S,474
c345,027
S 260,268

.,

123,383

.

168.699

^400.941

...Oct
.Nov..,
.Dec..,

72,768
90,526
96,535
1:6,594
114,716

123,802

1868.

1,211,108

June..

..Mar...

f 404,600

142,823

...Oct....
.Nov.
.Dec..

..May..

.Feb...

238,926
317,977

132,387

.Year

1,530.518

.April.

.Jan...
.

1,091,466. ..July.
1,265,831 ..Aug..,
...Sep..,

81.599

.

329.800
478,600

306,693

78,976
84,652

113,504

274,800

277-5U5

.June..

1,167,544

$92,433

112,952

...Oct...
.Nov..
.Dec..

(454 in.
$283,600

1,068,959 .April.
1 206,796 ..May..

.Feb..

..Mar..

855 611

$94,136

.

1,075,773
1,227,286
1,01*3,731
934,536
1,1* 1,693
1,3S8,915
1,732,673

(210 m.)
’$149,658

1,000,086 1,451,284
1,200,216 1,508,883
1,010,892 1,210,387
712,359 918,088

$1*0,411
85,447
84,357
SI,181
96,3S8
103,373
98,043
106,921
104,866

409,684, ..Mar.

490,666

624,174

(228 in.)
$241,395
183,385

..Jau..
.

-Marietta and Cincinnati.—*
1867.
1866.
.,1868.1
(251 m.) (251 in.)
(251 in.)

1S68.

845,853

(210 m.)
$178,119
155,893
192,138
167,301

$542,416 4*2,694
627,960

524,871

417,071

1867.

(468 m.) (468 m.)
692,754

$647,119

1866.

1868.

525,498

(708 m.)

757,134

18(58.

1867.

1866

(410 m.)
$292,047
224,621
27 J,454
2S0,2S3
251,916
261,480

9,424,450 11.712,248

r-St. L. Alton & T. Haute.—.

Ft. W., & Chicago.-

7,242,126*

fan.

.Feb..

..July...
480,763. ..Aug*..
...Sep...

487,867
539,435
423,341

1867.

.Dec..

..Year

7,160,991

1866.

1868.

4,650,328 4,613,743
1866.
(468 m.)

.

.Oct...
.Nov..

New York Central.

.

277,234
412,715
413,970
418,024

.

1867.

6,546,741

.

(524 m.)

.

3,892,861

480,626
578,253
571,348
661,971
588,219
504,066

r-Mich, So & N. Indiana.-

(524 m.)
$312,846

408,999
426,752
359,103
330,169

440,271
477,007
5 J 6,494
525,242
71-9,326
738,530
823,901
727,809
613,330

567,679 *

..

14,596,413 14,139,264
1866.

341 181. ..May.,
373,461. .June.
405 617. .July .

3^5,540

170,803
82,045

Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific. -

1868.

(1,032 m.)(l,152 m.)(l,152m.)
$590,767 $696,147
$141,926
800,787
459,007 574,664

570,353., ..Aug..
...Sep..

505,465
411,605

..

1867.

1864)

(280 in.)
$259,539. ..Jan..
296,496 .Feb..

15,216,552

PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.

415.982

(708 in.)
$603,053
505,266

..

OF

931,821
380,123

431,590 80

774,280
880,993 895,712
925,983 898,357
808,524 880,324
797,475 1,063,236

1866.

1867.

surplus

No. of passengers carried...
No. of tonb freight carried
No. of tons lrcight carried 1
mile....
Miles inn by paBsen. trains
Miles run by ire ght trains.
Wiles run by other trains...

-Chicago & Northwestern-

-Illinois Central.

Railway.

$1,215,713 58

operating road

270,386. .April.

3,695,152

1866.

For
Net

282,165
335,510
342,357
354,244

..Year..

—-Erie

EXPENSES.

209,249
329,851

5,476,276 5,094,421

IV o v

...$1,097,334 39

613,974

271,246

.

55,027 2S
3,452 35

261,599. ,Mar.,

322,038
360,323
323,030

BUSINESS.

032,454 00
114,709 50

Total

Qft
1868.

1
1867.

$S91,091 20

235,961

321,597
387,209

The consummation of this plan,

—The

290,111

371.543

exchange for bo Ms and preferred

already partially carried out; will give the Trustees §1,000,000 ot
actual cash for the development of Ibis large estate.
—The Peoria, Pekin, and Jacksonville Railroad will be finished
in three or four mouths, thus making a di ect route to Jacksonville

(280 m.)
$243,787
157,832

.Dec—

368,581

judgments and judgment sales in Cali'ornia, amounting to nearly
a floating debt of §70,000 or $80,000.

(280 m.)
$220,152
222,241

477,528
440,590
350,837

497,250

o

$200,000, together with

EARNINGS

MONTHLY

1SOO.

1808.
(507 rn.)

1807.

nds of Trustees, who are working the estate for the
the stockholders. The property was incumbered with

sent is in the li

—Chicago and Alton.—
°
1

-Atlantic & Great Western.1MH.

day between Chicago and Aurora.

a

that there is no

COMPARATIVE

with Messrs. D^an,

McGinnis & Co., of New York, bankers, and Lancaster <fc Co.,
of Richmond, tor placing upon the markets of Europe and thia
country the fust mortgage 7 per cent bonds for$10,000,000.
—The Chicago, B rlington and Quincey Railroad run 40 trains

317

186
153

17,177
33,095
27,089

Chesap ake and Ohio Railroad

arrangement

an

via Peoria.

31,456

3d, Aug. )

Western Union
“

“

75,025

285

.20, Aug. )
2d,
3d,

»

“

145,534
f

3d,
11
1st, Sep. I
“
2d,
|
3d,
“
J

“

“

127,728

113,890

506

1st, Ang. )

Michigan Central“
7.
*

113,729
133,530

[ 352,362

>-(4‘0in
j 1867)

“

128,4 6
106,523

226,275
452,162
303,002
317,672

and N. West’n.3d, Aug. )
“

Chicago

94,178

120,262
139,454
112,387

5

“

«

’

.4th, Aug. )

“

.

✓-Gross earn’gs—,
1867.
1868.

road.

“

“
“

Company have concluded

Earnings (weekly).—la the following table we com¬
weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of several

Railroad
pare

441

THE CHRONICLE.

3,1868.]

,

.May..
.

.

.Oct—
.Nov..
Dec..

.

••

,

V•«?,.

57,852

60,558
58,262
73,525
79.431

IS

8

(180 m-

59,762

84,607

will

Stihscribers

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
confer a great favor by giving ns immediate notice ok' any error discovered In our Tables.
Dividend.

COMPANIES
Marked thus * are leased roads
In dividend col. x — extra, c

cash, s

-=

stock.

Susquehanna

Albany and

Last
Date,

Periods.

paid..

irate Bid. Ask.

.100

v
iw York-and Harlem
New York & Harlem pref....

1,774,824
2,404,900! Jan. & July July ’6S

Savannah*
Ohio

50

10C

Berkshire*

Blossburg and Corning*
B iston and Albany

122%' 123

600,000 Quarterly. Ju y *68

Boston, Con. & Montreal,pref.100; 1,340,400 May & Nov.'Nov. ’07
Boston, Hartford and Erie.... 100; 14,884,000 Jan. &
Boston and Lowell
500; 1,976,000 Jan. & July July '68!
Julyj July ’63 i
Boston and Maine,
10C 4,070,974
ana

Providence

Baft'aio, New York, Sc
Buffalo and Erie

100 3,300,000

Erie*. .100

.100

22%
132
132
134

July; .July ’68

ivT

950 000 June Sc Dec. June *68
6,000,000 Feb. & Aug; Aug ’08

*

River.100

3(>0,500

137,500

preferred.100
Ohio and Mississippi,
10C
!
do
preferred.. 100
Old Colom- and Newport
100
i Orange and Alexandria
100
do

*

*

1

*

12S%

I Oswego and Syracuse..,-

.

i Panama

|

I Pennsylvania

Philadelphia and Erie*

;

fbiday

Last
Periods.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

1 Date.

& July July
& July'July
& July July
& July Jan.

Jan. &

paid.
rate

’68
’68
’68
’67

July Jan. ’68

3,068,400 June & Dec June’68;
4,648,900 Quarterly. ;A*g.’68; 2
898,950

Bid.

Aik

24~
122
140

84%

116%
93%

99

155,000 May Sc Novi

4,000,000

100 2,469,307
! North Missouri
:*:• j1 North Pennsylvania
50 2,363,600
100 3,150,000
135% Norwich and'Worcester
135% Ogdcnsb. Sc L. Champlain —100 3,023,500
134%

1.590.500
128
Camden and Amboy
100 5,Out,”00 Feb. & AuuiAug. ’68; 5
j.
373,455
Camden and Atlantic
50
do
do
preferred 50 723,500 Jan. & July July
68; 3%
721,920
Cape Cod
60 1.159.500
Catawissa*
50
66
’6
do
preferred
50 2,200,003 May & Nov
Cedar Rapids Sc Missouri *..100 5,432,0 >9

Burlington Sc Missouri

100 6,000,000

..100 1,755,281

’j

.!!
146%

50 6,785,05„
5t> i .500.000

New York, Pro v. Sc Boston.
! Norfolk Sc Petersburg, pref. .100
^o
do
guar.100
Northern of New Hampshire. 100
50
i Northern Central,
North Eastern (S. Car.)
do
8 p. c., pref
i North Carolina
.=.
100

....

50 250,000 June & Dec. June’68;
100| 13,725,00(1 Jan. & July'July ’68,

Jan. Sc

N. Y. and New Haven

I

1,232,1001Jan. Sc July! JulV ’08
733,700!
100 18,151,902; Jan & July!i July ’08
April w Oct Apr. ’08
100
100 1.050,000■ April & Oct j Apr. ’08

Washington Branch*
Parkersburg Branch

Boston

Stock
Marked thus * are leased roads
out¬
In dividend col. x «= extra, c —
standing.
cash, s = stock.

FRIDAY

out¬

standing.

Atlantic Sc St. Lawrence* ...1001
Atlanta & West Point
100
Baltimore and

COMPANIES

Dividend.

Stock

rxu

Railroad.

Augusta Sc

[October 3,1868,

THE CHRONICLE.

442

'Feb.
Jan. &

Annually. 'Feb.’68

1,000,000 Apr.

20,226,604

3,500,000
4,848,320

’67

Julyj July ’68

Oct, Oct. ’68

June & Dec: June’68
Jan. & July July ’68

28%
98%

2,063,655
50 482,400

Feb. Sc Aug! Aug..’68! 4
100 7,000.000 Quarterly. ;Oct. ’681 6 111%
May & Nov
50 27.597,978 Jan. & July; May ’68 I 2c5t 50
—
50 5,996,70u

&
do
preferred 50 25,028,905 Jan. Sc July; July *68|i — 94%
.. 2,400,001 Jan.
July
5#
Reading
140
Apr. Sc
: Phila., Germant. Sc Norrist’n* 50
1,569.550 Jan. & Oct; Apr. ’68
June &Dec June '68l5,2x
Central Georgia & Banx’g Co.100 4,660,800
July ’68 4 110%
July
12 V 122% ; Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 9,058,800
68j
Quarterly.
Central of New Jersey
100 13,000,000 June & Dec July *68i 2% 60
TO
1 Pittsburg andConnellsville... 50
1,776,129
June
3
Ohio
50 2,000.000
Central
Quarterly. Oct." ’681 2% 108%
'68!
100 11,500,000 Feb. &
do
do
preferred
50 400,000 December. June ’67 i 3 68% TO" : Pittsb., Ft.W. & Chicago
Aug. Aug.’68; 3
Portland & Kennebec (hew).. 100
579,501'
Dec.
102% *0 2%
Cheshire, preferred
100 2,017,82* Mar Sc Sep. Sep. *68j 3
151
! Portland, Saco, Sc Portsm’th.100 1,500,000 June Sc Dec! June ’68
5
3.886.500
Chicago and Alton,
10C 2,425,400 Mar & Sep. ^ep."68 5 151
Providence and Worcester... .100 1,890,000 Jan. & July July ’6$; 4
do
preferred. .100
165
Raritan and Delaware Bay*.. .10C 2,530,700
96
Chic. Bur. & Quincy,
.100 12,500,000 Mar. &Sep. Sep. ’68 5
42
Rensselaer Sc Saratoga consollOO 2,500,000 April & Oct Oct." ’68' *3%
Chicago and Great Easter*. ..100 4,390,000
Richmond and Danville
100 2,000,000
i *•" (
Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*... 100 1,000,000! Jan. Sc July July 63'" 5 1
88
100 847,100 Jan. & July July ’68
Richmond & Petersb.,
Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100 2.227,000!
88%
June’68 i6s
& Ggdensb’g..l00 2,496,000
39 •! °}$»!| Rome, Watert.
Chicago & Nor’west
100 14,555,745
Rutland
'
100
June ’6840s
do
do
pref. .100 16,268,037
Feb. & Aug. A*ug.’6S 3%
;108/« 1J3/8;
jo
preferred
100
14,000.000 April & Ocl Sep. ’68 10
Chicago, Rock Isl. Sc Pacific..100
St. Louis, Alton, & TerreH...100 2.300,000
Cine., Ham. & Dayton
100 3,521,664 April & Oct Apr. ’6s j 8s
do
do pref.100 2,040,000 Annually. May ’68
362,950
Cincin.,Richm’d Sc Chicago *.100
St. Louis, Jacksonv. Sc Chic.*lC0 1,469,429
1,676,315
Cincinnati and Zanesville.'. .. 50
79% 80
I
Sandusky, and Cincinnati
50 2,989,090
Cleveland, Col., Cin. Sc Ind.. .100 10,450,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’68 3%
do
pref. 50
393,073 May & Nov Nov! ’67
do
May ’0K 4
Cleveland Sc Mahoning*
50 2,044,600 May Sc Nov
93
901,341
Ju y ‘6s 8% 96%
Sandusky, Mansf. Sc Newark.100
Clove, Pain. Sc Ashta
100 8,750,'OOOiJan. & July Oct. ’68 2 '
86
Schuylkill Valley*
50 676,050 Jan. & July July ’68
5,111,925 Quarterly.
Cleveland and Pittsburg
... 50
869.450 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’68
101% Sliamokin Val. & Tottsville*. 50
Cleveland and Toledo
50 6,250,000i Jun. & July July ’68 3%
Shore Line Railway
100 635,200 Jan.& July July ’68
Oct. ’67; 2%,
Columbus Sc Indianap. Cent..100 6,510,000 Quarterly.
'.'.'.X South Carolina.
50 5,819,275
Columbus and Xeuia*
50 1,736,800,Dec & June Dec. 67! 4s 73%
South Side (P. Sc L.)
100 1,365,600 Feb. &
Concord
50 j 1.500,0001 May & Nov May'68 5 i
Aug i!*g. ’68
South West. Georgia
100 3,203,900
Concord aud Portsmouth
lOOj 350,000: Jan. Sc July July 68 3%;
Syracuse, Bingh’ton Sc N. Y..100 1.314,130
..100! 1,322,100 Jan. Sc July July '68 r 3 i
Conu. & Passump. pref..
Jan. Sc July July ’6S
132
1091 i;700,000 !• Jan. Sc July July '6k 5
it Terre Haute & Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150
Connecticut River
Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .104 1,115,400
& Oct Apr. ’63j 4
|
Cumberland Valley.
50) 1,316,900 Apr
do
* do 1st prei.100 1,651,316
!.. J
Dayton and Michigan *
100} ‘>.409,000 i
908,400
do
do 2d pref.100
59%
Delaware*
25 j 594,261 j Jan. & July July ’OS: 3 !
100 5,700,000
Toledo, Wab & West.
75
July '08
Delaware, Lacka., Sc Western 50 11,288,600 Jan. Sc July
jclo
do preferred.100 1,000,000 May & Nov M:*y ’68
do
scrip. 100; 2,812,0001
do
100 1,466,800 Jan. & July July ’68
Utica and Black River
102%
Detroit and Milwaukee
100, 1.047,850)
Vermont and Canada*
100 2,250,000 June & Dec June’Cf'
6J>. 61
do
do
pref. ..100 1,500,0001
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100 2,860,000 Jan. & July J**- ’68
.Dubuque and Sioux City
100' 1,673,952!
Virginia Central,
100 3,353.679
July 68!
do
pref. ..100 l,9SS.170j
do
Virginia and Tennessee
. .100 2,94 ,791
Eastern, (Mass)
.
100 3,883,300 Jan. Sc July July '68; 4 ;119%
do
do
pref.100
555,500
East Tennessee & Georgia.. .100 2,141,970 j
Western (N. Carolina)
100 2,227,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’64
East Tennessee * Virginia . loo 1,902.090
60 j
,707,693
Western Union (Wis. Sc Ill.)
500,000i May & Nov May ’53! 2# 31 ! •’0
Elmira and Williamsport*.... 50 i
do
pref. 50 500,000 'Jan. & July July 63; 3#: 49 ! 49>e» Wilmington and Manchester. 100 1,147,018
do
,163,775
100:28,465,300 Feb. & Aug Feb.’66' 4 | -69%' 70& Wilmington & Weldon
Erie,
Worcester and Nashua
75 ,522,200 Jan. & July July ’G8 5%
100! 8,536.900j January. Jan. ’68! 7
do preferred
132%
100! 3,540,000 Jan. Sc July July 83 4
Fitchburg
Canal.
4,156,000'Jan. Sc July July ’G8 4 ;
Georgia
lOOi
&Dec<June’68
89% Chesapeake and Del
99
50 ,983,563 June Sc
1,900,000i
Hannibal and St. Joseph
100
87% 89 j'Delaware Division*
Ang.
50 ,633,350 P’eb. & Aug Auer. ’68
128 ISO
5,253,836
do
do
pref. 100 j
Feb.
Aug
’6$
Oct.
•••;; Delaware and Hudson
.100 15,000,000 Feb. Sc
10oj 3,000,000; Quarterly. Jan. ’68 3
Hartford &N.Haven
Aug Aug. ’68
’OS! 4
46% 46%
100 ,500,673
{‘Delaware & Raritan,
Honsatonic preferred
100, 1,180,000
139 139%' Ldngh Coal and Navigation . 50 8,739,800 May &Nov May ’67
Oct. ’68i 4
Hudson River
100! 9,9S1,590: April & Oct
i
••••('Monongahela Navigation Co. 50 728,100 Jan. & July Jan. ’6S
Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 501 615,950!
100 ,025.000 Feb. Sc Aug
do
do
pref. 501 190,750 Jan. & July Jan. ‘68 *3% 146 146% 1! Morris (.consolidated)
do
preferred
100 ,175,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68
Illinois Central,
100125,26^794;F.-b.& Aug. Aug.’68! 5 ss 60
Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. & Aug Feb. 67
Sep.’67 4
..Indianapolis, Cin. Sc Lafayette 50 6,185,8971 Mar. Sc Sep Jan. ’66 5
do
prefer.. 60 2,888,977 Feb. & AugiFeb. ’67
28
Jeffersonv., Mad. & fndianap.loo 2,000,000 Jan.& July
Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 2,002,746
\pr. 'OS
Joliet and Chicago*
100; 300,000! Quarterly. July ’68 4
Union, preferred
50 2,907,850
Jolietand N. Indiana.... .... 100
300,OOO!Jan.& July
West Branch Sc Susquehanna. 50 1,100,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’65
50
jackawanna and Bloomsburg 50J 1,335,000]
Wyoming Valley
50 800,000 Irregular. Oct. ’67
..ehi^h
^ehierh Valley
50il0j73L400| Quarterly.
5'
July 68 3
r.exin^ton and Frankfort
100
514,646; Jsn. & July
Khl 8,572,400, June & Dec Dec. '67 j 4
47%
(
Miscellaneous.
Little Miami
50
1,500,000 Mar. &Sep. Mar. ’68
j Coal.—American
2,646,100* Jan. & July July '68 2
uittle Schuylkill*
o0
55 |!
Ashburton
2,500,000
Aug. ’66: 2
U)ng Island
50 3,000,000
Butler
25 -500,000 Jun. & Dec. Dec." ’67
211,121 Jan. & July July ’68 j 4%
Loaisvllle, Oin. A Lex pref .100
Consolidation
100 5,000,000
boaisville and Frankfort
50 1,109,594!Jan. & July July ’68: 3
Central
100 2,000,000 Jan. & July July" ’68
34%
32
5,492,638; Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 4
Louisville and Nashville
100
Cumberland
100 5,000,000
200 209
2,800,000
Louisville.New Alb. & Chic..100
60
Pennsylvania
50 3,200,000 Quarterly. Amg! ’68
35
Apr. *68, 4”
Macon and Western
100 1,500.000
1,250,4)00 Jan. & July Jan.-’67
Spring Mountain
..... 50
Maine Central
100 1,536,260
29 ||
25
Spruce Hill
10 1,000,000
Marietta & Cincinnati,1st pref 50 8,130,719 j Mar. & Sep Sep. ’60!'
Wilkesbarre
100 3,400,000 Apr. & Oct
do
do 2d pref.. 50 4,460,368 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’601
:
Wyoming Valley
100 1.2-50.000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’66
do
Common
2,029.778,
135
Oas.—Brooklyn
25 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67
150
Manchester and Lawienae .. 100 1,000,000 May & Nov May
Citizens (Brooklyn)
20 1,200,000 Jan. Sc July July ’68
Mar. ’68
5,312,725
Memphis & Chariest
100
Feb.& Aug. Aug. ’68
118%'119 h
Harlem.
50 1,000,000
Michigan Central,
100 8,477,366 Jan. & July July ’68
386.000 Jan. & July July ’68
286
83%, 83%M
Jersey City & Hoboken.. 20
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..100 11,065,340 Feb. & Aug Aug. '68'
do
do
guar.100!
1;
50 4,000,000 Jan. & July July ’68
Manhattan
536,800 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’68:
70
Metropolitan
100 2,800,000
1(1#
Milwaukee &P duChicn
50 1,000,000 May & Nov May’68
New Yorx
104
do
do
1st pref.100 3,214,250 February... Feb. ’67
750.000 Jan. & July July ’68
99
47%
William burg
50
47
February... Feb. ’67
do
do
2d pref.100, 1,014,"On
95
15
Il00
Improvement. Canton
16% 731,20
Jan. & July
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100 5,437,333
July ’66
94%' 94%!
Boston Water Power
100 4,000,000
34% 34%
do
preferred
100 8,166,342 January. Jan. ’67
114 iU5 ; Telegraph.— Western Union. 100 40.359,400 Jan. & July Jn'y ’6k
51% 62
Mine Hill <fe Sch’lkill Haven* 50 3.775.600 Jan. & July July ’68
48%
4?
Express.—-Adams
100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’68
Mississippi Central *
..100 2,948 785
500 9,000,000 Quarterly. May ’68
American
23% m
100
Mississippi & Tennessee
825,407
100 20,000,000
Merchants’ Union
49% 60
Mobile a*d Ohio
100 4,269,820
United States
100 6.000,000 Quarterly. Dec." ’66
31% 31%
Montgomery and WcstPoint.100 1,644,104 June & Dec) Pec. ’67
Wells, Fargo & Co
100 10,000,000
Morris and Essex
50 3,616,350 Mar. & Sep Mar. ’67
Dec. ’67
Steamship.—Atlantic Mai
100 4,000,000 Quarterly Dec. ’67
112% 112%
Nashua and Lowell
100
720,000 May & Nov May ’68
Pacific Mail
100 20,000,000 Quarterly. July
loo 2,056,544
Nashville & Chattanooga
'68
Jan. & July
| Truitt.—Farmers’ L. Sc Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. & July July ’68
Naugatuck
loo 1.430.600 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’63
500.000 Jan. Sc July July ’68
i
100 1,000.000
National Trust
New Bedford and Taunton ...100
Sc Aug! Aug 68
i
New Yotk Life & Trust.. 100 1,000,000 Feb.
I
1,334,000 Jan. A July
New Haven Sr- Northampton..10
68
7 (K»j 6,000,000 Feb. & Atig Aug. ’68i
1,000,000 Tan. Sc July I July
130
1;
Union Trust
10(1
New Jersey,
Jan. A July July m
1
United States Trust...... 100 1,500,000
100
895.000 Mar & Sep. Sep. ’67
New London Northern..
5,007,609
Orleans, OpC . A GL W»vtt00 4.093,405

(May

66% j

do

Phila. and

|4U

....

,,,

1

.

.

|j

.

•

j

,,
,

■

•

••

;j» h'x

—

—

’6sj

.

.l—

—

—

•

-

...

j«(W Jo




fi'

fit iirog.-'es

6.774,400

1<Tf09O#*J

October

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND

col-f

d si

'O

mg.

Bonds

•

SndZssexWW,™):

Jan. &

July

do
do

yfic
HaVen

$

Bonds of 1853
& London Northern; 1st Mortgage
Xm Orleans, Jackson eft Gt. North.:
1st Mortgage Sinking Fund
2d Mortgage
■•••••■•/■*
Xob Orleans, Opelou. eft Gt. West.:
WMortgage Construction Bonds.
Stw York Central: .
Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ....
Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal)..
ftoJeneg ($850,000).*
‘

*

200,000 6 April A Oct
485,000 6 Feb. & Aug

140,000, 6

July

1883
June A Dec 1887
May & Nov. 1883
1883
do
Feb. & Aug 1876
1876
do

2,90'*,000

Bonds

Bonds

*

I Irange (ft Alexandria ($2,627,762): ’
1st Mortgage
do
or 1st Extension
2d
3d
do
or 2d Extension
Qiwm & Borne:
1st Mortgage (guar. byR. W. A
Income

*.
....

O.)

Jmgo and Syracuse: 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Mile, of Missouri
let

2d

Mortgage, sterling

Jan. &
Feb. &

.....'

987,000 !

2,050,000!
850,000!

750,000!

1,338,000
1,458,000
400,000
1,130,500
573,500

350,000

200,000!
198,500!
375,000

($10*,600,’666)

1,000,000

5,000,000'
:

102,100

do
...

««*

v/vr

»rg and Steubenville: 1 st

Mortgage

•

•

and Toledo: ,1st
Mortgage..
orlfand <ft Kennebec

Jail. &

July
May & Nov.

3866
1875
1S73

..

aqnipmcnt Bonds

-

(fading and Columbia: 1st Mort..
tj'smer & Saratoga consolidated-j
1st Mort.
Rensselaer & Saratoga.*.
2d do
do
Jo
lit Mort
Saratoga A Whitehall....
‘rtMort.
*

S. A Rut.

(guar.)
fhmnd <ft Danville ($1,717,500) :
HnMortgage
interest Bonds
I^wnd dft Petersburg ($319,000)
fwfo. coupon A roicistorsa«* ;




,,

.

Jan. * Jnly
tJan. & July

1875
1875

1872
Feb. & An,
Jan. & July 1886
68-74
Various.
Mar. & Sept 1 ti¬

74*

175,000

ro ’75
iO’72
65 ’6?

2,000,000

Jan. &

July

1871

200,000;
1,721,514

Jan. &

July

1886
1876
1894

Feb. & Aug 189,8
Jan. A July 1880
April A Oct ’70-’75
Feb A Aug.
Mch & Sept

Tan. &

July

3872
1884

498,000

11

■100

!100

||

1910

1st

1877
1881
1901

Jan. &

2d
3d

July 1882

2,000,000
5,250,000
5,160,000
2,000,000
153,000
500,000

Aug

1912
1912
1912
1876
1881
1881

500,000

Mch A Sept
do

2%,000

no

Mch &

150,000|
450,000
400,000
500,000

Jan. A July 1873
80-’87
do
Mar. A Sept 1886
May A Nov. 1890

826,000

Feb. &
do

140,547

Sept

Aug

130j509' 7 jane & Dee

:

1st Mortgage

....

550,000

Qua terly.
Jan. A July
Apr. A Oct.
INI ay A N ov
‘Mar. A Sep.

7 I June.

1

do
do

>ec

84

1883
1907
188°
1885

1875
1882
1905
102

"98

77j4

186!

lly 186r
ily 188S

Jan.

ec

•

Llg

511,400

79)
40

•

...

.

1S72
1884
1865

448,000

.

.

...

.

...

1875

...

ly 1S73

400,000
562,800

ct

Jan. A
do

400,000
200,000
600,0o(i

1878

ly 1890

.

A

•

•

«

•

•

1890
93

ig

3,155,400

Jan.

1,000,000

1896

v.
v.

Jan.

25,000

1870

•

•

•

•

OOO

•

•

...

ly 1 1S71
do

500,000

....

..

.

1886
1873

c.

155.500

90

37*

ly 1S97

2,000,000
500,000

(guaranteed Baltimore)

1890
1890
1878
1878

A Dei
Jan. A Julyj’96

I,o00,()0<!

Mortgage

1877._

1877
y

•

0

-

....

’73 ’75 72*
69 ’76

Schuylkill Navigation: ($7,775,720)
93

||

1st Mortgage
2d

Mortgage
Improvement
Susquehanna and Tide-Water;
Maryland Loan
Coupon Bonds
Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds
UnionJPa.): 1st Mortgage.
West Branch and Susg. .1 st Mortgage

Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage

Mariposa Mining: 1st Mortgage
2d

do

Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds.
Quicksilver Mining:
1st Mortgage (gold)
2d

do

Western Union
1*1-

do

Telegraph;

1870
1890
1885

y

1878

t
v

1870
1877

y

1865

do
Jan.

1870

:

do

1,201,850

Jan.

148.0(H)
782,250

do

1,761,213
3 980,670
362,500

Jan. A

417,000
1,500,(M 0;

2,000.006

•

July

Jan. A July
do
do

May A Nov.
Jan. A July
Jan

••

A

July

Jan. A Julv
Jan. A July
JJan. A July

7 Jan. &.

•

•

•

•

•

•

o-i

•

•

•

....

....

•

•

....

•

•

A •

1897
1897
1877
1887
1876
1885

•

•

•

I

•

~v

1872
1882

_

m

m

m■

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

69*

•

•

•

July

1885
1878
1894
1883
1878
1878

62
•

500,000

Jtme A Dec
Jau. & July

•

•

•

m

1873
1879
>..

•

•

•

•

.

m

•

...

188
1885
1S79
18—

7,8^17^7^^97. ini

•

•

•

Feb. & Aug

49

•

0 •

•

«

• •

April A Oct

597,510
1,000,000

®

1S70

1,000,000
1,250,009
325,000
3.000,00u
633,000
600,000

629,000

»

1884

'Miscellaneous:
American Dock (ft Improvement:
Bonds (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) 2,000,000
Consolid. CoalQ0g(Md.): Mort.f conv.)
Cumberland Cbm: 1st Mortgage

1886

c

267,010

Boat Loan

105

1888
1888
1876
1879

800,000

guarameed, Balt

,

Convertible of

1883
1895

do

do

Monongahela Navigation : Mortgage
Morris4 Mortgage Bonds

1890

April & Oct

7

1S,0()0,0( 0- ”

Preferred Bonds
1,699.500'
Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage...
800,0()o|
Delaware and Hudson.; Bonds (coup)
531.000
Bonds, Nov. 1, 1867
1,500,000
Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage.
752,000
Lehigh Coal and Navigation :
Loan of 1870
384,162
Lo ill of 1884
5,606,122
Loan of 1S97
2,000,000
Gold Loan of 1897
5,000,000

1889

Semi an’ally
do
do
do'
Feb. A Aug
do

1.500,0001

1,500,000

S0-*

Canal

July 1884

Feb. &

do

Chesapeake and Delaware: 1st Mort. 2,089,400
Chesapeake and Ohio : Maryl’dLoan 2,(X)0,(K)o|
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed ....... 4,375,000

A

Jan. &

2d

...

1890
1876

do

2,500,000]

500,OoO

Wilmington, Charb.Ve (ft hutherford:
1st more, (endors. by Sta’e of'N.f’.)
Wilming on & Manch'r ($2,500,000):
1st mort. (1st, 2d and 3d series)
2d mortgage
York (ft Cumberland (North. Cent.):

1880
1875
’69-’71

lApril & Oct

84
•

;

3d
do
Income Mortgage
Warren: 1st Mortgage (guaranteed)..
Westchester & Philadelphia :
1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon ...
2d
do
,
registered
Western Maryland: 1 st M ortgage,..
1st
do
guaranteed... ... ..

83*

7:5,000!

75*811 Vermont Central: 1st Mort (consol.) 2,000,000

Western Union

July

Jan. &

June A Dec

1,600,0001

May A Nov.

1885

do.

April * Oct

May A Nov.

Virginia <ft Tennessee ($2,177,000)
1st Mortgage

i

July

,,000,(100-

2d
do
Vermont and Massachusetts let Mort

,;1|

Jan. &
do
do

300,000
300,(’00

Feb. A Aug
do

May A Nov. 1916
Feb. & Aug 1091
;May A;Nov. *70-’80

1,000,900
250,000

ext

Bay:
sinking fund

Troy,

May & Nov.

230,000
300,000

($1,373,400) ;

lariton and Delaware

1

1900

‘■00,000

Union Pacific : 1st Mortgage coupon
Vt. Central & Vt&Canada'. 1st mort

April & Oct ’71’87

1,000,000

mo rt

OS

1S77

1,521,000
976,800
171,500
200,000

106,000

l8tMort^e

Aug

Equipment (Tol. & Wab. Railway)
fiOO.OOO
Consoid. Mortgage Bonds
1,800,COC¬
II Iroy and Boston : 1st Mortgage—
300,000
2 i Mortgage
300,000
3d
do
650,000!
|| Convertible
200,000!
Union and Logansport: 1st mort
i 2,000,000j

75-’76

411,000
1,415,000

»/Awh0,e ,ine

lit
Mortgage,
H
do

1869 100
1872
94*
187-2
1874

April & Oct 1870
Jan. & July 1871
1880
do
do
1880
do
1886
May & Nov. 1868

400,000

Consolidated bonds

Aug

var.

4,000,000

2,656,600

btmortgage bonds,

Feb. &

var.

•

1861...

90

88

Jan. A July
April A Oct

575,000

Conpons Bonds...

M

Jan. & July
do
do
do

6,375,783

1843-4-8^-9
Sterling Bonds of 1843
79nd8’ convertible "
i
SB**®* Trenton : let Mort

M

July
Aug

59,000
3,400,000

lei Mortgage on 40 miles
let Mortgage (general)
*d
do
(general);

do
do

Jan. A July

4,972,000
4,880,000

.*.* "

PtikuM. fyrmant. eft NorHstown
Convertible Loan

1st Mortgage, W.I)
2d
W.D
do
Toledo n abash tft Western .-(13,31)0,00)
1st Mort. (Tol. & Illinois Hit)
1st Mort. (L Krie,Wab A St L. RR.
2d Mort. (Tol. & Wat). RR)
2d Mort. (Wab. & West Railway).

J

1,075,000

Jd
do
*. * ’ “
General
Mortgage Bonds.
Short Bonds or Debentures
Bonds due State of Pennsylvania
PhUa.md Balt. Central ($800,000):

Philadelphia and Erie

Pacific, Hailroad:
Bonds gnar. ^y At. <fe Pacific R.R
Southern Minnesota: Land Grant b’d
Staten Island: 1st Mortgage
jSyra. Bing, and N. Y. : 1st Mortgage
1

3874
1870

762,000!
1,150,000

hmylvania ($19,087,57.3)’:
let Mortgage

do
do

300,000
300,000

1,50",000

Panama: let Mor gage, sterling

Feb. *

700,000
2,275,311
1,492,633
250,0

Special Mortgage

Toledo, l\o & Warsaw .1st Mort.E.D.

1880
1887

.7,000,000

Mortgage (gold)

Mortgageconstruction bonds.!

1S92
1892

S. W

1S96

April & Oct

.....

Pmnsula: 1st Mortgage

July

ined.
1S85
1900
1874
3869
1868
1867

360,000

2,500,000 10

Mortgage consolidated........

Jan. & July
June & Dec

84*

1900

9S1,000

...

($580,000):

J. A. J.&O

700,000
1,20 ,000

1st Mortgage
Funded Bonds
Skamokin Valley & Pottsville:
1st Mortgage
South Carolina : Sterling Loan
Domestic Bonds
So^th Side (LI.)
South Side ($1,631,900):
1st Mortgage (guar. byPeteisburg)
3d Mortgage

18f 1

84*

1,290.000
818,200

1st Mort. land grant, s. F. guar
St. Paul eft Pacific oj Minn : (1st Div)
1st Mortgage (tax fn e).
1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax free)

Sandusky and Ci ncinnali:
Mortgage bonds
Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark

May A Nov. 1872
Feb. & Aug 1893
June A Dec 1871
April A Oct 1875
Feb. A Aug 73-’7S

General Mortgage

Ogdensburgand L. Champlain :
1st Mortgage
)hio and Mississippi: 1st Mort.E.D.
1st Morgage, W. D
2d Mortgage, W. D
;.
lit

95

1894

1892
1894

i

\St. Louis & Iron Mow-tain: 1st mort

May & Nov

95

May & Nov.
Feb. & Aug
April* Oct.

1889

6,189,154

1870

1894
1894

an’ally
do

1.700.000
2.200,0 0

'

Apr. & Oct.

Jan. A

Mortgage Bonds

Semi

2,200,001.
2,800,000

••

...

1,842,600

($6,000,000)

U Colony & Newport:

946,000

400,000
329, COO

\St. Louis, Jacksonv drChic: 1st Mort 1,372,000
OSL Paul tft Chicago ($4,000.000);

*

Chattel Mortgage
Norwich and Worcester
General Mortgage
Steamboat Mortgage

547,000

1,800,000

1890

1,797,000

($8,292,134) .*

511,500

npril A Oct

99,500
Work ana Neto Haven: Mort.Bo’ds 1,062,500
250,000
y. Y.,Prov. and Boston : 1st Mort.
Jan. & July
100,00''!
Improvement Bonds
Northern Central ($5,182,000);
1,500,00b! 6 Quarterly.
1st Mortgage, State (Md.) Loan.
1,9 i7,000 ' 6 Jan. A July
do
2d
1,064,500' 6 April A Oct
3d
do
125,900 ' 6 April A Oct
northern New Hampshire : Bonds
700.000 ' 7 Mar. & Sep.
North Eastern: 1st Mortgage....
do
145,000
2d Mortgage
do
339,000
North Carolina: Loan
North Pennsylvania

h

1880
Mar.& Sep
Jun. & Dec. ’69-’74
Jun. & Dec. 1891
Feb. & Aug 1863
1863
do
Jan <fc July 1875
Feb. <fe Aur 1881

731,600

Potsdam & Watertown, guar
R. W. «fc O., sinking fund
101*
37* Rutland: 1st Mortgage
do
1
Sa/'ramento Valley: 1st Mortgage...
!
2d Mortgage
! Vt. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute:
i
1st Mortgage
1 2d Mortgage preferred
2d
do
income

2,741,000
1,085,000

‘

General Mortgage
Consolidated Mortgage
4th Mortgage

Jan. A

Rome, Watert. tfc Ogdens.:
Sinking Fund (Wat. & Rome)....

r

Jan. & July 1CS6

165,000?
Bonds
671,000
Snbscrip- Bonds (assumed stocks)
1,514,000
Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts)..
453,000
Convertible Bonds
Xtw York and Harlem ($5,99',625) ;
3,000,000

1st

87* 1

1874
1873
18S5

•

•

•

Feb. & Aug
1876
306,000 7 Jan. A July
1881
do
174,000 1 6
1869
450,0001 7 Jan. A July

Real Estate

1st

Payable.

175,000: 8 ;Mar. & oep.

General Mor tirade

3,500,000

jLS .* 1st Taunton ..... - -.
Mortgage (convert.)
Bedford <ft

North Missouri:

1870
1876
1881

Mav A Nov. 1915

5.000,1100

lltMortgage, sinking tund

& Northampton : Bonds.
Hampshire & Hamden R.R. do .

given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand¬
ing.

it is expressed by the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

«

100,000
310,000
750,000

Point: Bonds

-.

Bonds (new)

umn

aa

Railroad:

Railroad:
Vort£8?e

is not

44

G <a

‘C

Payable.

I'IUDaT

interest.

N. R.—Where tlie total Funded Debt Amount

jnbrackefs’after the Co’s name.
Income

Description.

FRIDAY.

.

p*o>

Deb / outstaudAmount

V.B.-WTiere the total Funded
is not given in detail in thp fijrnrep
—uv the 2d
In t is expressed by the figures

"5

INTEREST.

.

Description.

LIST.—Page 2.

will appear In tills place next week.

Bond LUt Page 1

Montgomery ctWest

443

THE CHRONICLE!

3,1868.]

»

•

•

•

,

[October 3,1868.

THE CHRONICLE.

444

INSURANCE'STOCK LIST.

SOUTHERN SECURITIES.

S'ute Bonds.
Virg-nia reg stock,
“
44

47
53

South Carolina 6s, old
“

“

“

“

45
45
01

“

50
50
64

SO

6s, new
6s, reg. stock

Alabama 5s
“
8s
^Louisiana 6s, old
44
6s, new

Id: I

50

ST
00
58
55

53
55

53

6s, Levee

t

City Bonds and Stocks.

Alexandria 6s

42
35
50
68
08
48
00
45
41
70

43

79
80

82

75
70
00
so
OS
51
50
58

SO
75
03
85
72
53
52

50

61

00

05

Fredricksburg 6s

45
40
55

Norfolk 6s

Richmond 6s

Peter.-burg 6s
Wilmington, N. uC., 6s

8a

C

lumb;a, S. C

6s
Charleston, s. C 6s, stock..
Augusta, Ga., 7s, bonds
Savannah, 44 7s, “
Atlanta,
“ 8s,
“
Macon,
“ 6s
“
Columbus, “6s,
“
Mobile, Ala., 5s,
“
“
8s,
New Orleans, cons “
Memphis, ol i, 6s, “
new, 6s, “

h' {■ s

,

,

....

“

“

*•

iNashville 6s, bonds

72
70
50
70
50
79

i

“

“

m

75
78
75
SO
05
05
75

*

8s
“

8s

Va. & Tenn 1st mort 6s
“

“

8s-

....

Richmond & Petersburg 7s

44

7s,
.

8s 2 m bds !
stock
!

Orleans, Jack.

N.

07*

20

70

Clinton
Columbia*

100
100

Commerce
Commerce

(N.Y.).100
(Alb’y)lOO

200,000
400,000

Exchange

17
Firemen’s
Firemen’s Fund.. 10
Firemen s Trust. 10
Fulton
25
50
Gallatin
Gebhard
100
Germania
50
50
Globe

85
00
40
54
41
21
O'#
45

Great Western*+.100

25
50

Greenwich
Grocers’
Guardian

11,

0*

80
74

Hamilton

15

48
87
78

78
70
40
85
70

Ilan^ver

50

Hot!man

.....100

Hope....

30
54

25

Howard
Humboldt

40

i

50

Home

50
1< *0

200,000

25

200,000

King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20

.150,000

Bennehotf

par

Rrevoort
B liven
Buchanan Farm

Lafayette(B’klyn) 50;

150,000

Central
Clinton Oil
Columbia Oil
Home
Manhattan
Mountain Oil

10
100
10

2

•

2 50

Albany & Boston
Allouez

Bay State

Caledonia
Calumet
Canada
Charter Oak
Central
Concord

Copper Falls
Dana
Davidson

Eagle River
Evergreen Bluff

Flint tee River
Franklin
Gardiner Hill
Hancock
Hilton
Hecia.
Humboldt
Huron
Isle Royale*
Keweenaw

Knowlton

Companies.

Bid. iAskd

Companies.

25^
—

15
—
—

20

!

7

3%

3%
5%
—

16

5%i

j 7

Pontiac

—

75, Quincy X

Resolute
Rockland
St. Clair
South Pewabic
South Side

4*50

23%

2%
25

19

Star

33

:..

5

jjTremont

...

150,000

50

200,000

10n

300,000

25

200,000

100

'Mark’s

Nicholast
Security t
Standard

200, OIK)

25
25

150,000
150,000

50 1,000.000
50 200,000

Ster

7 GO

200,000

Stealing*

1(0

200.000
200,000

Stuyvesnnt
25
Tradesmen's
25!
United States.... 20
50j
Washington
WilliamsburgCity 50;
Yonkers & N. Y.100,

63| 1 00

1%

UWinthrop

8

!

11

26

St.
St.

11X

—

500,000

100
20

Rutgers’

■

2

Superior

1,000.000

Relieu

'.20 00
10% 45 00!
10 120 00121 50
6M
76
..6%
17

Pittsburg & Boston... 5%
1 75
14 00 14

.

35,

>

Republic*

4%i

;

150.000
250,000
400.000
250,000

10

10

10

10
..

July ’68.5
J’y’f8.3*
Aug’68.10
Apr'65.5

.

7
12

io

July’68.5
July'68 5
July '68.5

10
10

10

Jan.’66.5

..

5

July’68.5
Jan.’65.5

..

20
10-

10

12

July’68.5
July 68’.5
July’68.5
July ’68.5
July’68 5
Sept.’68.7
July’68.5
July’68.5
July’67.5

0

5
10
14

..

10
10
10
10
10
10 July’68 7
10 July’68.5

io
6
10
9
IS

"

July’68.8
Ju'y’685
July’ 68.5
Ju'y68.6i
July’68.7

10
15

13*
11

_

20

July 68.5
July’68.5
July 68.10

15
10
14
16
5
8

July’65.5
J uly '68 5
July’1810
Ju y’68.6
July’68.5
July'68.8

1 1-

Aug'68.6
July’68.5
Ju’y’68.5

10

10

^

5

11
10
8
12

uo

.

do
and Aug.
Jan. and July.
do

5
3 Feb.
6

July’68.7
Jun’66.3j
July’68.5
July'68 6
Mny’65.6
Aug ’65.5
July’68.5

10
12
10
7
12

? Feb. and Aug.
164,44' Jan. and July.
do
C99,8 '2
1
do
1
do
3
do
7 Feb. and Aug.
)
do
•> Jan. and July.
7 Feb. and Aug.
B Jan. and July.
do
2 Feb. and Aug.
7 Feb. and Aug.
178/ 7 Jan. and July.

500,000

ug.’bM

July ’68.4
July'ft\5
July'6S.8

July’68.7
luly’68.5

April and Oct.
Jan. and July.

i

July68.IO
Hg’68
Am-.’68.5
July ’68 5
Juy’68.5

J’ne’61.5
Apr.'68.5

-1

•

200,000
200,000
150,000

Resolute*

i

204,664

People’s

..

-M

.

JuDe’685

ug/68.8
wuiy’6810

do
Feb. and Aug.'!
Jan. and July.
257,458 March and Sep
179,875 Jan. and July.
do
324,352
do
124,836
do
419,774
do
175,845
do
301,939
do
1,214,615
do
648,755
do
351,173
do
260,750
do
15* ,991
do
215.453
do
do
do
do
275,8M
do
do
Jan. and July.
273,680 Feb. and Aug.
Jan. and July.
1
do

Phoenix + Br’klyn 50 1,000,000

1 13

SO

*

1

Peter Cooper

7 50; 8 00

3%
34

Pcwabic
Phoenix

50

—

8S

s\nr\

350.000

Park

50; 1 00

2 -

Native

35

,.

5%; 3 00 ; 5 00

Ogima
....liPetherick

150.000
150.000

.7% j

Niagara
50
North American* 50
North River
25
Pacific
25

1 75 3 0*
!
50; 1 00
j 2 00

5
8

IS 59

24%

200,000
300.000
210,000
200,000

........

New Amsterdam.
N. Y. Equitable 3

50

1%[

...

jiNational

5
4

200,000
300,000

N.Y.Fire and Mario

3Sf
5>T .. I

i iMendotat
iiMesnard
i'.Minnesota

....

200,000
200,000
150,000
200,000

National

2C
2 50

....6 ;

jManhattan
jMedora

13%

500,000

Merchants’
50
Metropolitan * +. .1.90,
Montauk (B’klyn) 50i
Nassau (B’klyn).. 50

©

2

6:}'Madison...

.100

Bid^Askd

pLakeSuperior

...

7

1%

25

Market*
100
Meehan’ & Trade’ 25
Mechanics (B’kly) 50
Mercantile
loo

COPPER MINING STOCK LIST.

..

5

300,000
150,000

100 j

Manhattan

•

•

280,000

Lor.glsland(B’kly) 50’ 200,000
Lorillard*
^5,1,000,000

25

6 50
5
2 30

...

5!

-

,

20

200,010

30

..

Lamar
Lenox

1 CO

50

....

—

...

_

—

..

.

—

National
i

....

—

.

•

80

—

500,000

1001

Knickerbocker... 40

2 00

50 N. Y. & Alleghany .. .par 5
—
90 jOil <’reek
iPit Hole Creek
00 Rathbone Oil Tract...
....10
75 Iiynd Farm
"ecoud National
Sherman & Barnsdale ....—
Tarr Farm
....10
Union
2
United Pe’tl’mF’ms.
...10
3 50 United States

10
10

|

Bid. Askd

,

204,000
150,000
150,000
200,000
150,000 147,066;May and Nov.
200,000 232,520|Feb. and Aug.
500,000 597,473 Jan. and July.
200,000 222,207“Jan. and July.
1,000.000 2,385,657 Jan. and July.
200,000 272,173 Feb. and Aug.
200,000 187,0651April and Oct.
200,000 198,456 Jan. and July.
do
150,000 185,2-8!
do
400,000 426,752
do
200,000 144.613
do
2,000,(HH) 2,393,915
do
150,630
150,000
do
500,000 69.9,322
do
200,000 217,103

Import’&Traders 251
Irving.

.Augi’685

.

—

Jefferson
Companies.

150,000

30

....

^ rv»-

200,000

50

Excelsior

tep.’68.6

385,101 1 March and Sep
425,060 April and Oct.
246,090 Jan. and July,
do
226,229
134,011 Feb. and Aug.
273,792 Jan. and July,
do
123,101
do
160,963
do
204,720

300,000
200,000

40!
100

l\68.1l

July’6&5
July 68.5
Aug.’68.5

200,000
250,000 277,680;Jan. and July.
500,000 1,432,5971Jan. and July.

50! 400,000

Exchange..

Eagle
Empire City

LIST.

Companies.

250,000
300,000

...

Corn

International

Bid. Askd

300,000

Commercial
50
Commonwealth ..100
Continental *
.100;

il05
100

J'

Aug.
March and Sep
May and Nov.
Feb. and Aug.
June and Dec.
Feb. and Aug.
Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
353,764 Feb. and Aug.
293,943 Jan. and July,
f- 51,339
do
do
213,472
417,194 Feb. and Aug.
226,092 Jan. and July.

210,000

..

J’e’64.,5

July’08.5

312,089
180,285
192,558
399,062
286,551
259,089
438,750

300,000
200,000
153,000

Citizens’

105
130
102

52

PKTliOLEUM STUCK

lbC6|1867]Lastpaid

279.261 Feb. and

200,000
200,000

25
25

City

70

43

Memphis & Charleston stock!:

44

250,000

Brooklyn

103
85

2S

0s

1865

and July.
and July.
and July.
and July.
and July.

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
289,191 Jan.

200,000

25 *
25;
17

75
90
'5
TO
115
79
50

||

44

4k

250,000
300,000

36

Vlemphis *fc Charleston 7s 44
Memp & Chiri’ton 2 mort 44
Memphis and Ohio 10s
44 | 30

so

Periods.

208,336
350,0Ifc
581,436
225,586

$200,000

(Br’klyn) 50

Broadway

5*

4 4

25

Astor.,
Atlantic

Bowery (N. Y.)

9

&Gt.North|I1

200,000

45

40

Orleans & Jack-on 8s bds
44
2 m 8s 44
New Orleans & Opelousas44
>.

r0

72*

.

4 4

American*
50
American Excli’e. 100
Arctic
50

Baltic
Beckman

19
02

.

~300,000

80

38

...

80
85

75
50

.

44

4 4

65
80
55
75

.

South Side Railroad 6s

8s income.

SO
82 i

02,

6s, bads

Va. Central, 1st mort. 6s.
44

8s, int

44

Mississippi Cent. 7* bonds

Railroad Bonds and Stocks.

Orange & Alex., 1

44

‘4

50

15
70
70
70

.

44

by State Tenn

25!

MixxtiV.V.'W.Y.

45
30

bonds..!

03

Adriatic.

92*

endorsed..

..

Memphis 6s, end. by Memp.
and Charleston Rai’road...
Memphis 6s, bonds, endors’di

85

70
88
U
44
71
“
44
stock,
• •25
Macon and Western stoi k.. J 105
Atlantic and Gulf bonds
j 78
*‘
44
stocks
40
40
P nsacola & Georg’a
MontgTy & West P. buds Is1! 82
4‘
44
2d; 55
38
Selma and Meridian bonds
52
MobiL and Ohio 8s

Muscogee bonds

Macon & Auvusta

S3

DIVIDENDS

Risks.j Capital. Netas’ts

write Mariue

.j

47
49

40

old
i e\v

1868.

participating, & (+)

>jCD

Railroad Bonds and Stocks :\ Uffd
80
Norfolk and Petersburg 8s
Wilm ngton and Weldon 8s.. 90
Wilmington & Alanch. 1st 0s 43
44
4*
2d.... 25
44
44
10
31...
02
Charlotte & S Carolina 7s
South Carolina Railroad 0s.. 05
44
44
7s.. 72
75
Nnrih East Railroad 7s
Cha leston and Savanuah 0s.
40
endorsed by State S. C
Greenville and C lumbia, en(lorserl hv rotate S. Carolina 33
Columbia and Augusta RR.. 05
HO
Georgia RR. bonus
*k
80
stock
“
103
Central bonds
14
14
stock
125
100
Southwestern bonds.
“
stock :
102
Atlanta & La Grange stock.. 95

Offd Ask

Jan. 1,

(*) are

Marked thus

and *70

Quotations by JT. M. Weltli
Co„ 15 New Street
Broadway.

Oct.’68.5

|Juiy‘6S.8
July'68.

.

Aug’68.
July’68.
July’68.5
July 68 5
July’8.6i

5
15
10

9*
8*

July 66.5
Aug 68.7

7
5

v

.

Feb.’67.5

Aug.’68 5

-

F’b.’68.3J

10*

July’68.

12
.

•

I July’68.5

.

•

!Aug.'68.5

Aug.’68 5
July'68.5
July ’68.5
Aug/68.5
July ’685
July '68.5

io
10
14
5
5

*

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.
+ Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares
x Capital $200,000, tn 20,000 shares.
piT Capital of Lake Superior comnanies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares
,

GOLD AND SILVER MINING

—

40

•

•

•

•

*

•

•

•

•

•

•

Harmon G. & S

|

—

»

^2?

25

10

Des Moiues

....

2 00

Edge! ill
Empi e Gold

Gold Hill

HamiltonG,& S.b de...




15
25
5

....

20

Liberty

.

..

..

....

40

.

1C

....

....

i

«

* • ♦

•

..

•

•

—

.

....

1

...

3 00
.

©

.

.

45
70

35
85 ;

Reynolds
Rocky Mountain....

-

•

•

•

.

.

12
....

20

..

Symonds Forks

4 95

5

(/j

.

B’klyn, Bath & C. I
B’klyn Cent &Jam.
Brooklyn City .. .

B’kmC.&Rid’w’d.
B’k’n C. & Rock. B.
Cent P’k,N.&E. R
Coney Isl.

,,

..100

Vanderhurg

4

.

4

t

...

,

,

’

107,700
1,031,500

500,000
1,200.000
1,000,000

& B’klyn

d’y.&c.
Eighth Avenue....
42(1 St. & G’d St. F.
Har. Br., M. & Ford
Ninth Avenue
Second Av. (N. Y.).
Sixth Av. (N Y.) .

Third'Av. (N! Y.)..
,V. Brunt St. & E. Bas

....

—

—

r\

• $ m •

|

....

Date.

$900,00()i

D.D’k, E. B

100

■,

Dividend.

100
100
200.000! 1867
1867
100 2,100,000
100
99,'850
100
48S,100
50 1,500.000 Feb. ’68
100
104,000

Price
bid.

p.ct

m

.

..

.

.

3X

.

.

....

3
«...

5
12

•

•

•

5

”

797 320
8(

O’OOO

750>’0
)
100

1,110,000
75 ueo

.

Nov. 67

3

5

It. E. Mor.
35,000 var.
1st Mort. 1,50C,000 1884
1st Mort.
80,000 1883
1st Mort.
498,810 1870
1st Mort.
300,000 1872
20.000 1884
1st Mort.

45,000...-

Mort.
Mort.
Mort.
Mort.
Mort.
I Realest.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
1st Mort.
•

"j

95,900
)

o

0

....

...

1867
1867

Bonded Debt.

40,000
8

....

750,000 May ’68

—

Twin Iliver Silver...

Text**..,. ~

•

—

..

.

•

10

..

Sensenderfer
Smith & Parmelee..

Capital ;
paid in.

Par.

Bleeck.St.&Fult.F.
Broadway (B’klyn)
B’uway & 7 Av.NY

•

..100 loo
Manhattan Silver...
25
75
1 25* Midas Silver
53
5
58
Montana
10 1 00 1 15
New York
New York
Eldorado
—
1 00
1
Ophir Gold.
15 00 40 00
5 25 Owyhee
20
4 40i People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5
25 1 00 1 05
1 Quartz Ilill

....

.

•

-

—

..

15

•

.

—

Valley

•

•

2

..

LaCrosse

_

—

Grass

—

.

.

....

Columbia G.
S
Combination Silver....
3 50
Consolidated Gregory.. 100! 4 85

Companies.

0
•

STOCKS & BONDS.

CITY PASSENGER-RAILROAD

—

—

Gunnell Gold
Gunnell Union

..

Kipp & Buell

50;1

—

Corydon

....

2
25

..

Hope...

40;

—

^

Bid. j Askd

Holman

Ada Elmore
par
Alameda Silver
10
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific
50
Bates & Baxter
Black Hawk
5
Benton
Bobtail
Bullion Consolidated....
10
Burroughs
Central

_

STOCK LIST.

Companies.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

_

1st
1st
1st
1st
1st

.
,

1st. Mort

12

.

550,000;1874j
148.000;1873|
672,000,...-j
203,(00;...

127,150,1873
134,500

....

124,000;...-

107,000)....
700,000 1867;

180,000-.. j
1.280,000 1 1S901
.

....

....

i

is,ooo;.

THE CHRONICLE.

3,1868.]

October

current.

prices

addition to the duties noted
discriminating duty of 10 per

I/„
a

[*j'r

fl<i val. is levied
Hairs that have

naties

with the

United States.

all goods, wares, (inn merof the growth or produce of

titf* Oh

,1?Tdise,

on all imports
no reciprocal

imported from places this
tide 'of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty
jo
c^nt. ad val. is levied in ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such
irticles when imported directly from the
tiace or places of their growth or producfen • Haw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted.
The tor in all cases to be 2,240 ft).
Hove

when

r

Anchors—Duty: 2* cents $ B>.
012002) and upward^It
8 @
Julies—Duty. 20 $ cent ad val.
Pot, 1st sort... $ 100 ft) 0 50 @<----

10 50
Beeswax-Duty,20 $ centad val.
American yellow.9 ft
45 © 46
Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct.
Bio Grande shin $ ton-13 00 @ ....
Bread-Duty, 30 H cent ad val.,
Mot
$ a •• @
8*
Pearl, 1st sort

13*

8i &

Breadstulfs—See special report.
Bricks.

hard, .per M.j.0 00 (9*11 00

20 00 @22 00

Crotons

Philadelphia Fronts...40 00 @

Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair
IS 2).
Auiei n,gray

40 @ 2 «#0

&wh. $ ft)

Clieese.—Duty: 4

Batter and
cents.

BatterFresh pull
... —. •
State firkins, prime. .
State firkins,ordinary

58
40
33
40
38
38
36
36
32
32
40
38

State, bl-flrk., prime..
State, hf-fir-., ordin’y
We'sn tubs, prime ...
Welsh tubs, ordinary.
Western, good
Western, fair
-

Penn,, dairy, good.
Penn., dairy, lair

.

Canada
Grease.

..

•

•

@
®

42

®

39
43

#

®
@
®
©
@
©
@
©

.

49

41
38
38
35
43
40

©
©
©

••

Cheese—

15*@
13 ©
1Q@
13* @

.Factory prirae.. .$ lb
Factory fair
PamDairies prime..
Farm Dairies lair.
Farm Dairies common
Skimmed...'
...

12 ©
5 ©

Candles—Duty,tallow, 2*;

36*
15*
15,
’

14*
13
12

sperma¬

ceti and wax rt; it

earine and ada¬
mantine, 5 cents $ ft).
Refined sperm,city...
48 @
52
Sperm,patent,. ..$ ft)
58 @
62
Stearic
30 @
31
Adamantine
:.
21 @
23

Cement—Roscndale^bl... @ 1 75
Chains—Duty, 2* cental ft)..
One inch & upward $ ft)
7*©
7J

Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton
of 28 bushels 80 ft) to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28
bushels of80 2) $ bushel.
Newcastle (4 ,s 2,240ft)
@10 00

Llverpo IGas Cann~l
@
Liverp’l House Cannel
@18 00
Liverpool Orrel
@
Anthracite. $ ton of
2,000 lb
7 00 @ S 00
....

Cocoa—Duty, t cents $ ft).
Caracas (in

bond)(gold)

9 2)
Maracaibo do

15 @

..(gold)

28 @
10 @ *
@

Guayaquil do ...(gold)
St.Domingo.. ..(gold)

16
30
10*

..

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot,

*i; old copper 2 cents $ ft); manu¬
factured, 35 $ centad val.;sheathing
>pper and yellow metal, in sheets42
hches long and 14 Inches wide,
weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot,
3 cents $ ft).

Sheathing,

new..

Jolts
Braziers’

$ ft)

.'. @
33 @

Pur Chile

20 @
26 @
26 @
@

met a’,..

American Ingot......

_

33 @

Sheathing, &c<i old..
Dheathing,yellow meM
Bolts, yellow

33

,

21

23|@

23*

unv^rred
Manila, 2* other untarred, 3* cents
$ 2).
^
22*®
23*
Tarred Russia
17 @
17*

Bolt

Rope, Russia.

^®^s~Duty,50
1st
do

Regular,qrts $

Superfine
latRe ular, Pints

?if°,ral

@

others quoted below,

22

cent ad val.
gro

70
55 @
1 40 @ 1 70
3^ @

50 @

50
70
40

Peppermint,pure.

frke.

^ 3 80
® 3 50

87* @ 8 50

...

Oil V itriol

@ 4 50
@ 5 50

2*@

Opium Turkey.(gold)

@ 8 62*
@
§"*-@ 95
35 @
3iq
'io @
77
25 @ 3 25
@
s
20 @
8 @
8*
SO @
25 @
30
@
14
35 @
36
25 @
28
20 @
44 @
51
2§@
2\
@
25
@ 2 50
25 @ 9 50
.
49
@
10*@
1 *

....

Oxalic Acid

Phosphorus
Prussiate Potash

Quicksilver

Rhubarb,China

2

Sago, Pet.led
...

SalAm’n'ac, Ref (gold)
Sal Soda. Newcastle “

1

Sarsaparilla,H.g’d inb’d
8arsaparilla,Mex.
“

..

Seneca Root.

Shell Lac

(80$c.)(g’ld)

Sugar L’d, W’e...
l*
Sulp Quinine, Am^ oz
Sulphate Morphine. “ 9
Tart’c Acid. .(g’ld)$ft>
Tapioca
Verdigris, dryj ex dry
5c @
..

.

Vitriol, Blue

51
11

10 @

per cent.

©
21
©
75 @
35
3i
8*©
70 @ 1 50

..

....

Aloes, Cape
$ ft)
Aloes, Socotrine
Alum

Annato, gooel to prime.
Antimony, Reg. of, g’d
Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined, gold.

13*©
lb

22

Arsenic, Powdered “
Assal'cetida
Balsam Copivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

..

25
S5
1 30

.

•

.

■

•

•

•

•

,

31

4|

©

18*

..

4«@

Crude

1 lor

,

41

30*©

$
(gold).
Brimstone, .\m. Roll
$ ft)

....

37

©39 00

@
58 @

72

Camwood,gold,$t .nltO 00 @175
Fustic,Cuba “
..28 0 @ 39
Fustic, Tampico, gold23 00 @ 2*
Fustic, Jamaic*, “ 23 uO @ 24
Fustic, Savanilla “ 24 00 @ 25
Fustic,’laracaibo, “ 22 00 @
Logwood, L'i*una “ 28 CO @
“
Logwood, Cam.
@
ogwood, Hond
“ -.... @ 20
Logwood,Tabasco “
@
Log wood,St. Dt-m. “
@ 25
Logwood,Jamaica “ 17 50 @ 18

00
00

.

00
00
00

....

....

1

00

@

5

5$@

6

..

.

©

1 v0 @

Cantharides
1 65 @
Carbonate
Ammonia,
in bulk
15 @

Cardamoms, Malabar..

....

Castor Oil..

..

Chamomile Flow’s^ ft)
Chlorate Potash (gold)
Caustic Soda
“

15

Carraway Seed

20
14

Cochineal, Hon (gold)
Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d)
Copperas, American ..
Cream Tartar, pr.(gold
Cubebs, East India....

79

34
4

..

29*@
30

.

#

.

••

© 3 25
35
@
50
@
85
©
@
5?
21
@
13
©
85
@
10
@
©
30

@

1'9@
3i@
in®

Epsom Salts
Extract Logwood

16
4

17 @

Se d

30

@
Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz.
Gambier
H'C
gold
Gamboge
1 75 @
9o ©
Ginseng, West
Ginseng, Southern. . 1 00 @

60

41
0o
95

45 @
05 @
8-0 @
85 @

75
39

@
5 45 @
@
Gum Myrrh,East India
55 @
Gum,Myrrh, Turkey.
@
Gum Senegal

35
51

Gum
Gum
Gum
Gum
Gum

Arabic,Picked..
Arabic, Sorts...
Benzoin.
Kowrie
Gedda

gold

..

..

Gum

Tragacanth,

35 @

85

37*

33
40

flakey,gold

60 @ 1 00

Hyd. Potash, Fr. and

Eng
(gold) 3 65 @ 8 85
Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 @
....

Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3
La<* Dye
Licorice Paste,Calabria

Licorice, Paste, Sicily.
Licorice Paste Spanish
Solid

Licorice Paste, Greek.

Aadder,Dutcn

(gold)

do, FreBoh, EXF.F.do

Limawood
Bar wood

00
00

70 09 @ 75 < 0

“

“

@ 26 00

Sapanwood,Manila“

SO @

....

Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val.
Prime Western...$
Tennessee

85 @
75 @

ft)

90
85

Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
$ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬
rels, 50 cents $ 100 ft).
Dry Cod
$ cwt. 7 00 @ 7 50
Pickled Scale...
bbl. 5 00 @ 6 25
Pickled Cod
bbl. G 25 @ 6 50
Mackorel,No. l,Ncw
shore.........
!6 10 @17 00
Mackerel,No.i,Halifax
@
Mackerel,No. I.By new20 00 @20 50
Mackerel,No.2Bayn'w .... @17 00
Mackerel, No. 2,11a ax
@
..

....

Oo

85
25
37
24

@ 3 75
@
90
55
@
40
@
@
25

29 @
31 @
12 @
15 @

Mac’el,No.3,Mass. 1’ge

..

.

Mackerel. No. 8, II’fax

@11 50
@

Mac, No. 3, Mass,med. 9 50 @'9 25
Salmon, Pickled, No.1.28 10 @30 00

@
35 @
50
22 @
25
Herring,pickled^bbl. 6 10 @ 9 00
Salmon, Pickled, $tce
Herring,Scaled^ box.
Herring, No. 1

Flax—Duty: 315 <|9 ton.
Nortb River
$ lb
16 @
Fruits—See

30

Furs and Skins

-Du.,y,10$ cent
Beaver,Dark..^ skin 1 On @ 4 00
do

75 @ 2
5 00 @12
2 00 @ 8
c0 @
25 @
10 @
4 90 @ 8

Pale...,

Bear, Black
brown,...

Jo

Badger
Cat, Wild
do House

Fisher,
Fox, Silver

...

do Cross
do Red
do Grey
do Kitl

do

30 @

pale.

Mink, dark
do
Otter

@ 5 00
@ i 50

25 @

Marten, Dark
......

..

pale

50
5 00
1 <>0
2 00
00
00
1 00

«/>

15
12
00
00

Raccoon

10 @

..

k, Black

50

00
00
00
00

3
3
10

Musquash, Fall

60

@ 2
@20
@ 3
@ 8
@ o

2 50 @

Opossum

50

00
00
50
60
50
00

5 00 @50 00
3 00
2-5

Lynx

@
@

0*

00

Skins—Duty : 10 $ centad val.
50 @
55
Goat,Curacoa$ lb cur.
do
do

Buenos A...cur.

do

Tampico. ..gold
Matainoras.gold
Payta
cnr.
Cape
cur.
Deer,San Juan$ ft>gold
do
do
do

Central America

o

Para
gold
Vera Cruz .gold
MiBsutri .gold

do
do

45

@

65

VeraCruz ,i.old

do
do
do

do

12*

24

special report.

Skui

w.

gold..

....

Honduras..gold
Sisal
gold

Texas

..

.gold

..

.

.

..

..

..

@

57*
55
50
57*
40
45
42*
44
44
42*

...

or Window
10x15 inches,

square foot;
16x24 inches,

larger ana
4 cents 9
square foot; larger and not over 2 4
x39 inches 6 cents
square foot
above that, and not exceeding 24x60
inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all
above that, 40 cents $ square foot
on unpolished Cylinder,
Crown, and
Common Window, not exceeding lOx
15 inches square, 1*; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not
cen

ts

not

over

over

24x30 ,2* ; all over that,

8 cents

$ ft*.'
American li indow-

-1st,2d, 8d, and 4th
qualities.
Subject to a discount of 45@50 tt cent.
6x S to 7x9.. $ 50 ft 7 75 @ 6 00
8x10 tolO\l5
llxl) to 12x18
14x 16 to 16x24
18x22 to 18x30
20x30 to 24x30
24x31 to 24x36
25x36 to 80x44
30x46 to 32x48
32x50 to 82x56
Above

French

17
20
22
25

50
00
00
00

@ 6 60
@ 5 60
@ 7 00

26 @ 7 50
00 @ 8 00
50 @ 9 00

@12
@13
@14
@16

50
50
50
00*

(Si ngleThick) Nev ’. isDiscount 45@5o$ cent

of Mar. 11

Vi t«>8x10

25x36
28x40
54x54
32x58

25
75
60

Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th

qualities.
8x11
11x14
13x18
18x.'2
20x30

8
9
10
12
15
16

$50 feet b 50 €b 6 25

to 10x15

9 00 @ 6
10 (0 @ 7
11 00 @ 8
l i 50 @ 9
16 50 @10
18 00 @J2
20 00 @16

to 12x18
to 16x24
to J8x30
to 24x3 *

to
to
to

75
50
00
00
00
00
00

30x48.(3 qlts).22 00 @18 00

32x56.(3 qits).24 00 @20 00
34x60.(3 qlts).27 00 @28 00
English sells at 35 $ ct. off above
rates.

Groceries—See special report.

Gunny Hags—Duty, valued at 10
cents or less, $ square yard, 3; over
10, 4 cents $ ft)
Calcutta, light &h’y %
18J@
19
Guiiny €lot1’i—Duty,valued at 10
cents or less $ square yard, 3; over
10,4 cents $ ft).
Calcutta, standard, y’d
22
21* @

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20
cents or less

20

$ cent

$ ft), 6 cents $ ft>, aiu
val.; over 20 oenti $

aa

ft), 10 cents $ ft) and 20 $ centad va.
Blasting(B) $ 25Jt> keg
@4 00
Shipping and Mining..
@ 4 50
Kentucky Rifle
6 50 @
Meal
6 00 @
..

..

.„

Deer

6 50 @

Sporting, in 1 ft) canis¬
ters $ ft)
86

@ 1 06

.

Hair—Duty free.
RioGrande,niix’d$ ft gold29J @
Buenos

Ayres,mixed

.

“

@

..

27*

Hog, Western, unwash.cur 7 @

9

Hay—North River, in bales$ 100 ft>a
for shipping
75 @
80
Hemp-Duty, Russian, $40; Manila.
$-5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sun*
and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and Tampi
1 cent $ ft).
Amer. Dressed.$ ton 275 00@315 06
do

Undressed

@

....

Russia, Clean..(gold) 350 1 0@360 00
Italian
(crold) 230 00@240 00
Manila..$ ft)..(gold)
11$
lt*@
Sisal...
30 @
11*
Tampico
7 @
7t
Jute
(gold)
, 5J@
6

IIides—Duty, all kinds, Dry
ed and Skins 10

or

Salt¬

$ centad val.

Dry Hides—
Buenos Ayr9S$ft)g’d
Montevideo.... do
Rio Grande
do
Orinoco
California....
Sun Juan
Matamoras...
do
VeraCruz....
do
Tampico... .
..

..

..

..

Bogota
PortoCabeilo

do

..

Muracaibo....
Truxilio
Bahia
Rio Hat he....
do

Cura^oa

8.

Domingo
Pt.

au

P.att

do

..

Texas
Western

»iy Salted
4. hill

20 @
20

SI

21 @

@
19*@
18 @
..

17 @
15
17

@

@
@
@
@
@
@
14*@
14 @
la @

17
17
17
14
17

2C*
20
50
18

16*
18

18
18
38
15

IS

15*
15
15

&
12 @
14 @
13 @

14
36
35

35 @
15 @
12 @
12 @

16
16

Hides—

.gold

Payta
Maranham....
do
Pernambuco..
Babia
Matamoras...
Maracaibo
Savanilla
do
Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ayres.$ ft) g’d.
RioGt vude
do
C&life.ala
do
do
Para
New Orleans...cur

City sl’httr trJm.ds
cured,

..

©
52* @
@
52* @
39 @
@
@
43 @
41 @
@
@

..

over

24x31 to 24x36.
to 26x40

Dye Woods—Dutyfree.

....

Sul¬

phur
Camphor,
i;de, (in
bond)....
(gold)
Camphor, Defined

Fenueh

3
40

4*@

Potash...
.'.

ton

Brimstone,

,

261

27 @

Borax, Refined
*.

@
@
©
@
@
@

45 jh

Bleaching Powder
Brimston

,

50

Berries, Persian, gold.
Bi Carb. Soda, New¬
castle, gold
Bi Chromate

.

..

2*

@
@

..

Ulass—Duty, Cylinder

«Y

Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
Ravens, Light.
pee 16 00 @
Ravens, Heavy
.18 CO @
Scotch, G’ck,No.l $y.
Cotton, No. 1
$ y.

Deer, Arkansas .gold
do Florida
gold
Polished Plate not

....

Alcohol, 88

Jalap, in bond

Colton—See special report.




riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $1 $ S>; all

GumTragacanth,Sorts

®®rdage—Duty,tarred,3;

6

4 CO

Soda Ash

val.; Gum Benzoin Gum Kowrie, and Gum Dainar, 10 cents per ft);
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20
$
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬
limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange,
50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Berga¬
mot, $1 $ ft); Oil Peppermint, 50
$ centad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents $ ft); Phosphorus, 20
$ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents
V ft>: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad
val.; Sal JEratua, 1* cents $ ft); Sal
Soda, * cent $ ft); Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; c<oda Ash, * ; Sugar Lead, 20cents
$ ft>; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
$ ft); Sal Ammoniac,2o; Blue Vit¬

10

35 @

O Lemon
On

ad

Gum Damar

..

9@

••••

Salaratus

..

14 @

Senna, Alexandria....
Senna, Eastlndia

Cutch

Coffee.—See special report.

95 @

/fnif
g Sa38la** I
O
Bergamot

Gamboge, 10 $ cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 ^ cent

■«

1 70 @ 1 75

Manna, small flake....
Mustard Seed, Cal....
Mustard Seed, Trieste.
Nutgalls Blue Aleppo

J® tt>; Extract Logwood, Flowers

Coriander Seed

....

Manna,large flake....

Benzols and

•••

■

“rackets

Common

Drags and Dyes—Duty,Alcohol,
2 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft);
Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft); Argols, 6
cents $ lb ; Arsenic and
Assafcedati,
20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus.
10; Arrowroot, 80 <$ cent ad val
Balsam Copaivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
Balsam Peru. 50 cents $ ft) ; Calisayn
Bark, 30 $ centad val.; BlCarb. Soda,
1*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ ft);
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft);
Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft); Crude
Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10
$ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton,and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude
Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40cents $ ft).;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents
<$ ft); Castor Oil,$1 ^ gallon ; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda,
1*;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream
Tartar, 10 ; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft);
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent

445

...

..

....

ll*@

13

13

32*
14*

14 @
12 @
12 @

13
13

11 @
11 @

11*
1»*

@
19*®
12 @

12*

i2* @

is*

..

li

446
Cherry boards

Upper Leather StockB.A. & Rio Gr. Kip
# ft gold
Sierra Leone., cash
Gambia & Bissau. .
Zauibar

25
.

..

bx boards
27
Clear pine
60
Laths
$ M 3
Hemlock... 3x4, per piece
do
4x6,
do
do
b:ls,
do

.

JCast India Stock—

Calcutta,city si’liter
« p.

buffalo,# 1b

do

16

151®
12}@
121®

gold

Calcutta, dead green

13}

...

13

...

Batavia,

Manilla &
buffalo

# ft

@

..

do

..

do

•voci";! — Duty free.
Mahozanv St. Porain-

$ lb

Para, Fine
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse
East India

Indiffo—Duty free.
Bengal
(.old) $ lb 1 10 @ 2 05
Oude
(gold) 75 @ 1 40
Madras
(gold) 95 @ 1 10
Manila
(sold)
70 @
95
(goldyi 10 @ 1 45
Guatemala
Caraceas
(gold) 80 ® i 05

do

Pig, American,No. 1.. 41 (0@42 59
Pig, American, No. 2 . 36 0 @33 50
Bar, Reft’d Mig&.Huer 87 50@90 00
• v re

Prices—.

Bar Swedes,ordinary
sizes

..

@i55 50

Bar, English and Amer¬

ican, Relined
KK)
io
do
do Comuiou 90

00®
00®

J oO 0 ® 175 00

Scroll

Dvals and Half Round 1C5 00® 155 00
Band

130 00®

prime,
3eof, plain mess
do

13

Hams,
Shoulders

.'....

75
8

Lard

6

4 @

...

pale.

...

Rods,5-8®3-l6inch.. Iu6 00® 165 00
Hoop

434

135 C0@:9d 00
9,®

13 ®

Double

lo*

14

5}®

..

0}

(g’d) # ton 51 1 0® 52 00

Railsi

11

80 00® Si on

American

do

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $ ft
3 00®
East Ind Billiard ball 3 0®
2 50®
African, Prime..
African, Scrivel.,W.C. 1 25®
,

3 15
3 25
2 87
2 25

Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 # 100 ft; Old
Lead, II cents $ ft; Pipe and Sheet,
2Icpnts $ ft.
Galena
$ 100 ft
®

(sold) 6 371® 6 40

Spanish

(g"l 0 6 37i@ 6 50

German

(gold) 6 3<}@ 0 871

English

net

Bar

Pipe and Sheet...

..

@10 60

.net

..

@12 00

eatlier—Duty: sole .35, upper 30
W cent

ad val.

—cash.$ lb.—,

Oak,sl’hter,heavy# ft

middle

do
do

UU

light..
docrop, heavy
do
middle
do
light..

do
do
do
do

Oak, rough slaughter.
Hemi’k, B. A., &c.,h’y
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

middle.

do
do

light.
Califor., heavy
do middle.
do
lignt.

Orino.,heavy.
do
do

middle

38 @
33 @
35 @
40 @
43 @
44 @
38 @

46
44
40
41
47
46
44

2.1®
23 @
28 @
27 @
28 @
23 @
25 @
27i@

29
2 if

light.

rough
good damaged
poor

do

28 @
35 @

241®
29 @

29}
9'i

do

bbl.

-.

..

Black walnut, r.rotcnes...
do
figur’d &blis’d
Yel.off pine timber, Geo

$ M. ft
do




plank

4 0"> ® ....
per case
do in casks.# gall., 2 35 ® 2 49
Palm
# ft
12 ®
13
Linseed,city.:.# gall. 1 04 ®
Whale, crude
@ i 25
....

wiut unbleach. 2 v({ ®

do

Lard oil, prime
Red oil,city dist Elain
do saponified, west’n

1 00 ®

....

75 ®

Straits
Paraffine, 28 & 30 gr.

80 ®

25 ®

Lubricating
Kerosene

(free).

£0

39

26}

ochre, ground in oil,| 50# 100
Spanish brown 25 # cei tad val;

# ft ;

22

@ 1 25
@ 2 00

20
22® l 25

35 00® 40 00

45 00@55 00

white, American,

dry
Zinc, white, American,
dry, No. 1
pure,

do white, American,
No. l,i n oil
do White,French,dry
do white, French, in
oil

Ochre, yellow, French,
dry
"
do
round, in oil..

®
®

11
11

@

..

14

12}@

13}

f) ®

9}

9 ®
..
®

12
131

14 ®

17

2 ®

13 @

Buck

Silk—Duty: free.
35

All thrown silk,

# cent.

Tsatlees, No. 1 @3. #ft 11 00 @11 75
Taysaams, superior,
No. I 2
9 50 @10 00
do medium,Nc3@4. 8 0) @ 9 60

@

....

8 @

2|@

Telegraph, No. 7 ta il

21

10

9

2}

3d

Croix,

00
00
00
00

*0

Chrome, yellow, dry..
15® 35
Whiting, Amer#l(K)lb 2 00 ® ....
VermiUon*China, # ft 1 20 ® l 31

101©

43 ®
53 @

Wool—Duty: Imported in the“ or¬
dinary condition as now and hereto
fore

practiced.” Class 1 —Clothiaq

Wools—The value whereof at the last

place whence exported to the United
States is 32 cents or less $ ft, 10
cencs # ft and 11 # cent, ad val.
over 32 cents # ft, 12 cents $ ft an
10 # cent, aaval ; when imported
washed, double these rates Class
2.— Combing Wools-The value where¬

of at the last place whence exported
to the United States is 32 cents or
less # ft, 10 cents # 1b an c 11 #
cent ad val.: over 32 cents $ ft, 12
cents # ft and 10 # cent, ad val.
Class 3 — Carpet Wools and other
.

.

sii'tilar Wools— The value whereof at
the last place whence exported to the
United States is 12 cents or less $
ft, 3 cents # 1b ; over 12 cents $ ft,

6 cents # lb.
Wool of all classes
imported scoured, three times the
duty as if imported unwashed.
a
Am., Sav’v flufico.59 ft
Sax’y fleece.# ft 60 ta
60®
do full blood Merino
55 ®
do yt & X Merino..
47 ®
do Native & X -Mer*
47 ®
11,

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued
at 7 cents # ft or under, 2} cents;
over 7 cents and not above II, 3 cts
# ft; over 11 cents, 31 cents # ft
and 10 # cent ad val. (Store prices.)
English, cast, # ft . .
18 @
23

1*1

10 @

English machinery....

ll}@
lpI@

20
®

14 @

16

olister

..

Tool
American spring do
American mach’y do
American Gennm.do
cast

10j@

@
10 @
..

..

pulled

Superfine

No 1, pulled
Califor , flne.unwash’d
do
naedi im do
do
commou, do

do
Valpraiso,
South Am.Merino do
do
Mestizudo
do
Creole do

44 ®
35®
30 @

28 @

27 @

28 @
34 @

28 ®
20 ®

Cordova,
washed

34 @

40®

do

@

10 @

,

«ashed

16
19

13
13

13

...

Mexican, uuwashed...
Texas, Fine
Texas, Medium.
Texas, Coarse

28 @
25 ©
3U @

30 @
27 @
£inc—Duty : pig or block, $1 50 ^
1D0 fts.; sheets 2} cents # ft.
fr’reigbts—

Heavy

Oil'.

^

# to

Sheet

Flour

.

.

45 ®

pulled

75

....

English blister

55 ®

Combi"g

To Liverpool
Ootto?

Brandy,gin&p.spi’tsin b:...@ 1 30
Rum, pure, in bond.
75 @ 89
SO @ 85
Whiskey, in bond

English,spring

do

Extra,

00

proof. ..(gold) 3 50 @ 3 75
Gin, diff. brands.(gold) 3 00 @ 4 £5
Domestic Liquors—Cash

American
Amerc n

#ft

20 per cent.)
.
do

East India,

proof, $2 50 # gallon.
Brandy, Olatd, Dupny
&
o..(gold) # gal. 5 20 @13
Brandy, Pinet, Gastillon & Co(gold) 5 00 @17
do Hem>eHsy(gnld) 5 50 @18
do Marett & Co(g’d) 5 50 @10
do Lege. Freres do 5 O ' @10
do otli for. b’ds(g’d) 5 00 @10
Rum, Jam., 4thp.(g’d) 4 50 @ 4
St.

30 $ ct. off list
35 # ct. off list

Cape G. Hope, imwssh’d

ior first

do

20®25 $ ct off list.

,

English German

8 @

Spanish brown, dry #
do
gr’dinoil.# ft
Paris wh., No. 1. ....

12 @

# lb

Drop

Spirits - Duty: Brandy, for first proof
$3 # gallon ; Gin, rum and whiskey,

34 ®

..

Shot—Duty: 2} cents # 1b.

Spices. -See special report.

Faints—Duty: on white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents # ft; Paris white and
whiting, 1 cent # ft; dry ochres,56
cev.tf # fOU ft: oxidesofzinr, 1} cents

#ft
Litharge,City
Lead, red,City
do
white, American,
pure, in oil

val.
Iron No. 0 to 18
No. 19 to 26....
No. 27 to 36....

Copper

Spcl ter—Duty : in pigs, bars, and
plates, $1 50 # 100 fts.
Plates, for.#100 ft gold 6 37I@ ....
do
domestic # ft
9}@
111

1 55 ® 1 65
1 60 ® ....

Bank

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered
$2 to $3 5* # 100 ft,and 15$ centad

Plain
Brass (less

@ 2 25

China thrown

® 2 00

Sperm,crude

ft;

15®

wood b’ds &

bleached winter 1 35 ® 1 40

do

.. „

Malaga, sweet.. .-(gold) 1 10 ® 125
Claret....gold.# cask35 00 @6000
Claret
gold. # doz 2 65 ® 9 CO

@3 25
@ 6 25
@ 2 70
@ 2 85
@ 2 22j

Timothy,reaped # bus 3 6
<
Dary
# bus 5 40
Hemp
2 65
Lins’d Am.rough#bus 2 80
do Calc’fl,Bos'’n,g’d ....
do do New Yk,g’d ....

195

1 00

Mad’ra(g’d) 70 ® 85
Port.(goM) 80 © 160
Malaga dry
.fgold) 1 00 @ 1 s

141

14 @

#ft

l 25

3 50

Marseilles
Marseilles

19£

Canton,re-ieel.Nol@2 8 50 @ 9 00
Canton. Extra Fine... 9 25 @19 00
Japan, superior
12 00 @i3 50
do
Medium
8 00 @ 9 50

China clay, $5 # ton ; Venetian red
and vermilion 25 # cent ad val.;
white chalk. $10 # ton.

logs $ cub. ft.
45® 50
P-ank, # M. ft.50 00@55 00

Poplar -fc W

-

29
27
28 i
29

Limber, &c. -Duty: Lumber,20
# coni ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad
val.; Rosewood *nd Cedar, free.
Bird’s-eye nviple,logs.$ ft.
6®
7
Black walnut ....# M. ft.50 00@70 00
Black wain t, logs'# sUp (t
3®
9

White oak,

Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or ilasks, $1 ; burning
fluid, 50 cents # gallon; palm, seal,
and cocoa nut, 10 # cent ad val.;
sperm ami whale or other fish (for¬
eign fisheries,) 20 # cent ad val.
Olive, Mar’s, qs (gold

Oils

do

boavy

in bags.64 In' @65 <M)
obl’g, do 62 £0 @6 > 90

29

# cent ad val.

Lime--Duty: 10
Rockland, com. #

,

Cake—Duty: 20 # centad val.
City thin obl’g,in bbls.
# ton.66 00 @06 50
do
West, thin

18

121

Asbton’s^’d) 2 50 @
iVorthingt’s 2 75 @ 2 80

ad val.
Clover

—^ gall. 3 50 © 7 00

Burgundy port..(gold) 75 @
Lisbon
(gold) 2 25 @
Sicily Madeira..(gold) 1 0< ©
Red, Span. & Sicily(g) 90 @

Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,
I cent # ft ; canary, $1 # bushel of
60 ft; and grass seeds, 30 # cent

75
50
00

Oil

# ft

Rod
Sheet, Russia
Sheet, Single,
and Treble
Nail

8®

Madeira

..........

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2} cents;
refined and partially refined, 3 cents;
nitrate soda, 1 cent # ft.
Refined, pure
# ft
.. @
7$@
Crude
7}
Nitrate soda
4|@
5
gold

6 Ou ® 7 50

Oakum-Duty fr.,# ft

100, 50 cents # gallon and 25 $ cent
ad val. ; over $1 #
gallon, $1» « '
Ion and 25 # cent ad val *

@
Liverpool,gr’nd# sack 1 80 @ 1 85

45

®12 nn
Terne Coke.... 9 00 ® 9 25

85i

Cadiz

do fine,
do fine,

24

00 ®1«2 75

Wines—Duty: Value not over Toms
# gallon, 20 cents # gallon, and
cent, ad val.; over 50 and not over

Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 cents#100ft;
bulk, 18 cents # JU0 ft.
Turks Islands # bush.
47 @
48

Turpent’e, s ft.#280ft 3 87I@
Ta-. N County $ bbl. 3 25 ® 3 50
Tar, Wilmington
3 75 ® 4 00
Pi roh City
3 121® 3 25

extra

141

lit®
18} @

;

»->

Tobacco.—See special report.

Rice—Duty: cleaned21 cents # ft.;
paddy II cents, and uncleaned 2 cents
# ft.
Carolina ....-.# 100 ft 8 75 @ 9 50
Rangoon Dressed, gold
9 00 @ 9 22
duty paid

special report.

SpHis turpentine #g
43 @
Rosin, com’n. # 280 ft 2 43 @ 2
do strainedanuNo 2.. 2 45 ® 2
do
No. 1
2 90 ® 4
do
Pale
5 00 @ 6

31

12j@

# ft

10

25®
5@

...

29 50 @24 7-5
20 00 @29 00

extra mess

do hams

Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 36cents # gallon; crude
Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20
$ cent ad val.

do

13‘J 00®

HorseShoe....

do

Naval

87 50® 90 00

/—S

2o
13

12®
8 ®

do
do

#ft
bbl28 50 @28 65
28 40 @28 62
26 25 @26 75
23 75 @24 50
14 00 @2G 50

Pork, old m es
Pork, prime mess

IVnifs—Duty: cut II; wrought 21;
horse shoe 2 cents # ft.
Cat,4d.@60d. # 100 ft 5 12J® 5 25
Clinch
6 621® 6 75
Horse shoe, f’d(6d)# ft
27 ® 30
Cooper...
40 ®
Yellow metal
‘*6 ®
Zinc
18 ®

$ ion 43 50@46 00

(in gold)

1-4®
12 @

Bahia

Molasses.—See

Pig, Scotch,No 1.

sizes

J1 @

14
10
15

16 @
8 @

am

per cent, ad vai

Plates,char. I.G.# box!2

@ 3 80

.

Plato and sheet

?° ic-C°ke
10 00 ®u 25
Terne Charcoalll 25

@
.

plates, 25

..

lams,bacon, andlard,2 cts

Pork,new mess,#

14

10 ®

#bbl.

ad

?,an®f
$ (gold) 26}®'
K™1.1*
English......... (gold) 84 5
(gold)
®

19

32 @
301®

-

val

cent

Provisions—Duty:beof and pork,
1 ct;

do
ft.
Rosewood, R. Jan. # ft

Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 14 cents $ lb.
Railroad, 70 cents # 100 ft; Boiler
and Plate, 1£ cents $ ft); Sheet, Band, I
Hoop, and Scroll, 1} to If cents $ ft;
Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3
cents $ ft.

Bar, Swedes, assorted

40

Mansanilla
Mexican
Florida. # c.

do

do

(110®

u

Tin--Duty: pig, bars,and block, 15*

bond,piime

30 @

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevi;as

@

in

L. S. to W.
115 test)
do Standard

grav.,
Residuum

..

do

@

Carthagena, &c

refined

Bose-

10

Nuevitas.,..
Mausr.nilla
Mexican
H o n u n ras

do
do
do

1}

terne

@

..

*
l3fa

Teas.—See special report.

....

16 @

in bulk

do

7 @

logs

S5

@
@
@

..

Crude,40@47grav.#gal

Port-au-Platt,

do

14
00

Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents;
refined, 40 jents # gallon.

white
Naptha, refined. 68-73

crotches

@
@

....

Foreign

,

50

St. Domingo,
ordinary logs
do
Port-au-Platt,

Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent,

ad val.

26
32

do

6 00

@

Barytee,American#ft
Barytes

25 @

Ifl ft..

.~

o

Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val.
Ox, Rio Grande... # C 7 00® ....
India

Cedar,

M ittoyany*
35
29
25

# lb. ... @
Chalk, block....# ton23 00 @24

22
50
25

American,prime, country and city # ft...

32 00 @33 00

# ton

China clay,
Chalk..

....

35®

do

Sugar.—See special report.
Tallow—Duty :I cent $ ft

6

@

Plumbago

00®70 0G
00®
@
@
22®

27
@ 2 75

....

Carmine,citymade#tt>16 00 @20 UU

00®^ 00

23®
31®

do
do

Venet.red(N.C.)#cwt

50
do
18® 20
per Mfc.21 00®24 00

77

Hops--/uty: 5 cents # ft.
Crop of 1808
# ft 15 @
5 @
do of 1867
15 @
Bavarian

...

strips, 2x4

do

75 @

Ox, American

...do 2 in.

do

HoneF—Duty,20 3ent $ SalLon.
Cuba (duty paid) (gr -d
# gall.

bds,
p’k 1 y> in.

Spruce

00®45 00
00@27 00

22 ®

Amer.com..

do

.

Maple and birch
30
White pine b x boards.. .23
White pine merchantable

23
27

@
@
23 @
@
..

20

Yermillion, Trieste ... 1 15 @ 1 20
do
Cal. & Eng.. 1 20 ® 1 Si-

and p’ank..70 00®80 00
45 00@‘»() 00

Oak and ash....

(October 3,1868,

CHRONICLE

THE

# to

.......# bbl.

V)ds...#ton

Heavy goods.. • #
Oil
Flour

ton
•••.•

$ bbl-

Petroleum

Jl

8®

Si® S
@ 5

-

..@85
27 6 @

@35
2 9 @

-

@5
@5

•••• ••

@3

^

Pork
Wheat

# bnsh.

Corn

$

To Havre:

Cotton
Beef and

@30
@40 0

27 6

Corn, b’k& bags# bus,
Wheat, bulk and bags
Beef
$ tee.
Pork
..# bbl.

(sail)

8.

® 3-16
2 9®.
.

•••••

To London

d.

(steam):s.

•

Measurem.

m

•? .7

pork.. # bbl.

I

c
(ft,

g’ds.# ton i0

••

©

„

60 @

Lard

Ae'ies.pot&p'l, # ton
Petroleum

8 00 a »
bouoo

1

1868.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Insurance.

Insurance.

October 3,

OFFICE OF THE

Commercial Cards.

OFFICE OF THE

Pacific Mutual Insurance

447

Atlantic

10

^

-

COMPANY,
TRINITY BUILDING, 111 BROADWAY.

Mutual

Insurance

New

York, January 11, 1868.
Tlie-following statement of the affairs of the Com¬
pany is published in conformity with the requirements
ot

Section 12 oi its charter :

Co.,

NEW YORK, JANUARY 25th,
1803,
The

Outstanding Premiums, Jan. 1,1867
Premiums received from Jan. 1 to

Dec, 31,

$119,180 75

1S67, inclusive

796,612 87

Total Amount of Marine Premiums

.$916,093 62

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

Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the
Company, submit the following Statement of ite
affairs on the 31st December, 1807:
Premiums received on Marine
Risks,
from 1st January, 1807, to 31st De¬
cember, 1807
Premiums
1st

Risks have been taken upon Time
upon Hulls or Vesstls.
Premium' marked off as Earned during the

on

*£28288;

$7,322,015 75
2,838,109 71

or

imriod as above
$S27,044 19
Paid for Losses -i.ul Expenses, less Savings,
&c., during the same period
603,270 41
Return Premiums
74,421 12

The Company has the

following assets

$626,877 64

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable

279,584 45
Subscription Notes in advance of Premiums 91,438 94
Re-insurance and other claims due the
Company, estimated at
52,477 92
Total Assets

Total amount of Marine Pre riums. .$10,160,125 46
No Polices have been issued upon Life
nor upon Fire Risks discon¬
nected with Marine Risks.

1807 to 31st December, 1867

Losses paid during the
same

Six Per Cent.

Interest,

Outstanding Certificates of the Com¬
pany of the Issue of 1863,
•will be redeemed and paid in cash, to the holders
thereof, or their legal re >resentatives, on and after

Tuesday, the 4th day of February next, from which
The Certiticates to
date interest thereon will cease.
be produced at the time of payment and cancelled.

Dividend in Script of FIFTEEN Per Cent, is de¬
clared on ihe net amount of Earned Premiums for the
A

year

ending December 31st, 1867, ior which Certificates
day of June next.

will be issued on and after the first

TRU S'JL'EES
John K. Myers,

period

$7,597,123 16

$4,224,364 61

Expenses

SINGER SEWING
MACHINES,
for family use and
manufacturing purposes. Brancne*
world, 8EN9
tb®
wor]

$1,305,865 98

Ephraim L. Corning,

Wm. liegeman,

A. S. Barm s,

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

Egbert Starr,
A. Wasson,

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

THOMAS HALE, Secretary,

ciYflke<*

t?)RA^LBCULA£Ugh0Ut

s.

Company has the following As¬

sets, viz.:
United States and State of New York

Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks. $6,804,485 00
Loans secured by Stocks, and other¬
wise

Real Estate and Bonds and

Mortgages,

2,175,450 00
210,000 00

Interest and sundry notes and claims
due the Company, estimated at
Premium Notes and Bills Receivable..
Cash in Bank

Total Amount of Assets

252,414 88
3,232,453 27
37-3,374 02

$13,108,177 11

Wright’s Black Ink
resists the action of time and chemical
agents, (see
certificate Irom School of Mines, Columbia

College,

large bottles).
«
instantaneously Black and unchangeably
Fluid.
on

'1 his ink is

Will not .Fade

Six per cent Interest

ing certificates

the outstand¬

cm

February next.
per cent,

of the

outstanding certifi¬

cates of the Issue of 1865 will be redeem¬
ed and paid to the holders thereof,
or their legal

representatives,
Fourth of
interest

on

on and after Tuesday the
February next, from which date

the amount

so

redeemable will

cease*

The certificates to be produced at the time of
pay¬
ment, and cancelled to the extent paid.

dividend

A

declared

on

Mould,

Deposits

W. C. WRIGHT &

Thirty

LARGE

Brooklyn, May 15,186V j

Gentlemen,—Our planing mill, with Fifty Thousand

feet of lumber

was destroyed
by fire last night, and
happy to say your Alum and Dry Plaster Safe
preserved our hooks, papers, and money in excellent

-we are

order.
We want another and
larger one,
you as soon as we have time.
Yours truly,

our

are

adding to the security

President, St. Louis, Mo.

We, the undersigned, cordially recommend these
seven per
cent mortgage Jionds of the St. Louis and

Iron Mountain Railroad as a good security. The reve¬
nue of the road will be large, and the administration
of the affairs of the
Company is in capable and exper¬
ienced hand-*, aud is entitled to the greatest confidence
of the public.
James S. Thomas, Mayor of St. Louis. '
John J. Roe, President St. Louis Chamber of Co*i

merce.

E. W. Fox, President St Louis Board of Trade.
Barton Bates, President North Missouri Railroad.
J. H. Britton, Pres. Nat. Bank of the State of Mo..
Wm. L. Ewing, Pres. Mer. Nat. Bank of St. Louis.
Geo. H. Rea, Pres. Second Nat. Bank of St. Louis,
Jas. B. Eads, Chief Eng. St. Louis & Ill. Bridge Co.
Geo. W. Taylor, Pres. Pacific Railroad of Mo.
Wm. Talsig, Pres. Traders Bank, St. Louis.
John R. Lionberger, Pres. T. Nat. Bank, St. Louis.

Adolphus Meir, Vice-Pres. Uuion Pacific Railway.
Robert Bafr.li, • res. German Savings Institution.
HKW YORK REFERENCES :

S. Gandy.

Blodgett.

A. R. Eno.
Geo. D. Phelps.

New York
be sold at
giving the accrued interest to the
buyer, Parties living out of the city, not having cor¬
respondents here, can send their funds to the Cashier
of the Bank of the State of New
York, and bonds will
he returned by express free of
charges.
H. G. MARQIJAND, Vice President.
N*. 43 Wall street,
the low price of 85,




1

PERFECT

ending 31st

^

_tw

i\$.

"*

t,

-

' Vi

;

■'

VY

■

V

'■

.

l-'

j

!

-S.

By order of the Board,
J. H.

CHAPMAN,
Secretary

Marvin

trustees:

THOS. ALLEN,

Pamphlets with details can be had at the
Agency. A limited number of Bonds will

ca

next.

the Southern States, insures an enormous revenue.
The Directors own 8.10 of the stock for investment,
and are interested to enrich the property as well as
to economize its expenses.

W. T.

hours, and the

every

Over $8,000,000 have been spent on the property
aud not over $2,000,000 of bonds issued thus tar. The
constantly increasing traffic ot carrying ore, with the
prospect of coutroling all the travel from St. Louis to

E. D. Morgan & Co.,
J. H. Swift.
Isaac N. Phelps.
W. V. Brady.

year

on

store, NO. 265 BROADWAY.

December, 1867, for which certificates will be
issued on and after Tuesday the Seventh of
April

Company, for the

and will call

SHEARMAN BROS.
This Safe was red hot for several
iron feet were actually melted.

the net earned premiums

Railroad Company’s Seven per cent First Mortgage
Bon ds, February and August coupons. The earnings
of the completed road to Pilot Knob are now moi e
than the interest on the entire mortgage. The pro¬

FIRE!

Messrs. Marvin & Co., New York,

Per Cent. Is

of the

day.

CO.,

MANUFACTURING CHEMISTS
31 Broadway, N.Y.

It can he seen at

of

St-Louis & Iron Mountain
ceeds of these bonds

Sediment.

no

For sale by all dealers, and at wholesale
by

ot

profits will be pal
to the holders thereof, or their
legal representatives
on and after
Tuesday tlie Fonrtli of

Fifty

or

Does not Corrode the Pen.

t

John A. Bartow,
Alex. M. EarJe,
John A. Hadden,
Oliver K. King,
Dean K. Fenner,
Win. T. Blodgett,
Lewis Buckman,
Chas. H. Ludington,,
Jos. L. Smallwood,
Thomas Eakin,
Henry C. Southwick,

*

re¬

nowned

William Leconey,

A. C. Richards,
A. Augustus Low,
W. M. Richards,
G. D. H. Gillespie,
C.E. Milnor,
MarMn Bates,
Frederick B. Betts,
MoseB A. Hoppock,
W. II. Mellen,
B. W. Bull,
Horace B. Claflin,

SingerManufacturingCo.
BROADWAY,
458
NEW YORK.
Proprietors and Manufacturer* of the world

,

Returns of Premiums and

The
the outstanding Certificates of Profits will be paid
to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives
on and alter Tuesday, the 4th day of February next.
The remaining Fiity Per Cent of the

THE

Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬

...$1,050,378 95

on

lEnsky* jSeoflahaa

Risks;

ary,

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

fi|

muaam,

JOHYOUGII^HlCHimQSS

Policies not marked oft

January. 18G7

^WARRANTED

John D.

Jones,

Wm.

Charles Dennis,
W. H. H. Moore,

Henry Coit,
Wm. C. Pickersgill,
Lewis Curtis,
Charles H. Russell,

Sturgis,
Henry K. Bogert,
Joshua J. Henry,
Dennis Perkins,
Joseph Gaillard, Jr.

Chrome Iron

1

s

Spherical

J. Henry Burgy,
Cornelius

Grinnell,
Hand,

Lowell Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,

C. A.

Royal Phelps,

Benj. Babcock,

B. J.

Howland,

Caleb Barstow

Fletcher

A. P. Pillofc

Robt. B.

William E. Dodge
Robt C. Fergnsson,

Gordon W, Burnham-

Westray,
Mintum, Jr.,

David Lane,

Frederick Chauncey,
James Low

James Bryce,
Francis Skiddy,

William H. Webb.

Daniel S. Miller.
Robert L. Taylor,

Paul Spofford.
Charles P. Burdett,

George S. Stephenson

|Burgl ar

Will resist all Burglar

JOHN D.

JONES, President,

W» flu H.

DENNIS, Vice-President,

MOORE, 3d VIoe-Pres.

J. 9. BBWUHDHi 84 Tlce-Pr***’

any

length •

Please send for Catalogue.

Marvin

Shephard Gandy.
CHARLES

Implements for
time

&

Co.,

PRINCIPAL WAREHOUSES'

~

51

No. 265
No.
No.

Broadway, New York.*
721 Chestnut st, Philadelphia.
108 Bank st, Cleveland, Ohio.

And for sale by our aeents In the principal citlc
throughout th United St*

448

NAYLOR & CO.,
99 John

DUANfi STREET.

110

CAST

SCOTCH LINEN GOODS,
In fall assortment for the

STEEL RAILS,

Clothing Trade.

Cast Steel

sale of
SONS’
LINENS, A: C

Frogs, and all other
Railway Use.

Agents for the

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

'

DUCK, &C

Townsend & Yale,

«09 92 Sc 94

well as Old Rails,

FRANKLIN STREET.

Scrap Iron and

-

158 PEARL

Germantown

Hosiery mulls.

Blackstone

Knitting mills.

Bristol Woolen

All

..

& Co.,

Co.
In

We beg to call the attention of Managers of Ran
■ways and Contractors throughout the United States
and Canada to our superior facliities for execuPnir
orders at manufacturers prices, for all descriptions «?•

both

Works,

Bronx

Tape

IMPORTERS OF

AND FANCY

& Co.,

M. Baird

PHILADELPHIA.

monthly or yearly requirements
RAILS, taking their

to gauges

Omnibuses.

be taken
to our

Smith, Hoffman & Co,
P LA C E

for execution at a fixed price in Sterling or on com¬
mission at the current market price abroad when the
order is received in London ; shipments to be made
at stated periods to ports in America
at the
est possible rates of

AND

OFFICE AND

,

Jr.,

Morris,

Successor to

69 Sc 71 Broadway,

Caldwell & Morris.

COMMISSION MERCHANT

SLIT, NEW YORK.
Jr., Frantz B. Muller,
General Partner.
Wm. Harman drown
20 OLD

Bexj. C. Moreis,

Advances

made on merchandize for

upon consignments
Ports.

NOTICE TO THE

YORK.

DANNE-/p\

this day entered into
of Sheffield
Iron, which

LEUFSTA, W. JESSOP Sc
And to which
trade.

I request the

Wright & Co.,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Cotton, Flour,

Iron Cotton

O.

SONS.

special attention of the

Proprietor.
WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above
notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers ol,
Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders

and Extra Cast Steel
establishments, Nos. 91 &
and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬

for this Iron, and for Blister
made from the Iron, at their
93 John Street, New York,
eral

Ties.

Street.

Boston.

F. & F. A.

Dana,

Agents in New York, for the

IR«»N TIE AND SELF-FASTENING
WROUGHT IKON BICaLE TIES,

Pig, Scrap Iron and other ITIctals, Lo¬
comotives, Railroad Chairs sc spikes.

.

Old Rails

Re-rolled or Exchanged for,new.

STREET, NEW YORK,

position to furnish to
desired lor immediate or
all
in the United states
ami Canada, and when required will contract to supply
mills with their monthly or yearly consumption at
the lowest current market prices.
We are also prepared to transmit by mall or through
the cable to our

LONDON

m BEAVER STREET.

For

Baling Cotton.

BEARD’S PATENT IRON LOCK AND

Ross, Dempster &

SELF-ADJUSTING TIES,
UNSURPASSED FOR STRENGTH AND RAPIDITY
OF

ADJUSTMENT.

BEARD Sc BRO..




457 Uroadway,

Co.,

SHIPPING AND COMMISSION
CHANTS,
YORK,
BROAD STREET.
NEW

29

HOT^E,

BROAD STREET,

Orders for old rails oil' ol Foreign Railroads for
shipments at stated periods to any ports in
at a fixed price in sterling or for execution on com¬
mission at the current market prices abroad when

America

In this department
unsurpassed and our
experience unequalled by any house in America. Our
yearly transactions in Old Rails being very much
greater than all other houses combined. Address

the order is received in London.
of our business our facilities are

W.

S.

Hopkins &York.
Co.,
New

69 A 71 Broadu ay,

Smith,

Gilead A.
Bartholomew

t

House,

STEEL

MER¬

SAN FRANCISCO,
623 battery street.

Orders for purchase of California Wheat, Flour,
Wool, Hides, and other Produce carefully filled.
Liberal Advances made on approved

merchandise.

LONDON.

TYRES,
META I S

AND
Railroad Bonds and U.S.
tie9

negotiated, and Credit

U. S. or

Americrn Securi
and Exchange provided for

and other

Continent.

Consignments solicited on

the usual terms

of any of

staples.
,
Special Counting and Reception Rooms
Americans in London, with the facilities usually

the

PHILADELPHIA PA..

SWENSON, PERKINS Sc CO..

Rails.

We are, therefore, always in a
consumers any quantity
remote deli very at
points

FOREIGN A AMERICAN RAILROAD
IKON, OLD AND NEW,

67 WALL

of

OPPOSITE BANK OP ENGLAND,
RAILROAD IRON,
BESSEMER KAILS,

The undersigned. Sole
ale and distribution of the

Manufactured by J. J. McCOMB, Liverpool, respectiully solicit orders for delivery in New York or other
©orts iu the United States, or at Liverpool.

both American and Foreign

Companies heavy shipments

Railroad

58 OLD

I beg to announce that I have
contract with Messrs. W. Jessop <fe Sons,
for the whole Annual Make of the above
in future, will be stamped

sale here, and

to Liverpool and other European

to the proprietors and mana¬
'Tils and Iron Manufacturers through¬
States and Canada, that we are con-

stantly receiving from

MORA IRON.

) Special
£ Partners

Grain and Provisions.
NO. 27 MAIN S • ., CINCINNATI,

Co.,

hog to announce

Old

CONSUMERS OF THE

SWEDISH

GENUINE

We

gers of Rolling
out the United

&c.

WAREHOUSES:

STREET, NEW

15 GOLD

Tools,

Leufsta, in Sweden, 29th April, 1867.
CARL EMANUEL DE GEER,

Gano,

6c

New York.-

Manufacturers.

To Iron

Castings and Street

a

GBNERAL

Hopkins

S. W.

& Co.,

Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools,

Consignments.

C.

low¬

and
freights. Address

Philadelphia.
Iron Tubes, Lap Welded

Gas Works

Boiler Flues,

STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
Consignments solicited. Liberal Cash

B.

Wrought

anufacturers o

CORNER CHURCH
Orders and
Advances made on

BROAD STREET,

58 OLD

Pascal Iron Works,

2 7 P ARK

HOUSE,

LONDON

New York.

Morris, Tasker

Miscellaneous.

Kails.
Foreign Rails, both Steel and Iron, will
for transmission by Mail or through the cable

Orders for

MANUFACTURERS.

-

NO.

of STEEL OR IRON

RAILS IN TRADE FOR NEW
difference in cash, and allow¬
ing the highest market price for their Old Kails, and.
If necessary, receiving the latter after ths delivery ot

STEPHENSON Sc CO.,

JOHN

and Ginghams, Ac.,
217 CHURCH STREET,
Between "Walker and Lispenard.

IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

Contracts for both Ikon AND

will he made payable in United States
America, and in either currency or gold
(at the optmn ot the buyer) lor Foreign; when desir¬
ed, we will contract to supply roads with their

STEEL KAiLs
currency for

the New'

and thorough
Material, Workmanship,
Finish, and Efficiency iully guaranteed.
MATTHEW BAIRD.
CHAS T. PARKY
GEO. BURXU vM.

All work accurately fitted
lv interchangeable. Plan,

Umbrella Alpacas

DEALERS

rolled to any
yard and of

furnished, receiving the

VELVETEENS,

VELVETS,

Steel Rails,

Bessemer

of American and Foreign manufacture,
desired pattern and weight for linial

approved lengths.

WORKS.

LOCOMOTIVE

British Dress Goods, Street Cars,

-

of No. 1

OLD

Company.

N.B.FALCONER&CO
STAPLE

ply

Pig Iron,
IN ALAND, ON DOCK, AND TO ARRIVE.
lots to suit purchasers. Apply to

BALDWIN

to furnish ail sizes natboth steam and lior-e

roads, and In any quantities desired either for IMuf.
DIATK OR REMOTE delivery, at anv port in the
United States oi Canada and always at the very lowest
current market prices.
We are also prepared to sun-

Metals.

approved Brands

8 01

H

AMERICAN and FOREIGN

Railroad Iron.

HENSJERSON brothers,
No. 6 Bowling Green, New York.

Wlnlhrop Knitting Co.

OLD BROAD ST*

We are always in a position
terns and weight of rail lor

Scotch

Pennsylvania Knitting Co.

Cmyudutta Glove

the

,

Railroad Companies.

To

SCOTCH PIG IRON.

Mni’g Co.

Glastenbnry Knitting

*

LONDON HOUSE, 58

STREET,

Iron and

mills.

with the purchase and fait of

Railroad Iron,

Manf’g Co.

Keystone Knitting

NO.

In connection

Metals.

Evans

W.

F.

Agents for

Lawrence

CO.,

Railroad Iron,
as

Railroad, Town, County, City and
STATE BONDS,

attention to orders for

give special

who

FLAX SAIL

Negotiations of eucry description of

:

NAYLOR,
B E N Z O N Sc
34 Old Broad Street,

,

Broadway, New York,

69 A 71

Steel Material for

LONDON

HOUSE IN

WILLIAM GIHON &

WHITE

STEEL TYRES,

CAST

Hopkins & Co.,

S. W.

208 So. 4th stree

80 State street.

street.
4

IRISH &

Jobbing and

PHILA.,

BOSTON,

YORK,

NEW

Commission Merchants*

Importers Sc

Railroad Materials,

Iron and

ESTABLISHED 1856*

Gihon,

Brand &

Materials.

Railroad

Iron and

Dry Goods.

[October 3, 1868.

CHRONICLE.

THE

at the

available lor
found

Continental Bankers.

Thomas

J. Pope &

Bro.

METALS.
292 PEARL STREET,

NEAR

BEEKMAN STREET

NEW YORK