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t

ante’ feette, Commercial ^imeo,

§attwajj jptomtor, and Insurance fonmal

A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

representing the industrial and commercial interests of tiie united states.

VOL. 4.

SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1867.
Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.
REMOVAL.

REMOVED TO THE MORE COM-

WK HAVE

MODIOUS OFFICE,

.

No. 12 WALL

STREET,

iorrner Office.

Directly opposite our

Hatch, Foote & Co.,
BANKERS

Bankers and Brokers.

JosErH A. Jameson,
James D. Smith,
Amos Cotting,
of the late firm of James
Of Jameson,Cottiug&Co.
Low & Co New York
St. Louis.
& Louisville, Ky.
,

Jhmeson,Smith &Cotting
\

BANKERS,
NOS. 14 & 16 WALL

Receive

STREET, NEW JOBK.

Deposits la Currency and Gold,

and allow Interest at the rate of Four Per Cent

AND

DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURI¬
TIES, GOLD, Ac.
R. P. Sawyers.
N. P. Boulett.

P. D. Boddey,

J. N. Petty,

P. D. Roddey &
No. 2X

Co.,

per annum on
for at f>ight.

bankers and brokers.
Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬
mission.
Particular attention <nven to the Purchase and
Sale of all Honthern and Misce laneous Securities.
Collections made on all accessible points.

Balances.

29 WALL STREE

T,

(Established 1854.)

A. M.

Foute,
Late Pres. Gayoso Bank,

Dealers in Government Securities. Special atten¬
given to Collections. Four per cent interest
allowed on Balances, subject to check at sight.
CO.
WHITE, MORRI8
tion

John Bloodgood & Co.,
Interest allowed

STREET, NEW YORK.

on

AND

deposits of Gold and Curren¬

subject to checkat sight, and particular atten¬

tion given

to accounts of country banks and bankers.

A.

C.

BANKER

Graham,

AND

BROKER,

3 BROAD STREET, NEW

West Indies, South America, and the United States.

AND

DEA ERS IN BULLION, SPECIE, AND
UNITE.• STATES SECURITIES.
No. 1 Wall

Foute

&

BANKERS AND
33

STREET

BROAD

Western

Loring,
BROKERS,

AND 36

STREET.

NEW

Gov or nm ent Securities of all ki nds,

Citizens’

Go \ d,

Foreign and Domestic Exchange,
on London and
Paris,
Bills on Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile.

State, Bank, and Railroad Stock* ant

P.

Hayden,
SPECIE,

24 Nassau Street, New Yo k.
Tlie Specie Department will be in charge
of J. S. Cronise, (late of J. S. Croniee & Co.), who
has my authority to
ration.

sign the Firm

name

by

18 WALL STREET,
Bny and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT
SECURITIKS, GOLD, &c. Orders for purchase and
sale of Stocks. Bonds and Gold promptly executed.

TYLER, ULLNANNACO., Chicago.

Bank,

Benoist &

A.

Co.,

BANKERS,
ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI,
Buy and Sell Exchange on all the principal cities
of the United States and Canadas. Also, drafts oh
London and Paris for sale.

procu¬

Scott

Garth, Fisher & Hardy,

Late

BANKERS,
STREET,
Harrison, Garth <fc Go. and Henry C.
Hardy).
Government Securities, Stocks,Bonds, Gold, etc.,
bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Brokers
a id at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬
Successors to

&„

Co.,

Kerr Sc Co.,
BANKERS,
LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS.

No. 18 NEW

Scott,

Collections made on all accessible points and re¬
mitted for on th day of payment, less current rates
ot exchange.

The Marine

sion only.

Company

OF CHICAGO.

Foreign and Domestfc Exchange bought, sold and

col'ected.

J. Young Scammon

Deposits received, subject to check, without no¬
tice, and Four per cent, interest allowed thereon.

President.

Robert Reu>

Manager.

General

Raiiking and Collections

promptly attended to.

M. K.

Jesup & Company,

BANKERS AND

Established 1848.

MERCHANTS,

Haskell & .C

84 BROADWAY.

Bonds and Loans for Railroad

Contract for
Iron

or

Cars, etc.,

Steel

C.

38

Cos*,

Ralls, Locomotives,

and undertake
all business connected with

& Commission

MERCHANTS,
BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.

o .,

BANKERS,

ST. LOUIS,
MO.
Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Ex¬
change collections made on all accessible points and

promptly remilted for at current rates of exchange.

Railways.

POWELL, GREEN Sc CO.

Budge, Schiff, & Co., Bankers
NO. 55 EXCHANGE PLACE.

Union

MEMPHIS, TENN.

Negotiate

NO.

Bankers.

Buy and Sell Foreign and Domestic Exchange
United Stales Securities, State of Tenne see, Shelby
County, and Memphis Bonds, anl past due Coupons.
Particular attention paid to Collections.

L.

AND DEALER IN BULLION AND

Southern Bills

Tyler, Wrenn
& Co.,
BANKERS,

Street.

(Charteied by the State of Tennessee.)

YORK,

DEALER IK

Hagen,

BANKER*',

BANKER,

York Stock Exchange, Gold Ex¬
change. and Mining Board.

cy,

States, available in all the principal cities of the
world; also,
COMMERCIAL CREDITB,
For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope,

Memphis, Tenn.

\

Members of the New

8TA,

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS
OF CREDIT,
For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United

W. W. Loiung.

made in all the States and Canadas.

GOVERNMENT
OTHER SECURITIES.

NASSAU

ISSUE

Cohen &

Interest allowed on
Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections

IN

B A. IV K. E Bt S
CORNER OF PINE AND

be checked

purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks
strictly and only on Commission.

White, Morris & Co.,

DEALERS

may

Bonds Bought and Sold.

BANKING HO U SE OF

22 WILLIAM

daily balances which

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

Will

Wall Street, N.Y.,

(PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.)

Interest allowed on

NO. 94.

Second

National Bank.
ST.

LOUIS, MO.
apital..00,000 I Surplus..$150,566
Prompt attention given to the bnsine-s of corres¬
pondents.
E D. JONES, Cashier.
C

NORT M-WESTERN STATES
Bank op

BROKERS IN UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

SECURITIES, GOLD STOCKS, AND
FOREIGN
Are

EXCHANGE.

prepared to Buy United States Gold Coupons
d ne May for Gold and Currency at liberal rates.




Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought and sold
exclusively on Commission.

Gelston &

Bussing,

RANKERS Sc BROKERS^
27 Wall street
All orders receive our Personal Attention.
Wm. J. Gelstok, ' *
-John S. Bussing.

Geo. C. Smith &
48 LASALLE ST.,

Bro.,

CHICAGO,

(Lake Bank of Montreal.)

x

•

■

.

Special attention given to collections.
Draw on—Drexel, Wintkrop & Co., and Winslow,
Lanier & Co., New York; Drexel & Co., Pniladelphia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada.j
•

S. G. & G* C.

Pacific Railroad Co.,
Having Completed, Equipped and

Hundred
of
Hlles
their Road, from Sacramento
California, to within 12 miles of the

AGENTS

Nevada moun¬

tains,

continue to
through us, their

offer

tor

66

Mortgage,

Constituting an absolute prior lien on
the portion of Road above named, wit ii
all the Rights, Franchises
Equip¬
ments, dee., pertaining

thereto.

The amount of these First Mortgage Bonds to be
isened per mile is limited by law to the amount oi
United States Bonds allowed and issued to aid the
construction of the Road, and the Mortgage by
which they are secured is DECLARED BY AC 1
OF CONGRESS TO CONSTITUTE A LIES

PRIOR AND SUPERIOR TO THA T OF THE
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT.
Interest at the rate oi Six Per Cent, per Annum,

RAN K E

Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, avail¬
able in all

J. L. Brownell
& Bro.,
BROKERS,
BANKERS Sc

28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals*

received

on

favorable terms.
TD vtnrDU'vmPq •

Pres. Nat. Mech. Banking Ass. N.Y.
Pres’t. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicagcr

J. H. Fonda,
C. B. Blair,

Edey & Co.,

Barstow,

BANKERS

Sc

BROKERS,

HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 80 TO

DEALERS IN
OTHER

Office No. 16.

GOVERNMENT

Vermilye

SECURITIES.

deposits of Gold and Cur¬
subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to

&

BANKERS.
No. 44 Wall Street. New

Keep constantly

on

Co.,
York,

hand for immediate delivery all
issues of

UNITED

STATES

STOCKS

INCLUDING

6
6
6
6
5
7
6

Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
Per Cent 6-20 Bonds of 1862,^
“

*

1864,

“
“
1865,
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
8-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
Per Cent Currency Certificates.

2d, & 3d series*

New York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan.
LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS!

Compound Interest Notes of 1864 A
1865 Bought and Sold.
VERMILYE Sc CO.

AND

Interest allowed upon

parts of Europe.

Interest Allowed on Dopeslte*

John Munroe & Co.,
AMERICAN

favorable terms.

NO. 7 RUB

BANKERS,

.

SCRIBE, PARIS
and

Pott, Davidson & Jones,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,

Railroad,
Authorized, adopted and aided by the

United States Governm’t.
runs

Securities

STREET.

Merchants and Bankers npon

Great National Pacific

It

Government

In

Gold, Stocks, Bonds, &c., Bought and Sold at
on Commission,
Registered and Cou¬
pon Interest collected without charge.
Agents for
the sale of First Mortgage 6 per cent.
Gold Bear¬
ing Bonds Central Pacific RR. Co.
M. T. RODMAN, 1
D. C. FISK,
)-General Partners.
K. H. FISK,
j
PLINY PISK, Special Partner.

rency,

part of the
MAIN TRUNK OF THE

NEW ORLEANS.

market rates

reserving the right to advance the price whenever

it la their interest to do so.
The Road forms the Western

DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AND

RS,

No. 36 Broad Street,

Tn the City of New York. The price of the Bonds
is fixed for the piesent at 95 per cent., and accrued
interest from January 1st in Cum ncy, the Company

Street, New York.

AND

payable Semi-annually, on the first days of January
Jnly. Principal and Interest payable in
GOLD COIN,

IT St CS Fine

Rodman, Fisk & Co.,

ana

UNITED STATES

BANKBBS,

STREET, BOSTON.

NO. 7 WALL

the laws of the State ol Cali'ornia, upon the divi¬
sion of their Road located in the State of California,
sad extending one hundred and fifty-six miles from
Sacramento (5tv to the California Mate line.
The Bonds have Thirty Years to run from July 1,
1866, and are secured by a

First

28 STATE

Dealers

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS,

Winslow, Lanier & Co.,

COMPANY,
WALL STREET, NEW YORK,

sale,

Issued in conformiiy with the Acts of Congress and

Ward,

XOB

Bankers and Brokers.

BARING BROTHERS Sc

put In operation nearly One

summit of the Sierra

Brokers.

Bankers and

The Central

'

[April IS, 1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

450

through the heart of the richest and most

populous section of the State oi California, connect¬
ing the

EXTENSIVE

MINING REGIONS OF
NEVADA, UTAH AND IDAHO,
with Sacramento and the Pacific Coast, from whence
their supplies must be drawn ; and the earnings of
the portion already running are very heavy, and
largely in excess of the interest upon the Company's
Bonds.
Having been for some time familiar with the oper¬
ations of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, we
are satisfied that they are conducted with rare abil¬

ity and prudence, and that the energetic and econo¬
mical management of the Company’s affairs entitles
them to the confidence of capitalists and of the pnb
lie. We have carefully investigated the progress,
resources, and prospects of the road, and nave the

fullest confidence in its success, and in the value
and stability of the Company’s securities. The at¬
tention of Trustees of Estates, Institutions, and in¬
dividuals desiring a long, safe and remunerative in¬

vestment, is especially invited to these First Mort¬

gage Bond*.
Orders may be forwarded to us director through the
principal Banks and Bankers in all parts of the

ountry.

(Messrs. Brown Bros. Sb Co.'a new building^
59 A 61 WALL STREET, NEW YORK
Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and
Government Securities.
Accounts of

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers In si
parts of Europe, etc., etc. Also Ocmocexeial Credits.

THE

PARIS

on

Interest allowed on depos¬

favorable terms.

EXHIBITION.

Norton &

Banks, Bankers, and Merchants resetsed

UNIVERSAL

BANKERS

Co.,

AND

its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬
tions furnished to corres pondents.
Rerbkkoks : James Brown, E*%., ^of Messrs.
Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬
ident of the Chemical National Bank; James H.

AMERICAN

York N. B. A

don.

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

Special attention paid to securing apartments for
visiting Paris, and letters of enquiry
replied to by return mail.

Banker, Esq., Vice-President of the Bank of Mow

No. 32 Broad

Street, New York.

Buy and Sell at Market Bates,

Solicit accounts from

MERCHANTS, BANKERS,
others, and allow interest on daily balances,
subject to Sight Draft.

and

on

favorable

Highest premium allowed for Exchange

on

Lon¬

Americans

Robt. McKim.

Jno. A. McKnr.

McKim, Bros. & Co.,
62 WALL STREET.
Interest allowed on deposit* subject to draft st

sight, and special attention given to orders from

other places.

J. Van Schaick,

terms,

And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or
Sale of Gold, State. Federal, and Rail¬
road Securities

Remittances nry be made in drafts on New York,
in Legal Tender Notes, National Bank Notes or
other funds current in this city, and the bonds will
be forwarded to any address by express, free of

AUBER, PARIS.

BANKERS,

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.

Make Collections

14 RUE

Hablktt MoKix.

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS,

38 Broad

Street,

BANKER AND STOCK BROKER

•r

charge. Inquiries for further particulars, by mail
otherwise, will receive punctual attention.

Miscellaneous.

or

Fisk & Hatch,

SECOND

EDITION.

The Mercantile

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
NO. 6 NASSAU

STREET, N.Y.

N.B.—All l&nds of Government Securities ie
ceived at the foil market price in exchange for the
above Bonds. Also,

All descriptions of Government Secu¬
rities kept constantly on band, and
Bought Sold or Exchanged.

ub Gold Coin and U. S. Coupons bought, sold,
collected.

ana
-

Deposits received on Liberal Terms,
subject to chech at sight.
|y Collections made throughout the country.
ana

cash.

Miscellaneous Stocks and Bonds bought and
told at the Stock Exchange on commission for

Special attention given to the Exchange of SEVEN
THIRTY NOTES qf all the seriesfor the new FIVETWENTY BONDS qf 1866, on the most favorable
arms.




Agency.

United States Business

Warren, Kidder & Co.,
BANKERS,

No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
Orders for stocks. Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬
cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLOWED
on

Directory*

John Cockle & Son,

The first edition of the above work

having been
days of its issue, the pub¬
lishers beg to announce a Second Edition, which
is now ready for delivery.
This work is the largest
Directory ever issued in the United States, and forms
a complete classified list of nearly all the traders,
dealers, and manufacturers, not only in all the large
cities of the Union, but in almost every town, village,
exhausted within

a

few

and hamlet in the Union.

It is

an

deposits, subject to check at sight.

invaluable work

for all persons having bnsine/ss relations throughout
the country. Copies for sale at the office of the pub¬

lishers,

(BROKERS
In Foreign
82

PINE

or

CO., Nc. 203 Broadway,

JOHN F. TROW. No. 52 Greene St.

George

Butler,

BANKER AND COMMISSION MERCHANT,

GALVESTON, TEXAS*

Scc., dec.
STREET, NEW YORK.

Rxfekknckb.—Moses Taylor;

John Munroe & Co;

C, Savage, U.S. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, HI.;

Hon. F. E. Spinner, Treasurer

U. 8., Washington.

Jones & Westervelt,
BROKERS,
*

R. G. DUN A

Exchange, Bonds, Notes,

BANKERS Sc

Government

and

Securities, Stocks, Bonds,
Gold, bought and sold on

Commission.
COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD
AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED.
NOS* IS NEW* 14 BROAD STREETS.
_

—p

f

-

THE CHRONICLE.

April 13,1867.J
Financial.

Bankers and Brokers.

Farnham,

George

L. P. Morton &

PAPER,

80 BROAD

BONDS, GOLD, &c., BOUGHT AND
SOLD ON COMMISSION.

At

Sight

Hedden, W inchester&Co

STREET, NEW YORK.

or

L. P.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

Sixty Day*; also,Circular Notea and

Stocks
All orders faithfully executed.
tOSUH HEDDEN,
ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,

Telegraphic order*

AND THE

UNION

W.WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN.

LONDON,

National

Co.,

Bank

Mortok,

Charms B.

Walter H. Bure*,

Miles*,

H. Onutm Oizunr.

BROKERS in mining stocks,

of the

Republic.

executed for the Pnrehaee and

Sale of Stock* and Bonds In London and New York.
Lun P.

Riker &

Quarterly Report of tlie

BANK OF

principal towns and ottles of
Europe and tha Bast

chase or sale of the Adams, American, United States,
Fanro & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express

Philadelphia, April 1, 1867.
Resources.
Loans and Discounts
Commercial Paper
Demand Loans

:

$384,562 14
T7 20

00

$461,762
77,874
23,481
26,877

14
85
58
53
l,0lo 32

Banking houee and Fixtures

Current Expenses and Taxes
Premiums
Revenue atanaps
Due from National Banks
Due from other B-rnks
United Stat s Bonds deposited with
Treasurer of the United States to
secure circulation
United States Bonds on hand
National Bank N. tes
Fractional Currency
.

6 NEW STREET

0.

and

BROADWAY,

80

Satterlee &

Travellers’ Credits.

Co.,

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE USE OF TRAV¬
ELLERS IN EUROPE AND THE EAST.

70 BROADWAY A 10 NEW STREET.

ISSUED FOR

..

Co., JLondon,

Legal Tender Notes
Compound Interest Notes

government

Allk TAXERXXS.

Drake Klein wort&Cohen
LONDON AND LIVERPOOL.

BANKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK,
Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securi¬
ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and
Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬
leum and Mining Stocks.
Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to

The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys
in the United States, is prepared to make advances

shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Coben
Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
credits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, Sonth America, &e
Marginal credits
on

London and

of the London House issued for the
52

Order* Promptly Executed.

J B. Chafpee, Pres.
Rogers, V. Pres.
Geo. T. Clark, Cashier.
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK

H. J.

of

Denver,

DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY

Authorised Capital - Paid In Capital
Transact a General Banking
Blake and P. Sts. DENVER

OF THE
-

-

-

-

D.

S.

Edwin
banker

JAY

COOKE,

business

corner of

•i

WM. G. MOORHEAD

H. D

ers

NOTH.

701,925 37

Profits...,

45,177 43

Total

I, JOSEPH P. MUMFORD, Cashier
Bank

tional

or the

COOKE,

)

knowledge snd belief.
MUMFORD, Cashier.

JOSEPH P.

Quarterly Report

Central

BANKERS.
Corner Wall and Nassau

Sts.,
New York.

No. 114 South 3d

Q. Bell,

Fifteenth

broker,

Whittingham,

National
CITY OF NEW

EXPitESS,

TELEGRAPH,
RAILROAD,

~

,

Bought and Sold

AND ALL OTHER STOCKS,
BONDS AND GOLD

on Commission.
Quotations and sales lists furnished
daily
cation. Orders
promptly executed.

appl! -

Panama
Tontine

Buildings, 88 Wall
New

“ve

.

Co.,
Street.

York, March 23,1867.

Dividend.—The

Board of Directors

day declared a dividend of SIX Per Cent.
evnings of the road for the Three Months

ending 81st instant, payable to
the stockholders or
legal representatives on and after the 5th April
books will be closed on the aiternoon
oiine 25th
inst., and reopened on the morning of 7th
proximo.
HENRY
ineur




York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of

SMITH, Treasuier.

$9,852,749

77

11,027
69,666
99,044
h**,975
664,553

23
10
80
59
61

2,550,000 00

$48,891 02

Curreney

29,662 00

Legal Tenders

4,086.417 U0
1,963,766 67

Checks

our

Washing¬

$19,414,293 49

Liabilities.

Capital Stock
Surplus and Profits

$8,000,000 00
493,521 84

Circulation

1,676 000 00

Deposits:

Individual
United States
Banks...

$7,030,531 82
129,543 49
.

......

7,680,830 34

14,240,405 66

Dividends unpaid

5,866 00

House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio,

win be resident partners.
We shall give particular attention to the purchase,

and

exchange of government securities of

&R issues;

to orders for purchase and sale of stocks,

and gold, and to all business of National

Banks.

Railroad

Philadelphia and

Washington we have this day opened an office at No.
Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city.
Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge A Co.,

bonds

OFFICE OF THE

March 1,1866.

:

6,158,826 59

1

sale,
on

YORK,

Street,

In connection with our houses in

ton

Bank

morning of the first Monday of April, 1^67

National

Street,

Opposite Treas. Department,
Washington.

New

of the

Resources.
Loans and Discounts
Liabilities of Directors ....$431,000 9*
Overdrafts
Current Expenses....
United States and N.Y Taxes
Premiums
Due from Banks
United States Bonds
Cash on hand, viz:

PITT COOKE.

0

of the Na¬

Republic, of

On tha

BODGE,

$1,664,602

Philadelphia,
do solemnl, swear that the above
statement is true,
to the best of my

H. C. FAHNESTOCK.

Philadelphia.

No. 8 Broad Street,

MINING

417.500 00

1,917 73

—

EDWARD

Jay Cooke & Co.,

In Southern Securities and Bank Bills.
•• BROADWAY A 5 NEW
8TRBBT,
New York.

W. H.

$500,000 00

Outstanding

Individual Deposits
.$518,840 94
Due to National Banks
186,166 70
Due to other Bank* and Bank¬

purposes.

VIS8ER,
Exchange Place, New York.

COLORADO.

BANK

anb

00

Liabilities.

Specie

SOUTHERN

»

Capital Stock, paid in

otfTHE

$500,000

$200,000

same

SIMON DE

Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬

ments made.

120,00

_

NO. 16 BROAD

Draft.

600 00

24,876 00
3,915 13

..

Brothers,

STOCK BROKERS AND

500,000 00

$1,664,602 80

Circulating Notes

53 Exchange Place.

Drake

.

20

10,068 99

$171,823 00

Total.

Dabney, Morgan & Co.,

securities,

242,’313

291,823 I Q

BY

bought and sold on commission,

.

...

Messrs. J. S. Morgan Sc

STOCKS AND BONUS

for the

By order of the Board of Directors.
JOSEPH P. MUMFORD, Ca*hier.

(58 Old Broad Street, LondomJ

Available in an the

Subscriptions from Stockhol.ers

becoming Stockholders.

HORTON, BURNS A CO.,

Stocks Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
homrht and sold at market rates, on commission
only
Interest allowed on balances. Advances
made on approved securities.
Particu’ar attention given to orders for the pur

($1,000,-

OOO).

•harea allotted to them in the
proposed increase,
will be payable on the second
day of May next, and
will he received at anytime
prior to that date. A
number of shares will remain to he
sold, application*
for which will be received from
persons desirous of

Letter* of Credit for Travekn* Uao, on

Bankers and. Brokers.

LOCKE

Philadelphia, March 12, 1867.

In accordanca with the provision* of the
National
Currency Act and the Articles of Association of this
Ban.., it has been determined to increase the Capital
Stock of this Bank to one million dollars

STERLING EXCHANGE

4g pine Street, New York.

NO. 69

Co., Bank of the Republic,

BANKERS,

ALSO,

ft-TOCKS
ST0C
’

Financial.
NATIONAL

(Late of G. S. Robbins * Son.)

COMKEBCIAL

451

JAY COOKE A CO.

$19,414,298 49

New York, April J, 1867.
W. H. SANFORD, Cashier.
Sworn and subscribed before me this second
day
of April, 1867.
CHAS. E. BOGERT.

Notary Public, City and County of New York.

United States

Treasury,
APRIL 8, 1867.

Lockwood &
BANKERS,

Co.,

No. 94 BROADWAY A No. 6 WALL STREET.
DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND
OTHER SECURITIES.
Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬
rency, subject to Check at* Sight. Gold loaned to
Merchants and Banker* upon favorable term*.

SCHEDULES OF (36) THIRTY OR MORE

COUPONS, due May, 1867, will
examination at the

United States

now

be received for

Interest Department ot the

Treasury.
H. H. VAN DYCK

Assistant Treasurer U.S.

[April 13,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

452

.

National

Jacquelin & De Coppet,
Stocits,

809 & 811

Bonds,
Gold, and
Government

BOLD ON COMMISSION.

BOUGHT AND

CHESTNUT STREET,

$500,000

Capital....
Offer*

Hknby Da ComT.

Johx H. Jaoqujbxts.

Republic,

PHI L A DELPHI A,

Securities,

its

Bankers on

services

Banka

to

and

Broad Street, Charleston, S. C.,
BANKERS Sc DEALERS
IN FOREIGN A DOMESTIC EXCHANGE, SPECIE,
BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND B >NDS.

Especial attention paid to Collections.
Refer to Duncan, Sherman A Co., New York;
Drexel A Co., Philadelphia; The Franklin Bank,
and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury A Co.,
Richmond, Va., Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, G&.

liberal terms.
DIRECTORS!

Heath & Hughes,
BANKERS & COMMISSI ON
IN GOVERNMENT

BROKERS

SECURITIES,

Joseph T. Bailey,

Edward B. Orne,

Nathan Hides,

William Ervisn,

Osgood Welsh,

Benjamin Rowland, Jr
Samuel A. Bispham,

Frederie A.

Hoyt,

GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING

William H. Rhaww, President,
Late Cashier of the Central

STOCKS,

13 Broad Street, New York,
Deposits received, eubject to Check, and Intere

Joseph P. Mumtobd,
Late of the

allowed.

HEATH.

T. W. P. HUGHES.

$5,000,000

Capital
NASSAU

PINE STREET

STREET, N. E. COR.

with

Loans for sale.

government.
Full information with regard to Government
,

times cheerfully

ROB’T H. MAURY.

Central National Bank,

descriptions of Government Bondsreceived on terms most
favorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United Stat< s
Has for sale all

City and Country accounts

and Canadas.
WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK,
•

*

The Tradesmens
291

BANK.

BROADWAY, NEW

YORK.
400,000

$1,000.00 0.

Capital

No. 336 BROADWAY Cor. WORTH

Designated Depository of the Government.

ST.

Bank¬

ers’ and Dealers* Accounts solicited.
D. L. ROSS, President
J. H. Stout, Cashier.

Gilliss, Harney & Co.,
BANKERS,
BROAD STREET.

NO. 24

Buy and Sell at Market Rates
SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS
and others, and allow interest on daily balances,
subject to sight draft.
Make collections on favorable terms,
ALL UNITED STATUS

And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or
Bale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities.

ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE,
BANKERS,

Street, New York.
Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securi¬
ties, of all issues, and execute orders fori he pur¬
chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur¬
No. 14 Wall

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
STOCK

BANKERS

BROKERS,

BOSTON.

No. 22 STATE STREET,

HENRY 8AYL1S

JAMES BECK,

JAMGB8 A. DUPEE,

Western Bankers.
J.W. Ellis, Prest. Lewis Worthington,
Theodore Stanwood, Cashier.

Cincinnati.

of

nil points WEST and SOUTH,
promptly remitted for. Capital Mock,

Collections made
and

V.-PraL

NATIONAL BANK

THE FIRST

on

$1,000,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000.

Dikectc rs.—John W. Ellis, Lewis
B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M.

Worthington, L.

Bishop, William
Mitchell, A 3

Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert

Winslow.

Gilmore, Dunlap & Co.,
West Fourth Street,

110

Sc

Charles.D. Carr & Co.,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

BROKERS,

AND

G A

AUGUSTA,

.

Dealers in

GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

REMITTED FOE.

Jas. M. Muldon
& Sons,
St., Mobile, Ala.
No. 52 St. Francis

Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬
ernment Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt
a’tention given to Collections.
References: r
B ibcock Bros & Co., Bankers, New York.

subject to check at sight.

Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York.
E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York.
Byrd & Halt, New York.
Martin, Bates & Co.. Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff <fc Gillespie.
Henry A Hurlbnrt. late Swift <fc Hurlbert.
Home Insurance Company ot New York.
New York LifoInsurance Company.
Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford.

Collections made in all parts of the United States
and British America.

Checks

accessible

points

day of payment.

on

UNION BANK OF LONDON.
FOR SALE.

•sssssssssssssssss—U—

D.
L>.
J
N.
.

Given,
3 3.BRO AD

T. H. McMahan & Co.

-

—

1

EC— ■

11

A. Given, of Watts, Given & Co., Padncah, Ky. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky.
M. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank of Ky.
S. Ray, late Cash’r Corn’] B’k of Ky., Lebanon, Ky

BANKING HOUSE OF

Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala.

THE

Jones & Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK.
BANK OF

CITY

COMMISSION MERCHANTS
tnd Dealer* in Domestic and. Foreign

N.

O., NEW

ORLEANS, LA.

Exchange.

GALVESTON, TEXAS.
Special attention given to Collections of all kinda,
having prompt and reliable correspondent* at all ac¬
cessible points in the State, and
REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT
EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.

Co. and D. 8. 8tetson A Co., Philadelphia. T. F.
Thirkield A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank
and Jos. E. Elder A Goodwin, St Louie. Fowler,
Stanard A Co, Mobile. Pike, Lapeyrs A Bro.,
New Orleans. Drake, Kleinworth A Cohen, Lon¬
don and Liverpool.

Burke &

Orders for the

purchase or sale of Government
Securities, Stocks,- Ronds, and Gold,
promptly executed.
Interest allowed
at

Draw

on

Co*,

STREET, NEW ORLEANS,

Merchants National Bank, New York, and
Bank of Liverpool, England.

Collections and remittances

Deposits, subject to cheques

Business.
Given, .Tone* & Co. are prepared to
draw Sterling Bill-, at sieht or sixty days, on
the Bank of Liverpool, in s-rns to suit purchasers.
The New Orleans House will make
Collections in that City and at all accessible

points South, and remit on the day of payment.

We refer to Bake of America atd National
Bank « f State of New York, New York City,
to any of the Kentucky Banks.

and

Jackson Brothers,
DEALERS IN

BANKERS,
54 CAMP

on

sight.

Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange

REFER TO

National Park Bank, Howes «fc Macy, and SpoffordL
Tileaton A Co., New York.
Second National
Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel A

NEW YORK,

And Dealer In all Classes of Govern¬
ment Securities and Gold.

and remitted for on

Underwriters Agency New York,
Ch irles Walsh. Pre-ident Bank of Mobile.

Watkins,

BROAD STREET,

COLLECTIONS MADE at aH

in

BANKER,




Travellim’

NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS,

Tenth National Bank.

L. S.

Commercial Credits for *he purchase of Mefchan
<Mse in England and the Continent.
Credits for the use of Travellers abroad.

108

Dealers

NO. 11

Correspondent, Yrkmiltb A Co.

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY

RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

rency,

BROKERS

PARIS.

IS8TTE

$l,0°0,000

'.

UKPLUS^

Co.,

1014 MAIN ST., RICHMOND, VA.
Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes,
State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &C.,
bought and sold on commission.
fW* Deposits received and Collections made sn
all accessible points in the United States.
N. Y.

ALSO

,

President.

WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Cashier.

CAPITAL

ON LONDON

JOHN MUNBOE Sc CO.,

ROB’T T. BROOK*

JA9. L. MAURY.

BANKERS AND

loanB

No.

$3,000,000.

NATIONAL

furnished.

R. H. Maury &

BROADWAY.

Capital

Philadelphia National Bank.

attention to business connected
the several departments of the

best terms.

Collections made for Dealers on

Cashier,

Government Depository and Financial
Agent of the United State..
We buy and sell all classes of Government
securities on the most favorable terms, and five

at all

318

,114

National Bank.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF
WASHINGTON,
H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke <fc Co.), Prbs’t.
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

especial
All the Government

Page, Richardson
& Co ,
STATE STREET, BOSTON,
AND

Washington.

Member of N.Y. Stock Ex

National Bank.

Fourth

Eastern Bankers.

BILLS OF EXCHANGE

AND

A. HAWLEY

Wilson,,

Conner &
No. 5

1

JkaiJLroud

Bank of the

STREET, N.Y.

NO. 29 NEW

Bankers.

Southern

Southern Bankers.

Bankers and Bickers.

promptly attended to.

.

STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, Sc
MENT

lfo« 19 Broad Street,
j

*

GOVERN

SECURITIES.

'

New York.

v--

■
*

*

&

Ponitor, amt gusunuw journal

ante’ fecttc, (Stommewiat

WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,

A

REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL

to

CONTENTS.

453 | Latest Monetary and Commercial
455 I English News
...
! Commercial and Miscellaneous
450

|

News

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND

457
458

.

COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Tobacco
Breadatuffs
Groceries.,..

465
467
408
468

458
462

Dry Goods
Imports

463

Prices Current

469
470

Cotton

Money Market, Railway Stocks,
U. 8. Securities, Gold Market,

Foreign Exchange, New York

City Banks. Philadelphia Banks
National Banks, etc

sale Prices NfY. Stock

456

Danville Railroad

453 j Richmond and

The recent Flnrry in Wall Street
The Proposed Foreign Loan ...
Labor Strikes and the Remedy..
Business under the Bankruptcy
Bill

Exchange

National, State, etc., Securities.
Commercial Epitome

464

and Tone of the

477- 7S

Market

THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND

®l)c ttfljronuU.
and

Financial Chronicle is issued every

Satur¬

day morning by the ‘publishers of Hum's Merchants' Magazine,
with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight
of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning icilh all
the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to
the hour of publication.
IN ADVANCE.
The Daily

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE

Tins Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with
Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana

mailed to all

$12 00
Bulletin, (exclusive of postage)
.
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For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financial
Chkoniolk, (exclusiveof postage)
5 00
Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It w, on the Chroni¬
others,(exclusive of postage)....

'

For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle,

cle,

20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin

without. The Daily

$1 20 in advance.

WILLIAM B. DANA &
60

Files for holding
Price #1 50.
The third volume

CO., Publishers,

William Street, New

the Chronicle or Bulletin can be

of the Chronicle, from July to

sive, is for sale at this Office ;

had at this Ojjice.

December, 1866, inclu¬

price, unbound, $5 00.

WALL STREET.
and sensitive condition of the money

THE RECENT FLURRY IN
The overstrained

York.

body at all acquainted with the

on

the

INSURANCE JOURNAL.

471 I Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
474
Insurance and Mining Journal .
475
472-73 | Advertisements ... .449-52, 476, 479-80

The Commercial

to

relations of Luxem
burg to Germany, of which it is a part—than it wras at once
supposed by the thoughtless multitude that wrar would be
Gold went up from 138 to 137, and
the immediate result.
the utmost consternation prevailed.
Now, it is not im¬
possible that wrar may eventually break outbetwreen Prussia
and France ; but it is necessary first to have a casus belli,
and secondly, to have a mutual readiness and desire to fight
the part of the belligerents.
Both these pre-requisites in

Railway News
,
Railroad, Canal, and MiscellaneBond List

France—an obvious fact which was long ago patent

every

THE CHRONICLE.

For

NO. 94

SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1867.

YOL. 4,

ors

INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES,

case

But

fail.
if there should in

before

even

us seem

to

a

few months be war in

Europe, why, it may be asked, should we be so much.alarm¬
ed for our financial stability ?
England would be neutral in

,

if some of the German holders of Five-twen¬
compelled to sell these securities, London would
absorb most of those that Frankfort lets go. Moreover, ?ti
case of war, the grain countries of Northern Europe would
produce less, and the demand for our breadstuffs and pro¬
visions would be enormous.
The consequent traffic would
increase the earnings of our railroads and give an impulse to
our internal commerce, so that in all directions industrial
enterprises would thrive and prosper. In the excitement of
the hour it was forgotton that usually in matters of trade the
losses of the belligerents are the profits of the neutrals, and
that we have little to lose, and might gain much if Europe
were so mad as to kindle the flames of a general war.
This view of the question seems to be gradually assuming
control over the public mind. And as our money market is
now easing rapidly, while currency flows back from the coun¬
try banks, and as idle capital becomes more and more eager
in quest of employment, it is probable, and facts confirm the
belief—that both at the Produce Exchange, at the Stock
Board, and in all departments of general business, a recovery

any
ties

just furnished a remarkable illustration of one
conspicuous mischiefs incident to a redundant currency.
A country whose financial system is unduly expanded is per¬
petually liable to pass from the hot to the cold stage an A
back again by turns. Just as with a patient in a fever the
whole organism is exquisitely sensitive to the smallest
exterior disturbance, so in our feverish monetary system a
very small cause may produce very considerable and unex¬
pected results. The news of a misunderstanding between
Prussia, France, and the King of Holland, relative to the
possession of the German Duchy of Luxemburg, has for
some time been known, and substantially no change has taken
place in the attitude of the parties which ought to cause
alarm for the peace of Europe. Yet, no sooner was it an¬
nounced by the cable that the King of IJoll&nd had declared

market has

event, and

are

may be soon
has prevailed

developed from the depressing
among us but too long.

.

languor which

of the

Vi? Inability hj$er the circumstances to make pver the fortress




THE PROPOSED

FOREIGN LOAN.

deferred the consideration of the foreign loan
of Mr. Sherman’s bill which was offered at the end

We have
clause

of the urgent pressure
topics. Tfow, however, that the war cloud is
rising in Europe the time seems to have arrived when the
public attention may rightly be claimed for this bill. As ©ur
readers will have observed, it is not designed to enable our
government to raise a new loan in Europe. We do not
need to borrow.
We are diminishing rBther than increasing
public debt. A glance at the copy of the bill which we
printed a few weeks ago shows that its proposed objects are
two, first to §aye iptprest by exchanging for 5 per cents the

of the

Thirty-ninth Congress, because

of other

our

THE CHRONICLE.

454

[April IS, 1867.

6 per

and

cent bonds now in the hands of European investors, the new bonds which the bill creates are intrinsically better
secondly, to prevent the disturbance which has often than our present Ten-forties. And who of us would give up

gold and foreign exchange I $1,000 of Five-twenties for $1,050 Ten-forties ? The disad*
by the return of our bonds from abroad. These are impor- vantage to foreigners of their interest being payable in our
tant advantages.
Can they be secured 1 Let us briefly ex- gold coin is of inferior and imaginary importance. Thanks
amine the bill in its relation to them both.
to our restless, unmatched mercantile enterprise, there is no
First the European holders of five-twenty bonds drawing country on the globe where American money is
unnegotiainterest at 6 per cent are to be induced to forego 1 per cent ble or unknown, and in London, Paris, Hamburg, Frankfort
of their claims and to accept a 5 per cent bond in exchange, there is no foreign money, except sterling, which is better
We are to persuade the holders to agree by making out the known or more easily negotiated.
bonds in foreign money instead of in American money.
Secondly, we think the influence has been much over-estiThus the English investor may change his five-twenties for mated which the importation of Five-twenties has
exerted, or
bonds expressed in pounds sterling payable in London, is likely to exert in times of monetary
panic in Europe. We
the French investor may have his new bonds in francs, pay- had a fair illustration of this last
Spring, when, notwithable in Paris, the German in thalers, payable in Frankfort, standing the severe character of the
pressure, the aggregate
and so on.
The people of each country may draw their of our Five-twenties which was returned was
probably less
interest in money which is familiar to them instead than 15 millions of dollars.
The fact is that the trouble to
of in a foreign coin with the value of which they
are us in case of panic has so far arisen, not so much by our
presumed to be imperfectly acquainted. The attractions of securities from abroad as by the heavy balances of foreign
such an arrangement, it is said, will be so generally apprefunds held here on call. It is estimated that an averciated, that foreign investors will be willing to forego the age of over 100 millions of dollars of foreign capital is
difference between 5 per cent, and 6 per cent, annual interest held here on account of the rate of interest
being so much
in order to secure it.
Lest, however, this inducement should higher than prevails at home. These balances are liable to
not be enough a second is added.
The bill provides that 5 be drawn down at any moment, and to the heavy remittances,
per cent, margin may be allowed on the exchange; that is, from this source, the large exportation of gold last summer
been caused in

„

•

the holder of

change

a

our

markets for

1,000 dollar 6 per cent, may receive in ex- is attributed rather than to the influx of Five-twenties
5 per cent, bond for the equivalent of 1,050 from Europe hither.
a

dollars.

Waving this objection, however, and admitting that our
question is, how we are to prevent these new Five-twenties might be sent over here at an inconvenient
sterling bonds from being sent over here in case of a monetary I moment, how would the situation be improved if these Fivepanic in Europe. To this it is answered that “ there would twenties could be called in, and if new sterling bonds could
be no market here for the new bonds.
Nobody at our Stock be substituted for them. Is it absolutely certain that the
Exchange would know anything about them. No brokers new bonds, for which there was a ready sale in England,
would want to deal in them. No American investors would would not meet an
equally ready sale at our Stock Exbuy them. They would be shut out of this country, andJ change? The business done between the two continents is
shut into the foreign country where they
were made payable.” so vast and so active, the mercantile and financial relaThese, then, are the two great arguments of the advocates tions thence resulting are so close, that it is impossible the
for the scheme. They claim that it would save interest
sterling bonds should not find their way here through the
though at the cost of increasing the capital of the debt, and ordinary channels for the transportation of foreign remitthat it would diminish the
danger that a panic in Europe tances. Once here they must be sold. They would speedily
would derange seriously our money market here.
acquire a special value as being scarce here, and as enjoying
It is obviously quite irrelevant in the
opponents of the higher favor in London than our other securities. When the
bill to argue for or against the propriety of
our borrowing conditions of the market were favorable it is easy to see how
money abroad for Government purposes. The bill has fre.
they might sell at a better relative price than securities
quently been objected to on such grounds, but as we have which were less available for foreign exportation. Instead,
shown it does not propose to borrow a
single dollar of new I therefore, of helping us to bridge over a time of panic by re<japital. Its simple object is to transmute one kind of security maining locked up abroad, it woijld be well if these securiinto another, to
exchange a 8 per cent, bond for a 5 per cent. I ties did not complicate matters, and make them worse,
bond, to convert some 300 millions of old Five-twenties I
Such are some of the objections to the projected foreign
into 315 millions of new consolidated Americo
European I loan. We might also urge against it the argument that
securities.
English investors are much more slow than ourselves to acNext it must be granted that there is
nothing unusual or cept novel securities in place of such as are well known,
unprecedented in the fact of sterling bonds payable in Lon-1 Even the new Five-twenties,
though intrinsically worth more
don being issued
by other countries to their British creditors. I than the old ones, because they have a longer time to run,
Perhaps no foreign bonds payable in Germany have ever I find little demand in England, because they are less known,
been issued, but in London
sterling bonds have been issued Hew, in the face of rooted prejudices, should we induce these
by several of our States’ Governments, by Russia, by Spain,
people to give up their Five-twenties, which they are well
by Chili and by many railroads and other corporations in acquainted with, and to
accept another bond instead, which
this country and elsewhere.
A glance at the share lists in js quite new and strange, and which is a 5
per cent, bond to
the English
papers suffice to show that such securities ex- boot.
We wish it were possible to arrive at a different
pressed in English money and pa^*ble in the English me-1 conclusion on this matter. But we are
compelled to admit
tropolis fetch a higher price in the market than similar that, although our five
per cent, bonds will, as we believe,
bonds would sell for if not
expressed in sterling money.
I be anxiously sought at no distant day at par, both here and
Granting all this, however, to the advocates of the foreign ia Europe, still to attempt a foreign negotiation of five per
loan, we fail to see how their plan is to be effective for the I cent, bonds at
present, is not a promising scheme. When
purposes they have in view. First we doubt whether the
we have got our Seven thirties funded and have paid offall our
holders of our Five-twenfies abroad would be
willing to give short-date indebtedness, when our deranged currency is rethem up on the terms proposed. It is difficult to
prove that stored to h®#Hh and our fiscal system is reformed, we shall
The

second

e-




J

I

April 13,1867.]
much better position,
do without one.

be in a
or

to

455

THE CHRONICLE.
either to make a foreign loan

inducing them to take the stand they now
assume as to wages and the term of lab#r.
We have not the ear of the laboring class, but if we had

done much toward

we

should

LABOR STRIKES AND THE REMEDY.

attempt to

exhibit the recklessness and im¬

policy of this movement in the present condition of produc¬
It is as anomalous as unexpected that at a time of general tion and trade. The process of national reaction from the
depression of trade, and after an almost universal decline in inflation of prices has set in with considerable severity. Few
the prices of commodities, there should be an extensive de¬ capitalists engaged in production are making their usual
mand for an increase in wages.
profits, and a very large proportion are conducting opera¬
In this city and Brooklyn several of the mechanical tions at a steady loss. The result of this condition of affairs
branches of labor, following out the decisions of their re¬ is that for months past many manufacturers in New England,
spective associations, recently announced their determina¬ and in this State also, have been compelled to curtail their
tion to work after the 1st of the current month only at a production or to suspend work altogether.
Merchants find
material advance. The demand comes chiefly from those the results of trade so unsatisfactory that they are buying
employed in building operations, and has probably been the least possible amount of goods—a course which reacts
stimulated by the active efforts to supply the present extra¬ injuriously upon the producing interest.
The country, too,
ordinary demand for dwellings. A similar movement has is suffering from the effects of heavy taxation, and the popu¬
taken place at the larger industrial centres of the country. lation generally are compelled to curtail their consumption;
In the mining districts of Pennsylvania, the men have com¬ which further depresses the markets, and renders labor less
bined in large numbers, preventing a minority who are will¬ valuable to employers. At the same time, financial affairs
ing to accept late rates from continuing work, and making show an unusual sensitiveness, and capitalists evince an ex¬
riotous demonstrations, which in Luzerne County have in¬ treme caution about entering upon new enterprises, until the
duced the Sheriff to call upon tho Governor for military aid. price of labor has been reduced to a point more nearly cor¬
At Pittsburg several thousand iron molders have been on responding with the purchasing ability of the people.
Now if, under these circumstances, the general demand at
strike for some time, and the employers say they cannot
yield to their demand without serious loss. At the coal mines present being made could be successful, it would only hasten
of Morris County, New Jersey, several thousand men are and make sure the ruin of the employers yielding to it.
now out of employment through an effort to enforce higher
They cannot produce now at a profit—the course of prices
has been and still is continually downward—so that if em¬
wages, and are forming combinations to carry their point.
In New England, labor derangements are spreading daily. ployers would consent to make the advance their loss would
In some cases an advance of pay is demanded ; in others an be greater and their failure inevitable.
Such a result is not
effort is made to effect a reduction of two to three hours in in the interest of the laborer. The return to a healthy state
the term of work, which of course amounts to an important of trade must be either through mutual sacrifices on the part
advance in the price of labor ; and in other cases the hands of capital and labor, or through general bankruptcy.
Lower
have struck in resistance to efforts on the part of employers prices necessitate lower wages, and lower wages will again
be followed by a further decline in prices.
to reduce wages.
j
But if the laborer cannot be brought to see this, capitalists
In Illinois, also, there is difficulty in the labor market,
growing out of the adoption of a law making eight hours a owe it to the whole country, as well as to themselves, to re¬
legal day’s work, in the absence of contracts to the contrary. sist these unreasonable demands, even if their resistance re¬
The employers propose to pay by the hour, at the rate here¬ sults in a total suspension of production.
And they should
tofore paid for ten hours’ work, while the workmen require organize for the purpose.
They have long known that labor
the same pay for eight hours they have heretofore received is organized with great unanimity in opposition to their
for ten; and both sides are organizing to enforce their re¬ interests; but, until now they have not been aware to what
extent of recklessness and injustice their resistance to the
spective demands.
There is little doubt that these untimely movements are course of the markets and of production could be carried.
due, to no small extent, to the political countenance which Their union is their strength; and there can be no really
has been given to che eight hours movement, now being vig¬ effective opposition to their movements without an equally
orously prosecuted throughout the country. The labor as¬ close combination among employers. In some instances the
sociations have refused to give their support to candidates employers have formed associations for the regulation of
who would not pledge themselves to the advocacy of their labor; but, as a rule, they are without organization, and con¬
Trade
purposes, and politicians have not been found wanting who sequently very much at the mercy of their men.
were
ready to pander to the demand. When the question jealousies may interpose a difficulty in the way of or¬
has been raised in the Legislatures, members have shown a ganization ; but the weight of the interests threatened,
fear of voting against it.
In Illinois and Michigan an eight demands that all such petty considerations be set
The power of endurance is oh the side of the
hour law has been adopted, in direct opposition to the pecu¬ aside.
liar necessity of agricultural States, that, at certain seasons capitalists, and the moment the workmen see employers
especially, work should be carried on for longer hours; and, presenting a united front the spirit of their resistance will be
in our own State, the Assembly has adopted a law to that broken, the power of their union, upon which they so rashly
effect by a large majority. In Congress, a bill was intro¬ presume, will fade away, and the labor market will be left
duced into the House making eight hours the limit of daily to the healthy regulation of individual interest.
What is really needed, at present, in almost every branch
labor in the Government workshops, which at first was re¬
jected by a considerable majority, but on the yeas and nays of production, is a reduction in the price of labor. Em?
being called, was adopted by a majority equally large. In ployers have for some time felt this arid appreciated the
the Senate, however, political fear had less influence, and the necessity; but they have been powerless against the resis¬
bill was rejected. Sufficient, however, has transpired in the tance of the unions; they have, therefore, but two alterna¬
Legislatures and at the elections to satisfy the workingmen tives, either to combine for protecting the interests of pro¬
squander their means in paying for labor more
that they have considerable power over legislation jn the duction,

regulation of $eir affairs \ and this discovery h$s doubtless




than

they can get for products,

In resisting this the work*

THE CHRONICLE

456

ultimately be the greater sufferers. Success in
their present rash efforts must force a large amount of the
Libor of the country to be kept idle, with the result ot pov¬
erty among the -working classes, a scarcity of products, a
protraction of high prices, a curtailment of trade, a limita¬
tion of the progress of wealth and diminished ability to com¬
pete with the producers of other countries.

[April 13, 1867.

of June next, we will say,
be commenced against a

proceedings in bankruptcy will
firm now doing business in
New York.
On the 15th of February last this
firm,
we
will suppose, contracted a confidential debt with
another firm, there, having for a long time existed be¬
tween the
two
firms reciprocal relations of service in
this way.
Ten days afterw ard, or on the 25th of Feb¬
ruary, the debtor firm deposits with the creditor firm
bank or railway stock in amount sufficient to protect the lat¬
BUSINESS UNDER THE BANKRUPTCY BILL.
ter against loss, in the event of disaster to the borrowers.
A movement looking to the modification, if not to the ab¬ In the second week of June
proceedings, as we before sug¬
solute repeal, of the Bankruptcy Bill passed by the
Thirty- gested, are to be commenced in bankruptcy against these
ninth Congress was begun in the first days of the session of borrowers.. In trie course of the
proceedings it comes to
its successor, but as the Fortieth
Congress has adjournec light that the transaction took place to which wre have re¬
without taking action upon the matter, it becomes the com¬
ferred, and that when the security was deposited the debtors
mercial community to prepare themselves for the effect upon estate w’as
already in an embarrassed condition. The protheir financial relations and general policy of this most se¬ visions of the act are
specific and precise to bring the trans¬
rious and important law.
action under the head of a “ fraudulent conveyance.”
For,
By the terms of the act it was provided, that as to the ap¬ says the act in section 35:
pointment of officers created by the act, it should go into
If any person, being insolvent, or in contemplation of
insolvency,
within four months before the filing of the petition bv or against him,
effect immediately upon its approval by the
President; but with view to
give a preference to any creditor or person having a
the ffrgt day of June, 1807, was fixed as the earliest
day at c.aim against him, or who is under any liability for him, procures any
which proceedings under the act should be commenced. This part of his property to be attached, sequestered, or seized on execution,
or makes any
payment, pledge, assignment, transfer, or conveyance of
last proviso seems to have generated an
impression that the any part of his property, either directly or indirectly, absolutely or
act has as yet no
operative force of consequence to the com¬ conditionally, the person receiving such pay merit, pledge, assignment,
transter, or conveyance, or to be benefited thereby, or by such attach¬
mercial community. But this is a very serious
mistake, and ment, having reasonable cause to believe such person is insolvent, and
one which it behoves all
persons engaged in business, and that such attachment, payment, pledge, assignment, or conveyance, is
made in fraud of the provisions of this act, the same shall be void, and
especially all persons engaged in the large and necessarily the
assignee may recover the property, or the value of it, from the per¬
confidential operations of an extensive traffic of
any kind in son so receiving it, or so to bd benefited
such a community as this
metropolis, must carefully avoid
And a little further on, the act defines fraud by adding
making.
that if such sale, assignment, transfer, or conveyance is not
The bankrupt system is directly aimed at the
right of an made in the usual and ordinary course of business of the
insolvent creditor making any
preference, which under the debtor, that fact shall be priina facie evidence of fraud.
common law and under our
State statutes is
permitted. While in another section it is also provided that if the cred¬
There is of course a difficulty in some cases in
enforcing this itor accepts such preference, having reasonable cause to be¬
principle. The trader only gradually passes into a state of lieve that the security was pledged in contemplation of ininsolvency. When, therefore, shall a preference be consid¬ solvency, his claim shall be disallowed by the assign¬
ered as made in view of
insolvency, and therefore fraudulent ee, etc.
men

must

a

under the act ?

The bill

now’

passed makes the period four

be little doubt, we

think, that under the opera¬
bankruptcy pro^ tion of these clauses, there will in many cases be great diffi¬
ceedings.
culty in escaping such action in the Commissiary courts as
The first of June is now two months off.
Under the act will result in
seriously disturbing transactions now looked
a
petition of bankruptcy may be filed, and proceedings com¬
upon as completed, and, no doubt at ail, that a first appre¬
menced in the case of any firm or individual in New
York hension of their effect must generally interfere with the sys¬
There

can

months before the commencement of the

within two months from this date.

These

be directed to

proceedings

may

tem

of

reciprocal accommodation existing

among

merchants,

procuring either a voluntary or an involun¬ and, to a certain extent, also among bankers in this country,
tary bankruptcy; and in either case, transactions in which
and especially in this city.
Upon a future occasion we shall
the future bankrupt is at this moment
engaged will pome set forth, at greater length, the probable consequences of the
directly under the operation of the act.- For it is provided enforcement of the newr
Bankrupt Act upon the business and

in Section

35, under the head of “ Preferences and Frau¬ the
prosperity of the country. This is a topic too vast and
Conveyances Declared Void,” and in Section 39, suggestive
to be touched upon and discussed at the end of an
under the head of
“Involuntary Bankruptcy,” that transac¬ article. But wre desire, to-day, particularly and clearly to
tions which may have taken place “ within four months next
fix the attention ofjffie mercantile community upon the fact
before the commencement of the
proceedings in bankruptcy ” that they are at this moment acting under the direct opera¬
shall be brought under the purview of the
commissary, and tion of this lawr in respect to some of the most extensi ve and
shall materially affect the settlement of the case. It will be
important of the relations w hich they are daily knotting and
seen, therefore, that ever since the first week in February,
unknotting one with another.
1867, merchants and others doing business have been acting
dulent

under the sword of

law which may be brought down
upon
them with fatal effect in the first week of June next. And

this

a

RICHMOND AND DANVILLE

RAILROAD.

not

The Richmond and Danville Railroad Company, chartered
only in the case of persons contemplating or
performing what are universally recognized as acts of and organized in 1847, completed their road, which extends
fraud, but in the case also of persons who desire simply to from Richmond to Danville, 1404 miles, in the spring of 1856,
conform to what are accepted as
ordinary rules of financial The State of Virginia owns three-fifths of the company’s sharehonor at all the large centres of American trade and com.
eapital, also a State loan of $400,000, and has guaranteed its
merce; to wit, pay up or secure in view of insolvency, any debt to the amount of $200,000. The operating accounts of

confidential loan.

To make the matter clear let




I
us

take

a

cafe,

-

the fiscal years

On the 12th pare as

follows:

ending September 80, 186Q and \860, com¬
,

Paaaenger

United States

.

Increase.

1866.

1860.

earnings
Freight earnings
Mails, express, &c

$152,689 98
884,472 78
.
23,841 78

$204,983 27
380,878 86
76,381 68

$560,904 43

$661,743 81

$62,898 84

Decrease.
$
6
4,094 3.

62,589 90
$100,838 88
10,970 69

10,970 69

transportation'

Against which

$4,917,500

21,460

74,909
1.488,500
202,575
67,666
-

....

52,007

and turnouts
Total
R. R. Company
Add Piedmont Railroad : Danville to Greensboro
Length of sidings

owned by R. & D.

turnouts on same

pany not

J
^
miles 140.50
ii o?
BuleB TITTI
158 97

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

$1,191,403

Inc.

$2,909,074

36,000

1,488,500
202.575

46,200

5,070

that the R. <fe D. Com¬

only lease, but are the actual owners of the Pied¬

Railroad.

mont

The funded debt of tha
stood at the

Company Oct. 1, 1860 and 1866,

following amounts :
1866.

I860.

Virginia loan, 7’e, redeemable 1887-88
Bonds guaranteed by Va., due 1875-76
Bonds

(extended)

44

(4th 44mort.) registered due 1873
coupon due 1875
For funding interest, due ’69 to ’76

44
44

$600,000
200,000
400,000

$600,000
200,000
30,500 Dec.
504,000 Inc.
322,000 Inc.
61,000 Inc.

369,500

504,000
322,000

61,000

$1,200,000 $1,717,500 Inc. $516,500

Total

Virginia State Bonds are redeemable in 34 years from
April 8, 1853, to September 30, 1854, by the payment of an,
annuity of 7 per cent. This covers 6 per cent, interest and 1
The

140.50
1 52
11.26
153.27
58.50
1.98

cent, principal; the latter, by continuous re investment at
cent, yielding the principal sum in the 34 years above
stipulated for. From the ledger it appears that the Company

per

6 per

miles 153.97

operated by B. & D. R. R. Company

$6,803,157

From this account it would appear

$2,461 22
710,828 99

,orn

owned and operated.

Mainline: Richmond to Danville..
Branch line: Manchester to Rocketts

Total

$3,726,037

Total

of the Piedmont
Railroad, extending from Danville, Va., to Greensboro, N. Car
48* miles, which this company leased and have operated since
February 20, 1866, at the fixed rent of $75,000 a year. In¬
cluded in the ordinary expenses are $30,000 paid on this ac¬
count, and also $16,739 11 paid on account of internal revenue
tax.
The whole line operated by the company in 1859-60
and.in 1865-66, is thus stated in the reports for those years :
1865-66

Sidings and

..

Sundry accounts

109,848 85

278,575 96
69
$282,328 47 $284,789
Earnings less expenses
818,996 67
Extraordinary expenses .... 108,166 08
The earnings for 1865-68 include those
expenses

Lines

charged the following accounts, viz.

are

Coat of road and property
State lean ainking fund
Stock in Piedmont R.R. Co
Balance due 44
“
44

$111,809 57

$672,714 00
387,924 31

-«*

.

Cash in banks

$560,904 48

Total earnings

Ordinary

457

THE CHRONICLE.

April 13,1867.]

Greensboro is now laid are indebted to the State on this account two
years’ instal¬
with heavy rail, and with the exception of about 20 miles
ments amounting to $84,000.
north of the Appomattox River, which it is proposed to relay,
The over-due interest on the guaranteed and mortgage bonds
is in fair running order.
Daring the year 1,100 tons of new
is-being taken up by an issue of funding bonds, payable at
iron were laid down in place of worn-out rail, and 114,958
short dates from 1869 to 1876. Interest on all bonds but the
cross-ties. The rolling stock October 1, 1860 and 1866, is re¬
State loan has been paid as it became due since January 1866.
presented in the following statement:
The bills payable, which form a very large item in the gen¬
Loco8-wheel cars.
6-wb cars 4-wh. Total
motives. Pass. Bagg’e. Box. Platfm. coal.
cars. Cars. eral account, it is proposed to liquidate by an issue of ten
i860
23
52
60
99
whole track from Richmond to

The

=

im.'.

*

,

20
16

25

:

189
145

10
5

49 *

430
285 years’ bonds.

22

48

debt will probably be

The ultimate amount of the funded

engines is considered ample for the
prospective business of the road for several years to come.
The

present stock of

$2,500,000. If the net earnings be maintained as
The additions in the last fiscal year consisted of 7 locomotives,
by the result of last years’ earnings at $284,000, and
5 passenger and 41 freight cars.
they are more likely to increase than decrease, a debt to this
The miles of road operated in 1859-60 was 142, and the amount can be safely managed.
The interest at 7 per cent,
will be $175,000, leaving $109,000 for sinking fund and what
average in 1865-66 (including seven months operations on the
Piedmont Railroad) 171 miles. The train mileage in these extraordinary expenditures on the road exigencies may de¬
raised to

shown

fiscal years compares as
,

1865-66

94,724
114,066

Total.
257,829
239,951

Service.
28,759
41,292

Coal.

Freight.
119,261
78,399

Passenger.
1859-60

mand.

follows :
10,065
6,194

Cateat iJIonetarg

being 1,816 miles, and in 1865-66,
1,403 miles to the mile of road operated, which shows a re¬
duction in the latter year of 413 miles for each mile of road—the total in 1859-60

length in operation.
The passenger trafiic
lowing statement:
Passengers
carried,
41,165
81,139

years.
1859-60
1865-66

English Market Report*—Per

Money Market.—The threatening aspect of affairs on the
decline in Europe of all secur¬
ities. At last dates, however, the panic feeling had somewhat subsi¬
ded, and an improvement set in. The course of Consols and American
securities, as indicated by the daily closing price, has been as follows :

on

the road is represented in the fol¬
Eastward

,

,

Pass’gers

Miles

traveled,
2,099,415
1,815,127

carried,
40,175
31,547

Total

,

.

Pass’gers

Miles

traveled.
1,944,262
1,838,490

carried,

81,330
62,686

v

Miles

traveled.
4,043,677
3,653,617

Consols for money
D S. 6’s (1862)
Illinois Central shares.
Erie Railway shares...

The return of 1865-66 does not include Government pas¬

The

sengers, 5,253 of whom traveled 515,672 miles. Including
these the total number of passengers was 67,939, carried

4,169,289 miles.
The tonnage statement for the two years

years.

1869-60

43,483
24,205

1885-66,

■>

/

Eastward
Tons
Miles
carried.
carried,

26,619
43,916

4,828,811

2,242,731

Total
Miles
Ton*

2,301,931

1,920,297

the two

periods

as

follows

carried.

carried.

70,102
08,121

7,139,742
4,169,028

stated in the
1, 1860 and 1866, compares for

:
1860.

Capital stock

Funded debt
Interest due
44

$1,981,297
1,200,100

:

on

bonds....

Loans, &c...

bills payable
Sundries

Transportation balance..




.

73,608
88,430

560,748

2,149,437

$8,844,083

75)4
78%

75%
78%

74%
70%

37)4

38

86%

84%

84%

78

78%

$6,808,157

Increase..
44

“
,

“

“
“

“

“

Wed. 10. Thu. 11

Tnes. 9.

90%
78%
76%
80%

90%
78%
76%

90%
74%
77
37

an

day

The market has been dull

average

1,598,089

Increase.. $2,969,074

•

•

was as

•

•

36

S. 6’s at Paris

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

75%

....

75%

(American 870,000) 668,-

and heavy throughout the week,

decline of £d. per pound. The

closing prices of each

follows:

Tone of market
Bales sold

Closing quotations.

Fri., 5.

Sat., 6.

Inactive.
8,000

Heavy.
8,000

12%d.

12%d.

Mon., 8. Tnes., 9. Wed., 10. Thu., 11
Heavy. Quiet.
Heavy. Heavy.
8,000
8,000
8,000
10,000

12%d.

12d.

12%d.

12®%^

Liverpool Breadstuff8 Market.—Breadstuff’s have been firm and prices
At the close Corn was somewhat easier, and 8d below the
highest Wheat is very buoyant.

advanced.

Fri. 5.
s. d.

Sat. 6.
s. d.

Mon. 8.
s. d.

(Mil. red No. l)p. ctl 13 6
(Califor. white) 44
13 6
Cora (West, mx’d) p. 4801bs 41 3

18 6
13 6
41 0
47
34
28 9
43 0

13 6
13 6
41 6
46
34
28 9
43 0

$
517,500
79,547
84,000
37,984
625,700
15,654

•

76%

Liverpool Cotton Market.—Stock April 5
000 bales.

1866.

$1,931,297
1,717,500
79,f4T
84,ICO
37,984
699,308
54,084

State loan
...1

on

•

.

>

The financial condition of the company, as

general balance sheets of Oct.

.

.

Mon. 8.
90

Bat. 6.
91

following are the daily closing quotations for U

Frankfort

is shown in the

*

.

Pans••••••«••*«,«#• • •

with

W estward
Tons
Miles
carried.
carried.
/

Fri. 5.
91

and Frankfort:

following table:
Fiscal

Cable.

London

Continent this week has caused a sudden

Westward

,

Fiscal

anil Commercial Cngltst) Neroa.

Wheat
44

•

Barley(American) per 60 lbs
Oats (Am. & Can.) per 45 lbs
Flour (West.Canal) per bbl.
Peas.. .(Canadian) per qtr

47
34
28 9

Tnes. 9. Wed. 10. Thu 11
s. d.
s. d.
s. d.

13 9
13 9
42 3
48
35
28 9
45 0

Liverpool Provisions Market.—Beef and pork are

43 9
48
85

44 0

13 9

42

Q

4^

8°
45 0

lower; bacon is

THE CHRONICLE.

458
Si. 6d. per

cwt. higher

advanced 6d.

other commodities

;

are

Lard

without change.

April 1—St. Eagle, Havana-

the 11th, but towards the close receded to 49a

on

Beef (ex. pr. mess) p 304 lbs 137

0

P©r£;(TEast. prime mes9) per
Bacon (Cam. cuv) p. ll2ibs
Lard (American)
“
“
GheeSe (mid. Am.)

44

“

38 6
49 0
60 0

77
42
49
60

77
42
49
60

77

5
0
0
0

6
0
0
0

42

49
60

6
0
0
0

77
42
49
60

77
42

49
60

$700

Aspinwall—

“

Total for the week

6
0
0
0

6d. better

;

roeic

(com.) 3d. lower; do (fine'

Ashes

Is. higher; turpentine

steady at 37s.: petroleum unchanged, but spirit? Id. higher; cloverseed 2s. 6d. higher : oils and cake without chauge.
Mon 8. Tue9. Wed. 10. Th. 11#
s. d.
s. d.
b. d
s. d.
e. d.
s. d.
33 6
33 0
33 6
33 o
33 6
33 6
B 8
8 6
8 6
8 6
8 3
8 6
17 0
16 -0
17 0
16 0
16 0
IT 0
37 0
37 0
87 0
37 0
37 0
8T 0
1 5
1 5
1 5
1 5
1. 5
1 5
1 0
1 0
1 0
0 11
Oil
Oil
44 6
44 0
44 6
44 0
44 6
44 6
54 0
54 0
54 0
66 6
54 0
56 6
52 0
51 6
51 6
51 6
52 0
52 0
66 0
65 0
65 0
66 0
65 0
65 0
£10 0 £10 0 £10 0 £10 0
£10 0
£10 0
£39 0
f£39 0 £39 0 £39 0 £30 0
£39 0
£.. .£131 0 £131 0£1310 £1310
£131 0
£410 £41 0 £41 0 £410
£41 0
£41 <)
Sat. 6.

Fri. 5.

Ashes—pots
Rosin

per

112 lbs

(com Wilm).
(fine)

*.*

44

“

Sp turpentine

“

Petro. (std white)—per 9 lbs
44
'

spirits
per gall.
Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs.
Clover seed (Am. red)
“
Iron (9c. pig mxd uum) p. ton.
Linseed (Calcutta).
,
* “
cake (obl’g).. .per ton
44
oil

Sperm oil

Whale oil

“

44
(Iceland) .per 252 lbs

The sugar

market is firm.

84 on*

..

Previously reported
Total since

508,139

January 1, 1867
for

March.—The

following is a .state
Assay Office at New York for

ment of business at the United States

the month

$477,340

*

United States Assay Office

Liverpool and London Produce Markets.—Generally quiet.

Craz—

Gold
Silver

6,260

2—St. Henry Cha’incey,

*,000

...

'

Gold

.

6
0
0
0

Mansanillo—
Gold
5—St. Alabama, Vera
.

Gold
2—St. Henry Channcey,

44

Mon 8. Tues. 9. Wed 10. Thu 11
s. d.
B. d.
8. d.
s. d.
125 0
125 0
125 0
125 0

Sat. 6.
s. d.
127 6

[April 18,1867.

ending March SO, 1867

:

DEPOSITS OP COLD. •

Foreign coin
Foreign bullion

$16,000 00
9,000 00
485,000 00— $510,00000

United States bullion
DEPOSITS OP

SILVER, INCLUDING PURCHASES.

Foreign coin

$19,000 00

Foreign bullion
United States bullion (contained in
Washoe
:
Lake Superior
Nevada
Total deposits, payable in bars.
Total deposits, payable in coins

5,000
6,000
13,000
1,500
<>,000

gold)

00
00
00
00
00—

220,500 00—

Gold, bare stamped
Transmitted to United States mint,

United States

$68,fcOQ

00

563,5/0

00

$343,000 00

422.141 91
193,976 07

Philadelphia, for coinage....

Mint Statement

March.—The

for

following is a

statement of

deposits and coinage at the Mint of the United Stated
during the month of March, 1867 :
DEPOSITS.

Value.
Gold

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.

Total

Value.

$305,770 14[Silver deposits inc. porch.

deposits, all sources..
deposits

$18,144

16

$323,914

»

COINAGE EXECUTED—GOLD.

Exports for the Wkkk.—The imports this week show an
dry goods, but are about the same in general merchandise,
the total being $4,759,407
against $4,242,200 last week, and
$6,327,863 the previous week. The exports are $4,392,123 this week,
against $4,660,390 last week, and $4,836,282 the previous week. The
exports of cotton the past week were 20,640 bales, against 18,863 bales
last week. The following are the imports at New York for week end
ing (for dry goods) April 5, and for the week endiug (for general
merchaniise) April 6 :
Imports

and

Increase in

POBXION IMPOST8 AT NEW YORK FOB THE WIRE,

Drygoods

General merchandise...

1866.

$1,860,803

$948,192
2,063,6S3

$2,918,981
4.665,269

$1,714,385
3,045,022

$3,011,875

$7,584,250
79,770,062

$4 759,407

$3,746,645
63,569,236

Previously reported

32,245,465

$67,315,781

Since Jan. 1
our

1865.

2,385,737

Total for the week

In

1864.

$85,257,340

1867.

63,114,364

$87,854,312

$67,873,771

report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry

goods for one week later.
following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from
of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending April 9 :

The

the port

EXPORTS PROM HEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

1864.

1865.

1866.

$3,766,748

$2,960,719

$6,069,510

38,968,225

53,427,835

60,872,431

$42,734,973

$56,383,554

$66,941,941

Per the week

Previously reported....
Since Jen. 1

1867.

$4,392,123
51,082,034

$55,474,157

The value of

exports from this port to different countries (exclusive
specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol¬
lowing table:
of

Since

This

To
Great Britain...
France
Holland & Belg.

week.

$2,164,903
433,299

58,113
808,842

Germany

N.Bnrope

Other
.

Spain

Japan

81,539

The

756,600
736,679
523,597

195,188

.

Australia
Br.N A Colonies

173,764
170,584
723,718

49,567

Other S. Europe
Best Indies
China A

Jan. 1,1867
$33,531,059
8,469,473
1,186,551
5,722,313

27,525
123,454

This

j

To
| Cuba.
Hayti

Since
Jan. 1.

week.

Other W. I

Mexico
New Granada...
Venezuela
Br. Guiana
Brazil
OtherS. A. ports

All other ports.

$114,892
11,064
140,162
19,488
83,214

$2,005,044

30,895
34,166

355,893
565,936
999,080

44,447

816,333

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
ending April 6,1867 :
Patriot doubloons.

$89,068

gold....

67,903
3,744

silver...
Spanish doubloons
5—St, S&xonla, Hamb’g—
Foreign silver
American

Silver bars
5—St. City of

97,081

British gold
5—St. Europe, HavreGold bars

23,451

*

500

Foreign silver

Total for the week.
,

^

..

Total since Jan. 1, 1867

4,522,782 1852
9,379,727

5,974,098
5,051,496
6,838,436
4,826,331
;

2,805,478
7,177,178
as

Dollars

Value."
62 50
25 60

25
15

Fine bars..

7,882 28

i
$310,519

15,245

$10,500 00
11,100 00

200
200

60 00
20 00

Half Dimes
Three-cent pcs.

76

200

$10 00

4,206

126 00

15

801 97

87,515

$22,607 97

Fine bars

at

COPPER.

$8,125 00 J Three Cent pi’ces 342,000
5,385.00 I Five Cent pieces2,678,000

812,500
269,250

One Cent, pieces.
Two Cent pieces

Total.

$10,260 00
133,900 00

.4,101,750 $157,670 00
RECAPITULATION.

Gold Coinage...
15,245
Silver
ao
...
37,515
Total Ne. of pieces

$310,519 76
22,607 97

i

f

Copper coinage. 4,101,750 $157,670 00

—I

4,154,610

$496,798 71

Pennsylvania Bonds.—The sale of the

$23,000,000 redemption bonds
The following table ex¬
hibits in which shape they are wanted, and how they will be issued:
Five p. c. loan, redeemable in 5 years, and payable in 10 years
$92,850 00
of this State

was

concluded

ou

the 1st iust

Five p. c. loan, redeemable in 10 years, and payable in 15 years
Five p. c. loan, redeemable in 15 years, and payable in 25 years....
Six p. c. loan, redeemable in 5 years, and payable in 10 years..
Six p. c. loan, redeemable in 10 years, and payable in 15 years
Six p. c. loan, redeemable in 15 years, and payable in 25 years... .

9 ,479 88
17
00
12
83

720,983
4,907,150
7,909,520
9,270,016

$23,000,000 00
that seventeen out of the twenty-three millions are
taken in bonds which do not mature for over ten years. The fact that
It will be

seen

many of the
dence which is
so

subscribers are trustees and guardians shows the confi.
reposed in the credit of the State. About one million ii

taken at five, the rest at six per cent

)c

Bankers’ ©alette.
DIVIDENDS.

from day to day lists oi bonds, Ac., lost, and
dividends declared.
These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday
morning such as have bet n published through the week in the Bulletin
will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below will be found thoM
published tbe last week in the Bulletin
We give

in our Bulletin

|

NAME OF COMPANY.

PAYABLE.

bAlV
p.

o’t.

BOOKS CLOSED.
WHEN.

WHERE.

Railroads.
Central of New Jersey....
Cin. Ham. A Dayton stock
Fractional parts cash..

BUSINESS

5
4

AT

April 2 \ 108 Liberty st. Apr. 10 to Apr. 20
April 20. Companys office Apr. 10 to Apr. 20
April 20. Companys Office Apr. 10toApr.20‘.
THE

STOCK

BOARDS.

following statement shows the description and number of shares sold at
Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week endiug

The
the
on

$9,5S6,983

imports of bpecie at this port during the week have been

follows;




1858

5,034,202 1857
10,649,696 1856
15,589,729 1855
9,659,322 1854
2,109,230 1853

860
.859...

Tht

Same time In

$5,575,146

10,600
22,2u0

imee

6,613,641

$7,014,259

Same time in

861

196,000
25,000

....

guarter Dollars,

$500,618

.

Previously reported

1866
1865
1864
1868....
1868....

Hall Dollars

Paris,
Liverpool—

7,871

Denomination. No. of pcs.
25
Quarter dollars.

SILVElt

296,295
1,967,2^2
492,025
939,654
206,341

York for the week

April 4—St. Eagle, Havana—

No. of pcs.
Value.
Denomination.
Double Eagles..
15,105
$302,100 00
25
250 Ot
Eagles
25
125 00
Half eagles
25
75 00
Three dollars...
Total

Friday:
Sat.

Bank Shares

Mon.

Tues.
80

60

206

'*60

18

74

200

100

Wed.
130

Thnrs. Fri’y. Week.
861
250
135

Railroad shares, viz.
Central of New Jersey...

Chicago A Alton
ao
preferred..
Chic. Burl. A Quincy

Chicago A Northwestern. 4,800
5,700
do
do
Pref. 8.000 11,700
;

Chicago, B, Isl. A Pacific. $.548 11,835

*24

83

306
210

*450

*200

TOO

100

4,200 7^650
12,400 10,600
6,100 12,100 7,800 8,425

8,200

9*100

8,500

18,400

1,306

1,100

94

84,150
69,600
51,801

,

4,400 10,100

7,700

800

500

6,854 19,450

6,200

100

-,

P. da Chien
do
1st pref.

New York
New York

H. pret

L., Alton <fcT.
do
do

St.

pret

pref

do

do

.

150

8,500

10

1,100

18,020

5,500

100

50

*

-r-f -

>

-

100

Quicksilver
improvin't— Bost.W. Pow

400
100
200
300

44

Canton

■jdegraph—West’n Union
Express—Adams

.

.

6,520

2,100
3,925
12,650

92

248

1,000

10,450

6.665

24.664

4, SCO

52,750
800
104

500

•

100

....

100

600

2,100
110

....

....

....

700

1,500
1,000

2,835

1,200
2,300

1,000
4,100

1,200

100
200

1,500
4,000

500

25
4

« •

•

•

•

•

»

....

*

300

200
3.140

2,778

2,600
8,475

4,023

$
77,000
2,0 0
....

3.000

40,000

78
500
550

200

200
200
300

4,001

1,860

50

280
2
20

#

,

100

....

170

870

4,350

7,865

4,600
9,100
2,700
3,900
16,730
955
b
,

50
180

4,240
25,631

sold at the

—

Thur.

Wed.

Tnes.

Fri.

$18,<;00
$80,000 $120,000 $23,000 $
14,000 373,500
53,000
7o,500
422,000

«

•

4,00)

10,000
62,000

.

•

•

....

....

23,000

7,000

..

24

the week, are given in the following statement:

Mon.

Sat.

2,91)0

1,100

Government, State and City and other bonds

Regular Board, daily and for

200
....

....

25
30

5

100

U.S. 6fs, 1881 .
U.S 6’s (5-20’b) .
U.S 6’8 (old) ...
U.S. 5’s (10-408)
U.S 5’b (old)
U. S 7-30 notes.

500
8
100
100

1,400
3,744

100

Wells, Far. & Co

The amount of

500
46
100
150

ioo

500
600
100
300

..

.

44

•

....

4

•

American.
United States...

44

•

«...

-

•

.

m

do

•

100

Pref..

Mariposa

44

•

1,110
1,600
1,250
63,100

60

200

44

56
...

10,275

6

200

1,500

Delaw’e & Hud Cap

“

386

500

17,310

200
100
200
60

800
50

400
....

54,600

....

3,400
6,110
3,503
5.000 19,100

*

8,000

...

1,500

100

-

....

Mining—Consol. Gregory.
44

1,600

•

6,475

8,300

3,876
10,860

50

800

2,900

800

50

Coal—Central
“

•

•

....

6
•

100
200
100

•

•

*

....

•

14,800

400

1,427

•

36

50

2,300
3,034

•

4,300

\

?150

•

•

•

*

8,100

1,900

1,360

•

Central

250

2,926

t

....

& N. Haven

23,850
r

200

-

miff. &

do pref....

1,252

200
100

„

■

do

170

48,800
5,302
103,900

•

Hudson River
100
2,800
Illinois Central
30
120
Michigan Central
Michigan Southern.. *.... 8,400 10,600
Milwaukee & St. P..

60

6,800

100

preferred
Hannibal &44St. Joseph...
do

preferred

10

9,000 ’5,800
1,060
1,600
81,600 15,350

100

Cltt ’and, Col & Cine....
el&ncl

“

7,500

14,000
5,000

27,500

10,000
1,000
19,000

.

.

60,000
2,000
10,000

Week.

2,000
114,000
25,000

State Bonds, viz.:

25,0C0

70,000

5,660

N. Carolina 6’s.
Ohio 6’s

•

•

•

•

509

7,000

Tennessee 6’b..

4,000

109,000

.

•

7,000

-

.

....

1,000
Virginia 6’a....
City Bonds, viz:
Brooklyn 6’s...

“

*

*

....

...

Company Bonds viz :

*

1,000

•

.

43,000
10,000
ioooo

.

.

17,000

6,000

•

•

..

....

....

,,,,

•

•

....

....

—

...

Missouri 6’s...
New York 5’s..
do
7’s..

*

42,000

—

33,000

«...

*

*

3,666

20,000

7,000

78,000

33,000

....

2,000

....

2,000
4,000

322,000
10.000

....

•.

•.

82,000
*

....

r • • •

8,000
44,000
500

222,000
1,000

2,000

....

short ”

beginning of the week some of the foreign houses sold
quite freely, in anticipation of a severe decline in prices ;

but the steadiness of Five-twenties at London

yesterday and to-day,

produced this morning an active demand for bouds for covering
those operations, under which the price of Sixty twos touched 109$,
but subsequently reacted to 109$, at which they close.
The lowest
point touched during the depression for that issue has been 109@$.
The transactions in bonds between this city and London have been
light, the extreme uncertainty of the political situation in Europe
rendering speculative operations unusually hazardous. The foreign
bankers appear to be light holders of bonds, and are not disposed
to increase their stock.
The continued purchase of liberal amounts
of August Seven-thirties by the Government causes a steady de¬
mand for bouds for investment from the sellers of the notes,

the pre¬

ference

being given to the new issue of 1865, which are quite firm,
closing at 107$@i-.
The following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬
pared with preceding weeks :
Mar. 8. Mar. 15.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S
U*8,
U. S.
U. S

6’s, 1881 coup
6-20’b, 1862 coupons
44
5-20’b, 1864
5-20’8,1865
44
5-20’8,1865, N. iss..
10-40’b,

•

•

107*

.106*

....

and

*

109*
107*

7-30’s 1st scries
7-30’s 2d Series
7-80’b 3rd series,...

Railroad

*

■

M

97*
1U6*
105*
105*

109*
109*
107*
107*
106*
97*
105*
105*
105*

Mar. 22. Mar. 29. Apl. 5. Apl. 12.
109

109

109

J09

109*
107*

109*
107*
108*
107*

109*
107*
107*
107*
9S*

199*
107*
108*
107*
97*

108

107*
106

98
106

105*
105*

105*
106*

97*

Stocks.--The

cellaneous

106

106

105*
105*

105*
106*

of the

course

stock market has been very excited and irregular.
The week open,
ed with a general weakness in prices, which wa9 increased by large

sales for

speculative effect, and within the past three days the mar¬

ket fell off from 3 to 8 per cent, on the
cline caused the bauks to call up their

respective stocks. The de¬
margins upon stock loans,

again induced forced sales, and aided the downward tend¬
Later, those who had sold down the market became large
buyers at the decline, and have since been operating vigorously for
an advance in prices.
Erie at one time touched 53, but to-day ad¬
vanced to 58. Ou Michigan Southern and Cleveland and Pitts¬
burg the fluctuations have been especially wide.
The whole mar¬
ket closes much firmer, quotations being in some cases above those
of !ast Friday.

25,000

6,200

21,000

16,000

45.0'W

ency.

The total transactions for

,

Railroad

At the
“

which
1,000

Connecticut 6’a

Georgia7’s

459

THE CHRONICLE.

April IS, 1867.]

8,000

the week, at both boards, foot up

610,581 shares, against 347,385 for last week.
Included in the
sales are 103,300 shares Erie, Rock Island 51,803, Mich. Southern
decline of
54,600, New York Central 63,000, Reading 52,760, and North¬

Friday, April 12,1867, P. M.

The

Money

Market.—The week opened with a

the deposits of the bank; and $3,438,036 in the le¬ western
preferred 69,600.
gal tender reserves, the result of an increase on the balance at the
The following are the closing quotations at the regular board to¬
Sub-Treasury during preceding days,. The Assistant Treasurer,
day, compared with those of the six preceding weeks :
however, made liberal disbursements on Monday, which gave an
Mar. 1. Mar. 8. Mar. 15. Mar.22. Mar.29 April 5. Apl. 12.
49
31
35*
33*
30*
easier turn to the money market. During the week the banks have Cumberland Coal
30*
84
86
28*
56*
36*
31*
Quicksilver
received liberal deposits from the country banks, and considerable Canton Co
45
43*
47*
46*
46*
45*
122*
27*
23*
21*
02*
pref....
remittances have come to hand from the Western cities, so that Mariposa
101*
99*
New York Central
102*
103*
105*
105*
55*
57*
55*
58*
54*
58*
59*
their loanable resources have been materially strengthened. The Erie
139
137
Hudson River....
138*
136*
102
102*
demand from the stock brokers has been much more active; but Reading
99*
101*
101*
101*
102*
71*
71*
74*
75*
68*
Mich. Southern..
75*
72*
their applications have been met without difficulty, at 7 percent, on Michigan Central
108
108
108*
81
Clev. and Pittsb.
82*
78*
69*
80*
76*
79*
stocks, and generally at 6 per cent, on Governments. The week Clev. and
119
119
120
17*
118*
121*
Toledo.
US*
35*
35*
34*
83*
31*
35*
36*
closes with a decidedly easier market, and with indications favoring Northwestern....
65
60*
65*
62*
63*
64*
62*
preferred
96
87*
an early return to lower rates of interest.
91*
97*
97*x.d.90*
95*
The banks have become Rock Island
91*
96*
96*x.d 93*
Fort Wayne
94*
9ti*
94*
accustomed to severe spasms in the market, and do not appear to Illinois Central
116
114*
115*
114*
115*
114*
regard the late fluctuations in stocks as calling for any special ac
The following statement shows the volume of transactions in
tion respecting loans. During the week they have called up mar¬
shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of
gins pretty closely ; but show no unwillingness to lend on stocks at the week, closing with this day’s business :
current prices.
Tues.
Wed.
Fri. Week.
Thurs.
Mon.
Sat.
130
135
250
861
206
SO
There has been a partial recovery of confidence in the discount
60
Bank shares
90,764 86,414 587,600
57,439 147,036
Railroad 44
49,225 106,722
546
market, and, at the close, rates favor sellers of paper. There is Coal
508
224
200
3,028
44
1,550
8,750
700
2,300
5,300
1,500
14,750
1,200
Mining
44
more demand for prime notes, which, however, continue scarce, and
500
400
300
300
6,600
2,400
2,700
Improv’t 44
300
4,000
16,780
3,744
4,001
1,850
2,835
are taken
Telegraph44
principally at 7 per cent, for two to four months* dates,
8,785 25.871
6,075
4,920
4,323
2,873
3,340
Steamship44
with exceptions at 7 4 per cent. There is an,abundance of second Express 44
84
150
302
505
100
1,141
rate paper on the market, which still passes at high figures.
53,725 263,223
47,424
33,991
62,467
At Regular Board.. 19,713
45,903
46,060 847,c68
36,800 101,854
58,254
At Open Board...
69,100
85,300
The following are the quotations for loans of various classes:
$4,618,981

on

....

-

....

-

...

....

•

•

•

•

-

....

....

....

44

*

....

..

„

.

....

.

Call loans

Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills, 3
months

Percent.
6 @7
I
6 ©7 'I

7

@

|

—

.

Percent.

Good endorsed bills, 3 Jb
4 months

do

single names

\ Lower grades

7#® 8
8 @9
9 ©15

United States Securities.—The market for Governments has

active, and, to day, has shown some excitement. The
decline in Five-twenties at London and on the Continent, produced
by the complications of relations between France and Prussia, has

been

more

induced

a

somewhat active

speculative movement in bonds of sixty-

two, sixty-four aad sixty-five.




Total current week.
Total Previous w’k.

34,844

The transactions in

the year are

115,008
34,541

55,023

3liare3

Rail-

44

15

1,064

44

22
29

401
694

ro’d.

184,987

479,945
390,690
406,939
231,33.

5

857 395,956

Apl. 12

861 537,600

Apl.

weekly

104,321

79,478

99,775 610,581
105,678
149,979 103,438 343,975

since the commencement of

shown in the following statement:

Week ending— Bank.
Mar. 1 1
1,026
“
8
1,066

44

70,791
42,195

Min-

Itn-

Tele- Steam-

Coal. ing. prr.’t. graph, ship. Other. Total.
2,283 4,8;0 3,400 6,903 29,623 2,309 235,392
4,953 7,600 8,900 11,673 31,269 1,209 546,620
18,373 6,350 12,975 7,8:33 16,3-38 2,453 456,076
4,990 5,250 10,000 7,5i>3
8,542 1.568 444,193
3,911 7,962 7,70» 5,806 17,530
822 275,760
1,820 5,350 3,500 8,655 26,302 1,535 343,975
3,023 14,750 6,600 16,730 25,501 5,511 010,581

460
The

THE CHRONICLE.

following is

Weeks

of the amount of Government bonds
and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds
sold at the Regular Board on each day of the past week :
a summary

Sat.

0. 8. Bond*...
U. 8. Notes
”

.

'

Mon.

Wed.

$89,000 $525,000 $209,500

State* City b’d*

40,000
88,500

Company B’nds.

21,000

Total Cur. w’k.. $138,500

PreviOU*week..

Tues.

265,850

7,500
76,000
6,200

02,000

27,50 )
19.000
14 .’,000 141,000

25,000

16,000

469,500
249,500

285.500

230,000 547,500
163,000 169,500 416,000

weekly, since the commencement of the
following tabulation :

Week ending

Governments

/

Friday.

Mar.
Mar.
Mar.

1
8
15

Notes.

$1,707,950

$330,000

1.068,650

823,000

2S5,500
315,250
261,850
133,480
299,750

1,397,000

166,000

1,289,500
1,231.300
1,750,100

Mar, 22
Mar.

April

29

5.

April 12

The Gold Market.—The

State &
Citv Bonds.

.

Bonds.

“

$512,300
3,355,500
1,06S,000
738,900

“
“

Company

for

159,500

13,265,948
20.17Q.7S8

108,958,253

H0,31l7r60
25.815,877 132.952,351
17,580,05S 109,866.761
13,296,106 112,2:35,056
16,772,353 111,661,266
18,828,437 110,890,405
22,S34,25< 100,634,126
13.889,356 105,1:0,790

bills,

iu

opened with

an

Changes in

Balances.
Dec.
6,260,951
Dec.
5,632,793
Inc.
Inc.

10,353,537
13,644,560

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

23,085,589
2,368,294
573,789
770,861

10,256,279
4,546,664

active demand

consequence of the condition of financial affairs in

Europe, and prime bankers’ sterling, 60 days, sold up to 109£. The
by Wednesday’s steamer, for London, Paris and Frank¬
fort, were quite considerable. Since the middle of the week, im¬
porters have shown an indisposition to remit, with gold at the pres¬
ent high premium, and
sterling bills close fully £ below the rates
of Tuesday.
There is an improved supply of cotton bills, but the
weakness of cotton at Liverpool and the failures at that
point re¬
ported by cable, have produced unusual caution respecting that
class of acceptances, and
they consequently sell at low rates. There
is a veiy general disinclination to [remit bills to be drawn
against,
and the market closes weak at
subjoined figures:
The following are the closing quotations lor the
several classes
of foreign bills, compared with
tfyose of the three last weeks :

$2,753,250
2,9o6.150
2.832,250

12 ,000
183,500
138,500
121,200

19,599,298
33,090,532
9,342,691

2,406,907

Balances.
103,325,459

remittances

.amount

194,500

1,935,874

-

Receipts.
13,897,446

Foreign Exchange.—The week

shown
Total

Bonds.

17,346.143

2,499,595

April 6....

2,335,700
1,558,250

2,877,562

2,781,958

9....
16....
23....
30....

“

121,200

year are

$197,000

687,000
297,000
651,500

“

3,152,28S
4,041,689

2,585,047

2,917,088

March2....

166.000
651,500

-Sub-Treasury-

Payments.
19,158,396
7,633,155
9,817,230
12,175,316
40,666,248
15,927,811

2,004,760

9....
16....
23....

“

Week.

10,000
76,000
8,000

45,000

The totals,
in the

Fri.

3

“

$95,000 $2-5,000 $453,500 $1,397,000

173,000

614,700
294,400

Thnr.

Custom
House.

Ending

Feb.

[April 13,1867.

2,356,150
2,759,0-0
1.568,250

2,335,700

of

gold has been very irregu¬
unexpected developments in European politics, together
with the decline of Five-twenties in Europe and failures
among
Liverpool cotton firms, have caused an advance during the week of
about 5 points upon our last quotations. There has been an un¬
usual speculative activity, the clearances at the Gold
Exchange
Bank having on some days reached the
large total of $140 ,000,000 ;
while the average for the week has been
March 29.
nearly $100,000,000 per London Coinm’l. March 22.
April 5.
April 12.
107%© 108% 107% @ 108%
107%© 108% 108 ©108%
day. To-day the prevailing tendency has been to operate for higher
do L>krsQ/i<7
109 @ 109%
103%© 109
10S%©
108%
109%© 109%
do
do shrt
109%© 109%
109 @109%
109%© 109%
109%@ 110%
prices, various rumors having been circulated for the purpose of Paris, long....
Ion
5.16%@5.15
5.17%@ 5.16% 5.17%©5.16% 5.16%@5.15
do s~
short
5.13%©5.12% 5.15 @5.13% 6.15 @5.13% 5.13%@5.12%
exciting apprehension at the position of affairs in Europe ; but, at
5.v0 ©5.17% 5.21 %@ 5.20
Antwerp..?
5.20 @5.18% 5.20 @5.17%
the close, the feeling is calmer, and the
6.20 @5.17% 5.21%@ 5.20
5.20 @5.18% 5.20 @5.17%
premium shows a fall of 1 from Swiss
Hamburg
36%@
36%@ 36%
36%@ 36%
the highest figure of the morning, the
36%@
price being 1361@f. The Amsterdam...
41% @
41%@41%
41% @ 41%
41%@ 41%
Frankfort.
41
41
%@ 41%
41
market does not appear to be in an over-sold
@41%
@ 41%
41%@ 41%
condition, as for some Bremen
79 @
79 @79%!
79%
79 © 79%
79 %@ 79%
Berlin
72 © 72%
time past loans of coin being
72 ©72%
72 @ 72%
72%© 72%
generally made “ flat.” There is con¬
siderable diversity of opinion as to the probable
New
York
City
Banks.—The following statement shows the
issue of the delicate
relations between Prussia and France ; the
condition of the Associated Banks of the
probabilities, however,
City of New York for the
are
generally considered sufficiently threatening to warrant all the week ending with the commencement of business on Saturday,.
advance in the premium that has occurred ; and until matters wear April 6, 1867 :
a more
-Average, amount ofpacific aspect it would seem that no material decline in the
Loans and
Circula¬
Net
Legal
Banks.
discounts.
tion.
Specie.
price may be anticipated. The Sub-Treasury continues its daily New York
deposits. Tenders.
$7,200,716 $1,258,042
$853,441 $5,779,236 $2,597,986
sales of gold to about the usual extent,
5,524,401
288,623
12,364
showing no disposition to Manhattan
3.645,601
965,970
Merchants’
7,0-7.696
494,876
887,119
5,300,268
interfere with the fluctuations
1,228,016
Mechanics’
growing' out of foreign affairs.
5,196,185
150,2 i 9
663,500
3,482,527
1,011,902
Union
103.806
4,063,713
4S9.S67
2.657.532
|g|The following have been the fluctuations of gold on each of the America
841,847
8,123,302
1,241,139
2,070
6,331,611
1,021,544
Phenix
last six days:
3,389,652
291.275
153,108
2,155.5:83
684,634
lar.

course

The

•

,

!

....

....

.

-..

City

OpenClos¬
Highing. Lowest, est. Ranee, ing.

Saturday, April 6. 132%

132% 133%
Monday,
“
8. 133% 133.% 136
“ 9. 136
Tuesday,
134% 136
Wednesday/1 10. 131% 134% 138
Thursday, “ 11. 137% 136% 137%
Friday, - “ 12 136% 186% 137%
Current week
132%
Previous week... 134
Jan. 1 to date.... 182%
....

132%
132%
132%

Tradesmen’s

Market-.
132% Steady: loans (64ths)—1@4
135% Excited: “
( “ )—l@3
134% Active: “
( “ )— 0@1
137% Excited: “
( “ )—0@4
136% Quiet:
“
( “ )—0@l
136% Firm:
“
( “ )— 0@3

%
2%

1%
8%
1%
%

138
134%

5%
1%

133

140%

8%

136%

136%

Loan range—(64ths.)
“

The movement of

specie and bullion
ending April 6, was as follows :

at

“

0@4
0@8

this port for the week

Specie in hanks Saturday, March 30
Treasure receipts from California
Imports of coin and bull on from foreign ports
Coin interest paid from U. 8. Treasury

$8,522,609

$891,992
60,201

56,200—

Total

reported supply
Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports
Paid into U. S. Treasury on account of customs

1,008,393

$9,531,002
..

$500,61^
2,406,907—

2,907,525

Apparent excess of supply for week
Specie in banks Saturday, April 6

$6,623,477
8,138,813

Deficit made up from unreported eourcos

$1,515,336

The transactions for the last week at the Custom House
and

Sub-Treasury

were as

follows

:

Cnstom House.

“
'

M
“

“

Receipts.
$343,479 86

Sub-Treasury

Payments.
$1,259,883 24
2,365,293 29
420,311 49

866,204 15

3,885,936 28
955,861 72

$2,406,907 05
Sub-Treasury morning of April 1.

$9,842,691 85

$13,889,356 59

i.

406,691 72
498,277 68
875,604 93
416.6^8 71

Deduct payments during the week
Balance on Saturday evening
Decrease during the week

‘

455.405 83

100,634,126 00

$114,523,482 69
9,342,691 85

„

$105,180,790 74
4,516,664 94

Total amount of Gold Certificates
issued, $1,812,000.
in the receipts of customs were
in Gold Certificates.

The

following table shows
Treawry since Feb. 2 :




,

Receints.
$2,832,966 25
1,873,952 98
3,034,664 10
1,345,248 83
2,703,8-'2 05
2, < 68,702 38

8.
4.
5.
6.

Total
Balance in

,

Included

$182,000 in gold, and $2,224,907

the aggregate transactions at the Sub-

Fulton
Chemical
Merch’ts Exchange

National

Butch. & Drovers..
Mech’s & Traders..
Greenwich
Leather Manufact’s
Seventh Ward
State of N. York...
American Exc’ge..

4,042,955
3,052,191
2,214,018
5.994.315
3,352,540
2,723,322
2,315,515
1.831,783

32,538
111,011
492,174

743,997

25.857

35,240

453,121
494,639
249,106

20,442

195.72C

2.956.315

166*486

4,751
257,110

1,195,380

31,360
299,945
462,100

179,041
155,000
9S6.310

415,746
63,4 3
89,504

5,944,565

61,796
15,901
237,8y2
65,097
31,454
107,549

482,097

1,‘120,976
5,093,382

Commerce

10.700,432
22,904,576

Broadway

5,408,ii31

Ocean
Mercantile
Pacific

3,249,608

Republic
Chatham

5,174,661
1,946,246

People’s

1,457,867

3,519,515
1,935,385

North America.
Hanover

2,334.222
2.565,142

Irving

Metropolitan
Citizens’
Nassau
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather.
Corn Exchange
Continental
Commonwealth
Orienitu
Marine
Atlantic

...

Imp. & Traders.
Park
Mech.

.«

Bank’g As’n

Grocers’

North River
East River
Mannf. & Merch’ts
Fourth National..
Central, i
Second National.
Ninth National....
First National.....
Third National,...
N. Y. Exchange...
Tenth National....
Bull’s Head
Croton
National Currency.

Bowery National*.
Totals

85,909

900,000
794,690

141,724
858 750

132,034
6,914

339,357

39,977

1,615,000
10,57 ,442
1,348,993

16.000

290,203
195,268

67,391

2,212,903

2,233,285
2,792.071

100.322
102,073

2,473,041
8,624,20!)
3 9 5,207

22,267
2-, 31
18,552
111,938

2,686,846

.570,721

61,3S7

243,727

5,136,330

...

238.714

1,204,807
1,758,628
1,333.523
5,596,334
14,848,650
1,083,065
1,144,636
1,395,329
1,004.417
1,436,558
17,109,706
12,473,763
1,223,S08
6,591,201
2,710,165
3,17 <,788
979,204

2,474,100
1,256,855
540,634
298,444
7<:6,555

17.279

133,553
4.3:6

552,800
759.460
947 238

9,827

2.513,211
1,818,SS9
1.159,623
4,936,223
2,472,782

£87,598

698.485
429,591

3,^82,225
1,898,754
1,303,990
1,915,015

1.141.473
603,814
219,141

1.514,507

399,368
399,000
5,784,143
379,476
279,200

2,477,683
1,986,380

2,553,063

111,786

1,000,000

4,4-25,219
18,278,159

728,792

9,7^0

12,423

3,8-12

180.000
90.000

9,263

225,000

752,008
200,091
496,650

301,944

1.218.473
4,728,104
440,660
302,441
173,468
296,725
164,978
4,457,658

1,134,980
1.083,023
1,155,318

1,054,048
13,844,130
11,680,834

6,983

'

1,042,798

1,000

15,584
81,149
9,438

946,945

283,500

947.461

625,253

441,8G9
,1,082,330
323,000
509,000

3,065,000

270,052
10,068
6,146
17,924

447.505
792.921
269.626
9> 8.900

492,279

1,394,009
4,729,104
1,224,119
1,751,088
1,95S,745
8S4/35

1,323,207

270;000

6,475,666
1,428,421
751,352

1,625.635

503.9 ->7

44,474

987,646

4.151,769
2,411,377
2.849,309

16.652

2,966,136
1,671.654

253,150
622,397
555,786
91,505
1,040,902
302,365

1,605,374

6,044,962

11,228

42,564

'

8.479.533
5,347,9S3

353,000
99,101

r

721,779

1,173,149
795,534

1,539,341
821,319
2,361,138

11.090

8,029
21.565
64.511

765.142

795,342
1,779.169

27,710

309,197
81,550
11,751

530,272

3,348,015

977,972

350,196

6,6-8,519

2,020,916
1,342,005

3.171,126
2,422,074
741,640
1,157,700
1,371,472
301,773
400,248
613,573

946.443

317,303
-

640,500

121,937
121 734

229,510

$254,470,027 $S,13S,813 $33,'<74,573 $188,861,269 $59,021,775

Clearings for the week ending March 30, 1867
Clearings for the week endiDg April 6, 1867
Balances for the week ending March 80, 1267.
Balances for the week ending April 6, 1867

$459,650,602 00
531,835,184 71
19,615,038 48
....

20,506,881 72

April 13,1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

The deviations from the returns of the previous week are as fol¬
lows s
Loans.........
Deo. $ SI 2,337 Deposits
..Dec. $4,618,9S1
Dec. 3,438,036
Specie...
Dec.
383,796 Legal Tenders
Inc.

irculation

The

following

105,378

series of weeks past:

a

CirculaLoans.

Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Mar.

Mar.
Mar.

Mar.
Mar.

Specie.

tion.

261.264,356 16.332,984
250,208,825 16,157,257
253,131,328 14,792,6 6
257,823,994 13,513,456
260,166,436 11.579,381
262,141,458 10,868,'82
263.072,972
9,968,722
259,400,315
9,143,913
255,282.364
8,522,609
6.. 254,470,027 8,13* 813

200.511.590

198,241,835
196,072,292
198,420,347
198,018.914

33.109.811

200,293,527
33,490,086 197,958,804
33,519,401 192,375.615
33,669,195 1S8,4-0/250
33,774,573 188,861,269

.

Apr.

Legal
-Aggregate
Tenders.
Clearings
65,944,541 612,407,258
67,628,992 508,825,532
64,612,940 455,833,829
63,153,895 443,574,086
63,014,195 465,534.539
64,523,440 544,173,256
62.813.039 496,558,719
60.904,958 472,202,378
62,459,811 459,850,602
59,021,775 631,835,184

Deposits.

32,995,347
32,777,000
32,956,309
33,006.141
33,294,433

2..
9-.
16..
23..
2..
9
16..
23..
30..

Banks.—The following shows the totals of the

Philadelphia

Bills of Nat’lB’ks.
Bills of other banks

Specie
Compound Interest
notes

Other lawful money

the totals for

are

461

Aggregate

of the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for last and

previous week :

March. 30.

•

Capital

115,517,150
50,880,306

Loans

Specie

602,148
15,856,918
4,308,758
6,896.213
34,lr0,285
10,631,532

Legal Tenders

Due from Banks
Due to Banks,

Deposits
Circulation..

a

series of weeks

Date.
Feb. 2

4.190,617
6,655,361
83,796.595

Increase.
Decrease.
Ii.crease.
Decrease.
Decrease.
Decrease.

10,651,613

Increase,

664,719

15,-82,745

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

9
16
23
2
9

17,837,598
18,150.657
"17,524,705

16

16,955,643

Specie.
873.614

52,394.721

10,522,972

841,223

51,979,173

826,843

10,566,434
10,581,600
10,572,068

832,655

16.071,■780

858,022

15,856,948

60,880,306

602.148

15,882,745
April 6.
Boston Banks.—The

50,988,231

661,719

Banks statements for

240,852

853,690
20,083

Philadelphia

867,110

50,538.294
50,572,490

,

25,797

118,141

Circulation.
10,430,898
10,449,982

871,564

-61,851,463

23
80

$117,925
173,429

:

Legal Tenders.
Loans.
19,269,128
55,551,130
62,884.329
19,659,250
18.892,747
52,573,180

Deposits.
39,592,712
39.811,595
40,050,717
37,314.672
34,826,001

84,581545
34,150,285

33,796,595

previous weeks:
Loans

Specie
Legal tender notes

Due from other banks
Due to other banks,..

Deposits

10,818,419
37,026,388
24,843,376
296,625

Circulation

(National),

Circulation

(Staup...
are

Feb.

4....

It

11.,

...

..

U

18....
41
25....
March 4....
11
11....
11
18....
11
25..
1...
April
14
8....

...

...

..

...

..

97,742,461
97,261,162
96.919,471
95.332,900

956 509

873 396

929,940

92,078.975

779.402
950.887
695,447

93,156,486
92,661,060

516.184

95,050,727

Tenders.
36,394.604
16,103.479

15,398,338
15,741,046
15,9S8,103
15,719.479
16,270,919

568,894

516,184

16,557,905

12,862,652

12,878,601

10,818,419

11,073.873

37.026,388
24,843,376
296,625

36,751,723
24,738,122

'

a

Legal

Specie.

$41,900,000
92.661,060

17,212,423

'

the comparative totals for

Loans.

Mar. 25.

91,723,347
435,413

12.862,652

..

The-following
past :

April 1.
$41,900,000

435,113

17,212,423

299,091

series of weeks
'-—Circulation.

Deposits. National.

..

39,708,053
39,474,359
38,900,500
37,898,963

38.316,573
36,712.052
36,751,753

24,691.075

24,340,631

.

306,014
305,603
505,603

24,686,063
24,7 5,420
24.053,605
24,675,767

303>28

•

24,809,533

...

..

301,430
289,538
299,133
299,091
296,625

296,011

designated

the Omaha Natioual
of

Bank, of Omaha, Nebraska,

as

a

depository

public

moneys.
The amount of issue of National Bank

Currency, for the week
The total issue to date, $302,336,256. From this is to be deducted the currency returned,
including
the worn-out notes, amounting to $3,447,582, leaving
in actual cir¬
culation, at this date, $298,888,674.
as

follows

:

As

secur¬

ity for circulating National Bank notes, $340,610,950 ; as security
depositaries of public money, $38,880,950. Total securities
held, $379,491 900.
for

We

pleased to see that Mr. Iiurlburd, Comptroller of the
Currency, has made public at so early a day the following abstract
of the quarterly reports of the banking associations of New
York,
Boston, and Philadelphia, showing their condition on the morning
of the first Mo..day in April, 1867 :
are

RESOURCES.

-New York
Jan. 1.
Loaus & discounts ! £157,967,294 27
Real esmte, furni¬
ture & flxtu-es..
5,016,886 76
431.050 92
Expense account..

Premums paid...
Cash items

ing

rev.

(includ¬
stnmps).

Due from N’l B’ks.
“

other banks

U. S. bonds
cure
cure

U. 8. Bonds & se¬
curities on hands'

Other stocks, bonds




637,324 70

941,100 96

78,758,030 91
9.583.978 64
4.136.978 64

69,414,064 77
7,947,324 06
2,689,883 83

1,032,735 19
4,805.130 79
460,494 75

4,516,321 66
8,458,871 83
248,084 03

42,487,S00 00

42,467,800 00 13,118,000 00

29,044,350 00

to se¬

deposits....

Philadelphia.
Boston.
$152,863,769 78 $32,215,006 01 $56,811,075 24
1,185,073 57
435,596 U
395,847 33

to se¬

circulation.

U. S. Bonds

-April 1-

April 1.

5,719,027 50
1,674,995 66

5,170,300 00

4,800,900 00

8,348,470 00
8,410,253 34

11,531,180 00
6,085,087 49

.

.

National b’k notes

outstanding....

34,257,816
406,037
201,962.194
2,619,414

State b’k n. outs’g
Individual dep’sits
U. States deposits.

Deposits of United
S. Disb’g Officers
Due to Nat. banks
Due to other banks
and bankers

Profits
.

00
00
16
34

34,972,371 00

11,006,790 00

25,309,509 00

379/ 53 00
175,493.039 91

135,08?) 00

35,516,987 95
1,887,404 12

311,258 00
39,011,725 13
1,465,594 19

2,789,205 55

4.8S4 47
52,466,889 22

51,841,582 80

5,622,989 44

10,108,134 06

13,278,398 39
4,870,196 27

12,508,466 93
7,494/207 48

974,533 83

1,060,696 80

1,768,818 47

948.356 23

996 70

$402,149,036 42 $377,790,364 23 $78,045,537 82 $127,604,785 51

....

winding up, and o
premium. Those banks that have
not obtained their full share of
currency, can use such notes in ob¬
taining more. The notes of the following National banks are
quoted at 2 per cent, premium :
those that have failed,

2,047,600 00

are

at

Venango Nat. Bank, Franklin, Pa.

BANK

are

a

Merchants’ Nat. B’k, Washington,D.C.
Tennessee Nat. Bank, Memphis,Tenn.
First National Bank, Utica, N. Y.

Capital

Companies.

(Marked thus * are
not

National.)

1,420,072 61
31,165 73
55,145 35

America*
America (Jer. City) .
American
American Exchange.
Atlantic
Atlantic (Brooklyn).

I First National Bank, Medina, N. Y.
| First National Bank, Columbia, N. Y.

| First National Bank, Carondelet, Mo.

|

STOCK

LIST.

4,534,610 86

6,260,158 78

1,057,420 24

1,084.150 00

IOC 3,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.. ..5&&C 135
25
100,000 Tan. and July
Jan. ’67..
—

.%.

100
100
100
50
100
25
50
50

500,000. •Tan. and July.

..'Jan.

4
6 116#
6
6
5
12
5
4
5
6 110
6
8
6
5
6 m
6
6 us#
6
6 103
5 116#

’67..
5,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66.
300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.

....

Eighth
Fifth
First.
First (Brooklyn). ...
Fourth.
Fulton
Far. &Cit.(Wm’bg).
Gallatin
Grocers’
Hanover

Importers & Trad...
Irving

LeatherMannfact’rs.

Longlsl (Brook.)

..

Manhattan*

Manufacturers’
Manufac. & Merch.*.
Marine
Market
Mechanics’

.

Mechanics’ (Brook.).
Mech. Bank. Asso...
Meehan. & Traders’.

Mercantile
Merchants’
Merchants’ Exch....

Metropolitan
Nassau*...
Nassau (Brooklyn)

«

National
New York
New York County..

NewYorkExchange.
Ninth
North America
North River

Ocean
Oriental*
Pacific
Park.

Peoples’*
Phoenix
St. Nicholas’
Seventh Ward
Second. /
Shoe & Leather

•

•

•

•

.

.

•

..

260

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

110#
•

•

.

....

....

....

•

....

....

•

•

•

.

....

,

.

„

C

^

-

113#
108

103
120

ono non

100
JO
100,000 ..Quarterly
Man. ’67.
30
200,000 Jah. and July.. .;Jan. ’67.
50
f
350,000 Jan. and July...|Jan. ’67.
100
6
250,000 Jan. and Julv... Jan. ’67
100
150,000 Jan. and July... J.m. ’67.
5
100
10
500,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66.
Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
100
10
100 6,000,000 Jan. and Julv... Jan. ’67
30
6
600,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66
20
6
160,000 Jan. and Julv... J»n. ’67
100 1,500,000 Apr. and Oct... Apr. ’67.
5
25
6
200,000 Apr and Oct... Apr. ’66
50
6
300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
100 1,000,000 Jan. and Jnly... Jan. ’67.
e
Jan.
and
100 1,500,000
July... Jau.’67.4&23-103
•Jan
50
and July... Jan. ’67.
6
500,000
50
6
600,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67.
50
400,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67.
6
50 2,050,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67.
£
30
6
252,000 Apr. and Oct... Oct. ’66.
100
500,000 Jan. and Jnly... Jan. ’67.
5
100
400,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
,6
*
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan ’67.
25 2,000,000. Jan. and July... Jan.’67.
t
60
500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
6
50
500,00( May and Nov,.. Nov. ’66.
5
25
600,001 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67. ......5
100 1,000,00( May and Nov... Nov.’66.
6
50 3,000,000 June and Dec
Dec. ’66
6
50 1,235,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
t
100 4,000,00( Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
Jan.
and
100 1,000,001
Jan. ’67.
E
July
100
c
300,001 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
50 1,500,001 April and Oct... Apr. 67
f
100 3,000,001 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
t
100
200,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67. .9<fea:2#
100
300,001 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
6
100 1,000,001 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
50
6
400,001 Tan. and July... Jan. ’67.
50 1,000,000 Tan. and July... Jan. ’67.
5
50
t
800,000 Feb. and Ang... Feb.’67.
50
422,700' Feb. and Ang.. Feb. ’66. ...5&x'
100 2,000,000 Jan.and July... Jan. ’67.
7
25
5
412,500 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66.
20 1,800,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67. 4&-«r
100 2,000,000' Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67.
100 1,000,009 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67
c
100
6
500,000' •Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67.
100
Nov. ’66
6
300,000' May and Nov
100 1,500,000 Tan. and July.. Jan. ’67.
6
IOC
6
200,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’65
100 2,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66
5
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67
5
100 1,OOP,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67
5
40 1,000,000
Jan. ’67
7#
50 1,500,000 May and Nov... Nov ’66
,..5
.

....

..

....

155

...

....

....

....

..

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

...

104# 104#
....

«

•

•

•

....

.

*.

.

.

«...

•

.

m

•

110#
110
108

...

....

112
....

110
110

....

•

•••

....

•

• •

132

•

136

....

•

•

•

•

....

.

.

.

.

•

....

•

•

•

117

117

....

Ill

•

•

•

111

•

•

•

.

....

•

•

•

.

•

115
....

124
1U6
•

•

•

•

•

•

•-

118
110
127
110

•

•

....

.

.

Republic.

•

....

.

..

.

•

....

....

...

East River

•

....

Jan. ’67.
100
300,000 Quarterlv
25
400,000 Jan. and July../Jan. ’67.
100 1,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66.
50
300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
10010,000,000 Jan. and July. .|Jan. ’67.
750,000 Jan. and July../Jan. ’67.
100 2,000,000 <Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.
100; 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... (Feb. ’67.
inn

Currency
Dry Dock*

....

....

..

Commerce
Commonwealth
Continental
Corn Exchange*
Croton

188

....

.

..

Chemical.
Citizens’

Bid. Ask

Last Paid.

..

il9

• •

....

120

....

••

•

a

•

•

•

•

105# 107
1

W

•

-

T

•

•

....

•

•

•

.

.

.

•

•

•

.

.

.

105

102
•

•

145
....

107

114# 116
•

•

•

•

110

105
....

..

....

Sixth
State of New York..
—

.

.

3,947,550 00

Periods.

..

Third. ,...
Tradesmens.

3,288,580 00

Amount.

..

Tenth.

15,123,950 00

Fbibat.

Dividend.

.

600,000 Jan. and July. ..:Jan. ’67.
250,000 Jan. and July.JJan. ’61..
Bowery.
Broadway
1,000,000 Jan. and July...!Jan. ’67.
300,000 Jan. and July...jJau. ’67..
Brooklyn
Bull’s Head*
200,000 Quarterly
> Apr. ’67.
Butchers & Drovers
25
Jan. ’67..
800,000 Jan. and July
Nov. ’66.
Central.
100 3,000,000 May and Nov
Central (Brooklyn)..
Jan.’67.
50
200,000 Jan. and July
Jan. ’67.
Chatham
25
450,000 Jan. and July

1,925,000 00

15,781,250 00

of Share.

Par

Greenwich*

endiDg April 6, was $27,550.

The United States Treasurer holds bonds

25,939,480 00
34,700,372 21

LIABILITIES.

City
City (Brooklyn)

State.

16.557,905 86,751,723 24,738,722
435.113 17,212,423 37,026.388
91,923/347
24,843,376
91,679,519
456,751 16,660,418 37,25S,775 24,851,522
National Banks.—1The United States Treasurer has
.

22,785,940 00
41,402,117 59

39,367,388

following are the footings of the Boston
April 1st, compared with those of the two

Capital

1,355,611 00
635,844 00
454,980 52

38.646,013

10,580,911
10.611,987
10,631,532
10,651,615

807,4133

April 8.
$41,900,000
91,723,347

422,935 00
30,364 00
792,037 48

The notes of the National banks that

The annexed statement shows the condition of the

Banks for

69,699 00
5,718.722 60

Cap. stock paid in $75,009,700 00 $75,009,700 00 $16,017,150 00 $43,550,000 00
Surplus lund
17,573,506 57
17,301,440 86
5,175,784 01
6,849,511 10

Aggregate

April 6.
$15,517,150
50,90S,231

1,439,115 00

69,488 00
10,547,117 30

$402,149,036 42 $377,790,364 23 $78,045,537 82 $127,604,785 51

....

....

average

2,228,868 00

uyion.

.

CHyf,

59

S00 0Q0 y&i. ftSJl

July,

JM, ’fill

»*«♦

110

112

....

•

•

•.

4.,,,

109

....

....

....

....

W

»*

M

»* j»

[April 13,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

462

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK

REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING

(REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE
STOCKS

American Gold Coin (O >!<i Room)
National:
United States 6s, 1867
do
do
6s, 1868
do
do
6s, 1868
do
do
6s, lS81.gi
do
do
6s, 1881
do
do
6a, 5-20s (1st iss ie)

.Vi-j

S(Uur.,

tJECUKt fir.S.

AND

i

>.

lies.

;|i35%

|

_
i

i

.

•107%

/

—

-1108

If

Chicago and Northwestern

108%

l —regie
. c
upon. 107% 107%;'107% 1G7%;107% 10TX
107%
—
..registera l
1
—

■

.

—

—

do

.'■‘.20*

1

108

108

109%

—

6e, Oregon Wa Ibol
.
6s,
do.
do.
{\yttirly)
5s, 1871
coupon

■1

coupon

5s, 10-408

registered

7-30s Treas, Notes
do
do

109%

—

\

—

|

98

98

106

97%

■106

—

—

I

'

——

7s

(new)
Canal Bobds, 1860

"00
—

84

—

—

do 1877
do
do 1879
War Loan
do

—

.

...

—

..

—

Michigan 6s

—

do
7s, War Loan, 1878
Minnesota 8s
Missouri 6s
95%
do
6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)...
do
6s, (Pacific RR.)
New York 7s, 1870
do
68,1867-77
do
5s, 1868-76
do
7s, State Bounty Bonds (coupon)...
do
do
do
do
(registered) 107%
North Carolina 6s ex-coupon
do
6s. (new)
Ohio 68,1870-75
1UA
do 6s,1881-86
Rhode Island 6s
Tennessee 6s 1890
do
6s ex-coupon
63
do
6s, (new)
43
Virginia 6s, ex coupon
do
6s, new
—

—

95%

—

—

——

—

—

Brooklyn 6 s
do
6s, Water Loan
do
6s, Public Park Loan
do
6s, Improvement Stock
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan
New York 7s

63

63

"

_

?

—

95

103
—

92%

—

108%

—

62%

61

63

62%

—

100

__

93

Spruce Hill

.

Wilkesbarre

Wyoming Valley...
©O#.—Brooklyn
.’
Citizens
Harlem

100

(Brooklyn)

Jersey City and Hoboken
Manhattan
Metropolitan

New York

——

_

—

—

■

—

-

-

--

—

26

143X

26 X 29
144 ~ 1.45

.

Brunswick

City

Canton...

100

Cary

100

lelegraph.—Western Union

100

Union,Russian Extension. 100
Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
100
Pacific Mail

S. Am. Nav. & Mar. Railway
1 ransit.—Central American

100 121

do
—

_

New York Life and Trust
Union Trust
United States Trust

25
100
100
100

Aepm*.—Adams
American
Merchants Union
United States

We>ls, Fargo & Co

Misting.—Mariposa Gold

Mariposa preferred

Minnesota Copper
New Jersey Zinc

Quartz Hill

Quicksilver
Rutland Marble

ftnitl and Parmelee




26X

24 X
42 V

43X

40%

36%

37

38

38%

SOX

80

77

79

84

120X 122% 120

68%
-—.

85

-—

—

—

—

25

49%

49%

—

—

99 X

99%

122

—

—

—

23X 24%

—

—

128%

193 V

ioi% 100% 10OX
33
32X

—

—

“—

38 '

37X

37

65

65

37

37%
—

—

—

—

95

95

'

—

Income.?.?

—

—

—

'
—

87
—

—

Interest

—

Extension

—

80

80

consolidated.....

—

do

—

—

—

—

90

90
74

Fund?

—

94

—

—

do

101%

—

4th mnrfirnfrfi

do

84%

84

84X

1st mortgage

2d mort.

—

—

—

—

—

103

—

—

97

97

—

■

89

■■

■

—

-

-

—

72

—
—

101%|

101 x

Consolidated and Sinking Fund..
3d

'

—

--

-

—

-

■

<

»■ —

—

■

■».

mortgage 1fi6ft

.

103
—

1885

—

_

T

—

107

107

—

—

—

Marietta and

Cincinnati, 1st mortgage..
Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72
do
do
8s, new. 1882
Michigan Southern, Sinking Fnnd
do
do
2d mortgage, 7s....

-

...

—

.

_!

10C

—

—

do
do
Goshen lane, 1868
Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort..
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage
do
2d mortgage
do

'

—

—

.

..

—

Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants..
Morris and Essex, 1st. mortgage

17

'■

91% 91%
98% 99% 91%
bl%

-

-

95 X

.

2d mortgage
do
New York Central 6s,

1883°

do

57

500
TOO
100

57

57

67%

ioo
100 21%
60
—

20

7X
20%

56X
56

56
-

—

100

67
69
8
19

55%
69

7
21 %'

96

96

19X

29% 28

25

25%

—

—-1

—sr

-23 X

28
—

T—

*

—’ll

—

—

....

94

85

2d mort...
3d mort...

do
do

Louie, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort
do
do

do

do

do

do

102

—

94

94X
85

-

JU

..

2d, pref....
2d, income.

Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage,
(to
34 mortgage.

85

—

Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort..
do
do

——

—

Mississippi, 1st mortgage
Peninsula, 1st mortgage
do
do

——

—

Ohio and

St.

31X

97

Q41/

do
6s, 1887
do
do
7s, 1876
do
do
7s, convertible, 1876
d*
do
78, 1865-76....
New York and New Haven

—

15

jo

—

b',’%

do

ioo

25
100

—

McGregor Western, 1st mortgage

100

100

—

lU8
107
69 X 66

—

Illinois Central 7s, 1875
Lackawanna and Western Bonds

100

Nicaragua

Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust

si

—

—

—

Hudson River, Is*?, mortgage, 1869.
do
2d mortgage, (S. F.),
do
3d mortgage, 1875

41%

Western

—

—

do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage, 1880
r
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Galena and Chicago, extended
do
do w
2d mortgage..
Great Western, 1st
do
do
2d mortgage
Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage

do

43%

4416

—

—

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72.

50
100
50

25

Ill*

—

—

mortgage?

—

20

50
20 25%
.100

50
60

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868

.

Williamsburg
improvement.—Boston Water Power

—-

—

—

1st mortgage

do
do
do
do

do

-

50

—-

——

Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort.

—

-

—

53

—

preferred

Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking
o
do new 7s

—

100
25
20

do
do

do

-

—

10

100

—

Railroad Ronds:

.

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain

-

MX 57%
45

—

—

Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage
Chicago. R. I. and Pacific, 7 j ercent
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage
do
do
3d mortgage, conv..

-

50
50

Lehigh & Susquehanna

53

55%

.

100

Toledo, Wabash and Western
do
do
do
preferred

**

—

—

55
71

10C
100
100 0SX 108%
100 70X 69%

50

do
do
do
do

§0

30

69*

119

—

10<
50

Chicago, Burlington and Q.uincy, 8 per cent...
Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage.....

65
68

1

—

115% 119

—

—

Reading

—

100 45
100
300 30%

Central
Consolidated
Cumberland
Delaware and Hudson

99

—

—

—

do
do

10

Butler
Cameron

119

Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund....

—

50

99

Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund

—

100

68%

—

-

:

Ashburton

50

mort
Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877...

“

—

65%

—

Atlantic and Great Western, 1st

49
48

48%

4S

‘‘

—

71X

—

St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute
100
do
do
do
preferred. 100

—

—

_

71

do
do
guaranteed...10C
40
Milwaukee and Prairie dn Chien
100
do
do
do
1st pref.. .100
do
do
do
2d pref...100
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100
50X 49
do
do
preferred
100 52X 52
Morris and Essex
100 1
New Jerse)r
100 !
101
97%
New York Central
luo 400% 100
123
123X 122%
New York and New Haven
100
New Haven and Hartford
100
Norwich and Worcester
.100
i
‘
25% $4% 24
22%
Ohio and Mississippi Certificates
do
do
do
preferred....
Panama
100
93
91X 91X 89%

1

6s
5s

Miscellaneous Shares
Qoal.—American

94%

94%

95

80X

—

—

87 X

£3%
57% 59% 60%
87%
85%
87%

—

—

Municipal:

do
do

—

—

—

—

;

—

95

95

—

——

32%

—

—

—

—

—

30%

—

55 X

—

—-

—

—

—

Louisiana 6s

■—

—

—

bs, War Loan
5s

2d

135

5f
135
13>>
138
100
100 114% HIM lisx 112% 113

Chicago.
Long Island
McGregor Western
Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred
do

(108

33%
60X
87X

32%
GO X

—

—

-

5(

J18%
106

106
108

108
109

v

—

—

10C
100
10C

preferred

jl06

j

—

—

—

—

Kentucky 6a, 1868-72

-

—

—

—

Registered, 1860
6b, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62-66-70.

do

Michigan Central
Michigan So. and N. Indiana

—

i. n v

Georgia 6s

do
Illinois
do
do
do
do
do
Indiana
do

——

—

10C

do

State:

California 7s
Connecticut 6s

Erie

Joliet and

106

106% 1105X 105 X 105% 105%
105%
105% 105X 1G5X

2d series.
3d series.

50

Delaware, Lackawanna and Western

Indianapolis and Cincinnati

—

.

—

1 st series

98

—“

—

—

—

302
98
97 X

■

50 119.X

Cleveland and Toledo.

98

—

100 89X
10( 99
5( 74X

Chicago. Rock Island and Pacific
Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati
Cleveland and Pittsburg

■

1171

preferred... ...100

do

106

Kri

—

10C>l_-3 X
10C 62

97X

—

—

—

101

Wed. Than

|Tnee.

118% 118%

100
100

Hannibal and St. Joseph
do
do
preferred
Harlem
do
preferred
Hudson* River
Illinois Central

\

—

5s, 10-40s

—

1001107%

Chicago and Milwaukee
do

'

lOOjllS

preferred

109
—

.1

{
'(

—

cc

.1
1

Iu9>^ 109

:!ic7*'!107%.1 1075*

1075,

i

regie

6b, 5.20s
do
6s, 5.208 (3d issue)
do
6s, 5.20a,
5.20a (new issue)...

108%

do

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
Chicago and Great Eastern

—

I

Moo.

1.

Railroad Stocks :
Central of New Jersey

Chicago and Alton

FRIDAY, APRIL IS.)

H&tur

STOCKS AND SECURITIES.

i

do

i

i

—

i

-1109%

coupon.

136%'1136%

—

—

-'109*, lOSj'j

regist

»| t'ri.

—

.

coupon.

v\ed
—

-!

coupon.

iThur

1313^ 1375k

registered 1313^)
regisU

EXCHANGE.

extended.

—

—

—

——»

—T

——

——*•

LU*

1864. ,

THE CHRONICLE

April IS, 1867.]

NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL

giitfetirflKTf will confer a grsat ftvor by giving m lmmedlat
IN'i'EKEHT.

DENOMINATIONS

la dtftttU for Inter—t.

*

linked tin*

do

«»££"«*•
•W**-i

131*

Jan. A

July 1868-

l

7,022,000

Jan. A

July

129
129
109
109

Jan. A

July 1874-

Jan. &

July

registered. f
-¥rx?pori- !• 20,000,000
registered, f

do

coupon.

1861

do

do

tered.

coup.

283,745,600

J

.registered. .
do
1864 ...coupon. ,
do
do .registered. '
do
1865 ...coupon. [
do
do
do .registered. |
do
do
do 1«65 (new).coupon.
do
do ' do registered. J
do
do
1864
.coupon, l
do (KMOs)
do registered, f
do
..

do
Treasury Notes (1st
do
do
(2d series)
do
(3d series)
do
State Securities.
Hiim ($4,066,210):

series)

)
V
)

989,562,000

Abxxe®*®
♦State

171,069,350

State

I
f

($5,706,600):

,

1,269,600
1,157,222
1,229,667

:i

5,263,254
945,200 6'

184,000
300,000

88,975
600,0; >0

State Bonds
do
do
Kentucky ($5,324,652):
State Bonds..
—

Louisiana ($13,357,999):
Bank Loan Bonds

State Bonds
Levee Loan Bonds
Pundod Coupon Bonds
Railroad Loans of ’53- 66
Maine ($5,127,600):
8tate Bonds (land)
do
do
(civil)
do
do
(war) of ’61

M£S*8tota
($2,585,000):
State Load Bonds
•Railroad Loan Bonds

Missouri {$35,404,515):

•State Loans (old)
Railroad Lonns (various)......
do
do
(Pacific)

* »t. Jo)

■SSPS^™
($2,903,600):
State Bonds
do

(war) 1861.

(war) 1864.

(war)

1866.

(war) 1866.
"*7/
:
„War *bsey{$3,895,200)
Pond Bonds
"ST
($51,753,03*2):
General Fund
do

do

do
do

do
do

Loans....
do
do
do

Bounty Fund Loan,
wp

do




444,022

103*

anta

..»,

($38,377,000):

.

..

do Bonds (Funding)
Tennessee ($23.000,000):
Internal Improvement Bonds...
do
do
do
Railroad Loan Bonds
...

Funding Bonds (new)
Vermont ($1,650,090):
War Loan Bonds

do

1886

Jan. *

July

var.

do

var.

Jan. A July
do

1886

Jan. A July
do
do
do
do
do
do

....

....
...

coupon.....

798,000
641,000

j-6,826,196
1,688,000
9,376,372

3,000,000
2,113,000

1,966,000
100,000

1,100,000
463,000

250,000
2,276,000

622,000
11,132,000
7,000,000
8,900,000

1,194,100
600,006
609,500
500,000

1870
’60 ’65
’69 ’70
’76 ’77
1879
1879

May A Nov.

pleas.
1866
1868

• e-s •

70
84

74
85

Baltimore ($21,928,666):
Internal Improvement Stock..
do
do
do
Jail Stock
Water Stock
Pittsb. A Connellsv. RR. Loan.
Baltimore A Ohio RR. Loan
Park and Park Improve. Stock.
Defense Loan

....

ioi“
101
....

Floating Debt Stock.

96*

—

($12,845,376):
Municipal Bonds

....

do
do

2 • • •

do
do

2,347,340
2,175,400
13,911,900

11,108,000
21,896,298
494,000
1,460,949

July

do

1863
1881

Jan. A July 1875
do
’76-’81

do

do

1870
1890
1890

Various.

’68-’74
’68-’77
67-’93
’67-’71
77-’93
1894
’71-’76
’71-’86

do

July
May A Nov.
Jan. A July

Jan. A

Mar. A

Sep.

Jan. A July ’73-183
1879
do

do

May A Nov.
Jan. A
do

1886
1890

July 1867

1883

do

....

....

(currency)

.

($10,023,419):
Municipal Bonds (various)....
Improvement Loan Bonds
...

do

do

do

Prospect Park Loan Bonds
do

do
do
do
Water Loan Bonds
Soldiers’ Aid Fund Bonds
Chicago ($3,975,500):

...

...

Mnnicipal Bonds (old issue)
do
do
(new issue).
Sewerage Bonds
.

Water Bonds
Cincinnati ($3,203,000):

Jan. A July
74-’91
do
do
do
Jan. A July
Mar. A Sep.

Municipal Bonds

....

....

05*
96*

’71-’94

•

•

•

99

•

1870^

Jan. A July ’75-’T9
do
’71-’81
do
’77-90
1887
do

\

-

....

e

e

e

•

Apr. A Oct. 1868
do
Jan. A July
do
*

1868

long.!
1888

6**

65

62*

62*

Jun. A Dec ’Tl-TO
Jan. A July
do
do
do

....

’86-’95 43
’84-’96

’6'-’99 89
’68-’99

J.,A., J. AO.

1870

do
Jan. A July

1870
1878

250.900
4,385,034

1,000,000
5,COO,000
723,966

July *68-’88

....

....

....

see.

1890

6,089,200

Various.

’67’87
’67’78
’74 ’76
’70 ’79

Municipal Loan Bonds
Water

Loan Bonds.

City

($l,963,5S
City and War Bonds

....

....

1OTXI8YH1LE

•

.

’67’96
’67’95
’67 ’91

371,000
956,500
1,184,000

Varioos.

’67’79

Apr. A Oct. ’67’82

1,231,000

Railroad Loan Bond*
Water Loan Bonds

I,975,000
851,000

]

Iilwaukee

($911.600):
Municipal (re-adjust.) Bonds..
Tew York City ($33,826,524):

Water Stock....
do
do.
Croton Water Stock
do
do
do
Water Stock.
Floating Debt Fund Stock
CentralPark Fund Stock
102*
do
do Impr. Fund Stock
do
do
do
do
Real Estate Bonds
101
102*
Sold. Family Aid Fund Bonds:.
do
do
do
do
Court House Stock
94* 94*
Soldiers’ Bounty Fond Bonds
do
Substit. A Relief B’ds
9i* 95*
Riot Damages Bonds
80* 81*
Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds..
Philadelphia ($35.166,621):
.....

....

....

....

.

Mnnicipal Bonds (old)
do
do
(new)....

911.600. 4

3,000,200
2,147,000
900,000
1,800,000
1,878,900
2,748,000
3,066,071
2,600,000

2,083,200
1,133,437
2,000,000

1,600,000
1,800 000
4,000,000
2,000;000
1,620,000
1,122,400
829,886

478,897
do
do
(old)
4,097,888
do
do
(new)
18,109,956
War and Bounty Loan Bonds... II,660,000
Pittsburg ($
):

1869

•

•

•

••

*

Quarterly

*

*

940

F.M.A.AN
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

’67’90

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

•

...

•

A

•

•

•

•

$e

•

•

•

1 •

’75’93
•

1894

.

1870
1880
1890

•

•

.

•

•

•

••

e •

96

•

.

•

98*

..

...

....

-

-

r

-

•

•

f...
•

•

•

•

....

*5
•

...

• « •

e«ee
e

•

•

•

•

• • •

•

.

.

'

•

’67 ’8S i

1918

•

.,.

1876

Various.
Jan. A July

....

....

1878
1887

do

•

....

1876

’67’98
67’04
'94 ’06

..

•

....

1883

’67 ’88

•

95

1887
1878
May'A Nov ’69*72
’78 ’78
do
do
’75 ’OS
do
’88’9(
do
’73’7(
do
’77 ’85
’91 ’97
do
Jan. A July
dodo
do

•

ltd

’67’84

Apr. A Oct. ’82 ’93
May ANov. 1887
June ADec.

•

♦

*•••

98:

.

,

98

100* 100*
•

• •

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

• • *

*

Harbor and Wharf Bonds

•

1,800,000

99*

May A Nov. 1887
Various.

....

92* 94

1881
2876

Various. ’68’86
Jan. A July 1871

Mnnicipal Loan Bonds

....

...

469,968
650,000

do ;

*

1894

675,000

Various.

....

’15 ’16
’81-’99 96
’85 ’90

Jan. A July ’72 ’90
May A Nov. ’70 ’97
April A Oct. ’96 ’00

689.900
650,000

($4,118,000);

Jan. A July
do

*

’76’76

Jan. A July
do
do
do
do
do
do

561,254

do
do
do
Water Loan Bonds.

do
do
do
do

1893
1895

622,000
893,840
850,0C0
1,217,000
589,000
6,188,000
615,000

896:000

.♦

J.,A.,J .AO. 1890
do
Mar. ASept.
do

336,000

..

May A Nov. 1876
Jan. A July 1886

2,192,168
225,000

1,083,000

do
do
Water Works Bonds
Detroit ($1,109,968):

Quarterly 3870 102*
Municipal Bonds
Railroad Bonds
July '68 ’7f 100
St. Louis ($5,644,000):
May A Nov. 1868
Jan. A July 'C7-’7i 93”
Municipal Bonds :
do
1877 108* 108*
Real Estate and Improv. Bonds
do
1877 107*
Water and Sewerage Bonds.
do

....

....

1871

845/22

4,1? 5,399

1,464,000

.

Apr. A Oct.
Jan. A July

....

Var.
Var.

Jan. A

1,800,000
1,098,000

(currency)

Brooklyn

Var.

do
do
do

do
do

Quarterly.

5 •

406,100 6

1,000.060

Water Loan Bonds
Jan. A

Jan. A

12,700,000
6,466,000

1,775,000
1,210,803

Boston
Jan. A July
do

700, °00
2,489,780

2,659,000
21,726,600

600,000

•

...

1870

Jan. A July ’69-’76

443.961

818,159
1,000.000

Various.

•

....

municipal Securities

S,39C,200 6

2,609,607

3,626,500

3 Various.
do
Feb. A Ang.

1876

102*
102*

-

State Bonds (coupon)
do
do
(registered) .......
do (Funding) conpon
do (
do
) registered
West Vikginia ($
):
State Bonds
Wisconsin ($2,248,191) :
War Bonds

July '72-'84 100* 101
April A Oct. ’74-’84 ICO* 101

6,168/90
29,209,000
3,000,000

1,567,600

Virginia ($43,166,286):

Jan. &

’67-’76 48* 50
do
’77-’86 48* 50
do
’87 ’96 48* 50
Jan. A July 1900 48
48

Jan. A July

,108

A abed

Various.

218,574

nds

119

Bid

679,218

-

103* 104
107* 107*

Jan. & July ’77-’80 118
do
’83-’84
do
1886

FRIDAY.

pal
Dee.

(domestic)

109*

1861

Princi¬

d Relief Bonds

2,183,532
3,6 0,000
4,(96,309
2,400,000

10s*
109*
*

Payable.

Jan. A July I860
do
1868
do
18’0
do
1875
do
188C
do
1881 102
do
’68-’71

879,866

(Union Loan)

102*
102
109
109
106
106

1,425,000

($11,814,763):

State Bonds.

110

July 1868

Quarterly

.

do

Ohio

ER8BY

Michigan ($3,970,921):
State Loan Bonds
Canal
do
War Loan
do
Bounty Loan Bond*

do

•

1883
1887

October.
’67-’72
Mar. ASept. ’67-’78
Various.
1871
Mar. A Sept 1883
Pub. A Aug. 1880
June A Dec
1889

,

do

do
do

160,000

2,832,500

do
do
War Loans
do
do
do
do
do
do (currency)

do

1868

Peb. A Aug.
Various.
’67-’72
Feb. A Aug. 1886
do
'86-’87
Various.
10 yrs

j..

do

1904

4,838,933
669,000
1,000,000
409,800
1,992,000

800,000
6*25,900
475,000

inscribed
Massachusetts ($25,555,747):
State Bonds
do
do
Railroad Loans

-

.

Hate.

477,060
3874,000
5,514,600

108*
nds, conpon
do
103* 104*
transmiesable
Military Loan Bonds
J 107* 107*
107* 107* RhodW Island ($3,626,000):
97* 98
Waif Loan Bonds
South Carolina ($5,205,227):
97* 96
196
State Stock (Pire Loan)..
106*
do Bonds (Bine Ridge RR.)..
105* 106*
do
do
105* 105*
(State Honse)
do Stock (do
do )

Jan. A July ’67-’73
do
’68-’72

State Bonds

w£w»

•

Onuundieg

109* 109*

271,000
3,346,000

346,000

do
do
(war) of’62
do
do
(bounty) of ’63
do
do
(war) of ’64
Maryland ($
):
do
do
do

....

l

4,578,017
1,514,489
848,000

Kansas ($604,476):

do
do
do

tt

North Carolina ($11,290,500):
State Loan Bonds
;....
do
do
do
do
do
do
Funded Coupons

.,

Indiana ($7,009,39*):
State Bonds
do
do
War Bonds, coupon
Iowa ($484,000):
State Stock.
War Loan Bonds

do

.

May & Nov 1872

Apr. A Oct.

3,030,000

etc.)

July

899,000

870,093

•

Canal Bonds
do
do registered
Coupon Bonds
do
do
do
do
do
do ’
War Loan Bonds

do

....

denomination*.
Marked thna * are !a default for intareet.

-j
&Aug. 1867
ASept.

Jan. A

8,600,000
2,000,000
2,000,000

(war) tax exempt..

State Bonds.....
do
do (fnnding,
Illinois (08,63*,252):

May A Nov.

1886

610,000

3.774,000
1,648,000
1,600,000

Bonds (war)
(war)

OfoaeiA

1884

Mar.

168,000
1,941,000
437,850

.......

($370,617):
State Bonds
BUte Bonds....--.

May& Nov.

7.30 Jan. A

($10,9 *0,000):

do
do
Flobiba

July >1881
May & Nov. 1882

682,330,150 7.30 Jun. A Dec. 1868

Cautobnxa ($5,822,000)"
Mate Bonds of ’67 and ’60
War Bonds
Cen. Pac. RR. B. (int. by State)

Connecticut

1881

Jan. A

7.30 Feb.

Bank Loan

Bank Loan

1881-

Aaked

our Tables.!

NTJSREaY.

euuuuut

—

(ftmding)
(incl. int. $8,252,401):

♦Real Estate

1871-

Jan. & July 1886

(extended)

do
do

do

6 July

16

Bonds.

do

1

do

do
do
do

State

f8

1862. ’. .coupon. )

Bonds (5-20s) o:

BMi

Jan. A July 1867

-W™*

1880
do

do

SSL

6,574,300
8,908,342

registered, f

do

do
do
do
do
do

Payable.

SECURITIES LIST.

notice of any error discovered In

TRIDAY.

137*

S?bfl8«.

Bonds

Rata

fruiel-

468

Railroad Bonds..

...

1,188,000
1,062,000
902,000
982,000

1,104,00$

Jan. A July ’67 ’86
’71 ’OC
do
’TOW
do ’
do
’67 ’87
do
’71’77

*

•

•

e

• • • •
• • • •

....

f

464

THE CHRONICLE.

Exports of Leading Articles from New York.

Commercial Himes.

®

©

COMMERCIAL

EPITOME.

© v) CD

a

0Q

Ok

•r*

April 12.

belligerent nature of the news from Europe, received
by the cable during the past week, and the advance in gold
which has taken 4place, has had the effect to unsettle values
materially, and to interrupt the regular eourse of trade which
had begun to set in. In the
place of returning confidence, we
have removed distrust and incertitude, with speculation in ar¬
ticles of food already too
high, and depression in nearly all
legitimate business.
Breadstufis have been active

advancing, but closed dull Tobacco active but less buoyant.
Groceries moderately active, but at irregular prices.
Provisions closed with more business,except for lard. The
advance in gold, and the probability - of an export demand in
case of a war in
Europe, have given a slight upward turn to
prices leading, however, thus far to very little advance. The
export movement is thus far somewhat behind last year, when
prices were much higher than now. The stocks of Hog Pro¬
ducts are not large in this market, but considerable
quantities
are to come forward.
At the close to-day there was more
movement in Bacon, part for
speculation and export, mostly
short ribbed, at ll^@llf. Beef is in light stocks so that the
extreme prices current are maintained.
Butter "and cheese

In

metals,

have

but dull, and

irregular

so

Leather has

quotations.

change to notice in iron, lead, and
tin.
Copper is more steady, with a sale of 200,000 lbs. Port¬
age Lake to arrive at 23£c.; and there is more speculation in
Silesian spelter at 6^-c., gold, per lb.
East India Goods have been without movement,
except sales
of 15,000 bags Calcutta linseed to arrive in Boston at
$2.27\
@$2.40, gold, in bond, the lower price for late shipments.
Naval Stores have been irregular and unsettled, but the
close is very firm all through, and some
speculation may be
noticed in spirits turpentine.
Oils of all kinds are quiet.
Freights have become dull. There is a good supply of room
on the berth, and about a
quarter million bushels corn have
been shipped to Great Britain, at 2f@4d.
per bushel by sail
and steam to Liverpool and
Glasgow, and 5s^4d.@5s. 6d. per
quarter to Ireland, but of cotton and provisions the shipments
have been very limited.
Three vessels were taken to-day for
petroleum to the Continent, being the only business of the
kind for the past few days.
we

no

•

Ashes, pkgs...

This
Since
Same
week. Jan. 1. time’66
216
1,738
1,428

Breadstuffb—

Com
Oats

Rosin..

4,912
1,297

805

Rye

Barley
Grass seed...
Flaxseed
Beans
Peas
C. meal,bbls.
C. meal,bags.
Buckwheat &
B.W. flour, bg
....

37,763

28
456
100

6,892
13,391
8,677
14,909

1.889

3,745 177.293
....

..

221
5.199
Grease, pkgs...
54
386
Hemp, bales...
Hides, No
11,692 100,817
27
Hops, bales. ..
2,738
Leather, sides
50,058 661,231
.

pigs

579
...

Naval Stores—
Crude trp,bbl

Spirits turp..

.

2,106
32,420
15,687

Cut meats....

Eggs
Pom

29,718
172,141

Beef, pkgs.
Lard, pkgs..,.
Lard, kegs....
6,045 Rice, pkgs
...

272,677 Starch
1,537 Stearine

906 Spelter, slabs...
4,688 Sugar, hhds &
1,016 bbls....
282 Tallow, pkgs...
166,975 Tobacco, pkgs..
3,324 Tobacco, hhds..
628,S21 Whiskey, bbls..
2,096 Wool, bales

9,930

5,245

No

Rice,
1.418

....

411

li;i88

The following table,

15,502
9,987

bush.".

2,338
75

12,920 Peanuts, bags.
164,111 Provisions—
65,112
Butter, pkgs..
94,028
Cheese

Dressed
333

pkgs

373,837 Oil, Petroleum.

3,434

6,085
13,879 292,019
Cotton, bales
369
2,328
Copper, bbls...
93
1,419
Copper, plates.
276 17,991
Driedfruit,pkg8

Molasses, hhds
and bbls

422,777 Oil, lard

40,095 200,367
1,900 15,593
2,078

Pitch

70,160 Oil cake,

38,627 444,089
4,383 221,480

Malt

Lead,

429,596

follows

21,960

—.

8'3'S”2»89'

rilO

r-i

sssWigg

€

09

<=•

t3

sa

©

eo

*

.

.

.00009

t-

-

•

•

•

©

T? S5

•

588

277

Hogs,
79.873

81,769

3,964

15,704

•©Hg®®coo©Ma(»l.

:*

’

T-l

Jn*

<ot-

*

•

:

:

•

•

•

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CO

04

CO O O

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.

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•
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CD

.

:£ :

gj :

:

55

:§ :8 :8 :8‘:

t-

:s

.

PQ t-

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■c
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09

•

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.

09
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09

.

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-co

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.

•

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CO

«?.:
* *

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.in

.

.

.00

'

•

T-t«

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:

t-I

.

.

'Sis:15?

22 Ot
S ^ Hrlrt
250 2!
$ 9-<« S « P
CO O CO
©»K!b !
a co a

o

•

•

-y-i

•

•

r-i

^

sic ; *;ss

.

:£©s

:;

©4

c-SSiS^SSS gs

•

•
T-I 1-t

t- H

“

§

:

:gs : i ;8 i

if ‘ vr

§ j |

0»00t-c009

•

■

72*3 ®®0D « « ® M fl
■gg B3BSS das o

rough,

i
d
5 E
p

S3!

<©

rt

p H

CD

>»a3 DO©

D

3<

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-f 09)

| i jSIi

g«

.^s

co
09

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ef '

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.

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—

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i-t

ss

i-T

8

i*SS

ggg i
S'8 ’ '^8'“ a"
gas;
k

:

1*81,| ;ss|,

Sf

IT

72,563 127,619
7,404 26,568
2,524
912
18,318 16,880
1,425
2,107
248,786 286,598
9,365
6,001

3,353
1,810
4,952 25,309 48,661
6,386
1,857 11,207
4,025 45,063 25,252
1,917 14,761 27,109

•

"

3
■

©

•o

;S

3 Po r-r

since

98

t-og>itt-

10

g9 -©* -

-

:

compiled from Custom House returns, shows the
exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York
since January 1, 1867, the principal ports of destination, and the total
for the same period in 1866. The export of each article to the several
ports for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount fu
the last Dumber of tfco CaaomoiK rm that here gives:




^
-a .» c.
—
t-at^oCibc-ie.)*ioouC-SS

rH

6,755 136,741 88,052
3,757 82,747 89,945
2,815 63,097 65,973
8,360 42,730 38,652
5,613 85,617 74,622
616 20,630 40,624
1,881 74,843 60,554
688
6,306
3,247
194
7,453
1,335
2,995 15,166 35,646
297 2,684
2,954
547
2,161
166

*

00

This
Since Same
week. Jan.l. time’66.
Tar

Flour, bbls.. 31,189 373,503
^Wheat, bush. 75,017 299,297

as

:

•

O

•

r-i rH

January 1.

receipts of domestic produce for the week ending April 12,

Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1866, have been

:

•

888* '8'2‘g'S® ‘8 '

Receipts of Domestic Produce for tlie Week, »nd since
The

:S

38891118

The

have been more active.
Hides have been rather firmer,
that it is impossible to give reliable
further advanced £c@lc. per lb.

OC lOrH tr

•

rT

Friday Night.

Cotton has further declined.

[April 18,1867.

;S8|;
s"
: :2 :C :

••••••

:gg

|8|;

465

THE CHRONICLE.

April 13,1867.]

usual table of the movement
The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show s of Cotton at all the porls since Sept. 1, showing at a glance
the foreign imports of certain Leading articles of commerce at this port
the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.:
for the week ending April 5, since Jan. 1,1867, and for the correspond¬
in 1866.

Imports of Leading Articles.

[The quantity is given in packages
For
the
week.

Since
Jan. 1,

165
448

1,646
12,724
4,291
197,167

Coal, tons ....
Cocoa, hags...
1.819
Coffee, hags
Cotton, bales.
Drugs. &c.
Bark, Peruv
....

..

Cochineal...
Cr Tartar
Gambler....

...

600
12

Soda, ash...

1,212

Gunny cloth

.

Hair

Hemp, bales..
Hides, &c.

„

Bristles

Hides,dres’d
India rubber..

Ivory
Jewelry, &c.
Jewelry
Watches....
Linseed
......

Metals, &c.
.




Cutlery...,

143
206

222
568

Hardware...

tcs & bbls..

Sugar,bxs&bg

4,254 Tea..!

5,335
1,188

4,578 Tobacco
1,748 Waste
1,328 Wines, &c.
6,417
Champ, bkts

806

3,028
1,156
7,135
43,521
3,964
11,195

9

446

26
615
34
871

542

'

14,016
903

32,036
297

69
99
288
19

2,676
14,461
1,143

16
16

167
267

9,500
3,417

167,808
28,169

88

1,286

Since
For
the Jan. 1,
1867.
week.
187
3,620

Iron,RRb’rs 3,679
Lead, pigs.. 14,443
Spelter, lbs.
Steel
6,025
Tin, boxes.. 16,116
Tinslab8,lbs 22,642
Rags
4,106
Sugar,
hhds,

2,093

158

Soda, sal....
Flax
Furs

179,828
1,490

3,159

.

Opium
Soda, hi-carb

Madder

5,664

2,280
4,431
5,357

19
66

Oils, ess,...
Oil, Olive...

Indigo

15,293

2,330
7,559

358
394

428
136
162
277
150
900

Gums, crude
Gum, Arabic

2,407

106

....

when not otherwise specified.]

Same
time
1866.

1867.

....

Blea p’wd’rs
Brimst, tns.

give

we

our

Sept* 1, and

Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since

ing period in 1866:

Buttons

Below

62,892

117,625

Stocks at Dates mentioned.

Same
time
1866.

682,828 2,467,226
74,023
48,012
148,515
182,812
872,248 2,334,762

18,487

17,198

5,3*5
2,881

40,557

33,370

63,797

4,580

259,752

410
403

11,102
3,532

82,442
244,346
8,882

2,884

3,632
28,935
35,985
Wines
30,800
1,688
3,854
62,721
913
11,225
20,906
36,725 Wool, bales...
313 Articles reported by value.
27,971 Cigars
$13,137
$96,702 $353,976
5,201
50,769
24,515
82,368 Corks
11,993 Fancy goods. .107,484 1,265,656 1,289,774
3,731 Fish.
234,437 541,335
22,976
1,351 Fruits, &c.
15,919
69,797 138,448
6,936 Lemons
1,928 Oranges.... 38,147 196,999
95,754
Nuts
22,681
227,501 411,181
28,638
Raisins
4.199
179,474 340,746
504 Hides,vmdrsd. 57,291 2,999,529 1,840,145
60,926
88,249
3,366 Rice.
7,288 Spices, &c.
667
Cassia
50,800 102,130
23,861
17,337
Ginger
41
49,674
212
78,860
Pepper
54,648
330 Saltpetre
16,966
89,397 Woods.
13,534
Fustic
21,723
20,240
85,104
33,831
Logwood... 5,964
61,874
33,719
1,714 Mahogany. 11,256

Friday, P. M., April 12, 1867.

receipts of Cotton this week at all the ports show 2
further considerable decrease, the total reaching only 31,995
The

bales, (against 39,252 bales last^eek, 42,507 bales the previous
week, and 40,776 bales three weeks since,) making the aggre¬

September 1, this year, 1,588,152 bales,
against 1,675,487 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The

gate receipts since

receipts

Received this week at*—
New Orleans
Mobile
Charleston

Savannah
Texas

are as

3,532

1

TO—

SHIP-

m’ntsto

since

SEPT.

Great

1.

80,631

for’gn.

130,611
97,492
49,749

33,602
261,348

34,654

492

89,749

7,739

22,383

20,846

•

•

NORTH.

Total.

416,504
113,593
60,216
80,631

•

•

.

•

•

•

•

.

•

•

4,274

37,876

13,852 37,13S

812,338

....

....

....

,,**

.

•

.

•

•

.

184,782
55,158
61,600
106,974

.

44,704

....

492

83,562

7,739
21,107

82,010

73.498 1.050.496

177,864

14,793
19,423
53,299 83,175
145,000
34,409 2,592

....

261

....

861,433 115,565

•

STOCK,

PORTS.

.

292,428 95,378 28,698
4,362 3,036
106,195
91
58,152
1,973

193 939

1,588,152

Total

France Other

Britain

632,995
211,368
125,862

N. Orleans, A^ril 5..
Mobile, April 5
Charleston, April 5..
Savannah, April 5
Texas, March 30*...
New York, Apr. 12+.
Florida, April 5$....
N. Carolina, Apr. 12
Virginia, Apr. 12 .
Other p’ts, Apr. 12+

....

•

•

•

•

...

§50,000

610,794 487,551

We have had this week a very dull market all the week.
The chief influence has been the belligerent reports by the
cable from Europe, accompanied as they have been

clining prices at
The advance in

with de¬
Liverpool and dull business at Manchester.

gold has retarded the decline in currency quo¬

tations, prices on this

basis being only half a cent lower; but

of course the concession to shippers, that is the gold price,
is much lower than a week ago.
This decline, however,
not been sufficient to stimulate exports, and very little has

has

goods remains unsatisfactory,
spinners are reducing consumption. The reduced move¬
ment of the American crop is quite lost sight of, in part on
this account, but more especially in consequence of the un¬
favorable aspect of European affairs. From the accounts re¬
ceived, however, it is not thought that war will be the result
of the present complication, and a recovery to some extent in
prices is therefore looked for. Still, the immediate effect of
The trade in cotton

been done.
and

the news is very unfavorable, and, consequently, the
of the week has been the smallest we have noted
the

business

for

closing quotations :
Upland.
$ lb

Ordinary

Florida.

Mobile.

23
24
25
27
29

24
25

23
24

;

25
27

Middling....

29

;
Good Middling,.

some

The following

time, the sales being only about 8,500 bales.
are

follows:

Receipts.
Receipts. Received this week at—
bales
1,941
bales
9,751 Florida.....
377
2,741 North Carolina.....
2,368
2,243 Virginia
3,525
Total receipts for week
31,995
5,517

Tennessee, Kentucky, &c

PORTS.

4,561
41,408
120,795

COTTON.

details of the week’s

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT.

rec’d

N. Orleans
& Te
24
25

26

26

28
80

28

30

of Cotton this week from New York show a
slight increase, the total shipments amounting to 20,640
bales against 18,863 bales last week.
The particulars of
The exports

and ’yet very considera¬ these shipments are as follows :
Liverpool per steamers—Australasian, 616..-. .Palmyra, 1,614... Eng¬
bly less than last week. From the Southern ports there is a Toland,2,274
City of Paris, 140
Chicago, 2,200—Olymous, 1,503
Per ships— C. Furdoonjee, 2,004....Excelsior, 1,056
Martha, 1,698
falling off in the shipments of 30,000 bales, the total from
Wisconsin, 800...^.Per Dark—Royal Diadem, 1,015. Total bales... 15,550
To
Havre, per steamer—Europe, 434
rier ship—Lady Blessington, 1,636.
those ports reaching last week 72,174 bales, against 42,157
Total bales
2,070
To Bremen, per steamer—New York, 613
bales this week; but from the Northern ports there is an in
Atlantic, 1,295
Per ship—
J. S. DeWolf, 256. ..Per bark—Ukraine, 396. Total bales
2,560
To Hamburg, per steamer—Saxonia, 460. Total bales
crease of about 5,000 bales, so that the aggregate shipments
460
Below
we
from all the ports for the week reach 65,061 bales.
give our table showing the exports of Cotton
Below
from New York, and their direction for each of the last four
we
give the details of the week’s shipments, showing 51,756 weeks
; also the total exports and direction since September
bales sent to Liverpool, 1,310 bales to Queenstown, 5,318
1, 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period
bales to Havre, 2,560 bales to Bremen, 460 bales to Ham¬ of the
previous year :
burg,1,618 bales to Barcelona, 455 bales to Genoa, 150 bales Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1866
Same
to Vera Cruz, and 1,456 bales to St. Petersburg, as follows :
time
Total
The

exports this week are large,

-

•

*

WEEK ENDING

Exported
this week toExport
Bre- .Ham- Barce- Gen- Vera St. Peters¬
Liver- QueensFrom
pool. town. Havre, men. burg. lODa. oa. Cruz. burg. Tot
460
2,070 2,660
New York.... 15,550
Boston
124

EXPORTED TO

March
26.

April

Philadelphia..

281

1,869
Baltimore
New Orleans. 10,188
Mobile
8,030
Savannah.... 6,512
Charleston
3,091
Galveston
7,022
...

Other British Ports

8,091

16,074

14,181

—

480

16,550 255,291 301,184
6,067 16,029

....

16,554 14,131

15,550 261,z48 317,213

....
—

....

1,529

2,092
1,156

1,310

455

Total to Gt. Britain..

150 1,456

Havre
Other French

87

....

8,091

485

2,630

ports

....

..

Wilmington,
N.C

79

Total exports
this week.. 51,756

79

Bremen and Hanover

1,310 5,318

2,560

460

1,618

455 150 1,466 65,061

the United States since
bales, against 1,100,441
bales for the same period last year, and the present stocks
are 487,551 bales against 495,086 bales at the same time
foreign exports from
Sept. l,~now amount to 1,050,496
The total

*

In this table, as
from the receipts at

™a. French

well as in our general table of receipts, &c., we deduct
each port for the week all received at such port from other

shipped
be de¬
thus parffenJirbj the statement of this met, as some of our readers mn to understand it.
Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain amount
from Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must
ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are

Hamburg
Other ports
Total to N. Europe..

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar
All others

Total Spain, etc
Grand Total
+ The

578
....

2,560
460

22,719
10,268

2,491

13,746
11,929
1,878

35,478

27,558

860
800

869
7

1,660

876

319.338

372.523

264

2,427

3,354

13,856

....

800

....

800

19,466

8

1,791

264

—

26,873

6

1,299

687

...

13,846

26,881

2,163

....

....

prev.
year.

13,862

1,152
1,296
•

2,070

date.

2,070

485

3,135

9.

578

2,630

....

April

2.

,.

Liverpool

to

March
19.

18,363

.

..

3,020

....

20,640

receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee

Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated.
X These are the receint* at all the ports of Florida to

Apalachicola, which are only to March 29.
I Estimated. Tbe stock at New York i* also estimated

April 5, except

466

THE CHRONICLE.

Receipts of cotton
Sept. 1:

at the port

of New York for the week

the stock,

price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New
York, and price of gold at the close of each week:

and since

From
New Orleans

This

Since

week.
Bales.

Sept. 1.

.

Texas

1,292

Savannah
Mobile
Florida
Total lor the week.
Total since Sept. 1.

The

following

.

Bales.
107,S19
39,901

455

81,0 8

2,574

24,297
29,496

This
week.
Bales.
.748
298
2.098
2,836

From
South Carolina
North Carolina

Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.

Per Railroad

Since

Sept. 1.

41
‘*

623,715

Last
week.

Receipts from—
New
Orleans

1,075

Texas

Savannah
Mobile
Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

1,142

56,007

Last
week.
163

10,716
13.774

Since

Sep. 1.
8,794

‘

.62

4*041
459

86
il

*i64

5,786
660
8.603

Tennessee, Kentucky, «fec...
•

Sep. 1.

-Philad’phia.—>

25,700

Virginia
New York, &c*

Total receipts

Since

bales

113

40,846

696

22,333

3,087

184,511

1,932
737

409

15,963

Reshipments.

The exports from these cities have been
Exported this
From Baltimore to

8
15

week.

2,611

Apr. 5

1,479 bales.

Shipping News.—We have
given above the vessels in
which the foreign
shipments for the week were made from the
Northern ports; we now add the same
information with re¬

Ship-

Feb. 1..
“
8
“
15..
“
22..
Mar. 1..
44
8..

....

.

per bark Ounmore, 1,310 Upland
:
Charleston—To Liverpool, per ship
Southern Rights, 278 bags Sea Isl¬
and and 2,313 Uplands
To Barcelona,
per brig
67
Galveston—To Liverpool, perRegeuerada,
barks Heiress, 2,371
.Palo Alto, 1,312
Jennie Cobb,
1,308....Lincoln, 1,726
per brig Prince of
,

1,310

..

3,091
87

6.632

“

“
“

.

Apr. 5..

7,022

Date.
Feb. 1.

79

15,576

32

3,818
3,751

©—

16,769
17,790
18,687

31
31

@—

4,890

“

8..
15.,
22.,
Mar. 2.
“
9.

..

“

..

“

“
“

“

15.
22.

29

April 5.

..

...

..

..

..

...

..

Price
Mid.

41,666 32,000 23, <43 251,727 sim—
26,030 30,200 31,103 24S,860 31
®—
19,433 33,300 26,543 243,248
sim—
28.786 29,150 26,882 246,935
3l); @31

To Liver- ToNew
York.*
pool.

ym
9-16©-

Price

gold.
1 ©- 135 ($135*
1 ®— 137%© -1 ©— 136%irA —

9-10©—
9-1'©- 1@%138%© —
31 ©31* 9-10©,—
—© —©. —
29 ®9-16© —
—©—
—© —%
30 ®—
%©9-16 %©% 134 ©135%
30 @—
9-1 G@—
%@- 134%©135
29|®30
9-16©—
%©- 134%©135
9,751 16.500 IS,710 177,864 29 ©—
9-16©% %©— 133%@134

20,576 33.600 26,408 238,930
17,312 17.500 20,489 234,337
13,359 25.600 25,895 219,971
14,5S9 22,709 22,077 213,376
10,874 16.050 40,010 185,954

*

By steam.
The market this week has been dull
and declining pretty much all
the week. This was due to
the lower
quotations at Liverpool and
New York, and an
unwillingness on the part of holders to meet the
vie ws of buy ere. Prices at the
close were but little more than nomin¬

al, ordinary (Liverpool
classification) being quoted at 26c., good ordin¬
ary at 27c., low middling at 28c., and
middling at 29c. Domestic Ex¬
change has ruled quiet, bankers
premium,
The rate for commercial has beenchecking on New York at
premium for New York sight.
Sterling Exchange closed at 145$@146$ for bankers.
Mobile. April 6.—By mail we have received one

from Mobile.

The

week’s later dates

30
30
29
29
29
29

5,871
4,101

©©—
©—
©-

©29%

©....
87%©....

To New

Price
York.*
gold.
1 ©— 135©!87
1 ©— 136®188
1 ©— 136©188

1
1

%@%@-

ymx

©—136*©1371
®— 139©14l
%©- 136©138
%©— 187©138
%©% 137©138
%©% 135*©13«
%©% 133 ©135

at 29c,

:

“

Receipts. Shipm’s.

1
8
15

.

“

22....
March 1

44
44

16.112
7,714

7,041
7,742

8,611

29,160
27,542

5,108
4,522
11,229
10,477
5,112
4,663

33,893
28,153
22,675
22,284
21,934

7,219
5,489
4,999
4,721

8
15
22
29

April 5

Stock.

9,489
10,624

:

4,306
3,651

.

Price Mid.
31%©-

_

26,250

31
31

30,376

7,598
The market this week has been
dull, and prices
the unfavorable European advices, sales

©—

©—

30%©30
80
28

©—
"•

—

29%©—
28
29

©29

@—
27%®-

19,423

have declined under

beiDg made as low as 27c. for
middlings. The stock offering, however, is very small, holders pre¬
ferring to wail rather than part with their stocks at present
figures.
At the close *he market is
excessively dull, and prices are nearly nomi¬
nal, middling being quoted at 427$c. and low
middling at 26c. Freights
show no change.
We quote to Liverpool 7-16@$d. for square, and |d
@$d.
round bales. Steam
for

Stock.

©31%

pool.
%@9-16
%©—
%©—
%©%@—
%©%©-

Steam.

series of weeks

“

-Freights-

To Liver-

^|ht on New York is bought by banks
$ discount, and sold at $ per cent, premium.
Sterling Exchange
$6.3t'@6 38 for 60 days’ bills.
Savannah, April 6.—The receipts for the week
ending April 5 were
3,651 bales (of which 126 were from
Florida),
against 4,806 bales last
week.
The shipments this week were
7,598 bales, of which 5,512
bales were to
Liverpool, 1,810 bales to Queenstown, 827 bales to New
York, 225 bales to Boston, 82 bales to Philadelphia, and 145 bales to
Baltimore. Below we give the
receipts, shipments, prices, Ac., for a

42,157

Follows:

Rec’ps. Sales. Exp.
.

1
1

at

Orleans, April 6.—The

were as

136 ©137
135J©137
136 ©138

—Freight for Upl’d—»

mid.

Early in the week price of middling remained

44

per

mail returns for the week
ending
April 5, show a considerable decrease in the
receipts, the total for the
week
being 9,7ol bales, against 10,874 bales last week, and 14,589
bales the previous week. The
shipments for the last week were 18,710
bales, of which 10,188 bales were to
2,092 to Havre, 1,529 to
Barcelona, 1,456 to St. Petersburg, Liverpool,
to
455
Genoa,
150 to Mexico, 2,734
to New York, and 106
to Philadelphia.
Stock
on hand
April 6,
was 177,864
bales. The
receipts, sales and exports for a series of
weeks, and the stock, price of
middlirg, rates of freight to Liverpool
and New York, and
price of gold at the close of each week since Feb.

1,

gold.

134 ©135

owing to
the limited
supply on the market: but later with the news of the
decline at Liverpool to 12$d. holders
accepted lower figures, and some
transactions were made as low as
274c., very little, however, was of¬
fered at that figure.
Exchange

Feb.

Wales, 305

New

1%©1%
1%©1
1%©1

follows:

as

7,859

.

Total evnorts this week from Southern
ports

29*©30
28 ©29 ®-

Price of

15,425
17,980
2,923 1,600 3,250 17,653
2,5:10 1,712 4,248 15,940
2,885 1,600 2,887 16,438
2,368 1,488 4,013 14,793
4,332

16..
22..
29

1,827
2,049
2,514
1,957
1,459
1,740

5,011
4,772
5,068
2,609

.

:

Exported this week from—
Total bales
New Orleans—To
Liverpool, per steamship Alhambra, 1,6S1
per
•
ships Harry "Warren, 3,437
Benda Tilley, 3,270
per bark
Mau dslie, 1.800
10,188
To Havre per bark E. A.
Kennedy, 2,092
To Barcelona,
2,092
per barks Aguedita, 537
Aranco, 992
To St.
1,529
Petersburg,
per bark Joshua Loring, 1,456
1,456
To Genoa, per
brig Ger-tacker, 4 5
455
To Vera Cruz,
per schooner Union, 150
150
Mobile—To Liverpool, per
ships Maud, 3,002
Melicete, 2,924
Aline, 2,104
8,030
To Havre, per
brig L. M. Merrill, 1,156
1,156
Savannah—To Liverpool, per ships
Pomona,
2,521 Upland and 4S5 Sea
Island... Kalos, 2,211 Uplands and 295 Sea
Inland..
To Queenstown,
5,512

N. C.—To Liverpool, per bri* Kate
Upham, 55
bark Panama, 24

%
%
%
%
%
%
9-16
9-16

1%© %
© % 132{®139*
71,781
© % 135 ©—
70,889
— © %
134*©136
71,136 28*©—
— © %
135 ©136
62,012 28 ©28% 9-16 — © % 135 ©136
44,704 26*©—
% — © % 135 ©135*
71.116

Date. Rec’ts. Sales, ments. Stock.

*

Wilmington,

30%©30 ©—
78,325 30 ©—
73,130 30 ©—

81,655

Feb. 1, were

-

gard to the Southern ports

74,633

2,741
There has been very little
activity
the unfavorable advices from

:

Liverpool, per steamer Somerset, 735 bales—per bark
Queen Victoria, 1,074
1,859
From Philadelphia to
Liverpool, per ship Kate Davenport
2^1
From Boston to Cronstadt,
per bark Sarah Hobart, 19
Mariano, 105...
124

three cities

9,701
3,050
9,911
12,095
7,476
2,472
4,587

9,400
9,500
9,100
6,800
3,400
9,950
6,850 3,429
6,350 21,735
3,300 10,049

3,576

Total bales.

making the total from the

8 450

in ihe market this week. Under
Liverpool and New York prices have
/—Baltimore.—, given away and at the close operations were
pretty generally suspend¬
Last
Since
ed, the following being the current quotations
week.
(Liverpool classification)
Sep. 1. good
ordinary 24$, low middling 25$ and middlings 264c. Freights
951
show but little
207
change, we quote Liverpool $d. per sail and—per steam ;
20
6,107 coastwise $c.
Exchange, bankers’ on New York fc. premium, com¬
200
mercial $c. premium.
Sterling exchange 144@145.
5^699
Charleston, April 6.—The receipts for the week
endiog April 5,
1,892 amount to
2,368 bales, against 2,885 bales last week.
37S
12,400
Shipments for
this week amount to 4,013
bales, (against 2,387 bales last week), of
which 8,091 bales were to
Liverpool, 87 biles to Barcelona, 662 bales
to New York, 52 to
Philadelphia, and 77 to Baltimore. The receipts,
398
27,456
sales and exports of a series for
weeks, and the stock, price of middling,
rates of freight to
Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the
close of each week since

follows

as

6,593
10,072
6,581
6,900
5,037
3,137
3,887

22
Mar. 1
44
8
44
15
“
22
“
29.

the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬
delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬

Price of

,

“

101,087

are

.—Boston.—,

-Freight——n
Price of To
To New
Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock* mid. L’pool. York.

Date.
Feb. 1

Bales.
43,835
28,410
67,842

13,879

tember 1:

[April 18,1857.

to

New York lc., to Boston
f@lc, to
In sailing vessels the rates are a

Philadelphia and Baltimore $@fc.
fraction lower.

Galveston, March 29.—We have received one week’s later statement
by mail from Galveston. The receipts for week ending March 28,
were 4,751 bales,
against 5,096 last week, and the shipments were
9,120 bales, of which 7,024 bales were to
Liverpool, 650 bales were to
New York, 628 bales to Boston, and 810 bales
were to New Orleans.
Below we give the
receipts, and shipments for a series of weeks, and
the stock, price of
middling, rates of freight to
York, and price of gold at the close of each week : Liverpool and New
,

^-Receipts—%

Date.
1866.
Feb.
1... 6,896
41

8...
44
15...
“
22..
March 1...
44
8...
“
15...
“
22
44
29...
.

6,494
4,957

1865.

Exp.

4,568
4,136

12,^88

4,086

4,337

8,180

6,040

2,790

4,215

7,766

2,721
2,597
1,234
1,252
2,274

3,806
6,289

5,299
V,351
6,096

4,751

4,296

9,711
9,120

Freights.

,

Price To Liver- ToNew
mid.*
pool.
York.t

Stock,
36,153 24 ®—
%©—
30,621 23 ®—
1 ®—
31,400 22%@—
%©86,365 22 ®— 9-16© %
38,170 21
—
..
%
38,336 21 ®—
%©—
41,386 20%©—11-16©%
87,544 21 ©—
%®
33,175 21 ®—18-16®%
.

Price

gold.
1%©— 135 ©137
1%®% 136*©138
1%®— 136*®138*
1%®^* 137©^1%©—-138^ *140
1%®— 133 @1?5
1%@— 3861@135*
1%@— 135 ©185*
1%©— 184 ©185*

*

Specie.
t ,Per steamer.
The market this week has shown
considerable activity, but prices
have fluctuated, and at the close are
nominal, the unfavorable advices
from Liverpool and New York
having checked the demand at previous

receipts for the week ending April 5 were 2,741
bales, against 2,611 bales last week, and the
shipments were
bales, of which 8,080 were to Liverpool, 1,156 to Havre, 12 to10,049
New figures, and holders
being unwilling to make any concession. Exchange
York, 580 to Boston, and 271 bales to New Orleans,
leaving
the
stock
—sight on New York we quote cotton bill* $@f per cent, discount sell¬
on band and on
shipboard, not cleared, of 44,70$ bales. The following ing, and Banker*
bill* $ per cent, discount. Freights to
Liverpool are
weekly receipts,
*»d exports for Meries of weeks, and slightly easier
to




York,by wii,i9.fw<M>y

467

THE CHRONICLE.

April 18,1867.]
TOBACCO.

MANUFACTURED.

Black

Friday, P. M., April 12, 1867.

exports this week are mostly from New York ; Balti¬
more having shipped ODly 45 hhds. and a few pounds of man¬
ufactured tobacco. The total is about the same as last week,
The

including 937 hhds. and 982 cases, against 1,066 hhds. and
701 cases, as given in our last statement. In the following
table will be found the particulars of the weeks shipments:
\
Pkgs. ,—S tern s
Hhds. Case. Bale. Tcs,&c & bxs. hhds. bales.
44
32
150
51
892
975

Exported from

.

.

45

Baltimore

Philadelphia

7

•

1

....

....

....

51
130
422

982
701
513

937
1.066
695

Total this week
Total last week
Total previous week..

•

«...

....

—

•

44

150
179

38
308

9
21

....

250

102,909
247,227

....

usual table showing the total exports
of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their
direction, since November 1, 1866 :
Below

we

give

ber

Belgium

.

Holland
Italy
France

Spain, &c

3,392
13,172
2,139
5,382
3,258
3,629
3,999

United States since Novem¬

...

10,862

.

15

.

166
99
461
•

•

•

.

•

Honolnln, &c

•

,

,

...

...

...

•

...

.

..

-*

•

•

•

.

.

44

good

@30c

Fine, tax paid. 80 @1 25
work,medinm, in bond 12fc@18c
g< od & fine *•
20 ©30c

40
60

@55c
@70c

Black

25
45

@40c

Bright work, medium... 44

@75c

•

...

.

.

.

.

•

•

.

•

.

460
50

435

...

...

..

...

2,438

....

••

.

.

•

.

47

.

...

.

...

.

•

.

,

•

.

•

90,697
251,432
428,449

874
231

...

...

1,658,268

...

902

...

•

76,893

2

..

.

.

...

...

...

The

Nov. 1,

60

Havana.—Wrappers

6^@ 70
75@ 85
90@1 00

1 25@2 50
55@1 05

Yara

Yara, average lots

60icfr

NEW

YORK

SINCE

Virginia..
Baltimore

NOVEMBER

1. 1866.
,-T’l sin. Nov 1-^

^-Previously-',
pkgs.
32,900
3,092
1,687
1,782

This week-^
hhds.
pkgs.
2S5
2.402
468
67
129 *
1283
1,618

From

hhds.

Total

&r the

1,764

hhds.

pkgs.

3,377

85,309

1,764

2,250

11,847

350

1,114
8,359

10,199

1,243
9,642

3

124

525

124

528

4,521

14,876

46,756

16,140

50,277

Other

The

70

receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since
have been as follows:
AT

350

following are the exports of tobacco from New York
past week :
EXPORTS

OF TOBACCO

FROM

NEW

YORK.*

.-Stems-.
Hhds. Cases. Bales. hhds. bales.

Pkgs.

2

Liverpool
London
Marseilles
Havre
Bremen

Manuf.,
Ibs.
17,280
12,054

....

31
30
439

Hamburg

....

Genoa
Africa
Cuba
Havti
Other West Indies
British Gniana
New Granada
Mexico
British N. Am. Colonies...

186
158

20
....

805
150

.

,

m

0

.

,

t

44

160

.

-

.

.

.

<

.

T,

.

15,033

20
3
43
5

t

7,171

.

....

,

t..

..

6

....

16,504

20

578

....

32

1,230
....

6

....

..

..

.

.

.

.

.

.

I

1,860

5

•

50

...

...

...

•

.

80

•

...

•

542
97

41

...

...

...

13,262
36,411
18,215
212,354
31,586

...

...

...

.....

...

.

...

15 @40c
@S6c

good & fine 44

FOREIGN.

Havana.—Fillers—Common.
44
*
Good
44
Fine

.

.

.

.

.

298

•

.

-

5
962

•

.

...

1

....

,

•

•

•

.

...

«

39
470
B40
268

1

All others

•

1,300

•

..

...

217

982
.

.

6

3,541

200
38
16
55
481
50

14

.

-Stems—, Pkgs.
hhds. bales. & bxs.
lbs.
316
760,745
273
543
1,821
16(5,615

.

...

821

Mediterranean
Austria
Africa, &c
China, India, &c.
Australia
B. N. Am. Prov..
South America...
West Indies
East Indies
Mexico

flue

Bright work—common “

1, 1866.

Cer’s &
Cases. Bales, tcs. Stps.
216
1,084

Hhds.

Great Britain
Germany

“

our

Exports of Tobacco from the

To

good

lb?.

69,856
4,022
7,297
75.175

«...

....

Man’1,

work—com., tax paid. 25

Total export

8,906

for the week

892

975

51

44

150

69,856

32

The exnorts in this table to European ports are made up from manifests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the cargo.
*

15,642

T’l since Nv. 1, ’6637,455

The
above

7,632

252

273

2,119

..

3,755,754

3,404

following table indicates the ports from which the
exports have been shipped :
Bxs.

Tc«. &

25

....18,027
813
20

....

Portland
New Orleans....

....

67
4

29

Total since Nov. 1.. 37,455

•

•

•

..

12

•

.

.

•

.

25

...

Virginia

•

30

...

20

21

San Francisco..

•

•

2,038 1,242

3,125

Philadelphia

.

...

14

Lbs.

eras.

13,484 6,365

New York
Baltimore
Boston

Sterns-^

Strips, pkgs. hhds. bis. mant’d.
193
1,343 1,022
273 3,560,626

Hhds. Cases. Bales,

From

...

.

...

•

...

...

•

15,642 7,632

150,703

...

...

...

44,425
8

252

.

..

.

100

3,404 2,119

273 3,755,754

The market for the

but the
at

past week opened active and buoyant ’
from Europe has rather checke 1 the demand

war news

have been

as

exports this week, from other ports,

follows:

From Baltimore—To Liverpool 45 hlids., 1 pkg., 4.(22 manufactured
From Philadelphia—1To Port Spain 7 cs....To Havana 1,297 lbs.

lbs.

Kentucky.—At Louisville, the sales at the four auction warehouses

during the current tobacco year, including reviews, amount to 11,189

.

29

...

1,067

1.511
430

The direction of the

the close.

Price* are about the same as ruled at the date of cur Inst
weekly review of the market, the market closirg firm and buoyant un¬

hhds,

der favorable advices from New York
liberal receipts.
We quote :

and

Lugs

$2 50© $4 00

$4 0C@ $6 60

5 00@ 7 (X)
9 IH @ 11 00
12 CG@ 14 00
16 00@ 17 00

00

.

Common leaf
Medium leaf
Good leaf
Fine leaf

European markets, with
Light.

Heavy.
6 0C@ 9
9 00@ 13
12 00@ 16
1 6 00@ 20

00
00
00

Monday the market was buoyant at full prices for all grades and
Kentucky leaf has amounted to about 600
advance in lugs. The offerings were 101 hogsheads, with 6 rejec¬
hhds., at prices ranging from 5£ to 22c.; the demand being tions. Sales include 1 hogshead at $2 80, 12 at $3@3 90, 14 at $4@
4 90, 8 at $5@5 95, 4 at $6@6 50, 11 at $7@7 80, 5 at $8@S 85, 7 at
mainly for export to the Continent, and prices in most cases $9@9 90, 13
at $l<@10 75, 5 at $11 25@11 75, 7 at $12@12 25, 5 at
showing £@lc. advance per lb. But the demand is less pres¬ $13(3)13 25. 5 at $14@14 50, 2 at $16@17 75, 7 at $IS@18 60.
Virginia.—At Petersburg the tobacco market the past week baa
sing and the supplies more liberal at the close, and prices are
been active at full prices for all desirable grades. Three hundred and
barely steady. A few hhds. of*Virginia tobacco have been sixty hogsheads and lots of loose have been sold at the Merchants’ Ex¬
taken at 5@20c. Foreign tobacco has been fairly active, and change the present week. We quote primings and common lugs at
$1 50 to 2 50 ; lugs in good order, $4 to 8 ; good leaf $10 to 14 ; very
currency prices have somewhat improved in sympathy with good $16
75 to 28 ; fine $35 to 51 ; fancy $69 to 100.
the rise in gold. Sales 180 bales Havana, at 85c.@$1.05, and
At Richmond
the 10th the bidding on the staple was quite lively
On

The business in

an

on

Manufactured tobacco has been firm and at the Exchinge. There was quite a large attendance of buyers, and
the Tobacco offered commanded fair prices. There were sold 80 hogs¬
in moderate demand.
In seedleaf there has been more doing heads, 22 tierces and 22 boxes, which brought from $3 to $49, accord¬
but business is still somewhat restricted by the imperfect ing to grade. The breaks still continue full, but shipping and fancy
leaf are scarce and in great demand.
stocks. ' The sales embrace 150 cases old Conn, at 55c., 200
New Orleans.—The stock is too small and the receipts are too light
cases new Conn. 11c., 100 cases new Conn.
11c., 65 cases to allow of any scope for large operations, and the sales since our last
State 10c., 180 cases Ohio 8£c., 74 cases Ohio 4^c., 77 cases semi-weekl) review are consequently confined to small lots, of which
the principal are a few hogsheads seed Leaf at 17^c., 4 new Leaf at
Ohio 9^c., 100 cases Ohio new 13c., 42 cases Pennsylvania, 4^c.@6^c., 5 do at 7^c., 11 at 12-^c., 25 at 9^c. and 10 at 121c. A
number of foreign buyers are here awaiting supplies.
Arrived, 94
6-J cents.
35 bales at

$1.07.

QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCT.
KENTUCKY

LEAP

Light.
Heavy.
Common Lugs.. 4 @ 4)4c.
@

..

...

Good Lugs
4*@ 6*
Common Leaf. ..647

Medium

do

..

7*@ 9*

5*@ 6*
7
»

@ 8)4

(HHDB.).

Light.
Good Leaf....
Fine do

Selections

(BOXES).

Running

Fillers

New York Running
Ohio
“

....

Lots
44

FlikrinrrirnfiM

Old

9

@11

6 @ 8*
5 @ 8%

w
Pennsylvania “
NewYp|kFillers...........




Heavy.
12 @15
16 @18
19 @20

Crop. Crop of 1865
65 @70c.
10 @22
25 @55

Connecticut Wrappers, Selections
44
“•

@12c.
@14
@16

@11*

SEED LEAP

“

10
18
15

5 @10

4 @ 6

*»♦#»»***r

9 @0

5

@ 6

6*@11
5 @10
8 @15

hhds. Cleared for New York, 155 hhds. Stock in warehouses and on
shipboard not cleared on the 5th inst., 1,454 hhds.
Maryland.—Maryland leaf is coming in more freely, but the demand
is limited ; Dew crop mostly inquired for, and prices steadily maintain¬
ed. Old crop, frosted, continues very dull. Sales for the week em¬
brace 200@300 hhds. Maryland within our range annexed. There is
nothing worthy of remark doing in other descriptions, and for which
the market is very dull. Inspections this week 768 hhds. Maryland,
(213 reinspected), 61 Ohio, 2 Kentucky, and 1 Virginia—total, 883
hhds. Cleared same time, 45 hhds. to Liverpool.

Maryland frosted to com’n $1.60@ 3.00 I Maryland upper country..
sonnd common. 3 5()@ 4 00 |
44
ground leav. new
good
44
5.00@ 5.50 Ohio inferior to good com.
brown and spangled.
middling.. i..... 6.00@ 8.00
M
g’d^fc fine red & spgld
good to fine b’wn 10,oo@l5,o0
..

-

44

nm yallow

$3.00@30.00
3.00@ 5.00
4,
7.

13.

& ftney.. 20.

468

THE CHRONICLE.
TOBACCO

STATEMENT.

Stock in warehouses 1st Jan.,
1867, together with 1,950 hhds.
on sbipDoard not cleared
19,595
Inspected this week
832
do
previously
2,985

The movement in breadstuffa at this market has been

Cleared for foreign ports. 6,799
Coastwise &

RECEIPTS

reinspected 3,360
9,159

....

Total

Stock to-day in warehouses and
on shipboard not cleard......

23,412

14,253

36,775
4,590
56,745
500

FOREIGN

FROM

'

bbls.

since Jan. 1
Wc»t Ind. week.
since Jan. 1

fair

degree of activity, and
the receipts continue below

FOR

bbls.

2,076

IS. A. Col. week..

Europe, and the rise in gold.

YORK

THE

25

7,151

832

24,676

7,655

4,618

1,982
26,777

61,046

bush.

14,086

"

1866
For week. S’eJan.l

40,980

.

425,530
113,150

8,280
1,700
5,915

139,365
262,950

Flour, C. meal, Wheat,

To
Gt. Brit week
since Jan. 1

unsettled, with some specula¬
mainly to the war news from

NEW

follows:

68,535
483,895
12,705
240,165
898,640

3,080

17,050
6,930

EXPORTS

as

YOKE.

856,735
101,435
261,325
448,040

39,970

Oats, bush

The market has been
greatly
tive excitement, attributable

a

NEW

1867
For week. B’eJan. 1.

Flour, bbls...
Corn meal, bbls
Wheat, bush
Com, bush.....
Rye, bush
i
Barley, &c., busu

Friday, April 12, 1867, P. M.

The flour market has shown

AT

,

BREADSTTJFFS.

7,550
5,215

WEEK

Rye,

bush.

6,515

AND

8IN0E JAN.

Earley.
bush.

34,313
729,033

Oats,

bush.
....

Corn,

bush.

52,527

98,7841,943,648
7,000

12,962
298
2,518
2,776
81,744
298
62,245
103.0851,999,553

675

Total

....

.

....

....

....

'

1.

exp’t, week 12,969
2,364
84,313
prices have been realized ;
since Jan. 1, 1867 116,034 37,164
34,322 128,620 763,421
same time, 1866
290,037
the average ; but the chief strength
34,030 100,296 136,626
666,8001,810,589
of the market has beeu de¬ Since Jan. 1, from
Boston
37,600
1,651
500
rived from the very light movement at the
1 257,571
936
West, and specu¬
Philadelphia
11,256
7,969
5,948
c
3,654 228,596
Baltimore
29,340
lative orders from that quarter.
8,350
500 449,351
Our own receivers would
rather reduce stocks; but the
peremptory orders of Western
GROCERIES.
millers, who are owners of most of the flour in store, has com¬
Friday, April 12, 1867—P. M. /
The market has shown considerable revival of
pelled a slight but almost daily advance in prices. The cur¬
activity during
rency prices of flour are now higher with gold about 137, than the week. There are more liberal stocks in
market, enabling
when gold was at 285 in July, 1864.
But the probability of buyers to operate more satisfactorily, although the
tendency has
another European war, and the
impossibility of this market been to rather lower prices. The gold fluctuations have ren¬
responding to any considerable export demand, without push¬ dered prices unsettled to some extent, while it has prevented
ing up prices still further, give a very strong feeling to the the decline in currency prices which would otherwise have
market. The close, however, is rather weak.
probably occurred. The week’s business has been quite libe¬
Wheat has advanced even more than
ral,
and the market may be called fairly active at i he close.
flour, especially
The imports of the week have been
Spring grades. The navigation of the upper lakes is not like¬
unusually large in the
ly to be resumed before the first of May, and yet receipts of articles of tea and sugar; six vessels
having arrived from
Wheat cX Chicago and Milwaukee have not been
equal to the China with cargoes wholly or in part of tea, and a large num¬
shipments thence by rail. The local millers have bought more ber of vessels in the West Indies trade with cargoes of
sugar
freely in this market than for some time, the stock has suffer¬ and molasses. The imports of tea amount to 86,750
pack¬
ed considerable reduction,
though still large. At the extreme ages, chiefly of black, and of sugar to 6,031 Havana boxes
advance there has been a pause, with a
very unsettled feeling. and 20,417 hhds—the latter being the largest importation of
The Western markets,
having been relatively higher than this, any week since the first of January.
have declined about five cents
The imports of
per bushel, but with renewed
sugar, at the five ports, since the beginning
extreme

•

[April 18, 1867.

business

at

the decline.

California Wheat has sold in this

market at lower

prices; a full cargo of forty thousand bushels
being taken yesterday at equal to $3 20, and then to-day
at $3 3
and good No. 2 Spring at $2 62@$2 65.
Corn has advanced about ten cents
per bushel, and exporters have taken about three hundred
thousand bushels, or
nearly one-fifth of the entire stock. (The exporters took a hund¬
red and fifty thousand bushels last
week, instead of 15,000
bushels, as printed.) The shipments are mainly to Great
,

Britain.

There have been moderate

.

.

.,

of the current year now amount to 52,988
boxes
and 57,124 bags, the details of which are

94,676 hhds.,
given in our tables.
The latest dates from China show a total
shipment for the
season
beginning June 1st, 1866, of 28,859,017 lbs. of tea to
this country, against 25,469,476 in 1865-6.
" Al¬
TEA.

Tea has been in
some

concessions

only moderate request, and at the close of last week

were

made.

Later the market

was

unsettled

by the

fluctuation, in gold. Near the close there is a rather better trade de¬
mand, and prices having somewhat recovered are more

steady. The

shipments of Corn from sales for the week include 7,900 half chests Oolong, 5,000 do Greens
Philadelphia and Baltimore, to Liverpool. - The supplies of 2,300 do Japans, and 2,300 packages Souchongs, all from first hands,
new corn at the Western markets
begiu to be liberal in quan¬ on terms not made public.
of the week have been unusually large, amounting to 8,626,tity, but the quality is generally inferior. The corn crop of 129Imports
lbs. of direct, and 2,496 pbgs. of indirect
importation. The details
1865 has
proved to be of unusually good quality, while that are as follows, viz: per “ Broadwater” from Amoy,
82,744 lbs of Con¬
of 1866, which now
and Souchong, 538,937 of Oolong and Ningyong ; per “ George
begins to come forward, is probably rather gou
Shotten„’ from Foochowfoo, 499,700 lbs. Oolong and
below the average in this
Ning.; per
respect. This increases the dispo¬
Queen of the Ocean,” from Foochow, 22,800 lbs. Congou and
Souchong,
sition to hold prime lots of corn in store.
703,100 lbs, of Oolong and Niug.; per “ F. Reck,” from Foochowfoo,
26,200 lbs. Congou and Souchong, 538,900 Oolong and
Oats and Rye have
Ningyong; per
advanced, but close unsettled, and the “Assyrian,” from Shanghae, 41728 lbs. of Twankay, 107,587
lbs.Hy
#

“

extreme

quotations of early in the week have

tained.

Bariev has advanced

two

cents

for

prime in bond,
95@97c., but for free Barley
irregular. There has been a limited
export movement of Canada Peas, at about previous gold
prices.
•with sales of Canada WTest at
the prices have been

The

following

are

closing quotations:

Flour, Superfine.. $ bbl $10 25®11 35
Extra State

11 ?0®13 35

ShippingR. hoop Ohio. 12 50®13 25
Extra
Western,
good

com¬

mon to

11 75®14 50

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
14 75®18 00
Southern supers
12 25®18 40
Southern, fancy and ex. 14 00®17 75
Rye Flour, fine and super¬
fine

Corn

8

meal, Jersey

and

Brandywine
Wheat, Chicago Spring
per




bushel......

00® 8 75

5 75® 6 25

2

30® 2 85

Boston since Jan. 1:

-SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN.

-imp’tsatn. y. abobton.To Atlantic ports.
*
To San
Direct /—Indirect—>
Feb. 1 to
June! to
Same Franat New At N. AtBosFeb. 15.
Jan. 31.
in ’65, cisco.
York, York. tor.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
pkgs.
pkg. all sorts
Congou & Son.
1,654,736 1,'141,614
888,525 From G’t Brit
Pouchong
374,163
,

Milwaukee Club

$2 25®
®
8 10@
3 20®
Corn, Western Mixed.... 1 26®
Red Winter
Amber do
White

Western Yellow
Western White

2 85

3 25
3 35
1 32

®

®

Jersey Yellow

Rye..^.

Oats, Western cargoes...
Jersey and State
Barley
Malt.
.

Peas, Canada
White beans

889,824 lbs. Young Hyson, 58,663 lbs. of Imperial, 75,856 lbs.
Gunpowder ; per “ Kate Carniefrom Foochow 69,800 lbs of Congou
and Souchong, 525,800 lbs. of Oolong and
Ningyong ; per “ Hansa,”
from Bremen, 62 pkgs.; per “
City of Manchester,” from Liverpool
2,434 pkgs.
The following table shows the shipments
of Tea from China and Japan
to the United States, from June 1,
1866, to Feb. 15, 1867, and importa¬
tions at New York and
son,

been main

not

,

fcNi
Oolong&Ning
..

.

1 29® 1 30
1 40® 1 58

72@
74
78® '79
87® 1 20
1 20® 1 36
1 25® 1 40
1 75® 3 M

Twankay
Hyson skin
Hyson

Young Hyson
Imperial
Gunpowder,

Japan$
Total.

9,947,737
611,184
52,505
1,556,775

6,236,478
1,453,697
1,508,905
5,458,983

309,283

8,141,966

742,049
132,084
1,236,838
6,586,498
1,245,503
1,521,619
4,476,078

69,093
8!
7,414.590 8,595
248,837 From Europe
112
5,384
762,962 From E’tlnd.
.

'

44,360

3,303,828
754,379

772,157 Exp’ts oth. p’t«

1,080,952

28,859,017 25,469,476 J 44,860 15,295,730

8,707

THE CHRONICLE.

April 18,1867.]

Hong Kong, Feb.. 15.—The occurrence of the Chinese New Year’s
holiday, the 5th of February, caused a cessation of business at all the
ports. Prices remain abont the same, and no shipments to America are
reported within the fortnight. At Yokohama, too little business has
been done to warrant reliable quotations.

469
«

Spices continue

SPICES.

quiet, and without interesting feature.

steady.

Prices

are

,

FRUITS.

Fruits have been rather

quiet for foreign dried, although the trade in
quite liberal. Prices show but little change. The sale*
Coffee has been in more liberal supply, and with the higher
price of include 5,200 boxes layer raisins, aud in green fruits large sales of
gold, gold quotations are rather lower. The market has been moder¬ Havana and Mesina oranges, cocoanuts, <tc. Domestic dried fruit is
ately active, but sales are chiefly on private terms. The sales for the without special change.
week include 8,600 bags Rio here, and 5,000 bags at New Orleans,and
We annex ruling quotations :
Tea.
11,000 bags in Baltimore. The market closing more steady.
Duty
pald..—Duty r aid—,
Imports of the week have been considerable, including receipts o^ Hyson, Common to fair
85 @1 00
do
do Ex f. to fln’st 85 © 90
Rio, Java, Ceylon, Maracaibo, and Laguayra Coffee as follows, viz.: Of
do
Unool. Japan, Com. to fair. 85 © 90
Superior to fine.... 1 10 @1 25
do
Ex fine to finest,. .1 80 @1 60
Rio 5,600 bags per ‘‘Contest,” 3,752 bags per “Hebe,” 5,800 bags
do
Sup’rto flne.l 00 ©1 05
per
Com. to fair
80 @1 00
do
Ex f. to flneatl 10 ©1 20
Yalkyrien,” and 4,841 bags per “Frithiof.” Of Java, 12,519 mats per Y’gHyson,
do
Super, to fine. .1 10 @1 40
Oolong, Common to fair.... 80 © 85
Humbolt.” Of Ceylon 5,000 bags per “ Alvington.” Of
do
Exflnetoflne8t.l 45 @1 70
do
Laguayra
Superior to fine... 95 ©1 9ft
3,682 bags per “ Adela,” and 1,846 bags per “ Mercedita.” Of Mara
Cnnp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 @1 16
do
Ex fine to finest. .1 85 ©I 75
do
caibo 4,077 bags per“ Ilva,” and 68 bags of sundries.
Souo & Cong., Com. to fair 65 © 75
Snp. to flne.l 30 @1 55
do do Ex. f. to flnest.1 06 @1 9o
do
The imports since January 1, and stock in first hands
Sup’rto fine. 85 ©1 10
April 9 H. Sk.&Tw’kay,C, to fair. 65© 70
do
Exttofinestl 25 ©1 60
COFFEE.

green fruits is

...

«

...

“

are as

follows:

do

OP BIO COFFEE.

Import.

bags
Philadelphia “
New York,

Baltimore
New Orleans
Galveston
Mobile
Savannah

“
“
“

—..

York, At Bost.
import. Stock. Imports.
661
bags 16,521
19,454
“

Java,
Ceylon

5*,666
4,500

1*866

233,844

87,972

Singapore,
Maracaibo,

11
“
Laguayra
“
St. Domingo, “

Other,

“

5,869
7,743
9,668

4,075
3,350

9,328
5,197

1,086
2,266

....

2,490

9^51

.

531

34,804

at New

York, 842 hhds.

Portland. 888
Boston, 1,779 boxes and 4, 635 hhds at Phila¬
delphia, 2,038 hhds at Baltimore, and 1,529 boxes and 436 hhds. at New
Orleans, making a total of 10,217 boxes, 30,843 hhds. and
1,335 baskets
at the five ports for the week, and 62,988
boxes, 94,676 hhds., and
boxes and 2,948 hhds. at

January first, 1867.
Stocks, April 9, and imports since January 1,

,

32,204
26,905

Imports since Jan. 1. 36,472

62,749

7,562

876

651

762

Philadelphia

do

New Orleans

do
do

Baltimore

Total
*

6,952
4,650
2,203
2,835

import

:

Brazil, Manila,
Cuba.—
For’gn, Orleans, Total
bags,
boxes. *hhds. *hhds. ‘hhds. *hhds. bags.
/

35,139
50,517

do
do

follows

are as
New

Other

8,159
10,946
2,651
1,360

52,988

76,516

85

1,535
2,104

4,869

108,937

60,396
1,413
9,811
13,110

16,832

262

2,426

4^056

1867
1866
1865

84,676

14,107

89,710
88,465

....

,

at Havana

Total export
,
week.
Since Jan. 1.

54,672
19,902
40,892

Stocks

boxes.

863,096
312,772
354,222

■

368,427
349,869
290,293

Muscovadoes.—The market still remains dull, with no sales
reported.
are 6$ to 6$ rs. for fair to good
refining.
Receipts, exports and stocks at Havana and Matanzas are as follows :
fo.

*ear.

week,

MOT-1866.

hhds.

1866

4,125
2,897
4,164

Molasses has been

prices

more

Exports.

,

—,

/—To U. States—,
,-Total exports^
for w’k. s’ce Jan. 1. for w’k. s’ce
Jan. 1.

1,375

14,324
16,209
21,582

....

do

:

do 10 to 12

1,475
3,510
2,462

Stocks,
hhds.

26,198
24,453
23,960

17,935

16,455
17,483

MOLASSES.
active with the better

supply received, and
upward tendency at the close, and

active demand

New York, and 14,396 hhds. at the other
ports.
Cuba.

^

,At ‘

York,

♦hhds.
6,800

stock

Philadelphia

^Tfl'WirnBytTWirHa

“

“

“

“

“

New Orlear s “

“3 571

“

“

Baltimore

Total
*

17,040

88,928

Include* barrel* and tierce* reduced




1,400
4,789
4

1,189
203
8

io’654

6,193
to

de 18 to 15
do 16 to 18
do 19 to 20
white

114© 19*
12*@ 18*
131© H*
134© 141
© 16
© 15
©15

....

©

•

do

••

Clayed.

@14
@ 134

Cassia, in mats.. gold $ lb
Mace

(gold)
Nntmogs, No. 1.... (gold)

47

..

6S*@ 70
Barbadces.,..
50 © .574
Spices.
41 ©
j Pepper,
(gold)
14 I Pimento,
134©
Jamaica.(gold)
85 ©
9.i I Cloves
(gold)
87
85 ©

Ginger, race and Af(gold)

H 49

214©
IS

21*

©

274©

..

28

Fruit.

Raisins, Seedless.. $ 4cask 8 25©.... Sardines
$ qr. box
do Layer
$ box 3 85 ©— Pigs, Smyrna
go d $ fi>
do Bunoh
3 t2 @3 65
Brazil Nuts
Currants
$ fi>
114© 12 5 Filberts, Sicily
23 © 30
Citron, Leghorn
Walnuts,
21 © 22
Prunes, Turkish
Dried Fruit—
Dates
124©;13
Apples
$ B>
82 © 35
Almonds, Languedoc
Blackberries
do
Provence
28 © 80
Raspberries

Sicily, Soft Shell

23 © 24
35 © 86

Shelled

$ box
$ hi. box

..

30

Pared Peaches

Unpeeled do
Cherries, pitted,

©

© 81

184® 78*
16 @ 20
15

© 17

10 © 11
8 © 18
9
23
45

© 12
© 24
© 43

87 © 42
new....

13
50

© 16
@ 52

hogshead*

DRY GOODS TRADE.
I Riday, P.

M., April 12, 18$7.

Dry Goods Market is less active thin last week, and
are that the
principal activity in this branch
of trade is over for the season.
There is, however, a moderate business
doing, and prices of staple goods and prime
makes are steady.
Lower grades, however, have a down¬
ward tendency in
sympathy with the decline in cotton. The
demand is chiefly for small lots to even
up assortments and
tor light
goods for seasonable trade. The export demand is
quite liberal as prices decline. The following are the details
the indications

for the week.
-FROM NEW YOBK.-

Domestics.

Exports to
Liverpool
Havre....

.

N. O.

bbls.

....

4,331
445
145
81
507

•

/

•

•

•

6,831
1,122
984

pkgs.
300

Dutch W. Indies..

3
49

Brazil
St. Pierre

“

Val.

....

China
New Granada
Cuba
British W. Indies.

1866...

are as follows;
■Porto Rico-v-Other Foreign.—,
♦hhds.
♦hhds.

imp’ts since Jan. 1.26,645
Portland
“
“
15,405
Boston,
*“
“
“16 613

$ gallon.
$ gall-

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

“

Stocks, April 9, and imports since January 1
New
N. Y

do
do
do
do

Hi© 19
17*© 19
16© 164

.

Molasses*

8 cents

fully maintained with an
Hayti
British Provinces
prevailing. The sales include about 8,000 hhds. of Other ports
all kinds, about
equally distributed among refiners and distillers.
Total this week.
Imports of the week have been above average in quantity,
Since Jan. 1
including Same time
9,761 hhds. at
an

are

104© It'*

.

19 © 20

do
Loaf
Granulated
Crushed and powdered
White coffee, A
Yellow coffee

43,017

The quotations

Receipts

Domingo...

gold 244© 264

The

will show the receipts, exports and stocks

81,784

9 © 11
6 © "i

Melado

THE

hogsheads.

Rec’d this /—Expts to U. S.—,
week.
week. Since Jan. 1.
8.747
57,980

fear.

10|© 11
114© 12

centrifugal

do
do
8ardines
do

10,051

Havana, April 6, 1867.—Buyers have not appeared much in the
market, as holders have continued to ask 7 rs. per arrobe for No. 12 as
a basis, in the face of
discouraging advices from London and the Uni¬

ted States.
The following
and Matanzas:

St.

...

7,520

....

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to

94,737

...

Duty

at

67,124 bags imported since

fair to good grocery...
do
pr. to choice

do

Imports of the week have been large, embracing 6,031 boxes, 20,417

Portland
Boston

Laguayra.....

18*

Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7 to 9 94© 10

boxes Havanna.

,

10*

...

do
do
do
do

quite active for raw at the beginning of the week, but
later, the fluctuations in gold somewhat interfered with trade,
although
there has been a liberal business doing. Prices are
steady at last
week’s quotations. Refined has been active and is rather
firmer in
price. The sales of the week include about 6,500 hogsheads Cuba and

At—
N. York stock
Same date 1866

r&vA. mats and bags
Native Ceylon
Maracaibo

© »9*
19
19

.

1^4©
174©
16 ©
171©

Sugar
do
$ B> 10 © 12*
Cnba, inf to com. refining
do
9J© 2]
do fair to good
do
do
10© 10*

was

hhds., and 1,385 Java baskets

80

Porto Rico

5,668

SUGAR.

Porto Rico, and 3,500

75©

Bio, prime, duty paid ...gold
do good
gold
do fair
gold
do ordinary
gold
do fair to g. cargoes
.gold

5,000

Total,...;.. 58,S62 13,928
Sugar

Sup. to fine

Coffee.

At New

26,672

5,000
2,500

“

“

Total

Stock.

136,810
1,800
?9,460
44,214
3,200

do

OTHER SORTS.

1860...

48,030

**3

* 224

1

239
445

D, Goode.

-FROM BOSTON.-

Val.

cases.

68
11
5
176

$20,522
5,759
354

Domestics

pkgs.
•

•

•

•

-

case*.

.

•

•

18,000
••

....

10,274

....

"4
—

356

....

•

•

•

«

....

•

•

•

•

....

$59,212

260

1,724 235,454

2,229

148

23,021

569

.

..

$44,635
475,744
260,699

20
4

1,599

1,627
3,024
198

26,550
14,891
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings have been less
active, and trade ig
confined to small orders. Prices
are*tending downward with little in¬
terruption. Atlantic N 3-4 12$, Massachusetts 0 do 15, Indiao Orchard L
do

....

....

13$, Commonwealth O do 9$, Union do 12$, Pepperell

N do 14,
Indian Head do 17, Atlantic V 7-8
17, Atlantic E do 16$, Pacific
E do 16$, Tremont E do
14$, Bedford R do 13, Boott O do 14$, Indian
Orchard W do 14$, Pepperell O do
16$, Indian Head 4-4 21, Princeton A

dofc21, Pacific extra do 20$, do H do 20$, do L do 17$, Atlantic H do 21$,
A do

do

6,009

8,937

21, do L do 17$, Lawrence E do 18*, do O do
20, do F
do 17$, Stark A do 20,
Amoakeag A do 21, do B do 20$, Medford do 19$,
Pittsfield A do 16$,Kenebeck do

12$, Roxbory A do 19, Indian Orchard

[April 13,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

470

American Linen is in good demand at former prices.
do 22$, Pepperell E do 19,
Foreign Goods are without material variation. Some Bales of dress
do 16, Dwight W do 17,
Pepperell R do 17$, Laconia E do 16, Exeter A do 16, Shannon do 16J, goods at auction have t rought better prices, and thiu French goods
Laconia B do 18, Laconia O 9-8 18, Pequot do 25, Indian Orchard A jaconets, organdies. Ac., Ac., are improved. Staple goods and plain dre$#
40 inch 19, dodo G 16$, Nashua 5-4 20, Naumkeag W do 23$, Utica
goods are quiet. Fine woolens are wanted. Linen is very quiet.
do 424, Pepperell 7 4 36. Utica do 50, Pepperell 9-4 47$, Monadnoc
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK,
10-4 5*2$, Peppered do 57$, Utica 11-4 90.
Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are lees active and prices show
The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Aptil
some decline.
Mechanics 3 4 11, Keystone do 10$, Revere do 10$, Globe 11, 1867, and the
corresponding weeks of i865 and 1866, have been a*
do 10, Kingston do 10, Boott R do 13, Waltham X 7-8 16$, Putnam B
follows :
do 14, Amoskeag Z do 16, Great Falls M do 16, do S do 15, do A do
ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING APRIL 11, 1867.
IS, do J do 16, Lyman Cambric do 18$, Strafford A do 18, Lawrence A
-1865
1866.
1867
do 15$, Hill’s Semp. Idem do 22$, Boot C do 17$, James 31 inch 17$,
Pkgs. Value.
Value.
Pkgs.
Pkgs.
Value
834
1,107
$501,805
do 33 inch 1S$, fiirtie t 31 inch 17$, do 83 inch 18$, Greene G Manufactures of wool... 894 $297,886
$174,021
634
do
cotton..
363
118,172
383,295
1,034
217,386
4-4 15$, Lewiston G do 16, Pocumtuck do 15, Putnam A do 16, New¬
261
239.736
434
silk...
213
do
216,741
195,888
market A do 18, do C do 19, Great Falls K do 16$, Bartletts do 22$,
512
do
flax.... 693
403,271
123,304
1,498
123,073
522
Miscellaneous dry gooas. 195
Constitutional do 14, James Steam do 22, Newburyport do 22, Indian
133,480
5,443
49,575
117,800
River XX do 16, Attawau?an XX do 17$, Lawrence B do 18, Foun
Total
: 2,358 $805,678
4,422 $1,661,586
7,407 $882,764
tain do 17$, Hope do 20, Blacka'one do 17$, Franklin do 20, AmosINTO THE
WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN
MAHKET
dubinm
keag A do 24$, Boot B do 21. Forestdale do 21$, Masonville do 25, do XX
THE SAME PERIOD.
do 26, Androscoggin L do 26, Lonsdale do 25, Wauregan do 25, do F Manufactures of wool... 485 $198,569
966
466
$405,441
$202,062
do 20, Bates XX do 25$, Arkwrig't do 27$, Lyman J do 28, Wamsutta
537
124
325
do
cotton..
116,725
177,364
148,241
1S6
silk....
126
do
534
127,303
212,974
148,243
H 32$, do 0 do 32$, Mystic Lake do 30, Lonsdale Cambric do 31$, New
4S7
535
do
139,842
flax
402
108,543
126,753
York Mills do 40, Hill do 25, Araoskeag 42 inch 24$, Waltham do 22, Miscellaneous
202
13,241
2,256
dry goods. 784
20,659
48,257
Wamsutta 9-5 37$, Naumkeag W 5-4 22$, Boot W do 24, Bates do 27$,
Total
2,438
3,508 $668,564
$571,799
$948,862
2,122
Wamsutta do 4 2$, Amoskeag 46 inch 27$, Waltham 6-4 32$. Pepperell
4,422
Add ent’d forconsumpt,n2,358
1,061,586
7,407
805,678
832,764
do 35, Utica do 50, Waltham 8-4 45, Pepperell do 50, Pepperell 9-4
60, Utica do SO, Baltic 10-4 60, Bates do 65, Waltham do 65, Allen¬ Total thrown upon mak’t4,4$0 $1,377,477
6,860 $2,610,448
10,9i5 $1,501,328
dale do 65, Pepperell do 70, Utica do 85, Masabesic 11-4 70, Amos¬
EtlNG THE SAME :
ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING I
300
710
Manufactures of wool... 493
keag do 76, Pepperell do 80.
$182,829
$150,488
$281,335
167
do
cotton..
301
305
60,792
95,771
102,771
Ticks are inactive and prices are somewhat nominal.
Cones¬
186
82,534
57
do
silk
73
60,991
51,348
487
292
toga C M 42$, Amoskeag A C A 32 inch 48, do A 32 do 38, do B 32
flax....
do
1,059
45,653
230,729
8(5,296
289
do 33, do D 30 do 23, do C 30 do 28, Pemberton A A 36$, Brunswick
Miscellaneous dry goods.5,581
2,454
4,700
51,152
53,472
20, Blackstone River 20, Hamilton 85, do D 82$, Somerset 18, Thorn¬
996
Total
6.064 $575,162
7,517
$621,472
$341,881
dike 21, Pearl River 46, Harvest 34, Hancock A A 29, Pittsfield 12,
Add ent’d for consnmpt’n 2,358
4,422 1,661,586
805,678
7,407
832,764
Buukerhili 24, York 30 inch 85, Cordis A A A 40, Everett 22$, Boston
5,418 $2,003,467
13,471 $1,407,926
AA 32, Swift River 20, Eagle 4 4 37$, Winnebago 12, Baltic 12, Al¬ Total entered at the port 9,375 $1,427,150

B do 15$, Sussex F do 17, Newmarket C
Great Falls M do 18, do S do 15, Albion

,

,

,

....

-

....

bany 12$.

quite nominal. Amoskeag 28 and 29, Uncasville
19 and 20, Whittenton A A 28, do A 3-3 26, do B B 2<\ do C 18, Pitts¬
field 3-3 12$, Pemberton Awn 45, Haymaker 21$, Everett 27 inch 21,
Massabesie 6-3 27, Boston 20, Chester Dock 18 and 19, Blackstone 17 and
15, American 17 and 18, Eagle 16$ and 17, Hamilton 27, Arkwright
26$, Easton 16$, Jewett City 21 and 22, Sheridan G 18.
Checks are in very quiet demand, but prices are unchanged.
Park
Mills Red 25, Lanark 4x2 29 inch 18, Lanark fur 18$, Union 50 4x2 3*2$,
Stripes

are

fio 50 2x2 32, do 20 4-2 30, do 20 2-2 30,
inch 28, Kennebeck 32$, Star No. 600 16,

Caledonia 15 ‘inch 34, do 11
Jo No. 800 2x2 22$, do No.

Cameron No 90 21$, do No. 80 20.
Denims and Cottonades are dull and prices are easier. Amoskeag
denims sell at 36c., Haymaker 21, York 33$, Warren brown 20, Pearl
River 33$, Union 24, Monitor 18, Manchester Co. 23$, Suffolk 25, Arling¬
ton 23j Blue Hill 18, Fort Moultrie 30, Mount Vernon 27, and Farmers’

900 4 2 26,

and Mechanics’ cottonades at 45c, Pemberton difet 46, liodman’a Ky J
47, PlowL A Anv. 50, Everett 47$, Whitteuden dAt 32$.
in fair demand for home trade.

Winthrop 16$,
Amoskeag 2;, Laconia 21$, Pepperell 21$, do fine jean 22, Stark A
21, Massabesie 18, Bennington 21, Woodward duck 82$, National bags
31, Stark A do 60, Liberty do 31.
Printing Cloths are dull and declining.
The last sales are reported
at 10c. for 64x64 square, but this is above the present price.
Prints are in less demand than last week, although there is a light
demand for new styles, and prices show but little variation. American
16, Amoskeag dark 15, do purple 16, do piuk 18, do shirting 15, do
palm leaf 16, Merrimac D dark 17, do purple 18, do W dark 19, do pur¬
ple 19, do pink 19, Sprague’s dark 17 and 17$, do purple 18, do shirting
18$, do pink 18, do blue check 18$, do solid 16, do indigo blue 17, do
Swiss ruby 17$, London Mourning 15$, Simpson Mourning 15$. Amos¬
keag Mourning 14$, Garners light 18$, Donnell’s 16$, Allen 16$ and 17,
Richmond 14, Gloucester 16$, Wamsutta 12$, Pacific dark 17 and 17$.
Cocheco 14, Lowell 14, Naumkeag 18$, Victory 14, Home 11, Empire
State 10$, Wauregan 14.
Lawns and Ginghams show but little change.
Lawns are in good de
mand but ginghams are rather quiet
Lancaster 23 cents, Hart¬
ford 18, Caledonia (new) 20, Glasgow 21, Clyde 16, Berkshire 21, Ger¬
man
20, Roanoke 16, Bates 22$, Manchester 18.
Canton Flannels are dull and nominal.
Ellerton N, Bro. 35, do
O do 32$, do T do 19, Laconia do 28, Slatervilie do 24, Hamilton
do 28$, Rockland do 17, Naumkeag do 25, Trernont do 21, Scotts extra
do 20, Whittendon do 22$, Ellerton N Blea 37$, do O do 36, do P do
82$, SaVu Falls do 31$, Methuen A do 32, Naumkeag do 25, Nashua
A 20, Chicopee 22, Extra Plush 24.
Corset Jeans are in steady moderate demand.
Androscoggin 14,
Bates colored 14, do bleached 14, Naumkeag 21, Pepperell 22, Naum¬
keag 8atteeu 23$, Laconia 21, Amoskeag 21, Newmarket 16$, Lewiston
14$, Indian Orchard 16, Berkeley 22, Rockport 21, Trernont 12.
Cambrios and Silesias are quite steady.
Washington cambrics sell at
18$ cents, Victory 12, do A 13, do high colors 14, Fox Hill 10$. Superior
11$, Smithfield 13. Waverly 12, S. S. A Sons paper cambrics at 17,
do high colors 19, White Rock 17, Masonville 17, and Indian Orchard
Silesias 21$, Ward do at 21.
Brown

Drills

Woolen Goods

are

in very

light demand for fine grades, other kinds
are still quite nominal, and unsatisfactory to manufacturers, so much
so, that still further stoppages of mills and reduction of production is
are

reported.

Modslin Delaines

changed.

in fair demand for

styles. Prices are un¬
All dark 23, Hamilton Co. 23, Manchester dark 23, Pacific
are

newer

dark 28, Armures dark 23, High colors 23, Pacific Merinos 40, Mourn¬

ing 28, Shephard checks 23, Skirtings 80.




IMPORTS

dull and

(OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND
WEEK

SPECIE)

AT THE POET OF NEW YORK FOR THE
APRIL

ENDING

6, 1867.

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
Pkgs. Value.
Pkgs. Value.
Pkgs. Value.
Lemons
15,919 Stationery, Ac.—
China, Glass <fc E.
j
22.681
Books
ware—
Nuts....
183 37,411
Bottles
38,147 Engravings... .4
1,6461 Oranges
1.471
China
563 28,025; Preserved gin¬
Paper
2403 36,814
Earth’nw’e .2407 106,764
150 12,718
ger
2,393 Other
28.837 WoodsGlass
71,-70 106,813 Prunes
Flums
Cork
Glassware
.585 15.593
11,24<
6,227
Raisins
Glass plate..208 34,532
4,19l Logwood, M.
lbs
Sauces and pre¬
..1,960 5,964
Drugs, Ac.—
serves
Alkali
10,185 Mahogany
136
1,607
11,258
..

182 Instruments—
Musical
1,766

3

Ammonia

sal..16

do

5,214 .Optical
661
Surgical

24

Argols

94

Aloes
Anoline
Alum
Ainatto

1
1

12,607
177
143

2,217 Jewelry. &c.—
..16
3,173 Jewelry

74,440
Watches
18 30,109
8S9
Blea powd... 358
6,823 Leather, Hides, Ac.—
Bristles
69 29,074
Brimstone,
Boots & shoes.3
438
394 13,36**
tons..
Carmine
1
140 Hides, dress¬
ed
99 49,098
Chalk
1,330
Hides, undress¬
Cream tartar.56 11,371
ed
57,291
4,923
Chickory.... 306
122
Cochineal
19
8,539 Horns
Gelatine
674 Liquors, v^ines, Ac.—
275
3,550
Gums,crude .428 14,825 Ale
do
arabic 136 10,116 Brandy
511 16,621
500
20
Copal
25
1,670 Beer
...

.

40

2,672

162

26,324

Ipicaculana ....
Jalap
Lac dye
'..81

6,528

Glue

Indigo

Leeches
5
Lie paste
50
Lie root ....200
Manna
Madder.
277
18
Oils
12
oo cod
do ess
150
do linseed..140
do olive....900
Paints
Paris white
...

....

622
2,680
100

2,298
3,647
867

53,011
945
381

10,483
17,371
3,224
16,399
482

-'

Giu...}

toDS....

120

4,460

Soda, bi erb. .600

2,415

do
do
do

sal
12
ash...1212
caustic 532

nitrate.
Safflowers
do

...

15

45,280

12,701
19,685
896

3

1,466

4100
Sumac
Van Llabeans.. 1
.32
Vermillion
Yellow ochre.803
Other

33,199

Sponges

..

Bananas
Currants

Figs

271
8,976

.39

1,699

1034

17,398

..

.

■

..26

Iron, RR. bars,
8679

41,323

20

1,072

tons.......1423

47,275
81,355
10.237
2,405

tons
tons

Lead.pigs. 14,443
Metal goods .31
.

21
Needles
2
Nickel
Old metal
Plated ware.... 2

Buttons......165

146
798

42,916

Building stones.

Clay

Cheese

14

726

4,009
1,002

13’l37

Cigars
Coal, tons....448

2.428

Corks
Clocks

5,201
24

1,478

Coffee,bgs.. .1819 29,783
Fancy goods.... 107,484
Feathers
Flax
Fish....
Furniture
Grindstones

5,313
9

1,732

22,976
1,101
1,157

Gunny cloth.615 11,902
34,194

Hair

...34

8,148

6

3.526

871 12,390
630
14
23 1,427
rubber ..288 42,992

Hemp
Honey
Hops
Ind.

19

Ivory

0,575

Machinery.; 207 12,278
M rble &
Matches

man.

129
172
247

do

Macaroni

92,320
5,876
Perfumery.. *..17 2,038
8,697
Pipes
Molasses
.8417
Oil paintings. .8

954

.4106

Rags

Abb

330

2,4S2

Saddlery

1,133

Steel

8,309

Tin, bxs..l6,I16 112,012

6
1

352
181

6025

88,399

35

Sugar, hhds, tes,

Sugar,
Kgs

s

4,171

13

1.487

Price* Current will be

477 and 478.

1,635

...5,366 256,695

bxs. A

2,881 46,839

plants..
2,715
Tea........4,580 56,211
Trees &

2.708

Umbrellas

Twine.....—4
Toys

22,642

19,313

9500 48,241

Soap

540

93,793

8,446

Seeds
Linseed

1,350

Zinc, lbs..33,452 2,032
3.014 Spices, &c.—
2,228
30,907 Mustard
'
41
2.129 Pepper

Our General

8,776

;...

Salt

Iron, other,

Wire

Bricks
Boxes

Provisions

Iron, sheet,

Per caps

12,820
3,981

994

..

do slabs..3U0,-

Hat9, goods..14
Fruits, Ac. -

4,578

Haircloth

343

Furs, Ac—
Furs

39,109

2,308
27,636
Guns
48
6,619
Hard ware.... 187 21,700
Iron, hoop,

996

Shellac

65,630

21
88

tons

Other

955

Guano

Copper
Cutlery

Chlo...
Muirl02

744

5,545
1,144
3,673

baskets ..3632
Metais, Ac.—
Brass goods ...3
Chains & an¬
chors
213

Iron, Pig,

1,933
1,212

215

Champagne,

1,089

Phosphorous. 20
Rg antimony.75

283

Porter
116
Bum
86
Wines......3854

Potash, hyd...l5
do
do

30

6,303

Miscellaneous—
Baskets
261

...

Cordials

Rattan
Rosewood
Willow

Tobacco.
Waste

Wool, bales

62

88]
2,074

410 12,944
403 19,406
913 72,936

Other

M51

Total

$3,045,023

found on piltfe*

April 13, 1837.]

THE CHRONICLE.

$f)t ftatinjag JRcnitor.

than

U. S. Mail

“

Express

“

Cley. &
Rents

1866.

1866.

$8,891,221 46

$2,441,895 70
4,707,582 12

4,739.067
98,900
149,658
85,000
4,861
25,354

.....

P’b’g HR. lease..

Miscellaneous
Gross earning*.

88
00
02
00
12
08

Increase.

98,900
100,298
85,000
2,869

of

49^359

00
00
35,6.2 31

Transportation

$1,344,674 25

machin’y

General expen. and taxes
eost of

operating

earnings

From which

662,910 50

$

$57,829 04

$2,319,531 02

$

$64,015 96

$3,317,878 41

•

55,460 66

Interest on bonds
Dividend 10 p. c. and tax

$901,485 00

Sinking fund,....
Clev.<fc Pittsb’gRR. lease

104,100 00
342,49 93

5

9

21,129 13

$2,874,991 58

paid tbe followiuj?

were

111,235 45

$5,147,686 54

34,331 43

three fourths of the main line of 468 miles has been relaid with
new, re*rolled or repaired rails, paid for as
repairs out of the current
earniDgs. The side tracks have been increased by 6.9 miles, which
makes the total sidings now iu use
105£ miles. In addition there
are 22
miles of second track from
Pittsburg to Rochester, and 7
miles from Chicago to the
crossing of the Rock Island Railroad.
The construction and equipment has been continued
through the
year 1866 to a larger extent than was expected. The expenditures
on these accounts amount to
$1,116,975 70, viz: in the Eastern
Division $580,926 80, and in the western
Division, $536,048 90.
These amounts include a small sum
properly chargeable to 1865.
years

21,8U6 56
47,247 50
59,493 48

1,568,196 04
1,2S»',472 24
475,574 55

$8,283,546 98

Add, net income of N.C.
and B. Y. RR

struction at the Fort

59

$5,295,515 58

Balance

Total net

$1,270,633 01

631,103 94
1,520,948 64
1,22<',978 76
587,810 00

....

$

amounts

$870,861 93
1,035,315 79

1,232 50

$442,886 83

:

$
184,033 29
14,678 67
$

118,678 67
209,048 06

$3 ,123 07

The financial condition of the
company as exhibited on the bal¬
sheets of December 31, 1865 and
1866, is shown

ance

133,848 87

$2,249,361 43

$2,233,404 45

$

$15,959 98

$1,068,513 98

$641,587 13

$

$426,926 85

1865.

Capital Stock

1865.

Mileage, per ton
ns
Average h&nl,
per ton
Mileage
of loaded cars
“
of empty cars
Average
load (tons) per car, west
u
44

“

44

This shows

an

7:111

east
total

44

1866.

Increase.

7:244
8:802
8:173

8:502
7:980

1865.

1866.

(280 m.)
$280,503 $226,152
222,241
275,282
299,063
290,111
258,480
264.245
822,277
329,851
871.643
855,270
885,985
321,597
409,250
387,269
401,280
322,638

(280 m.)

857,956

8,840,091 3,695,152
Erie
1865.

*

Railway.
1866.

(798 m.)

(798 m.)
$1,070,890 $1,185,746
1,011,735
1,831,124
1,538,313
1,425,120
1,252,370
1,274,558
1,418,742
1,435,285

1867.

1865.

Jan..
142,947 ..Feb..
238,362. ..Mar..

987,935
1,070,434
1,153,295
1,101,668
1,243,143
1,203,462
1,290,330
1,411,347

..

.April.

..May..

6,501,063 14,586,333

702,692
767,508
946,707

.

.

.

.Oct...
.Nov..
.Dec..

..Year

1866.

(524 m.)

(524 m.)
$314,598

$363,996
366,861
413,974
365,180
851,489

887,095
801,613

ajMB«i

BSa£2t

418,575
486,808
524,760
496,072
851,799

283,179

412,393
409,427
426,493
892,641

1867.

^896,732 4,853,798

Jan
Feb..
Mar..

..May.

.June..

.July..

..Aug

.

..Sep...
..Dec...

—

..Year..

—




$571,536
628,972
616,665
516,608
460,573
617,682
578,408
747,469
739,736
641,589
643,887
518,088

7,181,208

91%@104% ! May

April
A

full

605,266
505,465
411,605

1867.

1865.

»

fan.

302,437. .Feb..
Mar.~

379,761

Aprll.
.May..
June.
.

J uly..

.Aug*..
..Sep...
..Oet....
.Nov...
.Dec...

..Year..

(234 m.)

(238 m.)
$305,554 $241,395
246,331
183,385
289,403
257,230
196,580
197,S86
264,605
234,612
290.642
321,818
241,121
224,1,2
306,231
310,443
389,489 ^396,050
307,523 £ 422.124
270,073 « 331,006
201,779 S339,4*7

586,743 ...Feb..

.April.
...May..

—
—

..June..
.

—
—

,

..July
..Aug..
...Sep.
...Oct..,
.Nov..,
,.I>ec..,

—

—

.

.

$98,183

569,250

74,283
70.740

106,689
146,948
224,838
217,159
170,655
228,020
310,594
226,840

110,664

1,985,713

84,897

72,135

..J

uly.
..Aug..
..Sep..
...Oct...
.Nov..

.

.

.Dec..

..Year

—

1,222,017

108,082
267,488
202,172
170,795
116,224
150,9S9

245,7nl
244,854
98,787

1,943,900

Jan...
85,000. ..Feb...
72,000. ..Mar...
..

1,186,808

1865.

1866.

(234 m.)
$98,181

(275 in.)

86,523
95.905

.April..
..May...

.July...
.Aug...

106,269
203,018
237,562
251,906
241,370

..Sep...

^300,841

June

.

..Oct....
•Nov..>*
.Dec.^

-.Year..

fc

395,579

g 346,717

§.171,125
2,535,001

103
106

@108*
@111*
101%@lll%
104%@107%

Nov

$131,707

$267,626

.Jan—

184,497

.teb....
.its arch.

253,507

April..
May...
.

J une..

.July...
.Aug...
Sept...
.Oct
.Nov
.Dec

a series of
Financial Chronicle

(204 m.
$173,567 $168741
180,140
151,C30
222,411
167,007
J 96,154
173.732

215,784
245,627
226,047
243,417
243,413

...

78,976.

.Feb..
84,652. ..Mar..

.April.
..May..

—

—

.June.

—

—

—

..July.
..Aug..
Sep..
..

..Oct..
.Nov..

■

—
.

—
.

.Dec..

—

.

—

..Year.,

217,941
239,086
161,427

1863.

1866.

(285 m.)

(285 m.)

279,13
344,228

$282,438

337,240
401,456
365,663
329,105
413,501
460,661
490,693
447,669
323,869

1867.

1865.
.

123,4u4

130,000. .Feb.

131,900. ..Mar..

244.376

.June.

.

.April.
..May..

3

,3,736
3u5,196
335,082
324,986
359,665

—

..July.,
..Aug...
...Sep..,
...Oct...
..Nov...
.Dec....

872,618
412,558
284,319

1887.

(285 m.)
$304,095
283,661
875,210

429,168
493.649
414,604

808.649
—

Mississippi.
1866.

(840 m.) (340 m.)
$259,223 $267,541
239,139
246,109
813,914
326,236
271,527
277,423

290,916
804,463
349,285
344,700
350,348

..Year..

265,796
# r,158

4,504,546 4,260,125
—Ohio &

(275 m.)
$146,800. .Jan..

-

198,G82
195,138
189,447

220,138
178,434

.

276,416
416,359
328,539
129,287

$131,179

Michigan Central

1S67.

(251 m.)
$94,136. .Jan..

208,785

1867.

(204 m.)

Year..

—

188,815

1866.

(204 m.)

223.846

123,957
121,533
245,622

2,538,800

and

1865.

Milwaukee & St. Paul.-

1867.

(234 m.)
$143,000.
■

458,916 74

--Cleveland and Pittsburg.

(423 m.)

1866.

(251m.) (251m.)
$96,672
$90,125
84,264
87,791
93,763
82,910
78,607
82,722
76,248
95,664
107,525
106,315
104,608
96,1*23
115,184
106,410
108.338
125,252
116,495 JL50,148
116,146
110,932
105,767
111,665

.June.

$121,776

32,284,97

RAILROADS.

1867.

3,318,514 3,478,325
1865.

667,679
480,626

1866.

03
59

102%@106% | Dec

Marietta and Cincinnati.—>

(708 m.)
$660,438. ..Jan..
554,201. ..Feb.

578,253
571,348
661,971
588,219
504,066

1866.

(228 m.)

.April.
..May

(234 m.)

PRINCIPAL

1865.

..Mar..

6,546,741

80 994 11

47,016 51

analysis of the reports of this company for

OF

747,392 ...Mar..

—

@100
95*@10S

--Chic.* Rock Is. and Pacific

1867.

$603,053

337,135 11

| Oct

95

years will be found in the Commercial
of June 16, 1866, p. 142.

..Year..

1866.

62
r.3
63

92%@100% I Sept

91%@ 95% | June
88%@ 93
I July.
88 @100% 1 August

March

-Mil. and Prairie du Chien.-

(524 m.)
*302,714^

—

Jan

Feb

1867.

—

(708 m.)

81 $1,070,365 48 $

$26,545,693 09 $26 927,539 61 $331,846 62 $
The shares of this
company fluctuated in the New York market
in 1866 as is shown in the
following exhibit;

EARNINGS

—

9,088,994

881,846 52 $

charged

Total

922,892

7,960,981

are

.

77 j,990

546,609

923,886
840,354

(708 m.)

.April.

380,452
429,191
500,404
416,690
839,447

405,634
623,744
518,736
735,082

3,062,180

as follows, viz:
Cost of Railway, Ac
$23,183,381 33 $24,253,746
Supplies on hand
969,053 93
631,918
Due from other companies..
417,948 84
386,954
Miscellaneous assets
755,350 14
708,333
Sinking Funds
208,200 00
215,910
Cash in haLd
1,011,758 85
670,675

(930 m.)(l,032 m.)
$523,566 $690 832 ...Jan..

778,284
989,053
1,210,654
1,005,680
6S>8,679

1865.

(732 m.)
$906,759.
917,639.

838,499

1866.

849,376
116,331

Increase.
Decrease.
95 $02S,545 95 $
00
7,000 00
02
144.042 83
73
83,745 51
14
2S0,3SS 98
79
27,022 34
98 293,577 23

00 $0,940,987
00 12,568,500
85
40,822
24
364,295
12
5<>8,987
13
88,238
75
3,355,707

$26,545,693 09 $26,927,539 61

Against which

-Illinois Central.-

Mioh. So. & N. Indiana.
1865.

499,296
468,358
585,623

.July.

..Oct...
..Nov..

1,524,917^1,044,033

$641,006
482,164

747,942

...Sep..

—

(860 m.)

.June.

..An g..

860,823
323,030
271.246

807,919
236,824

Total...

--Chicago & Northwestem-

(280 m.)
$24Q,238.

448.041

Due J. F. Lanier, Trustee..
Balance to credit of income.

increase of the

Chicago and Alton.

12,573,500
184,871

....

Miscellaneous liabilities

C:183
0.300
0:193

COMPARATIVE MONTHLY

companies

Cur’ntexp’sesinDec.& prior

Decrease

freight tonnage of the road of
23.2 per cent. The foreign tonnage fell off
19,564 tons and the
local tonnage increased 212,727 tons. This
change explains the
reason of the shortened
average haul per ton in 1866 as compared
with tbe haul in the previous year.
The revenue from the
transportation of passengers fell off $949,325 76 fron* the previous year. Of this diminished income more

t

Due to other

1866

*

$9,312,442

Funded debt

earnings of the road for transporting freight in the
years 1865 and 1866, were very neariy equal, the quantity of freight
trarsported, and the conditions of the movement varied materially
in these years as will be seen
by the following comparison :
83',615
1,025,778
193,163
198,789,901 233,274,794 89,484,893
227
233
24,2^4,877 28,543,369 4,268,492
8,696,113
8,286,128

compara¬

tively in the following statement:

While the

Tonnage

large

Wayne shops of 150 box cars. The present
equipment consists of 189 locomotives, all in good order; 169 pas¬
1,992 §2 senger, baggage and express cars, and
1,381 freight cars.
10,318 23
The track is in excellent order and
fully equal to that of the
$....
$1,021,845 00 best western
roads. During 1866
twenty four per cent, of the main
operating, viz.:
track has been relfiid with re-rolled iron
; and during the last three
$
$74,141 24

00
43

$8,489,062 66 $7,467,217 56
From which deduct cost of maintenance and
“

Decrease.

$949,325 76
31,486 76

..

Maintenance of way
“
ofcars

half or

$480,000 was on account of military transportation.
express business of 1865 was exceptional, and caused by
the
inability of the lines occupied by the Adams Express Company
to accommodate the
large south-west business during the closing
period of the war—the overflow seeking the route via Crestline
over the road of this
company from Pittsburg.
The rolling st#k has been increased
during 1866 by the con¬
one

The

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad.—The oper¬
ating accounts of this Company for the years ending December 31
1865 and 1866, present the
following results :
Passenger Earnings
Freight
“

471

1867.

(340 m.)
$242,793
219,065

283,130
253,924
247,262
306,454
278.701
310.702
302,425
281,613

3J93,005 3,380,588 '

-

[April 18, 186T.

THE CHRONICLE.

472

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
Subscribers will confer a great favor
DESCRIPTION.

the
total

1,000,000
1,014,000
800,000
4,000,000
4,000,000
2,000,000

Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.)
do

Mortgage, sinking fund, (Oftio)
)

do

do

Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex

Sterling Bonds
do

Mort.(Portland)

1,500,001
268.900
484,000
619.036

011834

Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (3 F) 1834

915,230
1,024.750
628.500
1,852,000

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1865
do
do

do
do

1850
1853

BeUsfontaine ($1,745,000):
1st Mortgage
3d
do
Belvidere Delaware ($2,944,000):
1st Mort. (guar. C. am 1
3d Mort.
do
8d Mort.
do

589.500

150,000

364,000

444,00
‘.00,91 C

Buffalo. N. Y. a/vl Erie ($2,395,000):
1st Mortgage
3d Mortgage

Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000):

.

Dollar Loans
Dollar Loan
Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan
Camden and Atlantic : 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Catawissa : 1st Mortgage
Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage
Central of New Jersey : 1st Mortgage
3d Mortgage
Central Ohio : 1st Mort
.

($8,836,000);

mortgage

Convertible Bonds
Cheshire Bonds

Chicago and Alton ($3,983,000):
1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref....
-do
do

income

Chic.) Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406)
Trust Mortgage (S. F.)
Chicago and Ot. Eastern 1st Mort..

Chicago and Milwaukee :
1st

Mortgage (consolidated)

Chicago db Northwest. ($12,020,4S3):
Preferred Sinking
1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds

Fund

Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870
Extension Bonds

Chicago, Bock Island db Pacific :
1st Mortgage (C. A R. I.)
1st
do
(new)
Cine., Ham. db Dayton ($1,629,000) :

Mortgage

1st
3d

do

Cincinnati Richmond db Chicago.
..
Cincinnati db ZanesviUe ($1,300,000):
1st

2,000,000
380,000
500,000

1st

1st
2d

j

200,000

Sinking Fund Bont.s
Boston and Lowell:
Bonds o Ju y I8><
of Oct. 18*14.
do

1st

1884

do

1895

do

13 0

do

1866

do

Ap’l A Oct.

Mortgage

1,180,950
600,000

1,700,000
867,000

4,269,400
490,000

493,000
141,000

786,000
900,000
600,000

2,500,000

Ap’l A Oct.

April A Oct 1870
July 1870

Jan. A

convertible

do
Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1866

Connecticut River($250,000): 1st Mort
Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000):

Mortgage

Cumberland valley : 1st Mort
2d
do
6 per cent bonds

Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430):
1st Mortgage
do
do

Toledo Depot Bonds

Delaware ($500,600):
1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Deia.s Lacka. db Western ($3,491,500):
1st Mortgage, sinking fond
do
Laeka. and West* 1st Mort
Des Moines Valley ($2,088,000):
Mortgage Bonds
3d

Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680):
1st Mortgage, convertible
3d

ao

1st * 3d Funded Coupon Bonds..
Detroit and Pontiac R.R
do
do

Detroit. Monroe db Toledo ($734,000):
1st mortgage,




T3

M

PQ

do

do

do

do

-

Jan. A July 1872
Feb. A Aug 1874
1885
do

598,000

Ap’l A Oct.

1888

1,000,000
570,000

cent. Bonds.

7

Jan. A

July

1880

5

April A Oct

1862

1876
1879
1883
1880
926,500 7 June A Dec 1888
8,816,582 6 M’ch A Sep 1875
7 May A Nov.
4,000,000 7 M’ch A Sep
do
6,000,000 7
4,441,600 7 April A Oct

8,000,000

.........

Sterling convertible (£800,000)
Erie and Northeast ($400,000):
Mortgage
Georgia
Gat: db Chic. U. (incl. in C. dbN. W.):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund

94%

750,000
160,900

394,000

Pennsylvania:

Erie Railway ($22,370,982):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
convertible
3d
do
do
convertible
4th
5th
do
do

Jan. A July 1888
1894
do

660,000

2d
do
do
Grand Junction : Mortgage
Great West., Ill.: 1st Mort., W, Div.
1st Mortgage Whole Line
2nd do
do
Greenville & Columbia: 1st Mort.....
Bonds guaranteed by State
Bonds unsecured
—
Hannibal db St. Joseph ($7,177,600):
Land Grant Mortgage
Convertible Bonds..

7
7
7
6

700,000 7
100,000 7

8,437,750
633.600

7

700,000
927,000

6

90
97

96

.

do
Convertible
3d

Redemption bonds
Sterling Redemption bonds
1st

Jan. &

4S3.000
2,400,000

Jan. &

July

’75-’80

May A Nov. 1877
July 1893
Ap’l & Oct. 1883

3,525,000
5,600,000

Jan. &

861,000

Jan. A

1,250,000
3,600,000
756,000
2,000,000

484,000
1,397,000

6,000,000

July

100

Feb. A Aug 1869
J’ne A Dec. 1886
May A Nov 1875
1867
do

500,000
600,000

6
6

May A Nov 1870
Feb. A Aug 1875

6.668.500
2,523,000
2,563,000

April A Oct 1875

358,000

7
6
6
6

300,000
300,000

7
7

Feb. A Aug 1882
May A Nov. 1884

1st

Feb. A Aug 1885
do
1885
May & Nov. 1863
Quarterly. 1915
Feb. A Aug 1885

Jan. A July 1870
do
1896

92

95

84

84%

90
80

100
S7

80

39%

Indianap. A Madison RR., 1st M..
Jeff., Mad. A Indianap., 1st Mort
Joliet and Chicago :
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Joliet and N. Indiana: 1st Mortgaf
Lackiwanna db Bloomsburg 1st Mort
do
Extensi n
2d Mortgage
Extension
do
La Crosse db Milwaukee :
1st

1,250,000
500,000
56,000

May A Nov 1880
Jan. A July 1885

1,300,000

May A Nov 1893

Mortgage, Eastern Division...

2d

do

do

Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000):

1,129,000
1.619.500
1,107,546

M’ch A Sep 1873
do
1875
Jan. A July 1892

2,081,000
250,000

Jan. A July 1885
do1886
M’ch & Sep 1878

600,000
161,000
109.500
108,100

J’ne A Dec. 1876
Ap’l & Oct. 1904
do
1904
do •

283,000

Jan. A July 1867
do
'1881
M’ch A April i 1884 I
do
i’61-’94

800,000

640,000
897,000
612.600

May A Nov. 1881
April A Oct 1873
May A Nov 1881

2,000,000
485,000
800,000
900,000
400 000
-

500,000

200,000
903,000

1,000,000
79,000

($1,500,000):
Mortgage
Little Schuylkill ($1,000,000):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Long Island: 1st Mortgage

1,300,000

1st

886,000

500,000

500,000

Jan. A

July

1875

1,668 000
572,000
1,740,000

Ap’l & Oct

April A Oct

$2,500,000
1,000,000
1,005,640
250,000

250,000 8

May & Nov. 1875
G

1864
1875
lc78

various,
various.
Feb. A Aug 1886

924,000 7 Feb. & Aug 11876

-Tan. A July
Jan. A July
Jan. A July
March A Sep

196

1882
1874
1875
1885

102

107

April A Oct 1880
May A Nov. 1890
May A Nov. 1872
Jan. A July 1869
95%
May A Nov. 1873
July ’69-’74

Jan. &

90
’.0

101%

97
90
75

May A Nov

1883

April A Oct 1877
Jan. A July 1875
Feb. A Aug 1890
May A Nov 1893
Jan. A July 1883

1st Mortgage
1st Memphis Branch Mortgage ...
Marietta & Cincinnati ($3,688,385):
1st Mortgage,
Scioto and Hocking Valley mort .

1,650,000
280,000

Jan. A

July

var.

May A Nov.

var.

2,362,800

Feb. A

McGregor Western 1st Mortgage

1,000,000

1892
1888
1885

68,000

...

300,000

Maine Central: ($2,733,800)

1,095,600

$1,100,000 Loan Bonds

315,200
660,000
800,000

$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds
do
2d
(P.A K.RR.) Bonds.

Memphis db Charleston:
Mortgage bonds.
Michigan Central, ($7,463,489)
Sinking F’nd do

Aug
May A Nov.
Jan. A July

1st
2d

Mortgage, sinking fund..'...

1,294,000

May A Nov. 1880

2,297,000
4.504.500

MarchASep. 1869
April A Oct 1882

4

May A Nov

863,000
2,693, P0C

1885

do

1877

651,000

Feb. A

Aug 1868

402,000

Jan. A

July 1891

4,269,000
824,000

Jan. A

,

Income Bonds....

1,500,000

do
Goshen Air Line Bonds
Milwaukee db Prairie du Chien:

Mortgage, sinking fund

81

Feb. A Aug. ’90-’91
June A Dec. ’70-’71
Apr. A Oct. 1874
Feb. A Aug. 1870

Mich. S. db N. Indiana: ($9,135,840)

104%
100
93%

Milwaukee and St. Paul:
1st

Mortgage
do

2d
1887

100

April A Oct 1906

175,000
150,000

1st
1875
M’ch A Sep 1881
Jan. & July 1871

1.122.500

102
102
102

July 1866

Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point)
do (Glen Cove Br.) .
do
do
do State Loan
Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000)

Convertible

2,603,000
642,000
169.500

72

1890
1875

Jan. A

......

1,000,000

...

Little Miami

j 1890

Jan. A July 1874
do
1880

500,000

•

1875

do
do
do

500,000

1,465,000

1st Mortgage
Lexington & Frankfort

1895

July

Mortgage

Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort

July 1898

•

600,000 7 Jan. A July 1866
1870
do
364,000 10

ceased)...

.

110% Jeffe rsonviue, Madison dblndianapblis:
55

98%
99

,

•

April A Oct 1881
July 1888

7
7
7
7

..

•

1868
1868

do
do

3,890,000
1,907,000
192,000
623,000

Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284)
1st Mortgage— s....

89

1883
1895

Ap’l A Oet.

Mortgage

2d
do
Indiana Central’.
1st Mortgage, (interest
2d
do

101
98

86% 88

Feb. A

2,655,000

2d
do
Illinois Central :

Construction bonds, 1875
do
do
do 6 per cent

100
97
88

July 1870
July 70-75

Jan. A
Jan. A

Jan. A July 1883
6 Jan. A July 1873
1876
do
7

Huntingdon db Broad 7bp($l,462,142):
1st Mortgage
100

102% 103%

7 Jan. A

Hudson River

.

96%

....

Aug 1882
May A Nov. 1875
Jan. A July 1870
927,000
1,000,000 10 April A Oct 1868
1,350,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1888
2.500,000 7 May A Nov. 1898
1868
July,
326,000 7

New Dollar Bonds

($7,762,840) :
1st Mortgage
2d
do
sinking fund

7

388,000
1,963,000
1,086,000

Harrisburg db Lancaster :
Hartford db New Haven : 1st Mort..
Hartf., Frov. db FishkUl :

149,000

Illinois and Southern Iowa :

1,500.000
673,200

121,000

8d

JT^IDAT.

A}

ft

Payable.

300,000

2d section...

Eastern, Mass. ($1,848,400):
Mortgage, convertible

5 per

1883
1889
J’ne A Dec. 1893
Jan. A July 1873
Ap’l A Oct. 1879
Feb. A Aug 1882
Mar. A Sep. 1875
Feb. A Aug 1870
May A Nov. 1875
M’ch A Sep 1890

Mortgage

Mortgage

do

Sinking Fund Bonds

7,336,000

1,100,000

Dubuque and Sioux City :
1st Mortgage, 1st section

Elmira & Williamsport :
1st Mortgage

Aug
May & Nov.

Hubbard Branch

3d

Amount

N. B.—The sums placed after the outstand¬
name of Company shows the total
ing.
Funded Debt.

East

Feb. A

Feb. A Aug 11873
M’ch & Sep! 1876
Jan. A July 1875

Bonds
3d Mort. Bonds
Cleveland db Pittsburg ($3,872,860):

65'

1866

795,000
534.900

1st Mort.

65

J’ne & Dec. 1877
May & Nov 1872

1st

1st

•—«

INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

1st

July '873
Ap’l A Oct. 1879

Jan. &

dec., Fain. db Ashtabula ($1,500,000):

65

Jan. A

475,000

Mort.(payable $25,000 per year)
Clevdand db Mahoning ($1,752,400):

ao

<

1880
1885

1st

3d
4th

QQ

a

Feb. & Aug 1865
1865
do
1889
do

Cleveland, Cm. and Cine. ($450,000):

3d

•H

May & Nov. 1878
Ap’l A Oct. 18'4
Ja Ap Ju Oc 1867
Jan. A July 1875

J’ne A Dec. 1867
M’ch & Sep 1885
Feb. A Aug 1877
May & Nov. 1871

I

Central Pacific of Cal.

Ap’l A Oct.

1,000,000
500,000

Mortgage
Burlington db Missouri ($1,902,110):
General Mortgage
Bonds conv. into pref. stock
Camden and Amboy ($19,204,463):

1882
1879
1881
1876
1883

Jan. A July 70-’79
do
1870

Blossburg and Corning i >nd«

Mortgage

do
do
do
do
Jan. & July

1,225,000
433,000

Boston, Cone. db Mont,nit ($1,050,000):
1st

He

T3

Ap’l A Oct. 1877

13,058,000

Consolidated Bonds
Atlantic ASt. Law. 1st
3d Mortgage

Payable.

ing.

do

do

X3

outstand¬

$2,500,000

Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)
do

as ©

discovered in our Tables.

Railroad:

Railroad:
Atlantic db Ot. Western ($30,000,000):
1st
*d
1st
id
1st
*d
1st

PRIDAV •

Amount

H. B.—The sums placed after
name of Company shows the
Funded Debt.

'

by giving us Immediate notice of any error

INTEREST.

do
do

(Mil. A Western)
Real Estate

Mississippi db Tennessee ($1,069,600)
1st Mortgage
Income
Mobile and Ohio
Income bonds

($6,133,243):...

135,009

July 1893
April A Oct 1893
April A Oct 1884
Jan. A July 1875

600,00C
297,500

Jan. A July 1876
do
1870

881,900

May A Nov.

1867
1882
1882

1876

..

4,187,010

do
do

Interest bonds...,

75,843

do

Sterling bonds.

84

#•••*

•

•••

THE

April 13,'1867.]

CHRONICLE.

473

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued).
giving ns Immediate notice

Snbscrlbers will confer a great favor by

total Funded

Company show the

a

Payable.

ing

^

Debt.

1Bid.

£
p*

The

?

i

Debt.

<1

sinking fond

1st Mortgage,

do

2d

.

224,<*H>!

Naugatuck : 1st Mortgage (convert.
Mew Bedford & Taunton
....
N. Haven A Northampton : Bonds..
Hampshire & Hamden R.R.

do

Mortgage Sinking Fund....

2d Mortgage
New Orleans, Opelou.
1st

A Gt. West
Mortgage Construction Bonds

485,000

Jan.

2,741,000
423,000,

Jan.

do

..

•

2d
3d

Mortgage
do
do

or

1st ffixtenuion

or

2d Extension

Income

do

94

1st
2d

339,000

Mar. & Sep.

1807

:

April <fc Oct

1880
1887

Jan. «fc
Feb. &

1874
1S70

Jan. & July

2,500,000
360,001'

100,000!
300,000

July
Aug

.

.

«

•

.

.

•

•

•

750,000
180,000

April & Oct ’67-'69
67-’84

1,458,0(X

var.

’75-’76

1,110,500

570,000

May & Nov.

1873

350,(MX
200,00

May & Nov,
Feb. & Aug

1916
1°91

198,5(M

Jan. & Juh
do.

70-’8(
18S5

do

3d

Convertible Loan

,

do
Dollar Bonds of 1849
do
do
1861
do
do
1843-4-8-9
....

Sterling
Bonds of 1843
Dollar

Bonds, convertible
: 1st Mort
Philadd., miming. <& Baltimore ;

Mortgage Loan

Pittsburg A ConnellsviUe ($1,500,000):
let Mort.

(Turtle Cr. Div.)
P'b'g,Ft. W. and Chic, ($12,573,500)
"
1st Mortgage
do
do

Bridge O. & P. RR

Akron Branch: 1st mortgage.

Pittsburg and Steubenville:
1st Mortgage...
2d

•

do

Quincy and Toledo: 1st Mortgage..
Portland A Kennebec ($1,394,661);
1st mortgage bonds, ext
Consolidated bonds
Raritan and Jielaware Bay :
1st
2d

Mortgage, sinking fund.

1st

do

and Columbia:

*

.

1st Mort.
Saratoga & Whitehall....
let Mort. Troy, S. & Rnt.
(guar.)
Richmond A Danville ($1,717,500):
4 th
Mortgage
...

Richmond
A Petersburg ($319,000) ;
Bonds,
coupon & registered

General Mortgage




1,000,0(X
5,000,(MX
4,000,(MX

April & Oci
April & Oct
April & Oct

1877
1881
1901

143,800

6 Jan. & July

1882

408,(XX
182,40(
2,661,60(
106,000

Jan. <fc July
do

1867
1880

April & Oct

1870

Jan. & July
do
do
do

1871
1880
1880

May & Nov.
Jan. &

450,000

Feb. &

400,000

5,250,000
5,160,000
2,000,0iXt
158,5001
200,000

July

1886
1868

......

,,

!.

1889

Semi an’ally
do

1912
1912
1912

April & Oct
May & Nov.

1876

Jan. &

July

1,000,0001

Feb. &

Aug 1881

500,000)
600,0001

do

1884

1881
189

■

A Oct
do

1883
1895

250,000
208,000

7
7
7

Mch & Sept
do
do

1&88
1888
1876

800,000

7

Mch &

1S79

400,000 7 May & Nov. 1890
do
1S90
340,000 7
do
1880
600,000 7
826,000 7

140,547 7

Feb. &
do

Aug

130,600 7 June & Dec

175,0001

S

Mar, <fe

’73 ’75
’69 ’76
1875

Sep, 1870

Various.

1875

1875
1867
1872
1870
1886
68-74

Jan. & July ■70
do
’70 ’72
do
'65 ’63

300,000

300J*' 0
175,000

Bonds guar, by At. & Pacific R.R..
Southern Minnesota: Land Grant B’d
Staten Island: 1st Mortgage

2,000,000

Jan. &

July

200,OOP

Jan. &

July i886

1st Mortgage
Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st

1,400,(XX

April & Oct
Jan. & Jnly
June & Dec

1.180,000

Mortgage

1,600,0(X

Feb. & Aug
do
,
do

9 000 fwv,

y’UUU’m
2,50\00(
1,000,(XX
1,500.(HX
HOO.OOt

May & Nov.

Equipment bonds (Tol. <fc Wab.)..
Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & W.) 1,000,00

Troy and Boston ($1,452,000)
1st
2d
3d

Apr.

do
& Oct.
do

Jan. & July

300,0(X
300,(MX
650,004
20U,(XX
636,(XX

do

do'
Convertible

Troy Union ($680,000): Mort, Bonds.

Apr. & Oct.
May <fe Nov.
Mar. &
Tan. &

Vermont Central:
1st
2d

Mortgage (consolidated)

2,000,(XX

do

Vermont and Massachusetts

1,500,(XX

Mortgage....
Warren ($5’1,400) :
1st Mortgage (guaranteed)
Westchester & Philadelphia :
1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon
2d
do
registered
Western (Mass.) (6,269.520):
Sterling (BS99.900) Bonds...
Albany City Bonds. .*

94

95

90k

90^

...

94

..

Mortgage...

8>%

1883

1876

Tan. &

1873
1878

596,(MX
200,(MX

Tan. & >ul\
do
*
Feb. & Ang

1890
1890
1896

175,00!

May & Nov.

25, (XX

Tan. & Julv
do
'

1870
1871
1877

Tan. & Jnl}
TaAp JuOc

&

Jnly

1886
1870
1890
1885
1878

752,(W

Mch
Jan. *fe

Sept
July

1870
1866

414,15:-

Quarterly.

do
.

CIO

Jan. & Jnly
ipril & Oct

J48.1XX

766,001

Mortgage
do

1870
1884
1887

1876

590,00

6

May & Nov. 1876

1,764,831
980,671
686,5(X

6

Mch &
Tan. &

Sep1
July
May & Nov.

1872
1882
1870

Tan. & July
do
do •

1865
1878
1864

3

Improvement
Susquehanna and Tide- Water;
Maryland Loan
Coupon Bonds
T. W. Canal Priority Bonds
Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds
Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage..
;.
West Branch and Susq.\ lst Mortgage
Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage,...

3,000,00<
7 >0,00(
600,000

American Dock A Imprm:ement :
Bonds (gn ir. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.)

1,000,000 7 Jan. A Julv 1886

Covington and Cincinnati Bridge ;.
1st Mortgage Bonds
Consolid. CodlCo.(Md.): Mort.( conv.)
Cumberland Coal: 1st Mortgage

Manposa Mm ing;
1st

2d

Mortgage

.

do

Pennsylvania Coal; Mortgage Bonds.
tyi 'ick.silver Min ina ;
1st
“2d

Mort,,prin.&int.payable ingold
do

do

Western Union Telegraph;
1st Mortgage convertible.

51

April & Oci 68-’71
Jan. & Jnly 'TO-171
April & Oct 1875*

5,434,35

Mortgage'Bonds

July

Ypril & Oet

2,356,509
2,000,001
4,375,(MM
1,699,501
800,(MX

Pennsylvania A New York : •
1st Mortgage (North Branch).
Schuylkill Navigation ; ’
1st
2d

1861
1867

Feb. & Ang

536,001

Monongahcla Navigation; Mortgage

102
94 %

Tnne & Dec
Ian. & July

7

600,001

Mortgage.
Lehigh Coal and Navigation :
Loan of 18.70.
Jon of 1884

102

Sep.
July

511,40

986,501

Plain bonds (coupon)
Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st
100

70

IBS'7
1885
1875
1882
’68-’74

Jan. & Jnly

689, (XX

Dollar Bonds
;
Western Maryland :
1st Mortgage
1st
do
guaranteed...
Western Union: 1st Mortgage
York A Cumberland (North. Cent.):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds....
Canal
Chesapeake and Delaware; 1 st Mort.

Preferred Bonds
Delaware Division : 1st
Delaware and Hudson:

89

180)
1890
1878
1878
1883
1871

H

4,319,621

Chesapeake and Ohio: Maryl’d Loar
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed

90>4

due

650,00

400,001
662, m

,

99J<:

1876
1870
1894

>

1st

70

1871

:

Mortgage

Miscellaneous:

Sept

2,286,111
1,070,000

Loan...

.

230,000
300,(KM 6

Feb. & Ang
Mar. & Sept
Jan. & July

700,000
55,000

Mortgage (guar, by Peteisburg)
T.
Mortga. e

Morris.

Aug

1992
1862

•Tan. A July
Jan. & Jnly
June & Dec

800,000
600,000

Toledo, Peoria and Warsaro .1st Mort
Toledo Vabash A West ($15,600,000) :
1st Mortgage told)
)
1st do
extended
f
1st
Lake E. Wab. St. L. ext.
do
2d
do
(Toledo and Wabash)....
2d
do
(Wabash and Western)..

S9

1884

■

Mortgage

Reiisselaer A Saratoga consolidated ;
list Mort. Rensselaer <fc
Saratoga

Interest Bonds

1876

1,000,600

Convertible Bonds

Reading

7 Jan. &Jnh

976,800
228,500
200,000

Philadelphia A Trenton

2d
3d

675,00T

Jan. & July
June & Dec

1,290.1X10

...

1,521,000

.

.

July 18S0
April & Oct 1875

1894

S. W.

($800,000):

Philadelphia A Reading ($6,900)663).
Sterling Bonds of 1836....
do

1870
1875
1S72
1884

1894

May «fcNov.

9S1,000 6 Feb. A Aug 1900

Special Mortgage
Pacific, Railroad:

....

Jan. &

4,980, (MX
4,904,840

Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000).
1st Mortgage (Sunbnry & Erie)..
1st
do
(general)
2d do
(general)’
Philadel., Germant. A Norristown:

do

do
Feb «fc Aug
Mch & Sepi

1,150,(XX
1,072,00<

Pennsylvania ($18,209,040):
1st Mortgage

2d
do
Phila. and Balt. Central
1st Mortgage

April & Oct

416,(MX
346,(XX

1st

1

1874

var.

do

1,700,000

u

....

S4>*

223,0(X

X.,

Semian’ally 1894

2,800,000

700,000

frve)

'ovth Carolina : Sterling
Domestic Bonds

1

....

97

Jan. & July
do

1875
1881

125

1,372,000 7 April & Oct. 1S94

.

1st Mortgage

!,

112

1872

Jan A July
Feb. & Any

(1st Di

:

Mortgage
Funded Bonds
'econd Avenue: 1st Morttgage..
HU.hamokin Valley

(A

....

400,(XK)

Mortgage (tax free) 1,20 ,000

,

94

1863
1863

Chicago:

Sandusky and Cincinnati:
Mortgage bonds
*

.

Feb. & Aug
do

2,200,000

Pacific of Minn

1st 'Mortgage (tax
1st Land Grant

1,800,000
946,tXX)

($6,700,000)

Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191):

7 April & Oct 1869

1,494,OOP

...

let Mortgage

t. Paul A

104

50,000 7 Jan. & July 1896

189,00

do

Peninsula

i

1

1866
1875

Mortgage, sterling
do
,do

I

Jan. & July 1880
Jun. & Dec. ’69-’72
Jun. &Dec. 1891

709,590:
521,500,

329,(1 X>

2d Mortgage
preferred
2d
do ~
income
t. Louis, Jacksonville A
1st Mortgage

}

Panama:
lBt

V/. Louis, Alton A T. H.
1st Mortgage

....

Ibtl

July

Jan. & July

do

do

95

'73-’7b

149.400

Oswego and Syracuse ($311,500);
2d'

1875

May & Nov,

lst'Mortgage

do
Sanramento Valley:
1st Mortgage

100K
96

400.000

.

i

91
91
102
'05
105

1S93
1868

..

Oswego <6 Rome ($657,000).
1st Mortgage (guar byR. W. & O

...J

.

....

1872

May & Nov.

Feb. & /

Jan. & July
April & Oct
April
Oct

Orange dt Alexandria ($2,923,004):
1st

i

....

.

95

1876

i rrt'g.
18^5
1000
1874

R.R.;
r

-

.

II i 3

Payable.

5

530,000

j Rutland and Burlington:
1st Mortgage

....

1876

Quarterly.

2,900, (MX

2d Mortgage
Old Colony A Newport
Bouds
dO
do
*

....

!...

1876

(an. &

1,500,00(
2,500,000
721,000

OgdtwburgandL. (7Aaw.($l,491,000).
Mortgage....

.

....

1887

460,000

110,00

Mortgage ($6,000,000).
North Pennsylvania ($3,124,737) .*
Mortgage Bonds
Chattel Mortgage
Norwich and Worcester ($580,000) ;
General Mortgage.
Steamboat Mortgage

1st

•

Potsdam & Watertown, guar.
R. W. & O., sinking fund

A

1st General

Mississippi:

•

...

1883
1883

250,OOP

Bonds...

Mortgage.....

•

'

1883

•

2

1,000,000 6 April & Oct

2 cl

1st

....

1889

.

.,

Ohio and

•

•

1890

i

($1,000,000) ;

do
3d
do
Northern New Hampshire :
North Carolina: Loan
North Missouri:

•

DS6

Y

1,398,0(X

3,000,000
1,000,(XX:
1,000,000

General Mortgage
Consolidated Mortgage

Mortgage Bonds ....
N. }
Prov. and Boston ($350,000):
1st Mortgage...
Improvement Bonds
Northern Central ($5,211,244);
1st Mortgage

•

ing.

:

Rome, Watert. A Ogdens. .-($1,848,000)
Sinking Fund (Wat. & Rome).,

.

•

•

1885

y

165,000
606,000

.

1st

1st

3d Mortgage
%N lork and New Haven

1874
g, 1873
t

2.925,000

Bonds of 18(55
J
New York and Harlem ($6,098,045):
'

y

200,000

6,450.43S

Subscrip. Bouds (assumed stocks)
Sink. Fund B’ds (assumeddebts)..
Bonds of August, 1859, convert.. )

18»>9

450,000:

140,000

•

1881

1,730,000 8 Apr. & Oct

New York Central :
Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ..
Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal)
Real Estate Bonds

•

1876

y
do

180,000

New Jersey ($855,000); Bonds of 1853
New Tmdon Northern: 1st. Mortgage
New Orleans, Jackson A Gt. North.:
1st

May & Nov.% 1915

5.000.000
576,000

.

outstand¬

name

total Funded

Railroad

FRIDAY.

—

Amount

placed after the

snms

Company shows the

OD

Railroad:
Morris and Essex:

INTEREST.

Description.

Amount

placed after the name oroutstand-

The gums

discovered In our Tables.

FRlDAr.

interest.

Description.

of any error

1,183,701
1,093,(XX
9 -,015

6

227,569

429.000

»•••••

May & Nov.
Jan. &
Jan &

July

July

Jan. A July- ,74-,84
Tan. & July 1886

629,000
417,000

Jan. &

Jnly

1,600,000

Jan. &

2,000, (XX
630 000

July

April & Oci
Feb. <fc

1879

Aug

1,000,000

Jnne & Dec
Tau. &> July

I 3,000,000

May A N97»

500,001

1883
1878
1878

1873
1879

77*

474

THE CHRONICLE.

[April 13,1867.

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Subscribers will confer

a

great flavor by giving us immediate notice of any error discovered In
Dividend.

Stock

Companies.
Marked thus (♦) are

leased

PRTTUV

out¬

roada, and have fixed incomes. standing.

Periods.

Washington Branch*
100 1,650,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67
Bellefontaine Line
100 4,429,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
996,647
100
Belvidere, Delaware
Berkshire*
100
600,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’67
Blossbure and Coming*
50 250,000 June & Dec Dec. ’66
Boston, Hartford and Erie.... 100 11,877,000
Boston and Lowell
500 1,830,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Boston and Maine
100 4,076,974 Jan. A July Jan. *67
Boston and Providence
100 3,360,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Boston and Worcester
100 4,500,000 Jan. & July Jan. *67
Broadway A 7th Avenue
1<>0 2,100,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Brooklyn City
10 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
366,000
Brooklyn City and Newtown. 100
850,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Buffalo, New York. A Erie*. .100
Buffalo and State Line
100 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. *67
Camden and Amboy
100 5,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
Camden and Atlantic
50
522.350
do
do
600,000
preferred 50
721,926 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
60
Cape Cod
Catawissa*
50 1,150.000
do
preferred
50 2,200,009 Feb. & Aug
Central Georgia A Bank’g Co.100 4,666,800 June A Dec Dec. *66
Central of New Jersey
100 13,000,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’67
Central Ohio
2,600,000
do
400,000
Apr. ’67
April.
preferred
Cheshire (preferred)
124,550 January
Apr. ’67
100
Mar
& Sep. Mnr. ’67
Chicago and Alton
100 3.836.500
do
preferred. .100 2,425,000 Mar & Sep. Mar. *67
Chic. Burlington and Quincy..100 10,193,010 May & Nov Nov. ’66
Chicago and Great Eastern.'.. 100 4,390,000
July ’66
Chicago, Iowa A Nebraska*... 100 1,000,000
Chicago and Milwaukee*
.100 2,227,000 Jan. & July
Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 13,160,927
do
do
pref..100 12,994,719 Annually. Dec. ’66
Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific..100 9,100.000 April &Oct Apr. ’67
Cincinnati, Ham. A Dayton.. .100 3,129,200 April & Oct Apr. ’67
350,000
Cincin.,Richm’d & Chicago...100
Cincinnati and Zanesville
50 1,600,250
Cleveland, Colhmbus, & Cin.. 100 6,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb! ’67
Cleveland & Mahoning*...... 50 2,044,600 May & Nov Nov. *66
Cleveland, Painesv. A Ashta.100 5,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50 5,391,575 April & Oct Apr. ’67
Cleveland and Toledo
50 4.841.600 April & Oct Apr. ’67
Columbus A Indianap. Cent..100
Quarterly. Apr. ’67
Columbus and Xenia*
50 1,786! 800 Jan. & July Jan* ’67
Concord
50 1*500,000 vi ay & N ov Nov. ’66
Concord and Portsmouth
100
350,000 Jau. & July Jan. *67
Conn, and Passumpsic.pref.. 100 1.514.300 Jan. & J uly Jan. ’67
Connecticut River
100 I,650,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Cumberland Valley
50 1.316.900 Apr.;& Oct. Apr. ’67
Dayton and Michigan
100 2,384,910
Delaware*
50
406,132 Jan. & July Jan. 67
Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50 II,288,550 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Des Moines Valley
100 1,550,050
Detroit and Milwaukee
100
452.350
do
do
pref. ..100 1,500,000
Dubuque and Sioux City
100 1,673,952
do
do
Mar. ’i>7
March.
pref. ..100 1,983,170

....

1*
2*

i-ytT

Eastern, (Mass)

100

East Tennessee A
East Tennessee &

3.578.300

Jan. &

.

Erie
do preferred
Erie and Northeast*

pref. 50

500,0(90

100
100
50
loo
100

16.570.100

8,535.700
600,000
3,540,000
4,156,000
100 1,900,000

Fitchburg
Georgia

Hannibal and St. Joseph
do
do
pref.100
Hartford and New Haven.
.100
100
Housatonicpreferred
Hudson River
100
..

Huntingdon and Broad Top *. SO
do

pref. 50
100

Indianapolis and Cincinnati.. 60
Jeffersonv.,<Mad. <fe,(ndianap.l00

Joliet and Chicago*
100
Joliet and N. Indiana
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50

Lehigh Valley
Lexington and Frankfort

50
100
50
50

i

1

142"

134*!
•

....

...

3*

....

1

•

1

...

130*

i

....

26

1

30
58

2*

....

6

..

55"

2*

.

....

5x

105* 106

5
5

107* 109
135

100
100
100
50

McGregor Western*

1,500,000

7
5
5

Michigan Central
Michigan Southern *

33*
60*

87*

100

4
5
4
6

....

Savannah & Charleston
!

70

117* 118

2*

....

6
4

....

....

....

....

....

3
5

....

....

....

7 s.
108
4
•

i2i

Virginia Central

•

•

2*
3*

60
80

4
7
5
5

55*

...

...

100

100
.100

113*

4

80

.

.

j

*j

118

59
....

67
50

....

miscellaneous.

Coal.—American
Ashburton
Butler

Consolidation
Cumberland

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill

....

!

I

8*.
38.
4

117*

1
.

.

.

:

.

•

•

•

68*

•

5
3
s
7

•

85

80

...

....

•

•

•

•

_••••
•

•

•

4

i

100*’

tfi •

!

....U

...

June & Dec

Dec.’ *’66

1,800,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
2,530,700
800,000 April A Oct Oct. ”’66
600,000 April & Oct Oct. ’66
800,000 April & Oct Oct. ’66
2,000,000
1,008,600
2,385,500 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
2,233,376
2.300,000
1,700,000 Annually. May ’66
1,469,429
2,989,090
393,073 May & Nov Nov! *’66
900,000
1,020,000
1,^00,000
576,050 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
869,450 Feb. & Aug Ang. ’66
635,200 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
750,000 Quarterly.

261
111

United States

111

54* 54*
99* 99*

ioi’

31* 84

5,819,275

Feb. ’66

Jan.* ’67
186

37*

Nov. ’66
Jan. ’67

Dec. ’66
Jan. ’67

54*

3,353,679

139
6,710,800 Jan. & July Jan.’ ’67
1,860,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’64
2,687,237
1,141,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 5*

1,575,963
8,228,595
1,633,351.
10,000,000
2,987,412

June & Dec Dec ’66

6,137.00!

May & Nov Nov.’66
Jan. & July 3 an. ’67
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67

728,100
1,025,000
1,175,000
1,908,207
2,888,805
2.052,083
2.907.850
1,100,000
800,000

Feb. *
Feb. &
Feb. &

Feb. &
Feb. &

Aug Feb.’ ’’67
Aug Feb. ’67
Aug Feb. ’67

Aug
Aug

109*

Feb. ’67
Feb. ’67

July Jan. ’60
Quarterly. Sept.’66

Jan. &

10

1,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
& Oct

"l00 3,400,000 Apr.

S

1,250.000 Feb. & Ang

20
50

’

*.

112
46

60

30

40

Aug! ’’66

Feb. & Ang Aug. ’66
Jan. & July Jan. ’67

Jan. &
Jan. &

July Jan. ’67
July Jan. ’67

100

50
50

43*
26*

88*’

100 20,000,000

.*..*.*100 6,000,000 Quarterly. Dec.’’66
100

20,000,000

100
L. & Trust.. 25
New York Life & Trust lOO
Union Trnst
100
United States Trnst
100
Mtntng.—Mariposa Gold
100

4!666,*ooo

S.'American Navigation. .100

....

137

100

(Brooklyn)

70

I !l00 5,000,000
50 3,200,000 Quarterly. Feb.’ ’’67
.* 50 1,250,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67

Pacific Mail

}

•

s’

JulyiJan.

24*

1,000,000 May & Nov Nov! ’66
750.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Improvement. Canton 100.(16ipd) 4,500,000
Boston Water Power... 100
4,000,000
July ’66
Brunswick City
!ioo 1,000,000
Telegraph.—Western Union. 100 28,450,000 Jan. &
July Jan. *67
Western Union, Russ. ExlOO
10,000,000 Quarterly.
Express.—A. dams
100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Nov-’66
American
!!! .*.!*.600 9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66
Merchants’ Union

Union

4

’i,566;666

2,000,000
1,200,000
644,000
Jersey City & Hoboken!*. 20
386,000
Manhattan
50 4,000,000
Metropolitan
!." 100 2,800,000
New
Citizens
Harlem

Auk

120
1.507.850 Apr. & Oct Apr.
106
9,019,300 Quarterly. Apr.
1.776.129
9,940,987 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 2* 9i*

Wells, Fargo & Co
100 10,000,000
70" Steamship.~Afia.ntlc Mail... .100
4,000,000

3
5

i

U5*|

:

:

22,742,867 Jan. &

1,500,000 Mar. & Sep.
2,500,000
500,000 Jnn. A Dec.
5,000,000
2,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67

Gas.—Brooklyn

Williamsburg

69

50

795,360
3,068,400 June & Dec Dec.
4,518,900 Quarterly. Feb.
4,000,000
2.469,307
I Feb.
3.150.150
2,363,600 Jan. & July Jan.
3,077,000 Feb. & Aug Feb.
356.400 Apr. & Oct Apr.
20,222,647
3,007,197 January. Jan.
4,848,300 Jan. & July Jan.
2,063,655

25
50
2ft
..." 100
iqq

Wyoming Valley..!.!!!! .100

York..

T 107~ 108*’

1.408.600 Feb. A Aug Feb.' ’67 5"
500.000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 5

’07

W3roming

Wilkesbarre

’66

.100 26,530 000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
60 5,285,050 Jan. A July Jan. ’67

& Tide-Water.. 50
50
Susquehanna. 50
Valley
50

Central

2,056,544

1,500,009 Jan,.# July IjftU.

.

.

6

*66

4,093,425
N. Orl./Jackson
AfGtNorth.lOO 4,697,457
New York
50

..-..1

....

•

J

_

....

.

Central

_

....

•

50

prefer.. 50

Union, preferred
:i3*fj
85 1 West Branch &

....

-

2
2
3
4

Jan. ’67

.

New York and Harlem
to
prefers

do
Susquehanna

5
-

i! Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.)..

133

0

1*
4

..

.

.

Apr. ’67 2*

New Bedford and Taunton
New Haven * Northampton..100
1.224.100
Jan. ’67
New Jersey
100 5,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
New Londcga Northern..
100
895.000 Mar A Sep. Mar. ’67
N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO
..

!’!
....

....

3,082,000 February...
2d pref.100 1,014.000 February... Feb.
100 3,627,000 Jan. A July
do
preferred
100
Jan. A July Jan. ’67 510 s
Mine Hill * Schuylkill Haven 50 7,371,000
3.775.600 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 4
Mississippi & Tennessee... .100
825,399
Mobile and Ohio
100 3.588.300
Morris and Essex
* * kq 3,500,000 Mar. A
Sep Mar. ;67 3*«
Nashua and Lowell
”” 100
600,009 May A Nov Nov. ’66 4
Nashville *

Chattanooga

....

52
175

3*

do

........

.

116

Jan. ’67

•

56
73

«...

4
4

Milwaukee and St. Paul

....

70

100

Western (Mass).
100
Western (N. Carolina)
106
Western Union (Wis. & Ill.)..,..
Worcester and Nashua
75
Canal.
|
Chesapeake and Delaware.... 25
i-| Chesapeake and Ohio
25
Delaware Division
50
Delaware and Hudson
.100
Delaware and Raritan
100
i Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50
i
Monongahela Navigation Co. 50
Morris (consolidated)
10
do
preferred
100

....

rate Bid.

6,000,000 Jan. A July Jan.
1,755,281 Jan. * July Jan.

1,365,000
2.203.400 Feb. & Aug
Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..100 1.200.130
Terre Haute «
Indianapolis.. 60 1.983.150 Jan. & July
Third Avenue (N. YA..
100 1,170,000 Quarterly.
Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .100 1,650,232
do
do
1st pret.100 1,700,000
do
do
2d pref.100
908,176
Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 60 5,400,000
do
do
preferred. 50 1,000,000 May & Nov
Utica and Black River
100
834.400 Jan. & July
!
Vermont and Canada*....
100 2,250,000 June & Dec
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100 2,860,000 Jan. &
July

....

3
4
4

-

South Carolina
100
Seuth Side (Peters. & Lynchb)100
South Western Georgia
100

....

138*

3*

10<>

Schuylkill Valley*

50
ShamokinVal. A Pottsville*. 50
i Shore Line Railway
100
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
100

....

70"

60

do

pref. 60
Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100
Saratoga and Hudson River.. 100

’4" 98* 99'

Nov. *66

7,502,866 Jan. A July Jan.

Sandusky, and Cincinnati
do

Apr. ’67

N. Ind..l00 9.813.500 Feb. A Aug Feb.
do
do
guar. 100
787,700 Feb. A Aug Feb.
Milwaukee & Prairie Du Ch... 100
3,014,000 Feb. A Aug Feb.
do
do
1st pref.100
Feb.

....

1

136?

33*
60*
87*

'

3

*66
’62
’67
’65
’67
’67
’67
’67

Troy, Salem & Rutland
100
Richmond and Danville
100
Richmond and Petersburg .. 100
Rome, W'atert. & Ogdensb’g..l00
Rutland and Burlington
..100
St. Louis, Alton, & Terre H...100
do
do
pref.100
St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Cnic.*lC0

J

60

Apr. ’67

Maine Central
1,606,860
Marietta and Cincinnati
2,029,778
do
do 1st pref. 50 6.586,135 Mar. A
Sep Sep.
do
do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. A
Sep Sep.
Manchester and Lawrence... .100
1.000,000 May A Nov Nov.
Memphis and Charleston
100 5,312,725
Mar.

Saratoga and Whitehall... .100

j

5

3

Macon and Western.

I

15

5,253,836

Jan. ’67

Portland & Kennebec (new).. 100
Portland, Saco, & Portsm’th. 100
Providence and Worcester... .100
Raritan and Delaware Bay... .100
Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO

....

3*

Apr. ’67

Pennsylvania
Philadelphia and Erie*
Philadelphia and Reading .... 50
Phila., Germnnt.A Nomst’n* 50
Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50
Pittsburg and Connellsville... 50
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & Chic..l00

•...

FIUDAT.

paid.

Date,

100
482.400 Feb. & Aug Feb.
50
100 7,000.000 Quarterly. jApr.
50 20,000.000 May & Nov, Nov.
50 5,083,700 Jan. & July Jan.-

Panama

i

5

Nov. ’66
Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’6i
January. Jan. ’67
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Apr. & Oct. Oct. ’66

Feb. ’67
Mar. ’67
Jan. ’66

Orange and Alexandria
Oswego and Syracuse

j

....

60
100

do
preferred. 100
Ohio and Miss, certificates.. .100
do
preferred.. 100
Old Colony and Newport
100

!

....

126

100

Ogdensburg & L. Champlain. 100

1

120

6
5

July Jan. ’67

3,000,000 Quarterly.
1,180,000 May & Nov
13,937,400 April & Oct
494,380
190,750 Jan. & Julr
23,386,450 Feb. & Aug
1.689.900 Mar. & Sep
2,000,000 Jan. & July
300,000 Quarterly.
300,000 Jan. & July
1,335,000
10.734.100 Quarterly.
514,646 May & Nov

North Missouri
North Pennsylvania
Norwich and Worcester.

....

3*

4




•

•

.

i

5

Nov. ’66

Naugatuck

....

•

'4
5
5
5

3,572,400 June A Dec Dec. ’66
2.646.100 Jan. A July July ’66
Long Island
50 3,000,000 Quarterly. Feb. ’67
Louisville and Frankfort
50 1,109,594 Jan. A July Jan. ’67
Louisville and Nashville
100 5,500,000 Feb. A
Aug Feb. ’67
Louisville, New Alb. & Chic. .100 2,800,000

Little Miami
Little Schuylkill*

do

....

.

.

do

„

....

•

12*

Georgia.. .100 2,141,970
Virginia .100 1,902,000
jgmira and Williamsport*..
500,000 May & Nov
60
do

do
Illinois Central

...

....

Periods.

standing.

New York and New Haven... 100
New York Prov. & Boston
100
Ninth Avenue
100
Northern of New Hampshire.100
Northern Central
50
North Carolina.
100

....

Last

out-

...

2
4
6
3

5

Stock

leased

roads, and have fixed incomes.

1*

...

J l-E.

Comp antes.
Marked thus (*) are

Last paid.
Date.
rate Bid. Ask.

Railroad.
par
Alton and St. Louis*
100
158,000 Quarterly. Apr. '67
Atlantic A St. Lawrence*—100 2.494.900 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
Baltimore and Ohio
100 16,151,902 April
Oct Apr. ’67

Tables.

onr

Dividend.

Navigation

Trust.—Farmers’

Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100
Quartz Hill Gold..
25
Quicksilver
,,,,..100
Rutland HarbJ*,.,
85
„

1,000,000
1,800,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
5,097,600

iuarteriy.
Quarterly.

72*
82*
is»*

Mar. ’67

Quarterly. Dec. ’1
Jan. & July
Feb. & Aug
Jan. & July
Jan. & July

56

Jan.
Feb.
Jan.
Jan.

’

’
’
’

128
114

8.774.400
2,500,000
10,000,000
X 000,000 M*y&

Fab. 65

Nqy SPY?

28*

April IS, 1867.]

THE

CHRONICLE.

475

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.
Bid. Askd

Companies.

Companies.

Bid. Askd

Hammond

5

JBemie Heights.
Bennehofif Run
Bergen Coal and Oil...

2 75

Bliven

....

--

Bradley Oil

....

Brevoort

.

....

Brooklyn...
g
Bucharifei Farm......... .10

•

•

.

100

Central

.

•

•

....

•

.

•

•

.

.

.

.

.

.

30

20
....

....

.

.

.

*

■

t

....

4 50
•

•

•

•

Oceanic
Pit Hole Creek

Rynd Farm

.10
.10

75
20

6

Second National
Shade River
Union
.10
United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2
5
United States
10 3 50

10

Great Republic
G’t Western Consol

5
5
5
5
1

.

N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons

.

...

....

15

.—

N. Y. & Alleghany
New York & Newark...
N. Y. & Philadel

7
1 30

....

•

.

.

19
1 0-

....

•

.

.

«...

7C

Cherry Run Petrol’m.... 8
Cherry Run special
5
Clinton Oil
10
Empire City
5
Excelsior
5
First National
5
Germania
5

.

.

.

ST.

2
2

Venango (N. Y.)

....

10

Bid. Askd

paid

Adventure
JStna

}

Lake

25J [
3

Albany & Boston

Algomah..

*

Missouri State Mutual

Amerioan

Amygdaloid

?

i

(
(
i
i

Bay

Calumet
Canada
Charter Oak

1

....

66

30 00 40 00
47
: 83 1

—

5
4

Concord

85}
s'oo!

2 50

—

Copper Falls
Copper Harbor

24) ( 22 25
1

•

i

Davidson

30

%

....

•

•

•

2o’6o

—

5
2
2

hanover

Hecla
Hulbert
Humboldt

Hungarian

X

i

1

Huron
Indiana
Isle Royale*
Keweenaw
Knowlton

•

•

.

.

•

-

25

.

19
10

1 00

.

6X

.

•

.

•

.

....

Rockland
St. Clair
St. Louis
St. Mary’s
Salem

•

Sharon

..

12

.

7 50

3
1

..

..

....

5X

..

8 35
5 50

•

X

•

•

....

•

....

....

....

1

•

•

•

•

....

X

•

n.21

•

•

1

..

o

.

6ii!

1

..11X

1 25

50
2 25

8
..21

..

1 25

2 50

....

1 60

....

66

8

....

3

8

75:

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.
t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares
X Capital $200,000, in 20,000 shares.
Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.
Bid. Askd

10
10

..

—

..

—

....

Ayres Mill & Mining,

Bates & Baxter
Benton
Bob Tail
Boscobel Silver.....
Bullion Consolidated...

Burroughs

•

50
6

..

..

—

..

Corydon

•

•

k

t

2 00
1 10
3 CO
•

•

•

10

•

•

•

.

3 40

„

350

—

,.

Des Moines

25

9 00
5 15

—

....

9 is
5 20
...

—

Downieville..

1

..

Echla
Pall River
First National

Grass Valley
Gunnell
Gunnell Union
Holman

Bid. Askd

8

....

10

—

Gilpin

66

4

....

4 70
50

....

2

Hope
Keystone Silver

1

75
2

....

1

—

Knickerbocker

20

....

25 |
—

•

Kip & Buell

•

•

2

55

70

—
,

f

.

.

4

,

Liberty

5
50

Mill Creek
Montana
Montauk
New York

—

5

40

55

10

60
3

99
6

Nye

*

Ohio & Colorado G.& S. 45

People’s G. & S. of Cal.
Quartz Hill
Rocky Mountain

5

ica, Philadelphia
Enterprise, of Cincinnati
10,000 Merchant’s Ins. Co., Chicago.
10,000 Phenix Ins. Co., Brooklyn...

10,000
10,000
10,000
10,000

10.000

.•*

$300,00< )
300,00<)
200, m)
200,0CK )
500, OCX )
250,00()
soo.oot)

200,00C '
200, oot )

25
....17
100
20

200,00< )
153,00<
150,001
800,00*

70

210,00(

100

40

100

Excelsior

50

Exchange

30

Firemen's
17
Firemen’s Fund... 10
Firemens Trust.. 10
Fulton
25
Gallatin
50
Gebhard
100
Germania
50
Globe
50
Great Westem*+. .100
Greenwich
25
Grocers’
50
Guardian
Hamilton
15
60
Hanover
Hoffman
50
Home
100

Periods.

151,005 1 Jan. and July
325,23^ Jan. and July

Jan. ’67.

.

515,894 ) Jan. and July
222,07:1 Jan. and July
282,12r Jan. and July
257,75; 1 Feb. and Aug
336,471 March and Sei p
204,791 May and Nov
170,17] Feb. and Aug
345,741 June and Dec
266,36t Feb. and Ang
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

238,504

do

92,68;
384,261
333,878
275,591
309,625
214,14r
424,18£

Jan. and

Texas

162,'571

Foster Iron

Lake Superior Iron
Bucks County Lead

Bid. Askd
par

25
10

2

60
2 40

95!

1 10

OC
10
40
20

....

Yellow Jacket

Manhan Lead
Phenix Lead

Stor^ye...,..




....

...

100
5

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

•

—

—
....
—

—

....

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

40X

....

....

...

38 X

....

Dec. ’66.. 5
Feb. ’67... 6
Feb. ’67..i 5

....

....

150

...

..'4

....

Jan. ’67 .1<3
Feb. ’67.7*
Jan.’67.
5
July’64.3*i
Jan. ’67.. 15
Aug. N 6 ..15

180

....

107
...

....
...

...

..i 5

...

Oct. ’65...
Jan. ’67
7
Mar. ’64.. 5
July’64 .£

....

....

.

Apr. ’67..t
July’66 /
.

Jan.’67. ..£
Jan. ’67

.£

106

July’66.3X
July’65 .£
July ’66 .£

83

.

.

.

Feb. ’67 ..£
July ’66 ..6

....

....

July’65 .£3
’67.3X
.

Jan.

Aug ’66..C
Apr. ’65..5
Jan. ’67 3X

60

107
120

....

LIST.

Companies.

| Bid.

Tudor Lead
par —
Saginaw, L. S. <fc M..
25
Wallkill Lead
—
Wallace Nickel
—
Rutland Marble
25

Long Island Peat
8avon da Terre

5
•..

—

4

Askd

t

**

-

*

-

_

.

•

•

*

.

icox

•

„

....

m

m

m

m

«...

•--« •

T
a

-

-

m

127
»

•

•

,

,

,

,

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

...

•

m

•

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

86

*

•

a

•

•

totem*

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

^

...

Sterling *
Stuyvesant.
35

....

....

....

•

•

•

•

2 75

....

....

....

Tradesmen’s
United States

100
25
25
20

Washington
50
Washington *t. ...100
Williamsburg City.50

honkers &N. Y.. 100.

200,000
200,000
150,000
250,000

400,000

893,700
150,000
500,000

206,731
198’182 F"eb. and Aug.
158,733 J an. and July.
do
836,691
630,314 F ’eb. and Aug.
190,206 F eb. and Ang.
179,008 J an. and July.

•

»

.

.

f

_

.

76

....

•

•

•

.

501,244)

do

1 \.ug. ’66 5
< ran. *67..6
ran.’67 .5
Ireb. ’67.. .5
I i’eb. ’67...5
J an.’87 ..5
J uly '66 . .5

•

•

•

•

....

•

.

.

•

•

•

....

.

•

•

«...

.

.

.

34
....

.

•

•

—

Husse\L Fie

128
70

....

.

•

—

..

....

DenboLead

Iron Tank

5

...
•

Ang. ’65..-4

do
Jan *67 /.5
do
400,000 419,952
Jan. ’67. .5
152.229
do
200,000
July’66 .5
do
2,000,000 2,271,387
Jan. C7 .6
Hope
50
do
200,000
July ’65 ..5
Howard
50
do
500,000
546,522
Jan. "67 .6
Humboldt
100
do
200,000
195,926
July ’65 .5
do
Import’ & Traders. 50 200,000 167,833
July ’65 .6
International
100 1,000,000
800,604 Feb. and Ang. Aug.’66.3X
do
Irving
25
200,000 206,179
Feb. ’67..5
Jefferson
30
200,010
238,808 March and Sep Mar.’67 ..4
King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20 -150,000 176,678 Jan. and July. Jan.’67 5
Knickerbocker.... 40
do
280,000
302,741
Jan. ’67 ..6
do
Lafayette (B’klyn) 50
150,000 141,43-1
Jan. ’67 ..5
Lamar
100
do
300,000 863,006
Jan, ’67 ..5
25
Lenox
do
150,000
121,607
July’65 ..4
do
Long Island (B’kly). 50 200,000 284,605
Jan. ’67..6
Lorillard*
25 1,000,000 1.118,664
do
Jan. ’67 .5
Manhattan
100
do
'500,000 610,930
Jan. ’67..5
Market*...
100
288.917
200,000
do
Jan. ’67 3X
Meehan’ & Trade’. 25
do
200,000 222,921
Jan.’67 ..5
Mechanics (B’klyn) .50
do
150,000 146,692
Jan. ’67..5
100
Mercantile
195,546
do
200,000
July *66 4
Merchants’
50
200,000
do
245,169
Jan.’67.10
do
Metropolitan * t.. *100 1,000,000 516,936
July ’65 ..5
Montauk (B’k’yn).. 50
161.743
150,000
do
Jan. ’67..6
Nassau (B’klyn)... .50
150.000
do
259,270
Jan. ’67..8
National
7X
do
200,000
228,628
Jnn. ’67 ..6
New Amsterdam.. 25
319.870
do
300,000
Jan. ’67 ..4
N. Y. Equitable 3 35
2io;ooo 264,703 Tan. and July. Jan. ’67 ..6
N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100
247.895 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’67.. 5
200,000
Niagara
50 1,000,000 1,053,825 Jan. and Jtd?. Jan.’67 ..5
North American*. 50
do
500,000 511,631
July’66 ..5
North River
25
350,000 379,509 April and Oct. Apr. ’67..5
25
Pacific
200,000 244,293 Jan and July. Jan.’67..6
Park
100
do
200,000 212,521
Jan. ’67 ..5
Peter Cooper ..... 20
do
150,000 185,365
Jan. ’67 ..5
People’s
20
150,000 14 *,203 Feb. and Aug.
Phoenix t Br’klyn. 50
,000,000 1,077,288 ran. and July. Jan ’67. .5
Reliei.
50
do
190,167
200,000
July ’66. .5
do
Republic*
100 300,000 453,233
Jan.’67.3X
Resolute*
100
do
200,000 185,962
July’66.3X
Rutgers’
25
200,000
216,879 1I’eb. and Aug. Feb. ’67..5
St. Mark’s
25
140.679
150,000
do
Feb. ’67..5
St. Nicholast
25
150,000 156,220 J an. and July, i\ug. ’66 .5
Security t. .
50 1,,000,000
962,181 I ’’eb. and Ang. ! i’eb.’eOX
Standard
50
200,000
226,756 J an. and July. * Fan. ’67 .6
Star
100
do
200,000 195,780
ruly ’66 ..5
.

....

Aug. ’66... 5
Mar. ’67.. 5

July’66

Last
Sale.

x>ia

.

•

J
35!

...

—

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK
Companies.

*R| A

•

5
J. ’67.34«3 4
Jan. ’67..
Jan. 65... 5

July July’64

do
Feb. and Aug
Jan. and July
do
do
Feb. and Ang
228,696 Jan. and July

250,00(
600,001
200,00(
400,000
200, (XK i
250,001
234,875 April and Oct
500,00( 1,289,03’- Jan. and July
404,17b March and Sei
400, (KX
36,51b Jan. and July
200,006
424,295 April and Oct
300,000
203,990 Jan. and July
200,000
229,276
do
200,000
131,065 Feb. and Aug
150,000
204,000 241,840 Jan. and July.
do
150,000 121,468
do
150,000 165,933
do
200,000 250,766
149,689 May and Nov
150,000
200,000
227,954 Feb. and Aug.
600,000 525,763 Jan. and July.
200,000 200,015 Jan. and July.
1,000,000 2,385,657 Jan. and July.
200,000 255,657 Feb. and Aug.
200,000 170,225 April and Oct.
200,000 177,173 Jan. and July.

150^00

Last paid

,

Copakelron.

6,000
16,000
6,000

DIVIDEND.
-

Net as’tt

CO 8 o o )

Clinton
100
Columbia*
100
Commerce (N.Y.). .100
Commerce (Alb’y).lOO
Commercial
60
Commonwealth... 100
Continental *
100
Croton

Dec. 31,1866.

•

....;

10 00 13
20 5 00' 5
i
1
I
I

•

Gold Hill

2 60 ! 2 60

4 25

—

S^nsendprfp.r
Smith & Parmelee
Svmonds Forks

—

|

par

Liebig'

•

—

.,

Companies.

LaCrosse

.

1 50

..

..

•

•

....

Consolidated Gregory. ..100

Crozier....

8 70
95
2 00

1 25
1 00
1 00

—

..

Central
Church Union
Columbia G. & S
Consolidated Colorado.

8 70
81
1 00

—

.

10*000

.

*

..

Lorillard Ins. Co., N. Y
Market Ins. Co.. N. Y
Excelsior Ins. Co., N. Y
Security Ins. Co., N. Y
Insurance Co. of North Amer¬

.

4X

....

Companies.

10,000
OTHER companies.

.

5

par

•

....

....

.

.

City

Eagle
Empire City

.

10 13 10 50

33

Albin
Alameda Silver
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific

.

10

46 66

35 00
5

•

.

.

■

Hope

•

....

....

..

10,000
6,000

10,000

25

...

Corn-Exchange... 50

1 50
•

2 00
15 5C 15 75
5 00 )

..10X
10X

5 50

....

0 0;

5X

..

IX
2X
IX

Hilton

Atlantic (Br'klyn).
Baltic
25
Beekman
.u 25

Central Park
Citizens’

6X
5X

....

5 00
63

50

Bowery (N. Y.)
Rroadway
Brooklyn

CO
3X
15

Ridge

French Creek
Girard
Great Western
Hamilton

2 00

7
50

Resolute

•

Excelsior
19 50

1 50

11

Quincyt

1

9 00

Princeton.......
Providence

_

10

Empire

Arctic.

11%

Pontiac

....

Everett

American *.

4

Portage Lake...

2 25

Adriatic....

—

...

....

St. Lonis

10,000
10,000
10,030
10,000

Capita]

zEtna

2

...

are

write Marine Risks.

Naumkeag
1
New Jersey Consol.... 10

Pittsburg & Boston.

.

Vfirked thus (♦)

IX
18X
5X

Petherick
Pewabic
Phoenix

•

1 50

10,000

6,000
10,000
10,000

$296,000

participating, and (+)

8

Ogima

Mound City Mutual
Hope Mutual
Occidental Mutual
Jefferson Mutual

10,000

4X
5X
4X
6X

;;;; Pennsylvania *

’

Dana

6c

23

$10,000

South St. Louis Mutual

10,000
10,000
10,000

5,000
10,000

6

1%

New York
North Cliff
North western
Norwich
:

;

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

5

Native

....

the insurance

are

at St Louis
Salamanda Mutual

Askd

2

|15 00: National

Copper Creek

Delaware
Dev-*n..

*•••

....

—

Central

...

10,000

Phenix
Pacific
St. Louis Mutual
Home Mutual

paid 1

Mendotat
Merrimac
Mesnard
Milton
Minnesota

5 00 1 7 00

—

..

Bid.

Mass
Medora

1*

Atlas....

Caledonia

e’oo

5 60

l;
1

Allouez

Superior

$10,000

Washington Mutual

4

following

Total.

Madison
Mandan
Manhattan

•

LOUIS COMPANIES.

...

Companies.

Lafayette

....

•••

>

11

St. Louis.—The

Marine Insurance Co
Lnited States
Union
Lumberman’s & Mechanics’..
Tenth Ward Mutual
Globe Ins. Co
State Mutaal
Atlantic
Citizens’
*...
Western Mutual
Laclede Mutual

COPPER mining stock list.
Companies.

at

by the burning of the Lindell House

—

Ivanhoe
Manhattan
Mountain Oil
Natural

•

•

losses

20

par

HamiltonMcCIintock...

....

2 30

INSURANCE ITEMS.
Insurance Losses

•

•

1 05
,,,,

1 18*

•

.

•

....

t

a

•

[April 13,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

476
Financial.

Safes.

Insurance.

j^TNA

IMPORTANT

Marine Insurance.
The

'

Insurance

Company,

TO

Bankers

OF HARTFORD.

Incorporated 1819

Charter Perpetual.

CAPITAL

$3,000,000.

L. J.

HENDEE, President.

J. GOOD NOW,

Office of the Novelty Iron
New York. 18th December,

1,1867 -$4,478 100 74

Liabilities

394,976 96
LOSS

DAMAGE

AND

BY FIRE.

NEW YORK AGENCY,
02

WALL

JAS. A.

STREET.

ALEXANDER, Agent.

Security Insurance Co.,
Ne. 119

Capital,

BROADWAY,
One

Million

Dollars,

($1,000,000.)
FIRE AND INLAND
A. F.

Frank W.

Ballard, Secretary.

Risks

on

Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland
Navigation Risks.
Premiums paid in gold will be entitled to a return
premium in gold.
MOSES H. GRINNELL, Preset.

EDWAltD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres’t.

The Mercantile Mutual
INSURANCE

COMPANY.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Asaets, Jan. 1st, 1807

$1,201,349

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1S44.
During the past year this Company has paid to its

Ptilicy-holders,
IN CASH,
arebateroent on premiums in lien of 9crip, equiva¬
lent in value to an average
scrip dividend of

TWENTY
Instead of
are

PER

CENT.

issuing

a scrip dividend to dealers,
principle that all c*asses of risks
equally profitable, this Company makes such
on

the

cash abatement or discount from the
current rates,
when premiums are paid, as the
general experience
of underwriters will warrant, andthe nett

profits

=

kamc8 and the best tools.
Y ery truly,

'

W. H.
W. H.




BECIT1ELL,

-—

—

-

-

JOHN E. KAHL,

Secretary.

Niagara Fire Insurance
NO. 12 WALL STREET.

CASH CAPITAL,

$1,000,066

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865

270,363

Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid.
Chartered 1S50.
Cash Dividends paid in 15 years,
253 per cent.
JONATHAN D. STEELE, President.
P. NOTMAN, Secretary.

Hanover Fire Insurance
COMPANY,
No. 45 WALL STREET.

Office Union Foundry
'

Works, )
f

Chicago, Ill., March 13, lg67.

Winne,

Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co.,
Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample of new
combination of metals for safes sent us by you to
as thorough tests of the drill as we
could, and fail¬
ed to penetrate the metal at all. We thiDk it won d
be impossible for burglars to enter the safes made of
this metal by means of the drill during the
longest
time in ordinary business they could have acce-s to
them—in fact, tnat ihe metal is proof against the
drill.

Truly

Office

of

yours,
N. S. BOUTON & CO.

Northwestern Man’f’g

Edgerton,

ouumu-i
Henry R. Knnhardt.

John S. Williams,
William ”
*
1
Nelson,
Jr.,
Charles Dimon,

Geo. W. Hennings, A. William
Heye,
Francis Hathaway, Harold
Dollner,
Aaron L. Reid,
Paul N. Spoflord.

Rilwood Walter.

Cash

Chicago, March 11, 1867.
j
Winne,
Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co.,
Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample yon fur¬
nished us (of a new combination of metals to be

used in the manufacture of Lillie’s Safes) to the se¬
verest tests of our Power Drill, and with the best
tempered drills our skill and experience could pro¬
duce.
After operating upon it with different drills seve¬
ral hours without penetrating it more than half an
inch and at that point unable to make further

$4,550 06
BENJ. S. WALCOTT
President

J. Rbmskn Lank, Secretary.

The Mutual _Life InsuRANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
CASH ASSETS, Sept.

R. A.
Secretaries
pecre.anes,

1st, 1866,

over

large number of drills and machine power to pene¬
trate through it: and that it, was entirely out of the
power of even the most skilful burglar to penetrate
a tafe made of this material. '' -

CRANE, President.

McCURDY, Vice-President.

lISAAC ABBATT,
f J0HN M STUART.

Hope
Fire Insurance Company,
OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY.
Cash Capital-

$200,000 00

-----

Assets, March 9, 1866
Total Liabilities Losses Paid l.i 1865

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Lillie’s
DOUBLE CHILLED AND WROUGHT IRON
AND

BURGLAR

PROOF

Safes.

This Company Insures against Loss or
on as favorable terms as any other

Damage by
responsible

assortment of these unequalled Burglarproof Safes constantly oa baud at onr Warerooras.
Also, safes of every description, designed for both
Fre and Bur.lar-proof security. The public are iuvited to call and examine for themselves as to the
merits of our Safes.

Lillie Safe & Iron Co.,
LEWIS

JACOB

REESE, President.

CHAS. D. EARTSnORNE, Secretary.

REMOVAL.

The North American Life
INSURANCE COMPANY.
Remove to the r New Offices,

Will

2&9 Broadway,

LILLIE, President,

corner

on

Tho office

9PR0A9W4Y, |NEW YORK,

SOLICITED..

Board of Directors:
THOS. P. CUMMINGS,
HENRY M. TABER,
JOSEPH FOULKE,
ROBERT SCHELL,
STEP. CAMBRELENG, WILLIAM H. TERRY,
THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCHAPDT.
JACOB REESE,
JOSEPH GRAFTON,
JNO. W. MERSEREAU, L. B. (YARD,
JOSEPH BRITTON,
D. LYDIG SUYDAM,
AMOS ROBBINS,
WILLIAM REM SEN,
HENRY S.

A full

198

201,588 14

Fire

ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS

ELL WOOD WALTER, Preside

-

252,559 22
26,850 00

Company.

*

FIRE

$16,000,000 00

Actuary, SHEPPAHOMANS.

pro¬

satisfied that if not utterly im¬
penetrable, it wonld at least require days of time, a

R. T.

156,30393

$556,303 98

Gross Assets
Total Liabilities

FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.

Messrs. Murray &

gress, we became

$400,000 00

capital

Surplus

Co., )

D. Colden Murray,

E. Huy dock White,
N. L. McCready,
Daniel T. Willets,

L.

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President

STRAHAN,

lit tSIJKE.V

Henry Eyre,
Cornelius Grmnell,
Joseph Slasrg,
Jas. t>. FisiC

$740,482 43

TOTAL ASSETS

Foremen in Messrs. Merrick & Son’s Southw'orth

pool.

William Watt,

240,482 43

-

re¬

maining at the close of the year, will be divided to
the stockholders.
This Company continues to make Insurance on
Manne and Inland
Navigation and Transportation
Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks
on Merchandise of all
kinds, Hulls, and Freight.
Policies issu< i making loss
payable in Gold or
Currency, at the OfBce in New York, or in Sterling,
at. the Office of
Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬
James Freelan d,
Samuel Willets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1867

COMPANY.

Walker, Scc'y.

No. 83 WALL

$500,000 00

CAPITAL,

particulars.

Messrs. Murray &

DITIDEND THIRTY PER CENT.

Company insures against Marine

CASH

January 1st 1666.

$2,716,424 32

-

Co.,

BROADWAY, N. Y.

NO. 175

Foundry, Philadelphia, Pa.

(INSURANCE BUILDINGS,)
49 WALL STREET.
-

Germania Fire Ins.

JARVIS WILLIAMS, Treasurer.

met

COMPANY.

based

in all

Philadelphia, Pa., February 26,1867. ‘
Me-srs. Lewis Liliae & Son,
Gentlemen,—We have tried a simple of d.ublechilled iron similar to that sent to’ the Novelty
Works, New York, and our experience with it is
about the same, viz : that it can only be penetrated
by a long continued operation of the moBt skillful

Sun Mutual Insurance

Isaac H.

)

Works,

INSURANCE.

Insurance.

This

iaams

Boston, Mess*, January 22, 1867. f
We having made an attempt to drill a sample of
double chibe.1 iron furnished us by Messrs. Lillie &
Son, and failed to penetrate it.more than five-eighths
(%) of an inch, after hours of labor, leel that we can
endorse the above Nove ty Iron Works’ certificate

- V

HASTINGS, President.

ASSETS, Dec. 31, 1S65

Wit

61 William Street.

thont success.

w

opinion that it can only be penetrated by
the use of a Urge number of dri.ls, and the expen¬
diture of much power with days of time, and we
think it impossible foi a burglar with his time and
power to penetrate it at all.
Youis truly,
<,
ISAAC V. HOLMES. Snpt.
LYMAN G. HALL, Foreman.

and

CATLIN & SATTERTH WAITE, Agents.

)

our

Hinkley

Cash

1; 66.

subjected the sample of
double-chMed iron you furnished us to the most se¬
vere tests (as regards drilling through it) we could
It is

adjusted and paid
£

Works, )

Gentlemen,-We have

bring to bear noon it, and

INSURANCE AGAINST

8, 1867, $1,763,287 23.

Assets. Jan.

of Bank
burglar

Messrs. Lewis Lillie & Son,

Assets January

NO.

Company offer for the consideration
Merchants and tho^e desiring the &68t
proof security the fallowing certificates:
This

ers,

North

CAPITAL $500,000.

INCORPORATED 1794.

Risks made binding and losses
in New York.

Secretary.

of

Company

America, of Philadelphia.

Merchants.

&

Insurance

now

of Barclay

May let.

occupied by them.

Street, comer Qedjtr in to Rfuf,

§3 WHH*®

THE CHRONICLE

PRICES CURRENT.
duties noted
discriminating duty of 10 per

pgr In addition to the
l slow, O
cent, ad

val. is levied on all imports

under flags that have no reciprocal
treaties with the United States.
rif On all goods, wares, and mer-

chandise, of the growth or produce of
Countries East of the Cape of Good
Hope, when imported from places this
side of

Good Hope, a duty

the Cape of

of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the
place or places of their growth or produc¬
tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted.
The tor in all eases to be 2,240 lb.

Anchors-Doty: 21 cents qp lb,
012095) and

1C
upward^ ft 9$©
15 $ cent ad val.

A sites—Duty:

$ 100 lb 8 u © 8 62

Pot, 1st sort..
Pearl, 1st sort.

13 50 © 13 .75

Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val.

yellow.$ 5)
40 ©
41
Bones -Duty: on invoice 10
ct.
ttto Grande shin $ ton
...
©45 00
Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
Pilot..
$ » .. ©
7j
American

’

Navy

6

@

13
@
Breadstuf ffs—See special report.
8

Crackers

Bricks.

_

„

,

hard..per M.ll 00 (ft 12 00
17 50 @18 60
Philadelphia Fronts..: .... @73 00
Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair
1 y ft.
Amer’n,gray &wh. $ft 65 @250
Butter and Clieese.—Duty: 4
Common
Crot;»n

cents.

Butter—
N. Y State—Fresh

pails

©

..

Kivh1:;8

21 ©

Half tl»k n mbs...
Welsh tubs, prime.
Welsh tubs, Si^co'id

S.» ©

Western

?3
3^

Western

States —FirkHs, yellow

20 ©

31

15 ©

CO

©

.

.

11 ©

20

16
14
18
10

18
16

do

Common

Farm Dairies
do Cjinmon

©
@
©
©

19
14

Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; sperma¬
ceti and wax o; stearin©

and ada¬

mantine, 5 cents $ ft.
Sperm, patent,. . .$ ft
Refined sperm, oity...

49 @

Stearic
Adamantine

30©
IS @

33 @

22

Cement—Rosendale$bl ...@ 1 75
Chains- Duty, 2} cents $ lb.
One inch & upward$} ft
9©

Anthracite.
Cardiff steam

....

....

©

....

@

....

@

....

Cocoa—Duty, 1 cents $ lb.
Caracas (In bond)(gold)
23 @
# ft
Maracaibo do ..(gold)
@
14 ©
Guayaquil do ...(gold)
St

...

7 60 @ 3 00

Liverpool Gas Cann 1

NewcastleGcS .tSteam

@

DomiDgo.. ..(gold)

9j@

24
14}

10

3 cents $ ft.

Bolts
Braziers’.
Baltimore
Detroit

5 @
2. ©

36

©

85
36

-

85 ©
23 @

*

23 @

Portage Lake

23 ©

Cordage—Duty,tarred,8; unu-rred
Manila, 24 other untarred, 3$ cents
*Mb.
Manila,

$ ft

Tarred Russia
Tarred American
Bolt Rope, Russia.

-

22 ©
©
©

23
19$
19$
22

©
Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
Regular, quarts^} gross 55 @
70
Mineral
50 ©
70
Phial
12 @
40
Cotton—See special report.
,

Drugs

and Byes—Duty,Alcohol,
2 50 per
gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft;
Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6
cent* $ ft; Arsenic and
Assafoedati,

t

,

20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus,
10; Arrowroot, 80 $} cent ad val.;
BalaamOopaivi, 20; Balsam Tola, 30;

Bd«am Peru,50cents^ ft; CalUaya




1

Berries, Persian
Bi Carb. Soda, New¬
castle
gold
Bi Chromate Potash...

Brimstone.

21
©
75 ©
b5
4
8i©
8$©
61) © 1 l 3
U @
li}
18
2o
18 ©
36
fc5 ©
2|©
25 @
*2 ©
73
25 @ 1 50

Crude

60 *#.
38 @

8 12;
40

55
@
5 ©
84 ©

C§
35

$

(gold).40 00 @42 50

Brimston.',
$ ft

sm.

Brimstone.

I lor

Roll

81©
Sul¬

phur
Camphor, * •• i;de, (in
bond)
(gold)
Camphor, Refined
Carbonate
in bulk

5$@
28 ©
95 @
1 60 @

2)

97$
70

Ammonia,
18

©

19

Cardamoms, Malabar.. 8 25 © 3 50
Castor Oil Cases $ gal 2 17 © 2 20

ChamomileFlow’s$ft
Chlorate Potash (gold)
Caustic Soda

....

Carraway Seed
Coriander Seed

Cochineal, Hon (gold)
Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d)
Copperas, American ..

Tarar, pr.(gold)
Cubebs, East India....

Cutch
Extract Logwood
Fennell Se d

I^

it©
©
©
©

17 ©

@

61®

Gambier

Gamboge

..

Ginseng, Sonth&West.

Arabic,Picked..

Arabic, Sorts...
Benzoin ..(gold)
Kowrie
Gedda

Gum Damar
Gum Myrrh,East

India

Gum, Myrrh, Turkey.

Senegal
(g< Id)
GumTragacanth, Sorts
Gum Tragaeanth, w.

18
60
..

©

88

25 ©
40 @

86
27
41

55
80

.

©

65©
80 ©

flakey
(gold) 60 ©
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and
Eng
(gold) 8 75 @
Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 @
Ipecacuanna, Brazil
@
Ulap
1 7- ©
*P25

Licorice Paste,Calabria
Licorice, Paste, Sicily.
Licorice Paste Spanish
Solid
Licorice Paste, Greek.

,1*

<g 2 00

Gum

Lae D3
Dye

10

85 © 1 05
70 ©
80
35

@

28
50

1 00

8 85
4 09
2 20
55

36 ©
24

©

^8 ©
30 ©

25

Seneca Root

48

©
©
27 ©
Senna, Alexandria....
18 ©
Senna, Eastlndia
38 ©
She’l Lac
Soda Ash (8of>c.)(gkld)
am
30 ©
Sugar L’d, WV(gOid)..
2
25
©
Sulp Quinine, Amty oz
Sulphate Morphine.... 6 75 ©
52 ©
Tart’o Acid. .(g’id)f)ft
12 ©
Tapioca
©
Verdigris, dry a ex dry
10 ©
Vitriol, Blue
.

#

’

,

,

Duct—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
Ravens, Light. .$ pee 16 00 @
Ravens, Heavy
@
@
Scotch, G’ck, No.l <py
Cotton,No. i... $ y.
78 ©

42

.

— •

6 50 © 9 00

19

s
••

28
45

33
80
45

2|

....

.,

16
45
.

25 © 6 50
75 © 7 00
50 © T 50
50 @12 00
50 @18 00
19 00 @15 00
20 50 @16 00
24 00 @18 00
Groceries— See special report,
ttunny Bugs-Duty, valued at 16
cents or less, # square yard, 3; ovei
10, 4 cents ^ ft
Calcutta, light & h’y %
20 ©
21
Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 1C
cents or less $ square yard, 3; ova*
10,4 cents ^ ft.
Calcutta, standard, y’d
22}@
23
Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20
cents or less $ ft, 6 cents
$} ft, an
20 $ cent ad val.; over 20oents <fi
ft, 10 cents
ft and 20 qp cent ad val,
5 00
Blasting(A) $ 251b keg
Shipping and Mining..
© 5 50
50 @
Sporting, in 1 1b canis¬
ters $ lb
40 @ 1 10
Hair—Duty frkb. j
KioGrande,mixed$l ft
81$©
32$
Buenos Ayres,mixed
29 ©
80
Uog, Western, unwash.
12 ©
16

72

Dye Woods—Duty free.
Camwood..(gold)$ t'niSo 00©
Fustic, Cuba
30 0<> @ 81 00
Fustic, Savanilla
© 28 CO
Fustic, Maracaibo
2^ 00 ©
I ogwood, Hon
si 00 @32 00
Logwi od, Laguna(gnld)80 (0 @
Logwood, St. D< min.. :9 00 @20 00
Logwood, Cam ,(gold).2j 50 @
Logwood,Jamaica
©16 00

.

Hardware—

80

Dry Cod

cwt. 5 00 © 5 50
Pickled Scale. ..qp bbl. ..
@ 5 5»
Pickled Cod
bbl. 6 50 © 7 10

60 @ 6 50
..

special report.
10 ^ cent.
Beaver,Dark.skin 1 00 @ 4 00
do
Pale...
50 © 2 00
Bear, Black
5 00 @il 00
Frnits—See

brown

do

Fox.
do
do
do

Silver
Cro9S

Red

do

pale
Mink, dark
Muskrat,...*

2 00 © 8 06

50 @ 1 00
50 © 75

10 @
20
4 00 © 8 00

5 0*' @50 00
3 00 @ 5 00
I 00 @ i 60

50 ©
75
2 i0 @ 4 «0
5 00 @20 00

2 i 0 @ 5 00
3 00 © 6 00
S@
5 00 @ 8 00

Otter

Opossum
Skui

15 ©

80

30 @

75

10 @

Raccoon

k, B ack

50

Glass—Duty, Cylinder or Window
Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches,
2$ cents $ square foot; larger and
not over 16x2 4 inches, 4 cents $
square foot; larger and not over 24
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$; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2 ; over that, and not
over 24x30 .2$ ; all over that, 3 cents

$ ft.
American

Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th

qualities.

(Subject to a discount of3f@35$ cent.)
6x 8 to 8x10.. <j£ 50 ft 7 25 © 5 50
8x
tol0xl5
7 75 © 6 00
to
12xi9 to
18x22 to
20x31 to
24x31 to
25x36 to
80x46 to
32x50 to
•

Above

12x18
16x24
20x30
24x30

24x36
30x44

32x48
82x56

9
9
-.11
14
16
17
18
20
24

25 @ 6
50 © 7
75 @ 7
50 @ 9
00 ©10
00 ©11
00 ©12
00 ©18
00 @15

75 @ 7 60

list

7$* dia.

Padlocks
*

*.

Trunk

Stocks and Dies
Screw Wrencuea—Coe’s
.

do

Pate"f,

Taft’s
Srn tbs’ Vis

dia.
dla.

10 % ois.
List 10 %
Li 180 % dla.

dia!

Liat 20 % dla.*

..List 56@80 % dla.

$ ft 24 ©

*s

..

Framing Chisels.... Old List 87$ * d
^

firmer
no
,

insets.

do

do

handled,

insets

A ugnr

.

Bitts

Short Auffurs,per

Ki”*

a.

List40£adv.

do

Li8t40*adv.

List 20& 10 % dia.

dz.NewList 20jC dla.

List 20 % dla.
List 75&5 % dia
Cut Brads
List 60 % dia.’
List 25*80 % dia.
Rivet-, Iron
Screws American... List j0&5£dia.
do
English
List 80 % dia.
Shovels and Spades...
List 5 % dis.
Horse Shoes
7$@ S«?l!k
Planes
Ust 30© 35 *adv
Cut Tacks

@

Furs— Duoy,

Badger
Cat, Wild

>0©....

Pore lain
List 7* %
New List 2o&7$ %

Locks—Cabinet, Eagle

....

@
00 @42 00
no ©55 00
45 ©
50
20 ©
25

17 @ 7 50
60 @25 00

.

@18 6u
@13 SO
@17 0'J
@16 00
@’4 25

75 @

Knobs—Mineral.

“

20 10 @20 £0

Mackerel, No. 8, H’faxlj
Mackerel, No. 8, Mass
Salmon, Pickled, No.1.40
Sa mon, » i kled. p. tc.4<
Herring, Scaled^ box.
Herring, No. 1
Herring, pickled^bbl. 5
Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton.
Jersey
ft

@ $ 60

Door

Mackerel, No. 1, Mass
69
*5
75
75

00

. ....

.

rels, 50 cents 58 100 ft.

Mackerel,No.l,Halifaxl8
Mackerel, No. l,Bay..l
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..Id
Mackerel, No. 2, Ha ax 15
Mac’el,No.3,Ma?s. l’ge

©
©

......

£0 @10 00
2 @10 5*1
Cottnn Gins, per s:iw...$5© less
SO %
Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dis.
Cast Butt—Fast Joint. List 10 Jtaiiv.
Loose Joint..
List.
List 25 £adv.
HingesWr^u,}^
Door B-Its, Cast Bhi.
L st 20 % dla
Carriage and Tire Bolts List 40 % dia.
DoorL chs and Latches List
7$ i dia.

Flsji—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 : Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
^ bbl.; on other Fi6h. Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬

shore

24
21

ordinary..

17
15
2S

w

.

Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val.
Prime Western...$ ft
rr> @
@

do

__

1 to 3
8
do ordinary
6
Broad • atcli’s 8to3 bst. 15
do «idi ary
12
Coffee Mil s-Iron Hop’r 8
do Bri
Hopper
6
do
Wood Back
4

@115 00

78

15 ©
13 ©
@

Shingling Hatchets, C’t
Steel, best br ds, Nos.

(gold)80 00 ©

Tennessee

A\es—Cast steel, best
biand
pertRz
do
ordinary

Oarpe ter’s A dzes,....

...

Limavrood
Bar wood

8
9
10
15
16

to 10x15
to 12x18
to 16x24
to 24x80
to 24x86
24x36 to 30x44.
80x45 to 82x48
82x50 to 32x56
8x11
11x14
12x19
20x31
24x31

.

...

llx

7 ©
Madder,Dutch. .(gold)
7*
<1©
do, French, EXF.F.do
Manna, large flake.... 1 6;i ©
Manna, small flake.... 1 10 ©
8 ©
12
Mustard Seed, Cal....
13 @
Mustard Seed, Trieste.
35
Nntgalls Blue Aleppo 82} ©
Oil Anis
5 00 Gh 5 12
Oil Cassia.
4 00 © >►

Oil Bergamot

S5 ©

Grey
Lynx
Marten, Dark

11©
so$@

80

Sarsaparilla, Hond
Sarsaparilla, Mex

do House

05
95

44

..

Fisher,

92}©

10$@
oz.

45

14 @

.

Epsom Salts

Gum
Gum
Gum
Gum
Gem

80 @
10 ©
?$©
20 @
9

Prussiate Potash
©
Quicksilver
18 ©
Rhubarb, China .(gold) 2 75 @
-7 ©
Sagu, Pe *. led... '7...
Salaratus
20 ©
SalAm'n ac, Ref (gold)
©
Sal Soda, Newcastle...
94©

....

*0

..

Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 67$@
88 @
Phosphorus
90 @

_

3 00 @

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Refined

60
61

_

Assafcetida
Balsam Copaivi
Balsaui Tolu
Balsam Peru
Ba>k Petayo

Flowers,Benzoin.fi

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot,
2$; old copper l cents 39 ft; manu¬
factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing
copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42
inches long and 14 Inches wide,
weighing 14 © 34 oz. $1 square foot,
8heathing, new..$ ft
Sheathing,yellow

Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined
Arsenic, Powdered....

Cream

Coffee.—9ee special report.
.

Antimony, Regulus of

Cantharides

Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $1 ton
of 28 bushels SO lb to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 2b
bushels of 80 ft $ bushel.
Liverpool Orrel. $ ton
of 2,240 ft
@ ....
..

Liverp’i House Cannel

20

Alum

ton

40
81

57$ ©
4) ©

in bid

20

Cheese—

Factory Dairies

Alcohol

©

..

Firkins, md quality

Oxalic Acid

Annato, good to prime.

©

Reserve—Firkii.s

# ft ; Crude
Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstono, $10
$ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $1 ton, and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40cents $1 ft.;
Garb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents
$ ft ; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon ; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, l J;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,}; Cream
Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents
ft;
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
# cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent
$ ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft;
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacamh, 20 $
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬
limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anls, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange,
50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Berga¬
mot, $1 $ ft; Oil Peppermint, 50
^ cent ad val.; Opium, $2*50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents $ ft; Phosphorus, 20
$ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents
$ ft: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad
val.; Sal Bratus, 1} cents
ft; Sal
Soda, $ cent ^ ft; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 20 ^ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; .^oda Ash, $ Sugar Lead, 20 cents
$ lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ eent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 ^ oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 2o; Verdigris, 6 cents
fl ft; Sal Ammoniac, 2o; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $1 $ ft ; all
others quoted below# frke.

Refined Borax. 10 cents

8,

15

qnaiiiy

Oil Lemon
8 75 © 4 25
Oil Peppermint, pure. 6 00 @

Aloes, Cape
$ ft
Aloes, Socotrine

0

Nonh Pennsylvana —
F rkins

Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; BI Carb. Soda,
1$; Bl Chromate Potash, 3 cents
ft;
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft;

Acid, Citric.... (gold)

~

477

■

April 18,1867J

50
00
50
00
00
00
00
00
00

English And French Window—1st, 2d,
ill, and 4th qualities.

(Bi Dgle Thick)—Discount30@85 $ceit
fix 8 toSxlO. 50 feet 7 75 © fi CO

Hay-North Rivor, In bales^ 100 fta
for shipping
1 5u © 1 55
Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila.
$-5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn
and Sisal, $15
ton; and Tampico.
1 cent $ lb.
'
Amor. Dressed. $ ton 870 00@895 00
do
Undressed.. 275 00@280 00
Russia, Clean
8)5 00@360 (0
Jnte..
(gold) 90 00@136 00
Manila..$ fc..(gold)
11|@
12
Sisal
@
Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 $ cent ad val.
..

Drv Hides—
Ruenos Ayr9s$

Montevideo
Rio Grande
Griooco
California

ftg’d
do
do
do

18 ©

gold

13 ©

18*@
I7$@

California, Mex. do
Porto Cabello
Vera Cruz

..

do
do

Tampico

do

Texas

do

Dry Salted Hides—
Ch li
(gold)
California...
do
San wjch Isl’d do
South & Wesh. do
Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ayre8.$ ftg’d.
Rio Grande
do
California
do
Western
.

....

14 ©

lr$©
16 @
14 ©

13 ©
©
..

..

©

10 ©
no

©
10i©
10

©

10

©

10

©

^

Coutry sl’ter trim. <fc
cured.

City

do

do

lot©

Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. * Rio Gr. Kip
$ ft cash.
Sierra Leone.... do
Gambia & Bisst.u do

28 ©
80 ©

23 ©

ST

81
24

Honey—Duty, 2* 3ent $ gallon.
Cuba (duty paid) (gr1
q? gall. 84 ©
86
Hops—Duty: 5 couts $ ft.
$ ft
Crop of 1866
45 © 70
do of 1865

Foreign

Hi

20 ©

45

63©

70

478

THE CHRONICLE.

Horn*—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val.

do

St. Domingo,
ordinary logs

Ox, Rio Grande. ..$ C 10 00© 10 25
Ox, American
8 00© 10 00
India. Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent.

do
Port-au-Platt,
crotches
do
Port-au-Platt,

ad val.

Para, Fine
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

$ lb

05

do
do
do
do

70
55

©

Carthagena, &o.„p
Bengal

(*old)
(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
Guatemala
(gold)
Caraccas
(gold)

00

©

65
35
00
10
•iO
90

75 ©
65
65
00

©
©
©
70 ©

and Plate, 14 cents $1

Hoop, and Scroll, 14

fi>; Sheet, Band,

to 1| cents $ lb;
Polished Sheet, 3

Pig, $9 $ ton;
$ lb.
Pig,8ootch,No 1.
$ ton
Pig, American, No. 1..
Bar, Refi’d Kug&.Vmer
Bar, Swedes, assorted
sizes (in gold)
cents

31 00© 41 00
2 00©
85 U © 95 00

95 00©!00 00

/—Stork Prices—,
Bar

Swedes, assorted

sizes

@160 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
ican, Refined

110 <0@115 00

Rods,5-8©3-16inch.'.I T 00@172 50
Hoop
145 00@205 00
Nail Rod
9 ©
.$
Mi
1 i©
Sheet, Russia
It
Sheet, Single, Double
and Treble
5}©
S
Rails, Eng. (g’d)$ ton 5W): ©
....

American...... 82 5u© J-5 00

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $Ib
East Ind , Billiard Ball

2 cents

3 50

..

net

©10 On
©10 25

..

Pipe and Sheet... .net
Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 30
9 cent ad val.
cash. $ lb.—,
84 ©
:-N
Oak, Slaughter, light
..

do
do
middle
do
do
heavy,
do light Cropped,
do middle do
do bellies do

33

middle.

©
4 ' ©
44 ©
4T ©
<8 ©
23 ©
2J1©

heavy
Califor., light,

2S*@
27 ©

Hetnl’k, B. A.,<fcc.,l’t.
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do

.

do middle,
do
heavy,

2'
27
2,’

©
©
26 ©

middle

heavy,

do & B. A,

dam’gdall w’g’s
do
do poor
do
do
Slaugh.in rough
Oak, Slaugh.in rou.,l’t
.

do
and

do

do

©

27 ©

Orino., etc.Pt.
do
do

23 ©
19 ©
34

©

35 ©

mid.

35

©

42
4o
47

50
2l

2'J
30
30
28
29
28
28

28J
27
26
21
38
40
33
40

38 ©
heavy
Lime—Duty; 10 $ cent ad val.
Rookland, 00m. $ bbl.
© 1 85
do
heavy......
© 2 20
Lumber* Woods, Staves,etc.
—Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 $ oent ad val.; Rosewood
and Cedar, free.
Spruce, East. $ M ft 21 00 © 23 00
..

..

Southern Pine
40 00 @45 00
White Pine Box B’ds 80 00
@ 82 00

White Pine Merch.

Box Boards
Clear Pine

38 00 © 38 00
80 00 @100 00
% M 8 25 ©

Laths, Eastern.
Whie

Poplar and

„

....

3o strairedan tNo 2... 1 25 ©
4 87
do
No. 1
5 On © 7 00
do
Pale and Extra
(2S0 lbs.)
8 00 @10 00

...

extta.
do
pipe,
do
pipe,

pipe,
©300 00
©250 00
@200 Oft

heavy

light.

do
pipe, oulls .1
do;
nhd.,extra.
do
hhd., heavy
do
hhd., light.
do
hhd., culls.
do
bbl.,extra.
do
bbl., heavy.
do
bbl., light..
do
bbl., onlls..
Rea oak, hhd., h’vy.
do
hhd., light..

@180 0G
@250 00

_

HEADING —White
oak, hhd

Dahogany,

wood —Duty




@200
@12 '
©100
@175
@140
@110
© 60
@130
© 90

00
00
00
00
00
0C
00
or

00

@150 00

Cedar,

free.
Mahogany St. Domingo, oootehea, $ ft.

77 @

g.

Rose-

IS©

50

SO

Oakum—Duty fr.,$ lb
8?@
Oil Cake—Duty:
20 $ centad
City thin obl’g, in bbls.

11|
val.

in

bags.43 50 @50 (0
West, thin obl’g, do
©id 5<i
-

Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and

rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad

oil, in bottles

or flasks, $1 :
burning
fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seat,

and

cocoa

id’ $

nut,

sperm and whale

or

cent ad
other fish

eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val.

Shoulders,

val.;
(for¬

Olive, qs(gold per case 6 C*i ©
do in casks.$ gall.. 1
60©
Palm
$ lb
,
©
iii
Linseed, city.. .$ gall. 1 29 @ 1 30
Whale
75 @
SO
do refined winter..
95 @ 1 00
Sperm,crude
2 50 ©
do
do unbleach. 2 90
©
Lard oil
I i5 @ 1 i0
Red oil, city distilled
60 ©
Bank
80 @
Straits
85 @
Paraffine, 28 — 30 gr..
45©
56
....
....

-

.

..

.

...

....

Kerosene

(free).

4S @

PillnIs—Duty: on white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in

oil, 3 cents $ lb; Parif white and
whiting, L cent $ ft; dry Ochres, 06
cent* $ 100 lb :
oxidesofziur, 1$ cents
$ lb ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50$ 100
ft; Spanish brown 25 $ cel. tad val;
China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red
and vermilion 25 $ cent ad
val.;
white chalk, $10 $ ton.
Litharge,City... .$ft
11
12
Lead, red,City
12
llj©
do white, American,
pure, in oil
©
144
.

do

white, American,

124©

Zinc, white, American,
dry, No. 1
do white, American,

'

cents

bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft.

Turks Islands
Cadiz

$ bush.

$ ft

©

..

gold

..$lb
Timothy,reaped $ bus
C.Dary
bus
Linseed, Am.clean$tce
do Am. rough $ bus
do Calcutta ...gold

Shot—Duty: 2|
Drop

,

Si 11c—Duty:
35 ^ cent.

17 @
1;4
3 75 @
4 50 @ 5 50
©
2 85 © 8 00
2 60 ©
....

...

....

cents $
ft

free.

No. 1 @

;

1: CO ©11 25

medium,No3@4. 9 00 @10 «!5
Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. 9 00 © 9 25
Japan, superior
11 50 @13 00
do

Medium
China thrown

...10 00 @10 50
1< 00 @20 u0

13

3 00
10

24
l 35
1 10
l 40
^0

00 @20 no
$ tonS5 00 ©:% 00
$ bbL 4 00 @ 4 *9
$ ton
@27 Pi>
ft
15 @
35
40 ©
45

1^4©
@
@
©

<,()
07

Paris—Duty: lump,free;

calcined, 20 ^ cent ad val.

Scotia$ toe
...

Calcined, eaf>'em$ bbl
Calcined city mills

...gold

50
31

50 ©
©

51

..

Honduras..gold

574©

gold
gold

55 ©

Sisal
Para

do
do
do
do

47i@
28 ©

62j@
©

VeraCruz .gold

..

Chagres ...gold
Puerto Cab .gold

Soap-'Duty: 1
cent ad

val.

cent $

Castile

5?4

..

@

..

©

1b, and 25 $

$ 1b.

17©

174

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and
plates, $1

$ 100 fts.

au

do
do

4 50©
1 25©

d<*
do
1
Sherry
Malaga, sweet
<*o
1
do
dry.... do 1
Claret, in hhds. do 83
.

do

101

Steel—Duty: bars

...

5 00

@ 4 50
@ 5 50
@ 2 40
@ 2 50

Provisions—Duty: beef and

$ ft

and ingots, valued

$ ft
$ cent ad val. (Store prices.)
English, cast, $ ft
18 @
23
.

.

If @
12 ©

American, spring

Amer

c ,n cast

16
15

in cases.

I0j@
j l

1?4

@

20
16

hngiisu machinery

I3{@

Sumac—Duty: 10 $

cent ad val.

Sicily

$ ton.. 150

Sugar*—See

00

@226 00

Champagne....

val.
No. Oto 18

No. 19 to 26
No.27 to 36

....

....

15 A20
25 & 5
80 & 5

Tallow—Duty

Copper

do

Wool—Duty

American,prime, coun¬
try and city $ ft...

114

Teas.—See special report.

Banca
Straits

$ ft

(gold)

25©

254

(gold) 224©
English
(gold)
©
244
Plates,char. I.C.$ box 12 50 @18 00 *

pork,
let: lams, bacon, andlard,2
ts $ ft.
Beef, plain mess$ bbl..12 00 ©20 03
do extra mess
.19 00 @23 00
Pork,mess, new......f& @28 25
lo mNi Old *^..v8l 86
©82 §0

..

do
do

do

I. C. Coke
10 &o @12 < 0
Terne Charcoal 11 60
@12 95
Terne Coke.... 9 25
@ 9 50

$ ctoff list.

Tobacco*—See special report.
Wines and

Liquors—Liquors

—Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per
gallon^ other liquors, $2.50. Wines—
Duty: value net over 50 oents $ gal¬
lon 20 cents $ gallon and 25
$ cent
ad valorem; over N and not
50 cents $ gallon and 25

Valorem;
lon and 25

over

$

100,

cent ad

$1 $ gallon, $1 $ gal¬
$ cent ad val.

over

10

.

fore practiced.” Class 1
Wools—The value whereof—Clothing
at the last

glace whence
to the$ United
is 32 exported less
ft, 10
tates

cents or

$ ft and 11 $ cent, ad val.32 cents $ ft, 12 cents
$ ft and

cents
over

10

$ cent, ad val. ; 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 and
11 $
cent, ad val. ; over 32 cents
$ ft :2
cents $ ft and 10 $ cent,
ad val
Class 3 .—Carpet Wools and

other
similar Wools—The value whereof
at
the last place whence exported
to the
United States is 12 cents or less
$
ft, 3 cents $ ft ; over 12 cents w ft
6 cents $ 1b.
Wool of all classes

Imported scoured, three times the
duty as if imported unwashed.
Amer., Sax. fleece $ lb
624©
do
full bl’d Merino,
58 ©
do 4 and J Merino..
68 ©
Extra, pulled
50 @
Superfine
40 @ io
No. 1, pulled
SO © 4o
California, unwashed...
SO @ 40
do

common....

2i @
1« @
80 @
28 @

Texas

Peruvian, unwashed...
S. Amer. Mestiza, unw..
do
common,unw.
Entre Rios, washed
S. American Cordova

African, unwashed
do

25
82
40

©
@

@
20©

....

80 ©
20 @
28 ©
85 ©

Mexican,unwashed....
Smyrna,unwashed

....

do

27
32
88
80
84
27
43
46
80
40
27
82
53

82 @

washed

washed

Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1
100 fts.; sheets 24 cents
$ 1b.
$ ft

50 «

104©

114

Freights^

To Liverpool :
Cotton
$ lb
Flour
$ bbl.
Petroleum

8.

©
© 2
© 5
10 0 © 5
©20
.

..

..

..

©
©

..

..

Beef
$ tee.
Pork
$ bbl.
To London:

Flour
Petroleum

d.

B.

Heavy goods... $ ton

© 2
© 1

..

..
..

0

@17
@25

$ bbl.
5 0

Beef
$ tee.
© 3
Pork
$ bbl.
© 2
Wheat
$ bush.
Corn
©
To Glasgow (By Steam) :
..

Flour

Wheat

'

..

Imported in the “ or¬
dinary condition as now and hereto¬

Oil

.

1

9 ©

Heavy goods... $ ton 16

Tin— Duty: pig,
bars, and block,15 $
cent ad val.
Plate and sheets and
terne plates, 25
per cent, ad va>.

1
1

47 ©
57 ©

Wheat, bulk and bags

11 @

25©
50©

8

:

Com,h’k&bags$bns.

:1 cent $ ft.

..

$ ct off list.
$ ct. off list*

$ ft
15 p_*r cent)

Oil

sp -cial report.

2

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered
$2 to $3 5i $ 100 ft, and 15 $ cent ad

Sheet

19©

English, spring

.

6
3
4

15©
00© 150
do
2 40© 30
do’ll 00© 25

....

or under, 24
cents;
over 7 cents and not
above 11, 3 cts
$ ft; over 11 cents, 34 cents

..

(gold) 2 2:@ 6
do
95© 1
do 1 90© 9

Valparaiso,unwashed..

Plates,foreign $ ft gold -- 64©
do. domestic......
9|@
Spices* —See special report.

..

$ bbl. 4 50 © 5 00

White Nova Scotia

do

<5
86

..

English b ister

1 50
9
3 00

8 00 © 3 25

in bond

BlueNova

Bolivar

45
4>

..

Deer,SanJuan$ftgold
do
do

374

..

Payta
gold
Madras,....gol i
Cape
gold

German

Vaptha, refined
Plaster

84 ©
@
@
©
84 ©

Tampico...gold
Matamoras.gold

15

@

Petrole um—Duty:
crude, 20 cents;
refined, 40 mnts $ gallon.

Residuum

Buenos A.. .go'd

VeraCruz .$.old

14

Carmine,city made$ftl6

do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

find 10

......

Refined, free

Skins—Duty: 10$ cent ad val.
Goat,Curacoa$ ft gold
38©
41

11

dry
$ *00 ft 2 374©
gr1 ! in oil.$ ft
8©
Spanish brown, dry $
100 ft
1 20 ©
do
gr’d in oil.$ ft
8©
Paris wh., No.l$lo01b 2 75
@
Whitlog, Amer
2f@
Vermilion,Chinese^ ft 1 25 @
do
Trieste
1 05 @
do
Cal. & Eng
1 87 @
do
American....
25©

Crude,40@47grav. $gal.

Madeira
do Marseilles

Plain
Brass (less

All thrown silk.

do

4
4

Telegraph, No. 7 to 11

ft.
10^©
ill©

Tsatlees, No. I@3.$lbl2 00 @12 7 6
raysaams, superior,

10 @

do

Chalk, block
Chrome yellow.
Barytes

Burgundy Port,
Sherry ;

4 cent $ lb ; canary, $1 $ bushel of
60 ft; and grass
seeds, 30 $ cent

ad val.
Clover

4

do

.

Wines—Port

4

.

Selgnette

Alex. Seignette. do
4
Arzac Selgnette do
4 85©
J. Romieux.... do
4 75©
Rum—Jamaica ..do
4 5t@
St. Croix
d>
8 50©
Gin —Differ, brands do
00©
Dom’c—N.E. Rum.cur.
...@
Bourbon Whisky.cur. . ...<§>
Corn Whisky (.nb nd). 3C@

15

3J@

.

5

Hiv. Pellevoisin do

Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,

10

oil

clay

A.

9 @

Nitrate soda

4

...

refined and partially refined, 3
cents;
nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft.

pure

L°ger freres
do
Cog. do

Pellevoisin freres do

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2£ cents;
Refined,

4
5

?0@ 17
25© 16

5 00© 14

Other br’ds

624©

..

Crude

4
5

do
do
do
do
do

Jules Robin....
Marrotte & Co.
Vine Grow. Co.

$ 100 ft;

....

94©

Ochre,yellow, French,

China
Chalk

Pinet, Castil. &Co.do

Renault & Co.,
J. Vassal A Co.,

@10 75
© 9 75

@
Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 1 95 © 2 10
do flue,Ashton’8(i’d) 2 60 ©
do flue, A'orthingt’s
© 2 90
Onondaga.com.tine Dls. 2 50 © 2 60
do
do 210 1b bgs. 1 90 © 2 00
do
do
$ bush. 45 ©
50
Solar coarse
64 @
56
Fine screened
50 @
52
do
$ pkg.
@ S 25
F. F
240 1b bgs. 2 85 © 3 00

at 7 cents

No. 1,in oil
„
do whi e, French, In

Venet.red(N.C.)$cwt

(gold) 5 10© 9
Hennessy
(gold) 5 25© H
Otard, Dup. &Co.do 4 90© 13

..

dry

puie,

J. & F. Martell

.141

....

...

Brandy—

104
Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ ft.;
paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents

Buck

$ ton.51 HO @5*2 00

do

.

wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00
@ 65 00
Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 © 90 00
Oak and Ash
60 00 @ 65 00
Maple and Birch
85 00 © 40 00
Black Walnut
100 00 ©120 00

STAVES—
White
oak,

...

13#@
91©

Salt—.Duty: sack, 24

$ lb.
100 lb 6 00 ©
Clinch
7 50 © 7 75
Horseshoe,Fd (6d)$ft
28©
30
Horse hoe, pressed
20 ©
22
Copper
4S ©
Yellow metal
25©
27
Zinc
18©
20
Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 30 cents $ gaiIon; crude
Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20
$ cent ad val.
Turpent’e, . f ,.$28l)ft 5 50 ©
Tar, Am rici...... bbl 2 7> © 8 25
Pi ch
4 00 © 4 25
Rosin, common
4 DO ©

Cut,4d.@6<)d.$

Oils

3 00©
8
3
1

00©
African, W. C., Prime
25©
African, Scrivel.,W.C.
60© 2 50
L ead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 ft ; Old
Lead, H cents $ lb; Pipe and Sheet,
cents $ lb.
Galena
$ 100 lb
©
Spanish
(cold) 6 5 • © 6 6*24
German
(gol.i) 6 .r0 © 6 6*24
English
(gold) 6 10 © 6 8.*
Bar

Bahia

Spirits turp., Am. $

prime, do. ......19 50 ©20 00
$ ft
12©
1*

$ ft.

IWolas&es.—See special report.
Nails—Duty: cutl-J; wrought 24;
horse shoe

—

Lard,

Carolina.... •.$ 100 lblO 00
East India,dressed.... 9 25

20
15
15

....

do
do
do CommonlOO 00© 05 0
Scroll
1 l) : 0© 90 00
Ovals and Half Round 1 5 00©145 U0
Band
©140 0
HorseShoe....
135 00©

do

@
@

10 ©
14
50 @ 1 00
5 ©
8
4 @
6

Rosewood, R. Jan $ ft

Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 1^cents $ lb.
Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 fl>; Boiler

16
16
16
1J

14 ©
14©

Florida. $ c. ft.

do

12©

14©

Mansanilla
Mexican

do
do

40

12
15

..

Mexican

do

@

12 @

Honduras
(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas

Indigo—Duty FREE.
Oude
Madras
Manila

Nuevitas....
Mansanilla

10

Earns.

30

logs

80 ©

East India

do

7 ©

[April 13, 1867.

$ bbl.

$ bush.
Corn,bulk and bags..
Petroleum (sa*l)$ bbl.
Heavy goods..$ ton. 20

Oil
Beef
Pork
To Havbx :

$ tee.

..

..

,

bbl.

Cotton...
$ lb
Beef and pork.. $ bbl.

..

..

,

@2
©
©
@5
0 @30
@4i>
@5
@8

$
|

1 00
Measn?em.g’ds.$ ton j0 00 ©
Petroleum
6 6© 6 0
Lard, tallow, out m t
etc..
$ B>
w
Ashes* pot and pear!
8

3

THE CHRONICLE.

April 18,1867.]
Commercial Cards.

479

Steamship and Express Co.’s.
STEAM
TION

grain,
seeds
vlovb
and provisions.

COMMUNICA¬

BETWEEN

YORK

Commercial Cards.

Sawyer, Wallace & Co.,

NEW-

AND AUSTRALA¬

COMMISSION

SIA via PANAMA.

Blair, Densmore & Co.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
1«|

WASHINGTON

STREET.

Ohleago, Ilia.

Y

&

A EGER

Co.,

The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian
Royal
Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of
each month from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., and
the Australian Colonies, connecting with the steamer
of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving
New-York for
Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each
month. First and second class passengers will be

conveyed under through ticket at the following
rates: From New-York to ports in New-Zealand, or
to Sydney or Melbourne, $S4C to $364 for first
class,
and $218 to $243 for second class.
The above rates include the transit across the
Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for
forward cabins of the Australian steamer; after
cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United
States gold coin.

Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold
of Hokitika, New Zealand.
Children under three years, free; under
eight
years, quarter fare; under twelve years, half-fare;
male servants, one-half fare ; female do., three-quar¬
ters fare; men servants berthed forward, women

MERCHANTS,

HO. 47 BROAD

STREET,
NEW YORK,

J. M. Cummings & Co.,
DISTILLERS
AND

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS,

58 BROAD

STREET, NEW YORK,
Offer for sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE
WHISKIES, from their own and other fir*t-olaa*
Distilleries, Kentucky.

region

RECEIVERS OF FLOUR,
No*. 148,

160,162,164, & 166 N. SECOND STREET

BETWEEN WASHINGTON AVENUE
AND GREEN STREET.

ST.

LOUIS,

MO.

Wilson, Son & Co.,
Late of

For

Lynchburg, Va.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
the sale of produce and purchase
of merchandise generally.

of merchandise will be con¬
veyed under through bill of lading.
For further information, application to he made to
the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st,
Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent,
No. 23 William-st., New-York.

Jacob Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore.

Tannahill, Mcllwaine & Co., New York.

Miscellaneous.

California,
And

Bankrupt Law.

Hare just

the NEW BANKRUPT

WITH NOTES, FORMS OF PROCEDURE,
And

a

1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City.

11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis
21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento.

the Law of Bankruptcy.

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC
192 FRONT

Bar, and one of tbe Framers of the

English Bankruptcy Amendment Act.

Umbrellas &

Carrington,

8vo., Cloth, $3 50.
Mi. James has had unusual

opportunities to be¬
come familiar with the Law of Bankruptcy, having
been a Member of Parliament at the time the English
Bankrupt Act was passed, and having himself carried
through important amendments to the Bill. He w*s
also for many years a successful practitioner in the
English Bankruptcy Courts.—Amei\ Law Eegisler.

E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co.
AGENTS

BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.,

Professional and Private use,
receive

MILTON

BROTHERS, Now York.

CO.,
MILLS,

Lindsay, Chittick & Co.,
IMPORTERS

AND

COMMISSION |

MERCHANTS,
British Staple,
And Fancy
Dress Goods,

BY

White

Goods,

Irish and Scotch
160 & 152 DUANE

York.

Linens, Ac., Ac-,
STREET, NEW YORK,

Linen

line for Business,
at Low Prices. Orders

onr

SHOE

Threads,
THREADS,

SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC.
BARBOUR BROTHERS,
CHAMBERS

Mills at

POPE, 92 John Street.

Anthracite and Charcoal

HARPER Sc

\J\Wm 9

Nos. 43 Sc 45 WHITE STREET.

Metals,
J.

ifJL2m.1v mJ JO •

VICTORY MANUF.

prompt attention.

THOS.

mm iii

Loutrel,

MANUFACTURERS.
45 Maiden Lane, New

supply everything in

FOB

WASHINGTON MILLS,

STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK
We

ST., NEW YORK.

„

VA.

SOLICITED

Francis &

Parasols,

49 MURRAY

North River, New York.
S. K. HOLMAN, Agent.

CUSTOM

DWIGHT,

MANUFACTURERS OF

-■ a.ma.

RICHMOND,
YOUR

STREET, NEW YORK.

DOUBLEDAY Sc

By EDWIN JAMES,
Of tbe New York

USE,

One hundred pounds

ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
11 «3 MAIN STREET,

Adapted to tbe use of the Lawyer and Merchant.

of Beaver.

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
For passage tickets or further information, apply
at the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of

Ould &

corner

Henry Lawrence & Sons,

zanillo.

Canal street,

Street,

at Panama with

steamers for South Pacific ports • 1st and 11th for
Central American Ports. Those or 1st touch at Man¬

Collection of all tbe

American and English Decisions upon

Broad

:

allowed each adult.

BILL,

59

ER, FOOT of Canal street, at 12
11th, and
month (except when those dates fall on
Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.

Baggage checked through.

published

POLHEMUS Sc CO.,
MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS.

o’clock noon, on the 1st,

Departures of 1st and 21st connect
HARPER A BROTHERS

THEODORE

States Mail
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬

list of every

Weights.
Large Stock always on band.

Carrying the United

APRIL

The New

A

PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S
THROUGH LINE

To

Duck,

All Widths and

do. in ladies’ cabin.
A limited quantity

(Offices, for the present, 63 EXCHANGE PLACE).
BALTIMORE, MO.

Referbypermissionto Messrs.

Cotton

Pig Irons, Ingot Copper,
Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad
Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Patterson, N. J.

Byrd &

Hall,

Manufacturers of

Harper A Brothers will send the above work

Offices To

by mail, postage-free, on receipt of $3 60.
THE NEW BANKRUPT LAW.

With all the modern improvements,
and

Edwin James

& Dunphy,

COUNSELORS-AT-LAW,
have established a department *n their office for the
pr secution of Voluntary and Compulsory
Proceedings in Bankruptcy, with a system
of agency in all the large cities of America, Consul¬
tations with Mr. EDWIN JAMES, from 3 to 5 o’clock
daily.
NO. 293 BROADWAY.

Let.

ventilation, suitable for

5, 7,17, 19, 34, 36, 49 Sc 53 New St.*
ALL NEAR WALL

PARASOLS,

Nos, 12 & 14 WARREN ST., NEW-YORK.

splendid light

Banks, Bankers, Brokers, Merchants,
Lawyers, Railway, Insurance,
and other Companies,
In BuildiDgs
Nos. 38, 39, 40, 42, 57, 64, 66, 69, 71,
73, 78 Sc 80 Broadway.
Nos.

UMBRELLAS AND

STREET.

Lane, Lamson & Co.,
COMMISSION
NO. 7 RUE
97 FRANKLIN

MERCHANTS,

SCRIBE, PARIS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

George Hughes & Co.,
Importers A Commission
198 A 200 CHURCH

Files of this Paper Bound to Order.

BLANK BOOKS.

STATIONERY,
ENGRAVING,

PRINTING,. &C., &C.

Cooper & Sheridan,




36 EXCHANGE PLACE,
Comer of William St

Nos.

4, 6, 11, 17, 19, 21 Sc 38 Broad St
Nos. 4

Sc

19 Wall

Street,

And

Nos. 55 A 57

Exchange Place.

SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN

Merchants,
STREET,

GOODS,

SPANISH LINEN, .DUCKS, DRILLS,
LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS,
PATENT LINEN THREAD.

APPLY AT THE OFFICE OF
EDWARD

MATTHEWS,

No. 19 Broad St., Room No. 30.

Sole

Agents for

DICKSON, FERGUSON A CO., Belfast.
And F. W. HAYES A CO.,

Banbrldgs.

[April 18, 1867. '

THE CHRONICLE.
Commercial

Commercial Cards.

Co.,

Pearce &

S. H.

No. 363

BROADWAY,

ANi)

IMPORTERS

CHINA

SILKS,

& Co,

Delisle

Oscar

Oiled

HANDKERCHIEFS,

Mnslin

much

Goods,

Machine

Real Brussels

c

Collars.
invented.

LEONARD
AND
MANUFACTURER

Pongee ri’dkfn,

FOR
,

IRISH * SCOTCH LINEN

Oilea

Cotton,
Organzinc Silk,

STREET, NEW YORK,

Agents for the sale of

Tannahill,
«fc C

LINENS,

.

BURLAPS, BAGGING,
FLAX SAIL

DUCK, AC.

Goods,

Laces and

Anderson &

Enib’s,
Handk’lfe,

Linen

Smith,

Munsell &

&

COMMISSION MERCHANTS
FOR T HE SALE OF PRODUCE AND PURCHASE
OF MERCHANDISE GENERALLY.
No. 79 Front

SAM’L

BELFAST,

AND

HANDKERCHIEFS,

CD., LURGAN,

20 OLD

Co.,

MERCHANTS,
STREET.

119 CHAMBERS

Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s
SPOOL

COTTON.

MACHINE & SEWING SILK. BUTTONHOLE
TWIST, FANCY GOODS, <feC.,
Offer to Jobbers only.

Woolen

Strachan & Malcomson,
IMPORTERS, COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND
MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS

Co.,

198 *200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK.

IRISH

Wm.

Silk

Rearers.

Floor O

i l

5-4,

4-4,

LI> JttN CAMU’C

6-4,

Cloths,
10-4

8-4,

185

wide.

Church

M.

BAILEY,
MANUFACTURER,
34 Reade Street, Sew York.

Palm Leaf Fans,
IN

COMM ON AND FINE GOODS,
GREAT
VARIETY,

Imported this season, also
O I L E n»
SILK.
For sale by

Smith &

GENERAL COxMMISSION

G5 Commerce

Lawrence,

157 Dnane Street.

LINENS,

138 LASALLE

York#

New

A

Mills,
Chicago, HI.
Lockport Hydraulic Mills, LocKport, Ill.
Sweepstakes Mills,
West Lockport. III.
full supply of our well known brands
of Flour always on hand.
Eastern orders wdl have

prompt attention'at low
Our Chicago mills being situated
on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour,
Middlings, Bran, tfcc., to all points Ea t, saving <-xuense and damage from cartage.
Orders lor pur¬
chase of Grain, Flour, or provisions in this market
will be faithfully a tended to.

est market

CO’S.

18 UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND
SEWING.

MACHINE

Mile

RUSSELL, Sole Agent,

88 CHAMBERS

E. W. Blatchford &

SIX -CORD

Sc

HUGH

*

CABLED

OIL

CHICAGO, ILL.

HIDE

155 Kinzle Street,
Orders will receive careful and
TO

Importers of Fancy Goods, China and

Toys,

John O’Neill -& Sons,
MANUFACTURERS

Sewing Silks,
Machine Twist

Formerly No. 65 Maiden Lane,
HAVE REMOVED TO

Embroidery,
Organzine, and Tram.
ST., NEW YORK.
MILLS AT PATERSON, N. J,

84 CHAMBERS

No. 394




Broadway,

near

OF

Canal street.

GRAIN

Co.,

BROKERS,
Chicago.
prompt attention.

REMOVAL.

Strasburger & Nuhn,

CAKE,

I. S. Bush &

YORK,

No. 108 Duane Street.

AN#

LEAD PIPE AND SHEET LEAD,

.AUCHINCLOSS,

SOLE AGENTS IN NEW

Co.,

Manufacturers of
LINSEED OIL

Thread.
JOHN

price.

STREET, N.Y.

J. & P. Coats’
REST

ST., CHICAGO, ILL.,

PROPRIETORS OF
Oriental

CLARK, Jr. Sc
End, Glasgow.

JOHN

Co.,

(Established 1849.)
MILLERS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

HANDK’FS, AC.

Street,

MERCHANTS,

Street, Mobile, Ala.

Norton &

;

Spool Cotton.

THOS.
C.

AND

LINENS,

Mixtures,

AT GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES.

3-4,

England & Co.,

COTTON FACTORS

Importers of

No.

Fancy Cassimeres.

SCOTCH

Thompson & Co.,

IRISH

W. D. Sikonton.

W. W. Coffin, Treas.

AND

Murray Street, New York.

40

Merchants,

SLIP, NEW YORK.

FOB

Also, Agents for

Globe

Wm. G.

GOODS.

LINEN

C. Holt &

General Commission

Cambric Handkerchief Manufacturers

105 Reade Street.

COMMISSION

Morris,

AND

JAMES GLASS Sc

And dealers in

PONGEE

MOBBIS, JR.

CALDWELL,
FACTORS,

COTTON

Linen Manufacturers.

SILKS,

INDIA

B. C.

CALDWELL.

Successors to BREWER &

Importers of
CHINA

B.

Caldwell &

KIRK Sc SON,

WILLIAM

Street, New York*
McIlwaink & Cu.,
of Petersburg, Va.

Makttn & Tannahill,
of Petersburg, Va.

Agents lor

Co.,

McIlwaine
Co.,

PLACE, NEW YORK.

33 PARK

British and Continental.

.

BROKER,
TENNESSEE.

M E„M PHIS,

WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’

Importers of

Cummins,

COTTON

In full assortment for the

WHITE

HOPKINS Sc Co.,
69 & 71 Broadway.

L.

A.

GOODS,

Jobbing and Clothing Trade.

Tram Silk.

Co.,

W.

S.

Merchahts,

55 MURRAY STREET.

Silk,

Roads,

FOR SALE BY

•

H’dkfs,

George Pearce &

AMERICAN AND FOREIGN,

Gihon,

Importers Sc Commission

Oiled

'

Steam and Street
Brand &

GOODS,

Stock of the above at

Railroad Iron,

STREET, NEW YORK.

OF

IMPORTER

a new

364 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET

Laces,

Corsets, dec.

73 LEONARD

John N. Stearns,
STREET,

70 & 72 FRANKLIN

Goods,

Imitation Laces,

the most economical collar ever

White

HOSIERY and
MEN’S FURNISHING

Edgings,

Patent Reversible Paper

Cotton

HANDKERCHIEFS,

Swiss Ac French White

superior finish, and

Agents for the sale of the

58

and Lawn

Offers

and durability.

appearauce

Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red

Linen

Draperies,

real silk, which it equals in

as

,

Lace Curtains.

Silk,

Our “Imitation” has a very

(late of Becar, Napier & Co.)
Agent for S. Courtauld Sc Co.’s
ENGLISH CRAPES,
And importer of
„

French Dress

Imitation Oiled Silk.

osts but half as

Napier,

r

OF

and Manufacturers ot

SILK AND COTTON

Cards.

D.

Alexander

Importers ot
EUROPEAN

Commercial

Cards.

SHIPPERS,

MILLERS,

AND DISTILLERS.
We

are

Manufacturing

Corn Shellers,
ranging from 50 to 1,000
bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to
shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the
corn in superior condition for the Mill or Market.
Over 50Q in Daily Use. Portable Engines, Small
Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c.

Richards’ Power
'Of all sizes and capacity,

RICHARDS’ IRON
190 & 192 WASHINGTON

Chicago, Ill,

WORKS,
STREET,
_