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Railway phroit#*, and fnantante fmmwt

WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

*

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

YOL. 2.

SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1866.
CONTENTS.
THE CHRONICLE.

The Public Debt
Mr. Clark and Specie Payments .
End of the Insurrection—Some
of its Tendencies
Debt and Finances of Kentucky.

Analyses ot Railroad Reports

...

United States Debt
Latest Monetary and Commercial

417

418

421

English News

419

Literature
Commercial and Miscellaneous

420
421

News

422
5

422

423

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Commercial
Cotton
Breadstuff's

Money Market, Railway Stocks,
IJ. S.

Securities, Gold Market,

Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks, Philadelphia Banks

National Banks, etc
Sale Prices N. Y. Stock

Epitome

431
432
483

Dry Goods
Exports and Imports.

425

434
435-36

Prices Current and Tone of the
Market
437-39
THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.

Exchange
National, State, etc., Securities.

429 ‘

Railway News
Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane-

ous Bond List
440 I
442-43
441 Insurance and Mining Journal...
444

430

.

| Advertisements

445-48

&1)£ CfyroiticU.
The Commercial

and

Financial Chronicle is issued every

Satur~
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine
with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to
midnight
of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all
the Commercial and Financial news of the
previous day up to
the hour of publication.

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(exclusive of postage)

j5 00
Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It is, op the Chroni¬
cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance.

WILLIAM B. DANA &

OO., Publishers,

(Chronicle Buildings,)
60 William Street, New York.

Neat Files for

U

holding the Chronicle

can

be had at the Office.

Price

75.

THE PUBLIC DEBT.
It is

long time since any monthly statement of the public
debt has been received with sentiments of such confident
hope
and general satisfaction as the
April report, which we give
a

elsewhere.

Generally, indeed, the people are pleased to find
that, in consequence of the large revenue receipts, the aggre¬
gate amount of the debt has received no increase, but that the
national finances

are

in

a

sound and

healthy condition.

The

aggregate amount of the debt is $2,827,793,896 against $2,827,868,959 a month ago, hut we have six millions more

gold in the Treasury, and the currency balance is also about
a
quarter of a million more than on 1st March. Consequently
the total debt,
deducting the cash in hand, shows a decrease
ot $6,203,484
during the month. The statement before us
is defective in that it does not show what
is in the National




part of the balance

Banks, and it is generally wished that in

NO. 41.

future statements this additional information should be
given
to the public.
The recent correspondence between Mr. Mc-

Colloch and Mr. Clarke has attracted

special attention to the

subject, and Congress, we trust, will take some action in re¬
ference to this important matter before the close of the ses¬
sion.
The points on which monthly information should be
given, are first, as to the aggregate sum the National
Banks hold of Government funds; and secondly, as to the
par value of the securities deposited at Washington as a
guarantee for the safety of these public funds. Quarterly
statements should also be furnished showing
how much each
bank individually holds.
During the war the public atten¬
tion was much
engrossed with other things, and financial
matters were little attended to.
Now, however, among the
masses of the
people, the latter are absorbing more exclusive
attention, and the sharp pressure of taxation acts as a goad
to stimulate the
people to examine into the doings of the Na¬
tional Treasury, with an anxiety more general and more
per¬
vading than was ever knowrn in this country before.
To this fact we suppose are due the remarks which are
every where making themselves heard relative to the recent
Treasury negotiations of gold and of bonds. During the
month of February it will be remembered a large
amount of
seven-thirties had been bought up by Mr. McCulloch and a
quantity of five-tw7enties were sold, and the public disap¬
proval of the secrecy of the transactions was so strongly and
decidedly expressed that it was believed that nothing further
wrould be done without the public notice which has
always
been given in former years. The April statement
reports
some further
negotiations; but if we are rightly informed
these were all concluded before the first of March and
nothing
has been done since in opposition to the expressed wishes for
publicity on the part of the bond-holders and the public.
Of the new negotiations to wThich we have referred the
following are all that require special mention. Two millions
of compound notes have been taken in at par and interest
and about one million of seven-thirties also at par and inte¬
rest.
Four millions of six per cent bonds have been sold the
price, as we hear, being 102 and gold interest. One of the
most objectionable features in the report is the
purchasing of
one million and a-half of ten-forty
As the rea¬
year bonds.
sons why they have been bought
up are not known, nor the
price which was paid for them, we cannot say whether in a
pecuniary point of view the transaction was a favorable one
for the Treasury. But the reasons must have been very
strong that would justify the withdrawal of the longest bonds
we have in the hands of the
public; still Mr. McCulloch’s

418

THE CHRONICLE.

[April 7,1866.

strongly in favor of this, country. Besides, we must remem¬
a large amount of British capital has been
satisfactory that we ask a candid consideration of his rea
investing
sons when, as will
itself in this country during the past few months.
probably soon occur, they are made
This cir¬
cumstance tends to give a still more decided turn to the
public.
The only other point on which we have to express dissatis¬ foreign
exchanges, which, from the other causes to which we
faction is the increase of the demand loans which now amount have referred, are already sufficiently favorable.
to $121,751,970
against $118,577,939 last month. We preSuch, then, are the forces which produced the decline in
sume this increase is
only temporary, and Mr. McCulloch, by gold, and still tend to retard its inevitable rise. But it is
reducing the rate of interest, has already taken measures, easy to see that such forces do not touch our paper money
which will be] supplemented by others, to reduce this most at all; whereas before we can resume specie payments our
troublesome part of the national debt.
paper money must be cured of its evils, and especially of its
The gold notes have been reduced from 124 to 9£ millions. chief malady—redundancy. The great obstacle to
resump¬
This is regarded as a good movement.
tion lies in the over-issue of our paper currency; and no
The government re¬
ceives no possible advantage from these
gold deposits, which manipulations in the gold market, or in the market for foreign
are a source of
great expense. The April statement, then, of exchange, can reduce that over-issue by a single dollar. Con¬
the public debt, while it possesses some
peculiar" and excep¬ traction of the volume of the currency can alone correct the
tionable features, which, we trust, will not be repeated,
is, on mischiefs produced by redundancy. Without a reduction
the whole, a very encouraging one. And it will be
especially of the amount of paper money afloat, we can make no pro¬
so if we call to mind the
growing revenue of' the government. gress whatever towards specie payments.
The receipts of coin for customs duties last month were 11
It has been urged that the fear of contraction will stand in
millions, or more than twice as much as in March, 1865. For the stead of contraction itself. In other words, if we confer
the past nine months of the fiscal year the amount for the on the
Secretary of the Treasury the power to withdraw cur¬
whole country was no less than 134 millions. And it is
prob¬ rency at his pleasure, and to do this secretly, suddenly, in
able that the aggregate of the year will be
nearly one hun¬ such amounts and at such times as would be least expected,
dred and eighty millions.
Were our wThole debt consolidated there would be such a dread on men’s minds that even with¬
at 5 per cent, the
greenbacks included, we should only require out the exercise of this power, without any actual contraction
about 135 millions to pay the interest, and, at 6
per cent, of the currency, some of the results of contraction might be
less than 163 millions.
secured.
A more michievous, repulsive doctrine it is scarce¬
But, turning to the internal revenue, we find additional ly possible to contrive. For what does it virtually amount to 1
cause for satisfaction.
The public income from this source It declares that if you can fill the minds of thirty millions of
during the past nine months was no less than 244 millions, free people with such dread that they shall each and all keep
giving a monthly average of more than 27 millions. At the by them a great deal more ready cash than in a healthy state
close of the year the amount can
scarcely fall short of 325 of things is needful, the demand for currency will be in¬
millions. In the presence of such a prodigious
In the supply of this factitious demand a part of
revenue, with creased.
the public credit
advancing, and general business improving, your over issues will find employment. More paper money
the man must be short-sighted indeed who looks with
dismay being thus wanted, the currency will be less redundant and
on the few
short-date obligations
maturing in the current consequently less depreciated. But, at what cost, suffering
It
year, or is apprehensive that we are not able confidently to and risk for the nation would this result be achieved ?
trust, in our ability to meet them all without embarrassment depends on the repressive force of constant fear which is an
as
intolerable condition to a free people.
they mature.
Were it possible to
carry out the project, as happily it is not, unless temporarily
MR. CLARKE AND SPECIE PAYMENTS.
and to a very limited extent, the national character would suf¬
It is supposed by many persons, and it has been affirmed fer irreparable damage, our industrial energies would be
in Congress, that because gold
has declined 10 per cent dur¬ paralyzed, our wealth-producing faculties would languish. A
ing the last month, therefore we have advanced one point ship may ride through a brief storm under bare poles, but
nearer to the
resumption of specie payments, and that three her success as a handmaid of commerce depends on her car¬
more such movements would land us
safely at the w'ished-for rying full sail throughout most of her voyage.
goal. Nothing can be more delusive than the hopes buoyed
There is another class of persons who are very earnest ad¬
up by such reasoning; for it overlooks the real causes of the vocates for resumption, and admit that redundancy is
only
recent fall in gold,
among which the chief place must be to be cured by contraction, and over emission of currency by
given to the Government sales of coin during the month of calling in the excessive issues; but they are for executing the
February. These were very large, and compelled a number contractive process at one blow, by a sudden violent move¬
of needy and timid persons, who had been
holding gold, to ment. The precise method of accomplishing this wonderful
sell it. From the fall in price there wTas awakened also a feat we do not think these
gentlemen are at all agreed upon.
disinclination among the people to
buy or to hold specie at But it is sufficient for us to know that the thing is simply im¬
all; for no one wants to buy on a falling market. Thus the possible, and the very discussion of it has done injury by
public demand for coin was checked, while the supply offer¬ making plain people believe that contraction necessarily
ing for sale was greatly augmented. A fall in the price, means violent sudden contraction, with the certain concom¬
under such circumstances, was as natural and as certain as itants of
stagnation, bankruptcy and ruin to multitudes of
would be a fall in cotton, tobacco or
the people in all parts of the country.
turpentine, if you sud¬
In England,
denly increased the supply while you checked the effective de¬ after the Napoleonic wars, in the early part of this
mand. It must, however, be remarked that a reaction from
century, the currency was in a’ much less deranged
this artificial and temporary decline is
condition than ours is now.
equally certain.
Yet it required several
There are indications, indeed, that the
upward movement years of effort, after the restoration of peace, to get back
of gold has already set in, and that it will
gradually mount to specie 'payments. With this example before us, what
to higher prices..
Indeed, the recoil would have been much reason have we to suppose that we can safely resume for sev¬
more swift and
spasmodic if] in consequence of the heavy eral years to come ? It is true, indeed, that by the steady
shipments of cotton, the foreign exchanges had not been so use of the compound interest notes, as a means of reforming
management of the national finances has been on the whole

ber that

so

J




'

.

&

t

V

/

April 7, 1866.J

will probably be more swift, more
gentle than if we employed any other con

the currency, our

progress

and more
tracting machinery known to financial science.
rest assured that the process must be slow if it
sure,

and

But we may

is to be safe

sure.

To the

419

THE CHRONICLE.

compound notes as a means of contracting

the cur¬

have been alarmed at the

-

sweeping assumption of power
have at times appeared to be

and in their zeal for freedom

opposed to some of the measures of the Administration. -If,
however, they have shown less earnestness than we desired
in behalf of what were deemed necessary acts, we should not
forget that they have at least done good service in checking
the liability to tamper with the public liberties, and have de¬
monstrated to the world that amid the demoralizing influen¬
ces of an internecine struggle we can trust to a portion of the

the singular objection has been raised that it is expen¬
These notes bear 6 per cent interest. The only cost
which this method of reforming the currrency will entail on
the country is this amount of interest. And if we look at the people to keep vigilant watch upon the bulwarks of constitu¬
tional freedom.
momentous benefits which it will secure ; the great evils of
The President’s proclamation, announcing the end of the
revulsion, commercial panics, and industrial derangement
which it will prevent; wC think that any candid observer insurrection, consummates the refutation of the predictions
of foreign critics who, regarding the war as putting u demo¬
must see that it is really the least costly machinery that we
could possibly employ for the purpose. It is at all events cracy on its trial,” exultingly foretold an ignominous failure
of our form of Government to sustain itself against internal
the cheapest method that has ever yet been proposed in any
outbreaks.
The Union which, according to these judges,
country. But if a preferable way can be found, by all means
was
irreparably shattered, is still “ one and inseparable.”
let us adopt it.
That very element of vox populi which it was confidently
If, however, we are to make an advance towards specie pay¬
affirmed would prove the source of weakness and failure, has
ments in earnest, we must bewTare lest while Congress and
turned out to be the rock of our strength.
The proclama¬
the country are discussing the best methods of tnaking our
tion proves not only that no patriotism is truer than that of
progress easy and effective, we take any steps backward.
a free people, no military
power stronger than that of citizen
We much regret to hear that Mr. Clarke, the Comptroller
of the Currency, is still in favor of the plan advocated in his soldiers, no exchequer richer than that of a people voluntarily
last report urging the issue of one hundred millions of National defending their own interests, but also that a conquered fac¬
tion within a republic can loyally submit when subdued, and
Bank notes, in addition to the three hundred millions'-already
authorized. This project we had hoped wras dead.
If real¬ the Government knows how to receive that submission. If
the outbreak of hostilities demonstrated that popular govern¬
ized it would lead us directly away from the goal of specie
ments, in common with more absolute forms of rule, are
payments. It would render nugatory the many efforts and
liable to civil disruptions, yet results have proved that under
sacrifices which the country has already made with a view to
a
republic such outbreaks can be vigorously repressed and
resumption. It would raise up a barrier to our future pro¬
the disaffection rapidly healed.
gress towards a sound currency redeemable in coin on de¬
The work of restoration having been completed, the next
mand.
We trust there is virtue enough in Congress to re¬
sist and put down all attempts of whatever kind to carry out great business of the country is to eradicate any arbitrary
tendencies in legislation which may have grown out of war
a
policy condemned by every acknowledged principle of con¬
measures.
History abundantly sustains the assertion that
servative expediency and financial statesmanship. Since, as
the most oppressive of laws have been adopted either during
Mr. Clarke tells us, and as was already well known, certain
a state of war or
immediately subsequent.
Nor, can our
States of the Union have received more national currency
own legislation, since 1861, be quoted as an exception to this
than the law prescribes as their equitable share, the remedy
rule.
Military necessity has produced a partial disregard
is at hand. The currency so issued contrary to the law should
for individual liberty; to meet promptly a pressing emer¬
be called in again, and the needful amount can then be dis¬
tributed where it is wanted. Let us avoid the reckless blun¬ gency we have copied the measures of European govern¬
der of repairing a smaller evil by committing one of vastly ments ; the expedients have been found to work well, and
what has proved successful during a period of national peril
greater magnitude.
we are now too apt to regard as good in itself and worthy of
We should remember, however, that the
of conservation.
END OF THE INSURRECTION,—SOME OF ITS TENDENCIES.
rency

sive.

that the process of national temper and measures suited to a time of war are most dan¬
pacification is now completed, the condition of insurrection gerous and inimical in times of peace. Probably the coun¬
ended, and the late insurgent section restored to the exercise try will suffer for years to come from measures enacted, dur¬
of its normal state functions, is cause for congratulation. An ing the last four years, not always necessary for war pur¬
The official announcement

especially an unsuccessful one, is always poses, but which have received an infection of arbitrariness
from legislation of a more specifically warlike purpose.
•
fraught with danger to the liberties of the people; nor is the
Congress having been of necessity driven to hold individual
case otherwise when the outbreak happens under the govern¬
ment of a Republic.
Extraordinary emergencies call forth rights in abeyance for temporary military objects, has too
large assumptions of authority ; extra constitutional powers readily acquired a habit of treating the freedom of the citi¬
zen lightly in
other matters; and this vicious tendency ap¬
are
necessarily exercised ; civil law is superseded by mili¬
tary authority; the rights of the citizen are summarily dealt pears to us to taint some of the recent and current legisla
tion.
with, and every interest is held subordinate to the creation of
Nothing could be more unwise than this. Is it reason
an
over-whelming military power. In short, whenever a
able that, after the people have so triumphantly vindicated
country engages in war, and especially in civil war, it neces
their ability to take care of themselves under the severest and
sarily, to a large extent, surrenders itself to a condition in
most critical of national emergencies, that Congress should
whioh law and liberty are subordinated to force.
Thus it has been in our own case. The Administration enact a series of laws taking from them individual and local
and Congress have been driven to the adoption of measures control, placing them under government tutelage and bind- inconsistent in toto with the spirit of republican institutions, ing their action by uniform central regulations? In a coum
and justifiable upon no other ground than that they were de¬ try with such an infinite diversity of interests, few of which
signed to save from destruction a grand embodiment of those are fully developed and all of which are constantly changing
institutions. Many of the jealous conservators of liberty in their requirements and modes of operation, is it to be supinsurrection, and




THE CHRONICLE

420

posed that federal laws, attempting to minutely regulate
them, can operate otherwise than as an embargo upon their
business ?
Legislators mistake their mission when they un¬
dertake to define in a set of laws the whole duty of man.
The constitution of the

United States approximates more

closely to the laisser-faire principle of government than to
any other model; but the tendency of the times is to enact
laws based upon the doctrine that the government should
intervene for the regulation of the whole action of the citi¬
zen.
It is high time this dangerous policy were checked.
We say dangerous, for public harmony and the paramount
interests of commerce are alike threatened by this tendency.
The laws which may be harmless to one section may serious¬
ly embarrass the commerce of others, and if persistently
kept on the statute book, how could they result otherwise
than in grave sectional animosities %
Until the wrar, the
federal authority was confined within such narrow and harm¬
less limits that, although really protected by an invincible

[April 7,1866.
PUBLIC

The

DEBT OCTOBER

amounted to

$5,254,847, and is thus accounted for
Parties and

Acts authoriz-

<

rt
(Sixy ’rs bonds and int.
Dus.
>.R.]
imp.R.R. sc’p$609,500) * Various.
Feb. 88, 1835 Bank of Kentucky*.... May 85,1835 1866
$100,000.
100,000
Prime, Ward & King
Aug. 1,1835 1805
Feb. 29, 1836 Northern Bank of Ky*. April 25, ’36 1866
100,000
Bank of Ky*
50,000
June 1,1836 1866
165,000
28, 1837 War Department
April 1, 1837 1867
100 000
March 8,1843 John Tilden, ag’t to sell Sept. 2,1843 1873
Feb. 16, 1838 Aril Life Ins & Trust Co July 1, 1838 1868 6 1,250,000
22, 1839 Contract’s on pub. w’ks
19/41 ”70'716
^i000
21,1840 Northern Bank of Ky.. Nov. 4, 1840 1870 6
235,000
Bank of Ky
“
“
1870 6 -180,000

Various
“

“

..

“

“

“

“

by federal regulations in ev¬
action, and hindered at every step by a government

\

-j £>PFeb

“

“

“

“

.

Feb. 21, 18401
1841

Mar.
“

3, 1842

Contractors and in

Feb.
Mar.

ex¬

bonds.

11,
2,
1, 1844 Holders of Lex’gton &

Ohio R. R. bonds.... Jan’y 1,1865 1860 6
22, 1846 j Holders of six years’ ) Oct 7, 1846, I ,fi1 ftq a
1, 1847 j
bonds and others j to Jun 15,’48 f 01'wt>
Total amount held

by public and institutions
f Ang. 9, 1840
| Jan. 6,1S40
1 Jan. 1,1840
J Jan. 18, 1840'
Jan.22, 1840
.....

U

tt

.

1870
1870
1870
1875
1875
1875

151,000

SBalance1864 for int. on State bonds..
ah. 30, due For unexpen’d county
distrib. & held

July 1,1865
Total amouut held

by Board of Education

70,000
....

6

24,000
21,500

6
5
5
5

500,000
170,000

24 000.

5

(July 5,1850

by B’d

150,000

$6,486,000 $3,651,402

6

308,268
101,002

21,500
22,000
500,000
170,000
180,000
808,268
101,002

6

276,175

276,175

Dec 28,1848 pi'sure 5
U.

ery
official.

188,000

April 8,1841 |
to
)■ ’71-72 6 1,741,000 1,422,000
April 1,1842

I

change for six years’ -{

1843
1844

Mar.

$402
14,000
85,000
95,000
9,000
165,000
79,000
999,000
27,000

f

government, we were scarcely conscious of its control. If
policy necessary during the war is to be perpetuated, we
henceforth be trammelled

_

.

issued.

issues.

1864-65r

year

^
;
Hate of
.Rate,
Amount
Matu- per IssuOutIssue.
rity. an’m ed. standing.

ing the several institutions to which

the

must

10, 1865.

public debt of Kentucky, at the close of the fiscal

-

22.000

180,000

$1,602,945 ■ 1,602,945

Upon these considerations, we sincerely believe that, our
representatives will perceive that, the insurrection being de¬

Aggregate Public Debt
The annual interest on fhe above debt is

$8,088,945 6,254,847
$299,198

clared

Marked thus * indicates that principal
all others are payable in New York.

and interest are payable in Kentucky;

when Congress should as¬
sume no control which cannot be better exercised by it than by
the states, the local organizations or the individual.
We have
cited no particular legislation as objectionable; lor when we
hear on every side that the central government should enact
ended, the time has

come

general insurance laws; inaugurate educational bureaus;
perpetuate government interference with currency ; increase
the patronage of the President and the departments; and in our
zeal to serve the freedman, endanger the rights of all our citi¬
zens ; special instances appear
to us unnecessary. Slavery,
thanks to
huAe

we

kind

a
no

Providence, is at

an

end in this country;

fear that the contest which has resulted in

so

herited freedom.

*

The total debt of

Kentucky outstanding Oct. 10, 1865, amounted to
was held by the public, and $1,602,945
by the StateSchool Fund. Against this debt the sinking fund is credited
with various properties and assets valued at $7,638,4 94, and has large an¬
nual receipts from taxes, interest, dividends, &c. This fund is regarded as
sufficient to meet promptly and at maturity the interest and principal of
the indebtedness of the State. The valuation of taxable property for
1865 was $359,717,161, having been reduced about sixteen millions from
the valuation for 1864, a fact wholly due to deterioration in the value of
slave property, which for 1865 is set down at $7,224,851 only, being less
than an average of $50 per head assessed for taxation. The taxation for
$5,264,847, of which $3,651,402

1865

40 cents

the hundred dollars of

valuation, and appears to
have been sufficient for all purposes. This taxation is equivalent to 130
was

on

cents per

capita of the population. It is thus evident that Kentucky,
notwithstanding her losses by reason of the war, is abundantly able to
sustain her credit which has always stood high ; being one of those
States which has never been tainted with repudiation in any form what¬
ever.

The

debt

following statement exhibits the changes in the amount of the
by issues and redemptions yearly from October 10, 1859. to Oc¬

tober 10, 1865

;

$5,479,244

(Act Feb. 18,1864)
Loans from School Fund, being unex¬
pended county distributions

?rior to O
1861—military loan
n

9,000

1863—military loan

1864—military loan
1865—original debt

355,000
35,000

819,000
890,000
1,180,000

outstanding Oct. 10,1865
The following is a statement of the debt, at the date




2,481,113

$310,000

original debt

in
in

Total

219,113

67,000

2,656,010

as

follows

property of various descrip¬
These

aggregate at $7,688,494.

:

and interest $9,000
Surplus in Treasury, Oct. 10,1865
:
5 per cent legal tender notes on deposit in New York
Loan to Military Fund
Deposit to credit of Sinking Fund, Oct. 10, 1865
Total property

These

and assets owned by State

$4,830,475
1,562,820
109,000
435,697
'100,000
200,000
400,509

7,638,494

belong to and constitute the
SINKING

FUND,

fund

provided for the payment of interest on the State debt as it falls
due and of the principal at maturity.
The resources of this fund are
as follows: (1) Tax on Bank Stock, <fec.; (2) Dividends on Bank Stock
owned by State ; (3) Dividends on State Stocks in turnpike roads and
profits on works of internal improvement; (4) lease of penitentiary;
(5) 15 cents Revenue Tax; (6) tax on brokers and insurance offices;
(7) interest on loan to keeper of penitentiary ; (8) proceeds of the Com¬
monwealth Bank and stock in old Bank of Kentucky; (9) redemption
of forfeited lands and escheats; (10) interest on ($74,679 60) L. <t F.
railroad bonds ; (11) dividends on 2,178 shares L. & F. railroad stock;
(12) excess in Treasury over $10,000 ; (13) tax on playing cards; (14)
taxon billiard tables; (15) tax on railroad stocks ; (16) taxes on rail,
road and express companies ; (17) tax of 6* per cent per annum upou
dividends of turnpike roads; (18) tax on insurance companies incor¬
porated by the State; and (19) tax on oil companies, etc., $100.
The total

receipts by the sinking fund in 1864-66 were.".
Treasury, Oct. 10,1864

Add balance in
Total

Balance in

$867,300

20,490
887,790
557,123

resources

Warrants paid from Oct. 11,1864 to Oct. 10. 1865

Treasury. Oct. 10,1865

330,667

The warrants drawn iu 1864-65

for the

following purposes:—
(for coupons) in New York, $240,000; contingent ex¬
penses, $1,510 ; interest on school bonds, $81,465 ; interest on (home)
State debt, $30,142; loan to Military Fund, $200,000, and reduction of
were

Bank of America

State

debt, $4,000—total, $657,123.
THE MILITARY

State

are

FUND.

included all the financial transactions of the

account of the late

The State of

Kentucky, the Auditor
$8,621,000. Of this
sum the Federal government has
refunded to the State the sum of $1,061,000. This leaves due the State the sum of $2,670,000. ■'From this
sum should be deducted the State’s
proportion of the $20,000,000 di¬
rect tax, which the Legislature, by resolution approved
December 28,
1861, assumed to pay the Federal government; this is $606,641, which
deducted, will leave due the State of Kentucky for and on account of
money expended for military purposes $1,963,369.
on

war.

has borrowed and expended during the

VALUATION

$5,254,847

mentioned;

owns

Stock in internal improvements
“
in banks and railroads
Loan to Revenue Debt $100,000,

says,

$750,010

in

original debt

$1,795,000
417,000

$8.910,357

Redeemed prior to Oct. 10. 1861
“

described

Under this head

Amount outstanding Oct. 10,1859 .
Six per cent military loan certificates, 1861
“
“
“
“
“

are

—a

great good, will be the instrument for depriving us of our in¬

DEBT AND FINANCES OF KENTUCKY.

Against the above debt the State
tions and other assets valuedin the

The taxable

war,

AND TAXATION.

property in 1866 is valued at $869,717,161

while in

1864 it amounted

$375,129,756.
This decrease resulted from the
falling off in the value of slave property. In 1864 this item of taxation
was valued at $84,179,246, and in 1865 at
only $7,224,851, a difference
of $26,954,895.
Iam inclined to think,” the Auditor adds, “that the
to

additional increase of tax of. five cents

the $100 for

on

revenue

purposes
will be sufficient with the natural increase of valuation to meet the

of the State government.

expenses

The following shows the value of

ttaxables:
VALUE

OF

Number.

Land,

TAXES.

Num.

61,883,478 Value under equal¬

(over 16

Value,

i

4,280 $16,527,915

ization law

The tax at 40 cents

including

AND

!

$197,676,72V Stores

lots45,560

45,409,895

7,224,851 j Pleasure Car’ges, &c
16,641,815,Gold & ail. wat’s,<fec

153,514
years 63,552)..
Horses & mares.
299,160
Mules
6S.273
Jennies
3,933
.Cattle
520,798
Total valuation

and

TAXABLKS

Value.

17,778,146

acres

Town
Slaves

1,509,182
1,023,719

4,176,248 Gold & silver plate.
167,528; i*iauos

500,803

„

708,259

6,267,247|

$359,717,161

$100 valuation will

on

amount to

$1,488,868 66}
special taxes the total income from

number of minor
taxation will
$1,496,318 95 less collection and allowance. °The
general tax is levied thus—for State revenue 20c, for sinking fund 15c
a
be

and for school fund 5c
The

on

the hundred dollars.

following shows the variations in the valuation for

the last five

1188562--549673..
tons of

one

1861.
Land
$224,656,910
Town lots
51.508,000
Slaves
88,704,682
Horses end mares
22,037,713
Mules
5,681,521
Jennies
506,791
Cattle over$50...
4,510,666
Stores
10,547,876
Value under eqnalization law,....
56,317,873

Carriages, Ac.:..

1862.
1863,
1864.
1865.
$174,187,963 $185,151,296 $196,145,226 $197,676,721
41,142,7:38
47,037.010
56,145,757
61,883,478
57,998.498
57,511,770
34.179,246
7,2&4,851
17,948,088
16,842,503
17,024,£45
16.641,815
4,342.408
4,098,S15
4,409,908
4,176,248
309,351
274,610
293.382
167,528
3,432.621
3.349,618
3,840,288
6,267,247
6,642,301
8.058,397 • 12,457,231
16,527,915
.

45,55S.392
1,420.771

921,415

1,958,568
1,211,283

Watches & clocks
Gold and' silver

plate

47,201,524

974,528

587,416
6:14,319

Pianos
Total
Excl. of slaves.

AND

shown in the

708,259

of the

from all

governm nt

euding October 10, 1865

were

freight carried, and the equivalent passengers and tons carried
yearly for the last seven years,are shown in the statement which

follows:

Fiscal

,—Miles run by engines.
, ,—Passengers. —,
Pass. Freight. Other. Total.
No.
Mileage.
342,752 160,319 8,901 521,972 1,603.453 25,296,855
340,844 177,798 7,352 525,954 1,601,013 24,979.294
346,345 173,265 9,341 523,951 1,47b',394 23,239,178
365,958 193,249 4,910 564,117 1,506,196 24,542,655
363.251 205,354 4,909 573,514 1,689,505 29,425,029
413,488 223,169 1,865 638,522 2,141,19S 39,901,252
433,359 217,598 18,277 669,234 2,336,186 40,499,466

years.

18529-30647.;
1842-63

REVENUE

The gross earnings from
and the resulting profits

Fiscal
Years.

,

Receipts
Balance, Oct. 10, 1864...

$710,463 00
66,285 87

Total resources.......
Warrants drawn

’S’king Fund. School Fund.

776.748 87
757.446 46

Balance, Oct. 10, 1865...

$418,989 03

$194,238 52

28,762 59

$1,323,690 55

14,381 30

109,429 76

447,751 62
342,721 61

208.619 82

171,587 49

1,433,120 31
1,271,749 56

37,033 33

161,370 75

19,302 41

The above is exclusive of the

Deluding which and the balance

Total.

-

105,030 01

military and the enrolled militia funds;
on hand, Oct. 10, 1864 ($225,984 30),

of the

treasury amounted to $2,014,948 92 and the
-expenditures to $1,826,366 43, leaving a balance Oct. 10, 1S65 of
$188^82 49.
resources

^

ANALYSES OF RAILROAD REPORTS.
BOSTON

AND

WORCESTER

RAILROAD.

The Boston and Worcester Railroad forms
Jiine of railroad between Boston and

NO. 20.

an

Albany.

‘

Its constituents

are

as

miles
1.55
1.25
3.87

—Framingham to Milford
—Framingham to Framingham Center

—Grafton to

23.77

sideings

AND

130.50
15.03

CAR8.

rolling stock on the road owned by the company at the close of
(Nov. 30,) 1859-65, both inclusive, is shown in the fol.

the fiscal years

lowing

statement:

Close
of year.
1859.
1860....
1861....

Locom.

engines.
30
30
30
30
30
32

,.

1862....
1863....
1864....
...5681

35

The above

are

/—Pass cars—. Bag’e
8-wh. 4-wh. 8-wh.
46
49
49
49
45
51
54

.

exclusive of

tween Boston and New York.

9
6
1
1

1
1
1

‘

cars on

8
9
9
9
9
9
9

.—Freight

cars—.

8-wh.
269
272
275
273
308
302
295

4-wh.
24
23
13
10
10

Gravel. Total
,

4-wh. numb.
73
429
61
420
.

55
51
48

9

none

9

none

402
393
421
372
368

the land and steamboat lines be¬

This company owns

44-286ths of the
rolling stock of the land route, which in 1865 consisted of 24 passenger,
11
baggage and express, and 8 post-office cars ; and 2-5ths of five
passenger and two baggage cars on the steamboat route.
YEARLY

The

OPERATIONS

ON

THE

ROAD.

mileage of engines with trains, the number of




1,471,985
1,697,164

984,520
1,160,106

$1,10S,781

33.707

1.019,148

385,615
471,064
451,543
414,684

33,341
34.493
35,119
41,520
38,411
53,311
62,300

923,224
1,067,070
1,045,683
1,006,130

70,506

FINANCIAL

The financial condition

928,933

of the

406,462
352,295
501,636

439,284
408,595
490,804

483,858
487,465
537,058

CONDITION.

company as

at the close of the fiscal
years,

shown on the general
(November 30), 1855-56

1864-66, both years inclusive; is indicated in the statement which

follows

:

<lose of
Year.
1855-56....

1856-57....

1857-58...
1858-59....
1859-60....
1S6C-61....
1861-62....
1862-63....
1863-64...

Capital
...

Liabilities.

$500,000

4,500,000
4,500.000
4,500,000
4,500,000
4,500.000

$114,514

500,000

99 974

500,000
500,000

Dividend

...

...

...

4,500,000
4,500,000

...

...

...

Fiscal

are

-

charged

Account.

follows

as

Real
Estate.

$5,639,731

648,049

5.655,996

5,528,160
5,751,512
5,327,567
5,243,180
5,335,584
6,550,889
5,557,510
5,913,789

:

Gd. Jctn
RR bond,

,

Total
Amount-.

421,022
382,386
541,917
599,982
437,076
556,363
571,009
591,607

260,526

229,061
505,211

Construction

Years.

180.000
180.000
180.000
185,567
231,959
236,842

47,585
126,104
93,654
247,921

4,500,000

Against which

135,000
135,000

29,595

4,500,060

...

Reserve

(January). Income.
$135,000 $390,217

60,774

...

.

Floating

Debt.

$4,500,000

...

.

1864-65...

Funded

Stock.

Materials
Other
on hand.» Assets.

Cash on
hand.

...$4,855,411

$48,939

$100,000

4,841,779
4,689,098
4,728,580
4,738,442
4,500,000
4,500,000
4,500,000

$237,918

55,134

$359,541

100,000
100,000

$37,922

250,042

421,960

35,892
44,914
40,068
5,094
20,179

1838-59

54,608
54,458
75,998

109,000
100,000
100,000

92,831

4,500,000

126,933
144,925

281,100

100,000

103,008

144.862

100,000
100,000
£47,620

100,028
100,028
100,028

4,500,000

’.

192,276
497,264
138,160 “ 689,946

160,358

385,245
446,531
661,690

173,294
208,562

659,170
739,531

44,163

28,818
25,018
15,018

DEDUCTIONS.

The

following table deduces from the above statements the cost of
earnings, operating expenses, aud profits per mile ;
also, the ratio of the expenses to earnings, and of the profits to cost of
road and the gross

road

:

Fiscal

Cost of road Earnings
per mile.
per mile.

Years.

1855-56..
1856-57..

..

1357-58..
1858-59..
1859-60..
1860-61..
1861-62..
1862-63..

$70,985
70,830
63,554

Expenses
per

mile.

Expenses ^Profits Divi-

mile.

60.58
60.12
61.83
52.99
54.06
56.07
51.22
60.99
66.90
68.39

to cost dend
of RR. stock
8.99
7
8.39
6
7.51
6
10.61
7
9.27
8
9.07
8
8
10.89
9
10.71
10.83
10
11.93
10

length of the road

and branches

$16,210
14,900

$9,820

13,499
15,600
15,288

8,266
8,865

13.581

5,971

14,709

7,541

7,168

17,582
21,520

10.433

7.049

14,393
16,961

to

Earning!3.

7,334
6,423

7.610

7,127
7,851

69,131

69,277
65,789
65,7S9

8,957
8 347

65,789

1864-65..

65,789
24,812
are based on the whole

The above
68.4 miles in

Profits
per

aggregate length.

$6,390
5,943
5.152

THE UNITED STATES DEBT.

give below the statement of the public debt, prepared from
reports of the Secretary of the Treasury, for February 1, March
1, and April 1, 1866 :
DEBT BEARING INTEREST IN COIN.

68.40
62.10

Equivalent single track owned by the company
Leaded road—Agricultural Branch,
Framingham Centre to Northboro.
The

$437,061

1,202,654

$671,720
612,686
570,929
565,434
606,399
520,338
515,826
714,296

$33,430

We

3.07—

EQUIPMENT—ENGINES

Profits.

the

Total length of main line and branches

Second track and

Yearly

Expenses.

438,102

559,021
472,729
'
967,719
1,149,343
1,409,685
,
1,008,158
623,500

'

44.63

11.97
2.06

Millbury

427,404 16,060,097

Operating

,

Total.

$509,225

561,508

...

follows:
Main Line
—Boston to Worcester
Branch Lines—Boston to Brookline
—West Newton to Newton Lower Falls
—Natick to Saxonville

352,999 12,619,150
345,174 13,403,609
332.494 14,876,747
413.731 16,099,090
458,320 17,823.725

transportation, the expenses of operating*
are shown in the following statement :

1853-64..

important link in the

Tons.

ACCOUNTS.

Gross Earnings
Passenger. Freight. Other.

$566,126
547,339
604,268

1859 60
1860-61
1861 62

to

Freight.
,
Mileage.
327.350 11,605,506
,

yearly

1881-62

following statement.
Geu’l Fund.

the total

601,590

524,815

EXPENDITURES.

expenses
all accounts for the year

on

500,303

512,050

468,863,6-2 £54.917,150 372,968,047 375,129,756 359,717.161
380,158,940 296,918,652 315,456,277 £40,950,510 £52,492,310

ordinary receipts arid

sources and

45,409,895
1,509,182
1,023,719

515,803

1.381.113

504,386
500,228

RECEIPTS

The

47,217.147
1,383,198
976,635

421

mile

balance sheet

years:

as

1188653--6254901.

THE CHRONICLE.

April 7,1866.]

passengers

and

Denominations.
6 per cent,
6
do
6
do
5
do
6
do
6
do
6
do
6
do
do
6
6
do
5
do
6
do
6
do

Feb. 1.

due December 31,1867.....
r
July 1,1868
Januarv 1, 1874

January 1.1871

December 31,1880
June 30,1881
June

March 1.

$9,415,250

$9,415,250

8,908,341
20,000,000
7,022,000
18,415,000

20,000,000
7,022,000

139,288,1(0

8,908,£12
20,000,000
7,022,000
18,415,000
50,000,000
139,284,660

‘ 100.000.000
50,590.300

514,780,500
100,000,000
61,263,000

172,70.9,100

514,780.500
100,000.000
65,175,500

172,769,100

171,219,100
1,016,000
75,000,000

50,000.000

30,1861, exe’d for 7.30s

May 1, 1867-82 (5.20years)..

Nov. 1, 1870-85 (5.20 years)
Nov. 1, 1870-84 (5.20 years)
March 1,1874-1904 (10.40s).

July 1,’81 (Oregon war)..
June 30,1881,

.

8,908,342

April 1.
$9,415,250

139,233,250
514,780,500

1,016,000
75,000,000

18,415,000
50,000,000

1,016,000
75,000,000

Aggregate of debtbearing coin interest $1,167,149,742 $1,177,867,292 $1,180,230,342
DEBT BEARING

INTEREST IN LAWFUL. MONEY.

4 per cent Temporary Loan 1
in
)
5
do
do
1
r
6
do
do
( nouce> )
do Certificates (one year)
6
5
do One and two-years’ notes
6
do Three years’com. int.notes..
6
do Thirty-year bonds (Central Pa¬
cific R.)....
6
do
do
(Union Pacific

7.20 do
7.30 do
7.30 do

R.R., E. Div.

Three years’ treas. n., 1st s..
do
do
2ds..
do
do
3d s..

114.755,840

$118,577,939

$121,751,970

60,637,000
8,536,900
180,012,141

62,264,000
8,536,900
174,012,141

62,258,000
8,536,900

172,012,141

2,362.000

2,362,000

2,362,000

992,000
300,000,000 )
300,000,000 V

1,632,000

2,272,000

818.044,000

817,014,000

230,000,000)

Aggregate of debt bearing lawful
money interest
.$1,185,428,980 $1,179,475,236 $1,188,207,011

debt on which interest has ceased.

7.30 per cent

$233,500

$167,350 )

200,830

Three-years1 Notes

do
’ Texas Indemnity
Other bonds and notes

200,630 )

'...

$930,680

618,000 >

665,000

Bonds.

$930,580
$422,749,252

DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST.

Fnited States Notes
Fractional currency

$423,902,223

$423,435,373

26,553,244

27,523.734

Currency

$450,455,467 $450,959,107 $451,754,704
9,665,160
8,391,080
12,627,600

depos;t

Treasury

$116,018,959

$122,147,3S1

$1,167,149,742 $1,177,367,292 $1,180,236,342
1,197,295,881 1,185,428,980 1,186,207,011
985,780
1,373,920
*
930,680

458,846,547

Debt bearing no interest
Cash in treasury
LEGAL

..

460,419,864

463,586,707

$2,324,391,500 $2,827,868,759 $2,827,793,896
107,493,348
122,147,381
116.01S,959

Aggregate debts of all kinds

For week

TENDER NOTES IN CIRCULATION.

years1 5 per cent notes..
United States'notes (currency)
Thres years1 6 per ct comp. int. notes

$8,536,900
423,902,223
180,012,141

423,435,373
171,012,141

$8,536,900
422,749,252
173,012,141

Aggregate legal tender notes in circul

$612,451,264

$605,984,414

$8,536,900

Virginia 5

|1

ending March 24.

per

our own

Correspondent.]
London, Saturday, March 24, 1866.

Thur

Fri.

|

71)4
57ft

cent

cent
New York

1

Sat.

71 ft
57

51

Sat.

71ft

51ft

71ft
56ft
51ft

73
77

74

74

74

73

77
73

77
73
56

77

77
72

70

74
83
70

73
56 ft
74
83
70

77 ‘
74
55 ft
75
84
70

8034

79)4

79)4

79ft

69
59

G9
59

69
59

100

100

85

56)4
75

83

56ft
51ft

72

55ft

55ft

74
84 ft
70

74

79ft

79ft

84ft
70

1881. 6 per cent
with op:ion to be

69
59
100

100

85

85

85

85

85

37)4

37)4

37)4

37ft

37ft

76)4

76)4

76)4

76

76

76

76

76

76

76

76

9334
79)4

93)4

93
79

93

79

34

33)4

34)4

92ft
78ft
33ft

92
76
33

paid in

Philadelphia
Canada government 6 per cent,

ido

69
59
100

76

gaze, 6 per cent
dollar shares

50

Jan. &

July, 1877-84.,
5 per cent, Jan.
do
Grand Trunk of Canada

71)4
Otft

37ft

Pennsylvania Railroad bonds, 2d mort-

do

7134
57)4

Fri.

74

do
consolidatedmoit. bonds
Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid
do Convertible bonds, 6 per centIllinois Central, 1S75, 6 percent
do
do
7 per cent, 1S75..
do
100 dollar sh*s,
Marrietta and Cincinnati, 7 per cent...
New York Central, 100 dollar shares...
Panama Rail, 7 per cent. 1872. 2d mort.

do

Thur.

51

6 per

Pennsylvania section, 1st mortgage

iHonetarg antr Commercial Qhtglis!) Nem.
[From

1

Mon. Tues. Wed.

Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mortgage,

Catcst

Wed

87

The highest prices touched each day have been :

Atlantic and Great Western,
section. 1st mortgage,

$603,298,293

One and two

1

60.077,680

RECAPITULATION.

Debt hearing interest in coin
Debt bearing inter1 st in lawful money
Debt on which interest has ceased...

freely dealt in.

United Strifes 5-20’s

$107,493,348

tt....

been

$62,069,701

$55,736,192
60,282,767

$51,443,162
56,050,186

Coin

Currency

S7ft

87
1
1 87
| 87
!1 1 87
In the market for American securities the leading feature of interest
is a rapid advance in the Virginia 6 per cent bonds, arising out of nu¬
merous
proposals to fund the overdue coupons, preparatory to resuming
payment of iuterest. United States 5-20 bonds have ruled firm, and
have realized 71 f.
Atlantic and Great Western Railway shares have

Consols.

$463,5S6,707 $461,419,864

$458,846,517.

Aggregate of debt bearing no interest.
Amount in Treasury—

28 005,452

1

Tues

Mon

railway shares have con¬
of consols each day of the

19 TO MARCH 24, INCLUSIVE.

PRICES FROM MARCH

$985,780

$1,099,330

has ceased

Gold certificates of

Consols, most foreign securities, as well as
tinued dull. Below I give the highest price
week:
1

Aggregate of debt on which interest

Total in

[April 7, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

422

& July

7334
33ft

69
59

The

tendency of the rate of interest throughout Europe is still in a fa.
vorable direction, and the probability is that in the course of a few
weeks the rate at Paris will be three, and in London five per cent. The
opinion that this reduction will take place herehas gained ground con¬
siderably during the last few day£!jyid-44-‘Ts*now pretty generally as¬
sumed that the directors will make the reduction after the quarter shall
have been passed, and the dividends paid. During the last few days
monetary and commercial affairs have been in quite an anomalous posi.
tion: the rate of interest has given way ; but at the same time trade,
instead of showing signs of fresh life, has continued to decline, whilst the
various classes of securities are in a state of depression. Commercially,
business during the week just concluded has, in almost *wery depart¬
ment, beeu extremely quiet, and where changes have occurred in prices
the movement has been decidedly unfavorable.
In some quarters
transactions have been restricted by a disposition on the part of buyers
to delay their purchases till after the close of the quarter ; but in other
departments augmented supplies haveiiad an important effect in cur¬
tailing the extent of trade. The immense import of cotton at Liverpool
has been the cause of restricting the purchases of spinners in a very
material degree, whilst from the same cause buyers of cotton yarn and
cotton goods at Manchester have confined their operations to the supp ly
of their immediate wants, the large import and the large quantity of
cotton afloat from the East Indies having necessarily made them uncer¬
tain as to the price they should offer for any considerable supply of
goods.
Respecting the fall in the value of securities, the principal reasons
which suggest themselves are the affairs of certain of the financial com¬
panies, which have even had the effect of shaking public confidence in
some of the most reliable and sound companies in existence, and the
unfavorable state of the present relations between Austria and Prussia
concerning the Duchies of Schleswig-Holstein. These rumors are ne
eessarily of a very contradictory nature ; but they at times exert con
siderable influence on the prices of national and foreign securities
The demand for accommodation this week has been moderate.

The

prospectus of a new Egyptian loan has been issued. The amount
required is £3,387,300, at 7 per cent, the price of issue being 90 per
£100 bond.
The loan is to be redeemable in a period of fifteen years,
and as security the Viceroy has hypothecated certain valuable lands,
which

are

.said to be worth double

the amount of the loan.

As

the

greater part of the loan has already been forwarded to Egypt, its in¬
troduction has excited very

scrip has been doue at

*

little influence on the money market. The
The loan is divided in equal por¬

to 1£ prem.

tions between London and Paris.

The subscription books to the stock of the Anglo-American Telegraph
Company were closed on the 13. All the capital required to make and
lay a new cable, and to get up and complete the one laid last year has
been subscribed.
The contractors are making nineteen nautica^miles
of the new cable per day, and it i9 claimed to be a great improvement
upon that of last year. The Great-Eastern was being put in the most
perfect order, and the 30th June is the day fixed for her departure from
Sheerness for Valentia, Ireland.

literature.
The

Origin of the Late War; Traced from the Beginning of the
By George
pP. 491.

Constitution to the Revolt of the Southern States.
Lunt. New York : D. Appleton & Co., 1866.

Mr.

George Lunt is well known in Boston. He was an old
whig leader, and in the “ Slaughter-house Convention” of that
party at Philadelphia, in 1848, led off’ the delegation of Massachu¬
setts from the support of Daniel Webster to cast the vote for
Zachary Taylor. Subsequent events have thrown him pretty much
out of public notice ; still, however, he maintains a position among
“conservative” politicians, along with such names as Winthrop,
Cushing, Fillmore, Granger, and Thayer. The book has been writ¬
rather late

period for the purposes which the author had iu
view, but still it gives a very elaborate exposition of the contro¬
versy which is well worth consideration.
ten -at

a

He has endeavored to trace the anterior

It

course

of the

long

con¬

progressed, a fair supply of bills having been troversy between the North and the South , without regard to
Slavery, he declares, though
held back in the early part, a few holders having anticipated the possi¬ party interests or prepossessions.
made an occasion was not iu reality the cause of the war.
“ Selfbility of a further reduction in the rates of discount. The close of the
quarter has produced a slight degree of firmness to-day, but in the open seeking and ambitious demagogues ” succeeding the wise and patri¬
market money is obtainable at i to £ per cent below the bank rate. A otic citizens of the former period, disturbed the equilibrium of the
considerable supply of gold is now on passage from Australia, of which motion, and accomplished that calamity.
It is the misfortune of Repubublican institutions,” he remarks,
a fair proportion is now due.
The quotations for discount in the open
that many who have paid little attention to matters of state poli¬
market are as under:
PerCent.
Percent.
cy, and seem scarcely able to understand it, must pass judgment
30 days’ bills
5ft@ft
4 months’ nills
6ft to 7
has increased

as

the week

“

“

60
do
8 months’bills

5ft@ft
6 @.

do
do
4&6 months bank paper
6

6ft to 7

who have made
happened in this
On the Continent the principal change is at Paris, but the general
tendency in the money market is downwards, although no important turmoil of politics, that the latter have been too frequently set aside
changes have taken place. The quotations at the leading cities are as for inferior persons, and their better considered opinions disregarded
follows:
in favor of those of transient Congressmen, often incapable by na¬
Bank
Bank
Open
Open
rate,
market.
rate. market.
ture, and sometimes disqualified for calm judgment by persona
$ c.
$ c.
® c.
$ c.
Oft to

—

upon men of superior ability and high attainments
such topics the study of their lives. Hence it has

•

5
6

4)4
Amsterdam.




5*

i.

3ft
5)4
6)4-6

Turin
Brussels

4)4
5ft

Hamburg:
St. Petersburg

Madrid

;

4
4
9
—

5ft

4ft
4)4
Uncertain.

4

£ft

habits, and of Governors of States, who ought to have
among

remained

the governed.”

Aox)ther

object of this work of Mr. Lunt has been “ to place

THE

April 7, 1866.]

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS

light the intelligent and patriotic conduct of conservative
men of both great parties
which took a leading part in the affairs
of the country, until incidental causes deprived them of their due
influence.” This motive he dectores was not merely to render just¬
ice to the South, but to see to the safety of the body politic. Much

its true

prominence has been allowed to the State of Massachussetts as. pre¬
senting the most striking example among the several States, and
being the most conspicuous of them all in pressing the claims of
State rights from the earliest period.
“ No State has been at times
more

exclusive and sectional.”

the Whig partv>
their democratic
adversaries. Their position was that they could not interfere with
slavery in the States ; that it was imprudent to take action in rela¬
tion to slavery in the District of Columbia ; but that they bad a
perfect right to oppose the introduction of slavery into any terri¬
They were united while
tory of the United States already free.
.

as

Politically Mr. Lunt declares his confidence in
transcending by far, in principles and policy,

the democrats

were

divided, and, hence,

were

423

CHRONICLE.

hated by the liberty

Course

or

Gold

NKV&T

March.—Gold has declined steadily through

for

opening at 1861 and closing at 12'7f. On the 26th H touched
125J, the lowest point. The following is the course of gold for the

the month,
month.1

-

COURSE or GOLD FOB MARCn.
to
*

*5
Date.

Lowest. Closing.

JS
ta

0.

5

0

Openi’g

Date.
-

^

50

if

Lowest.]

XX

-M

m

O

5

136
; Tuesday
20 128# 128* 127* 128#
1 136* 136* 136
2 135* 136# 135* 135# 1 Wednesday..21 128* 128# 128* 128#
3 134* 134* 133# 133# I Thursday... .22 128# 128* 127* 127*
i
128# 126*
Friday.
23 128
4
24 126* 126* m
5 182* 184 182# 132* Saturday
25
6 132* 133# 182* 133* lSanday
126*
26 125# T26#
!Wednesday... 7 •133# 133# 183* 133* Monday
Tuesday
27 136# 128* 136# 128
Thursday
8 132*' 132* 131* 132
Friday
9 m# 182# ‘136# 130# Wednesday.. 28 12?#] 128 V 127# 1128
Saturday
10 130* iai# 129* 131# Thursday.... 29 128# 1128# i 127*427*
Friday
..30 "'(Good Friday )
Sunday
11
31 12?# 128# 127#
Monday
12 131* i32 130# 130# Saturday
i Tuesday
13 129* 130# 129* 131
'Wednesday. ..14 130* 131* 130* 130* March, 1866.. 136# 136# 124* 127#
201' 148# 151#
I860.... 201
Thursday
15 131* 131* 130* 131
1864.... 169# 169# 159 t 164*
130* 130#
; Friday
16 131. 131
1863.... m* 171# 139
149*
•Saturday
17 130* 130* 129# 129*
“
1862... 102# 102# 101# 101*
Sunday
18
100
100
1861.... 100 |100
127* iss#
Monday
19 128# 129

Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday

■

m

1

....

.

....

,

..

.

“

•

“
“

If thoy had stood firmly to their original
principles they might, Mr. Lunt thinks, have gained their ascend*
Course of Exchange for;March.—The following table shows the
ency, and saved the country from the incomparable ills with which
it has been, and is likely long to be afflicted.
But they became en¬ daily fluctuations of Exchange (long) on London, Paris, Amsterdam
tangled in the meshes of sectionalism, and left their honorable chiefs, Bremen, Hamburg, and Berlin, at New York for March, 1866 :
party most cordially.

,

“

^

while the democrats showed themselves

in the main, the defenders

COURSE or EXCHANGE TOR MARCH.

of the Constitution.

going at great length through the details of the contro
versey, Mr. Lunt finally brings his labor to the following conclu¬
sions, which deserve careful attention from statesmen ;
The superior power of the United States has been completely vin¬
dicated, and the South has abandoned all further purpose of resist¬
The speediest possible restoration of the Southern States to
ance.
equal rights under the Constitution is for the highest interest of the
whole country, if the Union is to be and to remain a republic of
equal rights in conformity with its own organic law. ' The present
irregular, unequal and disorganised system of government, for the
common safety, ought uot to be permitted to continue for a moment
longer than the most unavoidable necessity requires. The reason
why restoration is delayed he attributes to ambition of a particular
party for power. When the people rise above this and place the
country upon the free and solid foundation of the Constitution and
the Union, then only can the Republic be “ Peace.”
After

Letters

By Mrs. L. H. Sigourney.

of Life.

pleton

& Co

,

New York: D Ap¬

1806.

Mrs.

Sigourney is a familiar name in American households, and
her productions have but recently ceased to fill the “ Poet’s Corner”
in newspapers.
It must, however, be acknowledged, from a hasty
examination of these “ Letters of Life,” that her. gift as. a corres¬
pondent fully equalled her poetic inspiration. In this volume we
have almost her biography, sketched out by herself, and about it
nothing ary or tedious. She possessed great power of writing ex.
temporaneously upon passing subjects at call; and as is usual when
a woman steps somewhat from the accustomed circle^ she was often
beset for an immense number of literary contributions, such as
poems for albums, letters giving information of the best boarding
schools, marriage odes, reading manuscripts to see whether they
should be published, obtaining teachers, writing epitaphs and puffs
for an author to make his reputation by, preparing a list of female
poets, punctuating manuscript, drafting a constitution for a literary
society, acting as umpire to a baby show, correcting poetry, versi¬
fying a love story, etc. “ If there is any kitchen in Parnassus,”
she declares, “my muse has surely officiated there as a woman of
all work, and an aproned waiter.”
Her literary course had its
origin in impulse, but finally became a form of subsistence. Yet.
she received little pecuniary advantage from it in New England.
Her benefactors were principally from New York and Pennsylvania.
Letters of appreciation, however, came from others, as from the
King of Prussia, the Empress of Russia, and the late Queen of
France.
We have glanced over the collection with interest. Each chapter
is beautiful and attractive from the first—“ Home and its Inhabi¬
tants”—till the last, w Good Bye.” Her description of her Garden

equals that of Gail Hamilton, besides Laving
short, she verified her own testimony :




“I

never

a

better moral.

payment seemed not to be with the toil;
But wheresoever the kind affections sought
To mix themselves by music with the mind.
was ,my

1.
2.

108#@108*
108#@108*
108#@108*

C25

108*@108*

525

@518*

108#@108*

525

@520

71 @71#
71 #@71#
71 @71#

40#@40* 78 @78*
40#@40* 78 @78*
40#@40* 78 @78*
40#@40* 78 @78*
40#@40* 77*@7S#
40#@40* 77*@78#

35*®36#
35*@36#
35*@36#
35*@36#
35*@36*
35*@36#

70*@71#
70*@71*
70*@71#

@78* 36 @36*' 71#@7t#
@78* 35*@36* 71, >@71#
40#@40* 78 @78* 35*@36* “71 '@71#

107*@107*
107*@108*
107*@10S
107#@107*
107*@107 *

530

107

36 @36*
36 @36*
36 @36*

40#@40*

526#@520
527#@520
527#@520
527#@520
528*@521#
528*@521#

78
78

77#@78
77#@78
77*@78
77*@78
?7#@78
530 @527# 40#@40* 77 @77*

@522#
527#@522#
527#@522#
530 @526#
530 @527#

@107#

25..

@78,*
@78*
@78*

40#@40*

108*@108*
108*@108*
108#@108#
108*@108#
107*@108#
107*@108
19..
20..
21..
22..
23..
24..

78
78
78

40*@41

108*@108* 525 @518*
108#@108* 523*@520
;;108*@108* 527#@520
108 *@108* 527#®520

10..

78#@78* 36 ,@36# 71 *@71#
78 @78* 86 @36* 71 #@71#
78 @78* 36 @36* 71#@71#

40*@41
40*@40*

@520

5.
6.
7.
8..
9..

v. .7

•

40*@40*
40*@40#
40*@40*

523*@518*
525 @520

3.
4.

rlx daler.

Hamburg.
Berlin,
cents for
cents for
M. banco. ‘
thaler.

40#@40*
40*@40#
40#@40#
40#@40#
40#@40#

.;

inag&tfioa and delight.”

*0#@tl#
70*@7l*
70*@71#

70#@71
35#®36
70 #@70*
35*@36
?0#@70*
36*@36
70#@71
35*@36
70#@70*
35*@36
35*@36* 70#@70*

4

v

40#@40# 77 @77* «>#@35* 70#@70*
530 @526# 40 @40* 77 @77* 35#@35* 70#@70*
107. @107* 530 @526* 40 @40* 77 @77* 35#@35* 70#@70*
106*@107# 528*@527* 40#@40* 77 @77# 35#@35*-' 70#@70*
(Good Friday—no business transacted.)
106#@106* 830 @527# 40 ' @40# 77 @77# 35#@35* 70*@70*

107
107

26..
27..

28..
29..
30..

31..

530 @523*

@107#
@107#

106#@108* 530@ 518* 40 @41
77 ©78* 35#@36* 70^@71#
107#@108* 532*@517# 40#©41
77 @79
35#@36# 70#@71#
108 @109# 523*@515
,40#@41
78 @79# 36 @36# 71- @71*
Assistant Treasurer’s Statement for March.—The following is

Mar
Feb
Jan

the official statement of the
of

March, 1866

business at the Sub Treasury for the month

:
RECEIPTS

AND

DISBURSEMENTS.

$91,646,161 43

Balance March

1,1866
Receipts during the month:

$11,158,954 08

On account of customs
Loans
Internal revenue
Po6t-oflice Department ..
Transfers

2,754,594 40

530,616 21
159,268 68

2,498,673 22
6,542,180 00

Coin certificates.
Patent fees
Miscellaneous

4.610 66

6,004,608 62—

*

$46,299,063 18

$73,894 325 40

1866

Bv balance, cr. disbursing accounts March 1...
By receipts during the month..
To payments
1

$12,312,970 63

11,396,109 69— 23,709,060 32

13,419,675 85

$10,289,404 47

Balance

$4,510,365 16

By balance, cr. interest accounts

By
To

1.000,591 71— $5,510,956 87
2,668,320 93
1,001,973 39— 3,660,294 32

appropriations!
payments—coin..
do

currency

Balance

$1,860,662 55

.

By receipts for customs in
do

; ‘

101,179 01— 46,460,242 19

Post-office drafts
Balance March 31,

28,648,405 86

$120,294,567 29 *

.

Payments during the month :
Treasury drafts

do

March 1866
do

$11,163,$54 68

—

5471^)26 47

1865

$5,682,929 61

Increase

By balance, cr. bullion and expense
By coin received during the month
By fine bars

account for Assay Office...
$1,149,688 58

449,146 50

wrote for feme—

The

That

In

Days.

Bremen.
cents for

Amsterdam.
Paris.
centimes
cents for
for dollars.
florin.

London,
cents for
54 pence.

$366,511 87

1,598,835 08
$1,964,346 95

To

payments in coin
do

fine hars.

Balance............

$1,065,193 16
223,979 01—

1,289,172 17
$675,174 78

t

424

THE CHRONICLE.

By funds in hand, in Assistant Treas. Office—
do
do
Assay Office
By fine bars in Assay Office
By unparted bullion in Assay office
Less temporary loan
Less due depositors

$86,156,646
292,282
329,758
830,506

81
23- 86,448,929 04
39
67— 1,160,260 06

$1,373,540 54
1,079,001 75— $2,452,542 29

Balance

$85,156,646 81
New York.—Below is

at

of business at the United States
month

ending March 31, 1866

a

statement

Assay Office at New York for the

.Foreign coins
Foreign bullion

12,000
12,000
2,000
14,000

Unitea States bullion (contained in gold)

Superior

deposits, payable in bars

00
00
00
00

50,000 00

operations of the United States Mint, during the month ending-March
;

Value.
Total

Value.

$9:34,934 00|Silv. deposits A purcha's

74,924 39

deposits
.

COINAGE

$959,862 27

GOLD.

Denomination. No. of pcs.
Value,
.'Denomination. No. of pcs.
Double Eagles...
76,675 $1,533,500 00)Fine bars.
10

Value.

$4,414 92

76,685 $1,537,917 92

..

SILVER.

Dollars
Half Dollars

100

Quarter Dollars....
Dimes
Total

64,700

32.350 00 Three Cent
25 00 Fine bars

100
100
7

pieces.

10 00

$5 00
3 00
405 54

65,207 $32,893 54
COPPER.

^ent
pieces.
Total

500,000

$5,000 001 Three Cent pieces
7,600 00;

391,000

$11,730 00

1,271,000

380,000

$24,330 00

Imports

and

76,685 $1,637,917 92;Copper

65,207

follows

32,893!54|

1,271.000

$24,330 00

Stcamehip.

March
March
March
March

At date.

.New York

Henry Chauncey

Atlantic
New York....

'

..

for

the

Week.—The

imports

at this port

$ 685,616
1,485,314
2,430,198
3,879,266
5,088,819
6,557,602
7,983,155
8,372,992
9,046,607

944.878

1,449,074

Henry Chauncey

5
12
23
31

To date

,...$ 685,610
799,706
1,209.048

Costa Rica
.New York
Arizona

1,469,286
1,425,553
389,837

Henry Chauncey

673,615

Pennsylvania Railroad Dividends.—We have
prepared the follow¬
ing statement of the dividends paid by railroads in
the years

1860-65

Pennsylvania for

:

Railroads.
Beaver Meadow

Cleveland, Painesville
Cumberland Valley

Cleveland and
Chestnut Hill

1S60. 1861.
20
10
15
15

and Ashtabula

7X

Pitisburg

do

do

'7
.

8

"*X

10

4

7
10

1868. 1864.
22X 15
23
26
8
8
4
3
6
14
24
5

&X
40

Mahoney
Harrisburg and Lancaster
Huntingdon and Broad Top, preferred
Hanover Branch

9
...

36?*
10

1866.
35
8
4

11
15
34
25

5
0

.

preferred

East

'7

14X

'7

•••

5
7
0

'7

7

3X

3X

A

"*X

Iron ton

.

4
5

Lehigh Valley
Lykens Valley

*8

6
6

6

*X

Little Saw’ Mill Run

5
8

3X

.

'8

'8

6

12
10

14

Mount Carbon and Port Carbon

12
8
11

11
8
11

Valley
•

9

8X

.

t

..

.

do

6
12

10
8
10
6
6
12

6

ii*

Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne, and Chicago
Philadelphia and Reading

12
4
12

io
io
6
6

6
*

Nule Creek and Mine Hill
Mine Hill and Schuylkill Haven

Northern Central
North Lebanon
Newcastle and Beaver
Oil Creek

’5

6X

3

Lehigh Luzerne
Lehigh and Mahoney
Little Schuylkill

do

S3X

’3

10
4r

1802.
8

IX

5

Delaware, Lackawanna, and Western

.

1,412,892 $1,595,143 46
Exports

$9,261

:

Mount Carbon

RECAPITULATION.

Gold Coinage....
Silver....Total

as

Hazleton

$100 00 Half Dimes

100
100

been

Delaware and Hudson Canal and Railroad
Erie and Northeast
Elmira and Williamsport

EXECUTED.

Total

—-—

receipts of treasure from California since January 1, 1866, have

12
19
February 1
February 9
February 21

$1,149,972 94
Philadelphia, for coinage...
$815,151 29
United States Mint.—The
following is the official statement of the

deposits

$4,663

2721

January

$200,000 00
1,010,000 00

coins

A8PINWALL.

$4,326!Ribon AMunoz

Janua y

Gold bars stamped
Transmitted to United States mint,

Gold

Wells & Co
Panama Railroad Co

Date.

1,210,000 00

81, 1866

Eugene Kelley A Co

.

$10,000 00

Total

79,668 Lees & Waller
16,700 Order
8,200
Total
104,757
19,196

Harry Cohn

The

$1,160,000 00

do

Duncan, Sherman & Co....

SILVER, INCLUDING PURCHASES.

Lake
Nev

SAN FRANCISCO.

$13,186 Wells, Fargo & Co

Ackerman & Co
Total

$7,000 00
10,000 00
1,143,000 00

United States bullion

do

FROM

Bacon A Russell

Wells, Fartfo & Co

Foreign coin
Foreign bullion

DEPOSITS OF

following is her treasure list:

FROM

:

DEPOSITS OF GOLD.

1

The

California.—The steamship Henry Chauncey arrived
port on the 81st inst, from Aspjpwall, bringing the'California mails
from

$87,609,189 10

to be reimbursed

United States Assay Office

Treasure
at this

[April 7, 1866.

•

7
7
10

20

6X

io
4X

10

10
8

6
12
7
14
12
25

«
12
8
10

7X
7

7X
20
10
15
15
10
8

’7
7
past week though large, are not up to the average for the
9
6X
10
year. In
7
6
the exports are included
8
?X
15,802 bbls wheat flour, 8,624 bbls
8
8
8
10
10
cornmeal, Pennsylvania
10
6
6 ' 8
17,452 bush wheat, 22,728 bush oats, 1,990 bush
9
40
10
peas, 180,212 bush Pennsylvania Coal
7
7
7
sx 30
32X
corn, 1,225 pkgs candles, 10,902 bales
Schuylkill
5
3#
2X
5
cotton, 740 bales hay, Ac., as may Shamokin Valley
5.M
5
Valley and Pottsville
be seen from our
3
4
IX
articles exported given in the Commer¬ Southwark
summary of
6
6
6
6
6
0
cial Epitome.. The
Tioga
6
6
9
7
8
8
following are the imports at New York for the Wrightsville and York
2
2
2
2
week ending (for
4
'4
4
dry-goods) March 29, and for the week ending (for West Chester
4
general merchandise) March 30 :
Bank Liquidation in Virginia.—The
following bill requiring the
FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR
THE WEEK.
Banka of Virginia to go into
liquidation has just passed both the Senate
1S63.
1864.
1865.
1866.
and House of Delegates of that State, and is now
Dry goods
$2,073,598
$1,711,286
only awaiting the
$825,668
General merchandise
$2,549,331
2,000,768
3,316,436
1,941,385
3,423,972 signature of the Govenor to become a law :
Total for the week...
A Bill requiring the banks of this Commonwealth to
$4,074,366
$5,027,722
$2,767,053
go into liquidation.
$5,973,303
Previously reported.. 43,508.106
52,402,795
Whereas, The banks of this Commonwealth, during the
29,478,412
73,796,759
progress of
the war recently waged in the State of
Since January 1
Virginia, sustained such losses
$47,582,472
$57,430,517
$32,245,465
$79,770,062 that
In our report of the
they are
unable to promptly pay their liabilities ; and whereas,
dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry it is the sense nowthe General
of
Assembly that a speedy settlement of the
goods for one week later.
affairs of said banks should be made iD order to a
legal and proper dis¬
The following is a statement of the
exports (exclusive of specie) from tribution of their assets amongst all persons entitled to share in such
distribution ; therefore,
the port of New York to
foreign ports, for the week ending April 8 :
1. Be it enacted by the General
Assembly, That it shall be lawful for
EXPORT8 FROM NEW YORK FOR THE
WEEK.
the president and directors of
any bank, chartered by the General
1863.
1864.
1865.
1866.
for the week
$2,474,375 $3,177,025 * $2,301,742 $3,953,456 Assembly of Virginia, to make, or cause to be made, a deed, conveying
to such person or persons, as said
Previously reported
51,663,840
president or directors may select, all
35,791,200
61,126,093
56,918,975
the assets, real and personal, of said bank, and
Since January 1
providing, in such deed,
$54,137,715 $38,968,225 $53,427,835 $60,872,431 that the proceeds of said assets shall be distributed
amongst all per¬
In the commercial
department will be found the official detailed state sons, corporations and associations entitled to share in such distribution,
ment of the imports and
according to the legal rights and priorities of such persons, corporation*
exports for the week
and associations at the time such deed shall be executed.
The following will show the
exports of specie from the port of New
2. Be it further enacted, That whenever
any creditor or creditors of any
York, for the week ending March 31, 1866 :
bank of this Commonwealth shall, by
any suit or other legal process what¬
March 81—Steamer Germania,
ever, seek to obtain a judgment, decree or order, which said
Hamburg—
judgment, de¬
American gold
$2,500 cree or order, when rendered or made would create a lien in favor of such
German silver
1,000 creditor or creditors, upon the assets of the said bank, or
upon any por¬
Total for the week
tion of such assets, ana
thereby entitle such creditor or creditors to re¬
$3,600
Previously reported
5,364,804 ceive more than his or their just and ratable share or shares in the dis¬
tribution of the proceeds of all the assets of said
Total since January 1,1866
baDk, then, and in
$5,368,304 that case, aod in order to
Same time in
preserve the just rights of all creditors of said
i Same time in
bank to a fair pro rata distribution of the
1865
$4,471,S84 1858
proceeds of said assets, and
$9,330,736 for
1864
the purpose of effecting such distribution, it shall
1857
10,201,367
5,505,400
be the duty of the
1863
15,116,344 1856
3,802.573 president and directors of said bank, and they are
1862
hereby required to
8,885,496 1855
4,5-39,467 make, or cause to be made, a deed of
1861
1,480,522 1854
conveyance of the assets of said
3,891,533 bank in such
1860
manner and form, and for such
4,212,702 1853
2,474,690
purposes as are provided
1859
the

preferred
Philadelphia, Wilmington A Baltimore...
Philadelphia, Germantown A Norristown
Philadelphia and Trenton

7
6X
8

7

,

,

„




..

8.803,619 1852

7,052,415

for in the first section of this act.

,

THE CHRONICLE.

April 7,1866.]

8. Be it further enacted, That it shall be the doty of the banks of
this Commonwealth or the legal representative or representatives of
such banks, on the let day of April next and quarterly thereafter, until
final liquidation, to publish in some public newspaper of the State near¬
est the location of such bank or banks, a statement under oath of their
condition, and to make distribution of assets on hand at the end of
each quarter, according to the provisions of the first section of this act,
so far as the same can be done
consistently with the interests of all the
conditions of said banks ; provided that nothing herein contained shall
be so construed as to compel the president and directors of any bank

Receipts
Customs
Public lands

We

The

6
5

April 10.

5
5

April 14 Co’y’s office, N. Y April 4 to April 16.
April 14 470 West 8uth st. April 7 to April 14

WHERE.

On dem

5
4

BUSINESS

At Bank.
At Bank.

On dem.

April 1 to April 7.

Company’s Office
April 10 Company’s Office April8 to April 10

THE

AT

The afternoon sessions of the hoards

STOCK

BOARDS.

intermitted

were

on Tuesday out of re¬
spect to the memory of the late John Ward, Esq., and to afford opportunity to

the members to attend his funeral.

Mr. W ard

was

one

of the oldest and most

respected members of the Regular Board.
The following shows the description and number of shares sold at the
Regu¬
lar and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Fri¬
day:
Sat.
Mon. Tues. Wed. Thnrs. Fri’y. Week.
Bank Shares

Magenta

and Solferino.—Displacement, 6,750 tons;
1,000 horse power ;
draught, 26 feet; length of load line, 280 feet; breadth, 57 feet; wooden
hull, 4# inch armor plating; weight of armor, 900 tons; speed in smooth water
—Magenta, 13# knots ; Solferino, 14 knots.
Couronne.—Displacement, 6,000 tons: 900 horse power; mean draught 25
feet; length of loaa line, 260 feet; breadth 55 feet; iron hull; 4% and 3 inch ar¬
mor
plating-weight of armor, 700 tons ; speed in smooth water, 13 knots.
mean

49

.\

40

85

125

Jersey....
300
350
Chicago A Alton
50
45
Chicago, Bur. A Quincy
6,850
Chicago A Northwestern. 3,900
3,100
Chicago A Rock Island... 2,400
4,655
1,900
20
30
Cleveland, Col. A Cine
Cleveland & Pittsburg....
6,600 12,700 11,600
•

.

.

Cleveland A Toledo

Hudson River
Illinois Central
Little Miami

-

100

...

....

Pitts., Ft. Wayne A Chic.

St. Louis, Alton A T. H..
Toledo A Wabash....

'300
.

....

.

200

5,400

::::

.

.

.

.

.

.

'ioo

300

....

'ioo

100
300
100

500
10
100

.

.

.

•

100

.

•

-

.

....

100

•

800

.

.

.

.

•

....

•

•

•

•

/
'

<666
...

W estern Union Telegraph
W
Union Tel.—Ruasi
Extension
.

2,600
200
700

....

1,325

4*300
•

•

•

•

118

.

30
....

.

....

50
78.800

200
50

1,300

3,100

14,420

19,565

350
200

800
100

.

•

.

ioo

....

1,700
8,500

600
160

....

....

100
100

7,500

200

20,: oo

8,750

100

88,920

10

215
89
150

19,270

•

•

200

....

....

....

2,000

4,370

1,030

420

2,200

1,000

4,200
7,700

19,000
37,000

200

300

4,200

*

*

*

*

....

j
100
_

100
•

•

•

•

•

*

•

V

800

....

160
100

50
400

1,190

'500
1,500
680

50
700

200
100

1,800

....

*1,200

5,600
300
470

420

10

9
....

200
500

700
90
800

....

....

1,724

93,133
8,250
500
48
505
200

-

200

....

150

....

....

....

’ioo

.

20,900

•

....

....

.

17,900

.

2,700

2,300'
2,500

6,300

40

Wyoming Valley Coal

100
12

.

1,300

....

Pennsylvania Coal
Quicksilver
Spring Mountain Coal
Schuylkill Coal...
Spruce Hill Coal
...

.

.

....

.

Navigation

.

250

200
700

Pacific Mail

Union

24,720

....

100

’if 6

48
100

7,400

4,200
*

*

*

500

5

5
60
150

405

....

.

.

....

Mariposa

Peiho.—Displacement, 1,500 tons; 150 horse power; mean draught, 10# feet;
length of load line, 150 feet; breadth, 45 feet; wooden hull; 4# inch armor plat¬
ing ; weight of armor, 275 tons; speed in smooth water, 7 knots.
Saigon.—Displacement, 1,500 tons; 150 horse power; mean draught, 10 feet;
length of load line, 156 feet; breadth, 46 feet; wooden hull; 4# inch armor plat¬
ing; weight of armor, 275 tons; speed in smooth water, 7 knots.
Embuscade, Impregnable, Protectrice, Refuge.—Displacement, 1,225 tons;
150 horse power; mean draught, 9# feet; length of load
line, 130 feet; breadth,
51 feet; iron hull, 5# inch armor plating.
Arrogante, Implacable, Opiniatre.—Displacement. 1,340 tons: 150 horse
,power ; mean draught, 8# feet; length of load line, 145 feet; breadth, 48 feet;
iron hull, 5# inch armor
plating. The Implacable has made 7# and the Opiniatre
8 knots

*

18,675

403

1,450

.

18,350
15,150

....

....

14,400

....

300

.

.

9,100
1,000

.

100

17

4,700

.

....

....

*

American Coal
Ashburton Coal
Brunswick City
Atlantic Mail
Canton
Central Amer. Transit
Central Coal
Cumberland
Del. A Hudson Canal

Belliqueu9e.—Displacement, 3,350 tons; 900 horse power: mean draught,
19# feet; length of load line, 230feet; breadth, 40 feet; wooden hull; 6 inch
armor plating; weight of armor, 100 tons.
Paixhans and Palestro.—Displacement, 1,540
tons; 150 horse power; mean
draught, 8# feet; length of load line, 156 feet; breadth, 40 feet; wooden hull;
4# inch armor plating; weight of armor, 275 tons; speed in smooth water, 7
knots.

8,550

6,000
7,800

Reading R. R

Taureau.—Displacement. 2,450 tons; 900 horse power; mean draught, 16 feet;
length of load line, 200 feet; breadth, 47# feet; wooden hull; 4# inch armor
plating; weight of armor, 800 tons.

....

.

.

663

110

1,000

.

200
200

....

....

Milwaukee A P. du Chien.
Milwaukee & St. Paul....
Morris A Essex
New York Central
Ohio A Mississippi ($100)

.

.

236
.

8,800

1,000

....

110

2,800
4,200

....

.

900

500

..

.

.

150
150
200

1,900

10,350

....

Michigan Southern

.

17,950

Michigan Central R. R.. ?.

water.

200
100

400

Del., Lack. A Western...
Erie Railway
12,173

Marietta A Cincinnati

•

•

..

5,650 tons; 900 horse power: mean draught, 25%
feet; length of load line, 255 feet; breadth, 56 feet; wooden hull; 4% inch ar¬
mor plating;
weight of armor, 800 tons; speed in smooth water, 13# knots.
Invincible.—Displacement, 5,525 tons; 900 horse power; mean draught, 25%
feet; length of load line, 255 feet; breadth, 56 feet; wooden hull; 4% inch armor
plating; weight of armor, 800 tons; speed in smooth water, 13# knots.
Normandie.—Displacement, 5,650tons; 900 horse power; mean draught, 26
feet; length of loud line, 255 feet; breadth. 56 feet; wooden hull; 4% inch ar¬
mor plating; weight of armor, 800
tons; speed in smooth water, 13# knots.
Flandre, Gauloise and Guyenne.—Displacement, 5,700 tons ; 1,000 horse
power; mean draught. 25 feet; length of load line, 260 feet; breadth, 56
feet;
wooden hull; 6 inch armor plating;
weight of armor, 1,000 tons.
Heroine.—Displacement, 5,700 tons; 1,000 horse power; mean draught, 25
feet; length of load line, 260 feet; breadth, 56 feet; iron hull; 6 inch armor
plating; weight of armor, l,00i» tons,
Magnanime, Provence, Revanche, Savoie, Surveillante, and Valeureuse.—Displacement, 5,700 tons ; 1,000 horse power; mean draught, 25 feet;
length of load line, 260 feet; breadth, 56 feet; wooden hull; 6 inch armor plat¬
ing; weight of armor, 1,000 tons. The Provence has made 14 knots in smooth

•

•

253

17
650

Central of New

Gloire.—Displacement,

•

.

•

•

100

2<766

600

4,757
49
100

The volume of transactions in shares at the two

boards, comparatively, for
day of the two last weeks, and the total for the same weeks, is shown in
the following statement:
/-Reg. Board.—. Open Board.-^-Both Boards—x
each

for the lasi

Quarter:

and Year 1865.—The following statement of the
receipts
expenditures of the Government during the last quarter of 1865
was prepared in detail
at the office of the Registrar of the Treasury* Saturday
A comparison with the fourth
quarter of 1864 shows an increase m Monday
receipts of seventy per cent. The Internal Revenue receipts alone of Tuesday
Wednesday
the latter quarter
exceeding those of the former by $27,000,000.
Thursday
Receipts.—Customs, public lands, direct tax, internal revenue and Friday

and

Last

week.

Prev’s
week.

Last i rev’s
week. week.

26,284
33,415

34,800
42,600

47.950

18,105
23,185

31.500

39,750

21,671
29,253
45,443

Total of week

23J739

14,868

,




80.

WHIN?

Hudson River
Insurance.
Ea?le Fire
North River

vessels:

miscellaneous, fractional currency, six per cent, twenty year bonds, tem¬
porary loans, certificates of indebtedness, six per cent, compound inter¬
est notes,,
five-twenty bonds at six per cent., seven aud three-tenths
three years
Treasury notes, ten-forty bonds, five-twenty bonds, $130,678,540 33. Total receipts $270,551,830 08.
Expenditures.—Civil, foreign, and miscellaneous, pensions and
Indians, war, navy, interest on debt, Treasury notes, seven-thirties, three
year coupon bonds, temporary loans repaid, certificates of indebtedness
repaid, Treasury notes, (February, 1862), postage stamps, Ac*, fractional
currency, two year five per cent notes, three year six per cent, notes
bounty loan stock, Treasury notes, 1869, seven three-tenths Treasury
notes, $151,123,807 97. Total expenditures, $271,124,194 44.
The receipts aud expenditures for the year 1865 were as follows:

CLOSED.

BOOKS

o’t.

Chicago A Rook Island

British and French

Government

PAYABLE.

BATE

p.

Banks.

appends the following statement of the French Iron Clads at the pre¬
sent time, said to have been made
up from personal inspection of the

the

announced—

are

Gallatin National
Manufacturers’ National....
Railroads.

McKay, of Boston, to the Herald, he

of

following dividends

NAME OF COMPANY.

6. This act shall be in force from its
passage.

per hour in smooth water.
Receipts and Expenditures

onr

declared.

DIVIDENDS.

of the banks, whose notes are secured, or
were intended to be
secured, by the deposit of State or other stocks
with the treasurer of the Commonwealth, shall
present the same to the
said treasurer in amounts of one hundred dollars, or any multiple there¬
of, the said treasurer is hereby authorized and directed to deliver to
such legal representative or representatives of such bank, ae amour
the stock deposited with him for that
purpose, as aforesaid, equal in
amount to the notes so presented to him.

mgas-

of $619,447,028 61, which has been

year

Bulletin from day to day lists of bonds, Ac., lost, and
These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday
morning, such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin
will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below will he found those
published the last week in the Bulletin.

any

account of

give in

dividends

legal representative

an

$1,096,179,287^87

®tje Bankers’ <&a}ette.

of this act, the trustee or trustees in such deed shall forward such
copy
and make such report within
thirty days after the passage of this act.
6. And be it further enacted, That whenever the

Navies furnished by Mr. Donald

14,493,111 01
887,526,630 55
87.121,120 85
112,865,538 54

Total

$475,732,259 36

Showing a deficiency for the
met by loans.

thirty days after the execution of said deed, to the Governor of this
Commonwealth, a copy of said deed, and also a full and correct report
of the condition of the bank, the assets of which have been
conveyed by
said deed; and whenever any
such deed was made before the passage

French Iron Clad Navy.—In

674,668 40 Pensions & Indians

Total

ance

representatives of

$ 43,172,886 92

741,067 44 War
286,987,666 15 Davy
50,571,696 09 Interest

Miscellaneous

Commonwealth, or the trustee or trustees in any deed of convey¬
made by the president and directors of any bank as provided for
in the first or second sections of this act, to made a final distribution of
the proceeds of the assets of such bank at any period before three years
next succeeding the passage of this act.
4. Be it further enacted, That whenever
any deed of conveyance
shall have been executed under any of the
provisions of this act, the
trustee or trustees in such deed are
hereby required to forward, within

Expenditures.

$136,759,161 28 Civil, foreign, Ac

Direct tax
Internal Revenue

of the

or

425

23,535
83,999

59,670 40.200
40,330 45,100
38.500

170,934 122,563

The Stock transactions
shown in the

35.200

247,400 208,200

weekly since the commencement

following statement:
Both Week ending Regular
Regular Open
Board. Board. Boards
Friday. *
Friday.
Board.
January 6... 181,350 243,900 425,250 Februury 23.... 187,913
January 12... 339,109 328.400 667,509 March
2....217.961
January 19... 243,815 272,300 516,115 March
9....206.849
January 26... 247,743 301.400 549,143 March
16....206.312
February 2.. ..201,107 239,70(1 440,807 March
23....261.106
February 9.. ..209,140 227,800 436.940 March
122,5'*
February 16.. ..234,285 228,700 462,985 April
6.... 170,934
Week ending

.

,.

.

.

Last
week.

61,084
76,015
46,368
81.341

69,583

Prev’a
week

71,689
53,305

62,935
63,735
79,099

83,943

418,334 330,763
of the year are

Open

Board.

Both
Boards

183.200

371,113

221,500
211,300

439,461

213,450
335,910
208.200

247,400

41M,149
419.763

697,016
830.763

418,384

The Government and State, etc., bonds sold at the Regular Board,
daily, la it
week, are given in the following statement:

*

>

:

-

-

-..

—

-—

.

Tues.

$51,000
12,000

$55,000

$2,000
19,500

U.SA’s (10-408

92,660

3,500

2,000

U.S 7-30 notes
U.S Certific’s.

58,500

142,000

33,666

Missouri 6’s..
Tennesee 6’e..
N. Carolina 6’8

$17,000

Virginia 6’s...
Georgia

25,000

U.S. 6’e, 1881.
U.S 6’8(5-20’s).
U.S 6’s (old)..

U.S^’s (old)..

14,000
1,000

...

1

$43,000 $206,000
28.600
103,000
2,000
10,000
113,000
1,500

*

256,800

69,500

665,300
10,000

$7,000
10,000
2,000
7,000

16,000
10,000
2,000
7,000

$94,000
61,000

15,000

1,000

10,000

10,000
1,500

...

-niL

.

15,000

49,000
1,500

.....

•

tations.

17,000

10,000
3,000

7,000

slightly predominated. . The change appears to Ibe attributable
chiefly to the increased demand for money, forcing a partial realiza¬
tion upon securities. The decline of Five-twenties at London and
an apprehension that the difficulties
between Austria and Prussia
may cause a realizing upon American securities at Frankfort, and
a return of them
upon this market has also tended to depress gold
interest bonds, but without producing any material decline in quo¬
has

Fri.

Thur.

$11,000

21,000

'

[April 7, 1§8&_

10,000

$41,000 $12,000

A

y

105,500

....

x

-

$23,000 $32,000
7,600 21,500
7,000
5,000
9,000
•

5.000

,

Wed.

Mon.

Sat.

>

public debt for April 1st, shows that
Secretary of the Treasury has effected further funding conver¬
18^666
5,000
13,000
sions of securities. The compound interest notes have declined in
92,000 amount
5,000
6,000
15,000
50,000
16,000
bounty......
32,000,000, and Seven-thirties $1,030,000; while FiveOhio 6" s
California 7’s,
twenties have been augmented $3,912,000. Ten-forty bonds show
6,000
1,000
5,000
(gold)
600
500
a decrease of $1,555,000.
Connect’t 6’s.
The discovery that these conversions
were partly the
N. Y. city 6’s
cause of the late activity in Government securities,
Brooklyn city
and that the large operations were not wholly due to private opera¬
6’s
4.000
4,000
.The following is a summary of the amount of Governments, State and City
tions, as had been supposed, has tended, among other things, to de¬
•ecnrities, and railroad bonds sold on each day:
press the market during the week.
; Tptal for
“
Fri.: the week.
Mon.
Tiies. Wed!
Sat.
Thnr.
Sixes of 1881 are i lower than a week ago ; the 1st and 2d series
U. 9. Bonds
$63,000 $73,500 $23,500 $39,500 $65,000 $75,600 $339,500
U. S..Notes
69.500
33,000 115,500 256.800
708,800 of 5-20’s are unchanged, and 3d series is | lower.
9^,000 142,000
Ten-forties have
361,000
State&City Bonds 73,000 113,500 42,000 39,000 63,000 30.500
Railroad Bonds..
37,000
102,000 declined i under a diminished demand. Seven-thirties are £{£$■
15,000
12,000
9,001)
7,000
22,000
Certifi¬
Total amount.... $243,000 341,000 -107,500 216,000 391,800 212,000 1,511,300 lower, the 3d series closing at 99J, and the 1st at 100-fr.
The totals of each class of securities sold in the first three months of the yean
cates of indebtedness are £ lower.
Among a timid few there is a
and weekly for the last five weeks, are shown in the statement which follows:
certain degree of uneasiness respecting Federal securities, arising
Total
Governments-;—,
State, &c., Railroad
amount.
Bonds.
out of the relations between the President and the majority in Con¬
Bonds.
Bonds.
Notes.
Louisiana 6’b.

Kentucky

Minnesota 8’6.
N.Y. State 6’s,
New York 7’a

...

3,000

The official statement of the

the

.

;

......

„

-

'

•

/

1,691,500

$3,035,500
1,692,100

$12,165,700
9,822,000

2,903,600

781.240

10,622,840

$958,500

$164,000
141,300
143,000
55,000
102,000

$952,900

$4,827,200 $3,340,100
3,846,500
2,591,900
March
3,931,300
3,006,700
and for the weeks ending on Friday—
March 9
$516,700
$1,134,200
96(5.000
16
J,049,100
“
5*. 0,000
23
396,950
Go
880,500
841,200
708,800
339,5i0
April 6
January

...

February

.

...

870,200

“

634,000
3-8.000

“

361,000

Friday Night,

The Money Market.—There has been an

1

.

.

$1,773,400
2,026,600
1,763,950
2,164,700
1,511,300

April 6, 186&

unusual degree of ex¬

citement, not to say uneasiness in monetary circles during the
week.
The failure of Culver, Penn & Co last week, and the

consequent tuspensiou of several National Banks in the oil re.
gions; the suspension of four brokers firms in connection with spec¬
ulations in petroleum shares; the failure yesterday of the banking
house of Ward & Brother, Rochester ; and of Platt & Co, Boston ;

apprehension of failures in connection with speculations in
Michigan Southern shares, have conjointly produced a certain de¬
gree of feverishness.
These occurrences are construed as indicating a prevailing weak¬
ness in the condition of firms, and are producing a very decided
caution in matters of credit, and an indisposition to advance money
for speculative enterpi ises.
An increased activity in the stock market has augmented the de¬
mand for temporary loans, and the rate, on call, has ranged during
the week at six per cent, with occasional exceptions at seven per
and the

cent.

The circumstances above noted have increased

the disposition to

this, however, can scarcely be considered as appreciably af¬
fecting the value of bonds. % .
The following are the closing quotations for the leading Govern¬
ment securities, compared with those of previous weeks :
gress ;

Mar. 2. Mar. 9. Mar. 16. Mar. 23. Mar. 29. Apr. 6
U.
U.
U.
U.
U.
U*
U.
U.
U.

S. 6’s, 1881 coup
S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons.
S. 5-20’s, 18t>4
..
44
S. 5-20’s, 1865
..
“
S 10-40’s, • •
“
..
S 7-30’s 1st series
S. 7-30’s 2d Series

S 7-80’s 3rd series.....
S. lyr’s certificates....

Railroad

and

104#
103%

103
103%

xc90%

99%

104}*
103%
103%
103%
90%
99%

99%
99%

98%

99%
99%
99

104}*
103%
103%
103%
90%
-

100,
99%
99%
99%

164%-. 105

103%
108%
10;<%
90%

104%
101%
104%
92
100%

99%
99%

100%
100%
99^

100

99%

104%
104%
H4%
104

91%

100%
100
99%

99%

Miscellaneous Stocks.—The interest of the

market has centered

Southern stock—the

chiefly upon the speculation in Michigan
major portion of the sellers’ options, drawn

by the clique iu this stock, have matured during the week. The
“pool,” having secured the control of the floating stock, were thus
in a position to make their cfwn price for the stock required for
making deliveries under these contracts. On Monday the price
rose to 86 j on Tuesday the demand for cash stock set in, the price
for which was 88±, and 87$@88 for regular.
On Wednesday cash
stock sold at 92@94, and regular at 87f@91f ; yesterday the price
for cash purchases was 95@L04, and for regular 85@92.
This
morning it was found that this huge “ cornering” operation had
closed with the large purchases of yesterday, and to-day the trans¬
actions in the stock have been light at 80^@81f. Some of the
wealthiest speculators in the market have lost very heavily under
short contracts in this stock, and not a few brokers and outside
out

parties who had been drawn into the snare are heavy suflerers.
good collaterals, iu preference to discounting paper, The growing rage for getting up these ’change corners in very se¬
and hence the rates of discount are decidedly firmer.
The best
verely commented upon by bankers and conservative capitalists.
paper is taken at 7 per cent, and names which a few days ago would
1 The general stock market has been timid under the process on
The advance in Michigan Southern, it beiDg apprehended that important failures
pass at 7 per cent are now quoted at 8 per cent.
the rates of discount, however, is most apparent on the lower grades
might result, and prices of most other stock have been weak and
of paper, which are current at 12 to 24 per cent.
lower. This morning there was a revival of interest on nearly every
Balances with the West are still in our favor, although no im¬
stock on the list, attributable apparently to the feeling of relief at
portant, currency remittances are being received from that section. the closing up of the Michigan Southern speculation, without any
Merchants here are making purchases of produce at Chicago and serious
consequences to firms. An active speculation for a rise baa
Cincinnati, preparatory to the opening of navigation, and the cur¬ been started in Cleveland and Pittsburg. At the morning and af¬
rent of exchange may be expected to shortly turn in favor of the
ternoon sessions of the regular board, about 15,000 shares of the
West.
stock were purchased at 79ia80. Reading is also active under
During the last fourteen days there has been a considerable improve¬ clique purchases. Rock Island and Fort Wayne are also being
ment in the general trade of the city which has naturally quickened
manipulated by combinations for a rise.
the movements of money, and has tended to advance the rate of
At present the speculative spirit is more active that at any
interest, In the dry goods trade this has been especially the case ;
period for months past, and the operations generally take the direc- i
which has fortunately tended to allay the apprehensions connected tion
of an advance. The success in the Michigan Southern and
lend

on

call,

on

f

.....

?

*

with credits in that branch of business.
The

following

are

Milwaukee and Prairie da Chien “

the rates for the various classes of loans

:

corners

” has done much toward

stimulating this tendency. The outside public, however, appear
to have learnt to r.egard Btoek speculatioB as a very risky species
CallloanSi..
6 © Good endorsed bills, 3 &
6 © 7
Loans on bonds & mort..
f months.
7 © >9
of gambling, and are consequently cooperating to a very moderate
do
Prime endorsed bills, 2
single names,.;
9 ©10
months
7 ©
Lower grades
JL0 ©24
extent in the current operations.
United States Securities -The volume: of transactions in
The following are the closing quotations for leading stocks
governments has fallen off during the week, and the desire to sell compared with those of previous weeks:




Percent.

Percent.

-

.

,

-

. .

Feb. 83. Mar. 2. Mar. 9. Mar. 16. Mar. 23. Mar. 29.

Canton Go

41*

44*
42*
42*

43*

43*
40*
48*

Mariposa

12

12

11*

12

New York Central
Erie

90*
80*

91*
86*
108*
99*

90*
82*

92*
83*

103*
97*

106*

108%

190
78

102

Cumberland Coal.

44*

Quicksilver

41

103
100

Hudson River....

Reading—
Mick. Southern..

42%
40*

74

70

69*

Michigan Central

102*

Ciev. and Pittsb.
Clev. and Toledo.

107*

Northwestern....

101*

27*

“

78*

13.

108

25*

54

93

81*

62*

522*@521*

527%@525

Hamburg

Amsterdam......

35*@ 36*

35*@ 36

35*@ 35%

47

Frankfbrt

40%@ 40*

40%@ 40*

12*

Bremen,.

92*
74%

91*
78*
107*
100*

Berlin..

Swis*

101
81

79

27*.

63*

66*
117*
92*

Rock Island
Fort Wayne

week

79*
109*

April

128*
128*

2

127*

65*
54*
116* X.d.118*
92%
90*

4

128*
127%

6

8

Mexican Dollars...
Silver Thalers

were as

Receipts.
$494,006 56
429T742 49
291,570 72
343,543 45
353,733 23
538,738 30

March 26
‘

,——

“

27.
23.
29.
30.
81.

Total
Balance in Sub-Treasury

Deduct payments

$2,451,344 80
morning of March 26.

$2,117,408

4,185,519
4,289,118
8,271,359
8,054,688
2,718 792
2,771,829
1,934.492
2,336,098

3,"049,783
2,232,940
2,167,108
3,421,324
828,014
824,506
136,306
2,093,705

4,836,258
2,370,172
880,641

2,035,150
716,404
286,876

413,342 *
405,000
3 300
243,833

3,935,690
2,861,674
1,931,989

113,990
111,956
912,962
98,845
418,799
61,336
203,378
882,691

$1,479

451,083

6,0:#,147
8,249,266
2,719,975

14.779

7,280

135;551

130,000

1,280,265

2,536,560

8,742,998

5,120,860

78,224

900,000
736,593

4,S23,203
2,984,016

298,950

2,789,216

105,799
44,98ft

4,799,016

Chatham

1,900,452

168,078
127,329

People’s

1,328,324

North America....
Hanover
Irvine

2,498,420
2.489,774
1,796,000

17,958

89,845

551,354

132,191
7,516
296,527
248,651
189,900
863,700
136,135
4.676
470,000
718,018
693,000
28,265
478,334
216,427
122,211
221,700
92,50 )

66,896

140,m
55,628
23,000
30,627
27,073
208,457
115,389

Metropolitan......

9,602,234

Citizens’

1,462,563
2,138,962
2,596 972
2,770,405
3,425,660
3,332,070

.

3,553,960

127,8#

2,667,131
1,167,086
1,706,232
1,068,996
4,330,072
13,685,937

83,754
23,674
65,569
87,324
48,390
287,096

1,786,213

11,859

Nassau
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather.
Corn Exchange...
.

Marine
Atlantic

Imp. & Traders...
Park
Mech.

Bank’g As’n

Grocers’....?

'

North River

1,994,079 20
$11,100,540 15
82,997,469 67

Bnll’s Head.......
Manufacturers’....

The

333,923

1,510,571

4,086,329
1,903,544

1,190,227
2,617,426
1,716,874
1,569,000
5,797,994
1,261,773
1,680,177
2,019,877
1,306,041
2,130,000
2.457,450
1,992,754

165,801

v

998:681
488,689
2,536,224
8,393,881
3,267,670

2,297,626

1,099,324
1,278,6*2
544,096

1,566,!}*
529,936

256,908

1,009,956
619,220
459,000

1,984,000

469,568
740,666
877,415
565,332
992,600

690,000

826,000

808,660
172,004

1,000,000

352,627
903,810
8,482,795

307,867

1,512,364

584,112

275,153
221,683

979,620
11,639.039
12,547,089
809,649
6,364,092
3,518,823
2,948,342
7 6,850
203,282
1,123,401
440,548

8,420,120
4,087,867
297,288
2,096,560
1,734,538
1,066,845
285,708
21,000

11,930,392 23,736,534 188,554,592

72,158,099

9,063

'

52,509
18,298
100,896
0,437
7,688
9,145
11,876

T 2,621,239

8,645,125
587,843
108,781
1,069,183
700,580

.

212,210
1,200
2,533,922
1,517,840
269,532
801,610
449,500
798.220

268,#7
13,996
109,296
88,900

927,785

860,950

1,312,750

82,500
12,961

12,809
100,549
67,117

$237,356,099

422,561

3.274,245
940,842
1,533.883
982,949
8,296,788
13,747,487

515,087

26,390
20,458

1,037,897
1,584,552

1,108,095
0,074,524

.

Totals

32,654

929,792

Third National....
N. Y. Exchange..
Dry Dock.........

$8,941,363 01

63,808
27,66 5

1,432,064
15,500,131
12,499,443

East River
Manuf. & Merch’ts
Fourth National...
Central
Second National...
Ninth National....
First National

523,639 57

2,292,085
588,940
4,672,942
5,850,595

20,221,784

3,793,846
2,874,055
1,881,906

1,990,484

887,021

107,381
12,479
869,547

60,565

Legal
tenders.

1,738.002
1,483,587

10,136,551

.........

Continental
Commonwealth.
Oriental

4,764,402

275,296
496,773

811,198
5,859,603

Republic

8,941,363 01

464,820
125,301

68,811

Pacific

$94,098,009 82

20,577

3,097,522

Mercantile

806,043 70
810,800 52

22,626

960,921

Ocean

■'

.....

417,399

62,233

1,786,021

Cqnuneree.

,

13,962
539,250

256,8*1

2,115,963

ifcxc’ge..

Receipts.
$1,329,626 33
1,621,103 39
4,538,882 01

Balance on Saturday evening
Decrease during the week...

deposits.
$5 945.928

$922,S83

5,269,134
4,870,997
8,307,161
3,702,006

Payments.
$796^281 12
1,553,432 00
3,647,557 65
889,534 06
1,530,998 61

during the week..

tion.

Specie.
$2,288,522

Net

891,197
821,144

Broadway

——N

Circula-

5,081,070
6,428,177

American

20 75
5 00
1 82
88

Sub-Treasury

$7,271,225

State Qf N. York...

follows:
Custom-house.

-Average amount of

Loans and
discounts..

Fulton
Chemical
Merch’ts Exchange
National
Butch. & Drovers..
Mech’s & Traders..
Greenwich
Leather Manufact’s
Seventh Ward

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

Treasury

76%@ 77*
69*@ 90*

oi

City

$6 SO

20 50
4 85
1 23
86

NapoieonB

40*@ 40*

70*@ 70*

Tradesmen’s

127*
127*

$6 20

Spanish Doubloons

77*@ 78
70*@ 71

Mechanics’
Union
America
Phenix.

Buying. Selling.

Sovereigns....

@ 40*
40*@ 40%
77 @ 77*

Merchants’'

Highest. Lowest

11

35*@ 85*

39*@ 40*

40

following statement 4shows the
the City of New York lor the
ending with commencement of business ou March 31,1866 :

Banks.
New York
Manhattan*

127*] “
128* 127*
6
The Henry Chauncey, from Aspinwall, brought ou Monday
#682,877 in gold.
The following are currency quotations for some of the principal
foreign coins:
“

40*® 40*

,

during the
week ; the premium being firm at 28^@27£. Many of the sellers
options put out two weeks ago, on the passing oF the loan bill by
the House, appears to be still outstanding, otherwise it is difficult
to account for the continued steady demand for gold on loan, at the
rate of from 1 32 to £ per cent per day. The view of parties in
these speculations appears to be that, as the time approaches for the
payment of the May coupons, amounting to about #20,000,000, the
price of gold must decline very heavily; the calculation being that
the fall will more than compensate for the payment of interest
during the interim.
The export of specie on Saturday last was #3,500 ; Wednesday's
Canard steamer took out about #10,000 in gold.
The following have been the highest and lowest quotations for
gold, on each of the last six' days:
March 31

78 '@ 73%
70*@ 71*

26

26*

The Gold Market.—The market has been steadier

Highest. Lowest.
128* 127% April

40*@ 40%

condition of the Associated Banks

K'l

80%
no*

......

New York City Banks.—The

109*

84

532*@—

623*@52'7%

43*
40%

April 6

43*
41*
47*

82*

103
27

107*

27*

44*
40*
47*
12*

103*
78*

76*

77*

64*

preferred

427

THE CHRONICLE.

April 7,1866.]

077,380

227,038
260,968

137,851

changes in thestatement as compared with that of the prej
are not important, but indicate, on the whole, a healthier

$85,166,646 81
2,159,177 14

vious week

gold certificates issued, #1,376,000. Included in
the receipts of customs were #556,000 in gold and #1,895,334 in
gold certificates.
The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the Sub
Treasury since January 6 :

movement.

Total amount of

Weeks

Ending

Jam* 6—
“

20....
27....
Feb. 3....
“
10....
“
17....
“
24....
Mar. 8....
“
10....
“
17....
“
24....
“

Custom

»
-Sub-Treasury
House.
Payments. Receipts. Balances.
$2,107,341 $23,868,750 $15,861,866 $67,988,957
2,334,694
8,341,643
15,837,971 75,485*284

2,754,368
8,226,047
8,847,422

3,261,734

2,893,007
2,608,796
3,386,984
2,297,835
2,464,482
2,509,419

2,451,344

,

5,398,128
9,487,026
6,044,893
21,717,241
14,527,352
20,414,139
25,071,308
20,934,822
4,966,916

16,052,215
8,941,863

14,093,013
15,116,574

15,592,793
12,194,496
22,988,451
29,170,183
15,658,306
12,773,418
8,600,222
5.937,768

11,100,540
Foreign Exchange.—The continued

84,181.069

89,810.618

99,358,518
89,835,873
98,296:973

107,053^6

97,640,015
89,478,610
93,111,916
82,997,460
85,156,646

.

The deviations from the return of last week are

Inc. $2,855,581 I Deposits

Loans

..Dec.

Inc.

Circulation

2,015^259 J Legal Tenders
493,128

The several items compare as

weeks

quite unimpor¬

changes are as follows :

Specie

Change* in
Balances.
dec $8,006,888
inc
7,496,827
inc
8,695,784
inc
5,629,548
inc
9*547,908
dec
inc
inc
dec
dec
inc
dec
inc

The

tant.

(

.Inc. $2,688,347

Inc.

2,692,068

follows with the returns of previoui

:

CirculaLoans.

Legal

Aggregate

Specie.
tion.
Deposits. Tenders.
Clearings.
Jan. 0,60 233,185.059 15,778,741 18,588,423 195,482,254 71,617,487 370,617,523
Jan. 13,.. 234,938,193 46,852,568 19,162,917 L97,766,999 73,019,957 608,082,887
Jan.20,
239,337,726 15,265,372 20,475.707 199,816,248 72,799,892 538,949 311
Jan.27,.. 240,407,836 13,106,759 ‘20,965,883 195,012,454 70,319,146 516,328,672
Feb. 3... 242,510,882 10,937,474 21,494,234 191,011,696 68,796.250 608,669,123
Feb.10... 242,608,872 10,129,806 22,240,469 188,701,463 68,4#,018 493,431,082
Feb.17... 243,068,252 10,308,758 22,983,274 189,777,290 64.802,980 471,886.751
Feb.24... 239,776,200 14 213,851 22,959,918 183,241.404 61,502,726 497,150,087
Mar. 8... 235,339,412 17,181.1# 22,994,086 181,444,378-58,760,145 526,589,959
Mar.10... 233,068,274 16,563,231 23,033,237 180,515,881-64,341,802 594,204*912
Mar.17
233,517,378 15,015,242 23,303,057 185,438:707 68,402,764 579,2!«;509
Mfff.24... 234,500,518 13,945,651 23,243,406 185,868,245 69,496,033 693,448,864
Mar.31... 237,356,099 11,9#,392 23,738,534 188,554,592^72,158,099 529,240,640
Philadelphia Banks.—The following comparative statement

9,522,645
8,461,099
8,756,043
9,413,001
8,161,404
3,633,806
10,114,447

..

2,159,177

large shipments of cotton
from this and the Southern ports, with increased exports of breadstuffs and other produce, has largely augmented the supply of bills,
producing a corresponding weakness in the rates of exchange. At
the same time the demand from importers is limited, owing to a shows the average condition of the leading items of the Philadel¬
disposition to defer remittances until the payment of the May cou¬ phia Banks for the last and previous weeks :
March 24.
' March 31.
pons on Five-twenties, when importers expect to be able to buy Capital..
$14,64®,150
$14,642,150
46,381,115
46,043,488
Decrease.. $337,627
gold cheaper. To-day prime bankers 60 days’bills have sold at Loans.
990,6#
Specie
981,982
Increase..
8,698
Legal Tenders
15,969,814
15,954,832
Decrease..
13,983
106$@106f, and francs, long date, at 5.30.
113,403
Deposits
82.144,250
32,257,653
Increase...
The following are the closing quotations for the several classes Circulation....
8,6#,200
Increase...
8,666,2#
86,0#
of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks :
The most marked change in the statement of averages is adeMar. 16,
Mar. 23.
March30.
Aprils.
crease of #337,427 in the item of loans, and an increase of $113,403
London Comm’l,. 1Q6*@107%
106 ©106*
106%@107
1O&%@1Q0
do ^bkrs? long 108 @108*
107*@107*
106%@107
106*®#% in deposits.
do do short 109*.„.t.,
;l08*@ —
107*@-r*
Paris, long
The following comparison shows the condition of the Philadel*
525 @523*
527*^25
'58l*@627%
3S2%@530
do. Short
520 @518*
622%@521* j627*0533*
6***@526*
Antwerp
525 @521*
530 ®80%
530 ®27%
5WT@532% phia Banks at stated periods ;




..

...»

.

428

[April 7, 1866.

CRHONICLK

THE

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Mar.
Mar.

45,941,001
46,774,150
47,350,428

2
8
15
22
29

7,411,337
7,432,535
7,668,365

1,055,694
1,026.068

33,926,542

31,464,070

7.819,599

7.732.070

32,102,427
32.144,250

82,257,653

8,666,230

of the condition of
compared with the preceding, shovvs the fol¬

the Boston

banks, as

has in¬
de¬

lowing changes: Loans have increased $420,743; specie
creased, $19,403 ; legal tender notes have decreased $152 507 ;
posits have increased $809,859 ; national circulation
$67,806, and State circulation has decreased $32,291. The amount
due from other banks increase $441,617, and the amount due to
ther banks has decreased $135,619.

has increased

The

Accounts current at Paris
Ditto in the provinces

Dividends payable
Various discounts
Re-discounts

vious returns :

March 26.

April 2.

Capital
Loans.;

Specie
Legal Tender Notes

Deposits...'

Circulation (National)
Circulation (State)....,

The amount due

due to other

National

March 19.

provinces
public securities in Paris
in the provinces
on obligations and railway shares

in the
on

in the provinces

Ditto on securities in the Credit
in Paris
Ditto in the provinces
Ditto to the State
Government stock reserve
Ditto other securities

Securities held
Hotel and property of the bank
Expenses of management
Sundries

BANK

Bank of Buffalo was

(Marked thus * are
not

National.)

the progress of the
and circulation, from

National
January

6, 1866 :
Capital.
407,51*9.208
407.599.203
407.759.203
407.759.203
407.759.208
407.859.203
407.858.203

Banks.

Date.

1,626
1,626

6.

January
“

13.
20.
27.

“

1,628

1,628
1,628
1,629
1,629
1.629

February 3.
“

10.
17.
24.

“

Foreign

407.858.203
409.408.208
409.408.203
409,408,203

1.630
J,637
1,643

3.
10.
17.
24.
31.

Mar ch
Mar
arch

407,858,203

1.643
1.644

ISSUE

£11,015,100
8 984,900
13,554,055

£28,554,055

£28,554,055
BANKING

DEPARTMENT.

£14,553,000.Governmentsecurities...
3,873,778 Other securities.
Notes
Gold and silver coin.

deposits, including

£9,915,483
19,392,302
7,918,455
901,468

City)

(Brooklyn)

Bowery

Broadway
Brooklyn
Bull’s Head*
Butchers & Drov...

£38,127,708

compared with that for the previous

week, shows the

following changes:
£28.554.055
20,635,600

Circulation issue
Circulation active
Public Deposits
Other Deposits
Government securities
Other securities
Coiu and bullion in both

partments

6,824,602

12,478.479

9,916.483
19,392,302

de-

tSeven day and other bills...
The Rest
Notes in reserve
Total reserve (notes and coin)
In banking department....




397,849

8,873,778
7,918,455

8,819,923

Increase
Increase
Increase
Increase

Increase

following is the statement of the
ending March 22, 1866 :

The
woek

14,455,523

Increase
Increase
Increase
Decrease
No change.
Increase

£126,195
112,525

519,783
244,625
..

839,726
127,905
14,697
65,251
13,670

15,380

Bank of France for

the

211,069 74
802,746,632 74
277,841,536 0
9,085,300
9,830,100
11.255,000

6,151,300
29,822,700

19,067,800
607,300
353,000

0
0
14
91
0
8,449,411 0

8,481,358 0
837,739 55
10,103,184 3

656,824 69

11,229,229 14

1,368,369,878 4

1,340,872,593 33

LIST.

STOCK

Friday.

Dividend.

Bid. Ask.

Last Paid.

Periods.

Amount.

3,000,000 Jan.

137

.

..

4
6 114

.

.

....6
....6

..

..

:...

.12

120
110
185 ‘

.

Commonwealth
Continental
Corn Exchange*
Croton

Currency

5

5

Dry Dock*

East River

Eighth
Fifth
First.,
.
First (Brooklyn)
Fourth
Fulton
Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg).

Gallatin

Greenwich*
Grocers’

15

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

,

.5
10 202
,

10

5*

e>

no

.

no
•.

•

•

•

•

....

....

....

•

•

•

•

....

•

•

•

•

....

....

.,

*

....

6
6

.

.

....

...

.

..

0

150

„

5 108
5

.

•

■

«

•

.

5
50 3,000,000 June and Dec. Dec. ’65.
109
50 1,235,000 Jan. and July.. |Jan. ’66.
6 121
100 4,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
5
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July. Nov. ’65.
0
5
100
300,000 Jan and July.. Jan. ’66.
5 109
50 1,500,000 April and Oct.. Apr. ’66 .
5
100 3,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
9 140
100
200,000 April and Oct.. Jan* ’66.
100
300,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66. .......6
109
107
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
115
5 It 6
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.,
t
6
50
400,000 Jan. and July...
96
50 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66,
5 125
50
300,000 Feb. and Ang... Feb. ’66.
L65
50
422,700 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’66
7 150
100 2,000,000 Jan.and July... Jan. ’66.
5'115
25
412,500 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66.
4 99
20 1,800,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66.
5 108
100 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66
©CO
ClL01
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66
100
500,000 April and Oct.. Jan. ’66.
6 1Lio*'
100
300,000 May and Nov .. Nov. ’65
1 io
5
100 1,500,000 Jan. and July..
6: i05
100
200,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’65
6
100 2,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66
5
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July...
*5
10C 1,000,000 Jan. and July...
••ft
1*1 35
4( 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66
• •
61 20
Nov. ’65-,
60 1,500,000 May and Nov...
.

....

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

....

•

•

•

....

.

.

,

•

Pacific
Park

.

.

..

.

National
New York
New York County..

Ocean

ioi
.

•

Oriental*

-

5
in
6
110
4
5 no
5
5
5
5 100
105
5 100
6
6 110*

.

Ninth.
North America.-...
North River*

*

•..

6

.

.

-

...

5

.

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

,

100*

.

v

148

100

4
5

.

LeatherManufact’rs.
Long Isl (Brook.) ..
Manhattan*
Manufacturers’
Manufac. & Merch.*.

98"

■

.3^

,

Trad...

100*
97*
112

....

(Brooklyn)

110

..

Commerce

Marine
Market

0

60,000,000
12,980,750
38,416,737
100,000,000

.

Citizens’ *
City
City (Brooklyn)

Nassau

& branches
.:

7

472,665,187

495,188,809 11
299,355 51
266,420,483 78
265,474,0
7,463,600 0 1
10,853,900 0
11,208,000 0
5,153,200 0
29,682,900 0
19,332,600 S
1 583,400 0
391,700 0
60,000,000 0
12,980,750 14
36,416,737 91
100,000,000 00

.

Central
Central (Brooklyn).
Chatham
Chemical

NewYorkExchange.

The return,

6,266.264 60

.

Nassau*

£38,127,709

1,368,369,878 43

23,713,187 0
1,288,101 75
7,717,935 72
2,074,992 92

23,439,755 0
1,212,442 i®
8,099,462 94
2,074,992 92
—
6,293,943 15

and July. .!Jan. ’66.
Jan. ’66.
100,000 Jan. and July
600,000 April and Oct. ..;Oct. ’65..
5,000,000 May and Nov. Nov. ’65.
300,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66.
500,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66.
250,000
Jan. ’66.
25 1,000,000 Jan. and July..
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
50
200,000 Quarterly— Apr. ’66.
25
800,000 Jan. and July Jan. ’66.
Nov. ’65.
100 3,000,000 May and Nov .
Jan. ’66.
50
200,000 Jan. and July
Jan. ’66.
26
450,000 Jan. and July
Jan. ’66..
100
300,000 Quarterly
’66.
25
400,000 Jan. and July.. Jan.
Nov. ’65.
100 1,000,000 May and Nov..
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.,
Jan. ’66..
100 10,000,000 Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
100
750,000
100 2,000,000 Jan..and July..
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’66.
100
200,000
100
100,000 Quarterly.... Apr. ’66.
30
200,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66
Jan. ’66.
50
850,000 Jan. and July..
100
250,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66
100
150,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
’65.
100
600,000 May and Nov.. Nov.
Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
Jan.’66
100 5,000,000 Jan. and July..
30
600,000 May and Nov.. Nov. ’65
20
160,000 Jan and July.. Jan.’66
100 1.500,000 April and Oct.. Apr. ’66
200,000 May and Nov.. Nov. ’65
25
50
300,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66.
Jan. ’66.
100 1,000.000 Jan. and July.
100 1,500,000 Jan. and July.* Jan. ’66.
50
500,000 Jan and July..
50
600,000 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’66.
60
400,000 Feb. and Aug.. .jFeb. ’66.
50 2,050,000 Feb. and Aug.. .iFeb. ’66.
30
252,000 Apr. and Oct.. .[Apr. ’66.
100
500,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
100
400,000 Jan. and July.. .;Jan. ’66.
100 1.000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
25 2,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’6».
500,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66.
50
50
600,000 May and Nov,. Nov. ’65.
25
600,000 May and Nov.. .Nov. ’65
Nov. ’65.
100 1,000,000 May and Nov.

100
25
100
100
100
50

Metropolitan

6,824,602
12,478,479
397,849

bills.

Atlantic

« |
«

Atlantic

Irving

debt

5,771,381 71
99,270,405 43
123,565.358 14

Jr
Pi 02

American.
American Exchange

Importers &

Other securities.

dend Accounts
Other deposits
Seven day and other

264,247,170

DEPARTMENT.

£28,554,055 Government

exchequ’r, savi’gs banks
Commissioners of Na¬
tional Debt, and Divi¬

260,556,750
261,638,920
262,816,670

c

Hanover

Gold coin and bullion

Best
Public

258,432,790

March 21 :

England for the week ending

Proprietors’ capital

240,094,560
252,926,620
245,866 540
248,734.715
251,360,050
253,116,380
254,902,275
257,072,910

of the Bank of

Banking.—The following is the return

Notes issued

Circulation*

America*
America (Jer.

Foncier

Capital.

Companies.

Total to date $264,247,170.

following comparison shows
Banks, in respect to number, capital

6,376,199 53
110,558,850 63
111,838,095 25

'.

bullion
Commcial bills overdue
Ditto discounted in Paris
Ditto in the branches
Advances on bullion in Paris

depository during last week. The
total number of government depositories is now four hundred. The
only national bank authorized during the week ending March 31,
1866, is the Miners’ National Bank of Salt Lake, Great Salt Lake.
Total number of national banks now in existence 1,644. Amount
of national currency issued during week ending March 31, 1866,
$1 ,430,800. Amount of national currency previously issued $262,
The

distributed

Cash and

designated as a government

816,370.

883,051,725 0

CREDITOR.

banks, $14,144,509.

Banks—The Third National

.

Sun clries

$41,000,000 $41,900,000 $41,900,000
92,351,979
91.031,236 91,902,811
532,556
513,153
606,992
20,761,014 20,913,521 20,470,018
36,697,227 35,887,368 86,696,321
23,087,693 23,019,887 24,018,916
869,329
901,620
940,740
from other banks was $10,503,764, and the

0

4,000,000

4,000,000 0
836,328,325 0

—

Surplus of receipts not

Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto

c.

182,500,000 0
7,044,776 2
22,105,750 14

1,340,872,593 33

provinces
Treasury account

compared with the two pre¬

following are the footings as

amount

branches..
branches
in the

Banks.—The last weekly statement

Boston

f.

c.

182,500,000J 0
7,044,776 2
22.105,750 14

New reserve
Notes in circulation and at the
Drafts drawn by the bank on the
of the bank payable in Paris or

32,835,094
32,504.508

8,248,100
8,438,184
8.580,200

981,932
990,630

f.

Capital of the bank
Profits, in addition to capital
Reserve of the bank and branches

83,052,252

8,161,049

1,041,392

46,642,150
46,043 488

86,947,700
36,214,653
35,460,881
34,681,135

7,843,002

1.000,689
996,312
953,207
1,026,408

46,604,752
46.546,878
46 690,788

35,342,306
36,618.004

7,357,972

1,007,186
1,012,980
1,008,825

46,865.592

10
Mar. 17
Mar. 24
Mar. 81

7,226,369
7,319,528

983,685

47,254.622
47,007,558
47,233,661
47,249.383
46,981,337

3
10
17
24
3

Circulation.

Specie.
890,822

Loans.

Date.

March 15,1865.

March 22, 1866.

debtor.

Deposits.

•

•

•

....

...

Peoples’*

....

Phoenix

....

Republic

St. Nicholas’.

.....

Seventh Ward
Second
Shoe & Lealher

....

...

Sixth
State of New York.
Tenth

Third
Tradesmen’s
Union

Williamsburg City*

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

0

«r

.

•

••«

•

•

•

•

W

600 000 Jan. and July.

-

Jan. ’66 .....3#

• •• •

•

• •sft

8681

April 7,1866.]

Sttur.




National.
United States 6s,

do
do
do

,100!

119

registered.

115
114

coupon.

6s,
6s,
68,
68,
6s,
6s,

1868
1881
1881
5-20s...

fie,
6s,
6s,
6s,

5.20s
do
....registered
5.20s (3d issue)
coupon
5.20s,
do
....registered
Oregon War, 1881

registered.

1C4
coupon. 104% 104% 104%

do.

6s,

104%

registered.
coupon

105
104

104%

104% 104%

Cleveland, Columbus and
Cleveland and Pittsburg

104

.'

Delaware, Lackawanna and
Eighth Avenue

Western.,..

Erie
do preferred

registered.

coupon.

91%

91%

92

91%

92%

registered.

State.

*

108

do

do

do
do

-

do
do

..100

Pittsburg, FortWay116

Reading

72%

....

•

•

•

72%

72%

73

72%1

72%
! 75%

72%

St. Louis, Alton and
do
do
Second avenue
Sixth avenue...,
Third avenue

—

42

—

—

85

—

—

91

91%

9 %

91%

92%

25%

25%

25

24%

25

100 &S9
50 99%

88%

89%
99%

88% 88% 90%
99% i 100' 101
30%

a....

251

100 i

and Chicago

100

Terre Haute

99%
30

61

preferred. 100
100
100
100

do

60

50

Railroad Ronds:

03%
93%

93%

•

Atlantic and Great Western, 1st
do
do
2d

89

mort.
mort

Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort.,
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund
1st mortgage
do
do
Income
do
do
>

1877...
95

94
85

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent...
Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage.
Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund....
do
do
Interest

•*.

99% 100

Bounty Bonds..

100%
84

65

81

Extension

do
do
do

do
do
do

100% 100%
84% 84%

81

1st mortgage

consolidated.,,..

Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage

Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage
do
3d mortgage, conv..
do
do
do
4th mortgage
Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund.
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, let

1

1868
Long Loans

91%

>

68

91

91

68

91

90

68

Virginia 6s, coupon

68

Wisconsin 6s, War

Loan
municipal.

Brooklyn 6s
6s, Water Loan
6s, Public Park Loan
6s, Improvement Stock
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan
New York 7s, 1875
do
do
do

66

do
do
Erie, 1st mortgage,

2d mort.

1868

100
95

96
97

,

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72
do
Consolidated and Sinking Fund
do
2d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869
do
2d mortgage, (S. F.),
do
8d mortgage, 1875
do
convertible, 1867...

101

1885...., 101%

Illinois Central 7s, 1875
Lackawanna and Western Bonds
Marietta and

Cincinnati, 1st mortgage

Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72

8s, new, 1882

do

do

;

Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund
!

100
100 131%

130
47

47%
100 45%

Canton, Baltimore

100

Central Coal
Central American Transit

100
100
50

50
100
100
!00
100
l■ 0
100

.

Nicaragua Transit

...

100

.

.100
100

nuect

...

.100

do
do
do
do
do
do

,

do
do
do

do
do
do

80
81
46

"

6s, 1887
6s, Real Estate .1
6s, subscription
7s, 1876
7s, convertible, 1876..
7s, 1865-76

101%
80%

Mississippi, 1st mortgage
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort..

Ohio and
do
do

do
do

do
do

97%

2d mort...
3d mort..

Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort..
do
do
do
2d, pref...
do
do
do
2d, income.
Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage
do
'
do
1st mortgage, extended

81

St.

215

192

200

.100 57%

Western Union Telesrraph..

IS

18%

....

Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants
New York Central 6s, 18S3

43%
135

12%

11%

50

Quicksilver Mining
States Telegraph

47%

42% 43% 43%
135
134
133
133

100

Cumber.and Coal, preferred
Delaware & Hudson Canal
Harlem Gas
Manhattan Gas Light
,

45

95

106%

2d mortgage, 7s
do
Goshen Lfne, 1863
Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort..
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage
do
do
Income
do
do

do

miscellaneous.
American Coal
Atlantic Mail Steamship

Steamship
do
Scrip
Pcnnsylvan.a Coal

„

100

Hannibal and Si. Joseph, 1st Mortgage

5s, 1S68
5s, 1870
6s, 1873
6s, 1874
6s,>1875
5s, 1876
6s, 1S90
5s, 1898
5s,F. Loan, 1868

Pacific Mail
do

do

94

94

mort.

do 2d mortgage, 1864
do 2d mortgage, 1879
do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage, 1880
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Galena and Chicago, extended
do
•
do
2d mortgage

6s, 1876
6s, 1878
6s, 1887
5s, 1867

Wyoming Valley Coal

95

—

91

Toledo, Wabash and Western
do
do
do
preferred....

1877

Mariposa Mining
Mariposa Preferred
Metropolitan GaS’
New York Steamship

93

—

25%

Norwich and Worcester
Ohio and Mississippi Certificates,
do
do
do
t

85

Rhode Island 6s
South Carolina 6s

do
do

81

—

—

100
..100
..100
..100
..100
..100

New Jersey.
New York Central
New Haven and Hartford

dO

do

87%

.

uo

'

101%
96%

102

—

Milwaukee and St. Paul
do
pre
do

Joseph RR.)...

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

116

—

—

do

6s. 1878
do
do
6s, 1883...:.
do
7s, 186S.
do
7s, War Loan, 1878
do
7s, Bounty Loan, 1890
Minnesota 8s
Missouri 6s
do
6s, (Hannibal and St.
do
6s, (Pacific RR.)
•k 7s, 1870
New Yoi
6r 1SHR
do
6s 1867
do
6r’ 1868
do
fis’ 1872
do
6s’ 1873
do
fis 1874
do

Tennessee 6s,
do
6s,
do
6s

109%

109116

—

Michigan 6s, 1873

Kr 1R68
do
5e 1871
do
5s’ 1874
do
fis’ 1875
do
5s 1876
do
do
7s, State
North Carolina 6a
Ohio 6s, 1868
do 68, 1870
do 68,1875
do 6s, 1881
do 6s, 1S86

109

—

— —

Louisiana

6s

—

109
lie

—

5s

do

—

—

do

2*8
'Kentucky 6s, 1868-72

.

.100
.100

.

do
do

80

79

.

War Loan
Indiana bs, War Loan
do

74%

74%

73%

72%

80

.

do
1870
do 1877
do 1879

do

do

74%

80

—

1865

do

75%

.100

—

95

do

09%

—

.100

50
50
.100 107% 108
.100
60
.100
60
.100
.100
.100
.100
.100 101% 101%
.100 83% 66
..100
95
.100
1st pref.. .100
2d pref., .100
42
.100 42

100

Registered, 1860
6s, coupon, ’79, after 1860—
do
do
1862

,79%

130

.

Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860
do
do
do
do
do
do

—

.

109

Georgia 6s

130

.

i 99%

CaWornia 7s, large
Connecticut 6s

26

,64%
*13%

—

79% 79%
109% 109

80%

78%
107%

.1001

preferred

6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .(cur.).
100% 100% 100%
7-30s Treas. Notes.. ..1*7series. 100% 100% 100%
100
do
2d series. 100% 100% 100%: 100% 100
do
do
100%! 100% i 100% 100% 99%
do
... .Sd series^ 100%
do
do

6s, Certificates,

L15

50

.

:

Hannibal and St. Joseph
do
do
Harlem..
do
preferred

coupon.
92%

26% 25%
53% 53%
64%
114%' 116% 110 110

50,108

.

116

116
—

—

26% 26%

50* 78

.

—

—

26
.100: 54%'
.100 111%
.100 115

Cincinnati

Cleveland and Toledo

registered.

1

.100
do

do

coupon.

1871
1871
1874
1874
5s, 10-40s
5a, 10-40s

58,
5s,
5s,
5s,

93%

84

115

.100

(i yearly).

do.

85

.100,115

104.% 104%

registered.

5-208...'.

do

do

*08

107
85

—

.100! 86
.100

—

114

105
coupon. 105% 105% 105%

6s; 5-20s (2d issue)

J

Railroad Stocks.

127%

American Gold Coin

I

Fri

Thur

Tue. Wed

|£>»lur .Mon.

SECURITIES

Fn.

Tliur.

vVed

Tnes.

M«u.

FRIDAY, APRIL #.)

DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING

CLOSING SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH

SECURITIES.

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

STOCK EXCHANGE.

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK

(REPRESENTED BT THE

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

429

THE CHRONICLE.

131

40%

40%
56

134

55%

53% 58%

40%
58

do
do

do

do

2d mortgage
Interest Bonds...

..

..

79
87

72%

THE CHRONICLE.

430

[April 7, 1866.
=====

=±=

NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES LIST.
INTEREST.

Amonnt

DENOMINATIONS.

Rate-

American Gold Coin
National Securities.
Bonds of 1847
registered.
do
1848
coupon. I
I
do
do
registered, f
do
1860
coupon. \
do
do
registered, j ;
do
1858....,
coupon. [ !
do
do
registered.

do

registered, f

do

°dlonWdoBd(*%ear|]
Art
do

Ar.
do

do
do
1864.... coupon.
do
do
do .registered.
do
do
1865 ...coupon.
do
do
do .registered.
do (10-408)
1864
.coupon.
do
do .registered,
do
Union Pacific RR. Bonds of 1865
..

Treasury Notes (1st series)
do
do

do
do

9,415.250

:

—

20,000,000

July

..

Massachusetts—State Scrip

do
do
War Loans....
State Scrip
do
do
....

....

do

WTar Loan
Michigan—$2,000,000 Loan

v

..

do
do
do
do
Renewal Loan ...
do
' War Loan
do
War Bounty Loan....
Minnesota—State Bonds
Missouri—State Bonds
do
State Bonds for RR...
do
State Bonds (Pac. RR)
do
State Bonds (H,ASt.J)
do
Revenue Bouds
New Hampshire—State Bonds
do
War Fund Bds
do
WarNotes.
New Jersey—State Scrip
do
War Loan Bonds..
New York!
do
do
do
General Fund
'
do
do
do
do
do
Bounty Bonds.
do
do
do
do
do
do
•Canal Bonds.
do
do
do
do
do
North Carolina—State Bonds
..

,

’

Ohio—Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign

Loan
Loan

Jan. A

July

1881

Loan
Loan
Loan

do
Domestic Loan Bonds
Pennsylvania—State Bonds
do
State Stock
do
Militarv L’n Bds
Rhode Island—State (War) Bds.
South Carolina—State Stock...
Tennessee—Improvement Bonds
....

do
do

Improvement Bonds

Railroad Bonds.

Vermont—State Certificates
do

Virginia—Registered Bonds
do
do

Coupon Bonds
Sterling Bonds




Fond Certif....

'

G
'Jan. & July 1895
7.30;Feb. & Aug. 1867

do

100^ 100*

1876

803,000!
8,000,0001
2,073,750!
525,000'
1,325,0391

1,3S6,570|

2,371,725

1,631,677;
211.000!
1,157,700!

236.000!

2,058,173! 2)6

532,000;

4,800,000!
S,1T1,9;>2

3,192,763;'
1,727,000;

672,000'

220.000'

6,429,000
1,150,004
2,450,000
1,088,000
250,000
1,750,000
216,000

1,122,000
345,000
250,000
602,000

13,701,000
7,000,000
3,000,000
431,0H0

535,100
1,650,000
2,500.000

•

S

•

Jan. & July
do
do
do
do
do
do
Jan. & July
do
•"
\

.’!!!
97*

1866

;;;; ]

500.000
800,000

909,607
442.961
900.000

Various.

• •

do
1894
Jan. A July ’71 ’74
do
’75 ’78
do
->•[ 1883
Jan. & July' 1868
’73 ’83
do
do
1878
do
1886

do
Jan. A July
do
do
do
Jan. & Julv

1883
’71 ’89
*72 ’87
’72 ’85
1866
1874

800,000

Jan. A July 1677

702,000
3.050,000

192,585!

1,163,000!
167,000
4.500,000

9^719,500

tar.

Jan. & July 1860
do
1865
do
1868
do
1S70
do
1875
do
1881
do
1886

379,866'
2,1 S3,532;
1,600,000
4,095,309
2,400,000
679,000'
6,168,000:

May A Nov.:’68-’71
Various,

do
j tar.
Feb. & Aug. i 1871
Jan. A July! 71 ’94
Jan. & July;’68 ’90

29,209,000
3,000,000!
3,889,000!
2,595,516

605,000

94" 1

93*
96
72

72*

75

75*

00
95
95
95
95

do
j tar.
Jan. & July tar.

j lon g

„

6
6

Jnn. A Dec.i’71 ’78
Jan. A Jnlyj’84 ’95
do
’86 '95
do
1872
Jan. A July ’67 ’68
do
j’77 ’88

Apr, A QcU^'M

319,457; 8

Railroad.

do
do

10

New York City —Water Stock..
do
do
Water Stock..
do
do
CrotonW’r S’k
do
do
CrotonW’r S’k
do
do
W’r S'k of ’49
do
do
W’r S’k of ’54
do
do
Bn. S'k No. 3.
do
do
Fire Indem. S.
do
do
Central P'k S.
do
do
Central P’kS.
do
do
Central P’k S.
do
do
C.P.Imp. F. S.
do
do
C.P.Imp. F. S.
do
do
Real Estate B.
do
do
CrotonW’r S.
do
do
Fl.D’t. F’d. S.
do
do
Pb.B.Sk. No. 3
do
do
Docks&SlipsS
do
do
Pub. Edu. S’k.
do
do
Tomp.M’ket S
do
do
Union Def. L.
do
do
Vol. B’nty L’n
do
do
Vol.Fam.AidL
do
do
Vol.Fam.AidL
NewYorkC’nty.—C’t House S'k
do
do
Sol.Sub.B.R.B
do
do
Sol.S.&Rf.R.B
do
do
Sol.B’ntyFd.B
do
do
Riot Dam.R.B

Philadelphia, Pa.—City Bds,old
do
City Bds,new
do
City Bds,old
do
CityBds,new
Pittsburg, Pa.—City Bonds
Railroad Bonds.

Railroad Bonds,

90

1<X)

91

90* .91
»»

68

do
do

Railroad B’ds

Railroad....

do

85*
86*

69

7
7
6
6

City Bonds..
Water Bonds

Sacramento, Cal.—City Bonds..
do
County B’ds
St. Louis, Mo.—Municipal..

85*

Real Estate....

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Sewerage
Improaement..

San Francisco,
do
do
do
do
do

do

Wmmerow,

M.,J.,S,&D.:1890

'65’82
’65 ’74
’78 ’79
’65 ’85
’67 ’77
’72 ’73
’70 ’78

8

Water
Harbor

,

Wharves........
Pacific RR
O. A M. RR....;
Iron Mt. RR

Cal.—City Bonds,
City Fire B.
City Bonds,

C.ACo’tyB.
C.ACo’tyB.
C.ACo’tyB.

911,500 4
219,000 6
100,000 7
425,000 5
60,000

6

150,000 5
200,000 6
3,000,200 5
2,147,000 5
900,000 5
100,000 6
483,900 5
1.878.900 5
190,000 5
402,768 5
399,300 5
3,060,071 6
275,000 6
2,083,200 6
1,966,000 6
600,000 6
1,800,000 6
2,748,000 6
150,000 5
500,000 5

154,000

5

102.000

6
6

895,570
490,000

6

6
5
6
6
6
4,996,000 6
1.442.100 6
552.700 5
739,222 5
2,232,800 6
7,898,717 6
1,009,700 6
1,800,000 5
985,326 6
1,500,000 6
600,000 6
500,000 6
300,000 5
200,000 5
150,000 7
260,000 6
1.496.100 6
446,800 6
1,464,000 6
623,000 6
425,000 6
254,000 6
484,000 6
239,000 6
163,000 6
457,000 6
429.900 6
285,000 6
1,352,600 10

1,000,000

2,500,000
1,400,000
2,000,000
949.700

178,500! 10
329,000
1,133,500
300,000
960,000

C.&Co’tvB.

1.000.000

Sosas..

mm

100
99* 100
99*! 100
99* 100
.

■"

101*
90

95

95*

119

86

82*

93

1888

do

986

Apr. A Oct. 1895
Jan. A July
do
do
do
do
June ADec.

var.

1879
1890
1871
’69 ’79

92*
93

Apr. A Oct. 1865

1871

Jan. A July

Various. ’65’72
Jan. A July 75 77

Various..! 65 80

June ADec". 1883

650,000

City Loan
Rochester, N. Y.—City Bonds...
do
City Bonds.

96*

J.,A.,J.AO.|lS90]

6

City Bonds.

do

85

May A Nov! 1875
July 1886

Jan. A

Feb. A Aug; 1882
1 Jan. A Julv 1876

Water Bds

'

83
97
96

do
1670
Jan. A July! 1873

6
6

,

do

do

84*

7

6

122,000 6
118,000 7

Providence, R. I.—City Bonds...

92*

400,000 ;
125,000 ;
130,000
500,000 :
375,000 ;

Park Bonds....
Railroad Bonds.
Water Bonds...

do

86
00

20,000
256,868
50,000 ; 6
650,000 ; 7

Water Bonds..

Portland, Me.—City Bonds

Apr. A Oct. 1868

2,347,3401

2,115,400

000|

tar.

Sewerage Bonds

do
do

90
90

1866
1872
1873
1874
1875
1877
1866
1868
1871
1874

6,000,000
2,250,000
500,000;
900,000:

6
6
7
7
7
8
7

^00*

tar.

May & Nov. U890
Jan. A July.lS67

do
do

J., A., J. AO. 1870

1,030,000 6

City Bonds....
City Bonds....

101

Jan. & July;1876
do
’79 ’87

913,000!

.

City Bonds
Milwaukee, Wis.—Citv, re-adj’d
l00* Newark, N. J.—City Bonds.....
do
City Bonds
01*
New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds.
New London, Ct.—City Bonds..
I.—City
l94 Newport, R. Ct.—CityBonds
Bonds
07* New Haven,

l00
lUQ
jOO

]

Sewerage Bonds
Water Bonds

j

•

«

May & Nov.; 1880

25,566,000

L200

97

....

tar.

1870

City Bonds

100*

Apr. A Oct J1881

W ater Bonds...

do
do
do

1879

:;::;;::::::i’65 -62

299,000!
671,(MX),
360,000!

iron

97"
....

’66 ’67
’80 '89
1890

216,000'

Water Bonds.

T

75

| dem.

Quarterly
Quarterly

5,550,')00,

-Municipal Bon
Municipal Bonds

LOIT,
do
do
do

96“

1866

Jan. & July tar.
Jan. A July ’71 ’72
do
1870
do
pleas.
1S68
do
do
1878
do
pleas.
May & Nov. 1868
Jan. A July 1875
do
1878

1,189,780

•alo

100

Jan. A July 65 ’71
do
'65 ’95
do
1869
do
’81 ’97
’65 ’79

121,540!

Pub. Park L’n.
Water Loan...

do
do

! '67.69 84*'

j Quarterly

993,000;
634,200 i
1,281,000

Aeked

’65 ’69
’70 ’82

1,949,711!

ela:

’60 ’70
'60 ’65
‘69 ’70
’76’77
1879
1879

|’6S’72 94“

July

1,265,610

Improve’t St’k

do

’60 ’70

do
;1877
Jan. A Jiilvl’76 ’78
Jan. & July!'66’73
do

Mar.&Sept.

6,580,416!

[NNA

May & Nor 1868
Jan. A July 1886

Jan. &

6
6
6
4
5
6

Loan^tg.

AGO,
do
do
do

'

95

91*

95,000

i,soo,ooo
300,000

...!

.

short

731.000
700.000

554,000;

Water Loan

do
do
do

1872

do

1,722,200!

!

6

197,700:
740,000
583,205

Me.—City Debt

do

do
’78b’80
do
1S72
Jan. & July ’72 ’92 94"
Jan. A July 1SS0
102

8,926,000,:

447,000:
3.204,0001
516.000;
3,942,000
5,398,000!

5,000,000;

f

B. AO. RR..
Park

,

July’70’74

[do

I

B.&O.'R.coup )

do

1868

638,000!

200,000!

Water Loan...
York&Cum.R.

do

July 1877

1,225,500!
200,000
300,0001

N.W.Virg.RR.

Bid.

Jan. A July var.
do
11913

600,000:

Miscellaneous.

100*
104* Bangor,

do
do

4.963,000'
820,000
l,500,000i 6
3,500,000 ; 6
1,000,000 ! 6

Railroad Debt
J ••••
104* Boston, MaBS.—City Bonds
1885- jl04
May A Nov.
do
City Bonds
do
City Bonds
91* 92*
Mar. ASept. 1904do
Water
‘91

Jan. &

21,888,398'
’ 12.972,000

*

104*

100
104

1884

2,703,000,'

i-Unon
175,000
1,650,000

Wisconsin—State Bonds
do
War Fund Bonds....

104**

300,000,00017.30 Jun. ADec.
99* 100
230,000,000;7.30;Jan. A July 1868 99* 100
1 year
55,905,000 : 6 j Maturity
99* 99*

...1 iqqii a™

War Loan Bonds

May & Nov.

RR. Bds.

do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

104* 104*
104* 105*

July
May A Nov. 1882 ■!

100,000,000

1,009,500!

Loan

Jan. A

<ow,ow

j1V’‘‘U’1W

do

Baltimore, Md.—Improvement

]

1881
1881

July

Water Loan
Alb. Nor. RR...

FRIDAY.

Due.

Payable.

Jan. A

$90,000
225,000
850,000
300,000

Alleghany City, Pa.—City Bds.

....

r™

562,268i

Loan

Municipal Securities

Albany, N. 1.—City Scrip
do
City Scrip
do
do

Princi

pal
Rata.

1874]

....

..

July 1871-

Jan. &

1,258,(XX)
'300,000,(XX)

State Securities.
Alabama—State Bonds
do
do
do
California—Civil Bonds..
do
War Bonds..
Connecticut—War Bonds.
Georgia—State Bonds
do
do
do
Illinois—Canal Bouds
do
do
do Registered
do
Coupon Bonds
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
War Loan Bonds
Indiana—State Bonds
do
do
do
do
War Loan Bonds
Iowa—State Certificates
do
War Loan Bonds
Kansas—State Bonds
Kentucky—State Bonds
•do
State Bonds
Louisiana—State Bonds (RR)
do
State Bonds (RR)....
do
State Bonds for B’ks,
Maine—State Bon ds
do
War Loan
Martland—State Bonds
do
State Bds .coupon. )
do
StateBds inset ibed \
do
State Bonds.coupon.

July 1S68-

INTEREST.

OuUtauding,

| Asked

120
114* i 115
114 i 114
97* 99
97

Jan. A

.j

(2d series)
(3d series)

1867

7,022,000

| !
50,000,000
\
I :|~o 770 iqq

f

July

Jan. &

8,908,342

f

Debt Certificates

do
do
do
do

Jan. &

vn«.ooo

vcn'mtcvtrl
.registered

Bid

127* 128

Bonds (5-20s) or 1862.. ..couiwn. ) i-..
dn
do

DENOMINATIONS.

Payable.

282,746,000

[

Amount

FRIDAT.

pal

Outstanding

94

Various.
65 ’81
do
’65 ’75
Jan. A July ’77 ’S3
Various. ! var.
do
; var.

91

May ANov.' 1887

Julyj

Jan. A
do
!
June ADec. 1894
Feb. A Augi 70 83
Jan. A July 1873
Apr. A Oct. '60’84
Jan. A July ’67 ’87
’73 ’84
Apr. A Oct..,
Jan. A July; 70 81

May A Nov- 1870

do
Feb. A
do

1

Aug

May A Nov.
Apr. A Oct.
May A Nov.
do
Jan. A July

1880
1890
1890
’75 ’79
1875
’70 ’73
18G8
1898

do

11887

do
Feb. A

1898
1S87
1S87
1876
1873
1883
1878
1866

Aug
May A Nov.

95

95

do
do
do
do
’67 ’76
do
1873
do
Jan. A July ’65’ 69
May A Nov. 1S64
1867
do
1865
do
’66 ’73
do
May A Nov. ’75-’89
’73-’76
do
do
’80-’81
’83 ’90
do
’77-’82
do
Jan. & July ’65 ’81
’65 ’82
do
’65 ’93 87* 87*
do
’65 ’99 92
do
93*
Jan. & July var.
1913
do
66’83
Various.
93
Apr. A Oct. ’68 ’71
1885
Mar. ASept.
Jan. A July 1876
1893
do
Various, ’65 ’82
’65 ’82
do
Jan. A July ’65 ’76
Jan. A July '88- 9S
do
1884
Jan. A July ’65 ’83
’65 ’90
do
’79 ’88
do
’71 ’8'
do
85
’71 ’83
do
’65 ’86
00
’67 ’81
do
85
do
’71 ’73
’72 ’74
do
’74 ’77
do
85
May A Nov. 1871
Jan. & July 1866
do
\ 1875
1S88
do
’77 ’78
do

April A Oct.
July

Jan. A

1883
1884

part

431

THE

April 7,1866.]

±=±

fOil cake, bacon, bntter, cheese, lard, and tallow are

©l)c Commercial ®imeo.

Ashes, pts, bbls
Ashes, Prls,bls

COMMERCIAL EPITOME.
Friday

Trade ia

more

Night, March 30.

large quantities of goods are being passed to consumption, and
Stock of all the great staples are di
minieking, and it is not probable that any considerable increase of sup¬

Rye, bnsb

needed relief afforded to holders.

Oats,bush..
Peas, bush..
Candles, bxs.
Cotton, bales.
Hay, bales...
Hops, bales..
Naval Stores,

And yet the aspect of trade cir¬

The extremely feverish condition

and confidence.

cles is waDt of tone

respecting the course of trade is apparent on all sides. But
all experience goes to show that this condition of trade is in most cases
succeeded by an active demand and higher prices. When there is a
general apprehension of disaster to commerce, it is seldom experienced.
Panics come unheralded, when apparently all is well.
Co: ton has declined 2c per lb since last week, under an accumulation

of opinion

'
grains

of unfavorable circumstances.

Breadstuffs have been
vance

has been

firm, and in some of the coarse

Dags

*

bales

Jute..
„

Flour, bbls

,

—1S66

1865.

,

<

5,019

1866

250
119
>-49,171 •<
22,680)
( 21,930 Rice, E. IM clean¬
ed
bags 8,604 19,603
75,000
33,827 20,718 22,024 Rice, E. I., un¬
26,293 35,633 42,078 cleaned, bags
62,107
bgsl02,810 104,309 118,987 and mats

Coffee, other des-

criptions
Coffee, Java.mats
Sugar
hhds
Sugar
bxs

Sugar

hhds

Melado

........

579

69

>

23,296

279

large supply, and export orders so generally filled
that, except for spirits of turpentine, the tendency is downward at the
close. It is doubtful, however, if supplies of rosin and tar can be kept
up at the present relatively low prices.
Oils of all kinds have been quiet. Fish have been rather firmer. In
fruit we notice a large business and an advance in raisins, with a better
feeling generally.
Hides and leather continue very dull. We notice small shipments of
both to Liverpool. Tallow is a fraction lower.
Wool continues dull. Tobacco is quiet and unchanged. In hops the
supply of fine qualities is almost entirely limited to importations from
in

Belgium.
ments

freight market has been quiet for some days, and to-day
were checked by advanced rates asked.
EXPORTS

The

OF

LEADING

be




ship¬

ARTICLES.

following table shows the exports from this port of some leading
commerce for the past week, since January lf 1866, and for

articles of

correspojjin^ pjriol in 1865 $

;

Tar

....

3,067
58S.755

100

62

& bbls
Naval Stores—
Crude trp,bbl
....

Spirits' turp¬
entine

9,722

301

2,510
267,227 104,085
5,748
85,714
35,510
57,203

1,121
2,984

6,171
5,555
4,718

6,165
4,446
50
96
100
571

;

133,925
34,815
51,565

34,053
73,847
86,741
56,278
8,147

73,936
55,645
63,125

1,324
81.2S6

2,562
647
277

1,685

3,107

45.938

398
768

(Wool, bales... 1,140
(Dressed Hogs,
....i No

25,916

11,865 Tobacco, hhds.

..

Rice,

rough,

bush

416
,

7,235
13,205

6,869
23,502

Tobacco

511,000iWhisky, bbls..

15,332

611

176

16,118

118

Tallow, pkgs..

....

1,971

1,779

1,392

bills

....

6,103

Molasses,hhds,

25.588
863
13,564
1,977

Sugar, hhds &

....

8,361
1,526

121,732

6,346

Pitch

873
201
150.495

....

9,368

15,045
17,395

81,769
15,704

1,647

Including bags reduced to barrels.
The following table shows the

*

foreign imports of certain leading
for the past week, since January 1,
1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865 :
[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]

articles of

commerce

the
week.
,

at this port

Since
Jan. 1,
/ 1866.

Same
time
1865.
577

Hardware...

30,738

Iron. RRb’rs

201

2,276

650
149
3,945
447

12,224
5,561
149,269
1,480
2,191
3,502

Brimst, tns.

130
846
639

Cochineal...
Cr Tartar...
Gambier

23
7
250

217
544
3,702

Gums, crude

57
145
86

3,720
1,567
1,298

346

6,097

282

1,638

828j

Buttons

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

..

of the advance.

The

407,525

16,846

Rosin

4,688

Leather, sides. 38,233
156
Lead, pigs

301

extremely dull. The very general “ strike ” that
has been made by foundry managers against the exactions of their art¬
ists, has caused such a falling off in the demand for iron as to seriously
affect the price, and No. 1 pig can be bought at $42.
Other metals,
though genrally dull, are no lower, but the principal articles manufact¬
ured from metals are very slow of sale, with frequent yieldings ia price
to keep down stocks.
Petroleum improved, with a large export demaud and diminished re¬
ceipts ; but crude again coming forward freely, that article has lost part
are

Copper, bbls...

100
.Driedfmit.pkga
100
Grease, pkgs...
Hemp, bales... > 15
33,121
Hides,No
17
Hops, bales....

Metals have ruled

Naval stores

394,941

40,882

..

April 1. Mar. 1. April 1
hhdsll,836
5,941
8,005

Molasses.
Molasses-.. .bbls

3,520

1,401

58

JAN. 1.

Since
Same
Jan. 1. time’65

This
week.

Same
Since
Jan. 1. time’65

..

12,700
7,771
23,721
24,476
. 25,116

Jan. 1, and

record was made.]

..

43,300
4,650
95,098
14,683
24,769

81,841

107,838

THE WEEK, AND 8INCE

15,075 Oil cake, pkgs
...' 68,460
Oats
3,695 368,807 913,620, Oil lard
Corn
6,400 417,140 527,910, Oil, Petroleum.
Rye
432 12,858 14,0451Peanuts, bags.
Provisions—
Malt
14,775 156,726
Butter, pkgs.
56,362 115,925
Barley
20,995
Cheese.
Grass seed,
3,203 92,236
Cut meat9...
2,006
Flaxseed
875
32,180
Beans:
15,387
Peas
Beef, pkgs. ..
24,671 *120,580
C. meal,bbls. 2,751
Lard, pkgs...
C. meal.bags. 5,972 168,911
Lard, kegs...
B. W. Flonr,
Rice, pkgs
6,045
bags
19,944 260,738 103,050! Starch
Cotton, bales
-....iStearine
202
1,537
Copper, plates.
8S5
103
J Spelter, slabs..

overstocked. Sugar has been without iirj
portant change. The demand has beeu moderate for the trade ; stocks
are accumulating.
Molasses has been active and firm. Rice more act
ive. Teas have been in steady request. Spices dull and nearly nominal*
The following is a comparative statement of stocks :
1865.

....

3,261)

Wheat, bash

to be

April 1. Mar. 1. April 1.
Coffee, Rio.bags 52,985 )
(61,570

4,457; Whalebone, lbs

time in 1865, have been as follows:

Ashes, pkgs...

Groceries have been irregular, with spasmodic activity.
Coffee has
met with a fair demand, but a considerable portion of the business has
been in West India descriptions, for export to the Continent of Europe
This market appears

542Tobacco,mf,ibs. 9,672 639,8831,413,760

receipts of domestic produce for the week, since
same

68,934

44,131
26.393

878

Tobacco, pkgs

....

Breadstuffs—

1866.

7,108

8,091

Lard

.'..i

5,116

44,495

1.133

9,778 Staves M.....

58,724

This
week.

1865.

Linseed..
Saltpetre
Manilla hemp

2,030

113

Cheese

[Of the items left blank in 1865 no

rather better. There seems no doubt
now that the yield of hog products is very small.
It is much smaller
than in Tomer years, when circumstances were less favorable to a large
and continous demand. The receipts at this market are liberal, but the
demand is fully equal. Beef is arriving in large quantities, but there is
no accumulation of stocks.
Butter and cheese are still very scarce.
East India goods have been very slow of sale, and gunny bags are
lower, with a downward tendency in guuny cloth. The following is a
statement of stocks in this and the Boston market, on the 1st of April;

bales

509

60,756
5,816
64,240
27,146
99,917 109,043
3,350
2,628

Butter

....

11,015!

RECEIPTS OP DOMESTIC PRODUCE FOR

bacon has been active, and prices

bags

3,820

The

quoted.

Gunny cloth

....

iTallow

2,235

ad¬

an

.

141

Rosin, bbls.
Tar, bbls...

90,543

*

,

"

155

129,208

96,737 Oils.
Petrol., gals 493,7617,410,4712,026,291
3,416
9,0*26
319,444- Whale, gals.
80
84,740
39,080
38,892! Sperm, gals
....
8,860
5,562
140,541! Lard, gals
j Provisions.
115,888 Pork, bbls..
3,306 26,284 38,906
Beef,bbls&tcs. 1,986 23.835 37,283
....j Bacon, ..... 15,412 128,852 157,512

1,427
1,873

for the

1,075

'

C.Turp.bbls
S.Tnrp.bbls

Provisions show but very little change, except a slight change in Lard
Since the arrival of the Cuba from Liverpool the export demand for

Gunnv

.

Corn, bush.

615

Pitch, bbls

154.011 cake

82,609

Since Same

For
the

Jan. time
week. 1, ’66. ’65.

"

1,876

746

261,199
27,171
3,624
17,452 102,409
127,882
180.2121,601,003
22,728 346,159
1,990
10,857
16,457
1,225
10,902 154,808
::740
7,717

C.meal,bbls
Wheat, bus.

-

1, ’66. ’65.

15,S02

Flonr, bbls.

selves ;

..

1,133

given in 100 lbs.]

Since Same
Jan.; time

28

Beeswax, lbs.
Breadstuffs.

active; the wants of the country begin to assert them

plies will be had for a long period.

-

For
the
week.
Ill

Blea

p’wd’rs

Gum, Arabic
Indigo
Madder.

Oils, ess

...

....

5,354

22

•

70

36,371

Opium
8
Soda, bi-carb 2,560
Soda, sal.... 1,529
Soda, ash... 1,438

292
22,591
32,018
10,526

Oil, Olive...

Gunny cloth

.

Champ, bkts
Wines

4,363
3,707

2.207,Wool, bales...

1,314

•

20l!Articles

1,742

519
911

1,151

Hemp, bales..
Hides, «tc.

55

27,894

Bristles.....

130

504

Hides,dres’d
rubber..

369

India

630

3,166
6,878

Ivory

2

658

10

200
307

Jewelry, &c.
Jewelry
Watches....

26
10,790

89,097'

32,672

3.678

51,536
17,876

6,885
13,766

reported by value.

$43,873 $332,072
22,993
298
8,357 Fancy goods. .183,177 1,219,714
473 Fish
7,376 541,313

6,665

3,818

10,267
345,195
172,582

133,016

18,629

90,668
397,026

103,525

337,285

96.641

155 Hides,undrsd. 61,611
890 Rice
13,738

1,714,970

642,962
80,498

92,185

3,317
1,401

72,700

7,350<SpicfcSt &C.
71

Cassia

442,505

21,000
49,674
52,233

Ginger
117
Pepper
140Saltpetre .... 11,267
8,961 Woods.
1,813
33,988 Fustic
i Logwood... 1,121
537
Mahogany.
6,953

967

37,411
23,074

13.080
83.S09

12,452
Metals, &c.
1,551
Cutlery... .
143
London March 23.—Baring’s circular report:
Cocoa firm. 279 bags Trinidad sold at 76s@103s

Molasses

$83,651

12,963
Oranges.... 4,539
Nuts
10,362

Lemons

Raisins

-

19,527
73,927
734,332
6,917

8,573
2,199

9,62S Cigars
2,837 Corks

l,230;Frnits, &c.

1,674
50,428
61,495

41,690
83,469
260,109
2,274
1,932

997
76

l,975jWines, &c.

....

64

Linseed

I

3,574
1,274

Hair

‘

Lead, pigs.. 10,440
114.282
Spelter, lbs.Ill,375 2,026,S0O
Steel
4,292
40,998
Tin, bxs.... 27,853 140,180
723' Tin slabs,lbsl57,278 2,03S,728
761
14,339
6,276 Rags.
628 Sugar,
hhds,
666
tcs&bbls.. 1,446
23,238
45 Sugar,bxs&bg 5,776
73,712
....Tea
28,454
226,811

81

512

Flax
Furs

.....

1.001
105,943
11,640;

477 Tobacco
53S Waste

Sams
time
1865.

For
Since
the Jan. 1,
week.
1866.
434
4,036
38,878

36,759
53,743

50,653
-

for common to fine red; ,57
bags Surinam at 88s 6d for good and 77s 6d for common. 50 bags Carraccaa
bought in at 90s, and 882 bags Guayaquil at 75®80s, but latter since sold at 73®
74 shillings.

Coffee.—Very little offering; the sales

'

only compiise 113 casks, 12 bbls,

200

bags. Plantation Ceylon at 73@73s6d for fine ord, 77®79s for fine ord to low mid,
ana one lot at 86s for mid colory; 33 barrels, 23 bags Native at 68@69s for good
ord, and 29 bags Madras at 75®76s. In Foreign 3,092 bags Santos were bought
in at d0®66s fbr the sound, ana 5,000 bags damaged sold at 56s. A floating cargo
of 1,600 bags St. Domingo, Aux Cays, at 62s 6d insured free of 10 per cent for a
near port.
•■ Rum quiet, and only 140 puns sold ftt Is 6#d®l» 74 for Pemewa, with a few
■

432

THE CHRONICLE.

Copper.— Prices

of manufactured have been reduced £5
per t
tough cake and tile £91, best selected £94, sheathing £96, Y. M. sheathing 9d.
Lead.—Common pig £21@21 5s.
Hemp.—Russian steady; St. Petersburg clean £36@87.
1,200 bales Manila
sold from £46@47 for fair to good current.
Jute quiet, and privately no transactions of importance reported ; 340 bales
damaged^ brought previous*rates.
Iron.—Welsh quiet; Rails and bars £6 10s, f. o. b. in Wales.
Scotch pigs
768 6d cash for mixed number on the Clyde.
Linseed.—Arrivals this week 12.038 qrs from the East Indies. A good de¬
mand on the spot, and Calcutta finds ready buyers at 72@72s 6d ex
ship or ware¬
house ; Bombay would command 74s. Not much business
passing for arrival.
Linseed Cakes scarce at last week's prices. New York in barrels, £10 10s.@

£11.

Molasses—150 puns sold at 14s for st. Kitt’s, and 15s 6d@15s for middling to
good Antigua.
Naval Stores—Spirits turpentine firm at 47s 6d@48s for French
; American,
49s ; Petroleum, refined Pennsylvanian, 2s 3d. and
spirits, Is 5d@ls 6d.
Oils—Fish Sperm quiet at £120: pale seal held tor £51; cod, £49 10s@£50.
Linseed steady at 40s 3d(&40s 6d. Rape: Brown on the
spot continues very
quiet at £46 10s@£47 for English, and £48 for foreign ; for the last four months
delivery business continues in English at 43/ and foreign 43/ 10s; English refined,
48/ 10s; f reign, 51/(&52/.
Olive in good demand, Mogadore has advanced to 51/
@5710*, Seville to 54/ I0s©55/, Malaga, 55/, and Gallipoli, 57/; several cargoes
.

for spring shipment sold, and among them one of Malag!
K
52s
were as follows, Cochin 3‘‘7 tons against 1,396 tons in 1865,
Ceylon 1776 tons
against 1,325 tons in 1865. Palm scarce, fine Lagos, 43s@43s 6d.
Kice firm with small sales; 1,360
bags middling Ballam sold at 12s 6d, and 500

bag white Bengal at 14s 6d.
Spices—Pepper: black steady; 2,000 bags Penang were bought in from 3?g'd@
834d for good West Coast; 400 bags Pimento sold from 2%d@3d for middling to
fine: 200 bales Ceylon cinnamon were taken in from la
lld(§>2s 3d for thirds to
fair firsts ; 250 bales Cassia Vera were held for 62s.
Sugar.—The market is quiet, and closes at a decline of 6d $ cwt. The sales
of British West India have amounted to 1,480 hhds,
including at public sale the
greator portion of 387 hhds, 43 tierces, 61 barrels new crop Barbadoesat 31e@37s,
and Dates at 30s@31s 6d, and 160 hhds 6 tierces 49 barrels
crystalized Demerara
from 3Is 6d@,35s 6d. 2.649 bags Mauritius were
mostly sold at 27s 6d(gi32s 6d for
brown to yellow, and 34s@39s for yellow eemi-crystalized.
Spelter steady at £24 7s 6d@£24 10s.
Tallow.—The fluctuations have been frequent, but the market closes quietly
at 60s for this month and April to June, and 50s 6d October to December.
Saltpetre dull.—Only 360 bags Bengal sold at 23s 9d
cash, and 24s with
prompt for fine.
Tea.—14,300 pkgs sold at public sale this week, chiefly without reserve, and
at about previous market rates.
Good common Congou Is ld(gfls l.^d
Ib.
Castor Oil.—700 cases told from 5>id@6Xd ^
lb lor yellow to mid pale.
Liverpool, March 24.—American provisions and other produce. Ashes.—Pot
ashes are again dearer, the sales are 250 barrels, at 32s
9d@34s
cwt. Pearls
are in limited demand at 35s 6d
cwt.
Bark.—330 bags Baltimore sold at 7s 6d

It will be seen, from the

above, that the total foreign exports from
6ince Sept 1st, reach now 964,000 bales. At 20d per
pound at Liverpool, or f200 per baler taking the bales at 600 lbs. each,
this would give us a foreign credit of $192,800,000.
That our exports may, at least, for the present, continue at about
60,000 bales per week is probable. In fact, the large stock now on
hand, and the continued liberal receipts, can, in the present depressed
state of the dry goods trade, be disposed of in no other
way. Our
manufacturers still hold a considerable supply, and caunot be induced
to increase it.
The future price, therefore, would seem to
depend en¬
tirely upon the Manchester market. Heretofore the epinners have been
willing to buy all they could get at 19d@20d for middling. Now that
the American demand for their goods is decreasing,
many predict that
the trade will be dull, and the price fall.
It should be remembered
all the porta

the other

hand, however, that all the markets of the world are short
goods, the result of the high price and limited supply of cotton dur¬
ing the last four years ; that the India supply will be short, although
the present receipts are large; and that other
producing countries are
not to be relied upon to the same extent as
during the war.
Through the week the market has been fairly active, but prices have
steadily declined. The* reports by telegraph of the renewal of large
receipts at New Orleans,, although fully anticipated, have had a very
depressing influence. The falling off in the demand as advised from
Liverpool, cause holders to be anxious to realize. The private intelli¬
gence that the large accumulations of cotton at Memphis are now being
pushed forward to market, supported by the known fact that large
on

of

quantities
an

Butter—Sells slowly.
Closing quotations for Provisions are as follows : Beef—Prime
304 lbs, 115s@130s ; India mess, do, 130s@,137s 6d. Pork—Prime

lbs, 95s@100s.

Fish, sailed again the following

season, 17th April, 1864, for the west
Kamskatska, returned September 7th with 45 tons Dry Fish ;
sailed again 21st April, 1866, for same
fishing ground, returned to port
17th September with 70 tons Dry Fish, thus
accomplishing three voy¬
ages. Id 1864 the schooner Alert sailed for Bristol Bay, returning in
Ihe Fall with 9 tons Dry Fish. In 1865 the fleet consisted of 7
vessels
The Timandra, as above stated, she
returning from Bristol Bay in the
Fall with 70 tons, accompanied by the H. L.
Rutgers, with 45 tons ;
FlyiDg Dart, with 45 tons ; J. D. Sanborn, with 65 tons : Mary Cleve¬
land, with 60 tons; Equity, with 80 tons, and Taccoa, with 6 tons. The
latter catch from the vicinity of the Fox Islands. The whole
aggregat¬
ing a grand total of 384 tons. These vessels, officers, and fishermen,
are entitled to
bounty money from the Government, say three-fifths to
the men, two-fifths to the vessel. On
application to to the proper Gov¬
ernment authorities for this
bounty money, Captain Turner discovered,
greatly to his surprise, that the provisions thereof were limited to ves¬
sels usiDg Foreign Salt, on which the duties had been
paid previous to
the sailiug of the vessel upon her
fishing voyage.
coast of

Middling
Middling

The

Friday, P. M., April 6.
of cotton at all ports the past week amount to 40,000

receipts
bales, making the total receipts since Sept. 1st, 1,510,000 bales, and total
since May 1st, 1,926,000 bales.
Below is the movement for the week,
and since Sept. 1 :
Receipts at the ports

This
week.

bales.

40,000

Exports to Great Britain
Exports to France
Exports to other foreign ports

34,000
13,000
2,000

Total foreign exports.

49,000

Previously,
since Sept. 1.
1,470,900
760,000
115,000
40,000

Total to
date, since

Sept. 1.
1,510,000

From
New Orleans
Texas
Florida
Savannah
South Carolina
Total for the week..




33
35
37
39
42

83
36
38
39
42

Bales. |

.*

From

7,938|Norfolk, Baltimore, <fcc
150; Per Railroad
4,625: Foreign

447

1,441}

20,391
824,286

Total since July 1

The exports

844,627

of cotton from this port have been
hales

7,195
2,377

13,257

3.117

April 4.

2.151

549

8,779
....

'

....

950
450

:

1,099

863

35

9

500

93

1,226

16,609

10,621
296,708

Total from N. York since

July 1, ’65.

are our

15,983
307,329

328,312

10,902
829,921

307,329

Previously reported

following

:

9,925

1,511 *
:

Total for the week

The

follows

as

Week ending
Mar. 13. March 20.
Mar 27.

,

To Liverpool
To Havre
To Hamburg..'
To Bremen
To Glasgow
To other ports

evenBales.
1,957
,965
1,861

l,007|North Carolina

Previously reported

823,312

839,921

350,823

latest mail dates:

Charleston, March 30.—The

statement of cotton for the week clos¬

ing March 29 ehows that the receipts continue liberal, having reached
2,572 bales. Exports since September 1st are 63,016 bales as follows:
27,068 to Great Britain; 266 to other foreigu ports ; 31,435 to New
York ; 1,657 to Boston ; 1,592 to
Philadelphia ; 948 to Baltimore and
50 elsewhere.
Freight to Liverpool £d. To New York by steamer 1c,
and by sail $c@^c.
Exchange on New York sight £ discount to J pre¬

mium

Stock

:

on

'

hand

'

'

Week ending Week ending Week ending
,—March 8—,
.—March 22—, ,—Feb. 29—>
Seals. Upl’d. Sea Is. Upl’d. Sea Is. Upl’d.
3,622
1,610
3,622
* 1,610
3,622
1,610

Sept. 1, 1866....

Receipts from Sept. 1,1865, to
-beginning of week
Receipts for the week

3,786

62,931

4,193

65,969

51

3,038

70

2,502

4,362

62,326

4,555

67,579

4,625

70,081

3,257

Total

59,060
1,656

4,142

264

Exports since Sept, t, 1861, to
beginning of week
Exports for the week

63,760
1,939

3,837

60,687

3,837

921

259

61,608
4,475

53,699
6,627

3,837
718

61,608
4,971

4,096

'
122

3,379
983

New Orleans, March 31.—The
30th were 15,237 bales, against

529

66,083
3,998

receipts for the week ending March

11,680 bales the previous week. Ship¬
ments were 18,916 bales, as follows : to Havre
4, 166 ; to Marseilles
636; to Liverpool 13.551, and to New York 572. Stock March 30,
179,348 bales, and market closing middling 4U@41. Freight £c. steam,
and £c. sail, for New York, and
£d. sail and £d. steam for Liverpool.

Exchange for New York, sight,
discount; Sterling, 183^@134^.
give below the receipts each week since the 1st of January :

We

Week

ending Jan. 5—bales.

44

794,000

44

128.0C0

4k

42,000

964,000

32
84
37
38
41

receipts of Cotton at this market for the week ending this
*ng (Friday) were as follows :

4 4

915,000

N. Orleans
& Texas.

The

Total exports
Stock

COTTON.

Mobile.

34
36
35
41

Good

fishing.

says the Mercantile Gazette, (San Francisco), begins to assume
formidable dimensions.
Following is a detailed history thereof from
its inception : In April, 1863, Captain Matthew Turner,
commanding
the brig Timandra, 120 tons, new register, sailed as the
pioneer for the
Gulf of Tartary, returning in
September following with ten tons Dry

Florida.

32

$ Ib

Good Ordinary
Low Middling

mess, per tee
mess, per 200

Bacon—Short mids (boneless), per cwt, 63s@64s ; do (rib in),
62s@63s; long mids (boneless), 62s@63s ; do (rib in), 60s 6d@61s 6d; Cumber¬
land cut, 60e@61s • Hams, in salt (long cut),
65s@70s; Shoulders, 45s@,48a.
Cheese—Factory dairies, per cwt, 75s@80s; good to fine State, 64e@70s ; ordi¬
nary, 50s(g60s. Butter—United States and Canada, extra, 108s<&:i28 ; good to
fine, 90s@105s.
Pacific Cod Fisheries.—The prosecution of the business of Cod-

Upland.

Ordinary

common

doing in French.

Spirits of turpentine : dull at 48s(g;48s6d $ cwt for
French. Petroleum.—The market is firm, and about
3,000 barrels ■ eflned Penn¬
sylvanian have changed hands at Is lld@2s 2d ^ gallon, but chiefly at 2s Id for
fine oil; 750 barrels spirit sold at Is ld@ls 3d
gallon, as in quality, and 50 bar¬
rels shale < il at Is 9d $ gallon.
Lard.—With considerable arrivals the market
is dull, and notwithstanding that it is offered at a decline of 2s
cwt. from last
weeks quotations the demand is very limited, the total sales not
exceeding 70tons.
Tallow—Here we have had a good
consumptive demand, and a fair amount of
business has taken place in both North and South American at
49s@50s 6d per
cwt, according to quality. Beef—Has been in limited request, and with liberal
arrivals prices generally are in buyers’ favor. Prime mess,
however, being
scarce, maintains its late value.
The sales for the week are about
1,0^0 tierces.
Pork—American sells freely upon arrival at 90s@95s per bbl. Bimon—The arri¬
vals have this week been larger than for some time
past, and a debline of ls@2s
per cwt ha4 taken place, without leading to much business; dealers apparently
anticipating a still further reduction. Hams being scarce, have not participated
in the downward movement. Cheese—In
steady request at 75s@80s per cwt for
fine.

are again passing Cairo, up the Ohio
additional influence operating to depress

and Mississippi rivers,
prices. Against this
we have a
slight improvement in sterling exchange. But the decline
for the week is about two cents per lb., closing
quiet. Sales for the
week, 17,U00 bales. The following are the closing quotations:
is

fcwt. business has been done in place in Philadelphia. Naval stores.—Rosin.
good No transactions have taken
American, at 6s Sd@7s 6d $ cwt.
Not much

[April 7,1866.

44

“

12
19
“
26
Feb. 2
“
9
“
16
“

•

21,848 Week ending Feb. 24—hales.
20,912
16,427
24,080
21,362
21,673
Ur,592

44

15,463

March 3

44

“

44

10

44

“

“

17

44

“

24
31

,

■'

12,493
16,473
17,002
11,680
15,237

April 7,1866.]

THE CHRONICLE.

The totnl receipts since
total exports 525,186.
New

September let have been 621,295 bales, and

Orleans, April 4.—Cotton easy; sales 2,000 bales; receipts
; low middlings 35c.@36c.
Gold 4 25^.

1,700 bales

Mobil?, March 31.—Our dates by mail from Mobile

are

one

week

433

business is done. The lower counts are more
freely offered, in many
cases for resale, but the full rates of
Friday can no longer be realized,
and business in this class of yarn is
practically suspended. The state
of the cloth market is
very similar, and in no class of goods does any
fair amount of business appear to have
been done. The extensive en¬

receipts were 7,270 bales, against 8,503 bales last week, and gagements in the hands of manufacturers keep prices tolerably steady,
6,585 bales the previous week. Freights closed lower—Liverpool £d, but the demand shows much less animation, and sellers seeking for
orders find the turn of the market
and New York lc. Exchange on New York,
against them, especially where any
sight, par
discount,
lengthened period is required for delivering. Printing cloths show aa
Sterling 129@131.
much steadiness as anything in the market,
Wet k ending Week ending
especially the better quali¬
Weekending Week ending
/—March 10.—x ,—March 17—, /—March 24—w—Mar. 31.—,
ties, which are deeply engaged; but shirtings are neglected aod weaker
St’k on h. Sept. 1, ’65
24,290
24,290
24,290
24,290 in value, as is also the case with most kinds of domestics, T-cloths,
Received this week
<tc.,
11,175
5,585
8,503
7,270
which are more freely offered at the
Received previously .330,113 341,288 341,288 346,873 346,873355,376 355316
prices which were refused last
362,586
later.

The

...

...

..

week.

365,578

.....

371,163

379,666

386,876

Exported this week.. 10,477
6,104
6,746
18,628
Exported previously 274,367
284,844
28S,551
295,297
Burned and lost
3,531 288,425 3,581 292,132 3,581 298,878 3,584 317,609
...

WATER

Numbers...

.

On hand and on
board not cl’d

The

ship¬
77,153 .:....

following

and the total to

79,031

80,788

69,300

Total to
Week end. W’k end. W’k end W’k end. Mar. 31,
March 10.
Mar. 17. Mar. 24. Mar. 31. fm Sep. 1
6,067
8,673
3,114
11,278
167,140
.

2,397

2,806

7,180
270

....

822
524

826

15.893

Common quality
Second quality
Best quality

417
383

Baltimore
New Orleans
Other ports

667

34

666

—

Reeds

10,477
6,104
6,746
18,628
313,925
Savannah, March 80.—The statement for this week shows receipts
of 5,952 bales and 11,378 bales
exports. Market has been dull and un¬

settled, closing at 86c. for middling, Exports have been as follows :
To Liverpool, 6,154 bales Upland; to New York, 4,479
Upland and 136
Sea Island ; to Baltimore 607 bales
Upland, and to Charleston 2 bales
Sea Island. Freights to Liverpool are still
£@ld, and to domestic ports
£c bv steamers, and by sailing vessels ^c.
Week ending
—March 16—
Sea Isl. Upl'd.
281
3,724
107
7,094

-

Sept. 1

Received this week
Received previously

Week ending
,—March 23—,
Sea Isl. Upl’d.
,

Week

ending

—March 30—,
Sea Isl Upld.
..

281
142

3,724

'281

5.684

136

5,816

.

3,724

7,074

Exported this week
Exported previously
Total exports
Stock on hand

...

168,082

166,446

7,604

172,130

7,744

177,622

5,093
145,051

97

4,068

138

6,471

145,051

6,681

11,240
152,356

6,638

...

7,327

6,471

.

162,722

150,144

6.568

149.139

6,819

163.596

16,302

.

7,181

167

Total receipts

155,628

7,4G2

...

1,286

21,159

925

14,026

‘

Galveston, March 24.—We have received one week later mail dates
from Galveston. Sales for the week 751 bales, against 901 bales last
week, 1,388 and 1,765 for the two previous weeks.
Middling closed at

29@30 gold, exclusive of revenue tax. Freight, by sail to Liverpool,
; to New York, \c. ; steamship to
—
N. Y.. lc. Exchange on
New York, at sight,
dis. to par. Sterling, 105@108.
Week ending
Mar. 10.
1S66.
1861.

-

hand Sept. 1....
this week
at other

ports..

Total

13,857
2,59 r
120,516
16,170

Week ending
Mar. 17
1S66.
1861.
,

3,168
2,727
91,569
29,938

153,140

previously

Weights....
Prices

24,867

•

119,402

13,857
1,234

Week ending
Mar. 24
1866.
1861.

,

16,354

3,168 18,857
1,974
1,252
94,296 124,347
22,S20 18,089

3,168
1,393
96,270
22,888

154,558

122,268 157,545

38,060
3,640
8,820
23,497

oz.

4

8

18». 6d

,

END

Influenced

38,566

87,0(11
3,640
6,940
22,669

1,570

38,867
45,136
6,523

Boston
Mexico

46,195

41,969

21,108

37,001

911

42,730

3,610
7,889
28,425

911

6,523

22,954
21,108

1,570
40,956
47,942
6,653

120

Total
On hand and on
not cleared

131,573

120

113,186

136,485

116,017 140,882

6,216

21,567

*

Galveston

Bales.

6,624
8,234
6,632

“

“
“

4,568 Mar. 3...
“ 10....
4,136
4,337
“ 17
2,790
“ 24....

9
16
23

...

2,597
1,234

1,252

Galneston, Texas, March 31.—Cotton, sales of the week 2,500
bales ;. middling 81c. in specie ; stock
13,500 bales.
London.—Our
March 24, on
cotton

follows

27
29

34

SHIRTINGS,

60
d.
81
33
85

87-J

:

The dullness of the market for cotton has had its natural effect in the
trade for yarn and
goods at Manchester. The demand has fallen off
considerably, and prices are certainly weaker than at the close of last
week. For mule yarns from 40’s downwards the demand has
slackened

perceptibly, especially for export, and they

70

90
d.
87
89

100
d.
89
41

41

80
d.
35
37
89

d.
83
85
87

48

YARDS.
—50 Inches

56
lb. oz.
8 12
20s. 6d.

64
lb. oz.
10

66
lb. oz.

4

23s. 6d

78
lb. or.
11
0
11 8
27s. Od. 29s. Od

own

the market for some weeks to come.
Unless, however, we receive
large supplies from America, no material decline in prices can be ex¬
pected to take place, for the total supply in the country is less than at
this period in 1865 by 260,000 bales: the
quantity of East India qual¬
ities afloat shows an increase of 350,000 bales, so that without
making
allowance for the diminished export from Alexandria, the balance in
favor of lower prices, so for as India is concerned is
only to the extent of
9;',000 bales. Fiom Iudia advices continue to be received, representing
on

further decrease in the cultivation of cotton, with a
corresponding in¬
of attention being paid to the cultivation of
oleaginous seeds.
These seeds continue to advance rapidly in price in the London
market,
and are uow selling at prices from 10s to 15a per
quarter higher than at
this period in 1865.
'
a

crease

The

Liverpool cotton market closes dull at following prices

:

quotations.

Ordinary & Fair and Good Good &/—Same time last yr—,
Fine.
Middling.
Fair.
Mid.
Fair. Go<
lCd
17%@19%d. 20%@—d.
@17%d
18 @19%
20%©—
@18 @20
21%@—
@io%
18 @19%
21 @—
@16% 17%
30 @33
60 @75
40
38 @48
46
60

Upland

-

..

Mobile
New Orleans
Texas
Sea Island

-

-

•

1,929
781

OF

45,580

10,830

rear.

343,030

American
Briziliaa
West Indian

47,376
19,971

Egyptian

10,507
56,852

East Indian

Japan.

2,055

....

To this
date
1S66.

^To

36,130
43,860

t

12,990

66,240

40

10,800
3,240

440,820

768,450

17,980
5,600
1,740
4,690

2,440
2,430

85,510
210,2-0

95,830
25,520
68,980
233,670
1,420

70,780

14,370

-Av. w’kly sales
for cons’ption—.
Same To this
Same
date
period date
I860.
1866.
1865.

Total
this

SpecuExp't. lation.
4,320
9,090
3,270
1,210
2,890 11,410
550
320
3,000
850
1,060
6,340
3,690
1,720 17,200

This
week.

China and

DESCRIPTIONS.

Total
this
week.

Japan

Total

Total

ALL

130

5,130
4,430
East Indian... 11,920

Egyptian
China &

• •

..

SALES

American
Brazilian
West Indian..

•

-

correspondent at London, under date of Saturday
the subject of the Manchester market for cotton yarn and
as

50
d.
26
32

prices improved ^d to Id per lb ; but the recent heavy arrivals have en¬
gendered Increased caution on the part of buyers, and the advance in
prices has been almost entirely lo3t. However, the market closes with
the quotations for the time in favor of holder.
It is probable that during the next few weeks the market will exhibit
a want of
activity, and the prices may, to a certain extent, decline.
The heavy shipments from Bombay at the commencement of the
year ate now * beginning to arrive, and as the quantity of East India
cotton afloat is 630,000 balei, against 280,000 boles at this
period last
year, considerable quantities of Eastern cotton may be expected to be

own

goods, &c., writes

EXPORT,

by heavy receipts both from America and the East Indies

118,756

Bales.
2,721

85

—the import beiDg 136,761 bales—the
Liverpool cotton market has ruled
somewhat heavy. In the early part of the Week—owing to less favor¬
able intelligence from America respecting the receipts at Southern
ports
—the trade exhibited more firmness than at the close of last week, and

Trade.

4,928 Feb. 2

26.

21,1£9

.

:

6,241 16,663
4,963
each week since the 16t of January £iave

Bales.

Jan. 6
“12
“19

23,570

29
31

18,073

shipboard

The receipts at
been as follows:

“

1,570
39,197

22.828

911

d.
81

27

correspondent, under date of
the following full review of the Liverpool and Loudon

Exports to—
Great Britain
France
Other Continental ports.
New Orleans
New York

38 to 41

d.

27

25%

GRAY

*5 to 32

29

40
d.

European Cotton Market.—Our
March 24, gives
Cotton markets

123,719

123,113

...

TWIST FOR

16 to 24 30
d.
d.
22
20
23
21
25
23

16 to 24
d.
26

45 Inches
64
66
72
lb. oz.
lb. oz.
lb. oz.
9 0
10 0
10 8
20s. 6d. 24s. Od. 26s. 6d

56

lb.

—

Total

—

GOLD

2,703

Philadelphia

Stock on
Received
Received
Received

MULE

27,703
1,005
73,814

Providence

Stock

Common quality.
Second
quality...
Best quality ....

the exports from Mobile for the four last weeks
March 24, since Sept. 1 :

2,397

EXPORT.

6 to 12
d.
17
19
23

are

Where exported to.
Great Britain
France
Other foreign ports....
New York
Boston

TWIST FOR

.

43,010

25,110

8,840

is

date
1865.

Total

This

1865.

day.

353,596
111,323
20,385
71,004

19.651

459,669
334,068
113,328

140,504

411.328

74,097

122,136

40

6-*,167

1,095,744
12. ,S71

W,721
89,982

,

221,580
47,630

Same
date
1865

650

6,550

Dec. 31,
1865.

1-43,722
36.004

6.920
.

55,400
72,620

15,920

44,270
96,500
3,570

100,820
263.840

9,796
31,023
144,759

94,430

4,971

136,761 733,505 499,161 2,530,708 420,470 603,030 370,275
hardly so good to sell
supported by a moderate
demand for the home trade, remain
steady, but with less doing in them.
BREADSTUFFS.'
Water twist yarn in bundle and
warp is also in less active request, es¬
Friday, April 6,1866, P. M.
pecially (from the causes indicated above) for Germany, but with so
There is a sort of ‘ between seasons ” market for flour. Stocks are
little actual business to report on it is
light
impossible to do more than indi¬
cate the
tendency of prices, which, in general, is against sellers. Two¬ and the wants of the regular trade are large, but no one will buy any
fold yarns remain
perfectly steady in the finer counts from lOO’s up¬ more than the absolute requirements of the moment. The supplies have?
wards, although, even here, the inquiry is occasionally slacker, and less
increased, but are still moderate and not equal to the sale3. Conseas

at the close of last week.




are

The finer counts,

1—£ i

,

Li XI I4

quentlv. stocks still diminish. There does not seem to be much pros¬
pect of increased receipts at present,. The Western markets.are quite
bare of flour. The low rates of railway freight have had some influence
to that result; but it is mainly due to the want9 of the Ohio Valley,
where the wheat crop was last year so nearly a failure.
Wheat remains very firm for all sound milling qualities, but the in¬
ferior grades of spring are much depressed ; rejected Chicago has been
offered at $1,16, and $1 12 has been bid for export. The stock of sound
winter reds appears to be wholly exhausted, and good white wheats are
„

[April 7,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

434

Li

Liverpool, March

22.—The trade continues in

the same sluggish

long complained of. The imports of wheat and flour are mod¬
erate, those of Indian corn liberal. At Tuesday’s market there was a
moderate consumptive demaQd for wheat at previous prices.
Flour
was difficult to sell and rather easier.
Indian corn was in fair request,
but being in good supply, previous prices were barely
At
state

so

supported.
and in very
forced sales in the in-

to-dav’s market wheat was generally Id per cental lower,
limited request. Floor, in consequence o! some
! terval since Tuesday, was Is per sack lower, but
tention at the decline. The market being momentarily
bare of Indian corn, holders succeeded in obtaining an advance

had rather more at¬
comparatively
of tid per

qr,

closing buoyant.

becoming very scarce.
Quotations.—Flour, extra State, per barrel 22s@25s; do Ohio
Corn has been very firm, with a slight upward tendency, and an im¬ 26s@27s; do Canadian 26s@27s 6d; Wheat, Chicago and
proved export demand toward the close, Stocks are now getting so per 10U lbs., 8s 3d@9s 6d ; do Amber Iowa, 9s 8d@9s lod ;
amber winter, 9s 7d@ts lOd; Indian Corn, mixed, p6r 480 lbs., 28s
low that they are more easily handled, and prime mixed is generally
@28s 9d ; Peas, Canadi n, per 504 lbs., 88s; Oatmeal, Canadian, per
held at SOc. But higher freights at the close prevent a decided ad¬ 240 lbs., 25s@-6s.
FARMER-8 DELIVERIES.
vance.
Oats have advanced fully 5c. per
bushel. Shipments to
72,446 qrs. at 45s. 6d*
Week ending 24th March, 1866.
London continue, and we notice the charter of a vessel to load oats at Same time 1865
70,688 do 38s. 3d.
Portland for London. Barley has been active and very firm. Rye has
IMPORTS.
,—Flour-.-> I. Cora,
Wheat,
latterly done rather better.
bbls.
sacks.
qrs.
qrs.
4,219
14,330
The Western markets have had an advancing tendency throughout United States and Canada.
the week. The season is very backward and receipts quite light. It
9,164
14,330
10,345 4,219
Total for week
is thought, however, that the quantity reaching market will soon in¬
Total since 1st January
....
157,802 50,950 187,477 205,430
crease ; but it is quite as probable that demand now in abeyance, wait¬
30,166
Same time 1865
46,204 41,966 - 57,459
ing for the reopening of navigation, will be fully equal to such increased

Milwaukee,
do red and

„

....

,

..

deliveries.

that while

The latest report of the British corn trade has this feature,
farmer’s deliveries for the week were in excess of the corresponding
week of 1865, prices were still seven shillings sterling per quarter
At this market to-day there was a slight upward tendency,
in wheat, corn and oats. The following are dosing quotations :
Wheat, Chicago Spring
Flour, Superfine State and
per bushel 1 12® 1 65
Western
^ bbl $6 75® 7 20
Milwaukee Club
1 50® 1 70
Extra State
7 20® S 10
lted Winter
1 70® 2 20
Shipping It. hoop Ohio. 8 15® S 50
Amber State and Mich.
2 25® 2 40
Extra Western, com¬
2 00® 2 70
White
mon to good
7 30®10 25
Corn, Western Mixed
74® 80
Double Extra Western
Western Yeilow
80®
81
and St. Louis
10 40@15 25
.>
75® " 95
Southern supers
8 60® 9 05 Rye
40®
56
Southern, fancy and ex. 9 75®15 00 Oats. Western
Jersey and State
53® 61
common
to
Canada,
1 00® 1- 22
choice extra
7 35®11 00 Barley
Malt
'.
1 25® 1 35
Rye Flour, fin. and super¬
1 20® 1 25
fine
4 50® 5 25 Peas, Canada
2 20® 2 70
White beans
Corn meal, Jersey and
Brandywine
3 60® 4 15
The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been as follows:

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.
Friday, P. M., April 6,

higher.
especially

.

.

a

been dull for
old prices, until
compelled to advance by the actum of the agents and manufacturers
The result is
plain admonition to the commission houses that no ad¬
in prices will be tolerated, but, on the contrary, if they do not
wish to carry over their stocks of g< ods, they must be satisfied.for the
present with obtaining a very slight advance from the real cost of pro
stop the prevailing demand. Busiuess has consequently
the past three days. JqJjbers kept steadily to the
a

vance

duction.

bbls
Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Rvc, bush
Bariev. Ac., bush
Oats, bush

66,835

1,480
32,500

477,980

30,475

12,705
232,615
368,325

6,260

—

EXPORTS.

FOREIGN

1S66.
For the w'k. Since Jan. 1.
,

15,865

bbls
Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Rye, bush
Oats, bush
Corn meal,

The

export of

100.296

172,215

...

266,090

3.625
17,255

Flour, bbls

1,576,345

29,465
126,465

326,475
Britain and
hreacstuffs to Gieat

1866, has been as follows :

Bbls.
Flour.
97.324
300

From
To date.
New York, March 30, 1866
New Orleans, March 23, 1S06

supply of all kinds of domestic goods is still very
dullness continues a few days, prices will be
low, if not lower, than before.

The

and if the present

reduced

-1865.
1S06.For the w'k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S'e Jan. 1.
407,525
384.550
49,335
42,275
8.320
120,580
10-1.870
5,705

Corn meal,

Dry Goods Market was quite animated up to Tuesday la9t, and
large amount of business was done by both agent® and jobbers; but
slight advance in prices at that time has had the effect to almost wholly
The

a

RECEIPTS.

Flour, bbls

1866.

as

Brown Sheetings

and Shirtings have been stronger

large

again

and more ani¬

Wednesday of this week, and agents have advanced their
quotations $@l cent on standards, but this has checked business, and
15,075
1,200
the advance can hardly be
realized. Indian Head A, Atlantic A,
527.910
38,360
415
14,045 are held at 26$, Nashua X X, Appleton A, Atlantic P A, A H, and P,
137,105
21,180
913,620 H 25 cents, Amory 24, Indian Head B 30 inch 20, do E 48 iuch 20,
25,530
Nashua extra A ,°6 inch 22$, do fine C 40 iuch 23, do fine D 36 inch 22,
-1S65.Waltham F 40 inch 26, Appleton B 24, 4-4 Wachuse ts 24$, Atlantic
For the w’k. S’o Jan. 1.
319,445
10,490
heavy shirting A V 30 inch 21, do A G 19, and shirting P E 33 inch
38,895
2,555
300
140,540 21A»Appleton D 22$, G. Washington hy 36 inch 21, Griswold 8-4 11$,
115,890
8,910
Warren 36 inch 20, Pocassett Came 39 inch 26, do K 36 inch 21, do H
28 iuch 14, Phcenix Cotton Manuf. Co. 36 inch 23, do do 39 inch 25,
Ireland from Sept. 1
World wide 36 inch 15, Grafton 28 inch 14, do 30 inch 15, Shetucket B
27 inch 14, do A 30 inch 15, Massachusetts B 4-4 23, Medford 23, New¬
Bush.
Bush.
mated up to

'

Wheat.

Corn.

1,130,979

4,827,730
7,790
342,835
605,*45

market Manuf. Co. 33

inch 21, do do 36 inch 22.

and Shirtings are steady for the better grades
New York Mills are Sold up
Baltimore. March 27,1806
1,179
Boston, March 27, 1806
io,3io at 50, Wamsutta at 45 for 4-4. Bartlett Steam Mills 33 inch 26, do do
i9.195
California and other ports, Mch. 27,1866
6-4 35, do do 7-8 23, do do 4-4 22, Newmarket 33 inch 24, do 36 inch
5,794,010
1,19S.969
122,898
Total
73,359 28$, Waltham L 72 inch 72$, S3 inch 22$, do W 42 inch 30, do M 81
91,805
1,505,071
To about same period, 1S65
2-10,220 inch 100, do N 90 inch 110, Auburnville 4-4 81, Aquidnecks 4-4 21,
707,049
9,209,224
do
do
1864,
6,860,858
16,217,493
910,345
1863
do
do
White Rock 35 inch 36$, Kent River 11$, Uxbridge imp 28,
TO THE CONTINENT.
Stripes and Ticks are dull, with not ooly no improvement, but prices
bush.
bush.
bush.
bbls.
Corn,
"Wheat,
have bee materially reduced. Louisiana plaids are sold at 31, Ringgold
Rye,
Flour,
214.269
34,627 fast
2,959
6S,111
From New York to March SO, 1866.
plaids 25, Simpson’s Chambrays 31, Connecticut Stripes 21 for 3-8,
7,176
1,118
From other ports, to latest dates..
and 22 for 6-8, Albany Ticks ,16, American 25, Chattanooga 17$, Con¬
41,803 cord 28, Passaic 7-8 23, Pacific extra 7-8 35, Peabody 4-4 28, Sacon68,111
214,269
4,077
Total
13.625
9,985 dale 3-4 15 West Branch 4-4 37$, do No 2 7-8 32$, Windsor 7-8 26,
71,721
13.965
8,425
194,496
32,390
47,247 Henry Clay 3-4 j22, Suwanee 4-4 28.
192,540
1,197,964
97,076
Drills are dull for poorer qualities and prices are softening. Indian
Milwaukee—Receipts of Hour and Grain at Milwaukee from the *are quoted at 26, Globe Steam Mills 21$, Park do 21$, Baot and Mas¬
three last crops, commencing with Sept. 1st, compare as follows :
sachusetts brown each sell at 26, Laconia, Pepperill and Stark Stand¬
Barley,
Rye.
Corn,
Oats,
Wheat,
Flour,
ard, each 25, Massachusetts fine 24, Graniteville 22, and Stark H 21,
bush.
bush.
bush.
bush.
bush.
bbls.
154,463
111,669 Boot bleached 27, Massachusetts do 27 for heavy, and 25 for fine.
170,069
8,430.783
370.175
477,526
1865-6.
69,697
539,709
171,262
168,290
2,444,927
117,133
1864-5.
Corset Jeans are abundant and low grades are dull, while finer
188.604
120,734
227,828
653,613
8,592,780
1863-4.
251,700
qualities are in some demand. Indian Orchard are held at 17, New
W. ekly Receipts at Lake Ports.—'The following shows the receipts
Market Colored 18.
at the following lake ports for the week ending March 31 I
Denims and Cottonades are more in demand.
Denims are sold
Oats.
Corn.
Rye.
Barley.
Wheat.
Flour.
3,165 ahead for leading styles.
Peabody blue are sold at 22 ; Amoskeag sell
3,294
42,445
27.141
47,725
35,737
Chicago
3.420
5.320
2,492 at 50c ; Manchester 37 ; Haymaker’s medal 42 ; Tremont and Suffolk
1,981
Milwaukee
28,425
5,326
365
320
10,507
29,872
Toledo
12,733
7,916
each 42 ; Boston medal 32 ; York 47, and Providence 20. Cottonades
731
1,546
2,126
1,850
13.315
Detroit
4,900

Philadelphia, March 27, 1866

Bleached Sheetings

but inactive.

Poorer makes are lower.

.

7,750

8,Si6
15,420

Totals
Previous week

61,448

101,161

84,767

63.936

52,704

143,247

69,839

36.138

9,896
15,254

Cor, week. JS05

20,113

54.&17

80.900

41,705

14,557

Cleveland




....

6,018

2,175 ^

....

6,753
14,168
L887

bring 66c; York
mixed 40, do
camlet jean®

quite active ; New York mills double andV twist
and Everett 34(5)60; Whittenton’s blue, brown and black
cadet 42, do fancy plaid
; Xew York mills ipdigo blue
are

42.

Print Cloths are not

ENTERED POE WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAMS PERIOD.

active, although prices are quite steady, at

as

Manufactures of wool.

lS@t8* for 64x64.

do
do
do

Wednesday, since which time trade
Some agents advanced their prices $c last week, but
have since reduced it.
8ome others are $@l cent higher, but the ad¬
vance has wholly checked business*
Garners are 21, Amoskeag pink
20, do purple 19, do shirting 18, do dark 18, do light 18, do mourning

Prints were
has been dull.

quite active

up to

are

called for

15, do high colors 16, and

12$ and Milton Mills 12$.

21,467

2565
1318

port. 4145 $1,360,823

120,840

3883

391,143

4849 $1,^5,222
4612 1,673,759

$894,134

9461 $2,818,981

following is a detailed statement of the movement the past week
ending April 5, 1866 :
ENTERED

CONSUMPTION.

FOR

MANUFACTURES OF WOOL.

Pkgs. Value.
Woolens.. ...219 $128,909
Cloths.... ...27
Carpeting. ...190
Blankets..
20
Shawls
...27
...

...

15,204
64,385
4,449

18,581

Value.
78

Pkgs.
Gloves
1
Worsteds... .263
Delaines
15
Hose
13
Worsted yarn 69

Pkgs.

Value

1
Braids & bds. 56
Cot. & worst. 51

82,162
?0,923

Lastings.

131,338
8,544
5,110

—

Total...

14,837

.

...

Muslins...

996

1

...

Emb’d mus’n 28
Velvets
4
Laces v...
30
Braids & bds. 29
Hdkfs
1
...

74]$128,304 .Shawls
1
1,052 "Gloves

Plushes...... 1
Velvets
2
■Ribbons
88
Laces..'
20
Total

687

.

.

Leath

gloves. 38 $48,815
10,762
5,954
444
Matting

2,508 Sewings
$6,821 Braids &

3

Oil Cloth.... 27

877
3.128
92,327

Laces

12,428 ^Thread
88
21,068 iHemp yarn .677

$277,485

Corsets
87
Straw goods. 73
Feath&flow. 66

85,531
25,139

887

.35

,

23,112

459

8

Hdkfs

1869,491

Susp, & elas. 29 ,12,210

FLAX.

OP

.

Woolens
Cloths

36

Clothing

8,605

23.862

867

FROM

4

2,243

90

23.066

5

503

...

Blankets
Total

Listings

buck, and 20 for brown, and 12$@16 for lin

n

113
165
37

5$3G,411
57,618
10,449

OF

Silks
Ribbons

56
42

$114,153
87,677

Linens
405
Linen & cot. 1

Leath.gloves.
Matting

1,243

Laces
Gloves.......

4
2

....

$80,250
413
,

Hdkfs
Hemp

1

$1,006

28

922

6
8

yarn..

Silk & worst.

509

Corsets

4J3

81,437

3180

$1,037,036
AND

4612

$1,673,759

THROWN

INTO

THE

MARKET

-flax....

*

68.545

76,881
8,856

Total...„.w..1286 $303,225
tMOOBsampt’n 3180 1,037,036

Add enda

rpu) tt’wD hjkw nwtt




mi fumm

794
411
108
425
79

$350,413

45

391,243

12,820

fwws

m $s,us,m

Blankets

,283 $579,498

132
118
176
15

1,600

$43,212 Ginghams
.4
53,231 £nb7d Muslins 17
Velvet*
Hose

$177,019

1
..3
...2

1,547

$297,680

4

2,109

504

4,763

1,515
1,685
1,707

.254

41,407

..4
...7
9

637

....

$148,451

goods. 57
Suspen & elas 3

11,450
1,881

7,077
3,735
17,087

8
47

.

MANUFACTURES OP SILK.

99

$163,316
3,780

6

Velvets
2
Silk & cotton 13
Total

.

3,634

Ribbons
Laces

Gloves

...

7,695

118
9
..1

106,517

Vestings.

6,961

Strings..

629

Braids &

.

2,814
787

,

MANUFACTURES OF FLAX.

Linens
Thread
Total

495
1

$143,969

Linen&cotton. 4

Hdkfs

1,899

474
MISCELLANEOUS.

Leatherglov ..6
Matting....2,180

4.743 Embroideries 24
16,587 Colls & cuffs. 1

Straw

7,216
747

’

.2,271 $42,574
EXPORTS

(EXCLUSIVE

OF

specie)

PORTS FOR

4612 15613,759

m»

Pkgs. Value.
315 142,061
.34
19,106

6,700
184,370

Cottons
Colored
Prints
Gloves
Total

1817 : $739,844

1S18

Pkgs. Value.

Cot. & worst.397

DURING

1701
,

$19,464

MANUFACTURES OP COTTON.

Value.

$338,858
lc3,781
161,486
85,255
19,464

6,935

WAREHOUSING.

53,907

Total

314
$118,592
226
81,972
84
74,793
236 7
65,934
841
9,192

33

.

Braids & bds. .22
Total

THE SAME PERIOD.

$110,670
38,273

679
992

800

Carpeting.... 177

$434,324

$391,243

FOR

Pkgs. Value.

,

407,837
369,491
277,435
184,673

1
5

Thread

9

3

Woolens.... .277 $149,955
Cloths........16 -.10,579

29, 1866.

1318

45,988
210,449
228,617

237

7,609

MANUFACTURES OP WOOL.

Crapes

952
178
367
1248
867

$161,486

;.

2,486

Embroideries 14

ENTERED

Silks

Pkgs.

227
8,764

.

79

follows:

Value.
$370,195

1
4

Hose.

$85,255

importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Aprij
6,1866, and the corresponding weeks of 1864 and 1866, have been ne

1 S66.

$133,731

5.

MISCELLANEOUS.

■

,

411

.

8,673

MANUFACTURES OF FLAX.

The

-1865.
,
Pkg s. Valne.
559
$160,563
133
40,177
81
72,831
454
90,056
88
26,816

2,343

9,198

Gingams..... 29
Emb. muslins 24
Velvets
3

.

IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK,

,

12
2
26

COTTON.

MANUFACTURES OF SILK.

again dull, the inactivity begun a week ago has
are still pressed for sale, and the
offerings at auc¬
bidding is not as spirited and prices lower.

1864.

$339,858

.108

Cottons
Colored
Prints

crash.

ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING MARCH

794

.

MANUFACTURES

flannels sell at Si 50 for No. 1, SI 20 for No. 2, 87$c for No. 3, and 80
for No. 4, do 30 inch silk warp No. 1 §1 40, 33 inch do SI 50.
American Linen is in steady demand, at 21 cents for bleached Hucka-

Miscellaneous dry goods.

$184,672

Pkgs. Value.
1
653
Braids & bds. 5
2,295
Cot & wo8’d.206
91,666

12
5,908
Worsteds
357 >151,986
DeLaines.;..
7
3,982
Hose.........
1
451

ing do 67$, Lucas Mills white domets 85@45, Gilbert’s 4-4 white standard

cotton..
silk

9,802

WAREHOUSE.

Pkgs. Value.

Pkgs. Value.
106 $57,105 Shawls

Carpeting

fancy plaid shirt¬

do
do
do

16,676

MANUFACTURES OF WOOL.

Flannels are still nominal, with little real change in
prices* Plain
scarlet and oraDge range from 32$ @60, plain white 34@75, scarlet twilled
and blue and mixed do 37$@66, Army standard 77$, 4-4 Shaker
65@95,
California blue mixed 55; Home Woolen Company’s

303
135
45
315
488

858

367

WITHDRAWN

and $2 65 for 5 fr.

Manufactures of wool...

2,953
f,655
6,158
25,089

Total

£$1 60@$2,^Granville mills Si 60, Solomon Woodward’s
£ fancy $2 26, do 6*4 coatings S3 50, Fort Ann mills 6-4 do S3, Spring
mills fancy mixture D and T Si 87$@$2, and Utica 6 4 new
style fancy
cassimeres $3 25@$3 50.
Carpets are less active, but prices are generally
quite steady. Lowell
Company’s ingrain sell freely at S1 60 for superfine. SI 75 for extra
super, and $2 15 for three ply. The Hartford Com;any‘s SI 60 for
medium superfine, SI 75 for superfine, $2 07$ for
imperial three ply,
and S2 25 for extra three ply, Brussels $2 45 for 3 fr, $2 55 for 4 fr,

WAREHOUSE

2

bds.

are

Woollen Co.’s

PROM

$407,837

6
Silk & worst.
6
Silk & cotton 40
Silk & linen.
1

2,047

Embroideries 51
ColPrs&cuffa 2
2,646 'Millinery .... 6

Kid'glovea... 8

Evans, Seagrave ifc Co’s SI 37$@$2, F. M. Ballou
Co’s SI
25@$2, S <t H Sayres SI 25@$i 60, Babcock <fc Moss SI 50@$2,
Campbell <fc Co’s Si 37$@$2, Mechanicsville Co’s SI 37$@$2, plough,
loom and anvil cassimeres 50c, Dighton’s silk mixtures Si
87$@$2 25,
Suffolk Mills cassimeres S1@S1 25, Millville do SI 50@$2, Parmer’s
A Union do 47$, Carolina Mills fancy do Sl@Sl 50, Peacedale do Si 25,
American mills do $1 75 for £, and $3 50c@$4 for 6-4, East Windsor

WITHDRAWN

■■

.1178

MISCELLANEOUS.

dull.

flax....

24TT8,433

....

——

Total

Total

abundant, and in manj' instances
pressed upon the market. Some spring goods have been more ac¬
tive and steady, but generally the market for woolen goods is
extremely

cotton..
silk...

....

434,324

1248

Linens
738 $203,814
Linens&cot. 2
337

are

1010
438
327
992

.952

.

SILK.

1
5
110

Vestings
Hose
Raw

MANUFACTURES

Cloths are still dull and inactive. Cotton warps are quoted at $1 95
for No. 1, $1 85 for No. 2, and $1 75 for No. 3, 6-4 Conshohocken do
$2 26@$2 75, and 6-4 all wool black doeskins $3 25@$3 75, and 6-4
Leicester ladies cloths $1 75.

Pkgs.

.

Spool.... ....109$ 31,135
Hose
....484^133,929

360

-

2
10

Cravats

1,736
73,553
16,838

Gloves...

15,935
1,683
13,919
8,904

MANUFACTURES OP

Silks

50@70, Meyers IXL wide tapes do 65@$1 12, do 1XL narrow
tapes do 48@78.
Ginghams are less active, while poorer grades are dull and lowerGlasgow are sold at 28, and Lancaster 25.
Mouslin Delaines are less active, but prices are quite steady, gener¬
ally selling at 23 cents.

/

794

....

MANUFACTURES OF COTTON.

Cottons... ..309 $128,539
Colored... ...127
62,782
Prints....
1
383
Ginghams. ...31 10.834

250 do

%

177,019

297,680
148,451
42,614

STATEMENT*

DETAILED

are

Foreign Goods are
not continued.
Goods
tion are large, but the

$579,498

The

steadily. FeJer 1 are sold at 18, Smithfield
Wauregan 16 and high colors 17, Saratoga

Satinets

$502,891 *

$323,772

1,037,036

Crapes

and

10,174

46

12S3
537
254
504
2271

$178,267
66,099
116,2^

965

Total entered at the

in steady request at uniform rates. Bradleys Du¬
plex Elliptic per doz hoops 87$@$1 06, do Empress Trail do $1 25
Kelley Manufacturing Co. No. 20o Trail per doz hoc.ps45@66, do No

Cassimeres

36,402
61,582
83,120

consumpt’n 3180

Total
Add ent’d for

Jaconets are in light demand. Slaters are held at 19, White Rock
high colors 21, plain do 19.
Lawns are steady. Dunnell Manufacturing Co.’s 1,400 quality sell
at 27$c, Lodi fancy mourning and plain colors 25, and Pacific fancy

27$.
Hoopsrirts

437
186
103
508
1831

$177,494

....

Miscellaneous drygoods.

17, Swiss ruby 19, Dutchess B 16, Lowell dark 16$. do light 16$, each
a cent higher-than last week.
Arnolds 17, Merrimack 22 for W
and 21 for D, each l cent higher than last week. Columbia full madders 15, Concord madders 16, do purples 16, Glen Cove full madders
18, Wauregan fancies 18, do rubies 19, do pinks 19, do purples 19, the
same as last "week.
Spragues madders 20$, blue and green *20$, Ca¬
naries 19$, solid colors 20$, shirtings 21$ and mournings 17$, -$@1 cent
higher than hist week. • American 19 net, lc. higher.
Silesias are dull and lower, with the exception of the better quali¬
ties. Slaters plain are 20 cents, Indian Orchard and Lonsdale 25, Live
Oak 18, Social 80.
Cambrics

560

....

half

.

..„

cotton. .*"127
silk
86
148
flax

_

THE

WEEK

Corn meal,

bbls,,,vf>,,400

1,025

PORT

ENDING

Quan. Value.

Danish west indies.
:

FROM

THE

OF

NEW

APRIL

Quau. Value.
Flour, bbls
Pld Codfish,

500

bbla,,400

4,469

YORK

TO FOREIGN

3rd, l 866.
Quan. Value
Dried Codfish,
bxs
115

289

350 Pork,bbls..,.,.50

1,190




512
150
157
35
122
63

Lard, lb*
2,500
Bacon, lbs....740
Bread, pkgs
10
Beef, bbls
1
Hams, lbs
544
Hatches, bxs
.5
26,400
Hoops
Shooks

221

Corn, bush

200

190

Photo mat*ls,

Shoe pegs,
bbls
116
Beef, tes
174
Furniture cs.. .39

500

5

CS

LONDON

CRONSTADT.

28

Naptha, gal Is... 80
flasks

$3500

1,000
8,915

157,782

logwood,

2,910
424

bxs

2,304

500

14,569

23

10

GIBRALTER.
600
200 Tobacco, cs... 215

Cocoa, bgs—594
Extract, bxs ..250
Muskets, CS...100
Furs, cp
6

Staves

Rosin, bbl

.3

75

Cars.:
;..3
Miscellaneous....

BRITISH WEST

Cornmeals,

Beef, bbls
Corn, bush

3,384

XNDIKS.

118
1,946

3.523
1,793

1,832 Lard, lbs.. .13,423

280
415
1,712

79
Beef, bbls..
Lard, lbs... .1,875
Flour, bbl
170
Furniture, cs...29

Cheese,

lbs..5.916

3

Tobacco, cs

.905
Candles, bxs.1,075

Bread, pkgs..

440

Kerosene,

Rve Flour,

61

Lard, lbs....3,161
pkgs
12
Drugs, pkgs... .14
Oakum, bdls..100
Leather, roll
4

2^8 \yn pot
bush.
2,000
559
513 Peas, bush.. 1,890

Paint,

289

450

Oats, bush

..

85
480

Grease, lbs .1,600
Oil cake,

202

33

900

1

Carriage

Corn, oueh
100
Miscellaneous....

bbls

ANTWERP.

3,089

Potashes, bbls .86
Shoe pegs,bblsl06
Ess oils, cs ....4

530

19

6,434

Segars, cs

458
450

Sew mach, cs
.3
Effects, ce
9
Starch, crates..25
..

l,6u0

648
366

Beeswax,lbs.l,133
Coffee, bgs.. 1,296
,Cedar, logs
.236

22.625
3,600

..

$45,612
LIVERPOOL.

Cotton,

107,5'0

4

5,882 Carriages

Rosin, bbls .1,088

Live stock,
hhds

288
249

3 4U8

3,309

3,000

1,000

45

4,171

551
192

lbs
Hams, lbs

Miscellaneous

Petroleum.

463

4,373

Rosin, bbls. ..250
25
1,351,313 209.262 Pork, bbls
Tallow, lbs.87,800 17,272 Sweepings,
bbls
19
Hams, lbs...S,000 20,000
399 Jewelrv. ashes. 50
Bones, hhds.... 16
2,365 Oars..:... ..3,984
11.80O
Staves
Tobacco, hhds.87 11.400 Staves,No. 142,000

1,876

75,414

bush.94.388

Lard, lbs..670,423 126,173
Bacon,
lbs

7.5S9

269

Oak, pcs

Dry goods, cs.llri 47.780
375
Carriage
1
IK*)
Paintings, cs...3
8,690
Furs, bis
6
Drugs, cs
10 1, ;90
Pistol?, cs
3-4 22.043

2.700
4.032
250

12

Books, cs

Sew mach, cs..44
Ind. R.goods, cs.l

Skins, bis
33 13.563
Pork, bbls. ..2,043 47,135
Ptg press
I 2*,279
Beef, tes
..1,288 46.759
..

Rags, bis

144

22
Cheese, lbs. 13,440

3,000

Leather bis ...5C3

9,442

Miscellaneous...

.

197

153,668

galls
Fish roes,
bbls

680

106
724
225

762

100

48S
1,070
102,606

HAYTI.

14,047

100

Lard, lbs
Hams, lbs

.603
Bread, pks... ..10
Furniture, cs. .7
.

18

182

250
60
110
185
76

Bread, pkgs. .186
Dried fish.... .700

468
450

130

Rice, bags...

200

Beans,

bbls

Petroleum,

galls

Oars

.600
.74
.208
.

Optical

7

4,955

.1,121

lbs

1,552

6,958

Mahogany
323

15,776
541

3,535

Rattan
Rosewood
Willow
Other

1,037

-

447
99

124
616
powder.846 12.491

1,750
704
7,599
78
5,162

2,21l

465
44,771

929

2,2H

4,065
Cigars..
43,873
622
Coal, tons....650

Hides, undress¬

..

...

.100
.100

Logwood, tons,

*■

9,989

1,813

Fustic

..

3,109
2,500 Flour, bbls.. 1,570 14,063
7.264 Codfish, qtl...628 3.816
48
147
10,650 Hake, qtl
24,S50 Soap, bxs.... 1700 2,730
3,130
Tobacco, bale.110
1,241
$76,810 Furniture, cs. 116
451
Cheese, lbs 1.474
CETTE.
750
140,400 25,000 Hams, lbs...2,830
Staves
Lard. lbs....'5.350
1.247
FRENCH WEST INDIES.
659
Shooks
1,100 Butter, lbs:.3,411 1,543
374
Lumber, ft.... 905
28 Candles, bxs.115
31
941
Flour, bbls ...160
1,400 Sugar, bxs
112
Beef, bbls
27
600 Lumber, pcs..384
200 Machinery, cs..,8 2,039
Tcfhgues, bbls. 5
238
20
690 Potatoes, bbls.50
Pork, bbls.
134
Tar, bbls
100 Vinegar, bbls. 10
20
25
570
100
Corn, bush
-100 Btef, bbls
Peas, bush
Pk fish
Pk fish, bxs

846

Plums
Sauces and pre¬

.

49

Pork, bbl....620.
Pkld codfish,
bbls
238

„

Brimst’e tons 639
Cream tartar.. .7
Cochineal.... .23
Cutch
100
Gambier.:. ..250

140
66
150
188
3S1

...

25,117

8,779 1,655.405

MARCH.

ed
61,611
298
3,801 Corks
14,503 Homs
Cotton, bales.447 36,471
1,089 Liquors, Wines, &c.—
974
6
1,863 Clocks
.63
4,320 Ale
204 3,047 Cocoa, bags.. 149 2,193
528 Brandy
112
678 Coffee,bags .3945 70,604
3,374 Beer
386
13
131 Emery
Cordials
Gums,crude.. .67 7,292
194
138,177
4,763 Fancy goods
arabic.145
9,216 Gin
do
2,766
16
1,543 Feathers
do copal...90
1,453 Rum
Flax
512 31,308
3707 36,321
Indigo
86 11,536 Wines
7,376
Fish
Iodine, pot.. .17
2,348 Champagne,
478
bask
4353 48,633 Grain
Lac dye
49 2,686
8,172
Hair
64
Lie paste ....234
5,470 Metals, &c.— 8,411
296
Haircloth... .15
Madder
346 46,232 Brass goods....2
332
Hemp
55 1,335
3
Oils
25
1,026 Bronzes
Honey
31 1,465
22 2,680 Chains and an¬
Oils, ess
6,505 Hops
chors
114
169 8,960
Oils, linseed. 125 10,159
111,561 Ind rubber.. .630 61,351
70
8,242 Copper..
Oil, olive
476
Cutlery
143 71,987
Opium
8 4,431
7,587 .Machinery
57
76 7,231
Paints
12,683 Guns
242
Potash, chlo....
885 Hardware. ...434 44,:/72| Maccaroni...140 97,920
Lead, pigs.10,440 56,800 Molasses.. ..3818
3,318
do Pruss
.19
7,743
Oil paintings.. .6
Reg Antimony62 3,022 Metal goods...46 12,792
Paper hang¬
Iron, hoop,
9,866
Soda, bi carb2560
6,714
tns
128
ings
201 16,877
do sal.... 1529
8,824
740
Plaster
Iron pig,tns. .796 12,645
do ash....1438 48,691
Perfumery, .. .49 9,567
Iron, sheet,
do caustic.651 15,308
7,213
tons
165
8,330 Pipes —
Sponges
57 2,367
278
Provisions
Sugar of lead. 12
788 Iron, other,
tons
1123 54,528 Rags
761 18.573
Sulph copper ...
705
13.738
20
7,038 Rice
Sumac
3850 24,148 Needles
2
1,309 Rope
9,563
Secmmony
623 Nickel
2,508
7,92? Salt
Saltpetre
11,267 Old metal
Statuary
*
631
2
3,884
Tong beans... .4
379 Platina
56(
Starch
4,045
Vanilla beans. .3
1,650 Plated ware.. ..3
Seeds
5,766
3,63<
27
Vermillion
25
4,568 Per. caps
Linseed... 10,790 43,037
Vitrol of copper.
8 2,38!
8,443 Saddlery
Steel
4292 68,57S
Soap
39 3,019
Yellow berries..
1.374
v.
Other
5,754 Tin, bxs... 27.853 185,509 Sugar, hhds, bbls
and tes... .7446 295,638
Tin, slabs..3127,
Furs, &c—
157,2?8 lbs.... 27,269 Sugar, boxes &
Felting
106 2,OSS
262
Silver ware
.1
bgs
5776 138.608
Furs
81 49,700
Hats, goods... .7
2,034 Spelter, lblll,875 5,415 Trees and plants 3.050
Tea
28,454 329,984
Wire
23
1,795
Fruits, &c.
234 8,275
Bananas
;..
4,872 Zinc,lbs..282342 16,562 Toys
Tobacco
997 25.197
Citron
998 Stationery, <fcc.—

Ble.i

91

250

Lard, lbs

19.420 Soap, bxs
50
257 Dried fish,bxs.300
Ilav, bales.... 106
..15
Water, cks
64
286 Candles
Boat
1
Mfd tobacco,
lbs
1,784
612 Preserves, cs...21
Furniture, cs..26
Mfd tobacco,
hhds
4
780 Bread,pkgs.... 45
Paper, reams. 100
81 Empty casks, f.82
Miscellaneou s....
607 Trunks, pkgs..50
Lumber, ft.25,643
$147,660 Shingles.. .20,000
Rum, bbls
25
IIAVKK.

SPECIE)

ENDING

370

Baiytis

2,809

164

93,597

bis
Com.

2,093

-

1,620
....700

Nails, kegs
Shoulders,

Grand total.... $3,953,456

500, Miscellaneous—
1
128
4,547 Surgical
Alabaster oma.2
Acids.........60 ’ 3,916 Jewelry, &c.—
103
10 16,394 Baskets
Ammonia
254 Jewelry
5
26 42,145 Bags
Ammonia sal..3
232 Watches
Boxes...
Argols
...11 2.578 Leather, Hides, «fec.—
Buttons
201
130 27,269
Anoline....
2,326 Bristles
692 Burr stones
Assafcedita
849 Boots & shoes. 3
Clay
Aluminous cake.
927 Hides, dress¬
61
ed
369 135,950 Cheese
Bark. Peruv.. 130
2,243

80
365
318
184

125

125

$45,485

specified.]Value
Pkgs.

plate... .67

1
2
6
25

694
95

Codfish, qtl... .54

529

Alkali

;7,598

Gotton gin
Hats, cs
Shoes, cs

Nails, kegs....50

1,820

..

YORE FOR THE

Drutjs, <sc.—

Hardware, cs.. .40
Drugs, pkgs....76
Tobacco, hhds. 18

3,132

Miscellaneous.

660
208
822
350
625

Paper, reams 1000
Pepper,bxs... 20
Tea, pkgs
5

serves
397 19,070
Earth’nw’e..3839 103,484 Instruments—
Glass ........168
1,035 Mathematical.. 2
93
Glassware
92
4,886 Musical.
Nautical
2
Glass

253

bbls.... ....221
Sugar, bbls
.1

4.867

159
104
133
117
429
82
423

'

Fire crackers. .62

China

416

100
60

Pork, bbls ....131
Beef, bbls
132
Pickled cod fish,

128

270
224
876

lbs........1,100
Lard, lbs.... 1,000
100
Sugar, lbs
10
2,815 Pk codfish, bbl. 10
10
2,360 Soap, bxs
Oakum, bales..25
2
1,410 Matches, cs
5,792 Butter, lbs....600
147 Cheese, lbs.. .249
409 Mfd iron, pkgs 40
770 Pickets.... 14,000

AT THE PORT OF NEW
S0TH, 1866. /

Boftles

3.57S
1,156
65,680 10,299

lbs
Staves

2,600
242

Hardware, cs. ..14
Matches, cs... .63
Dry Goods, cs.. .1
Glassware, cs...7

$9,834

Trunks, pkgs

£.798

4,748
galls
266 Whisky, bbls .. .6
94 Whale oil,
700
galls
80

Corn meal,
bbls
65
Butter, lbs... .213

Rosin, bbls
Mfd. tobacco,

5.019

Mfd tobacco,

54
200

galls..,. ..2,426
145 Flour, bbls .450
150 Blacking, bxs.. 30
98 Drugs, pkgs...22

China, Glass &E. ware—

galls

8,595

4,230

Shooks

839

456

98

bbls....

1,886

,

Kerosene,

bxs

825

Naval stores,

202

Petroleum,

697

7,358

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise
Pkgs. Value.
Pkgs. Value,

2,200 1,254
1.306 Spirits turpentine, '
60
bxs
478
3.009
' 216
1,295 Oysters, cs.... .20
324 Corn starch,

Butter, lbs.. 3,769

Mf tobacco,
lbs
4,310

179
632
750

WEEK

43,221

15.452

bush

16.030

1,283

-.1

(OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND

15,650

Flour, bbls. .1,572

Wheat,

8
Lumber, ft209,746
Perfumery, bxs50

IMPORTS

AFRICA.

13,130

Pork. bbls.. ..517
bbls

47

562
247

19

105
181

$54,074

INDIES.

Flour, bbls..5,680 52,350

406

108

781

Glassware,cs.. .2
Cuttlery, cs ...90
Hardware, cs. .92

140

292

pkgs..64
Agl implements,

Mfdiron

408

650

Safe

413

495
20

75

Perfumery,bxs.50

$25,835

$58,171

'bbls

720

382

BRAZIL.

Dry goods, cs. .94 19,648
Flour, bbls...400
6,013
4
126
Sugar, bxs
750
Paper, reams..40
Butter, lbs.. 1,170
536

400
300

260

24

Steel.cs

60

cs

550
137 Domestics, cs. ..9
670
125 Lumber, pcs.. .85
50 Petroleum,
‘galls
22,900 10,777

Cotton

535

6,350

Pres’ved

600

pkgs
$13,690 Clocks, bxs

396

978

7,528

Furniture, cs.l96

5,003

gins, cs .8
1.112 Candles, CS....20
1,514 Lard, lbs,...6,761
Spts turpentine,
cs
6
120

30

cs

mach,

975
608
627
102

Miscellaneous...

80

12

Gin,

ioo

Salt, sacks....300
Onions, bbls.. .60
Cider, cs
30

bbl

6.280

Trunks

450

100

11,878
990

1,218

Lumber, ft. 42 000
Erick
18,000
Photo, materials,
cs
1
Potatoes, bbls. 160

229
194

Sew

1,532

69

cs ..42
cs. .93

100
cs—
1,730
912 Paint, cs........ 18
2
1,076 Hoop skirts
cs
98 Gas flxt, meats, 9

cs

galls

$20,799

270 Spts turpentine,

Butter, lbs..2,324
Hams, lbs... .394
Flour, bbls.. .600

270 Keroeene,

...

'

1,293
485

45
Drugs, cs
Copper still.... 1Domestics, cs...2
Beef, bbls.....132
Lard, lbs
3,800

100
1,045 Perfumery, bxsoO
200 Mfd iron, pkg..2
10
£00 Tar, bbls

3,150

150
740
806
98
42

ARGENTINE REPUBLIC.

304 Drugs, cs
419 Hardware,

Sew mach, cs. .10
Hardware, cs.. .8

Gin,

Tacks, bxs... 100
Nails, bxs
20

.100

basrs

...35
Logwood, tons.20
DUTCH WEST

140

cs

Mfd. iron, pkgs.39
Hardware, cs. ..6

Dried apples,

5,000

726
870

..25

bbls
8,403
15,964 Cornmeal,

Cotton, bis

2,839

25,400

Flour, bbls..2,600

8,811 Cornmeal,

373

logs

Perfumery,bxslSO
Potatoes,' bbls. 50
Rosin, bbls
5
Paint, pkg
9
Shot, kegs
50

1,985

9.537
100

$301,572

Potashes bbls..25

399
1,603
3,779

5

Opium,

BRITISH NORTH AMERICAN
COLONIES.

445

2

Glassware, cs.. .5

$18,107

Tobacco stems,
bales
40
Tobacco stems,
hhds
183
Cedar wood,

150

Furniture, cs... 84

Petroleum,

BREMEN.

..

1,650 Drugs,pkgs....42
200 Empty hhds.. .446

239

Resin, bbls.2.183
Tobacco, cs.. .245
Tobacco,hhds. .63

900
450
175

..634

Pkgs
14
Spikes, kegs.. 179
Machinery, cs .15

6,620

12,500
69

980
galls
20,183
14,000 Tobacco, hhil... .1
3,7S5

Miscellaneous....

..

e

galls ....136.407 35,466

355
230
5.024

Beef, bbls

Hay, bales

4S0

Lead, pigs..42
Vinegar, bbls. .20
Tar, bbls
20
Pepper, bgs.... 50
( inamon, roll. .10
Copper, bxs ... 4
Coal oil, galls2568
Linseed oil,
galls
83

925

103.000

320 Hoops

Petroleum,

1,009

2
Revolvere.es
Mfdiron, cs
2
Drv goods, ce.. .1

1,025
6,640

Oysters, bxs
$167,325 Frames, bxs
.Wood ware,
QUEENSTOWN.

Seneca loot,

bgs

8,238

Corn, bush. .1,000

123,413

40

Paint, bxs

668

pkge
9
Skins, bales.... 24

6,675

£ails, kegs.... 140

63,112

130.431

Drugs, pkgs.. .25
Fire crackers.. 12
Hoop skirts, cs.l
Furniture, cs...9
Cocoa, bags... 125

25,308

H.9,659

gall*

22,501 Logwood, tone.22

Sew mach, cs.714
Wooden ware,

Shooks &

Petroleum,

galls

MEXICO.

$11,702
Petroleum,

100
47,500

8,368

CUBA.

15,037

Cotton, bis..1,000

800
4,800
3,000

MALAGA.

_

CORK.

4,045

6,000

cs

Photo

$43,793

Londonderry.

73,381

218

20

Boots and shoes,

3,366

Corn, bush.26,866 19,881 Petroleum,
grails
6,000
64,176 26,206
Rosin, bbls. ..150
GREENOCK.
Ext logw’d,
83,720
bxa
1,000
4,196 Tar, bbls,...2,185 8,740 Staves

Cotton, bis....863
Ext Fustic,
bxs
,.400

16,000
16,800

matl, cs..7
Booke, cs.... 12
Sew mach, cs.. 16
Exp pkge, c».. .l

40.427

Miscellaneous

$47,260

Dry goods, cs. .40
Clothing, ce.... 42

TARRAGONA.

Cotton, bales. 225
Staves
14,300

225
800

800
Lumber, ft
;
Ind rubber goods
cs
1
Furniture, cs,.30

VENEZUELA.

GRANADA.

NEW

Quan. Value
Shooks

Bread, pkg9. ...20
Rosin, bbls
25

...

...

56,705

galls

Segars, cs

2
Rope, coils.... 10
cs

Miscellaneous

2

500

Spirits,pipes.. ..6

8,400
1,891

Corn, bush.28,320

50

Shoes,

3,000

33,600

Staves

Petroleum,

$40,430

10

Woodware,
pkgs

CADIZ.

BRISTOL.

HAMBURG.

Nails, kegs

Quan. Value.
Cutlery, cs

1
667 Combs, bxs
75 Lumber, ft.30,000
Hams, lbs....343
169 Cheese, lbs...448
83
150 Toys, pkgs
219 Wine, bxs.,..426
676 Miscellaneous

22,000

feet

$6,524

$118,901

10,000

250

Lumber,

100
45

200

gals

Miscellaneous....

500

Staves
6,000
Oats, bush..22,278

$11,739

Quicksilver,

Petroleum,

9
Sponge, bis
1,000
Cheese, lbs.92,066 20,254
Bacon, lbs. 189,144 29,565
Corn, bush.27,292 20,741
2,500
Tobacco, hhds..8
1,164 Horn tips, cks.234
4,105
523 Flour, bbls..2,000 20,000

..

Quan. Yalne.

Quan. Yalne.
1,300
Tobacco, hhds..8

Quan. Value

Quan. Yalne.

Ext

[April 7,1866,

THE CHRONICLE.

436

Books

Dried fruit..

1
1

2,431 I

Lemons
Nuts

Oranges....
Pineapples.
Prune*

87

14,606'

Engraving*... .9 5,4421
Paper
271 19,457
Other
97 15,194'

....

4,539

192 Woods—

|

Cedai

3,153'

Waste

76

Wool, bis...1,314
Wax

Other
Total........

5,59!

116,433

jjj

$3,423,9^

18

Maracaibo

CURRENT.

PRICES

good9 deposited in public stores or bonded
warehouses must be withdrawn therefrom, or the
All

duties thereon paid within one year from the date of
the originnl importation, but may be withdrawn by
the owner for exportation to Foreign Countries, or
ern

be transhipped to any port of the

Pacific, or West¬

Coast of the United states, at any time

before the

expiration of three years from the date of the original
Importation, such goods on arrival at a Pacific or
Western port, to be subject to the same rules and
regulations as if originally imported there; any goods
remaining in public store or bonded warehouse be-

5ondGovernment, and sold regarded as regulations to
three years shall be under such abandoned as
ie

Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Mer¬
chandise upon which duties have been paid may re¬
main in warehouse in custody of the officers of the
customs at the expense and risk of the owners of said
merchandise, and if exported directly from said cus¬
tody to a Foreign Country within three years, shall be
entitled to return duties, proper evidence of such
merchandise having been landed abroad to be furnish¬
ed to the collector by the importer, one per centum
of said duties to be retained by the Government.
In addition to the duties noted below, a discrim¬
inating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all
imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties
with the United States.
the

On all

growth

goods, wares, and merchandise, of the

of

produce of Countries East of the Cape

or

Hope, when imported from places this side of the
Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 por cent, ad val. is
levied in addition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the place or places
of their growth o* production ; Raw Cotton and Raw
Silk excep'ed.
The tor in all cases to be 2,240 ft.
Good

cent ad val.

Askes—Duty: 15

7 00

^ 100 ft

Pot, 1st sort
Pearl, 1st sort

1 12 50

Anckor*—Duty: 2* cents g 1b.
and upward
^ ft

11

©

Of 209 ft

Beeswax—Duty, 20 $ cent ad val.
American yellow
ft
29

©

$ cent.
Rio Grande shin
ton 80 00
Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.

©

40

Bone*—Duty: on invoice 10

$

Pilot

«*

©
©

.

5

©

Navy
Crackers

15

Breadstuff*—See special report.

1 $ ft.
60 © 2

Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair,

and white... $ 0)

American, gray

25

Butter and Ckee*e.—Duty: 4 cents.
Butter is dull but price* are steady.
Cheese

is

quiet.

.

foot, 34 cents $ lb.

AH cash.
Copper has been duU and unsettled, and prices are

lower.

$1 ft

Sheathing, new
Sheathing, &c., old
Sheathing, yellow

24

§

©

©
©

Bolts.

Braziers’..

29* ©

Baltimore
Detroit

81

Portage Lake

29* ©

©

45
26
84
45
4
,

,

80
..

fair to good

do

•

Firkins,
* fir. tubs,
,

strictly fine

Western, good to choice
Pa., common to m dium
do firkiDs, finer kinds, yellow .
West. Re erve, good to fine, yel.
do

Southern Ohio

..

.

35
42
8r>
80

to medium

com.

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; untarred Manila, 2$,
other untarred, 3* cents $1 lb.
20$ ©
21*
# lb
Manila,
Tarred Russia.
Tarred American
Bolt Rope, Russia.

..

..

••

Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
Regular, quarts
Short Tapers

gross

©
©
©

id
28

55
..

©
©
©
©

70
.

,

50
40

Drugs and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 40 cents $
gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ lb ; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft;
Argols, 6 cents $‘ft; Arsenic and Assafoetida, 20;
Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 80 $

val.; Balsam Capivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
Calisaya Bark, 80 $ cent
Chromate Potash, 3 cents
1b; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100 ft#; Refined
Borax, 10 cents $} ft; Crude Brimstone,* $6; Roll
Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur, $20 $ ton, and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Cam¬
phor, 40 cents $ 1b.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad
val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ 1b;
Castor Oil, $ l $ gallon ; Chlorate Potash, 6; Caustio
Soda, 1 *; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, *; Cream Tartar,
10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft; Cutch, 10; Chamomile
Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent $
ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gam¬
boge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $
cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum
Damar, 10 cents per ft; Gum Mvrrh, Gum Senegal,
Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacantn, 20 $ cent ad val.:
Hyd. Potash and Resublimed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and
Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil
Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Bergamot, $1 $ ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ cent ad
val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ 1b; Phos¬
phorus, 20 g cent ad val.; Pruas. Potash, Yellow, 5;
Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents $ 1b: Quicksilver, 15
$ cent ad val.; Sal iEratus, 1* cents $ 1b ; Sal Soda,
* cent $ 1b ; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 $ cent ad
val.; Shell Lac, 10; ^oda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cents
$ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Sulph. Mor¬
phine, $2 50 ^ oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6
cents
ftSal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vitriol, 25 $
cent ad val.; Etherial Preparations and Extracts, $l
$ ft; all others quoted below, fr kb. Mo^t of the
articles under this head are now sold for cash. (All

cent ad

Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ ft;
ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda, i A; Bi

88

CheeseFactory

do

86

©

88
80

©
©

22

©
©

20

18

©

21

20

common

dairy

©

20

.

English dairy
Vermont

40
35

17

made dairies

Farm dairies

do

Aloes,Cape
Aloes, Socotrine

-5

80

.

22

.

,

40
83
22

city

bbl

Cement”Rosendale

••

Ckalns—Duty, 2* cents $ ft.
ft
inch and upward .....

9 00

Anthracite

Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ lb.

Java, mats and bags • ••

81
25

Peppers — African,
Leon, bags

Sierra
(gold)

28

80
84

Peppers—Zanzibar.,

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Refined
Brimstone, Crude
Brimstone, Am. Roll
Brimstone, Flor Sulphur

5*

$ ton
$ ft

5*
38*

32
67 50

72 50

4*

4*
5*

22

•

•

©

27 ©

.

16

©
©

9 50

23
17

1

©

21
20
18
17
19

©

*7*

20* ©

If*
17*
16*
17*
26*

©
©
©

Castor Oil, Cases

Chamomile Flowers
Chlorate Potash
Caustic Soda

29
1 75

$ gallon
$ ft
(gold)

3 50
2 85

2 80
50

88j ©
8

Cobalt, Crystals.. .in kegs. 112 fts

<a

60
34

H

Cochineal, Honduras
Cochineal, Mexican....

(gold)
(gold)

95
85

Copperas, American
Cream Tartar, prime
Cubebs, East India.

(gold)

29
46

2*

18*

Cutch

ft

Cuttlefish Bone

Epsom Salts
Extract Logwood
Flowers, Benzoin..
Flowers, Arnica.
Folia, Buchu
Gambler.

¥ os.

4
12

2 50

....

La<* Dye

25
42

■,

Licorice Paste, Calabria

Liccorlce, Paste,

Sicily

Licorice Paste, SpaniBn
Licorice Paste, Greek

28

Solid.....

81 j
30

(gold)

Madder, Dutch

Madder, French, E. X. F. F.
Manna, large flake

Nutgalls Blue Aleppo

...

Oil Anise
Oil Cassia
Oil Bergamot
Oil Lemon /.
Oil Peppermint, pure

Gum Benzoin
Gum Copal Cow....
Grm Gedda
Gum Damar

India

Opium, Turkey

8*

do

7* ®
1 75 ©

.(gold)

42

3 50
4 75

5 25

(gold)

©
6 87* ©

2 85
8 60

©

©

..

©.

90
4 50

(gold)

©

40

©

(gold)

©

..

©

10* ©
8

Sarsaparilla, Hond
Sarsaparilla, Mex.

©

..

...

©

30 ©

24 ©
4 75 ©
©
..
©

$ 1b
$ bush.

Seed, Anise
do Canary
do Hemp
do Caraway...

©.

..

Rose Leaves
8alaratus
Sal Ammoniac, Refined
Sal Soda, Newcastle

..

$ ft

*

Coriander

©

..

Mustard, brown, Trieste

...

• •

California, brown.

do
do

©
©
©

1 50

Quicksilver
Rhubarb, China

do
do
do
do

©

(gold)

..(gold)
...'

Oxalic Acid

..

English, white

©
©

Senna, Alexandria
Senna, East India

24
85

©
©.
©

Seneca Root.
..:
Shell Lao...
Soda Ash (80$ cent)

85
Bo

©
©

Sugar Lead, White
Sulphate Quinine, Am
Sulphate Morphine

40 ©,

...

..

.

Tartaric Acid

4* ©

$

2 45
9 00

©
©
56* ©
©

oz.

$ ft

(gold)

Valerian, English

57
54

19

©
47* ©
12 ©

Dutch

do

3 60

..

..

Verdigris, dry and extra dry.
Vitriol, Blue...

.•

50

15

Duck—Duty, 30 $ oent ad val
Ravens, Light
.-...$ pee 16 00
22 00
Ravens, Heavy
Scotch, Gourock, No. 1 per yard.
1 05
Cotton, No. 1
$ yard

78

Dye Wood*—Duty free.
Camwood

(gold).

Fustic, Cuba
Fustic, Tampico
Fustic, Savanilla
Fustic, Maracaibo

...

ton

.(gold)
do

(gold)

Logwood, Campeachy..
Logwood, Hond
Logwood, Tabasco
Logwood, St. Domingo

(gold)

Logwood, Jamaica.........
Limawood
Barwood. '

®210 CO
80 00

19 00

© 32 10
©
©
© 20 00

20 00
00

©

i9 66
88
24
22
22

00

50
50

do

..

..

©
~

~

2 50
§ 25 00
23 60
:

©

140 00

(gold)

90 00 <2h

Feathers—Duty: 30 $3 cent ad val.
Prime Western
^ 1b
70
Tennessee

.

(g)
(g)

Fisk—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1; Salmon,
$3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish,
Pickled, smoked, or Dried, in smaller pkgs. than bar¬
rels, 50 cents $ 100 ft.
The Fi<h market is more steady especially for Dry

bale*
V ft

(gold)

Pickled Scale
Pickled Cod.......

$ bbL
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass, shore ....
Mackerel, No. 1, Halifax
Mackerel, No. 1, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2, Mass, there
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2, Halifax
Mackerel, No. 3, Ma^s. large
Mackerel. No. 8, Halifax
Mackerel, No 8, Mass
Salmon, Pickled, No. 1
Shad, Connecticut,No. 1. ^ hf. bbl.
Shad, Con'ect cut, No. 2
Herring, Scaled
$ box
Herring, No. 1
...
Herring, pickled
$ bbl.

© 16 CO
© 16 0j
©
18 50 © 14 00

15 75

15 00

..

14 00
© 38 00
..

(g)

60 ©
50 ©
5 00 ©
17

©

62*
53*
7 Ou

»

ft; Sardines, 50; Preserred
Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25 $ cent ad val.
Fruit has been In bettor demand and prioes are

steady.

$ * cask

box
$ ft
v

15
82

Dates

Almonds, Languedoo
Provence

do

4

Sicily, Soft Shell

do

Shelled

do

Sardine*
do
da

13*
82

14*

Prunes, Turkish

44

00

17 00 © 17 50
17 50 © 18 00

and Walnuts, 3 cents

do Layer
do Bunch
Currants

?-*
lo

22 50
17 00

Figs, Plum* and
Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, 10: Almonds, 6; other
nuts, 2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, i; 8helled do, 1*, Filbert

Citron, Leghorn

$5

§T 00

Frui<— Duty: Raisins, Currants,

Raisins, Seedless

55

6 50

22 00

Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton.
Jersey
#

80

88
105

6 50

4 50
6 U0

$
$ bbl.
# bbl.

Dry Cod
Dry Seale

80
75
7

60

Gamboge.
Ginger, Jamaica, bl’d, in bbls ....
Ginseng, Southern and Western..
Gum Arabic, Picked
(gold)
Gum Arabio, Sort*

dam Myrrh» East

5 50

Cod which is firmer.

55

Cantharides
Carbonate Ammonia,in bulk....

Coffee has been firm for the better qualities and

gold

Balsam Peru
Bark, Calisaya
Berries, Persian
Bi Carb. Soda, Newcastle
Bi Chromate Potash

1 75

production; also, the growth of countries this side
the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in
American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $1 lb; all other
10 $ cent ad valorem in addition.

.gold
. gold
...gold

42
90
1 50

©

or

.

85

3$

28
1 05

Coffee—Duty: When imported direct in Ameri¬
or equalized vessels from the place of Its growth

do ordinary
do lair to good eirgOM....

gold in bond
(gold)
(geld)

Capivi
Tolu.!

85

Camphor, Crude, (in bond).(gold)
Camphor, Refined.

can

moderately active, but closes quiet.
Rio, prime, duty paid
gold
do good
gold
do fair
gold

25

(geld)

25

23

3* ©

8 30

29

84

Coal—Duty,bituminou8, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels,
other than bituminous, 40 cents
$ bushel.
© 9 50
Liverpool Orrel..$ ton of 2,240 lb
..
Liverpool House Oannel
15 00 ©

Guayaquil .(gold)

12*

24

28*
3*

©
©
©

SO ft to the bushel;
» 28 bushels of 80 lb

bond)..$1 lb
do
do

121

Assafoetida

Bird

85
85

8apanWood, Manila

Cardamoms, Malabar

One

Caracas. ..(gold).(in
Maracaibo .(gold)..

58
26

25
85
50

Antimony, Regulus of
Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined
Arsenic, Powdered
Balsam
Balsam

65

4*

Alum
Annato, fair to prime

Bird

Candles—Duty, tallow, 21; spermaceti and wax,
8; stearine and adamantine, 5 cents $ lb
©
$ft
Sperm
50
©
do
patent,
Refined Bperm,
Stearic
Adamantine

$ gall.
§1 ft

Alcohol

23

ordinary, mixed

,111.,Ind. & Wis., g. to f. yel.
do com. tomed.
do

Mich

Drugs are in steady but moderate demand.
Acid, Citric
(gold)
<j
..

©
©

Senegal
Tragacanth, Sort*
Tragacanth, white flakey...
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng. L(gold)
Iodine, Resublimed
Ipecacuanna,/Brazil
Jalap
Juniper Berries

Phosphorus

Cotton—See special report.

60
60

50

Gum
Gum
Gum

Prussiate Potash

45
12

Mineral
Phial.

42

>

Canada, uniform and fine
do

52

43
42
52
55

Welch tubs, strictly fine.

Gum, Myrrh, Turkey..

...

nominal.)

Butter—
N. Y.,
do
do
do




2>
St, Domingo
17
Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2*; old copper
2 cents $ lb; manufactured, 30 $} cent ad val.; sheath¬
ing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long
and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 © 34 oz. $ square
Lagusyra

WHOLESALE.

may

437

THE CHRONICLE.

April 7, I860.]

..

box
V ht box
V qr. box

28
43
82
86

21

rApril 7,' 186ft

438
18
8
12

...$ lb

Figs, Smvrna
Brazil Nuts

Filberts, Sicily
Walnuts, French

12

Dried Fruit—
N. State Apples
Blackberries
Black Raspberries
Pared Peaches

Unpealed do
Cherries, pitted,

...$ lb

.

14

14$

...

•

25
12

new...

••

.

.

•

45
30
18
50

©
@

.

Chili
Wet Salted Hides—

.

ule

Furs -Du.y, 10 $ cent ad val. Product of the
British North American Provinces, free.
Gold Prices—Add

premium on gold for currency

Beaver, Dark.... «p lb 1 *0 @ 2 00
do
Pale
1 00 @ 1 50

Bear, Black

..

.$ skin 5 00 @15 00

4 oo @ 8 oo

brown

Jo

Badger
Cat, Wild
do House
ishor

Fox, Silver

.

do Cross
'do Red
do Grey

Lynx
Marten, Park
do

pale
Mink, dark
Musk rat, dark

..
.

..
..

TO ..
50 @
50 @ 1 00 ..
10 @
15 ..
4 00 @ 7 00..
5 00 @50 00 ..
3 00 @ 7 00 ..
I 00 @ 2 00 ..
75 @ I 00 ..
2 00 @ 3 00 ..
5 00 @10 00 ..
2 00 @ 8 00 ..
3 00 @ 4 00 ..
5 @
80 ..
4 00 @ 5 00

Otter

Opossum

5
5
75
75
50
50
25
25

.

Raccoon

Skunk, Black
do
Striped

@

10

@ 1

00

@
@

5

White

do

WoaUrtj.
No. 1.

North, and Ea»t.
No 1.

75
40
10

..
..

..

..

..

30 @ 60
25 @ " 75
10 @ 15

8 00 @600

5 00 @25 00

8 00 @ 5 00
1 00 @ 1 50
50 @, 75

50
00
50
00
5

@ 2 00
@,,8.00
@ 2 50
@ 8 00
@ 20

8 00 @ 4 00
10

5
50
87 @
20 @
3 @

76
62
35
8

Glass—Duty,Cylinder or Window Polished Plate,
over 10x15 inches, 2$ cents $ square foot; larger
and not over 16x21 inches, 4 cents $ square foot;,
arger and not over 24x39 inches 6 cents $ square
oot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20
cents «p square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ square
oot; on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common
Window, not exceeding 10x15 inches square, 1$; over
hat, and not over 16x24,2; over that, and not over
24x30, 2$; all over that, 8 cents $ tt>.
American rFi/i^w—lst,2d, 3d, and 4th qualities.
(Subject to a discount of 15 @ 30 $ cent.)
6x 8 to 8x10
$ 50 feet
5 50 @ 7 25
not

8x11 to I0x!5
1U14to 12x18
12xiy to 16x24
18x22 to 20x30
20x31 to 21x30
24x31 to 21x36
25x36 to 30x44
*0x46 to 32x13
22x50 to 82x56

6
6
7
T
9
10
11
12
18
15

.

Above

00

,

50
00
50
00
M0
00
00
00
00

@ 7 75
@ 9 25
@ 9 50
<a ii 75
(a 14 50
16 00
IT 00

<a is oo
(a 20 00
<a 24 00

English and French fVindow—lit, 2d, 3d, and
qualities.
(Single Thick)—Dlscoant 15 © 80 per cent
6x8 to 8x10
$ 50 feet
6 00 ® T
8x11 to 10x15
6 50 (a 8
11x14 to 12x13
7 00 @ 9
12x19 to 16x24
7 50 @ 10
12 00 @15
20xil to 24x80
Hx31 to 24x86
13 00 @ 16
15 00 @ IS
24x36 to 30x44
80x45 to 82x48
16 00 @ 20
*2x50 to 32x56
18 00 @ 24

4th

Gunny Bag1*—Duty, valued at 10 cents or
$ square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents $ 0>
Calcutta, light and heavy .. $ pee
2* <@

less,

75
25
15
50

50
50
00

50
00

23$

Gunny Olotli— Duty, valued at 10 cents or less
$ square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents $ lb.
Calcutta, standard
yard
28$ @
24

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less
$ lb, 6 cents $ lb, and 20 $ cent ad val.; over 20
cents $ lb, 10 cents $ lb and 20 $ cent ad val.
5 00
Blasting (A)
$ keg of 25 lb
5 50
Shipping and Mining
Bine

..

7 60

7.

1

Sporting, in 1 lb canisters.

lb

40

Hair—Duty free.
Bio Grande, mixed, .(cash)..$
Buenos Ayres,mixed

lb

29
27
10

Hog, Western, unwashed
Hay—North River, in bales $
100 lbs, for shipping.

55

@
@
@

@

io
30
23
12
60

Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $26; Jute,
$15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 $ ter; and
Tampico, 1 cent $ lb.
American, Dressed
$ ton 325 00 @385 00
220 00

Undressed

do

Busaia, Clean

(gold)

Jute
Manila
Sisal

(gold)

(gold)

00
00
10*
11

Hides-Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted, and Skins,
10 $ cent ad val.
Hides are dull and inactive, and prices are nominal.
»rv

Hides—

fiu9nos Ayres
Montevideo
Rio Grande
Orinoco
California
California, Mexican..
Porto Cabello
Vera Cruz

.$ lb gold

do

Tampico
Matamoras
Ban J nan and Cent Amer... do

Maracaibo....




-M

18i@
17j@
16$©
16$@
19 @
16 @
13 @

14 @
14 @

20

18$
17
17

18$
17
14
15

!4$

p$

Oak and Ash

@

13

Maple and Birch

do

Sierra Leone.
Gambia and Bissau
East India Stock—

25
25
16

do

@
@

Calcutta, city sl’ter... $ lb cash.
do
dead green
do
do
black, dry
do
do
buffalo
..gold.
.

20

do of 1864

65

45

@

Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
Ox, Rio Grande..
Ox, Buenos Ayres

18 00 @
13 00 @ 15 00

$0

$ cent ad val.
$ lb
80 @
70 @

India. Rubber—Duty, 10

Para, Fine..
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

-

60

East India

65

@

..

$ lb

180 @

1 00

Oude

2 10

@1 30

70
85

Madras
Manila..
Guatemala
Caraocas..

(gold)
(gold)

@
@
@

@

75
70

1 25
1 40

90

1 10

Iron—Duty, Bara, 1 to 1$ cents $ lb; Railroad,
Boiler and Plate, 1J cents $ lb;
and Scroll, 1$ to 1$ cents $ lb;
Pig, $9 $ ton ; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $ lb.

70 cents $ 100 lb;
Sheet, Band, Hoop,

Iron has still farther declined

during tho week.

Pig, Scotch, Best,No l(cash) $ ton
Pig, American, No. 1
Bar, Swedes,assortedsixes (in gold)

42 00 @ 45 00
.v9 00 @ 40 00
95 00 @b 5 00

r-Store Prices—,

Swedes, assorted sizes
. 155
Bar, English and American,Refined 115
do
do
ao
do
Common 105
Scroll,
145
Ovals and Half Round
187

00

Bar

Band

@

....

00 @
00

@

....

00 @195 00
(

50

@147 50
@145 00
@147 50

.

HorseShoe

140 00

Rods, 5-8 @ 3-16 inch
Hoop

117 50 @175 00
150 00 @215 00

$ fl>

Nail Rod

9

Sheet, Russia
Sheet, 8ingle,Double and Treble..

$ ton

Rails, English...(gold)
American

@

10$

31 @
7 @
56 00 @

32
8$

85 00

Ivory—Duty, 10 <p cent ad val.
East India, Prime
$ lb
Billiard Ball
African, West Coast, Prime
African, Serivellos, West Coast..
East India,

..

@

8 50 @
8 50 @
2 75 @
.2 00 @

$ 100 lb

4 00
4 50

3 00
2 50

@

..

8 25 @ 8 45

Spanish
German

8 25

English

8 25 @ 8 45

@

8 45

Bar.

..

@

10

Pip* and Sheet

..

@

14

L<eatlicr—Duty: sole 35, upper 80 $ cent ad val.
Leather is inactive and quotations are nominal.

cash.$ lb

Oak, Slaughter,light

84 @

41

middle... do

heavy.... do
light Cropped
do
middle
beldes

.....

do
do

do
do

,

do
do

49
19

45
48

@110 Of

@!0d 06

...

@150 00

_

Rosewood—Duty
50

@

75

17

@

20

17

20
25
23
25

i5
12
12
10

18
15
15
11

14$
IS
1J.

Nuevitas
Mansanilla.
Mexican
Honduras (American
....

Mansanilla
Mexican
Florida..

do
do
do

@ 70 00

@
@
@
5 @
50 @

$ cubic ft.

$

Bahia

8
00

53

85

83

middle do

84
84

@

@

38 @
29 @

do
middle do
do heavy., do
do & B. A, dam’gd all

31

29

@
@

35

82
30
82

8J

26 @
IS @

30
20

80

poor

84

@

33

@

86

37

@

44

..

185
2 25

Etc.—Duty
Lumber,#) $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad vaL;

14 @
14 @
16 @

14$

Rosewood and Cedar, frix.

14$
15$

Southern Pine....

,

Spruce, Eastern........f) M f**t

-

21 00 ‘ @ 25 00
55 00

'

90

@

60
40
85
85

...

English Islands....

1 05
75

50

@

40
42

Nails—Dnty: cut 1$; wrought 2$; hors* sho*
$ lb Cut, 4d.@60d
$ 100 fi>
7 00 @

cents

„

Clinch
Horse shoe,

8 75

$ lb

forged (8d)

@

80 @
0J @
@.

Copper
Yellow metal
Zinc

..

@

..

9 25
84

35
20

Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentin* 30
cents

$ gallon; crude turpentine, rosin, pitch, and

tar, 20 <p cent ad val.
Naval Stores are in moderate demand.

and Turpentine firmer.
Turpentine, N. O
$ 280 lb
ip bbl.
Tar, American
do foreign

Rosin U

stea iy

5 50
2 25

Rosin, common

No. 1
Pale and Extra

*

92

(280 lbs.)
Spirits turpentine, Am....$ gall.
..

Oakum—Duty free.... $ lb.

@
@
@ 6 00
@ 11 CO
@ 16 00
95
@

11

strainedandNo. 2

do
do

0 75
3 25
*

.

do

@

4 50
8 12$
3 *5
7 00
12 00

Pitch

@

Cake—Dnty: 20 <p cent ad val.
47 00
City thin oblong, in bbls.... $ ton
in bags
do
45 00
42 00
Western thin oblong, in bags

IS

43 00
45 50
42 50

Oils—Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23
cents; olive and salad oil, in

bottles

or

flasks, $1:
and oocoa
other fish

burning fluid, 50 cents $ gal(gp; palm, seal,
nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or
(foreign fisheries,) 20 <p cent ad valorem.
4 00
Olive, 13 bottle baskets
1 65
do in casks
$ gall.
12

^p lb

Palm

1 80
1 22

# gall

Linseed, city
Whale
do refined

winter..!.

@

C 12$

@
@

1 70

@
@
@

1 81

12$
,

,

1 30

2 40

Sperm, crude

winter, bleached
unbleached
do
Lard oil
*'....
do
do

2 50
1 75
-85

Red oil, city distilled.
do
saponified
Straits..
Paraffine, 28 — 80 gr.....
.
Kerosene
(free)...

l

lb
60

@
@
@
@
@
@
@

2 05

1 80

«

90

t

3

,

.

1 15
60
69

Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and
litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ fl>; Paris
white and whiting, 1 cent $ lb; dry ochres, 56 cent*
(p 100 lb: oxides of zinc, 1$ cents $ lb ; ochre, ground
in oil, $ 150 $ 100 lb ; 8panish brown 25 $ cent ad val^
China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red and vermilion,
25 ^ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 ft ton.
Lithrage, American.
$ lb '
Lead, red, American
do white, American, pure, In oil
do white, American, puie, dry.
Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1.
do white, American, No. 1, in oil
Oc1* re, y el low,French,dry jp^J00
do

grounjin oil

„

do

@
@

Lumber? Woods, Staves,

16

....

Spanish brown, dry

Inline—-Duty; 10 $ cent ad val.
Rockland, common
$ bbl.
do
heavy

15$@

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado..
do Clayed
....,

21

84 @
31 @

heavy, do
Orinoco, etc. Pt. do

do

45

82

33

weights
all do
Slaughter in rough, .cash,
Oak, Slaughter in ro gh, light... do
•do
’’
do
do mid. &. h’vy do
do
do

@
@

33

31 @

middle, do

heavy .do
California,light. do
do
do

@

41 @
44 @

Hemlock, B. Ayres, Ac., l’t do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

.
^

Oil

I<ead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 tt>; Old Lead, 1$ cents
$ lb; Pipe and Sheet, 2$ cents $ lb.

do
do
do
do
do

.

Port-au-Platt, crotches.
Port-au-Platt, logs

do
do
do
do
do
do

@176’ 00
@150 00
@110 00

..

Mahogany, St. Domingo, crotches,$ foot
do
St Domingo, ordinary
logs

do

nominal.

Kurpah

do
do

■

molasses—Duty: 8 cents $ gallon.

Bengal

Galena

..

hhd., calls
bbl., extra

Rosewood, Rio Janeiro

@
@

..

Indiffo—Duty rsti.

do

..

...

wood)
Cedar, Nuevitus

@

.

Carthagena, etc
Guayaquil

hhd.,light

@200 0*
@120 0*
@250 DO
©200 00
@125 00
@100 GO

..

.,

free.
,

25 @

@250 00

..

IfTaliogaity, Cedar,

90

@"00 00

..

do
hhd.,light
HEADING—white oak, hhd

87$@

@125 00

..

bbl., heavy
bbl., light....'
do.
bbl.. culls.,
Red oak, hhd., heavy

10

Hops—Duty: 5 cants $ lb.
Crop of 1865
$ lb

‘

hhd., extra.
hhd., heavy

do.

24

@

$ M.

exti a

do
do

'

Honey—Duty, 20 cents $ gallon.
Cuba..(duty paid).(gold).$ gall.

100 00

pipe, culls..-.,

do

„

23

@ 70 00

85 00 @ 40 00

pipe, heavy
pipe, light...

do
do
do
do

.

24
14

65 00

White oak, pipe,

»$

23 @

00

STAVES—

do

City
do
do
do
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip
$ $ cash.

00
00
00

@ 65 00
80 00 @ 90 00

..

Black Walnut

@
@

@ 80
@ 83
@100
@ 6

..

Cherry Boards and Plank

..

Coutry sl’ter trim. <fc cured, do

@230 00

840 00 @350
120 00 @160
$ lb
10$ @
10| @

Hi

9
9

do
do

Western

55 00

@
@
©
@

9

..

1 00 @ 1 50
50 @ 1 (JO
5 00 @10 00
4 00 @..7 00

1
5
1
2

■

do

.

.

prices.

Poplar and W. wood B’ds & Pl’k.

H
11
11
10

gold.

Ayr

35 00
29 00
80 00

12

do
do
do
do
do

.

10

9£@

gold.

IS

80
.

White Pine Box Boards
White Pine Merchant, Box Boards
Clear Pine
.7 “..
Lath9, Eastern
$ M

9

@

.

*

@ 1 18

15

oash.

22

@
@
@
@

@ 05 00

Paris
do

lb
.v.’p lb

$ .100 lb

ground in oiL$ lb
$ 100 lbs
Am
..$ 100 lbs

white, No. 1
.do

Whiting, American.
Vermilion, Chinese
do
do
do

$ lb

.........,gold.
California & English..

Trieste
..

American
Venetian r*d, (N. O.)

$ ewt,

..

..

..

@
@
@

14$ @
9

#

,

@

9$ @
@
9$ @

75

13
18
16

10
8 54
IV

c

00

l 40

■c

nvijAJLK./

'H-

# ft

Carmine, city made.....
China clay^.
Chalk-.

....79 bbL

Chalk, block

r

6 00

® 27
40
©

15

87

$ bbi.

Residuum.

Plaster

©
©

...

Pari*—Duty: lump, free;
# ton.

Blue Nova Scotia
White Nova Scotia
Calcined, eastern

..

$ bbl.

...

Calcined, city mills

..

Provisions—Duty: beef and pork,
hAms, bacon, and lard, 2 cents
lb.

22
294
Steel-Duty : bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $
lb or under, 2* cents; over 7 cents and not above 11,
3 cents $ lb; over; 11 cents, 34 cents $ ft and 10 $

40
6 50

. . .

do kettle rendered
Hams, pickled
do
dry salted
Shoulders, pickled
do
ary
Beef hams
Bacon

16

164

@

Sugar—Duty : on

ed, 84; above 15 and not over 20,4 ; on refined, 5; and
on Molado, 24 cents $ lb.
Sugar has been steady during the week, wiih a
moderate business done.
Porto Rico.......f
Cuba, inf to common refining
do fair to good
do
do fair to good grocery
do prime to choice do
do centrifugal
do M elado

Rags—(Domestic).

154

12

11
5
V

Seconds
Canvas

Country mixed

©

5*

$ sack

1 80
8 50

fine, Worthington’s....
fine, Jeffreys & Darcy’s
fine, Marshall’s

do
do
do
do

2 70
2 70

nn e

;...

Ashton’s

bbls.

Onondaga, com. fine

do
do
do
do
Solar coarse
Fine screened
do
F. F

...

210 lb bgs.
bush.

....$pkg.
240 ft bgs.

do

H.

^ lb

Crude
Nitrate soda

..
..

©

Seeds—Duty: linseed, 16 cents; hemp, * cent $
lb; canary, $1 $ bushel of 60 lb; and grass seeds,
80
cent ad val.
Clover..

Timothy,reaped...

$ lb
^ bush.

Flaxseed, Amer. rough
Linseed, American, clean...$ tee

American,rough.$ bush

do
do
do

Calcutta

8* ©
©
©
©
©
©

....

4 50
2 60

2 95

$ lb

Drop and Buck
Silk—Duty: free.
Tsatlees, No. 1 © 3

...

medium, Nc. 3 © 4....

do

10 25
9 50

10 50

Canton, re-reeled, No. 1 © 2
Jap an, superior

11 50
10 25

No. 1©3
do
China thrown.

16 50

22 00

Italian thrown,

©
©
©
©
©
©
©

11 00

10 00

11
18
11
20
23

00
00
00
00

00

-Gold.
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

Buenos

$ lb
Ayres

Vera Cruz

60

Tampico.
Matamoras.....

Payta

.-.

Madras, each

85

Cape^
Deer, San J uan
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

45

70

©
©
©
©
©
©
©

,

60

45 ©

45

..

52*
62*

.

62*
47*
75
40

$ ft

Bolivar
Honduras
Sisal
Para
Vera Cruz

1 40

...

Soap—Duty: 1 cent $ lb, and 25 $ cent ad val.
Castile..
# lb.
15 ©

Spelter-Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, fl 50 f) ft
Plates,ftnreign
lb
- 8* ©
9




1 10 ©

1 40

OHO« • • • 0

u

©

©

1 10 ©

1 30 ©
1 50

©

90

1
1
1
1
1

6i ©
65 ©
75

Ex f. to finest.

©

85 ©
1 05 © 1

25
60
20
45
75
60
70
80

Ex £ to finest

I. C. Coke

Terne Charcoal
Terne Coke

Common leaf do
Medium do do
Good
do do
Pine
do do
Selections do do
Conn, selected wrappers
do prime wrappers
do fair wrappers
do fillers
New York running lots
do
Ohio
New York and Ohio fillers
Yara

Pherry
d•
Malaga, sweet
do" dry
Claret, in hhds
do

n*[

.>

....

(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
(go d)

....(gold)

incases.

...(god)

..

5 80

© 10 00

5 0>

©
©

5
5
4
6
5
4
4
8
2

00
<0
95

70

SO ©
©

90

1 50

val

00
75
00
60
90
00

23

1125
13 25
10 00

©12 50
© 18 50
©

©
14 50 ©

5

©
6* ©

do
do
do
do
do

15

16*
18*

15
45
40
80
10
10

21
to
45
40

95
70

Manufactured (tax paid)—

fts (Western.)—Ex. fine, bright...
do
do
Fine.
fts (Virginia)—Ex. fine, bright...
do
do
Fine ..;
do
do
Medium
do
do
Common.........

Medium....;

New-York Seed, Conn. Wrapper.
Penn, •-•-^• do •
do
do
"

©
©
©
©

11

©
©

©

72* ©
66 ©
80 ©
70 ©
63 ©
©
90 ©
20 ©
05 ©
60 ©
50 ©
7J*@
68 @
65 ©

....

Clear Uaytna.
do
d» CodnecHcut Seed 7*.v......;

H4

9* ©
12 ©

8
5

; .Common
Cigars (domestic).

8

15
13
6
100
105
75
63

82*
7»
65

100 1b, and
0 to 18
No. 19 to 26
No. 27 to 86

15 $ cent ad val.

1 25
4 00

1

2
12

© 80 00
@105 00
© 45 0»
© 80 to

60 © 25 CO
18 00 @ 25 CO

18

4

2
6
2

8

85
90
25
25
00
60
00

©
©
©
©

1 20
1 25
1 75
1 50

©150 00
© 30 00

© 25 00

9*

5* ©

Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or less $ ft, 8
cents $ ft; over 12 and not more than 24, 6 cents ;
over 24 and not over 32,10, and 10 $ cent ad valorem ;
over 32,12 cents $ ft, and 10 $ cent ad valorem; on
the skin, 20 $ cent ad val.
Wool Is dull though domestic fleece* is scarce and
.

nominal.

‘

75
65

* and * Merino

do

Extra, pulled

Peruvian, unwashed
Valparaiso, unwashed, '
8. American Mestizo, unwashed..
do
common,unwashed..
Entre Rios, washed

African, unwashed
do

do

©
©
©
©
©
©

85
20

washed

Mexican, unwashed...
Smyrna, unwashed

87
28

@

22
43
42
25
15

Persian

51
50
40
25
45
25
83
80

@
@

27
82
18

do
unwashed
S. American Cordova

to

@
©
©
@

32

pulled

80
70
50

@

83
20
80
15

'

common
•

@
@

CO
48

1, pulled
California, unwashed
do
do
Texas

@

58

ft

@
@

47

American, Saxony fleece ... .$
do
full blood Merino

.

@
@

85

washed

1

85
100

2* cents $ ft.

Freights—
•To Livkepool :
Cotton
Flour..
Petroleum

©

d.

s.

$ 1b
$ bbl.

55

®>; sheet

18

$ ft

Sheet

,

24
43
45
80
25
45
25
25
49

@

2J

Syrian, unwashed
Esst India, washed

13*
8.

d.

5-16©
©

1
2 0
6
© 5
15 0 © 17 6
© 25 0
t* ©
H
4
©
© 2 9
© 2 0
..

..

$ ton

Heavy goods
Oil

..

Corn, bulk and bags.... ..$

Wheat, bulk and bags..;
Beef
Pork
To London

Heavy goods

bush.

•

$ tee.
$ bbl.

..

..

:

;

..

Oil
Flour

ton

20 0
..

$ bbl

Petrol^m

..

$ bush.

..

©
© 80
© 2
<©
4 4
©
8 8
©
©
6*
©
6*
2

$ bbl
^ bush.
....$ bbl.

^1 ton

Heavy goods
oil
Beef
Pork
To Havee:
Cotton

6

6*
6
6
0
O

6

25 0

© 5
© 30
85

..

0
6

$ tee.
$ bbl.

8

$

$0.

c.

^ ft

Hops.
\

bbl.

goods
« ton
Wheat, in shipper’-s bags.. $ bush'.
Measurement
Flour
Petroleum

..

# bbl.

Petroleum

pork

..

6 0

$ tee.

Beef
Pork
Wheat
Corn
To Glasgow ;
Flour
Wheat

Beef and
55 00
80 (ID
15 00
20 1/0

15
10
10
50
10
00
00
75
50
90
60
00
27
00
45
00
00

8
1
8

S5

1
85

5
5
5
5
5
5
6
3
8

List.
20 $ ct off list.
25 73 ct. off list.

....

Corn, bulk and bags
1 00
1 25
1 10
7o
60
76
70
66

©
©
©
©
©

45
50
2 2b
2 00

Donskoi, washed

..

©
©
©
©
©
©

0!

No.

1 25

©

7 00

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered, $2 to $3 5Q

10,

1 70

1 00

10s and 12s—Best Virginia
: do
Medium

t

(gold)
(gold)

..

Superfine

60 ©

Havana, fillers

# Tbs—(datk) Best
do
do Medium
do
do Common

(gold)
(gold)

Madeira
do
Marseilles

90

©

1 80

.

«

©

75 ©

...

(gold)
English
$ box
Plates, charcoal I. C

do
do

Port C. and Barcelona..

domestic

1 12
1 85
1 55

Navy fts—Best

Cihagres

do

12

.

Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Goat, Curacoa

Ilf ©

Tin -Duty: pig, bars, and block,15 $ cent ad
Plate and sheets and terne plates, 2* cents $ lb. ■
Banca
(eold)....$ lb
24 ©
Straits
(gold)
28* ©

do
do
do

(gold)

© 10 50
© 10 50
© 10 50
© 10 00
© 10 60
©
©
..
©

00
50
40
80
45

6
5
5
5
5

Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain.1b

Ex fine to finest 7

do

(cur.)

Burgundy Port
Sherry

144

80 ©
90
1 00 © 1 20

do

(cur.)
(• ur.)

Domestic— N. E. Rum
Bourbon Whisky
Corn Whisky
Wines—Port

o.

Lugs (light and heavy) $ $ (gold)

All thrown silk. 35 $ cent.
$ lb
11 50 © 12 50

Taysaams, superior, No. 1 © 2

Whisky—Scotch and Irish .(gold)

110 00 ©192 50

Skin&Twankay,Com, to fair.
do
do
Sup’r to fine.,
do

(gold)

Seignette

Other brands Rochelle.... (gold)
Rum—Jamaica
(gold)
St. Croix
.(gold)
Gin—Different bra nds
(gold)

17

valorem ; over $J0, and not over $4% $ j per
lb. and 50 per cent ad valorem; over $45, $3 per
pound and 60 per cent ad valorem.
Tobacco is moderate for manufactured, leaf is dull.

18

©

Jules Robin
(gold)
Marrette & Co
(gold)
United Vineyard Propr...(gold)
Vine Growers Co
(gold)
Other brands Cognac
(gold)
Pellevoisin freres
(gold)
A. Seignette
(gold)
Hivert Pellevoisen
(sold)
Alex. Seignette
.(gold)

©
©
©

cent ad

Siiot—Duty: 2* cents $ lb.
12

Brandy—J. & F. Martell...(_
Hennessy
(gold)
Otard, Dnpuy & Co
(gold)
Pinet, Castililon & Co. .. .(gold)
Renault & Co
(gold)

15*

Tobacco—Duty: leaf 38 cents $ lb ; and manu¬
factured, 50 cents $ lb.1 Cigars valued at $15 or less
per M., 75 cents per lb., and 2 i per cent ad valorem;
over $15 and not over $3t», $1.35 per lb. and M0 per

©

Bombay

cent ad val.

.

1 15 ©

11

"

4 0i
2 50

Brandy, first proof, $3 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50
Winks—Duty: value set over 50 cents 7$ gallon 20
cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over 50
and not over 100, 50 cents
gallon and 25
cent
ad valorem; over $1 $ gallon, $1 $ gallon and 25 $1

15

©
©

© 1 85
©

liquors— Liquors — Dnty:

and

Wines

©

..

30
8-1

Champagne

Souchong & Congou, Com. to fair.
do
do
Sup’r to fine.

104
6*

©

124
14*

I 00 ©
1 20 ©

do Ex. f, to finest

do

20

64 ©

©
©
©
©

Oolong, Common to fair
do
Superior to fine

50
2 00
3 25

,

8

©

Uncolored Japan, Com. to fair ...
do
do
Sup’r to fine ..
do
do
Kx f. to finest.

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* bents; refined and
partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent $ lb.
Refined, pure....

m

12*
13*

©

..

Ex fine to finest...

do

42

66

16
15

Gunpow. & Imper., Com. to fair
do
do Sup. to fine.

2 50
2 CO

8

16

Ex fine to finest

do

40

lif
TS4
14*
14*

to 20

Young Hyson, Common to fair
do
Superior to fine

1 85
8 60
2 80
2 80

2 40
1 90

©
©
48 ©

ll

to 12
to 15
to 18

$ ton

do

©
©
©
©
©

104
11*

7

Tea—Duty: 25 cents per lb
Hyson, Common to fair
do"
Superior to fine

12 50
9 25

Salt—«Dnty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 lb; bulk, 18
cents $ 100 lb.
50
Turks Islands
$ bush.

Liverpool,ground

104 ©

Tallow—Duty: 1 cent $ lb.
American, prime, country and city
$ ft

paddy 10

Cadiz

10&

..

Sicily

14

12*

Rice—Dutv: cleaned 24 cents $ lb.;
cents, and uncleaned 2 cents $ ft11 50
Carolina
$ 100 lb.
9 00
East India, dressed

North west coast
Ochotak
Polar

Sumac—Duty: 10 58 cent ad val.

54

11* ©
34 ©

City colored

10

10; ©
11 @
12 @
9* ©

White coffee, A
Yellow coffee

12

©
©

..

...

Granulated...
Crushed and powdered

18

14| ©

White, city

do 10
do 13
do 16
do 19
white

12

is

_

IH ©
1U ©

$ bbl.

do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do
Loaf

Tfliatebone—Duty: foreign fishery, % ad vaL
1 15
ft

South Sea

Arzac

184

10 ©
9* ©

lb

Havana, Boxes D. S. Nos. 7 to 9

184

©
©

161 ©

salted

...

No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white or clayed, above
No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refin¬

1 cent;

25 871 © 26 i>0
21 25 @ 22 00
..
@ 25 00
$ ft

12
U ©
12
raw or brown sugar, not above
10 ©

American, spring,

2 50

16*

14* ©

German.

Jinglish, spring

22

IT ©

lb

English, cast,

4 50
5 00
2 40

21* ©
29 ©

(gold)

.....(gold)

(Store prices.)

cent ad val.

15 00 @ 19 00
..
@
20 00 @ 24 00
..
@

Lard, in bbls

(gold)
(gold)

Cloves

Pork has been less active and unsettled but dosing
steady. Beef is quiet.
Beef, plain mess
$ bbl.
..
©
do new do
do extra mess
do
new
do
do India mess
Pork, mess, new
do prime mess
do mess, Old
do prime, do

(gold)

Nutmegs, No. 1
Pepper
Pimento, Jamaica

calcined,
@
©
©
(Si

..

African

Mace

$ cent ad val.

20

gold $ lb

Cassia, in mats.
Ginger, race and

Petroleum—Duty: crude, 20 cents; refined, 40
cents $ gallon.
26
25
©
Crude, 40 © 47 gravity .. $ galL
61
60
©
Refined, free
42
40
©
do
in bond..

Naptha, aeflned

50
15; and
to note.
50 ©
20 ©
22i
©
S7*
87*©
92
22 ©
23*

20; pepper and pimento,
ginger root, 5 cents $1 lb. \
Spices are very quiet wl.h little of interest
cassia and cloves,

.

50

#

.

yellow

Chrome

©
©

,

439

Spices—Doty: mace, 40 cents; nutmegs,

00

© 20

16 00
37 50
5 00

iLj.

$ bbl.

Lard, tallow, out meats, eto $ ton
Ashes, pot and pearl

1
10

6

6

i v

©

io

[April 7,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

440

"

———————————————

'

‘

bonds,
as may be agreed upon.
The grading from Macon north to tha
)c
commencement of the present work is already completed.
This
road will form a connection with roads now being built in Iowa
Southwest Pacific Railroad.—The Board of Commissioners
and Minnesota, and form an important sectiou in the great line be.
appointed by the Governor of Missouri under the act of Feb. 9th,
in cash

ments will be made

in first mortgage 7 per cent

or

Ratltoag Jtlonitor.

certain railroads
and property by the Governor, to fo,eclose the State’s lien thereon,
and to secure an early completion of the Southwest Branch Paci¬
fic, the Platte Country, the St. Louis and Iron Mountain, and the
1866, entitled “ An act to provide for the sale of

Cairo and Fulton railroads of Missouri,” are

inviting proposals lor
received

the gale of the first-named of these works, which will be

Louis.

tween St. Paul and St.

Bridge

the

over

Ohio.—The iron bridge over the Ohio at

completed, and the trains of the Pittsburg and
cross it regularly.
The road conn&ts with
the Pennsylvania Railroad at Pittsburg, and forms, with its west¬
ern connections, a through line between New York, Philadelphia
and St. Louis, Cincinnati and Chicago.
By this line there are only
two changes of cars from St. Louis to New York, and but one
change from Cincinnati to Chicago.
Atlantic and Gulf Railroad.—This road has been thoroughly
repaired, and the cars are now running regularly.' The first through

Steubenville is

Steubenville Railroad

May 9. These proposals include the land grant and all other
personal property and franchises of the late company.
The price bid is to be paid either in cash or State bonds or guaran¬
tees, one-fourth on closing the contract, and the balance in five
equal instalments, with six per cent interest on deferred payments,
payable annually, but the whole may be paid at any time. The tiain arrived at Savannah on the 13th ult.
Alexandria and Fredericksburg Railroad.—The construe,
purchaser is to keep the road and property in good serviceable con¬
tion of this road is about to be commenced, and it is intended to
dition during the progress of the work, and to extend it to Lebanou
within three years, to Springfield within four years, and to the complete it from Alexandria to Mount Yernon by the 4th of July.
western line of the State in five years after the date of sule, and
This link has always been a desideratum—it will.connect the north¬
shall expend at least $500,000 in each and every year in the work ern and southern seaboard systems of railroad, and supersede the
upon the graduation, masonry, or superstructure of the extension. connection by steamboats, as now practised.
James River and Kanawha Canal.—This great work, now The last instalment, the purchaser having faithfully performed all
other requirements, may be delayed until two years after maturity.
complete only to the mountains, is to be prosecuted by a French
The other railroads noticed in the act entitled as above are also for company, and opened to the Ohio at an early date. Over this
sals on terms identical with those which refer to the Southwest canal an immense traffic will pass through West and old Virginia
down to the James River and to the sea.
For the prosecution of
Pacific.
the enterprise French laborers are to be imported by the company.
North Missouri Railroad.—The Chief Engineer, J. B. Moul¬
Union Depot at Albany.—Now that the railroad bridge at this
ton, Esq., advertizes proposals for the grading and masonry of 53
point is completed, it is found necessary to have a Union Depot for
miles of the northern exteusiou of this road, extending from a point the railroads
using it. This will be located on Broadway, from
Hi miles north of Macon, and also for the grading and masonry of Lumber to Colonie street, and will be 600 feet deep by 100 feet
40 miles of the western branch from Brunswick to Moberly.
Pay- wide. It is to be built immediately.
until

real and

COMPARATIVE
-Atlantic ft Great Western.—.
1864.
‘

(322 m.)

$207,398
229,041
226,733

191^209

814;679

814,621
832,098

406;076
446,044

896,847
381,v10

1S65.

460,422
621,174

695,523
738,527
677,625
719,911
731,270

8,709,970

—XiTio nan wav.
1865.

1864.

$984,837
934,133

1,114,603
1,099,607

1,072,293
1,041,975
994,817

1,106,364
1,801,005
1,222,568

1,224,909
1,834,217

$100,991
195,803

$280,503
275,282
299,063

162,728

258,480

.

178,786

...June.

206,090

...July..

224,257

...Aug..
Sep

312,165
354,554
320,879

322,277
355,270
835,935
409,250

154.418

...Mar..

—

...April.

—

..May

—
.

—

—

—

—

...

.

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

—

—

6,568,068

638 m.)

(280 m.)

.

599,752

i

(257 m.)

-

Year.

..

lUlliUlO

(798 m.)
(638 m.)
$908,341 $1,187,188...Jan

661,891
657,141
603,402

1,240,626

...Mar...

1,472,120
1,339,279
1,225,528
1,152,803
1,364,126
1,345,456
1,406,385
1,451,217
1,503,993

..April..

■«ta-

.

jg —« ..June..
^,—2 ..July..
S—"> .-Aug ..
'5— g
a-

...Sep...
...Nov..
...Dec...

Year

—•

.

.

1865.

(524 m.)
$256,600

(524 m.)
$363,996

804,445
838,454
830,651
967,126
315,258
278,891
858,862
402,219

366,361
413,322
866,2-45

448,934
411,806

353,194
402,122
809,083
424,206
484,173
621,636
498,421
366,192

4,110,154

4,868,951

404,568

1864.

1866.

(234 m.)

(524 m.)
$314,598.. .Jan.
283,177... Feb..
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

..April.

...May..
..June.

...July..
...Aug*.
....Sep..
M

.

—

—
..

Year.

.

(468 m.)

(46S m.)

$290,676

$690,144

$555,4S3... Jan..
474,738... Feb..

457,227
611,297
688,066
525,751
582,911
506,640
625,547

*75,360

678.604

857,583
733,866
637,186
646.995
584,523
712 495
795.938

858,500

70l,«52
601,556

712.362

014,089

680,963

7,120,465

8,489,060




1,711,281
1864.

1866.

1864/
(468 m.)
-

168,218
178,526
149,099
117,013

(210 m.)

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

$100,872

-

224,838
177,159
170,555
228,020
310,594
226,840

110,664

1,935,571
1865.

155,730
144,942

..Aug...

218,236

..Sept..

234,194
203,785
202,966
204,726

2,084,074

2,$90,69$

...Mar..

160,497
157,786
149.855

...May
..June..

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

...May.
..June.

..oct....
..Nov.
..Dec...

..Year.

.

—

—

—

—

—

—

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

..Year.

.

117,604

1,038,165

—

—

1,222,017
1865.

(234 m.)

...Aug...
....Sep...
...Oct....

221,638

...Nov.—
...Dec—

193,135
129,227

Year..

1,402,106

—

—

...May...
.

...July...

—

.

...Mar...
..

...June..

...July..
..Aug...
.

—

—

April..

...May...

—

—

241,370
*

1864.

$178,119... Jan...
155,893... Feb...

—

$51,965-

^-Toledo,

1866.

—

—

—

—

Sept...

..Oit
..NOV:...

..Dec....

..Year..

(242 m.)
$79,735
95.843

132,896
123,987
127,010
156,338
139,626
244,114
375,534
221,570

3

0,841
895,579
346,717
171,125
2,535,001

(242 m.)
$144,084
139,171
155,763

144,001
,138 738

194,511

f 271,725
4374.534

*379,981
e*

875,534

2201209

?361,610

265,154

1247,028

$.050,9198

$.926,678

(285 m.)

$306,324 :$282,438
279,137

344,228
837,240
401,456
365,663
329,105
413,501
460,661
490,693
447,669
328,869

4,504,546

265,736
-1

—]
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—Ohio ft Mississippi
1864.

1866.
(234 m.)

..JDec,...

(840 m.)
$210,329
260,466
809,261
269,443
224,957
223,242
268,176
302,596
332,400
278,006
346,243
275,950

..Year..

8,311,070

$131,707... Jan...
122,621... Feb...
...Mar...

—

..April..

—

...May...

—

..June..

—

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

——

—

....Oct...
...Not...

—

—

—

—

Wab. ft Western
1865.

(285 m.)

8,966,946

..Year..

—

•

—*

1866.

405,510
876,470

..

104,587

1864.

—

—

—

1865.

408,445
410,802

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

—

114.512

106,269
203,018
237,562
251,9 6

—

3,223,088

265,780
263,244
346,781

—

83,702
131,648
126,970
99,662
86,4 2
164,710

—

—

384,290
300,707
261,141
190,227

271,553

—

..April..

—

—

288,095

348,802
838,276

^-Milwaukee ft St. Paul

..June

—

232,728

273,848

r

95,905

—

—

(285 m.)
$252,435

—

64,993

—

—

1864.

1866.

—

46,474

-

—

8,095,470.

..Year..

—

1866.

1865.

(182 m.) (182 in.)
$305,554 ;$237,555
246,381
174,164
289,403
186,172
227,260
811,180

336,617
821,037

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

—

—

...Mar...

—

—

831,494
824,865

—

8-4,897.. .Feb...

-

224,9S0
271,140

—

(284 m.)
$98,181
86,528

—

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

—

—

94,375
93,078
90,576
96,909
95,453

(23-4 m.)
$121,776... Jan...

—

243,178

..April..

—

.

91,809

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

1866.

—

..June...

...Mar...

—

...

89,901
72,889
83,993
78,697

..April..

—

.

...May...

(182 m.)
$158,735
175,482
243,150
186,013
198,679

(251 rn.) (251 m.)
'
Jan. .
$98,112
$ —
...Feb...
86,626
...Mar...
93,503
82,136
..April..
...May...
78,842
..June..
110,186
...July..
108,652
...Aug...
112,156
..Sep...
120,051

74,409

...Mar...

(210 m.) (210 m.)

..July..

147.485

.

—

146.943

$170,078
153,903
202,771
169,299
177,625
173,722
162,570
218,236
269,459
222,924
208,098
162,694

.

..April.

—

70,740
106,689

1865.

$77,010

✓-St. I., Alton ft T. Hante.-v

Pittsb.. Ft. W., ft Chicago.—.
1865.

$98,183
74,283

115,135
88,221
140,418
186,747
212,209
139,547
113,399

...Mar..

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

(234 m.)

$102,749

.

7,960,981

(251 m.)

512,027. ..Feb.

1865.

546,609

(679 m.)
$528,566... Jan...
405,634...Feb...

iUlvUic cell VOllui clli

(708 m.)
$582,828...Jan. 5.

7,181,203

923,886
749,191

1864.

lobo.

“

*

1806.

—

946,707

1864.

..

—

702,692
767,508

6,114,566

Year..

-

—

747.942

716.378

✓-Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.—»

r-Mich. So. ft N. Indiana.—.
1864.

6,329,447

459,762
423,797
406,373
610,100
423,578
686,964
799,286

..May.

—

(609 m.)
$541,005
482,164
499,296
468,858
585,623

563,401

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

—

528,972
616,665
516,608
460,573
617,682
578,403
747,469
739,736
641,589
648,887
518,088

416,5S8

,983,855... Feb...

....Sep...

—

wlibJL ttla

(708 m.)
$571,536

$327,900

..July..
...Aug...

—

1865.

(708 m.)
..

886,039

13,429,643 15,296,913

V

..June..

—

8,840,091

1864.

1866.

...May...

—

307,919
236,824

2,770,484

..April..

—

357,956

252,015
.

—

—

1865.

(609 m.)
$273,875
317,839
390,355
421,363
466,830
565,145
4S0,710
519,306
669,605
729,759

207.913 ..Feb...
...Mar...-

401,280

307.803

1864.

(280 m.)
$210,171.. Jan...
—

<—Chicago and Bock Island.-^

✓-Chicago <& Northwestern,-.

s

18(>6.

1865.

-

449,815
406,680

Chicago and Alton.

1864.

(426 m.)
(426 m.)
$319,711 $504,992. .Jan.
...Feb..
347,648

857^556

—

✓

18(56.

OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.

EARNINGS

MONTHLY

✓—

—.

(484 m.)
$226,059...Jan...
194,167...Feb...
—

...M«r...

April..

—

—

—

..May...
..June..

—

.

—

—

—

—

—

—

July..

(140 m.)
$30,840
37.488
42 038

41,450
48,359
68,118
50,303

..Auer...

49,903

,.Sept....

60,565
56,871
54,942
42,195

..Oct

..Nov...,.
..Dec

..Year..

(340 m.) i(340 m/

$259,223 $267,541
239,139
313,914
271,527
290,916
304,463
849.285

246,109
—

'
—

—

—

—

344,700
850,348

—

—

872,618
412,553

—

—

284,319

—

3,793,005

—

Western Union.
1864.

1866.

*

1866.

1865.

687,078

1865.

(157 rn )

$43,716
37,265
32,378
83,972
63,862
82,147
68,180
69,862
75,677
92,715
61,770

87,880

689,888

1866.

(177m.)
45,10$
86,006
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

-

-

—

—

—

441

THE CHRONICLE.

April 7,1868.]

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Dividend.

Stock

standing.
Railroad.
Alton and St. Louis

100

Baltimore and Ohio

100

Washington Branch... .100

Bellefontaine Line

100

Belvidere, Delaware

100

Berkshire

100

Boston
Boston
Boston
Boston

153,000 Quarterly.
13,188,902 ! April and Oct
1,650,000 April and Oct
4,434,250 Feb. and Aug
997,112 j

and Lowell

and Maine
and Providence
and Worcester

50 2,200,000
100 6,500,000

"... 100 2,085,925
50

Chicago and Alton
100
do
preferred... .100
Chicago Burlington and Quincy. 100
Chicago and Great Eastern
100
Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska... .100
Chicago and Milwaukee
100
Chicago and Northwestern
100
do
■
do
pref. .100
Chicago and Rock Island
loO
Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO

and Aug

110

.

Feb. &

Au£
Quarterly. Apr... 2#

Jan. and
Feb. &

Ang.

100

....100
Dubuque and Sioux City
100
do
do
pref..... 100
Eastern. (Mass)
100
100
Eighth Avenue, N. Y
Elmira, Jefferson, & CanandagualOO
Elmira and Williamsport...
50
do
do
pref... 50
...

Erie
do preferred
Erie and Northeast...

100

Fitchburg

100

100
*50

Forty-serd St. & Grand St. F’y.100
Hannibal and St. Joseph
100
do
do
pref... 100

Hartford and New Haven
Housatonic

100
100

do
preferred
Hudson River

100
100

Huntingdon and Broad Top

50
pref. 50

do

....

100

Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50
100
Indianapolis and Madison
do
do
pref.. 100

Jeffersonville
50
Joliet and Chicago
100
Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50
do
.do
pref. 50

Lehigh Valley
Lexington and Frankfort

50

Little Miami
Dittle Schuylkill

50

—

50

50

Island

Lonisville and Frankfort

Louisville and Nashville

50

50
100

Feb. .5

*

45

85”

cS4

92

115#

50
26

26#
June..3# 55# 55#
Apr...5 112# 112#
Nov. .5
115

Feb. .6
Jan .6
.

Apr ’66 4 79# 79#
109#
Apr...5 109
Mar. .2#
Jan...5
Jan... 8#

130

Jan...8#
72

Jan.. .3
Jan...4

102

130

128

952,350

1,500,000
835,000
600,000
6,632,250
516,573
2,981,267
2,646,100
1,852,715
1,109,594
5,527,871
2,800,000

Louisville,New Albany & Chic.100
McGregor Western
100
Maine Central
* ‘ ’ioo 1,050,860

Quarterly.

Pennsylvania
50 20,000. Ouu I May and Nov
218 1001
Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO
Philadelphia and Erie
50 5,069^450 Ja and July
50 20,240,673
Philadelphia and Reading
Phila., Germant’n, & Norrist’n. 50 1.476.300 Apr. and Oct
Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50 5.973.300 Apr. and Oct
Pittsburg and Connellsville
50 1,774,623
Quarterly.
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO 9,307,000 June and Dec
Portland, Saco, and PortsmouthlOO 1,500,000
Providence and Worcester
100 1,700,000 Jan. and July
Racine and Mississippi
100
Raritan and Delaware Bay.
100 2,360,700
Rensselner & Saratoga consol. .100
800,000 April and Oct
Saratoga and Whitehall
100
500,000 April and Oct
Troy, Salem & Rutland
100
800,000 April and Oct
Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOO 1,774,175 Jan. and July
Rutland and Burlington
100
St. Louis, Alton, & Terre HautelOO
do
do
pref.100
St Louis, Jacksonville & Chic.ICO

2.300,000

1,700,000

Annually.

July Jan...3

Quarterly.

Feo. and Aug
Feb. and Aug

Feb..2

90

89# 40
24# 25

105”

106#

251' 25i”
113

114

Jan...3
De.’65 10

64

65

100# 100#

Apr. .4
Apr ..5

114*

Apr

1:2#

106
115

98# 90#
100

.4
Jan...4
.

Apr...4#
Apr.. .3
Apr... 3
Jan...5

May. .7

80
60

s*

Feb.. 8

Jan...2#

56

Feb.. 2

Jan.. .6

June. 8
Dec. 3#

32

33

Jan,..3#
Dec ..3#
Jan ..4
Dec ..4
43
Jan...2
Jan.. .3
136#
Jan.. .0
Jan.. .5j
Jan.. .2

Division
50 1.633.350 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3
and Hudson
100 10,000,000 Feb. and Aug Feb.10
and Raritan
100 2,528,240 Feb. and Aim Feb. 10
and Susquehanna.... 50
200,000
Navigation
50 5,101,050 May and Nov Nov. .5

102

Delaware
Delaware
Delaware
Lancaster

74#

74#

80

80

Lehigh
Monongahela Navigation
Morris ^consolidated)

107

160

109

109#

115#

116

50

preferred

Central Coal
Citizens (Brooklyn) Gas
Consolidation Coal, Md
Cumberland Coal, preferred
Farmers Loan and Trust
Harlem Gas

125

720,800
1,025.000 Feb. and
1,175,000 Feb. and
138,086
1,908,207 Feb. and
2,888,806 Feb. and
2,050,070

100
Aug
Aug
>
100
Pennsylvania and New York... 50
Schuyikill Navigation (consol.). 50
Aug
do
Aug
preferred.. 50
Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50
Union
50 j
2,787,000
do preferred
50 j
West Branch and Susquehanna.100 1,100,000 Jan. and July
50
Wyoming Valley
.V
750,000
miscellaneous.
American Coal
25 1,500,000 Feb. and Ang
American Telegraph
100
Ashburton Coal
50 2,500,000
Atlantic Mail
.100 4,000,000 Quarterly.
Brunswick City
100
Bucks County Lead
200,000
Brooklyn Gas
25 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug
Canton Improvement
100 5,000,000
Cary Improvement
600,000
Central American Trans
100 3,214,300
do

54

98#
43#

137* ‘

Aug.. 2
Aug..3#

Jan...5
Oct... 4

50

45
60
28
9

116
55

60

...10
130

July.25
Feb..

2,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...5
20 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...4

International Coal

78*
115

27

Aug. .4

93

135#
106

Feb. .6*.
Feb..6

100

...

92
135

Feb.
Feb.

100 6,000,000
.100 5,000,000
25 1,000,000 Jan. and July Ja»...4
50
644,000
Hampshire and Baltimore Coal. 100
600,000

110#

65'

25 1,550,303
25 8,228,595

Chesapeake and Delaware
Chesapeake and Ohio

Apr...l#

Aug Aug.. 2
July Jan...5

101

Nov. .5

2,233,376

Sandusky, Dayton, and Cincin. .100 2,9S9.0W'
do
do
854,866 Feb. and Ang
pref.100
862,571
Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO
576.050 Jan. and July
Schuylkill Valley
50
Second Avenue (N. Y.)
650,000 Apr. and Oct
.-vlUO
Shamokin Valley & Pottsville.. 50
869,450 Feb. and Aug
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
750,000 Quarter^.
100
Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 1.200,130
Terre Haute and Indianapolis.. 50 1,900,150 Jan. and July
Third Avenue (N. Y.)..
100 1,170,000 Quarterly.
Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 1,700,000
do
do
1st'pref.100 1.700,000
do
2d pref.100 1,000,000
do
Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2.442.350 Juneand Dec
do
do
98-1,700 June and Dec
preferred. 50
125,000 Jan. and July
Tioga
.100
607,111
Troy and Boston
100
274,400 June and Dec
Troy and Greenbush
100
Utica and Black River
811,560 Jan. and July
,.100
Vermont and Canada.
;100 2,860,000 June and Dec
Vermont and Massachusetts... .100 2,860,000 Jan. and July
Warren
50 1,40S,300 Jan. and July
Western (Mass)
100 5,627,700 Jau. and July
Worcester and Nashua
75 1,141,650 Jan. and July
317,050 January.
Wrightsville, York & Gettysb’g 50

47

47#

43

22
46
10

43

1,000,000

Jersey City and Hoboken Gas.. 20 1,000,000
160
150
Manhattan Gas
50 4,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...5
11# 12#
Marietta and Cincinnati....!!. 50 2,022,484
Mariposa Gold
100 12,000,000
do
do
do
40
40
1st pref. 50 6,205,404 Feb. and Aug Feb .38
preferred
.100
do
do
2d pref.. 50 3,819,771 Feb. and Aug Feb .3s
21
21
Metropolitan Gas
‘. .100 2,800,000
11
Manchester and Lawrence
Minnesota
50 1,000,000
100 1,000,000 Jan. and Jnly Jan.. .4
108#
New Jersey Consolidated
Michigan Central
ioo 6,315,906 Jan. and July Jan..5
101#
10 1,000,000
Michigan Southern and N. Ind.’lOO 7.539.600 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3# 81# 82# New Jersey Zinc
.100 1,200,000
New York Gas Light
50 1,000,000 May and Nov Nov...
M..do . and Prairie Du ChienlOO 2.183.600 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5
do
guaran.100/
Milwaukee
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug F.5&l(ki’
92# New York Life ana Trust
3,014,000
do
do
1st pref. 100 3,082,000 Feb. and Ang Feb..4
95
96# Nicaragua Transit
100 1,000,000
do
do
Feb .6
2d pref. 100 1,014,000 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3#
Pacific Mail
100 4,000,000 Quarterly.
212#
193
Milwaukee and St. Paul
90**
100 1,000,000
Scrip (50 paid)
100 2.000,000 Quarterly. Feb..5
do
134*
45
preferred
!!!l00 2,400,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3#
Pennsylvania Coal
50 3,200,000j Quarterly. Feb..5
Mine Hill & Schuylkill Haven.! 50 3,708,200 Jan. and
60
Quartz Hill
25 1,000,000.
July Jan...4 11*6
100 3,452,300
Mississippi and Missouri
Quicksilver
100 10,000,000'Jan. and July Jan. ’65.6 40# 40#
Morris and Essex
Rutland Marble
50 3,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .38, 80
83
25 1,000,000; Jan. and July
Nashua and Lowell
100
114
Saginaw Land, Salt and Mm
25 2,500,000
600,009 May and Nov Nov. .4
Naugatuck
100 1,100,000 Feb. and Aug Feb..7
Schuylkill Coal
New Bedford and Taunton
100
85
Dec..4
500,000 June and Dec
Spring Mountain Coal
100 2,500,000 Jan. and July Jan...5
New Haven, N. Lond., & Ston .100
Feb
Western Union (Russian exten)...
738,538
New Haven and Northampton.. 100
Union Steamship
1,010,000
New Jersey
92
91
50 4,395,800 Feb. and Aug Ang..5
128
Union Trust
100 1 nm non
New London Northern
.100
United States Telegraph
700,000
100 3^000,*000'Feb. and Aug Aug. .4
New York and Boston AirLine.100
100 1,000,000 Jan. and Jnly Jan...5
United States Trust
788,047
New York Central.
58
100 24,386,000 Feb. and Aug Feb..3
92
57
92# Western Union Telegraph—. .100 22,000,000' Quarterly.
passed.
New York and Harlem
50 5,085,050
Wilkesbarre (Consolidated)CoallOO 2,175,000.Apr. and Oct
W illiamsburg Gas
70
; do
50 1,500,000 Jan. and Jnly Jan,..4
preferred
750.000] Jan. <UIU U Ui| Jan...5 j .... l • * . •
lOU.UUUjUOIU and July U&H.mU
50
Niagara Bridge & Canandaigua. 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan,.. 3
Wfoming Valley Coal
50 1,250,000 Feb. and Aug Feb..
k 50 i 55
•

,

,

Bid. Ask

Canal.

Quarterly. Apr.. 2#
Feb. and
Jan. and
Jan. and

Apr.. .4
Apr... 8

795,360
3,068,400 June and Dec Dec.. 8
Apr.. 2
4,295,630 Quarterly
3,150,150
2,338,600 Jan. and July Jan.. .5
3,077,000

....

1,500,000
1,751,577
1,982,180
3,155,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .4
1,000,000 Quarterly. Apr
600,000 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 2#
500,000 Jan. and July
500,000 Jan. and July Jan... 3#
16,400,100 Feb. & Aug Feb. .4
8,535.700 Feb. & Aug. Feb.. 3#
600,000 Feb. & Aug. Feb..6
3,540,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .4
750,000 April and Oct Oct ..5
1,900,000
5,253,836
2,350,000 Quarterly. April. 3
820,000
1,180,000 Jan. and July Jan...4
6,563,250 April and Oct Apr.. 5
494,380
190,,750 Jan. and July Jan...3#
23,374,,400 Feb. and Aug Feb..5
1,689,,900 Mar. & Sep. Mar. .4
412,
,000 Jan. and July •Tan.. .3
407,,900 Jan. and July Jan...4
1,015,,907

p’d

100

Peninsula

60
108

57

108

1,000,000

Jan... 3
Jan...5

Quarterly.
Quarterly.

Last

January. ;Jan..7
100 3,609,600 Jan. and July1 Jan.. .4
482.400]Feb. and Atig Aug. .4
..
50
..100 7,000.000i Quarterly. Apr..6

Colony and Newport

Oswego and Syracuse
Panama (and Steamship)

117# in#

2,425,400 Feb and Aug. Feb. .5 z90
8,376,510 May & Nov. N.5c&20« 115
2.250,000

Mississippi
do

Old

1,508,000

.

July Jan...2#

..

Detroit and Milwaukee
do
do
pref.

96
119
130
135

and July Jan...3#

871,900

1,783,200

Onio and

2,980,839

Periods.

.100'
100119,822,8511
preferred.. 1001 2,950,500

Ogdensburg & L. Champlain..

220

Aug.. 3#

and Aug Feb .10

,

Dong

Apr...4
Apr... 5
Aug. .8

standing.
New York and New Haven
100
New York Proviuence & BostonlOO
Ninth Avenue
,100;
Northern of New Hampshire.. .100.
Northern Centrak
50!
North Pennsylvania
50|
Norwich and Worcester
100-

.

and July Jan...3#
& Aug. Aug. .5

13,160,927
12,994,719 June & Dec.
6,000.000 April and Oct
1,106,125
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 3,000,000 May and Nov.
Cincinnati and Zanesville
100 2,000,000
Cleveland, Columbus, & Cincin.100 6,000,000 Feb. and Aug
Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta.100 5,000,000 Jan. and July
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50 5,403,910 Jan. and July
Cleveland and Toledo
50 4,654,800 April and Oct
Columbus & Indianapolis Cent.100
Quarterly.
Columbus and Xenia
50 1.490,800 Jan. and July
Concord
50 i:500,000 Jan. and July
Concord and Portsmouth
100
350,000 Jan. and July
Coney Island and Brooklyn
500,000
100
Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100
892,900
do
do ’
pref. 100 1,255,200 Jan. and July
Connecticut River
100 1,591,100 Jan. and July
Covington and Lexington
100 1,582,169
Dayton and Michigan
100 2,316,705 Jan. and
Delaware.
50
July
406,132
Delaware, Lacka., & Western
50 10,247,050 Jan. and July
Dos Moines Valley
100 1,550.050

.

Apr .1#

Bid. Askd

100 3,160,000 Jan. and July Jan. .5
100 4,500,000 Jan. and July Jan ..6# 134#

do
preferred
Central of New Jersey
Central Ohio
Cheshire (preferred)
Chester Valley

do
Illinois Central

p’d.

.

492.150
Brooklyn Central
100
Brooklyn City
10 1,000,000 Feb.
366,000
Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100
850,000 Jan.
Buffalo, New York, and Erie.. .100
Buffalo and State Line
100 2,200,000 Feb.
Burlington and Missouri River. 100 1,000,000
Camden and Amboy
100 4.988,180 Feb.
Camden and Atlantic
50
378,455
do
do
682,600
preferred.. 50
681,665 Jan.
Cape Cod
60
50 1,150.000
Catawissa

’

Last

600,000' Quarterly. Apr...l#
250,000! June & Dec. Dec. .2#
50
100 8,500,000
95#
500 1,830,0001 Jan. and July Jan.. 4
100 4,076,974 Jan. and July Jan .4

Blossburg and Coming...,
Boston, Hartford and Erie

out¬

Companies.
Periods.

Friday.

Dividend.

Stock

Friday.

out¬

Companies.




•

•

•

•

.

•

#

.

.

.

.

.

......

4

[April 7,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

2

*

=F

ij %

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS

Bid.

1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)
2d
do
4°
Eastern Coal Fields Branch..do
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (A7. Y.)
2d
do
do
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio)
2d
do
do

$2,500,000
2,000,000
400.000

1,000.000
777.500

4,000,000,
6,000,000j

A tlantic and St. Lawrence:
Dollar Bonds

088.000

484,000

Steriing Bonds

Ap’l & Oct.
do
do
do
do
do
Jan. & July

1,000,000
1,128.500
700,000
2,500,000

Mortgage (8. F.) of 1834

1855
1850
1853

titUefontaine Line:
1st Mortgage (B. & L.) convertible.
1st
do
do
extended...

368,000
422.000

116,000
650,000
347,000

do
do
do
(I. P. A C.)
do
do
Belvidere hexaware:
1st Mort. (guar. C. and A
2d Mort.
do
3d Mort.
do
2d
let
2d

88”

1867
1875
1880
1885

do>

Ap’l & Oct.

250,000

100,000
200,000

400,000
2,000,000
426,714

Buffalo and State Line.

500,000

j

1st Mortgage
Income.

200,000
400,000

.

Erie and Northeast
Camden and Amboy:
Dollar Loans
Dollar Loan
Consoldated ($5,000,000)
Camden and Atlantic:

.mil

....

493,000

Ap’l & Oct.

Mortgage
Central of New Jersey:
1st Mortgage

141,000

Feb. &

900,000
600,000

.

450,000
800,000
800,000
950,000
1,365,800

,

Central Ohio:
1st Mortgage W. Div
do
1st
E. Div
2d
do
3d
do
4th
do
Income

,

(Sink. Fund)
do

1

93

600,000

Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref
do
do

519.000

2.400,000
1,100,000

income

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy:
Trust Mortgage (S. F.) convert —
do
do
inconvert..
Bonds, (dated Sept. 20,1860)
Chicago and Great Eastern:

Mortgage

Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton:
1st Mortgage
Cincinnati and Zanesville:

Mortgage

Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati:
1st Mortgage
Cleveland and Mahoning:
1st Mortgage...
ao

do

.

.

Cleveland, Fainesville and Ashtabula:
Dividend Bonds
Sunbnry and Erie Bonds. .
Cleveland and Pittsburg:
'2d Mortgage
Sd
do
convertible
4th

do

—

Cleveland and Toledo:
Sinking Fund Mortgage
Con *ecticut River :
1st

Mortgage

Connecticut and Passumpsic River:
1st Mortgage
Cumberland Valley :
1st Mortgage Bonds

2d

do

do

Dayton and Michigan :
1st Mortgage
d
ao
do

Toledo Depot Bonds
Delaware:
l»t

Jan. &

May A Nov.
Jan. & July
Ap 1 & Oct.

*d

Mortgage, guaranteed

98
95

94^
95

-

90

1895

Jan. &

July

1898

80

Feb. A Aug 1885
1885
do
May A Nov, 1863
Quarterly. 1915
Feb. & Aug 1885

88

July 1870

99

108

109

....

100

Aug 1883

Jan. & July 1876
1876
do

7' Feb. & Aug
do
1,907,000 7 J’ne & Dec.
192,000 7 May & Nov.
do
523,000 7

3,890,000

110,000 6

fund....

1870
1869
1885
1875
1867

500,000 6 May & Nov 1870
600,000 6 Feb. & Aug 1875

77

6,837,000 7 April & Oct 1875
1875
do
2,896,500 6

Mortgage, convertible
.

104

2,563,000

1890

do

6

600,000 7 Jan. & July 1866
1870
do
364,000 10
500.000 7 Jan. & July 1866

Mortgage
Indianapolis and Madison:
1st Mortgage...;.

1862
1858

do
do

400.000 7

2d
do
Real Estate

7

'685,000 7 May A Nov. 1881

Teffersonville;

7 Mch & Sept 1861
392,000 7 April & Oct 1873

1st Mortgage
do
2d
....
roliet and Chicago:
1st Mortgage, sinking fund...
lermebec ana Portland:
1st Mortgage....
do
?
2d
3d
do
rxi Crosse and Milwaukee:

500,000

8 Jan. &

July

1882

May & Nov.

May & Nov
Jnly

Feb. A Aug
M’ch & Sep
do

1873
1864
1875

510,000
850,000
244.200

648.200
900,000
500,000

1,108,740

M’ch A Sep 1873
do
1875
Jan. & July 1892

1,802,000

Jan. &

Juljn 1885

800,000

J’ne & Doc 1876

161,000
109.500

Ap’} & Oct.

283,000
642,000
162.500

Jan. A July
do
do
do

500,000|

Jan. A

do

2.655.500

6

do

w«L

■

A

1,800,000

6

May A Nov

1883

7

April & Oct 1877'

500,000
225,00C

6 Jan. &
7 May &

July 1870
Nov. 1890

7 Feb. &

Aug 1883

.

.

Louisville and Nashville:
1st
1st

Mortgage

Memphis Branch Mortgage

.

1st Mortgage, dollar
Scioto and Hocking Valley

McGregor Western .—let Mortgage

.

1st

94

.

Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien
1st

.

8 Feb. & Ang 69-72
8 April & Oct 1882

4.822,000
2,194,(XX

.

Mortgage, sinking fund.

90

1st
2d

Mortgage, sinking fund....

7
7

402,00C

do
Morris and Essex: n U,
1st

'

92’ l66”
err.

79

•

•

•

•

...

108* ‘
94

July ■1891

95

7

Jan. &

7 Feb. A Aug 1893
7 April A Oct 1893

.

1,000,(XX

7

400, (XX

8
7
7
7

•

.

’

3,612,0(X
695,00C

....

95
94
•

•

ljtMortgag«convertible)
<t Suminglon:

Jan. & Juh 1875
1876
do
1876
do
May & Nov .1877
do
1883

ioo

81X

82

46.

50

-

Mortgage, sinking ftind

N. Haven, N. London
let Mortgage...,

.....

91

7

Naugatuck:

July 1875

.88

• •

1877
7 Feb. A Aug -1868
do

4,600,00C

do

do

May & Nov. 1885

•

Mortgage

do

•

:

Mississippi and Missouri River :
1st Mortgage, convertible
2d
do
sinking fund..
1st
\ do • Oskaloosa....
1st Land Grant Mortgage
2d

1883

2,230,500
4,328,(XX

.

2d 1
do
Goshen Air Line Bonds

do

•

V

Milwaukee and St. Paul:
...

91

»

Michigan South. A North. Indiana:

70
94

.

..

Sinking F’nd do

300,560 7

2,691,293 7 Feb. & Aug 1892
300,000 7 May A Nov. 1888
1885
1,000,00C 7
f

c
c

mort

Michigan Central:
Dollar, convertible

89"

1

-

Marietta and Cincinnati:

1867
1881
18—
18—

TiXl

1873

960,000

Extension Bonds

1904
1904

Jan. A July 1875
M’ch A Sep 1881

Mortgage, sinking fand

May & Nov.

.

Mortgage..

Mortgage

M’ch & Sep 1878

250,000

6

1st Mortgage, sinking fund....
Long Island:

Feb. & Aug 1880
do
1874

1,157,000
1.728.500

1,465,000

rAttle Miami:
1st

1890

do

379.000

7 May & Nov. 1872
7 Jan. & July 1869

903,000

.

-

Little Schuylkill:

1893

Jan. &

100

1867
1880

1,300,000

72

1,000,000

Mortgage, Eastern Division....
"
do
do
rAhigh Valley:
let Mortgage....
1st

2d

100

800,000 6 April & Oct 1870
1861
do
230,000 6
1862
do
250,000 6

.

Jan. A

1,397,000

si ’ si’

95

191,000 6 Jan. & July 1877

nduinapolis and Cincinnati :
1st Mortgage

’

Ap’l A Oct.

JTteka vsm «4 Western




1877
1893
1883

7
6

hdiana Central:
1st Mortgage, convertible
2d
do

3,167,000
680,000

Delaware. Lackawanna and Western:
1st

July ’75-’80

1,037,500
1,000,000

Sterling
Redemption bonds

’57-’62

95
92

July 1883

Feb. &

6

do

do

Jan. A

6

Mortgage.

1st

1885
1876

1,249,000

do

2d
3d

1st

M’ch& Sep 1865

7

927,000

Uinois Central:

80

2,000,000

Chicago and Rock Island:

1st

Aug 1890
May & Nov 1890

101

3,437,750 7 April & Oct 1881
633,600 7 Jan. & July 1883

Convertible
Tuntington and Broad Top;
2d

100

Feb. & Aug 1882
May & Nov. 1875

7

700,000

1st Mortgage
Tudson River:
1st Mortgage
1st
do
2d
do
sinking
3d
do

1st

91

....

1,000,000 10 ’ April & Oct 1868
1,350,000 7 ! Jan. & July 1866

Tousatonic :

....

July] 1873

927,000 6 Jan. A Jnly 1870

1st Mortgage
lartford, Providence and Fishkx
1st Mortgage...
2d
do
sinking fund....

Jan. & Jnly 1883
1883
do
M’ch«fc Sep 1890

467,000

Preferred Sinking Fund
1,250.000
1st Mortgage
3,600,000
Interest Bonds
756,000
Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870 2,000,000
Extension Bonds
484,000

2d

1,963,000
1,086,000

.'.

New Dollar Bonds

Aug 1882

do

!

lartford and New Haven:

5,000,000

Mortgage
Chicago and Milwaukee:
1st Mortgage (consolidated)
Chicago and Northwestern:
1st

1st

do

Land Grant Mortgage
Convertible Bonds—

1879

Ap’l & Oct.
Jan. & July

1888

96

....

...i.

149,000 7 Jan. & Jnly 1870

95

j

Aug 1870
May & Nov 1875

1,192,200

Cheshire:
Mortgage Bonds
Chicago and Alton:
1st
1st
2d

2d
do
fraud Junction:

1876

jj 3,000,000 7 May & Nov.; 1868
3,000,000
! 4,000,000 7 M’ch& Sep; 1879
do
I 6,000,000 7
i 1883
3,634,600 7 April & Oct) 1880
1.002,500 7 June & Dec; 1888
£800,000 6 M’ch & Sep; 1875

lannibal and St. Joseph:

Feb. &

do

7i

1875
1864

Jan. & July 1863
1894
do

Jan. &

Chicago Union:
Mortgage, sinking fnnd....

96

...

Feb. &

1st

,1

Ang

7

freat Western, (1U.):
1st Mortgage West.Division..
East.
do
do

.....

July 1873

do
Catawissa:

Feb. &

Ap’l A Oct.

Mortgage

....

Aug 1883
May & Nov. 1889
J’ne A Dec. 1893
Jan. &

Mortgage..

!
do

7

Mortgage

Feb. &

490.000

Loan

May & Nov.

falena and

Ap’l & Oct. 1866
Jan. A July ’69-’72
1870
do

1,700,000
867,000
4,269,400

,j!
8

1,000,006

Sterling convertible

1st

J’ne & Dec 1877
May A Nov 1872

T’ne & Dec. 1874

!

Vrie and Northeast:

July 1879

Jan. &

i Ap’l & Oct. 1887

7

598 000

Williamsport:

.

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

2d

%mira and

1st Mortgage
Vrie Railway:
1st Mortgage
convertible
2d
do
:3d
do
do
convertible
4th
5tb
do
do

1871

Feb. A Aug 1S65
1865
do
Jan. & Jnly 1870
1870
do
1889
do

do

Pennsylvania:
Sinking Fund Bonds

97X

8

420,000 5 Jan. & July 1872
739,200 6 Feb. & Aug 1874

Vast

97
«’•

(Mass.):

do

97
•

300,000
600,000

Mortgage, convertible

96

•

'

2d section.....

do

1st
Eastern

1866
’70-’79
1870
1870

May A Nov.

34,000

Mortgage

Tubuque and Sioux City:
1st Mortgage, 1st section

J

Jan. A July
do
do
do
do

1,000,000

do

1st

1866
1878

Ap Ju Oc
Jan. A July

Mortgage, convertible.

Detroit, Monroe and Toledo :

1883

300,000
200,000

Mortgage Bonds
Buffalo, New York and Erie.

1st
2d

1st

2d

1876

150,000

do
2d
do
2d
do
Sinking Fund Bonds
Boston and Lowed:

88

1879
1881

Ja

j 348,000
j| 2,500;000
2,500,000

j

1882

589.500

500,000

1st

I$1,740,000|

j

88

;;;

J’ne & Dec. 1867
M’ch & Sep 1885
Feb. & Aug 1877

1,000,000

Blossburg and Corning:
Mortgage Bonds
Boston, Concord and Montreal:
1st Mortgage

-

1879
1882

Ap'l & Oct.
May & Nov.

Baltimore and Ohio:
do
do
do

Payable.

ing.

ao

Railroad:

Railroad:
Atlantic and Great Western :

do
do
do

Amount
outstand¬

DESCRIPTION.

Payable.

ing.

FRIDAY.

INTEREST.

FRIDAY.

INTEREST.

Amount
outstand¬

DESCRIPTION.

BOND LIST.

May A Nov .1915

800,000

Jan) A Jnly 1876

4S&QM

M*ch4fc Sep 1861

m/Eu*

c

April 7,1866.]

INTEBS8T.

Description.

1aR te.

ing.

q at

Payable.

•E

SI 35
Oh

p,

7

Jan. & July 1869

6

Feb. &

)| o

Jan. &

July 1885

i

Mortgage Bonds

York, Providence and Boston:
Mortgage

Mortgage
North- Western Virginia:
1st Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore).
2d
do
(guar, by B. & 0. RR.)
3d
do
(do
do
do )
(npt guaranteed)
3d
do

Mortgage
.do
(noio stock)

7 .Tan Xr, .Tnlv 1ft74
7 Feb. & Aug 1870

6

Mississippi:

do )

311,500
1,139,000
i

do

do

1,029,000

Mortgage
Pennsylvania:
1st Mortgage.
1st

do

sterling...
Philadelphia and Baltimore Central:

7 April & Oct
do
7
7 Feb & Aug.

1870
1875
1872

7 Mch &

Sept

1884
1880
1875
1876

..

•

a

Mortgage
Syracuse, Binghamton and New
1st Mortgage
Terre Haute and Richmond:
1st Mortgage, convertible
Third Avenue (N. Y.)
1st Mortgage—;
Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw:

....

....

99*
....

....

lstMortgtwre
•

•

•

a

•

a

a

85

7

Jan. &

7

April & Oct

1876

94,000

7

Mch &

Sept

1866

1,180,000

7

Jan. &

July

1870

1,391,000

7 June & Dec

1894

....

•

....

2d

....

V

600,000
300,000
300,000
660,000
200,000

—

•

....

•

Vermont Central:
1st Mortgage..;...

2d
dq(no interest)
Vermont and Massachusetts /

....

....

92* 93
37* 38

Mortgage—.. V

1st

1st
2d

i

—

Mortgage (convert.) Coupon
• \ dqregistered!

*-

Western (Mass.):
.

.

....

75

72

dq *
Guaranteed

2d

95* 96
93

596,000
200,000

Mortgage
1st--’ do - , guaranteed... ... .
York & Cumberland (North. Cent.):
1st Mortgage..

....

93*

6 Jan. &

•

•

*

*

•

•

•

,

•

•

•

•

«

•

•

«...

...

•

•

•

•

•

••

....

••

....

...

•

•

....

93

25* 26
• ••

—

•

•

•

•

•

*

a

...

....

1878

I

?68-’71
1875 I
’66-’7h
D’m’d

Jan. & >ulv
do

•

•

•

•

79

75

1890
1890

•

•

....

97* 98

175,000 6 May & Nov. 1870
25,000 6 Jan. & July 1871
1877
do
600,000 6

.,

(Baltimore) Bonds

•

•

...

1883

g

6
6

•

....

1895

July

4,319,520 5 April & Oct
do
850,000 6
1,000,000 6 Jan. & Julv
150,000 G June & Dec

1st

...

....

KK4 QU8
Vrt

Dollqr Bonds—
Albany and W. Stockbridge Bonds
Hudson and Boston Mortgage ....
Western Maryland ;
■ ’■ u
■

....

550,600

•

•

•

•

•

86
72

399,300 7 Jan. & July 1873

.

'..

Sterling (£899,900) Bonds

....

.

«

•

•

•

•

•

•

600,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1875

Mortgage (guaranteed)

Westchester and Philadelphia:

80* 80*
80* 80*
....

.

.-

Warren:

....

....

2,000,000 7 June & Dec 1861
1,135,000 7 Jan. & July 1867

—

*

18H7

6 Jan. & July
7 April A Oct

Mortgage

Land Grant

•

....

1863

do

lOxqUUU

95

94

.

Jan. & Julv

-ton nnn

do
do
Union Pacific:

98

94* 95

6

•

....

188"
1885
1875
1882

600,000

*—

Mortgage Bonds

96

7 Jan. & July
7 Apr. & Oct.
7 May A Nov.
7 Mar. & Sep.

152,355

j

Convertible
Troy Union :

85
112

83*

....

1875
do
1865
do
Jan. & July 1874

7
7
7

1,500,000

“

do
do

8d

1872

900,000 ! 7 Feb. & Aug 1865
1884
do
2,500,000 7
1,000,000 7 May & Nov. 1875

(Toledo A Wabash)
(extended)
(Toledo and Wabash)
(Wabash and Western)

•

....

July 1871

1,400,000

York:

—

Sinking Fund Bonds
Equipment bonds
Troy and Boston: *

85*

....

•

Ang

200,000

rl abash :

Toledo ana
1st Mort.
1st do 2d
do
2d
do

a

....

...

Feb. &

1st

a

....

•

•.

•

...

1875

h

700,000

Staten Island:
a

•

•

...

Canal

....

....

-

1st Mortgage

do
2d
do
3d
Akron Branch: 1st mortgage
.

200,000

Pittsburg and Steubenville:
1st Mortgage.

do

jnt

^ 1865

,

Jan. &

July

1884

..

Feb. &

Aug

1889

•

7 Semi an’ally
do
7
7 April & Oct
7 Jan. & July

1912
1912
1912
1S84

?|

i......

and Terre Haute ;

2d i'' dq Z preferred
2d !' do.0't Income
St. Louis, Jacksonville <ft

.Tpty

V..

Chicago:

**''•?*•*

Mr.h Xr,

a

....

•

(^Pennsylvania :■
1st Mortgage Bonds

;

800,000

do

1880

1880

do

7

1,800,000 7
937,500 7

Feb. & Aug 1863
1863
do

2,778,341

10

Tan. & July 1875
■feb. & Ang 1881

....

.

Morris.

a

*

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

82

79

•

6 Mch A

Sept

•

•

87*

•

•

-V

....

1864

•

•

....

1868

do

6

88*
A

80* 82
....

....

1st

•

a

a

•

a

a

Mortgage (North

....

t.

•

.

..

’

‘

t

'.

1894
1894
• 1894

6

95

90

.

May A Nov. 1876

do

1,764,830
3 980,670

<

686,500

Improvement

a

...

•

i

.

6 Mch A Sept
6 Jan. & July
6 May & Nov.

1872

78* 75

1882

75

1870

76
»«« •

....

....

....

Susquehanna and Tide-Water:
Maryland Loan

a

a

a

-

•

a

a

a

a

,

•

a

•

a

•

a

•

r

a

,

a

jo.

•

■'

1st

1st

a

do

6

2,500,000

Mortgage

West Branch and

,

806,000 5 Jan. A July 1864
do
1866
200,000 5
do
1878
993,000 6
1864

55

51

•

•

,,,,

% *

•

•

• •

i

•

•

•

•

•

.

•

T'. '• f ~

Union (Pa.) i

a

....

....

;

do
Sterling Loan, converted
Mortgage Bonds ...........
Interest Bonds, pref

....

a

Susquehanna :

6

May & Nov. 1883

23* 24

450,000 * Jan. A July 1878

Mortgage

••

...

....

....

Wyoming Valley :

750,000

1st Mor
ortgage.

a

a

a

•

a

a

a

a

a

a

a

a

a

6

Jan. A

July 1878

7

Tan. &

July

ran. &

88

79

July 18—

Miscellaneous:

a

a

.

....

....

82

80

30* 24,.
#4#t

Cincinrihti and Covington Bridge :
1st MoFtgtee-Bone's .... v;
ilariposa Mining}
; 1st Mortrage

¥

;;:J

a

^
.

Pennsylvania Coal:
1st

a

•

a

1,500,000 7

t

7

j

2,000,000

609 000 7

Mortgage

1884

• » •

•

>

*

*

*pril A Oct

iFeb.

A

Ang

8

•

1871

•

•

•

•

»

f

•

•

a

88

Quicksilver Mining ;

77*
75

1st

609,00c

Mortgage

0,«*

2d
*" s

• • •

.• • A •

April A Oct

• • •

....

c*

t
•

6

590,000

Branch)... i,.

Schuylkill Navigation ;
1st Mortgage!
2d

•

1876

750,000

Pennsylvania & New York :
97*
92*

97
92

-

P

h

•

....

•

w

ipril & Oct

*

182,000 6 Jan. & July 1876

Mortgage Bonds

,

2,200,000 7 3emi an’ally
do
2,800,000 T
1*700,000 7 1Hay & Nov.

do

\

Nonongahda Navigation:

....

*

329,000 10

1870
1890
1885

161,000

Unsecured Bonds
v;

JaAp JuOc

752,000 7 Jan. & July 1865

Interest Bonds J4

Lehigh.,Navigation:

a

6
5
6

600,000 7 June & Dec 1865
900,000 7 Mch & Sept 1870

Mortgage Bonds

1888
1876

.800,000 7 Jnn. & Dec. 1874
.1862
do
200,000 7
1871
■> 123,000 7 Mch & Sept
j

1st

Erie
;

1886

800,000 6 Jan. & July 1878

Mortgage.*..Delaware and Hudson:
1st Mortgage, sinking ftwd
1 2d y do '• ,, i" do
do
f

July

.

Delaware Division :

•

Sppt 1888

do
do

500,000 7

Sacramento Valley:
1st Mortgage
2d V-idp
ftt. Louis, Alton

a

....

....

400,000 7 I May & Nov. 1890
1890
d >
340,000 7

,

'

a

•

1875

.

do - ~ (Watertown A Rome'
do
do .
(
do'j
Rutland and Burlington:

(no

186S

8 .Tan

250,000
140,000

Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.

IstMortpge

May & Nov.

1881
1881

Saratoga A Whitehall..

*

•

Jan. &

2,000,000
4,375,000

.....

6

....

7 Feb. & Ang
do
7

1,000,900

Convertible Bonds
Rensselaer & Saratoga consolidated
let Mort.1 Rensselaer A Saratoga

.

•

....

a

800,000 7 Mch & Sept 1879

1st Mortgage
Raritan and Delaware Bay:
1st Mortgage, sinking fund.
2d ;
do
•-.M.v.,.

«,

•

....

1,438,000

Mortgage
Reading and Columbia:
1st

-

Preferred Bonds

....

1,000,000
500,000

2d , .< do r?
Racine and Mississippi :

do

t

6

Mortgage lA>an
Pittsburg and Connellsville:
1st Moct. (Turtle Cr. Div}
iicago,
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Ch

(

1867
1880
93* 95
1870
1871
1880
87* 88
I
1880
101
1886 100
1886

Maryland Loan A
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed

93

89

6

Mortgage....;

•

2,382,109

Mortgage Bonds
Chesapeake and Ohio :
1st

6

PhiladelB timing. & Baltimore:

ipeal

....

•

1865
1885

April & Oct

6 April & Oct.
6 Jan. & July
do
6
6
do
do
6
do
7

,

do

•

April & Oct

April & Oct

'

v

1st
2d

•

5 Jan. & July
5
do

Philadelphia and Reading:
Sterling Bonds of 1836
do —do
do
Dollar Bonds of 1849
do
do
1861
do
1843-4-8-9
do
Sterling Bonds of 1843....
Dollar Bonds, convertible
Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible
Philadelphia ana Trenton :

Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.)
Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg:

•

6 Jan. & July
do
6

do
do

Consolidated Loan
Convertible Loan




•

.

July

CO

....

600,000 7 June & Dec 4867

Mortgage...
Shamokin Valley and Pottsville:
IstMortgasre

1877
1881
1901

7
6
6

A Erie)....

(general)
(general)l
PhiladelGermant. & Norristown:

^

.

7 Jan. &

1,290,000

1st

92
91

July ,72-,87 78

575,000 7 Jan. & July 1876

Mortgage

;

6 Jan. &

July ’70-’80

65

Payable.

,

Philadelphia and Erie: *
1st Mortgage (Sunbury

2d

7 Jan. &

1872
1872
1874

6 Jan. & July
6 April & Oct
do
6

sterling

Peninsula;

1st

....

) 7 Jan. & July
do
) 7
do
7

Mortgage
Pacific, (S. W. Branch):
Mortgage, guar, by Mo

1st Mort.
1st Mort.

...

1st

let

1st

....

••

Oswego and Syracuse:

.

1873
1885
1885

)
1,494,000 7 April & Oct 1869

Mortgage (East. Div.)
*do t (West. Div.)

1st ?,
2d

do
do
do

6

do

v...

.

1st

6

)
)

Ogdensburgand L. Champlain:

6

)

General Mortgage.
Steamboat Mortgage

do

Jan, & July 1873

)
)
)

Norwich and Worcester:

2d
2d

do

310

Chattel

1880
1887

April & Oct

) 6

Mortgage Bonds

(do

1866

)
220,700 6 April & Oct 1874

North Pennsylvania:

Panama :
1st Mortgage,
1st
do
2d
do

do

6

)

*<

Second Avenue:

...

’TR-’W

6 Jan. & July 1885
)! 6 Ja Ap Ju Oc 1877

Plain Bonds...

do

1866
1875

)

Sinking Fund Bonds
York and Cumberl’d Guar. Bonds .
Balt, and Susq. S’k’g Fund Bonds..
Northern New Hampshire :

1st
1st
2d

1868

fo Ari"

Ffih

)
232,000 6

Northern Central:

Ohio and

do

7 June & Dec
) 6 April & Oct

Plain Bonds

1st
2d

May & Nov. 1872
Feb. & Aug 1893

(extended)

Mortgage

1st Mortgage

•

7
) 7
) 7

Mortgage
Consolidated Mortgage
3d MortgageNew York and New Haven:

let

....

Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark:

•

(assumed stocks).

s

1,000,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1900
May* Nov ms
201.500

Railroad :
Sandusky, Dayton and Cincinnati:
2d

.

1st General

1st

!

....

6 May & Nov 1883
)! 6 June & Dec 1887
) 6 May & Nov. 1883
do
1 6
1883
) 7 Feb. & Aug 1876 101*
do
1876 101>i
) 7
do
1876 101X
7

Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts).,
Bonds of August, 1859, convert....
Bonds of 1865
.
New York and Harlem:

M

It

Rate.

ing.

M

Aug 1873

$500, OOt

-

f

‘

T3

2

.

New Haven and Northampton:
1st Mortgage..
New Jersey:
Fei ry Bonds of 1853
New London Northern:
1st General Mortgage
New York Central:
Prc mium Sinking Fund Bonds ..
Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal)..
Real Estate Bonds

CVS

ontstand-

Description.

S3

Railroad:

New

Amount

.

a »

Amount

outstand

FRIDAY.

INTEREST.

FRIDAY.

«?

>4-:

LIST - (continued).

AND

RAILROAD, CANAL

Subscrip. Bonds

443

THE CHRONIClas

s

A* ■

...;y
m + *

lijt

.

a... ««

t
?

J

irune & Dec 1878
•

ran. A July 187*

2,000,000 7Uraa. & July i57-’58*

'*

1

» A-

•

[April 7,186$. £J

THE CHRONICLE.

444

insurance anb

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST—Friday.

JJtining Journal.

Adamantine Oil

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.
Dec. 31,1865.

COMPANIES.

Marked thus (*) are

partici¬
pating, and thus (+) write Capital.
le

Joint Stock Fire:
Adriatic
25
JStna*
50

Albany
Albany City

200,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
200,000
200,000
500,000
250,000
300,000
200,000
200,000
300,000
200,000
153,000

30

100

American*

50

American Exchange...
Arctic
Astor
Atlantic (Brookljm)
Baltic
Beekman

100
50
25

50
25
25

25
25
17

Bowery
Broadway
Brooklyn (L. I.)

.100
100
100

Clinton

Columbia*
Commerce
Commerce

(Albany)..

Commercial
Commonwealth.
Continental*
Corn Exchange
Croton

50

200.000
200.000

150,000

Far. Joint St’k(Meridian)100
Firemen’s
17
Firemen’s Fund..;
10
Firemen’s Trust (Bklyn) 10
Fulton
;
25
Gallatin
50
Gebhard
100
Germania
50
Glenn’s Falls
10
Globe
50
Greenwich
25
Grocers’
50
Guardian
Hamilton
15
Hanover
50

50,000
204,000
150,000

Hoffman
Home. /

150,000

200,000
150.000
200,000

6
162,281 May and Nov. May
259,092 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66 ..6

500,000

707.973

100.000
200.000

241,448
237,551 Jan. and July. July’65 ..6

do

283.331 Feb. and

50

Howard
Humboldt

200,000
300,000
200,000
200,000

424,017
240,339

150,000

223.484

Importers’ and Traders’. 50
Indemnity
100
International

Irving.

25

Jefferson

214,320

1,000,000 1,848,518

100
30

200,000
200,000
150,000

40

262,(MS
281,929

280.000

King’s County (Brook’n) 20
Knickerbocker

do
do
do
do
Feb. and Aug.
do
do
March and Sep
Jan. and July,
do
do
do
do
do
Jan. and July,
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
Jan. and July,
do
do

238,031

50
100

Hope

Lafayette (Brooklyn)

.

200,000
Aug.
200,000
224,508 April and Oct.
Jan. and July,
200,000
189,759
do
150,000
198,860
do
400,000
556.304
do
300,000
503,880
50
50
do
200,000
233,893
100 2,000,000 3,598,694
do

Harmony (F. & M.)+

330.621

198.359

150,000
300,000
150,000

198,198
407,389
192,048
Long Island (Brooklyn). 50 200.000
284,157
25 1,000,000 1,402,681
Lorillard*
Manhattan
100
500,000 1,078,577
...

50

100
25

Lamar
Lenox

arket*
100
echanics’ (Brooklyn).. 50
echanics’ and Traders’ 25
ercantile
100
Merchants’
50

200.000

390,432

150,000
200,000
200,000

180,152
229.653
2137.069

200,000
297.611
Metropolitan* t
100 1,000,000 1,645,984
Hontauk (Brooklyn).... 50
180.957
150,000
Nassau (Brooklyn)
150,000
243,107
50
National
200,000
37#
269,992
!

New Amsterdam
25
N. Y. Cent (Union Sp.).100
N. Y. Equitable.... ... 35
N. Y. Fire and Mar
100

300,000

359,325

100,000
210,000

People’s

Apr. ’65..5
’66.3#

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

80

’66 ..4
’66 .5
’66 .5
’66 ..5
’66 .5 130
’65 .5
.

.

.

.

’66;. .6 150"
July’65 .5 90
July ’65 ..6 73
.

Feb.’65 ..6

59#

Feb.’66.3#
Aug. ’65..5

Phoenixt
Reliei...,

Republic*

.

Jan.’66
Jan. ’66

112’

Resolute*

200,000
150,000
150,000

100

280,206

233,603

Rutgers’

25

200,000

244,600

St. Mark’s
St. Nicholagt

25
25

150,000

179.926

150,000

182,845

Security*t

.

July’64 ..6
Jan.’66 ..5
Feb. ’66.. 4

July ’65 .6
July’65.. 5
Jan.’66.3#
Jan.’66.3#

Standard

lis*'

86"
86

.

81

Feb.’66..5
Feb.’65..5
.

57

200,000
200,000

25
26

150.000

50
100

400,000

243,711 Feb.
209,991 Jan.
372, S99;
688,391 Feb.

300,000
100,000
500,000

377,077
191,733 Jan. and July. Jan.’66. ..6 90#
Jan.’66... 5
621,301
do

Washington*
(Buffalo)
Williamsburg City....

50

Yonkers and New York. 100

50
..

.100
10
10

........

1

Devon

6

Maple Grove

Maple Shade ofN.Y

10

10

10
.....40

Marietta
Mercantile
Mineral Point

Montana
5
Mount Vernon.. ...!
3
National
c... 5
New England
10
New York
5
N. Y. & Alleghany
5
New York* KenUy Oil. 100
New York& Kent’y Pet.. t
New York & Newark....
N. Y. & Philadel
5

N.Y,Ph. ABaltCons

Empire and Pit Hole

2

....

Enniskillen

Enterprise

38

Equitable

10
5
5

Everett
Eureka
Excelsior

10

8

1

—

10
Fountain Petroleum
5
Fulton Oil
Germania.
1
Great Republic
'
G’t Western Consol... .100
Guild Farm
10
HamiltonMcClintock
Hammond
20
Hard Pan

10

35
45

25

1

...

20

3 85

Inexhaustible
Island

10 00
15

c.) 2

52

10

Plumer
President
Rawson Farm
Revenue

50

10

5

2 90

2 50

5
10
15

1

Bid.

Copper:

10

5

Sugar Creek

5

Terragenta

10

3

Union
10
United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2

10

...

and Aug. Feb. ’66..4

and July. July’65. .5
do
Jan. ’66. .5 104#
and Aug. Feb.’66.. 6 120

Albany & Boston
Algomah...

17

Amygdaloid

4#

Aztec

13#
17#

12 62

2#

87

-

Bohemian.

Consolidated

i

24# 44*66
1

r

1 25
6 25
85
2 35

-

9#
-

8# 42 50 48 50
-

2

Riocky

10
6

10
5

..

25

Mountain

—

Smith & Parmelee
Union

—

Waddingham

Hudson
Huron
Indiana
Isle Royale
Knowlton

Lafayette
Lake Superior
Manhattan
Mendota
Merrimac

Coal
American..

6#
18# 10 0C
10

Consol




I

66

11

Portage Lake
Quincy

6
...

10

50

10

......

Miscellaneous.

48 00

Reliance
Rockland

18

2 00

Superior..,..,,

10

325 3

3

S.

60
25

Rutland Marble

Saginaw,

i

00

•

•

m

par. 100 40 25 40 88

Quicksilver

-

3 80

100

Wyoming

-

65

50

•Wilkesbarre.

-

,

25

parlOO

British American
Co.ambian
International

-

55
75
70

s

Ashburton

Great Western*

i

9*65

,

Waverly

I

3*50

—

Spruce Hill...

Feb. ’66...2

20
65

Lead and Zinc:
Bucks County
par 5
2#
Clute...
—
1#
Denbo
:
—
Macomb
•
6
46 00
19
New Jersey Zinc
100
10
2 15
—
33 1300 16 00 Phenix
Wallkill
—
2 00
8
Iron:
1
85
Copake
par 50
2
Lake Superior
100
6#
60
4 75 Mount Pleasant
5

3# 36 00

581,689 Feb. and Aug.

1 00
55

—

..

2
25

25
75
40
00
45

25

Manhattan
Montana
New York
N. Y. & Nova Scotia.
Q uartz Hill

5#

Excelsior
Flint Steel River
Forest City
Franklin
Grand Portage.
Great Western
Hamilton...
Hartford
Hilton

—

Kip & Buell....
Liebig

3#

Evergreen Bluff

50
75
26
40

5
—

Hope

-

Eagle River

3 75
18 60
25 1 90
88

—

Gunnell
Gunnell Central
45 50 Holman

2#

Dacotah
Dover

10
25
50
10

—

Corydon

Eagle

-

4 00
2 25
1 75

par -—

Downieville....

5

Copper Creek
Copper Falls
Copper Harbor

Minnesota
New Jersey
New York

Bid. Ask

Gregory.. .100

-

,

70

Gold:

Pewabic
Providence

J00| 887 400

40
5

5

American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific
Bates & Baxter
Benton
Black Hawk
Bob Tail

Ontonagon....’

Washington*

9 95

.10

Companies.

J4 tut Stock Marine:

Jan.’66.3#
Jan. ’66.3#

8 00
25

....

W.Virg. Oil and Coal:.. .10
Woods & Wright
100

-

8,177,437 Jan. and July
do
1,322.469;

10
9 80

10
10

Venango (N. Y.) .
Venango & Pit Hole

Ogima
100 1,000,000
1001 640,000

20

Tack Petr’m of N.Y..... 5
Talman
10
Tarr Farm
10

[Ask.

paid 3
26
3

Norwich

Mercantile Mutual*

'

45
1 00
61
20
50
60

.TO

Success

Vesta
:
Watson Petroleum
Webster

5

75

Second National
Shade gtiver
5
Sherman & Bamsdale. :2#
Sherman Oil
Southard
10
5
Standard Petroleum

United States

10

Ivanhoe (div. Jan. 3 p.
Ken. Nat. Pet &Min
Knickerbocker
:
Lamb’s Farms.
Latonia & Sage R

3 95
2 50

5

..

Tygart’s Creek

4’66

80>

5

Titus Oil
Titus Estate

6

Home
Homowack

66

20
5
10

Story & McClintock
50
2 00

85

10
10

Heydrick
Heydrick Brothers
Hickory Farm
High Gate

17

"30
i

20

10

Rynd Farm

1 30

13

5

"25.

100
10

Pit Hole C. No. 2
Pit Hole Creek
Pithole Farms

85

2

Fee Simple
First National
Forest City
Fountain Oil

4 00

10

Phillips

10
5

40
4 00

8
25

Petroleum Consol

10 1 50

25
1 60

1

Noble & Delancter
Noble Well of N. Y
North American
Northern Light
Ocean
Oceanic
Oil City Petroleum
Oil Creek of N. Y
Pacific
Palmer Petroleum

45

35
15

Emp’e City Petrol’m.... 5

20

2

Manhattan

People’s Petroleum

Dutchman's Run

Hope... ^

July’68 .4 66
Feb.’66.3# 105

204,937

250,000

Columbia (Pbg)
Commercial
Commonwealth.
Consolidated of N. Y
De Kalb

1 55

Canada
Central..

—100
25

United States

10

Caledonia

50 1,000,000 1,548,964
50
200,000
275,036 Jan. aDd July. Jan- ’66. .5
200.000
100
Jan.’66..5
247,281!
do

Star

18

Boston

April and Oct. Apr. '66..4 91#
.5
Jan ’66..5

90

10

Clinton

Bay State
96

July ’66.. 6

221,607 Jan. and July, July’65

188,056
1,000.000 1,698,292
289,628
200,000
558,047
300,000
273,647
200,000

Clifton

Adventure

.7
.8

.

2 75

Cherry Run Oil
10
Cherry Run Petrol’m
2
Cherry Run & Shenango. 5

96

4

July’66 .10
July ’65 ..5
July ’65 ..5

409,218

187.612

,

Companies.

July’65 ..5
July’65 ..6 122#
Jan. ’66

"26

12
1 50
70
38

43
10
5
100
5
10 3 25 2 60

Buchanan Farm
Bunker Hill....
California
Cascade
Central

Jan, ’66. .5

155,156
281,838

do
do
do
Feb. and Aug.
Jan. and July,
do
do
do
Feb. and Aug.
do
Jan. and July.
Feb. and Aug.

5

10

McKinley..

MINING STOCK LIST—Friday.

July^65 ..4

200.000

100

5

Jan. ’66 ..5
Jan. ’66 ..5

Jan. ’66 .5
Jan. ’66 .10
Jan.’66 3#

2 75

20

10

10
10

par

Mingo
:
Monongahela & Kan

e.)...

Liberty
Lily Run

Mar.’66 ..6

150,000

50
50

10

June’63.3#
July’65 ..5

350,000

20

Western

Feb. ’66..5

200,000

North American*
North River
25
Northwestern (Oswego). 50
Pacific
25
Park...’.
100
Peter Cooper
20

Tradesmen’s.’

Jan. ’66 ..5

Jan. and July. Jan. ’66 ..4 122
283,567 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.3#
50 1,000,000 1,294,030 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66 ..6 110
do
50 1,000,000
Jan.’66 ..5 91#
751.653

Niagara

Sterling *
Stuyvesant.

July'64 ..4

.

300,000

30

Exchange

‘663#
65...5 65#
’66...5 84#
’66..5 106

Jan.’66 .10
Feb. and Aug. F.3#p. sh. 110
266,277 Jan. and July, July ’65 5 80#
do
538,473
July’64.3# 72
Jan. ’66 .5
do
227,336
494,704 eb. and Aug. Feb. *66..6 m"
279.681 Jan. and July. Jan.’66 ..5
310,563 April and Oct. Oct. ’65.. .5
1,532,888 Jan. and July. Jan. '66 ..7
448,269 March and Sep Mar. ’64..5 66
249,133 Jan. and July. July’64 . .5 50
403,468 April and Oct. Apr. *66..5 106
252,225 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66. .6
do
Jan'66...5 102"
306,424
44#
189,044 Feb. and Aug.
102
106,255
278.483 Jau. and July, Jan. ’66 .5
Jan '66.. 3#
do
194,223
do
July ’65 . .5
187,573
Jan. ’66. .5
do
305.956

200,000

50

Excelsior

’66...

348.98

400,000

40
100

Eagle
Empire City

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.

227,632 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65..4
353,311 June and Dec. Dec. ’65...5 128
268,582 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’66. .5 121
do
278,386
Aug. '65v10 151
178,264 Jan. and July
do
548.359

100

Bergen Coal and Oil

Bradley Oil

244,279 May and Nov.

400,000
200,000
250,000
500,000

Bennehoff & Pithole
Bennehoff Run
Bennehoff Mutual

..

Bliven (div. Feb. 3 p.
Blood Farm

Jan,’66...5

50

10
5
10
10
10 12 10 12 30
5

Anderson
Beech Hill
Beekman

Brooklyn

Jan. and July.
238.926 Jan. and July.
614,101 Jan. and July.
287.373 Feb. and Aug.
429,090 March and Sep

200.00U

.100

3.S

216,662

50
100
100

.

®

McClintockville
McElhenny

10
.10
10

Brevoort

486,942

300,000
210,000
250,000
500,000

70

City

0>

*c5

250,250
189,480
264,355

150,000

100
20

Last paid.

•

July.

200.000

Capital City (Albany).. .100
Central Park
Citizens’

343.775 Jan. and
do
233.304

$30(r,000

Agricultural, (Watert’n). 5

Period#.

OD

J

DIVIDEND.

Net
Assets.

Risks.

par

Alleghany
Allen Wright

Bid. Ask.

Companies.

Bid. Ask.

Companies.

M

25

April 7,1866.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Finanoial.

Of the condition of the

NATIONAL MECHANICS’ BANKING
ASSOCIATION OF NEW

YORK,

morning of the first Monday of April 1856

:

DR.

Notes and Bills discounted
and loans on demand.... $1,276,536 06

Indebtedness of directors.
Overdrafts...
Current expenses
Taxes paid
Remittances and other cash

C

88,753 79—1,865,289 86
154 56

$12,618 22
5,451 84—

items,

4,803,075 85

changes

Due from National Banks
Due from other Banks and Bankers....
U. S. bones deposited with U. S. Trea¬
surer to secure

54,825 54

12,411 80
355,000 00

circulating notes

U. S. bonds on hand
Other U. S. securities
Cash on hand in Circulating
Notes of other National
Bunks
Cash on hand in Circulating
Notes of State Banks....

$7,000 00
125,000 00— 132,000 00

$6,740 00
7,904 00

1,164 00—

Notes andBi'ls discounted..
Indebtedness of Directors.,. $75,942 75
Overdrafts

5,000 00
2,112 57

Mortgages
U. 8. revenue stamps

1,600 00

..

$6,767,435 75
CR.

LIABILITIES.

$500,000 00
108,219 45

Capital stock paid in
Surplus Fund
Circulating notes received from Comp¬
troller
$308,000 00
Less amount

culating notes

Cash

on

Amount outstanding
Individual Deposits
D vidends unpaid
Due to National Banks
Due to other Banks and Bankers
State Bank circulation outstanding....

Discount

308,000 00
1,200,262 86
2,722 44
270,633 91
11,738 44

12,677 00

$19,137 37
500 58
29,716 35

Exchanges
Interest
Profit and Loss
Premiums
Uncollected checks

392 73—

49,747 03
6,285 27
4,297,249 35

150,000 00
225,892 50
10,000 00

....

hand in

circulating notes of

other National Banks

13,550 00

Specie

129,961 95

viz

:

Legal Tender Notes
$252,715 00
Compound Interest Notes 271,270 00
Five per cent Treaaury^certificates

$2,976,385 99
LIABILITIES.

Capital stock paid in
Surplus Fund
Circulating notes received from Comp¬
troller
$132,600 00
.

v

,,,

Discount
Interest

$19,W3 74
3,465 40
4,151 83-

Profit and Loss

460,000 00
190,000 00

132,215
1,814,291
207,882
1,033
36,688
112,034
5,219

55
96
75
08

68
00

27,520 97

O. H. SCHREINER.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this second day
of Bpril, 1866.

-He'Ry C. Banks,
Notary Public, 8 John st., N. Y
-

State of New York, County of New

York: I, F.
Chandler, Cashier of “ The National Mechanics’
Banking Association,” of New York, do solemnly
sweartnat the abpve statement is true, to the best
of my knowledge and belief.
F. CHANDLER, Cashier.
Sworn to and subscribed before me, this second

day of April, 1866.

Wm. T. Farnham,

„

Notary Public, New York City.
[U. 8. Rev. 5 Cent Stamp, canceled.]

Bankers, Merchants,
And others should send

HARNDEN
as

by the

,

No. 16

PETROLEUM

The Trustees of the Bennehoff Petroleum Com¬
pany have this day declared their their regular

monthly

....

Dividend of Five (5) Per Cent.
payable on and after 10th day of April next, free of
Government tax. The transfer books will be closed

from 3d to 10th

day of April inclusive.
WM. CLARKE, President.
James McMaster?, Secretary.

t*

SECURITIES, BULLION, FAMILY
PLATE, &o.,

safely kept under ample guarantee, at a sma.. annual

The
paper

these

of Commer¬

objects THE CHRONICLE
known

the well

English paper

Economist," and is essentially unlike
published in this country.

any

other

v

THE CHRONICLE is divided into heads

de¬
num¬

or

partments, under which the contents of each

ber

are

arranged.

They

are as

follows:

1st. EDITORIAL
ARTICLES-prepare*
with great care by competent writers, upon
sub¬

jects relating to Finance, Commerce, and
other questions of general interest to busi¬
2d. LITEBATURE -Notices of

new

books.

3d. FOREIGN NEWS—It is with
great plea¬
sure we are able to announce that we have se¬
cured the services of one of the editors of the lead¬

ing London journal—The Economist—who will, in a
weekly letter, report the foreign markets specially
for THE CHRONICLE,
furnishing the freshest and
most reliable information with
regard to commercial
and financial affairs.

4th. COMMERCIAL Sc MISCELLANE¬
OUS NEWS.
6th. THE RANKERS GAZETTE—Giv¬
a list of all Dividends Declared and
Donds lost or stolen for the week; a review

ing

of the

Money Market, Stock, Go id, and
Foreign Exchange Markets for the week;
Bank Statements for the week, with compara¬
tive statements; progress and condition of Na¬
tional Banks, Foreign Banking, and a
Bank Stock List.

'

PRICES,

on

day of the week, at the New York Stock Ex¬
change of Stocks and Securities sold.

7th. A TABLE OF NATIONAL,STATE
AND CITY SECURITIES.

8th. THE COMMERCIAL TIDIES—Con¬
an epitome of the movements of trade for
the week; complete tables of the Total
Receipts
of Domestic Produce for the week and since

taining
Jan.

1. Also, of Exports and
Imports for
the week and > ear of all leading articles of
commerce, with a comparative statement of the previous year.
A special Report on
Cotton, acknowl¬
edged to be the best and most complete published

..

in the United States.

A

OFFICE OF THE

Panama Railroad

Co’y,

Tontine Buildings, No. 88 Wall St.,
New Yorf, March 24, 1866.
THIRTY-SIXTH
Directors have this

DIVIDEND.--The

day declared

Board

special Report

BreadstuflTs.

on

A

Dry Goods Report.
9th. WHOLESALE
PRICES CUR¬
RENT, containing fall quotations of the prices,
on Friday, of all
leading articles of Commerce in th«
New York Market.

of

a

Dividend of Four (4) Per Cent.

AND

OTHER

REN

COMPANY,
Wall Street, New York, March 23,1866.

they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and

Coupon Bonds

“

6th. A TABLE OF SALE

EXPRESS, 65 Broadway,

safe forwarding of
GOLD .SILVER, JEWELRY, & MERCHANDISE
of every description. Also for the collection of notes
drafts and bills, bills accompanying goods, etc.

To accomplish
is modeled after

each

OFFICE OF

BENNEHOFF

(half-yearly) and

so
furnish a complete history
cial and Financial transactions.

00

$2,976,385 99
State of New York, City and County of New York,
I, O. H. SCHREINER, Cashier of ” The Chatham
National Bank of New York,” do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true, to the best of
my
knowledge and belier.

(5 cent stamp.]

weekly record, of conveni¬
and bound at

a

ness men.

"

$6,767,436 75

Third—Affords

ent form to be kept on file,
the end of each volume,

285 00
,.*

Dividends unpaid

Second—Furnishes the most accurate information
to the Merchant and Banker on all matters
relating to their occupations—by means of thor¬
ough and well prepared reports ana full statistical
tables.

CONTENTS.

27,000 00— 561,015 00

Less amount on hand
Amount outstanding
Individual Deposits
Uncollected checks

topics.

19,878 14

Other United States Securities. .‘.V....
New York State Stocks

Due National Banks
Due to other Banks and Bankers
State Bank circulation outstanding....

hand

on

5,934 51
10,698 19
3,700 00
224,597 81
103,771 64

....

.

Legal Tender notes
$396,137 00
Compound Interest rotes.. 101,250 00— 496,387 00
New York State stocks

1,400 69

Premiums
Remittances and other cash items
Due from National Banks
Due from other Banks and Bankers...
United States Bonds deposited with
United States Treasurer to secure cir¬

;

Bonds and

$1,525,871 05

Real Estate
Current Expenses

13,604 52
viz

First—Exclusively devoted in its Editorial

Columns to the discussion of subjects relating to
the interests of Finance and
Commerce, to
the exclusion of politics and othor general

RESOURCES.

Other lawful money,

Specie....,

Other lawful money,

18,070 06

ex¬

Is published early every Saturday morning contain¬
ing the latest news up to Friday night. It is

NATIONAL BANK OF NY,
in New York, in the State of New York, on the
morning of the first Monday In'April, 1866:
CHATHAM

In the City of New York, in the State of New York,
RESOURCES.

Commercial & Financial
Chronicle

Quarterly,, Report

Of the condition of the

the

THE

Financial.

Quarterly Report
on

445

out of the eaminings of the road for the three
months ending 81st inst., and TWO (2) PER CENT
out of the earnings of steamers, failing vessels, &c.
payable to the stockholders or their legal represen¬
tatives, oa and after April 5.
The transfer books will be closed from the even¬

10th. THE RAILWAY MONITOR.
11th. A TABLE OF RAILWAY, CA¬
NAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BONDS.
12th. A TABLE OF RAILWAY, CA¬
NAL AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCKS.
13th. THE INSURANCE AND MINING
JOURNAL.

ing of the 27th March until the morning of April 8.

A Daily Bulletin

HENRY SMITH, Treasurer.

And Price Current is
per

centage, or in

OFFICE OF THE
SMALL

SAFES,

CHICAGO

AND ALTON

RAILROAD

served

published every morning and
by carriers in New York, and mailed to all

other subscribers.

COMPANY.

4

c

at an annual rental of

depositor

can

$20 to $45, to which onlt the

have access, in the

FIRE AND BURGLAR-PROOF VAULTS
OP THE

Safe

and after that date, at the office of Messrs. M. K.
JESSUP & CO., No. 84 Broadway, New York, less
Government Tax.
WM. M. LARRABEE, Treasurer.

1.
2.
3.
4.

CONTAINS,

A list of Bonds Lost and Dividends Declared..
Prices of Bonds, Stocks and Securities.
Prices of Gold and Foreign
Exchange.
Full Price Current of the General Markets and

Receipts of Domestic Produce.
5. Jobbers Prices of

THE

Dry Goods for the day.

DAILY

BULLETIN

WILL BE I8SUED TO MERCHANTS IN LARGE
NUMBERS,
AS A PRICE CURRENT, WITH THEIR CARDS PROMI¬

Deposit l Company,
•

(under special charter from the Legislature of New

York), in the

new

Marble Fire-proof Building,

146 BROADWAY,

Circulars, with terms, Ac., sent on application.




Chicago, Ills., March 21,1866.
Coupons of Income bonds of the Chicago <& Alton
Railroad Company, due April 1,1866, will be paid on

•

THE BULLETIN

OFFICE OF THE
ST.

LOUIS, JACKSONVILLE Sc CHI¬

NENTLY INSERTED AT THE HEAD.
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTIONS PER

CAGO RAILROAD COMPANY.

Jacksonville, Ills., March 17, 1866. ’
Coupons of the First Mortgage Bonds t>f the St.
Louis, Jacksonvill & Chicago Railroad Company,

dus April 1, 1866, will be paid on and after that date
at the office of Messrs. 1L K. JESSUP, & CO., No.
84 Broadway, New York, free of Government Tax.

JAMES BEROAN, Treasurer.

YEAR, EXCLUSIVE

OP

POSTAGE:

THE CHRONICLE with DAILY BULLETIN, .$12
00
THE CHRONICLE without
do
10 00

THE DAILY

BULLETIN, alone

5 00

William B. Dana Sc

Co.,
PUBLISHERS,

60 WiUiam Strut, New York,

\

-JJ. JLjl\J

Steamship and Express
STEAMSHIP

PACIFIC MAIL

Co’s.

COMPANY’S

•;?

-

Li'V'-

■>

k?<>

-THE

.

;

H

. ...

.

LIMITED

The Companies Act, 1862.”
AUTHOR IZER UA PITA L £1,800,000
T„- IN 60,000 SHARES OF £30 EAi H,
First Issue, 30,000 Shares, and the remainder to be
issued as may be required, under the sanction of a

Canal street, at 12
o’clock noon, on the 1st, lltb, and
list of every month {except when those dates fan on
Sunday.and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama

Cask

■

General Meeting.

FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.
i
APRIL;
r - • r~
let—Arizona, connecting with Goluxn City*
:

Wall Street.

YORK OFFICE, No. 63

NEW

tor SAN

Buildings,
Threadneedle Street.
LIVERPOOL OFFICE, 18 Brown 8 Buildings.
10th—Henry Chapncky, connectin' with St. Louis
81st—New York, connecting with Sacrahentq..
Chairman ; HARRY" GEORGE GORDON, Esq.,
Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with
Chairman of the Oriental Bank Corporation.
steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for
Central American Ports. Those or 1st touch at Man¬
Directors :
zanillo.
Lawfobd Acland, Esq., Chairman of the Ceylon
Baggage thecked through. One hundred pounds
Company-,
' V,
allowed e ich adult.
Harry GeoRgE Gordon, Esq., Chairman of the Ori¬
An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
ental Bank Corporation.
attendance free.
i k,;p»
John Binny K*y, Esq., late of Messrs. Binny &Co.,
For passage tickets or further information, apply
Madras.
it the Company’s ticket office, on fie wharf, foot of
Patrick Francis Roberison, Esq., M.P., Director
Canal street, North River, New York.
of tbi Oriental Bank Corporation.
F. W. G. BELLOWS, Agent.
William Soh lefield, Esq , M.P., Director of the
Un‘on Bank of London.
Francis Turner, Esq., of Messrs. J. A. Turner &
Co., of

Empire LineGA.,
SAVANNAH,

Winslow

1,600 Tons

NfERSEREAU,iL. B. WARD, c
SUYDAM, ' JOSEPH BRITTON,
WILLIAM REM SEN, - |AM04 ROBBINS,
JACOB REE'E,
CHAS. D.

THE

7
Mar. 7 San Salvador, Sat.Apr. 14
“ 24 San Jacinto, “ *‘
“ 21
“ 31 San Salvador, “
Returning, Leave Savannah, every Saturday, at
•
o’clock, P. M.
it'-'-*'

San Jacinto, Sat.
San Salvador, “
San Jacinto,
“

111

DIVIDEND TWENTY

profits of the Company ascertained
10. 1855, to January 1,
1865, for which certificates were issued

from January

at No. 63 Wall Street, New
stll Bills of Exchange on the

amount to

LIMITED,

Buy
And other States,

and

improved and unimproved

LANDS in the Southern and
Western States, on Commission.
*
European Agencies for the sale of properties and to
AGRICULTURAL

encourage
A. N.

emigration are being

MEYLERT,
of New

SMITH’S

York.

FERRY Sc BEAVER CREEK

Oil and Salt Company.

100,000 shares of $5 each, par
W. Wilson; Secretary, M. H. Ber¬
gen ; Treasurer, Chas. K. Braine*
Directors, Henry W. Wilson, James O. Giblin,
Chas. W. Miller, and William B. Smeeton.
OFFICE-78 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Capital $500,000, in
value.
President, M.




THE

FOREIGN TRADE

189 Sc 191

Feb. 20,1866.
ALFRED

EDWARD, President.

LECONEY, Vice-President.

WM.

Secretary.

THOMAS HALE,

NO. 12

goods on commission

E. H. Ashcroft,
No. 82

_

/

WALL STREET.

P.

BOSTON*
Manufacturer of and

,..,,

i;

The Mutual

-

dealer in

WATER GUAGES,
Steam Whistles, Brass Globe Valvar,

STEAM AND
Gauge Cocks.
Scotch Glass Tubes,

Boiler Pumps. Stock Plate# and
Dies, Tapps, Ratchet Drills, Low Water Detectors
&c., &c.
For circulars

Sc CO«,

Water 8tre« t,
New York.

NOTMAN, Secretary.

Sudbury Street,

address
-

-82

E. H.

ASHCROFT,

Sudbury St., Boston,

Mass

Marine & Fire Insurance.

i

Machinery, & Hardware
IR. -H. AJLEiEN

New York,

$1,107,24

Niagara COMPANY.
Fire Insurance

IMETROPOLITAN INSURANCE CO.,
NO. 108 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

Implements,

SOUTHERN AND

been

$1,000,000
Reference and particulars CASH CAPITAL,
270,353
addressing Pierrepont Edwards, Esq., SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1866
H. B. M’s Vice-Consul, Box 4,238, New York Post
Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid.
Office.
Chartered 1850.
Cash Dividends paid in 15 years,
253 per cent.
JONATHAN D. STEELE, President.

JOHN BRANNON,
of West Virginia.

FOR

$1,896,334

for eleven years
previous to 1863 have
redeemed in cash

Total profit

given by

established.

Agricultural

189,024

The certificates

WATTS, Ass’t Manager.

take to forward or purchase
for a New York house.

$1,707,310

January 1, 1865,

Additional profits from
to January 1, 1866

rp<

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,
and sell MINERAL LANDS in Pennsylvania

insures

taken.

Liverpool Agency.

NO. 60

PER CENT.

against MARINE and IN
LAND NAVIGATION Risks, on cargo and freight.
No time risks or risks upon hulls of vessels ar
This company

OF L OND ON:
Commercial
Bills of Lading furnished and signed on the Pier.
and Travelers’Credit?, available in all parts of the
world. Commercial retHts issued for use in the
For further particulars, engagement of Freight or
East Indies, ChtT&r otid Australia, will be upon the
Passage, apply to
. .•
GARRISON A ALLEN, Agents.
Oriental Bard* Corporation of London.
6 Bowling Green, N. Y.
Further particulars
be ascert lined on applica¬
tion at the office, No 63 Wall street,
Agent at Savannah, B. H. Hardee.
-WILLIAM WOOD, Manager.

Land Co.,

$1,164,380

The

ENGLISH AND AMERICAN BANK.
LonUott. -and on the UNION BANK
to Buy Bills of Exchange,^ and to issue

Miscellaneous.

BROADWAY.

1st, 1866

Assets, Jan.

JLimited,

GEO. BURGHALL
New York, March 10,1866.

BUILDING,)

(TRINITY

AMERICAN BANK,

ENGLISH A

Having opened offices
York, is prepared to

3

The National

HARTSHORNE, Secretary.

COMPANY,

& Thomson.

Messrs. Foster

•

President.

Pacific Mutual Insurance

Solicitors :
:

LEVERICH:

HENRY S.

Bankers]:

York

SOLICITED.

D. LYDIG

Esq.

New

CLASS RISKS

JNO. W.

York Manager : William Wood, E jq.
York Assistant Manager : George Burghall
Watts, Esq.
London Manager: Samuel G*ay, Esq.
Liverpool Manager : William Williamson,

by

-

Board of Direetors:
THOS: P. CUMMINGS,
M. TABER,
HENRY
ROBERT SCHELL,
JOSEPH FOITLKE,
STEP. CAM BRELENG, WILLIAM H. TEHRY,
THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCHABDT.
JOSEPH GRAFTON,
JACOB REESE, ,

New
New

Steamship Company of New York,
by them in a manner to
meet the first-class requirements of the trade. ' ~ ;
The Cabin accommodations of these ships are not
excelled by any Steamers on the coast, kba although
their carrying capacity is large, their draught of wa¬
ter enables them to insure a passage without deten¬
tion in the river,
' ,

Company,

BROADWAY.

$200,000 -OO
252 55?> 22
26,850 00
201,588 14

Company.
ONLY FIRST

Corporation.

Have been placed on
he Atlantic Mail
and are intended to be run

E

Capital-

In Ngw York: The Bank of
In London: The Union Bank

Loveland,

Burthen each.
the route to Savannah

,

against Loss or Damage by
as any other responsible

.

•

.

This Company Insures
Fire on as favorable terms

America.
Every Saturday.
of London.
In Liverpool: The Royal Bank of Liverpool
The Elegant Side-Wheel Steamships
In Manchester: The Unioa Bank of Manchester,
SAN SALVADOR,
Limited.'
‘
In Scotlandi The National Bank of Scotland, Edin¬
Commander, Joshua Atkins, and
burgh, and branches.
SAN JACINTO,
In India, China, and Australia : The Oriental Bank
Commander,

-....

Assets, Marcli 9, 1866 - Total lA -biliti s - - - JLosaes Paid I . 1865 - - -

Manchester.

p

FOR

Oriental Bank

OFFICE,

LONDON

P

o

OFFICE, NO. 92

Incorporated under “

ER, FOOT of

Tv

^

Fire Insurance

.

.

And Carrying: tbe United
Mail, v-, r.n
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH.RIV¬

^

Insurance.

English & American Bank

California,
i): IJ r. •/

*},.

.

[Ajitfl 7,1866.

v

Miscellaneous,

THROUGH LINE

To

.CHRONICLE.

THE

446

fcti. i. J

RANCE
CASH

Life Insu-

YOBK.
$13,500,000 00
8/WINSTON. President.

COMPANY OF NEW

ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1865, over
FREDERICK

R. A.

Secretaries,

j-

McCURDY,

Vice-President.

W^^fORiHS. ' »•.
SHEPPARD HOMANS.

Actuary,

Morris Fire

and Inland

INSURANCE COMPANY,
NO. 31

PINE

Cask Capital

STREET, NEW YORK.

$781,000 OO.
Merchandise, Furniture, Ves¬

Sc Surplus,

Insures Buildings,
sels in Port and their Cargoes,
other insurable Property,

Leases, Rents, and
AGAINST LOSS OR DAMAGE BY FIRE,
This' Company insures at customary rates of pre¬
at the lowest rates charged by responsible Compa¬
mium against all Marine and Inland Navigation Risks
nies.
on Cargo or Freight; also againdt loss or damage by
Fife.">6 4Sf»k
i... *; : ;
DIRECTORS:
If Premiums are paid in Gold, Losses will be paid
Edward RbWe,
William Mackay,
Albert G. Lee,
Ezra Nye,
The AbsnreA receive twenty-five -percent of the net
George Miha, •: '1
'■ Joseph Morrfeoo, -•
profiler Without incurring any liability, or, in lieu
J. C. Morris,
Daniel W. Teller,
theieoQ atWceir option, aliberal discount upon the
Robert Bowne, vr
•
Henry J. Cammann,
preatitonre hita uo bi.w
uc#
•>, (John D. Bates,
’ Charles HIckox.
AHlosses——'

Oath Capital.
Asset# Bi
hot. 1,1865,

oret.

$1,000,000
1,600,000

Edward C. Bat?s,

Script
..

L-.i-.C

JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President,
ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President,

JAMBS LORIMER GRAHAM,
Bsiht H. Portia, Secretary.

Jbm 2d V. F.

e.

^

a:

_

r

•’

ABRAM M. KIRBY, Vice-President,
ELLIS R. THOMAS, Secretary.

G. M. Harwood,

General Agent.

"1. XX

-H JOIVIO&HO dJdl

•

44?

TfflEr€HRt)Ni€iife

Bankers' and Brokers'

Bankers.

Insurance.

-—t-1'.
JAY

Sun Mutual Insurance

John J. . Cisco & Son,
JBANKERS,

COMPANY.

(insurance buildings,)

ASSETS, Dee. 31, 1865
~—

•

■

H.

$2,716,424 32

DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT.

TbiSi-Qompany insures against Marine Risks on

Vessels,' Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland
Navigation Risks.

paid ip gold will be entitled to a return
premium in gold: '
Premiums

MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't.
EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't
Isaac H. Walker, Secyy.

Negotiate Loans and Business Paper, make Collec¬
tions, purchase and sell Government and other Securi¬
ties on Commission, receive money on deposit and

allow interest at the rate of font per feent per annum,
on daily balances.which may be drawn at any time;
or win issue Certificates of Deposit bearing interest
payable en demand. ' ' ^
JOHN J. CISCO, of the U. S. Treasury in N. Y
.TORN ASHFIELD CISCO.

Co.,

L. Jt'. Morton &

D

Tv«Trn

renTPiNv
COMPANY.

INSURANCE

OFFICE No. 85 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

I PITT COOKS.

BANKERS.

In connection with

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844.
The Compdny fids paid to its Customers, up to the
present time, Jesses amounting to over
EIGHTEEN MILLIONS 0Ef DOLLARS.
:

1

Nassau,

corner

ton

For the

pagt nine

years the cash 'dividends

paid to

Stockholders, made, from ONE-THIRD of tne net
profits, have amounted in the aggregate toj
One Hundred and Twenty-one and
half per cent.
Instead of
pn

issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based
the principle that all classes of risks are equally

profitable, this Company will hereafter make such
cash abatement or discount from the current rates,
when premiums are paid,. as the general experience
of underwriters will warrant, ana the nett profits re¬
maining at the close of the year, will be divided to

the stockholders..
<r. ,, This Company continues to make Insurance on
Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation
Risks,, on the most favorable terms, including Risks
on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight.
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or

Union Bank of

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

will be resident partners.

.ssue

Bonds

Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling,

at the Office of

pool.

Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬

TRUSTEES.
Aaron L. Reid,
Joseph Walker,
Ellwood Walter,
James Freeland,
D. Colden Murray,
Samuel Wiilets,
E. Hay dock White,
Robert L. Taylor,
N. L. McCready,
William T. Frost,
Daniel T. Wiilets,
William Watt,
L. Edgerton, Henry Eyre,
Cornelius Grinnell, Heniy R. Kunhardt.
John S.. Williams,
E. E. Morgan,

“

'l'

'

*

*

■'

.

.

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,

-

„

Bankers.

.....

Co.,

BANKERS,

NO. 11 BROAD STREET, NEW
Allow interest at the rate of

Dealers in Government and otlier Se¬
curities.

Interest allowed upon deposits of gold and currency
suMect to check at sight Gold loaned to merchants

favorable terms.

YORK,
DEPOSITS,

of

Miscellaneous stocks and, bonds
on commission.
Collections made promptly on all
v...

.

'

.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
No. 22 STATE

Brothers

AND OTHER

Co.,

Department.

Bankers and Brokers.

STOCKS, BONDS, Ac.,

on

Galwey, Kirkland & Co.,

Cecil, Rawson A Co.

Drake Klein wort &Cohen

-

THE

W. T.

Galwey, J. L. Kirkland, W. B. Dinsmore, Jr

Ninth National
OF THE

J. C. Morris,

representative and Attorney,
prepared to make advances
on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort A Cohen
London and/Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
The subscriber, their

Bank,
•

~A/

City of New York) 363 Broadway.

credits upop
West Indtai;

theat.fQI'^.to.Qhiha* the East and

Marginal credits

NO. 5 WILLIilH

•

.IffJ7U0 r*.A**YSW.,.T». •.

-

SIMON DE VTSSEB,
52

Exchange Place, New York.

STREET,

.Broker in

PETROLEUM AND MINING STOCKS,
RAILWAY

SHARES, GOVERNMENTS, See.,
At all the Stock Boards.

of the London House issued for the same purposes.
;

PLACE,

Railway Shares, Bonds, and Govern¬
ment Securities bought and sold.

in the United. States, is
John T. Hill,
Cashier.

49 EXCHANGE

RANKERS AND BROKERS.

IiONDONANRUiVERPOOIi.

W. H. FOSTER, Cashier.

.

STREET, N. Y.

JOHN R. CECIL.
late Butler,
WM. A. HALSTED.

and Canadas.

7

STREET, NEW YORK,

Receive Deposits from Banks, Bank
and others. Orders for the Purchase aid
Sale of Government Securities receive partic¬
ular attention. Special attention is given to the trans¬
action of all business connected with the Treasury

Member New York Stock Exchange.
CYRUS J. LAWRENCE,

descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on termB mos

HENRY SAYLES

JAMES BECK,

DUPEE,

era

Commission for Cash Only.
received subject to check at sight, as

bought and sold

BROKERS,
STREET, BOSTON.

BANKERS,

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,.
•

Has for sale all




New York.

19 & 21 NASSAU

NO. 16 WALL

$3,000,000.

HENRY A. SMYTHE, President

BROKER,

STREET, ROOM 4.

O. Brien, Weston
Gray, Mcllvaine Bro’e, Washington Murray, Esq •

'

Deposits
with Banks.
.!
DEWITT C. LAWRENCE,

Correspondents.

No. 30 PINE

Culver, Penn & Co.,

BANKERS,

Alsu Ctmorercial Credits

Collections made in all parts of the United State

Dana,

ANB EXCHANGE

STOCK

JAMES A.

points.

&
a

BROADWAY.'

W.

S.

HENRY W. POTTER.

:

-

of Cred I lor Travelers in

J08EPH U. ORVIS,
President.

I. F. Green, Chs. M. McUhee

STOCK

(Late Secretary of State.)

Central National Bank,

favorable to our

Columbus Powell,

bought and sold

CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW,

BANKERS,

Capital

STREET, NEW YORK.

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

&

AND

318

MERCHANTS,

REFERENCES AND SECURITIES.

be checked for at sight.
Special attention given to the purchase and sale

DE LA PAIX, PARIS,

partaof Europe, etc., etc.

& Commission

which may

John Munroe & Co., Lawrence
Issue Circular Letters

POWELL., GREEN & CO.

C.

Messrs. Ward & Co., Wm. & John

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

No. 94 BROADWAY AND No. 6 WALL 8T.

STREET, NEW YORK,

Brokers.

Exchange on London and Paris bought and sold on
Commission—also Gold Stocks, Bonds, and Gold.

Depew & Potter,
BANKERS,
FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM ON

No. g WALL

Exchange.

EDWIN D. FOSTER.
Member of the Regular Board of

■

For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope,
West Indies, South America, and the United States.

.

No. 5 RUE

DAVID TWEEDIE,

ISSUE

world: also,

*

AMERICAN

STS.,

COMMISSION.

Members of the New York Gold

States, available in all the principal cities of the

Paul N. Spoffora.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President,
CHASk NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest.
OftspAftb, Becffetary.
■"
'* •"

and hankers upon

"

on

.

Francis Hathaway,

Lockwood &

SOLD

Bankers

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

Nelson, Jr.,
CharlesDimon,
Jas. D.Fisn^., - fT A, yVilliam Heye,
Geo. W. Hennings, Harold Pollner,

C. J.

and

ec

BANKERS,

Joseph SJagg,'

^

BANKERS & BROKERS,
STREET, NEW YORK.

33 BROAD

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU

Her.'A. Schleicher, William

,

1,1866.

lion of Dividends, Drafts, &c

'•’*

for purchase and ale of stocks ,
JAY COOKE & CO.

BOUGHT

Deposits, subject tc

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

i.

Stocks,Bonds,Gold, Foreign Exchange
and Government Securities,

anc

Cheques at sight
Prompt attention given to the Co

-

No. 30 BROAD

on Commission.
Securities executed abroad

Interest allowed,on

.

.»

Corn, Tweedie & Co.,

bought and sold
for

*?

and to all business of National

ADOLPHUS M. CORN

Stocks

v

give particular attention toi*the pubchass,

*

.

to

Orders

*

and gold,

March

London,

Bank, for Travellers* use.
Government Securities,

-

1

and exchange of government securities of

Banks.

suit purchasers; and alsoJto
Circular Letters of Credit, on this

sums

n

late of Clark, Dodge & Co.,

York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬

New

bonds

Exchange, at sight, or sixty days, on the

Philadelphia and

of Wall Street, in this city.

Mr. Edward Dodos,

all issues; to orders

prepared to draw Sterling Bills of

Are

houses in

•

NEW YORK.

«

our

Washington we have thiB day opened an office at No.

sals,

WALL STREET,

35

$1,366,699

Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866...

h

FAHNESTOCK,
EDWARD DODGE,
H. C.

Jay Cooke & C o.,

We shall

BANKERS 9

•<

COOKE,

-

The, Mercantile Mutual

(

COOKE,
G. MOORHEAD,

WM.

No. 83 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

49 WALL STREET.

t'if

_

■

.

,v

k

v

Morris,
Harbeckg & Co.,

B. C.

.

references l
*

2CAs.

Galwey. Casado & Teller,
Caldwell & Morris,

[April 7, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

448

BANKERS.

York,
hand for immediate delivery all

No. 44 Wall Street. New

Keep constantly on

CASH

STOCKS,

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
“
6
“
1864,
6
“
“
1866,
5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
7 8-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
6 Per Cent Currency Certificates.

•

$500,000 00

CAPITAL,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS

$105,989 83

TOTAL ASSETS

AND

2d, & 3d series,

Compound Interest Notes of 1804 Sc
1865 Bought and Sold.
YERiniLYE & CO.

The Tradesmens
BANK.

General‘Commercial Agents.
NOS. 38 BROAD

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE,

AND 36 NEW STREETS.

JOHN E. KAHL,

G. N. CARLETON, A. M. FOUTE, New York.
R. B. SPEED, A. M. SUMMERS, New Orleans.
J. H. SPEED, W. B. DONOHO, Memphis.
W. M. COZART, J. J. STOCKARD, Mobile.

Consignments and orders solicited.
CARLETON, FOUTE & CO.
New York, Feb. 1,1866.
References—Duncan, Sherman Sc Co., Bankers,
New York; I. B. Kirtland, Hill Sc Co., Bankers, New
York; Third National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.; Hon.
Thos. H. Yeatman, Cincinnati, Ohio; Hon. James
Speed, Attorney General U..S., Washington; J.
Smith Speed, Louisville.

$1,OOO.OOC

Davis,

R. M.

RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

-

(FORMERLY OF NEW ORLEANS.)

Tenth National Bank,

AND STOCK BROKER,

EXCHANGE

No. 240 BROADWAY.

STOUT, Cashier.

ALEXANDER, President.
LUCIUS J. HENDEE, Secretary.
DIRECTORS.
THOMAS A.

Drayton Hillykr,

Joseph Church
Robkrt Buele,
Ebenezeb Flower,
Eliphalzt A. Bulkeley,
Roland Mather,
Samuel S. Ward,
Austin Dunham,

Thos. A. Alexander,
Walter Keney,
Chas. H. Krainard,
William F. Tuttle,
George Roberts,
Thomas K. Brace,
Gpstatu* F. Davis,
Erastus Collins,
Edwin D. Morgan, of New York.

*

Assets, Jan. 1,1866,

NOS. 88 BROAD STREET AND 86

AGENCY,

No. 62 Wall Street.

NEW STREET.

Orders

promptly and carefhlly attended to.

Consignments of Cotton, Tobacco,

Burnett, Drake & Co.,
BANKERS,

duce solicited.

Hanover Fire Insurance

and other pro¬

A. P.

COMPANY,
No. 45 WALL STREET.

New York.

Merrill,

Goodman &

January 1st 1866.

MERRILL, Jr.,

Mississippi.

.

Richardson & Co ,

STREET, BOSTON,
ON LONDON

BILLS OF EXCHANGE
AND

JOHN MUNROE Sc
ALSO

CO., PARIS.

ISSUE

Commercial CREDITS for *he purchase
dise in England and the Continent.

of Merchan¬

capital
Surplus

"

:

Gross Assets
Total Liabilities

Lanas.
Will
every

purchase and ship plantation machinery of
description—st^am engines, saw mills, grist
<fec., of latest style and improvement.
lent and supplies purchased

Importer and Dealer in Hardware,

TORREY, Cashier.

National

Bank,

RICHMOND, VA.,

Designated Depository and Financial Agent of the
Government.

Collections made in this city

S. A.

and all accessible

FANT, President.

Glover, Cashier.

Hutchings Badger,

BANKING Sc EXCHANGE OFFICE,
86 DEARBORN St., CHICAGO, ILL.
Collections made on all parts

of the Northwest.
Stocks, Bonds, Gold, and Government Securities
bought and sold on commission, either in New York
or

and Commission

Chicago, and carried on margins when desired.

New York correspondent and reference,
Messrs. L. S. LAWRENCE & CO.

83 JOHN

STREET, NEW YORK.
All orders entrasted to him will receive prompt at¬

Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c.,

tention.

solicited.
SAM’L

Best of references

A. L. Mowrt,

Green,

L. A. Green
'




C. A. Boynton.

& Co.

BANKERS.

No. 16 WEST THIRD

agents

STREET, Cincinnati, Ohio.

REFERENCES:

David Gibson, Cincinnati,
Ninth National Bank, New York,
Wilson. Gibson Sc Co, New York,
B. M. Runyan, St. Louis, Mo.

PLACE, N. Y.,

for

WASHINGTON MILLS,

Chicopee Manufacturing Co.,
SARATOGA

Victory Manufacturing Co., and

NEW

SKIRT,

B. O.

Caldwell &

MORRIS, JR.

Morris,

Successors to Brewer & Caldwell,
COTTON FACTORS

J. W. Bradley’s
■

DUPLEX ELLIPTIC.

Manufactured solely bv

WESTS, BRADLEY 3c CARY, 97 Chambers Street.
79 Sc 81 Reade Street, N. Y.

Tracy, Irwin & Co.,
BROADWAY,
NO. 400

IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
or

Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods,

General Commission Merchants,
20 OLD SLIP, NEW YORK.
All orders for the purchase of Goods will receive

including a superb stock of
DRESS

prompt attention.

'

&

Hoffman

Co.,

BEAL

Cash advances made

on

ST., NEW YORK.

consignments of Cotton,

Wool, Hides and Naval Stores, by our friends in New
Orleans, Mobile and Galveston,
REFER TO

Bank, N. Y.

Messrs. Gilman, Son Sc
Messrs. Brown Sc Ives,

Catlin

&

Co., Bankers, N. Y.
Providence, K. I.

Satterthwaite,

LATE SATTERTHWAITE

ADJUSTERS OF

BROTHERS,

AVERAGES,

GOODS,

AND

HOSIERY and WHITE GOODS.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

NO. 24 WHITEHALL

1866.

given if required.

B. CALDWELL.

Mechanics’ National
L. A.

Merchant,

AND

Western Bankers.

B.

No. 35 St 37 PARK

(of the late firm

liberal terms.

H. G.

E. R. Mudge, Sawyer&Co.

BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.

Exchange Jeremiah ofM. Wardwell,
Neilson Wardwell Sc Co.)
BANK,

PHILADELPHIA.

points in the South.

delay.

GOODMAN & MERRILL,
86 New Street,
New York City.

Attends to business of Banks Sc Bankers

OF

Miscellaneous.

Agents for the purchase, Kale, or lease of Southern

j Capital,
1 $500,000

NATIONAL

First

Walcott, Secretary.

Special attention given to consignments of Cotton,

Southern Bankers.

J. W.

Benj. S.

Tobacco and Wool.

ut

on

President.

Merchants,

General Commission

abroad.

The Corn

DORAS

-

$556,803 98
24,550 00
L. STONE,

AND

Credits for the use of Travellers

A. G. GATTELL, Pres’t
|
A. WHILLDIN, V. Pres’t f

$400,000 00
156,808 98

Cssh

COTTON FACTORS

Travellers'

ALEXANDER, Agent

JAMES A.

.

W. GOODMAN,

B O 8 T O N
GOLD, STOCK, AND BOND BROKERS.
Personal attention given to the purchase and sale of
Stooks and Bonds at the Boston Brokers' Board.

114 STATE

$4,067,455 80
244,391 48

Office, No. 29.

Eastern Bankers.

Page,

1819.

$3,000,000

Capital

MERCHANTS.

COMMISSION

Co.,

Hartford, Conn.
INCORPORATED

NEW YORK

Designated Depository of the Government.
D. L. ROSS, Presiden t

i

Secretary.

Liabilities,

and

President.

Insurance

iETNA

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

CAPITAL

J. H.

205,989 83

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866

Carleton, Foute & Co.,

Orders from Banks and Bankers for the Purchase
and Sale of GOVERNMENT STOCKS, executed on
favorable terms with despatch; also, for all Securi¬
ties dealt in at the Regular Stock Exchange.

NATIONAL

WATER ST.

BROADWAY, N. Y.

*

NEW YORK.

INCLUDING

291

NO. 175

Exchange Broker.

No. 12 OLD SLIP, cob.

,

issues of

STATES

UNITED

Tobaeco, Note and

Co.,

Germania Fire Ins.

E. S. Thackston,

Co.,

&

Vermilye

Fire Insurance.

Commercial Cards.

Bankers.

'

ESTATE
AND

Mining

HASTINGS

S.
70

Bureau.
GRANT,

BROADWAY* NEW YORK.

Agent for the sale of Landed Estates, Mines, Tobacco
and Cotton Lands, in Virginia, Tennessee, North ^nd

power, and Mineral
tion with regard to

Springs^ The fullest obtained
above may be informa¬

through this office.

AND

Insurance Brokers,
No. fll WILLIAM STREET,
K.W. STUTYXIANT GATLINi

JAM, ». SATTXRTHWAXTX.

A Co., Satterlee
Wilson G. Hunt,

Assay Office.

&

Co., Lathrop, Ludington Sc

Esq., John Torrey, M. D„

Co.,

U. ».

■§