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auto’ fetfttc, (Stommtoat

Railway panitm, and insurance ■§otvmat

A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

representing the industrial and commercial interests of the
united states.

VOL. 5.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1867.

Western Bankers.

"Western Bankers.
P. Hayden.

Gilmore, Dunlap & Co.,
108

110

Sc

West

Fourth

Jos. Hutcheson.

RANKING

W. B

HOUSE

Southern Bankers.
Hayden

OF

Hayden,Hutcheson & Co

Street,

NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET,

COLUMBUK,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Do

a

General

OHIO,

Banking, Collection, alul Exchange
Business.

Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

J. F. Stark & Co.,

NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS,
Do

Checks

on

a

BROKERS,
PITTSBURGH.
general Banking, Exchange and Collection busi¬
ness.

day ot payment.'

New York CorrespondentsNational Bank North
America; Knauui, Isachod A: Kulinc.

UNION BANK OF LONDON.
FOR SALE.

Cash

Capital, $150,000.

F.

Tos.

^

Real Capital, $1,000,000.

Jos. F. Larkin,
John Cochuower,
Adam Poe,

Bank of the

Thomas Fox.
John M. Phillips.
Thos. Sharp.
John Gates.

GENERAL

PARTNERSHIP.

Harvey Decamp,

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

V.-Prest.

all

points WEST and SOUTH,
Capital Mock,
11,000,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000.
Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis
Worthington, L.
B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M.
Bishop, William
Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. fi
and

on

promptly remitted for.

Winslow.

The Marine

Company
...President.

Manager.

Ranking and

Collections
promptly attended to.

i»«

oners

Bankers

services

on

Haskell & Co.,
BANKERS,

ST. LOUIS, MO
Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Ex¬

hange.

L. A.

on all accessible
points
at current rates of ex-

Benoist &
BANKERS,

ST.

Co.,

LOUIS, MISSOURI,

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

Second

National Bank.
ST. LOUIS, MO.

Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..$150,566
Prompt attention given

pondents.




to the business of corres¬
E. D. JONES, Cashier.

BOB’T

T. BROOKS

Co.,

RICHMOND, VA.
Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes,
State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac.,

bought and sold on commission.
15?“ Deposits received and Collections made an
all accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent, Vkbmilyb A Co.

Conner & Wilson,

No. 5 Broad

to

BANKERS Sc

DEALERS

IN FOREIGNA DOMESTIC
EXCHANGE,SPECIE,
BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND BYNDS,

Charles D. Carr & Co.,
AND

BROKERS,

AUGUSTA,

BanlLs

GA.

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOB.

and

Burke &

Edward B. Orna,
William Bnrisn,

Osgood Welsh,

Frederis A Hoyt,
William H Rhawn.

William H. Rhawn, President,
Late Cashier of the Central National Bank.
Joseph P. Muhtoed, Cashier,
Late of the Philadelphia National Bank.

54 CAMP

Draw

on

Co.,

BANKERS,
STREET, NEW ORLEANS,

Merchants National Rank, New York, and
Bank of

Liverpool, England.

Collections and remittances
promptly attended to.

T. H. McMahan & Co.
,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS

and Dealers in Domestic
and

Foreign

Exchange.

GALVESTON,

Washington.
FIRST

NATIONAL

BANK

WASHINGTON,

H7 D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke * Co.), Pres’t.
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

Depository and Financial

We bny and sell all classes of Government
securities on the most favorable terms, and iuve
especial attention to business connected
with the several departments or the
G o vernmen t.
Full information with regard to Government loans
at all times cheerfully furnished.

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

St., Mobile, Ala.

Dealers in

Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬
ernment Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver.
Prompt
attention given to Collections.
References

:

Babcock Bros A Co., Bankers, New York.
Goodyear Bros. A Dnrand, Bankers, New York.
E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York.
Byrd & Hall, New York.
Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolft A
Gillespie.
Henry A Hnrlburt, late Swift A Hurlbert.
Home Insurance Company ot New York.
New York Life Insurance Company.
Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford.
Underwriters Agency*New York,

Charles Walsh. President Bank of Mobile.

1 Henry A Schroeder,

.

Street, Charleston, S. C.,

BANKERS

Agent of the United State*.

Established 1848.

JAS. L. MAURY.

BANKERS AND BROKERS
No. 1014 MAIN ST.,

liberal terms,

Joseph T. Bailey,
Nathan Hilles,
Benjamin Rowland, Jr.,
Samuel A. Bispham,

Government

change. Collections made
and promptly remitted for

STREET,
$ 1,000,000

OF

General

MAURY.

H. Maury &

PHILADELPHIA.

OF CHICAGO.
J. Young Scammon
Robert Reid

R.

directors :

Cincinnati.

Collections made

Republic,

800 A 811 CHESTNUT

Capital

THE FIRST NATIONAL RANK

of

National

Co.,

BANKERS,
CINCINNATI.

H.

Especial attention paid to Collections.
Reler to Duncan, Sherman A
Co., New York ;
Drexel A Co., Philadelphia; Tim Franklin
Bank,
and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H.
Maury A Co.,
Richmond, Va., Charles D. Carr A (Jo. Augusta, Ga.

Southern Bankers.

Larkin &

ROB’T

BANKERS &

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points
i,nd remitted lor on

NO. 113.

Pres. Southern Bank of Ala,

TEXAS.

Special attention given to Collect ions of all kinds,
saving prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac-

cessiblepoints in the State, and
REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE

IN

SIGHT

EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.
REFER TO

National Park Bant Howes A
Macy, and Spofford,
Tiles ton A Co., New York.
Second National
Bank and J. W.
Seaver, Esq.. Boston. Drexel A
Co. and D. 8. Stetson A
Co., Philadelphia. T. F.
Thirkield A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank
and Jos. E. Elder A
Goodwin, St. Louis. Fowler,
Stanard A Co., Mobile. Pike,
’Lapeyre A Bro.,
New Orleans. Drake, Kleinwcrths
Cohen. Lon¬
don and

Liverpool.

Eastern Bankers.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
STOCK

No. S3 STATE
JAMES A. DUPES,

BROKERS,
STREET, BOSTON.

JAMES BECK,

HENRY SAYLES

Page, Richardson & Co
BOSTON,

,

114 STATE STREET,

BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON
▲HD

JOHN MUNROE dc

CO., PARIS.

ALSO ISSUE

Commercial Credits for the purchase of Merchsa
dtse in England and the Continent. - Trai rllhrS*
Credits for the use of Trailers abrnd.

Bell, Faris & Co.,

BROKER

AND

BANKERS

12 NEW & 14 BROAD STK3ETS,
Members of the Stock, Gold and Government Boards,
Dealers lit Governments and other
Securities.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency

sight.

subject to check at

TRAV¬

CREDIT FOR

LETTERS OF

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

Jr.,

Murray,

B.

Opposite U. S. Treasury.
We receive Deposits and make Collections, the same
as an
incorporated Bank.
Government Securities
Bought and Sold at Market Rates. We also execute
orders for Purchase and Sale of Stocks, Bonds and

TURNER BROTHERS.

BROKER IN

L. P.

Securities,

Government and ©tlier
27 WALL

STOCK BROKERS AND RANKERS,
No. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities
Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds,
Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum, and
Mining Stoeks.
Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to
Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬
ment* made.
Orders Promptly Executed

J. L. Brownell & Bro.,
BROKERS,
STREET, NEW YORK.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts ot Banks, Bankers and Individuals received
favorable terms.
:

J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y.
C. B. Blair, Pres’t Merchants’ jNat. Bank, Chicago.x

No, 24 Broad Street,

paper
rest

aiid loans in currency or gold negotiated.

Inte¬

29 WALL

BANKERS AND

No. It

AND

WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President,*
William H. Sanford,

Cashier*

The Tradesmen’s
291

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

$1,000,00
450,000




SURPLUS

President.
HALSEY, Cashier.

Tenth National Bank.,
$1,000,00O.

Ca i>ital
No. 29

BROAD STREET.

Designated Depository of the Government.

and Dealers’ Accounts

solicited.

D. L.

Bankers

Citizens’

Robt. McKim. Jno. A. McKm.

BANKERS,
62 WALL STREET.
Interest allowed on deposits subject to

sight, and special attention given to

draft at
.

Wilson, Callaway Sc Co.,
Bankers and Commission
NO. 44 BROAD

BANKERS,
No. 4 WALL ST., SEW

YORK.

Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exp¬
orted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED
•a

deposits, subject to check at sight.

Gelston &

Bussing,

BROKERS^

BANKERS &
27 WALL STREET
All orders receive our Personal Attention.
J Gklsx© ,
. i John S. Bussing

New York State 7 per

C.

POWELL, GREEN Sc CO.

Sc Commission

MERCHANTS,
88 BROAD

Stocks. Bonds and

& 3d seriess

cent. Bounty Loan.

VERMILYE Sc CO.

.

STREET,

Garth & Vo. and Henry C
Hardy).
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc.,

Successors to Harrison,

bought and sold at, the “ regular” Board of Brokers
and at tbe Gold Exchange m person and on commis¬
sion only.

bought, sold and

collected.

John Bloodgood Sc Co.,
22 WILLIAM

STREET, NEW YORK.

DEALERS IN
GOVERNMENT
OTHER SECURITIES.

AND

deposits of Gold and Cnrren
subject to check at sight, and particular atte*
to accounts of country banks and bankers

Interest allowed on

cy,

tion given

STREET, NEW YORK.

deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬
ton, Tobacco. &c., consigned to ourselves or to our
K. GILLIAT & CO.,
correspondents, Messrs.
Liverpool.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Hedden, W inchester&Co
BROADWAY, NEW YORK,
Rankers and Brokers.

NO. 69

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold at market rates, on commission only.
Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬
proved securities.
Particular attention given to orders for the purchase
or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells,
Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.
All orders faithfully executed.
JOSLAH HEDDEN,
ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN.

Governments bought and sold ex¬
on Commission.

clusively

MEMPHIS, TENN.

Warren, Kidder & Co.,

Merchants

Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬
chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on

Union Bank,

Buy and Sell Foreign and Domestic Exchange
jmtedStates Securities, State of Tennessee, Shelby
Uounty, and Memphis Bonds, an1 past dne Coupons.
Particular attention paid to Collections.

.

orders from

*

Bankers

(Chartered by tbe State of Tennessee.)

“
1864,
“
“
1865,
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, 2d,
Per Cent Currency Certificates.

BANKERS,

McKim, Bros. Sc Co.,

LOSS, Preside

J. H. Stout, Cashier.

Per Cent Bonds of 1881.
Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,

Foreign and Domestic Exchange

RICHARD BERRY,
ANTHONY

6
6
6
6
5
7
6

No. 18 NEW

GOLD AND EXCHANGE BROKER,
36 NEW AND 38 BROAD STREETS.
Orders executed for Bankers, Brokers and Merchants.

o:her places.

STOClTs

including

Garth, Fisher & Hardy,

Street.

NATIONAL RANK.
i CAPITAL

STATES

Compound Interest Notes of 1864 &
1865 Bought and Sold.

Hagen,

T. A. Hoyt,

Haslett McKim.

Co.,

Sc

issues of

UNITED

RANKERS,
IN BULLION, SPECIE, AND
STATES SECURITIES.

No. 1 Wall

318 BROADWAY.

descriptions of Government Bonds-

Mux*,

BANKERS.
No. 44 Wal
Street. New York,
Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery all

DEALERS
UNITED

Clileago.

City and County accounts received on terms most fa
vorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United States an

H. Ciuexn Oaxlit,

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

WALL STREET.

Cohen Sc

Central National Bank,
Has for sale all

DEALERS IN U. S.

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

GOVERNMENT

$3,000,000

Gans,

Sc

Frank

STREET

Capital

Toth

Chabus E.

Vermilye

STREET,

(Established 1854.)
Members of the New York Stock Exchange, Gold Ex¬
change. and Mining Board.
Dealers in Government Securities.
Special atten¬
tion given to Collections.
Four per cent interest
allowed on Balances, subject to check at sight.
WHITE, MORRIS & CO.

RANKERS,

TILEU, ULLMANN A CO.

Telegraphic orders executed fbr the Purchase tn|
Bale of Stocks and Bonds In London and New

White, Morris & Co.,

Tyler, Wrenn Sc Co.,
Buy and Sell at most liberal rates,

principal towns and dti«

Europe and the East.

-

Waltxb H. Bums,

and Currency

SECURITIES, GOLD, <fcc. Orders for purchase and
Bale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed.

LONDON,

Lsti F. Mobtoic,

BANKING HOUSE OF

sight.

WALL

Available in an the

New York.

allowed on deposits.

No. 14 Wan Street.

18

UNION RANK OP

Jr.

Government securities, railroad and other bonds,
railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and
exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercantile

BANKERS.

sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold

MORTON, BURNS * CO.,

anm

George Phipps.

ADAMS, KIMBALL A MOORE,

New York,
Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securities,
of all issues, and execute orders for the purchase and

Use, oa

(58 Old Broad Street, LondoaJ

STREET, NEW YORK.

Franklin M. Ketchum.
Thos. Belknap,

RANKERS A
28 BROAD

Sixty Days; also. Circular Notes sal

Letters of Credit for Trarelen’

KETCHUM, PHtPPS Sc BELKNAP,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,

Drake Brothers,

NO.

STREET, NEW TORE.

STERLING EXCHANGE
At Sight or

Corner of Pine,

subject to check at

SO BROAD

James G. King’s Sons,
Street.

TURNER BROTHERS,
NO. 14 NASSAU STREET,

References

BANKERS,

YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

or

on

Co.,

54 William

BANKING HOUSE

Gold on Commission.

L. P. Morton &

'

George

Farnham, :

(Late of G. S. Robbins & Son,)

John Munroe & Co.,
BANKERS,
AMERICAN
NO. 7 BUB SCRIBE,

PAPER,

COMMERCIAL
ALSO,

STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, &c., BOUGHT
ON COMMISSION.

48 Pine Street, New

AND SOLD

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
Issue Circular Letters of Credit lor Traveler!

York.

Van Schaick Sc

Co.,

Street,

NEW YORK.

DEALERS IN GOV¬
ERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS

BANKERS AND

AND GOLD,

Also Commercial

parts of Europe, eto* ate.
SOUTHERN

No. 10 Wall

PARIS

and

v

EdWin

BANK

Is el

Credits.

NOTBi.

g. Bell,

AND
BBOKBBj
In Southern Securities end Bank Bills.

BANKER

•t BROADWAY

A

f NEW

New York*

0TBK**e
-

THE CHRONICLE.

August 24,1867.]
Bankers and Brokers.
)

(H. C. FAHNE STOCK,

BTH. G. MOOBHKAD,
H. D. COOKS,

)

>

< EDWARD

IK)DGE,
(PITT COOKE.

Cooke

&

B A NKER S

Corner Well and Nassau

Financial.

Bankers and Brokers.

JAY OOOKE,

Tay

227

Fisk &

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

Co.,

AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHE

No. 33 Broad Street, New York.
Buy and Sell at Market Rates,
ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE

Sts.,

RECOMMEND

Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS,

114 South 3d Street,
Pliiladelpliia*

others, and allow interest
Sight Draft.
•

on

BANKERS, and
daily balances, subject to

and

Opposite Treas. Department*
Washington.

of

1 Nassau, corner

agents

House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of
We shall
SALE,

Sandusky, Ohio, will

56 WALL

all issues; to orders for purchase and sale

of stocks,

and gold, and to all business of National Banks.

for

COMPANY,

Co.,

STREET, BOSTON.

Joseph A. Jameson,
I
James D. Smith,
Amos Cottixg,
of the late firm of James
Of Jameson, Lotting & Co.
Low & Co., New York
St. Louis.
|
and Louisville, Ky.

BANKERS,
NOS. 14 & 16 WALL

Receive

STREET, NEW YORK.

,

Deposits in Currency and Gold,

and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT

10 BROADWAY * IB NSW STREET*

per annum on
for at sight.

daily balances which may be checked

It forms ilie sole W estern link of the only
the Pacific which is adopted by "Congress

and aided

Bonds.

by tne issue of United States

Their road is already completed, equipped, and
running for t>4 miles trom Sacramento to within 12
miles of tho summit of the Sierras, and a large
amount ot the work of Grading, Tunnelling, &c.,
beyond that point has been accomplished.
The First Mortgage Bonds of this Com¬
pany afford unusual inducements of Safety and
Profit to Investors, for the following among other
reasons, viz :

First —The rate of Interest is Six per Cent, in

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

I-old, payable semi-annually in the City

York.

Second —The

Hatch, Foote & Co..,

BOUGHT AND BOLD ON COMMISSION,
GOVERNMENT

RANKERS

SECURITIES*

AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT

SECURITIES,

GOLD, &c.

iu Tixnmu,

All issues of SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES
the

Lockwood &

Co.,

RANKERS*

new

terms, and without

delay.

IMPORTERS and others

BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET.

No.

exchanged for

FIVE-TWENTY BONDS, on the most liberal

ket rates,

supplied with GOLD at

mar

aud Coin on hand for immediate delivery.
No. 12 WILL STREET.

AND

DEALERS IN
GOVERNMENT
OTHER SECURITIES.

Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency,
subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants
and Bankers upon favorable terms.

Pott, Davidson & Jones,

Dibblee

&

BANRERS A

Howard,
BROKERS,

NO. 10 WALL STREET.

69 A 61 WALL

Coupons and Dividends collected.

new

building^

P.

STREET, NEW YOKE..

May and Mil Stocks, Bonds, Gold and
Gorsrnment Securities.

Accounts

Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬
ed

on

it!,

favorable terms.

Interest allowed on depos¬

subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬

tions fhrnished to correspondents.
• Y
Rcrbrxoes: James Brown, Bn*., of Messrs.
Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬
ident of the Chemical National Bank; James H.

AND DEALER IN BULLION AND

24 Nassau
The Specie

J. N.

R. P. Sawyers.
N. P. Boulett.

Petty,

P. D. Roddey &

Co.,

J esup & Company,

BANKERS AND

Riker &

NO. 5 NEW STREET and SO

STOCKS,

BROADWAY.

MERCHANTS,

12 PINE STREET.

Bonds and Loans for Railroad

Cos.,

Contract for
or

Steel

Cars, etc.,

Rails, Locomotives,

Winslow, Lanier & Co.,

Ould &

Carrington,

Hi* MAIN STREET,

3




RICHMOND,
'
\

*

'

V

’

vli

\

Fourth.—Tlie United States Government
provides nearly half the amount ne¬
cessary to bu Id tlie entire road, and
looks nioii.ly to a small percentage
on tlie future traffic for re-payment.

Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision,
nied

with

accompa¬
Extensive Cirants of Public

Lands, by which the Government fosters this
great national enterpri-e. its success is ren¬
dered certain, and its financial sta¬
bility is altogether independent of
the contingencies which attend ordi¬
Railroad enterprises.

Sixth.- The Seouriry
Bonds is therefore
for

of its First Mortgage

ample, and their character

safety and reliability is equalled only by that of
the obligations of the Government itseli.

Seventh.—The net earnings of the completed
portion are already largely In excess of
the Interest obligations which die
Company will incur on twice the dis¬
tance. and are steadily increasing, rendering the

uninterrupted payment of the Inte¬
absolutely certalu*

Eighth.—At the present rate of Gold they pay near¬
ly
Per Cent, per annum, on the amount in¬

vested.

percent, and accrued interest fin currency) from
January let
Orders may be torwarded to us director through the
principal Banks and Bankers in all parts of the

be made in drafts on New York,
in Legal Tender Notes, Natioual Bank Notes or
other funds current in this city, aud the bonds will
he forwarded to any address by express, free ot

or

4c 29 Pine

Inquiries for furiher particulai s, by mail

Fisk & Hatch,

Street, New York*

DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE

AND

RANKERS AND DEALERS IN
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

avail¬

N.B.—All kinds of Government Securities ie
ceived at the full market price in exchange for the
above Bonds. Also,

NEW ORLEANS.

NO. 5 NASSAU

Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers,
able in all parts

of Europe.

Interest Allowed on

or

otherwise, will receive punctual attention.

All descriptions

Deposits*

STREET, N.Y

of Government Secu¬

kept constantly on hand, and
Bought Sold or Exchanged.

rities

^“Gold Coin and U. S. Coupons bought, sold,

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,
NASSAU

Railways

ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
^

Bearing Bonds of the Government.

charge.

BANKERS,

A N K E R S
CORNER OF PINE AND

and undertake
ail business connected with

Third.—The cost of the Bonds, Ninety-five Per
Cent, and accrued interest, is Ten Per Cent,
les- than that of the cheapest Six Per Cent. Gold

Remittances m°y

Negotiate

Iron

Principal is payable in Gold at

The Bonds are issued in denominations of $1,000
with semi-annual Gold Coupons attached, payable
in New York, and are offered for the present at 95

Co.,

BROKERS IN MINING

BROKERS.

Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bonght and sold on Com¬
mission.
Particular attention given to the Purchase and
Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous Securities.^,
Collections made on all accessible points.
Interest allowed on Balances'

M. K.

in charge

oe

New

rest

Street, New York.

Department will

oi

country.

No. 2M Wall Street, N.Y.,
(PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.)
BANKERS AND

SPECIE,

of J. S. Cronise (late of J. S. Cronise & Co.), who lias
my authority to sign the Firm name by procuration.

Banker, Esq., Vise-President of the Bank of New
TorkNfUL
P. D. Roddey,

Hayden,
RANKER,

of

maturity.

nary

Government Bonds of all kinds, State and City
Bonds, Railroad and other Stocks and Bonds, Gold
and Silver bought and sold on commission. Interest

BANKERS ANB BROKERS,

(Mettn. Brown Bros. & Co.’s

California, and thence through
TERRITORIES,

route to

Will

STOCKS Aim BONDS

of

the GREAT MINING REGIONS I F THE
to the vicinity of Salt Lake City.

Jameson,Smith &Cotting

Satterlee &

THE

Their line will extend from Sacramento, Califor¬
nia. across the Sierra Nevadas to the California
State line, travel sing the richest and most popu¬
lous section

JAY COOKE & CO.

March 1,1866.

END OF

GREAT NATIONAL RAILWAY
ACROSS THE CONTINENT.

STREET, NEW YORK,

28 STATE

give particular attention to the purchase,

and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Of

bonds

Ward,

BARING BROTHERS A

partners.

be resident

Companv is constructing, under the patron¬
of the UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
THE WESTERN

S. G. & G. C.

late of Clark, Dodge & Co.,

New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington

This
age

of Wall Street, in this city.

Mr. Edwabd Dodge,

Pacific Railroad Co.,

Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad

with our houses in Philadelphia and

THE

The Central

on favorable terms,
promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale

Securities.

Washington we have this day opened an office at No.

TO INVESTORS

-

Make Collections

Fifteenth Street,

In connection

;

DESIRABLE SECURITIES,
No. 5 Nassau Street, New
York,

.

New Yorlt.

No*

Hatch,

BANKERS

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

STS.,

ISSUE

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS
For the

use

OF CREDIT,
of Travelers abroad and in the United

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

West Indies, South America, and the

United States

and collected.

Deposits received on Liberal Terms,
subject to check at sight.
Collections made throughout the country.
^“Miscellaneous Stocks and Bonds bought and
and sold at the StocK Exchange on commission for
ash.

Special attention giver, to the Exchange of SEVENS
THIRTY NOTES of all the series for tlie new FIVE
Y BONDS of 1865, on the most favorable
terms1

228

THE CHRONICLE.

[August 24, 1867,

Financial.

Bankers and Brokers.

THE

Jacquelin & De Coppet,

Union Pacific Railroad

NO. 10 NEW

Aallroad

STREET) N.Y.

ex¬

amination at the United States

BOUGHT AND

RONDS

#ohx EL Jaoqiuzum.

rapid progress of the Union Pacific Railroad,
now building west from Omaha,
Nebraska, and form¬
ing, with its western connections, an unbroken line
across the Continent, attracts attention to the value
of the First Mortgage Bonds which the Company now
offer to the public.
The first question asked by prud¬
“Are

they

a

“Are these bonds

secure

profitable investment?”

?”

Next,

To reply in

brief:
1st.—The

The First

Smith 6c

early completion of the whole great line to
as certain as any future business event

4

B R O A 1)

KET,

Rearing SIX PER CENT. Interest,

N E W

PAYABLE IN

Y O R K
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange,
Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on
.

July 1st, by
JOHN J. CISCO A: SoN,

Deposits received and interest allowed same as with
an Incorporated Bank.
Bonds and Loans negotiated
for Railroad Companies.

33 WALL STREET,
Special Agents of the Company.

W. W. Loring.

U. S. Government Bonds,

Memphis, Tenn.

be.

The Government grant of over twenty mil¬
lion acres of land and
fifty million dollars in its own
bonds practically guarantees it.
One-fourth of the
work is

already done, and the track continues
a day.

to be

laid at the rate of two miles

2d.—The

Union Pacific Railroad bonds

Foute

&

RANKERS AND
3S

BROAD

STREET

Having Thirty Year* to

Loring,

AND

36

NEW

These Bonds

STREET.

stitutions, for

Gold,

FOR SALE BY

Bond*

Interest allowed on
Bonght and Sold.
Deposits subject, to check at sight. Collections
made in all the

cific ; and,

only line connecting the Atlantic and Pa¬
being without competition, it can main¬

tain remunerative rates.

3d.—125 miles of

this

are

finished and

done in

are on

hand, and it is under contract to be

September.

4th.—The net
ed

earnings of the sections already finish¬
than the gold interest

are several times greater

upon

flie First Mortgage Bonds

upon such sections,
and if not another mile of the road were built, the°

part already completed would not only pay interest
and expenses, but be profitable to the Company.
5tb.—The Union Pacific Railroad bonds

can

as the road progresses, and therefore can never
be in the market unless they represent a bona fide

property.

NO. 24

strictly limited by law to a
equal to what is granted by the U.S. Government

and for which it takes

a

second

lien

as

its

security.

This amount upon the first 517 miles west from Omaha
is only $16,000 per mile.
7th.—The fact that the U. S. Government considers a
second lien upon the road a good investment, and that
of the shrewdest railroad builders of the

coun¬

try have already paid in five million dollars upon the
stock (which is to them a third lien), may well inspire
confidence in

a

first lien.

8th.—Although it is not claimed that there

can

he

better securities than Governments, there are
parties who consider a first mortgage upon such a
property as this the very best security in the world,
any

and who sell their

bonds—thus

Governments to re-invest in these

securing

a greater

interest.

ed

interest, they are the cheapest security in the mar.
ket, being more than 15 per cent, less than U.S. Stocks.
10th.—At the current rate of

term*,

day the 2d day of September next.
The transfer
books of the Company will be closed from the close
of
business hours on the 21st instant, and
reopened on
the

premium

on

gold,'they

W. M.

LARRABEE,
Secretary and Treasurer.

Co.,

Dealers in Bills of

TEN PER

STREET, NEW YORK.

Exchange, Governments, Bonds,

Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject to
or Check.
Advances made on approved securities.

INTEREST PAYABLE IN GOLD.

THE

Sight Draft

Hamilton Gold & Silver

Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper.
Collections both inland and foreign promptly made.
Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated.

Drake Kleinwort&Cohen
LONDON AND

LIVERPOOL.

The subscriber, their representative ana

Attorneys

in the United

States, is prepared to make advances
on shipments to Messrs.
Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen
London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
credits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, South America, &c
Marginal credits

Mining Co. of Nevada.
This Company, based on a large and valuable
prop¬
erty in the Mammoth and North Union Districts,
Nye
County. State of Nevada, offer Bonds having five
years to run, bearing interest at the rate«of TEN Per
Cent, per annum, payable half
yearly, in Gold, at the
office of the
Company No. 430 Walnut Street, Philadel¬
phia, or at the office of Thomas Barclay No. 4 Wall
''Street, New' York.

These securities form a first claim
Assets of the Company, and are

daily subscriptions

are

already large, and they
by the

will continue to be received in New York

Continental National Bank, No. 7 Nassau St.
Clark, Dodge & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall St.
John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 33 Wall St.

tation

Edward

and

by BANKS AND BANKERS generally through¬
States, of whom maps and descriptive
pamphlets maybe obtained. They will also be sent by
mail from the Company’s Oflice, No. 20 Nassau street,
New York, on application.
Subscribers will select
their own Agents in whom they have confidence, who
alone will be responsible to them for the safe
delivery

COPARTNERSHIP.
Edward Lambert and James Mason

Street, New York.

associate

lowed.

T. W. B. HUGHES,
Member of N. Y. Stock Ex.

Gibson,Beadleston & Co.,
50 EXCHANGE

NEW YORK

NO. 8 WALL
•

Dealers in Stocks,

Strictly

RANKERS,
PLACE, NEW YORK.

bers.'
Interest allowed

BROKERS,

STREET,

Bonds, Gold and Governments,

on Commission.
and Collections made

Deposits received
of tbe country.

Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bought and sold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock,

Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of w hich

as

Edward Lambert & Co.,
RANKERS
AND

SPECIALITE

we are mem¬

COMMERCIAL

on

all

parts

:

PAPER.

on Deposits.
Dividends, Coupons and Interest collected.

Liberal advances on Government, and other Securities
Information cheerfully given to Professional
men,

JOHN J. CISCO.. Treasurer.

STREET,

REMOVES TO NO. 8 WALL STREET.

Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest al¬

out the United

•f the bonds.

Lambert,

NO 30 WALL

Henry Clews & Co.,

Bankers, No. 32 Wall St.
Hepdin, Winchester & Co., No. 61* Broadway.

presen¬

REMOVAL.

Hughes,

GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING STOCKS,

A. HAWLEY HEATH.

the entire

September Coupons for 1867 will be paid on
by either of the parties above named.

Exchange Place, New York.

BANKERS & COMMISSI ON BROKERS
IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,

1 3 Broad

on

exchangeable for
ordinary stock of the Company at the option of the
holder at any
period during the five years.
For particulars and further information
Jacob Zeigler, Secretary and Treasurer at theapply to
office of
the Company, or to Thomas
Barclay. No. 4 Wall St.,
New York.

of the Ijondon House issued for the same
purposes.
STMON DE VISSER,

Heath &

CENT.

FIRST MORTGAGE RONDS.

AND

Over Nine Per Cent. Interest.




morning of September 3d.

RANKERS,

pay

The

Chicago, August 14; 1867.

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

No. 53 WILLIAM

RAILROAD

Dividend.Notice—The Stockholders of the Chica¬
go and Alton Railroad Company are hereby notified
that a Dividend of FIVE Per Cent., free of
Govern¬
ment tax, has been declared on the
preferred and
common
stock
of the Company,
payable at the
office of
the Company’s
agents, Messrs. M. K.
JESUP & CO., No. 12 Pine Street,New
York, on Mon¬

Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and
others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to
Sight draft.
Wake collection* on favorable

Soutter &

THE

ALTON

Buy and Sell at Market Rates.
AGE UNITED STATES SECURITIES.

26
9th.—As the Union Pacific Railroad bonds are offer¬
ed for the present at 1*0 cents on the dollar and accru¬

AND

COMPANY.

BROAD STREET.

Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable

6th.—Their amount is

some

OFFICE OF

CHICAGO

BANKERS,

be issued

only

sum

NO. 33 WALL STREET.

fully

equipped with depots, locomotives, cars, &c., and two
trains are daily running each way. The materials for
the remaining 92 miles to the eastern base of the Rocky
Mountains

John J- Cisco & Son,

States and Canadas.

Gilliss, Harney & Co.,
road

regarded, by Savings and other In¬
long investment, as the most desirable

are

a

of all the Government Securities.

State, Rank, and Railroad Stock* and

must be the

LAWFUL

•’

MONEY.

upon what promises to be one of the most profitable
lines of raiuoad in the country.
For many years it

Run,

BEARING SIX PER CENT. INTEREST IN

BROKERS,

Government Securities of all kinds,
issued

are

*

O

the Pacific is
can

GOLD COIN,

Are ofl'ered for sale at the low' price
of NINETY and
Accrued Interest, added from

Commission.

A. M. Foute,
Late Pres. Gay os o Bank,

Co.,

(The United States Government holding a Second
Lieu,)

McGinnis,

S T R

OF THE

Union Pacific R.R.

McGinnis, Jr.

BANKERS AND BROKERS.
N O.

Treasurer.

Mortgage Ronds

*

INVESTMENT.

The

investors is,

Assistant

Hxkbt Da Com*.
John

Treasury.
VAN DYCK,

Securities,

SOLD ON COMMISSION.

Washington M. Smith.

ent

H.H.

Gold, and

THEIR FIRST MORTGAKE

Treasury,

NEW YORK, August 10,1867.
IV Schedules of (30) Thirty or more 10-40
Coupons
due September 1st, 1867, will now be received for

Bond*,
Government

AN

United States

Stocks,

Company,
AS

Financial.

Executors, etc., desiring to invest.
Refer by permission to

j M“sr|)'^KKYwr"0“

Co

References by Permission:
America, New York.
Hon, H. H. Van Dyck, Assistant Secretary of Treas.
C 01.
Jambs Taylor, Newport, Ky.
Bank

of

I**-

(fkscttc, ^nmmcvcial
A

***

$ailuuty jfttomtor, ami ^luntrancc journal.

WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

,

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS
OF TIIE UNITED STATES.

VOL. 5.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1867
CONTENTS.

THE
The Tradesmen’s Bank Defalca¬
tion
*
The Cry for More
Currency
The Effect of Grain Receipts on
Railroad Earnings
Thf* National Banks—Their Con¬
dition First Monday of
July,

230

1867
Debt and Finances of Buffaio
Latest Monetary and Commercial

231

Commercial and Miscellaneous

..

233

News

235

.

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND
COMMERCIAL TIMES.
Money Market. Railway Stocks,
Cotton
U. S. Securities, Gold Market,
Tobacco
!
Foreign Exchange, New York
Breadstuff's
City Banks. Philadelphia Banks
Groceries..
National Bankg, etc
sale Prices N. Y. Stock
Commercial Epitome

236

Exchange

232
232

English News
.

Dry Goods

239

241
243
244
244

245

.

THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND
INSURANCE JOURNAL.

Railway News
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneops

Bond List

247

248-249

| Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
i

j

Insurance and Mining Journal

Advertisements.

.

needed

in

the

internal

management of the safeguards
which, however sufficient to protect
their stockholders and the
public heretofore, are now contin.
ually showing themselves too weak and inadequate to cope
with the difficulties and
dangers of the present. A third
complaint, which is frequently heard, is that the personal
reputation of clerks and subordinate bank officers is less im
paired than formerly in the public estimation, when habits

against peculation

Prices Current and Tone of the
Market.
253-254

240

unsuspected for years under the eye of officers so vigilant
experienced and able as those of the institution in question
are believed
to be.
Not only is this general charge of
instability brought against our financial machinery, a second
point is that within the banks themselves there is a reform
on

CHRONICLE.
229

NO. 113

.

225-8, 25\

250
251
255-6

;

of

profuse expenditure are indulged which are notoriously
beyond the means of men living on moderate fixed salaries
and possessing no additional income from honest, honorable
Thk Commercial and Financial Chronicle is
issued every Satur¬
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, sources. The time has been when such speculative proclivi¬
with the latest news
ties or extravagance in personal or domestic
up to midnight of Friday.
expenditure as
may now be indulged without question by younger or more
TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
experienced clerks in confidential positions would have called
For The Commercial
Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier
to city
forth inquiry and remark from their superiors,
subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)
and if not
For One Year
$10 00
For Six Months
6 00 satisfactorily explained, might have even brought on the
By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin
offenders the penalty of summary dismissal.
enabled to furnish our subscribers
with that paper at the reduced
price
Those three points imperatively claim, and indeed they
of $4 per annum
making the price of
C.sohicle with Da.lv
are well worthy of, the
scrutiny of all those persons among
Bulletin,-j
T."“V---!
•»
Pest-aye is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. It is, on the
us to whose
Chroni¬
keeping is in any way entrusted the stability,
cle, 90 cents per year, and on the Daily
Bulletin $1 20 in advance.
the credit, and the public reputation of our banks and fidu¬
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers,’
60 William Street, New York.
ciary corporations. Far be it from us, however, to single
Remittances should invariably be made by
drafts or Post out and cast any reproach upon the officers and directors of
Office Money Orders. Soliciting Agents make no collections.
the Tradesmen’s Bank.
Enough has not yet been published

<£l)e CljronicU.

and

we are

of the circumstances of the fraud to enable

THE TRADESMEN'S BANK DEFALCATION.

a

disinterested

judge to pronounce w ith exact accuracy how far these men
panic is usually ought to be held answerable at the bar of public opinion
preceded by a series of defalcations and embezzlements, for what has been done by their tellers. Though human
which have secretly and gradually undermined
public confi¬ sagacity and forethought exhaust all their preventive inge¬
dence, until at length, when the mine has thus been loaded nuity, we are assured on high authority that it must needs
-and the train
laid, a larger or smaller local explosion brings be that offences come.” We must also admit that the of¬
■on the
general catastrophe prostrating the whole fabric fence in this particular instance has come from a most unex¬
of
monetary confidence, and spreading consternation, bank¬ pected quarter. Like a thunderbolt from a clear sky, this
ruptcy ^und ruin throughout the community. Something of sudden stroke fell without warning, and must have
this apprehensive
vague uneasiness has pervaded Wall street astounded and stupefied all the friends and connections of
for several months
past. And the recent disclosures of the parties implicated. A month ago had the officials of our
wrong doing in the Tradesmen’s National Bank, of this city, city banks been convened together, there would have been
have had an influence in reviving the feeling. Eighty or seen among them two elderly men, in high esteem for integ¬
[ninety thousand dollars, of course, are not in the aggregate rity, ability and experience, and enjoying the distinguished
so
large a loss as to embarrass a sound banking institution reputation of having served one of our oldest banking insti¬
.having one million of dollars of capital and a clear half million tutions for some thirty years. If it had been announced in
of reported and
unreported surplus. Nor is it that the peo¬ the assembly which wre have imagined, that a forgery, an
ple doubt the solvency of the Tradesmen’s Bank. What embezzlement had been discovered, you would have suspected
seems to be doubted is the
stability of the system in which any body sooner than these quiet, grave, sedate, trusty and
frauds such as these are of
possible occurrence, and can go, apparently trustworthy tellers, ^And had any one proclaimed
It lias often been observed that

i




a

financial

to

[August 24,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

230

prophet to the crimi
the man,” the attesting witness

each of the two associates

as

did the

difference is

as

to the time

when this

withdrawal of legal

safely.” Redundancy of the cur¬
would have found no one to believe him.
And yet, what rency then brings depreciation and depreciation brings high
are the facts ?
Both these long-trusted men have fallen. prices. Consequently, to depress high prices wre must cor¬
rect the evil wrhich has caused them, namely, redundancy of
They have robbed the bank. The proofs of extraordinary and
aggravated guilt are overwhelming, and are confirmed by paper money. And the obvious way to do this is to call in
and cancel the over-issues.
the testimony of the criminals’ own lips.
One has defrauded
The second great law to which reference was made
the bank ot $65,000, and the other of $35,000.
is that “ the money market,” as it is called, that is, the
It will answenmo useful purpose to detail in this place the
movements
of capital between lender and borrower,
sad story told about the shifts and contrivances by which
is “disturbed with every disturbance of the volume of the
these men, grave and self-possessed as they seemed outward
ly, but racked inwardly by night and day with a thousand currency.” If you augment the currency you stimulate the
movement of capital and “ money becomes easy.”
If you
terrors contrived to lull suspicion, and to hide from the
diminish the currency afloat you arrest or check the move¬
avenging Nemesis. It is of more practical need for us to say
ments of capital between the lender and the borrower, and
that there is little doubt, but if a forced holiday had been
nal

monarch, “ Thou art

tenders

can

be made most

money becomes stringent.”
In this reciprocal interaction
periodically given to these two men, and it trusted experts
between the volume of the floating paper money
e
had been put in their
places to do their work once a fortnight
movements of capital in the loan market, we find an expla¬
or once a
month, the chief part of the machinery which was
nation of the great activity of business of all kinds during
effective for years to conceal their embezzlement would have
the extravagant inflation of our currency in 1863 and 1864,
been destroyed or thrown out of gear.
It may safely be re
and of the depression and gloom which we sometimes suffered
commended to our bank directors to suspect the coufi
by the slight contraction which has been effected since the
dential clerk who never takes a holiday.
war.
Those acquainted with the commercial history of
As the case is before the courts we reserve all further
remarks until the unpublished facts shall be more fully England during the second and third decades of this century
will call to mind frequent illustrations of this principle. For
We will only add that the robbery with which
known.
almost invariably the alternate depression or activity of
Baker and Arnold are charged is not only a wrong to the
business responded to the enlargement or diminution of the
bank, which the refunding of the sums embezzled w ould can
bank issues as certainly, and as regularly as any cause is
cel and atone.
It reaches far deeper in guilt.
It is a followed
by its co-relative effect in the domain of physical
crime of the greatest magnitude against the public weal, and
science.
as an
incendiary who starts a general conflagration is visited
From all this it follows that if we could at pleasure con¬
by the law with heavy pains and penalties, so should the de¬
tract the currency sufficiently, we might resume specie pay¬
faulter, the bank peculator, the dishonest clerk be punished,
ments immediately, and that the chief if not the only reason
for he is an incendiary in another sense, and his act may, for
why we cannot immediately call in and withdraw one hund¬
aught he knows, come to light at a critical moment, give a
red millions or more of our currency so as to make the out¬
shock to public confidence, and start a financial conflagra¬
standing greenback dollar worth par in coin, is that before we
tion involving multitudes in one common ruin.
had gone far, before we had withdrawn' more than a few
millions, the money market would be thrown into
THE CRY FOR MORE CURRENCY.
confusion, the movements of capital between lender and bor¬
There are tw o opposite errors of inflation and excessive con¬ rower would be paralyzed, business would be at a dead lock,
traction into which those financial theorists are apt to fall and the policy would have to be reversed amidst the exe¬
who do not keep distinctly in view the great fundamental crations and the upbraidings of the whole nation.
To adopt
laws in monetary science, relative to the amount of currency such a policy, and to attempt to carry it out, if such an at¬
required by any country where commerce and industry are tempt could in this country be carried to such lengths as we
free and active. Of these laws, one of the most important lies have supposed, wrould inflict mischief on our trade compared
at the foundation of what is called the theory of contraction.
with which those resulting hitherto from our paper money
It may be expressed as follows: “ the value, or purchasing inflation are comparatively small and innocuous.
A third law relative to the currency, to which, at present,
power, of paper money varies inversely with its volume.”
If you increase the volume of paper dollars afloat you re¬ we need only refer briefly, is that “ Contraction of the cur¬
duce the value of the paper dollar, and conversely if you rency must be slowly, and gradually, and skilfully done, or
wrant to augment the value of the paper dollar, the only way
it cannot be done at all.”
Under a despotism, indeed, where
of doing so is to lessen the aggregate in circulation.
In the decree of the master is everything and the groans of the
other w'ords, a depreciated paper currency like ours can be people are nothing, such a policy might be carried to great
raised to par with gold by no method we can possibly adopt, extremes, but the failure of Russia some years ago to reform
so
long as we do not bring into play the principle of con' her currency is a memorable example that even by an abso¬
traction.
An eminent authority on practical banking ques¬ lute sovei eign financial law3 are too strong to be resisted,
tions gives another view ofthis subject.
“The only possible and will claim their rightful homage, howrever they may be
means,” he says, “ by wrhich specie payments can be reached, ignored.
There is, however, another law about the currency which
is by retracing the steps by which specie was abandoned as
the standard.
As prices were advanced by the manufac¬ w7e must not omit, as it has been very much abused and mis¬
ture of hundreds of millions of paper tokens called by law applied.
It tells us that the value of paper money varies
Thus a depreciated pa¬
money, swelling thereby the volume of the currency, and de¬ with the demand and the supply.”
creasing its value as compared with fixed property, so prices per money may appreciate if the demand is increased, even
can only be
restored to natural values by recalling the paper if the supply should remain stationary. We wrell remember
tokens issued under the pressure ef the rebellion.
As the how, after the battle of Gettysburg, and after several other
legal tender paper is cancelled, market values will recede,, decisive events in the war, the price of gold went down,, and
and by no other process can this desirable result be attained. kept down for a considerable period.
The reason was not
Upon this financial authorities agree, and the only point of found in the smaller volume of the 'currency, but in the
“

1

-




-

231

THE CHRONICLE.

August 24,1867.]

another rise, unless he became convinced by the evidence of
field for the use of that currency. In this law we find his own
eyes that the harvest was really very abundant. If,
an explanation of the fact that gold is not now selling at 200,
although the volume of our currency is twice as large as be" therefore, we needed any further proof of this abundance,
we think it may be found in the figures below, showing the
fore the war. More currency is wanted now. The field for
the use of currency is larger. The wealth, the commerce, the comparative receipts of flour and grain at Chicago, Mil¬
waukee, Detroit and Toledo for the weeks ending August
activity of the country, require more currency to fulfil the
functions for which money is used. From this law the de¬ 3d, 10th and 17th, this year, and in 1S66:
Week ending
<—Wheat, bus—. r-Flour, bbls—. /—Rye, bush—. .—Oats, bush.—,
1866.
1-67.
1S66.
1867.
duction has been made that the best way to specie pay
1866.
1867.
18H6.
1867.
Aug. IT.
63,654
8,615 342,308
77,922 25,078 18,444 28.598
355,911
Chicago
6,939
829
960
21,011
ments—although it be the longest way—is to grow up to Milwaukee... 48,473 58 528 2,482 1,348
3,212
322
15.334 26.464
Detroit
9,-24
155,221
38,,22
them. The advocates of this view maintain that we should Toledo
350
65,516
1,395
5,408
25,200 21,113
not contract the currency, but should keep its volume sta¬
Total
757,187 176,984 75,137 35,024 29,90S 11,161 432,288 112,527
Week ending Aug. 10:
tionary at about its present level, not suffering it to be in¬
97,S69
41,530
4,950
78,353 17,779 16,409 32,974
Chicago
165,272
13,865
8,290
2.265
1,536
2,263
5,787
91,118
42,175
creased at all, and waiting till in ten, or fifteen, or twenty Milwaukee.
3,520
1,289
De roit
5,945
6,019
6,729
26,784
2.020
25,038
2,838
4,545
8,240 14,t8'J
184,512
the growth of the country, and perhaps the deprecia¬ Toledo
years,
85,699
Total
8,506 132,486
450,897 182,915 41,122 29,162 41,599
tion of gold through the immense productiveness of the mines’
Week ending Aug. 3:
should gradually diminish the margin of depreciation, and Chicago..
£4,639
38,501
3,990
29,025 17,763 15,322 31,478
50,700
42,816
7,775
7,738
4.773
Milwaukee...
9,961
2,207
55,137 107,402
4.289
1,405
370
842
8 457
gradually bring up our currency to equality with gold, or Detroit
3,112
7,334
5,1U0

larger

.

.

.

•

.

....

.

.

.

.

.

....

.

..

.

'

.

.

6,341

2,077

166,858
2,095 12,992
bring down gold to equality with our currency. We do
52,642 133,960
Total
280,334 139,364 36,079 34,893 41,429 12,098
not propose to offer at present any remarks on this theory.
From these figures it appears how largely the arrivals this
We only place beside it, by way of contrast, a statement
which we were sorry to see in a speech, by Mr. Pendleton, year of wheat, flour and rye are in excess of the receipts in
a few days ago, “ the condition
of the country,” he says, 1866, the total increase of w heat for the three weeks amount¬
u
could bear an increase in the currency.
The ravages of ing to 989,155 bushels, or nearly double the receipts for the
Toledo

else

.

....

....

....

.

there-^the loss same time last year. Of course, thus far the grain is chiefly
winter wheat, and this fact will account for the large propor¬
of houses, horses, cattle, agricultural implements—the scarc¬
tion at Toledo and the insignificant arrivals at Milwaukee ;
ity of provisions—the enfranchisement of the negro—the im¬
at the latter port a decrease being shown, occasioned, no
portance of settling the whole population to labor at once—
create a demand for more currency.
Every interest there doubt, by the lateness of this year’s harvest for Spring
would be advanced by the stimulating effects of an enlarged wheat.
But our object in referring to this matter at present was
currency.”
In regard to the two errors to which wre referred at the more to notice the first evidence of reviving business induced
outset, we conclude that on the one hand the contraction of by this abundant harvest, as seen in the weekly traffic re
the currency, however necessary, must not be pressed too turns of the principal railroads of the Northwest. These
far or hastened too rashly lest we introduce fatal disturbance returns, which for some time past have shown a decrease in
into the money market, and on the other hand wre must not earnings, compared with those of 1866, are nowT again on tiie
In the following table we compare
allow the clamor for more currency to prevent our seeing increase in every case.
that more paper money means more inflation, more depreci¬ the reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the
ation of the currency, a larger premium on gold, higher leading railroads in 1866 and 1867 :
Week. Miles ot ,—Cross earn'gs—, r-Earn’gs p. m->
1867.
1866.
1867.
1866road.
Railroads.
prices for all the necessaries of life, and a departure to a still
191 55
171 42

war

the South—the destruction of capital

at

,

Chicago and Alton

greater distance from the standard of coin.

44
44

44

Li

THE EFFECT OF GRAIN RECEIPTS ON RAILROAD EARNINGS.

receipts of grain at the leading markets of the West
beginning to show the result of the abundant harvest of
which we have been receiving accumulating evidence during
are

the

Previous to the middle of July the
a very low figure, for the wreek
ending June 30th reaching only 127,000 bushels, and the
weekending July 6 only 100,000 bushels, indicating the
past few months.

total arrivals had touched

almost total exhaustion of the old stock.

Since then, week

by week, notwithstanding the exhaustion of the old crop, we
find the arrivals steadily and rapidly increasing, which is
certainly a very favorable indication. In fact, these weekly
statements ,always furnish the most satisfactory evidence we
have

as

to the extent and

condition of the years

yield.

In¬

dividual

opinions, as gathered through the press while the
is growing or being harvested, are of course valuable,

crop
but when the result is

seen

in the arrivals at the lake ports

2d,

“

82,2S1

91,947

77,781
96,282

84,726
105,652

162 04
200 59

17651

181,181
213,185

209,165

57
57

182 94

150,445

90

152,334

190,171
191,628

175
206
145
147

166 09
169 98

1

480

77,309

73,000

1

62,141

67,300

64,562

70,000
78,000

(
\
|

J

and N. West’n .3d,

Ohioago

July. 1 1 1
(
1,140
4th, ‘k
(lii bo
1st, Aug.
1»032.; j
2d, “
L

4

»*

The

.2d, July.'I
4th, “
|b
1st,Aug. 1

4

it

44

44

44

-

J

-

Chic., R I. and Pacific. .3d, July. 1
4th, “
!
.

“

44

44

44

44

44

A-t n

410

-

l-t,Aug. I
2d,

“

1

1

J

64,692

b

f

Detroit. and Milwaukee 5.4th,

July]
1st,Aug. |r

j

27.995
26,828

;

I
^

....

30,520

J

l

35,736

29,978
32,400
35,764

Marietta and Cincinnati.2d, July. 1i
3d, kk
|
4th, “
|

ir

22 577

24,2tO

31,003
23,lb5
23 334

37.218
24,775

44

44

44

4

44

44

»

44

44

J

44

44

“
“

-loo

44

44

2d,
3d,

100

Michigan Central44
44

44

44

44

44

-

.

44

.4

44

44

44

.3d, July. 1
4th, “

\

44

4 4

44

44

44

44

67,806

f

1

....

183 56
157 56
157 47
157 80

173 05
164 19

91

162 24
159 40
172 34
190 23

148
142
152
163

70
34
48

170 T3
190 24

96 45
148 28

25,055

89 95
123 54
92 29
90 79

62,251

237 92

218 43

98 71

99 49

-

66,647

75^025

J

l

67,638

7b,638

233 85
23i 33

263 24
268 90

)

r

70,546

64,321

134 64

122 74

129 80
150 24

158 04
173 42

118 55

71 40
101 84
6* 97
65 43

lst.Aug.

2d,

“

4ih, “
1st Aug.
2d, kk
..3d, July.' l
4th, “
b

\

I

.

WeBtern Union

\

IL

1st, Aug. J

Michigan Southern....
44

257

28,640

61

220 11

lst.Aug.
2d, “

.

J

2S5

524

1

i
r

1
147

‘

18,012

■

-

l

-

82,8il

78,725

90.871

20,984

12.652
18,019
11,671

22,240

11,655
10,814

11,580

125 65

6.j 89
6109

prospect that these roads will do a large freight busi¬
opinions.
Of course there are
ness this autumn, much above that of last year, wrould seem
numerous influences
affecting the question of early receipts?
The harvest is but just ended, and the
besides the mere circumstance of a large or small crop' to be almost certain.
This year, for instance, the present high prices wrould naturally increase of grain shipments, though proportionately large,
lead the farmer to hurry his grain to market; and yet, on are nothing compared to what they will be as the season
the other hand, when we remember the extremely small advauces; the largest receipts of wheat at Chicago for one
amount of old wheat we now possess, the large decline in week have been 355,911 bushels, while last year, an unusually
prices during the past few weeks, and the less favorable bad season, they reached in a single week in October upwards
As the earnings have thus increased at
accounts of the crop we are at present reoeiving from abroad, of 900,000 bushels.
the very opening of the season, so that instead of a uniform
we should
expect the farmer to hold back his gr«in for

facts

are




substituted for

The

232

THIS

CHRONICLE.

[August 24,1867.

.

balance

against the present year, the roads are able to show favorable influences will gradually extend themselves
through
its favor, we
may fairly conclude that the all branches of trade. Many are disappointed because a more
heavier traffic of the autumn months will enable them to
rapid improvement in the business of the country has not
show a very decided increase in their
earnings over the same been developed. This could not be expected; the improve¬
months of I860.
ment must be
slow; for not until consumers can obtain
Thus the first benefit of an abundant harvest is seen in
cheaper breadstuff's can they have any great surplus to spend
increased railroad returns, and it is safe to
on other than the necessaries of life.
anticipate that these
balance in

a

THE NATIONAL BANKS—THEM CONDITION FIRST MONDAY OF

JULY, 1867.

NYe have received from NIr. Hurlhurd, the
Comptroller of the
the several States for the
quarter ending the first

quarter in the last volume of the
quarterly:

Currency, the following statements of the National Banks of
Monday of July, 1867.’ Our readers will find the returns for the previous
Chronicle (Vol. iii.) page 554.

reports

of

the

national

ranking

associations

of

the

different states.

RESOURCES.

New York.
Loans and discounts
Iteal Est fur it andfixf...
Current expenses
.,

$
20ft,I 7.704 2!*
7,425.079 58
820,819 04

Premiums paid

1,430,478 51

('ash items
100,087,851 41
Due from other hanks
23,120.259 07
IT. S.bunds to secure cii cul n
8,782 118 81
U. S. bonds to secure depos.
78,923,350 00
Due from Nation >1 Banks
S,081,100 00
17. S. bonds A secur. on hand
17.818,8'0 00
Other stocks, bonds A mort. 11.525,877 55
Bills of National Banks
8.980,884 00
Bills of Shite banks
187,418 00
.

Specie
Leg il Tender Notes
Compound Interest Notes..

0,353,‘’05 01
4r,SsO,79S 28
31,845.800 00

Aggregate

Massachns’ts Pennsylvania. Ohio,
£
S
$
97,270,884 Oft 75,340.902 48 28,498.404 57
2,220,81 l 90
2,731, 02 05
733,000 88
430,351 15
585,020 04
191,583 82
117,901 44
03',985 39
95,702 99
0.078,300 15
0,7'0,042 08
791.192 02
5,213,020 99 12.934,035 02 4,811,12.' 99
311,8.0 17
1,231,580 81 1,058.232 45
04.831,000 00 44,037,200 00 20,018,900 00
4,802,400 00
5,353,200 00 4,812,250 00
0,011,750 00 2,352,400 00
S,152,550 00
1.971.*>70 00
2.09 ..525 70
180,753 58
3,100,402 00
1,827 921 00
812,272 00
0,188 00
72,001 00
41,889 00
892.040 25
572,419 48
02,735 35
9,394,009 28 14.503,725 40 4,715,511 52
12,578,350 00 12,500,295 00 3,191,840 00

Connecticut. Illinois.
$
$
20,451,787 11 17,705,811 12
057,030 84
410,773 08
90,590 80
140,802 20
90,111 80
40,451 20
098.937 48 1,002,891 47
5,970,718 94 4,353,117 02
248,500 54
390,027 75
19,410,000 0 » 10,845,250 00
1,190,150 00 1,494,800 00
1,993.200 00
701,000 00
508,053 79
271,686 85
523,331 00 1,151,912 00
2 ,543 00
3.252 00
95,769 90
84,317 27
l,453,7$3 14 4,331,745 15
1,SS5,730 00 1,£34,160 00

Rh. Island.

New

Jersey.

$
20,6S5,584 34 17,655,130 37
599,485 67
540,150 54
80,275 25
94,082 52
49,422 37
67,537 15
407,942 33
670,006 21
2,766,090 16 3,879,465 39
67,081 00
332,828 53
14,185,600 00 10,432,400 00
412,200 00
905,500 00
626 900 00
245,600 00
504.731 83
1151,344 00
503.303 00
414,063 00
2( ,738 00
18,288 00
33,962 22
132,189 62
1,047,370 03 1,271,910 09
1,017,670 00 1,382,490 00
.

Maryland.
$
17,024,880 96 1*2,772,972 32
658,7'*) 40
473,802 66
57,540 74
120,334 25
119,977 76
70,762 43
1,055,414 11
156,562 95
2,143,826 51 1,616.709 01
258,255 27
392,266 97
10,065,750 00 12,434,350 00
950,000 00 1,173,500 00
537,700 00
987,650 00
S74,735 98
226,126 90
801,911 00
252,749 00
23,554 00
9,275 00
*374,746 44
46,884 80
‘

3,272,614 67
1.994.910

i O

2,063,^72 19
1,29S,325 00

559,327,209 IS 227,282,248 78 187,836,227 85 72,968,662 17 61,396,250 46 45,3-17,257 71
42,387,428 37 39,016,913 25 40,214,526 84 34,096,143 48
LIABILITIES.

Capital stock paid in
Surplus fund
Nat. hank

no es

115,610,441 00

outstanding

Individual deposits

United Mates

deposits

Dep’its Lf IT. S. dish*i; ottic’s

Dae to National * auks
Due toot, erb-liks A hank’s
Sta e bank circulat’n outst’g

Profits

Aggregate

22.750,031
66,796,2~s
266,703,425
5,9Mi,570
84,8« 0

58
00
52
14
95
84
88
(X)

55,540,589
11,068,657
1,145,182
10;641.2:13 27

79,682.000 00
12,254 909 36
56 293,293 00
55,618,218 19
4,576,531 35
55,309 81
11,516.686 29
1.233.928 73

862,672 00

5,18',700 05

559,327,209 18 227,282,248 78

49,377,990 00 21,804,7(K) 00 24,234,220 00 1!,6’20,000 00 2O,3G4,SO0 00
11,333,350 00 12,390,202 50 12,667,000 00
10,271,317 54 2,660,129 25 3,307,691 21 1,381,486 77
941,044 08 1,927,388 59 1,450,027 58 1.334.747 01
38,066,831 00 18,303,487 00 17,055424 00 9,433,672 00 12,405,664 00
9.057,655 00 8.715.755 00 10,925,643 00
72,8>8.749 51 22,890,432 75 11,513,212 82 18,320,226 67
5,501.004 81 12,972,211 66 13,684,607 95 7,208,f 99 56
3,685,266 28 3,410,110 83 1,099,985 76 1,749,530 SO
734,949 47
669,588 93
660,942 48
719,887 40
30,096 06
91,939 86
47,776 14
211,287.59
13,185 32
51,327 06
146,6:18 99
121,686 00
8,362,761 17 - 2,159,106 91 2,227,650 02 2,295,047 95
632.099 21
1,596,495 02 1,785,660 17
86,3 )9 0»
1,436,773 20
581,082 72 - 245,309 88 1,234,229 91
438,255 51
194,419 97
297,851 82
89,846 15
686,851 (X)
432 552 00
92,131 00
2,721 00
2:39,987 00
269,948 00
376,145 00
9,442 00
3,059,589 09
975,241 85 1.232,818 63 1,064,055 02 1,006,438 9 7
944,499 02
706,695 35
930,953 36
187,836,227 85 72,968,662 17 61,396,250 46 45,347,257 71 42,387.428 37
39,016,913 25 40,214,526 84 34,096,143 4S
RESOURCES.

Loans and Discounts
Real estate, furnit. A lixt n's.
Current expenses
Premiums paid
Cash items
Due from National Banks
Due from other banks....
U. S Bonds to secure circ'n
U. S. Bonds to secure depo’s
l'. S B is. A secur. on hand.
.

...

.

Other st’ks, bds. A
mortg’s.
Bil s of National Banks....
Bills of State Banks

Specie
Legal tender notes
Compound Interest

Maine.
$

Missouri.

9,910,775 09

8,116,932 99
351,362 39

239,808 72
13,257 99
12.7: 2 20
2.1,191 87
1,560.827 SO
13.544 71
8,3 )7,25(i 00
770,450 00
550.850 0»
271.853 28
237,251 00
6,874 00

19,174 54
notes

..

Aggregate

Capital stock paid in..
Surplus fund
Nat bank notes

outstanding
Individual deposits.

United States deposits
Dep’ita of U. S. disb'g oflie's

Due to National Banks
Dim to other banks A bank s
State bankcireulat'u
outst'g
Protits

Aggregate

085,255 34
679,850 (X)

23,501,232 54

*
82,293 75

103,604 59
817,101
1,091,451
206,125
3,771,100

46
83
07
0)

035,250 00
408,200 00
916,244 48
295,867 1H)
12.850 (X)
101,253 63

1,619,544 99
843.390 00

18,838,573 08

Michigan.

Vermont.

*
6,703,567 21

Iowa.

$
5,023,356 87

*

302,460
51,910
14,117
.360,803

44
42
40

59
1.672.310 11
104,228 19
4,357.700 00
400,1 MM) 01)

100.512 20

33,513 71
31.184 46
134,675 85
959,497 93

14,498 46
6.44L(KH) 00
682,250 00

312,700<K)

6,239 (H)

6.161 00

45 00

9,686 57
356,510 00

37,269 18
702,871 28
324,680 00

564,851 76
251,500 00

16,401,371 56 15,267 419 66 13,243,656 78
12,011,606 97 10,778,686 02

4,523,076 21

7,547,017 19

7^843,246 05

1,42S,1S5 00
277,307 92
1.196,455 00
1,229,V39 53
46,399 89

1,890,000 00
148,518 78

2,885,000 05
180,507 40
2.318,648 04

693,590 00

43.364 02

6.065 39

1,266,545 69
639,950 00

326,889 31
315,960 00

172.148 15

•

31-00
4,284 16

LIABILITIES.
8.985.000 09
7U9.850 97
7,3M,S*>0 00
4,818,989 68
407,826 21
207,198 87

7,059,300 00
6*18,659 34
2,21)0,402 00
5,235,891 81

151,632 11

1,816,854 27

49,975 06
80,528 (H)
678,365 61

592.753 ul
1.0,355 00
577,367 61

23,501.232 54

IS,838,573 03

mary.
The debt liabilities of the

heads of funded debt and

565,939 95
1,041 DC.

5,050,010 (X)
655,441 06
3,812,06 > (HI
5,854,251 54

6,460,000 00
341,987 17

3,792,000 00
324,505 39
3,211,430 00

5,680,435 00
1,811,201 35
326,163 83
2,462 69

5,013,625 25

105,063 02

8 506 48
2,784 12

"2,375 IK)
265,313 57

96,362 00
537,517 02

35
65
13,414 00
279,46S 08

292,3'5 01
216,903 48
87,536 88

312,208
116.513
58,496
92,495

*

55
51

4,735,000 00
388,437 25
416,802 00
1,868,051 34
438,053 86
46,065 82

2,885,000 00
374,929 34
2.508,782 00
3,944,581 78
441,740 07

2.262 58
8,469 72

59,130 00
304,334 40

264,213 52
"17,848 36

34,808 00
119,075 33

1S1,148 47

176,377 89

4,523,076 21

7,547,017 91

7,843,246 05

229,704 73

16.401,371 56 15,267,419 66 13,243,656 78
12,011,606 97 10,778,686 02

Date of

Aug. 1, “
“
“

“

21.883 28

3,000 00

July 1,1852. .Bull', & Brantford RR.
May 1, 1853. .Franklin st. property
Dec. 1,
“
27,

16S,822 26

For what purpose
bonds were issued.

issue.

“

,

Market grounds

stock

$150,000..7 .Jan. & July.. 1872

(Coart St)..

32,000..6..Feb. & Aug. .1871
10,000..6..June & Dec..1873
35,000 .7..
: “
..1878
31,000..6..
“
..1S79

..Market grounds (Batavia St)
Feb. 2,1857..Building markets
June 1, 1859,. Judgments
“
2, 1862..Funding floating debt
Nov.15, “
Ship canal (construction)
15, “ ..Funding floating debt
Dec. 15, “
.Defense of the Union
Jan. 1,1863..
“
“
“
May 1, “
11
Aug.20, “
R lief of conscripts
“

.

.

“
ii

it

“

“
u

“
11

May 2. 1864. .Relief of volunteers’ families.
i.

as

20.
20
g

—total

The

11

85,0001 ® j- May & Nov

..Central school property......

..

city are ranged under the two
temporary loans, which togoihnr

14

115,935 58

200,009 59

Amount
Interest—> Prin.
Dec. 31, ’66 Rate. Payable,
pay’le.

..Elk St. market
..Franklin St. property

31, “
31, “

1,093,998 00
3,645,959 01 1,084,705 67
412.880 47
86,115 59
21,144 24
67,253 35

68,461 78
259,119 53
63,366 79

following are the details of the Funded Debt
existed at the close of the
year 1866;




(H)
388,900 (H)
146,023 00
216,636 (X)

.

576 00

embracing the whole
indebtedness, and the receipts
and disbursements on all accounts.
The report also contains
a
comprehensive exhibit of the progress of the city, as relates
to its finances, for the ten
years ending as above.
From this
very valuable document we have compiled the following sum¬

The

35
(X)

Ilampsh’e. Wisconsin. Delaware. Tennessee,
Kentucky
*
$
*
3,632,273 27 3,811,998 51 2,059,137 18 2,146,568 00
2,983,25949
11)1,389 05
176,257 31
110,625 19
156,678 96
124,596 33
26,897 76
33,353 47
21,116 08
59
45,800
28,815 00
21,072 19
42,172,81
8,030 23
45,704 29
31,662 27
191,085 51
252,748 10
37,798 25
58,781 19
10,695 59
350 651 &5
1,221,078 93 1,212,753 84
887,261 74
492,923 59
18,084 56
02,680 28
42.602 95
147,372 68
133,594 66
4,772.0(H) 00 2 843,250 00 1,348,200 00 1,410,550 (X)
2,660,000 00
745.850 00
500,000 00
60,000 00
551,000 00
311,000 00
406,750 00
308,750 00
25,500 00
436,500 00
65,000 00
84,400 00
31,385 Of)
82,288 76
316,038 00
80,300 00
179,945 00
105,543 00
32,620 00
273,697 00
100,4 5 00
366 00
17,293 21
S24.614 49
495,325 00

the year ending December
31, 1866,
field of its valuation, taxation and

8605,334.

151.279 23
25

808,189
154,385
3,712,150
504,000

5,059 IX)

27,293 26
529,092 85
457,450 00

DEBT AND FINANCES OF BUFFALO.
The Comptroller of Buffalo, under date of
July 1st, 1867,
has issued his report on the financial affairs of
that city for

amount to

4,915.312 64
235,254 68
37,852 46
17,575 46

659,450 (X)
49,359 07
116,526 00

-210.386 00
136,036 00
4,353 00
11.270 22
1.065,278 98

N.

il

,

'

.

36,000..6..

..1876

“

.1873

62,000..7..Feb. & Aug..1877
18,COO. .6. .June & Dec. .1867
“
15,000..7..
..1882
11,000 7.. May & Nov ..1882
11,000..7
“
..1882
6,000..7..Jnne & Dec.. 1882
22,000. .7. .Jan. & Jnly ’68'69
12,000. .7..May & Nov ..1883
6,000..7..Feb & Aug.’68’75
10,000. J..
“
..1881
10,000..7..
“
..1883
25,000..7..May & Nov 1874
25,000. .7..
“
..188o

December,.31, 1866, 8612,000.
temporary loan liabilities have been

contracted for pur-

t

August

THE CHRONICLE.

24,1867.]

the annual tax sales and for payments for school
The details are as follows:

chases at
lots.

what purpose

Amount ,— Interest. —* Prin.
Dec. 81,’66. Rate. Payahle. paya’le
1862...Purchases at tax sales, I860.. $40,000...7. ..Jan. & July.. .1867
1863...
“
“
I860.. 26,000 ..6...
“
...1868

pate of
shBOe.
Tniv 1.
‘‘ 1

bonds were issued.
“

“

1 1864...

*»

1861..

“

“
“
1,1865...
“
“ 1, 1866...
“
“
Sen. 18, P63.. .School lot in Diet. 34
Jnlv 1,1865...
“
“
14
1,1864...

“

“

27,541...7.
7...

“

...1869

“

..’68'69

7...
83,454
79,490...7...

“
“

.

1864..
1865..
1866..

24,538

.

..’6r70
..’68’71
4,567.. .7.. .Mar. & Sep ..1878
4,904... 7... Jan. & July... 1867
.

35
15,1866...
“
“
3,849...7 ..Apr. & Oct...1871
total December 31, 1866, 1293,334.

Apr.

Buffalo, including Squaw and Cranberry islands, covers an
area of 23,874.64 acres.
The distribution of the area is thus—taxable lots, 20,856.74
streets, 2,043.64; creeks, canals, slips and basins, 483.73; school lots, 28.54 ; engine-houses and police-stations, 1.27 ;
market ground*, 10.90; church lots, 18.09 ; cemeteries, 257.acres;

18607.— 1

hospital and asylum lots, 43.80;
pest-house lots -(on Squaw and Cranberry Islands), 8.7 5;
32;

public grounds, 31.29

:

239

The

general fund is raised by a tax levied annually upon
the whole valuation ; the income from markets, fees, and in¬
terest upon taxes, licenses, fines and
penalties are also credited
to this fund, which furnishes the means to
defray the ordinary
expenses of the city government. Of the receipts in 1866,
$460,262 03 was from taxes, $32,219 75 from school fund,
and the remainder ($38,526 89) from miscellaneous sources.
The tax receipts would indicate a rate of $lf on the $100
valuation. The principal objects of expenditures in the same
years were: schools, $151,909 66; police, $56,772 77 ; fire
department, $45,841 03; public debt interest, $36,542 13,
and principal, $8,000 ; lamps, $32,405 96 ; water, $20,004 25;
streets, $13,856 22 ; public health, $11,930 11 ; harbor, $13,802 10 ; &c., &e.
A table in the report specifies the expen¬
ditures of each department for ten years.
The financial condition of the city, as showu on the
general
balance sheet of December, 1S66, was as follows :

LIABILITIES.
RESOURCES.
County property, 60.31 ; New York State property, 2.77 ; Bonded or funded debt.. $612,000 00 Taxes not col¬
Geaeral treas’y warrants
lectable
245,000 00
United States property, 38.89 acres.
18,436 42— 112,995 33
Res’ces (Local
Gen’l fund liabilities..
The public improvements of the city consist of—paved
$857,000 00
fund)
20,211 28
School prop’ty
Worthless
15,707 20
4,504 08—
bonds
Tax certilica’s
$13,311 f0
streets, 54.17 miles; plank side-walks, 217.24; stone side¬
Local treasury
unredeemed 236,418 08
warrants
171,906 98— 1*5,218 48 Interest
84,337 27— 320,755 35
walks, 63.11, and sewers, 57.76 miles. Total length of streets,
Tax loan bonds
280,022 72 Property owned by city..
697,060 00
297.57 miles. The Assessors’ valuation of property belonging
School houses, lots, &c..
321,970 00
Total liabilities...,
$1,322,241 20
to the city in 1866 was $697,060, viz., engine lots and houses, Surplus resources.Total resources
146,246 68
$1,468,487 88
Resues (Gen’l
$63,360 ; central school property, $39,400 ; squares and parks,
fund)
$131,431 75
$329,250; markets and market grounds, $177,000; public
The following compares the population, valuation, income
burying grounds, $16,000; police-stations, $13,000; court and expenditures, debt, and the total liabilities and resources of
house and jail, (5-8ths of 90,000) $56,250 ; pest-house and the
city in I860 and 1866 :
-Absolute-Per capitagrounds $2,800. These values are not assessable for taxation
1860.
1866.
1860.
1S66.
The total valuation of school property (general and local) is Population
81,129
96, (-72
Valuation
$30,262,373 $34,957,700 $373 01 $360 89
Income
3 82
5 48
309,783
531,008
$321,970.
3 73
5 01
1302,443
485,444
Expenditures
The population of the city by the United States census was, General d<bt
6 62
6 32
537,000
612,600
8 03
School and tax bonds.
2 43
293,334
197,605
in 1810, 1,508 ; in 1820, 2,095; in 1830, 8,668, in 1840, Total bonded debt
9 05
9 35
905,334
7:34,605
12 46
13 65
1,011,679
1,322,628
15 41
15 •6
1,250,686
1,468,187
18,213 ; in 1850, 42,261; in 1860, 81,129. The Erie Canal
was opened in 1825, and the Albany and Buffalo line of rail¬
From this it appears that the valuation is lower in 1866
roads in 1842. The population by the State census of 1855 than in 1860
by $12.12 per capita. In the meanwhile the ex¬
was 74,214 ; of 1860, 81,129, and of 1865, 94,502.
The in¬ penditures have increased from $3 23 to $5 01, or 34.32 per
crease from 1860 to 1865 was 16.49 per cent., or a fraction
cent.
The funded debt is but a fraction higher.
Consider¬
more than 3 per cent, per annum compounded.
At the same ing the increased cost of labor and commodities, this result
rate the population in 1866 would be 96,872.
exhibits a rare instance of municipal economy.
The valuation of real and personal property for taxation in
each of the past ten years has been as follows:
fiatest fllonttant anil doinmertial <£nglist) N-uu.

Erie

Year.
1857..
1858..

Personal.

Real.

Total.

$29,446,280 $6,065,670 $35,511,950
27,743.945 *,485,080 34,229,025

1859.24,997,300
1860.. 24,358,905
1861.. 24,232,955

It will be

4,748,080

211,740,380

5,893,470 30,262,373
6,472,175 30,705,130

seen

....

......

...

.

.

.

Year.
1862..
1863..
1864..
1865..
1866..

Real.

Personal.

that the total valuation in 1857

than in the year

Total.

$24,677,175 $6,944,180 $31,621,355
25,910,815 6,528,045 31,738,860
25.401,900 6,517,510 32,009,410
25,86t>,2l0 7,730,0:10 33,598,240
26,438,325 8,519,375 34,957,700
was

larger

This may be attributed to the fact
that the general revulsion of business during the former year
occasioned severe losses to the business community, and the
valuation of property gradually fell for several succeeding
years, until it had reached its minimum in 1860 and 1861.
After that time it has as gradually increased to its present
valuation. It may be remarked, also, that the valuation
placed on personal property is not commensurate with that of
real estate, which may be accounted for by the general invest¬
ment of surplus capital in national securities, which are not
1866.

liable to taxation.

The accounts of the

city are kept so as to show the receipts
and expenditures based on general tax and other
city income
separately from the receipts and expenditures dependent on
local ’assessments. The latter are chiefly for street, district
school and other improvements. The receipts and expendi¬
tures of the general " fund,
according to the comptroller’s

KATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON
AT

1858

1859

Receipts.,

$460,450 64 '
438,340 42
299,437 46
809,783 40

1801^ 378,84814




Expenditures.
•

$315,834 47
364,904 18
304,783 83
302,443 1 8
383.644 49

Year.
18*2
1363
1864
1865

Receipts.

$327,184 88
363,694,20
440,537 47
647,451 38

531,008 67

DATES.

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
AUG. 9.

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.
LATEST

Amsterdam

Autwerp.
Hamburg

RATE.

TIME.

ON—

.

.

DATE.

short.
7^<&11
3 months. 25.37X @24.42 )£
13. 9>.£@13. VHi
.

_

Paris
25.32)$ @25.37>
short.
25.15 @25.25
Paris
3 months. 2.-2}£@i2.>7>
Vienna
6.26 @ 6.26>
Berlin
32 @32^
St. Petersburg
Cadiz
49X@ 49X
52 @ 52X
90 days.
Lisbon
3 months. 27.15 @27.20
Milan
27.15 @27.20
Genoa
27.15 -@27.20
Naples
New York
Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro
Buenos Ayres.
—

Pernambuco..

Singapore..

60 days.

Hong Kong
Ceylon..
Bombay

,.

short,

44

44

44

44

44

44

44

8 mo’s.

Aug. 9.
Aug. 4.

30

30

days.

l p.

c.

—

dis.

@ —
2-’.17X@25.20
13. 7%@ —
25.15 @ —
25.30

@

—

-

days.

60 days.
IK) days.
July 20. 60 days.

Au?. 9.

109X
X P- c. prem.

44

July 9.
June 26.
June 17.

15X

44

44

nne

12.

44

6 mos.
44

44

Aug. 7.
Aug. 3.
ug. 5.
June 1.

45.
48.

44

June 17.
—

11.89

3 mo’s.

July 12.
—

BATS.

July 10.

J

4$. 6c?.
48. 6rf.
Par.

ur.%d@>
lsll>£rf@
lsll>£d@

Madras
Calcatta

Sydney

Aug. 9.

TIME.

July 16.

Valparaiso....

-

30

days.

48>£@ —
44X@45X
21X@21>*
6>$<L@ —
b%d.@ —
2@2X dis.
Is.

44
44

P- c. prem.

U%d.

19.11 Xd.
1 s. 11 Xd.

IX p. c. prem.

[From our own Correspondent.}

London, Saturday, August 10, 1867.

statement, for each of the last ten fiscal years:
Year,:

LATEST

Expenditures
$284,196 19
334,604 83
403,867 33
50*,218 86

485,44416

The weather of the

present week has been of a variable, and, there¬

an unsatisfactory character. Harvest work has not only been
delayed, but the crops have failed to mature, and, in several quarters;
considerable damage has been done. At one period it was feared that

fore, of

234

THE CHRONICLE.

the harvest

was

about to turn out most

vailed ; but these are always made the most of, both in that
and abroad.
As to France, the favorable harvest which was

unfavorably, and that the cod.
changeable weather would destroy all the pros,
pects which have for so long a period been so encouraging. At present
it is difficult to know which view to take of the matter
; the weather isf
in fact, so changeable that the
encouraging influence of to day’s sun is
suddenly altered by the clouds and storm of to-morrow. On Monday
tinuance of wet and

last the weather

was as

fine

anticipa¬
proved rather unsatisfactory ; nevertheless it is a better
crop
than last year ; and if France needed but litt'e
foreign wheat then, it is
maoifest that she is capable of
depending entirely upon her own resour¬
ces
during the next twelve months, with the crop which Bhe has now
In Spain, Portugal and Algeria the
secured.
crops of wheat have beea
partial failures ; but these countries will not require any considerable
supplies. The most unsatisfactory accounts appear to be from Algeria,
in which country the
crop has almost entirely failed. From the fore¬
going remarks it may be observed that, excluding the United States,
our
prospect as regards a foreign wheat supply, is equal to
last year.
In reference to our crop I am of opinion that
if
we
should have flue weather for
harvesting it, the result
will be satisfactory, giving us
at least an average yield. Assuming,
therefore, that we receive no supplies from jour side, there is no cause
at present for a rise in prices so
long as the weather remains fine. But,
as I have
already mentioned, we anticipate a large supply of wheat
and flour from the United States, and it is in accordance with the
ex¬
tent of our imports of American
produce that prices will decline on
this side. As you are the best judges of the
magnitude of your own
crop, I leave the question of the fall that is likely to take place with you
Our imports of wheat this year have been
very large, and considerably
in excess of 1866 and the two
preceding years. The following state¬
ment shows the extent of our
imports in July, and during the seven
months ending July 31 :
«

could have been desired ;

districts the reapers were in the
wheat was cut; but on

suffered to

some

extent, the benefit which at the

same

derived from these rains must not be under-estimated.
for instance, are well aware that meat has been at a

time has been

Your readers,
very

high price

for several years past.
With
it cannot be expected that the

,

the immense consumption now going on
value of butchers’ meat will decline to
any important extent, but yet there is no doubt that the supply will be
increased in consequence of the present excellent facilities afforded for
fattening cattle, and for sending them in a thoroughly fit condition to
market—the late rains having been productive of immense benefit to
the pastures. The grass lands
throughout the country are rich with
verdure and are as green as in the height of
Spring, while turnips anc
the root crops have increased to a very large extent since the
perioc
when rain first commenced to fall after the late

dry weather. But to
bring the subject more to the question of wheat and a supply of bread,
it may be ob^erned that the crop of potatoes is almost doubled—a
circumstance that, in this country,
operates very powerfully on the
wheat trade.

But if

we assume

that the crop

of wheat in this country will be be¬
low an average, what is likely to be the course of the market between
the present time and the close of the year ?
There are some who per¬
sist in believing that the value of wheat in this
couutry must continue
.to rule high, but I may state that these are few in number.
Most per¬
sons, indeed, connected with the corn tr ade, are of
opinion that in the
event of the crop

of wheat being under

an

average,

but not greatly

deficient, the quotations, in the face of our large prospective importa¬
tions, must give way. To those who have not watched carefully tinof the

foreign markets, this assertion has been a matter of sur¬
prise ; but if we look into the future, and endeavor to ascertain what
supplies of wheat we are likely to receive, it is certain that no other
course

conclusion

can

be arrived at.

In

respect to the United States I shall say but little. I may state,
however, that on this side we are led to behove that we shall once more
be in the receipt of large supplies from your side, and that the trade in
breadstuff's, which has been so long in abeyance, will shortly be resumed
on an

extensive scale.

terday that
of wheat at
the

Through a private source I was informed yes¬
leading American house had made very large purchases
Chicago ; that the produce had been drawn against ; that

a

exchange had been corrected, and that the outflow

New York
more,

of bullion from

likely to be checked. Beyond this I shall state no
by the time this letter reaches you, the result of the
throughout the Uuion will, I should think, have been accurately
was

because

harvest

ascertained,

d from the remarks which follow, your readers will be
able to form an opinion of their own as to the future
price of wheat in
this country.
ai

You will remember that in

one of
my letters, written about six weeks
since, I mentioned that the crop in the South of Russia had suffered
considerably from a protracted drought of ten week’s duration ; but as
that was by no means an unusual
circumstance, and as the farmers in

country

ted has

in the early
fields, and a considerable quantity of
Tuesday there was a heavy fall of rain, and al
harvest work was in consequence entirely
suspended. On Wednesday
the weather,
though not so unfavorable, was very changeable, anc
heavy showers of lain fell throughout the country ; but since that period the aspect has been more satisfactory, and there is now
every appearan* e that it will so continue. Although the wheat has manifestly
as

[August 24,1867.

IN

JULY.

1S64.

1865.

Wheat

2,078,4S1

Barley
.

264,118

Oats
Peas
Beans
Indian Corn
Flour

64,137
27,171

57,572

344,584

568,954
231,434

IN

Wheat

8EVEN

12,552,284

Barley
Oats
Peas
Beans
Indian
Flour

665,102
‘1,086,611

2,320,147
508,3^0
1,408,500
3,090,682

1867.

3,807,142

.

368,257

1,506,924
273,681

106,724

1,144,096
260,313

MONTH8.

9,540,749
4,826,996
4,168,601
282,205
493,606

2,712,729

Corn

1866.

2,275,759
413,377
1,016,317
166,760
36,070
1,501,919
318,338

13.784,435
4,368,306
4,506,807
709,397
280,446

2,645,872
1,853,809

3,452,822

7,653,850

18,255,698
3,704,733
5,788,074
1,016,799
1,102,720
5,707,649
2,083,3:5

Trade remains

extremely quiet. As regards cotton, Brazilian aid
Egyptian produce continue to be pressed for sale, and hence a further
decline has taken place in prices. On the other hand American
pro¬
duce is somewhat firmer, and a fair amount of business
having been
transacted, the quotations are, in some instances, rather higher than on
Saturday last. The total sales of the week at Liverpool amount to
65,790 bales, of which speculators have taken 1,810 bales, exporters
20,870 bales, and the trade 43,610 bales.

At Manchester business

con¬

tinues very quiet; indeed
sed appearance, and prices

the trade of the city presents quite a depres¬
have a drooping tendency. Wool and woolen
goods are decidedly quiet, the changeable state of the weather during
the last few weeks having checked any
improvement in this quarter.
The public sales of colonial wool will be commenced on
Thursday next,
aud during their progress about 120,000 bales will be
brought forward
All other branches of trade remain
extremely quiet.
In the money market the only feature of
importance is the complete
failure of the

new

Russian loan.

Some weeks since the Russian Gov¬

ernment

appeared in our market for a loan of £3,000,000, and at Berlin,
same period, for a
similar sum, the proceeds of the loan
being, it was stated, for the completion or construction of railways
The new loan for £12,000,000 lately- introduced at Paris, Amsterdam
almost at the

and in this market has met with but little

attention, and so far as we
concerned, scarcely a subscription has been sent in. For¬
eign securities in the Stock Exchange have been very flat, the demands
ourselves

are

for fresh loans on the part of Russia, and the
delay which still prevails
forwarding large supplies of produce to the Odessa
respecting the settlement of the Spanish Passive debt having caused an
market, it might prove that the injury reported to have been done had
uneasy feeling to exist in reference to many foreign securities. Money
been greatly overstated. No doubt, had the
dry weather continued, is still very abundant; the demand for accommodation is
very limited,
the crop would have been lost;
butgeuial rains opportunely set in, and and hence the rates of discount remain
extremely easy. Bullion in the
the plant not only recovered, but the
crop has turned out as satisfacto¬
Banks of England and France continues to accumulate, and at
present
rily as it did last year. You will bear in mind that the South of Russia
they hold the unprecedented heavy supply of £59,360,000. Annexed
during the last twelve months, has furnished us with the greater pro are the
present rates for accommodation :
portion of our fore gn supplies of wheat, and it therefore follows that a
Per Cent I
“
Per Cent.
30 to 60 days1 bills
successful crop in that region is
!X@
I 6 months’bank bills
2 @2%
likely to have, and will have, an impor¬ 3 months1 bills
I 4 & 6 months1 trade bills....
2@ 3
tant bearing upon the course of
I
prices here. In Austria the crop is 4 months1 bank bills
very abundant, and the result of the harvest in Hungary is
On the continent the value of money has not materially changed since
equally
satisfactory. In (4 dhcia the crop has suffered from floods and heavy my last. The principal markets are well supplied, and the condition
storms ; but, with that
exception, the wheat crop in these districts has of business is about the same as it has been.
The progress of
proved abundaut, and we shall consequently receive large supplies the harvest is
necessarily absorbing considerable supplies of coin to pay
from Hungary and Austria, via. the Danube and Trieste.
In Prussia,
aborers ; but in other respects there seems to be no new feature. The
the result, so far, does not
appear to be unfavorable. On the banks of quotations at the leading cities at this date and at this period last year,
the Vistula, via., in Polish
Prussia, heavy rains and floods have pre¬ are subjoined;

the interior




were

B’k rate—*
1S66. 1867.

3%

Paris

At

Vienna

5

...

235

THE CHJR.ON1CL15.

24,1867.]

August

„

r-.B’k rate—, <-Op. m’kt—x
1866. 1867.
1866. 1867.
Turin..... 8
5
'
Brussels.. 5
2%
5
2%-2%
Madrid
9
5
-

Op. m’kt—x
1866. 1867.
2%-2%

2)4 3
b
4
46
2)4
2% 7

4

2%
l%-2

prices of com and oats are much lower.
ing of the new crop, and with prospects
Wheat

from abroad.

abundance

and

This is natural on the incom¬
of an average harvest at home
and flour have been without

change, also barley. Peas are 6d„ lower.
2
8)4
The quotations given for corn the first three days of the week is
Amst’rd’m 7
believed to be incorrect. It agrees with the report sent to the Associated
There has been no material alteration in the rates of foreign exchange
Press, biit private telegrams put the quotation much lower.
The result of the last sale of India Council Bills showed that the
5

Berlin

Frankfort. 5 ;

...

Hamburg.
St.

2-2)4

3
S%

—

-

7

Petb’g. 5)4

de¬
mand for remittance to the East had slightly increased. The bullion
movements of the week, so far as exports are concerned, havo been un¬
important ; but the imports of gold have been considerable, and chiefly
from the United States. We believe, however, that as your exports of
wheat and other cereals will shortly be on a considerable scale, our im¬
ports of specie from your side will entirely cease.
American eagles
also much quieter ; but the principal change in bullion is a decline
of fd- in the value of Mexican dollars, the supply here being consider¬
able, while there is scarcely any demand for shipment to Hong Kong.r

Fri. 16. Sat. 17. Mon. 19. Tues. 20. Wed. 21. Thu .22
d.
s.
8. d.
s. d.
s. d.
8. d.
s. d.
13 \9
13 9
13 9
13 9
13 9
13 9
Wheat (new So.)p. ctl
9
35
38 3
38 3
Corn (West. mx’d) p. 4801bs 38 3
5
0
5 0
5 ”6
5 0
5 0
5 0
Barley(American) per 60 lbs
2 11
2 11
2 11
3 1
3 1
3 1
• ‘nts
(Am & Can.) per 45 lbs
0
42
42 0
42 0
42 6
42 6
42 6
Peas. (Canadian) p»-504 lbs
0
34
34 0
34 0
0
O'*
Flour

are

The

GOLD.
8.

standard.

per oz.

do
do
Spanish Doubloons
per oz.
South American Doubloons... do
do silver.
United States Gold Coin

77
77
77
75
73

last price

d.
9
9
11
6
9
3

Mexican

per oz.

5 grs. gold

d.

do

per oz.
per oz

.

Dollars

Quicksilver, £6 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent.
Owiug to the large mass of money lying idle,

Liverpool Produce Market.—In the middle of the
15$d. per gallon, but subsequently recovered to
closed. No other change is noticeable.
fell to

d.

o% ©0% @—
5% @-

standard.

8.

s.

doubt
shall yet

commanded

statement

94%-94%*94%-94%

Consols for money

94

Friday.

Thur.

Wed’y.
Aug 10 uonday.| Tuesday

-94% 94%-94% 94%-94% 94%-94%

whole, the market for

Week ending aug.

1C Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday.
72%-73% 72%-73

U. S. 5-20’s

73%-73% 72%-72% 73%-74

Atlantic & G’t West¬
22%-.... 22
ern consol’d bonds 22%-.... 22%-...
43%-44% 45 -46% 47
Erie Shares ($100).. 45 -46
78
Illinois shares ($100) 76%-.r... 76%-.... 77%-....

73%-74

22

-22% 22%-....
45%-45%
44%-45
77%-.... 77%-....

-....

-....
-....

following are the latest prices for United States 5
the Continent: At Amsterdam 77$, at Frankfort 77 9-16,
and at Hamburg 70$.
Eugllth market Reports—Per

20 bonds on
at Berlin 78,

8.

d.

d.

8.

Wed. 21. Th. 22
s. d.
s. d.

31 0
76

Fri. 16. Sat. 17. Mon. 19. Tu. 20. Wd. 21. Th. 22
Sugar (No.l2Dchstd) p. 112 lbs. 25 6 25 6
25 6 25 6 25 6 25
Linseed (Calcutta).
“
68 6 68 6 " 68 6
68 6 68 6 68
Cake and oils were quoted a9 follows :
Fri.16. Sat. 17. Mon. 19. Tu. 2ft. Wd. 21. Th. 22.
Linseed cake
oil

(obl’g).p ton £10 5 0 £10 5 0
“ 39 10 n 39 10 0

Sperm oil

Whale oil..

The

p.

“115 0 0 115 0 0
0 0 40 0 0

252 gals.32

following

are

the quotations for
53 0 53 0

Iron (Sc. pig mxd num) p. ton.
Tin (Straits & Banca)p. 1121b

small

decrease both in

0 £:0 5 0 £10 5 0 £10 5
0
39 10 0 39 10 0 39 10
0 115 0 0 115 0 0 115
0
40 0 0 40 0 0 40

metals:
53 o

53

53 0

53 0

MISCELLANEOUS MEWS.
Week.—The imports this week sho

Imports and Exports for the
a

£10 5
39 10
115 0
40 0

....

COMMERCIAL AMD

dry goods and in general

merchandise, the

14,673,114 against $5,977,653, last week, and $3,488,374
previous week. The exports are $2,902,501 this week agains
$3,928,544 last week, and $1,615,117 the previous week. The exports
of cotton the past week were 960 bales, against 1,245 bales last week
The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry
goods) Aug. 16, and for rue week ending (for general merchandise)

total being
the

Aug. 17 :
NEW YORK FOR

THE WEEK.

1864.

General

1865.

1866.

.1867.

$1,533,626

$2,885,755
2,131,688

$3,867,154

$1,831,803

3.480,415

2,841,311

$4,154,575

Drygoods

$5,017,443
101,962,3:36

$7,347,572
186,962,8 1

2,620,949

merchandise...

Total for the week
Previously reported

Cable.

d.

31 0
76

31 0
7 6

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT

The

a.

“

“

American Securities ha9 ruled firm.
United States 5-20 b >uds have been dealt in to a fair extent, and prices
have improved, In Erie Railway shares the fluctuations have been Con
siderable ; and Illinois Central are rather weaker. Atlantic and Great
Western Railway securities have commanded but little attention.
United States 5-20 bonds close at 73£ to
; Atlantic and Great West¬
ern Railway Debentures 26 to 28, do Consolidated Mortgage bonds 22
to 23, Erie Railway shares 44$ to 45$, and Illinois Central 77$ to 77|.
The highest and lowest prices of the principal American Securities on
each day of the week are subjoined :
Taken as a

lbs

“

weather towards
The

d.

31 0 31 0 31 0
76
76
76
(n^dium)...
“
13 0 13 0 13 0 13 0 13 0
13 0
32 3 32 3
Sp turpentine
“
32 3 32 3 32 3
Petroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs
14
1 3)4 1 8)4 1 4
14
14
spirits. ...per S lbs
0 8)4 0 8)4 0 8% 0 8% 0 8)4 0 84
Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs.
41 9 44 9 44 9 44 9
44 9 44 9
Clover seed (Am. red)
“
41 0 41 0
41 0 41 0 41 0 41 0
London Produce and Metal Markets.—Whale oil, which opened at
£32, is now quoted at £40. The stock in port is low. No change is
noted in any other of the commodities in the telegraphic list.

Ashes—pots
per 112
Rosin (com Wilm).
“

11% @~

from the want of means

Week ending

week petroleum
16d. at which it

Fri. 16. Sat. 17. Mon 19. Tu. 20.

employ it in trade, combined with the more settled
the close of the week, the consol market has assumed a firmer appear
ance, and the upward movement in prices has been rather rapid.
banks have large unemployed balances, and some of the leading institu¬
tions have effected large purchases of stock. There seems to be no
that the consol market will continue very fir :i, and that we
see the quotations at a very high point.
Railways have
more attention, and prices have improved.
The following
shows the prices of consols on each day of the week :
Sat.

to

of beef and pork have be.eu

Bacon and cheese are lower. Lard is

Fri. 16. Sat. 17. Mon 19. Tues. 20. Wed. 21.1Thu :22.
8. d.
s. d.
s. d.
s. d.
s. d:
s. d.
139 0
139 0
139 0
139 0
139 0
Beef (ex. pr. mess) p. 304 lbs 139 0
75
75 6
75 6
75 6
75 6
Pork(Etn. pr. mess) ]a 200 lbs 75 6
43
6
43
0
44 0
44 0
44 0
Bacon (Cnmb. cm) p :112 lbs 44 0
it
kk
52
51
51
6
0
0
50 0
50 0
50 0
Lard (American)
kk
kk
49
50 0
6
50 9
49 6
50 9
50 9
Cheese (tine Am.)

@76

5
5
5
4

lei-

••

firm and 2s. advanced.

@—
©-

76

•

Liverpool Provisions Market—Prices

d.

8.

bbl.

steady throughout the week.

@~
@@-

8.

Bar Silver...'
do
containing
Fine Cake Silver

(extra West.) p.

under :

prices of bullion are now as

Bar Gold
do
Fine
do
Reflnable

.,

150,509,004

....

$4,073,114
155,865,760

$154,662,579 $106,979,779 $191,310,373 $160,538,874
Since Jan. 1
Market.—Trade is reported to be improving, and the
In our report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry
money market firmer, producing a natural reaction against stocks.
Consols close heavy and lower.
U. S. bonds, however, which fell off $ goods for one week later.
The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from
point are recovered, and close as at the commencement. Railroad stocks
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Aug. 20:
close lower.
London Money

Fri. 16.

Console for money
U S. 6’8 (1,862)
Illinois Central shares..
Eri° Railway shares....
Atlantic & Great West¬
ern cons. b,.nds

94%

73.%

78%
45%
21%

Mon. 19. Tues. 20. Wed. 21.

Sat. 17.

21%

94%

45%

77%
45%

77%

21%

21%

21

74%

77%

78

‘15%

94%

94%

94%
73%
,

daily closing for U. S. 6’s (1862) at
Frankioit
77%
...
21% ‘
The

73%

73%

45%

Frankfort were—
77

•

77%

94 9-16
73%
77%
44%
21%
77%

Liverpool Cotton Market.—Heavy receipts from the United States
an unfavorable effect on the markets.
Advices from Man"
Chester are aRo less favorable, and hence the giving way in quotations
since Tuesday*8 opening. Uplands have lost $d. on the week, closing
heavy.
Fri., 16. • Sat., 17. Mon., 19. Tues., 20. Wed., 21. Thn.22.

have had

Bales sold
Price Midd.
“

“

.

.....12,000

Uplds. 10%d.

Orleans

ll%d.

Liverpool Breadstuffs




10,»>00

10,000

10%d.

10%d.

ll%d.

8,000

10%d.

ll%d. 11 l-16d.

10,000

10%d.

11 l-16d.

EXPORTS FROM NEW

Thu. 22

10,000
11 d.

10%d.

Market.—Breadstuffs have lost strength, and

YORK FOR THE WEEK.

1867.

1865.

1866.

$6,808,167

$3,303,616

96,228,815

$2,482,421

125,019,079

116,463,388

$134,570,749

$99,532,431

$127,501,500

$119,425,889

1864.

For the week

127,762,582

Previously reported
Since Jan 1

$2,962,501

exports from this port to different countries (exclusive
specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the foL
lowing table:
Since
This
Since
The value of

of

To
Great Britain...
France

Holland &
Germany

Belg.

Other N.Europe

Spain

Other S. Europe
East indies
China & Japan .

Australia
Br.N A Colonies

This
week.

Jan. 1,1867

$1,599,906 $65,355,821
204,492
126,275

309,680
58,509
12,900

32,S71

88,817

To
Cuba

7,324.016 Hayti
3,201,796 Other W. I
14,136,352 Mexico
1,286,459 New Granada...
854,716 Venezuela

3,902,160

11,331
1,449,422
1,546,547

1,667,862

Br. Guiana
Brazil
Other S. A. ports
All other ports..

week.

Jan. 1.

$65,805

$3,610,024

225,867
81,161
71,499

4,559,242
1,20",0^9
2,000,1 36

27,521

32,249

433,458
784,446
1,768.840
2,116,582

30,049

955,491

762,560

236
The

THE CHRONICLE.

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
ending August 20, 1867 :

®l)c Bankers’ ©alette.

Tork for the week

Aug. 13—St. City of Wash¬
ington, Liverpool-

Mexican silver..

Gold bars

44

14—St.

America, BremenForeign silver

Gold and silver bars
14—8t. Morro Castle,
Havana—

44

Spanish gold

44

16—St. Teutonia,
Gold bars

Liverpool—
gold..,.

American
Gold bars

Total for tbe week

Total cince Jan. 1,

■*Tiu4ame

.

The Money Market.—The Banks statement of

$17,061,229
31,827,097
2*,638,616
20,864,791
22,281,889
13,418,533

10,755,072

imports of bpecie at this port during the week have been

as

follows:
Aug 10—St. Corsica, NassauSilver
12—St. Rising

44

Silver
25

“

Star, Aa1,574

Total for week

200

Spark,

Since Jan. 1

California.—The

from

August 12, arrived
ing consignees:

$116,724

Previously reported.... 1,189,103

Tampico—
Trbasurb

6,000

Aug. 15—St. Columbia, HavanaGold
108,925

pinwall—

Gold
Silver
13—St. Electric

$1,305,827

J FROM

steamship Arizona, from Aspinwall

.

J. w. Seligmann & Co

Wells, Fargo & Co

tFROM ASPINWALL,

$943,194 00

$1,200 00

Total ft\m San Francisco and

Aspinwall

—

The arrivals of treasure from San Francisco since the
ment of the year, are

$944,394 00
commence-

shown in the following statement:
Since

Date.
Steamship. At date.
Jan. 10.Rising Star. $874,764
20.New York..
525,956
Jan. 31. H. Chauncey 1,072,17 •
Feb.10.Ocean Queen 788,027
Feb.22.R s ng
952,082
Mar. 4 H. Chauncey. 818,818
44
13.Ocean Queen 244,888
Mar.24.Rising Star.. 833,151
44

.

Jan. 1.
$874,764
1,400,72•
2,472,8 5
3,260,922
4,213 004
5,031,8^2
5,276,710
6,109,861

April 1 H. Chauncey 891,992 7,001,853
44
14.Ocean Queen 1,142,884 8,144,737
44

50,346 00

500,000 00

N. G.

8. L. Isaacs & Asch.

22.New * ork... 1,114,778 9,259,515

May 2.H. Chauncey.

206,214 9,465,729

Date.

Since

Steamship.

At, date. Jan. 1.
May 11.Arizona
409,667 9,875,396
May 25,Ocean Queen 565,247 10,440,643
June 2.H. Chauncey.
774,31311,214,956
June 11. Arizona
6^3,26211,868,218
June 23.0c’n
Queenl,141,19813,009,416

It must also be taken into account that the balance in the
Sub-

July 4.Rising Star. 804,v50 13,813,666
July 11.Arizona.... 699.493 14,513,159
July 2l.Oc’n Queenl,158,396 15,671,505
Aug. l.H. Ch’ncey. 1,858,062 17,529,617
Aug. 11, RisingStar 1,165,844 18,695,461
Aug. 20, Arizona...

Treasury is swelled by about $7,000,000 of Compound Notes, lately
redeemed, and by about $2,500,000 of Clearing House certificates
recently paid off; both of which items will be early marked off,
reducing the balance nearly ten millions. Really, therefore, the
coin and currency balauce of the
Sub-Treasury is only $121,000,000 ; and not $131,000,000, as appears
from the statement of yes¬
terday.
Since the 15th inst about $7,000,000 of
August Compound
Notes have been redeemed at tbe
Sub-Treasury, and about $6,000,.

943,194 19,638,655

National Treasury.—The

tain

following forms present a summ iry of cer¬
Treasury and Custom Houses
by the Treasurer io trust for National banks :

weekly transactions

1.—Securities held

at the National

Date.

For circulation.

July 27

$340,63 ,500

3

340,649 500

“

For U. S. Deposits.

340,649,500
340,649,500
2.—National bank currency
17

amount

issued

(including worn-out notes) returned, and the

Week

,

“

3

Aug. 10
44

17

Currency issued.
Aggregate.
,

Current week.
$.6,250
174,600
68,020

82,380

$303,328,876
03,503,476
303,571,496
303,653,876

Weekending.

Currency
returned.

$4,522,462
4,547,562
4,595,862

4,455,015

Aug.10

486,50 *
49 ,000

“

3

17

605,tOO

Distributed.
$314,376
575,519
347,563
448,189

considerable

proportion of these liquidations have been made in bank currency
there must have been a reduction in the
legal tender reserves large
enough to make itself felt by the banks.
The following are the quotations for loans of
various classes:

Currency in
Circulation.

$298,806,414
298,955,914
298,975,634

298,988,861

Bureau by Trea¬
destroyed :

Receive 1.
$359,000

“

A considerable amount must also have been
retired
at other Sub-Treasuries and at
Washington. As a

amount in circu¬

8.—Fractional currency received from the
Currency
surer and distributed
weekly ; also the amount

July 87

000 at Boston.

379.447.450
379.437.450
38,787,950
379,437,450
(weekly and rggregate), and the

lation at date:

ending.
July 27

-

Total.
$3^9 429,450

$38,797,950
38.797.950
38.787.950

Aug. 10
“

disposition to discount paper at 6@6i per
apparently, from an impression that they will be able soon to
get the full legal rate. The consequent preference for demand loans
has a tendency to keep down the rate
upon those operations.
An expectation prevails in some
quarters that the Treasury will
come to the relief of the market
by buying a few millions of Seventhirties, this supposition being based upon the fact that the balance
in the Sub-Treasury runs
unusually high, rather than upon anyofficial intimatioDS to that effect.
Perhaps it may not be deemed im¬
probable that the Secretary will become a buyer of the Seven-thirties
of June or July, or both; for his balances will well enable
him to
do so, while it is to be presumed that he is desirous of
losing no op¬
portunity for carrying forward his funding operations; but whether
he will deem it prudent to buy the notes at the
present high price,
and whether he would not, at the same time, be a seller of
Fivetwenties to a corresponding amount, are matters
open to question.
cent,

SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

$25,692 00 Weill & Co
113,900 00 Order
65,481 00
68,700 00 Total from San Francisco
119,075 00

Call loans
Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills, 2
months
-

'■ 395.300

232,700

255,958

Per cent.
4 @ 5
6 @ 7
6

@ 7

Good endorsed
4 months

bills, 3 &

do
single names
Lower grades

Per cent

7#@ 8

9
11

@10
@15

United States Securities.- -The market for
Governments has

Destroyed.
$263,494

Monday

loans about 1 per cent.
The banks show less

at this port August 20, with treasure to the follow

Manama Railroad Co
Eugene Kelly & Co
Dabney, Morgan & Co

last

market had begun to feel the dis¬
turbing effect of the Western crop movement. The legal tender
ilne showed a loss of 6^ millions and the
deposits a decrease of about
millions, while the amo unt of loans and discounts was almost
stationary. So large were the surplus balances of the banks that
thi^ large withdrawal of funds has had little effect
upon the market,
beyond causing less to be done at the minimum rate of 3 per
cent.,
the bulk of transactions
having been on the basis of 4@5 per cent.
During the present week there have been further withdrawals ot
currency to the West, though probably not to the extent of last
week’s shipments, and at the close there is a
perceptible reduction
of the amount of money offered
by the banks; so that, judging from
the elements at present at work, it cannot be deemed
improbable
that the banks may early make an effort to advance the rate on
call

1867.$39,029,744

.

Friday, Aug. 23,1867, P. M.

revealed the fact that the
money

time in

<-$52,095,136 1858
19,217,381 1857
31,579,453 1856
27,5^3,724 1855
37,835,951 1854
3,263,858 1853
32,432,153 1852....?
47,496,512

;

47,639
21,051

$601,888
38,427,856

Previously reported

77,118 I
19,000 |

1864
1863
1862...
1861
1860
1859

The

1,200 |
164,937 j

Hamburg-

Same time in
1866

i^-The substance of the table of Stock Sales
usually pub.
lfshed bore will be found in tbe Sales
Table, page 207,

44

18,943 I

Silver coin

80,000

.

Ang. 16— St. Queen, Liverpool—
American gold
26,000
16—St. City of London,

147,000

[August 24,1867.

been unsettled and

irregular, partially in consequence of the expec¬
ease in
money, and partially from the arrival of

tation of diminished

unusually large amount of securities from the country. There
been considerable
speculative movement; some having sol3
Week ending.
Current week.
short,” in expectation of lower prices, while others
Total to date.
July i7.
being large
$4,678,563
$22,266,944 holders have used
3
6,789,304
every means for sustaing the market. At each
29,056 248
Aug.10
4,744,460
32,800,708 successive decline, the
17
foreign bankers have come into the
3,264,910
36,028,625
market as buyers
partially! sustaining the market; but the
6.—Receipts from Customs at the specified ports weekly :
Week eud’gN. York. Boston.
predominant tendency has been toward lower prices. To-day
Phila. Balt;more. N.Orleans.
Total.
July in
$1,90 ,542 $276,293 $126,069 $100,98i $95,518
$2,500,209 the market has been excited by a vague
27..
2,576,314
291,844
impression that the Treas¬
95,299
136,560
81
1,338,669
167,678 '
6!,477
103,095
16,084
1,687,003 ury will shortly resume the purchase of Seven-thirties. The
August 1 to 10. 8,792,406
“shorts,”
468,139
229,316
120,926
59,626
4,670,413 in
consequence, have freely covered their contracts, and the result
We call attention to the card of Messrs. Edward
Lambert and James has been an advance in prices of
per ctent. upon yesterday’s
Mason, on the fourth page of this paper, announcing tbe removal of Mr. figures. Holders are
very sensitive as to the tendencies of the
L&mbert to No. 8 Wall street, and tbe formation of a
partnership under money market, and indications favor the supposition that, in the
and style of Edward Lambert <b
Co,
event of money
becoming closer, quotations would fall heavily.
4.—Receipts

on account
current fiscal year to date :

of Internal Revenue weekly, and total for

an

has

“

44

44

„

44




-

wars-

1867.]

August 24,

The following are

THE CHRONICLE.

the closing prices of leading securities,

com¬

July
Aug.
Aug.
Ang.
Aug.

1,596,500
4,026,500

2

July

July 19. July 26. Ang. 2. Aug. 9. Aug. 16. Aug. 23
110%
110%
111%
111%
111
112
111%
111%
1137£
113%
H3%
109
110
109%
109%
110%
109%
109%
109%
109%
110%
110%
110%
107%
108%
108%
108%
108%
108%
107%
108%
108%
108%
108%
108%
102%
103
103
102%
102%
102%

s. 6’a* 1881 coup
S. 5-30’a, 1862 coupons.
S. 5-20’b, 1864
S. 5-20’s, 1865
“
..
S. 6-20’B, 1865, N. IBB...
S. 5-'0’b, 1867, c. . .
S 10-40 b,
0. s 7-30’b let Bones

5
12.
19
26

July

pared with preceding weeks :
U
U
0
U
rj
0.
U

July

237

2,752, 00
4,020,500
2,921,900

441.500

9
16
23

97,000
208,000
119,000

796,500
456,000

170,0)0
106 500

1,866,850

2,572,000
7,171,250
3,34),700
4,181,600
3.590,850

419,000

449,100

156,000

457,509

6,462,350

1,363,400
2,172,500

437.000
797.006

2,137,750
367,80)

1,492 500

1,041,600
276,350

4,240,650

1,823,400

The Gold Market.—The

129;<)00

590,000

3,937,500

216,000

6,770,050

of the

gold premium has been
comparatively steady. The speculation based upou rumors of over¬
n S 7-30’s 2d Series
107%
107%
107%
107%
issues of national obligations proved of short
duration, and on the
107%
107%
107%
107%
107%
0! S 7-30’8 3rd series.....
operators realizing upon their gold, the price fell back U about its
Railroad and Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market has
former figures.
The “ short ” interest appears to have been to a
shown rather more activity, but has been devoid of speculative
large extent settled, and the rate of interest on gold loans has been
spirit, in the absence of outside operators. At the beginning of the easier,
having ranged frbm “ flat” to 1 64 per cent, per day. The de¬
week there was an apparent desire among the larger holders of
mand for customs duties has been
quite active, but it has been fully
stocks to realise, the unfavorable aspect of the banka’ statement
met by the sales of coin
by the Treasury. The expert movement is
having somewhat shaken their confidence in the permanent ease of
now confined to small
shipments of bullion. As the period approaches
the money market. Prices fell off 1@2£ per cent, under the realis¬
for the export of the new crops of breadstuffs and cotton there is
ing movement, but the decline subsequently brought in buyers, less
disposition among the foreign houses to keep large balances in
causing a partial recovery, so that at the close prices do not vary
coin. The expectation of the payment of over tour millions of coin
materially from those of last Friday. The market, however, lacks
interest on Ten forty bonds on Sept. 1st has a
tendency to make
confidence, and would be likely to yield materially in the event of
107%

107%

108

107%
107%

107%
107%
107%

107%

the market easier.

any adverse turn in the loan market.
The following were the closing quotations at

the regular board

'

compared with those of the six preceding weeks;
Cumberland Coal

Quicksilver

July 19.

uly 12
40%
33%

Canton Co

Mariposa pref....

38%
34%
52%

....

48

23%

48%
2)3%

106%
71%

74%

116%
104%
79%

119%
107%

110

112%
91%
124%
48%
72%

103%
79%

110

Clev. and Pittsb.

91%

91

Clev.and Toledo.

1)9%
44%

121

Northwestern....
“

68
97

preferred

Bock Island

*

Fort Wayne
Illinois Central

44%
70%
99%
101%

101%
...

..

3i‘

•

27%

49

105%

105* *

70%

69%

120

94%
123

48%
70%
101%

124

104%
80%
110%
9)3%
123%
45%

....

124%

104%
82%

104
81
110
93

93%
46%
70%
103%
105%
119%

101%
105
119

69%

102%
103%
119

following statement shows the volume of transactions in
shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of
the week, closing with this day’s business :
Sat.
70

H5

“
Improv’t “
Telegraph “
Steamship4*

Mon.
126

29,172

Mining

570

.

6,787
27,270

Total current week.
TotalPrevious w’k.

34,057
30,985

.

34,860
928

1,750
3,360
2,420

19,175

43,789

40,725

600
800
200

2 0
200
400

32,840 217,152

8,910

1,961
1,350

750

1,955

22,036

44,473
16,340

1,100
200

45,421
33,837

Railro’d.

Min-

ending— Bank.
528 465,847
May 3
“

10
44
17,
“
24
“
31
June 7

Coal.

4,873

.'11,761

371,2/0 2,463
827 294,415 1,151
826 293,377 2,163
934 290,750 1,583
1,828 314,512 1,381
14........
653 397,920 2,586
“
21
681 224,243
819
“
28
422 537,561 3,436
298 395,506 4,466
July 5 (5 days)
44
12
1,182 464,286 15,742
“
19
1,281 287,142 4,955
“26
1,027 541,057 5,940
Aug. 2
1,202 359,786 1,855
9
990 277,709 1,590
“
“

6,400

44

16
24

603
516

The

following is

177,061

217,152

Im-

-

300

565

12,835
25,090
37,925

40,095
are

102,500
157,695

5,550
3,200
2,423 4,460
380

6,537 14,074
6,76 • 5 048
6,3)6 3 841

1,600 19,357

9,260

5,438

405,127
308,755

201,825
260,196

a summary

_

_

Fri.

,

City b’ds

Company B’nds.

1,000

10,000

^25,000

471,000

650,000

138,0' >0 113,000

51,000

49,000

50,000 134,0?*)
92,000 76,000

26,000

Total Car. w’k...$658,550
1,330,500 1,821,5001,147,100
Previous week..; 396,950
655,300 622,800

736,400

The totals, weekly,

lation:

Weekending

Friday. '
May 8

,

.

May

10

May
May

17
24

”

May 81..
June 7;..;:;:;:.
June 14.. ,,**]**’
June 21...

*»•




since May 3

are

GovemmeiitsBonds.
Notes.

3.918.600
4,628,800
8,363,900
4,355,200

1.905.600
8,172,650
3,585,350

141,100
567,200
22.000

41,000

725,500 920,560

State &

City Bonds.
643.000

520,000
682,800

515,000

68,500
161.500

744,000
795,250
495,000
604,7.001

866,-00

3,319v650

491,850

608.500

•

Company
Bonds.

203,000
238.500
223,200
158,100
218.500
158,000
2)33,000
153,000

165,000

4,010,700

4,291,900

6,113,400
3.266.100
4,143,150

4.775.100
4,815,600
4,641,200

0%
0%

141%
140%
140%

140%

140%

141%
141

132%

141%

Heavy.
Firm.

140%

140

Firm.

140%
140%

$5,311,997

$1,165,844
129,024
152,000—

1,44G,868

$6,758,865
..

$601,588
2,978,497—

3,580,385

up

$3,178,480
5,920,557

from unreported sources)

$2,742,077

The transactions for the week at the Custom House and Sub

Treasury have been
Aug.

as

follows

:

Receipts.
$381,179 12
378,675 99
576,159 46

12

“

13
14

“

“

15

“

16
17

“

642,744 13
519,903 15

Sub-Treasury
,
Payments.
Receipts.
$10,386,720 43
$10,317,129 87
1,007,124 89
2,631,3*7 68
1,943.522 78
2,311,196 01
.

270,658 06
1 632,453 21
2,252,6.5 07

1,236,713 00
3,251,599 29

479,835 14

$2,978,496 99

$17,493,144 44

$23,690,104 28
129,087,202 19

Sub-Treasury morning of Aug. 5.

3,942,074 93

$152,777,306 47
Deduct payments

during the week—

Balance on Saturday
Increase during the

17,493,144 44

evening

$135,284,162 03
6,196,909 84

week

Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $393,000.
Included
in the receipts of customs were $174,000 in gold, and $2,804,496 in Gold Certificates.

The

following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since Juue 1 :
Weeks

Custom
House.

Ending

June
44
44

1...,
8....
15
21....
29....

44

“

July

6

1,895,713
2,039,064
1,726,400

..

13....

44

20....
27....

“

Aug.
44

“

£

Payments.
27,547,745
8,347,553
17,331,277

1,955,086
1,789.140

...

3
IP....
17

Changes in
Receipts.

Balances.

18,850,257

123,583,732
134,112,919
134,616,271
132,129,745
132,459,170
130,492,492
130,581,603
130,311.621

18,876,740

17,8)34,628

14,932,695

1,610,006
2,078,270
1,901,280

12,446,169

25,086,873
15,022,070

25,416,297
13,055,392

28.444,856

28.533,967

17,330,480

2,576,313

21,804.904

2,447,422
2,685,075

18,851,2*4

17,060,498
21,689,378
17,416,869

18,180,192
17,49 >.144

23,690, L04

2,978,496

18.605,724

1)30,196,095
128,161,670

129,087,202
135,284,162

Balances.
Dec.
8,691,487
Inc. 10,5.9,186
Inc.
503,351
IuC.
2,4~6,526
Inc.
329,425
Dec. 1,966,678
89,111
Inc..
Inc..
269,982
Dec.
511,526
Inc.
1,4)34,425
Inc.
325.5)32
Inc.
6,196,909

Foreign Exchange.—The demand for

limited, and with
rates are

a

supply in excess
difficulty.

foreign bills has been very
of the wants of the market

maintained with

The

Total

5,954,50i>

0%

141%

Strong.
Heavy.

for the week
shown in the following formula :

was as

Supply deficient (made

3,957,500

amount

141%

Apparent excess of reported supply for week
Specie in banks on Saturday, Aug. 17

Week.

shown in the following tabu-

0%

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

“

571,500 $4,240,650
507,400 1,823 400
68,000
500,000
24.000
216,000

140%
141%

Specie in banks on Saturday, Aug. 10
Treasure receipts from California
Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports
Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury

638,5001,173,900 6,770,050

85,100
333.500

8.801.600

_

0%
0%

140%

ending Aug. 17,

Total
Balance in

5,000 10,269
3,000 8,108
1,500 8,884

141
141%
141%
141%

140
132

-

Tone of
Market.
Firm.

Clos¬
Highest. Range, ing.

The movement of coin and bullion at this port

shown in

Steam-

Wed.
Sat.;
Mon.
Tues.
Thur.
O.Bonds... .$622,550 $670,5001,006,50 ) 979,100 887,500
„

21.

Current week
Previous week
Jan. 1 to date

260,196
201,825

of the amount of Government bonds
and notes, State and
City securities, and railroad and other bonds
sold at the Regular Board on each
day of the past week :
U. S. Notes
Stite&

Opening. Lowest,
140% 140%
141
141
141% 141%
14 % 140%
141% 140%
140% 140%

Custom House.

45,421
52,290

Tele-

Wedn’day, 44
lay,

9,260

ing. pro’t. graph, ship. Other. Total.
6*160 12,150 14.084 12,700 4.946 516,920
3,300 10,150 14,247 17,491 5,680 425,777
3,620 7,500 7,925
8,916 9,358 333,713
5,600 6,950 7,870 15,875 6,0)7 338,679
4,000 10,050 5,254 11,828 9,038 333,437
7,810 9,350 10,177 17,148 6,212 3'18,418
9,978 10,005 16,517 23,295 6,661 467,615
2,825 2,500 6,253 11,915 15,395 261,661
10,400 9,4)30 15,702 22,868 25,841 625.86
23,425 4,850 23,753
8.600 8,344 469,242
24,635 19,675 42,837 16,672 5,643 590,672
5,150 5,900 15,115 11,441 7,631 338 615
10,600 13,500 24 309 18,295 13,->39 628,167

505

are

Thursday,
Friday,

19,357

485

18,871
26,550

weekly siuce May 3

2,423
4,450
1,600

1,700
1,040

450
125

26,009
31,100

41,211
29,278

140

following statement:

Week

44

Fri. Week.
120
516

18,823
25,650

The transactions in shares
the

570

Thurs.
10

500

843
14J

Gas
At Regular Board
At Open Board...

Wed.
105

2,026
1,500

2,200

85

410
200
200

1,400

Express “

Tues.

35,766

400
100

gold market during the week closing with
shown in the following table :

Saturday, Aug. 17
Monday,
44 19
Tuesday,
“ 20

45%

The

Bank shares
Eailroad 44
Coal
“ ..*

Friday

12)3

69

106%
118%

119

....

•

.

68%

106%
80%

104

•

•

21
104

7 %
120

106%

•

49%

109%x.d.l05%

83

•

•

32%
51%
22%

110

Michigan Central

•

....

105%
70%

New York Central
Erie.......
Hudson River.../
Beading
Mich. Southern..

The fluctuations in the

July 26. Aug 2. Aug. 9. Ang 16. Aug. 23

38%

course

of

following are the closing quotations for the several classes
foreign bills, compare^ with those of the three last weeks :

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

Paris, long
do short
't

Antwerp
Swiss

July 26.
109%® 109%
110 @110%
110%® 110%

5.13%@5.12%
5.1i%@5.10
5.11%©5.08%
@

Ang. 2.
109%® 109%
110

@110%
110%® 110%

5.13% £5.12%
5.11%<S)5,10

5,1T%@5,08%
....

Aug. 9.

Aug. 23.

109

@ 109%
109%® 109%
169%© 109%
J09%@ 110%
109%® 110
5.15 ®5.1-i% 5.17% @5.15
5.12%@M1% 5.15 @5.12
5,11%®^*. 16% 5.18% ©5.16%

511%© ft’16%

5.16%

Hamburg

86%@

Amsterdam
Frankfort
Bremen
Berlin

41 ^O,
41 >4®

79% @ 79%
72%@ 72%

41%@ 41%
41 %@
79% @ 79%
72%@ 72%

9 41

36%@36%
41%@ ..
41
@41%
76%@ 78%

36%
41%

36%@

36?,'®

41%

@

41

41%

72%@

78%
72%

@
78% @

@72%

72

following’ statement shows the
condition of the Associated Banks of New York City tor the week
eading at the commencement of business on August 17, 1867 :

July SO

Aug.10

15,767,146

Aug. 3

-AVERAGE

AMOUNT OF

Legal

Net

Circula-

Loans and

tion.
Deposits. Tenders
Capital. Discounts. Specie.
*3.000,000 $7.37(5,5*7 $1,127,530 $740,279- $6,817,453 $2,851,656

New York
Manhattan
Merchants’...

2,050.000
3.000,000
2,000,000

Mechanics’
Union
America
Phamix

1.500.000

3,000,000
1,300,000
1,000.000
1,000,000

City

Tradesmen’s
Fulton
000,000
Chemical
:500,000
Merchants’ Exchange.
1,235,000
National
1,500,000
Butchers’
300,000
Mechanics and Traders’.
000,000
Greenwich
200.000
Leather Manuf. National
000,000
Seventh Ward, National.
500,000
State of New York
2,000,000
American Exchange
5,000,000
Commerce
10,000,000
1.000.000
Broadway
Ocean
.*.
1.000.000
Mercantile
1,000.000
Paciilc..
122,700
2.000.000
Republic
Chatham
450.000
412.500
People’s
North American
1,000.000
Hanover
1.000,000
..

Irving
Metropolitan

500,000
4,000.000

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

(00,000
1.000,000
1.000.000

1.000,000
1,500,000
1.000,000

Continental.
Commonwealth

2,000,000
750.000
300.000
400,000

Oriental
Marine
Atlantic

Importers and Traders’..
Park

Mechanics’ Ranking Ass.

Grocers’
7
=..
North River
East River
Manufacturers & Mer
Fourth National
Central National
Second National
Ninth National
First National
Third National
New l'ork N. Exchange.
Tenth National
Bull’s Head
Croton National
National Currency

Bowery National.'.

300,000
1.500,000
2,000.000
500.000
300.000
400.000

350,000
500.500

5,000,000
3,000,000
300,000
1.000,000

500,000
1,000,000
300,000
1,1KK).000

200,000
200,(XX)
11X1,000

250,000

Stuyvcsant
Eleventh Ward
Total

5,35*5,710
3,037,ISO
8,147,645
3,714.4(54
3,045,069

86,623
S5,:!20

480,5:10

690,722

1,950
288,2.55

3,107,915

22,438

4,826,221

7,219.582

1.857,311
5,055,579
3.490.225
2,<i30,43 L

224,340
3*‘3,336

121,8*54
100,395

3,40(5,902
1,304,898
5,082,301
10,54*5,1X51

1,539,516

4,003,722
2,(X 15,755

1,318,912
864,765

8,299,232

3,740,692
808,046
491,166
701,126
1,234,244
2,009,568
827,71
585,203
525,640
538,245
125,812
849,294

2,718,246
1,855,987
1,918,688
1,968,543
5,159,758
2,*00.408

i

93.945

437,67*5

452,533
489,755
257,703
195,720
42,21

208*276
24,222

2,009,333

258,587
178,581

54,286
65,2*51
15,429
19,102

2.(51(5,8*51

1,999,998
1,044, *189

78 7,39

1,770,696

4,806,122

11,701
882,411
578,(HX)

5,656,761

2,678,833
945,356

1,000,526

1,625,3*51
862,676

1,685.790

24,509,413

5,482,592

31.80S

<XH),tH)0

3.231,989

67,526
17,512

794.270

4,603,697

1,600,160
1,365,579
2,127,930
2,128,170
I.679,000
10,853,535

481,678
140,487
S58.750
129,850
6,578
333,(MX)
287,436
191,829

11.325

243,337
S

34,551
18,71X5
26..820
50,891

1.984,262
2,774,950

2,433,093
4.608,160
2,971,146
4,176,217

2,796,440
1,323.587
1,833,303

1,291,994
6.417.213

13,018.467
817,909
861.082

8,235

1,295,063

1.008,921
2.975,000
1,287,097
518,560
257,923
067,418
550,5-10
183,040

82,520,200 253,232,411

744,882
667,601

804,500
239,000
744,000
595,208
195,476

,

266,089

1,439,837
5,19-2,5-16
581,037
308,435

*284,8:48
207,865
210,405
4.164,766
3,548,215
333,286

3,133,844
1,050,814
1,112,823
275,863
686,100

2,693,512
773,682
1,905,100
1,407,468
415,23-4

149,091

33.5,296

504,781

.

516,666
238,841

110.246
11X1,418
62.098

12,000
69,473,793

$490,808,035
414,2-9,517
18,743,050
19,272,301

previous week

n re as

35
05
19

10

lol

lows:
Dec.

Dec.

Circulation

Inc.

The

following

are

$194,820
608, 90
101,479

the totals lor

Deposits
Legal Tenders.
a

June 1. 252,791,514
June 8. 250.477,298
.lone 15. 246.22 , 465
June 22 243,640.477
June 29. 242.547,954

July 6. 246,361,257
.Inly 13. 217.913,0**9
July 20. 249,580,255
July 27. 251,243,830
Aug. 3. 254.910,010
Aug. 10

253,427,340
Aug. 17. 253,232,411

Specie
14,617,070
15,699,038
12,656,389

tion.

Legal

33.747.039

190,386,143

33,719,088
33,707,109

184,730,335

58,459,827
55,923,107

18

33,033,171

33,542,500

180.213.257

0.401,919
5,311,99 r
5,920,557

Clearings

461.734,216

70.174,755

9.3!*9,585

Aggregate
442.675,585

57,924,294
62,810,192

7,768,996
10.853,171
12,715,40 4

460,968.602

442,440,804
493,944,354
494,081,990

33,069,397 191,524.312 71,196,472
3;.053,869 197,872,003 72,495,708 521,259,463
33,574,948 199.435,052 73.441,301 491.830.952
33.90.S59 2UG.00S.8-6 74,605,8 40 481,097,226
38,559,117 2(11,158,75 4 75.098,762 408,i 21.716
33,505,378 199,4» >8,705 76,047,131 499,868,035

33,6‘9,757

194,046,591

64,473,793

414,289,517

Philadelphia Banks.—The

following shows the totals of the
leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for the last and previous
weeks:
Aug. 10.

9at’ltAl
Loans

Aug. 17.

$15,017,150 $16,017,150
53,557,-69
304 979

Specie
Legal Tenders

63,549,449

317,398
15.767,146
4,973,449
6,7(H),980

15,909,195
4,959,647
6,621,440
36,861.477
10,627,761

Due from Banks
Due to Banks

Deposits
Circulation

Clearings

29,725.0(X)

Balances....

2,807,458

36,364,835
10,628,310

28,239,163
3,127,435

Decrease.
Increase.
Decrease.
Increase
Increase
Decrease.
Increase
Decrease.
Increase

Date.
June
1...
June
8..
June .15
June 22
June 29.
July 6.

July




* !

Legal Tenders.
Loans.
16,881,11)9
52,747,3(8

$8,122
12,419
141,949

13,802

.

139,540

.

496,612
819

.

.

The annexed statement shows the condition of the
Banks lor a series of weeks.

24,613,921

24,670,852

262,507

262,878

Circulation (National)
Circulation iState)

following

The

past

1,435,837
229,977

16,800.720

53,158,124

16,COO,010
15,961,424
16.105,061

53,192.049
52,968,441
52.538.962

16,022,675

52,420,272

368,261
373,308
365,187
461,951

16,2^,914

52.392,55*

419,3-99

10,637,432
10,642,920
10,046,298
10,642,224

10,641,311
10,640,201
10.641,770

Circulation.—,
State.
Deposits. National.
279,275
37,006,894 24,725,794

Legal
3.,

June

<

Tenders.

Specie.
571,526
92,694,925
436,767
93,436,167
511,095
93.725,428

17,17 (,901
16,767,854

36,033,716

470,5-44

92,996,703

517,456

37,473,337

8.
i-.

*1^163

1.

July

36.039,933
36,521,129

94,747,778
95,046,458

15
22
29.
5
12.

Ik

n

Aug.
tt

..

..

..

..

92.9

95,096,571
95.594,214

....

96.367,558
97.098,873
96,901.687

19

15

719,795

15,758,396
16.055,141
915,298 15,065,466
S33,466 15,397,S28

38,251,040

24,804,153
24,771,778
24,768,947
24,727,383

268,768
271,048

267,294
266,353

266,494
264,922

24,801,823
24.771,684

38.610,434
650,203 15.427.625 *8,328,613 24,744.291
361.878 15,54 2,401 38.518,722 24,653,742
472,045 15.511,081 3S,398,850 24,055,075
412,217 15,196,701 38 283,576 24,670,852
365,127 14,697,154 36,902,686 24,613,921

BANK

252,696

256,564
263,250
288,672

262,507

LIST.

STOCK

(Marked thus * are
not

National.)

I;

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

Bowery
Broadway
Broiiklvn
Bull’s Head*
Butchers & Drovers
Central
Central (Brooklyn)..
Chatham

Chemical.
Citizens’

Deposits.
o »,•_>

if 4

100
100
75
50
100
25
50
50
25
100
50
25
100

City
City (Brooklyn)....
Commerce

Commonwealth...
Continental
Corn Exchange* .
Croton .'

Currency'
Dry Dock

.

.
.

.

.

.

..

Quarterly—

400,000 Jan. and July..
100 1,000,000 May and Nov..
50
300,000 Jan. and July..
100 10,000,000 Jan. and July.
100
750,000 Jan. and July..
100 2,000,000 Jan. and July..
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug..
100
200,000
Jan. ’67
10
100
100,000 Quarterly
30
200,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67.
.8%
50
350,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67
5
100
250,000 Jan. and July.. July '67
4
100
150,000 Jan. and July.. July '67
5
100
500,000 May aud Nov.., May ’67
10
100
10
500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67
100 5,000,000 Jan. and July.. July’67
6 108 109
30
600,000 May and Nov.. May ’67
5
20
5
160,000 Jan. and July.. July’67
25
10
200,000May and Nov. May ’67
50
300,000 Jan. and J uly.., July ’67
5
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. .'July ’67
5 112 160
100 1,500,000 Jan. and J uly.. July :67
5 115 117%
50
600,000 Jan. and July.., July ’67........4 105%
50
600,(XX) Feb. and Aug.., lAag. ’67
6
50
400,000 Feb. and Aug., ,;Aug ’67
6
50 2,050,000 Feb. and Aug.. jAug. ’67
5 1M
30
.5
252,000 Jan. and Jufy.. July ’67
100
500,000 Jan. and July.., July ’67
5 102*
100
400,000 Jan. and July.., ’July ’67
6 140
ioo 1,000,000 Jan. and J uly.., |July ’67
5 111
25 2,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67
5 118
50
6
500,000 Jan. and July..
50
500,000 May and Nov,. iMay ’67
....5 no
5
25
600,000 May and Nov.., IMav ’67
100 1,000,000 May and Nov.., May ’67
5
50 3,000,000 Jan. and July., July ’67
5 118
50 1,235,000 Jan. and July.., July ’67.
5 110
100 4,000,000 Jan. and July.., July ’67
6 133 13o
100 1,000,000 May and Nov
May ’67
5
100
5
300,000 Jan. and July.., July ’67
50 1,500,000 April and Oct... Apr. 67
6 112
100 3,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
5 136
100
200,000 Jan. and July... Jah. ’67..9&a,2%
100
6
800,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
..

ilsr:
First
First (Brooklyn)
Fourth
Fulton.
Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg).
Greenwich*
-

.

Importers & Trad...
Irving.'

LeatherManufact’rs.

Long Isl (Brook.)

..

Manhattan*

Manufacturers’
Mauufac. & Merch.*
Marine

Market
Mechanics’
Mechanics’ (Brook.)
Mech. Bank. Asso..
Meehan. «fc Traders’
Mercantile
Merchants’
Merchants’ Exch...

Metropolitan

„

..

Nassau*...
Nassau (Brooklyn)
National (Gallatin)
New York
New York County..
NewYorkExcha nge.
Ninth
:
North America....
North River*
Ocean
Oriental*
Pacific
Park

.

.

•

•

Tradesmen's.

87,077,456

tT'doa

.

......

•

•.

•

•

.

....

..

...

....

....

....

,

.

•

.

..

•

..

....

100
100
50
50
50
50
100
20

Stuyvesant*

•

....

Phoenix

...

*

....

25

St. Nicholas’
Seventh Ward
Second
Shoe & Leather
Sixth.,
State of New York.

• •

...

Peoples’*

.

July ’67
5 140
July ’67
e5
July ’67....
4
May ’67
5 117% 117%
July ’67
5
July ’67
6
July ’6T
5
July ’67
12
5
July ’67
Apr. ’67
4
July ’67
5
July ’67
5 108 109
July ’67
6
Juy '67
..8
May ’67
6
July '67
5
May ’67
6
July ’67
5
July ’67......:.5
118%
110
July ’67
6
July ’67
.5 106 107
Aug.’67
5

3,000,000 Jan. and July..
100,001; Jan. and July
500,000 •Jan. and July..
5,000,000 May and Nov..
300,000 Jan. and July..
500,000 Jan. and July..
25u,000 Jan. and July.
1,000,000 •Jan. and July.
300,000 Jan. and July..
200,000
“
Quarterly.
800,000 Jan. and July
000 Jan. and July
000 Jan. and July
'an. and July
450,000 Ji
300,000

Bid. Askd

Last Paid.

Periods.

..

East River

enth.
Third.

Amount.

25

37,252,614
37,174,269
37,333,279
36,616,817
87

100
25

Fribat.

Dividend.

Capital.

Companies.

Republic

Philadelphia

Circulation.

13,338,877

38,398,850
24,655,075
263,250

the comparative totals for a series of week

Loans.

...

Specie.
334,893
346,615

arc

''

13,992,942
13,398,^64

•

Grocers’
Hanover

Tenders.

Deposits
',314,763
179,477,170

11.197,700
8,738.094

Dec. $5,362,114
...Inc. 6,573,688

..

series of weeks past

Circula¬
Loans.

38,283,576

633,518

10,750,505
1,109,567
831 ,385
1,204,765
003,703
955,766
13,701,705
12,135,566
968,031
6,518.8J89
3,278,130

Clearings tor the week ending Aug. 17, 1807
Balances for the week ending Aug. 10, 1807
Balances for the week ending Aug. 17, 1867

.

36,902.686

96,307,558
472,045
15,511,084
13,052,184

490.946

989,805
5,353.161

Clearings for the week ending Aug. 10, 1867

Specie

Deposits

385.420

5,920,55733,069,757 194,046,591

The deviations from the returns of the

14,697,154
13,084,112
13,136,295

2,285,398

1,028,509
1,594,203

225,000

412,217
15,196,791

488,0.54
391,000

1.761,999
2,495,830
2.358,962

55

Aug. 5..
$41,900,000

97,098,873

365,127

Due from other banks
Due to other banks

531,552

2,16(5.146
1,082,798
2,313,100

1,316
830
11,740
71,815 2,967,122
17,118 1,677,933
270,000
19,217
925,712
12,977
445,590
799,199
37,568
6,989
269,076
2 79,(XX)
905.1(H)
9.077
6,927
2,046
180,000
3,984
1X),(X)0

3,276.020

166,636

1,449,000

78,400
11,652
283.500

17,915

972,808
1,257,704
17,195,430
12,839,035
1,195,310
5,276,046
3,174,477

835,142
636,39
429,838
1,145,290
636.419

5,(522, 135
1,392,691
1,744,046

308,901

0.116

1,459,968

1,713,009
1,218,968
1,777,982
1,507,687

6,000
34,456 2,150,390
132,791
16,71
55,466
4,216
48.900
550,584
75-1.159
28,518
15.420
948.500
20,985
8,134
569,818
114,039
242,127
13,183
8,711
10,475
12.237
300,000
7,884
98,923
47,893
502,122
993.500
180,395

J.188.10S

6,054,920

Aug. 12.
$41,900,000

96.901,687

Specie
Legal tender notes

17.
24.

2,601,929

compared with those of the two pre¬

Loans.

it

6,156,282
8,063,951
4,210,228
2,455,241
2,509,234
1,528.710
3,621,986

38,170,418
37,839,64
38,094,543
36,861,477
36,364,835

the footings of the Boston

Aug. 19.
$41,900,000

454.490

4,235,050

10,637,651
10,633,750
10,635,925
10,627,761
10,628,310

:

Capital

10..

205,000

3,3*50,210
1,356,193

bank statement for last week,
vious statements

it

993,958
,tXi5,095

304,979
317,389

333,118
302,055

53,104,475
53,427,840
53,117.569

Boston Banks—The following are

At

249,659
206,768
281,707

371,744

53,549,449

16,862,112
16,733,198
15,909,195

Aug. 17

53.150,569

16,608,860

July 27

New York City Banks.—The

Loans

[August 24,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

238

100
100
100

100
100
100
too
100
100

1,000,000 Jan.
1,000,000 Jan.

and July...
and July...
400,000 Jan.and July...
1,000,000 Jan. and July...
800,000 Feb. and Aug...
422,700 Feb. aud Aug..
2,000,000 Jan.and July...
412,500 Jan.and July...
1,800,000 Jan. and July...
2,000,000 Feb. and Aug...
1,000,000 Feb. and An

6 U'5
5
5
5 133

Feb. 5&

May’67.5

July ’67
July ’67
July ’67

105
..;

....

.V
7
5 135
•

4

.

....

152*'
....

105

117

6 115

Feb. ’67

•

.

•

....

....

....

I:

....

...

...

2,000,000 May and Nov... May
200 000

.

.

’67* .* .*!..." 5 iio

.,••■■■!

t

July... Ju y ’67
July... July ’67
1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67

50 1,500,00J

W

July ’67
July ’67
July ’67
Aug. ’67

107

5 106

Aug.’67 ...C&i*5 103
5 1 7%
500,000 Jan. and July Jan. ’67
..5
300,000 Jan. and July July ’67
5 110% 112
1,500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67
200,000 May and Nov...

1,000,000 Jan.
100 1,000,000 Jan.
40

July ’67

WO

and
and

May and Nov,.. M#y '67

QQfijJM* 6C6 July. Jn5y

t

f

.

,

.

_

..

5
5
7 135

....

.

-

....

.

.

...Sim

.

.

•••>»?#{ -—j

.

.

•

•

100
....

•

f

c

• •

•

J

•

THE CHRONICLE.

August 24,1867.]

239

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE,
REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALB REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, TOGETHER
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK.
Satur. Mod

SECURITIES.

STOCKS AND

Boom).. 140%

American Gold Coin (O >td
National t

do

do

6s, 1868

do

do
de
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

do

do

do
do

do
do

111%

111

110%

13%

113%

109% 109%

do
do
pref.100 70%
26,' 001
398,000! Chicago, Rock Island and Pac. 100 103%

.09%

110% 110% no

10%

Cleveland, Columbus and Cin...l00
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50

615,000

Cleveland and Toledo

108% 107% ICS

108%
1083

Erie
do

7,000

102% 102% 102% 102%

360,000
95,000
5,0t»0

99%

Marietta and
do

3,000

84%

1860...
do Registered, 1860
do 6s, con., ’79,aft.’60-62-65^70
do 1877
do 1879..

do
do

Indiana os, War Loan
do 5s
......

Louisiana 6s

...

Michigan 6s

54%

54%

(new)

54

67%
65%

68

(old)

60

6s, (new)

6s,

53%

67
65

66%
66%
50%

54

66
65

59,000

65%

144,000

65

130,000
.

No.
48

48

25

17

16%

17

14%

36

50

.

Citizens
Harlem

35
149

35

33%

l4i

149

100

100

127%

25

156

Jersey City and Hoboken 20

200

50

femckCi,»-

21%

20

-as

“nfe?' W.:: .100

Mail....
...100
Central American... 100

-<*e«*agna.

..

“

United States

$25 p’dlOO
100

Wells, Fargo & Co

Mining.—Mariposa Gold

Mariposa preferred

;

47

46

47

44%

42%

42%

43?

600
ioo
900

Minnesota Comper
New Jersey Zinc

Quartz Hill..,.

Quicksilver




112

19,357
600

8,666

.100

Merchants’Union $30 p’dlOO

.*

48%

113
113%
146% 147% 148% 147% 146% 145

100 74%
..500

fWtprecSS.—Adams
2
American
N

.

20%

5
48

^ntt^RusExt’nlOO 112%
Atlantic Mail
100

—Farmers’ Loan & Trust 25
York Life <fc Trust.100
rUnion Trust
100
i United States Trust
100
Jhisuranpe.—Home
100

J..

725

81

1,200

25

—

24%

7(0
200

82%

81%

80%

80

81

23,668

49%

49

47%

48

65%

65%

64%

2,110
3,300
20,519
4,900
25

3,015
21,025

48%

100
100
100
600

9

•

8%

$
102

9,000

102
92

20,000

10,000

Interest

5,0GC

85

So

1st mort

82

82%

36,0uu
8,000

'•’1%

,

1,000

96

3,000
’.07;

7,000

•4%

74%

Consolidated & Sink Fund
do
do
3d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1809
do
2d mort, (S. F.), ’85
do
3d mortgage, 1875..
do
convertible, 1867.
Illinois Central 7s, 1875.
Joliet & Chicago
84

10,000

do
do
8s, new, 1882....
Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund,

do

do

3,000

99

2d mort.,7s...

do
do
Goshen Line,’68
Milw’kee & Pr. du Chien, 1st mort
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort.. SO
do
2d mort..
do
Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage...
82
do
do
2d mortgage
New York Central 6s, 1883.
do
do
6s, 1887...
do
do
7s, 1876
do
do
7s, conv’le, 1876
New York and New llaven
.

Steamship.-

iS:'

21

45

49

Cary

Trust.

9,100
119

11*

119% 120

Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72

' 50'

Vat'. Po*-:

124% 125

Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mort.

50

Williamsburg...

47,650

McGregor Western, 1st mortgage.

”.*.*.’! .100

New York

F

306

127

127

SO
50

Metropolitan

69%

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72

*.100

Manhattan

68%

105% 104% 104% 103% H3%
103%
05% 105
104% 104% 104

do
do
2d mortgage
Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mort

50
50
10

(Brooklynj.....

69%

69%

4!)
65

Delaw’e, Lackawan. & West, lstm
do
do
do 2d m.
200 Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 1879
do 3d mortgage, 1883
1,100
do 4th mortgage, 1880
do 5tb mortgage, 1888
,.
Galena and Chicago, extended .
do
do
2d mortgage.
700
Great Western, 1st mortgage .....
323

50

Wyoming Valley..

8,100
3,600

122

do
3d mort conv.
4th mortgage.
do
Cleveland and Toledo, Sink'g Fund
do
do new 7s.

Central.
„100
Consolidated
100
Cumberland
100 35
Delaware and Hudson., .100 150

Got. "-Brooklyn

92%

Equipment

do
do

100
50

Wilkesbarre

'

91%

25

consolid'ted
Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort
Chicago. 11. I. and Pac, 7 i er cent..
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort..

:

Spruce Hill

II

1st mortgage...
Income

do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

14,000
2,000

!

Pennsylvania
Schuylkill
Spring Mountain..

15 *>50
25

Chicago, Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c
Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort
Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort
Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund

Loan

Butler
Cameron

102%

2d

50

do
do

do
do

6s, Public Park Loan....
6s, Improvement Stock.
Chicago 7s, Water Loan
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan

wal,—American
Ashburton

20,600
26,9.6

92

92%

Railroad Bonds:
Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 1st mort., ’77
Central of N av Jersey, 1st. mort.
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund,

do
do

Miscellaneous Stocks

45%
102

Alton & Terre Hante.100
do
do
pref.100
Stonington
100
Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50
do
do
do
pref. 50

municipal:

New York 7s
do
6s,
do
5s

44%
68%

81

50

....

do

St. Louis,
do

16.000

50

50%

new

Brooklyn 6s, Water

44 */
69

102%; 102% 102

70%

Cincinnati, 1st pretlOO

Reading

21,000
10,000

106%

55

Virginia 6«, (old)

Transit.

70?

prellOO
prellOO
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100
do
do
pref. ..100

5,000

106

106%

Ohio 68,1870-75
do 6s, 1881-86
Rhode Island 6s
Tennessee 5s

do

69%!

100
100

Milwaukee & P. du Ch. 1st
do
do
2d
do

128,000

(

80

80

North Carolina 6s (old)

6s

102% 103

102% 102%

.

6s,

**5

JS

ig
1

—

do
6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.)
do
6s, (Pacific RR.)
New York 7s, 1870
do
68,1867-77
do
6s, 1868-76
do
7s, State B'yB'ds(coup)
do
do
do
(reg.)

do
do

93

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic.100

do
7s, War Loan, 1878
Minnesota 8s...1
Missouri 6s

do

150

Morris and Essex
100
New Jersey
vl(Kl 105%
104% 105
’-05% 105% 105
New York Central
100
New York and New Haven ....100
Norwich and Worcester
.100
27% 26% 26% 26% 26%
Ohio and Mississippi Certifi
10
68%
do
do
do
pref.100
100
Panama

..

War Loan.

Kentucky 6s, 1868-72

IS 3

pref100
$2,000 Michigan Central
100
1,000 Michigan So. and N. Indiana .. .100 82%
do
2,000
do
guar. 100

74

7s (new)
Illinois Canal Bonds,
do

Long Island

424,200

124

Georgia 6s.

100

preferred

Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50

1,384,200

101

150

148

1

Hannibal and St. Joseph
do
do
pref. ..lot'
Harlem
,
50
do
50
preferred
Hartford and New Haven
100
Hudson River
...100 123% 1-5
’•20
Illinois Central..
100

2,000
10,000

116

Connecticut 6s.

149

800
32
100
7
435

“

406,000

117%

No.
15% I

15%

1

50

Delaware, Lackawan and West. 50
Dubuque & bioux City
.100
V
pref... .100

854,600
5,000

108% 108% 108%

Wwk’s Sales
A

t n

122

119

865.000

112%|ll3%

108
109

1 tiurb.

121

Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO
100
23,500 Chicago and Great Eastern
100 46%
567,050'; Chicago and Northwestern

110% 111

California 7s...

do
do

We<l.

Ueb.

15%

Boston, Hartford and Erie.. ...
Central of New Jersey
..100
Chicago and Alton
100
do
do preferred.... 100

m

107%
7-30sT. Notes 1$£ se.
107% 107%
do
do
2 d series 107% 107% 107%
107%
107% 107% 107% 107
do
do
3d series
State:

do

1

Railroad Stocks ;

139

coupon.

1868. .registered.
1881
coupon. 111% 111%
1881. .registered. :10%
5-20s (’62) coupon. 113% 113%
5-20s do regisVd
109%
6s, 5-20s (’64) coupon 110
6s, 5.20s do regisCd
0s, 5.20s (’65) coupon 110% 110%
6s, 5.208 do reqisCd
/«
6s, 5.20s (’65 0.) c mp
6s, 5.20s do regisVd 108%
6s, 5.20s (1867) coup. 108% 108%
6s, 5.20s do regis'd
6s, Oregon Wa. 1881
6s,
do. (i y'rly)
5s, 1871
coupon.
5s, 1871.. registered.
5s, 1874
coupon.
5s, 1874. .registered.
5s, 10-40s ...coupon 102%
5s, 10-40 ^.registered. 99%

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

do
do
do
do
do
-do
do

Mou.

ar^ c rt. i i c.c>

.

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

do
do

STuCKS AND

Week’s Sales

141% 141% 141% 140% 140%

United States 6s, 1867..registered.
do

frL

nursi

100 66%
..100 10%

..

Ohio and
75
73

74%

74%

74%

17%
12%
66

10%

5 65

66%
10%

100
50

10%
19

18

2,825
183

17
75

74%
66%

74%

73
17

90
310
500

1,400
950

15

85

...iOO

80%

1,900

SW
■CWWi

4,060

86
97

2,IX 0
10,000

82

85

S5

86

10,000

98%

..

Mississippi, 1st mortgage

99

23,000

Peninsula, 1st mortgage

Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne & Chic., lstm. 105
do
do

do
do

do
do

St. Louis, Alton & Terre
do
do
do
do
do
do

2d mort.
3d mort

H, 1st m.
2d, pref

2d, inc
Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort
1 oledo & Wabash, 1st mort., ext
do
do
2d mortgage.

Long Dock
Trov, Salem and Rutland. 1st mort

Mariposa, 1st mortgage (new)*,,

3 000

98%
82

91
82

79

82

To,000

89
SO

96% 97
30

5,000
9,000
10,690

30-.i

.~.

4,000

If

240

THE CHRONICLE.

Exports of Leading Articles from Now York.

tfrlje <£ammcrcial ©thus.
COMMERCIAL

The

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the
exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York
since January 1, 1867. The export of each article to the several
porta
for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount Jn the last

EPITOME.

□umber of the Chronicle from that here
<0

Friday Night,

©

active and rather firmer.

Tobacco

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active and closed

was

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:

nearly all of the leading staples, has been quite
brisk during the past week at full or improving prices. The
requirements of the retail trade begin to be generally felt in
our wholesale
markets, and as the demand for consumption
improves, there is a disposition among most holders to slightly
advance prices.
Breadstulfs and Cotton have been quiet and drooping, pend¬
ing the marketing of the new crops.
Groceries have been

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August 23.

Trade in

very

[August 24,1867.

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In Provisions there have been
wards better

change, generally to¬

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prices.

Mess Pork closed firm at $23 50 on a
speculative demand based on the anticipation that there will
be a short hog crop
during the next packing season. Lard
has advanced on English orders to 14c. for
prime, closing
quiet. Bacon and Cut Meats are in good demand. Beef
continues very quiet.
Butter has been less buoyant. Cheese
has sold largely for export.
Foreign Dry Hides have latterly been more active, and a
shade firmer.

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video to arrive at 20 J cents

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Naval Stores have been

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firm, with a good demand for
Spirits Turpentine and fine Rosins. The latest transaction of
2? _i—i©co
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©
Turpentine for export at 50^ccWrt
73
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Oils have been quiet. Tallow advanced with
gold, with a moderate business.
g
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Petroleum has been rather quiet without essential
change, tH
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the demand for future delivery has nearly ceased.
◄
Whiskey P |
6
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has again become active; about 2,000 barrels was sold
to-day
at 37 to 40 cents in bond,
closing firm at the higher figure.
g <
§ 38K
Fish have been more steady but quiet.
Hops continue s » 73 <n«<
^
o°°*N
m
nominal. The accounts from the yards of this State are more
favorable. Metals have been rather quiet but very firm.
◄
Wool has latterly shown increased activity at
slightly bet¬
$ a
ter prices.
2 ©
The sales include large lines of Western at 43@
56c. for No. 1 and extra fleece, and 30@31e. for unwashed.
Freights have been dull. The shipments of Breadstufls to
5
Great Britain have been trifling, and the business has
princi¬
OH
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Receipts of Domestic Produce

for the

Week, and since
t*

January 1.
The receipts of domestic produce for the week
ending August 23, since
Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1866, have been as follows :
This
Since
Same
week. Jan. 1. time’66

Breadstuff's—

26
26

4,093

3,821

This

Rot in
Tar

Since Same
week. Jan.l. time166.
12,547 230.887 251,145
13,066 38,414
171
4,849
1,863
.

Flour, bbls..78,8431,014.085 1,413,9801

Pitch
Wheat,bo ah 174.2901,552,852 1,311,166 Oil cake, pkgs
Corn
6 6,35 8 389,62413,124.309
Oil, lard 77
Oats
67,1712,008,512 4,569.207!Oil, Petroleum.

..

,212

..

Rye

9,895 107,809
1,500 343,335
9,311 69.863

Malt

Barley
Grass seed...
Flaxseed....
Beans
Peas
C. meal,bbl8.
C. meal.bags.
Buckwheat &
B.W. flour,bg

Cotton, bales
Copper, bbls...
Copper, plates.
..

Imedfruit,pkgs

48,054
2.318

12,699

395,291 Peanuts, bags.

301,875 Provisions
19,965
Butter, pkgs..
101,218
Cheese
4,854
Cut meats....

17,952
....

4q,378

292,839

147.180
160.369

1,729

49,744

592

222,460

....

6,085

8,759 433,638
284
7,438
9,693
506 21,669
71 10,069

Grease, pkgs...
15
580
Hemp, bales...
Hides, No
5,456 224,755
31
Hops, bales.
3,208

Beef, pkgs.

...

Lard, kegs....

15,099 jStearine

5,S34|Spelter, slabs...
5,576j Sugar, hhds &
bbls

2,356 Tallow, pkgs.. .
271,566 j Tobacco,
3,967 “ '
Tobacco, hhds..




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79,873

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3,904

....

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2,a33

81,769

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CC 40

2,442

41,840
53,266
94,970

!

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6,543

4,067
109,659

"TH
•

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2,086

4,742
1,759
2,455
2,120
1,838 100,779
3,497 71,517
100,123
60,520

#

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64,469

6,758
2,801

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9:,416

8.874

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63,746

137.7S6

.
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....

72

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2,872
3,700
595,417 612.977
12,465
9,381

80.627

©

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1,874 17.,7(H) 119,081
130 121,032 92,959
27,614 46,410
99,512 89.221
3,945
9,078
5,837

....

31,094

•

:

:2 : : : : .8 : :g : : .'SS : :

....

11,699 336,133 261.395
43,716 622,219 308,341

-

Leather sides .25,749 1,640,726 1,394,109 Whiskey, bbls..
j^ead.
560
9,871
5,841 Wool, bales
Molasses, hhds
Dressed
Hogs,
and bbls
150 14,436
No
10,638
T..
If aval Stores—
Rice,
rough,
Crude trp,bbl
100
5,641
29,965
bush

Spirits turp.. 3,047 40,666

*

A

T-I ©

•©c;©

•

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Pork

75,322 Rice, pkgs
421,192 Starch

pigs

....

Eggs

223,103j Lard, pkgs....

5,691

28,615

44,2-9

: : :

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THE CHRONICLE.

August 24,1867.]
Import* of Leading Articles.

^tports

Receipts and.

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows
foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port
or the week ending Aug. 16, since Jan. 1,1867, and for the correspond¬
ing period in 1866:

241
of Cotton (bales) since Sept.
Stocks at Rates Mentioned.

1, ai

The

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO—

the

Buttons

Coal, tons

....

Since
Jan. 1,

1867.
3,378
103,875
12,648

..

Blea

p’wd’rs

Brimst, tns.

•

.

.

524,610

284

Cocoa, bags...
Coffee, bags
16,317

1,849

'

.

259
•

•

•

•

•

•

Cochineal...
Cr Tartar
Gambier....

49
46

Gums, crude

Indigo

wr

3,830
1

3,250

108,806

510
275
7
128

16.692

Oils, ess ...
Oil, Olive...
Opium
Soda, bi-carb
Soda, sal....
Soda, ash...
Flax
Furs

Gunny cloth
Hair

.

v.

Hemp, bales..
Hides, &c.
Bristles

Hides,dres’d
India rubber..

Ivory

246,409

315,779

177,612

297,893
620,352

951

693,STS
18,412

79

4,683

3,054

Wines

1,433
1,74H

59.828

81,653 Wool, bales...

82,161
309,111

15,269
520

•

.

SpiceSj &c.
Cassia

72,541

Jewelry, &c.

Ginger
511
44
499
Jewelry
Pepper
747 Saltpetre
14
575
Watches....
3,119
Linseed
13,600 246,631 172,507 Woods.
Molasses
Fustic
931
2,017 [112,151 103,581
Metals, &c.
Logwood.... 4,606
65
Cutlery
4,024 Mahogany...
2,350
•

•

•

.

•

•

•

....

169,527

42,196
30,SS3

109,551

118.408
57,547
38,075

.

•

80,896

•

68,939

....

....

....

534

104,430

.

13,011
27,852

32,706

•

•

•

4*56,922
3,019

.

.

....

'

534

37.542

13,011
28,270

91,030

#

•

418

....

238,752 22,939
61,770 4,220
848
85,682
116,350 2,209
90,481
5,041
65,000
148
4C,G?4

....

*30,000

1,860,936 1,209,899 198,081'135,117 1,543,047 ? 762,241 130,405

of

occurrence

extending

rather

more

favor¬

middling Uplands
rains within

severe

portion of the

over a

growing region, has caused some apprehension, but the
growing plant may have been more or less injured on the low
lands of the Atlantic States, and holders have been rather
firmer, but without stimulating the demand. The sales of the
week amount to about 8,500 bales, the maiket closing firm at
the annexed

quotations:
Florida.

Upland.

22.023

111,642
80,673

959
108,592
9,697
59,242
373,412 28,341 15,166
3,ol9

153,401

cotton

126,800
40,098
140,802
120,565

40,043

•

618,504

declined to 28c. But the
the last two or three days,

L

•

178,264

PORTS.

for’gn.

•

8TOCK

NORTH.

Total.

403,147 160,852 54,505
145,543
4,352
3,506
75,547
1,825
3,524

156,248
234,111

France Other

continued dulness in the goods market, and
able interpretation of the crop accounts,

477,251
543,822
1,688 Hides,ondrsd.267,838 6,209,140 4.439.612
7,258 Rice
23,222
319,147 516,120

1,350
6,004

27,161
1,514

47,760

93,509 Cigars
$14,521 $273,5651,138.630
6.125
23,684 Corks
181,544 104,258
26,325 Fancy goods.. 40,232 2,379,964 2,747,603
8,719 Fish
3,659
407,696 587,821
3,074 Fruits, &c.
Lemons
17,545
7,052 351,171 359,119
3,646
Oranges.... 1,159 654,333 280,208
Nuts
86,005
4,029 500,397 652,168
Raisins

15
135
478
1

93,743

Great
Britain

The market this week Las not been very active.
Early in
the week it was dull and depressed, while the accounts from
the new crop were generally favorable.
There is now no ex¬
port demand, our own price being tibove the Liverpool market,
so that th-3 business has been
mainly for spinning; and with

14,219

830
30,135
527 Articles reported by value.

'

To ai

10,501

2,028

2,543 Waste

22,993

89,226

6,512

tes & bbls..

2,404 Wines, &c.
7,229
Champ, bkts

22,564
1,263
2,713
3,326

3cS,374

8,878! Tobacco

2,953

1,561
2*5
4,491

41,500

1.

enip-

m’ntsto

'

711,205
229,942

.

hhds,

14.728 Tea

14,352

132

728

8,878
6,676
255,847
192,980
281,772
271,191
1,270,355 7,148,653
121,989
139,2:19
444,313
496,599
2.464,988 4,729,225

66

722 [

931

.r

Steel

since

SEPT.

Mobile, August 16..
Charleston, Aug. 16.
Savannah, Aug. 16.
Texas, Aug. 9
New York, Aug. 23*
Florida, Aug. 16+—
N. Carolina, Aug. 23
Virginia. Aug. 23.
Other ports, Aug 23*

Same
time
1860.

Since
Jan. 1,
1867.

8281 Sugar, bxs&bg 2,133

493

...

Lead, pigs.. 6,661
Spelter, lbs.110,697

4,653
16,834 Rags
12,418 Sugar,

1,990
3,354
2,465
29,073

Madder.

47
610

Tin, boxes.. 11,757
Tinslabs.lbs 67,609

11,025

Gum, Arabic

126
133

...

Hardware...

Iron,RRb’rs

9,906

7,288
17,502
10,088
1,635

•

•

For
the
week

4,203
127,366

605,174

4,297
234

Cotton, bales.
Drugs, &c.
Bark, Peruv

Same
time
1866.

PORTS.

N. Orleans, Aug. 16

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
For
the
week
340

rec’d

127,885
103,430

Low

23

24
26

23
24
26

28;*

$

Ordinary
Good Ordinary

Mobile.

28*

Middling

Middling

31

31

Good Middling

23
25
27
29
32

N. Orlean
& Texa
23
26
28

29^
33

exports of Cotton this week from New York show
further decrease, the total shipments reaching only 960
The

COTTON.
a

Friday, P. M., Aug. 23, 1867.

receipts of cotton this week show a decrease over bales, against 1,245 bales last week. The particulars of these
last week, the total at all the ports reaching 6,161 bales shipments are as follows :
To Liverpool, per steamer—City of Washington, 339... .Propontis, 137
(against 6,830 bales last week, 5,597 bales the previous week
City of London, 132....The Queen, 181. Total bales
789
Bremen, per
:
66
and 5,993 bales three weeks since), making the aggregate To Barcelona steamer—America, 66. Total bales
To
per brigs—Pepita, 67.... Maria Louisa, 38. Total bales....
105
receipts since Sept. 1, this year 1,860,936 bales, against 2,024,Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton
794 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The details of the from New
York, and their direction for each of the last four
week’s receipts are as follows:
weeks ; also the total experts and direction since September
Received this week at—
Received this week at*—
Receipts.
1 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period
Receipts
New Orleans
bales
1,008 Florida
bales
<i
Mobile
444 North Carolina
of the previous year :
74
1,080 Virginia
Charleston
The

333

1,27*3

Savannah
Texas

595

• •

Total receipts for week

Exports of Cotton

6

1,347

Tennessee, Kentucky, &c

(bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1866

l

1

WEEK

EXTORTED TO

July

Aug.

3,180

Liverpool

Other British Ports

There

were

in fact

no

shipments from

....

any port

with the

Total to Gt. Britain..

ex¬

—Ei sorted this week to
Liverpool. Jremen. Barcelona.
789
66
105

Total this week

• • •

Total Frencli.....

particulars of the shipments from all the ports :

N-w Orleans

19.

825
....

789
....

367,355
6,057

3,180

1,715

311
173

Hamburg
Other ports

Faval

/

*

}

•

....

Total to N. Europe

..

484

•

•

825

789

28,338

....

657

....

17,963

....

300

35,142

38,256
16,064
7,586

66

...,

90

b8

28,344

...

■

....

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar
105

1,902

....

....

....

IS,228
45,097
6,052

657

390

66

61,900

39,377

312

30

105

2,308

2,463

952

All others

Total Spain, etc...—

,

35,054

6

....

941
66

385,199

373,412 402,161

•

....

....

30

Bremen and Hanover

■

1,730

time
prev.
year.

'

30

From—
New York
Boston

Total
to
date.

Aug.

12.

1,715

....

Other French ports

1—

Aug.

5.

29.

^

Sam

ENDING

**

....

322

30

105

!

754

3,260

3,217

960 1+66,922 479,897
Grand Total
2,694
3,694
1,245
ports amounted to 10,354bales. '
total foreign exports from the United States since
Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week
Septem¬
ber 1 are now 1,543,047 bales, against 1,520,304 bales for the and since Sept. 1:
This
This
Since
Since
same period last year, and the stocks at all the
week. Sept. 1.
week. Sept. I.
ports reach
Bales. Bales.
From

cotton from all the

only 130,405 bales, against 297,006 bales at the same time
in 1866. Below we give our usual table of the
movement
of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1,
showing at a glance
the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.:

From
New Orleans
Texas
Savannah
Mobile
Florida
Total for the week
Total since Sept. 1

...

Bales. Bales.
2,745 137,654
2,219
69,674
1,191 104,719
711. 26,743
42
32,304

Son t h Carolina
North Carolina

939
46

63,607
31,334

Norfolk, Baltimore, &c..

362

Per Railroad

704

75,664
122,735

8,759

—

.

664,434
i

The

*

In this table, as well as in our general table of
receipts, &c., we deduct
the receipts at each port for the week all received at such
port from other
Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain
amount shipped
from Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total
receipts must be de¬
ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We
are thus par¬
n-om

ticular in the statement of this fact, as




some

of our readers toil to understand it.

*

following

are

the receipts of

cotton at Boston,

Phila

The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee
Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated.
t These are tne receint* at all the ports of Florida to August 2
exeto
Apalachicola, which are only to July 26.
$ Estimated. The stock at New York is also estimated.

242

THE CHRONICLE.

[August 24,1867.

delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬
tember 1

:

,—Boston.—*
Last

week.

Receipts from—
New
Orleans
Texas

Sep. 1.

267

15,163
29,984

receipts

3S

....

*S7

62,412

643

2,65i

.

.

96
....

Sep. 1.
951
407

7,389
200

247,907

2,774

656
28
184

9.060
2,629

1,005

....

not

include the railroad

There have been

except 1 bale to

no

....

2,0:18
2,395
2,208

.

2,156

1,140

“

“

26

870

1,201

...

Aug. 2....
“

339

+25,225

*

964

16....

34,917

receipts at Philadelphia.

Fayal from Boston.

1,008

Mid.
— @9,100 14,100 79,686 26 @—
11,550 6,466 76,751 26 @27
6,650 19,112 60,583 26
5,750 7,954 56,107 liora
6,700 8,750 48,668 25 ©26
6,950 6,293 44,013 26 @27
4,500 15,656 29,983 27 ©4,300 4,160 27,886 27 ©273*.
5,260 5,365 24,449 2?*@28
3,350 4,620 22,939 28

given above the vessels in
foreign shipments for the week were made from
the Northern ports; we now add the same information with
regard to the Southern ports :
which the

Exported this week from—
New Orleans—To Liverpool, per bark
Regina, 941

Total bales
941

Total exports this week from Southern ports

941

.

The Growing Crop.— Another storm of rain all

along the Atlantic
coast has, during the past week,
given rise to additional complaints and
fears of damage to the
growing crop. This wet weather is particularly
unfortunate just at present, as it not
only discolors the now rapidly
opening ball, but also,serves to increase the danger to the plant from
the cotton worm.
With the exception of this storm, however, (the ac¬
tual effects of which it is too

early yet to know) our advices this week
materially differ from those heretofore publi lied by us. We have
not mom to insert extracts, but the result
of the information received is
that Georgia and South Carolina (with the
exception of Sea Islands) tbe
crop at present promises to be a fair one, and if the surroundings are
do not

Price

pool.

York.*
gold.
?*@ — 1 ©- 1363*®
3*© — 1 @— 136 @
15-32® 3* 1 @— 137%@138
15-32© 3* 1 ©— 138 ©1383*
139 ©
?$© — 1
9-16® — 1 ®— 139 @1393*
9-16®
• 1 @139?*® 40
?*@9-16 1 ©- 1393*© 39V
3*©9-161 ©- 139?*® 40
?*@9-16 1 @- 139 ©140
?*®9-161J@— 139?*© 140

.

By steam.

1'he more favorable accounts from
Liverpool, the bad accounts about
the growing crop in the State, and the limited stock on hand have lead
f ctors to a-1 vance prices during tlu last three
days of the week, and
the transactions were very limited. The market closed with increased

buoyancy, ordinary being quoted at (Liverpool classification) 20J@22L
has exhibited

low middling 26, and
midddng 28. Domestic exchange
but little variation. Bankers
checking on New York ^

per

have

*

To Liver-To New

.,

1,089
1,116

9

“

....

exports this week from these cities

Shipping News.—We

.-

21....
28....
July 5....
“
12....
19....
“

14,281

Reshipments.

t This does

14

“

32,706

.

bales

9,415
1,227

.

Since

Date.
Rec’ps. Sales. Exp. Stoek.
June 7.... 3,358 11,400 13.871 90,147
“

*

660
10.011

1,406

....

r
....

252

6,036
.

Sep. 1.

....

112

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

Last

week.

10,804

....

17.133

.—Baltimore.—,

Since

week.

73,685

Mobile
Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

*

Last

297

Savannah

Total

Philad’phia.—,

Since

Freights

,

Price

cent, premium,

mostly the latter. The rate for commercial has been ^@| premium for
New York sight. Sterling exchauge closed
154 for bankers.

Charleston, Aug. 17.—The receipts for the week ending Aug 16
1,684 bales, against 1,507 bales last week.
Shipments for
this week amount to 1,158 bales, (against 2,431 bales last
week), of
which 414 bales were to New York, 88 bales to
Philadelphia, and
656 bales to Baltimore.
The receipts, sales and exports for a series of
weeks, and the stock, price of middling rates of freight to
Liverpool
and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week
pince
amount to

June

7,

follows

were as

:

1.

ShipDate. Rec’ts. Sales, meats. Stock.
June 7.
937 1,589
1,753
5,S15
“
14.
759 1,889
5.665
1,689
“
21.
750
431
1,252
5,463
“
28.
379 3,574
1,145
3,034
517 1,579
July 5.
1,784
3,239
“
12.
957
640 1,262
3,134
“
19.
760
314
922
2,972
“
26.
533 1,697
2,639
1,364
842
655 1,735
Aug. 2
1,746
“
9
347 2,431
822
1,507
“
16..
354 1,158
848
1,084
.

.

.

.

.

.

*

^-Freight for Upl’d—,

Price of
mid.

To Liverpool.

25
25
25

@26
©
©....
24?$ @25
25 @26
25 @....
25 @—
25?*@- 6
25?* @26
26?* @27
27

To New
Price
York.*
gold.
75c bale 136’@137
75cbale 137 @...
75c bale 138 © ..
75c bale 13S©138*
75c balel37*@138*
75c baie 139 @...
75c bale 140 @...
75c bale 140 @...
75cbale 140 @...

-

?*@?*@-

?*@

-

?*©?*©?*@?£©?8@“
?8@—
>«@-

$2 bale 140 @...
@...

@27?*

75c bale 141

Steam.

Early in the week the market was less firm, but later, under im¬
yield will be in excess of last proved European advices, the market rallied and closed about -£c. above
year. In Alabama and Mississippi the prospects are certainly much the closing prices of last week, low middling being quoted at *26*@26,
and middling at 27@27£ cents.
better than a year ago.
Exchange sight on New York is bought
From Alabama especially reports continue
by bauks at par, aud sold at £ per cent. premium. Sterling Exchange
very encouraging, though not so universally so as was the case a short
$6 73 for 60 days’ bills. •
time since. "We hear of the worm in that State, and also in
Georgia
Savannah, Aug- 17—The receipts for the week ending Aug. !6 were
and South Carolina, but it has not,
up to the present time, done any
1,277 bales (of which 6 were from Florida), against 1,288 bales last
great amount of injury ; in the low lands of Mississippi, however, dam
The shipments this week were 1,643 bales, of which 131
week.
age has evidently resulted from this cause.
Louisiana aud Texas send bales were to Baltimore, 252 bales to Philadelphia, and 920 bales were
to New York.
Below we give the receipts, shipments,
prices, Ac., for a
very doleful reports of the worm from portions of each State.
In Texas series of weeks :
it is the coast counties in particular that are
suffering, while other parts
Receipts. ShipnTs.
Stock.
Price Mid,
June 7
.1
of the State are doing well ; but all ihe low and
3,151
5,547
10,872
243*@25
swampy lands of Lou¬
14
2,421
3,224
10,969
25 @isiana, especially the portions of that State and of Mississippi which lie
21
1,833
608
11,294
24?*@25
28
2,407
2,674
11,027
24 @24?*
along the Mississippi Red anti Yazoo Rivers are said to be suffering July 5
1,255
4,238
8,8:18
23 ©233*
12
1,166
4,948
23 @—
5,262
badly. Under these circumstances any estimate of the probable yield
19
1,351
2,258
4,355
23?*@—
of all tbe States would
26
4,882
2.419
evidently be premature.
3,318
25 @—
Aug. 2
'
1,140
1,580
2,878
26 @Mobile. Aug. 17.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates
9
1,238
1,541
2,575
263*®—
16
from Mobile, The receipts
1,277
1,643
2,209
26>tf©27
for the week ending Aug. 16 were 444 bales,
The market this week has been firm with an
against 848 bales last week, and the shipments were 1.948 bales, of
advancing tendency.
which S*2l bales were to Boston, and 1,122 bales were to New
Stock, however, is so limited that the business is much restricted.
Orleans,
leaving the stock on hand and on shipboard not cleared of 4,220 bales. Middling closed at 26^@i7c. Freights to Liverpool by sail are nom¬
The following are the weekly receipts sales and
exports for a series of inal at -^d. for square and fd. for round bales ; to New York,
weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to
Liverpool and to Baltimore and Philadelphia $1 60 per bale.
New York, and price of gold at the close of each week :
European and Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these maravorable the remainder of the season, the

“

“
“

“

'

“
“

“

Freight

,
-

Price of

Date.
June 7

1,117

“14
“"
21
“
28

3,450 11,698

12
19
26

7!5
549
413
445
291
389
311

Aug. 2

259

400

348
444

2,li 0

July
“

“
“

“
“

5

9

To

Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock- mid. L’pool.

.

16

3,150
2,850
1,550

1,760
2,250

1,275
650

.

To New-

Price of

York.

gold.

22,411 24 ©- 9-16 — © % 136$@:37*
21,743 24 ©— 9-16 —© % 1374©....
21,440 24 ©— 11-16 —© % 137 ©138
4,142 17,711 28*©— 11-16 —© % 137 ©137*
4,371 12,785 22*©— 11-16 — © % 139®....
460 12,616
nom.
?* - © % 138 ©139
1,444 11,561
nom.
?* —© ?* 140 @141
4,314
7,588
nom.
?* -@l
140 @141
677
5,730
nom.
%-% — @1
140 ©141
1,917
nom.
5,709
% —@1
140 @141
1,943
4,220 nom.
% —@1
140 ©141
....

The stock has been reduced so low that the offerings are
very limiter
and the transactions very small in amount. Prices, however, are firm at

(Liverpool classification) ‘25c. for low middling, 23£c. for good ordinary,
and 2i^c.for ordinary.
Freights show no change. Liverpool fd. ant
coastwise lc.
Exchange on New York clones at ^d per ceut. premium
checking, and par @ £c. buying. Sterling Exchange 60-day bills, 160 ’
and sight 151.
New Orleans,

Aug. 17.—The mail returns for the week endin'*
August 16, show a small decrease in the receipts, the total for th*
week being 1,008 bales,
against 1,116 b Its last week, and 1.089
bales tbe previous
week. The shipment fo- the last week were
4,6*20 bales, of which 94 1 hales were to Liverpool, 1,48.9 bales to Boston,
and 2,210 bales to New York.
Stock
bales. The receipts, ?ales and

on

exports for

our

correspondent in London, writes

as

follows

:

Liverpool, Aug. 10.—With the exception of Americau produce, the
during the present week. As re¬
gards American cotton a good business has been transacted, aud al¬
though the market is freely supplied, there is no actual pressure to sell,
and the quotations are, iu some instances, a shade higher than at the
close of last week. On the other hand, Brazilian cotton has declined
fd.,
Egyptiau £d., and East Iniia cotton £d. per lb. The total sales of the
week are 65,790 bales, of which 1,810 bales are on
speculation, 20,870
bales for export, aud 43,610 bales to the trade.
Annexed are the prices
current of American cotton at this date, and at this
period last year:
value of cotton has further declined

1867

,

Sea Island.
Stained
...

Upland....
Mobile....
N. Orleans
Texas.

16

9
9

9

17
12

m

4

11
9
9

m

.

Middling—
Sea Island..

Orleans

a

The

..

19
14
12
12
13
13

10?*
10?*
10%
10%

9?*
9?*

9?*
Annexed is a comparison
at this date since 1864 :

Upland
Mfobile

:

v

1864. 1865.
d.
d.
44
34
19

23
15
,

.

,

32
16

1866-

,

Ordin’y & Mid. Fair & Q’d fair. G’d & Fine.

Middling-

hand August 16 was 22,939

series of weeks, and the
stock, price of mid iliig, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York,
and price of gol4 ,it the close of each week since June 1, were
fellofo
.’
• • ■
■
: -




kets

64
17

Mid.
23
18

13?*
13?*

,

.

.

.

,

15?*
15?*

,

16
16

#

.

«

.

14?*

.

,

.

.

-

14?*

>

Fair. Good
62
84
23
21
•

.

•

.

.

•

of the prices of middling qualities of cotton

1866. 1867.
d.
d.
2<

17

!•“*

in?*

13?*

10%
10%

14?*

1864. 1865.
d.
d.

Middling—

Pernambuco.

Egv Ui

m

..

Broad*.. '.
Dhollenm...
.

.

..

.

..

1866, R67
d

-°03*

16%

1«?*

28?*

15

16

19
19

9?*

1J

d.

10?*
9?*

7%

6

7%

6

following statement shows the present stocks of cotton in Liverpool
jind London, including tbe supplies of ^American and Indian produce
present ascertained to
afloat to th# portsi
' ' ** *'

'

1867.
738.690

1866.

955,430
88,7b4
23,000
588,910

Bales

Stock at Liverpool
“

London

American cotton afloat
Indian
“

"

AS,932
56,000

685,230
1,563,852

1,655,104

Total

Of the present

stock of cotton about 45 J

6,500
1,880

9,300

Indian...2.880
East Indian
13,610
China and Japan..
10

170

Egyptian
West

1867.
21,070
4,810

18,480
5.6(50

2,1 0

119,^00 1:45.7:30
(55,310
713,170

(50,220
810,200

3.4(H)

3,480

3,450

4,740

13,280
*0

3,050

21,140
70

520
40

43,610 20,370

Total

year.
1866.
909,780 839,9(50
215,710 250.990

....

6,980
20

Average

weekly sales.

15,900

100
60

230

..

Same

period

1,810

This
week.

l.fKHl

Stocks

,

.

To this To this
date
date
1867.
1S6G.

>

2,700,673
255,252

24
1

1,625
5,953’

372'
51

792
588

571,238
646,905

...

.

4,571

231

13
50

10,513

85411,849

6,661,332

25

123,945 41,614 20,506

628

4,735

from which the

The following table indicates the ports
above exports have been shipped :

Tcs.&/—Stems.—, Bxs. &

Cases.
37,513
122

51,040
1,216

Biles,

3,635

llhd*.
62.558

From
New York
Baltimore
Boston
Portland
New Orleans

2,815

20

357 2,162
4 2,573
45, ..

....

268,517

4,516

530

31

4

263*
*7

180

21

45

636

29

Total since Nov. 1.123,945

41,614

Virginia

27

5,586

...

14

San hraucisco

Lbs.

bis. pkgs. manfd.
S54 4,920 6,294,582

hhds.

erns.

17,836

8,454

Philadelphia

Same
date
Dec. 31
1866.
18(56.

This
day.

Total.
1866.

1.6(H)
25,960
70

44,170 45,250

65,790 2,027,2202,101,840

Imports

/

1866

2,628
4,729

21

1,022
1,1:30

3,142

274

...

...

30

...

169

T’l since Nov. 1....

this

,

15

97

685
243

35
574
202
S29
7
3

All others

Total

Sales this week.
Ex- SpeculaTrade, port.
tion. Total,
American....bales. IS.700 • 6,670 1,090 23,460
,

1,825

...

Honolulu, &c

is American.

per cent,

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

SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS.

Brazilian

243

THE CHRONICLE.

August 24, 1867.]

315

222

....

467

-

854 11,849 6,661,332

628 4,735

20,506

93,717

The market for

Kentucky leaf was rather quiet until yester¬
day and to day, when speculative orders from the West came
11,655 310,241
Egyptian
296 144,912 138,356
200,083 53,190 38,6:10
23,180 on the market, and export orders were more freely executed,
West Indian
418
73,819
(58,7.‘35
90 274
27,190
25.840
11,620
East Indian
97,967 559,678 9S1,741 1.514,675 173.310 381,250
270.100 prices closing at some advance for the prime heavy sorts. The
China and Japan
891
9,271
12,993
2.840 sales of the week foot
1,780
7,340
up about 1,400 hhds., of which 200 to
Total
117,626 2,109,4632,482,480 3,409,020 733,690 954,4:30
516,770 the city trade, 500 for speculation, and 700 for export; and
the sales thus far for August amount to nearly 7,000 hhds.
London, Aug. 10.—Our maiket is extreemly quiet, and prices are lc
The annexed particulars relate The range of prices paid is mostly from 8 to lbe.
per lb. lower than on Saturday last.
to East India, China and Japan cotton :
Seed leaf has been as active as the limited offerings would
1865.
18(56.
1867.
There is complaint of the want of suitable assort¬
Imports* Jan. 1 to Aug. 8
Bales.
136,5^6
234,389
12 ,540 permit.
Deliveries
1S1.208
189,496
100,3(58 ment;
The sales em¬
prices of desirable lots tend upward.
Stocks, Aug. 8
64,444
88,764
88,932
brace 86 cases Ohio at 8c., 240 cases Connecticut, crop of 1865,
Bombav, Aug. 7.—The demand for cotton rules quiet at 218 rupees
for Dhollerah produce.
The shipments from January 1 to July 8 have private terms, 904 cases Ohio, about I7^c., 155 cases Con¬
necticut 22
7.290 1,019,919

American
Brazilian

332,240
145.9S0

383,160
116,210

167,270
41,760

1866.
hales.

1S67
hales.

25,177#

960,786 1,156,130
404,805
323,591

52,633

....

@2 5 c.

been—

1866.
hales.

Destination.
London

1867.
hales.

Continent
China
America

7,532

20,533

Liverpool

776,888# 856,900

2.438

Clyde
Total

.....'

.

'.

825,037

949.705

little business is doing in cotton, anc
prices rule next to nominal.
Good middling is quoted at 1 l^d.. fair to
fully fair 13£ to I4d. ( and good fair 15^d. per lb., free on board, An¬
Alexandria, July 27.— Very

nexed is the statements of exports :

Continent.
hales.

July 18 to July 26, 1S67
Previously from November 1st

..

hales.
795

32,875

1,128
190,259

158,179

....

1865 6
1864-5

hales.

157,3S4

33,208

ancy

week are estimated at 10,000
that our inside quotations are

RECEIPTS

AT

From

23

to

Spain, and the balance to different ports. The following
particulars of the exports lor the week from

table gives the
all the ports:

Export’d this week from Hhds. Case. Bales. Tcs.
4,355
3,991

.

..

682

10
841

87

Total this week
9,197
Total last week
4,789
Total previous week... 9,185

*—Stems

,

hhds. bales. Pkgs.

1,0*39

28
1

258
....

3
4
25

....

.

769 1,069

258

....

542
770
1,547 1,006

61
105
84

....

81
217

....

2

Man’f.
lbs,
185,227
4,034

ls9,S61
29,636

28,480

direction, since November 1, 1866:
Exports of Tobacco from the United States since Nove
her 1, 1866.
Cer’s &,—Stems—, Pkgs. Manfd,
Ilhds.

--

Great Britain
Sweden

17,171

.

.

Holland

Italy, *

.

Fiance

Mediterranean
Austria

Africa, (fee*




lbs.
Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. hales. & bxs.
518
57
805
215
1,226,743

2,414

312

.

Germany............. .42,470
5,644
Belgium

Spain, Gibralt.&c

4,052

2.608

4,531
412

31.889

54,963

33,2(51

67,993

133,996

70,448

138,737

OK

TOBACCO

Liverpool

FROM

...

London

...

Glasgow

.

.

.

16,898
13,242
18,844
10,01 5

1,096

•

•

,

•

30,8 ifi 1 1,292
860
169
21

.

.

.

-

.

1,4 6
•

•

964

.J.

•

•

•

18

...

Hamburg
Antwerp.

Hhds.
■ 754
496

•

•

...

,

,

,

•

,

i

»

...

.

.

582

51

■6

14

m

959

V V

r f «

»t f

(

M 7

276,327
49,736

17,276

«

(

)

ft*

Cases.

Bales.

....

1,281

•

...

.

..

...

.

..

140
410
214

Sidney

.

export for the week

.

.

woxes
....

....

.

....

.

99
.

Africa
Palermo
Cuba.
Other West Indies
Mexico
British North American Colonies
N»-w Granada
British Guiana

.

.

425
577

442
50
60

*

Cad z
Gibraltar

•

,

.

,

ports, has been as

•

25

3,

,

....

•

....

....

30
17

..

....

....

....

....

•

....

13
18
....

....

....

....

’67

.

.

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

....

,

....

.

,

,

682

....

....

....

5

4,355

....

...

28

1,069

The exports in this table to European ports are made up
fests, vended and corrected by an inspection of the cargo.

The direction of the exports

•

....

....

*

Manfd.
lbs.
....

3,614
....

1,809
....

....

...

*

8,830
96,510
24,680
....

•

•

•

•

16,870
414

28,153
1,897
2,450
185,227

from mani¬

for the week, from the other

follows:

To Havre, 1,656 hhds,
stems....To Bremen1,715 hhds. leal'and 122 hhds. stems....To Montevideo, 4,634 manufac

From B ltimore—To Liverpool, 144 hhds. leaf and box
leaf
To Rott- rdam, 576 hlids leaf and 136 hhds.

til - en lbs
From Bo ton—To Bombay, 87 cases
To British Provinces,
boxes
From New Orleans—To Vigo, Spain,'520 hhds. and 4 boxes
320 hhds
To Matamoras, 1 hhd.
From San Francisco—To Victoria, 25 pkgs.

10 hhds. and 3
To Liverpool,

’

Maryland and Ohio—At Baltimore, receipts of both Maryland and
Ohio were larger than for several previous weeks. The demand for

Maryland continues good, bulk of inspections being taken by shippers
lull former prices.
Of Ohio the enquiry is fair, with sales of 450
lhds. for Ger any, at prices without quotable change. In Kentucky
73,605
eaf we report sales of 75 hhds. heavy on private terms, market closing
*97,780 with an upward tendency, Inspections for the week, 1,283 bbdi,Mary?
46.411

...

.

.

...

...

,

,

698

V

•

•

•

•

•

854
•

.

2

•

•

3,694

99
20

25

61

.

.

•

20

,

8

871

YORK.*

NEW

.

Havre
Bremen

Total

129

871

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

....

Below we give our usual table showing the total exports
of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their

To

The
for the

4,528
412

129

4,741

2,455

pkgs.
99,662

53,087

1,372
....

Total

hhds.
S,696

4,029
2,608

•

The port*.

New York
Baltimore
Boston...
New Orleans
San r rancisco

1,876

T’l pin. Nov.l—,

.—Previously—,
hhds.
pkgs.
8,140
96,296

3

>.

1. 1866.

NOVEMBER

SINCE

3,366

Other

We have another week of

from New Orleans, and 10 hhds. from Boston ; and the
directions of these shipments were as follows. 1,816 hhds. to
Great Britain, 2,837 hhds. to Havre, 2,477 hhds. to Bremen,
138 hhds. to Hamburg, 576 hhds. to Rotterdam, 1,144 hhds.

YORK

556

Ohio, &c

extremely large exports of crude
tobacco, the total in fact being in excess of any previous
week of the present season, reaching 9,107 hhds., 709 cases,
1,069 bales, against 4,789 hhds., 542 cases, 770 bales last
week.
Of these shipments for the past week 4,355 hhds.
were from New York, 3,991 hhds. from Baltimore, 841 hhds.

NEW

.—This week—,
hhds.
pkgs.

Baltimore
New Orleans

Friday, P. M., August 23, 1867.

New black work

nominal.

from l7@25c., in bond, for export, and bright 22@50c.?
in bond, for home use.
The receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since
Nov. 1, have been as follows:
ranges

Virginia

TOBACCO.

activity and. buoy¬
The sales and re-sales for the
bxs., and prices have advanced

of the market for crude.

so

164,581
300,716

28,098
5,1172

249,544

....

80@92c., free, and 27 bales Yarn at $1.0 5.
Manufactured tobacco has shared in the

191,387

.

....

Total

Total.

333

Great Britain,
From

at

52*640

Grand total..

799,859# 844,432

There has also been a good business in foreign.
We notice
sales of 52 bales Havana in bond on private terms, 350 do

18,215
624,005

a>

244

THE CHRONICLE.

land, (105 reinspecte- ), 948 Ohio (2 reinspected), and 10
Kentucky—
total, 2,241 hhds. The clearances for the same time were as follows :
to Bremen, 1,725 hhds. leaf, 122
do stems ; to Havre, 1,636 hhds leaf;
Liverpool, 144 hhds.; Rotterdam, 1,909 hhds. leaf, 186 do stem—(in¬
cluded to the latter port, is
cargo of ship Crest of the Wave, ready to
clear, with 1,338 hhds),—total, 6,314 hhds. We renew
quotations, as
follows

:

Per 100 lb*.
sonnd common. $5.0(J® 4 50

Per 100 lbs.
Ohio inferior to good com. 3.00® 6.00
“
5.50® 6.50
brown and greenish. 6.00® 7.00
“
middling
7.50® 0.50 j
medium & tine red..
7.50®15.00
“
good to tine b'wn 10 oo®i6.i;o i
com. to rued. spang.
8.(IU®15.00
“
lancy
17.00?/ 25.00
fine spangled
15.0d®20.00
“
upper country... 3.00®30.00
yellow do. »&
20.ixi®30.oo

Maryland

good

“

“

“

..

[August 24,1867,

improved, mainly for the New England States, and the
buoy¬

ancy in old flours has been checked, although those manufactactured from old
Spring Wheat still bring one dollar per
bbl. more than relative
grades from New Winter. Some of
the State brands now

coming upon the market are from a
mixture of old and new
wheat, and serve to unsettle quota¬
tions for that
grade. A. good deal of new flour is going into
store in the
expectation that witli a little age it wili brino-

satisfactory prices.
fancy
moderately, but with shipping orders
grou’d leav. new 3.00® 5.00
being held out of the market, prices have been drooping.
Stock in warehouses and
shipboard 1st January 1867.
19,505 Millers entered the market
Iuspected this week
freely on Wednesday, and bought
2,241
previously
40,992 largely of Amber Winter at $2 37@2
4o, and White Western
Total.
at $2 50@2
65, but that was the only day of good business
62,828
Cleared for foreign ports
40,108
Coastwise and reinepected
during the Entire week, and since then prices have declined
6,587
46,695 3@5c. per bushel, except for California White, which is scarce
Stock in warehouses and
shipboard
16,133 and
wanted, at $2 75@2 80. Samples of the new
Manufactured Tobacco.—There continues an active inquiry for medium
Spring
Wheat have been received ; they
goods, which are scarce, and prices maintained at the improvement
are superb, both in quality
noticed last week ; fine qualities are still
and condition ; and we may
expect liberal supplies early in
quiet. Sales for the week
fair, and at prices within our previous range, viz.:
December. But stocks are low. Confidence in
present prices
is strong, and receivers will
POUNDS.
WESTERN.
undoubtedly store liberally rather
Pine bright
$ 90®1.10 j 5's and 10’s—com. to best...
45® 65 than accept two dollars for No. 1 Milwaukee.
Good
bright sound
80® 90 % lb. com. to best (dark)
50® 65
Medium bright sound
Corn has
62® 75
fluctuated materially.
(bright).
75® ' 90
The movement ha3
Common sound
55® 60 Pounds, common to good..
60® 80 been almost
Other qualities, out of condi¬
extra tine
entirely speculative, with very little for export or
85® 90
tion, range from
20® 50 Navy—pounds and halves... 55® 68
consumption. Some irregularity in the Liverpool quotations
Black sweet, ^ lb., sound... 62® 67
Aud
to condition
has
“

more

Wheat has arrived

.

on

“

on

VIRGINIA

..

“

“

“

“

contributed to the unsettled tone.

down to 20 oi,s.

as

Virginia.—At Richmond, in the market for the
past week we have
to report breaks and receipts
light. Market firm with no change to
note in prices.
928 hogsheads, 110 tierces, and 57 boxes, offered and
sold as follows :

is

But at the close there

good demand for consumption, and export prices firm.
anticipation of the early receipt of
large supplies. A portion of the receipts from New Jersey
are weather
beaten, and sell at a large concession. Rye has
Manufacturing Tobacco.—Lugs, common to medium, dark working
advanced from scarcity.
$5 00@$9 ; good,dark working, $8(5)12 ; 6un cured, common,
Barley is quiet. We notice receipts
$7(5)12 ; sun
cured, good, $12(5)18; coal cured, common, $7@12 ; bright, $12(5)20. of new crop from Canada
West, but no prices have been made.
Leaf—common, dark working$7@9 ; medium, dark working, $10(5)14 ; Peas are
quite nominal.
good, $15(5)17 ; fine and wrapping, $18@21 ; sun cured, $16@25@32;
The following are closing
quotations :
yellow wrappers, common, $20(5)35.
Shipping Tobacco.—Lugs, very common and heavy weights, $5@ Flour, Superfine..$ bbl. $7 40® 8 35 Wheat, Chicago Spring
Extra State
9 00®11 50
6

50; medium, $6(5)8 00 ; good, $8@12 50.
@27 60; continental $18@18@23.

Leaf—English $16(5)20

Stemming Tobacco.—Leaf—Common, $12@$14 ; good, $16@$17 ;
Mems—vety common to good, $1@$4 50.
At Petersburg there has been less
activity in the tobacco market,
and prices have slightly declined. The breaks continue
heavy and re¬
ceipts very fair. Sales the past week amount to about three hundred
and seventy-five hogsheads.
We quote : Lugs, common, $4 60 to $6 50,
fair $7 to $8 50, good
shipping $9 to $10 50, good working $8 50
to$10. Leaf common $8 50 to $10, medium $12 to $14,
good work¬
ing $16 to $18, fine $17 to $20, good shipping $16 to $18, fine $18 to
$25
Receipts this week 339 hhds ; last week 300 hhds ; total since Oct.
1, 7,429 hhds.
fine, $18@$‘20@$23.

Kentucky.—At Louisville there has been
quite a falling off in the
supplies, w hich of course diminishes the offerings at the daily auction
mart.
The extreme low
stage of the river very materially restricts

supplies, while, at the
time, it checks shipments- The market is
pretty well sustained, the preponderance of supplies being lugs and
medium leaf, with a fair shipping demand all the
week, and, though
prices have been rather dragging, the week closes with more firmness
for all grades, and a full and rather active demand. The
crop prospects
are
just now rather undefined, though the prevailing dry, hot weather
is unfavorable alike for tobacco as well as all
products of vegetation.
The sales at the four auction warehouses
to-day were 60 hhds. with 4
rejections, and the sales of the week sum up 754 hhds., with 55 rejec¬
tions, and the total sales ol the seas n, since the 1st of November, sum
same

hhds. The latest trmisactii ns were as follows: 2 hhds. at
$17 50@$>9 00, 6 at $15@15 26, 2 at $14 25@14
60, 5 at $!8@13 75,
2 at $12 26(5)12 50,6
at$ll@ll 75, 11 at $10@10 75, 6 at 9@9 80, 2 at
$8 10, 4 at $7 15@7 50, 4 at $6 10@6 75, 5 at
$5@5 95, 4 at $4 60
@4 95, and 1 at $3 40.
up 83,100

New Orleans.—Since the issue of

characterized
and

on

by increased stagnancy.

the whole rather

our

last the market has beeu

The stock

undesirable, and

as

cn

h lders

hand is very light,

firmly adhere

to

fneviousinstructions authorizing themimpracticablefigures demanded.
to operate, their
imited requirements, buyers find it
to
the
not

pay

Under these circumstances the transactions have been
trifling, being
almost exclusively confined to small lots to the
city trade. The sales
for the week w'ere about 176 hhds.,
including 25 hhds. stems at lc., 52
hhds. refused low leaf 4^@5c., 60 hhds. at 6c., 11 hhds. admitted at

9^c., the balance on private terms. Receipts for the week 439 lihdB.
Exports for the week—to Liverpool 320 ; to Vigo, for orders, 420, and
o Matamoiae 1
; total, 741 hhds.
Stock on hand and on shipboard
,910 hhds.

BREADSTUPFS.
Friday, August 23, 1867, P. M.

The market continues
tone and

prices.

exceedingly variable and unsettled in

Flour from new wheat has continued to arrive
week. It is still in disfavor with the bakers, and

freely all the
being in some
steadily declining

a

Oats have declined in

per bushel
Milwaukee Club

.'

$1 75®
1 50®
2 10®
2 32®
Double Extra Western
2 40®
White
and St. Louis
12 50®14 00 Corn, Western
Mixed.... 1 05®
Southern supers
10 00@11 00
Western Yellow
1 14®
Southern, fancy and ex. 11 25®13 75
Southern White
1 20@
California
12 50®14 00
Rye..^..
1 60®
Rye Flour, fine and super¬
Oats, Western cargoes...
74®
fine;
7 00@ 9 00
Jersey and State
78®
Corn meal, Jersey aud
Barley
1 00®
Brandywine
5 75® 6 50
„Malt.
1 55®
Peas, Canada
:
l 25®
The movement in breadstuff’s at this market has been as
follows:
Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 9 25@10 50
Extra Western, com¬
mon to good
8 50®12 25

Red Winter
Amber do

„

RECEIPTS

NEW

63,400
1,575
133,055
875,890
2,050
8,210

.

Rye, bush
Barley, <Sbc., busu,
FOREIGN EXPORTS

FROM

NEW

YORK

Flour, C. meal
To
Gt. Brit, week
since Jan. 1

5,037
43,784

N. A. Col. week..
since Jan. 1..

7,673
82,882

Wed Inti. week.
since Jan. 1

7,310

FOR

2,795

bbls.
...

,

25

147,575 73,742
24,467
4,302
since Jan. 1, 1867 342,991 102,632
same time, 1866. 633,395
91,195

Total exp’t, week

THE

Wheat,

1,257
22,574

bbls.

bush.
171,568

WEEK

bush.

AND

6,515

Barley.

....

....

....

4,113,425

bush.

116,4065,
1,750

....

230

«...

1,205

63

•

201,523 136,887
165,609 199,200

•

m

m

6,511

•

230

m

869,183
.

•

126,7425

1

Corn,

bush.
289,130

-

•

•

Wheat.
bush.

282,998
6,353

•

1,911

....

following shows

Corn.
bush.

Oats.
bush.

66,649
4,318
86,099
294,048

948,1688,

,

.

2,758

...

....

•

m

51,138

following lake ports for the week ending Aug. 17

6,401
676,362
699,006

the receipts

:

Barley.

Rye.

bush.

bush.

342,308
21,011

5,356
'360

28,598

1,801

65,516
3,553

720
850

19,950

26,120

1,709

458,508
43,622
147,486
3 v 24
112,527
1,541,071 6,813,39819,682,119 4,219,394

9,095
8,158

21,113
26,464
2,197
77,334

Corresponding week, ’66
Since Jan. 1, 1867
Same time, 1866

384,800
537,890

Oats,

bush.

844,495

12,090,370

SINGE JAN.

.

Flour.
bbls.
25,078
2,482

.

••••

500
15,(554
19,707 17,410
8,302
Baltimore..
79,928 34,198
Weekly Receipts at Lake Ports.—The

at the

1,416,085
192,325
1,326,355

703,610
37,645
43,230
290,685

46,098

Philadelphia

..

1,915
94,310

Rye,

Since Jan. 1. from
Boston
103,849
.

44,635

158,410
1,512,600
8,264,250
99,350
380,740
1,934.755

96,985

...

1
l
1

-1866For week. S’eJan.l.

982,925
'

1

20

25
30
35
80
13
16
25
85
78
82
20
65
40

YORK.

-1867For week. 6’eJan.l.

Flour, bbls—
Corn meal, bDls.
Wheat, bush....

Oats, bush

AT

2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1

355.911

48,473
2 7,582
155,221
46,250

663,4S4
4,069
82,093

803,437
773,197
493,497
635,383
176,984 1,416,463

1,907,87510,993.43125,375,950 8,011,958

960
350

480

30,388
44,374
8,533
11,161
555,587 389,296

638,2801,128,824

Eastward Movement of Grain by Canal.—The
following statement
will show about the amount of grain on canals destined for tide water :
From

Buffalo, 14 days
Oswego, 9 days
Total..

Wheat,
bush.
43,350

Corn,

bush.

43,537

1,182,710
169,403

86,887

1,352,111

Oats,

bush.
20,470
20,470

Barley,

Eye.

bush.

bush.

29,060
29,060

Previous week.,
17,141
1,567,817
22,570
9,280
pressed for sale from the wharf at
7,800
Corresp’di’g week’66..
146,790
1,683 015
570,205
41,666 33,935
prices, until good extras from Winter Wheat have been sold
Note —About 15,000 bushels of wheat per
at $10 2o@il per bbl.
day
forward by
At this decline business in them has railway—being equal on the average to 180,000 bush come ou tue canal,the Erie
afloat
cases




August 24,1867.]
exports of

THE

brkadstuffs to GREAT BRITAIN

AND

IRELAND

CHRONICLE.

FROM SEPT

From
New York

Date.
....

....

Baltimore
Boston
San Francisco
Other ports

44
44
44
44

5, 1867.

....

period, 1866..
do
do

3,345

.

4,938,954
16,332

38,640

5,429 379
1,31 >,032
2,849,283
15,843,922

9,939 693
13,504,960
1,0»1,474
632,581

19,608
171,540
145,589
167,494

1,179,975
TO THE

Flour,

Rye,

bbls.

11,786

169,086
........

4,285
23,161

.

PhiladT.
New Orleans..

imports since January 1,

753
649

2,008

.

Same date 1866
Jan. 1
Portland
do
Boston
do
Philadelphia do
Baltimore
do
New Orleans do

466

*

....

Brazil, Manila.
Total

,

bags. bags,&c

♦hhds.

70,712

78,764
144,573 204,629
1,709
4,5:30
45,992 3°, 294
17,705 57.266
14,629 16,305
25,140 10,987

27,962
99,071
13,051 64663

85,957
239,566
5,933
36,672
66,466
87,756

34,937
1,383
6,378

9,200
21,451
118

5*200

397,498

'.!!!

22,307

64,822

Includes barrels and tierces reduced
to hogsheads.

MOLASSES.
The market has been
active, and prices have been
very
sales of the week are about

10,360
41.803

159

4*056

11,105

73,467

249,746 324,011

,

follows:

are as

65,471

Imports since

263
57

2,759

Cuba.
For’gn,
boxes. *hhds. *hhde.

N. York stock

Other
hhds.

100

.

.

Other

10,360

74,407
6S,U1
105,887
323,181

245,651
(97,529

hhds.

boxes,

Baltimore

Total import....

11,488
95,c 57
13,965
13,369
Liverpool.—The latest mail dates to 9th
August report changeable
weather again ; and though so far the
injury done to the crops was but
but slight, a certain degree of
.

7,054

/

bush.

62,621

....

Cuba

,

At—

143

Stocks August 20, and

Com,

bush.

160,086

Total
To about same period, 1866..
do
do
1865
do
do
1864

193
877

_

Wheat,

bush.

19

499

.

CONTINENT.

From
New York, to Aug. 16,1S67..
Other ports, to latest dates..

6,576

300

53,720

.

Other Manila
hhds. bags.

,

Portland
15
Boston. 5,893

643,093
707,620

6,0^0

.

.

1S65.V
1864..

8,549,737

.....

.

.

same

bush.

470,743

740
^

Corn,

bush.

9; 1867.

9, 1867.
9, 1867.
...July 16, 1867.
....Aug. 9, 1867.
....

Wheat,

91,412

.

Philadelphia

Total
To about
do
do

Flour
bbls.

Cuba
hhds.

At—
boxes,
N. York 18,318

1, 1866.

245

full.

The

2,000 hhds., including 1,000 hhds.
Barbadoea
200 do. Porto
Rico, and 800 do. Cuba Muscovado.' The

demand is

mostly from the trade, and low distilling grades are
neglected.
anxiety was felt. The country markets
The imports of Cuba
molasses have been
all became firmer, and some have advanced. The French harvest
larger this week both at
so
New York and other
far did not give much satisfaction. The
ports. Of other kinds the
English markets had advanced,
receipts have fallen off.
but the latest telegrams
The details are as iollows :
by the cable report the market quiet and
prices weak. The following are the latest mail quotations :
Porto

Wheat—Red Baltic, 13s.@14s. ; Western
Red, nominal; White Cal¬
ifornia, 18s. 8d@13s. 9d. Flour—Western Superfine to Extra
(per 196
lbs.) 308.(5)338. 6d. ; Canadian Superfine to Extra, 338.(5)36.; French,
(per 280 lbs) 498.(5)548. 6d. Indian Corn—Mixed and Yellow (per 480
lbs), 86s. 9d.@36s, 9d.; White, 86s 6d.@37s.

At—
New York
Portland
Boston

Cuba. Rico. Other.
hhds. 2,040
682
1,295

i

440
851

At
....

more

active for the

leading

44

however, been the main cause of the advance in
currency
prices. The imports have been large in Cuba sugar only, of
which 18,318 boxes and 6,576
hogsheads have been received
at this port.
Of tea, coffee and molasses the receipts have not
been heavy.
The details will be found under the respective

All kinds

are

held

above named.

The demand was quite brisk until
Thursday, when the weather was
unfavorable, and all parties disposed to await the later advices
by the

due.

The sales of the week

about 18,000 bags.

were

mainly Rio, and

At o:her markets also the business

in Cof¬

fee has been good.
The imports of the

week have been 2,800 bags of Rio, per “
Industry;’’
4,683 do. per “Trinculo;” 1,080 bags
Maracaibo, 300 Laguayra, 440
St. Domingo and 686 bags
of s undries. The cargo of the “ Shawmut,”
reported last week at 7,755 bags, should have been 8,285.
The imports since
January 1, and stock in first hands Aug. 20, are
:

OF RIO COFFEE.

Import.
458,344
14,7:30

Philadelphia 44

Baltimore
“
New Orleans 44
44
“

44

Total

150,401
55,882
......

3,200
6,000
2,5u0

690,057

OTHER SORTS.

Stock.

Domestic fruits

are

York, At Bost.
import. Stock. Import.
Java,
bags* 45,492 7,663
23,810
23,500 Ceylon
44
9,110 4,110
Singapore,
“ *20,962
645
1M42
57,041
4.500

.

....

Maracaibo,

Laguayra

St.

82,011

44

29,694

44

23,960

Domingo,41 22,561

Other,

1,197
4,704
440

5,848

8,760
1,406

169,598 24,607

45,418

“

17,819

Includes pockets reduced to bags.
SUGAR.

The market was
very active in the middle of the week, and
prices
advanced ^c., with sales at 1 If@12c. for fair to
good refining.
The
saies of the week are about
7,500 hhds. (including 4,500 on Tuesday and
Wednesday) and 8,500 hhds., the market closing firm but less

Refined sugars are steady atr 16fc. for best crushed.
The imports of the week have shown a

buoyant

considerable increase

over

previous weeks, particularly in Cuba boxes, of which
nearly 80,000 have

been received

at the several

ports. Cuba hhds. are are also in excess of
last week’s receipts—at this
port 7,054 bags of Manilla are included in
the imports. The details for the week are
as follows ;




dull, with
very unsettled.
are

59.676
47,298
13.676
30,722

1,1*22

303,335

9,212

984

hogsheads.
are

limited.

turn

a

downward, except Sardines

Dutypa?d.-

Hyson, Common to fair
do
Superior to fine.... 1

10

@1
do
Ex fine to finest... I 35
@1
Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair
7j @1
do
Super, to fine. .1 1*. @1
do
...

Ex fine to finest! 40
©1
Imp., Com. to fairl 00 ©1
Sup. to fine! 25 ©1
do Ex. f. to finest! 55
@1

nnp. &
do
do
H. Sk.&Tw’kay,U, to fair,
«!•
do Sup. to fine
v

#—

90 @1 05

65©
75 ©

do

good

do fair
do ordinary
do fair to g. cargoes

Porto Rico
Cuba, inf. to com.
"ido fair to good

..

gold
gold
gold
.gold

30
5>
<5
35
70
15
45
8>
70
80

-

do

20
90
©1 00
©L 6>
© 80
©1 05
©1 55

i7)@ 18
Domingo.5|@ 16

Sugar.
$ B> Ilf© J4
do
refining
101® nj
do

do
do
do
do

do

...

$ gall.

90
90
05

174® 13

Laguayra

St.

do

do 18 to 15
do 16 to 18
do 19 to 20

12}© 33
I4f© 14

white

l4p© 36„

Loaf...
Granulated
Crushed and powdered
White coffee, A

do 10 to 12 111®

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Ouba Muscovado

©
©
©1
©1
©

lava, mats an I bags
....gold 24j@ 25
Native Ceylon
18i© SO
Maracaibo

17^© li|
15J© lt'i
>4$© 14J15 © 17

do
114© ni
do fair to good
grocery... 12 @ 12i
do pr. to choice
do
12|© 13
do centrifugal
ll»i© 13
do Melado
7 ©
y
Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7to 9 11 © ill
do

Doty raid—,

do Ex f. to fln’st 85
Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair.
/■»»
do
Sup’r to flue.' 90
do
Ex f. to finestl 10
Oolong, Common to fair.. 70
do
Superior to fine... 86
do
Ex fine to finest ..1 ci5
Souc. & Cong., Com. to fair 65
do
Sup’r to fine. 9
do
Ex f. to finestl 25

Coffee.

.

....

154 © 1ft
©

7-4

© 16

@16*

If*© 16*
15 @ 15

Yellow coffee

molasses*
.©
@ 75
47 © 55

do

.

55

At New

Total
*

7*106

35,286

FRUITS.

Foreign dried fruits

Eio, prime, duty paid ...gold 19 © 19*
do

COFFEE.

.

firmly, but sales

...

doing in invoices, but we hear of no
large transactions. Prices are generally steady, but holders are dis¬
posed to press sales as fast as possible without dropping prices.
The imports of the week have been
only 118 boxes by steamer from
London. At Boston 608 pkgs. were
received from Calcutta. Our
usual table of shipments from
China, and imports at New York and
Boston is omitted, as it remains
unchanged, except as to the particulars

Mobile
'
Savannah

17,770

116,677

SPICES.

r-

There is the regular business

Galveston

bbls.

Tea.
TEA.

New York, bags

35,449

to

N. O.

hhds.

1,757
2,190

847
175

24,373

heads below.

follows

26,141
'479
4,882

3,314
1,361

Includes barrels and tierces reduced

Total,

,

♦hhds.
1,230

99

40

are as follows

Rico-^-Oth. Fo’im.—

18,577

Total
*

24

302

...

♦hhds.
5,340

30,5-17

Porto
Cuba. Rico. Other.

New Orleans

/—P.

4

staples in this line of trade, and prices in some cases have
slightly improved. The demand to supply the small traders
of the interior is usually
large at this season, and the market
naturally feels its influence. The slight advance in gold has,

as

Baltimore

44

The market has been rather

now

Cuba.
♦hhds.
11,200

New York, stock.
N. Y imp’ts since Jan.
1.71,959
44
4
Portland
34,708
44
Boston,
44
51,480
44
a
Philadelphia 44
•“-44,180
44
44
Baltimore
44
10,639
44
New Orleai s 44

Friday Night, Aug. 23.

foot up

Philadelphia, .hhds

‘iii

....

Stocks, Aug. 20, and imports since
January 1

GROCERIES.

Rio steamer

At—

Clayed....

Barbadoea

•

m.

46 @ ^8
54

@ 56

Spices.

Cassia, In mats..gold filb
Ginger, race and Af(gold)
Mace
(gold)
Nutmegs, No!.... (gold)

43 @

1"4(©
90 ©
85

@

....

j Pepper

(gold)
Pimento, Jamaica.(gold)
924 j Cloves
(gold)
11)

1

S74

21©

2H

19 @

194

S64®

27

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.
B riday,

The market in the
early part
much activity as was

P. M., August 23, 1867.

of the week did not show as
expected, but improved latterly, and
more
purchasers from the country are making inquiries for
goods, and either purchasing or taking a survey of the market.
Prices of nearly all goods have been
quite steady since our
last; on Thursday a slight decline was noticed in the price of
one or two well known makes of
brown
sheetings. The job¬
bing houses at this time of the year usually expect a ve Jj
large business, and are apt to manifest some dissatisfaction if
it does not commence with
great activity. There has been
no “ rush ” as
yet, but there is every indication of a steady
Fall business as soon as the
money for the year’s crops begins
to be distributed
among consumers, and they begin to purchase

of the country merchants.
The important
H. B. Claflin & Co. was closed on Monday

house of Messrs.
and Tuesday in

of the death of Mr. H. B. Claflin, Jr., who we
was for some time a partner of the firm, residing
at Manchester, England.
Foreign goods have sold at the auc
tions rather more actively ; the demand for desirable goods is
very fair, though prices obtained are not much better than last
week. The exports of the week have been fair, both of
consequence

informed,

are

dry goods.

domestics and

of dry goods for the past week and since January
I, 1867, and the total for the same time in 1S66 and 1860
are shown in the following table :
The exports

FROM NEW YORK.

/

^Domestics.—, D, Goods.
73

Cisplatiue Iiepub.
Bremen

183

13
269
42

1,136
42,533
2,623

....

Liverpool
London
Havre
New Granada

•

$....

.

,

Fayal

....

Br. Provinces

....

Total this week.
Since Jan. 1
Same time 1866...
“
“
1S60...
-

annex a

•

•

•

525
3 5
250
757

....

few

our

J.

....

....

•

•

....

....

....

•

•

,

....

17
125

••

$3,037
835,349
730,072

30

3,669
2,354

•

.

....

....

•

,

n

9
1

....

cu*es.

.

....

.

1,200

4

399 $50,515
6,870 944,530
3,305 540,503
70,601

.

15

...

.

.

....

•

•

•

....

....

....

1
•

•

....

....

....

....

FROM :

Domestic!

....

....

....

,

pkgs.

...

....

....

—\

Val.

packages.

$4,040

o

Dutch W. I
British W. I
Cuba
Mexico

We

Val.

pkgs.

Exports to

manufacture,

142

5.650

1,781

29,570

particulars of leading articles of domestic
prices quoted being those of the leading

jobbers:
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are

in active request; during the

grades were most sought for, but
latterly medium and better sorts have also been in demand. A decline
of 2 cents, on Appleton A, and $ cent, on Amoskeag A and B has
taken
place
Standards are held at 16$@17$c, Atlantic N 3 4
10£, Indian Orchard L do 10-$, Suffolk do 12, Union do 10, Pepperell N do 13^, Atlantic V 7-8 14$, Atlantic E do 15, Pacific E
do 15, Bedford R do 11, Indian Orchard W do 114, Massachusetts E
do 14, Pepperell O do 141, Indian Heal 4-4 18, Pacific extra do 17$, do
H do 17$^, do L do 16, Atlantic H do 17$, do A do 18, do L do 16, Law
rence E do 154 do 0 do 17$, do
F do 16, Stark A do 17, Amoskeag A
do 16$, do B do 16, Medford do 164, K'mebeck do 10$, Roxbury
do 16, Indian Orchard B B 12$, Pepperell E do 174, Great Falls M do
14$, do S do 13$, Dwight W do 141, Standard do 14. Pepperell R do 16,
early part of the week the lower

Laconia E do 14$,
Saranac E do 2o4,

Laconia B do 16, Laconia O 0-8 16, Pequot do 21,
Indian Orchard A 40 inch 16$, do O do 14, Pep¬

perell 9-4 35, M< nadnock 10 4 35,
Bleached Sheetings and

of

[August 24,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

246

Pepperell do 424.

Shirtings

prime brands are generally steady,

are

in gaod demand, and prices

remaining unchanged since our last

Print Cloths have been

quite active at 9@9} cents for 64x64 square

cloth, with large sales at Providence

and a

very

firm feeling.
close of the week,

Prints show a decidedly increased demand at the
and prices are maintained firmly.
Some talk has

been heard on the
the price in consequence of the firmness in
printing cloths, but as yet they remain at former figures. Some very
handsome
new
styles in the market meet with much favor.
American 15, Amoskeag dark 14, do purple 15, do shirting 14-16,
do palm leaf 15, Merrimac D 15-15$, do purple 164, do W dark
1S-19, do purple 19, do pink 19, Sprague’s 15$ do purple 16,
do shirting 16$, do pink 16$, do turkey red 15, do blue check 16, do
solid 14$, do indigo blue 154, do Swiss ruby. 16, London Mourning 14$,
Simpson Mourning 14$, Amoskeag Mourning 13. Donnell’s 15, Allen
pink 16, Arnold’s 12$, Gloucester 15, Wamsutta 11$, Pacific 15$, Free¬
man 12$. Cocheco 16, Lowell 12$, Hamilton 15-154, Victory 124, Home
10, Empire State 9, Lancaster 15, Wauregan light 14, Hovey 8$, At¬
part of holders of advancing

lantic 8$.
Lawns and Ginghams are without business
Domestic Ginghams sell a* 20 cents,, Hartford
donia 15, Glasgow 19, Clyde 12$, Berkshire
chester 15.

of moment. Lancaster
16, Hampden 19, Cale¬

174, Roanoke 134> Man¬

are in increased demand and prices remained firm at
present figures.
Ellerton N brown 31, do O do 29, do P do 25, do
S do 214,do T do 20, Laconia Brown 224, Slaterville do 18, Hamilton
do 22$, Naumkeag do 21, Nashua A 20, Ellerton N Blea 33, do O do
81, do P do 27, Stillwater do 18, Granite State do 21, Naumkeag do 21$.
Corset Jeans continue in demand, without change in prices.
An¬
droscoggin I24, Bates colored 124, do bleached 12$, Naumkeag 17$,

Canton Flannels

the

Pepperel 19, Naumkeag satteen 21, Laconia 17$, Amoskeag 16$, Indian
Ward 16.
Cambrio8 and Silksias are in light request. Lonsdale Silesias sell at 20
cents. Victory J 16$, Indian Orchard 17, Ward 17, Washington glased
cambrics sell at 11 cents, Victory H 9, Superior 8, Pequot H, Waverly 11, and S. S. & Sons paper cambrics at 15 cents, do high colors
17$. White Rock 15, Masonville 15$.
Woolen Goods are steadily improving, but it is not easy to give
quotations in detail.
Mouslin Delaines are in a great variety of new styles, and prices are
very firm.
Lowell 23, Hamilton Co. 23, Manchester dark 23, Pacific
dark 23, Pekin 28, Armures dark 23, Pacific Merinos 374, Mourning
23, Spragues 22, Skirtmgs 30, Alpacas 24-30.
Flannels and Linseys are in good request at steady prices.
For
flannels Belknap shirtings sell at 474 cents, Washington do 50, Rob
Roy rolled 6-4 924 1° 95, Rob Roy 3-4 45 to 474, Cocheco black and
white check 424, Franklin shirting 45, Caledonia miners 37$, Pequa,
double fold 45, Bay State Opera 524, Gilbert's do 60, Middlesex do 60,
and Park Linseys 35 inch at 224 cents, do 60 do 374, do65 do 424, do
75 524, Miners’ Flannel 424 and 60, Uuion Cotton and Wool 20, Black
Orchard 15,

Rock

274.

steady. New

Cottonaoes are iu only light demand, but prices are
York Mills d it t 55 Parmer’s and Mechanics’ 45, Pemberton d&t 424,
Great Western 374, Plow, L.
Anv. 87$, York 224 to 35, Whittenden
d,fct 47$. Everett 25 to 37$, Andover 214.
'*
American Linen continues in steady request at unchanged rates.
Foreign Goods are improving steadily for all kinds of
new

exception of Utica n-4, which has declined to 32$. Globe
plain and
3-4 7, Kingston do 8$, Boott R do 11, Globe A 7-8 do 10,Strafford S do 134,
styles of dress and staple goods. The auction sales are increasing in
Waltham X do 14, Amoskeag Z do 13, Great Falls M do 15, do S do 14, interest, and the season promises to be a more satisfactory one. The im¬
do A do 16, Lyman Cambric do 164, Straford M do 14$, Hill’s Sernp
portations, as is well known, have been much below those of last year,
Idem do 18, Bartlett 31 inch 15, Newmarket A do 15, do C, do 17, Gre^t and importers ha\e s .ch confidence in the future of the market as to
Falls K do 16, Bartletts do 184, James Steam do 18 Indian River XX. withdraw at the auction sales such goods as do uot bring prices to suit
do 14$, Attawaugan XX do 154, Lawrence B do 164, Hope do 17$, them.
Boot B do 184- Forestdale do 20, Masonville do 224 Androscoggin L do
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK.
224, Lonsdale do 224 Bate3 XX do 25, Arkwrigut do 234, Lyman J do
22, Warasutta H do 30, do O do 30, Atlantic Cambric do 29, Lonsdale
The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Aug.
Cambric do 314, New York Mills do 35, Amoskeag 42 inch 224, Walt¬
ham do 20, ' wight 9-8 27, Wamsutta do 35, Lyman R. 6-4 18, Boot 22, 1867, and .the corresponding weeks of 1866 and 1866 have been as
follows :
W do 21, Nashua do 25, Bates do 25, Wamsutta do 40, Amoskeag
46 inch 284, Waltham 6-4 27. Mattawamkeag do 25, Pepperell do
ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE-WEEK ENDING AUG. 2*2,1867.
-1867.-1866.-1865.274, Utica do 82$, Waltham 8 4 33$, Pepperell do 374, Allendale
Value
Value.
Value.
Pkgs.
Pkgs.
Pkgs.
do 324, Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Pepperell do 424. Utica do 60, Allen¬
2,010 $896,909
$687,830
1,487
Manufactures of wool... 1,761
$697,720
dale do 40, Waltham do 424. Mcnadnock 10-4 874, Waltham do 50,
345,935
810
1,129
239,621
do
915
cotton..
238,771
657
524,797
327
Allendale do 474- Pepperell do 624, Utica do 65, Pepperell 11-4 62$.
330,617
do
silk
367
438,572
739
267,860
1,136
186,434
do
flax.... 1,113
270,441
Ticks meet with a regular trade demand, and prices of leading
601
543
206,040
170,333
Miscellaneous dry goods. 225
69,255
makes have
been quite stea y.
Conestoga extra 40, Conestoga
C M 35, Amoskeag AC A 32 inch 4 0, 00 A 32 inch 32, do B
5,533 $2,241,541
3,906 $1,614,835
Total
4,411 $1,714,759
32 inch 28, do D 30 inch 20, do C 80 inch 24, Pemberton E 18, do
INTO THE MARKET D UIi IN9
WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN
AA 30, Brunswick 15, Hamilton 28, Somerset 134, Thorndike 20,
SAME PERIOD.
Pearl River 374, Housewife 32, do AAA 28, do AA 24, Pittsfield 94
588
2,027 $886,065
841
$253,149
Manniact.ures of wool...
$345,350
report, with the

£

.

*

-----

THE

Housewife A 20, York 32 inch 384. 6° 30 inch
inch 32$, do 4-4 324, Everett 21, Boston A A

if

28$, Cordis AAA 82

27.
Stripes are iu fair request at unchanged prices.
Amoskeag 28$
and 244, Uneasville 164-174, Whittenton BB 17, do C 15$, Pitts¬
field 3-8 94, Haymaker 16 and 17, Massahesic 6-3 23$, Boston 14$ and
164, Blackstone 3-3 14, American 14 and 15, Eagle 12$ and 13$, Ham¬
ilton 24, Jewett City 184 and 144Checks have been without special activity.
Park Mills Red 17$, Lan¬
ark 4x2 29 inch 184 Lanark Fur 13$, Uuion 50 4x2 30, do 50 2x2 30,
do 20 4x2 274, do 20 2x2 274, Caledonia 15 inch 28, do 11 inch 22,
Kennebeck 264, Star No. 800 2x2 19, do No 900 4x2 21, Cameron No.
90 19,

do No. 80 17.

do 81.




cotton..

silk
flax

Miscellaneous dry

....

•
....

goods

in

as

SI
97
244
23

64,214

22,455

7,286

47

28,992

$555,436
1,714,759

Totalthrownupon mak’t 5,700

$2,270,195

—

1,289

49,269

168
69
103

22,025
116/56

forconsmnpt’n4,411

Total
Add ent’d

72,098

126,742

441
257
809
868

247,319
193,869
50,435

975

$425,963

8,906

1,614,835

4,402 $1,504,430
5 533 2,241,541

4,881 $2,040,798

9,935 $3,745,97i

SAME PERIOD.
145
$239,870
25
32,433

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE

Manufactures of wool...
do cotton..
silk
do
do
flax
....

....

much request .as brown and bleached
goods aud prints, but have still sold very fairly. Amoskeag 30, Hay¬
maker 28 inch 16, do brown 15, York 28 inch 29, Warren brown 27
inch 15, Boston Mfg. Co. 29 inch 13$, Pearl River 29, Union 16,
Monitor 14, Manchester Co. 19, Columbian XXX 30, do blue 29, Ar¬
lington 18, Blue Hill 12}, Mount Vernon 264, Pawnee 11}.
Brown Drills have been rather dull, a decline of 4 cent has taken
place in Pepperells and Stark A. Winthrop 14, Amoskeag 18, Laco¬
nia 174, Pepperell 18, do fine jean 18$, Stark A 18, Massabesic 16,
Woodward duck bag 26$, National bags 31, Stark Ado 62$, Liberty
Denims have not been

do
do
do

Miscellaneous dry

goods.

268
41
47

570
79

$88,769
14,119
96,277
72,722

24,348

consnmpt’n 4,411

$296,235
1,714,759

Total entered at the port 5,418

$2,010,994

Total
Add ent’d lor

1,007

537
95
125
148
9
914

3,906

4,820 $2,071,161

^°The table ofweealy imports
this page

5,925
6,9,2

201

5,533

534

$77,151
2,24 ,541

5,734 $2,318,692

usually published, on

will hereafter be omitted, and its place

by af 11 table of imports for the three
lished at the end olf each quarter.
Our General

6,259

8
19
4

119,644
55,931
8,448
$456,326
1,614,835

$5 J,481

supplied

months, to he

pub*

Prices Current will be found on pages
253 and 254.

August 24, 1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

®fje Uailtoay monitor.
Memphis

Thence
Thence

across the
Rocky Mountains
to the probable
junction (78
east of Salt Lake

Railroad.—Governor Brownlow has taken
possession of this road lor the State of Tennessee, the Company
having failed to meet their obligations to the State.
Consolidation.—The Columbus and

Logansport, and the Toledo
lington Railroad Companies have agreed
The extent of these roads is

tion.

Columbus & Ind. Central (Columbus to
Branch to Union City
Union & Logansport Railroad

upon articles of consolida¬
follows :

as

1S8.0
19.5

207.5
92.0
01 0

length of consolidated road

dent.

Pacific Railroad Subsidy.—Our readers are well aware that
beside the grant of ten sections of land on each side of the lines,
these railroads receive from the Government

large subsidy in a
bonds. The following table, prepared at the
Treasury Department, shows the length of each line and the amount
of bonds to be issued as the successive sections are
completed :
a

of curreucy

loan

;

7,200,000

32,000

9,270,560

955.705

$

$24,726,560

16,000

6,096,000

103.00

16,000

1,600,000

100.00

16,000

1,600,000

120 00

16,000

1,920,000

(late

Atchison and Pine's Peak
liR.)—For 100
miies next to the Missouri River

Sioux City
a

and

Pacific—From Sioux City to

junction with the Union Pacific Ka Iroad

at

Western Pacific—From San Jose to Sacra¬
mento, and probably to be consolidated with
the Central Pacific
...

Grand Total

2,358.00
1,358.00

the

legal title of Columbus and
Indiana Railroad Company, and is expected to be
completed for
use in November next.
B. E. Smith, of Columbus, Ohio, is Presi¬

48,000

Union Pacific (Eastern Division) -For a
length
equal to the distance from the mouth of tue
Kansas River to the 100th meridian.
881,0<)
381.00
Central Branch of Union Pacific

360.5

The consolidation will take

150.00

289.705

miies

Fremont

Iudianapolia)

Toledo, Loganeport & Burlington Railroad
Total

295

the Central Pa¬

Total Union Pacific Railroad

Indianapolis Central, the
and Logansport and Bur¬

Union and

City) with

cific Railroad

Ohio

and

247

$

$60,669,120

The bonds issued for these railroad? bear
6 per cent,
currency in¬
terest, and the companies severally are authorized to issue
an equal
amount ol their own bonds
having

issues.

At this date the Central has

Pacific 416

priority over the government
completed 105 miles, the Union

miles, and the Eastern Division

234 miles.

Miscellaneous.—We learn that the tunnel at. the Point of Rocks
the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, has been so far
completed as
to be ready to receive the track.
The tunnel at Williams’
Point,
on

mile and

a

half

beyond, is being vigorously worked, in order, it is
said, to have the double track completed by the 17th of
a

September.

RAILROADS.

Length
Central Pacific—From Sacramento to the W.
base of the feierra Nevada

Amount
per mile.

7.18
150.00

Thence across the Sierra Nevada
Thence to the probable junction with the Union
Pacific RR. (78.295 miles E. of Salt Lake City)

Total
amount.

$16,000

$114,880

48,000

7,200,000

32,000

17,411,680

544.115

The Sun

Paulo

(Brazilian) Railway was opened on I6th of
February, 1867. It is 864 miles in length. The traffic for the
month of May was about $64 000.
A company has been organized at New Orleans
called the
Electrical Brake Co. of America.” It is claimed that a
railway
train running forty four miles an hour can be
“

Total Central Pacific Railroad.

701.295

$

$24,726,560

Union Pacific—From Omaha to the E. base of
the

Rocky Mountains

516.00

COMPARATIVE
-Atlantic & Great Western.-^
1867.

1866.

1865.

<

(507 m.)
$289,400 $504,992
,327,269
408,864
899,870
388,480
394,533
343,408
399,364
451,477
429,669
474,441
472,483
462,674
528,618
596,583
526,959
540,537
5S7,121
541,491
614,849
497,250
475,723
368,581

459,370 .May...

3S0,796.

.June..

400,116. .July...
—
.Aug...
—
.Sept...
.
.

—

.

—

.

—

.

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

6,548,359 5,476,276 3,050,340. .Year..
Erie
1865.

Railway
1866.

(798 m.)

(798 m.)
$1,070,890 $1,185,746
1 011,735
987,936
1 331,124
1,070,917
1

538,313

1,425,120
1,252,370
1,274,558
L418,742
1,435,285

1,153,441

—>

,

1867.
..

1,217,143.. April..

1,101,632 1,122,140...May
1,243,636 1,118,731..June...
1,208,244 1,071,312 .July...
1,295,400
...Aug
1,416,101
...Sep—
..

—

...Oct—

6,501,063 14,596,413
1865.

1,826,722

1866.

(524 m.)
$314,598
283,179
412,393
409,427
426,493
392,641
338,499
380,452
429,191
500,404
416,690
339,447
4,652,793

fan.
302,437. .Feb..
379,761
Mar.
391,163.. April.
358,601... May..
304,232 ..June.
31 /,879. ..July..
.

...Aug*.
.--...Sep..

—

....Oct...
...Nov..

—

...Dec.1.
..Year..

Fittsb., Ft.W.,& Cl licago.—*
1865.

1866.

(468 rn.) (468 m.)
$690,144 $559,982
678,504
480,986
857,583
662,163
733,866
599,806
637,186
682,510
646,995
633,667
584,528
552,378
712,495
648,201
795,938
654,926
858,500
757,441
712,362
679,935
680,963
565,222




1867.

506,586.. June..

—

—

—

—

—

477,607...May

567,679
480,626

496,6:6.. June..
497,521... .1 Illy..

554,201... Feb.
417,352... Mar...
420,007.. April..

(234 m.)
$98,183
74,283

70,740
106,689
146,943
224,838
217,159
170,555
228,020
310,594
226,840
110,664

1,985,712

(234 m.)
$121,776
84,897
72,135
108,082
267,488
262,172

170,795
116,224

116,995

116,146
105,767

150,148
110,932
111,665

1,222,017

1,186,808

—

July.
.AngH

-.Sept

.
.
.

..Oct.*..
-Nov...
_Dec....
—Year~

1866.

$143,000. ..Jan..
Hf>,UX). .Feb..
72,000. ..Mar
.

.

87,510. April.
119,104. ..May..
114,579. .June
130,000. ..July..

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

.

.

—
.

.Dee.^

Year..

,340,744

2,251,525

(275 m.)

$131,707
123,<404
123,957
121,533
245,598

$146,800.

106,269
203,018
237,562
251,9«’6
241,370

^ >0,841

S395,579

£ 346,717
£*,171,125

i860.

..

—

—

..Oct
^ 375,534
..Nov;... ? 361,610

221,690. .June.
193,000. ..July.

..Aug..
...Sep..

276,416
416,359
328,539

.

129,287
—

..

Wab- & Western.—

$226,059
194,167
256,407
370,300
316,433

349,117

L 247,028

«Year« 2,936,678

8,694,975

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

Year.

...Jan...
...Feb...
..lar...

200,793
270,630

317,052

April..
..May...
.

329,078
3 04,810
309,591
•

..June..
.

.

—

—

—

July..

..Aug...

—

—

1866.

$259,223 $267,541
239,139
246,109
313,914
271,527
290,916
304,463

326,236
277,423
283,130
253,924

349,285
344,700
350,348
372,618
412,553
284,319

247,262
305,454

272,454
280,283
251,916
261,480
274,800

Sept...

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

—Year..

*

1867.

(285 m.)

$304,095
283,661

375; 210
362,783

333,952
284,977
313,021
—

—

—

278,701

310,762
302,425
281,613

1867.

(340 m.)

$242,793
219,065
279,647

284,729
282,939

340,135
—

—
—

—
_

—

—

Western Union.
i860.

(521 m.)
$237,674

224,621

Mississippi.—,

(340 m.) (340 m.)

3,793,005 3,380,583
t

»

1867.

325 f9l

304,917
396,248
436,065
8^4,830
264,741

..Dec....

230,497. ..May.,

208,785

lsGO.
(521 in.)

.

.

188,815

335,082
324,986
359,665
429,166
493,649
414,604
308,649

4,504,546 4,260,125
1865.

.Jan..
130,000. ..Feb.
134,900. ..Mar..
192,548. A pril.

2,533.800

2,535,00!

—

—

.

1867.

244,376

26), 796
337,158
313,7:36
365,196

328.869

(370 in.)

95,905

(285 m.)

$282,4:38

—Ohio &

(234 m.)
$98,181
86,523

(210 in.)
(242 in.)
$149,658... Jan... $144,084
149,342.. .Feb...
139,171
174,152... Mar...
155,753
188,162.. April..
144,001
138 7:18
171,736... May...
156,065 ...June..
194,52.'
July.. f 271,798
..Aug... ,1; 374,534
379,981
..Sept...
—

..Year.

1866.

^-Toledo,

1867.

—

...Dec..

1865.

(234 m.)

)

$;juo,.*

413,501
41)0,661
490,693
447,669

Oct:.,
...Nov.

—

1866.

365,663
329,105

,

..

—

in

279,15
344,228
337,240
401,456

.—Milwaukee & St. Paul.^

1867.

—

.

-

...Aug..
Sep..

—

$292,047

Michigan Central.

1865.

(285

„96,535.. J une.
it 6,594... J illy.
—

1867.

(410 m.)

3,313,514 3,466,922

90,5*26...May..

—

306,093
238,926

244,121

84,652.. .Mar..
72,768.. April.

108.3:38

277 505

306,231
317,977
389,489
—^400.941
307,523 S 428,474
270,073 ®315,027
201,779 S260,26S

78,976... Feb..

106,410

125,252

..Year...

—

115,184

1S66.

234,612
321,818

1867.

(251 m.)
$94,136.. .Jan.

96,023

245,7ul
244,854
98,787

(210 m.) (210 m.)
$170,078 $178,119
153,903
155,893
202,771
192,138
169,299
167,301
177,625
168,699
173,722
167,099
162,570
166,015
218,236
222,953
216,783
198,884
222,924
244,834
208,098
212,226
162,694
177,364

1866.

104,608

150,9S9

1,943,900

i860.

(228 in.) (228 in.)
$•105,554 $241,395
246,331
183,385
•289,403
257,230
196,580
209,099

Year..

..

(251 m.) (251 m.)
$96,672
$90,125
87,791
84,264
93,763
82,910
78,607
82,722
76,248
95,064
107,525
106,315

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

—

1866.

9,cS8,991

...Aug...
..Sep...

—

661,971

7,960,981
1865.

505,266
505,465
411,605
569,250

1865.

578,242...May..
—

1867.

(708 in.)
$660,438... Jan.—

578,253
571,348

<-ChicM Rock Is. and Pacific.—*

1867.

<—Marietta 1 md Cincu man.—-

*

r-St. L.. Alton & T. Haute.—.

(468 in.)
$560,115... Jan...
522,821... Feb...
678,349... Mar...
575,*287.. April..
534,733

..Year..

—

6,546,741

* 302,714..

—

...Nov..
...Dee..

—

$603,053

1865.

—

...Oct...

—

528,972

7,181,208

1867.

—

—

-Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.-

(524 m.)

—

.

...Aug..
....Sep..

$571,536

..Year..

—

Mich. 80. A N. Indiana.^
(524 m.)
$363,996
366,361
413,974
365,180
351,489
387,095
301,613
41^575
486,808
524,760
496,072
851,799

343,678.. June.

356,142..July

1866.

.

338,691...May..
—

RAILROADS.

...

238,362... Mar..
283,951 ..April.

(708 m.)

588,219
504,066

...Nov...

—

—

142,947 ..Feb..

(708 in.)

616,665
516,608
460,573
617,682
578,403
747,469
739,736

PRINCIPAL

(860 m.) (1,032 m.)(l,145 m.)
$541,005 $523,566 $690 832 ...Jan..
482,164
Feb..
453,695 586.743
499,296
609,633 747,392 ...Mar..
468,358 . 617,970 720,651 .April.
585,623
735,O'2 787,736 ...May..
747.942
922,892 898,357 ..June..
702,692
808,523 880,324 ...July
767,508
778,284
—
...Aug..,
946,707
989,053
—
....Sep..,
923,886 1,210,654
—
....Oct..,
840,354 1,005,680
—
..Nov...
546,609
698,679
—
...Dec,.,

$240,238. ..Jail..

1866.

OF

stopped by electricity

huudred yards

one

1865.

(280 m.)

Illinois Central.

filly and

-Chicago & Northwestern-^

»

1867.

(280 7/1.) (280 m.)
$280,503 $226,152
275,282
222,241
299,063
290,111
258,480
269,249
322,277
329,851
355,270
371.543
335,985
321,597
409,250
387,269
401,280
322,638
357,956
360, *23
307,919
323,030
236,824
271,246

...Dec....

—

9

1866.

641,589
643,887
518,088

—

1,524,9L7£ 1,041,115

Chicago and Alton.

1865.

between

EARNINGS

3,840,091 3,695,152

r~

(775 in.)
$906,759.. Jan
917,639...Feb...
1,139,528... Mar...

8,256, f 00

MONTHLY
1865.

(507 in.)
$361,137. .Jail....
377,852. .Feb....
438,046 .March
443,029 April..

(466 in.)

16,000

1866.

1867.

(157 VI.) (177 in) (177 m.)
$43,716
45,102
$39,079
37,265
36,006
27.666
32,378
39,299
36,392
33,972
43,333
40,710
63,862
86,913
57,852
82,147 102,686
60,558
68,180
85,508
58,262
5«»,862
75,677
92,715
61,770

87,830

689,388

60,698
84,462

—

100,308
75,‘.MS

—

64,478

—

814,08$

—

[August 24, 1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

248

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
Snbacrlbers will confer a great favor by

ii is

FRIDA*

Interest.

DESCRIPTION.

N»H*—Where th^ total Funded Debt
is not given in detail in the 2d col
umn

giving ni Immediate notice of any error discovered in onr Tables.

expressed by the figures

Amount
outstand¬

ing.

in brackets after the Co’s name.

Kate.

Payable.

Princpal payble.

IV.B.—Where the total Funded Debt! Amonnt
is not given in detail in the 2d col outstand¬

H3

T3

umn

h

2

-

)

2,653,000

S’k’sr Fund (Butt’, ex

1,382,000
17,105,000

Atlantic ASt. Law.1st Mort. (Portland)
2d Mortgage
Sterling Bonds

do

Consolidated Bonds

of 18 >4

do

Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (S
Mortgage (S. F.) of 1855*
•

do
do

do
do

F) 1834

7
7
7
7

Ap’l & Oct.

do
do
do
do
Jan. to July

'

Mortgage

do
Sinking Fund Bonds
Boston, Hartford and Erie
Boston and Lowell: Bonds o
do
of Oct. >864
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

364,0001

200,000

*444,(10

Ju y 1

t C

($2,395,000):

1st

Mortgage
Burlington A Missouri
General Mortgage
'

($1,902,110):
.

Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan....

Sterling £380,555 at $4 ^4
Camden and Atlantic : 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Catawissa : 1st Mortgage
Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage....
Central of New Jersey : 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Central Ohio : 1st Mort
Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage
Convertible Bonds
Cheshire: Bonds

Chicago and Alton :
1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref
do

income

Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406):
Trust Mortgage (S. F.)
Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort..
Chicago and Milwaukee :
-

(consolidated)
Chicago dt Northwest. ($12,020,483):
Preferred Sinking Fund
1st Mortgage

1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds
Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870
Extension Bonds

Chicago, Rock Island dt P icific:
1st Mortgage (C. & K. I.)...
1st
do
(new)
Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000):

1st
1st

Feb

675,000
867,000
4,437,300
1,841,962

J’ne

490,000

Jan.

493,000

Ap’l

141,000
76*\000

Aug 1882
Sep. 1875
Aug 1870
May to Nov. 1875
M’chA Sep 1890

1,100,000|

May

Feb. to
Mar. to
Feb. to

Jan. &

May & Nov.
July
Ap'l to Oct.

Jan. &

1877
1893
1883

S61,000|

Jnly

Cot. and Cine. ($150,000):

Mort.(payahle $25,000

per

year)

1,250,000
3,600.000

Feb. &

Aug

do

May & Nov.
Quarterly.
Feb. to

Aug

6,663,000

Jan. & July 1870
896
do

May * Nov
Jau. to July

....

-

•

•

102* ’ 102*'

5<>U,U00

do

May to Nov

112

....

90

84** sr”
90%
81%

82*’

83

450,000

Jan. &

101
91

91%

1890

Feb. to Aug 1873
M’ch to Sep 1876
Tau. & July 1875

Jan. & July 1874

1,000,000

July

do

Jan. & July 1885
do
1886

1st Mortgage
2d
do

Connecticut River: lsi Mort
Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000):
1st

Mortgage

Cumberland Valley: 1st Mort
do

2d
6 per

—

300,000
3,200 0^
1,00 -,000
250,000

M’ch to

95
89

72%

Ap’l & Oct. 1904
do

do

2,589,0001

do

642,000

Depot Bonds
Delaware: 1st Mortgage, guaranteed.
Deia., Lacka. & Western ($3,491,500):
lsi, Mortgage, sinking fund
.

Laeka. and West. 1st Mort

Des Moi'tf* Valley : Mortgage Bonds
Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680):
1st Mortgage, convertible
2d
do
1st & 2d Fnnded Coupon Bonds..
Detroit and Pontiac R.R....
do
do

Detroit, Monroe A Toledo; 1st Mort

169,500

500,000
1,122 500

1904

1,668 000
572,000
1,740,000

$2,500,000
1,000,000
1,005,640
250,000
250,000

994)000

Mrh A Sep
Jan. & July

Ap’l & Oct
May to Nov.
o

vari-

us.

various.

Feb. & Aug

.....

107
103
101

107%

94"
•

»

•

•
•

•

#••••

.

• •

.

•

•

...

....

95
81
74
1

•

•

•

....

...

....

April to Oct 1881
Jan. & July 1883

....

-

Jnly

do

1876

•

.

...

•

500,000
500,000

May & Nov
Feb. & Aug

1870
1875

April & Oct

1875
1875
1890
1875
1882

.

800,000

Feb. to

Jan. & Jnly 1866
do
1870

500,000

Mortgage

Mortgage

Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort

Indianap. to Madison RR., 1st M..
Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., 1st Mort..

Jan. to

2,523,000

Chicago:
Mortgage, sinking fund
Joliet and NT Indiana: 1st Mortgage
Lackawanna A Bloumsburg 1st Mort
Extensi

n

Mortgage

;

d<>
Extension
La Crosse A Milwaukee:
1st Mortgage, Eastern Division....
2d
do
do

do

640,000
397,000
612.500
2,000,000

May & Nov.
April to Oct
May & Nov
April & Oct

1881
1873
1881
1906

485,000
800,000
900,000

1882
1874
1875

40**000

Jan. to July
Jan. to July
Jan. to July
MarchA Sep

500,000
200,000

April & Oct
May & Not.

Mortgage

....

($3,688,385):

1385

903,000
1,000,000

..

...

•

•

•

.

•

..

... 9

....

.

•..

....

....

..

•

•

...

•

.

.....

May A Nov. 1878
May & Nov

....

•

••*>

.

103

105,

....

May to Nov. 1872
Jan. & July 1869

886,000
500,000
175,000

150,000

April to Oct 1877
Jan. to July 1875
Feb. to Aug 1890
May & Nov 1893

1,650,000
280,000
2,362,800
4,000,000

Feb. & Aug 1892
Jan. A July 1885

July
May to Nov.

...
....

1883

Jan. *

<•

McGregor Western 1st Mortgage
Maine Central: ($2,733,800)

•.

18S0
1890

1,300,000

..

•

105

1866

1,465,000

(Glen Cove Br.)

..

Aug

Jnly

Joliet and
1st

•

....

do
do
do

600,000
864,000

ceased)

•.;.

1883

....

...

....

var.
var.

S3

MarchASei* 1869
April & Oct

1882

May & Nov.
Feb. to Aug

1885
1877
1868

Jan. to

1891

85

....

Feb. & Aug. ’90-’91
June & Dec. ’70-’71
Apr. & Oct. 1874
Feb. & Aug. 1870
May to Nov. 1880

do

....

..

....

108% 110
111% 112
99

99%

96

....

Milwaukee A Prairie du Chien:

1st

* Aug im

Mortgage
do

2d

do
do

(Mil. & Western)...
Income Bonds
Real Estate

Mississippi A Tennessee ($1,069,600):

100
10*
98

1875
1881
(871
1887
1875
1864
1875
lr*78
1886

Mortgage, sinking fund.

Milwaukee and St. Paul:

Jan. & July 1867
1881
do
M’ch&April 1834
’81-’94
do
Jan. to July 1875

April & Oct

....

Feb. to Aug 1869
J’ne & Dec. 1885
May & Nov. 1875
1867
do

:

Jeffersonville, Madison A Indianapolis.

1st

283,000

do

Toledo

101%

J’ne A Dec. 1876

108,(00

.

Jan. to July 1873

1,095,600
$1,I'M),000 Loan Bonds
315,200
$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds.
660,000
2d
do
800,000
(P.& K.RK.) Bonds..
Mernj'his A Charleston: Mon. bonds 1,294,000
Michigan Central, ($7,463,489)
Convertible
2,297,000
4,504,500
Sinking Fond do
;
Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($9,135,840)
4 863,000
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do
2,693,000
Goshen Air Line Bonds
651,000

Sep 1878

161,000

8d




Mav& Nov.

...

Feb. & Aug 1882.
May & Nov. 1875
Jan. & Jnly 70-75
Jan. to July 1870
April & Oct 1868
Feb. to Aug 1888
May & Nov. 1893
1868
July.
1868
do
do
1868

2,563,000
358,000

— ....

1st Mortgage
1st Memphis Branch
Marietta A Cincinnati
1st Mortgage,

IS¬
IS—

600,000

2d

do

July

109,5(H)

cent bonds

Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430):
1st Mortgage

2d

Jan. &

J

##

1870

700,000

Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000):

M’ch & Sep 1873
do
1875
Jan. & July 1892

2,081,000

Jnly

Jan. to

6,668,500

do 6 per cent

Mortgage

do

Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1866
Columbus & Indianapolis Central:

3,437,750
633,600

192,000

Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point),

1880

1,129,000
1,619,500
1,107,546

600,000

8,890,000)

Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000):
1st Mortgage
Little Miami ($1,500,000):
1st Mortgage
Little Schuylkill ($1,000,000) :
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Long Island :
1st Mortgage

Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,872,860) :
2d Mortgage
3d
do
convertible
4th
do

do

Indiana Central:
1st Mortgage, (interest
2d
do

do

103

2.500,000
326,000
7(H), 000

1,907,000

bonds, 1875

Illinois and Southern Iowa

1st

1893

1,300,000

Jan. to

■

1862

927,000

92% Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284)
50

927,000
1,000,000
1,455,000

2,655,000

Redemption bonds
Sterling Redemption bonds
1st

.

1880
1885
iSy5

1,250,000

dec., Pain. A Ashtabula:
1st Mort. Bonds
2d Mort. Bonds

•35*

2d

1,397,000

April to Oct

‘

82

....

523,000

Construction
do

1(3

1885
1885
1863
1915
1885

Cleveland A Mahoning ($1,752,400):
1st Mortgage
3d
no
Hnbbard Branch

100

1,963,000
1,086,000

388,0001

1st Mortgage
2d
do
Illinois Central:

1898

2,000,(HH)
484,000

do

Huntingdon A Broad 7bp($l,462,142):

1st

Jan. &

756,000

do

Convertible

1895

5,600,000:

149,000

.

109

Jan. &

500.000

Mortgage

88%
95%

July ’75-’80]

Jnly
Ap’l to Oct.

3,525,000

...

Hartford A New Haven :
1st Mortgage
1
Hartf., Prov. A Fishkill :
Hudson River ($7,762,840):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
sinking fund
3d
do
:

92

>

121,000

..

91

1870
& Aug. 1883
to Nov. 1889
& Dec. 1893
880
& July 1873
& Oct. 1879

795,000
534,9. H)

Cincinnati Richmond dt Chicago..
Cincinnati A Zanesville.

90

90

1870
1870

500,(M)O

2d Mortgage
3d
do

Cleveland,

55

April & Oct
Jau. & July

483,000!

..

Grand Junction : Mortgage
Great West., 111.: 1st Mort., W, Div.
1st Mortgage Whole Line.
2nd dp
do
Greenville & Columbia : 1st Mort....
Bonds guaranteed by State
Bonds unsecured
Hannibal dk St. Joseph ($7,177,600):
Land Grant Mortgage
Convertible Bonds
Harrisbura A Lancaster :
New Dollar Bonds

July 873
Ap’l & Oct. 1879

1,180,950

2,500,000
7,336,000
1,500,000
673,2(H)

.

926.500
3,875,520

(incl. in C. & N. W.):
Mortgage, sinking fund

1st
2d

1866

2.400,000

do

1st
2d

Mortgage

Jan. to

J'ne to Dec

3,000,000
4,000,000
6,000,000

May to Nov. 1867
M’ch A Sep 1879
do
1883
April & Oct 1880
June & Dec 1888
M’ch & Sep 1875

<

Jan. to July 1880

4,441,6001

($400,000):

s

Ap’l & Oct. 1888

M

Gal. & Chic. U.

Feb. to Aug 1S65
do
1865
1889
do

Ap’l to Oct.

9(H), 000

..

Sterling convertible (£800,000)...

Erie and Northeast

1870

May & Nov

600,IHH)

cent. Bonds

Georgia

338,040

do
Dollar Loan

99

1877
1872

2,000,000
380,000

600,000

Bonds conv. into pref. stock
Camden and Amboy ($10,204,403):
Dollar Loans

99* 100*

July ’70-’79

do

Jan. & July 1872
Feb. to Aug 1874
do
1885

:

Erie Railway ($22,370,982):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
convertible
3d
do
4th
do
convertible
5th
do
do

100

99

1880
1885

500,000

Buffalo and, State Line ($1,200,000):

1st

5 per

J’ne & Dec.|lS67
M’eh & Sep 11885
Feb. to Aug 11877

589,500

Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie

do

Williamsport
Mortgage

T3

'd

f&
£

1,000,000
570,000

Sinking Fund Bonds
Elmira A

1866

*

598,000

do

FRIDAY.

Jan. to July 1883
1894
do

East Pennsylvania:

May & Nov. 1878
Ap’l & Oct. IS'4
Ja Ap JuOc 1867
Jan. to July 1875

8

894,000
750,000
160,000

2d section

do

*3.2*

660,000

800,000

Mortgage, 1st section
do

Payable.

name.

Mortgage, convertible
do
do

0

Jan. to

Boston, Cone, A Montreal ($1,050,000):
1st
1st

s

Ap’l to Oct.

500,0(H)

do

ing.

Eastern, Mass. ($1,343,PH)):

1881

1,000,000

do

1st
1st

1876
1883
1884
1895

1,225,000
4:33,000

do
Bu 'idere Delaware :
^it Mort. (guar. C. aDd 1
Id Mort.

915,280

1,021.750

do
do
do

1877
1882
1879

1,852,000

*1

0d Mort.

619.026

Ap’l to Oct.

628.5(H)

1850
1853

Bellefontaine ($1,745,000):
1st Mortgage

-

484,000

expressed by the figures

Railroad:
Dubuoue and Sioux City :

1,500,00
268,900

do
8d
1st Mortgage

It is

in brackets after the Co’s

<

Railroad:

/Mantis. A Gt. Western ($29,040,000):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)
$2,151,500
757,‘>(H)
2d
do
do
886,000
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.)
701,000
2d
do
do
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) 3,681,900

INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

•

1st

Mortgage

Income
Mobile and Ohio ($6,133,243):....
Income bonds

Sterling bonds
Interest bonds

Montgomery A Wbst Point :$l,130,700f
i

Bonds of 1870
Income Bonds..

....

...»

Mortgage Bonds (new).

296,560
4,269,000
324,000
1,500,500

135.600
600,000
297.600

881,900
4,187,0(0
75,8481

100,000[

810,000
750,0001

July

Jan. to Jnly 1893
April to Oct 1893
April to Oct 1884
Jan. & Jnly 1875
Jan. *

July 1876

do

1870

May A Nov.

1867
;88i
1882
1876

do
do
do

Jan. to July 1870
1876
do
1881
do

•

•••

....

86
....

80%
•

•

•

•

....

f

.

..

*

•

•

•

....

•

•

• •

•

••

•

• • • •

•

•

•

•

....

....

.

..

*

-

-

•

• •••

•

•••

•

••»

• ••»
• •

••

• •••

August 24, 1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

249

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.—Continued.
Subscriber* will confer a great favor by giving ns Immediate notice
Description.

interest.

B.—Where the toted Funded Debt
is not given in detail in the 2d col
omn it is expressed by the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

w

oS

Amount
outstand¬

o

ing.

T3

n «

Payable.

M

£ *
^ p.

discovered in

Description.
N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount
is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand

FRIDAY.

.

—

of any error

it is expressed by the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

umn

OQ

Tables*

onr

FRIDAY,

INTEREST.

1Rate.

ing.

Princpal payble.

Payable.

1

Railroad:
Morris and Essex :
1st

Railroad
5.000.001

sinking fund

Mortgage,

Naugatuck : 1st Mortgage (convert.)
New Bedford d Taunton
....

d Northampton ; Bonds.. .Hampshire & Hamden R.R. do .
New Jersey ($855,000): Bonds of 185:-’

Ar. Haven

London Northern .-1st Mortgage

New

New Orleans, Jackson rf- Gt. North.1st Mortgage Sinking Fund
2d Mortgage
^

Orleans, Opelou. d Gt. West.:

New

x

New

180,000

45O,(10O| 7
200,000 6 April & Oct

:

Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ..
Bonds of October, 1803 (renewal)
Real Estate Bonds

Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks)
Sink Fund B’ds (assumed debts).
Bonis of August, 1859, convert.. ]
!
Bonds of 1805
New York and Harlem ($6,09S,045):
i?t General Mortgage
Consolidated Mortgage

485,000 6

140,000| 0

3d Mortgage
N york and New
N. Y., Prov. and

6,450,438 G May & Nov
2,925,000 G .June & Dec
105,000 G May & Nov
do
606,000 G
1,39S,<XX) 7^ Feb. & Aug

Steamboat Mortgage

Ogdensburg and L. Champlain:

1st Mortgage
Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Old Colony d Newport R.R.:
Bonds
do
do

1883
1887
1883
1883
1876
1876
1876

J

Mortgage

2d
3d

do
do

1st. Extension
2d Extension

or
or

May & Nov

1,000,(XX)
1.000,000;
1,008.500

145,000
339,000
50,000
2,500,000
360,000

100,000
300,000

Oswego and Syracuse ($311,500);
do

sterling
do

1st Mortgage
2d
do
PhUa. and Balt. Central
1st Mortgage

Philadelphia d Reading ($6,900,663)
Sterling Bonds of 1836
do

do
do
Dollar Bonds of 1849
do
do
1861..
do
do
1843 4-8-9

Sterling Bonds of 1S43
Dollar Bonds, convertible
Philadelphia & Trenton : 1st Mort.
PhUadel., miming. d Baltimore:
Mortgage Loan
Coupons Bonds
Pittsburg d Connellsoille ($1,500,000):
1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.)
Pb'g, Ft. IF. and Chic.: ($12,573,500)
1st Mortgage
..

do
do

Bridge O. & P. RR

Akron Branch: 1st mortgage.

.

do

1st

Mortgage..
Portland d Kennebec ($1,394,661) .•
1st mortgage bonds, ext

Consolidated bonds
Banian and Delaware Bay:
1st
Mortgage, sinking fund....
do

Columbia: 1st Mort...

Rensselaer d Saratoga consolidated:
1st Mort. Rensselaer &
Saratoga
1st Mort.
Saratoga & Whitehall....
1st Mort. Troy, S & Rut.
(guar.)
Richmond d Danville ($1,717,500):
.

Interest Bonds
’‘** ’’‘
Richmond d Petersburg
’($319,000) '
"OndB, coupon & registered

CtenentfMortgage..,,...




575,000

Jan. &

1,000,000
4,000,000
143.800
408,000
182,400
2,661,600
106,000
1,521,000
976.800
228,500
200,(XX!
450,000

1,000,(XXJ
400,000

April & Oct

Jan. &

July

Jan. &

1877
1881
1901

Feb. &
Semi

1,000, OX
500,000
500,0(X

Feb. ifc

230,(XX)
300,(XX

208, (XX

800,000

Aug]

April & Oct

1881
1881
1890

do

1883
1895

Mch <fc Sept]
do
do
Mch & Septj

1888
1888
1876
1879

400,00d
340,001

May & Nov. 1890

500,000

1S80

826,000

140,547
130,500
175,000

do
do

Feb. &
do

98

91
91

1890

Aug ’73 ’75
|’69 ’76

June & Dec 1875
Mar. $ oep.j 18T0

•

•••

•

•

•

•

•

• •-

•

•

•

•

175, (XXi
25,(XXi
500,000

Chesapeake and Delaware ; 1st Mort.| 2,254,000
Chesapeake and Ohio: Maryl’d Loan 2,(XX),(XX)
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed
4,375,000
Preferred Bonds
| 1,699,5(H)
Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage...
800,(XX)
Bonds (coup)

....

....

....

-

6

1

6
6
6

414,158

90

....

so%

...

69
89

72%

•

•

•

•

•

•

June ifc Dec
do
do
Feb. ifc Aug
,

81

...

188?

Ian. &

•

.

.

9 •

•

.

i

1878

Jan. tfc Julv 70-’76
Vpril & Oct 1875

Jan. tfc uly
do
I ’’eb. & Aug

1890
1890
1896

* lay tfc Nov.
J an. tfc Julv

1870
1871
1877

*

y

do

July

Sept
July

do

....

•

do

....

72
92
••

•

....

1870
1897

April & Oct
do

1S76

May & Nov.

1876

Mch &
Jan. &

Sept

1872
1882
1870

Jan. & July

1865
1878

July

980,670

July
May & Nov.
do

»•••••

May & Nov.

1st

Mortgage Bon^s
Consolid. CoaWoJMd.): Mort.f conv.)|
Cumberland Coal: 1st

Mortgage
Mariposa Mining: 1st Mortgage
2d

do

Penn>y'vania Coal: Mortgage
Quick,:h <er Min mg ; ’
1st
2d

Bonds.|

Mort.,prin.&int.payable in goldl
do

do

Western Union Telegraph:
1st Mortgage convertible

429.000

July

1878

Jan. «fc

Miscellaneous:
American Dock d Improvement :
Bonds (gtnr. Cen.R.R. Co. of
N.J.)I 2,000,000
Covington and Cincinnati Bridge :

1883

Jan. &
JaD &

July

188)

July 1878

6 Jan. & July ’74-’84
Jan. & July 1885
Jan. & J uly 1879
? Jan. & July 18—

629,000 7

417,000

1,500,000
2,000,(XX. 7 April & Oci
6JO 000 7 Feb. & Aug

18 R81

500,000 7 June & Dec 1873

1,000,000 7 Jau.

July 1ST1

2,000,000 7/ May & Noy.

lb67

74

62

»

-

....

l."8?
1876

1,764,330

-9

*

....

1884

768,250

3

•

....

,

do

•

....

1886
1870
1890
1885
1878
1870
1865

Jail, ifc

Improvement
586,500
Susquehanna and Tide-Water:
Maryland Loan.
1,183,701
Coupon Bonds
1,993,000
Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds
227,569
Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage
3,(XX),009
West Branch and Susq. :1st Mortgage
750,000
Wyoming Valley : 1st, Mortgage
| 600,000

•

\pril &■ Oct 68-’71
,

Qnarlerly.

590,000

•

•

July 1873

\pril & Oct

232,087

Mortgage

.

35

....

1875

•

.

67%

....

.

•

.

....

65
30

1865

•

.

....

1872
1884

J 43,000

I

88

1=90
1890
1878
1878
1883
1871

•

2,000,000

Pennsylvania <(• New York :
1st
2d

e

*

....

....

Jan. &
Mch <fc
Jan. &

5,4:54,351

••

•

Jan. & July
Ja Ap Ju Oc
do

536,(XX>
752,000

1st Mortgage (North Branch)
99% Schuylkill Navigation :

89

•

....

1885
1875
Mar. & Sep. 1882
lau. & July ’68-’74
June <fc Dec 1861
Ian. «fc July 1867
Jan. & July 1883

5

7

Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st

[105

--

•

May ifc Nov.

.

7
8

200,000 6

..

Mortgage
Lehigh Coal and Navigation ;

Tan. & Julv
Oct.

7

596,(XXI

do

Mon-is. Mortgage Bonds
Boat Loan

98%

•

400,000

.

•

.

....

Apr.

•

.

562,800

j

.

do

7
7
7
7
6
7
7
6

511,400

Dollar Bonds.....

Delaware and Hudson

do

689,(MX) 6
936,500 6

Loan of 1870
l.o <11 ol 1884
1st mort. (RR. below M. Chunk).

an’ally

do

j

Aug 1889

1912
1912
April & Octl 1912
May & Nov. 1876
Jan. & July j 1884

7

May & Nov.

448,(XXI

...

96%

Apr. & Oct.

4,319,520

Monongahelu Navigation: Mortgage

do

500,000
LoOOjxx1

Feb. & Aug
do

%

636,000

Canal

91

.

•

1871

7
7
7
7

1,000,000
1.500,000

Albany City Bonds

Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds

1884

5,250,000
5,160,000
2,000,(XX)
158,500
200,OtX

900,000
2,500,000

July

Jan. &

T9

200,(XX)

Mortgage

Jan. &

1,600,000 7

Mortgage

2d

.

....

1876
1870
1894

do
guaranteed...
Western Union : 1st Mortgage ..
York d Cumberland (North. Cent.)

1882

July
April & Oct I

April & Oct
Jan. it July
June & Dec

2,000,0(X

800,000
650,000

1st

.

’

7

do

Western Maryland : 1st

....

....

Jan. & July ‘70 ’75
do
•0 ’72
do
‘65 ’6c<

6
6

1,400, OCX’

Western (Mass.) (6,269,520):
97

....

....

1875
1867

Mortgagel 1.180,000

3d
do
Income Mortgage
Warren : 1st Mortgage (guaranteed)..!
Westchester d Philadelphia :
1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon
2d
do
,
registered

80

....

...

Feb. & Atur 1872
Mar. & Sept 1S70
Jan. <te July 1886
Various.
68-74

6

175,000

Vermont Central. 1st Mort (consol.) 2,000,(XXI
2d
do
1,500,000
Vermont and Massachusetts 1st Mort|
550,000
Virginia <(- Tennessee ($2,177,000);

1875

Jan. & July 1867
do
|- 1880
April & Oct 1870
Jan. *fc July 1871
do
1880
do
1880
do
1886
May & Nov 18(38

7
5
6

....

1886

Troy Union ($680,000); Mort. Bonds.I

July 1876

April & Oct
April & Oct
April & Oct

7

S4
80

1875

July

..

1880

l,000,fXXt
250,000

Convertible Bonds

...

Julyl

7

Tan. * July
Jan. & July
June & Dec

7

do
Convertible

April & Oct ’70-*75
Feb & Aug. I 1872

Jan. &

7

7

82
79

Aug 1900

200,000

3d

1916
1-9!

Sept

:

Mortgage

4thMortgage

Aug |

Feb. &

7
7
7

Toledo H abash d Western
1st Mort. (Tol. & Illinois KK)
1st Mort. (L Frie,Wab Jfc St L. RR.
2d Mi rt (tol. & Wab. RK)
2d Mort. (Wab A We-t Railway).

2d

May & Nov. I 1866
Jan. & July 1875
May A Nov. | 1873
Feb. &

6

GOOJXX)
Equipment (Tol. & Wab. R 41 way)]
Sinking Fund (T. W.
W. It’wayi 1,000,000
Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) :
1 st Mortgage
300, (XXi

67-’S4

1884

5,000,000

Convertible Loan

Quincy and Toledo :

86

|’75-’7(>

Mch &

($800,000):

(general)

and Steubenville

99% 100

Jan. & July
June ct Dec

300, OCX
300,(*'0

:(13,3(X),(X))|

var.

1=92
1892

7

2,286,111
1,070,OCX

Toledo,Peoi-ia and Warsaw .1st. Mort

var.

7

7 00,OCX
1,20 ,(XX

55,000

Syr a. Bing, and N.Y. ($1,595,191):
Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st

April & Oct |’67-’69

4,980,000
4,904,840

Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie)...

Reading and

Jan. &
do

114

;

do
(general)
PhUadel., Germant. d Norristown :

2a

April tfc Oct |
July

1869
1872
1874

1,072,000

Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,(XX>)

1st
2d

1874
1870

89%

Jau. & July '70-’S0
do.
1885
Jan. & Julv

762,000
1,150,(XX)

Mortgage
Pennsylvania ($18,209,040)

Pittsburg

Jan. & July
Feb. & Au;

1900

-

700,(XX

S. W. Pacific, Railroad:
Bonds guar, ^y At. <fc Pacific R.R.
Southern Minnesota: Land Grant B’d|
Staten Island: 1st Mortgage ...

1880
1887

May & Nov.

189,00U

Panama :
1st Mortgage,
2d
do
Peninsula : 1st

2d
3d

July
April & Oci

8 J. A. J.&O.

-

800,(XX
500,(XX

1st Mortgage
Shore Line Railway: 1st Mort. bonds
South Carolina: Sterling Loan
Domestic Bonds
South Side ($1,631,900):
1st Mortgage (guar, by Petei sburg)
3d Mortgage

1st

Mortgage

do

Jan. &

1S94

....

•

1st Mortgage
Funded Bonds
Severn d A ven ue: 1st Mortgage
Shamokin Valley <4 Potts rule:

July 1S96

.350,000
200,00U

Pacific, guaranteed by Missouri —

1st
1st
2d

Jan. «fe

198,500

Income
1st
2d

Mar. & Sep.
do
do

April & Oct.

....

1894

an’ally
do

1,290. (XX

Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark,

1869
1868
1867

4<X),000
1,110,500
570,000

Oswego d Rome ($657,000).
1st Mortgage (guar by R. W. & O.)

103

85% 86%

1900
1874

700.000

7

150
50

...

1894
1894

Semi

9S1,(XX

Sandusky and Ci •icinnati:
Mortgage bonds.

96

Quarterly. ined.
2,500,000 G Ian. & July 1885

180,(XX)
223,000
1,458,000

...

102

1893
1868
April & Oct 1875
Feb. & Aug 73-’78
Tan. & July 1881

724,5001 G April & Oct
149.4001 G April & Oct

May & Nov.

1,372,00C
•

...

1875
1881

1,7(X).(XX

...

1872

do

7
7
7

2.200,(XX

2,SOD,(XX

..

Feb. & Aug
do

1,494,000
2,900,(XX)
750,000

....

do
do,

-j J

3,000,000

Orange d Alexandria ($2,923,004):
1st

W. Louis, Alton d Terre Haute :
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage preferred
2d
do
income.
St. Louis, Jacksonville d Chicago:
1st Mortgage
’
St. Paul <(• Chicago ($4,(XX),(XXT) r
1st Mort. land grant, S. F. guar
St. Paul d Pacific ot Minn : (1st Div)
1st Mortgage (tax free)
1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax
free)

....

1863
1863

7

400,(XX • 10 Jau -fc July
329,01 N « 10 Feb. & Auy

Mortgage
do

|

.:
do
do
Northern Nero Hampshire : Bonds..
North Eastern :
1st Mortgage
2d
do
North Carolina: Loan
North Missouri :
1st General Mortgage ($6,000,000).
North Pennsylvania ($3,124,737):
Mortgage Bonds
Chattel Mortgage—
Norwich and Worcester ($580,000) :
General Mortgage

1st

<

1891

946,(XX l

Sacramento Valley:

1885

7 Jun. & Dec

1,800.001 ) 7 Feb. & Aug

Mortgage
do

July 1=86
pril & Oci 1890

Haven: Moit.Bo’ds
250,<MH)
Boston : 1st Mort.
190,000,
Improvement Bonds
Northern Central ($5,424,500) .*
1,500,(XX)' 6
1st Mortgage, State (Md.) Loan...
2d
3d

1st

18S9

460,000

530,'(XX)

Rutland and Burlington:

Jan. &

2,741,000
423,000

“

....

Feb. ifc Aug
Jan. & July

709,501) 7 Jan. & July 18*0
521,5(X ) 7 Juu. *fe Dec ’69-’7; i

Potsdam tfc Watertown, guar
R. W. & O., sinking fund

1876
1881
1869
1874
1873

1,730,000 S Apr. & Oct.

Mortgage Construction Bonds

York Central

Jan. & July
do
•Ian. A July

224,Oihi

5

I

Rome, Watert. d Ogdens. .-($1,848,000)
Sinking Fund (Wat. & Rome)

1915

570,000

do

2d

May &Nov.

’O
T3

64

W-ij

THE CHRONICLE.

250

[August 24,1867.

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
giving

Subscribers will confer a great favor by

£i.B. —The figures after the
name, refer to the vol. and
page of Chronicle containing
last report. * means '‘'■leased,''
Kail road.
Alton and St. Louis*
Atlantic & St. Lawrence*
Baltimore and Ohio

Washington Branch*..

out-

luU.E5L

Periods.

1

100
10U

Belvidere, Delaware

10t

Blossburg and Coming*

10<

Jan.
Jan.
Jau.
Jan.
Jau.
Feb.

Broadway & 7th Avenue
1 0
Brooklyn City
10
Brooklyn City and Newtown. 100
Buffalo, New York, »te Erie*..l(X
Qamdeu aud Amboy. 4, p. 509.100

0°

Cape Cod
Catawissa*
do
preferred
Central Georgia & Bank’g
Central of New Jersey
Central Ohio
do
preferred
Cheshire (preferred)

50

&July
& July
<fc Jilly
& July
& Aug

50

Columbus and Xenia*
Concord
Concord and Portsmouth
Conn.Jb Passump. 3,p.216
Connecticut River
Cumberland Valley

50
50
100

pref.l(X)
100

50

100

Dayton and Michigan

Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50
Des Moines Valley
100

....

•

.

!

July ’67 4
July ’67 5
July ’67 ! 5
Aug. ’67 J*

139*
....

.

.

.

«...

...

....

5
5

....

•

.1

.

3)3

1,150.000

6

1,(XM),(XX) Jan. A July
2,227, (XX)
13,160,927
12,994,719 Annual! v.
9,100.000 April A Oct
3,2(M),8(X) Apiil A Oct
302,950
1,600,250
6,000,000 Feb. A Aug
2,044,6(K) May A Nov
5,000,000 Jan. A July
5,391,575 Jan. A July
4,841,600 April A Oct
Quarterly.
i,786^800 Jan. A July
1,500, (XX) May A Nov
350,000 Jau. A July
1.514.300 Jan. A July
I,650,000 Jan. A July
1.316.900 Apr. A Oct.
2,38 •>,063
406,132 Jan. A July
II,238,550 Jan. A July
1,550,050
•

•

•

....

55

57

121
57

121*
61
....

Ill
116
149

,•

114
120
150
••

....

•

452,350
1,500,000
100 1,673,952

Detroit aud Milwaukee
100
do
do
prcf...l00

45
7
5
5

Aug. 67
May ‘67
July ’67
Jan. ’66

69*
192* 102*

4
4
5
4

Dec. ’66

Apr. ’67
Apr. ’67

Apr.
Apr.
•July
May
July
July
July
Apr.

45*
69*

101

...

....

10*1

....

..

..

Savannah & Charleston

.

9 *

93”

....

....

....

3*

67

3
4
4

July ’67

3
5

Jan. ’67

....

....

....

....

..

.

m

....

....

*

Lehigh Valley

;.

Lexington aud Frankfort
Little Miami
Liit.tlo Schuylkill*
Lioug Island

50
1(K)
50

50
50

Louisville and Frankfort
Louisville and Nashville

50
100

2d

pref.100
Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 50
do
do
preferred. 50

...

Feb. &

Aug
Quarterly.
May & Nov
Jan. & J uly
Jan. & July
Apr. & Oct
Jan. & July

*

‘

Mar. ’<7

’7s'.

July ’67

4

lio”

....

26*

....

7
3

72

....

S3

....

Aug. ‘67 45
263
266
July ’67 6
May ’67 3c5s 106* 107
56

3
5
5
4

Jan. ’67

July ’67
Apr. ’67
July ’67

7

103* 103*

138
109

*

•

•

•

110
•

July* ’67

0 .00

"2* 103*
3
3
4

Aug. ’67
June’67

July ’67

Apr* *’67

....
....

....

....

....

....

2

Apr. ’67
Apr. ’67

....

•

2

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

f •

July ’07 *5*'
52

....

....

May ’67 7
3

May ’67

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

• •

•

•

•-

....

July* *’67

2*
2/S

Jan. & July
Feb. & Aug Feo. ’67
Jan. & July Jan. ’67

....

3

.

•

....

5

635.200
750,000 Quarterly. May ’67

....
...

5,819,275
1,360,000
2,203,400 Feb. & Aug Feb. *’66 *4*
1,200,130
1,983,150 Jan. & July July ’67 6
1,170,000 Quarterly.
776.200
1,651,314

....

....

....

....

.

....

..••••

908,424

48* 48*

May & Nov May ’67 3*
Utica and Black River
100
834,400 Jan. & Julv July ’67 4
Vermont and Canada*
100 2,250,000 June & Dec June’67 4
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100 2,8)0,000 Jan. & July July ’67 1*

....

....

....
.

m

.

....

53

57

Virginia Central, 3, p. 678

100 3,353,679
58*
Virginia aud Tennessee
.100 2,94 ,791
do
do
pref.100
555,500
Western (Mass), 4, p. 247
137*
100 8,710,800 Jan. & July July* ’67
69* Western (N. Carolina)
100 1,860,000 Jan. & July Jau. ’64 4
77* | Western Union (Wis. & Ill.)..
2,687,23'
75 1,141.000 Jan. & July July ’67 5*
| Worcester and Nashua
•

May ’67 ’2*
July 67 3*
F«b. ’64
Jan. ’67

4

7
5
4
6

Aug. ’67
July 67
Apr. ’67

....

58*"
SO
69
75

Chesapeake and Del. (5 p.lS3) 25 1,818,963
25 8,228,595
Chesapeake and Ohio

....

57*’

Division
|j Delaware and Hudson
Delaware

68

....

4

123* 125

July ’67 3*
July ’67 5 113* :20
80

300, (XX) Quarterly. Apr. ’67
_T 111
300,000

1

.

.

....

A

ir

Quarterly. July '67 2*
3
4
2
2
8
4

May A Nov May '67

June A Dec Jmne ’67
Jau. A July July ’67

Quarterly. Aug. ’67
July ’67
Aug. ’67

J an. A J uly
Feb. A Aug

.......

31*

....
.

lio

114
....

.

....

.

•

....

•

•

....

.

Jttly|July ’67

Butler
Consolidation
Central
Cumberland

1,633,350 Feb. & Aug
10,000,000 Feb. & Aug
2,521,300 Feb. & Aug
6,968,146 May & Nov
728,100 Jan. & July
1,025,000 Feb. & Aug
1,175,000 Feb. & Aug
1,908,207 Feb. & Aug
2,888,8)5 Feb. & Aug
2,052,083
2,907,850
1,100,000 Jan. & July
800,000 Irregular.

...

...

....

5
.

.

.

.

5
S
7
....

5
4
....

•

114

•

•

115

....

Boston Water Power
Brunswick City

....

Pacific & Atlantic
3 *S

20
5
4
3
5
4

3

4
4

65

75

....

•

•

•

•

•

.

.

•

Express— Adams

....

•

•

•

•

....

....

128*’
••

«

•

....

....

104*
•

•

.

•

104*!

•

....

....

1-|

American
Merchants’ Union
United States

Feb. ’67

Aug. ’67
Feb. ’67
Feb. *7

Jan.

..

*3 '
8
5
3
5
3
5
6

Jan. ’67
Feb. ’67
Jan. ’67

100

!!!
....

145

149
93
•

43

•

•

•

49*

....

110
.

.

.

.

57

30*
•

33*'
•

•

*’65

Sept.’66

....

....

6
V

....

....

•

•

•

*....

4

*

*

*

....

4

48
....
..

*5*

35”
175
45

5
6

-

'

49
35

175
48

....

•

36

Aug. ’66
Aug. ’67 5
July ’67 5

July ’67 *6
July ’67 5

May ’67
July ’67

5

July ’66

100

Telegraph.—entem Union. 100

May ’67
•'uly ’67

500,000 Jun. & Dec. June’67

....

3s.
3s.
5

Aug. ’67
Ang. ’67
Ang. ’67

3

1,500,000 Mar. & Sep. Mar. ’67 3\ex
2,500,000

....

...

..

25
50
25
100
100

June & Dec June’67

5,000,000
2,000,000 Jan. & July
>..100 5,000,000
Pennsylvania,..,...
60 3,200,000 Quarterly.
Spring Mountain
50 1,250,000 Jan. & July
Spruce Hill
lo 1,000,000 Jan. & July
20
Wilkcsbarre
27
100 3,400,000 Apr. & Oct
10
Wyoming Valley
100 1.250.000 Feb. & Aug
Gras.—Brooklyn...
25 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug
Citizens (Brooklyn)
20 1,200,000 Jan. & July
109*’ 110
Harlem
50
644,000
8)* 80*!
Jersey City & Hoboken.. 20
386,000 Jan. & July
Manhattan
50
Jan. & July
-90
100
Metropolitan
100
78
85
New Yor.c
50
May & Nov
48
William burg.
4*
Jan. & July
50
64* 66
Improvement. Canton lG0.(16jpd)
....

5

•

.

Uliscetlaneoux.
Coal— American
Ashburton

60
50

....

Raritan, 4, p. 599.100
Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50
Monongahela Navigation Co. 50
Morris (consolidated),4, p.631. 10
do
preferred
100
Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50
do
prefer.. 50
Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50
Union, preferred
50
West Branch & Susquehanna. 50
50
Wyoming Valley
.

...

4

50
100

Delaware &

....

4

•

•

....

O

.

•

....

120*

*

Mar. ’67
Jau. ’66

•

...

...

...

May '67
Apr. ’67

•

.

•

....

.....

Louisville, New Alb. & Chic. .100 2,800,000
Macon and Western
100 1,500,000 May A Nov May ’67
Maine Central
100 1,600,860
50 2,029,778
Marietta and Cincinnati
do
do 1st pref. 50 6,586,135 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66
do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66
do
Manchester and Lawrence... .100 1,(XX),(XX) May A N ov May ’67
Mar. ’62
Memphis & Chariest., 3p. 487.100 5,312,725
Michigan Central, 5, p. 151.. .100 7,502,866 Jau. A July July ’67
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’65
do
do
787,700 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
guar. 100
Milwaukee &P.dn Ch.ist pref.100 3,204,296 February... Feb. '67
do
do
2d pref. 100
841,400 February... Feb. ’67
Milwaukee and St. Paul
1(X) 3,627,000 Jan. A July
do
preferred
100
January. Jan. '67
Mine Hill
Jau. A July July ’67
Schuylkill Haven 50
Mississippi & Teun.4, p. 489.100
825,399
Mobile and Ohio
100 3,588,31X4
Montgomery and West Point.100 1,644,104
Morris and Essex
50
Mar. A Sep Mar. ’67
Nashua and Lowell
100
May A Nov Aug ’67
Nashville & Chattanooga
100
Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
Naugatuck
100
New Bedford and Taunton
.100
Jan. & Julv July '67
CitwJIaven & Northampton..100
Jan. A Ju’y July ’67
New Jersey, 4, p. 183
Feb. A Ang Aug.’67
100
New London Northern..
100
Mar A Sep. Mar. ’67
N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO
N. O^Jackson & Gt.N.,4,p.l34lOO
N‘*w York Central, 3, p. 769 ..100
Feb. A Aug Ang. ’67
Nfcw York and Harlem
50
Jan. A July. July ’67
50
itfuferred
Jan..&




do

......

.

January. Jan. ’67
4,848,300 Jan. & July July ’67

1,000,000
576,050
50
50
869,450

Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .100
do
do
1st pret.100

....

120

..

1,335,(XX)
10,7:34,100
514,646
3,572,400
2,646,100
3,000,000
1,109,594
5,501),000

July July ’67

-

Dubuque and Sioux City
March.
do
do
pref... 100 1,988,170
Eastern. (Mass)
1(X) 3.573.300 Jan. A July
E ist Tennessee & Georgia... ^00 2,141,970
East Tennessee & Virginia ..00 1,902,000
5<X),(KX) May A Nov
Elmira aud Williamsport*..
50
do
do
5<X),(H'H) Jan. A July
pref. 50
Erie, 4, p. 599
100 16,574,300 Fob. A Aug
do preferred
100 8.536.900 January.
Erie aud Northeast*
50
600,000 Feb. A Aug
Fitchburg
...100 3,540,000 Jan. A July
Oeorgia
1(H) 4,156,000 Apr. A Oct.
Hauuibal and St. Joseph
ltX) 1,900.000
do
do
pref. 100 5,253,831'
Hartford and New Haven.
1(X) 3,000,000 Quarterly.
Housatonic preferred
100 1,180,000 May A Nov
Hudson River
100 13,937,400 April A Oct
494,380
Huntingdon aud Broad Top *. 50
do
do
prel. 50
190,750 Jan. A July
Illinois Central, 4, p. 811
100 23,386,450 Jau. A July
Indianapolis aud Cincinnati.. 50 1,689,!XX) Mar. A Sep
Jeffersonv., Mad. & Indiana]). 100 2,000,(XK) Jau. A July
100
Joliet aud Chicago*
Joliet and N. Indiana
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50

Jan. &

....

5 8. 70
4
92*
3
62*
103
4

Feb. ’67

50
50

Terre Ilaute & Indianapolis.. 50
Third Avenue (N. Y.)
100

.

do

......

469,307

50

Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..100

....

....

89

....

2

50
50

Shore Line Railway
,.100
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
100
South Carolina
50
South Side (P. & L.) 4, p. 521. .100
South West.Georgia, 3, p. 616.100

....

....

'67
'67
’67

ShamokinVal. & Pottsville*.

....

87

2

10

Schuylkill Valley*

121* 122*
‘67 6
’67 2*
'67 5
'67 5

99

May & Nov May ^’67 T~

50 1,776,129
Pittsb.,Ft.W. & Chic.,4.p.471J00 11,440,987 Quarterly.
Portland & Kennebec (new).. 100
Feb.& Aug.
June <& Dec
Portland, Saco, & Portsm'th.lOO
Providence and Worcester... .100 1,750,000 Jan. & July
Raritan and Delaware Bay
100 2,630,700
Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO
8)0,000 April & Oct
500,000 April & Oct
Saratoga and Whitehall.... 100
800,000 April & Oct
Troy, Salem & Rutland
100
Richmond and Dan., 4, p.45‘».100 2,000,000
Richmond & Petersb.,4,p.488.100 1,008,600
Rome, Watert. & Ogdensb’g..l00 2,385,500 Jan. & July
Rutland aud Burlington
100 2,233,376
St. Louis, Alton, & Terre H.. .100 2.300,000
do
do
pref.100 1,700,000 Annually.
St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*100 1,469,429
Sandusky, and Cincinnati
50 2,989,090
do
do
pref. 50
393,073 May & Nov
900,236
Sandusky, Mansf. & Newrark.l00
Saratoga and Hudson River.. 100 1,020,000

..

.

...

5

July ’67

....

Ask

4~

Quarterly. Aug. ’67

100

Philadelphia and Erie*
Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89..
Phila., Germant. & Norrist’n*
Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore.
Pittsburg and Connellsville.

Y*

13C~

125
80

5
3

June & Dec June ’67

100
50

127* 127>8j Pennsylvania

6lX),000

Apr. ’67

Jan. & July Julv ’67

1,755,2S1 Jan. & July:July ’67

Apr. & Oct Apr. ’67

Panama

3*

Bid.

rate

Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67

Orange and Alexandria
Ostvego and Syracuse

j

April.

Date.

Periods.

do
preferred.100
Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.100
do
preferred. .100
Old Colony aud Newport
100

...

July ‘67 15

721,926 Jan. & July July ’67

FRID

Lfl&t p

Ogdensb. & L. Champ(5 p.ll9)100

5

Apr. ’67 2*
100
Mar & Sep. 'cp. '67 5
Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 329. .100
Mar A Sep. Sep. '67 5
do
preferred. .HX»
Chic.Bur. aud Quincy, 3, p 261.100 10,193,010 May & Nov May ’07 5
Chicago and Great Eastern... 100 4,390,(XX)

Cleveland, Columbus, &Cin..l00
Cleveland & Mahoning*
50
Cleveland, Painesr. & Ashta.100
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50
Cleveland and Toledo,9,
jp. 164 50
Columbus & lndianap. Cent..100

•

iik

522, 356

2,600.000
400,000

Cincinnati and Zanesville

....

.

....

100 3,000,000 Quarterly. July ’67 2*

Chicago and Milwaukee* ....1(X)
Chicago and Northwestern .. .100
do
do
prof. .100
Chicago, Rock Tsl. & Pacific..100
Cine., Ham. & Dayton(5 p.87)100
Cinciu.,Richm"d & Chicago...100

..

....

50 2,200,00.) April & Oct Apr. ’67 3*
Co.ltxi 4,666,800 June A Dee June ‘67 5

Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*.. .100

....

....

i*

Julv ’67

Dividend.
Stock

and

the vol.

N. Y. and New Haven (5 p.55)100
New York, Prov. & Boston.. .100
Ninth Avenue
100
Northern of New Hampshire. 100
Northern Central, 4, p. 568..
50
North Eastern
do
8 p. c., pref ...: .
North Carolina
100
North Missouri
100
North Pennsylvania
50
Norwich and Worcester
100

«...

ii7

4
5
3

Jun< & Dec June ’67
Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
Feb. &Aug Aug. 67

100

Camden and Atlantic
50
do
do
preferred 50

& July

to

discovered in onr Tables.

page of Chronicle containing
last report. * means “ leased." standing.

Bid. Ask.

....

June & Dec Juue ’67

Boston and Lowell
5tH
Boston and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .1(X
Boston ana Providence
ltX
10(
Boston and Worcester.

Buffalo and State Line

2

July .’67
April v Oct Apr. 67
April & Oct Apr. ’67
Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67
Quarterly. July "67

50

Boston, Hartford and Erie

rate

Date.

refer

any error

after the

out¬

UUlUt

Jan. & July

.KX

Berkshire*

name

)l Quarterly. .Tilly ’67 IX

HH

10o
100

Bellefoutaine Line

N. U.—The figures

rniTUv

Stock

tar

..,

immediate notice of

us

Dividend.

20

*

37

....

....

-•

.*

126

’

....

127*

....

155

....

158
• •

•

•

110

47

20*

47
21

*

43* 43*
July Ju'y ’67 2
Quarterly. Aug. ’67 2*
74* 74*
Quarterly. Nov ’66 2
73
74
Quarterly. Nov. ’66 3
17

Jfin. &

25

*

**

*

....

100
500
100
100

Quarterly.

Dec. ’66

3

75
66

17*
75*
66*

Wells, Fargo & Co.. .,.100
June ’67 2*
Steamship— Atlantic MaL
100 4,000,000
147* 148
Pacific Mail
100 20,000,000
_uarterly. June ’67
125
Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. & July July ’67
New York Life & Trust.. 100 1,000,000 iFeb. & Aug Feb. ’67
Union Trust..
100 1,000^000; Jan. <fc JulyIJnly 67
United States Trust...... 100 1,500,0001Jan. & July July 67
10
10*
Mining.—Mari posa Gold
100 5,097,600
19* 21
Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100 6,774,400

Quicksilver

..,.100

10,QOQ»QQ01

w,.....,..

Feb ’55

srwisa

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

PETKOLEUM STOCK LIST.
Bid. Askd

Companies.

Wright........par 10
Bemis Heights
Jj>

Allen

Hammond
par 20
HamiltonMcClintock.
2
Ivanhoe
2
Manhattan
Mountain Oil
5
Natural
5
N. Y. & Alleghany ...
5
New York & Newark.
5
N. Y. & Philadel
1
N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons..
10
Oceanic
Pit Hole Creek
Ratkbone Oil Tract...
...10
Ryud Farm
Shade River
5
Union
...10
United Pe’tl’m F’ms..
2
...10
United States
10
Venango (N. Y.)

•

•

•

•

....

3 50

5 00

Ppntml

Run
Run

Cherry
Cherry

Oil
Empire City

60

^
f
-10
100

,

f

•

•

•

.

•

•

•

....

i

50
15

5

10
10

Republic.....
Western Consol.

•

•

•

•

•

250. (XX

....

•

•

•

Atlantic

•

•

•

•

50

Bowery (N. Y.)
Broadway..
Brooklyn

20

.

io

‘-6

3 20

3 40

..

•

....

•

...

..

•

•

Bid. Askd
1

COMPANIES.

istna

Algoraab
Allouez

•

3 33

Amvgdaloid....—
Atlas

:

24 75 25 00
)

Oak

—

Copper Creek

—

2 00

4

Dana

2650 27 00►

24%
1

Falls
Harbor

Dacotah

50

•

Empire

Bluff

Excelsior
French Creek
Girard
Hamilton...

00
50

17%

Hanover
Hilton

1%
2%

Hope

l^i

Heda

—

1

Hungarian
Huron
Indiana

19
10

IsleRoyale*

i

*

25

41 50
4 CO

5
8

Knowlton

,

....

•

•

•

....

«...

.

•

....

...

6 00
•

•

•

•

.

•

7 00
7 €0

.

.

....

« • •

....

•

•

4

•

•

....

•

....

•

•

•

•

-.11%

•

•

.

..11

•

•

..

....

•

«...

..50
5k

....

38 1 25
14 2* 14 CO
3 25
29 U0 31 00

..

3%
..15

...

5k

..

....

....

.10 %

•

•

•

•

....

.—

•

•

•

•

.—

*
.

.

.

„

22 00 23 00
10
6k
12
3
1

3 63

....

5k
k

•

....

5 00
3 0G
•

....

•••

.

....

.

.

.

....

1

.

%

.

Sheldon & Colunitian.21

•

•

•

•

1

.

60

.11%

1 25

....

Superior

.

.

.

1 00

25

Tremont
Victoria
Vulcan

1%
1%

.

.

Washington

.

6
1
2k
3

.

.

West Minnesota
Winona

t

2

•

...

.

Winthrop

Capital !|1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.

300.000

210,000
250,001
500,000

200,000
424.189
4(H»,(H)0
200,001
228,691
250,01X1
234,87i
500,0O< 1,289,037
41X1,178
400,001
200.000
200, IKK

63

Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares.

Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares

222,921
146,692

200,000
200,000
300,(VM)

195,546

245,169
516,936

do

150,000

161,743

150.1MX)
200,<MK)

259,270
228,628

3(H), 000

319,870
264,703

800,604
206,179
238,808

40

200,010
150,000
280,000

Lafayette (B’klyn) ...50

150,1V!()
300,000
150,000
200,(MX)

par
.

......

Benton

..

..

Bid. Askd

.Companies.

Burroughs

•

.

.

.

—

50
5

#

.

...
..

1 00

—

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

10

....

•

..

•

•

1 00

•

•

..

25

,.

—

^

—

par

6 90
1 15
....

.

.

.

2

Hope

166
....

.

.

.

•

•

.

.

1 15
6 95
1 20
•

Manhattan Silver
Midas Silver
Montana
New York
New York & Eldorado

40

7 75

210,(XX)
200,000

100

20

150,000

20

Cooper
People’s
Phoenix t

200.000
150,000

Br’kiyn. 50 1,000,(XX)

Roliei

—

2 40

i

20

50 00 65 GO
35
People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5
Quartz Hill... ... ... /.. 25 1 70 i 75

Reynolds

-vi

.

—

10
—

Senseuderfer
Smith & Parmelee

#

1 30 1 40
11 90 12 50

—

200,000

100

300 000

100

200 (XX)

25

21X) (XX)

25
25

150,(XX)

St. Mark’s

St. Nicholast
Security + .:
Standard
Star....

50
100

Sterling *
Stuyvesaut

100
25

..

_

par

20

5 45

5 60
1 00

11

—

..

.

_

1

Twin River Silver

100

Vanderburg

50

400,(XX)
393,700
150,(XX)

Washington *t
1<X»
Williamsburg City.50
honkers <fc N. Y.. 100

Southern Stocks
rent

*on

Tank storage

“




....

....

176,678
802,741

141,434
363,006

2)7.895

•

•

•

•

«

....

.

....

...

.

•

Mar. ’64..5
.

...

.....

...

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

%

.

•

•

.

.

....

...

.

.

-

.

.

«...

....

•

....

....

....

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

«»

.

.

.

>

.

.

*

....

.

....

•

•

•

-

•

.

.

#

....

•

••V

....

....

Feb. ’67..5
Mar. '67 .4
.

5

..5
..5
.5
..5
..7
.ft
Julv’67..5
•July'67 3%

....

*

-

.

...»

....

«.

!
...

....

.

-*

.

«

•

.

....

.

«...

.

do
do
do
Jn’y’67
do
July ’67 ..6
Jan. and July. July ’67 .5
Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67..5
Jan. and July. Ju y’67 ..5
do
July ’6' .5

.

•

•

.

•

.

|

•

.

.

•

•

,

....

....

•

•

....

•

•

-

•

•

•

•

....

•

.

«...

....

.

.

.

.

•

... .

...

•

•

-

•

«

..

•

•

•

....

....

.

•

...»

•

•

•

.

....

•

.

179,008 J an. and July. J uly ’67 ..5
do
J uly '67 ..5
501,244

par

and

Bonds.—The followiug,

48©

bonds
“
“

—
—

“

”46

—

—

Savon de Terre

—

5

900
•

•• «

48

45©..
47©48

bonds, 6’s.
“

7’s
certificates

Charleston stock, 6’s
“
certificates
“
Fire Loan
S. Car. State bonds
>“

“

“

.

45©..

(new)

63©..
65©..

50©..
40©..
80©..

50©..
43©..

40©..

“

4i

u

•

•

•

....

....

•

•

•

•

.

.

.

.

•

•

•

....

•

•

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

*.

•

...

.

....

....

....

....

•

•

•

•

....

....

•

•

•

....

showing the

cur

“

stock

28©..

coupons
40©..
N. Eastern RR. 1st interest b’ds 65©..
“
4i
coupons
45©..
“
“
certiflcat s
45© .
Charleston gas stock
12©..
“
citv KR. stock
32©..
Char. & Sav. RR. bonds (guar). 40©..
.

“

‘k

“

Savannah bonds
“

“

coupons
“

,

•*U

.

.

•

......

...

.5

.

!

•

....

Julv ’67 ..5
July'07 5
July’07 .10
July ’65 .5
July '67 .5
July ’67.10

158^733

v

....

.

«...

.

.

.

.

.

•Julv ’67

•

...

July ‘67 .ft
•July ’65 .5
July '65 .6
Aug.’66.3%

July ’67
July’67
July ’67
July ’67
July ’67
July '67
July ’67

•

•

...

.5

.

•

•

....

.

Julv ’65

•

•

.

.

do
July’67 ..5
185,365 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’07 .5
14‘,203 Jan. and July. July ’07 ..5
do
July ’07 .5
1,077,288
Julv ’67 .5
190.167
do
do
Tnlv’67 d1*;
453 238
do
185.952
Tuly’(XL 3%
216 879 Cell, mul Auer Aug. ’07 6
Feb. ’67..5
do
310,679
356,220 • Ian. and July. Aug.’67 .5
962 181 <Yd). and An0Feb.’66.3%
220.756 ,Ian. and July. July’67 .'5
do
July ’67 ..5
195,780
200,731 7eb. and Aug. Aug. ’67. 5
198 182 1 cf»h. .<D'ri 4ii>t
\ng. ’66 5
J"an. and July. July *67 .6
do
Jan. ’07 .5
330.091
630,314 l "eb. and Aug. iVug. ’07.. .5
190,206 t '°b. and Aug. ^eb. ’67...5

85©..

S. Car. RR. etock

.

•

....

212,521

(old),.... 80©..
59©...

coupons
bonds

“

25

Rnsse.. FLe
—

•

Charleston Courier of the 17th inst:

...

Bid. Askd

Long Island Peat

—

..,,,

•

quotations for Southern stocks and bonds, we take from the

Columbia coupons

Rutland Marble

....

500,000

Georgia State coupons

—

Companies.

Wallkill Lead
Wallace Nickel

5

200,(XX)
250.000

“

Saginaw, L. S. Jk M.. ..25
100

•

18

—

Tudor Lead

5

200.000

20

“

Foster Iron
Lake Superior Iron
Bucks County Lead
Denbo Lead
Mauhan Lead
Phenix Lead

(XX)

200,000

25

“

Copake Iron....

50 l 000

Tradesmen's
United States

Memphis
“■

Bid. Askd

150,000

200 000
150.000

12 O'

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Companies.

...»

—

Texas

4 66
3 00

.

6

—

Owyhee

.

2 65

4

5
10
.

Rocky Mountain
2 95

2 35
15
1 10
2 55

—

—

Nye

July ’67 .5
July '07.. .5
Ju y'07 ..7

.

50

Washington

90

100

Symonds Forks
2 50

»o

—

—

Gunnell.,.,.

1

20

•

7 50
45

2

Seaver

First National
Gold Hin.

•

«...

—

Kipp & Buell

•

—

.

2 80

.

•

25

Harmon Gas
LaCrosse

«...

Faff River

10

—

Liberty

1

..

Eagle..
Edge hill

Gnnnell Union
Holman

1 10

....

..

...

•

1 50

•

—

Columbia G. <fc S
—
'.
Consolidated Colorado.
—
Consolidated Gregory. ..700

Crozier
Des Moines
Downieville

oo
1 75
•

t

...

.*

i

.

•

Central

Corydon

•

3 00

..

Bob Tail
Boscobel Silver
Bullion Consolidated..

1 40
1 05

...

Ayres Mill & Mining,

Bates A Baxter

—

10

195,926

121,(07
284,605
Long Island (B’kly) .50
Lorillard*
25 1,000,000 1,118.664
Manhattan
010,930
100
500,000

Rutgers’
1

Alameda Silver
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific

•

...

and Aug Aug.’67 ..5
and July. July’67 ..7
and July. July’67 ..5
and July July'67.3%
and Aug. Aug ’06. .5

200,000
150,000

1,000,000
200,000

Resolute*

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.
Bid. Askd

,,,,
•

April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5
J uly ’07 3%
Jmy '67 ..5
July ’67 .5
•July’66 .5
July O' .5

167,8:33

Republic*
Companies.

Feb.
Jau.
Jan.
Jau.
Feb.

288,917

200,000

Park
Peter

„

..

....

.

.

*

Mflvfuid "Nnv

.200.000

Import’& Traders. 50

National
7%
New Amsterdam.. 25
N. Y. Equitable 3 35
N.Y.Fire and Mar.100

....

Feb. and Aug.
•Jan. and July. July'67 . .5
do
•July ’66.3%
do
July ’65 ..5
do
July '67 . .5

Jan. and July.
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
Feb. and Aug.
do
March and Sep
Jan. and July.
do
do
do
do
do
do 0
do
do
do
do
do
do

100

Metropolitan * t.. .100
Montank (B’k’yn). .50
Nassau (B’klyn)... .50

.

Feb. ’-7.5

Feb. and Aug.
•Jan. and July.
Jau. and Julv.
Jan. and July.
March and Sej

546,522

Market*
100
Meehan’ & Trade’. 25
Mechanics (B’klyn).50
Mercantile
100
Merchants’
50

•

.

500,000
200,01K)

100
25

•

Dec. ’66. .5

424,29: April and Oct. Apr. '67..5
203,990 Jan. and July. July ’67 .7
do
229,276
July '67... 5

50

Lamar
Lenox

.

36,518

300,000

Howard
Humboldt

Knickerbocker

•

.

.

■135,793

King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20

••»

Aug. ’65. A

384,261 Jan. and July.
333,878 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67.7%
275,591 •Jan. and July. July’67. 6
do
July'64.3%
309,622
do
July ’67 ..5
214,147

150,000

30

•

July ’67..1(
July ’64 .4

25

25"

••

Aug. ’67...ti

Hope

100

•

Mar. ’67..E

March and Sej
Mavand Nov
Feb. and Aug
June and Dec.
Feb. and Aug.
2:38.501 Jan. and July.

.3ob,4'(l
204,7!X
170,171
345,741
266,30s

227,*954

Irviug

•

....

.

134,06
oO
150,01V
Exchange
204.001
Fireman’s.
lr
241,840
150.000
Firemen’s Fund... 1(
122,468
Firemens Trust.. 10
165,983
150,000
Fulton
25
200,700
200,000
mo nnn
149
Gallatin....
50
Gehhard
100
200,000
Germania
50
525,762
500,000
Globe
50
200,015
200,000
Great Western*t. .100 1,000.000 2,385,657
Greenwich
25
200,000 255,657
Grocers’
200,000
50
170,225
Guardian..
177,178
200, (XX)
Hamilton
15
150,01V)
162,571
Hanover
50
419,952
400,000
15 “.229
Hoffman
50
200,000
Home
100 2,000,000 2,271,387

I utemational

•

50 1,000.000 1,053,825
North American*. 50
500,000
511,631
;h River
25
350,(XX)
379,509 April and Oct. Apr. ’67..5
200,000
244,293 Jau. and July. Julv '67 ..6

....

4k

•

325,233 Jan, and July.
515,891 Jan. and July. July ’67.101
222.07-- Jan. and July J uly ’67
5
282.127 Jan. and July Jan. 65.. .5
257,753 Feb. and Aug Aug. ’67...5

Niagara

20,000 shares.

X Capital $200,000, In

Clinton
100
Columbia*
100
Commerce (N.Y.). .100
Commerce (Alb’y).lOo
Commercial..
50
Commonwealth... liXi
Continental *
100
Corn Exchange... 50
Croton
'
100
Eagle
40
..100
Empire City..
Excelsior
r.o

•Jefferson

Toltec

i 66 i

33

Keweenaw.....

.

...

South Pewabic
South Side
Star

15 00 25 00

%

Halbert
Humboldt

,

—

Rockland
St. Clair
St. Louis
St. Mary’s
Salem
Seneca
Sharon

18 25 IS 38

2
2

Hancock

....

•

Ridge

—

Western

Great

Bid. Last
Sale.

paid.

151 002

....

..

ltesolute

9%
&k

Steel River

Franklin

•

....

..

Quincy \

1
o%

Everett

.

....

..13k
5k
2
1
..lu

Princeton
Providence

3%
1%
10

Edwards

•

20

.

..

New York
North Clift'
North .western
Norwich

.

Portage Lake

\A

Eagle River

National

Native

.

Ik

..

Pontiac

}k

....

...

.

Pittsburg & Boston.

1

Dev-n..

Dorchester
Dudley -

.....

.

o%

..

Petherick
Pewabic
Phoenix

*0%

Delaware

•

.

,

5

..

Ogima
Pennsylvania *

Davidson

Flint

..

Naumkeag
New Jersey Consol..

°

Evergreen

..

Milton

Caledonia

Copper
Copper

..

j Minnesota

Calumet
Canada

•

•

| Mcsnard

Boston

Charter

4k
5k
4k
1%

..

Merrimac

13%

Central.
Concord—•

.

.

| Mendotat

4%

Aztec

Bay State
Bohemian

•

.

.

2

..

iMandan
8 5 1 Manhattan
Mass
Medora

1
17
2

American

paid 1

Madison/...

25%
6
1%

& Boston

Albany

Lafayette
Lake Superior

paid 3

•

153,000

City

Bid. Askd

Companies.

300,(XX
200,001

.

Central Park....
Citizens’

COPPER MINING STOCK LIST.

Adventure

Last

Periods.

Netas’ts

92,683

200.001

Beekman....

...

13

3(H),001

(Br'kiyn)..

200,(XX

...

....

....

Great

•

.

--

...

»

•

.

•

•

...

•

1U

300,00(
200,0<H
200, IKK
500,(XX

3 50

2 75

...

1 00

£‘400 om

Adriatic.

20

American *

...

.

National

Germania

dividend.

1, 1867.

•

•

....

...

27

•

•

•

...

Excelsior .

G’t

90

25

Petrol’m.... 2
special..... . 6

Clinton
First

...»

..

Farm..

Jan.

thus (*)

Capital.

..

Brevoort
Brooklyn...

Marked

..

Bergen

Buchanan

Bid. Askd

Companies.

—

Bennehoff Run......
Bennehoff Mutual. ..

Coal and Oil.
Braclley Oil

251

THE CHRONICLE.

1867.]

August 24*

(2dlieu) ..©...
64©..
10©..

(aft.June 1,’66). 95©...

Memphis & Char.RR. bonds... 78© ,
14
coupons..... 92©0$

252

THE CHRONICLE.
Insurance.

FIRE

Insurance.

INSVRIIVI'E.

American Fire
Insurance Co.,
114

COMPANY.

Caali Capital

$500,000 00
Surplus
255 057 77
Casii Capital au<l Surplus,
January 1,
1S67, $755,057 77.

JAMES W. OTIS. President.
R. W. BI.EEUKER, VicelTes’t.

Incorporated 1841.
Capital and Asset*,

Agent.

Metropolitan
Company having reduced its capital according
law, under the sanction of the Superintendent of the
sum of

TWENTY

$300,000,
on

Bank

Building.
TAMES LORIMER GRAHAM
President.
ORERT M. C. till AII
AM,

Martin Rates,
1 Midlev B. Fuller,
Franklin 11. Delano,
Gilbert L. Meeckman

*

Joseph B. Varnum,

W. R.

James Freeland,
Samuel Willets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
William Watt,

:

Cornelius Gritmell
Jas. D. Fish,
Geo. W. Hennings,

Francis Hathaway
Aaron I,. Reid,

Ellwood Walter.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President.
CM AS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President.

t£tna
OF

HARTFORD.

Niagara Fire Insurance
*

COMPANY.
I

rporated 1819

Charter

CAPITAL,

$3,000,000.

L. J. HEN

J.

Perpetual.

No. 12 WALL STREET.
CASH CAPITAL

SURPLUS, JANUA.RY 1st, 1867

DEE, President.

Losses

equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Char¬
Cash dividends paid in 15 year’s,253 per cent.

tered 1850,

GOOD.NOW, Secretary.

JONATHAN D.

Notman. Secretary.

Assets

January 1, 1807

Liabilities

INSURANCE AGAINST LOSS

-

$4,478,100 7i
394,970 06

AND

DAMAGE BY

COMPANY,

STREET.

Cash

capital.

Surplus
JAS. A.

ALEXANDER, Agent.

Germania Fire Ins.

Railroad Iron,

Co.,

$400,000 00
187,205 93

...

Gross Assets

$587,205 93
33,480 09
BENJ. S. WALCOTT, President.
Lane, Secretary.

Total Liabilities

J. Rem sen

Steam and Street

$500,000 00

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1867

315,074 73

S. AY. HOPKINS Sc

$815,074 73

Fire Insurance

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President.
JOHN E.

Hugo Schumann,

KAHL, Vice President.

Cash

Capital

-

Company,

------

Assets, June 1, 1867

-

-

-

$150,000
-

222,433

This Company insures against Loss or
Damage by Fire
terms as favorable as any other responsible Com¬

pany.

The Mutual

Life Insu-

RANCK COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
CASH

ASSETS, September 1st, 1866,

over $16,000,000 00.
FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.

R. A. McCURDY, Vice-President.
eretarie»
cretaries




1 ISAAC YBRATT.

|JoHy

Stuart.

YC lary, Sheppard Homans

Board of Directors

Henry M. Taber,
Theodore W. Riley,
Stepli. C&mbreleng,
Joseph Foulke,
Cyrus H. Loutrel,
Jacob Reese,
Le> he as B. Ward.
D. Lyd g Buy dam,

Joseph Britton,
Schuchardt,

Henry S. Leverich.

Robert.Schell,
William H. Terry,
Joseph Grafton,

Amos Robbing
Thos. P. Cum.nipgs,
Jno. W. Morserero.
David L. Eigenhrodt

William

Pemsen,
Stephen Hyatt,
JACOB REESE, President.
James E. Moore,[[Secretary.
Fred.

Broadway.

Steamship Companies.
SAMUEL THOMPSON Sc
NEPHEWS’ Black Star Line of
Liverpool Packets, and National
Line of Liverpool and Queenstown
Steamers, sailing every week. Passage office 73 Broad¬
way .corner of Rector Street (formerlv275 Pearl Street).
Sight Drafts on the Royal Bank of Ireland, payable in
all its Branches, and on C. Grimshaw* Co.,
Liverpool,
payable in any part of England and Wales. Bankers
supplied with Sterling drafts and through tickets from
the Old Country to any part of the United States.
PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S

THROUGH LINE

California,
Carrying:
And

tlie United
Slates Mail,
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬
ER, FOOT 0 i Canal street, at 12
o’clock noon, on the 1st,
11th, and
ilet of every month (except when those dates fall on

Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
vrith one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.
JULY

:

1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City.
11th—Henry Ohauncey, connecting with Montana

with
steamers for South Pacific ports; 1st and 11th for
Central American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Man¬
zanillo.

One hundred pounds

allowed each adult.
An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
For passage tickets or further1
information, apply
it the Company’s ticket office, on the
wharf, foot o
Canal street, North River, New York.
F. R. BABY Agent.

STEAM
TION

C O M M U N IC A-

BETWEEN

NEW-

AND AUSTRALA¬

SIA via PANAMA.

on

Secretary.

Co.,

69 & 71

The

OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY.
TOTAL ASSETS

Roads,

FOR SALE BY

YORK

Hope
CAPITAL,

FOREIGN,

for

No. 175.BROAD WAY, N. Y.

CASH

York, No. 6 Pine Street.

Baggage caecxed through.

July 1st, 1867

WALL

Cash

Agency in

?0tb—Arizona, connecting with Sacramento.
Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama

No. 45 WALL STREET.

NEW YORK AGENCY

02

STEELE, President

Hanover Fire Insurance

FIRE.

NO.

$1,000,000
278,000

an

CHARLES W. STANDAIiT Agent.

To

Company,

paid i p

AND INLAND
NAVIGATION
RISKS AT CURRENT RATES.

AMERICAN AND

John’s. Williams,
William Nelson, Jr.,
Charles Dimon,
A. William Ileye,
Harold Dollner,
Paul N. Spolford.

Joseph Slagg,

WADSWORTH, Secretary,

Insurance

as

FIRE

CENT.

D. <,'olden Murray,
E. Hayden*. AVhite,
N. L. Mr.Cready,
Daniel T. Willets,
L. Kdgarton.
Hem \ R. Kunhardt,

Henry Eyre,

S. S. Guthrie,
C. J. Hamlin,
O. L. Nims,
John H. Yought
James Adams. ,

Company has just organized with

Office in New

TRUSTEES

F. H. Wolcott,
P. W. Turney,
William T. Blodgett.
Charles P. Kirkland,
Watson E. Case,
John A. Graham,
John C. Henderson,
James L. Graham,
Clinton B. Fisk.

Lorrain Freeman,
Edward A Stanslmry,
J. Boorman Johnston,
Samuel D. Bradford,

PER

Henry Martin,

George W. Tift,

above, and have established
city, and are prepared to write

This Company continues to make Insurance on Ma¬
rine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks,
on the most favorable terms,
including Risks on Mer¬
chandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight.
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Cur¬
rency, at the Otlice in New York, or in Sterling, at the
Office of Rathbone, Bros.
Co., in Liverpool.

Vice-President.
Directors

This

$1,261,349

scrip dividend to dealers, based
all classes of risks are equally
profitable, this Company makes such cash abatement or
discount from the current rates, when premiums are
paid, as the general experience of underwriters will
warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of
the year, will he divided to the stockholders.

Cargo only, at the oltiec in the Metropolitan

i

Wm. H. Glenny,
S. G. Cornell,
John C. Clifford,
A. Reynolds,
James N. Matthews,
Pascal P. Pratt.
James M. Smith,
Adrian R. Root,

Instead of issuing a
on the
principle that

intends hereafter to confine its lire business to the
city
of New York and vicinity, and will also write Marine

Risks

Stephen G. Austin,

During the past year this Company has paid to its
Policy-holders,
IN CASH,
a rebatement on
premiums in lieu of scrip, equivalent
111 value to an average scrip dividend of

This

Richard Bnllymore,
L. K.
Plvmptou,
James II. Metcalfe
John Greiner, —
James Bray lev,
<). P. Kamsdefl,
Lauren Enos,

John Allen, Jr.,
Peter J. Ferris,

this

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844.

BROADWAY.
NEW YORK, April 16,1867.

Department to the

Win. G. Fargo,
Rufus L. Howard,
Dexter P. Kumscy,

o-

Capital,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Secretary

Directors,

PAULISON, Vice-President.
Walker, Secretary.

Assets, January 1st, 1S67

FARGO, President.
HENRY T. SMITH,

JOHN P.

COMFANY.

$200,000

REYNOLDS, Vice President.

MOSES II. GRINNELL, President.

No. 35 WALL

Company,

A.

land Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected
from Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en¬
titled to participate iii the profits.

INSURANCE

Insurance

$1,614,540 78

This Company having
recently added to its previous
assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000, and
subscrip¬
tion notes in advance of premiums of $.‘500,000. continues
to issue policies of insurance against Marine and In¬

Isaac H.

Capital Paid In
WM. G.

The Mercantile Mutual

F. H. Caijtek, Secretary.
.T. Gkiswolu, General

to

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1867.

49 WALL STREET.

Insures Propert)- against Loss or Damage bv Fire at
tlie usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses paid at the otlice of the
Cohipauy. or at its Aarious Agencies in the principal
cities in the United States.

108

OF BUFFALO

(INSURANCE BUILDINGS)

BROADWAY,

INCORPORATED 1823.

NO.

BuffaloCity InsuranceCo.
Cash

BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE, THIRD
AVENUE.

Insurance

Miscellaneous.

Sun Mutual Insurance

North

OFFICE

[August 24, 1867

Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Roya 1
Mail Company- dispatch a steamer on the 24th of each
month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬
tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the
Pacific Mail Steamship
Company leaving New-York
for Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each month.
First and second class
passengers will be conveyed
under through ticket at the following rates: From
New York to ports in New Zealand, or to Sydney or
Melbourne, $346 to $36-4 for first class, and $218 to $243

for second class:
The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus
of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward
cabins of the Australian steamer: after cabin, latter

$25 additional.

coin.

Fares payable in United States gold

Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold
region of Hokitika, New Zealand.
Children under three years,

free; under eight years,

quarter fare ; under twelve, years, half-fare; male ser,
van 1
• ie-haif fare;
female do., three-quarters farenun servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies
.

OT.i.

A limited quantity of merchandise
ider through bill of lading.

will be conveyed

For further information, application to he made to
e Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st,
Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent.

No. 23 William gt, Nev J

THE CHRONICLE

August 24,1867.]
PRICES CURRENT.
In

bJ7u>,

addition to the duties noted

discriminating duty of 10 per
cent, ad val. is levied on all imports
under flags that have no reciprocal
treaties with the United States.
a

goods, wares, and mer¬
chandise, of the growth or produce of
Countries East of the Cape of Good.
On all

Hope, when imported from places this
side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty

of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the
place or places of their growth or produc¬
tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted.
The tor in all eases to be *2,240 lb.

Anchors—Duty: 21 cent? ft lb.
012091b and upward $ lb

S8@

Ashes—Duty: 15 ft cent ad val.
Pot, 1st sort... $ 100 lb .... @ 9 25
Pearl, 1st sort
@12 00
Beeswax- Duty,20 ft
American yellow.$ lb

cent ad val.
40©
11

Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 ft ct.
Rio Grande shin $ ton45 00 © ....
Bread—Duty, 90 $ cent ad val.
Pilot
^ tt> .. ©

7*

©

Navy
8

Crackers

@

13*

Breadstuf ffs—See special report.
Bricks.
Common
Croton

hard..per M. 9 00 © 9 50
J8 ' 0 @20 00

Philadelphia Fronts...45 00 ©

Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair
1 ft ft.
Amer’n,gray &wh. ft ft 55 @2 00
Cheese.—Duty: 4

Batter and
cents.

Butter—

Fresh pnil, $ lb , new.
Hi-fi'kin tubs $ lb ,fc
Welsh, tubs ft lb. 4>
Fine to . xtra Sta e,...
Good o ii' e Stat ■,
Common Stite,.
W* tern Ba»ter,
Grease butter, urk. ft 1b

25 ©

85

22
28
98

i<3
25
32
*25
20
25

©

©
©
22 @
1 > ©
1
w

IS («n
18 <«n

6f@

Sf

Cheese—
12
11
11
11
11

©
©
©
@
7 ©

Factory Dairies
do Common
Farm Dairies
do Common

)3i
12

^

12
10

Candles—Duty,tallow, 2f; sperma¬
ceti and wax rt; itearine and ada¬
mantine, 5 cents $ ft.
Sperm, patent,. ..ft ft
52 @ _55
Refined sperm,city...
2©
45
90 @
20 ©

Stearic
Adamantine

81
22$

Cement—Rosendaleftbll 50© 1 60
8*

Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton
of 28 bushels SO ft to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28
bushels of 80 ft $ bushel.
Liverpool Orrel. $ ton
of 2,240 ft
@12 00
Llverp’l House Cannel .... @16 50
6 50 @ 0 7 )

Cardiff steam

@

Liverpo-1 Gas CannG
NewcastleG.s

*

@1

■

CO

Steam 9 50 @10 00

Cocoa—Duty, 9 cents ft ft.
Caracas

(in bondj(gold)

ft
Maracaibo do ..(gold)
Guayaquil do ...(gold)
St Domingo....(gold)

17 ©

©
13 @

ff@

others quoted below. free.

Acid, Citric.... (gold)
Alcohol, in bond
Aloes, Cape
ft lb
Aloes, Socotrine

5G @
5 ©
2'• ©

Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined

IS U

IS
,

.

m
10

19

ft
ton
(gold). 38
Brimston.-, Am. Roll
ft ft

ft ft

..

©

Sheathing, yellow

©
©
24 f©

33

26 @

Bolts
Braziers’
Baltimore
Detroit

Portage Lake

-

25f@
24f©

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8;

35
38
25
26
25

un tarred

Manila, 2f other un tarred, 3f cents
ft lb.
23
Manila,
ft ft
22 @

Tarred Russia
Tarred American
Bolt Rope, Russia

@
@
..

m
m

@

22

Corks—Duty, 50 ft cent ad val.
Regular, quartsft gross
55 @
70
Mineral
Phial..

50 @
_12 @

70
40

Cotton—See special report.

Drugs and Byes—Duty,Alcohol,
2
50 per

gallon; Aloes, 6 cents ft ft;
Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6
$ lb; Arsenic and Assafoedati,
20; Antimony, Crude and Regulua.
10; Arrowroot, 80 $ cent ad val
Balsam Copalvl, 20; Balsam Tola, 30;
Balaam Pern, 50 cents ft lb ; Calisaya
cents




5f

8<f@

351

50

@39 00

3f

Sul¬
.

Camphor, «' i;de,

(in
bond)
(gold)
Camphor, Refined

@
28*
@
1 70 @ 1 90

bulk
.

Chamomile Fiow’sftft
Chlorate Potash (gold)
Caustic Soda

Carraway Seed
Coriander Seed

Cochineal, lion (gold)
Cochineal, iVlexic’n(g’d)
Copperas, American
Cream Tarar, pr.(gold)
Cubebs, East India....
..

Cutch

Epsom Salts

!Sf@
@ 3 25
@
20 @
05

...

15

.

83

7<@
19 @
14 @
93 @
9'1 ©
im
@
33 @
17 @
@
11 @
17 @
80 @
H'O
..

..

oz.

gold

Gamboge
1 ‘
0 @
Ginseng, South&West.
50 ©
Gum Arabic, Picked..
18 ©
Gum Arabic, Sorts...
Gum Benzoin
Gum Kowrie.......,
Gnu Gedda
Gum Dainar
Gum Myrrh,East. India

So @
84 ©

Gum,Myrrh, Turkey.
Gum Senegal ...(gold)
Gum Tragacanth, Sorts
Gum Tragacanth, w.
flakey
(gold)
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and
(gold) 8
Eng
Iodine, Resublimed... 6

55 ©

.

25
bS
■

Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3
lalap, in bond gold..

..

©
©
©

@

85 ®

85
S5

24

Licorice Paste Spanish
Solid...
Licorice Paste, Greek.

34 @
30 @

7 ©
Madder,Dutch.. (gold)
7 ©
do, French, EXF.F.do
Manna,large flake.... 1 70 @
Manna, small flake.... 1 00 ©
8 ©
Mustard Seed, Cal....
14 ©
Mustard Seed, Trieste.
85 ©
Nutgalls Blue Aleppo
—

1-.

95

92*
It

29f
38

17f
H
00

4f
O'

85
8*

40
85
36
2 Of
45
#

m

.

,

28
—

@
& 3 9)
90
@
55
@
36
@
25
@

Licorice, Paste, Sicily.

33

4

21

60 @ 8 SO
50

25

...

SalAm’mac, Ref (gold)
Soda.Newcastle...
Sarsaparilla, Hond

..

Sarsaparilla, Mex

..

Seneca Root

4U

Senna, Alexandria....

25
20

Senna, East India

40

(80fto.)(g’ld)

Sugar L’d, W’e(goid)..
Sulp Quinine, Ainft oz
Sulphate Morphine....
Tart’c Acid..(g’id)ftft
Tapioca
Verdigris, dry.\ ex dry
Vitriol, Blue

©
©
©
©
©
©

2 15
6 75

51
il
88
10

25

10

less ft ft, 6 cents ft ft, an
ft cent ad val.; over 20 cents <|f
ft, 10 cents ft ft ami 20 ft centad vail
00
Blasting(A) ft 251b keg
50
Skipping and Mining..
@
Rifle
6 50 ©
Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬
ters ft lb.
£6 @ 1 06
20

*52

..

40

Hair—Duty

Buenos Ayres, mixed

biand
do
ordinary
do

82

Mackerel, No. I, Bay ..18
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay.. 1-5
Mackerel, No. 2,11a axlO
Mac’el,No.3,Ma>s. Tge 9
Mackerel, No. 8. H'lux
Mackerel,No 3, Mass
Salmon,Pickled, No. 1.37
Sa mon, 1 i kled. p to

List l(j ^adv
List.
List 5 % adv
ninge%Wr< iuht,
Door B< Its, Cast Bbl.
L:st 30 £ dis
Carriage and Tire do List 4()q 5 1 % dis
DoorL' ci-s and Latches List7f ^ dis.
Door Knobs—Mineral. List 7f % dis.
“
Porcelain
Li-t 79 % dis.
Padloeks
N w List 25&7f
% dis.

Loose Joint..
.

Locks—Cabinet, Eagle

0 * @
" @16
i5 ©
@
© 8
00 ©
©
40©
Is ©

Paten'.

25

firmer

50 ffh

40

*7f
7f
‘.5
12
40
01
00

8 75 @
(Ml © 9 00

7

Skuik, Black

Olass—Duty, Cylinder
Polished Plate not

over

tol0xl5
to 12x18
i2x 19 to 16x24
18x22 to 20x30
8x
1 lx

.

-

20x31
24x31
25x36
80x46
32x50

to
to
to
to
to

Above

24x30
24x36
30x44
32x18
82x56.

7
9
9
II
...14
16
17
.......IS
20

00 ©II
00 ©12

00 @18
24 00 @15

for shipping
80 © 1 t0
ilcnip—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila,
$-5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn
and Sisal, $15 ft ton; and
Tampico,
l cent

(81 a gle Thick)—Discoun t 35@45 ft cert.
6x 8 to8x10.ft50 feet 7 75 © 6 00

ft ft.

Anver.Dressed.ft ton 340 00@36Q 00
do

Undressed.. 2^0 0n@*90 00
84-i 00© (ftO (0

Russia, Clean
Jute

...(gold) il2 00@120 00
Manila..ft lb..(gold)
11 ©
11*

8isal

13 ©

Hides—Duty,all kinds, Dry
ed and Skins 10

or

lef

Salt¬

ft centad val.

Dry Hides—

5o
75

English and Pr* tr.h Window—1st, 2c',
3<1, and 4th qualities.

LDt 40 ?'adv.

18ny—North River, in balesft 100 fts

75

50
00
50
00
00
00
00
00
00

handled,

Lisi 75 % dis
List t»i! % dis.
Rivet-, Iron
List 5&40 % dis.
Screws American.. .List 37@40 % dis.
do
English
List 2-'@o0 % dis.
Shovels and Spades...
List ft % dis.
Horse Shoes
6i@'*ftft
Planes
List 30©35 £adv

Buenos Ayresft

Ibg’d
do

Montevideo
Rio Grande

do-

Dftnoco

or Window
10x15 inches,

25 © 6
50 © 7
75 © 7
50 © 9
00 ©!.0

£dis.

Out Tacks
Cut brads

1 0

75 © 6 00

n n

List 40 $adv

Augur Bitts
List 25* 10 % dis
hurt Auguts,per dz.NewList 30^ dis.
List 30 % dis.
Ring
do

23

2f cents ft square foot; larger and
not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents ft
square foot; larger and not over 24
x39 inches 6 cents ft square foot;
above that,and not exceeding 24x60
inches, 20 cents ft square foot; all
above that, 40 cents ft square foot;
on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and
Common Window, not exceeding iOx
15 inches square, If; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not
over 24x30 ,2f ; all over that, 8 cents
ft ft.
American Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th
qualities.
Subject to a discount of ’5 ft cent.
6x 8 to 8x10. .ft 50 ft 7 25 © 5 50

insets.

do
in sets

15 ©
©
80 ©

no

uo

....

Raccoon

ft ft 20 © 22

s

Framing Chisels.NewList37f

F«irs— Dmy,

Opossum

List 25 % dis.
L si 65 % dis,

..

do
1 aft’s
Sm tbs’ V is

...

Do
00
Uo
.‘ u
5 00 © S 0o

Trunk

8erew Wrenciies—Coe’s

50

....

50 ©
2 oO © 4
5 00 ©20
2(0© 5
9 00 © 6
8 ©

List 15 % dis
List 85 % dis.

“

....

10 ft cent.
Beaver, Dark.. ft skin 1 00. @ 1 00
do
Pale
5o © 2 00
Bear, Black
5 00 @i2 00
Jo
brown
2 00 © 8 0b
Badger
50 © 1 (41
Cat, Wild
50 ©
75
do House
10 © ‘20
Fisher,
4 00 © S 00
Fox, Silver
5 0< @50 00
do Cross
9 00 © 5 00
do Red
I 00 © i 5o

List. 1ft % eis.

Stocksaud Dies

;

tiO @13 50

special report.

Musk rat,
Otter

...

Cast Butt*—Fast Joint.

Herring, Scaledft box.
45
Herring, No. 1
22
Herring, pickled ft bbl. 4 50 © 5 5u

pale.
Mink, dark

©
©
©

.

20 00 @20 50
Mackerel,No.l,HalifaxlS 00 @18 5'*

do

17
15
27
25

©

.

shore

Marten, Dark

15
13
24
21

S 00 © 9 50
6 17 @ 7 50
15 50 @25 00
12 1 0 ©
Listlt % ('is.
@
@
$5@f? less 20 %
Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dis.

Mackerel, No. 1, Mass

.

ordinary..

?7
sr
12

--

do ordinary
Broad match’s 8toS bst.
do « jdi••ary
Coffee Mil s
do Rri
Hopper
do Wood Back
Cotton Gins, per saw...

$1 ; Salmon $9; other pickled, $ 1 50
ft bbl.; on other Fish. Pickled, smok¬
ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than l.arrels, 50 cents ft loo lb.
Dry Cod
ft cwt. 6 50 © 6 2]
Pickled Scale. ..ft bbl. 4 &o © 5 CO
Pickled Cod
ft bbl. 6 50 ©

Grey

doz

37* ©
©
11 @

Shingling Hatchets, C’t
Steel, best br'ds, Nos.

Fislt—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,

do

[ er

Carpe • ter’s Adzes,....

< o

Hi©
So ©

.

Hog,Western, unwash.
HardwareAxes—Cast stee\ best

@16 00
l.imawood
@1!' 00
Barwood
(gold)
@ *.5 CO
Feathers—Duty: 30 ft centad val.

Lynx

free.

RioGrande.mixedft ft

...

Fruits—See

00
00

cents or

2*20

©
©
©
©
@
©

...

Prime Western...ft ft
Tennessee

©15 00

50 @16
00 @18

..

Scotch, G’ck, No.l fty
@
72
Cotton, No. 1... ft y.
CO ©
Dye Woods—Duty free.
Camwood..(gold)ft t'nlUO 00©
Fustic, Cuba
31 0U © 32 HO
Fustic,Savanilla
@
Fustic, Maracaibo
25 00 ©
80-00 @
logwood, lion.
Logwood, Laguna (gold)
@
Logwood, St Doinin.. 1 00 @2J 00
Logwood, Cam .(gold)
@

Logwood,Jamaica

50
50
00

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 2C

Buck—Duty, 30 ft cent ad val.
Ravens,Light, .ft pee 16 00 @
Ravens, Heavy
iS Ou ©

,

10 50
15
16
18
20
24

6 50
7 00
@ 7 50
@12 00
@13 00

Gunny Hasrs—Duty, valued at 1C
cents or less^ ft square yard, 3;
ovei
10, 4 cents ft ft
Calcutta, light & h’y % 21f@
21f
Gunny C'lotli—Duty, valued at It
cents or less ft square yard,
3; ovet
10,4 cents ft ft.
Calcutta, standard, V’d
©
25

30

21©
28 @

8 25 @
9 75 @

Groceries— See special report.

H@
£f@

Sal

She11 Lac
Soda Ash

8x11 to 10x15
11x14 to 12x18
12x19 to 16x24
20x31 to 24x30
21x31 to 24x86
24x36 to 30x44
80x45 to82.\4S.
82x50 to 32x56

......

.

60 © 1 1.0

Lae Dye
Licorice Paste,Calabria

.

.

Flax—Duty: $15 ft ton.
Jersey
ft ft - 16 @

@

.

Cardamoms, Malabar..
Castor Oil Cases ft gal 2

Oil Anis
Oil Cassia
Oil Bergamot

Oil Lemon
3 87 © 4 25
Oil Peppermint, pure. 5 87 f®
Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 87* @ 7 66
Oxalic Acid
98 @
Phosphorus
£8 © ”96
Prussiate Potash
i5 @
90
Quicksilver
"9 ©
80
2 6) ©
Rhubarb, China
8ago, Pea, led
7 ©
Salaratus
20 ©

95

Cantharides
Carbonate
Ammonia,

Flowers,Benzoin.ft

3 cents ft ft.
Sheathing, new..

©

&i@

Crude

Gosper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot,
21; old copper 2 cents ft ft; manu¬
and yellow metal, in sheets 12
long and 14 Inches wide,
weighing 14 @94 oz. $ square foot,

40

4;@

Extract Logwood
Fennell Se d

copper
inohes

35
75

3S ©

..

Coffee.—See special report.

factured, 95 $ cent ad val.; sheathing

.

,

© 1
© 3

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Refined

Gambier

,

6i)

Bi Chromate Potash...

in

.

40

90 ©

Berries, Persian
Bi Carb. Soda, New¬
castle
gold

lor

35

©
3f@
25 ©

Assafoetida
Balsam Copaivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo.

i

2o

32

Arsenic, Powdered....

Brimstonj,

85

5S

3j@
75 @ 1 6 )
©
1*1

Annato, good to prime.
Antimony, Regulus of

\

*21

75 ©

Alum.....

Srimston

..

i

phur

Chains—Duty, 2f cents P ft.
8 @
One inch & upward ft 1b

Anthracite

Bark, 80 ft cent ad vaL: Bi Carb. Soda,
If; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ ft;
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft ;
Refined Borax, 10 cents ft ft ; Crude
Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10
$ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ten, and
15 ft cent ad val.; Crude
Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40cents 38 ft.;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents
ft ft; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic
Soda, if;
Citric Acid, 10;
Copperas,*; Cream
Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft;
Cutoh, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent
ft ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 ft cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft;
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20
ft
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬
limed Iodine, f5; Ipecac and
Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange,
50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Berga¬
mot, $1 ft ft; Oil Peppermint, 50
ft cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents $ ft; Phosphorus, 20
$ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 5Ucents
ft ft: Quicksilver, 15 ft cent ad
val.; Sal ASratus, If cents ft ft ; Sal
Soda, f cent ft ft; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 2li $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; Soda Ash, f; Sugar Lead, 20cents
$ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 ft cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 ft oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
$ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $1 ft ft; all

253

do

California

gold
California, Mex. do
Porto Cabello
Yera Cruz

..

do
do

i’amplco

21 @

©
@
:s*@
20 ©
©
16 @
17f@
..

2(i

21
2L
19

U'J
17
15

do

17f@

18

eur

Texas

20 ©

22f

15 @

16

D;y Salted Hides —
„

Ch li... '.
<vllfornia...

(g°ld)
.

do

Tump

co
.
do
South & Wesr. do
Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ayres.ft ft g’d.
Rio Grande
do
California
do
Western
....

..

©

:if@
11 @
11 @
11
Jl

©
©

is
12

in
ii*
m

12*@

13

Df©

13
14

Ooutry sl’ter trim. *fc
cured.

City
do
do
Uppe r Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip
ft ft cash.
do
Sierra Leone
Gambia & Bissau do
...

28
12

@

?0

©
25 ©

27

Honey—Duty, 2 3ent 1 gallon
Cuba (in bond) (g
gr1
ft gall.
60 ©
Hops—Duty: 5 cue-6 ft tb.
Crop of 1866 ..... ft ft
45 @
do

of 1865

Foreign

20 ©

©

THE CHRONICLE.

251
Horns—Duty, 10 $

St. Domingo,
ordinary logs
do
Port-au-Platt,
do

cent, ad val.
9 i:0@
7 00@ 8 00

Ox, Rio Grande... $ C

....

Ox, American
India Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent,

crotches
do
Po,rt-au-Platt,

ad val.

Para, Fine
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

$ ft)

75 @
@
®
@
@

East, Inala

Carthagena, Ac.
Indigro—Duty free.

logs

Bengal

(^old) $ft> 1 05 @ 1 70
Oude
75 @ 1 35
(gold)
Madras
60 ®
(gold)
50
Manila
65 @ 1 00
(gold)
Guatemala
95 ® 1 -JO
(gold)
Caraccas
75 @ i 0)
(gold)
Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 11 cents $ ft*.
Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 ft); Boiler
and Plate, 1£ cents $ ft*; Sheet, Band,
Hoop, and Scroll, 1| to 1| cents $ ft*;
Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3
cents $ ft*.
Pig, Scotch,No 1.
$ ton 41 50 @ 44 00
Pig, American, No. 1.. 42 00® 41 0 >
Bar, ltefi’d KngAAmer fc5 i) @ 90 00
Bar, Swedes, assorted
sizes (in gold)
92 50® 105 00
...

®

40

®

14
!4

Mexican
Honduras

do

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas
do
do
do

Bar Swedes, assorted
sizes

®155 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
ican, Relined
IPO
do
do
do Common 90
Scroll
132
Ovals and Half Round 127
Band
HorseShoe
127

00®1H5 00
00® 95 0
50® 80 00
50®i37 50
® 132 50
f0@

...

Rods,5-8®3-16inch.. 105 00® 16i 00
137 50® i92 ftO
Hoop
Rod

Nail

$ ft)

9 ®
191®

Sheet, Russia
Sheet, Single,
and Treble

loi
20

Double

51®
9
Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 52 5 @ f3 00
do

79 0'>® t"2 50

American

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $ft>
East Ind , Billiard Ball

Bahia

4

3 12
3 25
2 S7® 3 12
African, Prime..
African, Scrivel.,W.C. 1 60® 2 50
Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 ft>; Old
Lead, 11 cents $ ft); Pipe and Sheet,
2J cents $ ft).
Galena
$ 100 ft*
®
(god) 6 50 ® 6 621
Spanish
German
(g*»l 1) 6 Ml ® 6 024
English
(gold) 6 £0 ® 6 87*
Bar
n. t
® 10 00
Pipe and Sheet
®lo 25
net
eatlier—Duty; sole 35, upper 30
$ cent ad val.
■cash. $ ft*.-.
86 @
40
Oak, Slaughter, light
..

..

..

..

..

.

do
do
do
do
do

middle

do
<lo

33 @
8S ®

heavy.
light Cropped....

44
47
:9

@

47

@
@
3'»4@

50

middle.

2!
sn

304®

314

heavy
Cnlifor., light.

32

do middle.
do
heavy.

3< 14
29 ®
3 ' @
30 @

30 *

Orino., etc. 1’t,

“■*i@

V*

do
midtile
do
heavy.
do & B. A,

2‘*f®

30

27i@

SS4

dam’gdall w’g’s
do poor
do

2' @
19 ®

m

middle
bellies

d<*
do

....

....

Heml'k, B. A.,Ac-.Ft.
do
do

do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do

do
do

44
4t»

.

87

Slaugh.inrough
Oat, Slaugh.in rou.J’t
do
and

do

do

®

49 @
37 ®
40 ®

mid.

30

334

21
3 <
42
41

44
heavy
Lime—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Rockland, corn. $ hbl.
® 1 10
do
heavy
® 2 tX)
Lumber) Woods, Stave*,eic.
—Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood
and Cedar, free.
Spruce, Bast. $ M ft 18 09 ® 20 00
..

Southern Pine

80 00 ® 35 00
White Pine Box BVls 30 00 ®
White Pine Merch.
Box Boards
33 00 ® 35 00
Clear Pine
80 00 @100 00
....

1

Laths, Eastern. $ M

Poplar and

3 1’0 @

Whi

e
wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 ® 65 00

Cherry B’ds

Plank 80 00 ® 90 00

Oak and Ash

60 00 ® 65 00

Maple and Birch

...

Black Walnut
STAVES—
White

oak,

35 00 ® 40 00
100 DO ®120 00

®

special report.

horse shoe 2 cents

$ lb.
Cut,4d.@6nd.$ 100 ft) 5 G?4® 5 75
Clinch
7 2' ®
Horse shoe, fd (6d)$ ft)
2ft®
Morse hoe, pressed...
20 ®

Copper

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

..

@r'00 00

pipe, heavy
@250 00
@200 Ofl
pipe, light.
pipe, culls 120 00 @180 0(1
,.

..

.

hhd.,extra.

hhd., heavy
hhd., light.
hhd.,culls.
bbl., extra.

bbl., heavy.
bbl., light..
bbl.,culls..
Red oak;, hhd., h’vy.
do
hhd., light..
HEADING —White
oak, hha

I&hogaufi

..

..

,.

,.

.

.

_

_

_

„

@250 00
@200 00

@12 • 00
@100 0 0
@175 00
@140 00
@110 00
@ 60 00
@130 0C
@ 90 00

@150 00

Cedar, RoseWood—Duty free.
Mahogany St. Domin¬
go erotoho* * ft..
W @ 50




..

32
22

41 ®

Yellow metal
Zinc

25®
18

@

..

Naval

Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 3(i cents $ gallon; crude
Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20
$ cent ad val.
Turpent’e, • f $280ft>
® 5 00
bbl 3 75 @ 4 *5
Tar, Am rlci.
Pi ch
4
> ®
Rosin, common
8 S74®
do strained andNo.2.. .4 00 ® 4 50
do
No. 1
4 75
® 6 00
....

..

....

P ile and

do

Extra

(280 lbs.)
6 25 ® 9 5 )
Spirits turp., Am. $ g.
59®
61
Oakum—Duty fr.,$ ft)
8®
11
Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val.
City thin obl’g, in bbls.
$ ton
®..

do
West, thin

in

bags

Brandy—

00
14
16
114

J. & F. Martell

,

Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ ft).;

Jules Robin....
Marrette & Co.
\ ine Grow. Co.

Carolina
v $ 100 ft)13 00 @12 50
East India,dressed.... 9 25 @ 9 62
....

Salt-—Duty: sack,24

cents $ 100 ft);
bulk, IS cents $ 100 ft).
Turks Islands $ bush.
50 @
524
Cadiz
@

Solar coarse.
Fine screened
do
$ pkg.
F. F
240 ft) bgs.
►

2
2
2
1

60
h8
50
SO
42

@
@ 2 85
@ 2 60
@ I 90
@

50 @
60 @

.

ArzacSeignette

@57 00

obl’g, do
®
Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, $J : burning
fluid, 50 cents $1 gallon; palm, seal,
and cocoa nut. In $ cent@d val.;
sperm and whale or other ‘"fish (for¬
eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val.
Olive, qs(gold per case 5 874®
....

-

Refined,

Nitrate soda

@
94@
fci@

..

gold

15

do Marseilles

9|

Linseed, city... $ gall. 1 31 ® 1 32
Whale
75 @
do refined winter..
82 @
£5
Sperm,crude
2 0 ®
do
do unbleach. 2 35 ®
1 03 @ 1 15
Lard oil
O'* @
lied oil, city distilled
05
Bank
•0 @
75
Straits
80 @
35 @
4'i
Paraffine, 28 — 30 gr..
50 @
Kerosene
51
(free).
....

.

.

.

...

.

•

•

•

.

i’iiinl*—Duty: on white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents $ ft*; Pam white and
whiting, l cent $ ft); dry ochres, 56
cent* $ 100 ft*: oxidesofzim
1? cents
$ lb ; ochre, ground in oil, 4 50$ UK)
ft*; Spanish brown 25 $ cel. tad val;
China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red
Litharge, City. . ..$ ft*
Lead, red,City
do
white, American,
pure,

in oil

114®
11;®

val.;
12
12

35 ® 5 00
@
25 @ 3 r>0
5> @ 2 60

puie,

44

@
@

42*
42j

81 @

Madras

do
do
do

40

.

...each

Cape
Deer,SanJuan$ft*g(*ld
do
Bolivar ...gold
do' Honduras..gold
do Sisal
gold
do Para
gold
do
do
do

Vera Cruz .nold

Chagres ...gold
Puerto

Cab.gold

..

..

@
85 @
60 @

374@
..

@

574@
€0 @
..

@

524@
45 @

33
.

.

0
52J
<

40
6<4
60
624
57

Amer., Sax. fleece $ ft)

do

4 and J Merino..
Extra, pulled

10

10

@

11
15

@
Ochre,yellow, French,
dry
$ 5 00 ft) 2 0i> ® 2 50
do
gr’ ; in oil.$ lb
8 ®
y
Spanish brown, dry $
100 ft*
1 12 ® 1 25
do
gr’dinoil.$ ft)
8 ®
9
Paris wh., No. I$l00ft» 2 75 ® 2 8 4
Wh ;1 g, Amer
2 ®
24
Vermilion,Chinese$ft> 1 25 @ I 35
do
Trieste
1 05 ® 1 10 :
do
Cal. A Eng
1 26 ® 1 30
.

.

do

American....
v5 ®
80
Vonet. red (N.C.)$cwt 2 75 ® 8 00
Car mi ne,city made $ ft* 16 no ®20 (X)
China clay
$ ton3l (X) @ <5 00
Chalk
$ bbl. 4 00 ® 4 £3

Chalk, block

$ ton*i 0‘‘ @23 Of
15 ®
yellow.$ ft*
35
Barytes
39 00 @42 00

Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents;
refined, 40 >cnts $ gallon.
Crude,40@47grav.$gal.
@
114
Refined, free
4> @
..

....

do

in bond

Residuum

Castile

do
Texas

18

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and
plates, $! 50 $ 100 ft)s.
Plates,foreign $tt» gold
do

domestic

f4@
lo @

274 3)
29
21 @
$ bbl. 8 00 @ 3 70

Pla.**ier

Paris—Duty: lump,free;
calcined, 20 $ cent ad val.
Blue Nova Scotia$ toe
® 3 50

Calcined,ea?#«rn$ bbl
Calcined city mills

4 75 ®
....

...

® 2 40
@2 50

Provisions—Duty: beef and pork,
bacon, andiard,2 ts $ ft).
Beef,plain iness$ bbl..18 00 @24 00
do extra mess.
23 00 @28 0)
Pork,mess,new...—,..23 37 @2) 62
do met* >ld
75 @ ....
1 ct;

lams,

1«

.

.

Genuan

11 @

American, spring

12 @
19 @

Amer

c

n cast

English, spring
English blister
1..
tnglisn macliineiy....

16
15

10(@

124

H4@

20

18,@

To Liverpool:
Cotton
$ ft)

(gold)

..

..

12j

..

do
do
do

@
24}@
..

264
25

10 50 @li 5u
I. O. Coke
Terne Charcoall2 50 @12 75
Terne Coke
@ 9 50

Tobacco.—See special report.
Wines and

Liquors-Liquors

—Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per
sallon^ other liquors, $2.50. Wink—
Duty: value net over 50 cents $ gal¬

lon 20 cents %» gallon and 25 $
cent
ad valorem ; over 5< and not over
100,
50 oents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad

valorem:

$1 « gallon, $1 V gal¬
lon and 2o V cent ad val.
over

:

Heavy goods...$ ton 15 0 @17 6

(gold) 23j@
Plates,char. I.C.$ box l ? 6 @18 60
English

s.

..

cent ad val.
Plate and sheets and
terne plates, 25 per cent, ad val.

$ ft>f(gold)

d.

.,

..

coun¬

--Duty: pig, bars, and block,15 $

Banca

..

© ’ 0
$ bbl.
® 1 4
@4 6
Heavy goods.. .$ ton 12 6 @17 0
Oil
@20 0
Corn, b’k& bags$ bus.
@
3|
Wheat, bulk and bags
@
34
Beef
$ tee.
@26
Pork
$ bbl.
@20
To London

Straits

50 «

$ 1b.
® 114

s.

Flour
Petroleum

Teas.—See special report.
Tin

45;

Ireights-

Tallow—Duty :l cent $ ft).
114@

®

block, $1

100 ft)».; sueeis 24 cents
Sheet
...$ ft)

Sugar.—See special report.

try and city $ ft)...

88
25
40
21
so

26 ®
85 ®

washed
or

34

8i

38®

....

Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Sicily
$ ton.. 150 00 @225 00

American,prime,

8t>

Zinc—Duty: pig

80

18®

....

washed

Mexican,unwashed....
Smyrna,unwashed

16

@ 33

23
82

do
common, w...
Entre Rios, washed
8. American Cordova

do

so
2S

®
@
®
80®
83 @
34 @

Valparaiso,unwashed..
S. Amer. Mestiza, unw..

do

86

18 @

....

...

White Nova Scotia

common....

African, unwashed

4s

50
45

24®

Peruvian, unwashed

6|
104

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued
at 7 cents $ ft) or under, 24 cents;
over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cis
$ ft*; over 11 cents, 34 cents $ ft)
and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store prices.)
English, cast, $ ft*
18 @
23

14

Vaptha, refined

pulled

California, unwashed...

13*

white, American,

oil

No. 1,

fi5

@ 55

45 ®
4» @
t’8 @
80 ®

Superfine

@

9f@

No. l,in oil
do whi e, French, in

m>

do>

55

the

55 ®

full bl’d Merino.

do

cent ad val.

17J@

,*

57 ®

Imported scoured, three times
duty as if imported unwashed.

Soap—Duty: 1 cent $ ft*, and 25 $
$ ft).

9

of at the last place whence
exported
to the United States is 32 cents
or
less $ ft*, 10 cents $ ft) and
11 $
cent, ad val.; over 32 cents
$ ft 12
cents $ ft> and 10 $ cent, ad
val.
Class 3. — Carpet Wools and
other
si^ular Wools-The value whereof
at
the last place whence exported to
the
United States is 12 cents or less
$
!b, 3 cents $ ft*; over 12 cents $ ft
6 cents $ ft*.
Wool of all classes

Spices.—See special report.

Zine, white, American,

dry, No. 1

7®

Hvols—The value whereof at the
last

8» @

40 @

00

pbice whence exported to the United
States is 32 cents or less $
ig
cents $ ft> and 11 $ cent, ad
val. •
over 32 cents $ ft), 12 ctnts
$ ft> and
10 $ cent, ad val ; when
imported
washed, double these rates Class
2.— Combing Woofe-The value
where¬

00

.gold

60
^

dinary condition as now and hereto
fore practiced.” Ci.ass 1
—Clothing

00
00
0»
50
t0

A...gold

Tampico. ..gold
Matamoras.gold
Payta
gold

do

eg

15

Wool—Duty: Imported in the “or¬

Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Goat,Curacoa$ ft* cur
47 @
50
Buenos

35

....

47®

..

13

dry

70®

.

VeraCruz

75

#>>>

....

10J@

144

white, American,

do

do

Telegraph, No. 7 to 11
Plain
$ ft)
Brass (less 20 per cent)
Copper
do

Silk—Duty; free. All thrown silk.
35 $ cent.
Tsatlees, No.l@3.$ft)ll 51) @12 25
/Taysantus, superior,

do
do
do

*

.

Ilf®

do
Medium
China thrown

4’jn

5f'®
60®
®

....

ft).

@

.

8
3

Wire— Duty: No. 0 to 18,
uncovered
$2 to $3 5* $ 100 ft), and 15 $ cent &4
val.
No. 0 to 18
20@ 5 $ ct off liflt
No. 19 to 26
30A 5 $ ct. off li8t
No. 27 to 86
35 & 5 $ ct. off list*

....

@11
@10
@ 9
@i3
10 00 @11
10 50 @13

][[[

75®

3 5f@

.

,

and vermilion 25 $ cent ad
white chalk, $10 $ ton.

4
.

...

i?4
12 @
@ 8 25

10 25
do medium,No3@4. 9 5 )
Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. 8 75
Japan, superior
11 50

’*’*

75®
75®
75®

4
4

Sherry
d>
do
®
Malaga, sweet
90® 1
do
dry.... do
9( ® 1
Claret, in hhds. do 85 00® 60
do
in cases. do
2 65®. u
Champagne.... do 11 0b® 25

....

do in casks. $ gall.. I 55 ® 1 65
Palm
$ ft)
11 @
114

4 75®

4

...

...

No. I @

7

...,® 4

Whisky.cur. ....®
Whisky(m bond)
35®
44
(gold) 2 0 ® 850
Burgundy Port, do
85® l 30
Sherry
do 1 96® 4 gg
Madeira
8 50® 7
do
og

4 cent $ ft); canary, $1 $ bushel of
tt>; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent

Buck

5 0<@
4 75®

00
10
10 00

Wines—Port

60

$ft)
Timothy,reaped $ bus
C- D&ry
$ bus 4
Linseed, Am.clean$ tee
do Am. rough $ bus 3
do Calcutta ...gold t
Shot—Duty: 2| cents $
Drop
$ ft)

90® 16
90® 9

Bourbon

Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,
ad val.
Clover..

4

..

@ 8 00
..
2 75 @ 3 00

$ ft)

pure

W

....®

4

do
Rum—Jamaica
do
St. Croix
do
Gin—Differ, brands do
D<>m c—N.E. Rum.cnr

52
52

nu

..

do

P Romieux....

refined and partially refined, 3 cents;
nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft).
Crude

do

...

9 mi
0(|
13 ca
17 qq

5 00® i«
.@

Other br’ds Cog. do
Pellevoisin
do
A. Seignette
.
do
Hiv. Pellevoisin do
Alex. Seignette. do

Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 1 90 @ 1 95

tini',Ashton’s(g,d)
fine, Vorthingt’s
Onondaga,coin.fine bis.
do
do 210 St* bgs.
do
do
$ bush.

do
do
do
do
do

L°ger freres

$ ft).

do
do

(gold) 4 90@
Hennessy
(gold) 4 9i @
Otard, Dnp. &Co.do 4 8ft@
P*net,Castil.&Co.do 4 75®

Renault & Co..
J. Vassal A Co.,

paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 24 cents;

Chrome

pipe,

extia.

£0
8
6

Nail**—Duty: cut 14; wrought2|;

Oils

2 87®
3 00®

12

25 ®
5®

Rosewood, It. Jan $ ft)

.

/—Stoke Prices—,

20
12
12

8®
8 ®
8 @

Mexican
Florida. $ c. ft.

!?Iolasses.—See

14
15

14 ®

Mansanilla

do

.Hiuns,
Bhoulders,

®
®
11 ®

..

19 75 @20
$ ft)
12*®
15®
11 @

Lard,

10
15
10

i

prime,

10

30

Nuevitas....
Mansanilla

do
do
do

49

do

7®

[August 24,1867.

:

Oil
Flour

@.‘5 0

$ bbl.

@19

.

Petroleum

4 6 @ ...
Beef
$ tee.
..
@3 0
Pork
..
$ bbl.
@20
Wheat
$ bush.
..
@
f*
Corn
@
U
To Glasgow (By Steam):

Flour
Wheat

$ bbl.
$ bush.
Corn, bulk and bags..
Petroleum (sad)$ bbl.
Heavy goods..$ ton►

Cotton...

..

..

..

..

0

Oil
Beef

Pork..
To Havrx

..@20
@
54
@
54
@4 0
@’25 0

@4 0
...
@8 0
$
I

#tca.
$ bbl.
:

V ®

♦

Beef and pork.. $ bbl. 1
Measurem. g’ds.$ ton i0
6
Petroleum.

Lard, tallow,cutm t

iatii, pot Rnd pourl

00 @
00 @

6 @ 0

..

0

_

8 00 @19 09

2 55

THE CHRONICLE.

August 24,1867.J

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

Safes.
IMPORTANT

Thompson & Co., E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co.

Wm.

TO

AGENTS FOR

Importers of

Bankers

.

& Merchants.

IRISH

WASHINGTON MILLS,

LINENS,

BURLINGTON WOOLEN

No.

This Company

and

WROUGHT IRON

STREET.

burglar proof

Safes.

for
MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON
TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C.

¥

HOLE

COMMISSION

AND

IMPORTERS

Also Agents

Offer to

Lindsay, Chittick & Co.,

Company’s

COTTON.

SPOOL

WHITE STREET.

No*. 43 A 45

MERCHANTS,

119 CHAMBERS

Agents for the Glasgow Thread

DOUBLE CHILLED AND

MILTON MILLS,

Holt & Co.,

C.

COMMISSION

Lillie’s

CO.,

VICTORY MANUF.

Merchants and those

fire

CO.,

New York

Street,

offer for the consideration of Bank

desiring the best burgla
proof security the following certificates:
ers,

Chnrch

185

CO.,

CHICOPEE MANUF.

LINENCAHB’O HANDK’FS, AC.

MERCHANTS,
British Staple,
And Fancy

Goods,

Dress

Jobbers only.

White

Good*,

Irish and Scotch
Office of the Novelty Iron Works,
New York. ISth December, lfetifi.

John Graham,

)
j

Lillie & Son,
Gentlemen,-We have subjected the sample of
double-chided iron you furnished us to the most se¬
vere tests (as reearcls drilling through it) we could

Manufacturer of

Messrs. Lewis

bring to bear upon

it., and without success.

WOVEN

BINDINGS BED
LACE, COTTON YARNS, Ac.,

penetrated by

power to

penetrate it at all.
Yours

and

truly,
Supt.

ISAAC Y. HOLMES.

LYMAN G. HALL, Foreman.

MACHINE TWIST AND
SEWING SILKS,

SUPERIOR
Hinkley and

Williams Works,

Boston, Mass-, January 2*2,

)
1867. 1

No. 335

We having made an attempt to drill a sample-o
double chilled iron furnished us by Messrs. Lillie &
Son, and failed to penetrate it more than
{%) of an inch, after hours of labor,
we can

WORKS PATERSON,

live-eighths
leel that

Philadelphia, Pa.,
Messrs. Lewis

February 25,1867.

LiLLiE & Son,

Gentlemen,—We have tried a sample of d<-nblochilled iron similar to that sent to the Novelty
Works, New York, and our experience with it is
about the same, viz : that it can only he penetrated
by a long continued operation of the most skillful
mechanics and the best tools.
Y ery truly,
'

Messrs. Merrick

Foundry, Philadelphia,

& Son’s Southworth

FOR

IRISH

them—in fact, that the metal is proof against the
drill.
Truly yours,
N. S. BOUTON & CO.

Office of Northwestern

Man’f’g Co., )

Chicago, March 11,1867.
J
Messrs. Murray & Winne,
Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co.,
Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample you fur¬
nished us (of a new combination of metals to be
used in the manufacture of Lillie’s Safes) to the se¬
verest tests of our Pow. r Drill, and with the best
tempered drills our skill and experience could pro¬

duce.
After operating upon it with different
seve¬
ral hours without penetrating it more than
an
inch and at that point unable to make further pro¬

drills
half

s-uisfled that if not utterly im¬
penetrable, it would at least require days of time, a
large number of drills ana machine power to pene¬
trate through it; and that it was entirely out of the
1 ower of even the most skilful burglar to penetrate

gress, we

a

became

safe made of this

material.

R. T. CRANE,

President.

A full assortment of these

merits of

our

FOR EXPORT




198 BROADWAY)

STREET, NEW YORK.

Broad

President.

NEW YORK.

Reception Rooms available

Spacious Counting and

usually

COMPANY,

TYNG A

COMMISSION

AND

IMPORTERS

Broadway,

104

NOTICE TO THE

GENUINE

New

MERCHANTS,

York.

CONSUMERS OF THE

SWEDISH DANNEMORA IRON.

I beg to announce that I have this day entered into
contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & So'ns, of Sheffield
for the whole Annual Make of the above Iron, which
in future, will be stamped
a

JESSOP A SONS.

Weights.

Large Stock always on hand.
THEODORE POLHEMUS A CO
MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS.
A

59

Staples.

for Americans in London, with the facilities
found at lire Continental Bankers.
Orders for the above may be sent to

Duck,

All Width* and

Street, corner of

Beaver

Sawyer, Wallace & Co.,

And to which I

request the special attention of the

Leufsta, in Sweden,

29th April, 1867.

EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor.
WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above
notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers of,
Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders
for this Irox, and for Blistkr and Extra Cast Steed
made from the Iron, at their establishments, Nos. 91 &
93 John Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬
CARL

eral

Street, Bostox.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

Morris, Tasker &

NO. 47 BROAD STREET,
NEW TORN.

Pascal Iron

Co.,

Works, Pliiladelpbia.

Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap-Welded
Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

Manufacturers of

J. M. Cummings & Co.,
DISTILLERS

OFFICE AND

AND

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS,

STREET, NEW YORK,
Offer for sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE
WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Dis¬
tilleries, Kentucky.

15 GOLD

58 BROAD

ENGLISH AND

AMERICAN COAL.

Parmele
to h. l.

Brothers,
parmele & BROS.

C O A L

,

Kinds for Family and

Of all the Best

Office use,

32 Pine Street.
Yards: West22d street, near 10th Avenue,
and in Brooklyn.

.

LEWIS LILLIE,

New York.

AND DOMESTIC USE,

Cotton

Lillie Safe & Iron Co., Thomas
cr

solicited on the usual

of any ok* the

■

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

unequalled Bnrslar-

Safes.

terms

Henry Lawrence & Sons,

succAsors

proof Safes constantly on hand at our Warerooms.
Also, safes of every description, designed for both
Fre and Burglar-proof security, The public are in¬
vited to call and examine for themselves as to the

•

40 Murray Street.

Office Union

think
d
safes made of
longest

provided for United States or Continent.

SCOTCH LINENS,

AND

192 FRONT

ed to penetrate the metal at all. We
it wou
be impossible for buiglars to enter the
this metal by means of the drill during the
time in ordinary business they could have acce.-s to

Railroad Bonds and United States and other Amer¬
ican Securities negotiated, and Credit and Exchange

MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS

UMPORTERS AND

PLACE, LONDON, W.

RAILROAD
IRON,
BESSEMER
RAILS, STEEL TYKES A METALS.

Strachan & Malcomson,

Pa.

Foundry Works, )
J
Chicago, 111., March 13, 1867.
Messrs. Murray & Winne,
Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co.,
Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample of new
combination of metals for safes sent us by you to
as thorough tests of the drill as we could, and fail¬

15 LANGHAM

Consignment*

W. H. BECH1ELL,
W. H. STRAHAN,
Foremen in

N. J.

GOODS.

LINEN

Works’ certificate

endorse the above Novelty Iron
in all particulars.
JARVIS WILLIAMS, Treasurer.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

Smith,

A.

Gilead

MANUFACTURERS OF

N. J.

Mills at Patterson

Son,

Wm. G. Watson &

THREADS,

SHOE

SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC.
RARROUR BROTHERS,
95 CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK.

STREET, NEW YORK.

234 CHURCH

Threads,

Linen

CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬

ALS, WEBBINGS,

It is our opinion that it can only be
the use of a large number of drills, and the expen¬
diture of much power with days of
we
think it impossible foi a burglar with his time

time, and

Linens, Ac., A
STREET, NEW YORK.

150 & 152 DUANE

New York,

J. Pope & Bro,
METALS.

292 PEARL

STREET, NEAR

BEEKMAN STREET

NEW YORK

WAREHOUSES:

STREET, NEW YORK.

Established 1855.

Geo. Edw. Sears,
Successors to Samuel S.
MAKER OF

FINE

Motley,

ACCOUNT ROOKS,

AND DEALER

Every Description

IN

of Stationery,
of

For the use

BANKS, STOCK AND GOLD BROKERS, MERCH¬
ANTS AND INCORPORATED COMPANIES.
No. 45

Willium Street,

(One door north of
Mercantile Printing and
s

•

Wall Street, New York.)
Engraving of finest qualities

executed quickly.

SENSENDERFER MINING COMPANY
The Trustees have declared a Dividend of
Cent, on the Capital Stock for the month

ONE Per

of June,

payable at the office of the Company. No. 19 Broad
street, July 25,1867. Transfer hooks closed July 20 to
the 26th,
H, A. SHERRILL, Treasurer,

256

THE CHRONICLE.

Commercial Cards.

S.

H. Pearce &
No. 353

Commercial Cards.

Co.,

BROADWAY,
CHINA

We invite the attention of

Sillc,

DOMI.STIC

our

a

appearance and

SHIRTS

very

BUCK

sale of the

ever

58

LEONAKI) STREET,
IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF

ENGLISH
And

Linen

>

FS,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

Cotton, Flour, Grain

FURNISHING

GOODS,

George Hughes & Co.,
Importers A Commission Merchants,
198 A 200 CHURCH

Handk’fs,

John O’Neill & Sons,

Sole

machine Twist

B. Holabird &

CO, Belfast,

CO., Banbridgc.

ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS.

Oscar

,T.

Delisle

French Dress

Langley & Co.,

Muslin

MERCHANTS

superior to all others in strength, durability and
cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber
day.
REED’S PATENT COLD
PREMIUM
WHEAT AND CORN MILLS.

simplicity, will

&

Co.,

OF

Built of solid French Burr Rock.

Goods,

A.

Draperies,"

L.

Cummins,

COTTON

BROKER,

FOR

Machine

COTTON AND WOOLEN
GOODS.
From Numerous Mills.
19

WHITE

Globe

STREET,

NEW

Co.,

Anderson &

73 LEONARD

Mixtures,

AND

Smith,

PLACE, NEW YORK.

KIRK A

Brand &

PARASOLS,

SIX-CORD

JOS. H.

Agents for the sale

WHITE

AUCHINCLOSS,

GOODS,

Umbrellas &




MURRAY

JOHN

STREET, NEW YORK,

Produce,

Stock,

and

Baltimore, Md.

Sprigg, cashier; J. Sloan, Jr., cashier, Ba
timore, Md. And by permission to Jacob Heald &
Co., Lord & Robinson, Balt.; Tannahill, Melllvaiue
& Co.. N. Y.; Ambrose
Rucker, President 1st Nation¬
al Bank, Lynchburg, Va.

AC.

FLOUR,

CLARK,
Mile

’

•

■■—!-

•*

SEEDS

DIJCK, AC.

Blair, Densmore & Co.,

Jr. A
End, Glasgow.

CO’S.

’

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS,

\

IS UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE
SEWING.
THOS. RUSSELL, Sole
Agent,
88 CHAMBERS STREET. N. Y.
i

GRAIN,

AND PROVISIONS.

Spool Cotton.

DWIGHT,

Parasols,

Refer to D.

of

LINENS,
FLAX SAIL

No. 108 Duane Street.

OF

-

ROBT. N. WILSON,

Note Brokers.

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK.*

MANUFACTURERS

Merchandise,

CO.

WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’

Thread.

DOUBLEDAY Sc

WILSON,

Warehouse and office corner of Lombard and Frede
it<k streets, No. 39 East
End, Exchange Place,

Jobbing and Clothing Trade.

CABLED

J. N. Falls.

Morris, New York.

WILSON, SON Sc

Gihon,

IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN

BUYERS,

J. C. Johnson.
Refer by permission to Caldwell &

42 & 41 MURRAY STREET.

Bleachers,

Co.,

G. Falls.

Importers A Commission Merchants,

SON,

J. & P. Coats’

49

Street, Mobile, Ala.

Memphis, Teon.

In full assortment for the

HUGH

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

COTTON

Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK.

BELFAST, IRELAND.

Sc

GENERAL

G. Falls &

Hall,

UMBRELLAS AND

Linen Manufacturers and

JOHN

England & Co.,

65 Commerce

STREET, NEW YORK.

Manufacturers of

Agents for

BEST

Wm. G.

COTTON FACTORS

Corsets, Ac.

Byrd &c
Silk

Reavers.

WILLIAM

Laces,

W. D. Simonton.

Fancy Cassimercs.

33 PARK

Goods,

Imitation Laces,

Woolen

Coffin, Treas.

Edgings,

Real Brussels

198 & 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK.
W. W.

MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE.

Swiss A French White

YORK.

Particular attention

given to Southern patronage.

Lace Curtains.

AMERICAN

&

our

IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAWMILL.
per

IMPORTERS

17

Co.,

CINCINNATI, O.,

It is

And F. W. HAYES A

ST., NEW YORK.

COMMISSION

A.

Particular attention is called to

Embroidery,
Organzinc, and Tram.

Wm. C.

CINCINNATI, OHIO.
Special attention given to filling orders for
Spinners

ESTABLISHED IN 1826.

Agents tor

DICKSONS’ FERGUSON A

Sewing* Silk*,

Burnham

COTTON BROKER,

PATENT LINEN THREAD.

MANUFACTURERS OF

PATERSON, N.

ST., CINCINNATI, O.

'

STREET,

SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS,
SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS,
LINEN CHECKS, Ac., WHITE GOODS,

MILLS AT

and Provisions.

NO. 27 MAIN

Erastus

British and Continental.

84 CHAMBERS

Cano, Wright & Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK,

Emb’s,

Linen

and Orders Solicited.

importer of

Oilers a new Stock of tlie above at
361 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN
STREET.

Goods,

MERCHANT,

CINCINNATI.

Consignments

HOSIERY mid

MEN’S

COMMISSION

A Co.’s

CRAPES,

HA N DK ERCI1IE

Importers of

STREET,

J. Chapin,

PRODUCE

Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red

Tram Silk.

Laces and

N.

Napier

and Lawn

Organzinc Silk,

White

PEARL

CINCINNATI.

(late of Becar, Napier & Co.)

Cotton

Co.,

Merchant,—United States

NOS. 263 & 265 WEST

GLOVES,

D.

Pongee tCdkis,

70 & 72 FRANKLIN

Goods,

Agent for S. Courtanld

Cotton,

Carpenter,

BERLIN GLOVES.

*

H’dkfs,
Oiled Silk,

CO.

Bonded Warehouse.

Alexander

John N. Stearns,

George Pearce &c

Commission

KID, CLOTH AND

invented.

Oiled

Daniel H.

DRAWERS,

Foreign

Patent Reversible Paper Collar*.
the most economical collar

A

Germantown Woolen

durability.

Agents for the

A

OF CHINA AND JAPAN.

Hosiery,

superior finish, and
silk, which it equals in

*

AUGUSTINE HEARD

the

Large Stock of

Imitation Oiled Silk.
Our “ IMITATION ” has

Co.,

28 Stale Street, Boston,

Jobbing Trade Only
To

costs but half as much as real

&

AGENTS FOR

SILKS,

HANDKERCHIEFS,

Oiled

Everett

75 & 77 LEONARD STREET.

and Manufacturers of
SILK AND COTTON

Commercial Cards.

Petrie & Co.,

Importers of

EUROPEAN AND

[August 24, 1867,

~

"1

,

ItS

WASHINGTON
\

Chicago, Ills.

STBXET.
*