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A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states.

YOL. 5.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1867.

Western Bankers.

Western Bankers.
P. Hayden.

Gilmore, Dunlap & Co.,
108

West

110

Sc

Fourlli Street,

Jos. Hutcheson.

W.

BANKING HOUSE

Southern Bankers.

B

Hayden

OF

Hayden, Hutcheson & Co
NO. 135 HIGH STREET,

COLUMBUS,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Do

General Banking,

a

OHIO,

Collection, and Exchange

Business.

Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

J B.
H. J. Rogers,

NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS,

FIRST

Checks

depository

or
-

-

-

u.

s.

$500,000

Southern Bankers.

F.

los.

J

Real Capital, $1,000,000.

Larkin 6c

National

Co.,

BANKERS,

Bank of the

CINCINNATI.
Jos. F. Larkin,
1
John Cochuower,-1
Adam Poe,

Harvey

f Thomas Fox.
general
I John M. Phillips.
f partnership. 1 Thus. Sharp.
Decamp, J
^Johu Gates.

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

V.-PresL

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

of
Collections made

on all points WEST and
SOUTH,
promptly remitted for. Capital stock,
Surplus Fund, $250,000.
*1,000,000.
Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L.
B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M.
Bishop, William
Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S

and

Winslow.

promptly

William H. Rhawn,

Company
and

BANKERS,
ST. LOUIS, MO

Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Ex¬
all accessible
current

hange.

L. A.

rates

Benoist &

of

ex-

Co.,

on all the
of the United States and Canadas.
London and Paris for sale.

Second

principal cities
Also, drafts on

National Bank.
ST. LOUIS, MO.

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

pondents.




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

GA*

Co.,

on

STREET, NEW ORLEANS,

Merchants National Bank, New York, and
Bank of

Liverpool, England.

Collections and remittances promptly attended to.

-

■

■

t

—

T. H. McMahan & Co.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS

Wi4 Dealers In Domestic and
Foreign

GALVESTON, TEXAS.'

BANK

WASHINGTON,

H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke A Co.),
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

securities

Preset.

Depository and Financial

on

the most favorable terms, and

uive

especial attention to business connected
with the several departments of the
Government.
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
ernment

LOUIS, MISSOURI,

Buy and Sell Exchange

Draw

points

BANKERS,
ST.

54 CAMP

Osgood Welsh,
Frederie A. Hoyt,

Agent of the United State*.
We buy and sell all classes of Government

Haskell & Co.,

BROKERS,

AUGUSTA,

BANKERS,

President,

-■

AND

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOB.

Edward B. Orae,
William Krvlen,

NATIONAL

OF

ou

Charles D. Carr & Co.,

Exchange.

FIRST

Collections
attended to.

made

BANKERS Sc DEAL LBS
IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE,
BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND BuNDSL

Burke &

Washington.

Manager.

promptly remitted for at

1

Wilson,

Street, Charleston, S. C.,

and

Mumpord, Cashier,
Late of the Philadelphia National Bank.
———

President.

Established 1848.

and

Banks

Late Cashier of the Central National Bank.

Joseph P.

Correspondent, Vxrmilyb A Os.

No. 5 Broad

<

William H. Rhawn.

Government

change. Collections

N. Y.

liberal terms*

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

OF CHICAGO.

General Rankins:

on

to

en

all accessible points in the United States.

BANKERS

$ 1,000,000

Bankers

**■

J. Young Scammon
Robert Reid

STREET,

Capital
services

VA.

Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notea,
State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac.,

PHILADELPHIA.
&;*

Co.,

BANKERS AND BROKERS
No. 1014 MAIN ST., RICHMOND,

directors:

Cincinnati.

The Marine

Republic,

809 A 811 CHESTNUT

oners

T. BROOKS

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

FOR SALE.

Cash Capital, $150,000.

BOB’?

R. H. Maury &

Conner &

the

Paid In Capital
- *200,000
Transact a General Banking business corner of
Blake and F. Sts. DENVER COLOR ABO.

UNION BANK OF LONDON.

on

JAS. L. MAURY.

Deposits received and Collections made

Chaffee, Pres.

Authorized Capital-

H. MAURY.

bought and sold on commission.

V. Pres.
Geo. T. Clark, Cashier.
NATIONAL. BANK

designated

day of payment.

BOB'T

of Denver,

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points
and remitted for on

NO. 110.

attention

Exchange, Gov¬

Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt

given to Collections.

References

:

Babcock Bros* &

Co., Bankers, New York.
Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York.
E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York.
Byrd A Hall, New York.
Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolft * Gillespie.
Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & 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.

Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala.

Special attention given to Collections of all kind*,
having prompt and reliable correspondent# at all aceessible points in the State, and

REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT
EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.
RBFIR TO

National Park Bank, Howes * Macy, and SpoffonL
Tileston * Co., New York.
Second National
Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel A
Co. and D. 8. Stetson * Co.,
Philadelphia. T. F.
Thirkield * Co., Cincinnati. Third National thnir
and Jo#. E. Elder A Goodwin, St Louis.
Fowler,
Stanard A Co, Mobile. Pike,

"lapeyre A Bro.,
Drake, Klein worth A Cohen, Lon*
Liverpool.

New Orleans.
den and

Eastern Bankers.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
STOCK
No. » STATE
JAMES A. DUPEE,

BROKERS,
STREET, BOSTON.

JAMES BECK,

HENRY SAYLES

Page, Richardson & Co
BOSTON,

,

114 STATE

STREET,
BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON
▲HD

JOHN BIUNROE Sc

CO., PARIS*

ALSO IS8UC

Commercial Credits for the purchase of Mereham
dise is England and the Continent TaATELuauf
Geedits for the use of Travellers abroad.

Co.,

Bf.ll, Paris &

BROKER
Members of the Stock. Gold and Government Boards,
Healers in Governments and other
AND

RANKERS
12 NK*

STREETS,

& 14 BROAD

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

Securities.

Interest

subject to

James G. King’s Sons,
William Street.

Currency

on deposits of Gold and
check at sight.

al’owed

BANKING HOUSE
OF

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

TURNER BROTHERS.

Commission.

Gold on

BROKERS AND RANKERS,
BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

STOCK

No. 16

Securities
Bonds,
and

Buy and Sell on Commission Government
Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and
Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum,
Mining Stocks.
Currency and Gold received
Draft. Dividends and Interest
Orders
ments made.

deposit subject to

on

Government and

Securities and Gold
commission.
Individuals received

Stocks, Bonds, Government
Bought and Sold exclusively oil
Accounts ot
on

Banks, Bankers and

favorable terms.

IvEFEKENCES *

National Mecli. Banking Ass., N.Y.
Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago.

J. H. Fonda, Pres.
C. B. Blair, Pres’t

& MOORE,

ADAMS, KIMBALL
S

B A N K E 11
No.

14 Wall Street,

No, 2 4

Kktciivm.
Georqe
Thos. Belknap, Jr.

Broad Street. New

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

WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK,

of Exchange, Governments,

Sight Draft

Gans,

&

Frank

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN

No. It

SURPLUS

&

ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

Bank.

Tenth National

$ 1,000.0: O.

BROAD STREET.
Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers

Telegraphic orders executed lbr the Purchase and
Sale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New

H. Cauean Oaxxat.

BANKERS.
No. 44 Wall Street. New York,
Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery
issues of

INCLUDING

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

“
1864,
6
“
6
“
“
1865,,
5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
6 Per Cent Currency Certificates.

**

and Dealers’ Accounts

solicited.

D. L. '

OSS, Preside

ashier.

Compound Interest Notes of 1864 At
1865 Bought and Sold.

1

VERMILYE & CO.

STREET.

Garth, Fisher & Hardy,

collected.

Edey & Co.,

A: BROKERS,
HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 30 TO
BANKERS

No. 36

Broad Street. Office No. 16.

DEALERS

IN

OTHER
Interest
rency,

GOVERNMENT AND
SECURITIES.

allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬

subject to Check at Sight.

Merchants und

Bankers upon

Gold loaned to

lavcrahle terms.

Woodman,

G-

C. &

30 PINE STREET,

GOVERN MENT
SECURITIES, LAND WARRANTS, COL¬

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN

LEGE LAND SCRIP, &C.

THE AGENCY OF

.

Successors

Hardy).
Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc.,

Government Securities,

and Interest

THE

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

Foreign and Domestic Exchange

John Bloodgood & Co.,
22 WILLIAM

DEALERS

British North America.
NASSAU STREET.
Bills of Exchange on London bought and sold.
Draftsissuedand hills collected on San Francisco.and
ou the principal towns of Canada, Nova Scotia, ISIfew
Brunswiekand British Columbia. Dralts fur £2 and
upwards granted on Scotland and Ireland.
NO.

17

STREET, NEW YORK
Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and Gold
bought nnd sold on the most liberal terms. Merchauts, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on
deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬
ton, Tobacco. &c., consigned to ourselves o to onr
correspondents, Messrs.
K. GILLIAT & CO.,
Liverpool.
NO. 41 BROAD

C.

POWELL, GREEN Sc CO.

RANKERS,

No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
Order* for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬
cuted. FOUR PERCENT. INTEREST ALLOWED
o«a

deposits, subject to check at eight.

38 BROAD

STREET, NEW YORK.

Stocks. Bonds and Governments bought

clusively

on

and sold ex¬

Interest allowed on

Bussing,

RANHKflft A HltOKPItft
?7 WALL 8 * USE r
All onlsr* reeelv* our Person* 1 Attention.
Joan 8 lumiho
Wh. J. Gblsto




.

AND

SECURITIES.

deposits of Gold and Cnrren

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,
Brokers.

Rankers and

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
sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells,

or

Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.
All orders faithfully executed.
ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,
JOSIAH HEDDEN,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN.

John Munroe & Co.,
AMERICAN BANKERS,
NO. 7 RUB SCRIBE, PARIS
AJTD

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK;
lane Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers In afl

Also Commercial Credits.

forte ef Europe, eto^ etc.

Commission.

SOUTHERN

-George

GOVERNMENT

Hedden,Winchester&Co

Farnham,

v

(l.ate of O. 8. Bobbin* A Hon,)

Gelston &

IN

cy, subject to check at sight, and particular atten
tiOR given to accounts of country hanks and bankers

& Commission

Bankers

STREET, NEW YORK.

OTHER

NO. 69

Wilson, Callaway & Co.,

bought, sold and

collected.

of

MERCHANTS,

Warren, Kidder & Co.,

BANKERS,
STREET,
to Uairison. Garth & Co. and Henry C
No. 18 NEW

Rankers and Commission Merchants

Barstow,

2d, & 3d seriess

cent. Bounty Loan.

New York State 7 per

Government Bonds of all kinds, State and City
Bouds. Radroad and other Stocks and Bonds, Gold
ana Silver bought and sold on commission.
Inter¬

Coupons and Dividends

STOCKS

STATES

UNITED

all

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

BANKERS A: BROKERS,
No. 10 WALL

Co.,

&

Vermilye

No. 29

J. H. Stout, C

York.

Chabus B. Hums,

Howard,

Bank

RICHARD BERRY, President.

U. S.

WALL STREET.

Dibblee

NEW YORK.

$1,000,00
450,000

prlndpal towns and cities of

Europe and the Bast.

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

NATIONAL BANK.

Capital

Bonds,

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

Advances made on approved Securities
allowed on deposits.

CAPITA!

LONDON,

Walter H. Burns,

Negotiable

Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all
Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject to
or Check.
Advances made on approved securities.

The Tradesmen’s
291 BROADWAY,

Available in an the

WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK.

Dealers in Bills

President.

Cashier

”

BANKERS,
No. 53

•

&3,000*000.

Capital

William II. Sanford,

Mercantile

Co.,

Souttf.r &

est

BROADWAY.

LondooJ

Lxn P. Morton,

NO. 18 WALL STREET
Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES, GOLD, «fee. Orders for purchase and
sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed.

Central National Bank,

AND TO

BANK OF

UNION

York.

.

A CO. Cnica^o.

tod

HORTON, BURNS * OO.y

(58 Old Broad Street,

Phipps.

and
gold negotiated. Inte¬

RANKERS,

Has for sale

other Securities,

exchange bought and sold on commission.
paper and loans in currency or
rest allowed on deposits.

Tyler, Wrenn & Co.,

318

L. P.

Government securities, railroad and other bonds,
railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold

Securities,

TYLER, ULLMANN

Sixty Days; also, areolar Hole*
Traveler*’ Use, m

V

Franklin M.

New York.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government
of all issues, and execute orders for the purchase and
sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency
subject to check at sight.

At Sight or

STREET, NEW YORK.

27 WALL

Brownell & Bro.,

RANKERS Jk BROKERS,
28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.

STREET, HEW YORK.

STERLING EXCHANGE

BROKER IN

collected and Invest¬
Promptly Executed

J. L.

10 BROAD

Letters of Credit Cor

KETCHUM, PHIPPS Ac BELKNAP,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,

Drake Brothers,

BANKERS,

Jr.,

B. Murray,
*

Co.,

L. P. Morton &

54

.

TURNER BK OTHERS,
NO. 14 NASSAU STREET,

TRAV¬

CREDIT FOR

LETTERS OF

Bankers and Biokers.

Brokers.

Bankers and

Brokers.

Bankers and

[August 8, 1867

CHRONICLE.

THE

130

:c O M M K It C 1 A L

PAPER,

ALSO,

STOCKS, BONDS. GOLD. 4r«\,

BOUGHT AND SOLD

ON COMMISSION.

4 8 Platt Slrtttti,

New lo-k.

Edwin

BANK

ROTH.

Q. Bell,

■AHKBB
ARB
BBOKBB,
USoathwa Itwlta u4 Buk BUI*

••

aaoADWAY *
*

• Maw
Raw Y.rfc.

araaar,

THE CHRONICLE.

3,1867,]

August

Bankers and Brokers.

Financial.

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

Fisk. 8c Hatch,

Brokers.

Bankers and

131

FAHNESTOCK*
EDWARD

J

No. 32 Broad

bankers.

AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHE,
DESIRABLE SECURITIES,

Street, New York.

No. 5 Nassau Street,

Buy and Sell at Market Rates,

Wall and Nassau Sts.,

Corner

BANKERS

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

& Co.,

Cooke

Tay

DODGE,

COOKE.

'

COOKE,

H. D.

RECOMMEND

New York,

TO INVESTORS

THE

New York.

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.

FIRST MORTGAGE RONDS OF THE

Philadelphia*

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

The Central

114 Soutli 3d Street,

No.

Make Collections

Fifteenth Street,
Opposite Treas. Department,

and

of

Washington.

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

resident .partners.
shall give particular attention to the purchase,
SALE, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Of
all issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks,
bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks.

be

terms,
or

sale

Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad

Securities.

AGENT8

Ward,

FOR

56 WALL

COMPANY,

STREET, NEW YORK,

2S STATE

STREET, BOSTON.

Joseph A. Jameson,
Amos Cotting,
Of Jameson, Cotting & Co.
St. Louis.

James D. Smith,
of the late firm of James
Low & Co., New York
and Louisville, Ky.

RANKERS,

Co.,

NOS. 14 & 16 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

Receive

Deposits in Currency and Gold,

and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER

CENT

daily balances which may be checked

per annum on
for at

sight.
Will purchase and sell Gold, Bond3 and Stocks strictly
and only on Commission.

STOCKS AND BONDS

nia,

across

St »te

line, travel sing the richest and most popu¬
op California, and thence through

t-ECTiON

It forms the sole It estern link of the only
the Pacific wh ch is adopted by Congress
and aided by tne issue of United States
Bonds.
route to

Their road is already completed, equipped, and
running for 94 miles Iroin 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 Saiety and
Profit to Investors, for the following among other

viz;

reasons,

First —The rate of Interest is Six per

4-old, payable semi-annually

York

government

*v■;*

Hatch, Foote 8c Co.,,
RANKERS

securities,

.SECURITIES,

AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT

vv*

all YJJtnmxs.

Lockwood 8c Co.,
BANKERS.
No. 94

BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET.

Sealers

GOLD, &c.
All issues of SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES exchanged for
the new FIVE-TWENTY BONDS, on the most liberal
terms, and without delay.
IMPORTERS and others supplied
ket rates,

government and

in

SECURITIES.

OTHER

3 BROAD

BROKER,

AND

BANKER

STREET, NEW YORK*
DEALER IN

Bills on

Securities

and Paris,
Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile.

NASSAU STREET,
Buy and sell at market rates:

BANKER,
AND DEALER IN

Gold and Silver Coin.

cashed

24 Nassau

Pott, Davidson 8c Jones,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
(Messrs. Brown Bros A Co.'s new building),
69 A 61 WALL STREET, NEW YOrtK.
B«y and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and
Government Securities.
Acconnts #f

The

favorable terms.

Interest allowed on depos¬

its, subject to check at light.

Telegraphic quota¬

tions furnished to correspondents.

Banker, Eeq.. Vice-President of the Bank of Mew
P. D.
J. N.

Riker 8c

t>

NO. 5 NEW STREET and

r-v

No. 2tf Wall Street,

Co.,

RANKERS AND

BROKERS.

Gold. Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬
mission.
Particular attention given to the Purchase and
■•'•of all Southernandallsce laueoua SocurlUea,,
Collections made on all accessible poiuts,

Inureet allowed




on

Balance*'

traffic for re-pay uient.

Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision, accompa¬
nied with Extensive Grant- of Public

its success is ren¬
its financial sta¬
bility is altogether independent of

the contingencies which attend ordi¬
nary Railroad euierpri es.

of its First Mortgage

of the Government itself.

STOCKS,

80 BROADWAY.

Company will incu on twice the distance. and are steadily increasing, rendering the
uninterrupted payment of the Inte¬
rest

absolutely certain.

Eighth.—At t' e present rate of Gold they paynear]y .s X Per Cent, per annum, on tne amount in¬

vested.
The Bonds are issued in denominations of $1,000
with semi-annual Gold Coupons attached, pa. able
in New York, and are offered lor the present at 95
per cen . and accrued interest tin currency) from

January 1st

Orders may be torwarded to us director through the
principal banks and Bankers in ail parts of the

country.

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

Winslow, Lanier 8c Co.,
BANKERS,
2T Sc 29 Pin© Street,
DRAW ON LONDON AND

charge. Inquiries for fun her particulars, by mail or
otherwise, wi J receive punctual attention.

Fisk 8c Hatch,

New York*

RANKERS AND DFALERS IN
G 0 VERNMEN T SECURITIES,

PARIS, MOBILE AND

NO. 5 NASSAU

NEW ORLEANS.
Issue Circular Letters of Credit
able in all parts

for Travellers,

avail¬

of Europe.

Interest Allowed on

Deposits*

Duncan, Sherman 8c Co.,
RANKERS,

CORNER OF PINK AND NABSAtJ 8TB.,

N.Y.,

(PETTY, SAWYERS A CO., Momi.t, Ala.)

the future

on

or

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

r,
0
P. D. Roddey 8c

Co.,

BROKERS IN MINING

rf IQ.

Roddey,
Petty,

Firm name by procuration.

.

*,

RtRBKNCKS: James Brown, E*,., of Meant.
Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬
ident of the Chemical National Bank; James H.

York

Specie Department will be in charge
J. S. Cronise <fc Co.), who has

I

Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬
ob

Street, New York.

of J. S. Cronise (late of
my authority to sign the

.

ed

BULLION AND SPECIE,

„

,

taken in exchange for the new

Consolidated 5-20 Bonds, on terms advantageous to
holders of 7-30s.
Merchants and Importers supplied with coin for cus¬
tom-duties at lowest market rates.
Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous
securities promptly executed.
Mail and telegraph
orders will receive our personal attention. Deposits
received, and interest allowed on balances. Collections
made on all points with quick returns.
RODMAN, FISK & CO.

provides nearly half the amount ne¬
cessary to hu Id the entire road, and
look* mainly t > a small per-ceniage

Seventh.—The net earnings of the completed
portion are already lamely in excess of
tlie iote.est obligations which
he

P. Hayden,

Cent. Bonds of 1SS1; Ten-Forties ;
Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues ;
Seven-Thirty Notes, all series;
Compound Interest Notes, and'

without charge.
7-30 Notes, all series,

Bearing Bonds of the Government.
Fourth.—The United States Government

for
the obi.gat ons

NO. 18

Registered Interest Collected and Coupons

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

ample, and their character
Safety and reliaodity is equalled only by tnai of

Southern Bills on London

and

Six per

Principal is payable in Gold at

ty.

Sixth. - The Security
Bunds is therefore

Foreign and Domestic Exchange,

RANKERS,
Government

matur

Lands, by which tue Government fosters this

Rodman, Fisk 8c Co.,
In

Cent, in

City oi New

great national euterpn-e.
der ed certain, and

C. Graham,

A.

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

Dealers

with GOLD at mar

and Coin on baud for immediate delivery.
No. 12 WALL STREET.

in ihe

.

Second.—The

bought and bold on commission,

Sacramento, Califor¬

the Sierra Nevadas to tne California

the GREAT MINING REGIONS < F THE TERRITORIES,
to the vicinity of Salt Lake City.

Jameson, Smith 8cCotting

BROADWAY A 10 NSW STREET.

END OP THE

GREAT NATIONAL RAILWAY
ACROSS THE CONTINENT.

lous

JAY COOKE & CO.

JO

is constructing, nnder the patron¬

UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

Their line will extend from

BARING BROTHERS &

..

Satterlee &

This Company

THE WESTERN

S. G. 8c G. C.

We

March 1,1866.

Pacific Railroad Co.,
age of the

In connection with our houses in Philadelphia and
Washing*011 we have this day opened an office at No.
1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city.

Mr.

fhvorable

on

promptly execute orders for the Purchase

All descriptions off GovernmentSccurltiCN kt pt constantly on baud, and

Bought Sold or Exchanged.
rvr Gold Coin and U. S. Coupons

ani collected.

Dcpo«it*i received on

AND CIRCULAR LETTERS

OF CREDIT,
of Travelers abroad and In the

For the use
United
Statea, available In all the principal cities of the
world; also,

(XIXIMKKCIAL CREDITS.

For

use

In Knrope, east of the Cape

Weet Lndlee, ttouth America, and the

of Good Hope
United Mtatce

bought, sold,

Liberal Term*.

mobject to check at Sight.
|uff" Collections made throughout

the country.
fjBT'Mlsceilaneoc# ‘Rocks and Bonds bought and

ISSUE

CIRCULAR NOTES

STREET, N.Y

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

and

sold at th« hU*cn. Evrlmngo on commission for

nh.
it) trial attention rjirer tothe F.xch a tint of SE l 'ES 77//A T Y NOT ES qf all the eerie* for the new FI VK
l

WKSTY liONDS qf im\ on Ihe meet favoraUe

terms

THU

'anttnerrjaJ & ijh\inant|a
ianto’ tetftte, (Etomwcwal

Railway Dfamifaw, and gasurantt

A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states.

VOL. 5.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1867.

Western Bankers.

Western Bankers.
P. Hayden.

Gilmore, Dunlap & Co.,
West

110

108 &

Four ill

Street,

Jos. Hutcheson.

W.

B

Southern Bankers.
Hayden

BOB’T

BANKING HOUSE OF

NO. 135 HIGH
Do

a

General

STREET,

OHIO,

NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS,
COLLECTIONS MADE at all

J B.

day of payment.

Checks

UNION BANK OF

on

LONDON.

Chaffee, Pres.

DEPOSITORY

U.

S.

No. B Broad

Authorized Capital- - - $500,000
raid in Capital
$200,000
Transact a General Banking business corner of
Blake and F. Sts. RUN VEK
COLORADO.

BANKERS,

Jos.F. Larkin,

1

JohnCochnower, I
Adam Poe,

general
f partnership,

Harvey Decamp,

J

J.W.

(Thomas Fox.

.John M. Phillips.
| Tlios. Sharp.

(.John Gates/

.

Ellis, Prest. Lewis Worthington, V.-Pre*t.
Theodor* Stanwood, Co*flier.

THE FIRST NATIONAL RANK

of

STREET,

BANKERS

!•»

vnera

Bankers

on

aernces

to

Bank*

Burke 8c

Collections made on all points WEST and
SOUTH,
and promptly reunited for.
Capital Mock.

Nathan Hi Ilea,

Edward B. Orne,
William Errlan,

Benjamin Rowland, Jr.,

Osgood Welsh,

Dibrctcrs.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington,
L.
B.
Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William
Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S
Winslow.

Samuel A.

11,000,000. Surplus Fuml, $250,000.

The Marine

Late Cashier of the Centrml National Bank.

Jossrn P.

Company

Mumtord, Cashier,
Late of the

Philadelphia National Bank.

Draw

on

General Ranking- and Collcctlonn
promptly attended to.
Established ISIS.

Bank of

Haskell

&

BANKERS,
.

S--T.

LOUIS,

MO

.

Benoist &

Co.,

LOUIS, MISSOURI,

ijjtd Sell Exchange

on all the principal cities
United States and Canadas. Also, drafts on
London and Paris l'or sale.

Second National Bank.
ST. LOUIS, MO.

c*Pltal..$200,000 |
POn<leQts‘

NATIONAL

OF

BANK

WASHINGTON,

H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke <fc Co.), Pbes’t.

the United

Mate*..

We buy and Bell all classes of Government
securities on the most favorable terms, iuid five
especial attention to business connected
with the several departments of the
Government.
Full information with regard to Government loans
at all times cheerfully furnished.

Jas. M. Muldon 6c Sons,
BANKERS,

ST.

FIRST

Agent of

Dealers in Government
Securities, Gold and ExCollections made ou all accessible points
P^Ptly remitted for at current rates ol ex-

L A.

Washington.
HUNTINGTON, Cashier.
Government Depository and Financial

Co.,

Surplus .$150,568

attention given to the business of corresr
E. D. JONES, Cashier.




Liverpool, England.

T. H. McMahan 8c Co.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS

mad Dealers in Domestic and
Foreign

GALVESTON, TEXAS.

WM. 8.

'

Merchants National Bank, New York, and

Exchange.

President.

Manager.

STREET, NEW ORLEANS,

Collections and remittances promptly attended to.

OF CHICAGO.

J. Young Scammon
Egbert Reid

Co.,

BANKERS,
54 CAMP

Bispham,

Prederie A Hoyt,
William H. Rhawn.
William H. Rhawn, President,
-■*

GA*

and

liberal terms*

Joseph T. Bailey,

BROKERS,

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED TOR.

director*:

Cincinnati.

AND

AUGUSTA,

$ 1,000,000

pital

DEALERS

Charles D. Carr 6c Co.,

PHILADELPHIA.
Ca

Wilson,

5
Street, Charleston, S. C.t

Especial attention paid to Collections.
Reier to Duncan, Shermau & Co., New York;
Drexcl A Co., Philadelphia; The Franklin
Bank,
and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. If. Maury &
Co.,
Richmond, Va., Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, Ga.

Republic,

809 A 811 CHESTNUT

I

commission.

BANKERS Sc

National

Bank of the

CINCINNATI.

VA.

IN FOREIGN& DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE,
BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND BoNDS.

Real Capital, *1,000,000.

Jos. F. Larkin 6c Co.,

on

Conner 6c

OF THE

Southern Bankers.
Capital, $150,000.

Co.,

all accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent. Vxkmilye A On.

FOR SALE.

Cash

T. BBOOKE

Deposits received and Collection* made an

of Denver,
DESIGNATED

and remitted lor on

bought and sold

H. J. Rooers, V. Pres.
Geo. T. Clark, Cashier.
FIRST
NATIONAL. RANK

accessible points

ROB'T

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

Banking, Collection, ami Exchange

SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

JAS. L. MAURY.

BANKERS AND BROKERS
No. 1014 MAIN ST.,
RICHMOND,

Business.

Dealers in GOLD,

H. MAURY.

R. H. Maury 6c

Hayden,Hutcheson & Co
COLUMBUS,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

NO. 110.

No. 52 St. Francis

St., Mobile, Ala.

Dealers in Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, Gov¬
ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and Silver.
Prompt
aitention given to Collections.
References:
Babcock Bros

&

Co., Bankers, New York.
Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York.
E. 11. Bnlkly & Co., Brokers, New York.
By rd & Hall, New York.
Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. II. Gillespie, late Wolll <fc
Gillespie.
Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & 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.
Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala,

Special attention given to Collections of all kindi,
having prompt and reliable correspondents at all aocessible points In the State, and
REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT
EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES,
um to

National Park Bank. Howes &
Macy, and SpoffortL
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.
Thirldeld A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank
and Jos. E. Elder A
Goodwin, SL Louis. Fowler,
Stanard A Co , Mobile. Pike,
lapeyre A Bro.,
New Orleans. Drake, KlainwcrthJk
Cohen, Lm«
4m and Liverpool.
•

Eastern Bankers.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
STOCK

BROKERS,

Now 82 STATE STREET, BOSTON.
JAMES A.

DUPE*,

JAMES BECK,

HENRY SAYLES

Page, Richardson & Co ,
BOSTON,
114 STATE

STREET,

BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON
AND

JOHN MUNROE Sc CO.. PARIS.
ALSO ISSUE

Commercial Credits for the purohase of Mefehaa
dtse in England and the Continent.
TeayelleM*
Credits for the use of Travellers abroad.

130

Bankers and

Brokers.

Bankers and

BROKER
12 NEW & 14 BROAD STREETS,
Members of the Stock, Gold and Government, Boards,
Dealer** lit (loverinnenls and oilier
AND

BANKERS

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

Securities.

Interest

nl'owed on deposits of

subject uncheck, at

B ft OTHERS,
NO. 14 NASSAU STREET,
Corner of Pine, Opposite U. S. Treasury.
We receive Deposits and make Collections, Die same
as an
Government Securities
incorporated Bank.
Bouirlit ami Sold al Market Rates.
We also execute
orders for Purchase and Sale ol Stocks, Bonds anu

TURNER BROTHERS.

Drake Brothers,
BROKERS AND
BROAD STREET,

No. if*

28 BROAD

BANKERS,
Securities
Bonds,
and
subject

on

Securities and Gold
commission.
Banks, Bankers and Individuals received

favorable terms.

J. H. Fonda, Pres.
C. B. Blair, Pres’t

rest

National Mech. Banking Ass.,

N.Y.

Merchants' Nat. Bank, Chicago.
B A N K E R

A MOORE,
S

allowed

and Currency

Cheek.

Advances made on

Central National Bank,

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

BANKERS

#3,000,000.

all descriptions of Government
City and County accounts received on terms
Has for sale

Bondsmost 1a

Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United States an

vorable to our

WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK,

Willtam II. SanFOiiD,

AND DEALERS IN U. S.

No. 1 i

President.

WALL STREET.

RANKERS A BROKERS, §
No. 10 WALL STREET.
Government Bonds of all kinds, State and City
Bonds. Radroad and other Stocks and Bonds, Gold
ana Silver bought and sold on commission.’
Inter¬

Coupons and Dividends collected.

C.

30 PINE

STREET,
IN GOVERNMENT

BANKERS AND DEALERS

SECURITIES, LAND WARRANTS, COL¬
LEGE LAND SCRIP, AlC.

SURPLUS

Bank

RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY' HALSEY, Cashier.

and Interest

Bank.

$ 1,000,0r 0.

Capital

RROAl) STREET.
Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers

J. H. Stout, C

solicited.

D. L.

OSS, Preside

ashler.

Keep constantly on hand lor

Edey & Co.,

& BROKERS,
REMOVED FROM NO. 30 TO

RANKERS
HAVE

No. 36 Broad Street,

DEALERS

Offlcc No. 16.

GOVERNMENT AND

IN

OTHER

SECURITIES.

Interest allowed upon deposits of

Gold and Cur¬

rency, subject to Check at Sight.
Merchants and Bankers upon lavcrable

Gold loaned to
terms.

Warren, Kidder & Co.,
BANKERS,
NO. 4 WALL ST., NEW
Orders for stocks,
ented. FOUR PER
on

YORK.

Bonds, and Gold promptly exaCENT. INTEREST ALLOWED

deposits, subject to check at sight.

INCLUDING

-

0
6
6
0
5
7
0

Gelston & Bussing,
BROKERS
BANKERS &
27 WALL STREET

All orders receive our Fereonal Attention.
Wm. J.




Gblsto

,

John S. Bussing

S T O € K S

S T A T E S

Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
PerCent 5-20 Bonds of 1802,"
“
“
1801,
“
41
1805
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
Per Cent Currency Certificates.

2d, & 3d eerieFfl

cent. Bounty Loan.

New York State 7 per

Compound Interest Note* of 1864 A
1865 Bought and Mold.
VERMILYE Sc CO.

Garth, Fisher & Hardy,
Garth ifc Co. and Henry C
]lardy).
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc.,

Successors to Harrison,

bought and sold at the “regular” Board of Brokers
and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬
sion only.
For eign

collected.

and Domestic Exchange bought, sold and

NO.

NASSAU

17

STREET.

Bills of Exchange on London bought
Drafts)"ssued and hills collected on Sau Francisco;and
on the principal towns of Canada, Nova Scotia, New
Brunswickand British Columbia. Drnlts for £2 and

upwards granted on Scotland and Ireland.

STREET, NEW YORK
Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬
chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cont. on
deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬
ton, Tobacco, &e., consigned to ourselves o to our
correspondents, Messrs.
K. GILLlAi* & CO.,
Liverpool.
NO. 41 BROAD

Government Securities, Stocks,

C.

POWELL, GREEN & GO.

& Commission

Bankers

MERCHANTS,
STREET, NEW YORK,

38 BROAD

Stocks. Bonds and Governments

bought and sold ex¬

GOVERNMENT AND

IN

SECURITIES.

deposits of Gold and Cnrren
cy, subject to check at sight, and particular atten
tion given to accounts of country hanks and bankers
on

Hedden, W inchester&Co
NO. (J9

Wilson, Callaway Sc Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK.

OTHER
Interest allowed

I

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

Ranker* ana Broker*.

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Geld
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., ami Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.
All orders faithfully executed.
JOSIAII HEDDEN,
ISATAII C. BABCOCK,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, KOBT. M. HEDDEN.

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

PARIS

▲HD

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travelers in t!

Also Commercial

part* of Europe, etc., etc.

Credit*.

clusively on Commission.

BANK

SOUTHERN

George

Farnham,

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

York,

immediate delivery all

.issues of

UNITED

DEALERS

British North America.

Bankers and Commission Merchant*

Barstow,

Mnvca,

Co.,

RANKERS.
No. 4 4 Wall Street. New

No. 29

and Dealers’ Accounts

Sc

Vermilye

22 WILLIAM

of

and sold.

Tenth National

H. Cncn Oixunr.

John Bloodgood & Co.,

THE AGENCY OF THE

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

*1,000,00
4ii0,<i00

Walter H. Burks,

RANKERS,
STREET,

Woodman,

G-

&

NATIONAL. RANK.
CAPITAL

Charlxs K.

No. 18 NEW

Advances made on approved Securities
allowed on deposits.

Cashier

Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and
Bale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New Tort

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

Howard,

Sc

D ibblee

The Tradesmen’s
291

Gans,

Sc

Frank

est

BROADWAY.

Capital

Cmi3(l(is

approved securities.

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

EUleatro.

sf

Europe and the Bast,

Negotiable

N O. 1 8 W A L L S T R E E T
Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES, GOLD, Ac. Orders for purchase and
sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed.

318

YORK.

Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds,
Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all
Seen rities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Draft

sight.

IfLLM ANN A; CO.

principal towns and dtles

BANKERS,
WILLIAM STREET, NEW

Tyler, Wrenn & Co.,
BANKERS,
TV LEK,

Co.,

.

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

Available In all the

LONDON,

deposits.

on

SoUTTKR Sc

HcwYork,
Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securities,
of all issues, and execute orders for the purchase and
subject to check at

A BELKNAP,

BANK OF

UNION

Jil

Livi P. Mortoh,

14 Wall Street,

No.

George Phipps.

BROKERS,
No. 21 Broad Street, New York.
Government, securities, railroad and otlier bonds,
railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and
exchange hough* and sold on commission. Mercantile
paper and loans in currency or gold negotiated. Inte¬

or

References:

ADAMS, KlMBAbL

HORTON, BURNS 4k CO.,

▲HD TOT
Fuanklin M. Ketciium.
Thos. Belknap,

No. 53

STREET, NEW YORK.

Use, on

<66 Old Broad Street, LondoaJ

STREET, NEW YORK.

27 WALL

BROKERS,

Stocks, Bonds, Government
Bought and Sold exclusively on
Accounts ot

1*. P.

otlier Securities,

Government and

Brownell Sc Bro.,

BANKERS A

Letters of Credit for Travelers*

BROKER IN

-

■

Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes aid

BANKERS AND

NEW YORK,

,

T. L.

STREET, HEW YORK.

STERLING EXCHANGE

Jr.,

Murray,

B.

KETCHUM, PlMPlJ**

Buy and Sell on Commission Government
Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and
Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum,
Mining Stocks.
•
,
.
Currency and Gold received on deposit
to
Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬
ments made.
Order** Promptly Executed

J

80 BROAD

At

1TRNER

STOCK

Co.,

hah kern, s

54 William

or

Commission.

L. P. Mokton &

James G. King’s Sons,
Street.

Gold and Currency

sight.

BANKING HOUSE

Gold on

TRAV¬

ELLERS.

& Co.,

Bankers and Biokers.

Brokers.

CREDIT EOR

LETTERS OF

Bell, Faris

[August 8, 1867

CHRONICLE.

THE

.COMMERCIAL

PAPER,

Edwin

BANKBB

Q. BROKE®!
Bell,

AND

In Southern Securities end Bank

ALSO,

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

48 Pine Street,

*

NOTE**

AND SOLD

New York.

5 NEW
New York.

•• BROADWAY

A

Bill*.

STRBB*»
4

3,1867.]

August

THE CHRONICLE.

Bankers and Brokers.
H.

fH. O. FAHNESTOCK,

)

D

Bankers and Brokers.

5 KDWAKI) DODGE,

UOORH1CAP, >

„

WM

)

KK,

JAY

(PITT COOKE.

.

No. 32 Broad

New York.

3d Street,
Philadelphia.

of

S. G. & G. C.
AGENTS

RARING

balk,and exchange of government siecinuriKs of
to orders for purchase and sale of stocks,
bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks.

Joseph A. .1

\

rotting A Co.
Louis.

JAY COOKE A; CO.

March 1, ISM.

.

Co.i

RANKERS,
NOS. I t & If. WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

Receive

tO BROADWAY A IB NEW STREET.

and

Deposits in Currency and Gold,

allow Interest at. the

per annum on
lbr at

rate of FOUR PER CENT

daily balances which

may

be checked

sight.

Will purchase

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

STOCKS AND BONDS
BOUGHT AND BOLD ON COMMISSION,

Hatch, Foote & Co..,

securities*

government

RANKERS
AND- DEALERS IN

all Timms.

GOVERNMENT .SEGFRITTES,
GOLD,

Co.,

RANKERS.

FIVE-TWENTY BONDS, on the most liberal

new

terms, and without delay.
IMPORTERS and others
ket rates,

No. ai BROADWAY & No.fi WALL STREET.

DEALERS IN
GOVERNMENT
OTHER SECURITIES.
Interest allowed upon

the

AND

Rodman, Fisk & Co.,
RANKERS,
AND

Six per

1 8

NASS A IJ

Securities

Hold and Silver < <>in.

Registered Interest Collected and Coupons cashed
■without, charge.
7-30 Notes, all scries, taken in exchange for the new
Consolidated 5-10 Bonds, on terms advantageous to

holders of 7-30s.
Merchants and Importers supplied with coin for cus¬
tom-duties at lowest market rates.
Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous
securities promptly executed.
Mail and telegraph
orders will receive our personal attention.
Deposits
received, and interest allowed on balances. Collect ions
made on all points with quick returns.

RODMAN. FISK & CO.

RANKER

AND

Pott, Davidson & Jones,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
(Messrs. Brown Bros. & Co.'s new building),

69 A « WALL STREET, NEW YOkKT
Bay and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and

Accounts

3 BROAD STREET, NEW

Interest allowed

its, subject to check at sight.
“Mis

on

depos¬

Telegraphic quote-

furnished to correspondents.

Rkrbexoes

:

James Brown,

Yk N*
t‘

Ef**., of Messrs,

Bank; James H.

Es^, Vice-President of the Bank Q* Msw

5* £oijdey,

N.

Petty,

R. P. Sawyers.

J\ D. Roddey & Co.,

No. 2% Wall Street, N.Y.,
SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.)

(PETTY,

bankers and brokers.
Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬

mission.

to the Purchase and
rvoi
SoutheA and Miscellaneous Securities,
ooiiections
made on all accessible
on Balances'

Merest allowed




points.

Second.—The
ilia Mir t.y.

Principal is payable in Gold at

Third.—Tho cost of the Bonds, Ninety-five Per
Cent, and accrued interest, is Ten Percent,
les- Ilian that, of the cheapest Six Per Cent. Gold
•

Fourth —Tlie United State* Government

provide* nearly lmif tlie amount ueees*ary to bu Id the entire, road, and
look* mainly t«» a small per-ccnlage
the future traffic

on

lor

re-payment.

Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision, accompa¬
with Extensive Grant* of Public

DEALER

ren¬

sta¬

tlie contingencies which attend ordi¬
nary Railroitd enterprises.

YORK,

IN

Sixth.-Tlie Security of its First Mortgage
Bonds is therefore ample, aud their character
for safety and reliamlity is equalled only by that of
the obligat.ons of the Government itself.

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

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¬
rest absolutely' certain.

P. FIayden,
RANKER,
AND DEALER IN BULLION AND SPECIE,

21 Nassau
Tlie

Street, New York.

Specie Department, will be in charge

of J. S. (Jio.xisk (late of .J.‘S. Cnmisr &
my authority to sign the Firm name by

Riker &

< ’o.), who

has

procuration.

Co.,

BROKERS IN MINING

Eighth.—At tne present rate of Gold they paynearPer Cent, per annum, on the amount in¬
ly
vested.
The Bonds are issued in denominations of $1,000
with semi-annual Gold Coupons attached, payable
in New York, and are oflereu for the present at D5
per ceil

STOCKS,

BROADWAY.

.

and accrued interest fin currency) from

January 1st

be forwarded to ns director through the
principal Banks aud Bankers in all parts of the
Orders may

country.
Remittances ury be made in drafts on New.York,
in Legal Tender Notes, National Bank Notes or
other funds current in this city, and the bonds will
be forwarded to any address by express, free ot
charge. Inquiries for further particulars, by mail or
or

Winslow, Lanier & Co.,

otherwise, will receive punctual attention.

BANKERS,
27 Sc 29 Pine

Fisk & Hatch,

Street, New York*

RANKERS AND DEALERS IN

DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS,

MOBILE AND

G O VERNMEN T RECUR!

NO. 5 NASSAU

NEW ORLEANS.

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

avail¬

Interest Allowed on

Deposits*

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,
R A N K E R S,
CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU

STS.,

All descriptions of Government Secu¬
k* pt constantly on hand, and

rity**

Bought Sold or f x< hanged.
g2g7“Oold Coin aud U. S. Coupons bought, sold,
and collected.

Deposits received on Liberal Terms,
subject to check at sight.
Collections made throughout the country'.

ISSUE

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS
OF CREDIT,
For the use 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

TIER,
STREET, N.Y

N B.—All kinds of Government Securities io
eoived at the lull market price in exchange lor the
above Bonds. .Also,

of Europe.

N; P. Boulett.

8#ifrt*ci\\ar Mention given

First —The rate of Interest is Six per Cent. In
i.old, payable semi-annually in ihe City oi New
York

bility is altogether independent ot

wownBrothers & Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Presatilt of the Chemical National

reasons, viz :

great national enterprise, it* success Is
dered certain, and its financial

.

of

Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬
ed on favorable terms.

beyond that point has been accomplished.
The First Mortgage Ronds of ihis Com¬
pany afford unusual inducements of Safety and
Profit to Investors, for the following
among other

BROKER,

NO. 5 NEW STREET and si)

Government Securities.

miles ot tho summit of the Sierras, and a large
amount ot the work of Grading,
Tunnelling, Ac.,

C. Graham,

S T R E E

T,
Buy and Roll-at market rates:
Cent.. Bonds of 1 ss 1 ; Ten-Forties;
Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues ;
Seven-Thirty Notes, all series;
Compound Interest Notes, and
NO.

supplied with GOLD at mar
and Coin on hand lor immediate delivery.
No. 12 WALL STREET.

A.

deposits of Gold and Currency,

Government

Their road is already completed, equipped, and
running for 5)4 miles from Sacramento to within 12

nied

■

In

Bonds.

Land*,, by which the Government fosters ibis

subject to Cheek at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants
awl Hunkers upon favorable terms.

Dealers

line, t ravel sing the highest and most popu¬
of California, and thence through
the GKEAT MINING REGIONS <F THE
TERRITORIES,
to the vicinity of Salt Lake City.
It. forms the Hole WoNtern link of the only
route to the Pacific winch is -adopted
by Congress
aud aided by tne Issue of United Mates
t-EcTiON

Bearing Bonds of the Government..

Are.

Airissues of SEVEN TH IRTY NOTES exchanged for

Lockwood &

Their line will extend from Sacramento, Califor¬
across the Sierra Nevada* to tne California

nia,

St. it.e

Jameson,Smith &Cotting

Satterlee &

END OF THE

GREAT NATIONAL
RAILWAY
ACROSS THE CONTINENT.

lous

James D. Smi th,
of the late firm of James
Low A Co., New York
and Louisville, Ky.

.meson,

Amos Com no,
St.

COMPANY,

STREET, BOSTON.

Of Jameson,

THE WESTERN

Ward,

STREET, NEW YORK,

2S STATE

give particular attention to the purchase,

9

Pacific Railroad Co.,

sale

FOR

BROTHERS .V

56 WALL

resident partners.

THE

This Company is constructing, under the patron¬
age of the UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

1 Nassau,corner

all issues;

or

TO INVESTORS

The Central

terms,

Securities.

connection with our houses in Philadelphia ami
this day opened an office at No.

We shall

favorable

on

promptly execute orders for the Purchase

New York,

FIRST MORTGAGE RONDS OF THE

(iold, State, Federal, and Railroad

■Wadiiiigton've have

of Wall Street, ju this city.
Mr. Edward Dodge, late, of Clark, Dodge «fc Co.,
New York, Mr. II. C. Fahnestock, of our Washingt on
House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will

SECURITIES.

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

and

Washington.

-be

-

No. 5 Nassau Street,
RECOMMEND

Make Collections

Fifteenth Street,
Opposite Treas. Department,
In

AND DEALERS TN GOVERN M ENT AND OTHE)
DESIRABLE SECURITIES,

Street, New York.

ALL UNITED STATUS

Hatch,

RANKERS

Buy and Sell at; Market Rates,

Wall and Nassau Sts.,

114 South

Fisk Sc

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

bankers.

No.

Financial.

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

J ay Cooke & Co.,
Corner

131

^'“Miscellaneous Stocks and Bonds bought and
ami

sold at the St/»c»v

Exchange

on

commission lor

ash.

Sf ecial attention given to the Exchange of SEVEN’
THIRTY NOTES of all the series for the new FIVE
1

WENTYJS ONHR of 1865, on the most favor able

terms •

THE CHRONICLE.

132

Jacquelin & De Coppet,

American
Fire Insurance

jUllroad Stocks,

Hondo,
Gold, and
Securities,

Hxkbt Db Corner.

Cask Assets,
lit abilities...

AND 36 NEW

July 1, 1867

State, Bank, and Railroad Stocks and
llonds Bought and Sold.
Interest allowed on
Deposits subject to check at eight. Collections

Gilliss, Harney & Co.,
Buy and Sell at Market Rates.
ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS. BANKERS and
others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to
Sight draft. •

on

Also, that SIX

tax.

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

Julv 8,1807.

Scrip Dividend of 60 Per Cent., free
oi tax,
to parties entitled to participate in the profits of the

Company, for which certificates will be issued August
1,1807.

Also

an

interest Dividend of SIX Per Cent,

the outstanding
demand.

OF

THE

THIIiTY-FOUETH

STREET,

DIVIDEND.

NIAGARA FIRE
INSURANCE
PANY.
OFFICE NO. 12 WALL
CASH CAPITA I

n.

Drake Klein wort&Cohen

STREET.

$1,000,000

and after Monday, the 15th inst.
.). I). STEELE, President.

Kip, Secretary.

THE

GERMANIA HUE INSURANCE COM¬

PANY,

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 iu China, the East and
West Indies, South America, «fcc
Marginal credits

New

York, 175 Broadway, Julv 3,18(77.

At a meeting of the Board of Directors held this dav
Dividend of SEVEN Percent, on the capital stock
of this Company was declared
payable, free of Govern¬
ment

tax,

At the

on

and after Monduv, the 8th inst
meeting Mr. JOHN EDW. KAHL

FOR SALE BY

John J. Cisco & Son,
NO. 33 WALL

Interest

STREET.

City Stocks.

on

The Interest on the Bonds and Stocks of the
Corpo¬
ration of the City of New York, due and payable
August 1st, 1867, will be paid on that dav by PEtkr
B. SWEENEY, Esq., Chamberlain of the City, at tiie
NATIONAL BROADWAY BANK.
6
The Transfer books will be closed WEDNESDAY

July 3d, 1867.
Department of Finance, Comptroller’s Office
York, June 28th 1867.
’

.

’

New

"

CONNOLLY, Comptroller.

GOVErSentT

I NITER STATES

BONDS
HAVING THIRTY YEARS TO RUN.

Interest Six

percent. Lawful

The attention of

Money.

Savings Banks and other Institu¬

tions is invited to these Bonds

the most desirable

as

long investment.

by

Dabney, Morgan & Co.
United States

Treasury,

July 30,1867.
Compound Interest Notes falling due August 15,

now be received at this oilice lor examina¬
tion.
Assort the notes, each denomination separately,and
list them on tin* schedule furnished by this office.
Schedules may be Lad upon application to the Conver¬
sion Department.
II. II. VAN DYCK,
Assistant Treasurer.

1867, will

Bankers and Brokers.

was

unanimously elected Vice-President, and Mr. HUGO
SCHLMANN, appointed secretary of*this Company.
RUD. GARKIGl’E, President.

Cohen &

purposes.

TENTH

NATIONAL

29 Broad

RANKERS A COMMISSION BROKERS
IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,

Hagen,

RANKERS,
RANK.

AND

Street,

Tin* Board of Directors have this
day declared a
semi-annual Dividend of FIVE Per Cent., free of
gov¬
ernment tax, payable on Mondav, July 1st.
The trans¬
fer books will be closed until July 2d.
J. JL STOUT, Cashier.

Hughes,

DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE,
UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
No. 1

Wall

T. A.

AND

Street.

Hoyt,

GOLD AND EXCHANGE

BROKER,

36 NEW AND 38 BROAD STREETS.

SENSENDERFEK MINING €OMP INY
The Trustees have declared a Dividend oLONE Per
Cent, on (he Capital Stock for the month of

June,

GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING STOCKS,

payable at the office of the Company. No. 19 Broad
July 25,1867. Transfer books closed July 20 to

street

,

the 26th.

Street, New York.

J

„

Orders executed for

Bankers, Brokers and Merchants.

Van SctiAicK &

lowed.

Financial.

HUGHES,

Member of N. Y. Stock Ex.

Co.,

&No. 10 Wall Street,

H, A. SHERRILL, Treasurer.

Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest al¬
T. W. B.

desirable

.

same

New York, June 21, 1867.

A. HAWLEY HEATH.

most

a

SIMON DE VISSER,
Exchange Place, New York.

1 3 Broad

regarded, by Savings and other In-

are

New York,

NOTMAN, Vice-President.

OFFICE OF

LIVERPOOL.

LAWFUL

COM¬

New York, July 10, 1807.
The Board of Directors have declared a Dividend of
FIVE Percent, for the past six months, free of tax,
on

Run,

310,IH>0

1*.

Heath &

These Bonds

stit.utions, for a long investment, as the
of all the Government Securities.

For sale

SURPLUS, JULV, 1807

payable

to

BEARING SIX PER CENT. INTEREST IN
MONEY.

HKNSHAW, Secretary.

NATIONAL
BANK
liEPURLlC.

Company.

U. S. Government
Bonds,

of all tiie Government Securities for

(Established 1S54.)
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 <fc CO.

same

on

day been declared, free of all taxes, payable on Mon¬
day next, August 5th.
H. W. FORD, Cashier.

White, Morris & Co.,

26

Special Agents of the

*

aud

SON,’

JOHN J, CISCO &
33 WALL
STREET

RICHARD B.
WM. W.

THE

on

Scrip of the Company, payable

New York, July 30,1807.
A Dividend of FIVE Per Cent, for the fast six months
and an extra Dividend of FIVE Per Cent, have this

RANKING HOUSE OF

of the London House issued lor the

Street,

DIVIDEND NOTICE.—A Stockholders’ Dividend of
SEVEN Per Cent., free til tax, lias this day been de¬

on

LONDON AND

,

and after Julv 10, both free of Government,
PER ( ENT. interest on all the
outstanding Scrip of the Company be paid, on and
after August 15. prox.
THUS. L. THORNELL, Secretary.

payable

COIN,

Having Tkirty Years

ending June 30.1867, be de¬

clared, payable on demand, and a

BANKERS,
BROAD STREET.

29 WALL

PAYABLE IN GOLD

Are offered for sale at the low' price of NTVftv
Accrued Interest, added from
July 1st by

PER CENT.

Hie business of 1 lie year

No. 48 Wall

Nlake collections

Rearing: SIX PER CENT. Interest

Long Island Insurance Co

States and Canadas.

NO. 24

day resolved that a

TEN AIMD ONE-HALF PER CENT

kinds, Gold,

a

10,834

clared, and that certificates be issued to customers en¬
titled thereto, on and alter August 15, prox.; and a
Cash Dividend to Stockholders of

STREET.

Union Pacific R.R. Co..
(The United States Government holding
Second^

$629,492

on

BROKERS,

Government Securities of all

made in all the

$200,000
429-492

The Board of Directors have this

& Loring,

STREET

Cask Capital
Casli Surplus

Scrip Dividend of
FIFTY

BANKERS AND
38 BROAD

Street.
New’ York, July 8, 1867,

W. W. Luring.

Memphis, Tenn.

Foute

Company,

No. 48 Wall

BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION.

A. M. Foute,
Late Pres. Gayoso Bank,

Mortgage Bonds
OF THE

STREET, N.Y.

Jomr £L Jaoquklxv.

Tke First

SCRIP DIVIDEND.

EIGHTH

Government

Financial.

Dividends.

Bankers and Brokers.

NO. 26 NEW

[August 3, 1867,

NEW YORK.

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOV¬
ERNMENT

SECURITIES, STOCKS

A NR GOLD.

United States

Gibson,Beadleston & Co.,

YORK, Julv 17,1867. '
Holders of August Seven-Thirty Notes are
hereby
informed that this issue may now be exchanged at this
office for Five-Twenty Bonds bearing date July l, 1867,
irredeemable for five years, and carrying six pVr cent,

60 EXCHANGE

PLACE, NEW YORK.
Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bought and sold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock,
Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem¬
Government

bers.
Interest allowed

on

interest in gold.
Interest on the Seven-Thirties will be paid to the first
of July instant, and a bond lie given drawing interest
from that date. Interest on the Seven-thirties will
cease August 15, and if not
presented for exchange on
or
prior to that date, tiie holders will be deemed to have
waived the privilege of conversion.
H. H. VAN DYCK,
Assistant Treasurer U.S

Deposits.

Dividends, Coupons and Interest collected.

Liberal advances

on Government and ot her Securities
Information cheerfully given to Professional men,
Executors, etc., desiring to invest.

Refer by permission to

Treasury.

NE W

RANKERS,

] Messrs. Lockwood & Co.
t
Dabney, Morgan &

Co.

Citizens’

Union Bank,

(Chartered by the State of Tennessee.)

MEMPHIS, TENN.
Buy and Sell Foreigu and Domestic Exchange
nitedStatos Securities, State of Tennessee, Shelby
Jaunty, and Memphis Bonds, and past due Coupons
Particular attention paid to Collections.
Established 1855.

Geo. Edw.

Sears,

Successors to Samuel S. Motley,

Haslett McKim.

Robt. McKim.

Jno. A. McKim.

United States

McKim, Bros. & .Co.,




Treasury,
July 6,1867.
more 7-30 Coupons

Schedules of (30) Thirty or
due July 15, will now be received for examination at
the United States Treasury.

BANKER*,
62 WALL STREET.
Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at
eight, and special attention given to orders from
other places,

MAKER OF

H. H. VAN DYCK,

^

Assistant Treasurer.

FINE

ACCOUNT

BOOKS,

AND DEALER IN

Every Description
For the

of Stationery,

use

of

BANKS. STOCK AND GOLD BROKERS, MERCH¬
ANTS AND INCORPORATED COMPANIES,
No. 45 William

Street,

(One door north of Wall Street, New York.)
Mercantile Printing and Engraving of finest qualities
executed quickly.

*FHE

||m

mantra
m

jatte’ fcdte, tatwcrcml ^imcs, §tailwatj phmitor, and gn&muw gmrntal
A

WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

representing the industrial and commercial interests of ttie united states.

VOL. 5.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1867.
CONTENTS.

causes, or from perturbation
of prospective trouble in

NO. 110.
in the exchanges,

account
THE CHRONICLE.
Europe, some of these gentlemen
Review of the Month
Methods of Contracting the Cur¬
436 immediately think that our
greenback currency should be
133 The Debt of Chicago.
rency
138
Latest Monetary and Commercial
contracted to check the evil.
The Growth of our Capital and
Or if the money market be¬
134
Investments
English News
138
comes
India Railroads and the Cot ton
Commercial and Miscellaneous
easy and plethoric others of their number prescribe
Trade
135
News :
140
the same remedy, and urge Mr. McCulloch to sell gold or
THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.
Cotton
bonds, or to use whatever other means he can to gather
Money-Market, Railway Stocks,
145
U. S. Securities, Gold Market,
Tobacco
146
Breads tuffs
44? together a mass of currency in the Treasury.
This currency
Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks. Philadelphia Banks
Groceries..
148
National Banks, etc
141 Dry Goods
they would have locked up, and withdrawn for a time from
I4y
Sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange
143 Prices Current and Tone of the
the circulating current of active paper money, to be let out
Commercial Epitome
144
Market
157-158
THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.
again after a time to stimulate once more the fever it forcibly
Railway News
151 j Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
153 and
Railroad, Canal, and MiscellaneInsurance and Mining Journal
violently checked when withdrawn.
154
orBBond List
152 ' Advertisements.. 129-132, 155-6, 159-60
Many of these men are thoroughly honest in the advice
they give. Observation has shown that when greenbacks
are withdrawn from
circulation, are locked up suddenly and
(as Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued
every Satur¬ to a considerable amount, the effect is very marked on finan¬
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, cial
affairs. Hence speculators for a fall at the Produce or
with the latest news up to m
idnight of Friday.
Stock Exchange are very ready to join in the cry for such a
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
contraction of the currency in hopes of furthering their op¬
For Teb Commercial
Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier
to city subscribers, ana mailed to all
others, (exclusive of postage,)
erations, and putting money into their pockets. In this way
For One Year
$10 00
For Six Months
:
6 00 from the efforts of
many honest and of a few dishonest advo¬
By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin tve are
cates of contraction, a pressure is often exerted in favor of
enabled to furnish
subscribers with that paper at the reduced price
of $4 per annum
making the price of
locking up currency which Mr. McCulloch has found it hard
Chronicle with Daily Bulletin, \ £or 9-noJfoaJV
$14
to resist. Because of the prodigious power which the control
Pottage is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ of the
currency confers, and the danger of its abuse, the
cs 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance.
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers,
proposition has been urged that the Secretary of the Treas¬
60 William Street, New York.
ury should be relieved of the responsibility of regulating the
Soliciting Agents make no collections.
greenback currency altogether, and that the power should be
vested in a Board whose operations are to be in every case
METHODS OF CONTRACTING THE CURRENCY
regulated by law, and attended by the fullest publicity, ..
That the contracting of the volume of our redundant
paper every increase or decrease in the circulating medium which
money is an indispensable condition of a restoration of our they make being presented and made fully known before¬
currency to a specie basis is now, we believe, universally hand.
The obvious principle to be remembered in all our future
acknowledged. Almost every one who is regarded as au¬
thority on currency questions confesses that since, in the first arrangements, however, is that no contraction of the currency
instance, an over-issue of paper money caused it to depreciate, conducted by locking up greenbacks which must soon be
and since a further over-issue would
certainly cause it to de¬ paid out again, has any good effect whatever in helping for-,
preciate still more, therefore to withdraw and cancel a part ward our progress towards specie payments. ;There are twro
of our redundant
currency which is outstanding will lessen kinds of contraction wThich, during the past three or four
the
depreciation, and will bring the value of the paper dollar years have been pretty thoroughly put to the test. The one
n^rer to that of the dollar in coin. • That this admitted
is temporary in its character, and is of no service as a means
view of the case is correct is
proved by arguments which to approach resumption, as we have just shown. The other
seem
irrefragable, and have never been satisfactorily refuted. is more permanent, and consists in a cancelling and destroy¬
So far our financiers are
agreed. But when we come to ing of the currency which is withdrawn so that the same
discuss the details of contraction, there is the widest
diversity notes shall never be re-issued. The only way to resumption
°f
opinion. Some persons taking it for granted that contrac¬ and to restoration of specie payments is by this method of per¬
tu is a
good thing, a necessary thing, an essential condition manent contraction. Any other than this is deceptive and
f°r
resumption, are anxious that Mr. McCulloch should con- pernicious, and the wonder is that it can ever have been
tyct the currency to such an extent, in such a
way, or at otherwise regarded.
a time that
Another point on which there is a broad diversity of opin¬
probable evil and no possible good could
^Qlt from the
operation. If gold rises from speculative ion is as to the consequences of contracting the currency.;
or on

:

:

ji

y

.

®l)e iftfyronicU.

ani>

our




Hi

\

•

I

5

\

f

:

.

i

i

'

l

!-l

I t

134

THE

CHRONICLE.

[August 3,186

central principle of the laws rests on the security of person
either immediate or remote. As to
and property, and where the rights of capital are fenced
the remote consequences, there is at present little contro¬
round with all the safeguards which the wit of man can con¬
All parties are agreed that when we have consum¬
versy.
mated the work of contraction the effects will be beneficial trive, wealth grows very rapidly, and the increase of capital
and healthy, for we shall have a sound currency on a stable has surpassed anything ever realized in the history of mo¬
basis.
But it is the immediate or less remote effect of at¬ dern nations.
Next to the security of property, one of the most
impor¬
tempts at contraction that is dreaded. The disturbance of
tant conditions for the increase of wealth is that good in¬
the currency it is urged will cause perturbations in the money
vestments shall be easily accessible to all classes of men
market, in general values, in the public credit, and in every
who have the ability, by frugal thrift and skillful
industry,
department of business. During the course of the change
to amass a surplus above their wants. . In this respect, for
the burden will lie heavily on the debtor, who will have to pay
his debts in an appreciating currency, so that much suffering some years past wre have had an advantage over other coun¬
tries.
It is true that our currency for three or four
anddnjustice will be the result.
It cannot be denied that there is much to be dreaded in years after the commencement of the war, was being gradu¬
But the effect of the redundant issue of paper
the transition from a depreciated currency to one of higher ally inflated.
It acted in favor of the poor and of
But there are several safeguards which have been money was twofold.
'wilue.
the great masses of debtors throughout the country, by en¬
suggested in our case as tending to lessen those dangers,
abling them to pay their debts in a \denomination of money
some of which we must inevitably incur.
First, the process of contraction must of necessity be slow of less value than that in which they were incurred; and
We have no expectation whatever, nor, we suppose, has Mr. w hat is of more importance for our present purpose, it gave
McCulloch at present, that specie payments will be resumed that stimulus to all kinds of-industry which an abundant
in July, ISOS, or for several years afterwards.
What is to currency among an industrious, energetic, ingenious, versa¬
tile people never fails to develop.
The rapid, steady growth
be done in the way of contraction must be done slowly, or it
of wealth, and the extraordinary material prosperity which
will defeat its own purpose.
Moreover, some better method
resulted astonished our political economists, because it was
must be adopted of withdrawing the paper money for can¬
cellation ilian any we have lately used.
To take the green¬ realized in apparent defiance of some of those general
backs suddenly out of circulation and burn them up at the facts and laws which they had been accustomed to regard as
rate of several millions a month is an easy and simple me¬ equally' stern and unyielding with the laws of gravitation.
But we have tried it, and experience proves that it Notwithstanding that in the prodigious expenditure of the
thod.
does not work well.
We need some means of contraction war, capital was annihilated and spent with a profusion un¬
which shall act in a more gentle and less jerky, spasmodic known before, the industry of our people created new capital
way.
We have heard it proposed, as a contracting expe¬ as rapidly as the old was w asted. If we spent two millions
a
day on the War, w e made three or four millions a day
dient, to issue 4 millions a month of interest-bearing legal
tenders, and to withdraw an equal amount of greenbacks. by accessions to the activity of our production. To sup¬
This plan has much to recommend it, for when first put in ply the place of a million of our hardw orking citizens, we
circulation such notes are as active as ordinary currency, and invented or constructed labor-saving machines, which, at
they only become inert by slow degrees, as interest accu¬ less expense, would do the work of several millions of
mulates upon them.
Some of our most experienced and men. It was with reference to this state of things
sagacious financiers have much confidence in this expedient that Mr. Seward, on a memorable occasion, asserted
for contraction, the merits of which have been frequently publicly that “ not only had the war not impoverished any
body but it had largely augmented the national resources.’
explained in our columns.
Whatever method of contraction may be adopted, how¬ Something ol that enduring valor, resistless impetuosity and
ever, with a view to the improvement of our currency, the overwhelming force which immortalized our fighting armies
machinery employed must be permanent and steady in its in the field' seemed to communicate its fire to our industrial
operation, and we need not add that a condition of the first armies in their peaceful arts at home.. Consequently every
importance is that it should be controlled and managed w ith body seemed to he grow ing rich, and as was natural, there
the utmost publicity.
We understand some expedients w ill never was such luxury and extravagance among any people
be proposed early in the next Congress for contracting the in the world as prevailed in this country during the years
1803 and 1804.
currency gradually, by methods which will not disturb the
Such w ere the results of the extraordinary investments for
money market or produce any unnecessary spasms or insta¬
capital which were developed on all sides by the extra¬
bility in the working of our financial machinery.
ordinary' stimulus which operated during the war. H
would be absurd to say' that all the growth and wealth
THE GROWTH OF OIK CAPITAL AND INVESTMENTS.
which w ere then real ized were healthful and permanent, But it
In every country where a high degree of industrial ac.
would he equally wrong to suppose that the augmentation
tivity and material prosperity prevails, there is continually
of wealth was radically' unsound, shadowy and unsubstantial.
going on an increase and accumulation of capital; and the
We might as well say that the vegetable life of the tropics
lawrs by which that increase is governed have received some
is less sound.and perfect than .that of Russian America be¬
attention from political economists, though far less, probably,
cause it is produced more rapidly and under the stimulus of
than their importance deserves.
Of these laws, one of the
a more exciting
temperature. It was one of Mr. McCulloch’s
best established is that the capital of any nation increases
in proportion as individual property is protected by law and speculative errors when he was Comptroller of the Currency
that he failed to recognise the vast forces which were at work
as safe remunerative investments are easily' accessible to all
to increase the wealth of the country.
In a circular letter to
classes of the community. In Mexico and some of the South
the National Banks, containing practical hints of the greatest
American republics, property of all kinds being insecure,
capital increases very slowdy, if at all; and when the inse¬ value, he ventured into more abstract disquisition, as fol¬
Those consequences are

;

«■

'

lows

:

curity reaches a certain point, capital undergoes an actual
Although the loyal States appear superficially to be in a prosperous
diminution, and the country grows poorer every year. In condition, that such is not the fact: that while the Government is en¬
England; on the contrary, and in this country,, where the gaged in the suppression of a rebellion of unexampled fierceness and




“

THE

1867.]

August 3,

constantly draining the country of its laboring and
roducirg population, and diverting its mechanical industry from works
of permanent value to the con.-traction of implements of warfare: while
cities are crowded, and the country is to the same extent depleted, and
waste and extravagance prevail as they never before prevailed in the
United States, the nation, whatever may be the external indications, is
it prospeiirig. The war in which we are involved is a stern necessity,
and must be prosecuted for the preservation of the Govemrue« t, no
matter what may be its cost; but the country will unquestionably be
the poorer every day it is continued. This seeming prosperity of the
loyal States is owing merely to the large expenditure ot the Govern¬
ment and the icduudant currency which these expenditures seem to

magnitude, and is

■ervice

had at

necessary.”

of appreciation
might pass without attracting special notice, but in a Secre¬
tary of the Treasury it could scarcely fail to load to some
In

a

Comptroller of Currency such a want

the vast administrative powers which in
the anomalous condition of our finances are at present concen¬
errors

in wielding

hands.
space permit we might take the

trated in his

principle that “ capi¬
tal increases in any country in proportion as safe remunera¬
tive investments are offered to it,” and show how it illustrates
of the compensations which our national debt has brought
with it. In no other country in the world are there
'Did

one

investments for larger or smaller amounts
In no other
as are offered among us..

such lucrative
of money

thereby of checking the too great

for the most

n

render

135

CHRONICLE.

foreign demand
which can be

remunerative, safe investments

present by

British capitalists.

We have saul the

foreign demand is too

great. For our¬

much favor on the exporta¬
as
for whose judgment
have the highest possible respect.
If, while the national
debt was increasing, the growth of our wealth was so great
that wre could absorb the bonds as they were issued, surely,
that the debt has ceased to increase, wTe can take care
ol these bonds, by means of the constant augmentation ever
going on, of our rapidly grow ing wealth. Besides our bonds
too cheap as yet.
We cannot look with complacency oil
their passing into the hands of foreign creditors at eighty
cents on the dollar for six per cent, gold-bearing Five-twenties.
Moreover, there is another fact which may be variously
interpreted, but is not without interest.
Our daily papers
have recently given considerable attention to the increasing
disposition of capital to invest itself in railroad property.
During the period in which the national debt was growing,
the new federal securities which were being issued absorbed
new capital, but two years have passed since the debt
ceased to grow. As our wealth has been grow ing during that
time, the argument is that that the national securities are
m>t now sufficient to afford the means of investment. Hence,
it is said, the attention of capitalists is diverted to other se¬
curities, and to those of the vnost promising railroads among
the rest.
We do not endorse this opinion. It is, however,
worthy of examination in connection with the general move¬
ments of capital to which we have referred.

selves,

we

do not look with so

tion of Five twenties

do some persons

we

now

are

our

laborer or domestic servant,
they have saved up 50 or 100 dollars, invest it
sons to bring in an annual income of 7 to 8 per cent.
In
other country can the millionaire place his money so as
to secure with equal returns of interest an equal degree of
security. The rapid increase of capital in England is partly
attributed to the safe investments which* consols afford for
all moneys whatsoever, and if offering, as they do, absolute
security with moderate interest, the British consols have
done so much to stimulate the growth of wealth in England?
INDIA RAILROADS AND THE COTTON TRADE.
what may not our American consols be expected to do in this
The efforts recently made by the English Government to
particular, when they oiler with absolute security a high rate
of interest.
We shall not only’ attract foreign capital, but develop the resources of its vast empire in Hindustan, evince
remarkable energy and sagacity. Probably no country in
shall utilize our own capital and make it fructify. For now,
the world has made more material progress within the last
heretofore, it is a distinguishing characteristic of this coun¬
few' years than British India.
Notwithstanding the discour¬
try that partly because of our vast regions of rich, virgin
agements arising from the mutiny of the Sepoys, and the
soil, partly from of our mineral, manufacturing and agri¬
disasters of famine and financial collapse, the present condi¬
cultural industries, partly from of the ingenuity, energy
tion and future .'prospects of the people have been greatly
and versatility of our people, but more because of the free
improved. Railroads have been built, highways have been
air
breathe, and the free institutions under which we live
throw'll up, canals widened and deepened, obstructions re¬
there is an almost tropical impulse given 1o the growth of
moved from livers, bridges constructed over rivers and
wealth among -us; and in finance as well as in politics, Mr.
mountain chasms, and the jungle has been rendered passable
Madison’s words to I\Jiss Edgeworth are verified, that

country

the frugal

can

when

no

we

as

we

Providence

seems

to have set

the United States to do many

things which before wore thought
In view of these facts we see

impossible.

people
vast van amount

how it was th it our

help, so
of capital as 2,500 millions of dollars to the Government to
carry on the late war.
In that war we wasted much of our
capital, but what was left fructified with such rapidity that
it left us at the close richer than we were at the beginning:.
o
o
We also see that there is really no danger of repudiation
of our public debt.
It is too w idely distributed among our*

were

able to

lend, without foreign

,

for the first

time.

in the condition of the interior of
British India were initiated, or, at least, actively commenced
in accordance w’ith a policy adopted at the commencement
England, in place of attempting to break
of our civil war.
up our monopoly of the cotton trade by an open and formal
assistance of the South, resolved to effect the same object by
other and surer means.
Her statesmen, with far reaching
sagacity, resolved to improve the opportunity afforded by
These

the

great changes

Ameiican crisis, so as to

attach the tottering Indian

Em¬

abridge of gold. India
unrivalled
climate
the culture of the raw
whole
of cotton.

selves, it is held by too many of our people, it forms too pire to the imperial government by
has always been famous for cotton manufacturesof
fundamental a part of the great fabric of our national life
fineness and elegance, and it was known that her
to admit of its being disturbed.
To repudiate our
debt would be to shake the security of all property presented admirable facilities for
material.
Under the stimulus of high prices the
throughout the country. A revolution of such magnitude
world wras invited to compete for the production

national

would

end

in

the

would
monument for the contempt and

disruption ol the nation, and

deservedly make of us a

So monstrous
and absurd is the anticipation of repudiation, that the very
word has long ceased to be whispered by our most confirm¬
ed croakers.
Occasionally it is urged, we observe by certain
unappreciative English journals, which thus deter some of
their pantrymen fygui investing in our bonds, doing us the
wonder of the nations




w'ell known, were adopted to
develop its culture in British India, and for this purpose the
wealth and experience of the English people and govern¬
But

of all suceeding times.

special measures, as is

ment were

requisition

opportunities were-favorable. The Imperial Govern*
ment had got rid of the cumbersome and obsolete machinery
of the Easf, India Company, and assumed direct control of
The

l

brought into

THE CHRONICLE.

136

[August 3,1867.

In 1800-61, the Marquis Dal' branch lines connecting with the main stems are of great ex¬
housie, Governor General, inaugurated the extensive system tent, and will cost as much money as the main roads. To
of internal improvement, which was to enable the people of show the progress of Indian railroads it may be stated that
Hindostan to compete with America for the cotton trade of jt is only fourteen years since the first line wTas opened in
the world. To effect this object great changes were required* that country.
At the present time there are 3,200 miles in
The most favorable cotton regions of India were inaccessible operation, and next year a thousand additional miles will be
for want of proper facilities for communication.
In order completed.
This development of railroads in British India is of the
to get the staple to a market, it was necessary to carry it by
man and horse
power over vast tracts of jungle, across highest importance as affecting the cotton trade.
Formerly
mountains and ravines, and ferry it over great rivers.
wre
enjoyed a monopoly of the market; now, nearly one-half
To obviate these difficulties, the railroad movement of the cotton manufactured in England is derived from India
inaugurated was of the most comprehensive character. alone. A late Liverpool circulars estimates the quantity of
The population of India subject to
the English government American cotton now on hand and to arrive before Decernis probably not less than two hundred millions.
The coun¬ her 31st, 1867, at 680,000 bales, while the supply of India
try comprises an area of 1,304,000 square miles, stretching cotton for the same period is estimated at 925,000 bales.
1,800 miles in length and 1,500 miles in breadth from east Without expressing any opinion as to the correctness of these
to .west.
There is a coast line of 3,200 miles, of which figures, the more important fact for us to remember is that
1,900 are on the Indian Ocean and 1,300 on the Bay of Ben¬ the manufacturers of England have so altered and improved
gal. The climate is tropical, but embraces every variety of their machinery as to be able to use in much larger propor¬
temperature from the extreme cold of the Himmalayan tion than formerly the shorter India staple, while, at the
the vast

Empire of India.

mountains to the warmth of the

tropics. This great country
is broken up into an almost endless
geographical diversity.
There are vast and impassable
jungles, huge forests,
mighty rivers, mountain chains and extensive plains, the
whole being combined w ith a wronderful luxuriance of
vege¬
tation, which at every step obstructs progress and almost
prevents any passage by man or beast.
It was over this country,
presenting so many difficulties,
that Lord Dalhouse
contemplated his admirable network of
railroads. The system was, of course,
planned with refer,
ence to the
geographical features of the country, so as to
connect the extremes of the vast
empire writh grand trunk
lines, from which branch lines, or feeders, might be con.
structed, according to the future requirements of local com¬

time, the quality of cotton from that country has been
decidedly and steadily improved, and is being more careful¬
ly prepared for market.
Judging then of the future from
the-past, it may be expected to equal the American article
same

at

no

distant

period.

.

.

.

The establishment of railroads in India
obstacles to the

removes

the chief

growth of an almost unlimited supply of
cotton.
The country is admirably adapted for it, and the
teeming population has long been familiar with the staple,
and,exhibit great aptitude in its culture. The best cotton
regions have not yet been opened to the world ; the only
facilities for reaching a market being the slow and
expensive
process of cattle teams. The new railroads, however, will
convey the products of these regions to market cheaply and
merce.
Four thousand six hundred miles of railroad were expeditiously. Aud it is a noticeable feature ofltidian railroad
to be built, at an estimated
expense of $400,000,000.
The companies that their revenues are derived from goods rather
credit of the Imperial Government
than from passengers.
Of $35,000,000 income of Indian
was granted to private
railroads during the three years
companies, guaranteeing a certain amount of interest on all
ending June, 1866, twothirds were received from merchandise traffic.
money invested in Indian railroads. The government wisely
These facts throw considerable
rleft all details of construction and management to the ener¬
light on the future of
American cotton trade.
gies of the companies themselves, wffiich had every motive
They indicate that American cotton
for economy, as all
will henceforth be subject to a keen and active
money earned above the guaranteed div¬
competition.
idends was clear
gain. This system worked so well, that The cheapness of labor in India will also tend to place us at
last year several Indian
railways exceeded the 5 per cent, a disadvantage, as it is doubtful whether the freedmen can
guaranteed interest. During the half year ending Decem¬ work as cheaply as the Hindoo, who lives on a handful of
ber 31st, the East Indian and the Great Peninsular railroad rice a
day, and whose clothing consists of a yard of calico a
companies wrere able to declare surplus dividends. Half year. It is evident therefore that the trade in our chief
the amount of surplus income was devoted to the
repay¬ staple will be subject in the future to new conditions that
ment of former advances for interest
by the government, may seriously affect our entire country. In this view it is
and the other half was divided
among the stockholders. of the utmost importance that every facility should be ex¬
The net amount of guaranteed interest
paid by the govern¬ tended to the cultivation of the staple in the Southern States,
ment diminishes
every year.
In 1805 the amount was and that every obstacle should be removed. The injudicious
£1,450,000; in 1800 it was £800,000, and this year only cotton tax, that operates as a direct bounty to foreign produc¬
£000,000 was required. These figures indicate the profit¬ tion, should be instantly repealed, and new capital should be
able character of these Indian railroad
tempted into the production of the staple by the indispensa¬
enterprises.
The original system of Indian railroads
ble guarantees of security and
political quiet. .
contemplated the
establishment of communications between
Bombay, Madras
and Calcutta, the three
REVIEW OF THE MONTH.
great centres of military and com¬
mercial power.
The extremes of the empire wTere united,
Business during July w*as characterised
by the dullness
and roads were cut
through the great agricultural and pro. which ordinarily prevails duriug that month. The most
ducing districts. The East Indian Railroad Company has' notable feature in trading circles was a decided
improve¬
now under its
management 1,310 miles of railway, construct¬ ment in confidence, inspired by the
splendid crop prospects
ed at an expense of
$100,000,000, and is the longest line of throughout the country, which thus far have not been doomed
road in the world under one
The Great Indian to disappointment through the occurrence of unfavorable
company.
Peninsular road will be 1,233 miles
long when completed, weather. This revival of hope however, has not been attend¬
and next year it will be
open for traffic along its entire length. ed with any exaggerated preparations for the fall trade.
In 1868 from Calcutta to
Bombay, a distance of 1,458 miles, Merchants appear to be governed by a strictly conservative
there will be an unbroken railroad
communication.
The ! feeling, and deem it prudent to wait for the demand rather




•S

August 3,

Manufacturers have probably made ample

anticipate it.

than

THE CHRONICLE.

1867J

preparation for the fall trade; and,apparently apprehending

137

The great increase in the sale of bonds has taken
place
since the establishment of the Government
Department of

is danger of the markets being overstocked, some the Stock Exchange Board of Brokers.
The closing prices of Consols and certain American secu¬
have curtailed their production during the latter half of the
month. The jobbing trade has been cautious rather than rities (viz. U. S. 6’s 1862, Illinois Central and Erie shares
that there

,

sanguine; less, however, from any doubts of there being an and Atlantic and Great Western consolidated bonds) at Lon¬
active demand for goods than from a supposition that the don, on each day of the month of July, are showing in the
markets may be over-supplied.
following statement:
As the

natural consequence of the general quiet in trade,

has been very abundant, and speculation in Wall
street active.
The banks have had large idle balances, and
the rate of interest on demand loans has ranged at 4@5 per
cent., and during the last week of the month balances were

COURSE OF CONSOLS

money

loaned at 3 per cent.

protracted depression in railroad stocks succeeded by
prospects of unusually large grain freights, had prepared

A

the

brisk upward]movement, and the dealers
entered upon the “ summer campaign” with an unusual
unanimity of view as to the upward tendency of values, and
the result has been a much more rapid advance than was
realised within the same period last year. The following
comparison shows the prices of stocks at the close of July,
the market for a

18G6 and, 180?

:

1866.

1867.

104%
64%

..

..

111%
83%

- ...
..

July 26, Julv

1

108%
76%
120%
107%
81%

120

..

Reading
Michigan Southern..

Cincinnati & Pittsburg.
North Western
..

“

“

pref..

Rock island
Fort Wayne

..

..

.

1866.
84%

35%
64%
09%
101%

30

1867.

93%
50%
71%
102%
106%

The

aggregate transactions in stocks at both Boards dur¬
ing the month were 2,240,991 shares, against 1,577,040 shares
in July last3 year.
The total sales from January 1 to the
close of July are 13,580,850, which is about 10,000,000 shares
less than for the

period last year.
The following table shows the volume of shares sold at the
New York Stock Exchange and the open Board of brokers
in the two first quarters and the first half of the current
year,
in the month of July and since
January 1 :
same

VOLUME OF SHAKES SOLD AT THE STOCK

94%
94%
94%
94%
94%
94%

Friday. 5
Sat day. 6

Sunday. 7
Monday 8 94%
9
Wedne. 10
Thurs.. 11

94%
94%
94%
94%
94%

..

Friday..12
Sat’day. 13
Sunday. 14

1st
Bank shares
Railroad “
Coal
“

Since

Quarter. ‘2d Quarter. Illf

year.

7,815
..

11153

IS,MS

5,070,773
07,800

4,910,358

9,990,130
93,205

Mining
“
Improv’nt “
Telegraph “
Steamship11

25,405
91,188

123,857
81,209
117.973
228.083

Expr’gs&c'1

153,113
215,873

17,074

2,072,100
3,052,143

.

At New York Stock Ex...

AtOpenB’d

Julv.
4,784

Jan. 1
‘23,752

1,888,124 11,878,200
31,503
124,708
03,110
47,535
109,020
58,138

104,480

215,045
384,704
271,091
444,550
122,154

2,074,351
3,510,059

4,140,757
7,193,102

900,241
1,340,750

103,435

38,007

44

43%

....

25

79%
79%

73%
73%

80%
80%

•

73%

73%
73%
73%
73%
73%

94%
94 %
94%
94%

Friday..19

72%

of 18G2

at

•

•

.

.

.

.

....

....

60%
80%

....

80%
£76%
£77%
80%
£76%

47

46%
46%
46%
46%

Mon day 22
Tues. .23
Wedne. 24
Thurs. .25

5-20s sh’s.

....

Tues.. .30
Wed.. .31

24

94%
94%
94%
94%

76%

94

72%

94

72%
72%

70%
76%

94

a.

&

Ish's.

G.W

46%

22%
22%
24 "
23%

46%
47

48%
47%
47%

48%

77

48%
48%

80%
76%

43%

23
23

22%
22%
22

—

91 %

23% Lowest...
23% Range....
22% | Lo i o’-1
22% | Hi Uc

93%

22

72% £•76%
72% 76%
72% 76%
72% 76%
72% 76%

72%

Highest..

•

seem•ities.

U.S.II11.C. 1 Erie

(Hoi iday)

Friday..26 94
Sat’day.27 93%
Sunday.28

Monday29

•

-

.

44%

43%
44%
45%
45%
45%

American

mon.

Date.

Sat'day.20
Sunday.21

....

73

Tues.. .16
Wedne. 17
Thurs.. 18

•

•

1 Ra

\

73%
72%

1

%

90
96

67%
75%
7%

6

rfitZ

4

72%
82%
10

48%

25
22

5%

3

35%

22

46%
10%

26
4

highest quotations for U. S. G’s (5-20 years)
ending Thursday have

Frankfort in the weeks

follows:

Frankfort.

The

43%
43%
44%

79%
79%
79%
79%

73

73

as

43%

79%

LONDON—JULY, 1867.

Cons
for

secur

79 %

72%
72%
72%
72%
72%

MondaylS 94%

been

ties
Erie A. &
shs. G.W

SECURITIES AT

July 4.
76%@.77%

July 11.
77%<&77%

July 18.
77%@77%

July 25.
70%(&77%

Aug. 1.

76%@76%

of the

gold premium has been steadily upward,
the price having advanced from 138 to 140|.
The remit¬
tances of
of bankers’ credits and on
specie for the settlement
account of Erie and Illinois Central stock
returned, as well
as for United States
coupons due July 1st, have been -quite
considerable, the total exports from New York for the month
being $14,301,702. The exports and the receipts from cus¬
toms duties together amount to
$24,096,106; while the re¬
ceipts from California, from abroad, and from the payment
of coin interest aggregate $14,032,901.
It thus appears that
course

the withdrawals from the market for the month exceed the

BOAKD9, JULY, 1SG7.

f

.

Monday 1
Tin's.,. 2
Wedne. 3
Thurs.. 4

The lowest and
July 26, July 30.

N. Y. Central..
Erie
Hudson River

Cons Amo rican
for U. S. in.e.
mon. 5-20s sli’s.

Date.

Tues

AND AMERICAN

278,155
232,289
380,711
502,094
100,221

5,040,998

receipts by $10,063,205 ; yet, at the close of the month, the
amount of specie in the banks was
$969,098, showing that
$11,032,303 of gold was drawn from outside sources, a large
proportion having doubtless been drawn from Washington,
Philadelphia and Boston, being the proceeds of July coupons
paid in those cities. From the statement below it will be
seen

3,5:13,852

that the withdrawals for the first

seven

months of the

exceed the supply from California and interest disburse¬
0,172,087
12,011,197
13,591',843 ments by $47,370,818.
This large deficiency has been made
United States Securities were very firm and active up chiefly from sales by the Treasury, overland receipts from
throughout the month. The low rate of money has caused the mines, and coupon disbursements by the Treasury at
a
steady home demand for investment; while the extreme other cities forwarded here for sale. The following formula
shows the details of the movement in the first two
ease in the London
quarters
money market has encouraged a partial
movementYor shipment. The price of Five-twenties at London and first half of the current year and in July, with the total
has varied but little, and as
gold has risen over two points, movement since Jan. 1 :
bonds on this side have
correspondingly advanced. Toward
GENERAL MOVEMENT OF
COIN AND BULLION.
the close of the month the advance in
prices appeal'd to have
1st quarter. 2d quarter. Half year.
July. Since Jan.l.
increased the number of sellers, and prices fell off from the In banks at commen’t $13,185,222 $8,522,609 $13,185,222 $7,7ii8,996 $13,185,2*22
Rec’s from California.
6,109,861
6,899,555 13,009,416
2,662,139 la,671,555
Imp’s
409,077 1,147,619 1,556,696
64,291
previous high figures. The amount of Government bonds Com Fni lbr’u conn’s
l,b21,087
interest paid by
and notes, State and
U. States
10,838,303 17,793,025 28,631,328 16,306,371 39,937,699
city bonds, and company bonds, sold at
the New York Stock
Total repo’d sup’y. $30,542,463 $3-1,362,803 $56,382,662 $21,801,897 $70,415,563
Exchange Board in the two first quart¬
ers and the first half of
the current year, in the month of Exp. to for’n count’s. $6,566,958 $18,028,709 £ 24,595,607 $14,801,702 $38,897,369
Customs duties
33,170,0*8 27,185,886 60,356,514
9,794,404 70,150,918
•July and since January 1, is given in the statement which
Total withdrawn.. $39,737,5S0 $45,214,595 $84,952,1SL$24,096,10G 109,018,287
follows:
Total 1807
Total 1800

5,724,849

5,015,010
5,312,110

11,339,879

2,240,991
1,577,010

Y.

EXCHANGE

BOARD.

13,580 850

year

Excess of withdraws.
BONDS

SOLD

AT

THE

N.

1st quarter. 2d quarter.
U.|3. bonds... $18,702,650
$40,388,350
notes....
4,792,480 ' 3,3*7,600
f, e ® city b’ds
8,Ss4,100
7,601,650
company b’ds 2,216,200
2,367,700
TT,0

,

U. 8

Total 1867. $34,595,430
Total 1S66. 32,600,540




STOCK

Half-year.
$59,091,000
8,140,080
16,485,750
4,583,900

July.
$10,171 900
4,170,600

S’ce Jan. 1.
$69,262,900
12,?10,6s0
3,683,000
20,168,750
615,000
5,198,900

Specie in b’ks at close
Deficit made up from

uureported

$88,300,730
69,014,890

$18,640,500 $106,941,230
14,765,500
83,780,390

sources

$17,717,732 $18,620,783 $36,3:18,515 $11,032,303 $47,370,818

The statement which follows shows the

daily fluctuations
price of American gold coin as quoted at the Gold
Room during the month of July :

in the
$53,705,300
36,414,350

$9,195,123 $10,851,787 $28,569,519 $2,294,209 $38,632,724
8,522,609
7,768 996 ' 8,738,094
7,768,996
8,738,094

NEW YORK, JULY,

COURSE OF GOLD AT
4-a

w

O

£

0

Date.

c

O
1

Tuesday

....

.

Thursday
Friday

.

.

Saturday
Siimbiy
Monday

.

.

.

Tuesday

Thursday
Friday
Saturday....
Sunday
Monday

13hw 130

.

138%

2 13844 138
138)4
3 138)4 138)4 138)4
4
(Holiday.)
5 138)4 138’4 139 >4
6 139)4 138)4 139 >8
7
138 V> 139
8 139

.

Wednesday..

HH

rj:

tJj

Closing.
138 V

Date.

c.

To

C

C

0
1

1

| Sunday

13914 1 Monday
13s>4 (Tue-day..

21

512)6 40

22

23

140
140

Closing

|

139)4

139)4

140
140

—

—

—

—

„

“

....

...

Tuesday....

Wednesday.
Thursday...

Friday
Saturday

journalists, when calculating the debt and expenses of western cities

capita, ought to he careful about the date of their census reports.. It makes
quite a difference whether the estimates are based on the populations of Jive or
ten \ ears ago or on those of the present year.
In this manner all western cities
are liable to misrepresentation ; and as Chicago grows faster th.n any other
city in the United Mates, it is not strange that eastern men should he misled
by the statistics published from time to time iu the New York journals.

pe"

OL

139%
139%
1393 4
: Wednesday ..24 139)4 189J4 139*4
25 1-9)4 139)4 139)8 139)4
138)4 Thursday
139
Friday
20 159)4 139 ‘u 139)4 139)6
Saturday
27 139)4 139)4 140)4 140
13S)4 •Sunday ....28
29 140)4 140)8 i 10)4 140)6
9i138)6 138)4 138)4 138)4 Monday
140)4 110%
30; 14< ©140
138)4 138)4 ! Tuesday
.101138)4 138)4
140
139)4 110
.11 138 Li 13S)« 139)4 139)411 Wednesday. .31 j 140
139'B 139)4, L
.12 139 >8 139
t
140)4 140
158)4 13*8
.13 139)4 139
139) 8 139)41 June ..1867
155)4 149
1800.... 154)4 147
1
.14
158 y. 140)6.144
1805.... 141
.15 139)4 139 hi 139)4 139)4|
255
285
222
1804.... 222
.16 139 % 139)4 1 h>)6 H0-©
128)6
1803
141)4 123)4 145
.17 1 0)6 139)4 140)6 139 s d
1802.... 109
108)4 120)6 115
.18 139) g 139)6 139)4 13»)4
139)4
.19 139)4 139)4 140
1 04)7/
132)4 141)4 140
.20 139)4 139)4 139)4 139)4 S’ee Jan. 1,1807

..

Wednesday.

to
M

Eastern

1807.

4-j

rfJ

u

rAugust 3,1867.

CHRONICLE.

THE

138

“

“

The writer appears

—

as to the

claims we have understated, and

population and debt—the former he

To make the L-atter intelligible, we give side by
fide the statements of the Chronicle and of the Republican:
the latter

overstated.

Debt

,

/-Populat on—,
1806.

1860.

109,260 200,418

5.397.064

$2,095,WO

Chronicle

>

186(5.

1800.

Debt

n. cani'a-^

i,8t;f?
©

*
$19.IS
I860.

20

2,455,000 4,757,500 109,U00 250,000 $22.52
can
YJM
First, then, let us l. ok at the population. Th< re is no essential dif
ference so far as 1860 is concerned, but for 1866 we gave the total at

Rtpubl

Republican editor estimates it
250,000. We
difficult to keep pace with the rapid

200,418, while the

...

“

figures, both

to call in question our

are

well

aware

that it is very

—

—

specie shipping
of commercial
bills has been very light; a moderate amount of acceptances
has been drawn against shipments of Five-twenties; but
there has been a large deficiency, which has had to be made
up by the shipment of specie.
After midsummer the foreign
bankers usually settle their European credits; but, although
Foreign exchanges have ruled firm at the
point throughout the month. The supply

development of some of our Western cities, and hence in writing with
regard to them are always carelul to take the last official figures
Estimates” we never base an argument upon when we can obtain
*•

anything better. On the first of last October (1866) the city authoiities took the census of Chicago.
The results were published at the
time, and we now have before us the city “ Comptroller’s report from
April 1, 1866 to April 1, 1867,” in wh.eh, on page 80 our friend of the
Republican will fiud the results to be as follows :
White.

'

c

Colored.

Total.

2,409 200,418
198,009
with our figures. Now
the remittances for that purpose have been large, an im¬ we do not care to raise any
question as to the present population of
pression prevails that, owing to the very low rates of interest Chicago. The Republican editor may estimate it at 250,000, or even
at London a considerable amount of balances has been
600,000 if he desires, we shall not object, but as our table was dated
last year, and as this was last year’s census, we must be excused for
allowed to remain unsettled.
The following table shows the course of foreign e xchange being satisfied with our own figures.
Second. As to the statement of the debt for 1866, we shall also have
daily for the past month :
to refer to the same Comptroller’s report, pages 4 aud 5, where it is
COURSE OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE (GO DATS)—AT NEW YORK
published in detail. Below is a recapitulation :
Berlin.
Bi
Hamburg.
Paris.
1
London,
for
54 pence.

cents

Haye
1..
2..
3..
4..
5..
6..

10..
11..
12
13..
14..
15..
1G..
17..
18..
19..
20..
21..

io9%@uo%

109%©U0%
110
110

@110%
@110%

513%@512%

110
110
110

513%@512%
513% @512%
51 G%©512%
512% ©511%:
510% @512%

uo%@iiu%

512%@511 hi
512% ©511)4
512)6©511)4

@110%
©:io%
@110%
@110%
110%©110%
110 @110%
110%@110%
110)6 ©110)4
110 ©no>4
llu%©llU%
110 © 110)4
110>8 ©110)4

25

110)8 ©11014

2G..
27..
28..
29..
30..
31..

florin.

110)6© 110)4
110%@110%
110)4 @110)6

110)6@110)4
109%@110
110 ©110 )4
110

@110)4

510)4©512)6
512)6 ©511)4
510)4 ©512)6

41)4© 11 36
4IX© 41's
41 >4 ©41 >8
403.4© n h
41% ©41%
40)4© 11 >4

41)4©H)6
41 )4©41 %
%© U)6
40)4©41%
41 >4 ©41)6
41

40 )4 ©41)4

Since
Jan.l 10S

©110)6

ri x daler.
7@(@78)4
784t@7S)4

79

’@79)4

© 79 *4
©79*4
78% @.79
79 @79)4
78)4 @79
7!)
79

79
79
79

©79)4

@79)4

©79)4
78%©79%
79 @79)4
78)6@79

@79*4

79
79

5P2%©51 1)4
512)6 ©511)4
(<011)4
513)4@512)6

79

@79)4

©512)6
513)4001256
513)4 ©512)6

41)4@41)6
41)4 @41)6
41)4 ©41)6

79
79
79

@79)4

515

517%@5H% 4o%@41%
518)4 @511 % 40)4 @41)6
520 @510
40)4@il)6
Apr 108)4© 10 •% 522)6©512)6 40)4@liy
525 @515
40)4© 11)6
Mar. 108 @109)4
@41)6
522%@515
Feb. 10S%@109
@4156
Jan. 108%@109% 520 ©513)4

July 109)4@110)6
June 109)4 @110)6
May. 109%@U0)6

emeu.

cents lor

41)4@4t)6
41%@41%
41)4© 11)6
41
@41)4
41%@41%
41%@U%

512)6©511J4
512)6 ©511)4

525

@510

40%@41%

This

O

cents for
NR banco.

30
@363 6
40%©.ii%
30
@30)4
517%©513% 40%@H %
516%@513% 40%@n% 78 @78 54 30 @30)4
(Indepencli lice Day.— National ID lidav.)
513%©512% 41 %@41 % 79 ©79*4 3*;*4©3G34'
513%@512% 41 %@41)8 79 @79 >4 3G)4@3G)4

110

22..
23..
24..
.

cents for

109%@110%. 517%©513%

7..
8.
9..

centimes
for dollar.

population of Chicago, Oct. 1, 1806
total, as will be seen, agrees precisely

Total

(a 79

54
79 ©79)4
7S%@79%
79 ©79*4

©79*4
.©79)4

78 @79)4
78)4©79)4
78 /6 @80

78)6©7!*X
78 @79)6
78J6@7!i)4
7 8)6 @70)4

78 @ 80

THE HEHT OF CHICAGO.

thaler.
72
72

©72)4
©72%

71)6 @72)4

issue) ...
(uew “ ) ...
School construction debt..
Sewerage debt—
“

3ff%@30%
36V4©26'‘4
30 )a 7 <36)6
•30'4@36)6
36)6©* 36)6
3034 <i 30)6

72 *4©72%
72 % @7 2%

3034 @30-16
30 % @510)4

Floating debt

70,000
1,359,090
103,000

.*

1,820,000

639,504
5,307,004

Total debt ol Chicago,,

improvement deb t
Here, again, our figures appear

to be correct even to a fraction. The
Republican editor consists in omitting the floating debt.
Our comparisons, however, were necessarily made upon the total debts
of each of the cities, and not upon the bonded debt alone.
But we forbare to pursue the matter further.
Our readers will at once see that
as our table was right as to the total debt and population, the deductions
as to the debt per capita were also correct.

error

72)4@72)6
% ©72%
72)4 @72%
71)6 @72
72% @72%
71%@72,

Wafer debt

992,500

Funded debt (old

River

72% @>72)6
72% @72%

1800-7.

1806-7.
353,000

cents lor

of the

72% @72)6

30 % @36)4
36 *4 @30)4

30% @36)6
30
@30)4

72

71 %© 72*4
72
@72*6

71%@72%

30%©>30%
30% @30)6
30) 4 @30)6

72 %©72%
72%©-,72%
72 *4 (< c 72 %
72% ©72%
72% ©72%
72% @72%

30)4@30)6
3G%@30%
30)4© 30)4

72%@7 2%
72% @72%
72%©,72%

30% @30)6
3634©30,V

30%@30%

@30)6

71)6© 72)6

@30 -‘6
@30)6
35)6 @30 ?4

72 ©72)4
71 )4@72)4

30
30
30

35%@3G%

71)4 ©72)6
71% ©72%

30

71%@72%

©30 )6
30)6 ©30)4

72

@72)4

35%©30% 71%@72%

Catcst

illonrtarj) anil (Eammercial (fihttjltsl) JLim,

KATES OF

EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON
AT

LATEST DATES.

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
JULY 19.

.

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.
LATEST

TIME.

ON—

Amsterdam
Antwerp.

.

.

...

Hamburg

RATE.

short.
11 17%@11.18%
3 months. 25.37% @25.42%
13. 9)6© 13.10

25.32%@25.37%
short.
25.12% @25.20
3 mouths. 13. 5 @13.10
6.20%@ 0.20%
44
32 @32%
St. Petersburg
49)4© 49%
Cadiz
52 @ 52>4
90 days.
Lisbon
4

4

3 months. 27.25
-4 4

Genoa

DATE.

July 19.

TIME.

short.

44

Naples

27.25
27.25

@27.35
@27.35

©27.55
—

New York....

—

Jamaica

—

Havana
Rio do Janeiro
Buenos Ayres.

—

RATE.

11.89

@

-

4 4

25.17)6@25.20

44

13. 7%@
25.15 @
25.30 @

44

44

Paris
Paris
Vienna
Berlin

LONDON

44

3 mo’s.

-

—

—
—

—

—
—

July 19.

—

33%

3 mo’s.

—
—

—

July 13.

30

C2)6

days.

—

—

—

—

—
—

110%

July 19 00 days.

Juue 24. 90 days.
y> p. c. prem.
July 1. 60 days. 11®Lit P- c. prem

—

—

.June 25.

—

.—

44

21%@22%

@48%
surprised to see in the Chicago Republican of the 27th of
45%@0%
Valparaiso
22 ©22%
July a very remarkable criticism of tbe figures we gave respecting Pernambuco..
July 1.
June 15. 6 mos. Is. 5%(/.@ —
45. Ad.
60 days.
Singapore
Chicago in the article published in the Chronicle oh the 20tb of the
June 25.
4s. 5%(/.© —
4s. Ad.
Hong Kong....
June 14.
3©3% dis.
1 p. c. dis.
same month (Chronicle, Vol. 5, page 71), with regard to the debts
Ceylon
Is. 11 %(/.
July 9.
Is 10% c/@ls 11 d
Bombay
and taxation of our large cities. Strange as it may appear, not one
Is. 11 %(/.
lsl0%t/@H 1 It/ July 0.
Madras
Is. 11 yd.
lsl0%c*@!s 11 d July 7.
of the Republican's figures are correct, although, as it states, the “Comp
Calcutta
June 13. 30 days. 1% p. c. prem.
1 p. c. dis.
30 days.
Sydney
trolleys office is so accessible” to its editors. We give the following
fFrom our own Correspondent.]
extract from tne criticism referred to :
But the Financial Chronicle asserls that the debt of Chicago has increased
London, Saturday, July 20, . 867.
from $19 18 per head iu 1800 up to $20 93 in 1806, and the Chicago tribune of
yesterday repeats those figures, evidently without investigation. Now, let ns
The week which is just closing has been one of unusual quietness
look at the facts in the case. At the close of the year i860, the total debt of the
city of Chicago was $2,455,000. The population, according to the United States very little of importance has transpired to interest readers either here
census in that year, was, in round numbers, 109,000, which would make tbe
or abroad.
Perhaps the leading circumstance to which any importance
debt, according to population, $22 52 per head. On the 1st of April, 1807. the
total debt of the city of Chicago was $4,757,500, and with an estimate of the
can be attached is the movement in the wheat trade.
In this depart¬
population at 250,000 which is quite moderate, the debt of Chicago amounts to
only $19 03 per bead, which is $3 49 per head less than it was in 1800. Thus ment there has been more animation than for some weeks past, and
much for the figures prepared at, the East with regard to Chicago, and it is sur¬
prising that any Chicago journal could he sillv enough to leprint them blindly, prices are one shilling per quarter higher than they were on
without investigation, especially when the Comptroller’s office is so accessible
last. At the same time, however, although millers have purchased
We

were

—

—

—

—

■

June 12.
June 4.

44

-

44
44

—

44

44

44
44

44

—

44

44

44
44

44

Saturday

to all who

desire information on that subject.




August 3,1867. J

THE CHRONICLE.

139

freely, they have continued to operate with great caution, and it in the shares or stocks of
public companies. The continued
rapid upward movement in prices has been checked. The dowuward movement in
prices operates effectively in checking
causes of this advance are three fold, first, as you have been
frequently speculation, there being, notwithstanding the cheapness of money
informed, our farmers hold very small supplies of produce ; sec ndly, a great absence of
speculation. The rates for accommodation in the
millers, owing to their recent limited purchases, possess very limited open market are much below those of the
Bank of England. Our lead¬
stocks ; while, thirdly, our importations of foreign wheat are on such a ing banks have made advances to
the brokers at as low a figure as 1£
acale as to only balance pretty evenly, supply and demand. During the per cent.; and almost
any amount of money could be obtained on good
present week much rain has fallen throughout the country, and at its security at 1|- per cent. The current minimum rate of discount in the
commencement high wind prevailed. This circumstance led to more
open market may, in fact, be considered to rule at If to l£ per cent. ;
ioquries being made, and hence the factors had the opportunity of ob¬ a striking contrast with this period last year, when
money was at ten
taining more money. Millers, however, were too wise to make exten percent. Anuexed are the present
rates, so far as regards the best
sive purchases, and. as a rule continued to buy only to meet their im¬
descriptions of paper:
Per Cent I
mediate wants. The rain which was falling was calculated to do much
Per Cent.
30 to 60 days’ bills
1 %@2
| 6 months’bank bills
2%@
good, provided that a return of fine and settled weather took place. 3 months’ bills
1%©2
4 & 6 months’ trade bills.... 2 ©3
4 months’ bank bills
2 @
I
Millers, therefore, were by no means justified in buying largely, and
The supply of bullion now held
by the Bank of France amounts to
with but few exceptions, I cannot perceive that they have done so. The
£34,685,320, while discounts are at only £19,750,260. Throughout the
weather appears to be again becoming settled, and, from its appear¬
Continent the demand for
money i9 as sluggish as it is here. Apart
ance to-day, it seems probable that
we shall have a very favorable
from Spain and Italy, both of which countries are in a
state of financial
period far harvesting the wheat and other cereals.
embarrassment, the rates have had a drooping tendency. During the
It would be impossible to calculate what has baen the
advantages week,
however, the changes which have taken place have not been im¬
gained by the recent fall of raiu. In the northern counties the hay
portant. Annexed are the quotations at this date, and at the corres¬
crop, which is not yet wholly secured, lias been damaged to some ex¬
tent; but, taking the country at large, they have been of incalculable ponding perioil in 1866:
-B’k rate—,
B’k rate—,
Op. m’kt-^
Op. m’kt—,
1S66. 1867.
1866.
18b7.
benefit, The wheat plant has, indeed, suffered in some districts from
1866. 1867.
1866.
1867.
At Paris
4
Turin..... 8
2%3J^-3% l%-2
5
Vienna
accompanying high winds, and has been partly laid ; but the goo i which
5
4
6
4
Brussels
6
2%
5
2%-2%
Berlin
7
4
Madrid
9
2%
5
has been performed by tilling out the grain has more than
compensated
Frankfort. 6
2%
6
l%-2
Hamburg 4%
—
k^'
Amst'ra’in 7
for the damage sustained in this respect.
St. Petb'g. 5#
2%
7
2-2%
It is, however, of no very
5%
7
6-6% 7%-8%
6-0%
Bills d)f exchange have been in good demand this week, and the
material benefit for raiu to tall upon the wheat af ter the plant
quo¬
has com¬
menced to blossom. But, at this period of the year, rain is more neces¬ tations in most cases are rather less favorable to this country.
The bullion market presents but one feature of
sary on account of the crops of spring corn and the root crops.
importance. This
I also
has been caused by the nature of the latest
mentioned to you in my last letter that barley had suffered
telegraphic news from
very cousiderably from the drought which prevailed during the in gathering Shanghae. It appears, according to our latest advices from that port <
of the leaf crop.
The breadth of land under barley cultivation is that the silk trade has opened with considerable excitement, owing to
large, but the dry weather has prevented the plant from fully develop¬ extensive speculative transactions. The rate of exchange had risen
ing itself, anil, from this circumstance, the proportion of malting produce materially, the quotation at one period having been 6s. 4d ; but a tele¬
gram just received, and dated June 20, states that it had fallen to 6s. 3d.
to the other kinds is likely lo be below the average. In this
respect the
late rain has been beneficial in the extreme, and in the course
Owing to this movement in China there has been an increased demand
6>r Mexieau dollars, and as the supply here is small, an advance of
of next week, we may be able to ascertain what amount of food h s
fdt
ha-* b<jen established in the
has accrued.
Oats, beans and peas have recessarily derived much
quotations. For bar silver, however, there
G no increase of demand, and its value remains unaltered.
benefit from wet weather.
Gold and
Should, therefore, the weather again be
A me. can eagles are unchanged in price ; but as
come settled, the agricultural
regards the latter there
prospect which has, for a long p<-no i,
is a
been very favorable, will be materially improved, and as
good export inquiry, the supplies received by the Russia and the
very muc'
importance is attached to this.year’s harvest, both here and abroad, the Teu oni i having been purchased for shipment to the Continent. Our
probable result should be the subject of mu .h encouragement at the imports of gold and silver during the present week have been about
£7UJ,U00. The prices of bullion are now as under ;
present ti ie.
GOLD.
Throughout the manufacturing districts there is no material increase
s.
d.
8.
d.
of business.
The Liverpool cotton market opened with a flat and de¬ Bar Gold
77
9
.per oz. standard.
©—
do
Fine
do
last price
77
9
pressed appearance, but during the last few days there has been rather
Iteflnable
do
do
77 11
(&—
6
75
.per oz.
more steadiness.
©76
Holders of produce, however, show a desire to meet Spanish Doubloons
So.itli American Doubloons.
do
73
9
more

hence any

..

...

-

...

..

-

....

-

...

o

.

.

.

©r—

..

the market, and for this reason the downward movement in the
quota¬
tions continues unchecked. The trade demand is good ; but on
specu¬

United States Gold Coin

lation, owing to the fact that prices continue to give way, very little is
doing. The week’s sales amonnt to 76,740 bales, of which only 1,860
bales are on speculation, while exporters have taken 15,660
bales, and

Bar Silver

the trade 59,220 bales.
made to establish

At Manchester

higher

a

fruitless attempt has b

range

76

3

SILVER.
s.

do
containing
Fine Cake Silver
Mexican Dollars

..per oz.

5 grs. gold

standard.
do

5

d.

d.

8.

0% <&—

5

peroz.
peroz.

0%

5

5% <&—

4

Quicksilver, £6 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent..
A fair amount of business has been transacted in the

ien

of prices. The attempt has been only
successful to the extent of checking any further downward movement.
The wool trade is very firm, and the business transacted in
colonial
description?, since the close of the public sales, has been at fully late
rates. The total arrivals of wool for the series of sales, which will be
commenced in August, already amoui t to 109,615 bales,of which 22,476
bales are from Sydney, 22,680 Port Philip, 6,836 Adelaide, 465 Swan
River, 3,437 bales Van Diemen’s Land, 36,331 bales New Zealand, and
17,390 bales from the Cape of Good Hope. The iron trade is still in a
most inactive state, and the trade of
Birmingham and the district com
plain sadly of the existing waut of business.
No change has been made by the Directors of the Bank of
England
a

do

..

—

11%

—-

consol market

during the present week. There has, however, been a want of firmness
prices, and the quotations have given way.
It is still maintained
that owing to the abundance of money, the indisposition of
however,
the public to invest in the shares or bonds of public companies, and to
the wTant of secure means of employing our surplus means in trade, a
further rise must take place.
The quotation is still high, and is about
six per cent, higher than at this period last year.
The following state¬
ment shows the highest and lowest prices of consols on each
day during
the present week :
in

Weekending July20 .fionday.l Tuesday Wed’y.

Thur.

Friday.

Sat.

|

Consols for money

94%-94% {94%-94% 94%-94% 94%-94% 94%-94 % Holiday.

In the early part of the week the market
but it was
firm, and prices continued to rise. This movement was caused by
is manifest th it a reduction to 2
per cent, must shortly take place. The
the purchases on American account, with a view, it is said, of influenc¬
last return of the Bank of England shows clearly to what extent the
demand foi money has been reduced. The amount of “ other securiti s,” ing the approaching election of Directors. The continued export of
gold from New York, and the advance in the premium have produced
or
advances, is only £17,576,507, against £27,752,249 last year, or a
a flatter market for United States Five-twenty bonds, and their value
dimunition of more than £10,000,000. On the other hand, the
supply has given
way. Atlantic and Great Western Railway securities have “
of bullion held
by the bank has been materially increased. The total is
given way in price, but other American securities have ruled steady
now £22,686,7
26, against £13,645,975 in 1866, while the reserve of notes
Annexed are the highest and lowest prices on each day of the week :
and coin amouuts to as much as £12,360,255,
against the small sum of "Week
ending July 20 Monday. I Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day Friday. ,Sat’
£3,224,595 at this period last year. The demand for money during the
72%-73% 72%-72% 72%-72%|72%-73
72%-72%
present week has been comparatively insignificant. The supply is U. 8. 5-20’a
►>
Atlantic & G’t West¬
24
ern consol’d bonds 23%-23%
2
22%-23% 21%-22 22
very large; but notwithstanding this circumstance, many capitalists show
45
Erie Shares ($100).. 46
45 -45%
o
46)$-47
4G%-47
a desire to allow their
M
money to remain idle rather than invest Illinois shares ($100) SO#-.... 77# X. d. 77 x. d. 77 -77% 76%-77

in their rates of discount.




The minimum is still at 2\ per cent,

_

C3

-....

-...

*

-....

-....

140
The

THE CHRONICLE.
the

following

dam, 76£

are the latest quotations from the Continent: Amster
Frankfort, 761 ; Hamburg, 70 ; Berlin, 77g.

;

previous week. The exports are $2,848,536 this week against
$3,892,324 last week, and $3,325,599 the previous week. The exports
of cotton the past week were 3,694 bales, against 5,797 bales last week
The following are the imports at New York for week ending
(for dry
goods) July 26, and for the week ending (for general merchandise)

Eus:ll»h Market Reports—Per Cable.

London

Money Market.—The general tendency of the market is
buoyancy, as the feeliug that war between France and Prussia
is imminent declines. The fact that the Bank of England increased its July 27
bullion reserve by £995,000 on the week has also some effect in this di¬
toward

Fri. 26.
Consols for money
U S. 6’s(1862)
Illi ois Central shares..

93%

72 11-16
72

72%

7(1?.
76?*
41%

76%

94
72 7-16

94

77

77

48

48%

48%

'

ern cons,

23

b mis

23

76%

76%

21%

22%

22%

22%

daily closing for U. S. 6’s (1S62) at Frankfort

Franklmt

$2,869,310
2,959,977

$2,130,751
3,090,101

$3,445,866
136,801,907

$6,206,463

$5,S29,287

86,004,186

171,411,861

$5,2)0,852
141,178,880

$140,241,773

.

76%

..

Wed.,31. Thu. 1
10,(MK)
12,Oo0

Sat., 27. Mon.. ^9. Tues., 30.

Fri., 26.
Bales sold
15.000
Price Miud. Uplds. 10%d.
“
“
Orleans lu%d.

8,<hm)

lu.' OO

12,(MX)

10'f8d.

10%d.

10%d.

lo%d.

10%d.

10% d.

10%d.

10%d.

Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—Barley and oats

10%d.

10% d.

without change*

are

tid., and closed at 41s. 6d. California wheat, which
had been selling at 13s."lid. has declined to 13s. 9d,, aud new western
corn is 9d. lower,
closing at 85s. Southern flour is quoted at 29s., a
decline of 1-s. from Tuesday’s closing rate. The market is reported
dull and declining:
Peas have advanced

Sat. 27. Mon 29.1Tues 30. Wed. 31. Thu .1
s.
s. d
d.
S. d~ ’
s. d.
a. d.

Fri. 26.
8. d.
Wheat. (Mil. red No. l)p. ctl
Corn (West, nix’d) p. 48016s

per

bbl

.

#

13 11
35 9
0
5
1 0
41
0

Barley(American) per 60 lbs
<»hts(Am & Can.) per 45 lbs
Peas. (Canadian) pr504 lbs

(souther’ii)

.

0

5
4
41
.

..

13 11
35 3
5 0
0
4
6
41
30 0

13 11
35 9
5 0
0
4
41
0

13 11
*>)
9
0

0
■

13
35
5
4
41
29

i)

35
5

0
0

4

6

11
29

0

9
0

0
0
6

0

Liverpool Provisions Market—Beef continues to advance, and closed
6d.; poik is firm at 73s.; bacon and lard have each advanced
6d., the first closing at 43s. and the latter at 50s. Cheese lost 2s. in as
many days, and is now selling at 52s.
at 142s.

Bepf(ex. pr. mess) p. 304 lbs
Pork(Etn. pr. mess) p 200 lbs
Bacon (Cumb. cut) p. 112 lbs
Lard (American)
“
“
Cheese (hue Am.)
“
“

Thu

Fri. 26. Sat. 27. Mon 29. Tues. 30. ’Wed. 31.
s. d.
d.
s. d.
d.
s. d.
140 0
140 0
140 0
140 0
140 0
73 0
73 0
73 0
73 0
73 0
43
43 0
42 9
0
42 6
43 0
49
54

6

9

49
54

0

3
0

49
54

0

49

6

51

0

Since Jan. 1

In

$92,210,649

$177,241,148

$146,399,732

report of the dry-goods trade will be found

our

goods for

were—

...

Live-pool CottonMarket.—The unfavorable reports of the Manchester
market have reacted on the cotton interest, and prices have declinedMiddling uplands being quoted at lO^d and Middling Orleans at 10$ !.

Flour

1866.

$3,366,859
2,839,604

Previously reported

76%

76%
48%

47; a

'

£.

0

the

one

'closed firm.

Ashes—pots
Rosin (com
*•

per

Wilrn ).

112 lbs
“

“
“

(line)

Fri. 2(1. Sat. 27. Mon 29. Tu. 30. Wed. 31. Th. 1.
s. d.
s. d.
th" 8. (i.
s. d.
s. d.
31 0|
31 0
31 0
31
31
o
0
r*
7 0
i
0
7 0
70
7
0
7 0
16 0
16 0
15 0
12 0
15 0
16 0
31
1
0
44
41

Sp turpentine
Petroleum (std white).p. S lbs
spirits
per 8 lbs
Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs.
Clover seed (Am. red;
“
“

0

4%
9
9
0

31
1
0
44
41

0

4%

31
1

9

0

6
0

44
41

31
1
0
44
41

0
5
9

9

0

31
1
0
44
41

0

4%
9

6
0

31 0

0

4%

1 H

9
6
0

0 9

44 6
41 0

London Produce and Metal Markets.—Dullness has ruled

throughout
The only change from last week’s
Linseed Cake which has advanced 10s., closing firm at £10.

the week, as

report is in

is usual at this

season.

Fri. 26. Sat. 27. Mon. 29. Tu

/

Whale oil

The

4 O

“41

Sperm oil...;
'

25 6

68 6

25 6

68 6

68 6

Wd.24.

Th.g5.
(obl’g).pton £9 lu 0 £9 10 0 £9 15 0 £19 0 0 £10 0 0 £10 0 0
Fri.19.

Linseed cake
“
oil...

25 b

25 6
68 6

Sugar (No. 12 Dch std) p. 112 lbs. 25 6
25 6
68 6
68 6
(Calcutta).
“
Cake aud oils were quoted as follows :

Linseed

30. Wd. 31. Th. 1.

p.

following

41

4 0

“120 0 0 120 0 0
252 gals.32 0 0 32 0 0
are

Mon.22. Tu 23.

4 0

41

41

120 0 0 120
32 0 0 32

4 0

41

4 0

41

4 0

0 0 120 0 0 120 0 0
0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0

the quotations for metals:

Iron (Sc. pig mxd nura) p. ton.
Tin (Straits & Bunca) p. 1121b.
Latest:

-

8at.20.

53 0

53 0

53 o

23.—FNratcionl

following is

a

statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from

53 0

—

53 0
—

Friday, August 2, P.M.

EJThe sales of cotton at Liverpool, for the week ending this day, foot
up 57,000 bales, of which 13,000 were for export and 3,000 bales on
speculation. The stock in port is estimated at 676,000 bales, of which
349,000 bales are American.
;
To-day’s sales were estimated at 10,000 bales.
The last prices re
ported are 10$ for middling uplands, and 10§@10£ for middling
Orleans.
There is

no

change in the breadstuff’s, provisions, or produce
Liverpool or London.

material

markets either at

—————————————^^

COMMERCIAL AIND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
and

Exports

for the

considerable increase both in

total

Week.—The imports

this week show
dry goods and in general merchandise, the
being $5,220,852, against $3,229,456 last week, and $6,412,676

Imports
a




:

EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

$8,040 364

$2,947,348

1866. J
$3,-‘343,670

105,022,360

87,605,017

116,123,753

$2,848,536
108,071,191

$113,062,724

$90,552,365

$119,46?,423

$110,919,727

Previously reported
Since dan

1865.

1864.

For the week

1

1867

'l’he value of exports

from this port to different countries (exclusive
of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol¬
lowing table:
To
Great Britain... :
France
Holland & Belg.
wermany..
Other N.Europe

Spain

Other S. Europe
East Indies

This
week.

42,213
40,524
332,812

Jan. 1.

$149,119

Other W. I
Mexico
New Granada...
Venezuela
Br. Guiana.....
Brazil
Other S.A. ports
All other ports.

$3,396,794
*728,145
4.161,517

62,709

....

637.092

3,754,908

1,251,684
1,546,547
1,460,917

75,283

Since

Hayti

6.925,104
2,998.358
13.329,919
1,180,897

118.538
131.340
429.418

This
week.

To
Cuba

,351,221 $60,925,631

China * Japan .
Australia
Br.N A Colonies

The

Since
Jan. 1, 1867

1.675

850,973

40,798

1,836,723
422,104

...

36,885

735,235

44,901

1,563,600
1,940,516
859,576

..

..

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
ending July 27, 1867 :

Fork for the week

July 22-St. N. America, Para—
Americ in gold
$8,709
22—St. Scotia, Liverp’l—
“

27—St. Virginia, Liverp—
American gold
27—St. Europ ■, Havre—
Silverbars

j

1,320,000

American gold
G ild bars
Silver bars

1 -,5«>3

Mexican silv'r dollars 204,088
25—St. Moro Castle, Hav—

3 950

264,244

Havre—
gold

American
French coin
27—St. Allemania—

40,700
Spanish doubloons..
“•25—St. Herman, Brein’n—
4,200
Foreign silver
25—st. Herman, London—
Mexican dollars
36,021
Gold A silver bars...
854,613 !
25—St. lierinau, South¬

Liverpool—
gold

ampton—

American

130,781 |
4,779 j

f illows

33,774,091

1,1867

$37,266,051

_

Same time

in

$51,294,597

1858

$15,039,978

18,626. -90
31,014,205
25,363,076
35,678.887

1857
1856

26,074,186

1855
1854

19.917,808
18,899.924

3,258,976
27,987,291
43,182,097

1853
1852

12,556,140
14,814,953

20,456,8:14

imports of specie at this port during the week have been as
:

Rio Janerio—
Gold
22—St. South America,
St. ThomasGold
A....

Total for the week.

|

Silver
23—Oc’n Queen, Aspin—
Gold
Silver

“

$1,300

,

25—St.. Columbia,
Goal

4.369

ij

following forms present

Ilav—
930

a summ iry

of cer¬

weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom Houses:

1.—Securities held by the Treasurer in trust

Date.

For circulation.

July 6

amount

July 6 /
July 13
“20

36.797.950

:

Total.
$379,496,950
379.529.450
379.429.450

currency issued (weekly and Aggregate), and the
(ineluding worn-out notes) returned, and the amount in circu.

lation at date
Week
ending.

$38,878,450
38.897.950

340,631,500
340,63 i ,500

20

for National banks

For U. S. Deposits.

$340,618,500

13

“

2,234
1,50J

....

$1,599,782

January 1, 1867...-

Total since

400

$10,733
$1,589,049

Previously reported.

tain

9,600

$3,49 ,960

July 22—St. South America,
“

25,(HJ0
8,500

203,962

Previously reported

The

38,000

.

....

“

Total since Jan.
Same time in
1866
1865
1864
1863
1862
1861
1860
1859

75.000
2,000

American coin
American silver
Silverbars..
American gold
27—St. City of Antwerp,

....

Gold and silver burs.
Un parted silver bars.
Total lor the week

186,750

Gold bars
27—St. Europe.

9,733

English sovereigns..

325,000

Foreign - oin
27—St Europe, Paris—

218,767

National Treasury.—The

53 U

the imports of dry

week later.

“

Liverpool Produce Market.—With the exception of fine American
rosin, which has advanced from Pis. to 16s., the market is unchanged,
and quotations remain as at last week's close.
Petroleum advanced on
Monday ]ast to Is. 5d., but has since receded to Is. 44d, at which it

1867.

port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending July 30

“

43
50
52

0

to
53

<

142
73

The

THE WEEK.

,486,091
1,959,775

Total for the week

70%'

91%
72%

FOR

1865.

1864.

94

72 9-16

Atlantic & Great Weet-

The

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK

Mon. 29. Tues. 30. Wed. 31,

Sat. 27.

94
94

Railway shares.,..

•

:

Dry goods
General merchandise...

rection.

Eri

[August 3, 1867.

:

.
Currency issued.
Aggregate.

,

Current, week.

...$160,550
46.350
,

76, 50

$303,2(16,276
303,252,626

30 3,328,876

Currency

Currency in

returned.

Circulation.

$4,425,962
4,465,062

$298,780,314

4,522,402

298,787,564

298,806,414

received from the Currency Bureau by Trea¬
surer and distributed weekly ; also the amount destroyed :
Receive!.
Destroyed.
Weekending.
Distributed.
July 6
$470,000
$365,955
$349,000
Juiv 13
"
30

currency

-

600,'00
359,000

475,089

314,376

385,400
263,494

August 3,1867.]
4.—Receipts
fiscal year to

account of Internal Revenue weekly, and total for

on

date

THE CHRONICLE.

:

Week ending.
July 0
July 13

Current week.

*

20

“

Total to date.

$4,875,294
3,230.367

$14,302,808
17,503,235
22,271,798

4,078,563

5.—Receipts from Customs at the specified ports weekly
Week end’g1
N. York.
.Inly 0
,..$1,012,769
July 13
2,078,94)
20
1.90 ,512

Boston.

$298,120
190,700

“

44

27

Phila.

$111,320
231.384

270,2*3
291,844

2,577,00*

-

120,009

95,299

:
Baltimore. N.Orleans.
Total.
$213,050
$02,053
$2 207,330
94,727
2,769,553
173,802
100,98s*
95,518
2,500,209
130,500

i upon August Seven-thirties; but apparently for the purpose of
getting rid of a portion of their accumulations. The period ap¬
proaches when the want of money is likely to cause some holders to
realize upon their
indicate that such

Governments
a

movement

and although there is nothing to
immediately at hand, yet the an¬

;

is

ticipation of it keeps the market quiet.
prices of bonds now and one

shows the

U. S.
“

We call attention to the card of Geo. Edward Sears, account-book

manufacturer and dealer in stationery, at 45 William street. Mr. Sears
succeeds Mr. Motley in business at his old well-known establishment.
Messrs. Parrr ele Brothers’ card will be lound in the last part of this

141

44

6X 18S1
5-20’s, 1802
“

fcl

41

.

1804

1805......

Aug. 2, Jillv24. |
1807.
18*4(5. |
11 '#
111# |
112
IONS,; j
109#
1()8# I
109#
108# |

The

following are the closing
pared with preceding weeks :

issue, offering for sale all the best kinds of coal for office and family
There offices are at 32 Pine street, and West Twenty-second

Aug, 2, July 24,
1807.
“
44
“

street, near Tenth avenue.

®l)c Bankers’ (Sauttc.

102#

7-30's, 1st Piv...

11

pr ices of

“

44

2d
3d

41
44

107#
107#
107#

...

...

leading securities,

1800.
102

100#
100#
100#
corn-

July 5. * Julv 12 July 19. July 26. Aug. 2
x.c.109#
110#
110#
110#
110#
ill#
111#
Hi#
111#
112'
107#
108#
109#
HU*
109#
109#
107#
1( 8#
109#
109#
109#
109#
110#x.C.107#
108#
108#
107#
108#

S. 0’s, 1881 coup
S. 5-20’h, 1802 coupons.
58. 5-20’s, 1804
44
S. 5-20’h, 180 5
44

113

..

..

S.

5-20’h, 1805, N. iss...
S. 5--0X1S67, c
S
S

10-40X

44
7-30’s 1st series
S. 7-30’s 2d Series
S

100#
10)4#"
100#
100#'

..

7-30’s 3rd series...

.

107#
102#
107#
107
107

DIVIDENDS,

during the past week

10-40’s

Jline 21.
D.
LT.
U.
U.
lT.
U.
L.
GU.
U.

use.

The following Dividends have b en declared

The following comparison
year ago :

Railroad
:

and

been unsettled.

108#
102#
H'8#
108
10S

107#

108#

108#

102#

102#

102#

107#
107#
107#

107#
107#

107#
107#
107#'

107#

Miscellaneous Stocks—The stock market has

The advance of

prices during July was more rapid
by the leading operators, and to their view there
expected
P. o’t.
WUEN.
WHERE.
appeared o be a danger that ' the Summer movement might
Bank*.
exhaust itself too early by an advance to extreme quotations.
5
Oriental
At Bank.
August 1
July 20 to Aug. 1.
0
At Bank.
August 1
Long (eland, Brooklyn....
The larger
operators lor a rise appear, therefore, to have
5
Corn Exchange
At Ban*.
AUglDt 1
July 24 to Aug. 1.
u. ited
in
Bank of Republic
5&5 x August 5
At Bank.
forcing the market back, and have sold a
5
Manhattan Company
At Bink.
Aug. 11).
Leather Manufacturers
0
For some time,
At Bank.
August 1
Juiy 30 to Aug. 2. large amount of stocks for that purpose.
5
St. Nicho as
At Bank.
Aug. 10
Aug. 2 to Aug. 12.
the market took all the stock thus offered without any yielding of
•Sail road*:
3
New York Central
23
Aug. 20. Dune. Sli or &Co Julv 31 to A
prices; during the last two days, however, there has been a partial
5
Philadelphia <fc Trenton...
August 1
Phi'adelphia
111*11 ranee.
failure of confidence among outside operators, and prices have
A ugus* 1
Gebhara Fire
5
141 Broadway.
(4
yielded 2per cent. Some are buyers at the decline, while with
Broadway Insurance
August 1 158 Broadway.
Aif'Misr 1
5
Washington
others there is a disposition to break down the market still further,
Universal Life
3# August 1 Companys Office
5
Jersey City ^ ire
July 30.
Jersey City.
especially as the temporary weakness has increased the short interest.
1V1 Inc ellancou*.
American & Mexh au Mail. $39
There can be little doubt that, on the lower basis sought to be es¬
August 1 20 B toad way. J uly 28 to Aug. 2
5
Morris 1 anal & Bank. Co..
August 1 | Jersey City.
July 25 to A lie. (4
tablished, there will be very active buying and a subsequent effort
52T" Tlie substance of the table oi* StoekSnles usually pub¬
to run up prices beyond any figures reached this season.
Confidence
lished here will be found In tlte Sale* Table, page 143.
has been temporarily shaken by the decline; but the feeling is re¬
Friday, Aug. 2,1807, P. M.
markably unanimous in favor of a future material advance.
The Money Market .—The extreme ease in money noted for
The miscellaneous list is quiet, that class of stocks having been
some tithe past has been continued throughout the week.
The last neglected by the larger operators. Their turn usually comes when
statement of the Associated Banks showe 1 a moderate gain in de¬ the iiterest in railroad stocks has been exhausted.
The contest
posits and in legal tenders, with a slight increase in loans, aud the between the old express companies'and the Merchant’s Union Ex¬
condition of the banks has probably not changed materially since.
press Co. has produced a considerable speculative interest in that
At the Western cities exchanges on New York appear to be about
class of stocks, and the prices of Adams, United States and Ameri.
evenly balanced , and as money is reported comparatively easy at can have advanced 3@t per cent, during the week.
The business at the two stock boards for the current week amountCbicag o and Cincinnati there is no prospect of any immediate
ed to 40o,127, against the previous week’s business 628,167 shares.
change here arising from Western movements.
The banks still retain their overdue compound interest notes. The The principal stocks sold were—Chicago and Northwestern, common
Treasury gives in redemption of the notes an important proportion 66 613, and preferred 24,703 , Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific
of bank currency, the effect of which is to reduce the legal tender 22,425; Cleveland and Pittsburg 30,000 ; Cleveland & Toledo,
reserves of the banks.
By holding the notes the banks appear to 7.470 ; Erie 84.000 ; Hudson River 3.496 ; Marietta and Cincin¬
lose the use of the interest (amounting to about 20 per cent, of the nati, 1st pref., 6,592 ; Michigan Southern 11,800; Milwaukee and
principal), but only apparently; as they consider the claim lor in¬ St. Paul—common 4,525 and .preferred '8.900; New York
Central 25.950; Ohio & Mississippi ($100) 14.450; Pittsburg,
terest as representing so much legal tender and consequently count
the interest as so much reserve : and their legal tender reserve being Fort Wayne and Chicago 12,997 ; Reading 28,845.
The miscella¬
neous stocks sold amounting to—Coal, 1,885; Mining, 6,400 ;
so far increased, they are at liberty to lend more freely.
Im¬
As, how¬
ever, few of the overdue notes are held by the banks ol this city, this provement, 5,000; Telegraph, 10,269 ; Steamship, 6,537 and Ex¬
consideration has no direct bearing upon our money market.
press 14,078, in the week’s aggregate, 44,139 against last week’s
The demand for money is chiefly confined to the stock brokers, aggregate 86,083.
who pay on demand loans 4@5 per cent, upon stock collaterals, aud
The following were the closing quotations at the regular board,
3@4 per cent, on Governments.
compared with those of the six preceding weeks ;
The banks take all the prime
There is little done in discounts.
June 21. June 2. July 5. July 12 July 19. July 26. Aug 2.
38#
38#
40#
33#
Cumberland Coal
34#
32#
32"
paper offered at 6@7 per cent. ; but the offerings are quite limited. (Quicksilver
343#
31#
27#
48
52#
51#
48#
47
Canton Co
Maturing obligations are generally met with regularity, and tnere Mariposa pref....
22#
23#
23#
21#
24#
io#
109#x.d.l05#
100# 105#
is a slight improvement- in cenfidence among buyers of paper.
105#
102#
104#
New York Central
7 #
71#
74#
70#
66#
59#
0(4#
PAYABLE.

It A TIC

NAME or OOMrANY.

books

thau

closed.

was

...

ho-

.

_

—

...

1

1

Qn<

....

•

•

•

.

...

The

following

are

the quotations for loans of various classes
3
6

@ 5
@ 7

6^,@ 7

108#
107#
Reading
70#
Mich. Southern..
Michigan Centralx..6.11*7
77#
Clev. "aud Pittsb.
120#
Clev. and Toledo.
353a
Northwestern
44
59#
preferred
90#
Rock Island

:

Per cent.

Per cent.

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

Erie
Hudson River....

<-

Good endorsed bills, 3
4 months
do
single names
I Lower grades

&
0#@ <8

9 @10
11 @15

United States Securities.—Governments have been, upon

^

103#
79#

no#
104#
79#

119#
107#

110

no

112#
91#
124#
48#
72#

109#

109#

no

109#
7b#
no#

no

120

42#
05#
95#
103#
121#

bl#
80#
121#

45#
07#
97#

91#
119#
44#
(48
97

91

121

44#
70#
99#
101#

83

104

120

100#
bo#
....

94#
123

4b#
70#
101#
100#
lib#

100#
the Fort Wayne
100#
101#
98
119
122
120#
Illinois Central
whole, dull. There has been a steady influx of bonds, apparently
The following statement shows the volume of transactions
beyond the demand for investment; and the broker’s have
probably increased their supplies somewhat considerably. To-day shares, at the regular aud open boards conjointly, on each day
some of the brokers bid up prices
per cent, upon bondSj and the week. closing’' with this day’s business :




..

i

....

in
of

142

THE CHRONICLE.
Sat.

At
At

76, %0

73,(M3

100
900
800

600
700
SOO
653
500

1.750
1,510

2,160
1,520

Fri.

Thurs.
121

85

51,916

37,961

41,*16

460
500
500

359,786
1,855

1,000

900
300
1,090

800

6.400

811

5,000
10,260
6,537'

3,764

3,472

14,078
165,434
220,693

450

1,140
1,106

2,888

2,200

1,054

95

....

.

33,431

23,471
62,500

25,065

28,559

21,704

30,204

54,300

49,800

30,6:30

24,188

1*\275

87.731

S5 971

77,865

59.189

49,957

109,617

129,872

123,72)

45,892
115,102

48,479
99,7 SO

405,127
628,167

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

Mon.

a. S. Bonds...
U.S. Notes

Tues.

.$112,500$5,533,500

State&City b’ds
Co.npauy B’nds.

49.000
17,000

Total Car. w’k.. $188,5' 0
Previous week... 251,500

Wert,

Thur.

Fri.

40.000

101.000
30.000

77.000

197,000

456,000

24,000

17,000

2U,0U0

17,5i)0

106,500

311,500

431.0 X)

297,0001,673, S50

45S.500 1,671,000 654,900 607,700 537,000 4,180,600
Tiie Gold Market.—Gold has been upon the whole linn.
The

demand for customs has been

large; but there has been a material
requirements lor export. The market has been
spasmodically affected by the reports of difficulties between France
and Prussia, and by a temporary decline in Five twenties
at London to 72F
The price at one time touched 14o-|
under these influences; but the understanding that the Trvas
ury may- become a seller upon any indications that the price i
likely to stand at over 140 has checked the upward ten ;e
To-day there was a very active demand for loans from the “ sIltn ’»
and gold was lent generally at | per cent, per day,
in sympathy
with which the premium advanced about
The fluctuations in the gold market during the week
closing with
Friday are shown in the following table :
reduction in the

Open-

Hiirh-

ing. Lowest,

Saturday, July
Monday,
“
Tuesday,
“
Wedn'rtay, “

27
29
30
31
Thursday, Aug. 1
Friday,
"
2

139%
14u%
140%

Current week
Previous week
Jan. 1 to date

Clos¬

140%
140%
14'.%
140

139%
139%

340%
140%

0%

coin

was as

and

following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since May 4 :
Weeks

Custom

Ending

lily
“

“

“

8,347,553
17,3 51,277
14,932,(595
25,086,873

18,876,740

15,022,070
28.444,856
17,330,480
21,804,904

13,055,892

1,895,713
2,089.064
1,726.400

29....

0...

bullion at

OX

0%
0%
0%

18....

1,610,006
2,078,270

20....
27

1,901.280
i (jj 313

Specie in banks Saturday, July 20
receipts from California
Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports
Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury

this

ending at tl)e

Mechanics’
Union
America
Phccuix

!

City
Tradesmen’s..

.<

.

Fulton
Chemical
Menchants’ Exchange..
National
",
-

butchers’
'fee lahicsaud Traders’.
Greenwich
Leather Manuf. National
Seventh Ward, National.
'tat,; of New York
\iii -ricau Exchange

Commerce

Broadway
•

>e -an

Steady.
Firm,

..$3,491,960
2,576,314—

6 06S,274

$7,274.74S

$1,453,316

2.000,000

Continental
Commonwealth
Oriental
Marine
Atlantic
’
Importers and Traders’..
Park
Mechanics’ Banking Ass!
Grocers’
Nortli River

Manufacturers & Mer
Fourth National
Central National.
Second National
Ninth National
First National
Third National
New York N. Exchange.
Tenth National.
Bull’s Head
Croton Nat ional
National Currency.......
„

Bowery National*
Stuyvesant

during the week, but the supply being at the same time lim¬
ited, there is do material change in rates. Leading drawers quote
60 days sterling at 110£, but the best bills are sold ou the street £
below that figure.
The

following are the closing quotations for the several classes
of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks :
July 12.
July 19.
109%® 109%
109%® 109%
110%® 110%
110%® 110%
110%® 110%
110%® 110%
6.13%@5.12% 5.13%® 5.12%
5.11%@5.<)8% 5.11%@5.10
5.17%®5.08% 5.17%@ 5.08%

Amsterdam
Frankfort
Bremen
Berlin

79%@
72%®

@
.

36%®....
41%@41%
41%®
79%@ 79%
72% ®
72%® 72%

..

41%

....

....

72%

July 26.
109%® 109%
110 ©H0%
110%® 110%

5.13%®5.12%
5.11%@5.i0
5.17%@5.0S%
®
86%®
41%® 41%
41%@
79%® 79%
72%® 72%

Aug. 2.
10!)%® 109%
110 ©110%
110%® 110%
5.13% @5.12%
5.11%©5.10
....®

rThe transactions for the last week at the Custom House

Sub-Treasury

were as

follows:

4.000,000
400.000

l.lKM).(HM)

24

Receipts.
$468,648 25
599,190 36
444,284 61

26
27

387,616 68
452,759 35
223,814 53

July

Total

Deduct

Balance

$2,576,313 83

Sub-Treasury morning of July 15.

839,990 55
4,464,491 56
5,110,000 70
1 597,284 01
1,980,591 87

$21,804,904 47

ReceiDts.

$8,811,009 72
1,757,895 33
3,351,103 &5

4,544,865 51
1,616,402 66
1,608,101 84

1,(X MI.OOO
1,500,000
l.(XX).(MH)

2,WO.OOO
750.000
300.000

Saturday evening
Decrease daring the week
on




21,804,904 47

$130,190,095 33
06

2,850,085

858,750
130,255

1.279.1*5

,333,000

1,779.791

2*7,038
195,1*5

1.093.289

470,128

1.191,W0

41O,0u0

38.9*5

2,118,412

0,27(7,420

3,im,a‘)0

10,918-

131,182

83.510
FI

■1 222
502000

46.565
27.019

77.1,957
919,063
8,23!

,956
24,975
117,515
48.225
8. *52

509,939
212.127
8,8.80

'

22 4*2

35*1,500

9,182

1,54X1.000
2.000.000

6,503,222
15,374.1*0
97 1,985

50.101
310.027
8.255
0.1 10

99,166
502,651
993.5(H)

889.7*8 '

1,25**95
935.857

500,000

1,195,200

5.0W.000
3.<XX).()()0

10.015.854

1,301,54)0
5,243,450

5(X).(XM)

3,107,823
3,2O0,!)-10
1,000.2-17
3.079.700
1.1:5:4.205

11.652

10,447

300,000
1.000,000

308.219
7S.!XX)

19,910
1,529

1,102.077
1,801,372

400.07)3
501,616

2.111.258

71**7,567
4*2.599
900.000

1,083,871
2,378.000

1,235,175
14,010,103

Circulation

The

following

are

Loans.
June 1. 252,79l,ol4
June 8. 250,477,293
June 15. 246,22 ,465
June 22. 243,640,477
June 29. 242,547,954
July 6. 246,361,237
July 13. 247,913,00!)

12.495,841

1,218,406
6.539,073
3.3*7,104
2,553,9*2
8i 6,034
2,152.100
1,605,093

8,738,094

Boston Banks.—The
Boston Banks.’ statement

5,130,857

3,772,209
420,628

3.212.802
1,242,659

1,02.3,620
292,088

411,332

i if),394

90.000

325,094

225,000

5i0,ll0
554,760

117,025
218,500
127,599
10,000

401.041
509.001
9o-796

the total? for

11,197,700

293,420

4,50*5

9,936
180,000

■131

218,653

..

.’

5S
14
57
75

....Inc.
Inc.

$1,172,034
1,164,53!)

series of weeks pust

Circula¬
tion.

Legal

Deposits.

33,747,039
33,719,088
33,707,109

190,386.113

33,633,171

179,477,170
186,213,257
191,524.312

33,542,560
33,669,-*97
31,653,869

33,574,948
33,596,859

$491,830,951
481,097,226
20,507.083
18,406,352

previous week are as fob

Deposits
Legal Tenders.

a

759,700

74,603,840

8,7:58,094:33,596,859

July 20, 1807
July 27, 1867

7,768,996
10,853,171
12,715,404

■

515.000

200.000
200.000
100.000

Specie.
14,617,070
15,699,038
12,656,389
9,399,585

253,217

07,4.381

8:50

303,557
417,219

253.588

1,000.000

Inc. $1,639,575
Dec. 2,45!',606
Inc.
21,911

_

1,502,952
5.476.801
478,959

1,112,974
807,372
1,312,907

2(5! 1.243
900,300

The deviations from the returns of the

Loans...;,..;

512,750
:;o;3,77i

9.925
21.500
6.932
2.137

lows:
8Pecie

300,000
1,0.33.000
703,837
210.8!*)

1,801,091
*29,987
2.41*7,85 4
1.OS7.046
1,520,!H)4
1,122,579
5,0*78,920
17.550,9:59
2

283,500

69,240 4 2.907,706
16,7751 1.680,977
270,000
34.380
87!*,409
28,452
445,429
799.199
41,793

12,7*1.172

300.000

559,07)9
206,576
494,047

1.814,249

0.7)80

40,092
9,000

1.205.508

1,OO0,(HX)

1,188,849
413,306
!".H),038

1,509,3.56
3,008.270

18,919
3*. 137

184,730,335
18 *,31 i,763

Tenders.

58,459,827
55,923,107

57,924,294
62,816,192
70.174,755

71,196,472
1!)7,872.063- 72,495,708
199,435,952 73,441,301
200,608,8=6 74,603,840

Aggregate
Cleari tics

442.675,585
461,734,216

400,908,602
442,440,804

498,944,354
494,081,990

521,259,403

491,830.952

481,097,226

following are the footings of the last
compared with those of the three previous

weeks:
July 8.
$41,900,000

Loans

94,747,778

Specie

915,298
15,065,466

July 15.
$11,900,000
95,04(5,458
833,466

July 22.
$41,900,000
95,096,571
6-c0,203

361,878

15,397,828

15,427,625
15,917,890
13,988,001
38,328,613
24,744,291

15,542,401
11,518,840
13.278,639
38,548,722
24,653,742

353,090

350,504

Due from other banks..
Due to other banks

15,800,271
13,485,936

15,570,355
14,238,518

Deposits

$152,000,999 80

481,811
110.538

1,834,003
1,3*1,250

500.000
300.000
400. (XX)
350,(XX)

2,270,172
2,972,631
6,618,810
1,77)8,849
770,91)9

4,917,095
2,282,502

4(XUKM)
3<H).O00

Balances for the week ending
Balances for the week ending

Legal tender notes
payments during the week.

900,000
795.720

79,105
30,495
10,8! 18
301 r0!*()

4.39,747
97,748
740,167
4.30,503'

S. 159.881

Clearings for the week ending July 20, 1867..
Clearings for the week ending July 27, 1867.

Capital
$21,689,378 41
130,311,621 39

4,354,151
G,514.468

0O,*12

82,520,200 251,243,350

July 27. 251,213,830

Sub-Treasury-

Payments
$7,812,545 78

.

2.12()„004
2,0*0,150
2,052,572
4,327,000
3.0!) 1.242
4,155,434
2,738.018

1 .000.000

250,000

July 20. 249,580,255

Custom House.

Balance in

and

197,000

00,432

1.078,000
10.000,444
1,52*.001

Eleventh Ward

....

41%©
79%® 79%
72% ® 72%

2,300,992
919,669

259,370

1,451,358
2,150,090
2,552,018

5.17%@5.08%
36%@
41%@ 41%

256.915
178,(105

375.081)
904,239
435.749 5.939,800

4.7*5.972
1.791,007

500,000

718,043

297,256
lD, 7*25

1.901.5*0

1,<XX).(HX)

293.481

489.979
257.511
195.720

79.105
52.712

1,513.844
10,268,146;
24,130,265
G.002,018
3,204.079
3.011.S10

5.000.IHM)
10.-000.000
1.000,01)0

766.572

2,010,535
1.559,423
827,382

18,987

3.10S.S4G
1.2*0,235

1,000,000

East River

2,143,322

600,000
500.000

450.000
•U 2,500

Metropolitan

8,738,091

®

89.111

269,982
511,526

AMOUNT OF

1.100.361

2.000,000

Chatham

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

$13,313,022

of supply for week.

30%®
41%@
41%®

Inc..
Inc..
Dec.

,

2.000,002
2,5:2.205
1,098,172

422,700

Republic

Firm.
Dull.

Foreign Exchange.—There has been rather less demand for

Hamburg

21,689,378

1.5(H),i)00
800,000
OUO.OOO
21 Hi.ouO

bills

Swiss

17,06(1.498

Loans and
Discounts,

1.000.0(H)
1,000,000

Mercantile
Paeiilc.

Irving

17,926

Deficits made up from unreported sources

Antwerp

28.533,9(57

329,425

1,966,678

Net
C ire u laLegal
tion.. Deposits. Tenders.
Specie.
$6,531,848 $3,177,113
$7,050,502 $1,015.059 $701,272
217.2*1
2.050,000
4,429,765 2,015,035
f>,052.:509
11.7fl
8*5,914
3.000,000
470.117
5,668,162 2.220,033
7.12*,*150
578,(HH)
4.039,162
1,230,7)19
2.000,000
5.155,275
152,455
1.500.000
474.225
229,100
2,140,460
931,723
3,9:’>2,420
2,(!<M)
O.OOO.ODO
2,8(7,017
8,227.276
1.451,5 is
7,(527,002
1 .*00.000
2,696.036
190.275
288,255
733,918
5.028.5(75
1.000.000
2,193,369
•125,774
1*1,975
3.(505,7-1!*
1.00(1,000
1,982,<)80
801,472
5.115,73«
15,018 794,500
1 ,'.102,578
158,080
1,028,304
<500,0(H)
1.915,815
300.0(H)
5. >0,740
1,820,942
5,081,691
5.274,(518
7*3,292
452.090
11.195
1.955.(H »0.
5.1*2.591
*2.778,234

Capital.

Hanover

$11,197,700

949,000-

Specie in banks Saturday, July 27

do short

130,492,493
130.581.(503
130,311.621
150,196,095

AVEUAGK

Ranks.
New York
Manhattan
Merchants*

.

Paris, long

132,459,170

503.351

2,4^6,526

following statement shows tl e
City lor the wetk
of business ou July 27, 1867 :

commencement

Firm
Firm.

:

$1,158,396

reported supply for week
Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports
Paid into U. S. Treasury ou accounTof customs

London Comm’l.
do bkrs%/i0
do
do shrt

17,834,628
32,446,169
25,416,297

8,691,487
10,5.9,186

condition of the Associated Banks of New York

North American

port for the week

Total

excess

134,112,919
134.616,271
132,129,745

New York City Banks.—The

People’s

140%
139%
140%

shown in the following formula

Treasure

Apparent

Cha
Bala
Dec.
Inc.
Inc.
L c.
Inc.
Dec.

Sub-Treasury
«
Recei]>ts. Balances.
27,547,745
18,850,257 123.583,732
*

Payments.

1,789,140

June 1....
“
s....
“
15....
“
22.
J

r

House.
1,955.086

Market.

140%
140%
140%
139%
340%
340%

0%

133% 339% 140%
139% 139% 140
132% 132% 141%

The movement in

and

The

Tone of

Range. ing.

189%
140%
140
139%

139%
140

..

ending July 27,

est.

140

.

gold,

3.590,850

....

680,000

In*

$2,414,314 in Gold Certificates.

Week.

283,000 163,0001,412,500 $2,'752,000
37.0(H)
51,850
276,350

247,.0 1

76,5 K)
68,000
11,000

10,000

The total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $1,373,000.
eluded iu the receipts of customs were $162,000 in

1.202

.

Sat.

32

Tues.

8,526

1,380

following is

old at the

Wed.
275

600

Total current week.
Total Previous w’k.

and notes.

515

2,400
1,900

Regular Board
Open Board...

The

105

78,190

Mining
“
Improv’t “
Telegraph “
Steamship14 ’’
Express “

“Mon.

101

Bank shares
Railroad “
Coal
“

[August 3,1867.

38,251,(M0
24,801,823

38,(M0,431
24,771,684

Circulation (State)*260,4'%

304,923

Circulation

(National)..

'

July 29.
$41,900,000

95,594,214

THE CHRONICLE.

3,1867.]

August

143

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

(REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, TOGETHER
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER Ob' SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN TIIE SAME WEEK.)

American

A

do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

\m. .registered.

do

1868
coupon
1868. .registered.

•

—

State:

Georgia 6s
7s

537,500j

los.oooj

512,000

422,000;

Dubuque & biuux City
“

700.000;
4,1)00;

Erie
do

Indiana 68,
do 5s

85

4 03%

104

do

J *

:

—

(}'I

05%
51

69%
69%

0G%

67

50%

50%

Cameron

Central
%
Consolidated

Cumberland

*

147,000

Qas.

100

Wyoming Valley
Citizens
Harlem

(Brooklyn)

50 V,

38%

38 %

do
do

38%
152

;157%

22%

23
i

i

52%1 51

Cary

100!

•—}

— -| —

lelegraph.—Western Union... .100! 48% > 17% 47
West. Union, Hus. Ext’nl()0|
j
! —
—
Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
100 114%:
Pacific Mail
100 145% 115% 145
Iransd. Central American... 100

Merchants’ Union $30 p’dlOO
UnitedStat.es
100
Wells, Fargo & Co
100
100
Mining.—Mariposa Gold
Mariposa preferred
100
Minnesota Copper
50
New Jersey Zinc
15
•Quartz mil..;
25
Quicksilver
.,,..100
Rutland Marble
v...
25
,




28%

28%

14,450

67

40
18

106% :07%10«% 106%

12,997
28,845
750
700

4,011
200

102%

3,000
91%

1,000

1,00C

.

do

r

72

4,000

7s

new

do

,

do 2d

m.

50

4th mortgage, 1880
5th mortgage. 1888

74%

74%

1.100
300'
3,600

%:

m%
146

4 0,269

•7%)
-

j

400’
...

140% i-*5%

0.437;

—

—

—

—
—

73 ^

73%

72%
15

—_

74%

75

68
9 :a
23

6*%
—

74
72
15
—

66%

74

75%

76%

73%

75

76
18
79

—

76%
66%

—

17
78
67

5,380i
1,318;
945

1,174

10

22%

—

5,360
1.500!

2,100

67%

23

23
-—

do
do
2d mort ,7s
do
do
Goshen Line,'68
Milw’kee & Pr. du Chien, 1st mort
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort..
do
do
2d mort..
Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage...
do
do
2d mortgage
New York Central 6s, 1883.
do
do
6s, 1837
do
do
7?, 1876
do
do
7s, cor.v’le, 1876
New York and New haven
Ohio mid Mississippi, 1st mortgage
Peninsula, lei mortgage
.

—

99

91

..

90%

do
do

do
do

do
do

—

—

—

86

St. Louis, Alton A Terre
do
do
do

90

93

—

3*4%
—

34
—

34%
—

34%
j-wnt

32%
—

2,S00

10,0#0

1,000
9

1,000

—

87

—

—

I 79

sj%;

_

—

8,000

i

1,000
5,500

"i7ooo

93
—

1

Wj f>»
00 o

SO

do

Troy, Satem and Rutland, 1st morV

10,060

—

87

m

2d, prei
*?<i, in<* ;
Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort;
Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort., ext..i
do
do
2d mort :;n?*••'. j
do

1

—

m. 103%
2d mor'..
3d mort.

II, 1st

1

5,0(0

96%

Pittsh’g, Ft. Wayne A Chic., 1st

do

34%

10,000
8,000

McGregor Western, 1st mortgage..
Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mort..
Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72
do
do
8s, new, 1882

1

23

18,000

114
103

Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund,
*

2,000
4,000

101

102

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72

„..

10

28%

25,v50

Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mort.

...

.

25%

Galena and Chicago, extended
do
do
2d mortgage..
Great Western, 1st mortgage
do
do
2d mortgage

—

...100

American

4,525

8,900

Cons'lidated & Sink Fund
do
do
3d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869.
do
2d mort, (S. F.), '85
do
3d mortgage, 1875..
do
convertible, 1867..
Illinois Central 7s, 1875
113%
Joliet & Chicago

53%!

100
100
500

11,800

Interest
Extension
1st mort

do
do
.do

900

40%

40%

100,

Insurance.—Home
txpr ess. —Adams

1st mortgage... 100%
Income
& Quincy, 8 p. c

900
255

45-

Canton

Irust.— Farmers’ Loan A Trust 25
New York Life & Tru-4.100
Union Trust
100
United States Trust..... .100

176

30%

51% 5.1
66% 1 66

67%! 05%.

100
100
100

100

j

50

Williamsburg
50
improvement.—Bust. Wat.Pow. 20
Brunswick City
100

$tfuth fwwl P$fn\el§e

53

6,592

100 109% 108% 107% 106% 105% 105%

do

do
do
do
do

do

50

New York

27

27%

111% 112
82% 8.2

81%

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 1879
do 3d mortgage, 1883

100

..

24%

53%

1,245
415

2d

31%

3,496

118%

»

Delaw'e, Lackawan. & West, 1st m.

50

Nicaragua

8

,

Jersey City and Hoboken 20

Manhattan
Metronolitan

[20%

119%

Chicago R. I. and Pac, 7 i ei-cent..
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort..
do
do
3d mort couv.
do
do
4th mortgage.
Cleveland and Toledo, Sink'g Fund

100
25
20

—Brooklyn

84,010
1,250

consolid'ted
Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort

4.000
4.0*K)

50

Wilkesbarre

76%
78%

Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund

do

10

300

Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort

99

50

Schuylkill
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill..

30,900
7,470

Chicago, Burl’ton
Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort

76,0.10

2,000,

50

..

do
do

do
do

93

Delaware and Hudson... 100j

Pennsylvania

95% 94%
123% 123

22,425

Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund,

Miscellaneous. Stocks :
Ashburton

24,703

Railroad Builds:
Buffalo, N. Y. A Erie, 1st mort., '77
Central ol N w Jersey, 1st mort—

21,000

21,0001

03

100
j 50
25
50
P'O
100
.100

63,613

■

23,0001

2,00

67%

—

Jersey City (is,
New York 7s
do
(is
do
5s

48%
70%
1162% 131%

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic.l0u| “"’f ;J6 v«. 167%
107% | -97% 106%
Reading
50j*^/8 -06,y
51
2,000 St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100
81
80%
do
do
do
3,0c0
pref. 100
Sfonington
100 52% 52% 51% 1
51
51%
Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 72%
72
do
do
do
pref. 50
3,(MX) Troy, Salem and Rutland
106

2,100

6s, Public Park Loan —
6s, Improvement Stock.

Chicago 7s, Water Loan
Water Loan

%

—

Jltiuicipal :

*’

do

preflOO
10<)
5,000, Michigan Central
Michigan So. and N. Indiana .. .100
—I
do
do
guar. 100
16,000; Milwaukee & P. du Ch. 1st preflOO

1

58
57%

6s. new

Bullet’

18;

26.0! o

79%

70%; —\ 104
—

Virginia (»s, (old)

CoaL—American

120%, 120%! 120

Norwich and Worcester
23%) 28
Ohio and Mississippi < 'ertiii
!()■>
do
do
do
pref.lOOi
Panama
.100%.,,

St. Jos. RR.)
RR.)

...

50

j 71%

200

100 119

N.«*w York Central

do
6s,1867-77
do
5s, 1808-76
105%
do
7s, State B\vB’ds(( onp)
do
do
do
(reg.)
58%!
North Carolina 6s (old)
8%!
do
6s, (new)
loo. !
Ohio 6s, 1870-75
do 6s, 1881-86
Rhode Island 6s
Tennessee 5s
67% 68% I
do
(is (old)
66% (»)%
d<>
(is, (new)
52 |

.

50

McGregor Western. ..."
UK)
23,500. | Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preflOO

Louisiana 6s.

do
do

215
1(0
305
100

116
f!19

50

preferred

New York and New Haven
New Haven and Hartford

104 >i 104% 103%

76%
78

203,350 i

War Loan
War Loan

Brooklyn6s, Water Loan

121%'

116

pref. ..100

5,0008 Indianapolis and'Cincinnati.... r>o
50,500"; Long Island
50

Kentucky 6s, 1868-72

do

do

7 k%

do
do
2d preflOO
do
Milwaukee aud St. Paul
100
do
do
ptef...l00
Morris and Essex
100
New Jersey
...100

Michigan 6s...
do
7s, War Loan, 1878

51%

75%

100
100

Hudson River
Illinois Central

190.(K>o:

do 1879

Minnesota 8s
Missouri 6s
do
6s, (Han. &
do
6s, (Pacific
New York 7s, 1870

100

preferred..

do

do 1877

.

.100
pref. ...100

Harlem

’79,aft.’60-62-65-70

do

“

10.000’

1125

50
'

pref.100

do

es

——

71% 72
7-A% |
102% 103
Chicago, Rock Island and Pac 100 103%
Cleveland, Columbus and Cin...l00
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50 92% 94 I 94% l 96
Cleveland and Toledo
50 126
'125%; 123% 1126
Delaware, Lackawan aud West. 50 1.26 jl26 !

Bonds, I860
Registered, 1800

6s,cou.,
do

100-

Great Eastern

do

Illinois Caual
do
do
do
do
do

W««k’ii Sal

,

118

100

Chicago aud Milwaukee
100 -—
Chicago and Northwestern..... 100) 50%

21,800

19,000

85%

(new)

Chicago aud

207,600

do

-119

124

California 7s
Connecticut 6s

100

1 liurs.

preferred... .100118

Hannibal and St. Joseph

do
5s, 10-408 .. .coupon {*{-4 102% 402% 102% [102% ,102%
do
do
5s,
registered.\'w>
! 107%, 107%
do
7-308 T. Notes 1st se. — WA
407% 107%! 107%
do
do
do 2d series
107%
do'
do
do 3d series
lu‘^«

do

do

Wed*

I Ufch

Chicago, Burlington aud Quincy1001149%

6s, Oregon War 1861
6s,
do. (iy'/hj)
58, 1871
coupon.
5s, 1871 ..registered.
,
c-oupon. *1U%|
5s, 1871
5s,
registered.

do

Mull.

Sr.

Kail road Stocks:
Centralof New Jersey
Chicago and Alton

,140%

1881
coupon.
,110%
110%;
110% - —:
1881. .registered.
111% 11%: 1U% 111%
5-20s (’6-l) coupon. m%
5-20b doregist'd
109%! 109%’
5-20s {'M) coupon. 109%
5.20s do regist'd
100% 100% 109% 109% 110
5.20s (’65) coupon
5.20s do rec/ist'd
>08%
5.20s 065 n.) c nip. 108% 108% 108% 108%!
(is, 5.20s do regist'd
108%
108%
■~jlOS%
6s, 5.20s (1837) e mp
108%
6s, 5.20s do regis'd

-

do
do

do

do

140

S i uCKS A .\ iJ

[Week’s Sales

National:
6s,
68,
6s,
6s,
6s,
63,
6s,
6s,
6s,
68,
6s,

do

Sri.

UU I-.,

140% 140% 140

Gold Coin (G>ld lioom).. 140

United States Os,

do

Satur. Mon.

SECURITIES.

STOCKS AND

!

I

11,000

144

THE CHRONICLE.

Exports of Leading: Articles from New York.

&f)£ Commercial ©ittteo.
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
ports
for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount ?n the
last

EPITOME.

number of

Friday Night,

[August 3,1867.

©

August 2.

the Chronicle from that here given

co

io i-i

ci

•

co x of ci

•
•

Q X O X Cf Of •TiOO’flNO-/)
rH i-oft-'®
rafofcC ^ CO
> CO ^ C*
CD
a t~ co rf os

•

increasing, but without buoyancy
in prices, or any especial activity.
There is as much disposi¬
tion to sell as to buy, and profits, though not large are fair,
and pretty evenly distributed throughout the various branches

T—I

th

IO

•f-<

o CD

'C,© W W K 1C t- l- r5

■rt

The volume of business is

:

O* tfc- CO Tf C* -r ts* ^ fW »0 QO « r*

•

rlrl

cij

«

;-~of©~co‘"to~cft»T-rT_r

'
I* t- — lC
rr of c- cc 1
T-t
cco

^OiJhSS
OfSO^g
eo

nrl

-

co

W

T-t

of business.

Cotton has
somewhat

slightly advanced, Breadstuff's have declined
under increased supplies, but with more business.

Tobacco is held at

33
it

££

®
—
-ri
.3

etna
co f— t— in

■
•

«o
~

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© co

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co © to c>

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© *0

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o t to co
—

.

C: t-i 0

t*

c^co

advance

which, has checked business*
Groceries, at rather easier prices, have been fairly active.
Pork has parti ally lost the late speculative advances, new
mess
closing drooping at $23 35. Lard, which touched 13f
cents for prime, has fallen to 13£, and Dry Salted Hams and
an

Shoulders have declined

cent

one

per

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: 17I?
•

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cj

33
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oi co co

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w-

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>

good business in Leather.
Metals have been less active. The
large business of the
previous fortnight in Copper, Tin and Iron has been followed
this wreek by
comparative quietude, although the business is
a

;

.moo

.

T-t

O O

0

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H

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ri

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there is

o o ot f1 —
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ot ^1
i- T-<
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©

.

pound. Bacon alone,
very light supply. Beef

Cheese has been dull and declined one cent.
Hides have been quiet but very firm, and

•

cn 7-

is very scarce

inquiry for Skins, and

_C
Cl,

©

bog products, close firm with a
and firm, and Butter has done rather better and
prime table sorts have advanced 2a3 cents per pound, but
among

J

1

.

s

^

;-o-0

tjT

th CO

o

O
H

•

co

•

O

o

still considerable at full

co
TJ<

•

<0

prices.
goods have been rather quiet, but without essen¬
change except a decline in Manilla Hemp to 11c. gold.

■

co
CO

•

•

.i-od

ct
Cl

0

*

.OWH

10 ro o* co co

>

:s

:

*
*

.1^00

■00(7)
'rtr.ri

•
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co

co"

'?

East India

®

There have been further transactions in Jute.

Naval Stores show
in reduced stock and

some

variations.

Rosins

tS

are

able.
Wool is without

quite favor¬

especial feature ; receipts are still much
but prices do not improve.
Freights have been dull; the London steamer took Breadstuffs, on her own account, but
to-day there was a pretty fair
business to Liverpool and
Glasgow.
below last year,

for the

Week, and sluce

January 1.
same

time in 1866, have been

65

Breads tuffs—

3,817

3,481

as

follows

:

5

Rosin
Tar

8,003

!

Pitch
Oil cake, pkgs
Corn
025,001 0,070,297 9,9 5,394 Oil, lard
Oats
193,0931,724,805 3,208,500 Oil, Petroleum.
Rye
13.390 95,440
304,828'
-Peanuts, bags.
Malt
3,000 320,819
207,520 Provisions—
Barley
7,105 50,974
102,512
Butter, pkgs
Grass seed
40,422
100,183 Cheese
..

..

,

Flaxseed

7,720
313

17,775
285,892
1,735 40,483
1,154 220,103
....

C. meal,bbls.
C. meal,bags.
Buckwheat &
B.W. flour, bg

Cotton, bales
Copper, bbls...

..

Copper, plates.
l)nedfruit,pkgs

Grease, pkgs...
Hemp, bales...
Hides, No
Hops, bales.

4,140

Cut meats..

39,199

Eggs

140,307

Pork

151,838
217,143

Beef, pkgs.
Lard, pkgs..
Lard, kegs..
75,322 Rice, pkgs....
404,063 Starch
.

,

....

6.085

6,864 414,361
384
6,729
610
9,303
45 21,055
173
9,998
.

..

565

8,258 207,612
3,177

..

14,593! Stearine

5,134; Spelter, slabs-

3,457j Sugar, hhds

and bbls

1;000

2,193

5,228 Wool, bales
Dressed
Hogs,

Naval Stores—
Crude trp,bbl

9,816

118

Spirits turp..

1,836

5,328
35,753

27,588
29,053




No

Rice,
bush

<7»
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t-i r—

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•vOOt-WOO. f-CtC»!OCJ
; o ^t^cooq co —^,00 x t-i co x a

t3"sO cc'cTof

£T

of x T-t Ot »C Of TT
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1,805
61,890

4,284 418.599
255
0,406
2,SOI

0,272

2,321

1,759
7,343
4,638 84,234
3, .‘389 04,281
1,684 94,868
5,477 49,176

2,092
3,909
96,395
37,3:44
48,293
85,835

81,769

330

rough,

§|Jo-=|£s

.

•

.

•

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4

•

d—

cn

©

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3,964

.

CO

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55

•

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■T*0
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5,737

8.789

■

CO o

co CO CO
Of T-I

07

(_

CtHXOMt-XOt-CCJO

■
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cc
to

7,201 305,920 236,188

34,871 500,103 236,102
400 79,984 93,008
2,570 105,114 112,815
412 120,555 92,454
100 20,305 40,355
-19 97,504 7! 1,500

■

’cfr-T

X

2 S5
®

X CO
O T-t

1

1

—

o

....

79.873

268,8511Tobacco, pkgs.
3,704
j Tobacco, hhds

14,136

4,338
1,609
1,164' 40,912 59,133
2,802
3,333
25,8138 526,893 553,515
12,445
9,185

&

5,490
bbls
2,344 Tallow, pkgs..

825

....

193
512

197,755 233,211
11,550 38,114

....

Leather, sides .45,327 1,524,910 1,257,644] Whiskey, bbls
A«ead, pigs
Molasses, hhds

..

•

3

.

This
Since Same
week. Jan. 1. tinie’OO.

Flour, bbls.. 39,000 823,210 1,283,117
Wheat, bush 48,3001,119,810 1.110,410

Beans
Peas

•

X rH Ci

T-i

^

t-l

This
Since
Same
week. Jan. 1. time’66

Ashes, pkgs.

•

-CCCJO

co

l-H

'

at

The receipts of domestic produce for the week
ending August 2, since

Jan. 1, and for the

co
~

^
-

of -r

cn

more

from Wisconsin the accounts

Produce

cr. O'. CO Of t- X1 05

Hr. o

L- CN Of

of

firmer, while Tar is

Receipts of Domestic

•

■

) CO to 10

•

Hay has declined.
Hops are quite unsettled ; the accounts from the growing
vine
:

•

o

are

closes firmer.

better

<7* CO t- <7
Cl O O Ti

.

0'. ^

Common

Oils of all kinds have become

are

•Tl*'OC»Ot-.0'^'oCOT(;oCfOO»COlOT(ii.'5TiWCCO
o CO co
<7«OiOC0007>COO»l-aDcOOCOCOrriOiOrit,

-TO X O CO O

CO 1(0 co
-

^-3

plenty at some
comparatively quiet.
Petroleum has been tending downward and closes
heavy and
unsettled for both present and future
delivery.
Foreign Dried Fruits still tend upward. Fish are less buoy'ant.
Building Materials are steady. Tallow lias been in good
demand and firm.
AVhiskey declined early in the week but
decline.

o»

c 'caoco
*0 ’Zt CO O <7)
'zt
a cxri
,

o

as
Ci
t-t

e

s 2 S

o

Ss

SI

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f-Pin

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o

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w
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w

/•

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,

,

tial

5 8€ ■S’3-

August

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show8

The

or

ing

por*
the week ending July 26, since Jan. 1, 1867, and for the correspond¬

rec’d

PORTS.

week.
....

1867.

10,872

2,985
87,591

3,945
95,936

620

11,889

7,783

546,170

505,344
1,816

bags...
Coffee, bags .. 19,564
21
Cotton, bales.
Drugs, &c.
231
Bark, Peruv
150
Blea p’wd’rs
Cocoa,

Gambier....

10,109
2,730

82
45

1,862

10
73

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

3,289

2,272
24,111

974

Opium
Soda, hi-carb
Soda, sal....
Soda, ash...

488

....

96,0 6

650
25
646
222
184
60
213

Flax
Furs..

Gunny cloth

14,352

'268

Indigo
Madder

.

Hair

Hemp, bales..
Hides, &c.

14,821
20,378
1,250
2,299
21,382
2,649
84,430

....

68
247
328

Hides,dres’d
India rubber..

1,194
5,440
26,488
1,396

27
12

Bristles

Watches....

3,237

225,734
105,043

2

72

....

887.025 6,882,068
131,915

110,083

385,265

451.867
2,302,614 4,609,113

Tin slabs,lbsll9,320

40,384

32,351

11,188
4,087

229 272

17

683,234
17,063
4,472

Virginia. Aug. 2.

2S6,602
271,258
593,998
12,587

284

.

Other

Great

401,118 158,632 54,000
145,543 4,362 3,506
1,381
3,524
74,174
58,303
369,058

57,497
37,808
103,592
31,372

ports, Aug. 2*

959

108,592

3,019
534

•

•

•

•

28,344
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

PORTS.

7,798
63,596
•

•

•

613,750
153,411

79,079
109,551
66,101
460,998

....

•

•

•

....

*

.

.

....

•

165,007

31

14

2,328 Wines, &c.
50,487
7,229
Champ, bkts 2,300
Wines
90,104
2,968
7,532
514
28,555
78,512 Wool/bales...
455 Articles reported by value.
89,476
21,731 Codes
2,213
168,189
24,860 Fancy goods.. 98,874
7,813 Fish.'
6,691
403,519
2,746 Fruits, &c.
Lemons
9,334
338,125
16,331
3,239
Oranges
653,174
Nuts
82,786
4,350 481,571
Raisins
7,458 471,604
1,524 Hides,andrsd. 104,973 5,714,109
6,492 Rice
21,320 250,802
14,543
453
Cassia
'
72,541
40.013
183
Ginger

•

•

37,275

90,302

322

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

$35,000

739,611 156,757

1,843,235 1,200,807 195,821 130,603-1,527,231

To.nl

•

534

.

27,565

229,361 29,983
7,588
60,238
2,639
82,175
2,419
111,305
88,321 7,9S0
71,000
148
40,6^4

12,901
27,887

•

12,901

'

3,019

•

8TOCK

NORTH.

Total.

for’gn.

Britain.

116,129

..

France Other

hhds,

13.521 Tea...
8,282 ! Tobacco
2,252 Waste

exhibited considerable activity
the part of holders.
This is princi¬

The market this week hos

9,685

and increased firmness

on

pally owing to the greatly reduced stocks (the total at all the

78,927
290.706

I Ports low reaching only 156,757 hales), and only moderately

45,424

favorable accounts from the growing crop. Spinners have entered the market more freely, some spa~"'‘,t,v0 tcck::g
been do-

91,457

2d9;VJ3i‘2,498,970 veloped, and prices have further advanced during the week
580,228
fully one cent, the market closing very firm in face of a weak
350,485
275,376 report from Liverpool by the Cable. The idea prevails to some
608, *98 extent that our stock will not suffice to supply the wants of
581,894
4,122,099 spinners until the new crop comes in, and that they may be
455,254 I
compelled, therefore, to order cotton from Liverpool. Our
125,873
exports, therefore, are likely to be very small for the remainder

45S
698

169,527
31,678

Pepper
Saltpetre

|°f ^ie

i4 s<)2

120^490

2,091

93,895
3,688

29,798

Fustic

Logwood

...

Mahogany..

1,875
5,357

106,144

80,673

season*

The sales of the week have been about 16,500

bales, the market closing firm at the following quotations:

166,541 Woods.

Metals, &c.
Cutlery......

166,'969

4,149

Steel

tcs&bbls..

529

Linseed
Molasses

Spelter,lbs

8 ’>01

255,082

» •

666
j
738 Sugar.bxs&bg

411

Ivory

Jewelry, &c.
Jewelry

^VUU,

6,348

time
1866.

227,629

IromRIib’rs 27,933
Lead, pigs.. 6,375
j^/lww
W,'. »W

15,171 Rags
11,871 Sugar,

885

...

Gums, crude
Gum, Arabic

4,074

5,934
16,752
10,088
1,531

15

Cochineal...

Hardware...

Same

Since
Jau. 1,
1867.

Tin, boxes.. 24,733

279

355
23

Brimst, tns.
Cr Tartar

For
the
week.
367

Same
time
1866.

127

Coal, tons

Since
Jan. 1,

1.

707,992
228,891
152,724
231,422
175,808

N. Orleans, July 26.
Mobile, July 26
Charleston, July 26.
Savannah, July 26.
Texas, July 19
New York, Aug. 2*.
Florida, July 20+....
N. Carolina, Aug. 2.

is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]

8HJP-

m’ntsto

SINCE

SEPT.

period in 1866:
For
the

1 TO—

EXPORTED SINCE 8EPT,

foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this
[The quantity

1, an

Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept.
Stocks at Rates mentioned.

Imports of Leading Articles.

jbe

145

THE CHRONICLE.

3,1867.]

19,927
126,622
100,580

Upland.
$ fi> 22

Ordinary

26

Middling

28
30

Good Middling

The

Friday, P. M., Aug. 2, 1867.

exports of Cotton this

N. Orleans
Mobile. & Te
22
25
27
29
32

22
24
27
29
31

22
23
26
28
30

23

Good Ordinary
Low Middling

COTTON.

Florida.

week from New York show

receipts of cotton this week at all the ports show a a further decrease, the total shipments reaching only 3,694
very slight increase,the total reaching 5,993 bales (against bales, against 5,797 bales last week. The particulars of these
5,946 bales last week, 6,026 bales the previous week and shipments are as follows :
7,932 bales three weeks since), making the aggregate receipts To Liverpool, per steamer—Scotia, 1,247....Hecla,348....Virginia, 1,C69 3,180
.*...
'
”
1
I ... City of Antwerp, 526 Total bales
- ® a
Tnmi
.'
30
since Sept. 1, this year 1,843,235 bales, against 2,004,441 To Havre, per steamer—Europe, 30. Total bales
To Bremen, per steamer—Hcmiann, 15
Atlantic, 296. 9 otal bales...
311
173
bales for the same period in 1865-6. The details of the week’s To Hamburg, per ship—Sir John Lawrence, 173. Total bales
Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton
receipts are as follows :r
Receipts. from New York, and their direction for each of the last four
Heceived this week at*—
Receipts. Received this week at—
bales
27
bales
New Orleans
1,201 Florida
152 weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September
Mobile
341 North Carolina
Charleston
102
1,331 Virginia
1, 1866; and in the last column tho total for the same period
Savannah
1,378
Total receipts for week
Texas.
536
5,993 of the
previous year :
Tennessee, Kentucky, &c.....
925
The

’

.

.

aggregate receipts at all the ports for the corresponding
week of 1866 was 6,608 bales.
The exports also show- a
small increase for the past week, the total reaching 16,234
bales, against 11,845 bales last week and 18,787 bales the j
The

previous week. In the following table we give the
of the week’s shipments from all the ports :
LiverFro n
New York

pool.
3,180

Boston
Baltimore

Havre.
30

particulars

12,558

2.823
401

401

Charleston.;
Total this w’k

9,281

1,985

775

6,521
2,823

t

401

805

311

173

1,985

1

16,234

corresponding week in 1866 the shipments from
ports amounted to 12,215 bales.
The total for¬
eign exports from the United States since September 1 now
amount to 1,527,231 bales, against 1,492,063 bales for the
same
period last year, and the stocks at all the ports reach
only 156,757 bales, against 330,186 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.:
$ For the
all the

*

In this table, as well as in our general
from the receipts at each port for the week

Southern ports.

~

table of receipts, &c., we deduct
all received at such port from other

For instance, each week there is a certain -*-)ts mustshipped
amount be de-




-

^

Total
EXPORTED TO

July

•

Te are thus parfail to understand it

July

8.

15.

4,322

Liverpool

Other British Ports

....

Total to Gt. Britain..

I July

j 22.

5,101
....

4,774
....

4,322

5,101

371

742

371

742

Bremen and nanover

465

1,527

Hamburg
Other ports

727

420
500

454
155
414

2,447

1,023

j Havre

1
34

New York since Sept. 1,1866
WEEK ENDING

;

-Exported this.week to
.
1 Other French ports
BarceBreHam-St.Peters-B. N. A.
Iona.
men.
burg. burg. Colinie s.Total.
Total French
173
311
3,694

34

New Orleans...
Mobile

Exports of Cotton (bales) from

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar

3,180
....

1,192

363,001 374,235
6,057 17,962

28,338

34,111
88

30

28,344

34,199

311
173

37,233

17,745

16,064

7,496

15,097
6,052

60,793

38,894
1,915

30

....

....

484

...

....

....

....

Grand Total

5,885

8,290

....

5,797

....

952

754

2,803

2,669

3,694 460,998 4o6,959

Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the
id since Sent. 1

week

:
Since

This
week.
Bales.

From
New Orleans

.

Sept. 1.

2,230

130,665

South Carolina

North Carolina

1,636

66,771
101,348
26,032

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

prev.
year.

6

...

Spain, etc

to

date.

3,180 369,058 391,197

....

All others

Total

29.

1,851

v

Total to N. Europe..

4,774

July

Same
time

.

50

Bales.

32,262

From

Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.
Per Railfoad

This
Since
week. Sept. 1.
Bales. Bales.
813
106

141
620

61,324
31,122
75,167
120,456

6,864

645,157

*
The receipts given for these ports are only the shipment# from Tennes»a*
Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated.
+ These are tne receint* at all the ports of Florida to July 12, except
Apalachicola, which are only to July 5.
4 Estimated. The stock at New York ig also estimated.

THE CHRONICLE.

146
The

following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬
delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬
tember 1:
Philad’phia.—, ✓-Baltimore.-^

,—Boston.—*
Last

week.

Receipts from—

New Orleans
Texas
Savannah
Mobile
Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

Last
week.

Since

Sep. 1.

5

71,091
16,836
15,168
29,717

.

.

•

Sep. 1.
10,025

.

684

Tennessee, Kentucky, &c...

305

238,805

Total
*

bales

receipts

200

....

....

190

2,687
1,005

....

7,584
2.574

19

31,372

1,154

407

7,010

....

81

9,863
57,150

60

951

8

1,020

660

Virginia

Sep. 1.

....

8.841

....

0,036

Since

....

219

112

New York, Ac*

Last
week.

Since

....

14,017
.

....

....

....

330

269

32.773

week

have

423,578

Reshipments.

t This does

not

include the railroad receipts at

The exports
been as follows

Philadelphia.

of cotton from these cities this
Worcester

.

34
1

S

......

...

bale s

7

ven
•e
-

above the vessels in

week

.lie

were

made from

information with

same

European
kets

Total bales

-

per

ships Theobold 2,660

—

to meet the

6 521
773

1,985
2,823

Despejada 183

Total exports

this week from Southern ports
The Growing Croi\—The accounts this week
from most districts

favorable, while fiom

401

12,503
as

to the crop are

they are less
however, evidently fallen
throughout a large portion of the South, and it has been followed in
some
places, as is claimed, by the appearance of the worm. Still full
reliance cannot, of course, be placed on unfavor aide rumors. At this
season of the
year we must expect to hear the usual summer com¬
plaints. In our opinion, however, there is just at present more to fear
from the ill effects of politics on labor than from the worm ; but if all
goes well from this time, we expect a fair yield. Below we give a few
favorable.

some

Too much rain for cotton has,

extracts from

advices

more

we

our

improvement in the quota¬
notwithstanding that the sales to the trade and
for export have been large, prices are lower than at the close of
last
week.
In American cotton there is no alteration, but Brazilian
has
declined £d., and Egyptian also £d. per lb.
East India produce has
slightly declined in value since Saturday last. The total sales of the
tions.

76,740 bales of which 1,860 bales are on specula¬
tion, 15,660 bales for export; while the trade have purchased to the
extent of 59,220 bales.
Annexed are the prices current of American
date and at

cotton at this

and middling.
18

.
,
c
r
Sea Island....
Stained

Upland

showery, they apprehend the

insect of destruction.

17
11

© 9#

0
0
0

(a) 9#

a more

hopeful feeling.
Alabama.—The Mobile Times of the 26th of July, says :—The crops
fast

recuperating from the losses inflicted by the late fifteen days
looking as
} romising as ever.
The approach of the army worm, which had been
heralded by the arrival of the grass worm, has fortunately been
entirely
foiled by the late hot weather, and the
danger may now be considered
as over.
The Mobile Price Current of the 27th July gives extracts
from letters received from
many parts of the State, all of which agree
that the crop of cotton is looking
extremely well.

rains, and under the powerful influence of a July sun are

Georgia.— The Savannah News and Herald of the 26th of July, says :
—Crop accounts from the upland district of our scGtion are very favo¬
rable, and the dread of damage by too much rain has died away, driven
out by
the cheering prospect before the planter. The sea islands and

seaboard counties of this State, South Carolina and Florida, have suffer¬
ed severely by the rains of the last six weeks, and Irorn
which, we
regret to say. the accounts grow worse daily.
South Carolina.—The Charleston News of the 26th of
“

Our exchanges
in a few sections

July says :
us cheering news from the crops, and it is only
that any fears are entertained by tlie planters.
In
growing crops on the bottom lands have in some in¬
bring

Spartanburg the
stances been destroyed, but

large portion of this has been planted
good, not only for corn, but for cotton and

of low land in that

Our advices with

favorable.

Texas




and

locality.”
regard to the Upland sections of the State

are

all

12#

....
..

are

made of heavy

Mid. Fair C^a
v>7
rd!r-Loort

13

*

ts

..

12#

line.
64

52

f:

^

..

10,/

h#

..

..

.

of

cotton at this date since 1864
1864. 1865. 1800. 1867.
d.
d.
d.
d.
27
34
18
41

Middling—
Sea Island..

Upland

..

3:#
31#
31#

..

Mobile
Orleans

...

.

.

13#

19#

14

14#

20

1804.
d.
Pernambuco. 80

GO
d.
18

Broach......
Dliollerah...

11
11

Middling—

.

10#
10#
10#

.

.

19

19#

lsGG, 1867.
d.

a,

16# 10#
7
W
7
6#

'

Subjoined is a statement showing the stocks of cotton in London and
Liverpool, including the supplies of American and Indian produce afloat
to those ports:
1366.
Stock at

Liverpool

Bales

“

London
American cotton afloat..
Indian
“

Total

.

70.385
35,000
700,000

.

•

1867.
729,810

934,100

.

:

82,802
40.1 XX)

688,580

1,739,485

1,541,192

The

following are the particulars of sales and imports for the week
and year, and also of stocks on the eveuiug of Thursday last,
compared
with the corresponding period last year:
SALKS, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
St!lies this week
Total
Same
Ex- Specula
this
period
Trade. port.
tion. Total. vear.
1866.
,

30,350

7,500

,

5,660

10

Total

370

IS,770

West Indian..

100

1,000

.

.

6,090
#830

1,590

.

lu

59,220 15,660

.

1,620
....

....

«...

210
....

1,860

Avon

,

.

Brazilian

38,660

weekly
1867.

829,480 763,430
186,340 232,150

10,330
1,690

113,120

1,370

57.760

24,670
*20

127.130

54,260
612,200 698,200
3,370

1S66.

21,160 18,500
4,730 5,850
3,550 3,010
1,540
l,t!)0
18,060 15, 00

2,570

20

44,060

76,740 1,832,2701,873,010

30

45,440
1

This
week.

•

American
Brazilian

31,179

.

9.106
52
251

.

Egyptian

West Indian
East Indian
China and Japan

11,787

.

.

To this To this
date
date
1807.
1866.

Total.
1806.

903,816 931,128 1,156,130
291,899 300,235
404,865
141,801 133,753
200,083
90 274
69,919
62,141
424,669 833,987 1.544,675
891
4,795
12,993

55,378 1,926,061 2,266,014

3,109,020

Same
date
181*6.

This
day.

383,490
151,610

418,610
1 OS,580

Dec. 31,*
1866.

105,6*10
1,830

333,520
6,600

107,270
41,760
23,180
11,620
270,100
2,840

729,810

934,100

516,770

56,530
30,750

4

',120
24,070

London, July 20*—A very moderate business has beeu transacted in
prices are rather lower than at the close of last week. The
subjoined particulars relate to East India, China and Japan cotton:
cotton, and

1865.

Imports, Jan. 1 to July IS

Bales.

1866.

1807.

198,577
163.063

198,091
89,019

63,196

Stocks, July 18...:

128,08-i
168,598

Deliveries

70,385

82/02

July 6.—The trade is quiet but the better descriptions
of cotton are held at full prices, (food middling is
quoted at 1 Bid.fair to -fully fair 15d. to lojd., good fair do. 16|d. to 16Ad.
per lb.
Aunexed is the statement of exports since November 1 :
Alexandria,

Great Britain.
bales.

.
.

From June 25 to July 3, 1867

450

Previously from 1st November, 1866
Total
Same period last season
Do.
1864-65:

Continent.

Total.

bales.
501

bales.
953

155,0 4

32,105

155,504

32,608

1SS.112

130,515
212,168

27.792

158,307

187,159

' 42,178
253, (ill)
Bombay, July 9.—The exports during the fortnight have been 65,000

bales.

TOBACCO.
Friday, P. M., August 2, 1867.

The

exports of crude tobacco il 1 is week from all the ports
are less than last week,
though still large, the total shipments
1,015 cases 1,303 hales, against 6,183
leaching 5,624- birds.,
*

Mississippi.—Continued complaints

36
17

16

,

‘f/4
10#
”
]4)/
13#
"
©If# 10#
13#
7
14,"[
following statement shows tlie price of middling qualities

Mobile
New Orleans.
Texas

a

again, and the prospects are
products. The rains have been felt more severely in the Pee
Dee country than in any other section, on account of the
large quantity

other

10#
10#/

1866.--

Good and

good fair.
*24

20
14

12

9

Total

by telegraph report better weather and

:
^

Lair and

The accounts from the country, on the whole,

discouraging than we have before noticed. The South Wtstof the 17th of July says: Last Saturday a
gentleman, who is eul
tivatiug a plantation a short distance below this place, brought into our
office a cotton stalk perfectly full of embryo caterpillars.
He thinks
that in a few days he will not have a green stalk in a field of 260
acres.
We have heard of another plante * on the river who has con
eluded to suspend all work on his cotton, owing to the presence of this

are

period in 1866
1867.

are more

Our later advices

same

r

have received:

disastrous results.

no

On the contrary,

exchanges, which will indicate the tenor of all the

New Orleans. —The New Orleans Price Current of the 27th of Ju
y
says,: The weather is still warm and showery, but with less rain than
last week. The hope of the planters is that the recent rains will be
succeeded by a dry, hot spell, which would destroy the worms and en¬
able the laborers, inefficient as they are, to clean out the
If, 01
grass.
the coutrary, the weather should continue
most

market, and hence there is

Belgravia

..

To Havre per schooner W. L. Burroughs 775
To St. Petersburg, per bark Frank .Ylarion 1,985
From Mobile—To Liverpool per ship Bazaar 2,823
From Charleston—To Barcelona per hiig Solida 218 ...

Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to
these mar¬

correspondent in London, writes as follows : *
Liverpool, July 16.—During the earlier days of the week the cotton
trade was much depressed, and a further decline took
place in the
quotations. At the close, however, there is decidedly more steadiness
in the market, but at the same time holders of produce manifest a
desire

The

regard to the Southern ports :
3,801.

In the high laodt*

our

1

Exported this week from—
New Orleans—To Liverpool,

and

Ordinary

making the total exports for the week 35 bales.
*

throughout Texas and portions of Mississippi.

however, crops are progressing favorably.

week amount to

:—

From Baltimore—To Liverpool, per steamship
From Boston —To British N. A. Colonies..

rains

[August 3,1867.

For latest news respecting the
Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph des¬
patches at the close of our London letter in a previous part oi this paper.—[$*•
CoitfiERCiAL & Financial Chbonicwb.

August 3,
bbds.,
*ments
o468

2,211 cases, and 1,25V bales last week.
for the present week 1,415 hhds. were to
blids. to Germany,

week’s shipments
port3.

New

1,224

....

1,084

York

Baltimore

971
30
14

79

^--Sterns
,
hhds. bales.

Tcs.

3,623

Export’d'his week ii

16

Boston
:
jiew Orleans

301

Man’f.

Pkgs.

“

“

lbs,

•

•

•

© 3

.

MANUFACTURED.

Black

work—com., tax paid. 25

@30c

Fine, tax paid. 80 @1 25
work,medium, in bond 10 @15c
gi-od
16 @28c
tine

Black

60

@55c
@70c

25
45

©40 c
@75c

Bright work, medium,.. “
good & fine 41

good

“

40

tine

44

Bright work—common 44
good
44

FOREIGN.

Havana.—Fillers—Common.

60@

are

the

Yara

70
85
90@1 05

6,171

59
112

....
....

330

55@1 05

.....

Y'ara, average lots

60<£

1.

( STATEMENT OF THE STOCKS OF SPANISH TOBACCO, AUGUST
Havana, Cuba, Yara,
bales.

bales.

22,851

142

449,603
35,293

889

SO

give our usual table showing the total exports
0f Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their
direction, since November 1, 1800:

\

New York.

at

...

102

....

...

70

monthly statements of the stocks of tobacco
Cien’s

-

....

1,015 1,?03
2,211 1,257
678
1,268

1 20@2 00

Havana.—Wrappers

75@

Good
Fine

44

102

....

....

5,624
6,183

15 @40c
50 @85c

!

Total

11,160
4,023

-

..

206

44

44

!

OF

IN

STOCKS

HOUSE,

170

....

....

YORK TOBACCO INSPECTION WARE¬

NEW

THE

206
279

iio

7,547

1865

STATEMENT

75

....

7,187

..

281

....

we

bales.

bales.
75

....

Total this week —
Total last week ...
Total previous wee

’

4#@ 10
10 @30

44

Philadelphia

Below

@17
@30

.

44

59
•

....

Wrappers

Pennsylvania and Ohio Fillers
“
Average lots
“
Wrappers

22,851

’

..

..

Crop.
5>s@ 6#
12 @20
15 @40
4 @ 4#
7 @15
10 @25
@ 3*
7 @14
10 @25

@10c.
@40
@65
5

Below

rihds. Case. Bales.

New

Crop.

7
25
45
S
15

Fine wrappers...

from all the ports :
or

The

Old

1,354 hhds. to Italy, 255 hhds. to

and the balance to other ports.

(BOXES).

SEED LEAF

Of the ship
Great Britain,

The stocks the past
month have not very materially increased, for although the
receipts have continued liberal, the exports have been on an
extremely large scale. On the 1st August, the stocks at New
York, Baltimore and New Orleans amounted to 51,501 hhds.,
gainst 55,682 hhds. the 1st of July, 43,105 hhds. the 1st of
June, 34,307 hhds. the 1st of May, and 33,305 hhds. the 1st
of April. The following table gives the particulars of the
France,

147

THE CHRONICLE.

1867.]

1.

AUGUST

Md., Total
llluls. Hhds. Hhds.
25
43
21,923

Ohio,
F.Ki)ort* of
v

Tobacco from the United States since Noveniber 1, IS66.
Cer’s &.—Stems—, Pkgs. Manfd,
Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. bales. & bxs.
lbs.
57
1,203,309

Hhds.

To
Great Britain

11,646 2,414
412
....
36,011 28,500

Sweden
Germany

5,383

21
<•>

1 hr,34

Italy
France....,

China, India, &c.
Australia &c..
B. N. Am. Prov
South America

35

2,58.7
4,605

100
1,013

802

2,626’163
217,615
401,125

702
584

1,055
372

East Indies

615,588

.

626 4,170

85111,500

30,566
29,705

Total stock
Same time, 1866
44
1865

35,o83

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

above

following table indicates the ports
exports have been shipped :

G,413,355

from which" the

Lbs.
hhds. his. pkgs. manfd.
854 4,868 6,055.781
357 2,151
12
2 2,028
261,916

Tcs.»fc^—Stems—v Bxs. &

Hhds. Cases. Bales.

From

34,895 14,590

New York
Baltimore
Boston
Port land
New Orleans

.

..41,558
1,132

...

82

3,447 2,616
14

20
...

6,562

San Francisco

»

Virginia

'•

...

.

.

461

Total since Nov. 1. ..100,771

263
47

31

45

268
29

...

38,70617,561

The market this week has been

45

...

5,432

...

...

...

...

...

4,516

530

...

91,112
222
626

...

4,179

290
467

...

...

854

11,599 6,413,355

decided
in these grades, but they brought very full quotations. The
finer grades are held mostly out of the market.
Seed leaf
shows
large falling off in business, the better grades
being held back.
There has been some specu¬
lation in goods in the growing districts, and a general holding
back and withdrawing from the market, in anticipation of
higher prices. We have only to note sales of 30 cases Con¬
necticut fillers at 44c.; 28 cases Connecticut, 11c., 90 do, 8@
10c., 190 do, private terms, 41 do., lVc., 02 cases old Ohio,
7c. In foreign tobacco the business has been restricted to 127
bales Havana on private terms. Manufactured tobacco is
very firm, especially new work. The demand is moderate
for local consumption and to fill export orders, and the trans¬
has not been

very

a

actions of the week amount to

Virginia
Baltimore
New Orleans

.

Ohio, &c
Other

pkgs.

hhds.

2.361

412

46,219

28,319

3,515
2,562
49,212

129

871

129

871

63,214

122,198

....

about 950 boxes.

Total

117,560

59,825

4,638

3,389

.

FROM NEW

OF TOBACCO

EXPORTS

We have

QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY.

Heavy.

LEAF

Common Lugs.. 4M@ 5 c.
@ ..
hood Lugs
6 @ 7
5E£@
Common Leaf... 67#
7^@ 8#

Hedmm

do

...

8

@10




12

(HHDS.).

Good Leaf
Fine do

Selections

Heavy.
1‘2^@16
13#@14>f 17 @19
15^@16*f SO @21
Light.
10#©13c.

York

London
Bremen

624
942

'

Hamburg
Leghorn

42
1,013

.

Gibraltar
British N. A. Colonies
Cuba
Other W. Indies
Br. Guiana
New Granada
Brazil

259

871

1.954

94

3,595
7,970

1,224

22,851

2

3,623

week

971

European ports are made up from

exports in this table to

The

lbs.

9,332

25
2

Total export for the
fests, verified and

626
316

311
87

Genoa

*

Cases. Bales,

545

Liverpool

corrected by an inspection of the cargo.

From Baltimore- To Liverpool 200
hhds leaf and 59 hhds. stems.
From Boston—To Gibraltar 40 half

hhds leaf and 30 cases... .To

bales

mani¬

week, from the other

exports for the
ports, have been as follows :
The direction of the

To Africa 15 hhds

Bremen, 1,484

To Fortune

.To St. Pierre Miguelon, 10 cases, 3 bales and 25 boxes
Hayti, 56 bales. ...To British N. A. Provinces 1 lihd., 4 cases and

Island, 6 boxes.
i o

71 boxes.
From Philadelphia—1To Santiago de Cuba, 3,350 lbs.
From New Orleans- To Marseilles265 hhds... .To

of manufactured.
Liverpool 46 hhds.
Virginia.— At Richmond the market continues tirm. Sales for the
week, 650 hhds, closing a little heavy, particularly for low grades. All
sun-cured fillers and wrappers command full rates. The following
.

<

3

•

•

UlCUlUlU

KENTUCKY

412

28,S69

YORK.*

Hhds.

.

T

luaij

y

:

-

kinds of tobacco.

Light.

4,448
'

the exports of tobacco from New

The following are
for the past week :

thoroughly revised and mainly advanced our quotations for all

n

87,598

7,796

84,147
3,811'

7,643
3,473

M

T’l sin. Nov 1—*
hhds.
pkgs.

Previously—,

•

•

1. 1866.

NOVEMBER

Manuf.

generally less active, owing

The improvement

SINCE

.

mainly to, the advanced views of holders. The demand for
Kentucky leaf has been good, but factors having shown a dis¬
position to advance prices, business has been restricted to
about 600 hhds., mainly lugs and low leaf, for export to the
Mediterranean.

YORK

and since

erns.

...

...

21

Philadelphia

...

NEW

This week—,
hhds.
pkgs.
153
3,451
637
42
201
550
2,993

From

The

i ‘I

5,372

Brooklyn Inspection Warehouse, August 1, 1867.

Nov. 1,

100,774 38,766 17,561

25,194

7,335
1,963

Total
Delivered since
Stock in

25

43

919

34,337
6,143

....

•

' 2,443

'.

RECEIPTS

T’l since Nov. 1

•

4,892 hhds.

Brooklyn inspection—Stock July 1,1867
Received since

25

43

24,507

August 1, 1867

12,414

....

33,596
9.089

Total

Stock

49

12,365

Delivered since

The

41
160

2

Mexico...—
Honolulu, &c
All others

1131646

72,605

21,231

Stock July 1, 1867
Received since

616.018

600
274

305
1,607
632

533
104

West Indies

570
51

61

1,474

Africa, &c

17,276
46,411
18,215

1,280

1,066
14

....

576

HO

7,544

Spain,Gibralt.&c
Mediterranean
Austria

27*2*944

851

40,736

764

KVfdO
8,417

Belgium
Holland

20

3,526

Hhds.
624

Hhds.

O

I

Ot "

^

x

bright, $16(3)22 50 ; me¬
firm at full prices for all desir¬
able grades. Good shipping and manufacturing leaf is in demand, and
may safely recommend to planters to ship their tobacco, as tfoe mar¬
ket is active and firm. Fancy wrappers aiso sell welh The market the
fine shipping (English) $16@2' @26 ; common
dium bright, $26@35: fine, $50(3)75.
At Petersburgh the tobacco market is
we

?,

d

148

THE CHRONICLE.

past week has been active with heavy breaks, sales to the amount of
about 400 bhds. htve been made at full prices for all desirable grades.
The receipts are comparatively light. We quote the market firm at the
close as follows ; Lugs, common #4 60 to $5 50 per 100 lbs., fair $6
to $7, good shipping $7 50 to #9 50, good working $8 50 to $10. Leaf
common $8 50 to $10, medium $12 to $18,
good working $15 to $18,
fine $17 to $20, good shipping $16 to $18, fine $18 to $25. Receipts
this week 291 hhds ; last week 256 hhds ; total since Oct. 1, 6,500 lihds.
At Baltimore, receipts of both Maryland and Ohio have fallen
off materially the past week.
The demand for Maryland is good,
but sales restricted on account of the limited offerings. We report 800
@400 hhds. sold, and prices unchanged. For Ohio descriptions the de¬
mand has been more active ; the sales foot up since our last review,
1,850 hhds., of which 672 were taken for France, and the residue for
Germany ; prices rule steady. In Kentucky leaf there is nothing doing
worthy of special remark. Inspections for the week, 495 hogsheads
Maryland (83 reinspected). 930 Ohio, (114 reinspected), 3u Virginia—
total 1428 hhds.

Bremen

;

Cleared

200 hhds., 30

time, 1,484 hhds. leaf, 59 do stems to
to Liverpool. Quotations unchanged.

same

cases

Stock in warehouses 1st. January 18(57, together with 1.950 hhds ou ship¬
board not Cleared
Inspected this week
previously.

19,595
1,428

“

35,873
5(5,89(5
29,301

59,038

.

35,239

—u«s and on
shipboard not cleared
21.657
Orleans.—The market opened more active, but towards the
close of the week was cbaiacterized by less animation. Offerings have
been restricted, and as extreme views have
prevailed between buyers
and sellers only a limited business was done.
The rapid depletion of
the stock caused factors to hold at very full prices. The sales for the
week comprised 163 hhds.
We quote the market very firm. Receipts
for the week, 661 hhds.
Exports for the week: To New York 201,
Marseilles 265, and to Liverpool 46—total, 512 hhds.
Stock on hand
and on shipboard, 4,740 hhds.

[August 3,1867.

The movement in breadstuff's at this market baa
been
RECEIPTS

Flour, bbls..
Corn meal, bols

Rve bush
Bariev &c. busn.....
Oats, bush ’
EXPORTS

18,(595

There has been

fair

1,023,920

NEW

Flour,

To
€it. Hrit week....
since Jan. 1

5,(515
22,242

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

6,389
08,592

Wc*-t ■»»«!. week.
since Jan. 1..

1,392
133,93(5

C.

bbls.

s-uue time, Ison. 577,032
Since Jail, ljlrom
Boston
91,751

FOR

•

•

THE

meal, Wheat,
bbls.
.

bush.

0,75(5
75,712

.

25

1,111,7(50
9,009,355
302,990

180,125

6,620

143,015

„

455.885

2,900,495

WEEK AND SINCE
JAN.

Rye,

Earley. Oats,
bush.

bush.

0,515

Corn.

bush.

8,957
844,495

1.

85,111

250

19,836

....

....

4,ooo

t;;a

1>‘50

...

46,(549

290

68,508

1,205

775

0,75(5

TotHlexp’t, week

14,(50(5
since Jan. 1, 18(57 282.452

YORK

1,278,825

104,210
677,630
19,070

90,5*0
347,930

163,000

FROM

W*’815
3.550

1,158,880
5,901,385

10,(5(55

—lSfiA-

*

823,(530

2,150
6O/H0
73«>,3(55

Wheat, bush
Corn, hush

FOREIGN

,

82,280

follows:

as

YORK.

,

94,035
82,827

03

.

8,957

....

100,027 13(5,-87
147,215 199,200

13,700

500

Philadelphia

18.(1-47

l(i,<'54

Baltimore

50,2(Hi

S69,183

8J302

32,089

2,758

....

7tii?
5,185’4^3
824,1907,
6483

126,314

258.018
5,398
4,7(53 673,844
„

1,911 696,162

Eastward Movement of Grain bv Canal.—The
following statement
will show about the amount of graiu on canals destined for
tide
water-

Wheat,

Corn,

Oats,

bush.

bush.

bush.

14,110

1,208.740

10,989

255,804

Total
Previous week.......

31,099
50.420

Oorresp’di’g week’66.

80,374

1,464,544
1,709,409
1,901,132

Barley,

254,740

Buffalo, 14 days......
Oswego, 9 days

Weekly Receipts
at the

bush

9,580

Rye.
bush.
4,405

....

254,740

9,580

347,055
951,546

10,600
28,470

4,465
25,216

99,050

Lake Ports.—The

following shows the receipts
following lake ports for the week ending July 27 :
V

Chicago

Friday, August 2, 1867, P. M.

NEW

1S07
For week. b’cJan.l.

(New

BREADSTUFFS.

AT

Milwaukee
Toledo
Detroit
Cleveland

at

...

...

...

Flour.
bbls.
14.258
3.373
7.174

3,015

Wheat.

Corn.
bush.

bush.
02,155

879,826

0(i,2S8
(58,387

13,099
55,582

2,187

Oats.
bush.
51.120
4,782
2,237
1,7:3(5
17,000

.’358

Barley.
hush.
1,100

Rye.

bush.

15,187

1,586

degree of activity in Flour and Wheat,
70,000
2,800
20,000
price? tending downward.
Totals
30,020
2(59,017
974,905
76,875
2,056 17,123
Previous week
Flour has been so very irregular as to be
9 ,512
3,323
8,400
extremely difficult Corresponding week, ’0(5 25,(580 237.541 1,158,577 319,411
43.3(50
140,441
9*51,429
1,745 29,514
to quote.
Since Jan. 1, 1807
...1,382,14(5 5,101,2801 7,482,080 3,541,958
536,794 521,239
The inferior and low grades of State and Western Same
time, 180(5
1,808,79010,191,10822,171,803 7,070,772 5*0,118 1,092,059
have been taken so freely for export that these qualities have
Liverpool, July 19.—We have had nearly a week of heavy rain and
been nearly cleared off the market.
The better grades of ex¬ winds which have laid the grain crops in many instances, hut done no
"further damage, and otherwise have been beneficial. The
tra State have also felt an
markets,
export demand, and are now in
however, are very sensitive at this critical season, and'have
generally
reduced stock, and all sound Western flours are scarce and advanced. France and
Belgium have competed with English buyers
wanted. But of Southern flours, and city brands from new lor cargoes on passage. On Tuesday we had a brisk advance of 8d.(7/)
-4d. per cental on wheat, and Is. per sack ou flour. Indian corn on the
wheat there is a surfeit, and prices have
given way materially contrary was dull and rather easier. To-day holders tried to establish
a further advance, but
were disappointed in the result.
Wheat and
being decidedly lower and unsettled to-day.
flour both sold very slowly where more
money was insisted upoD.
Wheat shows a decline for new, while old of all
grades has Indian corn too was not active, and anytning over 36s. was obtained
remained steady. We are now receiving some new Red Win¬ with great difficulty.
farmers’ deliveries.
ter Wheat from Ohio and
Michigan, the quality of which is Week
ending July
25,502 qrs. at 64s. M.
superb, selling at $2 40@2 50. Amber Southern was taken Same time 1800 13, 1S07...
“
80,932
55s. lOd.
imports.
yesterday for export to London at $2 35, and during the week
several boat loads of inferiorSpring have been taken for
W heat,
Flour
I. Corn,
Liverpool
bbls.
sacks.
qrs.
qrs.
at $1 60@$1 65. White California maintains its
at $2 65 United States and Canada
p
2
8,700
(5,000
24,061
France, Spain and Portugal
.]
2,273
@2 75. The crop of Winter Wheat has all been secured in North
7:38
Europe
104
Mediterranean and Black Sea...
good condition. The Red Wheat is superior in quality and
50
812
8,951
32.242
the yield large, but the white is much shrunken and other¬ Other places
wise deficient in quality and quantity.
52
43,600
9,189
33,002
The weather continues Total for week....
Total since 1st January...
..62(5.164
22,424 232,125
537,445
good in the Spring Wheat regions, where harvesting is. now Same time i860
287,(530
59,518 257,234
560,651
about commencing.
Corn has been declining.
An effort to sustain prices by
groceries.
putting a large proportion of the receipts in store, upon which
Friday Night, Aug. 2.
the stock increased from 205,000 to 504,000 bushels, was
only
The grocery trade has bt3en less active this week than was
partially successful. The corn crops in the Southern and
Middle States promise all that can be desired.
In the Eastern generally expected.
The very encouraging prospect of the
States and the more northern of the Western States it is some¬
crops in the country has led to rather higher anticipations of
what backward, but enjoys just now
peculiarly favorable warm trade and speculation in most kinds of goods than seeuis to
and moist weather.
a

...

but with

956

...

...

t

„

/

.

..

r.

.

.

.

.

...

.

.

....

•

•

•

•

..

..

r

Oats have been in better supply, and with small arrivals of
new from the South, the market is weak and unsettled.
Rye
has been dull. Barley is
entirely nominal. Barley malt is
scarce and firm.
The following are closing quotations :
Flour, Superfine..$ bbl. $6 40® 7 (50
Extra State

Shipping R. hoop Ohio.
Extra

WesteroL

mon to

75®10 75
9 50®10 50

7
com¬

good

8 G0®12 25

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
12 50®16 00
Southern supers
Southern, fancy and ex. 11 00®15 50
California
12 25@14 75
Bye Flour, fine and super¬
fine

Corn

meal, Jersey
Brandywine




7

00® 8 75

and
5

35® 6 10

Wheat,
per

Chicago
bushel

Spring

“$1 60®

.

Milwaukee Club
Red Winter
Amber do
White

...

.

Corn, Western Mixed....
Western Yellow
Southern White

Rye,....
...

Barley

Malt

Peas, Canada

8S®
06®
10®
1 30®
77®
90®
1 00®
1
1

Oats, Western cargoes...
Jersey and State

2 05

1 50® 2 15
2 10® 2 40
2 40@ 2 50
2 25® 2 75

1

1
1
1
1

03
10
15
55
83
93

1 20

50® 1 05

1 15® 1 30

-

have been warranted at this time.

very active during the best seasons
and it is no unfavorable thing to

Trade does not become

until about the 10th, inst.
notice a quiet market at
this time. Prices of all kinds of goods are
steadily maintained,
and there is a fair trade for
consumption, but there is less
speculative feeling than for the past two weeks.
The imports during the week have been considerable of
coffee and sugar—small of molasses—and of tea
only 57 pkgs.
Of sugar, the heaviest receipts have been in Cuba boxes—the
total being 11,304 ; the
receipts of boxes at other ports have
also been liberal.
The receipts of Rio coffee amount to 26,528 bags,
making the stock in first handj to-day about 63,000
bags, with the prospect of about 10,000 bags coming to hand

.

149

THE CHRONICLE.

3,1867.]

Angnet

FRUITS.

of Maracaibo and one of Ceylon Lave

Two cargoes

nest week.
also been

received.

quite large, and a further advance is noted. Other kinds have
steady, and the market so closes. Domestic dried fruits are
neglected.

TEA.

very

SPICES.

have ruled firm.
terms.

table of imports is omitted, as it r mains substantially
Advices from Hong Kong are to the 30th of May. The Overland
Trade Report says of Tea : The market at Foochow has not yet
opened, though musters are coming to hand in considerable numbers
and the clippers are on the berth. Reports, however, are sent down,
favorable both to the quality of the finer classes of teas and to the
chances of reasonable rates at the opening of the season.
1 he season
hmalready been opened at Ca ton at a reduct on in rates as compared
with last year, though one hardly sufficient to meet the exi encies of
situation.

has been

Sugar

We

•

fairl 00 @1 I

either raw or refined, and

especially of Cuba boxes. At
The details
11,304.

At—
N. York 11,301

6.388
548
2,004

8
2,069
Stocks July 30,

Portland
Boston.

....

.2,854

307

>

*

boxes.

uuty

-

Baltimore

.

...

..

29,223

16,131 54,9*10

..

10.986

14,r26

9,819

.

Includes barrets

/

.

—v

26, ,195
100,,849

187,283 301,046

and tierces reduced to

4,056

370,274

22,307

....

.

,

*

....

159

,

....

been

hogsheads.

and the large stocks of last week have
At the close, however, trade is rather

foot

quiet, but prices are steady and firm. The sales for the week
up
fully the large volume of 43,454 bags.
the imports of the week have been quite liberal, including 26,528
bags of Rio, and 12,623 of other sorts. The details are as follows : Of
Rio, 4,000 bags per “ Psyche,” 5,000 per “ Neseatoa,” 4,669 per “ Hulda,”3,801 per “ Wanderer,’” 5,021 per “Alexandria,” and 4,037 per
"Dolphin.” Of other sorts, 7,418 bags were Maraicabo, 4,110 bags
Ceylon, 410 bans bags Hayti, and 685 bags of sundries.
The imports since January 1, anil stock iu first hands July 33, are
as

follows:
OP RIO

Import.
Baltimore
New Orleans
Galveston
Mobile

At New York, At Dost.

83,709

import,. Stock. Import.

Java,
bags*45.492'
9,110
22,000 Ceylon
“
9,110
11 20,902
Singapore,.
“ 28,614
Maracaibo,
Laguayra
“ 23,660
{ St. Domingo,“ 20,630
Other,
“ 17,023
5.000

130,397
55,882
3,200

“
u
“

Savannah

Stock.

403,543
10,730

York, bags
Philadelphia “
New

11

5,000
2,500

“

611,252

Total

' 83,709

SCDomingo.

©

..

..

Sugar.
: on raw or

.

...

..

..

..

..

MoliiNses.

Duty; Scents $

gallon.

gall.

New Orleans
Porto Rico

©

.

do

.

6

5( i ©
46 ©

Cuba Muscovado

46 ©

Clayed...,*,

B.irbad..trt,,

•

54

....

48

© 58

i6

Duty: inaco, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia
pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents 79 lb.
Cassia, in mats goidqwib
4* © .... | Pepper,
Ginger, race and Al(gold)
11© 114 Pimento,
Mace

(gold)

(gold)

7,930

4,110

645

1 Cloves

86 ©

Currants
Citron, Leghorn

Prunes,

and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds,
2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1|, Filberts and
50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25

.$ 4cask
©
q9 box 4 10 ©4 15
9 75 © ..
$ lb
11]© 11*

1 ©

21 © 22

Turkish

11 © J 2
41 © 42
28 © 2)

Almonds, Languedoc
do
Provence

Sicily, Soft Shell
Shelled..

39 box

Sardines..
do

27

Currants, Figs, Plums

1 )at.es

do
do

21|

21 ©
19©
$64©

Fruit.

Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates,
Walnuts, 3 cents
1b ; Sardines,
39 cent ad val.
Raisins, Seedless.
do Layer
do Hunch

(gold)
(gold)

Jamaica.(gold)

S74 I

r

Duty: Raisins,

and cloves. 20; pepper and

$ hi. box

21 © 234
35 © 3o
..

©

$qr.box
$ 1b

Sardines
Figs, Smyrna
Brazil Nuts..

Filberts, Sicily

a

Walnuts,
Dried Fruit—

.<{9 ft*

Apples
Blackberries

18*©
15 © 2i
8$© 10
12 © 13

© U

4

@

7

16 © :s

© 50

Raspberries

35 © 4 )

Pared Peaches

Unpeeled do
Cherries, pitted, new...

7i© ®

40

© 45

291© 31

1*454
9,599

THE DRY

875

5,288

H 1,406
39,386

GOODS TRADE.
I riday, P.

8,927

6,426

164,191 25,274

Total

I

87*©

Nutmegs, No.l....

OTHER SORTS.

COFFEE.

....

SpiccH.
57,768

been more active,

considerably reduced.

gold 24 © 27
184a V 0
174© IS*
17 © 18

....

COFFEE.
Coffee has

...

brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white
or clayed, above No. 12 an d not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 34
above 15 a*
not over 20, 4 ; on relined,5 ; and on Melado, 24 cents ^ ft).
do 13 to 15 12|© 13
do
fi>
4 © 144
Porto liico
do 16 to IS 144© 14
do
101©
Cuba, Inf. to coin, refining
do 19 to 20 154© 15
do
1 j. ; 611 j
do fair to good
do
white
do
14}© 16
i2 © 124
do fair to good grocery
© 17
124© 13 .Loaf
do
pr. to choice
do
© 16
Granulated
H<4© i3
do centrifugal
@ 16
Crushed and powdered
'» ©
’•»
do
Melado
HI© 16
White collee, A
Httv’o, Box. D. S Nos. 7 to 9 11 © 11.}
15 © 15 £
Yellow collee
do
do
do 10 to 12 114© 121
Duty

57,609

5,200

10,937

69,228

13,051

35,430
62,810
35,564

20,738
1,118

Orleans do

>—

219,813
5,720

7 910

as,524

bags, bags.ifcc

93.156

•

31,872
1,383
6,207

.117,1)94 187,941
4,337
1,694

..

do
do
do

Philadelphia

•

2,854

1

Imports since Jan.
Portland
do
Boston

•

uaguayra

.

follows : :Manila.
Brazil,

75,698

■

77,3 7

.

.

gold '4 © MJ
.gold 15 © 17

hags

Native Ceylon
Maracaibo

....

♦hhds.

.

gold 17 © 1TA
gold 15$.© 16

...

Total

For’gn,
1111 < i h
♦hhds.

Cuba.

S

paid ...gold 18$© 19

do good
do fair
do ordinary
do fair to g. cargoes

3}* 5
125

1,8 U

.,

New Orleans..

At-

♦

1,237

..

148
and imports since January 1, are as
Ollier

N,York stock.

New

Philad‘1..
Hait i more

,

OaiUU

Rio, prime, duty

Other
hhds.

Cuba
,
hints.

,

80

©

equalized vessels from the place
side the Cape
the growth of countiies this vessels, 5 centa
American equalized

all the ports

boxes,

At—

Ex

65

Coflee,

New York alone as follows : of boxes
for the week are the import

Other Manila
hints, bags.
790

Cuba
,
boxes, hints.
,—

6o © 7

75 ©

85

26 @1 6)

9» ©i os
f. to hnestl 25 ©1 55

Sup’rtohne.

do
do

55 @1 8

Duty: When imported direct in American or
of its growth or production; also,
of Good Hope when imported indirectly in
or
all other 10
cent ad valorem in addition.
lava, mats an 1

.

amounts to

25 @1 4

Tw’kay, C, to fair.
do Sup. to hue

Ex f. to hnestl 10 @1 20
70 © so

do

Oolong, Common to fair....
do
Superior to hne...
do
Ex hne to hnest ..l
Souc. & Cong., Com. to fair

Ex hne to ftnest.l 40 ©l ^

do

unp. & Imp., Com. to
do
Sup. to line.1
do do Ex. f. to hnest. 1
do

show a decided increase at most

—Duty paid—,
85 © 90
Uncol. Japan, Com.to fair. 81) © 90
do
Sup’rtohne. 90 ©I 05
do Ex f. to fin’st

do

.

H. Sk. &.

imports of sugar

;
Tea.

principally from the trade, and there is little of interest
of change or expectations to notice in relation to the trade this week.
The general remarks at the head of this article seem to apply more
particularly to sugar. The sales amount to 2,900 hhhds. and 1,400
The

ruling quotations

lb.
r-Duty pa:d.
Ilyson, Common to fair ... 90
o
do
Superior to line.... 1 HI ©l 3
do
Ex line to finest. .1 35 ©l 5
Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... 7 ©1 i
di>
Super, to hne. .1 l'> ©1 3

the demand is

boxes.

annex

Duty: 25 cents per

SUGAR.

only moderately active for

fairly active, and with rather light offerings prices
We notice a sale of 8,000 mats Cassia on favorable

Spices continue

pool, Our usual
unchanged.

the present

is

remained

quiet during the past week, with only a fair trade
in lines. Holders of cargoes are very firm in their views, and there is
Dodoubt of aD increased business soon. The sales for the week are
5000 half chests Japans and 900 do greens.
The imports of the week have been only 57 packages from Liver¬
'I’gA bus been

especially the busi¬

good demand, and for raisins

Feuits continue in
ness

TI ie

Dry Goods market presents many

M., August 2, 1867.

features of interest

improvement compared with last week. The anticipation
opening of fall trade with the beginning of this month
MOLASSES.
has caused considerable activity on the part of Jobbing bouses
Molasses has also been less active, although there is a fair demand
in this and other cities in stocking up in preparation for it, and
prevailing for both low and high grades. The sales foot up 2,500 hhds*
considerable sales of goods have been made by agents here to go
of all kinds.
The higher price of cotton has also stimu¬
The week’s import is small, being about equal to that of the previ¬ to the large cities.
ous week, the details are as follows :
lated the activity, but there has been no speculative feeling
Forto
Porto
Cuba. Rico. Other. exhibited.
At—
The business is in preparation for a legitimate
At—
Cuba. Rico. Other.
478
New York....hhds.
825
50
478 Philadelphia, .hhds.
Baltimore...
Portland
consumptive demand. With the present small 9tock of cot¬
25
33
Bouton
897
2 New Orleans
379
ton in the country the operators are able to advance prices
Stocks, July 30, and imports since January 1 are as follows:
N.O.
Total,
*

Includes

pockets reduced to

bags.

and

of the

...

Cuba.

*hhds.

At

New York, stock
N.Y imp’ts since Jan.

Portland

Boston,

Philadelphia
Baltimore

“

“
“

“
“

“

“
“

New Orleare11
Total
*

13,700

1.68,982

“ 34,268
“ 50,339

“ 43,300

“ 10,337
“ 30,477

237,703

,—P. Rico-r-Oth. Fo’gn.—,

3,840
16,583

22,741
479

99

3,314

1,255
847
175

22,273

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to




♦hhds.
1,600

♦hhds.

,

4,336
1,360

1,911
....

30,767

hogsheads.

hhds.

bbls.

19,140
108,306
34,846
57,989
45,855
13,095
30,652

1,122

290,743

9,212

•

•••

7,106

....

98-1
....

with a considerable spinning demand
time, it is not likely that the price will advance to

somewhat, but even
at this

With the possibility that the coming
crop will reach the estimate of 2,800,000 baless manufacturers
are very careful not to produce large stocks of goods to lie
over upon a market with cotton at 18 or 20c. per lb.
It is
ully comprehended by purchasers that with light stocks
30

cents

per

lb.

Ll'l

150

THE

CHRONICLE.

of

goods, prices may be temporarily advanced, but they antici¬
pate that trade would be checked by it, and a further decline
occur a

few weeks later.

There is

why trade should
not be quite active
during the greater portion of this month.
No anxiety exists,
except, perhaps, the trifling effects created
by speculative rumors intended to induce buyers to lay in
larger stocks of goods. Generally the trade exhibits a very
healthy, satisfactory condition. The exports of Dry Good
and Domestics continue fair. The
following are the details fora
the week, ending JuH7 30, 1867 :
no reason

PROM NEW YORK.

Domestics.

Exports to
Danish W. Indies..
British W. Indies
Havre
Cuba
New Granada
Brazil

pkgs.
5
9

.

Havana
-St. Pierre
Br. Provinces

.

“

We

.

annex a

•

.

.

2.222

few

pkgs.

ca-:es.

•

....

500

•

....

....

"

.

....

.

.

300

....

-

.

1
2

,

7

....

3

352,503

$800

10

3,610
2,198

821.617

5,296
1,774

1678,797

particulars of leading articles of domestic
and

Shirtings have met with

a

liberal de

very

agents have

Roxbury do 16, Indian
ell

R do

164, Kenebeck

Orchard B B 1

do 10b

Pepperell E do 174, Great
Dwight W do 14b Standard
14. Pepper¬
,

16, Laconia E do 14b Laconia B do 16, Laconia O 9-3 16,

Pequot do 21,Saranac E do 204, Indian Orchard A 40 inch 16b do G
do 15b, Utica 5-4 374,
Pepperell 7-4 27b Utica 7-4 42b Pepperell 9-4

86, M( nadnock 10-4 35, Pepperell 10-4 42b Utica do 70, Utica 14-4
75 cents.
Bleached Sheetings

and

Shirtings have also been

in

fairly active

agent’s hands, while jobbers report but lirtie business.
Trices are
essentially changed. Globe 3-4 84, Kingston do 9b Boott R do
11, do H do 12, Globe A 7-8 do 10, Strafford B do 13, Waltham
X do 15, Amoskeag Z do 12b, Great Falls M do 144. do S do
13b (fo A
do 15b Lyman Cambric do 164, Straford M do
14, Hill’s Setup Idem,
do 18, Bartlett 31 inch 15, Newmarket A do
15,doO, do 164, Great
Falls K do 16, Bartletts do 19, James Steam do 18 Indian
River XX
do 13b Attawaugan XX do 154, Lawrence B do
16b, Hope do 17b
Tip Top do 19, Amoskeag A do 20, Boot B do 13b Forestdale do
20, Masonville ’ do 224. Androscoggin L do 224, Lonsdale do 224
Bates XX do 25, Arkwright do 234,
Lyman J do 22, Wamsutta H do
not

30, do O do 30, Atlantic Cambric do 29, Lonsdale Cambric do
314,
New York Mills do 35, Hill do 21,
Amoskeag 42 inch 22b Wall ham
do 20, Dwight 9-8 27b Wamsutta do
35, Lyman R. 6-4 18, Boot
W do 21, Nashua do 26, Bates do
25, Wamsutta do 42b Amoskeag
46 inch 24, Waltham 6-4 26b

Mattawamkeag do 25, Pepperell do

27b Allendale do 274, Utica do 424, Waltham 8-4 33b
Pepperell
do 37b Allendale do 324,
Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Pepperell do 424.
Utica do 65, Allendale do 40, Waltham do
42b, Mnnadnock 10-4 374,
Waltham do 50, Allendale do

50,

Pepperell 11-4 65.
Ticks have met with
extra 40,

but litt’.e

Lawns and Ginghams are dull and nominal at this
time. Pacificlawre
No. 1,400 sell al 20, do do no No.
20, plain black and colors 18 to
25
and Manchester
Chambrays at 24 for B, 264 for C, 31 for D, 334 for
E, and F 38. Lancaster Ginghams 23, Hartford
15, Hampden 19, Glas¬
gow 20, Clyde 12b Berkshire 18, Roanoke 12, Bates
20, Manchester 15. c
Canton Flannels are in

Pepperell do 62b Utica do
business

or

Conestoga C M 32, Amoskeag A C A

change.

70,

Conestoga

32 inch 40, do A 32
inch 32, do B 82 inch 28, do D 30 inch
20, do C 30 inch 24, Pem¬
berton E 18, do A A 30, Brunswick 16, Blackstone River

17, Hamil¬
30, Somerset 1 4b Thorndike 18, Pearl River
37b, Pittsfield 9b,
York 32 inch 40, do 30 inch 29, Cordis A A A 32 inch
32b d‘» 4-4 32b
Everett 21, Boston A A 27b Swift River
174, Eagle 4-4 214, Albany
9b cents.

inactive, but steady. Amoskeag 23£ and 24b, Uncaeville
16b-17b Whittenton BB 3 3 17b, do C 15b Pittsfield do 94,
Hay¬
are

maker 16 and 17, Everett 27 inch 16 and
17,

»

Massabesic 6-3 28b Bos
ton \A\ and 15b Blackstone 3-3
15, American 14 and 16, Eagle 12^ and
13b Hamilton 25, Jewett City 13b aQd 14b, Sheridan G 14.
Checks are without change, and the demand has been
small. Park
Mills Red 174, Lanark 4x2 29 inch
18b Lanark Fur 13b Union 60' 4x2
80, do 50 2x2 30, do 20 4-2 274, do 202-2 27b Caledonia 15 inch
28,
do 11 inch 22, Kennebeck
264, Star No.600 15b do No. 800 2x2 20b,
do No 900 4-2 224.
Denims

are

in fair

Haymaker 28 inch

demand, and prices

are

steady.

Amoskeag 29,

16, do brown 16, York 28 inch 29, Warren brown
27 inch 15, Boston
Mfg. Co. 29 inch 13b Pearl River 29, Chester
Dock 16, Monitor 14, Manchester Co.
19, Columbian XXX 33, Arling¬
ton 18> Blue Hill
12£, Otis BB 25, Mount'’Vernon 264, Pawneellf.
Brown Drills are in demand for
export.

Winthrop 16, A moskeag
18, Laconia 18b, Pepperell 18b, d° fioe jean 19, StaFkA
18, Maasabeaic 16, Woodward duck
bag 26b National bags 81, Stark A do 64b

Liberty do 81.




season

'

and

Silesias

are

in

fair

demand

at

unchanged rates
H 10, Superior 8|
cambrics at
high colors 17b, White Rock 15, Masonville 15b and Indian 164. do
Orchard
Silesias 18, Ward do at 18.

Washington cambrics sell at 114
Pequot lib, Waverly lJb S. S.
Muslin

Delaines

cents, Victory
tfe Sons paper

offered in a great
variety of new and desirable
is only a light demand from any source.
Lowell 22
23, Manchester dark 23, Pacific'dark 23, Arrpures
dark
23, High colors 28, Pacific Merinos 40,
Mourning 23, Shepherd checks
20, Spragues 19, Skirtmgs 30.
are

Woolen Goods are
improving steadily, especially for heavy goods,
although prices are not advanceJ. Quotations can
hardly be given with
any degree of certainty.

Flannels

and Linseys are in some
demand at steady rates.
Westerly
at 29, Park 35 inch 224, do 60 do 37b, do 65 do
42b d<>75 52b,
Miners’ Flannel 424 and 50, Union Cotton and
Wool 20, Black Rock
For Flannels
Bdktiap shirting sell at 50, Washington do 50, R >b Roy,
rolled 6-4 924 to 95, Rob
Roy 3-4 45 o 47 b Cocheco black and white
check 45, Franklin
shirting 45, Caledonia miners 37 4, Pequa, double
fold 45, Bay State,
Opera 55, Gilbert's do 62b Franklin do 624, Mid¬
dlesex do 60.

Linseys sell

26.'

Cottonadrs are in
only light demand. New York Mills d & t 55,
Farmer’s and Mechanics’ Cassimeres 4
5, Pemberton d<bt 424 Great
Western 374, York 22b to
35, Whittenden d&t 474, Everett 25 to 35,
Andover 214.

American Linen is in

steady request, and prices

are

maintained.

Foreign Goods are very
quiet, but with light importations and the
expectations of an early opening of trade there is a
good degree of
confidence manifested. The demand is
very light for all kinds of

goods.

.

.

IMPORTATIONS OF DRV GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW
V0R8,
The

importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending
A.ug.
1, 1867, and the corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866 have been as
follows

:

entered for consumption for

the week

1865,
Pkgs.
Value,
Manufactures of wool...3,017 $1,322,200
do
cotton..1,212
331,073
do
silk...
549
581,718
,

do

,

2,0.>3

$925,377
211,548
870.9.3

334,1.-17
158,558

356
866
609

251,668
190,637

6,242 $2,734,196

Total.....
from

4,518

$1,950,208

406

warehouse

and

THE

Manufactures of wool... 1,042
do

cotton..

do
do

silk
llax

159
85

thrown

the

147
-70

44.858

112.358

$54,023
19.877
10,704

299
8

64,061
6,313

forconsumpt’ii6,242

$731,579
2,734,197

4,548

$123,180
1,950,203

inak’t7,435 $3,468,773

4,862

$2,073,383

....

Total

Total thrown ipon

1,1867.
1867.

,

Pkgs.

Value

511
596
223
556
253

$233,295
IBS,098
248,062

2,139
MARKET

170,465

105,091

$954,011
DUBtHfl

SAME PERIOD.

$506,987
-

into

7
67
23

....

Miscellaneous dry goods,
Add ent’d

,

694

flax1,028

Miscellaneous dry gooas.

withdrawn

ending AUG.

1860.
Pkgs.
Value.

,

ton

Stripes

the

as

17.

disposed of con-iderable styles but there
quotably changed. Standards are Hamilton Co.

quantities of goods. Prices are not
held at 17^@l8c.
The following are prices in jobbers’ hands, *2 per
cent, off for cash:—Atlantic N 3-4 l<»b Indian Orchard L do
12, Union
do 10, Pepperell N do 134. Atlantic V 7-8
14$, Atlantic E do 15,
Pacific E do 15, Tremont E dol 1^, Bedford R do 11, Indian Orchard W
do 13, Massachusetts E do 14,
Pepperell O do 141, Indian Head 4-4 18,
Pacific extra do 17b do H do 17b do Ldo 16, Atlantic H do
17b do A
do 18, do L do 16,Lawrence E do 154. do C do
17b do F do 16, Stark A
do 17,
Amoskeag B do 17, Medford do
Falls Mdo 14b do S do 13b

purple 164, do W dark 18-19, do purple 19, do pink 19,
Sprague’s lsy0
purple 16, do shirting 16b-17b do pink 16, do turkey
red°l5, do blue
check 16, do solid
14b do indigo blue 15b, London
Mourning 141
Simpson Mourning 14b Amoskeag Mourning 18b Dunneli’s
15, &\\}'
pink 16, Gloucester 15, Wamsutta lib, Pacific 15b
Freeman 124
Cocheco 16, Lowell 12b Hamilton
15-154, Home 10b Empire ‘State
9, Lancaster 16, Wauregan light 14, Hovey 8b

Cambrics

:

jobbing houses and

n

-

Prints have been
inquired for more liberally by j >bbing houses a 1
assortments are
generally filled up in anticipation of an early
open!
of business.
Prices are unchanged.
American 15, Amoskeag dark U
do put pie 15, do
shirting 14-14b, do palm leaf 15, Merrimac D
15-151 T

18, Ward

29,617

....

inactive in this market but firm at 9
cents for

improved request

....

2

.

are

cloth.

advances1
Ellerton N brown 81, do O do 29, do P do
25, do S do 21b do T do 25*
Laconia Brown 26, Slaterville do
21, Hamilton do 25, Rockland do 124’
Naumkeag do 22b Nashua A 20, Extra Plush 22b Arlington
17b ’
Corset Jeans are in light
demand at steady 'prices.
Androg.
coggin 124, Bates colored 124, do bleached 12 b Naumkeag 17,
el 19,
Pepper,
Naumkeag satteen 21, Laconia 17b Indian Orchard 154, Rocknort

.

....

....

•

.

•

....

140 $19,145
5,581 79 >,500

Brown Sheetings
mand from

.

.

.

I860.... 62,420

manufacture

*

Domestics

....

....

Total this week.
Since Jan. 1
Same time I860...
“

.

.

Val.

1

2,005
1,880

10
.

.

....

13,996

12

.

BOSTON

....

285
609

4
100

Hamburg

D, Goods
packages.

Val.
$379

-PROM

Print Cloths
64 square

[August 3,1867.

314

20,760
17,all

127
60

$64,687

121
172

10,570
26,145
25,826
8,148

501

$144,376

2,139

954,011

21

2,640

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE
SAME PERIOD.

Manufactures of wool...
do
do
do

cotton..

silk....
flax
....

Miscellaneous dry goods.

474
27
64
193
5

Total
763
Add ent’d for consumpt n 6,242
.

$184,267
9,594
112,703
53,947
4,641

$365,152
2,734,196

,

971
166
140
271
1,453

$412,544

3,001
4,548

$788,527
3,950,203

50,641
198,627

642
173
39

90,793
359,221

160
24

,

1,038
2,139

$28S,347
50,025
37,3-9
40,111

12,304

$428,116
954,011

Total entered at the port 7,COS

$3,099,348
7,549 $2,738,730
3,177
83F” The table of weekly imports usually published on this
page will here
after be omitted, and its
place supplied by a full table of imports lor the three
months, to be published at the end of each quarter.
Our General Prices Current will be
found on page*

157 and 158.

Per contra the

Railroag iltortitor.

®|)c
follows :

,-ead as

1862-63.

(1 ♦(•*!•! !1 I <
Materials
Cash, loans, &c.
J.d. &N. Ind.RR.

$889,082 $1,202,415 $1,771,814 $2,001,3:15 $1,824,226
|?:"n6nasn p. ill. cents...
2:59
2:72
2:09
2:49
2:4\y,
K.Tht
• 1,983,757 2,074,274 2,233.529
2,208,592 2,285,522
K ton P.m.) cents....
1:99
2:00
2:49
2:25
3:00
Passengers

73,121

$Iceliaueoua
TYitnl gross

earnings........ $2,940,500

*.

$3,434,548 $4,145,419 $4,440,490 $4,325,491

1,272,300 1,720,125 2,400,149 2,808,370 2, 20,777

Expenses
wof>‘irnin°'S
"ei

140,070 170,503 215,7.3

98,859

.$1,074,200 $1,714,423 $1,739,270 $1,0:48,114 $1,498,714
50.82 ' 49.92
41.90
36 4
34.05

cent ?

per

varying somewhat from the above
ficrares, exhibits the total revenue and disbursements as in the folgeneral income account,

'The

statement :

lowinsr
°
J

1862-63.

1801-05.

1803-01.

shown

are

:
“~'
171,02(5
224,006
108,225

807,841
108,2.5

054,725
108,225

Jacks’ll, Lans’g <fc
Sag'w bond ac’t

1800 07.

1805-00.

1804-05.

1S03-6L

following

Construction, &c. $13,S05,57G $13,805,570 $13,805,570

^Michigan Central Railroad.—The fiscal year of this company
ends May 3L. The results of operations for the past five years
1

151

THE CHRONICLE.

_,\ugust'3, 1867.]

1805-60. 1806-07.

Land accounts ...
As’ts in olli’s h’ds
Bills & accounts.

*

108,310
38,118

$11,310,423 $14,930,814
209. SS7
288,005
""

75.730

10S.225

S,055
122,030
152.110

125,911
145,737
6S,078

214,173
137,009
39,596

209,414

333,060

75,750
108,225

92,753

$16,017,543
the estab¬

Total
$14,834,955 $15,00(5,822 $14,781,570 $15,188,190
Through Freight Lines.—That success should attend

lines of transportion managed by a central direc¬
tory could never be doubtful. That they have become a success, the
semi-annual circular report of the business and earnings of the
Blue Line,” which commenced business January 1, 1867 proves
beyond cavil. This shows the following facts :
lishment of'great

“

40,050.94 tons.
20,281.20 tons.

Freight moved Rust

West...

“

“

Net
“

$701,004 81

earnings..
“

491,088 44

$312,194 $772,030 $1,002 894 $708,385 $400,803
Total
(50,332.20tons. Total net earnings... $1,192,753 25
2,947,917 3,417,180 4,121,213 4,415,279 4,333,705
The number of miles run was 8,800.856, and the number of tons
Total revenue
3,200,111 4,189,822 5,124,107 5,159,004 4,794,507 carried one mile. (>2.5.‘M,42‘2, at an average rate of 1.92 cents per
From which amounts were disbursed as follows, viz,
ton per mile.
Proportion of freight East, 61.46, and West, 38.54
$1,272,360 $1,720,125 $2,406,149 $2,808,370 $2,820,777
Sinking fulld
84,500
84,500
81,500
84,500 84,500 per cent.
The division of earnings was made as follows :
622.091 643,720 028,081
and exchange....
617,057 000,217
S dividends—July
(3) 181,713 (0) 303,432 (12) 757,889 (4) 259,048 (5) 349 135 Boston and Worcester
Michigan Central railroad $305,010 47
January. (5) 302,800 (0) 303,432 (0) 378,912 (5) 344,035 (5) 375,135
Chicago,
Burlington and
and
Western
Railroad
(0; 389,472
Stock dividend, July, 1805
Quincy railroad
4,129 89
others east of Albany... $100,925 29
US taxon dividends ...
09,9-5 113 381 00,503 Hudson Iliver ml road
I o«i oo-. j 21,753
15,723 20,920
80,828 11 Chicago and Alton railroad.. 20,300 01
receipts.J
’
I 33,409
95,280
1,700 04
New York Central rail road.. 383,930 05 Illinois Central railroad.
Great Western (Can.) railroad2s9,217 39
Total disbursements.... $2,487,475 $3,180,928 $4,415,722 $4,098,801 $4,351,057
Total amount distributed
$1,192,753 25.
The number of regular “ blue cars” now in the line is 402. The
Balance to next year
$772,030 $1,002,894 $708,385 $400,803 $443,450
The general balances are shown in the following accounts, as of
approaching fall and winter business, it is estimated, will require
1,500 to 2,000 cars for its accommodation.
1807.
1806.
1805.
1804.
1803.
Roi..nre

previous years...

from

Receipts

from

.

earning

ranges
Interest
*-

.

u

-

...

on

Bonds
U.8. tax on

Jack n,

7,403.489
58

4

1,598

158
000

1,059

905

1,002,894

15,492
7( (8,3*5

437

coup.

7,740,989
5,435

Unpaid dividends.

$*,070,' 00
7,208,989

$0,982.8(50

7,505,189

7,999,M 89
4,95(5

•

$0,491,380

$0,315,900

$0,057,430

Lane’gand

233,4(59

Saginaw Jilt. Co.
Bills"& sundries .
Balance of income

772,036

279.915

413,450

4(ill,8U3

Railroad.—The following is a statement
earnings of the several street railroads of St. Louis for
the year 1866, as reported to the Internal Revenue, assessors :
Citizens (Frank in av.)
$118,343 I Tower Grove (Third st.)
$ 2,495
Missouri (01 ve st.)
11(5,088 | Union (Locust st)
'
71,191
Reople’s (i-ourth st..) 11 mo
110,574 Bellelbntaine, 2mo
4,441
St. Louis (Fifth st )....
238,178 |
St. Louis Passenger

of the gross

EARNINGS OE

COMPARATIVE MONTHLY
-Atlantic & Great Western.18(57.
1805.

18(5(5.

(400 m.)

(507 in.)

(507 m.)

$301,137.. Jan—
377,852.. Feb....

$289,400 $504,992

B

327,2(59
899,870

J343,4(J8

|399,304

408,8(54

438,04(5
443,029

388,180

394,533
451,477

’*429,009
3 472,483
* 590,583

474,441
462,074

J587,12l

540,537

014,849

475,723

528,018

52(5,959

—

.

497,250
308,581

—

3,050,340.. Year

r“

-■>

1,153,441

(775 in.)
$90(5.759.. Jail ..
917,039... Feb...
1,139,528... Mar...

1,217,143.. April..

1,101,032 1,122.110...May ..
1,243,030 1,118,731..June...
.July...
1,208,244
—

1,418,742 1,295,400
1,435,285 1,410,101

1,47(5.244

—

—

—

6,501,063 14,590,413
Mich. So. & N.
180(5.

—

—

..sep....
...Oct—
...Nov...
...Dec—

..Year..

(524 m.)

$314,598
283,179

301,613

418,575
486,808
521,760

$302,714. fan.
302,437. .Feb..
..

Mar.
379,701
391,103 April.
358,601. ..May..
304,232. J une.

410,090

351,799

339,417

4,052,793

.

.

..July..
..Aug-.
...Sep..
...Oct...
.Nov..

.

..Dec..

’

..Year

—

..

18(55.'

1

O/.i!

180(5.

(408 rn.)
$690,144 $559,982
480,980
678,504
002,103
857,583
599,800
733,8(56
082,510
637,180
633,007
64(5,995
584,523
552,378
048,201
712,495
795,9:38
054,926
757,441
858,500
679,935
712,302
580,963
556,222
(468 in.)

8,489,062 7, 7,218




(468 m.)

$500,115.

,.

Jan...

522,821. .Feb...
078,349. ..Mar..,
.

575,287. .April.
578,242. ..May.
500,586.

June.

JulyAug...

Sept.,
Oct...
Nov,,.
Dec •, •
-

7,181,208

$98,183
74,283
70,740
100,089
140,943
221,838

217,159
170,555

228,020
310.594

220,840
110,604

$003,053
505,2(50

505,405
411,005
509,250
5(57,(579

'

480,021}
578,253
571,348
001,971
588,219
504,000

0,540,741

~Ye»r~

....Sep.
...Oet...
...Nov.
...Dec..

—

—

1*05.

1807.

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

(251 in.) (251 in.)
$‘.10,125
$96,672
8-1,264
87,791
82,910
93,763
82,722
78,(507
95,064
76,248
10(5,315
107,525
9(5,023
104,608
106,410
115,184
108,338
126,252
150,148
11*5,395
110,932
11(5,146
111,665
105,767

..Year-..

1,222,017 1,180,803

(70S in.)

$6(50,438. ..Jail..--.
554,201... Feb.

417,352... Mar...
4*30.007.. April..
477,007. ..May .
490,010.. June..
...July..
—

...Aug...

—

..Sep...

—

—

—

—

—

18(50.

(234 in.)

$121,770
84,897
72,135
108,082
207,488
202,172
170,795
110,224

1805.

(234 in.)
$143,000.
85,000.

(234 vi.)
..

155,893
192,138
107,301
108,(599
107,099
100,015
222,953
198,884
244,834
212,226
177,364

>240,744 2,251,525

8(5,528
95,905
100,269

..

.

87,510. .April.

203,018

119,104. ..May..

237,5(52
251,9U0

.June
..J uly..

241.370

..Aug..
...Sep..

150,989

''83(10,841
S395,579
*0
346,717

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

-

Year..

c-171,125

2,535,001
1805.

$149,(558..
149,342..
171,152..
188,162..
171,736..,
150,065 .
—

—

—

(242 m.)
$144,084
139,171
155,753
144,001
13s 7:38

194,521
f 271,798
,2,374.534
8 379,981
~

—

• «

-

$131,707
123,404
12-5,957
121,533
245,598
244,370
208,r. 83

•

—

—-

—

.

Sep...

(370 in.)
$14(5,800.

130. (MM).

.

.

.Jan..

Feb.

131,900. ..Mar..

192,548. .A pril.
230,497. ..May..

221,090. .June.

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

...Oct..
.Nov..
.Det...
Year.'..

—

..Dec...,

375,534

,361,010
f 247,023

^Year^ 2,926,678

194,107

250,407
270,300
310,433
325 691

304,917
396,218
349,117
430,005
354,830
204,741

8,694,975

317,052
329,078
364,810

265,790
337,153
313,736

283,661

365,196
335,082

329,105

324,986
359,6(55
429,166
493,649
414,604
308,(519

413,501

460,001
490,093
447,0(59
328.809

375,210
362,783
333,952
2S4,977
—

—

—

—

—

—

4,504,540 4,260,125

—

1807.

18(50.
'

(340 m.)
$242,793

$259,223 $207,541
239,139
313,914
271,527
290,910
304,403
349,285
344,700
350,348
372,018
412,553
284,319

"

(157 in.)
..Jan...
...Feb...
..Mar...
.

,

April..
.May...
..{line..

July..
.Aug...

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

.Year..

219,006
279,(547
284,729
282,939
240,135

240,109
326,-23(5

277,423
283,130
253,924
247,202
305,454
278.701
310.702
302,425

281,013

3,793,005 3,380,583
-Western Union
18(55

IsOO.

(521 in.)
$237,(574
200,793
270,030

(285 m.)
$301,095

1805.

129,287

$220,059

*

1867.

(285 m.)
$2*2,438

(5140 rn.) (340 in.)

410,359
328,539

(521 in.,

1S60.

—Ohio & Mississippi.

-

18(57.

188,815
270,41(5

2,538,800

.

..A ug...
..

-

401,450
305,003

..Year..

—

S428,474

344,228
337,240

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

—

317,977

2400.941

$auo,j
279,1s

r-Toledo, Wab. & Western.
ls(>7.

(210 in.)

—

(275 in.)

$98,181

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

114,579.

I860.

-

.'400,093
238,926

(285 in.)

—

-

280,283
251,916
2(51,480

277505

1805.

(251 in.)
$94,130.. .Jan.78.970... Feb...
84,052. ..Mar...
72,708.. April..
90,52(5... May...
9(5,535.. J une..
...July..
—

27-’,454

209,099

Michigan Central.

»

1807.

-Milwaukee & St. Paul

1807.

245,701
244,854
98,787

1806.

$292,047
224,021

3,313,514 3,460,922

.Year..

-Marietta imdCincninati.—*

du Chien.-

1865.’
(210 in.) (210 in.)
$170,078 $178,119

162,694

9,088,991

.

098,079

1807.

(410 in.)

(228 m.)
$241,395
183,385
257,230

o 315,027
201,779 S200,203

.Nov...
..Dec.,

1,005,080

7,900,981

i

>

1,943,900
L., Alton & T. Haute.18(57.
1860.

153,903
202,771
169,299
177,625
173,722
162,570
218,236
216,783
222,924
208,098

.

840,054
540,009

..Year.

—

1,985,712
-St.

r-Pittsb.,Ft.W.,&Chicago.
-I Vito
1807.
’

528,972
610,(5(55
510,008
4(50,573
017,082
578,403
747,409
739,736
041,589
043,887
518,088

(708 rn.)

...Aug.

—

(228 in.)
$305,554
240,331
289,403
190,580
23-1,012
321,818
241,121
300,231
889,489
307,523
270,073

.

Pacific.-*

1800.

1805.

18(57.

.

..July

18(50.

1805.

(708 m.)
$571,530

(231m.)

380,452
429,191
500,404

495,072

1807.

2*3,951 ..April
338,(591 ...May.
343,078.. J une

Illinois Central.

18155.

(524 m.)

238,302... Mar.

—

180(5.

.

142,947 ..Feb.

—

-ChicM

Northwestern—.

(800 in.) (1,032 m.)(l,145m.)
..Jan..
$541,()()5 $523,5(50 $090 832
.Feb..
453,695 580,743
482,104
009,033 747,392 ..Mar..
499,296
017,970 720,(551 .April.
408,358
735,0*2 787,730 ..May..
585,023
922,892 898,357 J une..
747.942
.July
77-,990
702.(592
..Aug..,
778,284
707,508
...Sep.
989,053
940,707
..Oct..,
923,880 1,210,(554

$240,238. ..Jan.

3,840,091 3,095,152

-Mil. and Prairie

Indiana.-

412,393
409,427
420,493
392,041
338,499

4,826,722

Aug

...

—

1,637.592^ 1,410,001
1,524,917 £ 1,041,115

1865.

..

18(57.

(798 m.) (798 m.)
[$1,070,890 $1,185,740
| j 1,011,7:45
987,930
1,331,124 1,070.917

(524 m.)
$363,990
3(56,361
413,974
365,180
ap.l,489
387,095

..Dec....

f—

i

r

.Oct
..Nov...

—

,

1,580,317

..July...
..Aug...
..Sept...

—

1800.

1,538,313
1,425,120
1,252,870
1,274,558

..June..

—

—

5,470,27(5
1865

May...

459,370
*■

541,49 i

*

lUarcIi
April..

.

(280 in.) (280 in.)
$280,503 $22(5,152
222,241
275,282
290,111
299,0(53
269,249
258,480
329,851
322,277
371.543
355,270
321,597
3:15,9*5
387,2(59
409,250
322,(538
401,280
300,523
357,950
323,030
307,919
271,240
230,824

1805.

ism
(280 in.)

180(5.
1 «••<*■

1805.

PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. Rock Is. and

-Chicago &

—Chicago and Alton.—
18(57.

.$051,310

earnings reported

Total gross

$10,(117,543
$14,834,955 $15,006,822 $44,781,570 $15,188,190

$43,716
37,205
32,378

18(56.

$39,079

45,102

27,666

30,006
39,299

82,147

102,086
85,508
60,b98
84,462

■

43,333
80,913

75,077

92,715
61,770
87,830

1867.

(177 m) (177 m.)

33,972
63.802
6S.1S0
59.802

—

100,3u3
75,248

64,478

689,883 814,03$

.

36,392
40,710
57,852
60,558

152

THE CHRONICLE.

[August 3, 1867.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
Interest.

DESCRIPTION.

FRIDAY •

N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount
is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand
umn it is expressed by the figures
ing.
in brackets after the Co’s name.

i Princpal payble.

Payable.

|

DESCRIPTION.

T3

is not iriven in detail in the 2d col outstand¬
nmn it is expressed
by the figures
ing.
in brackets after the Co’s name.

M

-d

INTERE8T.

N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount

03

s

a

Payable.

£s

i

Atlantic A Ot. Western

($29,940,000):

1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)
$2,151,500
2d
do
do
757.500
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.)
886,000
Id
do
do
761,000
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) 3,6X1,900
do
Id
do
2,653,000
1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff. ex
1,382,000
Consolidated Bonds.,
17,105,000

Atlantic ASt. Law. 1st Mort.(Portland)

Mortgage
Sterling Bonds

do
do

1850..
1853..

*1
do
Be». 'idere Delaware

619,036
915,280

1,852,000|

do

689,500;

-j

200,000
444,00
-00,Out

1st Mortgage
2d

Mortgage
Buffalo and Mate Line ($1,200,000)
1st Mortgage
Burlington A Missouri ($1,902,110):
General Mortgage
Bonds conv. into pref. stock
Camden and Amboy ($10,204,463):
Dollar Loans
do
Dollar Loan
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

Mortgage

Central Ohio : 1st Mort
Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage
Convertible Bonds
Cheshire: Bonds

Mortgage (consolidated)

Chicago A Northwest. ($12,020,483):

Chicago, Rock, Island A Pacific:

Mortgage (C. & R. I.).'
do
(new)
Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000):
2d Mortgage
1st
1st

do

Cincinnati Richmond A Chicago..
Cincinnati A Zanesville.

.

Mortgage

Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($450,000) :
1st Mort.(pavable $25,000 per year)

Cleveland A Mahoning ($1,752,400):
1st Mortgage
3d
no
Hubbard Branch

do

1st

...

....

....

1870

Jan. ft

July -873
Ap’l & Oct. 1879

Ap’l ft. Orf

Connecticut River: 1st Mort
Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000):
1st Mortgage

1st Mort

2d
do
6 per cent, bonds

Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): *
1st Mortgage

338,040
675,00! I
867,00(1
4,437,300

.

.

....

.

..

.

*:

92

do
do

6,000,000
4,441,600
926,5(H)
3,875,520

convertible...
do

do

-

•

•

•

.

($400,000):

Georgia

388,000,

Gal. A Chic. U. (incl. in C. A N. W.):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do
do
Gr and Junction :
Mortgage
Great. West., 111.: 1st Mort., W, Div.
1st Mortgage Whole Line
2nd do
do
Greenville. A Columbia: 1st Mort....
Bonds guaranteed by State
Bonds unsecured
Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600):
Land Grant Mortgage

Jan. ft

493,000
141,000

Ap’l & Oct.

7,336,000

.

1839
J’ne ft, Dec. 1893

May ft Nov.

490,000
780,(XX)
900,000
600,000
2,500,000

•

1,963,000
1,086,000
927,000
1,000,(XX)
1,455,000
2,500,000
328,000
700,000

COO,000

July

.

.

....

.

:8so
1873

....

....

1879
1882

....

Feb. & Aug
Mar. & Sep. 1875
Feb. ft Aug 1870
May & Nov. 1875
M’ch ft Sep 1890

....

.

.

.

.

•

.

100

....

103
....

’75-’80

.

.

.

....

1,250,000
3,600,(XX)

756,000
2,(XX),(XX)
484,000

May ft Nov.
Jau. ft July
Ap’l & Oct.

1877
1893
1883

Jan. &

1S83
1895

1st Mortgage, guaranteed
Deia., Lacka. A Western ($3,491,500):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do
Laaka. and West. 1st Mort

1,397.000

6,663,000(

92

Feb. & Aug 1885
do
^ 1885
May ft Nov. 1863
Quarterly. 1915
Feb. & Aug 1885

1st

95

82
86

Jan. ft July 1870
do
1896
1880
lass

do

1895

1,300,000

May & Nov

1S93

450,000

Jan. ft

LS90

795,000

Feb. ft
873
M’ch ft Sep 1876'
Jan. ft Julv 1875

July

2d
....

•

•

Jan. ft

.

.

July

.

1st

1 885
l 886
1 878

102

do

250,000
600,000
161,000
109.500

72

J’ne ft Dec. 1 876
Ap’l & Oct. 1 !X)4
do
1 904
do

Jan. &

..

250,000

250,000
924,000

Feb. &

•

•

•

r

••

May ft Nov. 1 875
various.
1 875
various.
1 378
Feb. & Aug 1 880

•

Ap’l & Oct. 1 887

.* ’ 1,005,640!

1 864

Aug[l 876

May & Nov

1883

99
95

•

•

May *fc Nov

1893

Jan. A July

280,000

var.

May & Nov.

var.

Augl

2,362,800
4,000,000

Feb. &
1892
Jan. &July 1885

1,095,600
315,200
660,000
300,000

June & Dec. ’70-’71
Apr. & Oct. 1874

Feb. &

Feb. &

Aug.
Aug

1870
1880

May & Nov

2,297,000'

March&Sep.

1809
1882

113

113#

1885
do
1877
Feb. ft Aug 1868

99
90
100

100#

April ft Oct

863,000
2,693,(>00
651,000

May & Nov.

296,560

Jan. &

4,269,000

July

1891

324,000

Jan. ft July 1893
April & Oct 1893

135.500

Jan. &

600,000

„

Jan. &July 1876

3.500.500

April & Oct
July

297.500

18S4
1875

do

1870

May & Nov.

1867
183 i
1882
1876

...

i

•

»

Sterling bonds.

•

Interest bonds

....

....

Bonds ofl870.
Income Bonds

....

• ••

..

«

■

Mortgage Bonds (new).

881,900
4,187,0(0

do
do
do

76,843

100,000
310,000

.760,000

80

’90-’91

3,294,000'

Mortgage, sinking fund

1st Mortgage.
Income

•

April & Oct 1877
Jan. & July 1875
Feb. & Aug 1890

4

Income bonds....
o

1873

4.504.500

1st

1890
i

May ft Nov.

1,650,000

(P.&K.ItR.) Bonds.

101

1872
1869

....

($2,733,800)

103

1875
1885

July

May &Nov.
July
\

886,000
5(X),(XX)
175,(XX)
150,000

...

tilwaukee and St. Pam :
1st Mortgage
do
(Mil. & Western)
2d
do
Income Bonds...,
do
Real Estate

Jan. &

Jan. &

1st Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do
Goshen Air Line Bonds

....

Jan. ft July 1882
Jau. & July 1874

1,300,000

fich. S. A N. Indiana: ($9,135,840)
....

1881

April & Oct 1873
May ft Nov 1831
April ft Oct 1906

1,465,000

Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds.
do

1866

May & Nov.

903,000

Convertible

April & Oct 1 875
Wrch ft Sep 1 881
Jan. & July 1 871

$2,500,000
1,000,000

Mortgage

July

1,(XX),000

do

Memphis Branch Mortgage

1882

Murch& Sep
April & Oct 1830

Sinking Fund do

July 1 875

1,740,000

do

114

Jan. & July 1866
do
1870

.

Mort. bonds
lichigan Central, ($7,463,489) •"

.

Jan. & July 1 867
do
1 881
M’ch&April 1 834
do *
1 81-’94

500,000

2d

Aug

200,000

$1,1^0,000 Loan Bonds
$100,(MX) Loan Bonds
1st

Feb. &

500,0(M)

Mortgage, Eastern Division

Maine Central:

92
74

1875
18751890
1875

do
do
do

400 (XX)

n

Marietta A Cincinnati ($3,688,1385):
1st Mortgage,'
McGregor Western 1st Mortgage

....

95

M’ch ft

ExteDsi

Mortgage

Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point),
do
do (Glen Cove Br.)
Lewisville and Nashville ($3,297,(XX)):
1st

.

April & Oct

102
104

1870
1875

485,000
800,00(1
000,000

..

873
875
892

300,000

Sep

.

Feb. & Aug 1869
J’ne & Dec. 1885
May & Nov. 1875
do
1867

May & Nov
Feb. & Aug

2,000,000;

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

•

Aug!

M’ch & Sep
do
Jan. ft July

283,000

•

....

Jan. ft July 874
do
1 880

108,100

.

1873
1876

May & Nov

do

1st

May & Nov
Jan. & July

July

640,000
397,000
612,500

d<>
Extension
La Crosse A. Milwaukee :

90

....

do

Mortgage

Chicago :
Mortgage, sinking fund
Joliet and N. Indiana: 1st
Mortgage
Lackawanna A Bloomsburg 1st Mort

102#

Jan. &

Jan. &

Indianap. ft, Madison RR., 1st M..
Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., Ut Mort

-

1883

500,000

1st

....

81
8D

July

Mortgage

Joliet and

98
87

Jan. &

UK

1883

-600,000
364,000

c.;

Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort

....

July

97

April & Oct 1881

300,000

Jeffersonvme, Madison A Indianapolis:

SO

1882
1875
1870
April & Oct 1868
Feb. <fe Aug 1888
May ft Nov. 1893
1868
July
do
1868
do
1868

358,000

Mortgage, (interest ceased)
do

94
90

:

Mortgage

1st
2d

Feb-. & Aug
May & Nov
Jan. & July

6,668,500
2,523,000
2,563,(XX)

do 6 per cent

Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284)

112

....

86

July

672,000,

($734,000)’:'

102#

....

91

1898

Jan. ft

1,250,000
500,000
5«0,000

1.122.500

($5,206,680):

.

2d

1,668 000|

($2,088,000):

».

1st

July
Ap’l ft Oct.

642,000
169.500

Bonds

Delaware:

.

101

July 1870
July 70-75

500,000
500,000

Redemption bonds
Sterling Redemption bonds
1st

Jan. &
Jan. &

Jan. &

3,890,000
1,907,(XX)
192,(XXI
523,000

.

Illinois Central:
Construction bonds, 1875

Illinois and Southern Iowa

July

92
89

927,000

do

do

101

2,u55,000

Huntingdon A Broad 7bp($l,462,142):
1st Mortgage...

do

....

Jan. &

3d
do
Convertible

2d

1883

700,000

.

.

105
103

April ft Oct. 1880
June & Dec 1888
M’ch & Sep 1875

3,437,750
633,600

••

•

do

:

Hartford A New lldven :
1st Mortgage
flar/f., Prov. A Flshkill :
Hudson River ($7,762,840):
1st Mortgage
96# 90#
2d
do
sinking fund...-....

•

July 1880
April <fc Oct 1862

.

149,000

Harrisburg A Lancaster

1870
FVb.<fc Aug. 1883

1,841,962

2,589,000

Detroit, Monroe A Toledo

.

April ft Oct 1870
Jan. ft July 1870

2,081.000

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1866

Detroit and Pontiac R.R....
do
do

convertible

Mortgage.;

....

Feb. & Aug 1865
1865
do
1889
do

1,129,000
1.619.500
1,107,546

2d Mortgage
8d
do
convertible
4th
do
Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,2S0):

1st Mortgage, convertible
2d
do
1st & 2d Funded Coupon Bonds.

May & Nov. 1867
M’ch & Sep 1879

do

Erie and Northeast

••

1-877

500,000
1,000,000

Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,872,860):

Detroit and Milwaukee

Aug

3,000,000
4,(XX),000

Mortgage

Sterling convertible (£800,000)

1^
JLOOi#

Feb. &

Jan. &

New Dollar Bonds

1,180,950
600,000

121,000

1st Mort. Bonds
2d Mort. Bonds




...

1885

1,000,000
570,000

2d
3d
4th
5th

....

July ’70-’7()

500,000

534,9iX)

dec., Pain. A Ashtabula:

1st Mortgage

...

Ap’l & Oct. 1888

do

July 1872
Aug 1874

1st Mortgage
5 per cent. Bonds

•

•

1894

Jan. &
Feb. &

698,000

Elmira A Williamsport :

Convertible Bonds

861,000

Preferred Sinking Fund
1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds
Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870
Extension Bonds

Mortgage Bonds

•

•

1866

483,000
2.400,000,

income

Des Moines Valley

.

•

Erie Railway ($22,370,982):

J’ne & Dec. 1877
Muy ft. NnV 1S72

1,100,000,
Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406):
Trust Mortgage (S. F.)
3,525,000
Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort..
5,600,000
Chicago and Milwaukee :

2d
do
8d
do
Toledo Depot

•

•

Indiana Central:

do

Cumberland Valley:

Ap’l & Oct.

.

.

.....

•

...

1880
1885

2,000,000
380,000

1,500,000
673,200

Chicago and Alton:
1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref

1st

•

•

•

•

do

394,000
750,000
160,000

do
do

Sinking Fund Bonds

•

Jan. ft July 1883

660,000

East Pennsylvania:

.

•

Ap JuOc
Jan. & July 1875
do

do
do

•

...

.

•

800,000

2d section

Mortgage, convertible

65

•

J’ne & Dec. 1867

Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000)

3d

•

do

Eastern, Mass. ($1,848,400):

—

Boston and Lowed : Bonds of Ju y
of Oct. 1864
do

1st

p’l ft, Oct

Jan. &

364,000

Sinking Fund Bonds
Boston, Hartford and Erie.

do

55

18 "4
1867

Ja

65

...

0

1,000,000
500,000

do

1st

55

:

Mortgage

2d

3

1st

1866
1878

1,225,000
433,000

Boston, Gone. A Montreal ($1,050,000)

2d

1882
1879
1881
1876
1883
1834
1895

Dubuque
1st Mortgage, 1st section

65

55

1877

■

\

628.500

itfMort. (guar. C. and V.
.,d Mort.
do
1st
1st

do
do
do

May & Nov

1,024,750

Beliefontainc ($1,745,000) :
1st Mortgage

Id Mort.

Ap’l & Oct

268,900

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1855..
do

do
do
do
Jan. & Jul}

484,000

0118*14
do
Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (S F) 1834
ao

do

1,500,000

2d

-

Ap’l & Oct

«

Railroad:
and Sioux City :

i

Railroad:

FRIDAY.

(XO

1

Jan. & July 1870
do

1876

do

1881

S5# 87

August 8f

THE CHRONICLE.

1867.]

153

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
Subscriber* will confer a great favor by giving ns imi&edlate notice of any error discovered In onr Tables.
uTIf^THe- figures after the
TCfer to the vol. and
S of Chronicle containing?
Report. ♦ means “leased.
Railroad.

par

Louis* —.—100
St.Lawrence*....100
ftSntlc*and Ohio
Baltimore
Alton

and st-

100

Washington Branch

Bellefontame Line..
Belvidere, Delaware

••

fflnSburg and Corning*

jw
50

£ton,Hartford andIrie....100
Boston and jjowell. — • • - • •

Dividend.
Stock

FRIDAY.

Last

out¬

standing.

and Newtown.1(H)
Baffalo! New York, A Erie*. .100
Buffalo and State Line... --•-•100
Camden and Amboy. 4, p. 5.H),100
Camden and Atlantic......... 50
do
do
preferred 50
Brooklyn City

Date.

rate Bid. Ask.

refer

after the

the vol.

to

and

last

2
4

Ninth Avenue
Northern of New

5
3

IX
2%
L2%
4
5
5
5
5

12%

132
139
113

3%

3%
5
5

126

127

3J

59%

3X
5

2% 1*1%

122“

6

2%
5
5

5

63
115
H7
147
14

117
119
150

67“
485#

48%

70%
101% 101%

..

3.572.400

67

’07

4
4
5
4
6

100

101

95

95%

2%

Rutland and Bnrlington
.100
St. Louis, Alton, A TerreH... 100
do

do

pref.100

St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*100
Sandusky, and Cincinnati
50
do

pref. 50

Savannah A Charleston

10>

5ft

Shore Line Railway
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
South Carolina
South Side (P. &L.) 4, p.
South West.Georgia, 3,

1(H)
100
50

521.. 100

p.

616.100

Terre Haute A Indianapolis.. 50
Third Avenue (N. Y.)
100

3
4
4

Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .100
do
do

3

5

Saratoga and Hudson River. .100

Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..100

8%

124

130

do
do

1st pret.100
2d pref.100

Toledo, Wabash A Western.. 50
do

do
preferred. 50
Utica and Black River
100
Vermont and Canada*
100
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100
Virginia Central, 3, p. 678. ..100

7 8.
HO
4




70
90

5s.
4
3
4

102*
28% 2S%
67% 70

‘7*

88

3

4%

258
6
3c 5# 106%

106% 106%

5
5
4

109

“

‘

IJuly ’

109%

*2% 106*

106%

3

3
4

2,233,376
2.300,000
1,700,000 Annually. May ’67
1,469,429
2,989,090
393,073 May A Nov May ’67
900,000
1,020,000
1,000,000
576,050 Jan. A July July ’67
869,45( Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
635,200 Jan. A July Jan. ’67
750,000 Quarterly May ’67
5,819,275
1,360,(HR)
3,203,400 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’66
1,200,130
1,983,150 Jan. A July July ’67
1,170,000 Quarterly.
776,20(
1,651,314
908,424
5,700,000
1,000,000 May A Nov M)iy ’67
834,400 Jan. A July July ’67
2,250,000 Tune A Dec June’67
2,860,000 Jan. A July July ’67

51
8C

61
81

2%
2%
3

5

eS%
3%

70%

4
4

51
72

97“

1% 56% 67

3,353,679
530#
2,94 ,791
do
565,500
pref.100
Western (Mass), 4, p. 247
100 8,710,800 Jan. A July July ’67
Western (N. Carolina)
100 1,860,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’64
Western Union (Wis. A Ill.)
2,687,237
Worcester and Nashua
75 1,141,000 Tan. A July July '67 6%

Virginia and Tennessee

.100

.

4
7
5
4
6

84

75%
78

73%
79%

47%

55

180*

iii»%

’67

5
4

’67

9

4

’07 2% 117
3
4

25
25
50

1,818,963
8,228,595
Delaware Division
1,633,350
Delaware and Hudson
100 10,000,000
Delaware A Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,521,300
Lehigh Coal and Navigation
6.968,146
Monongahela Nfivigatinn Co. 50
728,100
Morris (consolidated),4, p.631. 10 1,025, (XX)
do
100 1,175,000
preferred
Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207
do
prefer.. 50 2,888,805
Susquehanna A Tide-Water.. 50 2,052,083
Union, preferred
5(> 2,907,a™
West Branch A Susquehanna. 50 1,100,(XX)
Wyoming Valley
60
800,000
Miscellaneous.
Coal.—American
25 1,5(H),000
Ashburton
50 2,500,000
.

120%

113% iis%

1%

’07

Canal.

Chesapeake and Delaware....
Chesapeake and Ohio

Butler

2?

June A Dec June ’67
Feb. A Aug A ug.
Feb. A Aug Aeg.
Feb. A Aug Aug.

’67
'67
’67

May A Nov May ’67
A July 1 uly ’67
A Aug Aug. ’67
A Aug
ng ’67
A Aug Feb. '67
A Aug Feb. ’t 7

Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

151%
91%

‘

62%

32% 84%

Jan. A

July Tan., ’65
Irregular. Sept.'66

Mar. A

Sep.

Mar. ’67

500,000 Jun. A Dec.

80
47

55

jnne ’67
37%
176

48
38
180

40
125

128

150

160

50% 51
22% 22%
47% 47%
75
75

14%
78

TC%

66%
111% ii% *
145% 145%
100

..

.

106%

3

Consolidation
1(H) 5,000, (XX
2.646.100 Jan. A July July ’67 2
40
Central
100 2,(XX),(XX) Jan. A July Jan. ’67
3,(XX),000 Quarterly. May '67 2
Cumberland
100 5,000,000
1,109,594 Jan. & July July ’67 3
Pennsylvania
6() 3,200,000 Quarterly. Feb. ’67
5,500,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67 4
Spring Mountain
60 1,250,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67
2,800,000
Spruce Hill
Rj 1,000,000 Jau. A July
1,500,000 May A Nov May ’67
Wilkesbarre
100 3,400,000 Apr. A Oct
1,600,860
Wyoming Valley
100 1.250.000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’66
2,029,778
Chxs.—Brooklyn
25 2,000,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. "6i
6,586,135 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’66 38. 25% 26
Citizens (Brooklyn)
20 1,200,000 Jan. A July July ’67
4,051,744 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66 38.
Harlem
50
644,000
1,000,000 May & Nov May ’67 5
Mar. ’62
Jersey City A Hcboken.. 20
386,000 Jan. A July July ’67
Memphis & Chariest., 3 p. 487.100 5,312,725
108
Manhattan
111
60 4,000,000 Jan. A July July '87
Michigau Central, 3, p. 152.. .100 7,502,866 Jan. & July July ’67
80% 80%
Metropolitan
100 2,800,000
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’65
New Yor.c
do
50 1,000,000 May A Nov May* ’’67
do
guar.100
787,700 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
90
William burg
750.000 Jan. A July July ’67
Milwaukee &P.du Ch.lst pref.100 3,204,296 February... Feb. ’67
60
78
79
do
do
2d pref.100
Improvement. Canton 100.(16$pd) 4,500,000
841,400 February... Feb. ’67
50
51
Boston water Power
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100 4,000,000
100 3,627,000 Jan. & July
Jufy ’66 20
65
do
Brunswick City
100 1,000,000
65%
preferred
100 7,371,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Mine Hill A Sohuylkill Haven 50 3.775.600 Jan. A July July ’67
114
116
Telegraph.— Western Union. 100 28,450,000 Jan. A July Tu y ’07
Express— Adams
100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Nov ’66
sississippi A Tenn.4, p. 489.100
825,399
Mobile and Ohio
American
500 9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66
100 3.588.300
Merchnn ts’ Union
1(H) 20,000,000
Montgomery and WestPoint.100 1,644,104
Morris and Essex
United States
100 6,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66
60 3,500,000 Mar. & Sep Mar. ’67 3 %* 62% 75
Nashua and Lowell
100 10,000,000
100
Wells, Fargo A Co
720,009 May A Nov Aug ’67 20
Nashville A Chattanooga
Steamship—Atlantic Mai
100 4,000,000 Quarterly. June ’67 2%
100 2,056,544
Pacinc Mail
100 20,000,000 Quarterly. June ’67 3
Naugatuck
100 1.408.600 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
New Bedford and Taunton
S. American Navigation. .100
600.000 Jan. & July July ’67
.100
New Haven A
Union Navigation
100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 5
Northampton..100 1.224.100 Jan. & July July ’67
Sew Jersey, 4,
Trust.—Farmers’ L. A Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July July ’67 5
p. 183.
100 6,250,000 Feb. & Aug Aug.’67
New York Life A Trust.. 100 1,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67 10
^ew London Northern.. .. 100 895,000 Mar A Sep. Mar. ’67
N. Orleans,
Union Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. A July July ’67 4
Opel. A Gt. WestlOO 4,093,425
N. 0.
United States Trust
100 1,500,000 Jan. A July July 67 5
Jackson A GtN.,4,p.l84t00 4,697,467
New York Central, 3, p. 769 .100 26,530 000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
sl05 105% Mining.—Maripoga Gold
100 5,097,600
New York and Harlem
60 5,285,09: Jan. A July July ’67
Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100 5,774,400
67
85 2,500,000
preferred
Quartz Hill Gold
60 l£C0i00i>|Jan. * July
F«l> ’55
Quicksilver
looj10,000,000
...

90

795,360

do

3%

June A Dec June ’67

120X

Richmond A Petersb.,1,p.488.100 1,008,600
Rome, Watert. A Ogdensb’g..l00 2,385,5(H) Tan. A July July ’67

ShamokinVal. & Pottsville*. 50

5
5

’67

’67

120
70

July July ’67

100
100

Schuylkill Valley*

1.22% 123%

A

4,000,000
2,469,307
Feb. ’67
50 3,150,150
100 2,363,600 Jan. A July July ’67
Ogdeusb. A L. Champ(5 p.ll9)100 3,077,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
do
356.400 Apr. A Oct Apr. ’67
preferred. 100
Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 20,222,647
do
preferred. .100 3,007,197 January. Jan. ’67
Old Colony and Newport
1(H) 4,848,300 Jant & July July ’67
100 2,063,655
Orange and Alexandria
Oswego and Syracuse
482.400 Feb. A Aug Feb. 67
50
Panama
1(H) 7,(XX). 000 Quarterly. July ’67
Pennsylvania
50 20,(XX), 0(H) May A Nov May ’67
Philadelphia and Erie*
50 5,083,700 Jaii. & July Jan. ’67
Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50 22,742,867 Jan. A July July ’67
Phila., Germant. A Norrist’n* 50 1,507,8*0 Apr. A Oct Apr. ’67
Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 9,019,300 Jan. A July-July ’67
Pittsburg and Connelleville.
50 1,776,129
Pittsb.,Ft.W. & Chic.,4,p.471.100 11,440,987 Quarterly. July ’67
Portland & Kennebec (new).. 100
Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
Portland, Saco, & Portsm’th.100 1,500,000 June & Dec June ’67
Providence and Worcester... .100 1,750,000 Jan. A July July '67
Raritan and Delaware Bay... .100 2,530,700
Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO
800,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67
Saratoga and Whitehall... .100
600,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67
Troy, Salem A Rutland
100
800,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67
Richmond and Dan., 4, p.456.100 2,000,000

do

’67
'67
’67

’67
’66

Ask

Hampshire.100 3,068,400 June A Dec June ’67
50 4,618,900 Quarterly. Feb. ’67

Sandusky, Mansf. A Newark.100

’67 2%
67 3%
’60
’67
’67

100

North Missouri
North Pennsylvania
Norwich and Worcester

.

.

rate Bid.

6,000,000 Jan. A July;July ’67

York, Prov. A Boston.. .100 1,755,281 Jan.

North Carolina

Detroit and Milwaukee
do
do
pref.

’< 7

Date.

Periods.

paid

Northern Central, 4, p. 668..

gj

’67

FRIDAY*

Last

out¬
of Chronicle containing
report. * means “ leased. standing.

New

366,000

1(H)
452,350
..100 1,500,(MX)
Dnbnqne and Sioux City
100 1,673,952
Mar.
do
do
pref. ..100 1,988,170 March.
Eastern, (Mass)
100 3.578.300 Jan. & July July
East Tennessee A Georgia.. .1(H) 2,111,970
East Tennessee A Virginia
100 1,902,000
Elmira and Williamsport*..
500,000 May A Nov May
50
do
do
500,000 Jan. & July July
pref. 50
Erie, 4, p. 509
100 16,571,306 Feb. A Aug Feb.
do preferred
100 8.536.900 January. Jan.
Brie and Northeast*
50
600,000 Feb. & Aug Feb.
Fitchburg
100 3,540,000 Jan. A July July
Georgia
10ft 4,156,(HH) Apr. A Oct. Apr.
Hannibal and St. Joseph
1(H) 1,900,000
do
do
pref. 1(H) 5,253,83f
Hartford and New Haven.
1(H) 3,000,000 Quarterly. 1 uly
Honsatonicpreferred
100 1,180,000 May A Nov May
Hudson River
100 13.937.400 April & Oct Apr.
494.380
Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50
do
do
190,750 Jan. & July Jan.
pref. 50
Olinoi8 Central, 4,
loo 23,386,450 Jan. A July Tilly
p. 311
IndianapoliBand Cincinnati.. 50 1.689.900 Mar. & Sep Mar.
Jeffersonv., Mad. & Indianap.1(H) 2,000,000 Jan. A July Jan.
•Joliet and Chicago*
100
300,000 Quarterly. Apr.
Joliet and N. Indiana
300,000 Jan. & July Jan.
Lackawanna and Bloomsbnrg 50 1,335,000
Lehigh Valley
50 10,7:14,100 Quarterly. Tilly
Lexington and Frankfort
100
514,646 May A Nov May

Dividend.

Stock

page

IX

Jan. A July Jan. ’(>7
Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67

850,000 June A Dec June '67
2,200,000 Feb. A An Aug ’67
6,936,625 Feb. &Aug Aug. 67
622,350
6(H),000
721,926 Jan. A July July ’67
Cape Cod
1,150.(HX)
Catawissa*... —
2}
April & Oct Apr.
do
preferred
50 2,200,00.4 June A Dec June ’67
’67
Central Georgia & Bank’g Co.100, 4.666.800
13,0(H), 000 Quarterly. July ’67
Central of New Jersey
1U0 2,(HK),000
Central Ohio.....
400,0(H)
Apr. ’67
April.
do
preferred....
Apr. ’67
Cheshire (preferred)
100 124,550 Mar A
3,886,5(H)
Sep Mar. '67
Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 329. .100
do
preferred. .100 2,425,000 Mar & Sep Mar. ’67
Chic.Bnr. and Quincy, 3, p.261.100 10,193,010 May & Nov May ’07
Chicago and Great Eastern.. .100 4,390,000
Jan. &
Chicago, Iowa A Nebraska*.. .100 1,000,000 Jan. & July July ’67
2,227,000
July
Chicagoand Milwaukee* ....100
Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 13,160,927
do
do
pref. .100 12,994,719 Annually, Dec. ’66
Chicago, Rock Tsl. A Pacific..1(H) 9,100.000 April & Oct Apr. ’67
CincM Ilam. A Dayton(5 p.87)100 3.260.800 April A Oct Apr. ’67
362,950
Cincin.,Richm’d A Chicago...100
50 1,600,250
Cincinnati and Zanesville
Cleveland, Columbus, & Cin.,100 6,000,000 Feb. A Aug Aug, 67
Cleveland A Mahoning*
50 2,044,600 May & Nov May ’67
Cleveland, Painesr. A Ashta.100 5,000,000 Tan. & July July ’67
Cleveland and Pittsbnrg
50 5,391,575 Jan. A July Jan. ’66
Cleveland and Toledo,3, p. 164 50 4,841,600 April A Oct Apr. '07
Quarterly. Apr. ’67
Columbns A Indianap. Cent..l00
50 1,786,800 Jan. & July •July '67
Columbus and Xenia*
Concord
50 1,500,000 May * Nov May '67
350,000 Jan. A July July 67
Concord and Portsmouth
100
Conn.& Passump. 3,p.216 pref.100 1.514.300 Jan. A July July ’67
Connecticut River
100 1,650,000 Jan. A July July ’67
Cumberland Valley.
50 1.316.900 Apr. A Oct Apr. ’67
Dayton and Michigan
100 2,38s,063 Jan. A
406,132
Delaware*.
50
July Inly ’67
Delaware, Lacka., A Western 50 11,288,550 Jan. A July Jau. ’67
Des Moines Valley
100 1,'550,050

Little Miami
50
Uttle Schuylkill*
50
Long Island
50
Louisville and Frankfort
50
Louisville and Nashville
100
Louisville, New Alb. A Chic. .100
Macon and Western
100
Maine Central
100
Marietta and Cincinnati
50
do
do 1st pref. 50
do
do 2d pref.. 50
Manchester and Lawrence... .100

name

New York and New Haven. ..100

163,000 Quarterly. July ’67
2,494,900 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
16,161,962 April Oct Apr. ’67
1,660,000 April & Oct Apr. ’67
4,420,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
996,647
600,000 Quarterly. July ’67
250,000 June A Dec June ’67
11,877,000
1,830,000 Jan. A July July ’67
4,076,974 Jan. & July July ’67
3,360,000 Jan. A July July ’67
4.5(H), 000 Jan. & July July '67

and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .106
Boston aim Providence
100
Boston and Worcester
100
Railway & 7th Avenue
L 2,1(H),000
1,000,000
Boston

Periods.

paid.

N. if,—The figures

125*
150
10

10%

89% 92%

'm

[August 3,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

154

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.
Companies.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Bid. Askd

Parted thus (*) are
participating, and (+)

dan. 1 ,

Capital. Netas’ts

write Marine Risks.

5
10

5

_

5

Brooklyn

25

20
00

10
100 1

Buchanan Farm
Central

Cherry Run Petrol’m.... 2
Cherry Run special
5
10
Clinton Oil
Empire City
5
Excelsior
5

1 25

N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons

2 00

90

10

10

®

•

....

15
.

.

.

3 25

4 00

....

....

....

•

•

.

•

•

•

50

25
4

•

•

--

.

•

.

.

.

.

10
3 <»5

10

30
3 75
....

Bid. Askd

.-17

300,000
210,000
250,000

70
100

City
Clin Ion
Columbia*
Commerce
Commerce

(N.Y.). .100
(Alb’y). 100
50
100
KHI

Commonwealth..
Bid. Askd

Companies.

600,000
200,00(1
400,000
2(H),0(H)
250,(HH>

100

Commercial

COPPER MINING STOCK LIST.
Companies.

250,000
300,000
200,000
200,000
300,000
200,000
153,000

20
.

Continental *
Corn Exchange..

....

500, (HH)

50

400,000

100

paid 3

Adventure
JJtna

•

11

3
1#
1
17

....

Alfoncz

...

Amerioan

*

.

.

.

.

.

7 50

7 25

.

....

.

.

3 03

2#
5

—

25

.

.

....

21 50

5
4

•

•

•

•

.

•

....

25 50 20 00

1

....

1

Dorchester

...

.

Dudley

Eagle River

1#
1#
3*4

....

....

20#

2 25
....

....

.

•

10
1

Everett

•

....

.

.

....

NY»nltlin

French Creek
Girard

.11
7
50

.

....

Hanover
Hilton

0 75
03

66

7

1 00

necla.

20 00

—

X

Halbert
Humboldt

6

Hungarian

•

•

.

.

.

.

•

.

4 00
....

....

—

•

....

•

•

.

.

•

.—

•

....

.—

22 25 23 00

10

OH

....

'.

Toltcc
Tremont
Victoria
Vulcan

.

.

.

.

•

.

66

3 63

8
4 00

....

....

....

;.

i 56

....

....

•

....

4

....

5
.8

....

....

Washington
00 West Minnesota
•

•

•

•

.

1%
]H

.

•

....

2 00
1 00
«•

•

•

50
50
Hoffman
.100
Home
25
Hope
50
Howard
.100
Humboldt
Import’
Traders 60

4#

•

±

..

....

....

International

Irving

50

Jefferson

King’s Co’t-v(Bklyn)20
Knickerbocker... 40
Lafayette (B'klyn) .50

50

1

66

.100
Market*
Meehan’ & Trade’ 25

Mechanics (B’klyn) .50
.1(H)
Mercantile
50
Merchants’

Metropolitan * t.. .1(H)
Montauk (B’klyn) ..50
Nassau (B’klyn).. ..50
National
.7*
New Amsterdam. 25
3 35
N. Y. Equitable
N.Y.Fire and Mar.100
.

50
North American* .' 50
25
North River
25
Pacific
.1(H)
Park
20
Peter Cooper
20
People’s
Phoenix + Br’klyn 50
50

Reliei

.1(H)
.1(H)
25
25
25
50
60

Republic*
Resolute*

Rutgers’

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.
Bid.

Alameda Silver

par

Ayres Mill & Mining.

—

10

American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific

—

1 55
1 05
1 40

—

..

50
5

Bates & Baxter
Benton
Bob Tail

.

.

....

1 15
1 10

—

....

Boscobel Silver
Bullion Consolidated

.

.

.1

•

1 00

—

....

10

Burroughs
Central
ChurGh Union
Columbia G. <fc S

....

....

—
.

•

•

Consolidated Colorado...
Consolidated Gregory... 700
25

Corydon

....

6 70
1 20

6
1 2i

....

1

Eagle

•

.

•

.

•

•

...

—

....

Fall River

....

—

....

First National

Gilpin

—

•

Gold Hill
Gunnell

•

.

•

25

17

Knickerbocker

—

Kipp & Buell

2

....

3 00

40

”45 "50

—

5

85
7

—

2 00
25
1 20
2 35
6

2 05
45
1 30
3 40
8

—

Liberty

80

—

LaCrosse

55 00

Manhattan Silver
.100
Midas Silver
—
5
Montana
New York
10
New York & Eldorado
—

5

Quartz Hill
Reynolds
Rocky Mountain
Seaver
Seuseuderfer
Smith & Parmelee

25

Texas
Twin River Silver

3 201

....

50

2 15
....

....

Yanderburg

100

MISCELLANEOUS stock list.
Bid. Askd!

Companies.

Copake Iron.

par

Foster Iron

Tudor Lead

5
....

Bucks County Lead
Denbo Lead
Manhan Lead

Fbeuir Lead".
fbti Tank Storage......




Bid. Askd

Companies.

par

—

8aeinnw, L. S. A M.. ..25
Wallkill Lead
—
.

Wallace Nickel

—

Rutland Marble

25

—

Long Island Peat.

—

RyissdU- Fi e
8avon de Terre

—

"63

57

—

5

—

—

....

R

St. Mark’s
St. Nicholast

Security +

.

Standard

.

.1(H)
100

Star

Sterling *

150,000
4(H), 000

200,(HH)

2,000,000
150,0(H)

20 00
• • • •

t

600.000

2(H),010
150,(HH)
280,(HH)
150,000
300, (HH)
.150,(MM)

.

July'67

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

419,952

15-,229
2,271,387
135,793
64(5,522
195,926
167,8-33
800,604 Feb. and Ang.

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

302,741
141,431

July’66 .5
July 67 .6
July’65.. 6
July '67 .5
July ’65 .5
July '65 .6
Aug.’60.3#

-

»

•

.

.

-

.

•

•

,

.

T

.

.

«...

,,

.

,

,

,

,

,

...

...

....

.

,

.

.

...

.

.....

....

....

.....

.....

.....

.....

....

....

.

.....

.
.

«...

.

•

’

222,921
14(5,692
516,936
161,743
259,270
228.628

.

«...

....

....

.

.

319,870
264,703 Jan. ami July.
247.895 Feb. and Aug.
1,053,825 Jan. and July.
do
511,631
37!).509 April and Oct.
244,293 Jan and July.
do
212,521
185,365 Feb. and Aug.
141,203 Jan. and July.

,

,

.

....

.....

.5

.

5
July’67 .10

•Lily'67
-

.

.5

.

July’67..5
July’67 3#
July ’(57 ..5
July ’67

•

•

....

.

July ’67

•

•

•

.5

.

July’67 ..5
July’67 .5
July ’67 7

«...

July ’65 ..5
July '67 ..5
July ’67.10
July ’67 .6

....

.

July ’67

July'67

.6

.

.

.

5

-

•

.

.

.

.

.

.

Feb. '67..5
Ju y'67 ..5

July ’(C .5
Apr. ’67..5
July ’67 .6

.....

.

.....

July’67 ..5
Aug. ’67 ..5
July ’67 ..5
July’67.. 5
-July ’07 .5
-Tilly ’67.6#

•

..

.

....

.

.

•

.

.....

.

•

•

*

•

.

•

.

.

•

July’66.3#
Aug. '67. .6

..

Feb. ’(57..5

150,220 Jan. and July. Aug.’67 .5
Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’66.3#
Jan. and July. •July ’67 .5

902,181
220,756
195,780
200,731
108,182
158,733

.

do
....

July ’67 ..5
.

.

„

500,(KM)

501,214

Washington

.

•

•

.5

.

July ’67

Yonkers & N. Y.. 100

25
26
50
.100

.

.

,

.

•

.

393,7(H)
150,(MM)

25

•

July ’67 .5

Washington **.
Williamsburg City..50

.

.

.

1,000,000
6(H),(HH)
350,(KM)
2(H), 000
2(H),0(H)
160,000
150,090
do
1,000,000 1,077.288
200. (KM)
do
190,107
do «
3(H),(HH)
453,233
2(H) 000
do
185,952
200,000
216,879 Feb. and Aug.
do
150,(HH) 140,679

200,000
200,000
200,000
150,0(H)
250,000
4(H),(HH)

-

Feb. ’67..5
do
200,179
238,808 March and Sep Mar. ’67 .4
176,678 Jan. and July. •Inly '67 5

245,169

200. (HH)

-

.

2(H),(HH)
3(H),000
150,(KHI
150,000
2(H),0(H)

150,000

•

.

195,546

1,000,000

.

.

2<K).000

200,000

.

.

.

288,917

210,000

.

•

.

2(H),(HH)
2(H),(HH)
150,000

300,000

-

•

.

Feb. and Aug.
Jan. and July.
do
336,691
630,314 Feb. and Aug.
190,200 Feb. and Aug.
179,008 Jan. and Jnly.

Stuvvesant
Tradesmen's..
United States

.

2 16
8
—
10 1 70 1 80
—
11 90 13 60
40 13 75
— 13
20 6 05 6 15
60 1 00
7
20

.

4 09

—

10

Hope

25

11

Syinonds Forks.

—

10

2

Nye
....
Owyhee
85 People’s G. & S. of Cal.

—

•

—

1 20

—

..

par

.

1 10
—

Crozier
Des Moines
Downieville

j

1 50,
1 15,
3 00

—

•

Gunnell Union
Holman

8 00
1 15
2 25

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Askdj

.

8(53,006
121,H)7
200,000 281,005
Long Island (B’kly).50
25 1,000,000 1,118.0(54
Lorillard*
100
Manhattan
500,000 610,930
100
25

Lamar
Lenox

.

t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares.
Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.
Capital $200,000, In 20,000 shares.
Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares

Companies.

200,(HH)
200,(HH)

2(H),(HH)
2(H),(HK)
.1(H) 1,(HH),(HH)
25
2(H),(HH)

.

*

1,000,000
200,(HH»

.

Niagara

3

Wint.hrop

....

•

75

.

2#

•

200,000

—

.

Winona

....

50

6
1

.

.

•

....

38

.21
•

500,(HH)

50

.

8

.

150,(HH)
2(K).(HH)

.

*

3 00
.15
5 # 31 00
.10 H

.

150,(H)0
200,<HH)

Hanover

88 1 60
5#
3 >4 12 50 1.1 00

.

150,(MH)
204,(HH)
150,(HH)

Hamilton

.

....

66 Superior

5

....

1 00

19
10
33
...

•

#

.

1

Huron
Indiana
Isle Royale*
Keweenaw
Knowlton

•

.

....

IX

TTnn*

•

.

17#

Hancock

•

•

.

2

Hamilton

•

.

2

...

•

..

30

200, (HH)

17
Firemen’s
Firemen’s Fund.. 10
10
Firemen s Trust.
25
Fulton
50
Gallatin
100
Gebliard
60
Germania
50
Globe ...?
Great Wcstern*+. 100
25
Greenwich

Grocers’
Guardian

...

.

....

•

....

.

....

....

7 IK)
7 00

•

12
Hoc lr land
3
St. Clair
1
St. Louis
5H
St. Mary’s
Salem
H
1
Seneca
Sharon
X
Sheldon & Columfcian.21
1
South Pewabic
2
South Side
Star
.11#

....

OH
8 H 17 50 17 75

•

.

Ridge

....

.

....

.11#

Resolute

.

•

....

4

Quincy \

.

.

.

...'.

Flint 8teel River.

1
.lu
.

Princeton
Providence

....

.

•

....

.—

Pontiac

•

•

....

.

Portage Lake

5#

Evergreen Bluff...

•

..

0 00
4 00

5#

.

Pittsburg & Boston..

•

•

...

Empire

•

•

.

8lVf

•

Petherick
Pewabic
Phoenix

.

...

Edwards

•

....

....

OH

.

.

Pennsylvania *

•

03
2 00

3#
4

•

.

....

1?'
5

.

.

Ogima
•

•

•

.

Eagle
Empire City

....

4H

.

New York
North Cliff'
North w estern
Norwich

•

—

....

Excelsior

•

•

..

5H

•

Naumkeag
New Jersey Consol...

—

Central
Concord
Copper Creek
Copper Falls
Dacotah
Dana
Davidson
Delaware
Dev^n

10 00
17 50 20 00)

...—

.

■.

•

40
100
60

Exchange

....

300,000
200,000

Excelsior

.

....

4*,

•

Mendotat
Merrimac
At canard
Milton
Minnesota
National
Native

Bohemian

.

.

•

•

....

2
5

.

At nrlora
....

3 50

Calumet
Canada
Charter Oak

paid 1

Madison
Mandan
Manhattan
Mass

.

.

.

2

Atlas
Aztec

Lafayette
Lake Superior

•

....

....

25#

Albany & Boston..
Algomah

•

•

•

•

•

....

Sale.

151,002 Jan. and July.
325,233 Jan. and July.
515,890 Jan. and July. July’67.10}
222,073 Jan. and July. July ’67 5
282,127 Jan. and July. Jan. 65.. .5
257,753 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’67...5
330,470 March and Sep Mar. ’67..5
204,790 May and Nov.
170,171 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65. .4
345,749 June and Dec. Dec. ’66..5
26(5,368 Feb. and Aug. Aug. *67...6
238,506 Jan. and July. July ’67..10
July’64 ..4
92,083
384 '266 Jan. and July.
338’S78 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67.7#
275,591 Jan. and July. July’67. (5
do
July’64.3#
309,622
do
July ’(57 ..5
214,147
424,189 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’■ 7 5
228,090 Jan. and July. July’67 ..5
234,872 Jau. and July. July *67... 5
1,289,037 Jan. and July. Ju y'07 .,7
404,178 March and Sep Mar. ’(5-1. .5
36,51 S
424>.)5 April and Oct. Apr. '67..5
203,990 Jan. and July. July’67 .7
J my'67... 6
do
229,276
13 4,06t Feb. and Aug.
241,810 Jan. and July. July '67 .5
do
July ’66.3#
122,168
do
July ’65 .5
165,933
do
July ’67 .5
2(H), 76(5
149,(58!) May and Nov.
227,954 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67 .5
525,702 Jan. and July. July ’67 .7
200,015 Jan. and July. July’67 ..5
2,385,657 Jan. and July. July "(57.3#
255,657 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’(56..5
170,225 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5
177,173 Jan. and July. July ’67 3#
do
July '(57 ..5
162,571
...

6(H), 000

25

Broadway
Brooklyn

5

.

$300,000
300,000
200,000
200,000

Adriatic
50
<Etna
American *
0 50
American Exch’e. .100
50
Arctic
25
Astor
Atlantic (Br’ldyu) ..50
25
Baltic
25
Beekman
Bowery (N. Y.) ... 25

25

15

Venango (N. Y.)

....

•

....

.10
Union
2
United Pe’tl’mF’ms—
.10
United States

...

«,

®

.

....

.10
.25

Shade River

15
....

.

.

.

liynd Farm

...

10

.

•

•

10

5
5
5
5
1

.

•••

•

•

•

.—

Bid. Last

Last paid.

Periods.

....

....

2
2

Oceanic
Pit Hole Creek
Rath bone Oil Tract

....

5
5

First National
Germania..
Great Republic
G’t Western Consol

.—

Ivanhoe
Manhattan
Mountain Oil
Natural
N. Y. & Alleghany
New York & Newark...
N Y. & Philadel

....

....

10

Brevoort

20

HamiltonMcClintock...

do

3

2 50

10

Bergen Coal and Oil
Bradley Oil

par

Hammond

par 10

Allen Wright
Bemis Heights
Bennehoff Run
Bennehoff Mutual

DIVIDEND.

1867.

do

Aug. ’66

•

6

July '67 .6
.

Jan. ’67

.

.5

Aug.’67.-. .5
Fel). ’67...5

•July ’67 ..5
July 67 .5
.

*

important decision relating
telegraph companies has just been rendered by the Supreme Courl
of Michigan, in the case of the Western Union Telegraph Company vb
Carew, appeal from the Wayne Circuit Court. Carew telegraphed t<
Baltimore for frtv cases of oysters.
In the transmission an error oc
curred, whereby he received only four cases instead of forty. Tim
message was written on one of the company’s blanks, with the usua
printed heading, covering the conditions on which messages are takei
for transmission. The Circuit Court held that the telegraph company
was liable for the damage suffered by Carew, treating the company »
common carriers, and Carew as not bound by the conditions unless bif
attention was particularly called to them.
The Supreme Court reverses this decision, holding that the telegrapt
company are not common carriers, and that they have a right to estab
lish any reasonable rules governing their liability in the impartial trans
mission of messages, plainly printed in conspicuous letters. It is statei
to be sent on the annexed conditions, the sender by signing the meesagi
adopts the conditions, and is bound by them, whether he reads them 0
oot, It ie bis owe uegligenoe if be fails to notice them.
Rights

to

ov

Tkeegraph Companies.—An

155

THE CHRONICLE.

1867.]

August 3,

INSURANCE.

PIKE

.

Insurance

Sun Mutual Insurance

Fire

American

North

255 057 7<
1,

Capital and Surplus, January
I

'

Cities in

807, *755,067 77.

$1,614,540 78

Capital and Assets,

Caster, Secretary.
,j. Griswold, General Agent.

Director*.
Richard Bullymore,

and

President.
JOH N P. I’AULISON, Vice-President.
Isaac II. Walker, Secretary.

This Company

1 raving reduced its

capital aeeordin

the sanction of the Superintendent of
Department to the sum of

law, under

Insurance

the

IN CASH,
rebatement on premiums in lieu of
m value to an average scrip dividend
a

JAMES LOKI WEIt UII AII AITI
President.

FOBEKT M. C. UK A HAM,

continues to make Insurance on

Director* :
F. II. "Wolcott,
P. W. Turney,
"William T. Blodgett.
Charles P. Kirkland,
Watson E. Case.
John A. Graham,
John C. Henderson,
.Tames L. Graham,
Clinton IT. Fisk.

Lorrain Freeman,
Edward A Stansbury,

Johnston,
Samuel I). Bradford,
.1. Boorman

WADSWORTH, Secretary

W. li.

Ma

'l ids Company
line and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks,
on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬

chandise of all kinds,

York, No. 6 Pine Street.
Agent.

AmericanRailroad Guide
August Number

Contains :

Latest Official Time Tables, complete, for the Unite
{States and Canada ; Towns, Cities, and Villages
on

Railway Linc-s. Hotels, &c.;

Steam

Navigation Lines.
A

PERFECT

MEN AND

GUIDE FOR BUSINESS
TRAVELERS.

Price

Twenty-Five Cents.

by News Agents and Dealers.
J. \V. Pit ATT A Co., Publishers.

For Sale

75 FULTON

Hulls, and Freight.*

issued making loss payable in Gold or Currenrv, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the
Office of Rathbonc, Bros. & Co., in Liverpool.

STREET, N.Y.

Policies

Steamship Companies.

TRUSTEES.
James

Joseph IT. Yarniini,

CENT.

PER

dividend to dealers, based
Huiprinciple that all classes of risks arc equally
profitable, tins Company makessueb 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 be divided to the stockholders.

V ic e-P r e .*»! de *11.

Martin Bates,
Duillev IT. Fidler,
Franklin H. Delano,
Gilbert L, Beeckuum.

scrip, equivalent
of

on

intends hereafter to confine its fire business to theelty
of New York and vicinity, and will also write Marine
Risks on Cargo only, at the otlice in the Metropolitan
Ranft Building.

NAVIGATION

Company has paid to its

Instead of issuing a scrip

$300,000,

organized with paid up Cash
Agency in

CHARLES W. STAND ART

Policy-holders,

TWENTY

.

CUR<CENT RATES.

RISKS AT
Otlice in New

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1811.

April 1(1, 1867.

NEW YORK,

Henry Martin.
George W. Tift,
S. S. Guthrie,
C. J. Hamlin,
O. L. Nims,
John H. Vought
James Adams. |

1 INLAND

AND

F1KE

$1,261,349

During the past year this

Company has just

yj

4

T.auren Enos,

James M. Smith,
Adrian R. Root,

This

Bravlev, |

0?P. Ramsdell,

Capital, as above, and have established an
this city, and are prepared <0 write

COMPANY.

Assets, January 1st, 1867

BROADWAY.

108

NO.

Mutual

STREET, NEW YORK.

-No. 35 WALL

Company,

Insurance

James

Pascal P. Pratt,

The Mercantile

i

U

L. K. Plvmpton,
James H. Metcalfe
John Greiner,

Stephen G. Austin,
Win. H. Glenny,
S. G. <’ornell,
John C. Clifford,
A. Reynolds,
.Tames N. Matthews,

MOSES H. GRINNELL,

INSURANCE

Metropolitan

$200,000

Capital Paid in

Wm. G. Fargo,
Rufus I,. Howard,
Dexter P. Kumsey,
John Allen, Jr.,
Peter J. Ferris,

tire United States.

.TAMES W. OTIS, President.
R. W. BLEECEEK, ViceITes’t.

APRIL, 1867.

WM. <1. FA KUO, President.
A. REYNOLDS, Vice President.
HENRY T. SMITH, Secretary

This Company having recently added to its
assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000,
tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues
to issue policies of insurance against Marine
In¬
land Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected
from Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are on
titled to participate in the profits.

Property against Loss or Damage

p\ it.

to

Casli

Incorporated 1841.

by Fire at
I lie usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of Un
Company, or al its various Agencies in the principal
insure

ORGANIZED

previous
and subscrip¬

INCORPORATED 1823.
Surplus

OF BUFFALO

(INSURANCE BUILDINGS)

Co.,

faMiCapital

BuffaloCity InsuranceCo.

COMPANY.

49 WALL STREET.

OFFICE 114 BROADWAY,
rp WCII OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE, TIIIR
W,A*
AVENUE.

rasii

*

Miscellaneous.

Insurance.

Samuel Willcts,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. f rost,
William Watt,

Henry Eyre,
Cornelius Gi

SAMUEL THOMPSON &
NEPHEWS’ Black Star Line of
Liverpool Packets, and Nationa 1
Line of Liverpool and Queenstown

D. Golden Murray,
E. 1 InydoeK. White,
N. L. M< Crearly,
Daniel T. Willcts,
L. Edgyrton.

Freeland,

Henry R. Kunhardt,

John S. Williams,
William Nelson, Jr.,
Charles Dimon,
A. William Heye,
Harold Dollner,
Paul N. Spoiford.

innell,

Joseph Slagg,"

Jas. D. Frsli,
Geo. W. Hennings,

Francis Hal ha way,
Aaron L. Reid,
Ell wood Waller.
ELL W ODD WALTER, President.
•
(HAS NEWCOMB, Vice-President.
J. Desuaed, Secrefar y.

office73 Broad¬
215 Pearl Street).

Steamers, sailing every week. Passage
way,corner of Rector Street (formerly
Sight Drafts on the Royal Bank of Ireland,
all its Branches, and on C. Grimshaw <fc Co.,

payable in
Liverpool,
payable in any part of England and Wales.’® Bankers
supplied with Sterling draffs and through tickets from
the Old Country to any part of the United States.
PACIFIC MAIL

STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S

THROUUII LINE

.

.

JEtna

To

California,
And Carrying

Insurance
OF

Company,

HARTFORD.

$3,000,000.

CAPITAL
L. J. HEN

DEE, President.

NOW, Secretary.

Asset* January

1, 1SC7

No. 12

cash Capital
SU liPLUS, J AN UAliY

Hanover Fire Insurance
STREET.

J uly 1st, 1S67

STREET.

Cash capital
Surplus

$400,000 00
187,205 93

-

.*

Gross Assets.
Total Liabilities

$587,205 93
33,480 09

\.

:

President.

BENJ. S. WALCOTT,

Germania Fire Ins.
No. li

CASH

Co.,

CAPITAL,

SURPLUS, Jan. lat, 1867
TOTAL ASSETS

$500,000 00

Fire Insurance
OFFICE, No. 92

Secretary.

Hugo Schumann,

*

Cash Capital -

pany.

Bcprptiii'iPR
secretaries

J JoEUf

'




Stuart. *
AC'lttryAfcllElTAKD HOMANS

222,433

or Damage by

Fire

responsible Com¬

Board of Directors:
Henry S. Leverich.
Robert.Schell,

Steph. Cainbr.cleng,
Joseph Foulke,
Cyrus H. Loutrel,

McCUfaDY, Vice-President.
5 Isaac Abbatt*

$150,000

- -

'

RANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.

R. A.

-

This Company insures against Loss
on terms as favorable as any other

The Mutual Life Insu1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00.
FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.

Company,

------

Henry M. Taber,
Theodore W. Riley,

CASH ASSETS, September

attendance free.
For passage tickets or

Jacob Reese,
Lcbbcus B. Ward.

Lydig Suydam,
Joseph Britton,
I).

Fred. Schuchardt,

William H. Terry,

Joseph Grafton,

Amos Robbins,
Thos. P. Cummings,
Jno. W. Mersereau,
David L. Eigenbrodt,
William Eemsen,

Stephen Hyatt,
JACOB

E, MooBE^Secretary,

board. Medicines and

further information, apply
wharf, foot o

Company’s ticket office, on the
Canal street, North River, New York.

it the

F. R.

STEAM

BABY Agent.

COMMUNICA¬
NEWAND AUSTRALA¬

BETWEEN

PANAMA.

Royal
the 24th of each
month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬
tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the
The Panama. New-Zealand and Anstralian
Mail Companv dispatch a steamer on

BROADWAY.

Asset*, June 1, 1867 RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President.
JOHN E. KAI1L, Vice President.

through. One hundred pounds

allowed each adult.
An experienced Surgeon on

SIA via

Hope

315,074 73
$815,074 73

zanillo.

iYOBK

).BROADWAY, N. Y.

with Sacramento.

Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with
steamers for South. Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for
Vnt ml American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Man-

TION

J. Remsf.n Lane, Secretary.

dates fall on

JULY:
1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City.
lllh—11enuy Chauncky, connecting with Montana

Baggage cnecaed

COMPANY,
No. 45 WALL

month (except when those

Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.

20th—Arizona, connecting

■r

ALEXANDER, Agent.

JAS. A.

15years,253 per cent.
SThlELE, President

.$4,478,100 74

AGENCY

WALL

62

218,000

....

promptly paid. Char¬

EIRE.

NO.

$1,000,000

1st, 1S67

Losses equitably adjusted and
tered 1850. Cash dividends paid in

INSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY
NEW YORK

list, of every

WALL STREET.

JONATHAN D.
Notman, Secretary.

304,076 06

Liabilities

LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬
ER, FOOT 0 1 Canal street, at 12
o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and

COMPANY.

Charter Perpetual.

Incorporated 1819

J. GOOD

Niagara Fire Insurance

the United

Mail,

States

REESE, President,

New-York
the 11th of each month.
be conveyed
rates: From
to Sydney or
Melbourne, $846 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $248
for second class.
The above rates inclnde the transit across the Isthmus
of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward
cabins of the Anstralian steamer : alter cabin, latter
$25 additional. 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¬
vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters fare
men servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies
cabin.
A limited quantity of merchandise will be conveyei
under through bill of ladiug.
For further information, application to be made
the Pacillc Mail steamship Company, No. 59 Wall 8t., ’
VWS
Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving
for Aspinwall (Colon) on
First and second class passengers will
under through" ticket at the following
New' Y'ork to ports in New Zealand, or

„

Of tO CHARLES w.

WEST, Agent,

No, 26 William it., New

tor*

156

THE CHRONICLE.

[August 3, 1867,

Financial.

Safes.

Insurance.

THE

IMPORTANT

OFFICE OF THE

TO

Atlantic

Union Pacific Railroad
Bankers

Company,

Merchants.

&

Mutual

Insurance

Are now constructing a Railroad from

O in A H A

NEW

NEBRASKA,

,

westward towards the Pacific Ocean, making, with its
connections, an unbroken line

Lillie’s

ACROSS THE CONTINENT.
The

Company

First

now

offer

a

limited amount of their

Mortgage Bonds

FIRE

PER CENT. IN

This road

tlie Hollar.

LYMAN G.

Binkley

and

Wu

ltams

(%) of an inch, after hours of lanor, led that we can
endorse the above Novc ty Iron Works’ certificate
in all

particulars.
JARVIS WILLIAMS, Treasurer.

Philadelphia, Pa., February 25,1807.
Messrs. Lewis Lillie &*Son,

entire line, tlie bonds of the

Gentlemen,—Wo have tried

to them.

chilled

iron

a sample of
similar to that sent to the

exclusive of the

me

dmibieNovelty

about the same,

capital, $118,116,000; but the full value

Works, New'York, and our experience with it is
viz : Ijiat it can only he penetrated
by a long continued operation ol the most skillful

Capital Stock of the Company is one
dollars, of which five millions have
already been paid in, and of which it is not supposed
that more than twenty-live millions ut most will be re¬
quired.

W. TT.
W. II.

hundred million

The cost ofthe road is estimated by competent
engi¬
to be about one hundred million

neers

dollars, exclu¬

sive of equipment.

Prospects lor Business.
The railroad connection between Omaha and the
now complete, and the earnings
of the Union
on the sections already finished for the month

East is
Pacific

May

were

$261,782.

These

sectional

earnings
as the road progresses will much more than
pay the in¬
terest on the Company's bonds, and tlie
through busi¬
ness over the only line of railroad between
the Atlan¬

Foremen

BECH1ELL,
STRAIIAN,

in Messrs. Merrick & Son’s South worth

Foundry, Philadelphia, Pa.

same

period

$5,683,895 05

Returns of Premiums and

Expenses
The

$1,194,173 23

Company has the following As¬

sets, viz.:
United States and State of New York

Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $6,771,885 00
secured

by Stocks, and other¬

1,129,350 00

Real Estate and Bonds and
due the

Agent,srLHie Safe and Iron Co.,
the sample of new
combination of m* tals for safes sent us by you to
as thorough tests of the drill as we
coil’d, and fail¬
ed to pein Irate the metal at all. We think it; won d
be impossible for biuglars to enter the safes made oi
this met <1 by means of the drill during
the iongest.
time in ordinary business they could have access to
them—in lact, teat the metal is proof against the

Gentlemen^—We subjected

drill.

Security of tlie Ronds.
Company respectfully submit, that the above
statement of facts fully demonstrates tlie
security of

their

Bonds, and as additional proof they would sug¬
gest that the Bonds now otiered arc less than ten mil¬
lion dollars on 517 miles of road, on which
oyer twenty
million dollars have already been

expended;

miles of this road the

cars are now

maining 187 miles

nearly completed.

At the present rate of

annual interest

premium

on 330

running,jmd the

on

re¬

T !

gold-these bonds

ou the present

Nine per

cosCoT

5

cent.,

and it is believed that on the
completion of the road,
like the Government Bonds, they will go above
par.

The

Company intend to sell but a limited amount at
the present low rates, and retain the
right to advance
the price at their option.

Subscriptions will be received in

.

Truly

Total Amount of Assets

and by BANKS AND BANKERS
generally through¬
out the United States, of whom
maps and descriptive
pamphlets maybe obtained. They will also be sent

by

Company’s Office, 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

©f the bonds.

yours,
N. S. BOUTON & CO.

of

434,207 81

Six per cent interest on tlie outstand¬
ing: certificates of' profits will be paid
to t he holders thereof, or their
legal representatives,
and

on

after

Tuesday tlie

Fifth of

February next.
The outstanding certificates of the issue of
1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders

thereof,

or

their legal

delivery

NEW YORK.

representatives,

Tuesday the Fifth

cease.

of

The certificates to be

of

on and

February

produced at the time

payment, and cancelled.

A dividend
declared

ofthe

of

Twenty Per Cent, it

the net earned premiums

on

Company, for the

year

issued

on

and after

Tuesday the Second of April

next.

By order of the Board,

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¬
our Power Drill, and with the best
tempered drills our skill and experience could pro¬
duce.
verest tests of

After operating upon it with different drills seve¬
ral hours without penetrating it more than half an
inch and at that point unable to make further
pro¬
gress, we became satisfied that if not utterly im¬
penetrable, it would at least require days of time, a
large number of drills and machine power to pene¬
trate through it; and that it was entirely out of the
( ower of even the most skilful burglar to penetrate
safe made of this material.

R. T.

Secretary.
TRUSTEES:

John D.

Jones,
Dennis,
W. II. II. Moore,
Henry Coit,
Charles

Wm. C.

Pickersgill,

Lewis

Curtis,
Charles H. Russell,
Lowell

Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,
Royal Phelps,
Caleb Barstow
A. P. Pillot

CRANE, President.

A full assortment of these
unequalled Burglarproof Safes constantly on hand at our Warerooms.
Also, safes of every description, designed for both
Fre and Bur.dar-proof security,
The public are in¬

vited to call and examine for themselves
merits of our Safes.

as

to

the

.

Lillie Safe & Iron Co.,
LEWIS LILLIE, President.

'

William E.

Dodge
Geo. G. Hobson,
David Lane,
James Bryce,
Francis Skiddy,
Daniel S. Miller.
Robert L. Taylor,

BROADWAY) NEW YORK.

Wm. Sturgis,
Henry K. Bogert,
Joshua J. Henry,
Dennis Perkins,
Joseph Gaillard, Jr.
J. Henry Burgy,

Cornelius Grinnell,
C. A. Hand,
B. J. Howland,
Benj. Babcock,
Fletcher Westray,
Robt. B. Minturn, Jr.
Gordon W, Burnham,
Frederick Chauncey,

James Low

GeorgeS. Stephenson,
William H. Webb.
Paul Spofford.
Charles P. Burdett,

Shephard Gandy.
JOHN D.

JONES^ President,

CHAR EES

DENNIS, Vice-President
MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres
HEWLETT, 3d VtCO-Pres t.

W. H. H.
198

CHAPMAN,

f

Messrs. Murray &

a

ending 31st

December. I860, for which certificates will he

Northwestern Man’f’g Co., f

Chicago, March 11, 1867.

JOHN J. CISCO. Treasurer.




3,837,735 41

$12,536,304 46

J. H.
Office

New York by the

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

mail from the

141,866 24

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable..
Cash in Bank

next, from which date all interest thereon will
Union Foundry Works. |
Chicago, 111., March 13, 1867.
j
Messrs. Murray & Winne,

The

pay an

221,260 00

sundry notes and claims
Company, estimated at

Value and

are

Mortgages,

Interest and

after

Office

tic and Pacific must be immense.

-

70

Very truly,

The authorized

of

$7,632,236

paid during the

hanics and the best tools.

be realized.

now

1866 to 31st December, 1866

Losses

IIALL, Foreman.

Works,
\
Boston, Mass*, January 22, 1807, f
"We having made an attempt to drill a sample o
double chilled iron furnished us by Messrs. Lillie &
Son, ami failed to penetrate it more than five-eighths

The Government makes a donation of 12,800 acres of
land to the mile, amounting to 20,032,000 acres, estima¬
ted to be worth $30,000,000, making the total
resources,

of the lands cannot

ary,

wise..

The Company is also permitted to issue its own First
Mortgage Bonds to an equal amount, and at the same
time, which, by special Act of Congress, are made a
United States being subordinate

15

Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬

Loans

Means of tlie Company.
Estimating the distance to he built by the Union Pa¬
cific to be 1,505 miles, the United States Government
issues its Six per cent. Thirty-year Bonds to the Com¬
pany as the road is finished at the average rate of about
$28,250 per mile, amounting to $-14,208,000.

on the

Wokks, |
lirfiO.
f

Son,
Gentlemen,—We have subjected the sample of
double-chilled iron you furnished us to the most se¬
vere tests (as regards
drilling through it) we could
bring to bear upon it, and without, success.
It, is our opinion that it ean only be penetrated by
the use of a Urge number of drills, and the expen¬
diture of much power with days of time, and we
think it impossible fot a burglar with his time and
power to penetrate it at all.
* ^
lours truly,
ISAA< ’ V. HOLMES. Snpt.

was

Mortgage

2,188,325

January. 1806

Total amount of Marine Premiums.
.$10,470,346 31 '
No Polices have been issued upon Life

Office of the Novelty Ikon
New York. 181 h December,

COLD,

1870.

First

26

nor upon Fire Risks discon¬
nected with Marine Risks.

completed from Omaha 305 miles west
on the 1st of
January, 1807, and is fully equipped, and
trains are regularly running over it. The
Company
has now on hand sufficient iron, ties, etc., to finish the
remaining portion to the eastern base of the Rocky
Mountains, 212 miles, which is under contract to lie done
September 1st of this year, and it is expected that, the
entire road will be in running order from Omaha to its
western connection with the Central
Pacific, now being
rapidly built eastward from Sacramento, Cal., during

•*

1st

$8,282,021

:

Policies not marked off

ou

Messrs. Lewis Lillie «fc

on

of its

Risks;

AT

Ninety Cents

of the

on Marine Risks,
January, 1866, to 31st De¬

cember, 1866
Premiums

PROOF

Safes.

tr

Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter
Company, submit the following Statement
affairs on the 31st December, 1866:

from 1st

BURGLAR

AND

The

Premiums received

DOUBLE CHILLED AND WROUGHTIRON

having thirty years to run, and bearing annual interest
payable on the first day of January and July in the
City of New York, at the rate of

SI*

YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1867,

This

Company offer for the consideration of Bank
ers, Merchants and those desiring the best burgla
proof security the fallowing certificates:

Co.,

J. D.

August

THE CHRONICLE

3,1867.]

Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda,
1*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ lb;
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft ;

PRICES CURRENT.
addition to the duties noted
a discriminating duty of 10 per
tent ad val. is levied on all imports
under dags that have no reciprocal
fn

t

with the United States.
all goods, wares, and mertkandise, of the growth or produce of
Countries East of the Cape of Good

treaties

Qn

Hove

imported from places tins
Hope, duty

when

'of

side
the Cape of Good
a
of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such

articles when

imported directly from the
growth OT produc¬

sluce or places of their
tion • Raw Cotton and Raw

Silk excepted.
all cases to be 2.240 lb.

The tor In

lb.

Ancli**rs—!>uty: Scents

upward#ft 8t@
Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val.
pot, 1st sort... $1 100 lb
@8 7 *
012091b and

Pearl, 1st sort
@12 75
■tppswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val.

41® 43
Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct.
Kio Grande shin $ ton45 00 @ ....
American

yellow.^ B>

«rpad—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.

¥»

Pilot

®

-

@

Navy
Crackers

@

”*
14

Breadstuff*—See special report.
Bricks*
Common

hard, .per M. 9 00 @ 0 50

18 <'0 @20 00
Philadelphia Fronts...45 00 @
Croton

Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair
1 8

ft.

Amer’n,gray &wh. $ft
Batter and

65 @9 00

Clieese. -Duty: 4

cents.

ButterFresh pf

il, $ lb , new
Hl-firkm tubs $ lb “
Welsh, tubs $ lb. 4>
Fine to «xtra Sta e,...
Good io live State, —
Common Stite,

24
2»

85

20
20

21

28

@
@
18 @
15 @

18
--

(h

@

28
25
Is
24
••

Cheese—
14
13
13
12

13
do

12
12

Common..

7

do Common

Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; sperma¬
ceti and wax d; it, earine and ada¬
mantine, 5ucents $ ft.
Bperm, patent,. .
1b 48 @ 55
Refined sperm,
Stearic

city...

Adamantine

38 @

30 @
18@

31
21

Cement—Rosendalo^bl.... @ 1 60
upward $ft

8@

8}

Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $1 ton
of 28 bushels 80 ft to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28
bushels of 80 ft $ bushel.
Liverpool Oriel. $ ton
of 2,240 ft
@12 00

Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents

$ ft; Castor Oil, $1
gallon ; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 1*;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, *; Cream
Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents ^ ft;
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent
& ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Darnar, 10 cents per ft ;
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Guin Tragacanth, 20 ^
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬
limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange,
50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬
mot, $1 $ ft; Oil Peppermint, 50
$ 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, 50cents
$ ft: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad
val.; Sal ASratus, 1* cents ^ ft; Sal
Soda, £ cent ^ lb; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; Soda Ash, * ; Sugar Lead, 20cents
$ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 ^ oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
$ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 2o; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 ^ cent ail val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $ l
lb; all
others quoted below. free.

Acid, Citric
(gold)
Alcohol, in bond
Aloes, Cape
$ lb

Anthracite
Cardiff steam

Newcastle G^s cuSteam

Alum

Annato, good to prime.
Antimony, Regulus of
Argols, Crude,
Argols, Refined
Arsenic, Powdered

J '-

@

6i)

@
@
@

Bleaching Powder

18
..

..

LSI

3j

Crude

ton

Brimston.

Am.

38 50 @40 00
Roll

$ ft....
Brimstone,

.

l

lor

.@

3J

Sul-

phur
Camphor, :>i;de, (in
bond)....
.(gold)
Camphor, Refined,...

18 @
19
3 00 @ 3 25
2 15 @ 2 17

‘2d @
‘2i»
14 @
84 @

Guayaquil do ...(gold)
Domingo....(gold)

9'* @

@

3>

12 @
9J@

13
10

Coriander Seed

Cochineal, Hon. (gold)

Cochineal,Mexic’n(g’d)
Copperas, American ..
Cream Tarar, pr.(gold)

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; unt-rred

Manila, 2* other unlarred, 3* cents
V lb.

22 @

23

@

1'**
19*

@

22

@

Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
Regular, quarts*® gross 65 @ 70
..

Phial..,.

50 @

70

12 @

40

Cotton—See special report.
and Dyes—Duty,Alcohol,
* 50
par gallon; Aloes, 6 cents # ft l
Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6

rents

$ 1b; Arsenic and Assafcedati,
Antimony, Crude and Regulus.
10; Arrowroot, 80 $ cent ad val
Balaam Copal vi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
Balaam Pern, 50 oents V ft; Callaaya




Slndl Lac
Soda Ash

: 5

40

■

Epsom Salts.

..

Scotch, G’ck, No. I $y.

..

Flowers,Benzoin.5

oz.

17 @
30 @

5|

Gambier

Ginseng, South&West.
Gum Arabic, Picked..
Gum Arabic, Sorts...
Gum Benzoin

Gum

@11' 00

(gold)
@ 5 60
FcathcrK—Duty: 30 $ con tad val.
Prime Western...^ 1b
‘. 0 @

..(gold)

Myrrh,East India

Gum,Myrrh, Turkey.
Senegal ...(gold)
Gum Tragacanth,Sorts
Gum Tragacanth, w.
Gum

(g"ld)
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and
flakey.

Iodine, Resublimed...
Ipecacuanha, Brazil...
Jalap, in bond gold..
Lac Dye
Licorice Paste,Calabria
Licorice, Paste, Sicily.
Lioorice Paste Spanish
Licorice Paste, Greek.

1 75 @
s5 (m
50 @
h5 @

square

on

50

,

@

40
,

.

8x

.

i 66

12
#

00

6 50 @ 9 00

unpolished Cylinder, Crown, ami
Window, not exceeding i0.\

.

tolOxlS

7 75 @ 6 00
9 25 @ 6 50
9 50 @ 7 00
11 75 @ 7 50
14 50 @ 9 00
16 00 @10 00
17 (HI @11 00
IS 00 @12 00
20 00 @13 00
24 00 @15 00

English and Pr*tch Window—1st, 2c,
3d, and 4th qualities.

35
4 50 <?h 5 0 )

8 75 @ 4

7g

foot; larger and not over 24

llx.'i to 12x18
12x19 to 16x24
18x22 to 20x30
20x31 to 24x30
24x31 to 24x36
25x36 to 30x44
80x46 to 32x48
32x50 to 32x56
Above

.

.

30 @

Subject to a discount of )5 $ cent,
fix 8 to HxIO.
50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50

72
7*

..

5q

qualities.

25

34

3p

H) @

i£; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not
over 24x30 .2^ ; all over that, 3 cents
$ lb.
American Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th

65

30 @

s @
:o
5 00 @ S 0o

15 inches square,

90
,

5 00 @20 0o

2 H) @ 5 0|)
.3 00 @ C Oo

16 ((<*■

Biack

Common

@ 8 80
@
@ 3 9»

@

fH) @
75
2 c0 @ 4 • o

inches, 20 cents ^ square foot; all
above that, 40 cents ^ square foot;

6>
28

24

5 (K @50 00
3 00 @ 5 00
I 00 @ i 50

inches 6 cents
square foot;
above that, and not exceeding 24x60

,

@
31 @

2o

x30

4-.

@

10 @

GIjisn—Duty, Cylinder or Window'
Polished Plate m»t over 10x15 inches,
2i- cents
square foot; larger and
not
over 16x24
inches, 4 cents ^

26*

.

pah*

Skin k,

75

4 oo @ 8 00

Raccoon

60 @ 1 00

7 @
Madder,Dutch. .(gold)
(m
do, French, EXF.F.do
Manna,large flake.... 1 6u @
Manna, small flake.... 1 00 @
.8 @
Mustard Seed, Cal....
14 @
Mustard Seed, Trieste.
Nutgalls Blue Aleppo 83|@

......

Opossum

36

80 ®

3 75
6 50
3 85
85
25

.

Muskrat,

55

•

23

50 @

Otter

On
Oil
75
88

,

•"

50 @ 1 (Hi

Mink, dark

6J

@
81 @
‘25 @
40 @
@
55 @
@
•

do

IS
60

2

00 @18 5o
no @18 50
0 > @

2 00 (n> 8 00

*

1

@ 1 06

@
@
11 @

87*

15 @
13
13 @
24
24 @
21 @

IT
15
21
25

.

Buenos

Ayres, mixed.
Hog, Western, unwash.

--

85
19

HardwareAxes—Cast steel, best
brand
do

per

doz

_

ordinary

Carpe - tor’s Adzes,....
do ordinary
Shingling Hatchets, C’t
steel, best br’ds, Nos.
1 to 3
do ordinary

,

8 00

@ 9 50
6 17 @ 7 50

Broad batch’s StoS bst. i5 50 @2.> 00
do «rdi -ary
12 i 0 @ ....
Coflee Milis
Listlt % dis,
do Bri
Hopper
@
do Wood Back
@ ...
.

....

(lotton

Gins, per saw...$5@S less 20 %
Wrought Butts List 5 % dis,
Cast Butts—Fast Joint. List 10 jtadv.
Loose Joint..
List.
List 5 % adv.
Hinges,Wr,)Ui’ht,
Door Bi Its, Cast Bbl
L*st 30 % dis
Carriage and Tire do List 40@5 J % dis.
1 )oor L> cks and Latches List 7i ^ dis.
Door Knobs—Mineral.
list
% dis.
“
Pore lain
List 7# % dis.
Padlocks
N* w List 25&7± % dis.
Narrow

.

.

@10 50
15 @
@
Mackerel,No 8, Mass
@ S 25
Salmon,'Pickled, No.1.57 00 @
Sa moil, I i kled, p. to
@
45
Herring, Scaled5^ box.
40 @
22
Herring, No. 1
1H @
5.j
Herring, pickled^bbl. 4 60 @

Lynx
Marten, Dark

.

v.

SI)

20 00 @20 50

House

6 50 @

RioGrande,mixed^ 1b
72

....

brown

Rifle

if air—Duty frke.

...

@

..

Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬
ters ^ ft
’ 86

...

do Cross
do lied
d<; Grey .

17.]
41
.

..

....

78

$ cent ad vai.; over 20 oents VI
ft, 10 cents
ft and 20 $1 cent Ad val,
00
Blasting(A) $ 25ft keg
@
50
Shipping and Mining..
@

45

fO @
Dye Woods—Duty free.
Camwood..(gold)^l t nlUO ()G@
31 on @ 32 00
Fustic, Cuba
Fustic,Savanilla
@
Fustic, Maracaibo
25 00 @
) ogwood, lion
80 00 @
Logwood, Laguna (gold)
@
Logwood, St,. D"min..‘l (30 @22 00
liogwood. Cam.(gold)
@ ,
Logwood,Jamaica iO
@16 00
Limav/ood
Bar-wood

20$

..

52

Cotton, No. 1... ^ y.

Fox, Silver

U

@

••

@

.

20 @

Gunny Flotli—Duty, valued at 10
cents or less $ square yard, 3; ovei
10,4 cents $ ft.
@
25
Calcutta,standard, y’d
Gun powder—Duty, valued at 90
cents or less 98 ft, 6 cents
$ lb, an
20

Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
Ravens,Light..^pee 16 00 @
Ravens, Heavy
18 On @

do

3*5

10t@

@

(80|)c.)(g’ld)
2*@
Sugar LM, W’e(goid)..
@
Sulp Quinine, Am^ oz 2 15 @
Sulphate Morphine.... 6 75 @
Tart’c Acid, .(g’ld)^ft
51 @
Tapioca
il @
Verdigris, dry ex dry
@
Vitriol, BTue
10 @

Fisher,

17 @

..

..

38
80

q

Cubebs, East India....

Fennell Se d

weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot,
3 cents $1 ft.
83
Sheathing, new..$ ft
@
Sheathing, yellow
25 @
Bolts
@
35
Brasiers’
@
33
Baltimore
24|@
2*il
Detroit
26*@
26
Portage Lake
24|@
25*

# ft

27 @
IS @

Uo

29

18

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot,
2*; old copper 2 cents $ ft; manu¬
factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing
copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42
inches long and 14 inches wide,

Tarred Russia
Tarred American
Bolt Rope, Russia.

Senna, Alexandria....
Senna, Eastlndia

92i

H@
2i|@

Coffee.—See special report.

Manila,

-()

95

@10 00

2 @
S’ 1 VA

:

special report.

Calcutta, light &h’y %

Seneca Root

Badger
Cat, Wild

45
83

@

@
@
@

—Du«y, 10 ^ cent.
Beaver,Dark.skin 1 00 @ 4 00
do
Pale
50 @ 2 00
Bear, Black
5 00 @i2 00

*

Groceries—See

00

00
00

Gunny Bags—Duty, valued at It
cents or less, # square yard, 3; oval
10, 4 cents $1 ft

£'ii rs

Cantharide1 60 @ 1 70
Carbonate
Ammonia,

Carraway seed

@16 CO

”8

Fruits—See special report.

2-’i

•

80

6 00 @ 6 5 J

....

Sarsaparilla, Bond
Sarsaparilla, Mex

Flux—Duty: $15 f|8 ton.
J erst^y
^ lb 1 o @

n
@
S2l@

50

—

5*

31j@
•

80

Sal Soda. Newcastle... 2 10 @

Mackerel, N o.l,IfalifaxlS
Mackerel, No. I, Bay..18
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..] >
Mackerel, No. 2,11a axi6
Mac’el,No.3,Mass I’ge 0
Mackerel, No. 3. 11’fax

5

..

90
86

50
00
50
00
00

...

shore

4U

Bi Chromate Potash...

Brimston

@
88 @
Prussiate Potash
; 5 @
7s @
Quicksilver
Rhubarb, China.(gold) 2 75 @
Sago, Pe i. led
7 @
Salaratus
20 @
SalAm’n ac, Ref (gold)
9*@

Mackerel, No. 1, Mass

.

38 @

Soda, New¬
gold

Bi Carb.
castle

.85

Phosphorus

■

....

to 10x15...:.... 8 25 @ 6
to 12x18
9 75 @ 7
to 16x24
10 50 @ 7
to 24x30
15 50 @12
to 24x36
16 50 @18
24x36 to 30x44.
18 00 @15
80x45 to 32x48
20 50 @16
32x50 to 32x56
24 00 @18

Opium, Turkey.(gold) 7 00 @

Oxalic Acid

Dry (Jod
^ cwt. 6 50 @ 6 75
Pickled Scale... $1 bid. •* <>*• @ 5 <0
Pickled <'oil.... ^1 bbl. 6 50 @

@
25 @
35
5 @
85
1 25 @ 1
II
@ 3 25

Assalcotida
Balsam Copaivi
Balsam'Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

*

rels, 50 cents W inn lb.

2

8x11
11x14
12x19
20x31
24x31

.

Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 : Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
^1 bid.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬

3

.

Oil Lemon
3 87 @ 4 25
Oil Peppermint, pure. 5 s7*@

Tennessee..

5 @
8
2> • @
21
75 ®
1-5
3 s@
4
75 @ 1 6 I
@
lv*
IS @
20

Chamomile Flow’s^ft
Chlorate Potash (gold)
Caustic Soda

Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ ft.
Caracas (in bond)(gold)
$ ft
17 @
Maracaibo do ,.(gold)
@

.

60

■

@1 < t;0

....

Liverpool Gas Carmel

Mineral

57J@

....

@

Liverp’l House Cannel

St

Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstono, $10
$ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40cents $ ft.;

....

Chains—Duty, 21 cents # ft.
One inch &

-Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft ; Crude

157

(SingleThick)—-Discount 35@45^cert.
6x 8 to8x10.^60 feet 7 75 @ 6 (JO

*

.

Locks—Cabinet, Eagle
“

Trunk
St< cks and Dies

List 15 % ols.
List 15 ^ dis.

Screw Wrenches—Coe’s
Pateni
do
i aft’s

List85^dis.
List 25* dis;
L s' 65 % dis.

-s
^ 1b 20 @ 22
Framing Chisels.NewList37l i/.fi jfdi 8.
Firmer no insets.
List40jtadv
co
do
handled,

Sin tbs’ Vis

in sets

List 40 £adv.

Augur Bitts
List 25& 10 % dis.
Hhm t Aumirs,per dz.NewList 30 % dis.
do
List 30 % dis.
Ring
Cu t Tacks

List 75 % di s
Cut Brads
List 60 % dis.
Rivet , Iron
List; 5&40 % dis.
Screws. American.. .List 87@40 % dis.
do
English
last vr@60 % dis.
Shovels anil Spades...
List 5 % dis.
Horse Shoes
61 @7^ ft
Planes
List 30@35 }6adv
If ay—North
for shipping

River, in bales$ 100 fts
9i) @
95
Hump—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila,
$-i5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn
and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and Tampico,
1 cent JJj* ft.
Ainer.Dressed.$ ton 840 00@860 00
do
Undressed.. 2<0 0C@«90 00
Russia, Clean
845 00@350 00
Jute
(gold) 110 00@117 00
Manila..^ lb..(gold)
11 @^,111
13 @ j 1<%
Sisal
■
Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 ^ cent ad val.
Dry Hides—
Huer.<»s Ayres^ Ibg’d
21 @
29
Montevideo
Rio Grande

do
do
do

*Orinoco

California

„

gold

21 @
21 @
.9 @
1J @

do

14*@

do

17 @
17 @
19 @

21

(g°ld)

Porto Cabello
Vera Cruz

15 @

1G

do

@
74I@
11 @

12

..

do

Tampico
Texas

cur

.Dry Salted Hides—
Tamp

co

20

@

California, Mex. do

Ch li
* i llfornia...

m

.

.

do

South AkWesr.

do
Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ayres.ft g’d.
Rio Grande
do
California
do
Western

Ooutry sl’ter trim. Jfc
cured.

Kip

$ ft cash.
Sierra Leone.... do
Gambia & Bissau do

II*

..

15

1H@

12
12

11

@

71*

l‘i@

18*

12j@

18
14

28 @
?2 @

<50

25 @

27

City
do
do
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio Gr.

16
18

Honey—Duty,2 oent $ gallon.
Cuba (in bond) (gr’
# gall. 55 @ 60
Hops—Duty: 5cci*ii&ty lb.
Crop of 1866
# ft
45 @ 70
<lo of 1865

Foreign

20

@

40

40 @

60

168

THE CHRONICLE.

Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val.

ad val.

Para, Fine
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

$ ft

®
®
®

®
Carthagen-i, &c
Indigo—Duty free.
Bengal
(;old) $ ft 1 O'! ® 1 70
Oude
Madras....
Manila
Guatemala
Caraccas.

(Hold)
75 ® 1 85
(gold)
60 ®
85
(gold)
65 ® 1 <i()
95 ® 1 20
(gold)
(gold)
75 ® i 0)
Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1£ cents $ lb.
Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 lb ; Boiler
and Plate, 14 cents fl) fl); Sheet, Band,
Hoop, and Soroll, 1^ to If cents $ lb;
Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3
cents $ lb.
Pig, Scotch,No 1.
fl) ton 41 50® 45 00
Pig, American, No. 1.. 42 00® 41 00
Bar, Refi’d Eng&Amer 85 U ® 90 00
Bar, Swedes, assorted
sizes (in gold)
92 50® 105 00
/—

Bar Swedes,
sizes

Stoke Prices—,

assorted
®155 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
ican, Refined
100 00®1< 5 00
do
do
do Common 90 00® 95 0
Scroll
132 50® 80 00
Ovals and Half Round 127 50®137 50

@132 50

Band
Horse Shoe...

127 f 0®

...

Rods, 5-8®3-16 inch.. 105 00@16» 00

137 50® 192 50

Hoop

$ lb
Shpet, Russia
BTSeet, Single, Double

9®

and Treble

loj

194®

20

54®

Nail Rod

8

..

Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 52 5 ® f3 00
do American
79 0 »® f2 50

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $ lb
East Ind , Billiard Ball

2 87®
3 on®

3 12
8 25
:< 12

African, Prime..
..
2 87®
African, 8crivel.,W.O. 1 <;0@ 2 50
JLead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 lb ; Old
Lead, 14 cents $ fl); Pipe and Sheet,
21 cents $ fl).

$ 100 fl)

Galena

®

..

(gold) 6 50 @ 6 021

Spanish....
German
,

(gull) 6 50 ® 6 624

English

(gold) 6 50 ® 6 874
net

Bar

@10 00

..

Pipe and Sheet
net
..
@10 25
Leather—Duty; sole 35, upper 30
$ cent ad val.
.—cash $ lb.—,
Oak, Slaughter, light .
38 ®
42
.

middle

heavy.
light Cropped....

44®

middle
bellies

47 ®
19 ®

46
46
47
50
21

Heml’k, B. A.,dsc.,rt.

30®

31

do
do

30}®
3t)f®
29j®
9}®
29 ®
2-Si®
29 ®
28 ®

314
81
30
304
80
9 }

do
do
do
do
do

do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do

3* ®

4

....

middle.

heavy
Califor., light.
.

do middle.
do
heavy.
Orino., etc. l’t,
' do
middle
do

heavy.

•

®

30
29

do

do & B. A,

do
do

dam’gdall w’g’s
do "poor do
Slaugh.in rough

25®
19 ®
87 ®

-?04
21
3>

Oak, Slaugh.in you., 1’t

40®

42

do
do mid. 37 ®
41
heavy
40 ®
44
Iilnie—Duty; 10 $ cent ad val.
Rockland, com. $ bbi.
® 1 10
..
do
heavy
® 2 00
Lumber* Woods, Staves,etc.
—Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood
and Cedar, free.
Spruce, East. $ M It 20 00 ® 2 2 00
do
and

Southern Pine
White Pine Box B’ds
White Pine Merch.
Box Boards
Clear Pine

30 00 ® 85 00
30 00 @
....

38 00 ® 35 00
SO 00 ®100 00

Laths, Eastern. $ M

Poplar and

3 CO ®

Whie

wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 ® 65 00

Cherry B’ds

Oak and Ash

Plank 80 00 @ 90 00

60 (X) ® 65 00

Maple and Birch

...

Black Walnut

35 00 ® 40 00

100 00 ®120 00

(STAVES—
White
exLa
do

oak,

pipe,
fl) M.

pipe, heavy
pipe, light.

@300 00
®250 00

..

..

do
..
do
pipe, culls .120 uO
do
hhd., extra.
..
do
hhd.,heavy
..
do
hhd., light.
..
do
..
hhd.,culls.
do
bbl., extra.
..
do
bbl.,heavy.
.
do
bbl., light..
...
do
bbl.,culls..
Bed oak, hhd.,h’vy.
_
do
hhd., light..
^

@200 Ofl

®1S0 06

@250 00
@200 00
@12 *00
@100 00
@175 00
@140 00
@110 00
@ 60 00

@130 00
@ 90 00

HEADING —White
oak, hhd

(Kal&ograny,

@160 00

_

Cedar,

wood—Duty free.

Rose¬

ItahQgany St. Domin¬
go orofrhoo,




V ft..

*5 ®

so

Hennessy

40

Shoulders,

Otard, Dup.
P<net, Castil. &Co.do

4 8
4

14

Romu.lt &C„..

d,»

lit @

5

!4
14
15

J. Vassal A Co.,
Jules Robin....
Marrette & Co.
Vino Grow. Co.

do
<10
do

10 @
11 @

14®

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas

20
12

B@
8 @

@

12
12

25 @
5 @

Mansanilla.....
Mexican
Florida. $ c. ft.

50
8

H

Rosewood, R. Jan $ lb

6

4 @

Bahia......

MolaNSCS.—See

special report.
Nail*—Duty; cutlj; wrought2};
horse shoe 2 cents $ fl).
Cut, 4d .@60*1. $ 100 ft 5 G?4@ ....
Clinch
Horse shoe,
Horse .-hoe,

7 2-

@

....

fd(6d)fl) ft" 28 @
82
pressed...
20 @ 22
Copper
42 @
Yellow metal
25®
Zinc
18®
Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 36cents fl) gallon; crude
Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20
$ cent ad val.
Turpent’e, • f ..fl)280ft 4 75 @

Ilf®
12
Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ ft.*,
paddy lO^ents, and uncleaned 2 cents
V ft.
Carolina ......fl) 100 tb!3 00 @12 TO
East India,dressed.... 9 25 @ 9 62

Cadiz

Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 1 '. ft
do fin-‘,Ashton’s(g’d) 2 60
do

fine, Worth!ngt’s 2 sS
Onondaga.coin.fine bis. 2 50
do

do

2lo fl)

bgs. 1 SO

do
do
$ bush.
Solar coarse
Fine screened
do
fl) pkg.
F. F
240 tt> bgs.

42
50
50

....

Other br’ds

®
@ 1 95
@
85
@
60
@
90
@
@
52
®
52
@
oo
®

bbl 4 50 @ 5 75
4 UO @
Pi ch
Rosin, common
3 624®
do strainedandNo 2.. .3 75 @ 4 25
4 U> @ 5 50
do
No. 1

Tar, Am rloi

....

Pale and Extra

(280 lbs.)
5 75 @ 8 50
Spirits turp., Ain. $ g.
58®
60

Seeds—Duty

gold

..

Wines—Port

Canary
fl) bus 4 85 @ 5 00
Linseed, Am,clean 7? ice
@
do Am. rough fl) bus 3 25 @ 3 59
do Calcutta ...gold v 674®

Oakum—Duty fr.,fl) ft
11
8®
Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val.
City thin obl’g, in bbls.
$ ton
®
...

do
West, thin

In bags

@56 00

ohl'g, do
®
Oils — Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, $1 ; burning
fluid, 50 cents fl) gallon; palm, seal,
and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.;
sperm and whale or other fish (for¬
eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val.
Olive, qs(gold)par case 5 874®
do in casks.fl) gall.. 1 56 @
Palm
fl) fl)
30}®
Linseed, city... $ gall. 1 81 @ 1 32
Whale
7 @
do refined winter..
82®
90

Sliof—Duty: 24 cents fl) fl).
‘
Drop
fl) lb
10}@
Buck
ll}®

No. 1 @

do
Medium
China thrown

Jo 00
il) 50

@11 <0
@13 no

70®

Bank

75

Straits

Paraffine, 28
Kerosene

—

30

@
35 @

gr..

53 @

(free).

...

do
do
do
do

do white, American,
No. I,in oil
do whi e, French, in

14®

oil

15

Ochre, yellow, French,
dry
$1 • 00 fl) 2 09 ® 3 50
do
gr’.i i n oil.
8®
9
fl)

Spanish brown, dry $

100 B>
1 12 ® 1 25
do
gr’d in oil.$ fl)
8 ®
9
Paris wh., No.I$l00ft 2 75 ® 2 8*4
Whiti ig, Atner
24
2 @

Vermilion,Chinese^fl) 1 25 @ I 35
Trieste
1 05 ® 1 10
Cal. & Eng . 1 26 @ l 30
American....
-5 @
30

do
do
do

Venet.red(N.C.)fl)cwt 2
Carmine,city made fl) ft 16
China clay
$ ton3i
Chalk
fl) bbl. 4
Chalk, block.... $ ton?<5
Chrome yellow.. .fl) fl)
Barytes
39

75 @ 8 00
00 @20 n0
00 ® )5 00
00
O'115
00

® 4
@23
@
@42

n

0>
35
00

Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents;
refined, 4b tents $ gallon.
Crude,40@47grav.fl)gal.
@ * 18
Refined, free
50 @
..

do

in bond

Naptha, refined
Residunm

3 4®

31
21 @
# bbl. 8 25 @ 3 75
-

Paris—Duty: lump,free;
calcined, 20 fl) cent ad val.
Blue Nova Scotiafl) ton
@ 3 50

gold

Madras

each

.

Matamoras.gohl

Cape
Deer,Sand nan fl) ft gold
do

do
do
do
do
do
do

....

11

Peyta

Vera ('ruz ..gold

do

46

10®

Tampico. .gold

do

....

Paints—Duty: on white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents fl) fl); Pan* white and
whiting, l cent fl) lb; dry ochres, 56
cent* $ 100 fl); oxidesofzinr, I? cents
fl) fl) ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50 $ KM)
lb ; Spanish brown 25 $ ce^tad val:
China clay, $5 $ ton ; Venetian red
and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.;
white chalk, $10 $ ton.
114®
12
Litharge,City... .fl)ft
Lead, red, City
11}®
32
do white, American,
pure, in oil
.
®
144
do white, American,
pute, dry
134
IS ®
Zinc, white, American,
94®
10
dry, No. 1

...

4 75 @

..

® 2 40
Calcined citf mills
@ 2 50
Provisions—Duty: beef and pork,
1 ct; lams, bacon, andlard,2 ts $ fl)
Beef,plain messfl) bbl.. 18 00 @24 00
do extra mess...... .23 00 @28 0U
Pork,mess,new..._^..23 60 @2j 75
do man >Id
23 50 @ ....
....

7 00

*1o

Champagne

Bolivar ...gold
Honduras ..gold
Sisal
gold
Para
gold
Vera Cruz .gold

Chagres ...gold
Puerto Cab .gold

47
8)
40

@
@
@
@

..

@
51 @
40 @
85 @
50 @
374®
@
574®
60 @
@
524®
45 @
..

..

•

•

val.
No. 0 to 18
No. 19 to 26
No.27 to 36

35 00® 00

20® 5 fl) ct off li,t
fl) ct. off

....

....

35& 5 fl) ct. oft

18 @

:

10 W

cent, ad val

7®
47®

2.—

rates

4
4^4
42}

\Vf

83

the last

52}

imported scoured, three times
duty as if imported unwashed

00

Amer., sax. fleece fl) ft
do
full bl’d Merino.
do 4 and} Merino..

624
57
55

50

1‘4

30
@ 2$
1«® 33
®
2S @ 30
32® 84
30 @
83 ®
3i ® 8S

common...

18

..

African, unwashed
do

at 7 cents fl) tb or under, 24 cents;
7 cents and not above ll,3cis

German

ll

@
12 @
19®

10
15

Amer

10}®

124
20
16

n cas;

c

English, spring
English UisP*r
hnglisa machinery....

114®

I8t@

35 ®

fl) ft

To Liverpool:
Cotton
$ ft
Flour
fl) bbl.
Petroleum

d

s.

*

..

..

114®

..

Ilf

Pork.

fl) bbl.

..

@20

:

Heavy goods. .*$ ton 15 0 @17 6
Flour...,
Petroleum

cent ad val.
Flato and sheets and
terne plates, 25 per cent. a<J va<.

.

..

..

I. C. Coke
in 50 @12 50
Terne Charcoal 12 50 @12 75
Terne Coke
@ 9 50

@50
@19
@
@86.
@26
@
44
@
4}

..

Corn,bulk and bags..
Petroleum (sad)fl) bbl.
Heavy goods..fl) ton.

Tobacco.—See special report.

..

..
..

Oil
Beof....»
fl)tea.
Pork
fl) bbl.
To Havre :
-Cotton
.....fl) ft
Beef and pork.. $ bbl. I
Moasurem. g’da.fl) ton *0
Petroleum
5

@
@4
@25
@30

6}
0
0
0

@3 0
.@20
$
$

......

and Liquors—Liquors
—Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 per

Wines

fallon-i: other liquors, $2.50 Wines—
)uty value net
50 cents fl) gal¬
over

flj

lon 20 cents fls gallon and 25
cent
ad valorem; over 5onnd not over
100,
50 cents fl) gallon and 25 fl) cent ad

$1 $ gallon, $1 fl) gal
fl) oent ad yah

$ bbl.

'46
...
Beef
fl) tee.
Pork
:.fl) bbl.
.,
Wheat
$ bush.
,.
Corn
To Glasgow (Ry Steam):
Flour
fl) bbl.
..
@ 2 0.
Wheat
$ bush.
@
64

^ ttr(gold)
®
26J
(gold) 24}®
English
(gold)
23|®
Plates,char. I.C.fl) box 19 <5 ®13 50

J@
00 @ ..
(<0 @ ..
6 @ 6 0

Lard, tallow, out m t

over

Ion and 25

jij

8-10® 5-32

Oil

valorem;

@

..

»

..

^ fl).

—Duty: pig,bars,and block, 15$

do
do
do

451

@1 9
® 4 q
Heavy goods...fl) ton 15 0 @2• 0
Oil
@20 0
Corn, b’k& bagsfl) bus.
@
3}
Wheat, bulk and hags
@
3}
Beef
fl) tee.
@26

Teas.—See special report.

Baiica
Straits

49

Freiglits —

To London

Tin

®

IS® 21
26® sa

washed

Sheet

Sugar.—See special report.
American,prime, coun¬
try and city fl) fl)...

3,,

Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50
100 fts.; sneets 2} cents
fl) Ib.

Sumac—Duty: 10 fl) cent Ad val.
Sicily
^ ton.. 150 00 @225 00

'J'ullo w—Duty :1 cent

washed
....

do

and 10

.

18® 25

....

Mexican, unwashed....
Smyrna, unwashed

over

g5

2( ®

do
common, w...
Entre Rios, washed
S. American Cordova

Steel—Duty: barsand ingots, valued

45

8() ®

Valparaiso, nnwashed..
8. Amer. Mestiza, unw..

104

t5

£8 ®

Peruvian, unwashed

64

M

®

45® 4s
4 * ® 5ti

Superfine
No. 1, pulled
do

the

.55

Extra, pulled

•

$ ft; over 11 cents, 34 cents fl) fl)
fl) cent ad val. (Store prices.)
English, cast, fl) ft)
18 @
23

to the

classes

40
57 i

•

place whence exported

United States is 12 cents or less
ih, 3 cents fl) ft ; over 12 cents fl) ft
0 cents fl) 1b.
Wool of all

^0

f}@

American, spring

.('lass

Combing Hbo^-Tlie value where¬

li

4

Spices.—See special report.

.

*

57 @

of at. the last place whence
exported
to the United States is 32 cents or
less fl) ft), 10 cents fl) lb and
w
cent, ad val. ; ov<*r 32 cents fl) ft '•>
cents fl) It) and 10 fl) cent, ad
Class li.—t'arjxt Wools and
other
similar Wools—The value who roof
at

50

10 ®

domestic

■ft)

9

when imported

;

washed, double these

in pigs, bars, and

plates, $! 50 fl) 100 lbs.
Plates,foreign fl) lb gold

ls:

“ 181

s

•••••..

Spcl ter—Duty

S

33.Vi

California, unwashed...
fl) fl).

^

do 2 65® ■ „q
do 11 00® 25 00

Wool—Duty: Imported in the “or
dinary condition as now and hereto
lore practiced.’’
Class 1 -Clothing
}\uol*— l li*; value whereof at tin* la-t
place whence exported to the United
States is 32 cents or less
fl) ih ]q
cents fl) 1b and 11 fl) cent, ad
val •
over 32 <;ents fl) tb,
12 c uts fl) lh !nid

cent
>

.

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovemi
$2 to $3 5i ^ 100 Ib,and 15 ^ cent ad

Soap—Duty: 1 cent *19 ft, and25 fl)
ad val.
Jastile

o-

®

90® i'j.i)
9(® l ]r

do

incases,

i

70®

« o

.

"a)
s

450

...

dry....

do

...

White Nova Scotia

do

Claret, In hhds.

Planter

Calcined,eastern fl) bbl

do

do

Kins —Duty : 10 fl)^ cent ad val.

Goat,Curacoafl) ft our.
do Buenos A.. ,go d

5

""

50®

•

fl) ft*
Brass (less 20 p-r cent )
Copper
dO

10 25 @11 00

50

i'nk

0 @
sr,®

3

I’Hi.'i

medium,N<>3@4. 9 5) @10 00
Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. H 75 @ 9 fti
11 50 @13 50
Japan , superior

i'i;

1 9<i®

Telegraph, No. 7 t<i il

do

2 0> @

unbleach. 2 35 @
1 OS @ 1 15
Lard oil
611 @
Red oil, city distilled .
65
do

do
do

.

..

do

do
do

Sherry

....

Sperm,crude

(gold) 2

........

..

Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk.
35 fl) cent.
Tsatlees, No. I@3. fl)fl>U 50 ®i2 25
Taysaams, superior,

*“*

35®

.

Madeira
do Maraeilles

...

•III

*'*•

4 75®
4 75®
4 75®
3 5t®
3 5<®

do

Burgundy Port,
Sherry

Malaga,sweet

.

47

75®

...

‘.4

13
124®
® 8 25

4

Whisky (m b. nd)

linseed, 16 cts; hemp,
4 cent fl) fl); canary, $1 $ bushel of
60 fl); and grass seeds, 30 $ cent
$Ib

4

...

.

81®

Timothy,reaped $ bus

? JJ

75®

@
4 75@

..

;

ad val.
Clover

in’AA

P Romlenx
do
Rum—Jamaica
do
St. Croix
do
Gin-Differ, brands do
3 00®
D«*m c—N.E.Rum.cur.
....®
Bourbon Whisky.cur.
®

..

9 @

»

7f^ S
1S
^ 16 00
* ‘£

4

.

2 75 @ 3 00

,L0

>1 S*

9o|fS
cl ij -J

Cog. do

ArzacSeignette

9
,

4 9()a
«
5 0i

do
fi0

...

u.

.

Pellevolsin
<l0
A. Seignette
do
Hiv. Pellevoisin do
Alex. Seignette. do

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2jj- cents;
refined and partially refined, 3 cents;
nitrate soda, l cent $ fl>.
Refined, pure
$
@
15
Crude
Nitrate soda

(gold) 4 90®

(gold! 4

&cifdo

L^ger freres

Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 B>;
bulk, 18 cents fl) 100 ft.
Turks Islands fl) bush.
46 @
^8

,

..

do

J. & F. Martell

10 @

..

do

Brandy—

@19 50

Hams

-

Nuevitas....
Mansanilla
Mexican
Honduras

do
do
do

19 09

...

Lard,

30 @

crotches
do
Port-au-Platt,
do
do
do
do

prime,

10

7 @

logs

76®

East India

do

St. Domingo,
ordinary logs
do
Port-au-Platt,

do

Ox, Rio Grande... fl) C 9 i 0®
Ox, American.
7 00® 8 00
India Rubber-Duty, 10 fl) cent,

[August 3,1867.

*<&
-

Alltel, pot and pearl

-

8 00 Qll.tf

1867.J

ugust 3,

Y

George Hughes &

Co.,

A Commission Merchant*,
198 A 200 CHURCH STREET,
SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS,
SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS,
importers

FERGUSON & CO, Belfast,
W. IIAYES A CO., lfanbridge.

And F.

SILK AND COTTON

Oiled

Delisle & Co..
OF

IMPORTERS

Lace

has a very superior finish,

economical collar ever invented.

John N. Stearns,
STREET,

Curtains.

Offers

Railroad Material.
ESTABLISHED IN 1826.

B. Holabird &

A.

CINCINNATI!, O.,

OF

Oileo

Cotton,
Organzinc Silk,

Ja <

White Goods

ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS.

Tram Silk.

It is superior to all others in strength, durability aud
simplicity, will eut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber
per day.
RE GO’S PATENT (.’OLD PREMIUM

WHEAT AND CORN

Co.,

George Pearce &
70 & 72 FRANKLIN

given to Southern patronage.

Byrd & Hall,

COTTON

Emb’s,

VMRRKLLAS AND
14 WARREN

L.

A.

Handk’fii,

British and Continental.

John O’Neill & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF

Commission merchants,

Importers A
42 & 4t

MURRAY STREET.

FINEN GOODS,

IRISH A SCOTCH

In full assortment

for the

F I N E N S,

AC.

Co.,

Woolen

198 & 200 CHURCH ST.,

NEW YORK.

DUCK, AC.

Silk Mixtures,

Fancy Cas*Imeres,

Reavers.

Thompson & Co.,
FINENS,

185

Church

ROBT. N. WILSON,

Produce,

Merchandise,

Note Brokers.

Stock,

and

Warehouse and office corner of Lombard and Frede r
ick streets, No. 39 East End, Exchange Place,

Baltimore, Md.
Sprigg, cashier; J. Sloan, Jr., cashier, Bal¬
timore, Md. And by permission to Jacob Heald &
Co., Lord <fc Robinson, Balt.; Tannahill, Mclllvaine
& Co., N. Y.; Ambrose Rucker, President 1st Nation¬
al Bank, Lynchburg, Va.

FLOUR,

Importers of
PLACE, NEW YORK.

New

Streets

York

8BBDI

GRAIN,

AND PROVISIONS.

Agents for

FINENCAMR’C IIANDK’FS, AC.
No.

WILSON, SON A CO.
WILSON,

Smith,

Anderson &
33 PARK

IRISH

Street, Mobile, Ala.

Refer to D.

FLAX SAIF

,

MERCHANTS,

COMMISSION

65 Commerce

W. D. Simonton.

Treas.

W. W. Coffin,

TENNESSEE..

England & Co.,

GENERAL

JOS. H.

BIJRFAFS, RAGGING,

Wm.

AND

MILLS AT PATERSON, N. J.

Globe

BROKER,

CfUITON FACTORS

Embroidery,
Organzlne, and Tram.
84 CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK.

WILLIAM GIIION & SONS’
W HITE

Wm. C.

Machine Twist

Trade.

of

Agents for the sale

PHIS,

Sewing Silks,

.

Jobbing and Clothing

Cummins,

COTTON
M E M

Brand & Giiion,

OHIO.

Special attention given to filling orders for Spinners.

Linen

PARASOFS,
STREET, NEW YORK.

BROKER,

CINCINNATI,

Good*,

Faces and

Manufacturers of

Burnham

Erastus

STREET, NEW YORK,

Importers of
White

MILLS.

Particular attention

Built of solid French Burr Rock.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Co.,

IM PROVED circular saw mill.

Corsets, dec.

Nos. 12 &

a new

Particular attention is called to our

r

Imitation Faces,

GOODS,

Stock of the above at 301 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET.
«

LEONARD

Real Brussels Faces,

ft LEONARD

HOSIERY and
FURNISHING

MEN’S

,.

Il’dkf*,
Oiled Silk,

—

DKERCHIEFS,

HAN

Cotton

Swiss A' French

and Lawn

Silk,

Pongee n’dkfts,

machine Edgings,

*

HANDKERCHIEFS,

IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER

muslin Draperies,

Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red

Linen

and
costs hut half as much as real silk:, which it equals in
appearance a*d durability.
Agents for the sale of the
Patent Reversible Paper Collars.

58

Goods,

French Dress

CHINA SILKS,

Imitation Oiled Silk.

the most

Oscar

Co.’s

ENGLISH CRAPES,
And importer of
-

Our “ IMITATION ”

DICKSONS’

Agent for S. Courtauld A

and Manufacturers of

THREAD.

Aleuts lor

Solo

Napier,

(late of Becar, Napier & Co.)

Importers of

EUROPEAN AND

D.

Alexander

BROADWAY,

No. 353

&c., white goods,

PATENT LINEN

Co.,

S. H. Pearce &

Cards.

Commercial

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

LINEN CHECKS,

159

THE CHRONICLE.

WILLIAM

KIRK & SON,

BELFAST,

Blair, Densmore &. Co.,

Linen Manufacturers.

C. Holt &

Co.,

MERCHANTS,

com MISSION

119 CHAMBERS

Agents for the Glasgow

SPOOF

.

JAMES GLASS &

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

CO., LURGAN,

Cambric Handkerchief Manfilhcturers

WASHINGTON

Iff

STREET.

Chicago, 111*.

Thread Company’s

J. & P. Coats’

COTTON.

Agents for
MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON HOLE
TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C.
Also

Oiler to Jobbers

BEST

CABLED

SIX-CORD

Thread.

only.

Yaeger & Co.,
RECEIVERS OF FLOUR,
Nos.

John Graham,

JOHN

WOVEN CORSETS,

HUGH

STREET, NEW YORK.

MANUFACTURERS OF

Umbrellas &
49 MURRAY

Linen

RUSSELL, Sole Agent,




N.Y.

Threads,

SHOE THREADS,
SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC.

SEWING.

R CHAMBERS STREET,

Parasols,

95

STREET

AVENUE

AND GREEN STREET.

LOUIS,

ST.

Thomas

MO.

J. Pope & Bro.
METALS.

292 PEARL

STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN

STREET

NEW YORK.

Gas Fixture*,

JOHN

THOS.

BETWEEN WASHINGTON

STREET, NEW YORK,

Spool Cotton.
CLARK, Jr. A CO’S.
Mile End, Glasgow.
i» unsurpassed for hand and machine

143,150,152,154 and 156 N. SECOND

YORK.:

DOUBLEDAY A DWIGHT,

FACE, COTTON YARNS, Ac.,

^

AUCHINCLOSS,

No. 108 Dnane Street.

SKIRT MATERI¬

ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED
231 CHURCH

A

SOLE AGENTS IN NEW

Manufacturer of

.

8TB1KT.

BARBOUR BROTHERS,
CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK.
Mills at Patterson

N. J.

Kerosene Oil Lamp*,

Chandeliers of every Description.

*

John Horton &ROOMS,
Co.,
MANUFACTORY AND SHOW

233

A

235

CANAL STREET,

Corner of Centre Streei,

opposite Earle’s Hotel. 21

THE CHRONICLE.

160
Commercial Cards.

Commercial

Hunt, Tillinghast& Co.,

To

Asbuelet and Excelsior Reavers.

DOMESTIC

Drawer*.

“

Goods,
GLOVES,

Mountain Dale

“

NO. 27 MAIN

Son,

4.

No. 835

AND

Also for

SEVERAL

WELL

KNOWN

Scotch and Irish Linen

N.

GOODS.

J. Chapin,

PRODUCE

SCOTCH

AND

ELLERTON NEW MILLS

Cotton

Flannels, Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

production for the

«f which

season of

1867, sample

ready for inspection at

are now

192 FRONT

specially invited to the

our

cases

8 and 45 White street.

USE,

Duck,

Wm. C.

J. M. Cummings & Co.,
AND

BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.,
CHICOPEE MANUF.

MILTON

CO.,

MERCHANTS,

STREET, NEW YORK,
Offer for sale, IN BOND, line BOURBON and RYE
WHISKIES, from their own and other iirst-class Dis¬
tilleries, Kentucky.

IMPORTERS
British

AND

Brothers,

Dress

COAL,

Goods,
Goods,

West 22d street, near 10th
and in Brooklyn.

Linens, Ac., Ac.,
STREET, NEW YORK.

CUSTOM

Oliice

use,

Lane, Lamson & Co.,
MERCHANTS,

NO. 7 RUE

.

SCRIBE, PARIS,
97 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK.

Loutrel,

STATIONERS. PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK
MANUFACTURERS.
4 5 Malden

Lane, New York.
supply everything in our line for Business, Pro¬
fessional
and PriVate use, at Low Prices.
ceive prompt attention.

I. S. Bush &
HIDE
155 Kinzie

REMOVAL.

OF

DUNDEE

LINENS,

Has removed from 125 and 127 Duane 8t.. to No. 94
Read Street.
.

Nkw Yobs, May




1867.

Orders

re¬

FOREIGN,

for

Steam and Street

Roads,

FOR SALE BY

S. W. HOPKINS Sc Co.,
69 & 71

Broadway.

Ould &

Street, Chicago.

Carrington,
LAW,

ATTORNEYS
Hi* MAIN

GENUINE

SWEDISH

DANNE-

I beg to announce that I have this
day entered into
a contract witli Messrs. W.
Jessop & Sons, of Shellield
for tlie whole Annual Make of the above
Iron, which
in future, will be stamped

AT

STREET,

RICHMOND,

W. JESSOP A SONS.

And to which I request the special attention of the
trade.
Leufsta, in Sweden, 29th April, 1867.
CARL 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 Ikon, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel
made from the Iron, at their
establishments, Nos. 91 &
93 John Street, New
York, and Nos. 183 & 135 Fed¬
eral Street, Boston.

Co.,

BROKERS,

Orders will receive careful and prompt attention.

James Smieton,

IMPORTER

AMERICAN AND

mjAleufsta,

IIY

We

COMMISSION

Railroad Iron,

Avenue, New York,

SOLICITED

Francis &

White

150 & 162 DUANE

:

YOUR

Irish and Scotch

Family and

32 Pine Street.
Yards

And Fancy

Railway*

MORA IRON.

PARMELK «fc BROS.

Of all the Best Kinds for

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS,
Staple,

Rail*, Locomotive*.
’

NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE

Parm'ele
SUCCESSORS TO II. L.

Lindsay, Chittick & Co.,

Railroad Cog,,

ENGLISH AND AMERICAN COAL.

MILLS,

Nos. 43 Sc 45 WHITE STREET.

York.

MERCHANTS,

Rond* and Loan* for
Contract for
Iron or Steel

58 BROAD

CO.,

VICTORY MANIJF.

Negotiate

D I S T I L L E R S

COMMISSION

MERCHANTS,

12 PINE STREET.

all bu*ine*w connected with

NEW YORK.

AGENTS FOB

WASHINGTON MILLS,

New

and undertake

NO. 47 BROAD STREET,

CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK.

E. R. Mudge, Sawy er& Co.

COMPANY,

J ESUP & CoMPANYj

Cars, etc.,

MERCHANTS,

TO

usual

Staple*.

COMMISSION

BANKERS AND

Street, corner of Beaver

COMMISSION

IT Sc 10 WHITE STREET, WEST OF

AND

Broadway,

M. K.

CO

Langley & Co., Sawyer, Wallace & Co.,

Have Removed from 139 Duane St.

the

on

of any of the

available
for Americans in London, with the facilities
usnaliv
found at tlie Continental Bankers.
J
Orders lor the above may be sent to

1«4

MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS,

Broad

term*

Weights.

Large Stock always on hand.
THEODORE POLHEMUS A
59

Consignment* solicited

TYNG Sc

A

E. R. MUDGE, SAWYER A CO.

Railroad Bonds and United States and other Amer¬
ican Securities negotiated, and Credit and
Exchange
provided for United States or Continent.

IMPORTERS

All Widths and

Smith,

RAILROAD
IRON, BESSEMER
RAILS, STEEL TYRES Sc METALS.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Cotton

store,

A.

PLACE, LONDON, W.

Spacious Counting and Reception Rooms

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC
The attention of the trade is

15 LANGHAM
.

Miscellaneous.

For the Season of 18 67.

new

Gilead

LINENS,

40 Murray Street, New York.

MERCHANT,

Consignment* and Orders Solicited.

UMPORTEKS AND MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS
IRISH

COMMISSION

CINCINNATI.

Malcomson,

FOR

Manufacturers.

STREET,

MLKS,

PATERSON, N. .T.

Strachan &

PEARL

CINCINNATI.

Valley Worsted Mill Cardigan Jackets
LINEN

Merchant,—United States

Bonded Warehouse.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

WORKS

O.

Carpenter,

NOS. 2G3 & 205 WEST

MACHINE TWIST

SEWING

ST., CINCINNATI,

Daniel H.
Commission

Wm. G. Watson &

44

MERCHANTS,

Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions.

Foreign

SUPERIOR

If ome Mannl’g Co.

COMMISSION

MANUFACTURERS OF

“

Knitting Co.

Gano, Wright & Co.,

DRAWERS,

KID, CLOTH AND HER LIN GLOVES.

t<

Mill

A

Germantown Woolen

Woolen and Merino

Hose.

Star

SHIRTS

BUCK

Bros. Sc Co., Oakland Merino

*V

OF CSUNA AND JAPAN.

Large Stock of

Also for

Brick

Co.,

Boston,

AUGUSTINE HEARD &
Co.

the

Hosiery,

AND A NUMBER OF THE REST CASSIMEHE MANUFACTURERS.

Shirt* and

&

28 State Street,

Jobbing Trade Only
our

L. Pomeroy’s Sons Cotton Warp Cloths

Excelsior Mill

Cards.

AGENTS FOR
We Invite the attention of

Agents for
Watervllle Manufact’g Co.’* Shawls.

Lyon

Everett

Co.,

75 & 77 LEONARD STREET.

ST., AND 112 & 114 DUANE ST.,

John Brugger’s
Hose.

Commercial

Cards.

Petrie &

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
TO & 72 READS

[August 3, 1867.

Vi,

Morris, Tasker & Co.,
Pascal Iron

Work*, Philadelphia.

Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap-Welded
Boiler Flues, Gas Works
Castings and Street
Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c.

OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES

15 GOLD

:

STREET, NEW YORK.

.