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ante’ fcrtfr, dDommwriat limes,

§aitumy Ptmitot, amt §tt<suranre |ournal

A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states.

VOL. 5.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1867.

Western Bankers.

Western Bankers.
P. Hayden.

Gilmore, Dunlap & Co.,
110

Sc

108

West Fourth Street,

Jos. Hutcheson.

W. B

HAKKiNU HOUSE

Southern Bankers.
Hayden

OF

Hayden,Hutcheson & Co
NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET,

COLCMBC*,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Do

a

General

OHIO,

Banking, Collection, and Exchange
Business.

Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

J. F. Stark & Co.,

NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS,

Checks

general Banking, Exchange and Collection busi¬

a

ness.

New York Correspondents
National Bank North
America; Knautu, Nachod & Kuhne.

UNION BANK OF LONDON.

on

FOR SALE.

Cash

Capital, $150,000.

Real Capital, $1,000,000.

National

Co.,

BANKERS,
•
CINCINNATI.

Bank of the

Jos. F. Larkin,
I
f Thomas Fox.
John Cochnower, 1
general
I John M. Phillips.
Adam Poe,
f partnership. 1 Thos. Sharp.

Harvey Decamp, J
J.W.

Theodore Stan wood, Cashier.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

of

all

points WEST and SOUTH,
promptly remitted for. Capital Mock,
$1,000,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000.
on

and

Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis

B.

Worthington, L.

barrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William
Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. A

Winslow.

$1,000,000

Capital
IU

vnert

Bankers

■ernces

on

to

Banks

Late of the

Manager.
to.

Haskell & Co.,
bankers,

■

ST.

LOUIS, MO
Dealers in Government
Securities, Gold and Ex¬
change. Collections made on all accessible
points
and
promptly remitted for at current rates of exhange.

L. A. Benoist &
BANKERS,

Co.,

ST.

or

LOUIS, MISSOURI,
Q?d Sell Exchange on all the principal
the

United States and Canadas.
London and Paris for sale. *
*
•

cities
Also, drafts on

Second. National Bank.
ST.

LOUIS, MO.

Capital ..$200,000 | Surpl us..
$150,5 66
IKtodeat8-

attention given to the business of corresE. D. JONES, Cashier.




■_

BANKERS Sc DEALfeBS
IN FOREIGN* DOMESTrC EXCH ANGE,SPECIE,
BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND B NDSw

Charles D. Carr & Co.,
AND

BROKERS,

AUGUSTA,
COLLECTIONS

Edward B. Orna,
William Erriea,

Osgood Welsh,

Philadelphia National Bank.

GA.

PROMPTLY REMITTED FOB.

Co.,

BANKERS,
54 CAMP

Draw

on

STREET, NEW ORLEANS,

Merchant? National Fank, New York, and
Bank of

Liverpool, England.

Collections and remittances
promptly attended to.

T. H. McMahan & Co.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS

and Dealers in Domestic and
Foreign

Exchange.

GALVESTON, TEXAS.

Washington.
FIRST

NATIONAL

OF

BANK

WASHINGTON,

H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.), Pbxs’t.
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

Depository and Financial

Agent or tlie Uuited Mateo.

Established 1848.

Wilson,

Street, Charleston, S. C.,

Burke &

William H. Rhawk, President,
Late Cashier of the Central National Bank.
Joseph P. Mumtord, Cnshier,

Government
'

No. 5 Brood

and

Frederis A. Hoyt,
William H Rhawn.

President.

promptly attended

Conner &

liberal terms*

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

OF CHICAGO.

General Banking and Collections

Co.,

all accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent, Vebmiltb A Oft.

PHILADELPHIA.

Company

J. Young Scammon
Robert Reid

T. BBOOKE

RICHMOND, FA*
Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notea,
State, City, and Railroad Bond® and Stocks, Ac,
bought and sold on commission.
$3? Deposit* received and Collections made Ml

BANKERS

'

The Marine

BOB’T

BANKERS AND BROKERS
No. 1014 MAIN ST.,

directors

Cincinnati.

Collections made

Republic,

809 & 811 CHESTNUT STREET,

L John Gates.

Ellis, Prest. Lewis Worthington, V.-Prtst.

JAS. L. MAUBT.

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

Southern Bankers.

F. Larkin 6c

Tos.

J

H. MAURY.

R. H. Maury &

PlTTSttUHGii.
Do

day of payment.'

BOB’!

BANKERS & BROKERS,

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points
and remitted for on

NO. 114.

We buy and sell all classes of Government
securities on the most favorable terms, and eive

especial
with

attention to business connected
the several departments or the

Government.
Full information with regard to Government loans
at all times cheerfully furnished.

Special attention given to Collections of all
having prompt and reliable correspondents at kinds,
all aocessiblepoints in the State, and

REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE

nm to
National Park Bank, Howes *
Macy, and SpoflhnL
TUeston A Co., New York.
Second National
£*nk *?£W. Bearer, Esq., Boston. Drexel A
Co and D. 8. 8tet*on A
CoM Philadelphia.
Thirkield * Co., Cincinnati. Third National T. F.
Bank
and Joa. E. Elder A
Goodwin, St. Lonia. Fowler.
8tanard A Co, Mobile.
Pike, Xapeyre A Brs.,
New Orleans. Drake, KleinwcrthA
Cohen, Lon¬
don ead Liverpool.

_

Eastern Bankers.

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

St., Mobile, Ala.

Dealers in Foreign and Domestic
Exchange, Gov¬
ernment Securities.
Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt
attention given to Collections.
T?u»tdi ffprvnra

Babcock Bros

•

&

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

Home Insurance Company oi 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.

IN SIGHT

EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.

Dupee, Beck 8c Sayles,
-

STOCK

BROKERS,

Now tt STATE STREET, BOSTON.
IAMBI A.

DUPIB,

JAMES BIOX,

BINBT SATLSS

Page, Richardson & Co

,
BOSTON,
BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON
114 STATE STREET,
AMD

JOHN MUNROE Sc

CO., PARIS*

ALSO ISSUE

Commercial Credits for the purchase of Merehaa
dtse la England and the Continent. Teat tuaaf
CiEDira for the use of Tn^Uers iMai

THE CHRONICLE.

258

[August 31,

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬

Bell, Faris & Co.,

ELLERS.

BANKERS
AND. BROKER
12 NEW & 14 BROAD STK3ET8,
Members of the Stock, Gold and Government Boards,
Healers lit Governments mud oilier
Securities.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency
subject to check at sight.

L. P. Morton &

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

m BROAD

OF

At

B.

STREET,
Opposite U. S. Treasury.
We receive Deposits and make Collections, the same
as an incorporated
Bank. Government Securities
Bought and Sold at Market Rates. We also execute
orders for Purchase and Sale of Stocks, Bonds and
Gold on Commission.
TURNER BROTHERS.
NO. 14 NASSAU

Murray, Jr.,

Government and
27 WALL

I». P.

Securities,

AWD THB

UNION BANK OF

J. L. Brownell & Bro.,
BROKERS,

BANKERS Sc
28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and individuals received
favorable terms.
Rffehenceb*

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

Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase sal

gold negotiated. Inte¬

Sale ol Stocks and Bonds in London and New

White, Morris ' & Co.,
STREET,

Frank

New York.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securities,
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.

No. 44 Wal

Keep constantly

Cohen &

TYLER, ULLMANN A: CO.

AND

Chicago.

No. 1

National Bank,

Central

Wall

T. A.

318 BROADWAY.

6
6
6
0
5
7
0

83,000,000-

Capital

,
S.

Orders executed for

Haslett McKim.

AND

Garth, Fisher & Hardy,
RANKERS,

No. 18 NEW

BROKER,

Hardy).
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc.,
bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Brokers
and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬
sion only.

Bankers, Brokers' and Merchants.
Jno. A, McKim.

Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought, sold and

collected.

John Bloodgood & Co.,

Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at
eight, and special attention given to orders from

22 WILLIAM

ocher places.

NATIONAL BANK.

$1,000,00
450,000
RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

>

$1,000,0" O.

No. 29 BROAD STREET.

Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers

and Dealers’ Accounts

Bankers and Commission Merchants

STREET, NEW YORK
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬
chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on
deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬
ton, Tobacco. &c., consigned to ourselves or to our
correspondents, Messrs.
K. GlLHAi’ & CO.,
Liverpool.

solicited.

D. L. i

OSS, Preside

George

J. H. Stout, Cashier.

Citizens’

Union Bank,

(Chartered by the State of Tennessee.)

Warren, Kidder & Co.,
BANKERS,

No. 4 WALL STm NEW YORK.
Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬
cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED
ea

deposits, subject to check at sight.

kGelston & Bussing,
HANKERS Sc RROKER8°

-

-«

...

'All

v.




J

2rt WALL SiREET
orders receive oar Personal Attention,

G*ls»0

.John S. Bussing j

NO. 69

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

Rankers and

Brokers.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold at market rates, on commission only.
on

balances.

Advances made

on

ap¬

'

Particular attention
or sale of the Adams,

PAPER,

ALSO,

STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, &c., BOUGHT AND SOLD

given to orders for the purchase
American, United States, Wells,
Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.
All orders faithfully executed.
JOSIAH HEDDEN,
ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN.

ON COMMISSION.

MEMPHIS, TENN.
Bny and Sell Foreign and Domestic Exchange
JlmtedStatcs Securities, State of Tenne-see, Shelby
Uviinty, and Memphis Bonds, an 1 past due Coupons.
Particular attention paid to Collections.

Hedden, W inchester&Co
proved securities.

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

COMMERCIAL

IN

tiougiven to accounts of country hanks and bankers

Interest allowed

Farnham,

STREET, NEW YORK.

,GO*VEft NHENT AND
OTHER SECURITIES.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Curren
cy, subject to check at sight, and particular atten

NO. 44 BROAD

Tenth National Bank.
Capital

DEALERS

Wilson, CaUaway & Co.,

291 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

STREET,

Successors to Harrison, Garth & Co. and Henry C

BANKERS

The Tradesmen’s

A

VERMILYE Sc CO.

Hoyt,

Robt. McKim.

1st, 2d, & 3d serieeg

Currency Certificates.

Compound Interest Notea of 1 864
1865 Bou^htand Sold.

62 WALL STREET.

CAPITAL

Per Cent

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

McKim, Bros. & Co.,

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

SURPLUS

Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
Per Cent 5-20 Bonds ol* 181)2,
“
“
1804,
u
‘‘
1805,
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds.
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes,

36 NEW AND 38 BROAD STREETS.

descriptions of Government Bonds—
City and County accounts received on terms most fa
vorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United States and
Has for sale all

STOClTs

New York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan.

Street.

GOLD AND EXCHANGE

STATES
INCLUDING

Hagen,

DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE,
UNITED STATES SECURITIES.

Go.,

issues ol*

BANKERS,

Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT

SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. Orders lor purchase and
sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed.

Mir.wp^

Street. New York,
hand for immediate delivery all

on

UNITED

No. 14 WALL STREET.

STREET

&'

BANKERS.

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

BANKERS,

18 WALL

n s

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN U.

Tyler, Wrenn & Co.,
NO.

Ga

&

H. Csuexn Oixunr.

Bursts,

VeRMILYE

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

BANKERS.

Chabus E.

Waltmr H.

ADAMS* KIMBALL Sc MOORE,
No. 14 Wait Street,

York.

Lnvr P. Mobtow,

RANKING HOUSE OF

29 WALL

4 8 Pine

Street, New York.

Van Schaick &
No. 10 Wall

Co.,

NEW

September 1st, 1867, will

now

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YOKE,
Issue Circular Letters of Credit lor Travelers In sB

furtsef Europe, eta, eta Also Commercial Credits.

SOUTHERN

Treasury,

YORK, August 10,1867.
fW“ Schedules of (30) Thirty or more 10-40 Coupons
animation at the United States

AMERICAN BANKERS,
NO. I BUB SCRIBE, PARIS
AMD

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOV¬
ERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS
AND GOLD.

due

John Munroe & Co.,

Street,

NEW YORK.

United States

be received for

*

Europe and the East.

*

railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and
exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercant ile

J

LONDON,

Available in all the principal towns and cities

No, 24 Broad Street, New York.
Government securities, railroad and other bonds,
paper and loans in currency or
rest allowed on deposits.

HORTON, BURNS A OO^

Phipps.

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

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

Day*; also, Clrealar Note* ut
Use, oa

<58 Old Broad Street,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Franklin M.Ketoiium.
George
Thus. Belknap, ,Jr.

STOCK BROKERS AND BANK ERS,
No. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

on

other

or Sixty

Letter* of Credit for Traveler*’

KETCHUM, PHiPPs Sc BELKNAP,

Drake Brothers,

Sight

BROKER IN

Corner of Pine,

STREET, NEW TORE.

STERLING EXCHANGE

54 William Street.

BROTHERS,

Co.,

H1NKEB8,

James G. King’s Sons,

BANKING HOUSE

TURNER

1867.]

ex

Treasury.
H.H. VAN DYCK,
Assistant Treasurer,

*

Edwin

BARKER

BANK

ROTH*

Bell,
Q. BROKER*

AND

In Southern Securities cod Bank Bills.
•• BROADWAY A 8 NEW STREET*
New York#
*

THrClIRONlCLE.
-?

,

*

*

,

'

.

Bankers and Brokers.
JAY COOKE,
)
WM. G. MOORHEAD, >
H. D. COOKE,

(H. O. FAHNESTOCK
K EDWARD DODGE,

(PITT

>;

No. 32 Broad

Street,

r

Philadelphia.

Fifteenth Street,

of

of Wall Street, in this city.
Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.,
New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington

to orders for purchase and sale of stocks,

and gold, and to all business of National Banks.
JAY COOKE & COv
March 1,1866.

bonds

Satterlrb & Co.,

or

The Central

Pacific Railroad Co.,

sale

This

agents

66 WALL

THE WESTERN

Ward,

for

COMPANY,

St^te

8TREET, NEW YORK,

28 STATE

GOVERNMENT

Jameson,

Amos Cotting,
Jameson, Cotting & Co.

Of

St. Louis.

I

of the late firm of James
Low & Co., New York

and

reasons, viz:

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

Second.—The Principal is payable in Gold
at
matur

(’em. and accrued interest,
les- than that of the

SECURITIES,

Fourth.—’The United State* Government
p«ovlde» nearly half the amount nece«*ary to build the entire road, and
look* mainly t<» a email
percentage
on the future traffic i'or
re-pay ment.

exchanged for

FIVE-TWENTY BONDS, on the most liberal

IMPORTERS and others supplied with GOLD at mar
rates, aud Coin on hand for immediate delivery.

ket

Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision, accompa¬
nied with Extensive

No. 12 WALL STREET.

AND

Dibblee

&

BANRERS A

Grant* of Pnbite
Lands, by which the Government fosters this
great national enterprise, its success I* ren¬
dered certain, and its financial sta¬

Howard,

bility Is altogether Independent of
the coutltt&ehcies which attend
ordi¬
nary Railroad enterprises.
—

BROKERS,

NO. 10 WALL STREET.

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
(Meters. Brown Bros. & Co.'s new buildingA
69 A «1 WALL STREET, NEW YOKK7
Buy end sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and

Government Securities.

Accounts

sf

Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬
ed

favorable terms.

on

Interest allowed

its, subject to check at tight.

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

P.

depos¬
Telegraphic quota¬

24 Nassau
The

Seventh.—The

net earnings of the
completed
portion are already largely in excess of
tlie lute* est obligations which ihe

Company wlllineu* on twice the dis¬
tance. and are steautly increasing,
rendering the
uninterrupted payment of the Inte¬

SPECIE,

Street, New York.

Specie Department will

oe in

rest

charge

of J. S. Cronisk (late of J. S. Cronise <fe Co.), who has
my authority to sign the Firm name by procuration.

Banker, Esq., Vice-President of tin* Bank o* New

Yaikrf&jL
P. D.
J. N.

Riker &

Roddey,
Petty,

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

P. D. Roddey &

Sixth.-The Security of its First
Mortgage
Rands is therefore ample, aud their character
for safety and reliarnhty is
equalled only by mat oi
the obligat ous of the Government
itself.

'

BANKER,

on

tion! frirniehed to correspondents.
Refer knobs : James Brown, Ea^., of Messn.
Brown Brothers A C6.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬
ident of the Chemical National Bank ; James H.

Hayden,

AND DEALER IN BULLION AND

NO. 5 NEW STREET

and

STOCKS,

mission.
Particular attention given to the Purchase and
Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous
Securities.u,
Collections made on all accessible
points.
Interest allowed on Balanced

Orders may

be iorwarded to ns director through the
principal Banks and Bankers in all parts of the

SO BROADWAY.

charge.

BANKERS,
27 & 29 Pine

Remittances tiry be made in drafts on New
York
in Legal Tender Notes, National Bank
Notes or
other funds current in this city, aud the bonds
will
be forwarded to any address
or

J esup & Company,

Fisk &

Street, New York.

„

DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AND

Contract for

Iran

or

Cars, etc.,

Interest Allowed

Cos.,

Steel Rails, Locomotives.

’

and undertake

all

able in all parts of

business connectedwitb
Railways

Europe.

on




Carrington,
inroRNsrs

BAN K E lfi S,
CORNER OF PINK AND NASSAU 8T8.,
ISSUE

liijfifAlN

at

iav.

*
RICHHONI, Vi,
_

■

8THBKT.

States,
world;

-H

^

.

.

V

NO. 5 NASSAU
STREET, N.Y
N.B.—All kinds of Government Securities ie
reived at the frillmarket pi ice in
exchange for the
above Bonds. Also,
rities

CIRCULAR NOTES

Ould &

.

All descriptions of Government Secu¬

Deposit*.

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,
For the

Hatch,

BANKERS AND HEALERS IN

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, avail¬

MERCHANTS,

VT

by express, free of
Inquiries for furs her particulars, by mail or

Otherwise, wid receive punctual attention.

NEW ORLEANS.

12 PINE STREET.
Negotiate
Bonds and Loans for Railroad

currency)

January 1st

Winslow, Lanier & Co.,

BANKERS AND BROKERS.
Gold. Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬

BANKERS AND

certain.

country.

Co.,

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

M. K.

absolutely

Eighth.—At ti e present rate of Gold
they pay near¬
ly
Per l ent, per annum, on the amount in¬
vested.
The Bonds are issued in denominations of
$1,000
with semi-annual Gold Coupons
attached, pavable
in New York, and are offered lor the
present at Sf.i
per cen . and a- crutd interest tin
from

Co.,

BROKERS IN MINING

Nlnety-flv« l»er

is Ten Per Cent,
cheapest Six Per Cent. Gold
Bearing Bonds of the Government.

terms, and without delay.

subject

ty.

Third.—The cost of the Bonds,

RANKERS

new

to within 12
arid a large

Tunnelling, Ac.;
beyond that point has been accomplished.
:
Trie First Mortgage Bonds of this
Com¬
pany afford nuusual inducements: of Safety and
Profit to Investors, for the
following among other

STREET, NEW YORK.
Receive Deposits in Currency and
Gold,

All issues of SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES

already completed, equipped, and

miles irom Sacramento

miles of tho summit of the
Sierras,
amouut oi the work of
Grading,

BANKERS,

the

s'.

running for

GOLD, &c.

Pott, Davidson & Jones,

through

TERRITORIES,
only
by Congress

Their road is

NOS. 14 & 16 WALL

A1X TABIYrm.

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

THN

aided by the Issue of United states

Bonds.

aud Louisville, Ky.

AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT

No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET.

F

City.

Jameson, Smith & Cotting

SECURITIES*

DEALERS IN
GOVERNMENT
OTHER SECURITIES.

t

It forms the sole Western link of the
rouse to the Pacific whch is;
adopted

James D. Smith,

I

Hatch, Foote & Co..,

BANKERS.

richest and Most popu¬

Californ ia, ’ and thenee

"

Joseph A.

daily balances which may be checked
sight.
Will purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks
strictly
and only on Commission.

Lockwood & Co.,

of

the GREAT MINING REGIONS
to the vicinity of Salt Lake

STREET, BOSTON.

for at

BOUGHT AND BOLD ON COMMISSION,

line, traversing the

lous e-EeTioN

per annum on

STOCKS AND BONDS

!

END OF THE

GREAT NATIONAL RAILWAY
ACROSS THE CONTINENT.
Their line will extend from
SacramentOy Califor¬
nia, across the Sierra Nevada* to tue California

and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT

10 BROADWAY * 16 NSW STREET.

TO INVESTORS THE

FIRST MORTGAGE RONDS OF
THE

terms,

RARING BROTHERS Sc

We shall give particular attention to the purchase,

•

RECOMMEND

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

partners.

exchange of government securities of

York,

for the Purchase

S. G. & G. C.

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

all issues

DESIRABLE SECURITIES,
No. 5 Nassau Street, New

Securities.

1 Nassau, corner

and

AND DEALERS TN GOVERNMENT AND OTHE

street* New York.

promptly execute orders

Hatch,

BANKERS

Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad

In connection with our houses in Philadelphia and
Washington we have this day opened an office at No.

sale,

Fisk &

ItL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS,
BANKERS, and
others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to
Sight Draft.
~
.......
make Collection* on favorable
and

Opposite Treas. Department*
W ashingt on.

be resident

Financial.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates,

!

New York.

No. 114 South 3d

■:/

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

BANKERS.

Wall and Nassau Sts.,

~T

< .’a

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

COOKE.

Jay Cooke & Co.,
Corner

*,.*•

;'■* li-ii

Bankers and Brokers.

AND CIRCULAR LETTERS
OF CREDIT
of Travelers abroad and in the United
available in all the principal cities of the
also,
/
:
f
use

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
For use in Europe, east of the
Cape of Good Hope
West Indies, South America, and the United States

a

kept constantly on hand, and
Bought Sold or Exchanged.
t3P“Gold Coin and U. 8. Coupons bought, sold,
and collected.
Deposits received on Liberal Term*,
subject to check at sight.
fc£r“ Collections made throughout the country.
^“Miscellaneous Stocks and Bonds bought and
and sold at tho Stoca Exchange on
commission for
ash.

Special attention giver, to the Exchange of SEVENTHIRTY NOTES qf ail the eerie* for the new
FIVE
Y BONDS qf 1865, on the most

favorable

terms

[August 31,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

260

*

•

.'

•.

£

?

.

_

:

-

i.

Financial.

Financial.

Bankers and Brokers.

THE

Jacquelin & De Coppet,

Union Pacific Railroad

STREET) N.Y.

NO. 86 NEW

ARCHITECTS <V CIVIL
111

Jillrotd Itoekg)

Bondfy
Gold, and

Company,

E. T. Littell &

Government Securities,

AS AN

ioum H. Jaoquxlxx.

John McGinnis, Jb.

Washington M. Smith.

Smith 6c
The

rapid progress of the Union Pacific Railroad,
building west from Omaha, Nebraska, and form¬
ing, with its western connections, an unbroken line
across the Continent, attracts attention to the value
of the First Mortgage Bonds which the Company now
offer to the public. The first question asked by prud¬
ent investors is, “Are these bonds secure ?” Next,
“Are they a profitable investment?”
To reply in
now

brief:
1st.—The early completion of the whole great line to
the Pacific is as certain as any future business event
can

be.

lion

acres

The Government grant of over twenty mil¬
of land and

McGinnis,

BANKERS AND BROKERS.

STREET, NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange,
Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on

NO.

4

Commission.

upon what promises to be one of
lines of railroad in the country.

issued

the most profitable

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

must be the

cific ;
tain remunerative rates.

3d.—425 miles of this road

F

&

o u t e

Loring,

BANKERS AND
3S BROAD

STREET

are

BROKERS,

AND

36

NEW

STREET.

kinds, Gold,

State, Bank, and Railroad Stock** anu
Interest allowed on
Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections
made in all the States and Canadas.

38 WALL

Having Thirty Years to Run,
BEARING SIX PER CENT. INTEREST IN LAWFUL
MONEY.
These Bonds

stitutions, for

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

are

a

of all the Government Securities.

John J. Cisco & Son,

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

draft.

Hlake collections

equal to what is granted by the U.S. Government
a second lien as its security.
This amount upon the first 517 miles west from Omaha
is only $16,000 per mile.
and for which it takes

7th.—The fact that the U. S. Government considers a

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

Sale

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

and who sell their Governments to re-invest in these

greater interest.

declared on the preferred and
the Company, payable at the
Company’s agents, Messrs. M. K.
CO., No. 12 Pine Street,New York, on Mon¬
day the 2d day of September next.
The transfer
books of the Company will be closed from the close of
business hours on the 21st instant, and reopened on
the morning of September 8d.
office of
JESCP &

the

W. M.

LARRABEE,
Secretary and Treasurer.

Co.,

TEN PER

Drake Klein wort&Cohen
LONDON AND

The subscriber, their

LIVERPOOL.

representative ana Attorneys

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

of the London House issued for the same purposes.

SLUON DE
26 Exchange

INTEREST PAYABLE IN GOLD.

THE

subject to Sight Draft

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

VISSER,
Place, New York.

CENT.

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS.

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

on

8th.—Although it is not claimed that there can be

ment tax, has been
common
stock
of

STREET, NEW YORK.

Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits
or Check.
Advances made on approved

RAILROAD

Dividend Notice.—The Stockholders of the Chica¬
go and Alton Railroad Company are hereby notified
that a Dividend of FIVE Per Cent., free of Govern¬

BANKERS,
No. 53 WILLIAM

second lien upon the road a good investment, and that
some of the shrewdest railroad builders of the coun¬
stock

favorable terms,

Soutter &

be issued

turn

on

THE

Chicago, August 14,1867.

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.

only as the road progresses, and therefore can never

6th.—Their amount is strictly limited by law to a

OFFICE OF

AND ALTON
COMPAin Y.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates.

part already completed would not only pay interest
and expenses, but be profitable to the Company.

property.

FOR SALE BY

-

CHICAGO

BANKERS,
NO. 24 BROAD STREET.

upon the First Mortgage Bonds upon such sections,
and if not another mile of the road were built, the

be in the market unless they represent a bona fide

STREET,

Special Agents of the Company.

NO. 33 WALL STREET.

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

can

and

JOHN J. CI»CO Sc SON,

Bonds Bought and Sold.

finished and fully

5th.—The Union Pacific Railroad bonds

COIN,

U. S. Government Bonds,

Memphis, Tenn.

Sight

a

PAYABLE IN GOLD

Are offered for sale at the low
price of NINETY
Accrued Interest, added from July lBt, by

W. W. Loring.

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

4th.—The net earnings of the sections already finish¬
ed are several times greater than the gold interest

securing

Bearing SIX PER CENT. Interest,

Gilliss, Harney & Co.>

equipped with depots, locomotives, cars, &c., and two
trains are daily running each way. The materials for
the remaining 92 miles to the eastern base of the Rocky
Mountains are on hand, and it is under contract to be
done in September.

bonds—thus

(The United States Government holding a Second
Lien,)

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

Government Securities of all
are

Union Pacific R.R. Co.,

an

laid at the rate of two miles a day.

2d.—The Union Pacific Railroad bonds

Mortgage Bonds
OF THE

BROAD

fifty million dollars in its own

bonds practically guarantees it.
One-fourth of the
work is already done, and the track continues to be

Tlie First

Hxnbt Da Coppet.

INVESTMENT.

ENGINEERS,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

Designs and Specifications prepared for Stores,
Warehouses, Railway, Mercantile and Banking edi¬
fices generally.
Particular attention paid to the most approved
forms of Iron and Fire-proof construction.

BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION.
MORTGAGE BONDS

THEIR FIRST

Co-,

Hamilton Gold & Silver

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

phia, or at the office of Thomas Barclay No. 4 Wall
Street, New Tork.

These securities form a first claim on the entire
Assets of the Company, and are exchangeable for

ordinary stock of the Company at the option of the
holder at any
period during the five years.

particulars

For
and further information apply to
Jacob Zeigler, Secretary and Treasurer at the office of
the Company, or to Thomas Barclay, No. 4 Wall St.,
New* York.

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

tation

9th.—As the Union Pacific Railroad bonds are offer¬

ed for the present at 90 cents on the dollar and accru¬
ed interest, they are the cheapest security in the mar¬

ket, being more than 15 per cent, less than U.S. Stocks.
10th.—At the current rate of premium on gold,'they

Heath &

BANKERS ACOMIRISSION BROKERS
IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,

Over Nine Per Cent. Interest.
The

dally subscriptions are already large, and they

will continue to be received in New York by the
Continental National Bank, No. 7 Nassau St.

-

Clank, Dodge & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall St. >
John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 83 Wall St.
Hxnbt Clews & Co., Bankers, No. 82 Wall St.
Hxddin, Winchesteb & Co., No. 69 Broadway.

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
mail from the 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 delivery
t

the bonds.




JOHN J. CISCO Treasurer.
NEW YORK

Edward

Lambert,

NO 30 WALL STREET,

AND

pay

REMOVAL.

Hughes,

REMOVES TO NO. 8 WALL STREET.

GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING STOCKS,
13 Broad

Street, New York.

COPARTNERSHIP.

Edward Lambert and

Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest al¬

associate

lowed.

T. W. B. HUGHES,

A. HAWLEY HEATH.

Member of N. Y. Stock Ex.

Edward Lambert & Co.,
BANKERS AND

Gibson,Bead]eston & Co.,
BANKERS,
PLACE, NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and Gold
bought and sold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock,
Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem¬
50 EXCHANGE

bers.
Interest allowed on

James Mason

as

NO. 8 WALL

BROKERS,
STREET,

Dealers in Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Governments,
Strictly on Commission.
Deposits received and Collections made on all parti
of the country.

SPECIALITE

COMMERCIAL

:

PAPER.

Deposits.

Dividends, Coupons ana Interest collected.
Liberal advances on Government and other Securities
Information cheerfully given to Professional men,
Executors, etc., desiring to invest.
n,fn- Vkvr nai*m1ao4An ,a $ MOS9F8 • LOOK WOOD & Co.,
Refer by permission to
| « Dabney, Mobgan & Co,

References bjr Permissions
America, New York.
Hon, H. H. Van Dyck. Assistant Secretary ofTreas.
Bank of

Col. James

Taylor, Newport, Ky,

.

gaufettis’ fectk, (EtowmeMat
A

§tattwag pomtflr, and § ttfurmitt fouroal

WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

VOL. 5.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1867
CONTENTS.
THE CHRONICLE.

The Purchases of Seven-Thirties

Stopped
Foreign Topics
Proposed Prohibition of Railroad
Expansion..
Chicago and Northwestern Rail.

I

261
262

I

road

264

Southern Railroad Reports

j Latest Monetary and Commercial
|

263

English News

264

2 5

Commercial and Miscellaneous

|

News

267

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Money Market, Railway Stocks,
U. S. Securities, Gold Market,
Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks. Philadelphia Banks
National Banks, etc
sale Prices N. Y. Stock
Commercial Epitome

Exchange

Cotton
Tobacco
Breadstuff's
Groceries..

273
275
276

277

268

Dry Goofis

271

Prices Current and Tone of the
Market
285-286

272

278

-

279

j Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.

2,82

Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane- j Insurance and Mining Journal .
283
ous Bond List
280-281 | Advertisements
>257-60, 284, 23 -8

© 1) c
1 hr

Commercial

and

satisfaction, inasmuch as it is obviously a bad policy to keep
any more idle money in the Treasury than is absolutely
needed, so long as the Government has to pay 8 per cent, on
all the funds it raises

long bonds.
public anxiety on this point has been illustrated in
the active discussions which have been elicited by the publi¬
cation a few days ago of a semi official statement of the
amount of the balance now in the Treasury, as compared
with that of the first of August. The aggregates compare as
on

The

follows

:

Aug. 27.

THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.

Railway News

NO. 114

Coin
Curre ■ cy

$93,639,000
51,332,000

Aug. 1.
$102,905,174

72,474,276

*

Decrease.
$9, 66,174
21,142,270

Financial Chronicle is issued every

Satur¬

These

figures

are very

$175,379,450
19,457,960

$30,408,450
351,960

$125,865,00J

€1) r o n i c i f.

$144,971,000
19,106,090

Total
Deduct gold certificates
-

$155,921,190

$30‘056,490

suggestive.

They show in the first

day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants1 Magazine, place that in the past three or four weeks the government
with the latest news up to midnight if Friday,
has disbursed 30 millions more than its receipts, although
the latter have been

is estimated, to
On this view of the ease, fifty-five
For One Year
$10 00 millions of currency have been paid out of the Treasury,
For Six Months
6 00
twenty-one millions of which were previously locked up and
By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin we are
enabled to furnish
subscribers with that paper at the reduced price
effectually shut out of the ordinary channels of circulating
of $4 per annum making the price of
money available for business.
Chronicle with Daily Bollrtin,
$'s So To form a correct estimate of the policy which directed
\ gj
Postage is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. It ts, on the Chroni¬
cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance.
these movements we must look at the figures more in
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO, Publishers,
detail.
And turning first to the gold balance we
60 William Street, New York.
For

TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered
by carrier
to oity subscribers, ana mailod to all others,
(exclusive of postage,)

heavy, amounting,

as

25 millions of dollars.

our

J®5** Remittances should invariably

Office Money Orders.
f

be made by drafts

SPciting Agents make

nn

or

Post

collerfions.

THE PURCHASES OF SEVEN-THIRTIES STOPPED.

Yesterday, by orders from the Secretary of the Treasury,
the further

of Seven thirty notes of
The reasons for this ac¬
tion are two.
The work of depleting the heavy balance of
idle money in the Treasury has been to a great extent ac¬
complished ; and, secondly, the books have to be mado up
for the monthly statement of the debt which is to
appear
early next week. When that report is out we shall know
the precise amount of the Treasury purchases of notes and
that of the sales of gold and bonds. That these transactions
have been so conducted as to cause large disbursements of
currency, we know by the effect produced on the money mar¬
ket, which serves as a tolerably reliable index just now of
the outflow of
currency from the Treasury. If we are not
misinformed, the purchases of Seven-thirties will, if neces¬
sary, he renewed next month, and will go on to any extent
that may be
expedient, or until the balance of idle money in
the coffers of the Government
is brought down to a more
adequate working Average. Mr. McCulloch’s efforts to re¬
duce his balance have been generaly
regarded with much
purchases were stopped
the issues of June and July, 1868.

-




find that it fell from 103 millions
lions

on

the 27th.

on

the 1st inst. to 93 mil¬

Of these 10 millions, 2 millions were

probably paid for coin interest, leaving 8 millions as the
the government has sold in addition to the customs
receipts during the period under review. What those re¬
ceipts were we can only estimate. All we know is that
the customs from July 1 to August 27 were $26,353,000.
Hence the August receipts can scarcely he less than 13 mil¬
lions.
If this coin has been sold, together with the 8 millions
before mentioned, the government must have disposed of
some 21 millions in the gold room since the end of July.
This sum is, however, considerably in excess of the general
belief, which sets down the probable sales at twelve to fifteen
millions. The remaining six millions are supposed to he
accounted for by the method of keeping the accounts of the
Department, as gold certificates which have been redeemed
are allowed to accumulate in the office here, and are counted
as cash
until they reach a certain amount, when they are
charged to the Washington office and finally destroyed. If
we
accept this hypothesis and estimate the sales of gold at
15 millions, then at an average price of 140, the value in
currency will be 21 millions, which have been received into
the Treasury and again disbursed.
Besides these 21 millions of currency derived from gold
amount

262
i/lr.Vfti

„

THE

CHRONICLE.

sales, Mr. McCulloch, as will be seen from the foregoing
table, has lessened his currency balance 21 millions. He
must therefore have
paid out 42 millions. Nor is this al
The receipts from internal revenue must have been abou
fourteen millions. As this sum also has been paid out, the
aggregate disbursements of the Treasury, as we said above
will amount since the 1st inst. to fifty-five millions.
Another point must be settled, however, before we can
accurately see what results in ihe money market will pro¬
bably follow this disbursement of fifty six millions, twenty
one millions of which was
previously inert, but is now callec
into activity just at the season when the movement of the
crops begins to call for it.
The question we refer to is, as to
what has been done with the money.
A part of it—some 9
or 10 millions
probably—has been paid out on requisitions
for the War Department, which have recently been
large,
It this sum is paid out immediately by
the disbursing officers
who have received it, it will very soon return into the cir
culating current, and tend to stimulate business. About 21
millions are believed to have been
paid out in purchases o:
Seven-thirties, and in meeting the maturing interest on them
The compound notes have come in more freely, and about 25
millions of currency are computed to have been expended
in
paying them off.
Gathering together all these points, there are two deduc¬
tions which plainly suggest themselves.
First, the Govern
ment sales of gold, however
large, have not been on so ex¬
tensive a scale as to derange business
or perturb our toreign
exchanges. This is indicated by the price of gold and of
bills on Europe, which have not receded as they would do
if gold was crowded on the market. How far the sales in
question have defeated the plans of certain gambling specula
tors in gold and Five-tw7enties we will not in this
place
discuss.

Secondly, an important effect of the disbursements is
already in the money market, which has been kept
steady and easy, notwithstanding the very large withdrawal
seen

of

compound interest notes from the banks, where they have
Jdone duty as part of the 15 or 25
per cent, leserve required
by law. The cancelling of these notes could scarcely be ex.
pected to be accomplished without a ripple on the smooth
surface of the loan market. The

precautions Mr. McCulloch

has

adopted to prevent trouble have been successful and now
danger is to be apprehended from this source, as
the next
compounds fall due in October, and in their place
the new certificates
may be issued, w hich are available for
bank reserves.
Consequently, the payment of these com¬
no

further

pounds will not be at all likely to work stringency in money.
How,far that result may be brought about by other causes
which will

into

operation during the Fall months we
inquire. It is sufficient for our present purpose
to show what Mr. McCulloch’s
precautions have been to pre
vent the stringency and
monetary trouble which have so long
been predicted in some
quarters as certain to result from the
fact that “ a large amount of
compound interest legal tender
notes fell due at a
very critical time, when the remainder of
the 300 millions of Seven thirties were
maturing, which
would, in case or pressure, require to be paid in cash; and
might necessitate a ruinous issue of greenbacks to save the
Treasury from a dead lock.”
must

come

hereafter

not

was

[August 31,1867.

complete as we had been led to believe by th
dispatches a fortnight ago :

cable

so

It is officially announced that the number of
obligations of the Russian
loan subscribed in France was 291,2*29 out of the 600,000 to be
disposed
of.
What was taken at Amsterdam is not publicly stated, but I hear
it was somewhere about 70,000.
As to
the

England,
subscription was
perfectly insignificant— not very much more iban the portion taken by
Messrs. Baring. Thus, then, the loan has only obtained a partial suc¬
cess ; but the FYench contractors, I
hear, are hot, dissatisfied, seeing
that the subscription made here
considerably exceeds not only the por¬
tion they took firm, but the optional one also.
In another respect the
affair has been satisfactory.
It has drawn part of the public—the real
bona fide good public—from the reserve they have so long maintained
with respect to public
subscriptions—a reserve natural enough, seeing
that several of the subscriptions of the last few years have produced
grievous loss. There was a veritable crowd at the Oomptoir d’Escompte
of traders, workmen, and
petty rentiers to subscribe. The number of
obligations demanded by each individual was, of course, small ; but
that this,sort of people should have responded at all to an appeal for
funds for a foreign government, especially for one that is not
popular in
France, is considered a fact of some importance in itself, and a good
augury for the future. The Bourse has regarded it as a favorable symp¬
tom, and it is one of the causes of the rise that has taken place there.
On the other Laud, the Paris money market has not /ai!ed to note that
the small part taken in the leau by London and Amsterdam,
proves
that those two places have ceased to hold Russian credit in the
high
esteem they once did.
Several

have been

given for the unpopularity of
just nowin the money markets of Europe.
One of
them is the agressive position which that power has assumed
in its exterior relations ; another, the disorder into which the
finances of the Empire have been brought by the reorganiz¬
ation of labor consequent on the emancipation ukase of 29th
March, 1866, as well as by other causes, prominent among
which is the debased and depreciated currency which several
ineffectual attempts have been made to improve, and bring
up to par with the precious metals.
Auother foreign matter of interest is the conclusion of the
litigation in the Overend, Gurney & Co. suit. This case was
decided on the 15th inst' in tne House of Lords, the highest
court of appeal in England.
It will be remembered that
when the insolvent concern of the partners in the long estab¬
lished discount house of Overend & Co. was purchased for
£500,000 by the Joint Stock Company, which assumed the
old firm name, the bankrupt condition of. the business was
concealed from the stockholders, and of the two deeds which
transferred the business and completed the sale, one only
was made
public, the other being kept secret. Some of the
shareholders thought that this concealment formed a valid
excuse by which they could elude the
responsibility of pay¬
ing the debts of the company into which they had been fraud¬
ulently entrapped. But the court has very properly decided
that whatever remedy against their directors the impover¬
ished stockholders may have, they must, according to their
ability, pay each his proportionate share of the debts of the
company, for if the directors are liable to the shareholders,
the shareholders themselves are liable to the public.
Other topics of interest arise out of the reports of the
leading banks of London, which have'just been published.
We have compiled from these reports the following table,
which will well repay examination, as it shows how lucra¬
tive a business is done by these institutions, notwithstanding
the stagnant condition of the money market and the low
rates of interest which prevail:
reasons

Russia

D'vid’ds.—,
nne’67 Dec/66.
.

.

.

city..

.

.

.

5

FOREIGN

By the Cuba’s mails
able financial interest.
cient

we

TOPICS.

have foreign advices of consider¬

Two

or

three of these

are

of suffi-.

prominence to merit special mention in this place. The
first is the details of the negotiations relative to the Russian
loan, on which the correspondent of the London Economist
makes the following observations, showing that the failure




Total
*

t
+

22
28
6
10
16.66
25
33.33

Capital

Deposits.

£880,864

28
32
8
10
25
20
13.33

-.. 17.28av.

Cash

paid up.

£12,032,334
21,858,958
1,072,448

1,000,000
418,940
500,000
3,080,000
1,200.000

'

2,285,068

*

*

.

«

t

1

1,602,600
$3,419,647

+6,012,256

869,068

1,600,000

19.47av.£6,609,804 £66,609,618 £12,670,106

v

.

i

'

*

:

>

■*

.

ti

•

and at Call.
*

*

figures show that, from the profits of the first six
of these seven banks divided 14 per
its capital, another 12£ per cent., a third 11 per

months of the year, one
cent, on

^

272,990
502,967

30,614,719

This amount includes cash in bank, at the Bank of England,
i

£3,284,353
2,'IIS,488

*14,733,765

Including acceptances.
Including £1,105,419 circulation

These

re-

serve.

August 31,1867J

263

THE CHRONICLE.

illustration, than the continuing of the fare on the Central
Railroad at two cents per mile during the whole of the Avar
period. A large majority of the people desired to ride at a
cheap rate, and, therefore, the legislature refused to raise the
fare, although wages and railroad material were doubled in
Money is a drug in London. It commands but If price, and every consideration of justice and good sense de¬
is done.
or 2 per cent, interest.
Yet we see here a little group of manded that the railroad should be permitted to charge a
institutions whose sole legitimate business it is to borrow higher rate. Bat, in addition to all this, it should be re¬
money and lend it out again, and this they have done to such membered that the power really always remains with the
good purpose that the most prosperous of them have made people of the State. They reserve the right to amend all
enough by their operations to divide 25 or 30 per cent, a charters—to cut down prices, to limit profits, in a word, to
year on all of their own capital which they have actually em¬ cure all abuses. Under such -circumstances what have we
barked in their business. To throw as much light as possi¬ to fear'? A corporation might have great influence for a
ble on the problem, we have shown in our table, first, the time ; but were it to abuse it, it would very soon be crippled
rate of dividends; then, the paid up capital, on which these by the people.
We have great faith in the American pub¬
dividends have been earned; thirdly, the amount of the de¬ lic; diseases may develop themselves, but the curative
posits, which constitute the fund, by the lending of which the power is always inherent in. an elective government.
The grand question, however, not only for the people of
profits have accrued; and, lastly, the amount of the bank
funds which are kept on hand as a cash reserve. The dilemma this city and State, but for the whole Northwestern and At¬
which seems to force itself upon us is, either that the capital lantic States, is the means of transportation of the surplus
of these institutions is small in proportion to the volume of produce of the West to the seaboard.
The Empire State
the transactions done, or else that the profits of the money- lies directly in the track of this vast commerce, and all ex¬
lending business, as conducted in London, are much larger isting modes of transportation are utterly inadequate for the
than would be inferred from the low rates of interest which
purpose. Even now we need not only two or three, but may .
soon
prevail there. ^
require a dozen lines of direct railroad communication
between this city and the heart of the great grain region,
PROMISED PROHIBITION OF RAILROAD EXPANSION,
The principal objection then to the action of the Convention
The action of the Constitutional Convention at Albany in is that it ties us up, and prevents us from competing with
prohibiting the consolidation of railroad companies w ith a other States for this rich commerce. Baltimore,_Philedel-‘

while
the aggregate the average of the last twelve
mouths’ dividend of the banks was over 18 per cent.; the
two institutions which rank lowest on the lists dividing 7 and
10 per cent, respectively, and the two highest 25 and 30 per
cent. What the official reports do not show is how the thing

cent.,

capital of $20,000,000, is a matter deserving the
earnest consideration, not only of the business community,
but of the public at large. The alleged object of those who
supported this important change in the organic law of the
State, was to check the accumulation of capital in the hands
of corporations, which might abuse their privileges and in¬
creased power to the detriment of legislative
independence}
and to the prejudice of the interests of the people of the
whole State.
It was urged in support of the proposition,
that the great railroad combinations in New Jersey and
Pennsylvania have proved injurious to industrial progress,
and that they exercise.a controlling influence upon the action
of the respective legislatures.
On argument it was stated
-that the sale of the Pennsylvania canals to the railroad com¬
panies actually resulted in an increase in the cost of passenger
and merchandise transportation contrary to the conditions of
sale, the companies being able to purchase the legislature,
and thus prevent any action against them for breach of con
tract.
Hence it was argued that the delegates should by
their action prevent the organization or consolidation of
great corporations, whose influence might endanger the purity
and independance of the Legislature of this State.
It is almost inconceivable that so intelligent a body as the
Constitutional Convention, should have been led by such
reasoning to resort to the unusual expedient of special legis
lation to check the expansion of a
particular branch of in?,
dustry. If industrial undertakings are to be narrowed down
to a point below
legislative corruptability, then there will
be an end to progress.
It is obvious that the adoption ol
this principle would lead to the most serious embarrassments
in every
department.
For the charges of corruption
to which certain
legislatures of this and other States have
rendered themselves liable are by no means limited to rail¬
road transactions.
Besides, the argument is too sweeping ;
the fears of the Convention are
groundless. There is a -point
beyond which even a corrupt legislature will not dare to go .
as
they have to look to the people for their election, on great
questions of public interest they are not generally for sale.
It is hardly
necessary to point to any other circumstance in
combined




phia and Norfolk are placed at an advantage. A cheap
twenty million dollar railroad will not reach from the
prairies to New York; and if the proposed constitutional
prohibition should become a law, we must relinquish the
contest for commercial supremacy.
And yet beyond this. ’
special injury to the State, it will be of still greater detri¬
ment to the whole northwest, whose interests require all the
avenues to the seaboard capital can give them.
Our railroad system has outgrown the local wants for
which it was devised.
Nearly all the great lines to the West
are formed by the consolidation of old railroad companies
and the construction of a few missing links.
The New York
Central, for example, which has proved so advantageous as
an outlet for the West, is, as all know, a consolidation of old
lines which formerly worked with little concert of action or
harmony. It is obvious that if this great highway were
broken up and divided into sections, each under different
management, that it would operate most injuriously to ther
interests it now serves.
The capital stock of the New York,
and Erie Railroad is $25,000,000.
Yet this and other rail¬
road companies are to be precluded from increasing their
accommodations and extending their facilities!
There* is less reason for this limitation, or, we should
rather say, there are more objections to it at the present
time than there were a few years since. And there will be still
more cogent reasons against it in the future.
The time was'
when direct railroad travel from New York to Albany and
Buffalo was regarded as grand achievements. We have got
beyond all that now. We require direct railroad transpor¬
tation, without break of bulk, not only from this city to Chi- ?
eago and the Mississippi, but also to the Pacific Ocean., The
tendencies of the times

are

all in favor of the consolidation

capital for industrial enterprises, and it
is difficult to see howr of why these tendencies, when mani¬
fested in the direction of railroad enterprises—upon which
all modern commerce depends—should be checked by legis¬
lative enactments. Our industrial undertakings must be on
a larger, on a continually increasing scale, as the
indus¬
tries of the country continue to develope.

and centralization of

264
But

THE CHRONICLE.

than if

board of directors controlled the entire route ?

one

freight matters union is particularly difficult. The ques
tion of charges, of
liability for losses, in fact a division of
interests in almost every particular
arises. The one subject
of separate liability would
always control wih forwarders
(other things being equal) leading them to give preference
the routs where

there

division.

Then, too
freight must be carried through without change of cars

the

road^is not given 'with sufficient detail.
reports, however, we collect the^followingTnformation :

the

1864-65.

1,511,992
1,370,515

1866-67

1,533.028
1,726,920

The financial condition of

exhibited

on

the^company on'the 81st_May yearly, as
general account, is shown in the following statement:

the

was

no

1865.
Common stock
Preferred stock
Funded debt
Net

$18,232,495

$39,522,848 47 j. $41,006,096 04
the foil iwing, viz :

$45,864,3^2

04

$34,870,931 98

$35,272,814

51

J, 102,024 40

$35,079,585 25
1,269,240 09
1,539,935 02

34,500 00

253,000 00

1,274,350 00
3i,S78 44
1,015,932 00

1,274,350 00
381,359 77

293,000
274,200
2,018,200
44,193
1,303,158

12,994,719 79
12,020,4^2 87
825,398 44

floating debt.:

157,603 59

Total

Against which

are

Property

as per terms
id, tion
New construction
New equipment

1867.

$13,174,901 18
13,019,065 79
14,05l,0u0 00
277,150 85
483,988 22

Income account

charged

61

14,789,125 42
16,251,000 00
1,123,476 65
468,224 46

of consol-

.

Securities

1866.

$13,160,921 18

8 9,508 91

management

This is au extremely
important element, as it permits lower freights to be charged,
and a saving secured in
bringing the produce of the west to

U. RK. bonds
Green hay transit stock, &c...
Chic. & Milwaukee RR. stock.
Other stocks a n bonus
Materials on hand

1,770,356 21
4,828,399 5<

hand, viz.:
Sinking fund, 2d mort. G. & C.

But above all
be

can

should remember that

we

economical than

more

the seaboard.

In

twenty.

word there

a

one

seems

to

us

be

to

no room

for argument oil
tion

-

on

this point. The advantages o consolida¬
standing at the close of each fiscal
very great—in fact, every day in the development
summary'i
country will the importance of through routes under

the control of

direction increase.

one

CHICAGO AND NORTHWESTERN RAILWAY.
The third

:fiscal

of this consolidation expired Mayj31,1867. The
earnings and expenses yearly, as show in the reports of the company ,
have been

follows

as

^

year

:

earniDgs

$2,167,901 77

....

“

90,045 97

Miscellaneous"

1866-67,

le65-66.

1864 65.

.

67’8'5 91

46,317 53

$5,510,727
5,393,191
157,157
77,660
105,103

52
39

$2,945,016 19
t ,649.559 81

30
21
86

124,485 27
96,627 81

$6,820,749 75 $8,243,840 28 $10,161,735 45
From which must be deducted cost of
operating and taxes, local and

national,

as

follows:
168,119 91

249,439 99

157,769 07

204,684 12

$6,724.26o 45
266,426 57
113,3ul 18

$4,621,361 84

$5,527,083 45

$7,103,993 20

$4,295,472 86

.

$5,072,959 3t

.

stamps..

Total cost and taxes
(Percentage of cost, &c

Earnings less
Interest

on

Dividend

following directions, viz

on

bonds

B. & M. R.R. stock
outstanding anu try t, 1S66
Interest »>n C & M. RR. bonds and
<T

™

j

on

dividend

on

$1,142,900 07
59,120 00

Below

company

397,115 98
372,872 15
678.929 78

Dividend on preferred stock....
Afinrpius income

132,423 95
639,230 94
982,000 00

518,521 82
447,1135 33
742,193 83

102.067 29

The

surplus as above has been reduced by charging against it certain
interest and discounts, properly chargeable to construction, viz.: in
1864-65, $521,826 19 ; in 1865-66, $416,799 20, and in 1866-67
$117,881 05, making a total of $1,054,956 44 ; which, deducted t om
the aggregate surplus ($1,523,180
90,) leaves May 31,1867, $468,22 46

00
00

3,600,000
l,9l9,0ou
1,173,000
189,000
200,000
105,000

00
00
00
00
00
00
1,075,000 00

1,232,000 00
189,000 00
200,Ot 0 00
3211,000 00

1,200,000 00
2,027,100 00

3,040,000 00
2,200,000 00

July

1805-66.
23 ©27
26 @30#
26 @30

48# ©58

August 52 #((1,57#
8ept
44#@54
Oct.... 34 @16
N v
40# @47#
.

.

-Preferred stock
—~
1865-66.
1866-67.
1864-65.
68 @61#
86 @94# 53 @57
69 ©66#
84 ©93
56# @6 1
63 @68#
85#@91# 58# @64
65 #©72#
77 @86# 00# @64

Common stock

Dec.... 38
Jan..
32

@14#
@40#

32#@ ;7
@34
A^ril... 21 #@35#
May.
21 #@33
March,. 20

@60

27#@29#
28# @34#
31

@39#
34# @37#

27
@36#
20 #@29#
25 @27 #
24 (h 30#

1806-67.

2ri#@31#
30 @37
35# @37#
@37#
@oo%
37#@02#
42 @55#
3: @40#
34
38

62# @69
64# @69

67#@81
75# @85#

35#@39#
3 #@3b#

72# @81#
69# @82
65# @->4#
57# @83#
63# @99#
59# @65#
56 #@65#
56#@00#

61

@65#
£3# @62#
65 #@56#
52 @57#
@67
52#@59#
@63# ,55# @61#

69#@7s#
61 #@71#
61#@67#
48 @64

30

26#@29#

@^6#
31# @36#

48
52

23

28#©62#

48 @94# 52 @69

@39#

These stocks have been

increased^yearly

56#@84#

follows:

as

Common.

Preferred.

Total.

$1,150,458
13,9;-0
57,494

1864-65
1805-66
1866-67

$4,564,248
24,336
1,770,070

$5,714,706
38,316

1,827,664

No dividends have been

paid on the common stock. On the preferred
paid Dec., 1864, and again June, 1865. No
further dividend was paid until December, 1866, when a 7 per ceut. div¬
idend was paid on the preferred stock in kind.

stock

a

dividend of

The

fiscal year:

June,

—May 31st-

1864.
1?8 1
189.0

Iowa leased lines

Freeport line'
Elgin-» ichmond line

Belvedere-Madison line..
Rockford Kenosha line
.

cago-Green Bay line

204.0

818.1
91.0
33.0
49.5
72.4
242.4

Clinton line

Ch

300,000 00
756,000 00

was

the

surplus actually carried to the general account.
length of line operated, and the stock of engines and cars on he
road have been largely increased
during the period which the ab » ve
accounts cover. The following statement
shows' these at the dafc »of
the consolidation in June, 1864, and at the close of each
subsequent
as

184,000 00

00
00

since the consolidation:

1>64-65.
June... 60 @60

Year. 20

stock, in accordance

with terms of lease
Rents of Iowa leased railroads.

300,000
756,0U0
3,600,000
1.948,000

general history of the company the reader is refeired to the
AND FINANCIAL CHRONICLE, VOl. 1, p. 618, 646 and 711.
wegive the monthly range of sale prices of the stocks of the

.

3,473 45

184.000 00

For the

F» b

:

j $940,322 40
00-^ 65^20 00

j

1867

$200,000 00
1,250,000 00

$245,000 00,
1,25 ,100 < 0

CoMMERCIAk

..

bonds and debt

binkiug fonds

$3,057,742 25

$2,716,756 83

$2,199,387 91

expenses

Disbursed in the

69.91)

67.04

67 75

1866.

1865.

$12,020,482 87 $14,051,000 00 $16,251,000 00

Total, May 31

,

Cost of o
operating.
Stale, county ana t »wn taxes.
U.S. tax on earning*, and

given in the foliowiug

year, are

8’s, Flag Trust Bonds (Depot)... ... $245,000 00
7’s, prel. sinking fund b’as (C. & N.W. 1,250,000 00
184,010 00
7’s, Appleton exten’n b’ds (
do
7’s, Gie uBay
“
(
do
300,000 00
756,000 00
7’s, funded coup int. “ (
do
3,61Hi,0u0 00
7’s, gen. 1st mortgage “ (
do
7’s, 1st mortgage bonds (G. & C. U. 1,963,000 00
7's, 2d
“
“
do
1,311.000 00
(
189.000 00
6’s, Elgin&State line “
go
(
7 s, Miss.Riv. Bridge kl
*00,000 00
(
do
7’s, Equipment bonds (C. & N. W.).,
270,4a2 87
7’s, ls-t mort. bonos (hen. R.R.)
1,029,000 00
7’s, consol, s’k’gf’d Vds(C. &. N. W.
948,000 00
10’s.’ Equipment bonds (
do

846,0,6 37

Total gross
earnings

'1.208,625 91

Total..
$39,522,848 99' $41,006,096 04 $45,804,322 04
The details of the several securities issued, and the amounts out¬

are

of the

\f

1865-66.

1,096,697
956,484

Passengers carried.
Freight (tons of 2,COO lbs.)

From

.

In

to

The business of the

told that

there^can be unity of action without
consolidation. Most certainly, a person may travel from
New York to Omaha'and have his baggage checked even i
he passes over twenty roads.
But is it not self evident that
there will be more to overcome to bring about this unity
we are

[August 31,1867.

342.1
91 0
33.0
67.6
72.4
242 4

1865.

1866.
138.1
204.0

Chicago-Milwaukee line*

...

Peninsula Railroadt

.

70.0

1867.
138 1
352.9

342.1
91.0
33 0
67.6
72.4
242.4
83.6
71.5

138 1

491.0
91.1
33.0
67.6
72 4
242.4
83 5
71.5

j

-Xf

*1 920.5

1,003 5

1,152.4

SOUTHERN RAILROAD REPORTS.
1. North Carolina—2. North Eastern—3.
NORTH

CAROLINA

Mississippi Central.

RAILROAD.

The fiscal year ends May 81. The gross earnings of this
the years ending as above, in 1860 and 1867, compare:

railroad for

1860-61.

Passenger earnings
Freight
“
Ma.ls,
“
Total gross

The
in the

1

earnings

general business of the
following statement:

company

for the

$201,761 82
301,930 37
14,886 66

$420,661 89

'.

*.

1866-67.

$182,884 49
215,477 40
22,800 00

$518,558 85

year

Assets on hand May 31, 1866
Old drafts coll cted this year
fenndry deductions on negro bonds and other war claims

profit and loss

1866-67 is shown

.,

$445,579 11
405 06

passed to

24,820 24

*

Leased Mav 8, 1866.
t Consolidated October, 1864, and opened through

December, 1864.

The

is

change in the rolling stock from June 1, 1865, to June 1, 1867
shown in the following statement:
No. of

engines.
1865
1867

Increase




164
*48

~84

Numb°i: of

cars—

Pass. Caboose. Bag., &c. Freight.

from shop accounts .
from sale of old iron
fTom sale of suppl es.
from minor sources

N

94
133

83
117

75
101

2,772
4,815

Ore
214
679

15

34

26

2,043

205

$470,804 40

Gross earnings from transportat on
Amount received irom rents

Total.

2,450

3,239
5,6c 9

618,558 85

....

.>

Increased^ liabilities
Total

resource j tor

$5,865 70
5,3i3 70
46,936 02
13,838 82 ‘
7,635 91—
....

year

..

Charged with the follpjving disbursements, viz:

79,640 15
’27,401 67

$1,096,405 07

August 31, 1867.]
Ordinary and

THE CHRONICLE.

extraordinary expenses-oW

$244,393 49

EARNINGS.

448,153 84~ 690.456 33
8,881 86
iVoRo'^’-* 632,782 45
««« current....... 44,850 42 61,807 79
18,627 15
ol^wav

Construction (old) $2,381 85, and right
ti Vftn"
Worthless accounts passed to profit and loss C *
Bi Is receivab e $6,357 87, and accounts current J"***
Cash on hand May 81,1867

W

The
as

Wiiht ner

cent loan, due March 1,1867

do

$3 *9,000 00
19,820 00

do

loans at 8 per cent, on demand
mils pays
Bills payable

$4,000,000 00
358.820 00
172,639 00
20,774 28
61,854 82

Temporary

Current

accounts

Dne on

ne^ro bonds, 1864 and 1865

79,743 67

Profit audloss.

Total capital

£91,603 32

and liabilities

$5 290 435 06

Against which are charged as follows, viz

;

Cost cf road, equipments and real estate
Amount of sinking fund
Stock in hatham Railroad Company
Stock in North Carolina Railroad Company
Bills receivable ($6,357 37) and current accounts

*4

.* $204*666 06 *
44 444 44
J***. 21 400 00
*
.’

Casnonhand
)

^

(8. O.)

NORTHEASTERN

I

The fiscal year

qaa a*
st'otn 7Q
is]627 15

ends February 28.
-Gross

Year ending
Feb 28.
Paeseng’s.
$15,360 90
1867
1858 '
42,644 44
1859 '
78.689 2 k
1860
89,423 54
18*1 ....:.
89,045 05
ig82
65,355 18

1883’

.

expenses

for 10

:

earnings.-

Operating

Nett

108,271 46 33,053 04 222,013 74
149,782 27 37,903 13 277,113 94
137,168 38 37,494 42 263,707 :s5
98,050 98 88,143 99 237,550 15
89,712 11 2i5,49l 87 439,514 81
II
308,557 74 325,423 02 859,264 61
( ^o report made tbis year
9o,345 47

88,23375

18,tt5d 32

20*2.285 54

123,868
154,850
159,411
134,347

93
72
96
72

141.992 18

337,320 92
)
131

120,018 40 176,3.1 51 21,455 44 317,776 35 251,088

4Q

04

96 144 81

122,263 22
104,296 39
117.202 43

70.694 05
66,687 31

length of this road is 103 miles, extending from Charleston to
Florence, and a connection with the Wilmington and Manchester Kail
At the commencement of 1856-57, it

was completed to Monk’
miles north from Charleston. At the close of that year
Corners, 29*
it was open to the Santee River, 48± miles; the average mileage
oper
ated in 1856-7 having been 38.86 miles. The whole road was
to traffic on the 5th August, 1857.
The financial condition of the company on the 28th
February, I860,
1866 and 1867, comparatively, is shown in the following statement:

opened"

I860.

in $50 shares

bonds (7’s) due :>ept. 1, 1869
2d
“
“
(7’s) due Sept 1,1868
Pref. stock (8’s)* Uue May 1, 1873

700,000
105,800
104,200
43,910
105,590
8,184

rond- for real estate
Bills payable, notes &c

Open accounts
Cash due by company./
Interest outstanding

of

a

00
00
00
66
85

145,000 00

as

erau

&

Total expenses

•

ffi.-fi dne?
e

...

nr.e.mi nts

United States

*

Cash

22,597 40
6,000 00
11,934 41
18,134 38
3,505 12

..

...

10,862 19

Total property and amounts

4,064 00
26,136 04

3,987*50
2:,265 28
8,254 24

4,064 00

22*359

96
1,295 18
8,7o7 5U

paid

as

it becomes due.

MISSISSIPPI CENTRAL

The fiscal year

of this

RAILROAD.

company closes

$2,949,231 47

337,526 37—

$1,190,896 66
l,ilo,40U 00
*7,550 00

71,000 00

9«&,y80 00— 3,393,826 66

Circulation in change bills

Bills payable
Open accounts and pay rolls

* * * *

210,161 60
368,825 67
304,0o9 60—

..

Total capital and assets

Against the

above are

882,996 77

$8,568,371 97

charges

follows, viz:

as

Construction account..

$5,776,^24 02
769.436 99—

Reconstruction since ?ept. 1, 1865
Interest on M. C & T. itR. bonds
Preferred tock

6,546,161 01
607,354 48

$7,832 93
37 43

r..\

176,849 40

Income bonds
First mortgage bonds
Second mortgage bonds
“
Floating debt
Expenses 1st September, 1865, to date

152,228 16
217,644 17
65o 93

119,812 74-

Tennessee bonns
Cash in hands of Treasurer
Real estate, bil.s
receivable, and other available

‘

675,060 76
307,788 13

$225,000 00
18,846 65

means

188,160 94—

Total property and assets

With

737,526 87
604,790 70

1

Fiist mortgage bonds
Second
“
“
Income
“
M.C. &T. RR.
“
State of Tennessee

432,007 59

$8,568,371 97

regard to the funding of interest coupons, it may be stated
e of Tennessee has
agre d to take bonds at 6 per cent, for

that the Sta
her

share, and

at the

same

time

a

State loan of

$200,000

waa

The coupons

granted.

of the companj ’a bonds will also be funded as rapidly aa
possible. It is expected that the income of the current
year will be
adequate to provide fur accruing interest

Cutest iUonetarg anti Commercial

(Snglisl) N.us.

RATES OF EXCHANGE AT
LONDON, AND ON LONDON
A A' LATEST DATES.

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.

AUG. 16.

LATEST
ON—

TIME.

...

RATE.

DATE.

short.
1118 @11.19
3 months. 25.37 *@25 42*
13. 9%@l3.10%

Paris
25.32,* @25.37*
Paris
short.
25.15 @22.
3 months. 12.72*@i2.77,*
Vienna
Berlin
6.2h%@ 6.26%
St. Petersburg
31% @82
Cadiz
49%@ 49*
Lisbon
90 days.
5 %@ 52
Milan
3 months. 7.17* @27.27
Genoa
27.17*@27.27*

TIME.

RATS.

Aug. 16.

abort.

8 mo’s.

13. 7%@ —
2 .20 @25.22
13. 7*@ —
25.15 @ —
25.30 @ —

3 mo’s.

8*X

*4

44

*4

44

44
44

Aug. 16.

44

Aug. 15. 80 days.

53

Naples
New York...
Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro
Buenos Ayres.

Aug. 14.
July 24.
An gr. 3.

Valparaiso....
Pernambuco..

14,571 95

amounting at the close of 1866-67 to $176
267.73, is fundable into certificates of indebtedness. The total amount
to date was $283,249 60, of which $5,168 27 was retired in
settlement
of freights, and $52,818 60 by
funding. These certificates bear 7 per
cent, interest, payable semi-annually, and are
payable January 1,1875
now

as

200,000 00

Profit and loss

175,267 73

$2,054,885 41 $2,158,883 38 $2,199,209 24

The overdue interest

dated Sept. 1, 1866, reads

$200,000 00

Earnings 1st September, 1865, to date

Amsterdam...

Darlington RR. (par
...

$307,783 18
297,008 57

Capital stock and dividend of Oct. 6,1862

Antwerp.
Hamburg

$1,931,051 91 $2,093,176 37 $2,148,130 65
50,800 00

:

"

Bills receivab

28 000 00
45.269 30
65,185 45

follows:

Stock in Florida Steam Packet Co...
Real estate

Interest is

$604,790 70

Sinking fund
Contingent fund

145,090 00
155,009 00
28,000 00
27,3^0 79
16,792 22
62,818 50

2dmortgige bonds
*‘2.V4l»n

155,000 00

700,900 00

corresponding amount of 2d mortgage bonds in

Cost of road and property

finp.n

receipts

1867.

$898,950 00

$2,054,885 41 $2,158,883 38 $2,199,209 24

Against which are charged

i

7u0 000 00

11,242 28
120, 236 35

and liabilities

♦Secured by the deposit
the hands of irustees.

$898,450 00

00

funded into certificates

Total capital

Post

1866.

$897,200 00

latmort.

Stock inGi

450 00

follows:

297,522 63
621,943 69

The

“

19,07153

“

'i ennessee bonds

Freight.
Other.
expenses.
earning?.
$15,425 32 $1,558 94 $32,347 45 $..*
$
47,383 50 9,375 61
99,403 55
61,132 01
38,271 59

2A283 85

Stock capita'

307 788 94

........
.......

Equipment..

The receipts and

Total.

104,310 83

1864

„

$5 290 435 06

RAILROAD.

(not including 1864-65) were as follows

l367

63

_________

Total property and assets

ls66 *::;!!!

Conducting transportation. $74,874 1$
Way, $97,901 77; engines
and cars, $72,610 18
170,511 95
Fuel, $34 021 79, and sun¬
dries $ 28,378 16
68,401 «

The balance sheet of the
company,

Interest on

......

“

expenses.

$187,480 23

Balance to credit

financial condition of the company at the close of 1866-67, reads

Capital stock

road.

Mail
Other

$1,096,406 07

follows:

years

Passenger receipts
Freight
“

Total

Total disbursement

265

Singapore..
Hong Kong...
Ceylon
Bombay ....

60

....

4a. 6d.
4s. 6d.

Par.

lsll*d@

Madras
Calcutra....

Svdney

days.

30

—

lsll%d@ —
lsll>id@ —
1 p. c. dis.
days.

fFrom

our own

60 days.
90 days.
90 days.

July 24.
July 12.
July 3.
Aug. 1.
6
July 7.
July 12.
July 16.
Aug. 12.
Ang. 16
June 22. 30

44

44

109%
* p. c. prem.

15* p. c. prem.
21*@21*
48* @ 45 @ —
21*@21%

44
44

mos.
44

44
44

44

44

days.

4a.

6*d.@
4*.5*d.@
1«.

—

—

2@2% dis.
ll*o@u U*d
1*. 11 7-16rf.
P- c. prem.

1*

Correspondent.!

London, Saturday, August 17, 1867.
present week has been one of intense heat, and harvest work
has made considerable progress. The advance made, however,
owing
to numerous and heavy storms throughout the
country has not been ao
great as could have been desired ; but so far as I can learn, the result
The

August 81. At the com.
1865-66 trains were running north only as far in the eastern counties—our principal wheat-growing district—is satis¬
as Abbeville.
On the 20th September the
bridges were completed to factory. At present, however, very little produce has been carted, and
Holly Springs, and on the 15th November the line was opened to Grand although much wheat has been cut the period is
very critical, and it
Junction. On the 6th January trains were run to
Bolivar, and on the cannot yet be looked upon as certain that we shall secure the crop in
18th May to Jackson ; but it was not until the 17th June that
connec.
good condition. During the week the trade for wheat has been in a
tion waa made with the Mobile and Ohio
Railroad. The business of most inactive state. Millers are now working
very closely, confining,
the road was also
interrupted by want of rolling stock. Under these their purchases to the supply of wants that are most pressing. As yet,
conditions the company accomplished but a small
quota of the business sufficient new wheat has not been sent to market to test the state or
of which the road with a sufficient
equipment is capable.
probable course of prices ; neither is the extent of the harvest suffici
The following statement exhibits an account of the
earnings and ex. ently ascertained to form a guide as to the future. The quotations
peases for the year ;
however, are decidedly lower than at the close of last week. To what
mencement of the year




266

[August Si; i86l

extent

endured

difference of

calls.

prices have given way, is a subject on which there is considerable
opinion; but it may be estimated at about three shilling
per quarter.

Although

the rains which continue to fall are not to be desired, so
concerned, yet, as I stated in my last letter, the benefi
the country has derived from them can scarcely be over-estimated. A
good agricultural year does not merely consist in securing a large crop
of wheat; other crops are an important element in that estimate.
After the wheat plant has commenced to bloom, it requires little rain*
but this is by no means the case with other cereals.
Barley, for instance
peeds much moisture, and bad it not been for the late rains the result
of this year’s crop would have been as unfavorable as it was last year
Now, however, there is a good prospect that the yield will, on the wholet
be satisfactory. In the same manner oats, beans and peas have derived
much benefit. Oats are a good crop, but beans and
peas are not very
favorably spoken of. The yield, however, is likely to be larger than
was at one time
anticipated.
Again, the root crops have very materially improved in consequence
of the rains. The importance of a good crop of
potatoes, in considering
the future price of wheat, should never be under-estimated. Consumed
by the far greater majority of individuals, and especially by the poorer
classes, an abundant crop has a very great effect in reduciug the con¬
sumption of bread. Of late years the cultivation of potatoes has greatly
increased, so much so, indeed, that, except at the commencement of the
season, when there is a demand for new potatoes, the Continent is ai
most entirely excluded from our market.
The foreign crops, however^
being earlier than our own, supplies of new foreign potatoes reach us
long b€ fore our own crops are ready. Hence, in the early part of the
season, new potatoes are received in considerable quantities from Por..
tugal, France, and, later on, from Holland.
With this exception, we
grow sufficient potatoes for our own consumption.
One result of this
is the further development, however disastrous it may have been to
railway shareholders, of our railway system. ' The cultivation of potatoes
in distant parts of the country is not profitable, unless there
happen to
be ready means for sending produce to market at a
comparatively trifl¬
ing expense. The numerous branch lines of railway have supplied this
want, and for this reason an increased breadth of land is under cutyiva
tion. The turnip crop, too, is abundant, and, on account of the high
price of meat during the last few years, such a result should be hailed
with satisfaction. It will enable the grazier to fatten his cattle at a
smaller expense, and will also enable him to send his stock to market in
primer condition, thereby increasing the actual supply of meat. At pres,
eut, however, we are only in the first stage of harvest-work, and it is
necessarily impossible to state clearly the result. Taken as a whole
however, it would seem that the agricultural prospect has decidedly im
proved, and that the result is not likely to be disappointing to the com*
munity at large.
as

wheat is

.

poor

shareholders who

are

not in

position to

a

pay up their

,

The money market remains extremely quiet. The
supply is very
large, "and the demand for accommodation has been on a restricted
scale, peculiar to the last few months. The bank minimum remains at
2 per cent., while in the
open market the best short-dated paper is taken
at 1$
per cent. The discount market, in fact, is without movement,
and the banks still experience great difficulty in
employing their sur¬
plus funds. Annexed are the quotations for the best short-dated paper.

..

far

by

Per Cent I
30 to 60 days’ bills
3 mouths’bills
4 months’ bank bills

1#@
| 6 months’bank hills
l#@l# I 4 & 6 months’ trade bills....
1#@2
I

Percent.
2

@2#
2@ 3

On the

Continent, during the week, very little change has taken place
The markets remain extremely quiet at about the rates cur*
rent last week.
The following statement shows the present
quotations
compared with those of last year :
in rates.

r-B’k rate^
1866. 1867.

e

At Paris
Vienna
Berlin
Frankfort.
Amst’rd’m

.....

...

Owing to

Op. m’kt—,
1866.

B’k rate-^
1866. 1867.

1867.

2-2#

3#

2#

3-3#

5
5

4
4

6
5

2#

6

2#
2#

6
6

l#-2
2-2#

6

Turin
Brussels
Madrid

4

8
..

...

Hamburg
St.

.

r-Op. m’kt-^
1866.

1867

5

6

2%

5

9

5

-

-

—

Petbg. 5#

2#-2#

4
7#-S#

7

2
8

considerable importation the market for Mexican dollars
and prices have a drooping tendency. Bar silver is dull at
one-eighth, but in other respects the bullion market remains
unchanged. Aunexed are the present quotations :
a

is very flat,
a decline of

GOLD.
s.

Bar Gold
do
Fine
do
Retinable

..per oz. standard.
do
last
do

Spanish Donbloous

.per oz.

South American Doubloons..
United States Gold Coin

.

.

price

do
do

d.

77

9

77
77
75
73
76

d.

s.

9

11
6
9

m—
@76
@—

3

_

0
—

SILVER.
s.

Bar Silver
do
containing 5 grs.
Fine Cake Silver
Mexican Dollars

Quicksilver, £6 17s.

per

per oz.

gold

standard.
do
per oz.
per oz.

d.

5
5
5
4

0#
0#
5#
11#

s.

d.

@
@
@
@

bottle; discount 6 per cent.

In the

early part of the week the Consol market ruled firm at higher
quotations, but since then the market has been dull aud prices have
given way. The actual amount of business transacted is small. The
following figures show the highest and lowest prices on the days enum¬
erated

'

:

Weekending Aug 17 vionday.j Tuesday VVed’y.
Consols for money

94*8-95

|94#-95

94#-95

Tbur.

Friday.

Sat.

94#-94# 94#-94# 94#-W#

United States

Five-twenty bonds have been dealt in to a moderate
have ruled firm. In other American securities there
have been but few changes of importance. The highest and lowest
prices each day of the week are subjoined :
extent, aud prices

Throughout the manufacturing districts business has continued very Week ending Aug. 17 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday.
quiet. The principal exception is cotton, in which there has been large U. S. 5-20’s..
73#-74£ 73#-74# 73#-74 73#-74 73#-73# 73#-73#
Atlantic
G’t Westtransactions at higher prices. The public sales of colonial wool were
ern consol’d bonds 21#-.... 21#-...
21#-.... 21#-.... 21#-.... 21#-....
commenced in London yesterday. The supply of wool to be offered at Erie Shares ($100).. 46#-.. 46#-.... 45#-.... 45#-.... 45#-.... 45#-....
Illinois shares ($100) 77#-.... 77#-77# 78
78#-.... 77#-.... 78
these sales is very large, and amounts to 126,000 bales.
So far, the
biddings have been moderately active at the rates of the preceding
English Market Reports—Per Cable.
series.* At present there have not been many foreign buyers in attend.
The following statements give the daily closing quotation • in the
aoce,’but the home trade are operating with considerable freedom.
English markets for the week ending August 29 :
The case of Overend, Gurney & Co., limited, still absorbs much atten.
London Stock Market.—The Bank bullion reserve was increased
tion. The unfortunate position of the shareholders, and the call of £10
during the week by £42,000. Stocks of all kinds in the meanwhile have
now due, but which has remained in
abeyance, peuding the decision of been
irregular and, at the cloee, were dull, at a heavy decline. The falj
the House of Lords, has excited much sympathy, but it seemed clear
in American Securities, however, is the result of the rise in
gold, which
that thejsase would be decided against the shareholders, and in favor
has been higher during the week than at any former period since the
of the creditors. The shareholders have therefore no alternative but to
opening of the current year.
pay up the calls in arrears, and will probably regret the great expense
Fri. 23. Sat. 24.
Mon. 26. Tnes. 27. Wed. 28. Thu. 2.
to which they have gone in making the
94 11-16
attempt to free themselves Consols for money
94 13-16
94#
94#
94#
94#
U. S. 6’s (1862)
73
73#
73#
73#
73#
!
73#
from their respousih lity.
The appellants have urged that as the pro. Illinois Central shares.. 77#
77#
76#
77#
77#
77#
44#
44#
45#
45#
45#
•pectus of the new Company did not faithfully state the position of the Eri-> Railway shares..,.. 44#
Atlantic & Great Western cons. Ixnds
private firm, and withheld much information which, had it been made
21
21
21#
21#
21#
21#.
The daily closing for U. S. 6’s
public, would have not only prevented the uew company being startedj
(1862) at Frankfort were—
but would have compelled the private firm to stop payment, the new Franktoit
76#
77#
77#
77#
compaay was founded upon fraud, and they are therefore not liable
Liverpool Cotton Market.—The week opened with a supply in port
but Lord Coloneay observed that a contract induced by fraud was not and afloat of 767,000 bales
(including 323,000 American). The sales of
void, but only voidable, and, the appellants not having taken any steps the week had been only 69,000, and owing to large receipts, and unfa_
to have the contract declared void, it could not now be
put aside. In vorable advices from Manchester, prices had fallen off £d. on all des¬
defence of the directors of the undertaking, it may be observed that criptions. The
daily sales and quotations during the current week are
they were themselves men of wealth, and held a large stake in the con- shown in the following statement;
cam.
During the period, when they knew their position, they retained
Sat., 24. Mon., 26. Tnes., 27. Wed., 28. Thu.29.
Fri., 23.
Bales sold
;
’ 8,000
their shares in the undertaking, and were not unwilling to
6,000 •4 8,000 *
8,000
8,000 ”
accept the Price Midd. Uplds. 10,000
10#d.
10#d.
10#d.
10#d. ; 10#d.
10#d.
whole of the responsibility attached to them. The directors have, in
Orleans lid.
lid.
10#d.
10# d.
10#d
11# d.
fact, suffered to a greater extent than many of the shareholders, although
Liverpool Breadstuff8 Market.—The market has been quiet through,
there is no doubt that in numerous cases
ut the week, and closed heavy, but without reportable change of quo*
great hardships have been
*

-...

-....

*

.




.

....

.

..

“

“

. ■ r

\.J Jf.1

k.i '-..J A

>

AM

X Ak i

I.

tation, except in corn, which closed at

a

$4,269,873

Previously reported.... 134,570,749

6811.—Securits
1
d.
13 9

d.
13 9

d.
13 9
13 4
35 9
5 0
3 6
41
6
34 0

8.

Wheat (new So.)p. ctl
“
33 4
(Calif white) “
Corn (West, mx’d) p. 4801bs 35 9
5 0
Barley(American) per 60 lbs
3 6
Oats (Am. & Can.) per 45 lbs
Peas..(Canadian) pr504 1be 41 6
Flour (extra West.) p. bbl. 34 0

13

.

4
9
0
6
6
0

35

5
3
41
S4

d.
13 9

8.

13
35
5

s.

13
35
5
3
41

s.

18

4

9
0
6
6
0

3
41
34

34

d.
13 9

d.
9
4
9
0
6
6
0

8.

i

d.
0
6

43

Lard (American)
Cheese (fine Am.)

6
3

52
49

“
“

d.
6

s.

142
75

6
6
9

43
51
49

0

d.
0

8.

140
75

6

6

43
52

0

0
0

49

d.
0

8.

140
75
43
51
49

d.
6
6
43 6
61 9
49 0

6
6

9
0

dg

s.

137
75
43
51
49

o

O

6
9
0

Petroleum i9 ^d. lower.

Rosin—common is 3d. dearer, but
Spirits Turpentine is quoted Is. advanced. Ashes,

middling has lost Is.

petroleum spirits, and clover seed

are

without change.

f

per

(com Wilm).

middling....

112 lbs
“
“
“

fine

29 0
29 *6
1 4
1 4
0 8* 0 8)4
44 9
44 9
41 0
41 0

$p turpentine
“
Petroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs
-spirits....per8 lbs
Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs.
Clover seed (Am. red)
“

30 *6
•30
1 4
1
0 8)4
0
44 9
44
41 0
41

‘6

3#
8)4

6
0

30*6

80 0
1 3)4
0 8%
44 6
41 0

0

31

18*

44 3
41 0

London Produce and Metal Markets.—Since

Monday Sugar has been
la. lower, closing at 24s. 6d.; and Linseed Oil 10s. lower,
closing at
£39. The market generally has been steady and moderately active,
but otherwise than as above, without change in quotations. The fol¬
lowing shows the daily closing prices reported by the cable :

Fri. 23. Sat. 24. Mon. 26. Tu. 27. Wd. 28. Th. 29
25 6 » 25 6
25 6
24 b
24 6
24 6

Sugar (No.12 Dch std) p. 112 lbs.
Linseed (Calcutta).
“

Cake and oils

686

686

686

686

686

quoted

•

“

oil

44 39 10 0

Whale oil

Iron

following

are

39

0 0

39

0 0 39
0 0 115
0 0 40

0 0
0 0
0 0

& Banca)p. 1121b.

....

53 0

53 o

—

53 0

53

....

$102,928,053

209,423,889

$212^418,131

$130,930,212

2.—Nationl

Spain

39,422

i.,

Other S. Europe
East Indies

China

A

Japan

The

York

0

53

0

....

..

3,940,466

549

1,942,873
1,740,391

4,705,027
2*050/523

50,487

Veneznela
Br. Guiana
Brazil.

11,331
1,665,971

2i6

$8,715,440
811,248
i,

48,688
145,785

.

N ew Granada...

1,328^459
1,016,581

396,326
72,529

.

$105,416

....•••<

’

•

Australia
Br.N A Colonies

Since
Jan. 1.

To

3,241,218 Other W. I
14,601,503’ Mexico, 'i

465,151
42,000
161,865
38,306

N.Europe

This
week.

.

$898,278 $66,254,099 Cuba,
111,467
7,435,483 Hayti

......

Other

KSince
Jan. 1,1867

*

433,458

....!

Other S iA. ports
All other porta

Aug. 20—St Weser, Biemen—
Foreign Coin
20—St. Weaer, London—

955,491

,

'

'fGobi Bars

■

319,188
Doubloous..
5,118
22-St. Ci y of Paris, Liv¬
erpool—- "
American and British :
'
Gold..... ,i......
18,806
American Coin. •...
5,837

60,000
“

-

Silver Bars.........
62,076
22—St. Columbia, Havana— ,:
American Go’d
22—St. >outh America,
Para.

<

1,400

..

..

Specie
Denmark, Liver¬

>

.

“

22—St.

13,618

24—St

Hammonia, Hamburg—
Foreign Silv r
«
,5,000

•

D nbloons
Silver Co n

pool-

Gold and Siver Bars.

Total for the week

10,000
1,200

85,000

$695,533

...

Previously reported

Total since Jan.

1, 1867

$39,625,277

.-.

Same time in

$52,882,448

1856

;i

•

.

'•

'j

vj

.

Great Western consolidated bonds 21£.
The sales of cotton at Liverpool for

31,976,496

Sp2l,6l7
...i.,.;/22;3d9,427

33,656,637
1^,763,667

17,476,554
r.i t

:

imports of tpecie at this port during the week have been

yesterday’s closing quotations.
Bacon is 6d. lower.

Aug. 18—Schr. E. Waters, Tam¬

Aug. 23—Schr. Julia, Kingston— ,yl

pico-

Silver..

Silver

14

44

6,000

•

Queen, Aspin wall—

/

Cabello—
Gold
Silver

1,200

!

.

_.

1

,

■

tain

reportable change in the
provision market. Grain and flour are quoted at yestfrday’s rates.
The London Merchants’ markets are steady
and unchanged since
no

yesterday.

.

Si; '•!

.

and

Exports

for th*

Wkkk.—The

{

•

.

$340,649 500
340,649,500
340,649,500
319,664,590

10

Aug.17

24....

amount

...

10

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

'
.

.

1865.

1867. ’•

General merchandise...

$1,093,337
i;f49,304

$2,632,704
2,443,876

$2,071,161
2,193,303

$2,318,692
1,957,902

Total for the week

$2,S42^41

$5,076,580

$4,264,464

164,663,570

$4,276 594

106,979,779

204,310,373

207,613,569

$157,506,220

$112,056,359

$208,574,837

$211,890,163
'-i
</.

cSince Jan. 1
-

82,380
75,600

!■

*

■

\

‘

-

.

»

•

.

.

«

.

*/

j

i

*2

--

-

report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry
goods for one week later.,,
The following » a statement of the exports (exclusive of
specie) from
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week
ending Ang. 27;
-

our

;




-

Total.
$379,447,450
879,4374450
•

-

370,4 i7,450

and distributed

Currency

4.—Receipts

on
year

Circulation.

.

‘$298,955,914

'4,595,862

4,683,115

also the

298,988,861
299,046,.i61

Currency Boreau by Trea¬
destroyed :

amount

•

Destroyed.
$395,300

232,700

448.189

5

554,491

;

.

Total tb date
$29,056-24

Current week.
$6,789,304

3^264,940"

Ang.17
24.,
.

^

258,958

392,100

account of Internal Reveoue weekly, and total for
to date :
' w*

Weekending.
July 3

I

298,97^,634

’^

4,455,015

Distributed.
$515,519
347,563

$486,50 ‘
49 ,000
...‘605/00
483,000

24

current fiscal

;

Currency in

reiurned.
$4,547,562

Receive I.

Aug.17.

•-

-

...

303,729,476

weekly

10

,

v.tf

303,571,496
803,653.876

'

*-■■*•

...

i

r86^62

2,878,73?.

\

J-t

,

38,907,36

.

,

,,

5.—Receipts from Customs at the specified ports weekly

^

:

N. York. Boston.
Phila. Balt more. N.Orleans.
Total.
July 20
$1,90 ,512 * $2S*,29:ii $126,069; ‘$100,98^ $95,518
$2,500,209
*7
...2,576,314
291,844
f 95,299
1^560 ,i(T
.. 31.'..... J 1,33S;H69 167,678 - h dr,47T ’ '103,095 J ld,084* “1,687,003
August 1 to 10. 3,792,406
468,139 - 929,316
120,926
59,626
4,670,413
Week

end’g*

r..

“

Missouri Bonds.—The State Treasurer of Missouri has issued the

following notice to holders of Union Military Bonds
•

i

:
j

*

?'

-

Bf'-r

State Trea^wii^ QFFfQ*i >rJ >
1S67. f
: Union
military Bonds of all .dates,, will, continue to. be received at
this office for redemption from day to day until al1 are presented and
■

j,

In

....

•

*

i

“

1866.

Dry goods

Previonaly reported

V

38,5^7,950

,f

....

1864.

.

38,787,950
38,787,'50

•

| 03;503,476

"68,020

Aug.17

“

•

Deposits.
$38,797,950

.

July 3

dry goods and a small decrease in general merchan
dise, the total being $4,276,694 against $4,673,114 last week, and
$6,977,663, the previous week. The exports are $2,994,242 this week
against $2,962,501 last week, and $3,928,544 the previous week. The
exports of cotton the past week were 1,738 bales, against 960 bales
last week. The following are the imports at New York for week
ending (for dry goods) Aug. 23, and for the week ending (for general
merchandise) Ang. 24 :

i..ii

pf cer¬

aumm <ry

For U. S.

-Currency issued.^
»
Current week.
Aggregate.

Weekending.

small increase in

a

1

•

:

ending.
July 3

surer

imports this week show

.J-.V

3i9,202,^82
bank currency issued (weekly and aggregate), and the
(including worn-out notes) returned, and the amount in circu¬

Week

“

li

/(■)

following forms present a

8.—Fractional currency received from the

Imports

$18,663

$1,824,490

!j l.x': ’

I

For circulation.

24...

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.

J-

1,364

1,305,827

July 3
“

,

weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom Houses
*.
*
'
held by the Treasurer in trust for National banks.:
'■

“

.

->$,582

...

Previously reported
I.

* 1

....

Total for week

■

517

*;..>•

23—Brig Hermes, Porto

21—St. Ocean

lation at date

Otherwise there is

as

follows

Date.

the week ending last evening
summed upward of 62,000 bales, including 6,000 for
export ands
2,000 for speculation. The stock on hand at same date was 794,000
(314,000 American) bales. The market to day was dull, but steady at

‘

$17,249,170

...

1855
1854
1853i
1852

38,623,776
8,264,058
344296,184
49,083,811

.1

.

1857.....

27,922,122

1860
1859

'u

•

1858

19,960,545
31,785,951

1865
1864
1863
1862

i

39,029,744

v

Same time in

•

......

*•

National Treasury.-—The

Consols for money are quo ed at 94|, and U. S. 6’s, 1862, at 73£.
Illinois Central Railroad shares 77, and Erie shares 44|. Atlantic and

-

h

■

Aug. 24—St, Periere, Havre—
Foreign Coin
‘ 12,600

Since Jan. 1

Friday, August 30, P.M,

*4152,794

v

Ur’jh

$1,200

Silver Coin...
20—St. Weaer, Southamp¬

.. >

Latest:

784,446
f,‘90<,8Ol

.

134,961
36.212

.........

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
for the week
ending August 24, 1867 :

Gold

the quotations for metals:

(3c. pig mxd num) p. ton. 53 0

Tin (Straits

39 10 0

“115 0 0 115 0 0 115 0 0 115 0 0 115
p.252 gals.40 0 0 40 0 0
40 0 0 40 0 0 40

Sperm oil

The

39 10 0

ThiB
week.

Holland & Belg.
Germany..;....

The

as follows :
Fri.23. Sat. 24. Mon. 26. Tu. 27. Wd. 28. Th. 29.
Linseed cake (obl’g).p ton £10 5 0 £10 5 0 £10 5 0 £10 5 0 £10 5 0 £10 5 0
were

...$138,840,622

To
Great Britain...
France...

ton

Fri. 23. Sat. 24. Mon 26. Tn. 27. Wed. 28. Th. 29
8. d.
8. d.
8. d.
8. d.
1.
». d.
31
0
81 0
31 0
31 0
31 0
^31 0
7 6
7 9
7 6
7 9
7 9
79
13 0
13 0
12 0
12 0
12 0
C12 0
*

.Ashes-r-pots

Since Jan 1

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

Liverpool Produce Market.—Tallow has been weak and closes 6d.

lower.

.$2,9 .4,242

127,501,500

of

b.

137
75

''-">1867.

The value of

Fri. 23. Sat.!24. Mon 26. Tnes. 27. Wed. 28.'Thu : 29*
139
75

,

1866.=

$2,728,713

-

s.

Liverpool Provisions Market—Beef has been irregular, and since Sat¬
urday has declined 6s. Lard opened at 52a. 3d., but has been selling
cheaply, and closes at 51s. 9d. Pork, bacon and cheese are unchanged,
the quotations reported being those at the close of previous week :

“

"^1865. ■
$3,395,622
99,532,431

1864.

8.

“

-=267

For the week
Fri. 23. Sat. 24. Mon. 26. Tnes. 27. Wed. 28.

«'■

EXPORTS non XIW YORK YOB TH1W1IK.

decline of 6d. from previou8

Yates.

IRosin

CO

THE CHRONICLE.

Angngfc Si, 1867.]

•<-./ M

Jefferson City, Mo.r AugAl5,v

P1d„Wre„i all‘p^esenfed ^fore the M of NoymW/i&Cliffl b.
on

computed and paid to the 7th of August, 1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

268

and after the 6th day of November, I867t
that date (Nov. 6, 1867).
Unpaid Union military bonds will cease to bear interest on and after

Fbiday, Aug. 80, 1867, P. M.

Interest on all presented on
will be computed and paid to

the 6th of November, 1867.
The State cow having the money

for the payment of these bonds exdu?ively, idle in her Treasury, the said date (Nov. 6, 1867) has been
fixed upon as the limit to which they may bear interest, in justice to
herself and all her creditors.
*

All concerned

directed to take notice4iereof.
Yery respectfully,
\

are

Wm.i Bishop, State

r'

Treasurer.

The Cuban Telegraph Cable.—The submarine cable just laid be
ana Cuba is ouly the initial
of an extensive system o‘

tween Florida

telegraphic communication between the countries bordering on the Gul
beyond, and perhaps of another Atlantic cable
The company which has undertaken the enterprise is styled the “ In¬
ternational Ocean Telegraph Company,” and was organized in the city
of New York, in the year 1865.
William F. Smith, President ; distin
guished himself during the late war as u Baldy Smith,” and is a topo¬
graphical engineer of large experience and skill. The company has
obtained from Spain the sole right, for the space of forty years, of laying
ocean cables between
the United States and Cuba, and between the
latter place and such other countries as may be deemed advisible. The
State of Florida conceded the exclusive right to construct a submarine
telegraph from its shores to Cuba, as well as the right to construct a
land line of four hundred miles in length through the State. '1 hese
concessions were granted for a space of twenty years.
In addition the
of Mexico and others

State of Panama has granted the exclusive right for twenty-five years
on either her Atlantic and Pacific shores, while the West

to land cable

Indian, Venezuelan, Argentine and other Central and Scuth American
governments have granted liberal concessions for telegraphic con¬
nections with other countries. The cable to Cuba is about 90 miles
in length, and is laid from Key West to Che^ena, a small hamlet west
of the City of Havana. The New York Herald thus states the direction
in which the connecting lines will be pushed:—The line connect

[August 31,1867.

The Money Market.—The
what anomalous.

course

of monetary

affairs is

some¬

For the past two

weeks the bank statements have
large decrease in deposits and legal tenders; the loss in
each item being about $11,000,000. and yet money continues com¬
paratively easy. There has been an advance of about one per cent,
in the rate of interest; but since the middle of this week there has
been a strong tendency toward the former low rates. The loss of
legal tenders has been largely due to the sales of gold by the Treasury,
the sales for the two weeks ending August 24th being $7,000,000,
or over $9,000,000 in
currency. Probably not more than two-thirds
of this amount has been paid for in greenbacks, so that the loss of
legal tenders by the » anks on these transactions may be taken at
about six millions, leaving five millions to be accounted for as hav¬
ing gone into the interior. Part of this amount remitted to the
country banks may be considered as remittances against compound
notes sent by the banks to their correspondent banks here for re¬
demption, the notes having been drawn against, in many cases,
before the Tieasury had actually liquidated the notes.
On
Saturday last the Sub-Treasury had received $12,500,000
of compounds, from Aug. 15th to that day, and had paid
only $8,000,000, showing that $4,500,000 was due to the
banks and other parties having presented the notes ; and this
circumstance would partially account for the decrease in legal
tenders shown by the lust bank statement. To-day, however,
this unliquidated balance has been reduced to about $1,000,000 ;
beside which the Government has bought a lew millions of Seventhirty notes during the present week ; so that the legal tender re¬
serve is
probably now larger than at the date of the last bank state¬
ment, and this may account for the greater ease in money apparent
shown

a

ing the South American countries on the Atlantic Ocean will be via
Cuba, St. Domingo, Porto Ric >, St I homae, « audaloupe, Martinique,
Trinidad, and Demerara. From thence, principally by land lines, tele
graphic communication will be opened through the Empire of Brazil to
St. Roque. From this latter point a sub marine cable will extend to the at the close.
Cape Verde Islands; from thence to the.coast of Africa, and be carried
The wants of Wall street are very limited, and are readily sup¬
to Cadiz, in Spain, thus completing the clrcle of the Atlantic Ocean. On
the Pacific shores of South America telegraphic communication will be plied at 4@5 per cent., round sums being sometimes placed on Gov¬
obtained with the United States through Cuba. Commencing at San¬ ernments at 3
per cent.
tiago de Cuba, a cable will be laid to some point in the vicinit of Morant
Discounts are comparatively quiet there is but little produce pa¬
Point, or Falmouth, in the Island of Jamaica, a distance of about one
hundred and forty-three miles.
A fhore line will connect this with per offering, and the supply of metchandise notes is not large. The
Kingston, from whence a cable will be laid to Aspinwall. on the Isthmus banks are not disposed to discount freely at present low rates, ex¬
of Panama, a distance of aaont six hnndred miles.
It is expected that
the company will immediately proceed to the work of constructing the cept on choice 60 days’ paper, which they take mostly at 6 per
lines to Jamaica and Panama.”
oent,; longer date of prime are negotiated at 6£<g)7 per cent.
The following are the quotations for loans of various classes :
&The Tunnel at the Summit or the Sierra Nevada.—The great
tnnnel of the Central Pacific Railroad is completed.
This is the last,
Percent.
Percent
the longest, and by far the most costly of the excavations along t .e Call loans
4
@ 6
I Good endorsed bills, 8 &
line of this road. It is one thousand six hundred and sixty feet in length, Loans on bonds & mort..
6 @ 7
4 months
6*@ 7*
Prime endorsed bills, 9
and was begun at the east portal on the 16th of September, aod on the
| do single names
9 @10
months
6 @ 6* i Lower grades
11 @15
west portal on the 2<>th of September last, and the work upon it has
therefore occupied about a year. The material which had to be drilled
United States Securities.—Governments have been unsettled
and blasted was granite of the hardest grain. As but a limited surface
and weak, under a prevailing desire to realise, until toward the
could be presented to the workmen, advantage was taken of a depres
aion in the centie, and a working shaft of one hundred and fifty nine close of the
week, notwithstanding that the Government has bought
feet was sunk so as to present four w rking faces. The average rate
a fair amount of Seven
Thirty notes. The market has been for sev¬
of progress wiih powder was about one foot per day to each face, or
eral days cons derably oversold; and
from twenty to thirty feet per week in all.
to-day, upon the “shorts”
In March last the company accepted the services of an experimenter
attempting to cover their contracts, the market was run up £@1
in nitro glycerine, which article was manufactured on the spot, wher¬
ever it could be used with
ndvantage, and the average was incr« ased per cent, upon Sixes of 1881, and Five-Twenties of 1862 and 1865.
to nearly fifty feet per week.
The workmen, principally Chinamen, Duiing the day the advance was partially lost; but from the active
labored in three gangs for eight hour each, and proved very service¬
borrowing demand for bonds it is apparent that the “ short” account
able in this kind of work. At times the consumption of powder reached
has not been wholly closed.
four hundred kegs per day. Work was continued during one of the
.

,

severest

winters

ever

an elevation of over seven thousand
times higher than the Alleghanies or the

<2U)c Bankers’ ®a?ette.
DIVIDENDS.
The following Dividends have b en declared
■AMI or COMPANY.

O’T.

during the past week :
BOOKS OL08BD.

WHEN.

WHERE.

Bal'road*.

Pnt-»burg...

5

Sept. 14

Con

8

Sept. 2

Comnnny’rOffice Ang 2 < to Sept. 3

N«vl«aiiun.
Pacific Mail

pany’BOffice Sept. 8 to Sept. 14

BTThe substance of tbe table of Stock Sales usually pub¬
lished here will be found In tbe Sales
Table, page 211*




To-day the Sub-Treasurer
suspended his purchases, for the convenience of the department
making up the monthly statement of the public debt.

in

From the 15th of

August to the 28th inclusive, $14,500,000 of
Compound Notes have been presented at the Sub-Treasury for re¬
demption, of which $13,500,000 have been liquidated, the balance
being held to be examined and counted. It is to be presumed that
the redemption of the August series is now
nearly completed. The
redemption at New York and Boston amount to about $20,000,000;
which, added to the redemption at other points, must cover nearly
the entire issue outstanding at the date of
maturity.
The following are the closing prices of
leading securities, com¬
pared with preceding weeks r

PAYABLE.

bats

P.

bought by the Government during

the week is estimated at 6 to 7 millions.
has

The Wool Crop of Michigan.— A careful estimate of the number
of sheep in Michigan this year, by an extenshe wool dealing firm,
showed it to be 2,871,634.
Allowing the average tor each sheep to be
four pounds, the quantity of wool will be 9 466,536 pouuds, which is
much below the estimate of the report of the Agricultural Department.
Those who think they have as good data to go upon as either the wool
dealers or the department, say that the clip of Michigan will at least
reach 12,000,000 pounds.

Cleveland and

The amount of Seven Thirties

known, at

feet above the oceon, or three
Catskills.

cr.
u.
U.
u.
u.
u.

s. 6’s, 1881 coup
8. 5-20’s, 1862 conponB.
8. 5-20’s, 1864
“
s. 5-20’s, 1865
“
s. 5-20’8,1865, N. iss...
s. 5- 0’s, 1867, C

U.ti
U* 8
D. S.
U. s

10-40’s,

7-30’s 1st series
7-30’s 2d Series
7-30’a 3rd series.....

July 26. Ang. 2. Aug. 9. Aug. 16. Aug. 28. Aug. 80
110*
m*
109*
109*
108*
108*

102*
107*
107*
107*

112

109*
109*
108*
108*
102*
10.*
107*

107*

111*
113?*

ill*

111

111*

113*

HO*
no*
108*
108*

110

118*
109*
110*
108*
108*
102*
107*
107* ;

114*
109*
no*
W'*
108*

103
108

107*
107*

110*
108*
308*
„

103
107*
107*
107*

107*

i

103

107*

107*

THE

August 31,1867.]

269

CHRONICLE.

The Gold Market.—Gold has been dicidedly firm during‘the
stock market has
been dull, with but little fluctuations in price.
The ease in the week, the price at one time having reached ]42f(g^$-. The delicate
relations between the President and the Cabinet has been the chief
money market enables holders to carry their stocks under the stag¬
cause of the advance in the premium.
Other causes, however, have
nancy of the market; but the entire absence of outside interest
combined to produce the higher rate. The revelation, by official
prevents any important efforts being made to run up prices, although
the generally increased earning3 of the roads would seem to encour¬ figures, that the balance of trade for the year ending June 30th was
nearly sixty millions in gold against us, and the tendency of Euro
age an upward movement. On both sides there appears to be a dis¬
position to defer operations looking to the future course of the pean politics to excite an apprehension that a large amount of this
balance may be suddenly called home, has produced a very decided
market, until the probabilities as to the condition of the money mar¬
ket are more definite.
Perhaps a large majority of operators in¬ impression in favor of a higher premium, while the nominal amount
in the banks favors that result.
cline to the opinion that money will become somewhat striugent be¬
Early in the week there was some speculation, growing out of
fore the close of September, but many think that the improved
the relations betweeu the President and General Grant, but upon
earnings will sustain prices against a close money marked
the whole the speculative movement is limited. The “ short ” ac¬
The following were the closing quotations at the regular boards
count appears to have been closed, and loans of gold are mostly
compared with those of the six preceding weeks;

Miscellaneous Stocks.—The

Railroad and

July 26. Aug 2. Aug. 9. Aug 16. Aug. 23.Aug. 30.

July 19.

38#

38#

Cumberland Coal
Co
§;uicksilver
Erie

Hudson River....

116#

Reading
Mich. Southern..
Michigan Central
Clev. and Pittsb.
Clev. and Toledo.

104#
79#

Northwestern....

44#

“

110
91
121

<0#

preferred

99#

Rock Island......
Fort

101#

Wayne

Illinois Central..

....

....

27#

31
49

49#
21

...

....

•

104

.

.

•

....

•

105

105#

69#
124#

70#

68#
120

124

104#
80#
no#
93#
123#
45#

104#

104
81
110
93

82#
•

.

.

”

93#
123

....

45#

46#
70#
108#
105#

105
119

103#

119#

69

101#

made “ flat*”

The fluctuations in the

28#

....

....

.

32#
51#
22#
109#x.d.l05#
7 #
74#
120
119#
106#
107#
83
80#
112#
91#
94#
123
124#
48#
48#
70#
72#
104
101#
106#
106#
119
118#

48#
23#
106#
71#

auton

•

34#
52#

....

Mariposa pref....
New York Central

•

119

69#
102#

.

.

.

Friday

gold market during the week closiug with

shown in the following table :

are

....

124#
104

83#
110
94

126#
46#
70#
103#
105#

Tone of

Clos-

High-

Open-

105#
7w#

.Market.

ing. Lowest, est. Range, ing.

141
0# 140# Steaa>.
141* 0# 140)* Firm |

140)$

141
140#

Saturday, Aug. 24
Monday,
“ 26
Tuesday,
“ 27
Wedn’day, “ 28
Thursday, “ 29
Friday,
“ 30

141# 0)* 141#
142# 0# 142
141# 141# 142
0# 141#
14l# 142# 0# 141#
142

Current week
Previous week
Jan. 1 to date

141
140#
132

140*

141)* 141

Firm.
Active.
Strong.

141)*

14 #

140#
149#
132#

142# 2
141# 1#
142# 10#

Strong.

141#

140#

141#

....

The movement o( coin and bullion at this port for the week
following statement shows the volume of transactions in ending Aug. 24, was as shown in the following formula :
shares, at the regular aud open boards conjointly, on each day of
$5,920,557
Spe(
the week, closing with this day’s business :
Treasure receipts from California
$943,194
Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports
18,665
Wed.
Thurs.
Fri. Week.
Tues.
Mon.
1,095,859
Com interest paid from U. S. Treasury
134,00075
5
10
242
20
75

The

67

Bank shares
Railroad “
Coal
“

'

Steamship1*

“

Express

29,470

32.939

36

80
200
200

200
200

1,975

1,150

1,700

720
405
1,650
3,016
2,882

“
Improv’t “
Telegraph “
Mining

20,213

27.703
225

27,910

500

800

28,218

166,432

Total

341

700
100
990
660

3,520
2,205
9,125

1,120

2,430

1,907
3,257

5T5

250

2,300

1,189

1,230

1,030

1,992

11 5 0

11,360
22,050

12,938
24,890

14,075

80,6022

20,020

14,063
12,600

IS,600

121,600

35,017
41,211

26,663
44,473

33,410
67,109

37,828
45,421

32, *>75

202.202

37,925

260,196

8,707

Apparent excess of reported supply for

Specie in banks ou Saturday, Aug. 24

Gas
At
At

Deficit
14.467

Regular Boards.

13,099
Open Board.... 22.810

Total current week.
Total Previous w’k.

86,539
84,067

The transactions in shares

weekly since May 3 are shown in

following statement:
Im-

Weekending— Bank. ro’d.
Coal. ing. pro’t.
528 465,847
505 6,100 12,150
May 3
10
11,761 371,2/0 2,463 3,300 10,150
17
827 294,415 1,151 3.620 7,500
24
826 293,377 2,163 5,690 6,9.50
44
31
934 290,750 1,583 4,090 10,050
June 7
1,828 314,512 1,1381 7,810 9,1350
14
653 397,920 2,586 9,978 10,005
“

“

**

“

“21
“

681
422

28

July 5 (5 days)
“

12

“

19
26

“

224,243
537,561

819

2,825

264,663

625.869

298 395,506 4,466 23,425 4,850 23,753
1,182 464,286 15,742 24,635 19,675 42,837
1,281 287,14 1 4,955 5,150 5,900 15,115
1,027 541.057 5.940 10,600 13,500 24 309

8.600 8,344 469,247
16,672 5,643 590,678

5.000 10,269

6,537 14,074 405,127

“

9

“

16
24

990
61)3
516

30

242

“

graph, ship. Other. Total.
14.084 12,700 4.946 516,925
14,247 17,491 5,0r0 425,772
7,925
8.916 ' 9,3'8 333,711
7,870 15,875 6,097 338,67<>
5,254 11,828 9,038 333,431
10,177 17,148 6,212 3 8,410
16,517 23,295 6.661 467,617

277,709

177,061

217,152
lo6,482

1,855 6,400

1,590 5,550 3.000 8,108
380 3,200 1,500 8,884
2,42)3 4,450 1 600 19,357
341 3,520 2,205 9,125

11,441 7,631 338 615
18,295 13, :39 628,167
6,76 • 5 048
6,356 3.841
9,260 5,4:38
8,707 11,580

308,755
201 825

260 196
x02,202

amount of Government bonds
and railroad and other bonds
each day of the past week:

following is a summary of the
and Dotes, State and City securities,
The

sold at the

Regular Board
Sat.

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

on

Tues.

Mon.

Wed.

Thur.

Fri.

Week.

$54,100 $176,500 $272,00) 1,023,000 621,000 1,135,50 $3,282,100

.

86,200

■“*ate&City b’ds
Company B’nds.

16,000

64,800

78,000
26,000

34,00

41,000
40,000

37,000

69,000
19,000

20,000
22,000

9,900
73,000

Ang,

28,500

9,00

shown in the following tabu¬

19

, T

“
“

434,785 17
561,159 15
A

24

Total
Balance in

-GovemmentsBonds.
Notes.

Friday.
8

M ay

May

10

May
May

17
24
81

May

.

•June
7
.June 14
.June 21...
June 28

$2,992,122 75

Sub-Treasury morning of Aug.

■

.July
5 (5 days).
July 12.
July 19
July 26
Ang. 2

$162,924,661 65
Deduct

payments during the

Balance on Saturday
Increase during the

Aug.

Aug.

9

16.......1.

Aug. 23.
Attg.




80

238,500

682,800

515,000

223,200
158,100

808.500

218,500
158,000

3,266,100
4,143,150
4.775,100
4,815,600

161.500

3.801.600

866, 00

495,000

8.319.650
1*596,500
£,026,500
1,363,400

491,850

664,700

441.500

437,000
797,006

233,000
153,000
165,000
97,(00
208,000

1,492 500

119,000

8,342,700

796,500

170,000

456,000

106 500

457,509
500,600

166,000
129,(00
216,000

-£.317,000

159,50Q

4,180,600
3.590,850
6,462,360
3,957,500
6,770,050
8,954,600

.

190,000

*134\K?’2S IS

evening
week

Total amount of

oo

Included
$155,000 in gold, and $2,837,-

Gold Certificates issued,

receipts of customs were
Certificates.
The following table shows the aggregate
Treasury since June 1 :

in the

$403,000.

122 in Gold

Custom
House.

Weeks

Ending
June 1....
“
U
4 *
4%

July
44

8....
15
21

/

Payments.

1,955.086
1,789.140
1 895,713
2 039,064

29
6

1,726,400
1,610,006

13

2,078,270
1 901,2S0
2 576,813
2,447,422
29)85,075
2,978,496

...

Foreign

2

992,122

transactions at the Sub-

Sub-Treasury
Receipts. Balances.

*

18.850,257 123,583,732
18,876,740 134,112,919
17,331,277
17,834,628 134,616,271
14,932,695 12,446,169 132,129,745
25,086,873 25,416,297 132,459,170
15,022,070 13,955,392 130,492,493
28.444,856
28.533,967 130,581,603
17,330,480 17,060,498 130,311.621

27,547,745
8,347,553

21,804,904
18,851,294
18.180,192
17.49 <.144

28,475,460

21,689,378
17,416,809
1^,605,724
23,690,104

130,196,095
128,761,670
129,087,202
135,284.162

27,640,499 134,449,200

Exchange.—There is but a limited

Changes in
Balances.
Dec.
8,691,487
Inc
10,5 9,186
503.351
Inc.
I c.
2,46,526
Inc.
329,425
Dec.
1,960,678
89,111
Inc.
Inc.
269,982
Dec.
611,526
Inc.
l,434,4-.’5
Inc.
325.53-2
Inc.
6,196,90a

Dec.

.884,962

demand/for bills

days
mostly on the basis of 109£©1091 for bankers’prime
ing; to-day there is a good supply of bills, and rates are £ lower.
The following are the closing quotations for the * several classes
of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks:

203,000

620,000

3,585,350

4.920.500
2.921.900
4.240.650
8,282,100

28,475,46 ) 95

week.

4,610,700
6,954,50"
4,291,900
6,113,400

643.000

744,000
795,250

2.172.500
2,752,1 00

$27,610,499 62
135,284,162 03

$28,475,460 95

19.

for remittance.

City Bonds.

2,137,750
867,800
1,041,600
276,350
1,866,850
449,100
1,823,400

Sub-TreaeuryReceipts.
Payments.
$12,805,548 71
$12,851,068 28
4,1)98,024 90
2,919,52913
8,13-2,025 47
1,571,032 87
2,605 079 78
1,7?9.765 25
1,045,410 59
6.990,056 69
3,453,610 17
2,354,008 73
,

Total

85,100
333.500
68,500

8.172.650

and Sub-

amount

22.000

4,355,200
1.905.600

$2,399,77 5

Company

,100
567,200

4,628,800
3.363.900

6,028,535

State &

Bonds.

14

3.918.600

359,624 81

..

lation:
Week ending

$3,428,760

week at the Custom House

Receipts.
$43 S.138 45
694,032 63
606,382 54

..72
Total Cur. w’k... #244,300
263,500 417,8001,111,200 691,5001,226,500 3,9513500
Aug. 3...
Previous week.. 658,550 1,330,500 1,821,5001,147,100 638,5001,173,900 6,770,050
19...,
17
The totals,
are
24

weekly, since May 3

3,587,656

2,992,123—

supply (made up from unreported sources)

20
21
22
23

196,00

317,000
159,500

$595,533

week.

Cnstom House.

“

Steam-

2,501) 6,253 11,9*5 15,395
3,436 10,400 9,430 15,702 22,868 25,841

Aug. 2....W. 1,202 359,786

“

Tele-

..

Treasury have been as follows :

“

Min-

Rail-

in

The transactions for the

“

the

$7,016,416

reported supply for week

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

419;000

4,641,200
2,572,(KM)
7,171,250

The transactions

for Wednesday’s steamer were

60

Aug. 2.
109#© 109#
London Comm’l.
110 ©HO#
do bkrs’ Ing
110#© 110#
do shrt
do
5.13# @ 5.12#
Paris, long
5.1l#@5.10
do short
5.17#©6.08#
Antwerp
© ....
Swiss
36#© ....
Hamburg

Amsterdam

41#© 41#

Aug. 9.

Aug. 23.
109#© 109#
119#© 109#
!09#© 110#
5.17#© 6.15
6.15 ©5.12
5.18#© 5.16#

sterl-

Aug; 80.1

lf9#@ 109#
109#© 109#
109#© 109#
1(*%@ 110#
109#© 110
5.17# @5.15
5.15 ©5.13#
6.15 ©5.12
5.12#@5.11#
6.18#@5.16#
5.17#©5.16#
5.17#©5-16# 5,1?#© 5.16# 6.18#@5.16#
86#@36#:
36#© 86#
36#© 36#
41#@
41#© ...
41 © 41#
....©....

....

270
Frankfort
Bremen.........
Berlin...

41*® ....
79#® 79#
73*® 72#

41#
18#

41 ®
78#®
73*®

73*

41 @ 41#
78#® 78#
72 ® 72*

41

®41#
78#® 78#
73 ® 72*

Aug. 3
Aug.10

following statement shows the
condition of the Associated Banks of New York City tor the week
ending at the commencement of business on August 24, 1867 :
AVggAOK Aiiorxr or

,

Loans

and

Ang. 17

Capital. Discounts. Spec*?..
Won. Deposits. Tenders.
$3v<fee,O0O $7,107,412 $1,214,4C0 $87,817 $6,437,306 $2,986;)09
1,409,101
r-6.'58f ' id*# '4,200,851
2.O5&.O0O 5,361,902
1,853,716
390,726 mm 5,001.128
34&&069 6,943,181

Bavks

York’.

Manhattan
Merchants’...
Mechanics’
Union.....
America

2,006,084

1,500,000’

Phoenix

City
Tradesmen’s
Fulton

Chemical...
Merchants’ Exchange....
.,

3,000,0w
l,S0O,OOO
1,000.000
1,000,000
000,000
300,000

1,235,000

121 730
67 625

3,863,448
8,460,677
3,831,332
3,483,623'
2,087,827

578,WO
479,715

128,359
239,949
22,30S
88,850

5481,865

288,064

678)997

1,83&A&

1,941

$438,721
8,3tom

797,483

2,491,728
2,001,629
1,914,708
1,922,674
5,184,329

452,681

413,422
48,903

5,492,236;

3,492,144s

3,814,285

1,046,160
846,457
3,530,301
501,779
551,000
75-7^203
i,no^2

2,769,856

Boston Banks—The

53,427,840
53,117.569
53,5*9.449

302,055
304,979
817,389

10,635,925
10,627,761
10,628,810

53,399,090

314,242

10,628,324

vious statements

the footings of the Boston*,
compared with those of the two pre¬

following

bank statement for last week,

38,094,543:
86,861,477;
86,864*83536,459,579*

are

:

Aug. 28.

Legal

Net

Cireula-

16,733,19$
15,900,195
15,767,146
16,882,816

*...

Aug. 24

New York City Banks.—The

New

f August 31,1867*^

THErfi^pipCL&

Aug. 19.

$41,900,000

Capital

$41,900,000

$41,900,000-

Aug. 12.
97,098,873412,217

Loans

96,915,478

96.901,687

Specie
Legal tender note*

396,576
15,175.423

Due from other banks
Due to other banks

12,112,500

365,127
14,697,154
13,084,112
13,136,295
36,902,686

13,423,376

Deposits
Circulation

(National)
Circulation (State)^

The

2,032,187
824,189
461,454
473,043
510,170

following

.

35,790,624
24,707,736
261,963

are

15,196,791
13,992,942
13,398,*04

38,283,576
24,670,852
262,878,

24,618,921
262,507

the comparative totals for

a

series of week

59,670
489,428
935,300
2,684,738
past :
Batchers
-Circulation.11,924' 258,046 1,933,841
2,6304*25
Legal
1 #8,342
Mechanics and Traders’.
195,720
19,192
1,999,190
Tenders.
State.
Loans.
Deposits. National.
Specie.
112,037 June
Greenwich.
826,765
4,217
200,000
1,010,839
..3
571,526 17,17*,9 U 37,006,894 24,725,794
279,275.
92,694,925
678,578
Leather Mannf. National
144)895 262,469 2,239,782
600,000
3,150,313
16*....
436,767 16,767,854 36,033,716 24.804,153
268,76893,(36,167
Seventh Ward, National.
426,575
950,140
14^8,439
34,fa* 178,553
500,000
..71
511,095 15.719,795 36,039,933 24,771,778
271,048.
State of New York
218.000
93.725,428
976,226
193,389
3,318,097
2,000,000 4^84,652
..42
American Exchange
470,544 15,758,396 86,521,129 24.768,947
993,922 5,957460*
2,417,349
92,951,163
267,294
207,204
5,000,000 10,548,536
Commerce
279,409 5,9*Ml5
...1
7,996,569* 4,140,470 July
617,456 16.055,141 87,473,387 24,727,383
266,353:
10,000,000 24,440,612
92,996,703
5,684,586
53,114
896## 4,305,730 1,435,483
Broadway
1,000,000
8...
91,74-7,773
266,494
915,298 15,W)5,4(»6 38,251,040 24,801,823
786,909
Ocean
796,785> 2,278,909
53,297
1,000,000 3,129,615
15
95,046-, 458
833,466 15,397,828 38.610,434 24.771,684
264,922;
Mercantile....
613,486
4Sl,67fr 2,388,467
250,008
1,000,000 3,272,588
22
252,696
650,2**3 15,427.62) 88,328,613 24,744.291
95,096,571
432,319
Patt&e.;
11,9S2
140,449 1,532,5?7
422,700 1371,661
29....
95.594,214
256,564
361,878 15,54 >,4C1 38,548,722 24,653,742
3444 #16
996;#)
Republic^.'.'.
858,750
4,717,128
174,254
2,000,000
5
Chathfctii'..
263,250
627,501 Aug.
472,045 15.511,084 38,348,850 24,655,075
96,367,558
36,257
1,706,603
129,735 1(748,927
450,000
222,211
..21
18.T31
288,672
6,S>77- 1-178,343
412,217 ,15,196.701 38 283,576 24,670.852
97.098,873
4l‘A50Q 1,358,338
People’s..,.
North Ameritah
352,321
338,000- 1,927,466
83,042
96 901,687
1,000,000 2,246,179
19....
262,507
365,427 14,697,154 36,902.686 24,613,921
Hanover
526,049
48,154
287,314
1,537,47S
1,000,000 2,412#37
261,963
26..
396,576- 15,175,423 35,790,624 24,707,786
96,945.487
491,000
4,000
1,5(2,000*
Irving
1,642|000
195,157
500,000
100,149 2,190,900
5,386^26Metropolitan
4,000## 10,4794132
Citizens
44§4#0
1,467,014
o45,{V»
16,776 132,690 1,310,7*3
Nassau
45.496
4,213
486,773
1,730,672
1,0^000 2,147,223
547,579
BANK STOCK LIST.
769,524
59,659
2,173,011
2,775,114
St. Nicholas
752.701
756##
24,869
2,462,064
1,211,801
l,000;00f
Shoe and Leather
833.800
21,944
948## 2,401,800
1,5OO,O0< 4,694,000
Corn Exchange
187,0002.053,4658,089
1,686,401
30,111
1,000,(XX
Fkjbay.
D*vjuxnd.
Capital.
Companies.
Continental
750,000’
110,367 569,813 2,656,285
2,000,000 4^d7/4«»
Commonwealth
15.475
750,000
673,806
2.805.857
242,127
2,260416
Oriental
986,521
199,448
10.475
8,700
300,000
1,286,910!
(Harked thus * are og
Marine
581,566
nm 800,000 1,502,812
400,000 1,829,450
Last Paid.
Bid.
Periods.
wot National.)
Atlantic
S3 Amount
98,489
282,326
1,267,744
300,000
980,900
Importers And Traders’.. 1,500,000 6,807,156
1,399,507
562,121 5,250,031
Park
201,999'
2,000.000 12,943,708
4,280,427
15,951,764
100 3,000,000 Jan. and July.
America*
Mechanics’ Banking Ass.
July ’ffl.... ...5140
8,285
603,091
798,725
1.112,506
500,000
Grocers’.
25
855,235
284,872 America (Jer. City)
100,000 Jan. and July
July ’67
e5
300,000
6,146
790483
North River
400.000
23,884
100
1,347,701
u)6o2
354,285 American
500,000 Ian. and July... July ’67
4
East River...
968,159
350,000
2,899 283,500
624,721
231,427 American Exchange. 100 5,000,000 May and Nov... May’67
5 117#
Manufacturers A Mer
836
10,278
500,000 1,269,215
821,391 Atlantic
1457,724
75
300,000 Jan. and Jnly... July ’67
Fourth National
71,908 2,970,734 12,868,64$ 4/134,987
5,000,000 16,301,331
50
500,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
61j
Central National
8,000,000 12,273,628
12,819 1,677,250 11,983,3^ 3,734,563 Atlantic (Brooklyn).
100
Second National
250,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67
5
1,182,790
300,000
270,000
941,729'
338,571 Bowery. .......
Ninth National
25 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
12
24,257
928,142
1,000,000 5,377,281
6,600,989
3,189,011 Broadway
First National
60
14,728
3,150,431
500,00Q
445,369
3,409,596
1,238,692 Brooklyn...—
800,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
5
Third National
3,327,677
42,366
1,000,000
799,199 2,413,420
838A53- ; Buffos Head*...
60
4
200,000 Quarterly,.... Apr. ’67
New York N«.Exchange.
1,019,154
1,497 268.983
300,000
756,706
289,977 Butchers A Drovers 25
Jan. and July .. July ’67
800,000
5
Tenth National
1,000,000 2,873,500
904,800
21,500
1,765,300
675,100 Central
and July .. July ’67
100 3,000,000 Jan.
10O
Bull'S HeaftJ.
200,000 1.340.858
6,928
9,7t8
1,483,202
Jan. and July .. Jnly ’67
60
Central (Brooklyn).
Croton National
200,000
200,000
597,250
180,000
1,411
412,S65
149,255
National Currency.
25
262,073
450,000 Jan. and Jnly.. Juy '67.
100,000
4,278
90,000
326,312
122,395 Chatham?
Bowery N at ional
68t,914
100
225,000
250,000
Chemical.
498,571
198,147
300,000 Quarterly..... May ’67.
6
Stuyvesant
*55
549,751
508,696
61,154 Citizens1
25
...
400,000 Jan. and July... July '67........5
Eleventh Ward
218,444
263,852
10,000
100 1,000,000 May and Nov,.. May ’67
.6
City

National..'....

1,500,000
800,000
600,000

....

..

...

^860

.

0

..

..

,

.

Total.....

82,520,200 250,697,679

6,028,53533,736,249 188,744,101 64,960,030

Clearings for the week ending Aug. 17, 1867
Clearings for the week ending Aug. 24, 1867
Balances for the week ending Aug. 17, 1867
Balances for the week ending Aug. 24, 1867

$414,2-9,517 65

421,496,637 98
19,272,301 16
20,170,949 80

The deviations from the retnrns of the

previous week

are as

fol

lows:
Dec.$2,534.734

SneaUu......

€.

Cftreatattou..,*
The

Lie.

Ino.

following

are

Loans.

June 1. 252,791,614
June 8. 250,477,298
June 15 246,22-,465
June 22 248,640,477

107,978
66,492

the totals for

Deposits
Legal Tenders

a

series of weeks past:

Circulation.

Specie.

242,547,954

38,719,088
33,707,109
133,633,171
33,542,560

6 246,361,237

10,853,171

33,069,397

.

June 29.
.

July 13. 247,913,009
July 20 249,680,255
July 27. 251,243,830
Aug. 8. 254,940,016
Aug. 10. 853,42>T,&0
.

Aug. 17 : 253,239,471
Aug 24 . 250,687,679

Legal
Aggregate
Deposits. Tenders. Clearings

14.617,070 33,747,039 190.386,143 68,459,827 442,675,5b5

15,699^038
12,650,389
9,399,585
7,768,996

.

Dec. $6,302,490
Dec. 4,543)763

12,715.404 33,663,869
11,197,700 33,574,948
8,738,094 33,596,859
6.461,949 33,559,117
6,311,997 33,565,378

6,920,577; 33.669,757
6,02S,5S5 38,730,249

184,730,335
18‘,311,763
179,477,170

66,923,107 461,734,216
57,924,294 460,968,602
62,810,192 442,440,804
180,218,267 70.174,755 493,944,354
191,524,312 71,190.472 494,081,990
197,872,003 72,495,708 621,259,403
199,435,1*52 73.441,301 491,830.952
200,6Q8,8>6 74,60',840 481,097,226
201,153,75 1 75,098,762 468,i 21,746
199,409,705 76,047,431 499,868,035
194,046,591 69,473,793 414,289,5*7 ‘
188,744,101 04,960,030 421,196,637
-

Philadelphia Banks.—The

following shows the totals of the
leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for the last and previous
weeks;
Aug. 17.

Aug. 24.
$10,017,160 $16,017,150

Capital
Loans,

03,399,090 Decrease.

63,549,449
317,898

Legs.’Tenders

15,767,146 16,882.316 Increase

DuSfrom Banks.
Due to Banks
Deposits
:
Circulation.

4,973,449

.

314,242 Decrease.

4,547,339
7,204,4-6

in crease.

426.110

443,500
94,544

The annexed statement shows the conditiou of the

July 18

July 20

July 27

Legal Tenders.
Loans.
16*881,108
52.747,3 8
1**1020
53,15 *,124
10,300.0*10

15,901,424

•

•

*

*

•

•

286

1,427,551
571,990

Philadelphia

series of weeks.

a

Date.
June I*......
June 8

r*'

.

.

Balances;

June 10
June 2*
June 29
July 6.

3,156

1,115,670

.

Increase
36,364,835 36,459,379 Increase
10,628,610 10,628,3-’4 Decrease.
2S.289,163 26,822,012 Decrease.
3,124,435
3,699,425 Increase.
6.760,980

Clearings

Basks for

$150,359

•

.....

16-105,061
JvlylV*I^Uwl
16;02$ti?3

16,234.914

16,608,860'

16,862,112




53,192 049
52,968,444
52

538,962

52,420,272
62)802,552
53,150,569

63,104,475

Specie.
8.34,394
34«,«15
368,261

Circulation.

19,037.432
642,90
10,0*6,298

10

871,308
305,187

10,642,224

401,951
419; 399
871,74#
333,118

10.640,-201
10,641,770
10,537,651

10,641,311

10,633,750

Deposits.
37,332,144
87.252,611

37)174,-69
87,833,279
80,610,8 7
37,077,456
37,-85,226

and

July... July ’67

Commonwealth....
Continental
Corn Exchange* .
Croton

100

,

Currency
Dry Dock
East River
Fifth
First.4

First (Brooklyn)....
Fourth.
Fulton.
Far. A Cit. (Wm’bg).
Greenwich*
Grocers1........—
Hanover

Importers A Trad...

Irving

LeatherManufact’rs.

LongTsl (Brook.)

..

Manhattan*-

Manufacturers’
Mann tac. & Merch.*.
Marine

100
30
50
100
100
100
100
100
30
20
25
50
100
100
50
50

50
50
30
100
100
100
25
50
60
25

Market
Mechanics’
Mechanics’ (Brook.).
Mech. Bank. Asso..
Meehan. A Traders’.
Mercantile
100
50
Merchants’
50
Merchants’ Exch....
100
Metropolitan
Nassau*...
Nassau (Brooklyn) .
National (Gallatin)
New York...)
New York County..
New YorkExchange.
Ninth
North America
North River*
Ocean
.

Specie

300,000 Jan.

.5
5 117

100 10,000,000 Jan. and July. . July ’67
100
750,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
190 2,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67;
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Ang.’67. .

Commerce

Eighth

Loans

July

50

City (Brooklyn)'.,.

Oriental*

Pacific

50

Park.

Peoples’*
Phcenix...

Republic.

St. Nicholas’
Seventh ^ard
Second. •.*.
Shoe A Lea.her
Sixth.....
State of New York.
...

Stuyvesant*
Oenth.

100
100
50
100
100
100
100
100
50
50
50

..

.....

T hir4
Tradesmen's.

....

.

5 106
5

118
109
106 #

200,000

100,000 .Quarterly
200,000 Jan. and July...
850,000 Jan. and July...
250,000 Jan. and July...
150,000’Jan. and July...
600,000 May and Nov...

Jan. *67

10

Jan. T67

3#
5
4
5
10
10

July ’67

July ’67

July '67
May ’67
500,000*Jan. and July... Jnly ’67
5,000,000 JAn. and Jnly... July '0?
600,000 May and Nov... May ’67
160,000 Jan. and July... July’67
200,000]May and Nov. May ’67
800,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
1,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67

109*

5

5150
5
10
5

5113-

.

5 115

1,500,000 Jan. and July... July ’67

117#

4 106
6
6

500,000 Jan. and Jnly... July ’67
600,000 Feb. and Aug.,. Aug. ’07

400,000 Feb. And Aug... Aug ’67....

2,050,000|Feb. and Ang... Aug.’67
Ang. ’67"

5 136
252,000 -fan, and July.. July ’67
5
110'
660,000 Jan. and July... July ’67..
5
400,000 Jan. and July... July’67
..6
1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67..
5 111
2,000,000 Jan. and July. July’67
500,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
6
114
500,000 May and Nov,.. May ’67
5
....6
600,000 May and Nov... May ’67
5
1,000,000 May and Nov... May ’67
6
3,000,000 Jan. and <nly.. July ’67...
Jan. and July... July *67..
5
1,235,000
...61 34
4,000,000 Jan, and July... July ’67
10#
5“
1,000,000 May and Nov
May ’67
5
300,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
1,500,000 April and Oct... Apr. 67..,
5 110
6 125 140'
3,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
200,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’ST.O&ag#
6
800,000 Jan. and July.. Jnly ’67
107
1,000,000 Jan. and Jnly... Jnlv ’67.
5
Jan. and July... July ’67
1,000,000
5 107 ,108
400,000 Jan.and July... July ’67
6
105*
1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
5
6 140
300,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’67
422,700 Feb., and Ang.. Feb. 5<fe May’67.5
2,000,000 Jan; and July... July ’67
.7 151* 153
412,500 Jan, and July... July ’67
6 135
4 103#
1,800,000 Jan, and July... July ’67
...5
2,000,000 Feb), and Aug... Feb. ’67
*5JS
1,000,(XX Feb. and Aug... AUg. ’67 ...CAX5 103 104f
Tan. and July., Jan. ’627....... 5
600,O0»
.5
300,00* fan. and July. ’July ’67..
.5 110
1,500,001 fan. and July., July ’67
HI*
200,00* Jay .and Nov...
..

#'•

100
25
20
100
100
100
100
100
100
1(H) 2,000*00 day and Nov.., May,*67 ...
100
20000...•.....
100 1,000,00* fan. and Jnly... Juy ’67 ...
100 1,000,00* Jan, and)July... July ’67 ...
40 1,000,0(1 fan. and July... July *67
50 1,500,09) day and Nov.. .[May ’67

88,1794181 Union.
37,839,64 t WlUUmshurg CUy*4 501

6 108

500

OOOj fan. and July.

.-

Jnly *67

5
.6
...5

7
.5

8#

*

110*

271

THE: CHRONICLE.

August 31,1837.]

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, .
REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPOSTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, TOGETHER
WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK.

American

Satur. Mod.

SECURITIES.

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

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do

California 7s...
Connecticut 6s.
Georgia 6s
7s

Kri.

iiurs

STOCKS AND

Week’s Sales

138%
no*

—

—

109

109%

111

111%

110% 110%

.

113%
—

-

—

—

—

93,500

110% 110% 110%

654,500

107% 108
108

108

—

108%

108%

106

=

—

473,<00

3,500

—

103

67.000

99

—

01,000
51,750
74,100
69,100

—
—

—

—

107%
107% 107%

—

RR.)

1C3% 103

103
78

—

103

—

—

—

—

—

—

(coup)

106%

(reg.)

53

54

—

—

—

103
77%
103

66

65%

new

50
50

municipal:
Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan
do
6s, Public Park Loan
do
6s, Improvement Stock.
Chicago 7s, Water Loan
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan

—

—

66%
65%
50

65%

65
—

...

53%

3.000

39,000

—

40,000
71,000

65

5.'%

96

'

6,000
$1,000

—

—

—

—

—

—

16,060

PI

103
300
500
800

pref.

—

65%

125

105

91
27

109

—

125

105%

71,727
60
60

—

27

27

266

—

27%

5,060

270

184

do

48%

—

34

—

—

—

146% 145% 145

1(H)
211

-

—

2 %

50

146

47

20

—

*

do

Income

$

102 '

'..

do
do

do
do

do
do

-

—

1,000

—

92

—

55

92

—

16,500!

—

8 000

—

—

—

Intere

91

—

2,000

—

Equipme
1st mort
coneolid’ted

85

8,OOC'
5,0o0

85
82

—

—

do

new

do

94

—

1,000

2,000

.

72%

—

96%

7s

do 2d

5,000:

91
—

l02

2,000

8,000

“

—

m.

15.000

—

1,000
3,000

——

20

—

2J

1,000

Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund

47%

—

43

42%

1,205j
42%

|13
113
146% 146% 145% Aik 14 %
113

9,125!

1,050

7,05ij
j

I

do
do
2d mort.,7s..,
do
do
Goshen Line,’O'
Milw’kee & Pr. dn Chien, 1st mort
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort.
do
do
2d mort..
Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage.,
do
do
2d mo'tgage....
New York Central 6s, 1883.
do
do
6s, 1887.
do
do1
7s, 1876

do^

76

75%

100 66%
100

Minnesota Copper..
50
New Jersey Zinc........ 15
Quartz Hill
25
Quicksilver
100 27%

-.7
67

75%
74

76
66

74%
73%
75

74

72

72%

71%

335

16

76%
74%

16%

40

73

72%

66%

11

10%

20%

7,109

1,488
2,010
1, 00
800

do

—

—

—

—

—

—

13,000

112

112

H2
99

99

12,000

11

—

;

8,«M0

82%

84%

2,0C

—
—

—

—

95

1,000

—

—
—

7s, conv’le,

*

Peninsula, lsl mortgage

—

do
do

do

do

m.
2d mort.

do
do
3d mort.
St. LouiB, Alt on & Terre H, 1st in.
do
do
do
2d. prei
do

—

—

1000

105

Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne & Chic.. 1st

—

9S%

—

—

,

do

do

2d, me

—

—

7

,

79%

—

90

90

i"T"

1

/

5,000;
20,000
7,100

—

—

1,120
Western Un.on Telegraph, 7

—

«*=y

Tolcd*", Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort
96%

28%

.1,000

—

*

—

27

1,000

New York and New iiaven
Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mort

Toledo & WaDush, 1st mort.. ext..
m< rt/m"*
do
do
28

:oi%

—

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

—

j

74
American
Merchants’ Union $30 p’dlOO

BuUa&d Marble....25,

200

—

—

United States Trust..... ,100

100

1,000

pref.

do
Cons’lidnted & Sink Fund
do
3d mortgage, 1868.
Hudson River, 1st mortgage. 1869.
do
2d mort, (S. F.). ’8
do
3d mortgage, 1875..
do
convertible, 1867..
Illinois Central 7s, 1875
Joliet & Chicago

& Trust 25
New York Life & Truit.TOO
Union Trust
100

100

83

—

—

...100

$25 p'dlO)

49

—^—

—

100

100
100
500

82

107
i07% 107
Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 1879
103%
do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage, 1880
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Galena and Chicago, extended....
ICO
do
do
2d mortgage..
Great Western, 1st mortgage
do
do
2d mortgage
Hannibal and St. Joseph. 1st Mort.
Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72.*.... 102%

50

....100

—

—

1,940
26,150
1,000

.......

7remit.. Central American... 100

Mariposa preferred

48%
66%

600

83%

.....

Cary
.100
Idegraph.—Western Union
109 43% 43% 43%
West. Union, Rns. Ext’nlOO




do

do

No.

100
25
20

100

Wells, Fargo & Co
Hiring— Mariposa Gold

49%

..

Chicago. R. I. and Pac, 7 1 ercent..
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort
do
do
3d mort, conv.
do
do
4th mortgage..
Cleveland and Toledo, Sink1" Fund

50
50

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

United States

2,050
2,325

Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort

—

50
100
50

*l

124%

no

82%

82%

guai

do

do

11,000

100

...

80%

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

10

Insurance.—Horae.r..~
Express.—Adams. 1.

8 %

Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 1st mort.,
Central of N w Jersey, 1st mort
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund,
do
do
1st mortgage..

50

Irust.—Farmers’ Loan

—

120

Railroad Ronds:

06%

—

Jersey City and Hoboken 20

“

do

do

6,000
18,000

IZ

66%

—

—

Central
100
Consolidated
100
Cumberland
100
Delaware and Hudson... 100

Nicaragua

200

no

Delaw’e, Lackawan. & West, lstm.

Pacific MaH....

150

•

81

Toledo, Wabash and Western..

5,000

54

—

Miscellaneous Stocks:
Coal.—American
100
.Ashburton
50
Butler
25
Cameron
50

,

—

11,000

1*6%
•

do

do

Steamship. —Atlantic Mail

34,650

—

—

41,000

New York 7s
do
6s
do
,5s

Can ton

70%

do

do

50

Virginia6s, (old).

New York

200
81

500*

40,000

—

-—

—

6)%
6 %

Manhattan
Metropolitan

69%

69%

105% 105% 104% 104

—

Harlem

10,550

.

81%

...

ioj%

Rhode Island 6s
Tennessee 5s
do
6s (old)
do
6s. (new)

„

1

do

do

Wyoming Valiev
©<W.~Brooklyn
Citizens (Brooklyn)

126% 126%

—

50

New York and New Haven
Norwich and Worcester
Ohio and Mississippi Certift
do
do
do
pref

Ohio 68,1870-75
do 6s, 1S81-86.

Wilkesbarre

69%
76%

48%

do

do

53%

Spruce Hill

67

14,400

104% 104%
104% 104% •05%
104% 104% 103% 104 104%

North Carolina 6s (old).
do
6s. (new)

Spring Mountain

7?

2d prt

,

do

do

,

•

94

93%

*

19,450
17,000
13,650

70%

103%
100

7,000

—

46%

69%
103

100
.100 124% 124%
119% 119% 119
100 119

Michigan Central
Michigan So. and N. Indiana

6,000

—

Kentucky 6s, 1868-72
Louisiana 6s
Michigan 6s
do
7s, War Loan, 1878

Pennsylvania
Schuylkill

46

63

Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st pre “ ““

$2,000'

101

100

—

50

50

do

70%

100
pref. ..100

Long Island
do

—

—

Joseph

Indianapolis and Cincinnati...

'

—

69%
100 76

100

Harlem
do
preferred
Hartford and New Haven
Hudson River...
Illinois Central

do Registered, 1860
do 6s, con., ’79,aft. ’60-62-65-70
do
do 1877....
do
do
do 1879....
do
War Loan
do
Indiana bs, War Loan
do; 5s

6s,

118

126

—

Erie
do preferred
Hannibal and St.
do
do

Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860

do

—

10O
5
1

“

do
—

20

—

—

1,023,600

IUv

114
—

c-aes

-mn

V*

—

102% 102% 102% 102%
99%

"NTo

121%

45%
4*% 46
100 40
do
do
69% 69%
pref.100 69% 70
102% 10 i
Chicago, Rock Island and Pac 100 10.'% -03
100
100 '
Cleveland, Columbus and Cin. ..100
Cleveland and Pittsburg
93% 93
50 93% 93
Cleveland and Toledo
121%
123%
50 123
118
Delaware, Lackawana and West 50
“
116
scrip
Dubuque & Sioux City
...100

521,000
191,500

Week’s

v n

-

inure*

Chicago and Northwestern

1

;108%

«h».

........

100 121%
100
1,500 Chicago and Alton
do
do preferred.... 100
272,000 Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO
2 ,(iuo Chicago and Great Eastern
100

109% j 109%

—

vy

r

15V

Boston, Hartford and Erie..

13% 113% 1114%
100
108% 109

|109%

^
|ios

84%

Minnesota 8s
Missouri 6s
do
6s, (Han. & St. Jos.
do
6s, (Pacific RR.)
New York 7s, 1870 .... I
do
68,1867-77
do
5s, 1868-76
do
7s, State B’y B’ds
do
do
do

Mvn. iu*»,

OcU.UA

Railroad Stocks ;

141% 141%

111M 111% Ill

100

(new)..1

Sc.cc turu^cs.

Central of New Jersey

107%
7-30s T. Notes 1st se. 1"7%
do
2d series 107% 107% 107%
do
107%
do
do
3d series 107%
State :
125
124

do

do

1

Gold Coin (G ,ld lioorn). 140% 140% 141% 1.42

National:
States «s, 1867. .registered.
do 6s, 1868.;-.. .coupon
6s, 1868..registered
6s, 1881
coupon.
6s, 1881. .registered.
6s, 6-20s (’62) coupon.
6s, 5-20s do regisVd
6s, 5-20s (’64) coupon.
6s, 5.20s do regisVd
6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon
6b, 5.20s do reqisl'd
6s, 5.20s (’65 n.) c>up.
6s, 5.20s do regisVd
6s, 5.20s (1867) coup.
6s, 5.20s do regis'd
6s, Oregon Wa. 1881
6s,
do. (1 y'rly)
5s, 1871
coupon.
5s, 1871.. registered.
5s, 1874
coupon.
5s, 1874. .registered
6s, 10-40s ...coupon 102%
5s, 10-40s. registered.

United

•V

ues.

.

STOCKS AND

85

—

97

11
1

—

96%

; 10,000

C~i,ooo

272

THE CHRONICLE

&{)e Commercial ®imeo.

Exports of Leading Articles from New York.
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 port*
for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount ’n the
last
number of the Chronicle from that
The

COMMERCIAL EPITOME.
Fbiday Night,

There is

a

brisk demand for all those

here given

S

«

GO

staples that

firm

$2 3 25.

at

lish orders to 13Jc. Cutmeats and
half cent., city cured short rib

Lard advanced

£

TH

03

a

-

cf

t©

OD
—

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£• ©
^

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•

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.

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^

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GO

•

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Wt-fc.

of

8

:gg£ :
to •'j*

:

'C*r-<OS

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© ©»

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r-T CO r-T

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t~(

l-^GO r-t r-i
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Eng¬

Bacon have advanced

t-"

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1

•

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r-

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grid®
to

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rr

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all kinds remains nominal with
very small stocks. There have
been very large shipments of Cheese to Great Britain with

O

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prices. Butter is also doing rather better,
although supplies have been liberal.
Hides and Leather met with a brisk
inquiry, but towards

•t-i-ttCco

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£

a

small advance in

-ccOtf

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closing 13@13^c. Beef of

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the close the advancing views of holders have checked business.
Naval Stores have been
steady, with a

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■0003 00 CO

ig : ‘If
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large business in

Spirits Turpentine and the low grades of Rosins. There
been no important
changes in Oils, and but a moderate

:

in

are

on

S

a ®

August 30.

good supply, but the inquiry is not of a nature to follow any
material improvement in
prices. Dealers complain somewhat,
therefore, of a want of spirit to the markets. But there is
little disposition to accumulate stocks,
and goods pass rapidly
to
consumption and export.
Cotton has been freely offered on
arrival, and declined le¬
pound. Breadstuff's are generally lower, except Corn*
per
Groceries have been rather quiet, and
prices barely supported.
Tobacco has been excited, active and
buoyaut.
Provisions have, on the whole, been
doing rather better,
the dernnnd is improving, while
supply remains about the
same.
Mess Pork declined on
Wednesday to $23, but re¬
covered and closed

[August 87,1867.

’®C0^

ss

o

#

All kinds of East India Goods have been
illa Hemp, which is wanted at
In Metals
an

notice

we

a

33

H

•

*

03

03

•

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o

quiet, except Man¬
ll£ to life., gold.
large business in block tin based on

eo

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advance abroad.

Other metals have been rather
Petroleum has been very active for the

quiet.
past three days.
The demand has been to fill contracts and for
export. Stand¬
ard refined white has advanced two
cents, closing 29£@30c.,

U.J

; 00 CD r-t

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for the

Week, end

a

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»

The receipts of domestic
produce for the week ending August 30, since
Jan. 1, and for the same time in
1866, have been as follows :

XJ

This

Ashes, pkgs...

Since
Same
week. Jan. 1. time’66
27
4,129
3,821

Breads tuffe—
Flour, bbls.. 86,7041,100,789 1,463,15*2

This

Rot in
Tar.

Pitch.

28
744

Flaxseed....
Beans
Peas
C. meal,bbls.
C. meal.baers.

Bnckwheat &
B.W. flour, bg
Cotton, bales
..

Copper, bbls...

Copper, plates.

Dnedfrm t, pkgs

1,690 19.642
292,839
1,781 61,55
695 223,155
....

6,086
6,678 439,316
403
7/41
....

160
275
42
4

9,8:13

21,944
10,111

105,392

8,453
41,182
152 865

164,089[

Cheese
Cut meats....

Por

Beef, pkgs.

...

225,533j Lard, pkgs

Lard, Kegs....
75,322!Rice, pkgs

425,606 Starch

15,217 jStearine

5,834JSpelter, slabs...

:
O

■©

.«

liead, pigs
Molasses, hhds
and bbls....
Maval Stores—

Crude trp,bbl

767

10,638

14,436

....

60

,

6,691

Spirits tup.. 2,104 42,770




6,841 Wool, bales
Dressed Hogs,
10,785
No

30.711

35,529

Rice,

bush

rongh,

.

.

:S :8 :

•

o

■

►

a

i
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•

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■

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,

•

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a

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.

.

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*oB©^©

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30,204 9,3 5 136 4,482 1, 0-4 59,1,893
50

ot

o

•

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•

•

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12,465

p

: :

:

:

:

:

•

•

•

*

•©r-|4t©4*l

:gg

cost
© CO
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Rococo

2

.

.

.eccoooo^tco^©©© —
©
©©©©•^'■a-iTTj'rHOSl.-®

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9,381

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© ©

1—t

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•

*

1,963

45,033 66,412
2,872
3,700

11,392 347,525 275 743
42,130 664,349 340,749
42 80.H69 91,416
2,614 174,374 121,276
211 121,243 93,741
43 27,657 46,491
1,033 100.545 81.399
50
5.850
9,128
8,874
2,004

•j*
CO
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....

o

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CO

•

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33,908 629,325 637.807

•

:

•

.

•

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• © © ©

•

•

•

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©

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.

.

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•

00

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t-r-t

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a

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■

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t—

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l® (S’*

® •9' ®

S

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•

©^io^^T tr (7^co_

ceoo©i

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a

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:

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ijt co© i-t © w
fc- t* ©f 00 CO

<m'c-

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coot

S3.--*
7JO

© eo t--4 co
55 » oo-r’S 54 -coao
5«tjt ©OCCtc t-©©r-ti-iO0tr-

of of of co'-r Tr'-tr—7 ©,-<' t-T in

oTr-Too'©

JO

-

3.059 140.545
143
6,901

65,386
6,731

2,801

«2

2,r33

6.044:Sugar, hhds &

Grease, pkgs...
5,703
bbls
Hemp, bales...
584
2,353 Tallow,
pkgs.-Hides, No
9,578 234,833 271,8121 Tobacco, pkgs
34
Hops, bales.
3,242
4,033
Leather, sides .84,958 1,675,684 1,464,03» Tobacco, hhds..
WTiiskey, bbls..
lAWtUUI. DlUvO

...

4;877

©
ft

rf co

:g : :

O H

9,275 240,162 257,613
832 13,893 38,459
....

51,600
18,144

45i

week. Jan.l. time’66.

Wheat,bosh 845,4i>61.898,318 1,420,7191051 cake,
pkgs
Corn
708.604 9 098,22813,835.032
Oil, lard
Oats
88,843 2,097,355 4,711,640|Oil, Petroleum.
Rye
14,193 122,(K)2
423,478 [Pearnts, bags.
Malt
2,175 345,510
346 j 61 Provisions—’
Barley
2,600 72,463
20,465 Butter, pkgs..
Grass seed...
3,546
5,145

Since

*-t
©

©

f
if C*

;

a

.

■s :

;cOrjt
co'

i-i

*

.©

• © co ©
•©TP©

.©D'CCl'rH

.

.

J-j
a
O H

.OJCOOTjtCO

.

.

*

x:

since

January 1.

of

jO

m

Receipt* of DomesticIFrodace

jo©«
tr O

‘

g *9
©

*1-7

a

I
n

jOW'f

©

.00

:

tr G* r— rt t- O as

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tf '
<o

SI5S :
H ^ ^

steady. Whiskey has become dull. New
hops arrive sparingly, and prices are unsettled. Fi^h of all
kinds are decidedly firmer.
Foreign dried fruits are quiet but
firm.
Grass seeds are
drooping, but Flax seed is rather firmer.
Wool continues in good demand
; many large holders have
withdrawn their samples, and transactions have not been
large.
Freights have been dull in all directions, and rates drooping.

■

■

■

Tallow has been

.CO

oicc8©8
C4r-

©

©

179

2,698

2,299

74.215

1,489 101,612
3,098 63,618

CD

43,767
54,505

®0DCL.0DcDaDQD®aDaD®aDaD®Ott-®

ftS^'0.'^'0 g ^ ^
©’ *

-

8

2

.

a :
h :

►.

S
5 • O iS -- ®i
©

=3

ip
I

*

I b'

....

ft

*

H rt rH rt

_

00 J4

o <a

©

*73
_

•■S »s©T

*

o
-4->

0Q

a ®

1*1

OD

'3

a?

illlslall

hi ©

P ©

:
:

KEr>
<V’

97,228

....

» 00

&: :

9

79,873 81,769
3,964

to

• 1—<

•

....

03

1,759

2,833
4,125
4,335 105,114 115,497
....

,3BBBB«BHfl 0C © ®
I « B 3 3 C 3 SJ5 O « b b

©

2* E-o

0)Q

Si

®

fto3 o

■£

-P

OD

•

So

August 31, 1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Imports of Leading Articles.

273

Receipts and Exports of Colton (bales) since Sept. 1, and
Stocks at Rates Mentioned.

The

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show
the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port
or the week ending Aug. 23, since /an. 1,1867, and for the
correspond¬
ing period in 1866:

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO—

PORTS.

•

Buttons

4,280

Hardware...

188

134,956
9,906
535,553

7,566
9,516

284

1,849

Iron,RRb’rs
Lead, pigs..
Spelter, lbs.

12,648

•

..

....

Bark, Pernv

7,288

....

Blea p’wd’rs
Brimst. tns.
Cochineal...
Cr Tartar
Gambier....

.

.

•

•

•

17,502
10,088
1,642

•

•

•

7
3

...

•

•

•

934

14,352

•

Gams, crude

11,025

Gum, Arabic

•

•

•

2,953

•

46
240
20

2,485

Oil, Olive...
Opium

2,987

32,060

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

6,200

Indigo

Madder.
Oils, ess

...

...

•

-

.

326

Flax
Furs

•

•

•

•

110

Gunny cloth

....

.

Hair

2,036

3,594

115,006
17,2t>9
i
22,890
1,263
2,8v3
22,993
3,343

17

Hemp, bales..
Hide's, &c.

89,226

....

Bristles

Ivory

1,361
6,191
27,671
1,515

56
30

Hides.dres’d

Watches....
Linseed
Molssses

384
120

697,993
18,52S
4,683

116

10,649

931
63H

60,759
94,381

82,482
310,570

15

30,150

49,147

Corks

189.656

8,112

109,246

....

520
761

330,146

555,625

72,541
40,043

10,999

Cassia

126,800

....

Ginger
Pepper
Saltpetre.....

42,196

....

•

•

•

.

.

.

40,469
140,802
120,565
22.023
127,885

103,430

169,527

*

.

172,507 Woods.

106,024

2,470

4,056

Fustic

1.111

Logwood...

7,337

81,994
118,979

57S

81,251

Mahogany..

3,506

75,547
108,592

3,524

1,825

153,401
80,896
109,551

59,242

119,601

....

374,342 28,460

57,557

3,' 19

38,163
105,233
33,114

13,011
27,852

534

tions

Received this week at*—
Receipts. I Received this week at—
New Orleans
bales
887 / Flori da
Mobile
207 North Carolina.
Charleston
1,440 Virginia.
Savannah
1,152
527
Texas
Same week last year
Tennessee, Kentucky, &c
1,601

Receipts

.

bal e s

10
88

803

.

Ordinary
Good

....

Low

Total this week

..

116

.1,302

116

405

197

405

197

787,713 90,910

Florida.

Mobile.
22
24

25

25
27

26
28

26
28

30

31

32

ments

are as

follows

:

..

weeks ;

also the total exports and direction since September
1, 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period
of the previous year :
Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1, 1866
Same
Total

Total.

Aug.

Aug.

12.

19.

825

3,715

Other British Ports

....

Total to Gt. Britain..

825

1,715

789
....

789

....

....

....

....

657

Hamburg

300

66

'

Other ports

....

90

2,110

Total to N.

Europe..

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar

....

usual table of the movement
ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance
receipts, exports, stocks, &c.:
give

our

of Cotton at all the

the total

391,276
17,962

6,057

....

374,342 408,238

930

2S,454

35,477

6

88

116

28,460

35,565

90
405

38,846
16,469

18,379

116
....

year.

868.285

930

prev.

date.

27.

time

to

Aug.

5.

Liverpool

Aug.

....

7,586

....

1,7:18

the

we

4°5
197

Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton
from New York, and their direction for each of the last four

WEEK ENDING

ports amounted to 9,895 bales. The
total foreign exports from the United States since Septem¬
ber 1 are now 1,545,159 bales, against 1,530,199 bales for the
same
period last year, and the stocks at all the ports reach
only 90,910 bales, against 320,428 bales at the same time
Below

930

116
90

•

Total

in 1866.

23

To Liverpool, per steamers—City of Paris 150
Denmark, 491. ...Tarifa,
20
Kus-ia, 269. Total bales
To Havre, per steamer—Periere, 116. Total bal »s
To Bremen, per steamer—Western Metropo is, 90.
Total bales
To Hamburg, per steamer—namon nia, 405. Tot 1 bales
To Barcelona per brigs—Temeraria, 137—Fotuna 60. Total bales

15,097
6,219

657

390

66

495

62,401

39,695

312

30

105

197

2,606

2,704

952

764

3,457

All others

cotton from all

& Texa

22
23

slight increase, the total shipments reaching 1,738 bales,
against 960 bales last week. The particulars of these ship¬

372
90

3,458

,

Spain, etc

Grand Total

3*22

105

197

2,694

—

30

3,245

960

1,738

468,660 486,956

Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week
Sept. 1 :

and since

From
New Orleans

Texas
Savannah.;
Mobile
Florida
Total tor the week
Total since Sept. 1

This
week.
Bales.

Sept. 1,

2,020

139,674

774
679
5

Since
Bales.

70,448

105,398
26,743
32,309

.

From
South Carolina
North Carolina

Norfolk, Baltimore, &c..

Per Railroad

This
week.
Bales.
450
49

Since

Sept. 1.
Bales.

64,057

81,383
508 76,172
1,193 123,928

5,678
670,112

*

In this table, as well ss in our general table of receipts, <fcc., we deduct,
from the receipts at each port for the week all received at such port from other
Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped
from Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must be de
ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus par
ttcular in the statement of this fact, as some of our readers fall to understand ifc.




♦

Cotton this week from New York show

Total FrencU

Hamburg. Barcelona.

.

*15,000

....

29

EXPORTED TO

-Exported this week to930
372

•

a

:

Bremen.
90

418

•

•

•

25
27

Middling

Bremen and Hanover

Havre.

37.630

91,833

23

Ordinary

Havre
Other French ports

Liverpool.

.

<

from all the ports for the week continue very
small, the total reaching only 2,110 bales, against 1,902 bales
last week, and 4,539 bales the previous week. The only

From—
New York
New Orleans

.

Upland.
$ lb 22

The exports

shipments from all the ports

534

....

13,011
28,270

....

.

«...

;

t

of the

....

68,939
468,660
3,019

1,871, S96 1,211,203 198,147 185,809 1,545,159

The exports of

receipts of cotton this week show a small increase over
week, the total at all the ports reaching 6,715 bales
(against 6,161 bales last week, 6,830 bales the previous week
and 5,993 bales three weeks since), making the aggregate
receipts since Sept. 1, this year 1,871,896 bales, against 2,067,
259 bales for the same period in 1865-6.
The details of the
week’s receipts are as follows :

.

N. Orlean

COTTON.

last

.

....

Good Middling

The

.

9,697
(5,858

....

Middling

Friday, P. M., Aug. 30, 1867.

.

245,637 16,973
61,323 3,839
683
87,897
132,320 1,668
90,932 4,599
48,000
148
40,6:9

the spinning de¬
fair. The great cost of storing, insuring and hand¬
ling cotton, and the heavy loss of weight to which it is expos¬
ed while in transitu, have caused
many consignors to order
sales from the wharf on landing, at thevbest price, and as the
receipts of the past week (5,(578 bales) have been liberal for
the season, there has been rather more cotton offering than
might have been expected, considering the small stocks. This
has given spinners an advantage, and prices have yielded oue
cent per lb. in the face of
higher gold, with sales of about
7,()00 bales, the market closing dull at the annexed quota¬

Fancy goods.. 39,917 2,419,881 2,806,054
Fish
3,589
411,285 588.562
Fruits, &c.
Lemons
271
3M,442
396,301
151
654,484
Oranges
282,582
86,005 Nuts
4,043 510,440 657,075

574

4,352

mand very

by value.
$3,818 $277,3831,140,381

Cigars

618,878

145,543

The dull and declining tendency of the Liverpool market,
and the favorable accounts which continue to be received from
the new crop, have had a
weakening effect upon this market
this week, although stocks are very light and

14.219

527 Articles reported

Metals, &c.
Cutlery

4,115

403,521 160,852 54,505

178,927

.

307,229
620,352

PORTS.

for’gn.

959

STOCK.

NORTH.

Total.

157,798
239,262

...

317,580

183,666

France Other

Britain

230,149

Texas, Aug. 16
New York, Aug 30*
Florida, Aug. 23t
N. Carolina, Aug. 30
Virginia. Aug. 30.
Other ports, Aug 30*
Total

Great

1.

712,092

Savannah, Aug. 23

6,864
9,115
200,935
263,413
280,707
284.0 0
1,270,355 7,257.691
141,312
126,079
531.299
471,737
2,496,340 4,729,225
3 ,962
41,703
247,927

82,639 Wool, bales...
94,799
24,562
27,099
8,789
3,213
17,828
8,646

Aug. 23
Mobile, August 23..
Charleston, Aug. 23.

Same
time
1866.

6.054

Wines

7,373 Rice
15,826 SpiceSj &c.

246,631
112,535

....

Since
Jan. 1.
1867.

1,518

2,424 Wines, &c.
7,229
Champ, bkts

555
605

'

203

hhds,

736
tcs & bbls..
835 Sugar, bxs&bg
14.728 Tea
u.040 Tobacco.'
2,632 Waste

Jewelry, &c.
Jewelry

2,073
Tin, boxes.. 27,424
Tin slabs,lbs 31,352

N. Orleans,

756
Raisins
478,007
543,822
1,699 Hides,andrsd. 40,223 6,249,363 4,521,016

11
187
510
1

India rubber..

....

Steel

4,653
17,748 Rags
12,858 Sugar,

3,081

493

.

617

For
the
week.

616,498

Coal, tons
Cocoa, bags...
Coffee, bags
11,324
Cotton, bales.
Drugs, <fcc.
....

Same
time
1866.

M’NT8TO

since
SEPT.

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
For
Since
the
Jan. 1,
week.
1867.
183
3, *61
6.050
109,925

8HIP-

rec’d

1

The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee
Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated.
+ These are tne receint* at all the ports of Florida to August 2 except
Apalachicola, which a^e only to July 26.
‘
$ Estimated. The stock at New York is algo estimated-

274

THE CHRONICLE.

[August 31,1867,

The

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

445

,—Boston.—,
Since
week. Sep. 1.
75,388
1,603
17,133
15,168
585
30,569

Receipts from—
New Orleans
Texas

Savannah
Mobile

Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

Last

Since

week.

Last
week.

Sep. 1.

Since

Sep. 1.
951‘
407

10,804
133

9,548
1,227

33

2,793
1,005

170
39
232

7,422
200

112

.

j9

6,036
660

Virginia
York, <fec*

87

408

10,098
63,821
33,114

4,092

New

251,999

1,409

Tennessee, Kentucky, &c...

9.230
2,668

14,513

460

19,785 22*©— 11-16

£2,616

139 @....
138 @139
140 @141
140 @141
140 @141
140 @141
140 @141
140 @141

—@ #
@ #

li,56f~

nom.
nom.

7,588

nom.

5,730
5,709

nom.

—(flit

1,917

nom.

1,943

4,24)

nom.

588

3,839

nom,

—@1
—@1
•—@1

2.250
400

677

348
444
207

-Biltimore.-

-Philad’phia.-

4,371

389
341
259

tember 1:

Last

1,550

291, 1,760.

2,100
650
550

1,444

1,275 4,814

r

-

-@ #
-@l

The demand this week has been very
easier.
At the close low middling is

light, and prices are rather
quoted nominally at 24$.
Freights show no chaDge. Liverpool fd. and coastwise 1c. Exchange
on New York dotes at
fd per cent, premium checking, and par @ fc.
buying. Sterling Exchange 60-day bills, 150 and sight 151.
New Orleans, Aug. 24.—The mail returns for the week
ending
August 23, show a further decrease in the receipts, the total for the
week being 887
bales, against 1,008 bales last week, and 1,116
bales the previous week. The shipments for the last week were
7,259 bales, of which 374 bales were to Liverpool, 3,382 bales to Boston,
1,518 bales to Philadelphia, 300 bales to Baltimore, and 1,685 bales to
New York.
Stock on hand August 23 was 16,973 bales,, The re¬
ceipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks* and the stock, price
of middlir g, rates of freight to
Liverpool and N«w York, abd price
of gold at the close of each week siuce June 7, were as follows:
-

Total receipts

-

*

bales

152

t25,377

474

35,391

Reshipments.

t This does not include the railroad

There have been

no

receipts at Philadelphia.

exports this week from these cities.

The Growing Crop.—Our advices this week
Tire injury to the cotton plant

are

along the Atlantic

the effects of last week’s

anticipated

coast,

rain, has failed to report itself

may believe it was not serious.
tion of the country

favorable-

more

as

yet,

as

so we

judge that in all that sec¬
the prospects were quite promising. In fact a cor¬
respondent of the Charleston daily News, under date of West Point,
Georgia, August 23, writes that “ Georgia and Alabama are lull of,
cotton. Good judges are
placing the crop of Georgia aione at 650,000
bales.” This is undoubtedly an extremely sanguine estimate, even with
a continued favorable and late season.
As to Southern Georgia we
hear complaints that owing to the luxuriant
growth the bolls are not
abundant and the lower ones are rotting. Some of the rumors of des¬
truction by the worm in Louisiana and
Mississippi we see contradicted
this week, and others are stated to be
exaggerations so that the injury
from this

cause

will not, we

believe, be as extensive

Freights-

,

We should

Price

To Liver- To New

Price

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

14

u

.

2,038 9,160
2,395 11,550
2,208 6,650
2,156 5,750
1,143 6,700
870 6,950

.

21....
28....

“

July 5....
“

12....
19....

“
“

26

“

11

“

*

1,201

...

9

4,500
4,300

1,089
1,116

Aug. 2
.

16....
23....

5,260

1,008

3,350
2,425

887

Mid.
pool.
York.*
gold.
— @#@ — 1 :@- 136#@
14,100 79,686 26 @—
@ — 1 @
136 @
6,406 76,751 26 @27
15-#32@ # 1 @-137#@138
19,112 60,583 26 @—
15-#32@ # 1 @-138 @133#
7,954 56,107 nom.
#@ — 1 @- 139 @
8,750 48,068 25 @26
9-16@ — 1 @— 139 @139#
6,293 44.013 26 @27
9-16@ • 1 @- 139#® 40
15,656 29,983 27 @#@9-161 @- 139#@ 39#
4,160 27,886 27 @27#
#@9-16 1 @^ 139#@ 40
5,365 24,449 21 *@28
#@9-161 @- 139 @140
4,620 22,939 28 @#@9-16 1*@- 139#@'4U
7,259 16,973 28*@—
#@9-16 li@- 139#@140

By steam.

There

further

was a

improvement in prices early in the week of about

f cent., but during the last three days the improvement was on some
grades in part, though there was no quotable reduction. The market closed

anticipated.
depends upon the future, we are dull, ordinary
beiug quoted at (Liverpool classification) 21 @23, low
unable to make any estimate of the probable
yield.
middling 26*, and middling 28f. Domestic exchange has exhibited
Charleston, Aug. 24.—The receipts for the week ending Aug 23 but little variation. Bankers checking on New York f per c^nt. premium.
amount to 1,450 bales,
against 1,084 bales last week. Shipments for The rate for commercial has been f@§ premium for New York sight.
this week
Yet

almost

as

everything

amount

to

as was

even now

1,715 bales, (against 1,158 bales last week), of

which 1,403 bales were to New York, 142 bales to
170 bales to Baltimore. The
receipts, sales and

Philadelphia, and

Sterling exchange closed 156 for bankers.
European

and

Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these

mar¬

exports for a series of
weeks, and the stock, price of middling rates of freight to
Liverpool kets our correspondent in London, writing under the date of August
and 1 New York, and price of gold
at the close of each week since 17, states :*
June 7, were as follows :
Liverpool, August 17.—The cotton market during the week has
freight for Upl’d^,
ruled steady.
Frice of
ShipTo Liver¬
To New
Price
A considerable quantity has been taken by the trade,

Date. Rec’ts. ! Sales, meats. Stock.
Jute 7.
937 1,589
1,753
5,S15
*«
14.
759 1,889
5.665
1,689
U
21.
750
431 1,252
5,463
It
28.
879 3,574
1,145
3,034
517 1,579
July 5.
1,784
3,239
44
12.
937
640 1,262
3,134
44
19.
760
314
922
2,972
44
26.
5:33 1,697
1,364
2,639
2
842
635 1,735
Aug.
1,746
9.
347 2,441
1,507
822
14
16.
354 1,158
848
1,084
44
23.
220 1,715
683
1,450
.

.

.

.

.

.

..

.

*

mid.

25
25
25

pool.

@26

#@#@—

@....
@....
24# @25
25 @26
25 @....
25 @—
25#@6
25# @26
26# @27
27 @27#

#@#@#©#@—
#@—
#@—
#@-

York.*
gold.
76c hale 136 @137
75cbale 137 @...
75c bale 138 @ ..
75c bale 13S@138*
75c balel37*@13S*
75c bale 139 @...
75c bale 140 @. ..*
75c bale 140 @...
75cbale 140 @...

#©-

$2 bale 140 @...

#@-

75c bale 141 @...

nominal. nominal.

$2 bale 141 @...

Steam.

Savannah, Aug* 24—The receipts for the week ending Aug. 23 were
1,152 bales, against 1,277 bules last week. The
shipments this week
were 1,097
bales, of which 131 b iles were to Baltimoie, 133 bales to
Philadelphia, and 830 bales were to New York. Below we give the
receipts, shipments, prices, Ac., for a series of weeks :
June 7
“
“

.

14
21
28

“
“

“

“

2,421
1,833
2,407
1,255

.

.

.

12
19
26

1,166
1,351
4,282
4,382
1,140
1,238
1,277
1,152

.

.

.

Aug. 2
“

Receipts.
Receipi
3,151

.

July 6
“

.

9
16
23

.

.

.

let
Early in the week the market

Shipm’s.
5,5-17

3,224
608

2,674
4,238
4,948

Price Mid,

24#@25
25 @24#@25
24 @24#
23 @23#
23 @23#@—

8.838

5,262

2,258

4,355
3,318
2,878
2,575
2,209

2,419

1,580
1,541

1,643
1,697

remained
rein

Stock.

10,872
30,969
11,294
11,027

25
26

@@—

*‘

"

38




AMERICAN
—

paid this

@-

m

Price of

To

Freight

To New

Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock* mid. L’pool. York.
1,117

715
549
413

-

Price of

gold.
9-16’ —@ % 186J@137*
21,743 24 @- 9-16 -@ # 137*©....
21,440 24 @-11-16 --@ # 187 @138
4,142 17,711' S3*@— 11-16 —@ % 137 @137*

8,450 11,698

8,150
2,360

,

....

22,411

24 @

16
13

Stained
Uoiand..
Mobile
New Orleans
Texas

Annexed is
at this

COTTON.

Current

-

Ordinary and
middling.

40

7# *
6#
6#

—

16
11

12#
11#
12#

prices.--

Good and
fine.
32
64
16
17

Fair and

good fair.

17
12

9#©10
9#@10
9 #@10
9#@10

10#
11
11#

11#

comparison of the prices of middling qualities of cotton

a

date since 1864

:

1864. 1865.

Middling—

d.

Mobile.
Orleans

d.

d.

30

Sea Island.... 44

Upland

1866. 1867.

d.

28

17

29#
30#
30#

15#

13#

10#

15#

14

11

15#

14#

1864. 1865.

Middling—

1866.

Ih67

d.
Pernambuco,. 30#

d.

Broach...’.'.... 19
Dhollerah
19

8#

7#

10#
6#

8#

7#

6#

11#

d.
16#

d.

The

following statement shows the present stocks of cotton in Liverpool
including the supplies of American^ and Indian produce at
present ascertained to be afloat to those ports :

and London,

1867.

1866.

26#@v7
26

Sea Island

■

Liverpool

Bales

91,471
20,000
494,000

680,100
91,883
59,000
620,000

1,643,741

»

1,450,983

938,270

London
American cotton afloat
Indian
“

26#@—

1,668
^

,

14
*1

Descriptions.

“

.

‘‘

OK

Prices

Stock at

firm, but later, under unfavorable advices from New York, it has been
very dull, at a decline offc
to lc„ middling being
quoted at 26c. with no sales. Freights to Liver
pool by sail are nominal at fd. for square and fd. for round bales;
to New York, fc.; to Baltimore and
Philadelphia $ 1 50 per bale.
Mobile, Aug. 24.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates
from Mobile. The receipts for the week
ending Aug. 23 were 207 bales,
against 444 bales last week, and the shipments were 588 bales, of
which 355 bales were to New York, and 233 bales were to New
Orleans,
leaving the stock on hand and on shipboard Dot cleared of 3,839 bales.
The following are the weekly
receipts sales and exports for a series of
weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to
Liverpool
and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week r
Date.
June 7

PRICES

week.

Prices have been lees firm this week, and transactions have been
very
small. At the close prices are lower, but nominal.
Exchange sight on
New York is bought by banks at
par, and sold at £ per cent, premium.
Sterling Exchange $6 75 for 60 days’ bills.

“

and in consequence of the lowuess of prices some transactions have
been effected on the part of both speculators anq
exporters. American
qualities have commanded more attention, at an advance of from fd.
to fd. per., according to quality.
Brazilian has also improved in value.
The prices realized being fd. per lb. in advance of last week. East
Indian has, in some in: tances, changed hands at fd. per lb. more money,
whilst other qualities support late rates.

Total....

The annexed

figures ehow the sales and imports for the week and
year, as well as the stocks of each description of cotton on the evening
of Thursday last, compared with last year:
SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
*

Sales this week.—

Trade.

Ex- Speculaport.
tipn,. Total.
'

American....bales. 26,240
Brazilian
13,300

Egyptian

West Indian
East Indian
China and Japan.

Total

"

3,370 2,800 '32,410
2,950 3,4)0 19,250

80
2,440
3,5:30
25,400 10,300

10
70,910 36,710

80
700

Same

Average

period

weekly sales.

year.

1866.

1867. v1866.

942,190 869,360 21,230 18,620
234,960 257,180
5,060
5.630.,
8,370 3,410
122,400 137.350
61,960 •1,060
1,590 J
69,540
751,370 856,160 13,640 16,300
60
20
3,460
6,050
-

2,600
4,230

2,500

Total
this

38,200
10

.

9,080 96,700 2,123,9202,187,060

44,980 45,610

-

*
For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton
market see Telegraph des¬
patches at the close of oar London letter in a previous part oj this pa^er.—[ica.
Commercial & Financial Chronicle, "V
-

,

:‘T

August

31,1867.]

275
-imports-

This
week.

1867.

Total,

1866.

This

3866.

day.

«.

25

San Francisco

Same
date
Pec. 81
1866.
1866.
364,420 167.270
111,630
41,760
38,480
23,180
25,150
11,620
359,470
270,100

14,9411,084,860 969,202 1,156,130 315,540
321 310,562 325,518 s 404,865 131,090
859 145,771 139,927
200,083
51,450
24,110
457
74.276 69,624
90 274
19,132 578,8101,036,321 1.544,675 156,140

4mPnpftn

JSXon ;
gSSS;:;
w/st Indian
S Indian

Philadelphia

-Stocks-

Tq this To this
‘ date • • 'T ’'date:

..., s

a

31

Virginia

47
45

280

*

636

29

Total since Nov. 1.130,896

42,449

97,332
222

....

21,085

315
467

....

628

12,021 7,220,191!

894

4,780

*

>

.

,

The market has been excited and ^active.

The sales of

Kentucky for the week amount to fully 2,000 hhds., largely
for export, but in part for speculation and
consumption. The
Totai
3-,710 2,145,1732,549,863 3,409,020 680,100 938,270 516,770 I shipping demand lias been for Fiance, Italy and Spain, and
London, Aug. 17.-The market hae beeu more animated, and a fair tlle demand for consumption has been for good wrapping lots,
busings Ins been transacted at an advance of £ to id. per lb. on Bengal The transactions are understood to embrace one line ot 700
and Western. Other qualities have ruled firm.
hhds., and another of 500 hhds. As regards prices, we can1865.
1866.
1867.
n°t as >’et make any grand advance in quotations, though de146,149
241,124
imports, Jan. l to Aug. 15
Bales.
J46.149
241,124
^,960 cidedly higher prices have been paid than during the first halfi
185,517
Deliveries
184,524
Lines have been sold at prices at which they
Stocks, Aug. 15
69,698
91,471
91,883 of the month.
were
Alexandria, Aug. 5.—There was a great want of animation in the
previously held, and considered tar above the market.
Japan

China and

894

....

9,271

demand, and the total sales were

12,993

9,120

Prices

moderate.

very

were

variation. Good middling lO^d. f.o.b., fair
13£d. f.o b., and good fair J5d. f.o.b.

»’|y without
13i to

2,840

1,740

The business in Seedleaf has been restricted for the want of

nomin

to fully fair

goods to work with, and we have only to notice sales of 290*
cases Ohio at
5j@15o., 108 bales State, at private terms, 40
cases Connecticut at 9c. In
foreign tobacco we notice the sale

EXPORTS.

Great Britain.

Continent,
bales.

bales.

November 1,1861, to Aug. 3, 1867

From

Same period
do

158,730

1865-6

33,504
23,44 >
52,192

138.969

1804-5..

256,086

Bombay, Aug. 12.—Advices from this port state
all kinds of cotton is quiet at 220r. for Dhollerah.

Total.
bales.

of 68 bales Yara at 81 05.
Manufactured tobacco lias continued

192,234

167,414

active

not fully transpired, but.
of black work for export.

they include large lines

that the market for

QUOTATIONS

Light.

IN

(HHDS.).

Heavy.

Good Leaf..

..

Friday, P. M., August 30, 1867.

CURRENCY

LEAP

Common Lugs.. -4^@ 5 c.
@
Good Luge
6 @ 7
5tf@ 5%
Common Leaf... 6>*@ 7#
7.M@ 8#
Medium
do
8 @10
9^@12

TQBAOCO-

Fine

Light.
10**@13c.

.

13#@14^

do

Selections

11

1

c

xt

Tr

SEED

LEAP

“

“

7

.

Wrappery lots

25
45

Fine wrappers

,

|

r

'

*

20 @21

(BOXES).
Old

Connecticut & Massachusetts Fillers

Orleans; and the direction of these shipments I Black work—com., tax paid.
“
good
fine
‘
was as follows.
1,229 hhds. to Great Britain, 47§ hhds. to.
Bright work—common
hhds. to France, 1,708 hhds. to Bremen, 1,664 hhds. to Rot¬
goo.d
from New

17 t@19

15)*@16)tf

reaching 6,451 hhds., 825 cases, 579 bales, against 9,197 I New'York state Fillers
fT.
hhds., 769 teases, 1,069 bales last week. Of these shipments
“
“ Wrappers0!8*.’!’*.*.*.*.*.*15
V
‘10
V,
Pennsylvania and Ohio Fillers
for the past >veek 3,461 hhds. were from New York, 2,140
“
hhds. from Baltimore, 20 hhds. from Boston, and 826 hhds.
•
^^mIkupactured! ** 1U
mi

Heavy.
12#@16-

..

The exports of crude tobacco this week show a considera¬
ble decrease, though still large, the total from all the ports

•

buoyant.

S27S I ^le Par^°ulars of transactions have
KENTUCKY

’

and

@60c
@;'.5c

25
40
jo

Crop.
5X@ 6#
@20
@40
<§> 4X
@15
@25
@ 3*
7 @14
10 @25

@10e.

12
36
4
7
10

@,40
@65

5
@30
@3

@3°

,

Fine, tax paid. 80
Black work,medium, in bond 10
g« od & fine *•
16
Bright work, medium... “ 15
good & fine “ 60

@70c
@10c
45

New

Crop.

@75c

@1 25
@15c
@28c
@40c
@S5c

FOREIGN.
terdam, 846 to Genoa, 460 hhds. to Cadiz, and the. balance Havana.—Fillers—Common.
60@ 70 Havana.—Wrappers
1 20@2 00
Good..... 75@ 85 Yara
to different ports.
55@1 05
It will also be noticed that there is a very
Fine..... 90@1 05 Yara, average lots
60t# 7o
large shipment from New York of manufactured tobacco,
The receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since
over 500,000 lbs. having been sent to Melbourne.
The fol¬ Nov. 1, have been as follows:
RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER 1. 1866.
lowing table gives the particulars of the exports for the week
/—This week—,
T’l sin. Nov 1—,
.—Previously—»
from all the ports :
From
hhds.
hhds.
hhds.
pkgs.
pkgs.
“

“

The ports.
Export’d this week from Hhds. Case. Bales. Tcs.

.'»...* 3,461;

New York..

Baltimore.
Boston

Philadelphia

'*

Below

12

•

6.451

Pkgs.
42
46

3,615

—

825
579
769 1,069
542
770

.....

....

45
258
81

40

172

658,859
139,861

61

105

29,636

our usual table showing the total exports
of Tobacco from all the ports of the United
States, and their
\ye

To
Great Bri

Sweden.,

Germany

...

:

...

1, 1866.

Cer’s &,—Stems—, Pkgs.
Manfd,
Hhds.
Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. bales. &bxs<
lbs.
518
18,400
67
215
2,467
' 825' 1,226,743
342
20
8 3,739
44,178 31,264 11,658
894
698
276,327
860
49,736
169
2
18,562
964
18
17,276
21
46.411
25
99

Holland.

.

Italy .v..

•

.

.«

1,4 6
...

Austria.

1,096

«

20

...

61

...

•••

14.!

Africa, &c
China, Inc

*

...

1,561

es..,
es.,.;

All others..

...

...

•

.

.

.

■

372
51
169

21

*

■

_

1,625
6,166

24
1
•

•

■

62i
■

214

2,628

4,757*

EXPORTS




63,180
80

9,2530

Cases. Bales,
38,*17 17,903
132

.

■

u

....

2,821

^628

erns.

„

...

13
60

...

4.780.

871

129

871

70,448

138,737

73,146

143,072

4,335

OF

TOBACCO

of tobacco from New York

FROM

NEW

YORK.*
Stems

Liverpool.

33
355
15
227

Havre
Bordeaux
Bremen

bales.

Manfd.

Pkgs.
.

33

..

lbs.
....

20

251

1,232

Hamburg...

287
161

Cadz.
Genoa
China
Metbourn
British North American Colonies..
Cuba.

68
298

40

460
846
4
20
15

500,331
22
26

l,5i8

2

9,477
43,102

Hayti
Other West. Indies

7

Argentine Republ c

New Granada

291

Brazil

816

for the week

3,461

804

667

40

42

555,244

The

ports, has been as follows

io'ei3

89412,021. J

357
4

Stems.—* Bxs. & Lbs.
hhds.
bis. pkgs. manf d.

2,162
2,618

45
••••

263

129

34,616

102,' 62
4,596

exports in this table to European ports are made up from mani¬
fests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the cargo.

255,252
615,156

4*571

Tee.

Hhdj.
66,019

57,285

Hhds.Cases.Balee.

*

'

the ports from which the
^,exPQi:ta; haye been shipped *•;

From
EYork

2,696

.

Total export

3,201,004

792
712

following table indicates.

vrat_

427

33,261

8,913
4,211

.

...

130,396 42,449 21,085

2.608

54,963

....

3,142

231

...

412

1,355

.

The following are the exports
for the past week :

137^720

...

...

80

1,313
1,187

25
.

.;

582
51

18,215
624,005
72,605

...

is

••

99,662
4,531

•

c

97

683
243 •

*

*

953

1,829

69
204
840
7

...

*

805

...

...

The

«

8,696
4,052
2,608

Glasgow

.

...

Belgium

Eastinc

Total

•

pkgs.

65
15

London

Exports of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬
ber

•

2,900

2,322

give

directiou, since November 1, 1866

Mu

New Orleans

Ohio, <S
Other..

....

..

.

lbs,

555,244

84

....

.
....

Totallast week
9,197
Total previous week... 4,789

40

....

217
159

Man’f.

,

45

4
826

week

667

11

20

New Orleans
Total this

804
10

2,140

—Stems
hhds. bales.

....

894
...

4,962 6,849,826
Ill

6,632
6^0 f
4

268,517
4,516
*

.....

1

:

From Baltimore—To Rotterdam, 1,664 hlids. of leaf—To Bremen, 476hbds.
of leaf and 45 hhds. of stems.... i’o St. Johns, P.
R., 1U cases and 84
cffddics
From Boston—To Africa, 18 hh4s. leaf—To Surinam, 2 hhds. lejf
To
Turks Island, 10 boxes
.To St. ierre Miquelon, 19 cases, 12 bales and
30 boxes
To British Provinces, 2 cases :md 6 boxes.
From Philadelphia—To Havana, 3.615 lbs. manufact’d. ...ToPort Spain,
4hhds
From New Orleans—To Liverpool, 826 hhds. leaf..
..

Virginia.—At Richmond, in
we

911

reviewing the market for the past week
report breaks and receipts light, and no change in prices.
hogsheads, 100 tierces, and 51 boxes sold this week as follows

have to

Manufacturing Tobacco.—Lugs, common to medium, dark working
working, $8@12 ; sun cured, common, $7(9)12 • sun

$5 00@$9 ; good, dark

276

THE CHRONICLE.

[August 31,1867.

«nred, good, $12@18

; coal cured, common, $7@12 ; bright, $12@20,
be remembered that the South and South-West have
raised
fancy, $20@45.
Leaf—common, dark working$7@9 ; medium, dark working, $10@14 ; large quantities of Corn ; that we are not likely to have the
good, $1 5@1'7 ; fine and wrapping, $18@21 ; sun cured, $16@26@32; large demand for Corn from the South, which until now has
been a strong
yellow wrappers common, $20(5)35, medium to extra, $40@100@20J.
support to this market, but, on the contrary
Shipping Tobacco.—Lugs, very common and heavy weights, $5@ large supplies from tKat
quarter. The scarcity and high price
6 60; medium, $6@«
00; good, $8@1‘2 50. Leaf—English $16@2o of Oats and
Hay, which have been favorable to the Corn
@27 60; continental $13@18@_‘3.
Stemming Tobacco.—Leaf—(Joran on, $12@$14 ; good, $15@$17 ; market, are not likely to continue long.
Oats have been without essential change ; the
fine, $18@$20@$23. Mems—very common to good, $1@$4 50.
receipts con¬

Maryland and Ohio.—At Baltimore, with fail receipts of
Maryland
leaf, the stock in factors hands offers better inducements to buyers, and
with good demand for Bremen and Holland,
prices are steadily maintaired. In Ohio leaf, the sales since the close of our last leview amount
to 665 bhds., and were all taken for
Duisburg and B emen, at prices
before

same as

quoted. There is nothing doing in Kentucky the past
week except retail lots. Inspections lor the week, 1,482 hhds
Matyland
(239 reinspected) ; 741 Ohio, (30 reinspected) ; 40 Kentucky—total,
2,263 hhds; cleared same period, 476 hhds. to Bremen, and 825 to
Rotterdam.

Kentucky.—At Louisville, the market has been firm and buoyant
throughout the week, with liberal offerings and receipts for the season,
and closes firm with an upward
tendency. The fact that the crop will
be short is now generally conceded, and i3
having its effect upon prices
here, and must necessarily, at an early day, influence prices in the mar¬
kets of the United States and
Europe. We quote :
SHIPPING
_

.

Light.
$3 7 @ 4 50
4 25® 5 00
6 00® 8 50

Common sound lugs
Good sound lugs
Commod sound leaf
Medium sound leaf
Good leaf
Fine leaf
Choice leaf

00®ll 00
00@15 00
oo@17 00
17 oo®!8 00

MANUFACTURING
.

LEAF.

*

Da k

Fancy
The sales for the current tobacco year,
lows ;

Western,

wrappers.

$13 0o@15 00
16 00®21 00

$18 00®23 00
29 00®36 00
40 00®75 00

including reviews,

are as

Rye Flour, fine and
Corn

fol¬

11,566

Nintn-street warehouse

.

Boone warehouse
Louisville warehouse

8,444

..

*

Total

7,396
6,530

33,936

6
5

meal, Jersey

75® 6 59

New Orleans.—The market has been characterised
by increased
dullness during the past week. There has been a moderate
enquiry
for the heavy descriptions, but the extreme views of holders, inspired

principally by the discouraging tone of ihe aecounts from the interior,
have prevented the consummation of
any large trail actions.
An ad¬

RECEIPTS

Flour, bbls

AT

hand

on

NEW

shipboard.

Wheat, bush
Corn, hush
Rye, bush
Barley, &c., busn

160,130

3,525

51,210

FOREIGN

EXPORTS

FROM

NEW YORK

bbls.

To
Gt. Brit, week
since Jan. 1

bbls.

3,461
47,245

bush.

171*568

25

4,051
666
since Jan. 1
86,9:33 -23,140
We*t Ind. week.
7,805
985
since Jan. 1
155,380 74,727
Total expH, week 20,267
1,551
since Jan. 1, 1867 863,258 104,183
same time, 1866
653,165 94,101

AND

Barley.

bush.

6,515

bush.

844,495

The market the past

week has been without

new

features of

importance.
Flour has continued to arrive freely from the South as well
well as the West, and prices have yielded from day to day,
until quotations show a material decline for the week. .The
most marked decline has been in the higher grades, say above

$11 per

bbl. Flours below that figure have not been in ex¬
cessive supply, and with a good shipping demand from the
British Provinces and the West Indies, they have been
better supported, although lower ,in sympathy with the
general market.
We cannot expect any settled mar¬
ket until the extra State from the new Spring Wheat
shall arrive freely.
It seems to be the general impres¬
sion that the price of good new shipping extra State will settle
down to about $8 per bbl., and with this before them buyers
as

last week.

201,523 136,887
193,424 199,200
500

82,457




bush',

listin',si
430

869,183
....

2,758

....

1

Corn
bush*

7,660
64,309
3,50.

6,941

35,442

89,601
149,343

127,1726,086,331
948,1668,514,016
283,038
5,651
6,3)3 OIW
1,911 699,006

Lake Ports.—The

following shows the receipts
following lake ports for the week ending Aug. 24 :
at

Flour.
bbls.

33 017

Chicago

Wheat.
bush.

641,515

Corn.
bash.
848,693

81,068
199,922
143,043
74,500

4,755
110,704
4,566
52,500

3,202
26,639

25,450

Cleveland

2,6U0

90,908 1,140,058 1,021,208
77,3:34
803,437
773,197

Oats,
bush.
791.6 0
32.981

Barley.

Eye.

bush.
17.440

bush.
72,152

130,582

2,002
1,100

3,442

7,825

2,228

31,500

2,4*0

1,900

994,558

25,190

77,885

458,508
146,1:30

9,095
11,193 15,026
680,777 710,165

387,572 1,826,556
Corresponding week,’66 49,1:30
Since Jan. 1, 1867.
1,631,456 7,953,45620,703,327 5,213,952
Same time, 1866
1,957,00311,331,003,27,202,506 8,158,0^8 400,4891,338,850
Eastward Movement of Grain by Canal.— The following statement
will show about the amount of grain on canals destined for tide water:

Wheat,

Corn,

Oats,

bush.

bush.

bush.

1,240,330
68,780

Total
Previous week

218,237
86,887

1,299,110
1,352,111
2,283,2 4

Barley,

132,780

Oswego, 9 days.

196,470
21,7o7

132,780

From

Buffalo, 14 days

Corresp’di’g week’66.

43,375

Note—About 15,000 bushels of wheat per

Rye.

bush.

bush.

40,270
-

—

40,270

20,470

367,890

29,060

34,150

42,356

day come forward by the Erie

railway—being equal on the average to 180,000 bush afloat on t e canal.
Liverpool.—Mail dates to August 16th, report: With very
weather the improvement in the corn trade is los , and wheat is

fine

dull,
Flour slow.

with very little demaud, at a decline of 3d. per cental.
Indian corn dull, at 86s. for sound, and 35s. for soft mixed. Peas dear
and dull. The first new American wheat appealed in our market to¬

day.
This is

The quality good, Southern Red, for which 13s. 9d. was paid.
a fancy price, and could not be made for quantity. '
»
farmers’ deliveries.
..

but prices have not been so
Millers have done but little, and shippers

operated spasmodically. The market is awaiting more liberal
supplies. The large receipts of California Wheat yesterday
will be offered very sparingly at full prices, but the bids at the
close were not generally over $2 00. No. 1 Milwaukee Club
of the new crops was offered in large lots to arrive all Sep¬
tember at $2 08, and would probably bring $1 95.
Corn has been fairly active for export and consumption, and
since Wednesday the price has advanced 3 cents per bushel
for mixed; but with the fallingoff in the Southern demand,
White has declined. There is considerable speculative feeling
in this article, based on smaller receipts at the Western ports
and indifferent prospects of the growing crop. But it must

Oats,

....

8,302

will not add to their stocks.
Wheat continues very scarce,

strong

8IN0E JAN

----

16,913

,

M

4,548,306

430

*63

1,205

17,5:30

Weekly Receipts

’4OM30

l,7o0

19,947

Baltimore

12,604,435

•

Since Jan. l.i'rom
Boson
107,553

Philadelphia

’imJJ

1,461$

429,7&0

Rye,

1

1,488,935

17,220
*>460

FOR THE WEEK

Flour, C. meal, Wheat,

S’eJan

7,735
185,200
614,055

1,986,026

608,445
13,570

follows:

72,840

1,712,675
8,872,695
112,920
384,265

*

as

.

Friday, August 30, 1867, P. M.

70®
60®

For week.

1,063,955

1,720
200,075

Corn meal, uols

Totals
Previous week

BREADSTUPFS.

45®

YORK.

81,030

Milwaukee
Toledo
Detroit

on

14®

Malt

-1867Forweek. o’eJan.l.

prising 75 hhds. of which
week, 181 hhds.

70

1 15
1 16

Peas, Canada

at, the

Lugs at 4^c. ^ lb., 39 hhds. do. at
Admitted at 9c
Receipts for the
Exports for the week, to Liverpool 320 hhds. Stock

2

„

Brandywine

ditional cause for the
prevailing stagnation is the undesirableness of
the offerings, most of which are confined to
samples entirely unsuitable
to the orders now on hand.
Hence the business has been light com¬

2 hhds.
8 hhds.

2 80
2 85

08®

1

<■

and

10®
32®
85®

....®

Rye
Oats, Western cargoes..
Jersey and State
Barley

75® 8 50

.

at 6c., and

Western Yellow
Southern White

super¬

fine

2
2
2
1
1

Corn, Western Mixed...

N, A. Col. week..

Pickett warehouse

4£c., 16 hhds.

Red Winter
Amber do
White

com¬
to good
8 25®11 50
Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
11 75®13 25
Southern supers
9 00@10 25
Southern, fancy and ex. 10 50®l3 00
California
12 50®14 00
mon

Oats, bush

Bright

wrappers.

Common and medium
Good and flue

Extra

$4 85® 5 50
5 60® 6 50

9
13
15

*

closing

Heavv.

9 00® 11 00
12 00©14 00
15 00(g) 16 00
17 oo® » 00
19 00@21 00

early in SeDand Bariev

The following are
quotations :
Flour, Superfine..$ bbl. $6 85® 7 75 Wheat, Chicago Spring
Extra State
8 50® 10 75
per bushel
Milwaukee Club......
Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 9 00®10 50

The movement in breadstufis at this market has been

QUALITIES.

.

tinue very small, but large supplies are expected
tember. Rye has materially declined.
Barley
Malt are firm.

..

28,686 qrs. at 68«. 2d.
45,980
“ 608. Sd.

IMPORTS.

Wheat,
qrs.
767

United States and Canada

France, Spain and Portugal
North Europe
Mediterranean and Black Sea

Other places
Total for week
Total since 1st January
Same time 1866

,

Flour
sacks.

qrs.

2,887

16,369

!.*;.*
...

I. Corn

bbls.

"79

11,026

V19

.

11,793

2,887

79

760,595
332,306

33,928
60,702

247,499
267,738

19J88
603,848

706,178

GROCERIES.
Friday Night,

The

Aug. 80.

Grocery trade has been less active than last week,
geueral disposition jtto postpone important

lather from the

THE CHRONICLE.

August ii'31,1867.]
t
I', f
^

«• r

transactions than from any important influence. There seems
no inclination on the part of the trade to purchase beyond the

immediate consumption demand. Stocks of some articles are
rather light, and this tends to restrict' business. The imports
of the week have been of limited quantities—of Coffee, 19,828
bags, including 11,537 of Rio; of Tea, 4,545 packages of

greens;

of each

of Sugar and Molasses less than usual. Full details

At—

N. York stock

68,277
75,579

,

Same date 1866

Imports since Jan.

Portland
Boston

Philadelphia

do

Baltimore
New Orleans

...

do

4,580
80,377
.18,913 67.773
17,603 16,495
25,140 10,987
.

Total import

243,655

'■

6,013

21,807
1,118
75,927

258,277 328,3:9

159

5,200

37,005
67,236
88,302
12,105
404,316

9,463

.

do

*

35,169
111,232
13,051 72,070

66,194
88,864

85,428
1,483
6,628

1,709
47,*>8l

.

Brazil, Manila'
bags. bags,*c

Total
♦hhds.

....

.147,281 208,227

do
do

*

market has continued rather quiet, but with

The tea

/
Other
Cuba.
For’gn,
boxes. *hhds. *hbds.
.

article will be found under the respective heads.
TEA.

277

4,056

72,229

22,307

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads.

steady

a very

Havana, Aug. 24.—The Weekly Report says: “The sugar market
feeling on the part of holders. Tie sales are 4,800 half chests greens, has at last revived from the stagnant condition which for the past weeks
has been its characteristic feature. There has been a fair amount of
1,000 do. Japans, and 1,100 do. Oolongs.
business transacted, the last advices from London and New York with
The import of the week consist of 81,682,881 lbs. from Shanghae
regard to this staple having induced buyers to reappear iu the market ~
by the “ Sea Witch,” made up as follows: 22,891 lbs. Twanbay, 4,239 and some
HysoD skin, 67,883 Hyson, 192,146 Young Hyson, 29,846 Imperial, and the basis important parcels of low and high descriptions were sold oa
8$ rs for No. 12 generally” At the close the market was*
49,429 lbs. Gunpowder. At the date of latest advices from China no
firm, buyers offering 8* rs, and holders demanding 8f. Last year at
shipments of Dew crop had been made to the United States.
this date 12 was at 7i rs.
The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and
The following will show the receipts,
exports and stocks of boxes at
Japan to the United States from June 1, 1866, to June 1, 1867, and Havana and Matanzas:

importations at New York and Boston since Jan. 1:

/—IMP’TS AT N.
To Atlantic ports.
,
To San
Direct
at New
Jane 1 to Jun.1,’66, to Same FranYork,
June 10.
June 1,’67.
’66-66, cisco.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
pkga.

HIPMENT8 FROM CHINA AND JAPAN.

v

,

1,136,547 ‘
600,576

Congou* Sou

1,869,236

Oolong*Ning

10,867,437

9,765,794

12,078

60,114

809,052

876,266

468,163

Poucbong
Fekoe.

Twankav

Hyson skin
Hyson
Young Hyson.

Imperial
Gunpowder

...

Japans..
Total

At N.

Bos-

York.

ton.

w

From Europe
64,708
112
2,015,096 xprom K’^Ind
7,100,493 *r0m
in?o
1,696.157
1,908,227 From oth.p’rts
4,890,816
56
17,127
717,849

51,832

1,689,788

6,996,203

34,629,528 31,547,497 j 61,832 31,632,881 16,436

.....

Hong Kong, June 29, 1867.—The Overland Trade
Tea : “ An extensive business has been done during

Report

18,262

says

of>

the fortnight at

low enough at Foochow, at all events, to ensure
profitable results, and have been augmented by an extensive colonial
dem&Dd.
An irregular advance in rates will also be observed in the
reports from Hankow.
The following interesting table from the circular of Mess. Little <t Co.
ihowe the total export from all China and Japan for the past three
seasons, and the countries to which the tea was exported :
which

rates

are not

U. States.

Gt. Brit

Austaalia. Contin’t.

Green

“

9,5*0,000

15,260,000

Japan

44

1, 20,000

6,40o,000

24,840,000
7,620,000

118,640,000 34,660,000 11,030,000 1,676,0U) 166.066,000

Total

lbs. 103,74?,000 11,776,000 10,472,000 4,126,000 129,117,000

1W6-6.. Black
Grjrn

44

Japan

44

10,926,000 12,792,000

7,000,000

03.719,000
8,; 00,0 0

115.869,000 31,569,000

10,472,000 3,126,000 161,036,000

1,200,0.0

Total.....

8,442,000 10,253,000 1,005,000 124,763,000
21,286,000
7,8r.7,0i<0

lbs. 105,073,000
“
13,919,000

1864-6..Plack
Green
japan

2,300,000

Total

17,369,000

i:

week.

6,750

Since Jan. 1.

5,530

4,974

267.835
329,527

14,676

5,602

323,447

20,355

The details

iollows

are as

Porto
I
Cuba. Rico. Other. |
hhds.
955
220

At—
New York
Portland
Boston

.

....

20
1&6

58

10,853,000

1,005,000

149,919,000

At

♦hhds.

Porto
Cuba. Rico. Other.
Philadelphia..hhds. 693
40
'

At—

j Baltimore
■

New York, stock
N. Y imp’ts since
Portland

Baltimore

380

18,527

26,361

99

Total

245,255

5,068

847
175

2,190

1,757

24,363

35,875

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to

There has been

Stock.

At New

51,270
4,500 Java,

Total

721,594

York, At Bost.
import. Stock. Import23,810
bags* 46,104 7,573
44
9,110 4,110

Ceylon
Singapore,
44
Maracaibo, 44
Laguayra
44
St. Domingo,44
Other,
44

55,882
8,200
5,000
2,600

*20,962
645
117
36,003
25,060 4,514
22,561
18,109

11,442
8,820

6,117

1,927

177,889 23,076

45,999

75,770
Total

*

hogsheads.

foreign dried fruits is quite small in first hands

tic dried is in very
this time.

do

,

small supply, but the demand is very moderate at

Sun. to fine

75®

Bio, prime, duty paid ...gold 19 ®
do good
gold 1'*-® 1*J

85 ® 90UncoL Japan, Com. to fair. / 80 ® 90
do
Sup’r to fine. 90 ®1 05

The

imports of the week have been much below those of the previous
week; included in them are 7,407 bags of Manila sugar. The details
follows:

N.York 2,668
....

Other Manila
hhds. bags.

3,593

491

V...*

loo

10,444

83
1,689
250
Stocks August 27, and
imports




Other
hhds.

Cuba—»
boxeB. hhds.
/

■

At—

Philad’l
Baltimore

1*208
2,976

263
356

607
190

New Orleans

since January 1, are as follows

fava. mats

Native

an

1

bags

7

®

i*

....

Ceylon

Crushed and

gold 24*® 2*
18*® ‘.0 17

® 39
171® 18
151® lb

-

.

Melado

do

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

$ gall.

®
52 ® 70
47 ® 55
.

12|® 13i
14*® 14*
15*® 16
14*® 16r
®
®

....

BarbacLea

16?

® 16?
P|@ 16*
15 ®
15^.

powdered

White coffee, A
Yellow coffee

'do Clayed....

17|

•.

46 ® 48
53

(® 55

Fruit."

*cask .... ®....
box 4 00 ®4 10
a 65 ®

Bunch
Currants
do

lb

Dates

Almonds, Languedoc
do
do
do

do

..

1’.*® n*

30*® 1
214® 22

Citron, Leghorn
Prunes, Turkish

Sardines

:

®1 20

do
Ex fine to finest. .1 26 ®1 6>
Sono & Cong., Com. to fair 65 ® 80
do"
Sup’rtoflne. 9>®105
do
Ex f. to flnestl 25 ®1 55

...

Raisins,Seedless.
do Layer

about 5,400 hhds. and 1,500 boxes Havana.

,

Ex f. to flnestl 10

do

Oolong, Common to fair.70 ® SO
do
Superior to fine... 85 ®1 00

gold 15*® It* Maracaibo
uagu&vra
gold 14*.® 15
.gold 15*® 17* St Domingo
Sugar.
do
do
Porto Rico
$ 5) II?® I4a
do
do
Cuba, inf. to com. refining
10*® ll*
do
do
do ' fair to good
do
Ill® 11*
do
do
do fair to good grocery... 12 ® 124Loaf..
do pr. to choice
do
...
12*® 13
do oentrifugal
It'*® j 34- G ranulated
do fair
do ordinary
do fair to g. cargoes

for the week

Inland
Boston.

80

/-Duty paid—,

do Ex f. to fln’st

do

Coffee.

quiet at the beginning of the week, and somewhat irregular
demand, with rather easier prices, but later there has been a
moderate business doing, and prices are steady at the close. The sales

-—Cuba
boxes, hhds.

at

this

Molasses.

in the

sre as

9,212.

FRUITS.

The stocks of old

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Ouba Muscovado

was

are

305,493

fair, steady business in spices, with, however, but
worthy of note, except a sale of 4,500 bags Singapore pepper oa
Thursday.

SUGAR.

Sugar

984

little

Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7 to 9 11 ® 11*
do
do
do 10 to 12 111® 12*

Includes pockets reduced to bags.

.!

1,122

a

..

OTHER SORTS.

OF RIO COFFEE.

20.000

7406

SPICES.

are

follows:

170,401

N. o:.
bbls.

hhds.

15,810
117,802
35,306
59,920
48,031
13,7.2
30,722

499

3,314
1,401

34,708
51,5:38
44,873
10,675
30,547

'
'

NewOrleais44

♦

4.960

1. 72,914

'

44

*hnds.

10,470

Jan.

44
Bostou,
Philadelphia44

do

Baltimore
44
New Orleans 44
Galveston
44
Mobile
44
Savannah
44

...

Tea.

imports since January 1, and stock in first hands Aug. 27,

469,881
14,730

36

New Orleans

♦hhds.

COFFEE.

received.

Import.

inconsiderable at

:

Stocks, Aug. 27, and imports since January 1 are as follows
Cuba. ,—P. Rico.-rOth. Fo’gn—
Total,

•

-

1,247,861

The imports of molasses for the week have been

all the ports.

...

York, bags
Philadelphia 44

236,138
324,824
212,257

supply of molasses has been quite liberal, and easier prices have
accepted. The amount of business is fair, and the market closes
more steady, with sales of 1,600 hnds.

...

New

boxes.

1,154,828
1,076,411

been

pa!d only moderately active, owing in part’ Hyson, Common to fair /—Duty @1 t*5
90
do
to the non arrival of advices, and of new stock with which to operate
Superior to fine.... 1 10 @1 30
do
Ex fine to finest ,..l 35 ®l 5
Prices have been quite steadily held, and so close. The sales for the Y’gHyson, Com. to fair
7 @1 '5
do
Super, to fine. .1 1- @1 35
week are about 13,000 bags Rio, and 1,080 do. Maraciabo.
do
Ex fine to finest ! 40 @1 70
The imports of the week include of Rio 5,060 bags per “ Talisman/
unp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 ®1 16
do
Sup. to flne.l 25 @1 45
6,600 per 14 Petrel/’and 931 per “Mary.”
Of other kinds 612 bags
do do Ex. f. to finest. 1 55 ®1 8>
Jave, 6,809 Maracaibo, 1,100 Laguayra, ami 270 of sundries have been H. Sk. &Tw’k.ay,C, to fair. 65® 70

aa

12,809

Stock*

The

The market for coffee has been

The

,—Total export—,
Since Jan. 1.
week.

time, with advices of rather higher figures for the new crop, caua
iog a very steady feeling and somewhat restricting operations. Domes¬
3,870,000

1,570,000

121,292,000

44

r-Expts to U. S.--,

week.

MOLASSES.

Total.

lbs. 107,840,000 13,000,000 11,030,000 1,676,000 133,546,000

1866-7..Black

Rec’d this
Year.
1867
1866.
1865

pug. all sorts.
^omG’tBri-

1,432,406
7,520,022
1,416,858

8,410,644
1,871,443
1,967.980
6,364,933

Indir’ct At

lojujoS161’228
12,078

152,926

66,466
2,065.181

T. A BOSTON.

Provence

Sicily, Soft Shell
Shelled

....%! box
V hi. box

tll ® j2
41 ® 4<s
28®2‘

Sardines
b

^

qr.

Brazil Nuts

Filberts, Sloily
Walnuts,
Pearl Sago
Tapioca

Macaroni, Italian

IP*®
15 ®
b*®
12 ®
8 ®
64®
12 ®
17 ®

18*:
2i
9
13
1*
7*

13*
17t

Dkixd Fruit—

23 ® 23*

Apples

..
® ..
29*® 81

Raspberries

35 ®

box

$ lb

igs, Smyrna

Blackberries
.HM# •*••

#

5 ®

7*®
•«

• •

®

9
8*
..

*»>

¥

f

r a

ViU

278
Splceg.
43n Pepper,...
(gold)
114 I Pimento, Jamaica, (gold)
90 ®- 92$'| Cloves
(gold)

CaaaU, In mats >geW|#lb

43®
1*4®

Ginger, race and Af(gold)

Maqe

,,.„teold)

Nutmegs, No. 1....(gold)

86®

274®
®
V64®
..

6741

.

28, do 11 inch 23$, Kennebeck 26$, Star No. 800 2x2 19, do No
900
Cameron No. 90 19, do No. 80 17.

4x2 21,

....

194

Denims are in light steady demand at uniform rates.
Amoskeag 30
Haymaker 28 inch 16, do brown 16, York 28 inch 29, Warren brown

27 inch 15,

Boston -Mfg. Co. 29 inch 18$, Pearl River 29, Union 16
Monitor 14, Manchester Co. 19, Oduoibran XXX: 80, do blue
2!j>, Ar¬
lington 18, Blue Hill 12$, Mount Vernon 26$, Pawnee 12$, Northfield

THE DRV GOODS TRADE.
I

rid ay,

12$.

P. M., August 30, 1867.

dry goods market has shown all the activity which
expected at this time, with a due regard to the health
and prosperity of the trade. There has been no excitement,
but a continued steady demand for almost all kinds of goods,
and prices have been very steadily held, notwithstanding the
could be

in lower
moderate

accumulate

...

‘

.

Prints have continued active although the demand is rather
less at
the close and trade is extending more to other
kinds of dress

goods.
Prices are unchanged. American 16,
Amoskeag dark 14, do purple
16, do pink 16$, do shirting 14-16, do palm leaf 15, Merrimac

material, and

general belief
prices for the future. Manufacturers hold only
stocks, but there is an apparent disposition not to
raw

-

.4

in demand for

are

export And in fair request for home
14$, Amoskeag 18, Laconia 18$, Pepperell 18, do
fine jean 18$, Stark A 17$, Massabesic 16, Woodward duck
bag 26$
National bags 81, Stark Ado 62$,
Liberty do 31.
Print Cloths are not very active in this market. Prices are
less
firm at 9 @ 9$ for 64x64
square cloth.

The

dtilness in the market for the

..

Brown Drills
trade.
Winthrop

D

15-16$, do purple 16$, do *W dark, 18-19, do purple 19, do
pink
19, Sprague’s 15$ do purple 16, do shirting 17, do pink
16, do
turkey red 15, do blue check 16, do solid 14$, do indigo blue 16$, do
Swiss ruby. 16, London
Mourning 14 $, Simpson Mounting 14$, Aiaoekeag Mourning 18. Dunnell’s 15, Allen.pink 16, Arnold’s 12$, Glouces¬
ter 15, Wamsutta 11$, Pacific
16$, Freeman 12$. Cocheco 16, Lowell
12$, Hamilton 16-15$, Victory 12$. Home 10, Empire State 9, Lan¬
caster 15, Wauregan light 14,
Atlantic 8$.

beyond the actual wants of the present season.
goods there is an improved tone, and the production
of finer grades is increasing. Low grades of goods are less
wanted, and in some instances prices are easier. Foreign
Lawns and Ginghams are dull for the time.
Lancaster Domestic
goods have met with an increased demand during the week, Ginghams sell at 20
cents,, Hartford 16, Hampden 19, Caledonia 16
and both importers and jobbers have done a fair business.
The Glasgow 19, Clyde 12$, Berkshire 17$, Roanoke 13$, Manchester
15
Canton Flannels are in increased demand and
exports of dry goods and domestics continue liberal.
prices remained firm at
The exports of dry goods for the past week and since January the present figures.
Ellertou N brown 31, do O do 29< do P do 25, do
S
1, 1867, and the total for the same time in 1866 and 1860 dodo 21$, doT do 20, Laconia Brown 22$, Slaterville do 18, Hamilton
22$, Naumkeag do 21, Nashua A 20, Kllerton N Blea 38, do 0 do
are shown in the
following table :
31, do P do 27, Stillwater do 18, Granite State do 21,
Naumkeag doi>I$.
FROM NKW YORK.
—FROM BOSTON
Corset Jeans continue in
In woolen

Domestics. -> D, Goods.
Val. packages.
50
5
48

Brazil

Argentine Repub.
China

525

Liverpool....

..

Havre
•Cuba
New Granada

•

$5,393
357

2,685
62,649

•

•

•

#

•

....

....

....

.

..

...

.

.

.

.

•

•

pkga.
.

15, Ward 16.
;jv:.
Cambrics and Silesias are in light
request, Lonsdale Silesias sell at 20
cents. Victory J 16$, Indian Orchard 17, Ward 17,
Washington glased
cambrics sell at 11 cents,
Victory H 9, Superior

.

.

.

....

.

,#l

•

...

..

....

19
1
48
7

.

•

8,451
1,200
5,290
2,000

*

....

.

.

erly 11, and S. S. A Sons

....

'

..

Total this week.
Since Jan. 1
Same time I860...
“
“
1860...
annex

manufacture,

a

....

628

$71,084
7,498 1,015,614
3.566 585,527
70,803

....

T75
3,744
2,411

.

few

Muslin Delaines

6

..

$16,941
852,290
....

29,774

Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are still in active demand, and
there is no further decided
change in prices.
Atlantic N 3-4

10$. Massachusetts C do 12, Union do 10, Pepperell N do 13$, Atlan¬

tic V 7-8 '14$, Atlantic E do 15, Pacific E do 16, Bedford R do 11,
Massachusetts E do 14, Pepperell O do 14$, Indian Head 4-4 18, Appleton A do 16$, Pacific extra do 17$, do H do 17$, do L do 10, Atlantic
Hdo 17$, do A do 18, do L do 16, Lawrence E do 15$. do 0 do 17$, do
F do 16, Stark A do 17, Amoskeag A do 17, do B do 16$, Medford
•do 16$, Kenebeck do 10$, Roxbury do 16, Pepperell E do 17$, Great

75 62$, Miners’
Rock 27$.

and

Shirtings

are

still

in active

are

,.

...

t.

.

s'esdily held.

Pepperell

request and

for prime brands prices are firm. Globe 3-4 9, Kingston do 9$, Boott R
dp 11, Globe A 7-8 do 10, Strafford S do 13$, Waltham X do 14, Amos¬
keag Z do 13, Great Falls M do 15, do S do 14, do A do 16, Lyman
Cambric do 16$, Hill’s Sernp. Idem do 18, Bartlett 81 inch 16, Putnam
4-4 14, Newmarket A do 16, doC, do 17, Bartletts do 18$,
James Steam
do 18 Indian River XX. do 14$, Attawaugan XX do 15 $, Lawrence B
do 16$, Hope do 17$, Boot B do 18$, Forestdale do 20, Masonville do
22$, Androscoggin Ldo 22$, Lonsdale do 22$ Bates XX do 24, Lyman
J do 22, Wamsutta H do 80, do O do 30, Atlantic Cambric do 29, Lons¬
dale Cambric do 81$, New York Mills do 35, Hill do 21, Ainoskeag 42
inch 21$, Waltham do 20, Dwight 9-8 27, Wamsutta do 35,
Lyman R.
6-4 18, Boot W do 21, Nashua do 25, Bates do 25, Wamsutta do 40,
Amodkeag 46 inch 28$, Waltham 6-4 27. Mattawanvkeag do 25, Pep¬
perell do 27$, Utica doiS2$, Waltham 8-4 88$, Pepperell do 87$, Alleudale do 82$, Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Pepperell do 42$, Utica do 60,
Allendale do 40, Waltham do 42$, Monadnock 10-4 37$,'Waltham do
.60, Allendale do 47$, Pepperell do 52$, Utica do 65, Pepperell 11-4
62$.

do D 80 inch 20, do C 30 inch 24, Brunswick 4-4 15, Hamilton 28$,
Somerset 13$, Thorndike 20, Pearl River 37$, Housewife 32, do AAA

-

'

■

unchanged rates.

IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK,
The

importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Aug.
corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866 have been ae

29, 1867, and the
follows:

entered tor consumption for the week ENDING AUG.

1865,

.

1866.
,
Pkgi9. Value.

,

,

Pkgs.
Value.
Manufactures of wool...2,778 $1,141,600
do
do
do

860,596

575
800

643,121
224,902
109,882

418
752
706

Total
WITHDRAWN

PROM

5,208

290

WAREHOUSE

AND

THROWN

554
704
526

226,697
228,948

$2,353,915 '
THE

1867.

Pkgs. Value
1,785 $815,930
924
279,786

448.289

INTO

29,1867.

,

2,285 $1,068,120
386,891
1,097

1,190

5,633 $2,480,101

cotton..

silk...
flax....
Miscellaneous dry goous.

47 j,576

200,765
206,490

4,493 $1,974,597
MARKET

DUBQta

THE SAME PERIOD.

Manulactures of wool...
do
do
do

696

cotton..^ 113

$326,129

1,780
359
269

370,
164

$783,853

2,236

$915,243

silk....

62

85,316
87,752

flax....

324

6^,904

62

18,317

1,530

forconsumpt’i)5,633

$536,418
2,480,101

2,942 $1,360,121
5,208 2,358,915

4,179 $1,551,452
4,198 1,974,597

Total thrown YDOn mak’t 7,213

$3,016,519

8,150 *3,7 9,066

8,672 $3,626,04 9

Miscellaneous dry goods.
Total
Add ent’d

Ticks have been

fairly active, and prices are without decided change.
Amoskeag AC A 32 inch 4 0, do A 82 inch 32, do B 82 inch 28,

Flannel 42$ and 60, Union Cotton and Wool 20, Black

CoTTonades are in only light demand, but
prices are steady. New
York Mills d A t 65 Farmer’s and Mechanics’ 45, Pemberton
dAt 42$,
Great Western 87$, Plow, L. A Any. 87$, Ybrk
22$ to 35, Whittendeo
dAt 47$, Everett 25 to 37$, Andover
21$.
American Linen continues in steady request at

Falls M do 14$, do S do 13$, Dwight W do 14$,Standard do 14. Pepper¬

Blsaohkd Sheetings

,

good demand and prices

Flannels and Linseys are in good request at
steady prices.- For
flannels Belknap shirtings sell at 47$ cents,
Washington do 50, Rob
Roy rolled 6-4 92$ to 95, Rob Roy 8-4 45 to 47$, Cocheoo black and
white check 42$, Franklin
shirting 46, Caledonia miners 87$, Tequa,
double fold 45, Bay State
Opera 52$, Gilbert’s do 60, Middlesex do 60,
and Park Linseys 35 inch at 22$ cents, do 60 do
87$, do65 do 4$$;do

ell R do 16, Laconia E do 14$, Exeter A 14, Laconia B do 16, Laconia
O 9-8 16, Pequot do 21 . Saranac E do 20$, Nashua 5-4 25, Utica do

85, Mi nadnock 10-4 35,

in

Pekin

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

82$, Utica 7-4 37$, Pepperell 9-4
do 42$, Utica do 60, do 11 4 65.

8, Pequot. 11, VVavhigh colon

paper cambrics at 15 cents, do

Co. 23, Manchester dark 23, Pacific dark 23,
28, Armures dark 23, Pacific Merinos 37$, Mourning
28,
Spragues 22, SkirPnga 80, Alpacas 24-30.

5.658
2,549

746,931

are

Lowell 23, Hamilton

8

....

our

iobbers:

....

>

17$, White Rock 15, Masonville 16$.

4

J5r. Provinces...

demand, without change in pricea An¬
droscoggin 12$, Bates colored 12$, do bte^ched 12$,
Naumkeag 17$t
Pepperel 19, Nanmkeag satteen 21, Lhcouia 17$, Amoskeag 16$^ Indian
Orchard
.

cas-es.

$....

•

....

St. Pierre

We

Domestics

Val.

pkga.

■

Exports to
Hayti

424'
287
645
587

116,176
336,732
102.95)4

20,366

127,435

282,970
169,574
56,230

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAMS PERIOD.

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

350
56
68
224

$139,941
17,790

1,252
459

$590,010

116,223
61,129
18,230

230
513

281,378
1*2,563

1,765
358
228
590
483

118,248

$79J,091
202,972
260,160
137,631

28, do A A 21, Pittsfield 9$, Housewife A 20, York 32 inch 38$, do 30
49
126
87,054
87,860
inch 28$, Cordis A A A 82 inch 82$, do 4-4 32$, Everett 21, Boston
Total
;
747
$253,310
2,580 $1*169,248
3,424 $1,336,714
A A 30, Swift River 17$.
Add ent’d for consumpt’n5,588
2,480,101
5,208 2,358,945
4,493
1,974,597
Stripes are rather quiet for the present, but generally
steady. Total entered
at the port 6,370 $2,833,411
7,788 $3,528,193
Jkmoskeag 23$ and 24$, Unca9Vtlle 16$-L7$, Whittenton BB 17, do
7,917 $3,311,311
The table of weekly imports usually pubUiheil on
O 16$, Pittsfield 8 8 9$, Haymaker 16 and 17, Everett 27 inch 23$, I
Maseabeaic 6-3 28$, Boston 14$ and 15$, Blackstone 3-'3 14, American 1 tills page w Illli ere after be emitted, mad Its place anppHed
14 and 16, Eagle 1.2$ and 18$, Hamilton 24, Jewett
City 18$ and 14$ by a f 11 table* Idf Imports for the three months, to W
Checks

also

only moderately active, but prides are very steady.
Park Mills Red 17$, Lanark 4x2 29 inch T8$, Lanark^Fur 13$, tJnidti 60
4x2 80, do 60 2x2 80, do 20 4x2 27$, do 20 2x2
27$, Caledonia 16 inch




are

lished at the ead of
•

'

1

»-'l

■1

»i

»'^l,

«

■

icach'quarter.

j

i. <i

n. '

Oar General Prices Current

(i ,

tuw^n-n 1 'in - 11 "
on pages

will be found

385 and 886.

ip

,

,i. *3 SUSSJUf x V

a.

-O. jL

279 1

AcgUStSl, 1S67J
—*-

.»

Consolidation.—It is

’’w wti 0 r.

'.Railroad Earnings (weekly).—lo the following table we com*

pare-the reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the leading
railroads in 1866 and 1867

:

C. and

Week. Miles of .—Gross eam’gs—,
Railroads.
Atlantic & Gt. Western.3d,
44
“

“

“

“

.

*

.

“

“

4th, “ [ 607
1st,Aug. f
2d, “ J

!!

“

*

44

“

“

f

2d, “
bd, “

2d,
3d,

*•

44

“

“

17142

191 55

77,781
96,282

84,726

“

J

44

“

f
J

213,185
150,445

190,171

152,334

194,628

226,275

410 1

j

26,828
28,640
3",736
32,955

(

l
,

183

l

Marietta and Cincinnati.4th, July *1

f

‘

::

“

4tu, “

“

*<•

“

“

«

“

lst,Aug,
ad, 44
3d, 44

“

2d,
3d,

4

“

Western Union
“

ti

41

“
44

44

75,025

94,630

76,638

18,019

11,655
10,814
11,31*5

•***

90,871
97,730

22,240

1T7

82'8il

78,725
84,043

544

}

3d|

24,990

(-8*012

524

[

J

lst,Aug. I
2d
44
‘

*

24,775
25,055

67,091
78,731

4th,July 11

“

d

•

37,218

6H*647

285

4th,July]
lst,Aug. i

Michigan Southern
*

35,764

37,520

24,1ST

[

J

29,978
32,400

23 334

4th,July 1

Central“

Michigan

“

125,200

31,003
28,165

\

™

3d,’

67,300
70,000
78,000

62,141

64,562
64,692
102,951

410

J

::

105,652

171,095

J 1,032.)

“

Milwankee.lst,Ang.
“

Detroit and

91,947

11,671
11,530
17,177

206 5V
145 90
147 61
165 79

388,480
894,533
451,477
474,441
462,674
528,618
526,959

899,870
343,408
399,364
429,669

472,483
596,583
540,537

541,491

687,121
614,849
475,723

497,250
368,581

6,548,359 5,476,276

Bailway

Erie

1866.

‘

1865.

(798 m.)
$1,070,890 $1,185,746
(798 m.)

_

987,936
1,070.917

1,011,735
1,331,124

1,158,441

1,538,313
1,425,120
1,252,370
1,274,558
1,418,742
1,435,285

$361,137 ..JTan—
877,852 if’eb....

438,046 .March
443,029 April..
459,370 May...
380,7% ..June..
400,116 ;; July...
..Aug...
..Sept...
..Oct
,.Nov

...

..Dec

3,050,340..Year

142
152
163
175

70
34
48
29

159
172
190
199

40
34
23
58

123
92
90
94

54
29
79
11

148
98
99
97

28

158 (k
173 42
186 51

125
65
61
64

101 &4
6 > 97

$906,759 Jan
917,639 ,4.Feto...
1,139,528 ...Mar...
1,217,143, .April..
1,122,140. ..May ..

..

..

,

392,641

887,095
301,613
418,575
486,808

f;*’*24,760
495,072
851,799

338,499
380,452
429,191
500,401
416,690
339,417

4,826,722

4,652,793

..

,

„

^Plttsb., Ft. W., ft C
'

1865.

(468 m.)

'

$690,144

678,504
857,583
783,866

'

637,186
646,995
! 684,528
1712,495
i795,988

1868,500

(712,362
!

680,963

1866.

..Sep....

,..Oct—
..Nov...
..Dec—

641,589
648,887
618,088

'

..Year..

7,181,208

6,546,741

—

679,936

565,222




across

Feb...
.

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

..Oct.,..

—*

■

«•;

|*iNOVh.»

TDec....

*

7

7,976,491

U

208,098
162,694

..Jan..

'72,000. ..Mar

.

87,510. .April.

244,834

212,226

177,864

1*46,744 ! 2,951,595

829,105

..Oct..
.Nov..

.Dee..

.

.

.

413,501
460,661
490,693
447.669
828,869

.

Sep..

..Year..

—

1867.

123,404
123,957
121,533
245,598
244,376
208,785

.

"

1865.

$146,800. ..Jan...

130,000. ..Feb.
131,900. ..Mar...
192,548. April..
230,497. ..May...
221,690. .June..
193,000. ..July..
'Aug...
...Sep...
...Oct...'
.

.

188,815

276,416
416,359
328,539
129,287

..Nov...
.Deo,...
—

1866.

1865.

325 *91

194,521
June..
t July.. (271,798
..Aug... j, 374,534
..Sept... g 378,981
*

i

^

,;Nov:...

875,534

f 361,610

’..Dee.... 1247,028
—rU

’

804,917
8%,243
819,117
436,065
&4,830

164,741

8,tt4,ro

.

•

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

$237,674
200,793
270,630
317,052

.

April..

309,591'

859,665

—

Mississippi
1866.

1867.

1865.

(157 m.)
$43,716
37,26532,878
33,972

July..

68,180

50.862
75,677

..Aug...

.Sept...
..Oet
.;Nov..

C Dee..

(340 m.)
$242,793
219,065
279,6*7
284,729
282,989
:

240,185
234,688
aoj

onra

—

-Western Union.

63.862
*82,147

~

tir-:

833,952
284,977
313,021

r

3,793,005 3,890,583

..June..

..May...

829,078
304,810

862,783

429,166
498.649
414,604
808.649

$259,223 $267,541
239,139
246,109
813,914
326,238'
271,527 277,423
290,916 283,130
304,463 253,924
Q4A OOK
OArt aoa
349,285 247,262
305,454
344,700
350,348
278,701
310,762
372,618
412,553 802,425
284,819 281,613

1867.

(521 m.)

283,661
875/210

(340 m.y (340 m.)

(370 m.)

$131,707

$304,095

4,504,546 4,260,125
—Ohio ft

..Year.-,
Year.. • 2,535,001 2,588.800
Wab. & Westernr-Toledo,

—

-

343,736
365,196
335,082
824,966

..

(242 m.) (521 m.)
$149,658.. .Jau... $144,084 $226,059
194,167
189,171
Feb...
256,407
155,753
174,152.;. Mar...
188.162.. April.. 144,001' 270,300
138 738
316,433
May...

—

337,240
401,456
366.668

108.338

(210 m.)

1

337,158-.

(275 m.)

£346,717

.

—

344,228

.

1866.

S395,579

.

—

265,796

$3UO,i

..Aug..

86,528
95,905
106,269
203,018
237,562
251,9*6
241,370

'119,104. ..May..

—

279,15,

96,623

$98,181

.1867.
(265 *».>

78,976. .Feb..
84,652. .Mar..

106,410

(234 m.)

—

(286 m.)

72,768. .April.
90,526 ^ ..May..
96,635. .June.
1» 6,594. ..July.

1866.

—
—

Michigan Central —
1866.

-Milwaukee’ & St Paul

1867.

—

3,318,514 3,466,922

.

1,186,808

1867.

(410 m.)
$292,04T
224,621
27.',454
280,288
.
251,915
261,480
274,800

1865.

150,148
110,932
111,665

1,222,017

..Year

;r-

(261 m.)
$94,136. .Jan..

84,264
82,910
82,722
95,064
106,315

93,763
78,607
76,248
107,525
104,608
115,184
125,252
116,495
116,146
106,767

1866.

(228 m.) (228 m.)
$305,554 $241,395246,331
183,385
289,403
257,230
1%,580
209,099.
234,612
277 605
806,693
821,818
244,121
238,926
306,231
317,977
389,489 '">400.941
: 307,523 £428,474'
•270,078 0 346,027
201,779 2-260,268

1867.

1866.

'87,791

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

—

$323 97

$336 28

1865.

.

..Year..

—

(251m.) (251m.)
$96,672
$90,125

1866.

u

9,424,450

1865.

.

156,065

•

'-Chic., Bock la. and Pacific -*

1867.

1866.

-Marietta and Cincinnati.

..Sep..

192,138
167,301
168,699
167,099
166,015
222,953
198,884

-

OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS.

1,943,900

202,771
169,299
177,625
173,722
162,570
218,236
216,783
222,924

$643,028

(860 m.) (1,032 m.)(l,152 m.)
$541,005 $590,767 $696,147 ...JAn..
482,164
459,007 574,664 ...Feb..
499,296
613,974 765,898 .. .Mar .
468,358
624,174 774,280 4.April.
880,993 895,712 ...May..
585,623
747,942
925,983 898,357 ..June..,
702,692
808,524 880,324. i. July,.
—
767,508
797,475
...Aug...
946,707 1,000,086
....Sep...
—
932,683 1,200,216
—
....Oct..,
754,671 1,010,892
—
. ..Nov...
547,842
712,359
...Dec...
—

..Aug..

,

$667,516

21
73
98
71
57

Mount Cenis.”

1865.

496,616. .June.
497,521. ..July.

-i aim

2,588
12,056
7,059

r-Chicago & Northwestern-*

671,348

9

8,131

27*
430
64
99
150

1867.
80
238 65
514 29
101 49
189 39
130 72

$703

telegram dated Paris, August 28,
“ To-day the first train of cars passed over the railroad

says :

420,007. .April.
477,60?. ...May,

(210 m.) (210 m.)
$170,078 $178,119
155,893
153,903

54

$627 75

*

-Mount Cenis Railroad.—A

554,201. ..Feb.
417,352. ..Mar..

L., Alton & T. Haute.-*
1867.

49,884

1,985

1,985,712
1865.

41,781
16,571

8,625

d. m

1866.

$242,809
328,632

25#
86#

..

1*471,125

■<

-

757,441

Welland

1867.

_

2,849,069'

Earnings

-1867.

$216,674
375,834

1,377

..

Brockville & Ottawa
Ottawa & Prescott....

..Year..

—

$5,061,048

July.—The following statement

1866.

97

110,664

r-St.

1

B>89,062

..Year..

$2,492,214
1,384,837

.—Gross Earnings-*

315

..

Northern

^360,841

.

miles of
road.

Great Western
Grand Trunk

578,253

310.594
226, S40

...Oct...
.Nov..
..Dee.;

were

operation:

...Oct...,
.Nov.h
Dec.„

...Sep..

above,

shows the gross earnings of the railroads of Canada in July, 1866
and 1867, comparatively, and also the earnings per mile of road in

..Aug..
...Sep..,

,.Aug*.

$2,568,834

Canadian Railway Earnings,

567,679
4^0,626

224,838
217,159
170,556
228,020

304,232 .June.
31*,879 ..July..

as

$2,211,989

116,224
150,989
245,7t»l
244,854
98,787

146,943

ending

2.841

$44,860

(12) 1,228,648

114,579. .June
130,000. ..July..

v.

year

1,464,222

26*,172
170,795

302,437
379,761 ■, Mar..
391,163 April.
358,601 ...May..,

for the

expenses

earnings

(234 m.)
$143,000. ..Jan..
S6,C4J0. ..Feb..

fan.
.Feb..

.

earniugs and

(234 m.)
$121,776
84,897
72,135
m 108,082
267,488

(234 m.)
$98,183
74,283
70,740
106,689

$41,762

$1,107,377

...Sep...

1866.

$50,780

&c., per mile

(14) 728,918

.’.Aug...

—

•$5/744,814

$1,104,612

569,250

1865.

(524 m.)
1302,714

—

506,465
411,605

183.6

(10)499,730

283,951. .April.
338,691i ..May...
343,678. June..
356,142. July..

(708 m.)
$660,438.

$7,876,417

95.5

1,960,938

Earnings less expense*

238,362. .’.Mar...

—

$10,783,906

Dividends

(280 m.)
$240,238. ..Jan...
142,947

:

986,337

Expenses

-Mil. and Prairie du Chien.-

.

-

Gross

EARNINGS

661,971
688,219
604,066

(468 m.)
(468 m.)
|559,982., $560,115... Jan...
Feb...
480,986
662.163
678.349...Mar...'
699,806
575.287.. April..
May..
682,510
506.586.. June..
633,667;
562,378
634,733, July-.
,.Ang„.
648,201
-JSept.,.
664,926
a

(708 m.)
$603,053
505,266

528,972
616,665
516,608
460,573
617,682
678,403
747,469
739,736

1867.

(524 m.) (624 m.)
$363,996 $314,698
283,179
366,361
413,974;, 412,393
409,427
365,1801
851,489
426,493

65 43
97 04

$14,372,185

$4,868,427

. ...

129 80
150 24
160 39

1866.

(708 m.)
$571,536

(775 m.)

—

1866.

.

332 03

65
89
09
37

$3,882,090

Railways operated.

268 90

$7,872,185

4,372,185

follows:

Illinois Centred.

1865.

1867.

Mich. So. & N. Indiana.
1865.

71
49
24

263 24

233 85
211 33
276 24

3,840,091 8,695,152

..

.

6,501,063 14,596,413

The

$10,000,000

$6,901,816
974,601

.

Miles of road
Cost of road,

as

19
73
24
36

$5,000,000
2,872,186

charged the following, viz.

Total cost of road, &c

S69 98

164
170
1%
305

are

Equipment

197 60

157 56
157 47
157 80
25110

(280 m.)‘ (280 m.)
$280,503 $226,152
222,241
275,282
290,111
299,063
269,249
258,480
329,851
322,277
871,543
355,270
321,597
335,985
887,269
409,250
822,638
401,280
857,956
860,-23
323,030
307,919
271,246
236,824

(507 m.)

1,101,632
1,243,636 1,118,731. .June...
1,208,244 1,071,312 .J uly...
..Aug
1,295,400

1,416,101
1,680,317^1,476.^44
1,537,592* 1,416,001
1,524,917^1,041,115

Against which
Construction

1865.

1867

(466 m.y (507 m.)
$289,400 $504,992
408,864
* 327,269

166 09

$5,000,000
1,600,0 0

Total
amount.

C. Jfc Toledo,
April 30,1867.

$6,600,000

Chicago and Alton.
1866.
1867.

.-Atlantic & Great Western.
IsiKK
1KH7.
1806.

176 51
220 11

162 04
200 59

COMPARATIVE MONTHLY
1865.

Stock capital
Funded debt..

235 53

l

Chic.,R. I. and Pacific..4th, July 1
“
1st,Aug. (
“

259 14

527.841 1749.362
S

44

119,016

lh67.

104,542

480

N. West’n.4th,July'l 4 14g f
Z
Kin’061

Chiaago and

1867.
206 20
225 80

82,281

July. 1

4th, 4lst,Ang.
2d, “

“

“

114,477

1866.
275 35
246 68

1866.

139,608
125,070

Erie,

Oct. 31', 1860.

r-Earn’gs p.

131,88

road.

3d, July.'

Alton

Chicago and

imported anthoratively that the Cleveland
companies have
agreed upon articles cf consolidation. The details have not "been
made public. The following shows the financial condition of the
companies at the close of the last fiscal year:

and Erie and the Cleveland and Toledo railroad

’

1866.
1867.
(177 m) (lTla)

45,1024 b $89,079
27.666
36,006
89,299
86,392
48,338
40,710
86,913
57,852
102,686
60,558
85,506
58,262
60,696
84,462

92,715 100,808
61,770 vi 75,248
-17,880 -T *4,478

689,868 814,081

280

THJS CHRONICLE.

[August 81, 1867.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
Subscribers will confer

a

great favor by giving us Immediate notice of any error discovered in our Tables.
INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

_

is not given in detail in tbe 3d col outstand¬
umn it. is expressed by the dgures
ing.
in brackets after the Co’s name.

Railroad:
Atlantic <4 Ot. Western (f 2^,940,000):
1st

id
1st
Id
•

r

Mortgage, sinking rand, (Pa.)
do

do

Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.)
do

1st
Id
1st

do

Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio)
do

do

Mortgage S’k’g Fand (Buff,

)

ex

do
of 18*1
Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (S F) 1834
—

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1865
do
do

do
do

1850
1853

BeOefontaine ($1,745,000):
1st
51

Mortgage

2d Mort.
8d Mort.

do
do

757,^00
886,000
761,000
3,681,900
2,653,000
1,382,000

619.086

1,000,000
500,(XX)
589.500

Mortgage

1

do
f
8inking Fund Bonds
Boston, Hirtford and Erie.
Boston and Lowell: Bonds o‘ Ju y ’ 3
do

of Oct.

8*1

364,0001

200,000
441,(M)
-00, »> t

Dollar Loans
do
Dollar Loan
Consolidated ($5,000,000)

Loan...

Sterling £380,555 at $4 *4

2d Mortgage —
Catawissa : 1st Mortgage
Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage....
Central of New Jersey : 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Central Ohio: 1st Mort
Central Pacific of Cat.: 1st mortgage
Convertible Bonds
Cheshire : Bonds
Chicago and Alton :
1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref
1st
do
2d
do
income

Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406):
Trust Mortgage (S. F.)
Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Moirt..
Chicago and Milwaukee :
1st Mortgage (consolidated)

Chicago <t Northwest. ($16,251,000):

Preferred Sinking Fund
1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds
Ctensol. 8 F. Bonds, conv. till 1870
Extension Bonds
E

tuipment Bonds
Equipment bonds

Mortgage
do

Cincinnati Richmond db Chicago.
Cincinnati db Zanesville 1st Mort..
Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($450,000):
1st Mort.(payable $25,000 per year)
Cleveland db Mahoning ($1,752,400):
..

.

1st Mortgage
8d
no
Hubbard Branch
Xfti
Pain, db Ashtabula: IstM. B’ds
2d Mort. Bonds

Cleveland db PUtsburg ($3,872,800):
2d Mortgage
8d
do
convertible
4th ’
do
Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1866
Columbus db Indianapolis Central:

1st Mortgage
do
2d
Con tecticui River: lit Mort

Conn, and

Passumpsic R. ($800,000):
Mortgage
Cumberland Valley: 1st Mort
1st

2d
do
6 per cent bonds

Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430):
1st Mortgage
do
do

Toledo Depot Bonds
Delaware: 1st Mortgage, guaranteed.
Mtia.. Lacka. db Western ($3,491,500):
1st

Mortgage, sinking fund

Sd
do
iAekfl. and West. 1st Mort
M Moi'i** Valley : Mortgage Bonds
c troit and Milwaukee ($5.206,680):
1st

Mortgage, convertible

1st ft 2d Funded Coupon Bonds..
Detroit and Pontiac R.R.........
do
do

droit, Monroe db Toledo: 1st Most




FRIDAY.

i
W

TJ

i

Payable.

T3

M

«

*

600,000

Jan. ft July

Ap’l ft Oct,

Sinking Fund Bonds.
1st

99' IDO’
1U0

98

:

1,000,000
670,000

.

Sterling convertible (£800,000)...

.

Mortgage

1st
2d

90

-

1866

do

Feb.
Mar.
Feb. ft Aug 1870

Grand .Junction : Mortgage
Great West., 111.: 1st Mort., W, Div.
1st Mortgage Whole Line
2nd
do
do
Greenville db Columbia: 1st Mort....
Bonds guaranteed by State
Bonds unsecured
Hannibal ft St. Joseph ($7,177,600) :
Laud Grant Mortgage

U 2
85

89
90

Redemption bonds

Sterling Redemption bonds

Illinois and Southern Iowa

July 75-’80

1st

2.400,000
1,100,000

Jan. ft

3,525,000
5,600,000

Jan. ft

92

18&3
1895

109
55

102

July
Ap’l ft Oct.

..

484.000
165,0 X)

July

Feb. ft Aug
do
Mav ft Nov.
F.M A.&N.
Feb. & Aug

1885
1885
1863
1915

A*>r. ft Oct

1874
’68-’71

May ft Nov.

86

7

Aug 1882

800,000

81#

Jan. & July 1870
do
896

1866

640,000 7 May ft Nov.
397,(XX) 7 April ft Oct
612,500 7 May ft Nov
2,000,000 7 April ft Oct

1881
1873
188 L
1906

Exteosi

n

Mortgage.

d *
Extension
La Crosse db Milwaukee :
101
91

Jan. ft July 1885
do
>895
May ft Nov 1893

1st

91%

Mortgage, Eastern Division....

2d

do

Jan. ft

July

1st Mortgage
Little Miami ($1,500,000):
1st

Mortgage
Schuylkill ($1,000,000):
Mortgage, sinking fund.
Long Island :
1st Mortgage

Little

908,000
1,000,000

7
7

795,000
534,9)0
121,000
500,000

Feb. ft Aug
M’ch ft Sep
Jan. ft July
Jan. ft July
do

1873
187G
1875
1874
1880

6

May ft Nov.
May ft Nov

1,000,000

Mortgage

1st Memphis Branch
Marietta ft Cincinnati

Mortgage
($3,688,385)

....

1st Mortgage.
McGregor Western 1st Mortgage
.

M’ch & Sep 1873

1,129,000
1.619.500
1,107,546

do
1875
Jan. ft July 1892

2,021,000
692,000

Jan. ft July 1885
do
1886

8,260 0^

Jan

1,00 -,000

May & Nov.

250,000
600,000
161,000

109.500
108,. 00

ft

Ap’l & Oct.
do
do

April & Oct

250,000

250,000
921,000

102

1883

1875

98

M>h ft Sep 1881

99

Jan. ft

97

May ft Nov.
vari

us.

various.

1875
1864
1875
1-78

Feb. ft Aug 1886
Feb. ft Aug 1 m

1,650,000 7 Jan. ft d illy
280,000 7 May & Nov.

var.
var.

7 Feb. ft Aug 1892
7 Jan. ft July 1885

84

Feb. ft Ang. 90-’91
June & Dec. ’70-’71

1,095,600

6

Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds.

315,200
660,000
800,000

1,294,000

6
6
6
7

2,267,000
4,504,500

8
8

March ft Sep 1869

4

May ft Nov.

651,000

7
7
7

Feb. ft

Aug

1885
1877
1868

296,560

7 Jan. ft

July

1891

($9,135,840)

1st Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do
Goshen Air Line Bonds.
Milwaukee db Praii'ie du Chien :
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Milwaukee and St. Paul:
1st Mortgage
do
(Mil. ft Western)
do
2d
Income Bonds
do
Real Estate

1881
1834

15

1893

6

....

Mich. S. db N. Indiana:

1904

May & Nov

4,000,000

Convertible

do
’81-’94]
Jan. ft July 1875 ■

Jnly
Ap’l & Oct

1st

150,000

($2,733,800)

$1,1 '0,000 Loan Bonds
$400,000 Loan Bonds

1872

886,000 7 April ft Oct 1877
500,000 6 Jan. & Jnlv 1875
175,000 7 Fob. ft Ang 1890

2,362,S00

...

Sinking Fund do

11404

1871
1887

102

..

Michigan Central, ($7,463,489)

Jan. & July 1867
do

r<5

Maine Central:

..

May ft Nov.

:

2d
do
(P.ft K RR.) Bonds..
Memrhis ft Charleston: Mort. bonds

J’ne ft Dec. 1876

1.122.500

1,000,000
1,005,640

72#

18—
M’ch ft Sep 1878

M’ch&April

$2,500,000

92

July 18—

283,000
2,589,000
642,000
169.500
500,000

1,668 000
572,000
1,740,000

94

103

1873

6

Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Pojnt).
do
do (Glen Cove Br.) ..
Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000):
1st

'

Jan. ft July 1869

1,300,000

....

Dhigh Valley ($1,477,000):

1890

Jan. &

1,465,000

do

1st

450,000

7

485,000 8 Jan. & July 1882
800,000 h Jan. ft July 1874
900,000 7 Jan. & July 1875
40" 000 7 Marchft Sep 1385
500,000 7 April ft Oct 1880
200,000 ? May ft Nov. 1890

Lackawanna db Bloumsburg 1st Mort

May ft Nov 1880

500,(XX)
5*0,000

July

500,000

do

10

:

82

do

7 Jan. ft

1866
1870

Joliet and

2d

do
do

July

Mortgage, sinking fund
N?Indiana: 1st Mortgage

95

1885

6,663,000

1,300,000

do
Feb. ft

115

1875
1890
1875

864,000

RR., 2d Mort
Indianap. a Madison RR., 1st M..
Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., 1st Mort..

Chicago

1867

2,523,000 6
2,563,000 6
358,000 6

600,000

Mortgage

1st

102
105

6,668,500 7 April ft Oct 1875

Mortgage...

Joliet and
84

1873

1870
1875

do

Jeffersonville, Madison db Indianapolis.
-

75
,

1876

600,000 6r May & Nov
500,000 6 Feb. & Aug

Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284)

90

1898

81

99
92

1869
1885
1875

....

Jeffersonville

Jan. ft

100

1881
1883
1883

3,890,000 7 Feb. & Aug
1,907,000 7 J’ne ft Dec
192,000 7 May ft Nov.
do
523,000 7

Mortgage, (interest ceased)

1st

1870

:

Mortgage

1st
2d
1st

3,040,000

7 April ft Oct
.7 Jan. ft July
700,(XX) 6 Jan. ft July
927,(XX) 6 Jan. ft July
do
2,(55 000 7

Indiana Central:
1877
1893
1883

July

3,437,750
633,600

Mortgage

Construction bonds, 1S75
do
do
do 6 per cent

90

7,836,000
1,500.000

756,000

10
1,455,000 7
2.500,000 7
826,000 7
700,000 7
(00,000 7

2d
do
Illinois Central:

1875
1890

6

927,000

Huntingdon db Broad 7Top($l,462,142):
1st

6

1,000,000

Hudson River ($7,762,840):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
sinking fund
3d
do
Convertible

100

May & Nov.
M’ch & Sep

1,250,000
3,600,000

Feb. ft Ang 1882
May & Nov. 1875
Jan. ft July 1884
do
878
do
70-75
Jan. & Jnly 1870
April ft Oct 1868
Feb. ft Ang 1888
May & Nov. 1893
1868
July.
do
1868
do
1868

388,000 7

: New D. B’ds
Hartford dc, New Haven.: 1st Mort
Hartf;, Irov. db Fishkill :

Ap’l

861,000

7
7
7

200,(00
189,000

Harrisburg ft Lane'r

141,(XX)
786,000

May ft Nov.
July
Ap l ft Oct.

1,919,000
1,173,000

*

do

Convertible Bonds

1870
1883
1889
ft Dec. 1893
880
& July 1873
ft Oct. 1879
ft Aug 1882
ft Sep. 1875

92
9J

Jan. ft

Georgia

873
1879

103# ...*
101# 101#

7

Elg:n and State RR. Bonds
55

92# 95

149,000

(ind. in C. db N. W.):
Mortgage, sinking fund

Mississippi "Fiver Bridge Bonds..

1865
1865
1889

Ang.
May & Nov.

483,000

7 May ft Nov. 1867
7 M’chft Sep 1879
7
do
1883
7 April ft Oct 1880
7 June ft Dec 1888
6 M’ch ft Sep 1875

Gal. db Chic. U.

Feb &

Jan. &

3,000,000
4,000,000
6,000,000
4,441,600
926,500
8,875,520

Erie and Northeast ($400,000):

April ft Oct 1870
Jan. & July 1370

673,200

7 Jan. ft Jnly 1880
5 April ft Oct 1862

Bonds

Erie Railway ($22,370,982):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
convertible
3d
do
"
4th
do
convertible....
5th
do
do

100

99

1867
1875
1880
1885

493,000

2,500,000

Williamsport
Mortgage

5 por cent.

J’ne

900,000

598,000 7 Ap’l ft Oct. 1888

Elmira db

675,000
867,(XX)
4,437,300
1,84’. ,962
490,000

600,000

894,000 5 Jan. ft July 1872
750,000 6 Feb. & Aug 1874
do
1865
160,900 e

..

Pennsylvania:

1866

Ang

660,000

do
do

do
East

7 Jan. & Jnly 1883
7
1894
do

800,000

2d section..,

do

J’ne ft Dec. 1867
M’ch ft Sep 1885
Feb. ft Aug 1877

Jan.

do

Eastern, Mass. ($1,848,4i 11):
Mortgage, convertible

Jan. & July ’70-’79
do
1870

Feb. ft
do
do

:

Mortgage, 1st section

1878
IS'4

1,250,000

(new)
Cine., Ham. db Dayton ($1,629,000):

2d
8d

1,180,950

1,397,000

do

1st
1st

0

Ap’l ft Oct.

2,200,000

■Chicago, Bock Island db P rcific:
1st Mortgage (C. ft R. I.)
2d
3d

"i

May & Nov.
Ap’l ft Oct.
Ja Ap JuOc
Jan. & July

338,040

■Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage

1st

do
do
do

500,000

Buffalo andhtate Line ($1,200,000):
1st Mortgage

◄

Dubuque and Sioux City

J’ne ft Dec. 1877
May ft Nov 1372

2,000,000

Burlington db Missouri ($1,902,110):
General Mortgage
Bonds conv. into pref. stock
Camden and Amboy ($10,264,463):

<s

PQ

INTEREST,

is not yiven in detail in the 2d col¬ outstandumn It is expressed by the
.figures
log.
in brackets after the Co’s name.

1877
1&82
1879
1881
1876
m3
18*4
1895

380,000

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

•r*<

54

Buffalo. N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000) :
-

Ap’l & Octr.

915,280
1,021,750
do
623,500
1,852,000 6 Ap’l ft Oct.

Boston, Gone. db Montreal ($1,050,000):
1st
1st

'S

? 2.

do
do
do
do
Jan. & July

433,000

and A.)

DESCRIPTION

N.R.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount

T3

a ►»

Payable.

Ap’l & Oct.

1,225,000

do
Bdvidere heiaware:
1st Mort. (guar. C.

s

$2,151,500

268,900
484,000

Mortgage
Sterling Bonds

•2*5
O as

Railroad:

Consolidated Bonds
17,105,000
Atlantic SSt. Law. 1st Mort. (Portland) l,5nO,<Hk
Sd

FRIDAY¬

05 ®

N.R.—'Where th total Funded Debt Amount

863,000
2,693,(XX)

.*

.

...
.

Mississippi ft Tennessee ($1,069,600);
1st Mortgage
Income
Mobile and Ohio
Income bonds

,

Apr. ft Oct. 1874
Feb. ft Aug. 1870
May & Nov. 1880
April ft Oct 1882
do

4,269,000 7 Jan. ft Jnly 1893
824,000 7 April A Oct 1893
1,500,500 7 April ft Oct 1884

135,500

7

Jan. ft

July

99
93

100

84

86

93#

80

1875

600,006 6 Jan. ft July
do
297,500 10

108
112

1876
1870

'

($6,133,243):

8?l,90f'

Sterling bonds

4,187,0) 0

Interest bonds

75,818

Montgomery db West Point: $1,130,700
Bonds of 1870

Income Bonds

Mortgage Bonds (new)

8

n
8

May &Nov.
V

do

do
do

1867
•8f i
1884
876

100,000 7 Jan. ft July 1870

810,000 7
750,000It

do

1876

• •••

do

1881

••••

281

THE CHRONICLE.

August 31, 1867.]

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.—Continued.
SabserlbertTwlll confer a great favor by giving as Immediate notice of any error discovered in oar
Description.

W.H.—Where the total Funded Debt
is not siven in detail in the 2d col

it is expressed by the figures
brackets afrer the Co’s name.

nmn

in

FRIDAY.

interest.
Amount

outstand¬

ing.

Payable.

Description.

Princpal payble.

•H

«

N.H.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount
is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand¬ cJ
umn it is expressed by the figures
ing.
in brackets after the Co’s name.
&

<x>

<

Railroad :
Rome.Watert & Ogdens. ($1,848,000)

Railroad:

J(orris and Essex:

New Bedford dk Taunton
N. Haven dk Northampton

...

Bonds.
Hampshire & Hamden R.R. do .
New Jersey ($856,000): Bonds of 1853)
New London Northern: 1st Mortgage'
New Orleans, Jackson dk. Ot. North.:
Mortgage

1st

:

Sinking Fund

SO^i.ivm
f>76,000
224,'H to

dk Gt. West.:
1st Mortgage Construction Bonds.
New York Central:
Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ....
Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal).,

May A Nov.

1915

200,000

April A Oct

485,000

Feb. A Aug
Jan. A July

July 1=86
-pril A Oci 1890

Jan. A

May A Nov
•June A Dec

606,000
(assumed stocks)
Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts).. 1,898,000
Bonds of August, 1859, convert.. |
460,000

do
Feb. A Aug
7
do
1
do

1883
1887
1SS3
1883
1876
1876
1876

3,000,000
1,000,000

May A Nov.
Feb. A Aug

1,000,000

do

1868
1875

Consolidated Mortgage.
3d Mortgage
N lark and New

Haven; Mort.Ro’ds 1,068,500

250,000

and Boston : 1st Mort.
190,000
Improvement Bonis
Northern Central ($5,424,500):
1st Mortgage, State (Md.) Loan.... 1,500,000
N. Y., Prow,

2,500,000

do
do

2d
3d

724,50

-

Northern. New

Hampshire

Bonds..

:

North Eastern:
1st Mortgage
2d
d<

Loan

Ogdensburg and L. Champlain:

anTSSsiskppi:

Ohio
1st Mortgage.
2d Mortgage
Old Colony dk Newport R.R.:
Bonis

2d
3d

Alexandria ($2,923,004):

-

Peninsula

:

50,000

Jan. A

2,500,000
360,000

Jan. A

100,000
300,000

«...

•

.

....

..

•

•

•

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

86

.

-

86*

....

....

....

...

Convertible Loan

Philadelphia dk Reading ($6,900,663);
Sterling Bonds of 1836
do
do
Dollar Bonds of 1849
1861
1
do
do
do
1843-4-8-9
do
Sterling Bonds of 1843
do

•

•

•

•

•

....

•

.

•

1896

July
April A Oct

1880

114*

Jan. A July
Feb. A Aug

1874
1870

.

’•

do

Sandusks/ and Cincinnati:
Mortgage bonds
Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark:
1st

Mortrage
Funded Bonds
Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage
Shamokin Valley & Pottsville:
1st Mortgage
Shore Line Railway: 1st Mort. bonds

Loan

South Cajolina: Sterling
Domestic Bonds

Jan. A July
June A Dec

6

Feb. A

Aug

1900

i.2<*).nnn

7

806,000
500,000

7
7

•Tan. A J nly
Jan. A July
June A Dec

1875
1875
1867

700,000

Mortgage (guar, by Peteisburg)
Mortga e
Special Mortgage
S. W Pacific, Railroad:
Bonds guar. sy At. A Pacific R.R..

r.

.

•

.

•

.

•

•

•

•

7

do

82
79

180,000

April A Oct

'67-’69
6r-’84
’75-’76

•

•

•

84
80

....

...

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

«

• •••

,

....

*•••

....

,

Feb. A Ang 1872
7 Mar. A Sept 1870
5 Jan. A July 1886
6
68-74
Various.

55,000
2,286,111
1,070,000

•

175,000

6
7

Jan. A

7

July

• • •

Jan. A

July

•

•

•••

•

.

r

•

•

.

'

....

.

1886

a

•

..

...

•

•

• ••

....

1871
.

.

7

200, (XX

•

’10 ’72
’65 ’68

do
do

2,000,00(

•

• • ••

300,000 6 Jan. A July k70 ’75

30(V’/ 0 6

•

•

9

....

....

1,400,00( 7 April A Oct 1876
Mortgage 1.180,000 7 Jan. A July 1870
Toledo, Peoria and Warsaio 1st Mort 1,600,000 7 June A Dec 1894
Toledo Vabash dk Western .-(13,800,00)
88
Feb. A Ang V90
900,00C
1st Mort. (Tol. A 'llinois KH)
1890
do
2,500,000 7
1st Mort. (L f-'ri' ,M’ab A St L. RR.
1,000,000 7 May A Nov. 1878 80
2d M. rr (Tol. A Wah. RK)
f o
1878
1,500,000 7
2d Mort. (Wab A We-t Bsilway).
600, OCX 7 Apr. A Oct. 1883
Equipment (Tol. A Wab. R ilwav)
1871
do
1,000,00( 7
Troy and Boston ($1,452,000);
300,000 7 Jan. A Julv 188'5*
1st Mortgage
300,OCX 7 Apr. A Oct. 1885
650,000 7 M*ay A Nov. 1875
3d
do
200,OCX) 7 Mar. A Sep. 1882
Convertible
A
636,000 6 Jan. A July ’68-’74
Troy Union ($680,000); Mort. Bonds.
65
Vermont Central. 1st Mort (consol.) 2,000,000 7 June A Dec 1861
1,500,000 7 Jan. A July 1867 30
2d
do
550,000 6 Jan. A July 1883
Virginia dk Tennessee ($2,177,000);
June A Dec 1872
500,000
1st Mortgage
1884
do
doT “
3d
1,000,001

Mortgage

89

t

i

•

•

••«

‘

.

Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st

90

•

-

99
....

.

90* 91

1 92
1892

South Side ($1,631.900):

1 st.

....

•

•

•

81
•

•

•

•

••

.

223,000
1,458,000

var.

var.

....

.

•

•

•

•

•

e.

....

•

.

.

....

72*

....

....

•

May A Nov. 1866
Jan. A July 1875
May A Nov. 1873

350,000
200,001

May A Nov. 1916
Feb. A Aug 1Q91

fan. A July ’70-’80
do. 1885
104
Jan. A July

.

... •

•

•

•

•

....

•

....

«...

•

.

....

•

67*
35

.

...

....

.

....

....

...

....

Income Mortgage
Warren; 1st Mortgage

7

400,000

7 Jan. A July
8 April A Oct

1873
1878

448,000

(guaranteed)..

Philadelphia :
1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon
2d
db
registered
Western (Mass.) (6,269,520):
Sterling (£899,900) Bonds
Albany City Bonds

April A Oct ’70-’75

...

....

Feb A Aug.
Mch A Sept

1872
1884

Tan. A Julv

April A Oct

18S0
1875

Jan. A

July

1876

April A Oct
April A Oct
April A Oct

1877
1881
1901

Tan. A

July

1882

408,000
182,400

Jan. A July
do

1867
1880

91

April A Oct

1870
1871
1880
1880
1886
1868

90*$

....

....

....

....

1,000,000
5,000,000

4,000,000

9 *

96it

....

....

95

Quincy and Toledo: 1st Mortgage..
Portland dk Kennebec ($1,394,661):
lstmortgige bonds, ext

Ian. A July
do
do
do

May A Nov
•Tan. A

Feb. A

91

Aug

i.
.

...

....

.

•

•

.

•

•

Consolidated bonds
Raritan and Delaware Bay:
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
do
3d
Convertible Bonds

300,000
1,000,000

250,000|
308,000

Reading and Columbia: 1st Mort...
Rensselaer db Saratoga consolidated :

800,000

1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga..
1st Mort Saratoga A Whitehall....
1st Mort. Troy, 3 & Rut. (gnar.)
Richmond dk Danville ($1,717,503):

400,000
340,000

.

500,0C0|
826,000

140,547|
130,500,

175,0001.

....

•

do

Mch A Sept
do
do
Mch A Sept

•

•

.

.

•

•

•

•

.

•

1883
1895

.

*

•

,,,

,

....

•

.

•

•

....

1888
1888
1876
1879

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

.

1890
1880

.

.

2d

....

June A Dec 1875
Mar. A oep. 1870

iTHweellaneon#:
American Dock dk Improvement;
Bonds (gu ir. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.)
Covington and Cincinnati Bridge :

Mortgage Bonds

Mariposa Mining: 1st Mortgage

—

do

Ouic.Kydivr Mining:
1st Mort.,prin.Aint.payable
2d
do
da

•

....

Western Union

...

•

a •

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

•

.

.

•

•

.

*

....

•

•

•

....

•

•

•

....

♦

*

....

•

•

•

...

..

....

•

•

•

•

•

*

•

.

•

....

•

.

•

78
90
•

•

v

..

....

to

.

•

•

a

•

Mch A Sent
Jan. A July

1872
1882
1870

Telegraph:

Jst Mortgage convertible

586,500 6 May A Nov.
6
6

i,ias,70i
1,093,000
227,569

in gold

Jan. A July
do

1863
1878
••••»•

..

3, (XX), 000 6 May A Nov.
750,000 6 Jan. A July
A

July

1883
1878
1878

7 Jan. A

July

188

Jan

6

2,000,000

499.000 6 Jan. A July
629,000/ 7 Jan. A July
Jan. A July
4i:,ooo
1,500,000 l Jan. ft July
2,000,(XX. 7 April A Oci
•

•

•

’74-’84
1885
1879
w—

6J0 0U0

7

Feb. A

Aug

*»8 1881

500,000

*

June A Dec
Tan. A July

1873
1873

1,000,000
$,000,000

v •

....

•

•

.

.

•

.

•

•

•

.

•

•

•

♦ e

•

•

.

•

•

•

-

-

n t

.

•

•

....

1876

6
6

•

*

•

• • •

•

•

*

1S76

May A Nov.

...

....

1876

do

6

600,000

Wyoming Valley: 1st Mortgage

1870
188*1
1897
1887

April A Oct

6

1,764,330

Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds.
Feb. A Aug ’ 73 ’75
do
69’76

143,(XX>
768.250 6

3 980,670

do

Improvement
Susquehanna and Tide- Water:
Maryland Loan
Coupon Bonds
Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds
Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage
West Branch and Susq. .1st Mortgage

2d

2,000,000

590,000

Pennsylvania dk New York:
1st Mortgage (North Branch)

Quarterly.

do
6
do
6 Jan. A July

232,067

Consolid. CoalCoAMd.): Mort.(conv.)
Cumberland Coal: 1st Mortgage....

.

.

do

414,!5S 6
5,434,351 6

.

below M. Chunk)...
Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage
Morris. Mortgage Bonds

1st

....

May A Nov. 1890
do
do

..

Schuylkill Navigation:
1st Mortgage

....

....

April A Oct

Loan of 1870
1 o n of 1884
1st mort. (R'L

Boat. Loan

Feb. A Aug 1881
1881
do
1890

230,000

.

1S89

Semi

6

500,000

....

1870
1871
1877

,

,

...

,

Aug

1890
1890
1896

Chesapeake and Delaware: 1st Mort. 2,254,000 6 Jan. A July 1886
Chesafteake and Ohio : Maryl’d Loan 2,000,000 6 JaAp JuOc 1870
1890
do
4,375,000 5
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed
1885
Preferred Bonds
1,699,500 6
800,000 6 Jan. A Jnlv 1878
Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage...
536,000 7 Mch A Sept 1870
Delaware and Hudson.; Bonds (coup)
Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st. Mortgage.
752,000 7 Jan. A July 1865
Lehigh Coal and Navigation ;

...

July 1884

April A Oct

,

Bonds

Feb. A

175,000 6 May A Nov.
25,000 6 Jau. A July

do

•

•

Cana)

97

9i

7

Mortgage

.

an’ally 1912 104*
1912
do
93*; too
90
April A Oct 1912 8s
May A Nov. 1876
Jan. A July 1884

500,000

1st

...

•

.

•

5,250,000
5,160,000
2,000,000
158.500
200,000
600,000

do

..

Guaranteed (Baltimore)
.

....

596,000 6 Jan. A yulv
do
200,000 6

do
guaranteed... . .
Western Union: 1st Mortgage
York dk Cumberland (North. Cent.):

•

•

1875

4,319,520 5 April A Oct '68-’71
689,000 6 Jan. A Jnlv ’70-’76
936,500 6 April A Oct 1875

Maryland: 1st Mortgage...

1st

2d

.

562,800

Dollar Bonds;

Western
....

...

94

...

,

.

•

1865

511,400

do
Feb. A Aug

•

•

.

.

1,000,000

..

Mortgage

...

7
7

•

•

19(10

700,000
1,20 ,000

•

....

Syra. Bing. andN.Y. ($1,595,191):

•

•

•

1874

106,000
1,521,000
976.800
228.500

Pittsburg and Steubenville:

Interest Bonds
Richmond db Petersburg ($319,000):
Bonds, coupon & registered

8 J. A. J.A O.

9S1,0(X

1st Alnrt lanrl errant S F gnar
Si. F'auf dc Pacific of Minn ; (ls£ Div)
1st Mortgage (tax fr< e)
'
1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax free)

V

149
49

im

Southern Minnesota: Land Grant B’d
Staten Island: 1st Mortgage

...

«...

I860
1872

2,661,600

;

4thMortgage

.

88 >4

1887

•

....

....

July

April A Oct
Jan. A July

Dollar Bonds, convertible
300,000
Philadelphia db Trenton : let Mort..
Philadel., miming, dk Baltimore:
450,000
Mortgage Loan
1,000,000
Conpons Bonds
Pittsburg cfe ConneUsville ($1,500,000)
1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.)
400,000
Fb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,578,500)

mortgage.

April A Oct.

Chicago ($4,000,000);

1st

1

($13,000,000) ;

&»erslMortgage.......

....

1U0

....

1869
186“'
1867

1,494,001
2,900,000
750,000

575,000

do

Akron Branch: 1st

....

.

97
96

143.800

Central ($800,000) :

Bridge O. A P. RR

.

.

4,904,840

Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie)....
do
(general)




....

....

4,980,000

(general)..
Philadel., Germant. & Norristown:

1st
2d

.

.

1,075,000

.

Mortgage

1st Mortgage
3d
do
3d
do

7

-V

...

....

1,150,000

1st

1st
1st
2d

•

106

Quarterly. iried.
•Jan. A July 1885
April A Oct 1900
April A Oct 1874
do
do

762.000

sterling

Mortgage
Philadelphia and Erie

1,372,000

dk Chicago :

Westchester &

1st Mortgage

do
Phila. and Balt.

.

....

Pennsylvania ($18,209,040) ;
1st
9d

•

.

Feb. A Aug -73-’7t
Tan. A July 1881

Mar. A Sep.

guaranteed by Missouri —
do

May A Nov.

•

•

($311,500) :

do

Panama:
1st Mortgage,
2d
do

•

St. Paul dk

....

....

198,500
189,00

Income

Pacific,

96
91

,,,

1894
1894
1894

2,800,000

2d
St. Louis, Jacksonville
1st Mortgage

.

.

95
92

1,110,500
570,000

Rome ($657,000).
1st Mortgage (guar by R. W. A O.)
Mortgage

.

.

•

lfii

»

Oswego dk

1st
2d

1,700,000

7
7

2,200,000 7 Semi an’ally

3d

400.000

•
Mortgage
do
or 1st sxten'-ion .
do
or 2d Extension ..

Oswego and Syracuse

•

i

....

1875
1881

July

329,001' to Feb. A Auv

Mortgage preferred
do
"income.

i

....

do
do
1st

April A Oct

145,000
339,OOi

North Missouri:
1st General Mortgage ($6,000,000)
North Pennsylvania ($3,124,737):
Mortgage Bonds
Chattel Mortgage
Norwich and Worcester ($580,000) :
General Mortgage
Steamboat Mortgage

Oranne db

149.401

May A Nov.

700.000

North Carolina:

A

400,000 10

Alton dk Terre Haute:

<p

1863
1863

1st Mortgage

....

....

1872
1893

General Mortgage

Feb. A Aug
do

2d

6,450,438
2,925,000
165,000

1st

d. Louis,

...

7
7

1,800,000
946,000

Mortgage

1st

do
S i'ramento Yalley;
1st Mortgage..7

..

1SS9

j
($6,098,045) :

....

.

1885

Apr. A Oct.

Bonds of 1865
New York and Harlem

....

.

ft
£.&

7 Jun. A Dec. ’69-’72
7 Jun. A Dec. 1891

530,000

do

Subscrip. Bonds

-

....

Payable.

'

521,50C

Watertown, gnar.

R. W. A O., sinking fund
Rutland and Burlington :

....

FRTDJJr,

709,500 7 Jan. A July 1%0

Sinkirg Fund (Wat. A Rome)

•

....

1874
1873

1,730,000

Bonds—

•

Potsdam A

450,000

140,000

•

•

Jan. A July 18W
18S1
do
Jan. A July 1869

180,000

423,000

2d Mortgage
New Orleans, Opelou.

Real Estate

*

.

Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do
ATaugabuck : 1st Mortgage (convert.)
1«t

Tables.

INTEREST.

7

/May A Nov. 1*7

t •

.

...

.

•

.

•

•

•

•

• • •

....

•

•

....

74

•

a

64

....

•

• •

•

•

.

«

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

• » «

.

^

.

•

m

-

•

•

*

v

*

a

0

•

62

•

»

•

• •

-

•

282

THE CHRONICLE.
.

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK

Subscribers will eeal'er

«

st

report. * means “ leased.

Dividend.
FRIDAT.

out¬

Last
Date,

Periods.

Railroad.
par
Alton and St Louis*
100
Atlantic & St. Lawrence*—100

153,000 Quarterly. July
2,494,900 Jau. & July July
100 16,151,902 April v Oc» Apr.
100 1,650,000 April & Oct Apr.
1<K> 4,420,000 Feb. & Aug Aug.

Baltimore and Ohio

Washington Branch*

Bellefontame Line

Belvidere, Delaware

100

Berkshire*

100

Boston and Lowell
500 1,830,000
Boston and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .100 4,076,971
Boston ana Providence
100 3,360,000
Boston and Worcester
100 4,500,000

10
Brooklyn City
10
Brooklyn City and Newtown.100
Baffalo, New York, «fe Erie*.. 100

Buffalo and State Line
100
Camden and Amboy. 4, p. 599.100
Camden and Atlantic
50
do
do
preferred 50

Cape Cod

60

paid.

’67

366,000

850,000
2,200,000
6,936,625
522,351
600,000
721,926

3

’67 4
’67 5
’67 5
'67 5
’67 5
& Aug Aug. ’67 3%

July
July
&July July
&Jnly July
& July July

15

5

.

.

.

,.

50

2,029,778
6,586,135 Mar. & Sep
4,051,744 Mar. & Sep
1,000,000 May & Nov
Memphis & Chariest., 3p. *87.100 5,312,725
Michigan Central, 5, p. 151.. .100 7,502,866 Jan. & July
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Feb. & Aug
do
do
gnar.100
787,700 Feb. & Aug
Milwaukee &P.dn Ch.lst pref.100 3,204,296
February...
do
do
2d pref.100
841,400 February...
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100 3,627,000 Jau. & July
do
preferred
,...100 7,371,000 January.
Mine nill & SGhuylkill Haven 50
3.775.600 Jan. & July
Mississippi & Term. 4, p. 489.100
825,399
1st pref. 54
2d pref.. 50
Lawrence... .100

100

Sep. ’66
Sep. ’66
May ’67

3s.
3s.
5

50

100
...

Naugatuck

Mur. ’62

July ’67
Feb. ’65

Aug. ’67

82)*




.

.

...

Rome, Watert. & Ogdensb’g..l00
Rutland and

Burlington..
100
Lonis, Alton, & Terre II... 100
do
do
pref.100
St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Cnic.*100
50
Sandusky, aud Cincinnati
do
do
pref. 50
Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100
900,236
Saratoga and Hudson Kiver.,100 1,020,000
Savannah & Charleston
10*' 1,000,000
Schuylkill Valley*
50
ShamokinVal. & Pottsvillo*. 50
Shore Line Railway
100
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
.100
South Carolina.
;
50 5,819,275
South Side (P. A L.) 4, p. 521.. 100
South West.Georgia, 3,
p. 616.UK)
Syracuse, Biugh’ton & N. Y..1U0 1,200,130
Terre Haute & Indianapolis.. 50
1,983,150
Third Avenue (N. Y.)....'
100 1,170,000
Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .100
776,206
do
do
1st pret.100
1,651,314
do
do
2d pref.100
908,424
Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 50
do
do
preferred. 50

1,141,000
Canal,
Chesapeake and Del. (5 p.183) 25 1,818,953
Chesapeake and Ohio
25 8,228,595
Delaware Division

l05%

109

2
2
2

Jau. «fc July July ’67

109%

5

Annually. May ’67

7

....

....

■

•

.

....

....

....

....

>

48
83

83

May & Nov May ’67 3"
•

Jan. & July July ’67
Feb. & Aug Feo. ’67
Jan. & July Jan. ’67

2*

%x

Quarterly. May ’67
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’66

$

•

4

Jan. &

6

July July ’67

Quarterly.

•

•

»

•

•

•

•

«...

3
5

•

•

•

....

mmm

118

....

....

....

....

180

•

....

....

48%

May & Nov May ’67 3X

Jan. &

June’67

•

•

•

•

•

4
4

.

•

.

97%
53

July ’67 IX
530s

56

...

...

....

July

;«7

Jan. ’6-4

137%
4

....

July July ’67 5%

June &Dec June ’67

50 1.633.850 Feb. & Aug
Delaware and Hudson
100
Feb. & Aug
Delaware & Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 10,000,000
2,521,300 Feb. & Aug
Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50 6,968,146 May & Nov
Monongahela Navigation Co. 50
728,100 Jan. & Julyi
Morris (consolidated),4, p.631. 10
1,025,000 Feb. & Aug
do
preferred
100 1,175,000 Feb. &
Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. «fc Aug
Aug
do
prefer.. 50
Feb. & Aug
Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 2,883,805
.

Aug. ’67

Aug. ’67
Aug. ’67
May ’67
•'uly ’67
Feb.
Aug.
Feb.
Feb.

’67

’67
’67
’07

West Branch & Susquehanna. 50
1,100,(KK) Jau. & July Jau. ’65
Wyoming Valley
50
800,000 Irregular. Sept.’66
IJIIsce llaueous.

Coal.—American

25
50

Ashburton
Butler
Consol idation
Central
Cumberland

Pennsylvania.
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill

Citizens

Harlem

....

3

25

^

100
100
>..100
50
50
10
100

3
8
5
3
5
3
6
6
6

500,000 Jun. & Dec. June ’67

5,000,000
2,000,000
5,000,000
3,200,000
1,250,000
1,000,000
3,400,000

Jan. &

July Jan.

’67

(Brooklyn)

Jersey City & Hoboken..
Manhattan....

burg

50
20
50
100
50

114
•

144”

•

•

•

145
90% 92
....

....

47

•

....

•

•

57%
82

•

....

4

•

....

4

.

....

....

5

•

.

99%

...

....

••

58

35

Quarterly. Feb. ’67 5
Jan. & July Jan. ’67 6
Jan. & July

•

40

30”
•

•

....

...

35%
174
50

....

36%

Apr. <fe Oct
Aug Aug. ’66
25 2,000,000 Feb. <fc Aug Aug. ’67 5
20 1,200,000 Jan. & July July ’67 5

100

..

....

1,500,000 Mar. & Sep. Mar. ’67 3iex
2,500,000
.

....

....

2,052,083
50 2.907.850

Union, preferred.

38

‘

1.2*0. (MM) Feb. &

....

....

127%

644,000

170

386,000 Jan. & July Jnly ’67 5
4,000,000 Jan. & July July ’67 5
2,800,000
1,000,000 May & Nov May ’67
50
750.000 Jan. & July July ’67 5

....

...

....

•

•

«

• •

*

.

»

•

•

•

Improvement. Canton lC0.(16Jpd) 4,500,000
.1
46% 48
Boston Vvater Power
100 4,000,000
20
20%
July ’66 20
Brunswick City
1(K) 1,000,000
Telegraph.—Western. Union. 100 28,450,000 Jan. & July •Tn'y ’P7 2** 42% 42%
Pacific & Atlantic
25 3,00J,00Q Quarterly. Aug. ’67
%X
Exjmess.—Adams
100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Nov ’66 2
73% 73%
American
..

....

500

States Trust
Mining.—Mariposa Gold

100

.....

71

9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66 3

100 20,000,000

100
100
100
100

6,000,000
10,000,000
4,000,000
Pacific Mail
20*000,000
Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000
New York Life & Trust.. 100
1,000,000
Union Trust...
100 1,000,000
United
_

105
110

t

103% 103?i
127% 130

5

3
3
4

834,400 Jan. & J uly July ’67

75

Merchants’ Union (30 p’d)
United States
Wells, Fargo & Co
Steamship — Atlantic Mai

1.408.600 Feb. & Aug Aug, ’67
500.000 Jan. & July July ’67
1.224.100 Jan. & July July ’67
6,250,000 Feb. & Aug Aug.’67
895 000 Mar & Sep. Mar. ’67
4,093,425
4,697,457

.

..

and Nashua

William

73

.

67%

’67 5
’67 4

.

48)4

3,5<X\000 Mar. & Sep Mar. ’67 3X8 65
720,009 May & Nov Aug ’67 20

270

Quarterly. Jnly ’67 2)4 105% 105%

2,250,000 June & Dec
2,860,000 Jan. & July
Virginia Central, 3, p. 678. ..100 3,353,679
Virginia and Tennessee
.100 2,94 ,791
do
do
pref.100
555,5(K)
Western (Mass), 4, p. 217
100 8,710,800 Jan. & July
Western (N. Carolina)
100 1,860,000 Jan. & July
Western Union (Wis. «fc Ill.)..
2,687,23
Worcester

Metropolitan

8.588.300

•

....

St.

..

•

27%
70%

268

6

April &Oct Apr. ’67
April & Oct Apr. ’67
April & Oct Apr. ’67

Raritan and Delaware Bay
1(H)
Rensselaer <fc Saratoga conBolltX)
Saratoga and Whitehall... .100
Troy, Salem & Rutland
.100
Richmond and Dan., 4, p.45'5.100
Richmond & Petersb.,l,p.48S.10<)

New Yor.c

114*

27%
69
90

3c5s
’67 3

’67

•

:o3

15

’67
’67

June,fc Dec June ’67
Jan. & July July '67

Providence and Worcester... .100

78

July ’67

Quarterly. j July
May *fc Nov May
Jan. & Jnlv Man.
Jan. & JulyiJnly
Apr. & Oct Apr.
Jan. & July July

.100

Mariposa Gold Preferred. 1
Quicksilver .,.,.,.,......1!

Quarterly. Dec. ’66

74

72%
66%

3'-

66%
Sept. ’67 2)4 112% 113

June ’67 3
Jnly ’67 5
Feb. ’67 10
July ’67 4

July 67

!

5
•v*v

5,774,400

10*000,000

71%
17%

16%

Quarterly,
Quarterly.^
Jan. & July
Feb. & Aug
Jan. * July
1,500,000 Jan. & July

6,097,600

•

63%'

3

Feb.& Aug. 1 Aug. ’67

Portland, Saco, <fe Portsm’th. 100

82%

65

70
91

7

Feb. «fc Aug !Aug. *67

50

•

....

5*.

January. Jan. ’67
Jau. & July July ’67

100

•

S7%

-

....

Portland & Kennebec (new). .100

91%

Jan. ’67

86

4
3
4

'Apr. & Oct Apr. ’67

100

Utica and Black River
.100
Vermont and Canada*
100
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100

125
99

...

jnne ’67 4~ IDT

iFeb. ’67
Jan. &• July July ’67
Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67

50
100

Peunsyl vania
50
Philadelphia and Erie*
50
Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50
Phila., Gennant. & Norrist’n* 50
Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50
Pittsburg and Counellsville.
50 1,776,12!
Pittsb.,Ft.W. <fc Chic.,4.p.471.100

109)4 llU

Feb. ’67
Feb. ’67

New Bedford and Taunton
New Haven A Northampton..100
New Jersey, 4, p. 183
100
New London Northern..
100
N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt WestlOO
N. O.jJackson &GtN.,4,p.134100
New York Centra], 3, p. 769 .100
26,530 000 Feb. &Aug Aug.’67
Nuw York and Harlem.
50 5,285,0th, Jan. &
July July ’67
preferred
50 1,503,000 Jan. & July
July ’167
..

4

100
100

Wyoming Valley
Gas.—Brooklyn

100 2,056,544

loo
.100

May & Nov May .’67

125

5
3

*

June & Dec

pret.

North Carolina.
North Missouri
North Pennsylvania
Norwich aud Worcester

Wilkesbarre

Montgomery and WcstPoint.100 1,644,104
Morris and

Essex
Nashua and Lowell
Nashville & Chattanooga

2

1.600.800

do
do

Mobile and Ohio

Quarterly. Aug. ’67

Panama

127

..

do
do
Manchester and

Periods.

50

8 p. c.,

Orange and Alexandria
Oswego and Syracuse

3%

126%

FRIDAY.
Last p aid.
Date. rate Bid. Ask

ont-

“ leased.'''

do
preferred. 100
Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.100
do
preferred. .100
Old Colony and Newport
100

140

Tan. & July July ’67 3%
1,150.000
2,200,00.1 April & Oct Apr. ’67 3 % 56*4 57
4.666.800 June A Dec June ’07 5
13,000,000 Quarterly July ’67 2% 121% 122'
57
2,600.00(
64
400,00(i
April.
Apr. ’67 6
124,550
Apr. ’67 2%
Chicago and Alton, 4, i>. 329. .101 3,886,500 Mar «fc Sep. 'ep. ’67 5 116*4
120
do
121
preferred. .100 2,425,000 Mar & Sep Sep. ’67 5
125
.26
Chic.Bur. and Quincy, 3, p 261. 5< 10,193,010 April & Oct Apr. ’67 10
Chicago and Great Eastern. ..100 4,390,00(1
Chicago,Iowa & Nebraska*... 100 1,0()0,0<HI Jau. & July July ’67
Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100 2,227,000
40*4 46/g
Chicago and Northwestern .100 13,232,496
do
do
69% 70
pref. .100 14,789,125 Annually. Dec. ’06
10 )4 !03>;
Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific..100 9,100.000 April <fcOc( Apr. ’67
Cine., Ham. & Dayton(5 p.87)100 3.200.800 Apiil& Oct Apr. ’67
Cincin.,Richra’d & Chicago...100
362,950
Cincinnati and Zanesville
50 1,600,250
Cleveland, Colnmbns, & Cm..100 6,000,000 Feb. & Aug Aug, 67 4 100 100
Cleveland & Mahoning*
50 2,044,600 May A Nov May ’67 4
Cleveland, Painesr. & Ashta.100 5,000,000 Jan. & July July ’67 5
Cleveland and Pittsburg
9334 94
50 5,391,575
Sep. ’67 5
Cleveland and Toledo,3, p. 164 50 5,000,000 April & Oct Apr. ’67 6
126% 127
Columbus & Indianan. Cent..100 2
)
Quarterly. Apr. ’67
Colnmbns and Xenia*
50 1.756.800 Jan. & July Inly ’67 5
Concord
:
50 1,500,000 |-iay <fe Nov May ’67 5
133)*
Concord and Portsmouth
100
350,000 Jau. & July July 67
4)3
Conn.<& Passump. 3,p.216 pref. 100 1,514,3(K' Jan. &
July July ’67 3
Connecticnt River
100 1,650,000 Tan. & July July ’67 4
Cumberland Valley
50 1.316.900 Apr. & Oct Apr. ’67 4
Dayton and Michigan
100 2,38 s,063
Delaware*,
50
406,132 Jan. & July July ’67
Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50 11,288,550 •Jan. & July Jan. ’67
125
Des Moines Valley
100 1,550,050
Detroit and Milwaukee
100
452, &50
do
do
pref. ..100 1,500,000
Dubnqne and Sioux City
100 1,673,952
do
do
pref. ..100 1,988,170
March.
Mar. V7 Is.
Eastern. (Mass)
110
100 3.578.300 Jan. & July July ’67 4
East Tennessee & G
‘orgia... ^00 2,141,970
East Tennessee & Virginia .00 1,992,000
Elmira and Williamsport*..
(0
50
500,000 May & Nov May ’67
4)2
do
do
SO
500,000 Jan. & July July 67
pref. 50
4)3
Erie, 4, p. 599
100 16.574.300 Feb. & Aug F«b. ’66 4
69^8 70
do preferred
78
loo 8.536.900 January
Jan. ’67 7
Erie and Northeast*
50
600,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 5
Fitchburg
100 3,540,000 Jan. & July July 07 4
120)*
Georgia
10o 4,156,000 Apr. & Oct. Apr. ’67 6
Hannibal and St. Joseph
45"
100 1,900,000
do
do
68
pref. 100 5,253,83f
Hartford and New Haven.
.100 8,000,000 Quarterly. July ’67 3
100 1,180,000 May & Nov May ’67 4
Housatonicpreferred
Hudson River
100 13,937, KM) April & Oct Apr. ’67 4
124)* 125
Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50
494,380
do
do
prei. 50
190,750 Jan. «fc July July ’’67 3)4
Illinois Central, 4, p.
811
100 23,386,450 Jan. & July Tilly ’67 5 119 :20%ji
Indianapolis and Cincinnati.. 50 1.689.900 Mar.
80>;
Sep Mar. ’07 4
Jefl'ersonv., Mad. & lndianap.100 2,000,(KM) Jan. & July Jan. ’66
Joliet and Chicago*
100
300,(KK) Quarterly. Apr. ’67 i% 90*
J oliet and N. Indiana
300, (KH) Tan. & July July ’67 4
Lackawanna and Bloorasburg 50
1,335,0(H)
50 10.734.100
Lehigh Valley
July ’’67 2 % 114 115
Lexington and Frankfort
100
514,646
ay & Nov May ’67 3
Little Miami
50 3,572,400 June & Dec Jmne ’67 4
Liittle Schuylkill*
60
50 2.646.100 Jan. & July July ’67 2
Longlslana
50 3,(*H),0iM)
Quarterly. Aug. ’67 2
Louisville and Frankfort
50 1,109,5m Ian. & July July ’67 3
Louisville and Nashville
100 5,500,000 Feb. &
Aug Aug. ’67 4
Louisville,New Alb. & Chic.. 100 2,800,000
Macon and Western
100 1,500,000 May & Nov
May ’67
Maine Central

Marietta and Cincinnati

means

Ogdeusb. & L. Champ(5 p.U9)100

Catawissa*
50
do
50
preferred
Central Georgia & Bank’g Co.100
Central of New Jersey
100
Central Ohio
do
preferred.......
Cheshire (preferred)
100

100

Dividend.

Stock

Jan. & July July ’67
Jan. & July July ’67

do

2%

5

last report. *

Northern Central, 4, p. 568..
North Eastern

& July
«fcJulv

June & Dec June ’6
Feb. <fc An^ Aug. ’07
Feb. &Aug Aug. 67

page of Chbon*cle containing

7%

14%

Jau.
Jan.
Jau.
Jan.
2,100,000 •Ian.
1,000,000 Feb.

The figures after the
refer to the vol. and

—

N. Y. and New Haven
(5 p.55)11*0
New York, Prov. & Boston.. .100
Ninth Avenue
..100
Northern of New Hampshire. 100

i%

June & Dec June ’67

K,

name

Bid. Ask.

rate

'67
’67 2
'67 4
’67 5

996,647
600,000 Quarterly. July ’6

50
250,000
Blossbuig and Corning*
Boston, Hartford and Erie... .100 11,877,000

Broadway & 7th Avenue

N.

Stock

standing.

LIST.

great favor by giving us Immediate notice of any error discovered In our Tables.

N.B. —The figures after the
name, refer to the vol. and
of Chronicle containing

[August 81,1867.

143% 144
125
"•
-

•

•.•,

•

•

• •

•

.

■

..

•

••

-;•

10% 11

-

22 :

Feb ’35

27%1 28

283

the

ayi867,]

August

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.
Bid. Askd

COMPANIES.

Wright..... •. .par 10
o
Bemis Heights

Hammond.
par 20
HamiltonMcClintock. ...—
Ivanhoe
2
Manhattan
2
Mountain Oil
Natural
5
N. Y. & Alleghany
5
New York «& Newark. ...6
5
N. Y. & Philadel

^lleu

jknnekoff Mutual. .
Bergen Coal aud Oil

10

Cherry
Cherry

15

»

....

25

Run Petrol m.... 2
5
Run special

.

.

27
1 00

.

.

.

.

N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cous..

•

•

m

„

.

3 50

•

•

•

•

•

....

-

26

$300,000
*H\i\

Adriatic

.

ijUilHA

unit

tn/

•

200,000
200,000
500,000
250,000
300,000
200,000
200,000

50
American *
American Exch’e. .100

50
Arctic
25
Astor.
Atlantic (Br’klyu) ..50
25
Baltic
25
Beckman
Bowery (N. Y.) .. 25
25
Broadway
...17
Brooklyn
Central Park......
Citizens’
.

.

%

.

.

is

GO

'

.

Capital.

.

....

1
...10
...25
...

Oceanic
Pit. Hole Creek
Rathbone Oil Tract...

.

....

Oil

•

...

1 4

....

.

...

...

Jan. 1 ,1867.

Marked thus (*) are
participating, and (f)

.

..

...

...

.

—

.

....

....

.10
1U0

Farm

-

,

.

300,000
200,000

.

.

Kmpire City
Excelsior—

»
®
o

National

First

..

•

•

....

io
—

Clinton

•

•

«

Brevoort
Brooklyn...
Central

...

6 10

*

write Marine Risks.

..

Bra5lcvOil
Buchanan

....

5 00

10

Rennehoff Run

Bid. Aakd

Companies.

•

•

•

Rynd Farm.....

-

15

....

....

....

.....

Shade River

....

....

13

...10
5
Union
...10
United Pe’tl’in F’rns..
2
United States
...10
10
Venango (N. Y.)

•

....

5
10
Great Republic.....
G’r Western Consol.... .10
Germania.

-

■

...

.

...

.

.

10
3 30

..

3 75

153,000
210,000
250,000
500,000

LI MINING STOCK LIST.

100
Clinton
.100
Columbia*
Commerce (N.Y.). .100
Commerce (Alb’y).lOO
Commercial
50
Commonwealth.. 100
Continental *
.100

200,000
J
00,000
200,000
250,000
600,000

Corn

..

400,000

.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

....

P*id 11
}

Adventure
JStna

...

....

Altfomab....

,

S 25
1
.17
2

American...

•

.

Amygdaloid.
Atlas

.

,

.

Madison *
Mandan
8 50 Manhattan

...

Alloncz

Lafayette
Lake Superior

....

,

•

....

....

.

.

.

.

....

.

.

Caledonia

10 00
25 00
15

—

Calumet

•

•

•

•

Canada
Charter

Oak

.

—

Central
Concord

4

Copper Creek

—

66

2

1%

.....

63*

•

.

..

•

1%
•1836
536

•

•

•

.

.

....

6 23

7 00

.

50
2 00

....

2 15
....

Devn.

....

....

.

New Jersey Consol...
New York
North Cliff
4
North western
11%
Norwich
.11
7
Opima.
.
.50
Pennsylvania *

Petherick
Pewabic
Phoenix

...

....

...

•

•

•

.15
536 29 00 32 00
.

.

Pittsburg & Boston..

.

.

....

•

.1036

.

.

.

.

....

Portage Lake...

Dudley
Eagle Riyer.
...

Everett

...

6)
—

Bluff

Excelsior
Flint Steel River

•

9%

French Creek
Girard
Great Western
Hamilton.

....

8
1T%
1%
2%

•

•

.

.

*

....

•

....

•

•

•

•

63
1 25

....

...

....

.

1

Hungarian

19
...10

Huron
Indiana

•

•

5
8

Keweenaw...'
Knowlton

.

•

•

•

.

•

Victoria

....

,

•

.

.

....

....

West Minnesota
Winona

....

00|

4

_

.

6
1

Washington

6 CO

•

136

Vulcan

...

....

33

IsleBojrale*

•

3

Winthrop

436

2%
,

63

1 00

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.

t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares.
20,000 shares.
Capital of Lake Snperior comoanies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares

i Capital $300,000, in

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.
Bid. Askd

Companies.
Alameda Silver
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific

2 0
90
1 95

par
85
1 00

10
—

Ayres Mill & Mining.
Rites & Baxter

..

Columbia (L «k S

25

Hope

--

.

LaCrosse

—

Montana
Ne w York
New York & Eldorado

.

i

95

05

Nye

.

Des Moines

—

|ag!e.. ;.

—

First National
Gold Hill.....

3 45

—

—

Gunnell...,,

i‘66

10

i‘66

.

..

Parmelee
Smith
SvmondsForks.
Texas

5
25

5
130 1 45
11 75 12 U0

—

Sen^enderfer
3 40

6

10

Beaver

—

FaURiver

1 io
2 85

65 GO
35
50
1 05 1 75

—

..

l

...

S. of Cal

Rocky Mountain

—

DownieviHe....

—

.

tnartzTIHll...
eynolds

.

.

10
.

2*70

2 35
12
1 (K)
2 75

....

Consolidated Colorado... —
Owyhee
Consolidated Gregor yv. .100 610 6 20 People’s G. &
Corydon.....
25 1 25 1 30
..

50
80
6

Manhattan Silver...... 100
Midas Silver

—

Crosier....

2

Liberty

—

Central..."..

2

i 66

10

CharcH Union./.

25
15
50
9 15

—

1 05
3 00

—

Burroughs.

Union.,..par

i'io Kipp & Buell

95
1 5j

5

Bob Tail
Boscobel Silver

BullionConaolidated

Askd

Harmon Gas

—

50

Benton

Companies.

Gunnell
Holman

.

.

.

Gebhard
Germania
Globe

—

5 30
50

20
—

—

.

Twin River Silver

150 000

200,000
600,000
200,000
1,000.000

'200,000
200,000

60

.

200,000

—

15
50
50
100

.

.

...

Hope
Howard

50
.100
Import’ & Traders 50
International.’
.100
25
Irving
Jefferson
.

Humboldt

.

150,000

400,000
200,000

2,000,000
150,000
500,000
200,000
200,000
1,000,(HH)
200,000
200,010
150,000
280,000

ftnjrkefhorlfflr

40

150,000
300,000

Lafayette (B’klyn) .60
Lamar
Lenox

.100
25

150,000
200,000

Long Island (B’kly) .50
Lorillard*

25
Manhattan
100
Market*
.100
Meehan’ & Trade’ 25
Mechanics (B’klyn) .60
Mercantile
.100
Merchants’
50
Metropolitan * t.. .100
Montauk (B’klyn) ..50
Nassau (B’klyn).. .60
National
736
New Amsterdam.
25
N. Y. Equitable 3 35
N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100
50
Niagara
North American*. 50
North River
25
Pacific
25
Park
100
Peter Cooper
20
20
People’s
Phoenix t Br’klyn 50
Reliei
50
100
Republic*
100
Resolute*
25
Rutgers’
25
St. Mark’s
St. Nicholast
25
50
Security t
Standard
50
Star
100
100
Sterling *
25
Stnyvesant
25
Tradesmen's
United Stales
26
60
Washington

1,000,000
500,000

200,000
200,000
150,000
200,000
200,000
300,000
150,000

.

...

....

•

17
10
10
25
50
.100
50
50
100
.

f

....

•

....

....

....

.

7 56
3 00

....

X

...

•

•

—

Halbert
Humboldt

St. Clair

•

....

1%

Hope

•

.

12
3
1

.....

•

Lanover
Hilton
Heda

•

....

Hancock
.

Ridge

-

....

....

.

22 00 25 00

St. Louis
St. Mary’s
536
Salem. ’
36
,i#.
Seneca
1
Sharon
36
6 87 7 12 Sheldon & Columfcian.21
62
75. South Pewabic
1
1 00 South Side
2
Star
11%
5 00 Superior
8
’.
Toltec
21
1 00
Tremont
1%

2
2

.

636

17 50 18 00

——

:

•

•

.

10

Quincy X

Resolute

1

-

*

.—

Providence

....

....

10

Empire

....

Princeton

....

30

Firemen’s
Firemen’s Fund..
Firemen s Trust.
Fulton

Hoffman
Home

38 i 25
536
3% 14 37 14 50

.

200,000
2(H),000
150,000
204,000
150,000
150,0(H)
200,000

.

Exchange

Greenwich
Grocers’
Guardian
Hamilton
Hanover ;

....

.

Pontiac

....

Excelsior

....

l
.10

Naninfeejig

300,000

.

Empire City

....

.

Davidson

♦

....

5

.

Milton
Minnesota
National
Native

Eagle

5*40
1 00
18

100

‘*75

2 05

ColitAimis.

Cowlyi:b|QL4;

..

•

.

100

4

•

•

m

Saginaw. uT 8. <fc M..
WaltkttlLeadr..
Wallace Nickel
Rutland Marble

•

U

•

i
^

•

•

-

t >-,




T""

•

•

Long Island Peat.

•

-

par
..

B’jLs 1..u.......•«

’

/ V w’.V

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Tudor Lead

par 5

Bake Baperior Iron....

‘

Bid. Askd

-

Savon

ae Terre...

O

150,000

Vi inkers & N. Y.. 100

Philadelphia

Cost of road,
New works

500,000

and

of this company, as
lows :

....

—

6G, 4t)»>

515,S!K) Jau. and July. Jnly ’67.101
222,073 Jan. .and July. July ’67 5

•

•

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•- •

•

•

•.-*

•

•

•

.

282.127 Jan. and July. Jan. 65.. .5
257,753 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67...5
336,47(1 March and Sep Mar. ’67..5

.

.

.

.

.

....

204,790 May and Nov.
170,171 Fen. and Aug. Ang. ’65..4
345,749 June and Dec. Dec. ’66..5
266,368 Feb. and Aug. Ang. ’67...6
238:500 Jan. and July. July ’67..10
July’64 .4
92,6S3
*

’

*47

—

48

....

.

....

....

•

•

....

838,878 Feb. and Aug. Feb ’67.7%
275,591 Jan. and July. Julv’67. 6
do
July’64.3%
309,622
do
214.147
July’67 ..5
424,189 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’.7,6
228,696 Jau. and July. July’67 ..5
234,872 Jan. and Jnly. July '67.. .5
1;289,037 Jan. and July. Ju y’67 ..7
404,178 March and Sep Mar. ’64..5

•

•

•

.

.

....

.

....

.

.

.

•

...

•

•

•

....

....

....

....

...

.

.

...

424,295 April and Oct. Apr. ’67..6
203,990 Jan. and July. July’67 ..7
do
229,276
July'67...5
131,005 Feb. and Aug.
241,840 Jan. and July. Jnly'67 .5
J «*ly ’66.3%
do
122,468
do
July’65 .6
165,933
do
200,706
July ’67 ..5
149,6S9 May and Nov.
Feb. and Aug. Aug.’67 ..5
227,954
525,762 Jan. and July. Jtly’67 ..7
200,015 Jau. and July. July’07 ..5
2,385,657 Jan. aud July. July '67.3%
’255*657 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’66..5
170,225 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5
177,173 Jan. and July. July ’67 3%
do
July '67 ..5
162,571
do
July ’67 . .5
419,952
do
July’66 .6
152,229
do
July Ct .5
2,271^387
do
July ’65 .5
135,793
do
646,522
July *67 ..6
do
Jniy ’65 .5
195,926
do
July ’65 .6
167,833
800,604 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’66.3%
do
Feb. '67..6
206,179
238,808 March and Sep Mar.’67 ..4
176 678 Jan. and July. July ’67
6
do
July ’67 ..6
302,741
do
Jnly’67.. 5
141,434
do
July ’67 ..6
363,006
do
121,(07
July ’67 ..5
do
July ’67..7
284,005
do
July’67 ..5
1,118,664
do
610,930
July’67..5
do
July ’67 3%
288,917
do
222,921
Jnly’67 ..5
do
July ’67..6
146,692
do
195,546
July '67 5
do
Julv’67 .10
245,169
do
516,936
Jnly ’65 ..5
do
July '67 .5
161,743
do
July ’67.10
259,270

%

•

—

-6
—*

•••

••M
^

■

■

i

.

v ••

•

• «

•

-

.

.

.

...

....

•

....

•

.

-

•

.

.....

.

.

....

....

....

....

.

...

.

.

.

.

.

.

•

....

•

•

•

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.

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•

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•

•

•

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•

•

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.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

...

.

.

•

•

-

.

-

•

•

•

•

.

.

•

.

.

•

•

.

.

601,244|

do

•

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.

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

,

•

•

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.

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.

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.

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,

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...

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m.

....

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....

Ang. ’67. .5
July ’67 ..5
July-67. .5
July ’67 .5

....

•

•

•

•

•

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•

•

•

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....

.

•

•

....

July’67.6%

>-*

•

,

.

.

•

•

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.

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•

....

•

•

•

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....

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....

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•

.

•

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•

•

....

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.5

....

Ang.’67.. .5

....

I

Feb. ’67...5
.

•

•»

t

•

July ’87 ..5
Inly 67 .5

.

...

•

Apr. ’67..5
July ’67 ..6
July ’67 ..5

.

'

...»

.

,,,,

•

Tan.’67

■>

.

•

.

•

-

July’6' ..5

.

•

•

•

J11 y ’67 ..5

Feb.’66.3%
Jnly ’67 .5
July ’67 ..5
Ang. ’67. 5
Ang. ’66 6
July '67. .6

•

•

•

•

•ln’y’67 ..6
July ’07.. 6
July ’67 ..5
Ang. ’67..6

Ang. ’67. .6
Feb. ’67..5
Aug.’67 .5

•

•

%

•

•

....

.

Jnly’66.3%

•

•

....

.

.

.

....

1

.

.

.

_

.

• •• »

Erie Railroad.—The financial condition

as

fol¬

$5,091,400 00
$17,Mir ,732 84 Capital stock
1,000,000 00
106,099 84 7 p. c bonds, due 1877..
.

6

1881..

“

1885..

“

“

1901..

Preferred debt

.

Less assets

f

Total

on

6,000,( 00 00
3.000,000 00
4,000,000 00
600 00

Advances by Penn. PR.
Co. on construction ac¬
count....

$16,984,894 82

(7 he cost, as above, is less yearly
earnings, deducted agreeably to act of
Feb. 10,1862.)

“

“

6

325,000 00

“

7

on

$18,300,832 68
Less earnings to July 1.
1,315,937 86

An action has been

...

hand....

260,643 59
$18,362,643 59
867,748 77

$17,984,894 82

brought in the United States Circuit Court

Louis, tivoompel the city of Hannibal, Mo., to pay 8180,000
for bonds issued Ibr the benefit of the Pike County and Illinois
Railroad, from a point opposite Hannibal to Naples, on the Illinois
river* which was abandoned.long ago.
at St.

—

•

..

—

25

•

....

of July 1,1867, is stated to have been

Ac

Estimated interest
funded debt

Last,

Sale.

paid.

151,002 Jan. and July.

do
200,000 228,628
do
300,000 319,870
210,000 264,703 Jan. aud July.
247.895 Feb. and Aug.
200,000
1,000,000 1,063,825 Jan. and July.
do
500,000
511,631
350,000 379,509 April and Oct.
200,000 244,293 Jan. and July.
do
200,000 212,521
160,000 185,365 Feb. and Ang.
150,000 14',203 Jan. and July.
do
1,000,000 1,077,288
do
200,000 190,167
do
300,000 463,233
do
200 0(H)
185,952
2(H), 000 216*879 Feb. and Aug.
do
150,000 140,679
150,000 156,220 Jan. and Jnly.
1,000,000 962^181 Feb. and Ang.
200,000 226,756 Jan. and July.
do
200,000 195,7S0
200,000 206,731 Feb. and Ang.
200,000 198,182 Feb. avd Aug.
150,000 158,733 Jan. and Jnly.
do
250,000 336,691
400,(HH) 630,314 Feb. and Ang.
Washington *f. ...100 893,700 190,206 F**b. and Ang.
Williamsburg City.50 150,000
179,008 Jan. and July.

Total

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.

Last

Periods.

36,51 S

ion
40
.100
50

.

....

.....

.

.

.

50

.

....

•

....

25 75 26 00

Dana

Evergreen

5%

.

.

.

....

—

....

24)
1

Copper Falls
Copper Harbor

.

25 00
1 87

«

•

.

.;...

.

•>

•

Mendotat
Merrimac
Mesnard

.

....

4%

•

Exchange..

flfiilnp

2

.

Mass
Medora

....

....

paid 1

Bid.

Net as’ts

.

70

City

dividend.

284

THE CHRONICLE.
Insurance.

FIRE

[August 31, 1867.

Insurance.

INSURANCE.

Miscellaneous.

Sun Mutual Insurance

North

American Fire
Insurance Co.,

BuffaloCity InsuranceCo.

COMPANY.

OF BUFFALO

(INSURANCE BUILDINGS)

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1 867.

49 WALL STREET.

Cash

OFFICE

114 BROADWAY.
BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER
INSTITUTE, THIRD
AVENUE.

INCORPORATED 1823.
Cash Capital.

Incorporated 1841.
Capital and Assets,.

WM. G.

$1,614,540

A.

78

$500,000 00

Insures Property against Loss or
Damage by Fire at
the usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses
paid at the office of the
Company, or at its various Agencies in the principal
cities in the United States.

REYNOLDS, Vice President.

HENRY T. SMITH,

Company having recentlv added to its previous
assets a paid up cash capital of
$500,000, and subscrip¬
tion notes in

Wm. G. Fargo,
Rufus L. Howard,
Dexter P. Rumsey,

advance of premiums of $300,000, continues
policies of insurance against Marine and In¬
land Navigation Risks. No-Fire Risks disconnected
from Marine taken by the
Company. Dealers are en¬
titled to participate in the profits.

John

Wm. H. Glenny,
S. G. Cornell,
John C. Clifford,

GRINNELL, President.

PAULISON, Vice-President.
Walker, Secretary.

The Mercantile Mutual
INSURANCE

Metropolitan
Insurance
Company,
NO.

108

BROADWAY.
NEW

YORK, April 16,1867.
This Company having reduced its
capital according
to law, under the sanctum of the Superintendent of the
Insurance Department to the sum of

$300,000,
Metropolitan

Bank Building.

JAMES LOR1MER GRAHAM
President.
OBERT M. C.

Assets, January 1st, 1867

TWENTY

Martin Bates,

J. Boorman Johnston,
Samuel D. Bradford,
W. R.

GRAHAM,

iETNA
OF

TRUSTEES,

Company,

HARTFORD.

D. Colden Murray,
E. HaydooK White,
N. L. McCready,
Daniel T. Willets,
L. Edgerton,

Henry Eyre,
Grinnell,
Joseph Slagg,
Jas. D. Fish,

Henry R. Kunhardt,
John P. Williams,
William Nelson, Jr.,
Cnarles Dimon,
A. William Heye,
Harold Dollner,
Paul N. Spoll’ord.

Cornelius

Geo. W. Hennings,
Francis Hathaway,
Aaron L. Reid,
Ellwood Walter.

Steam and Street
S.

CAPITAL

$3,000,000.

L. J. HENDEE, President.
J. GOOD NOW, Secretary.

AssetsUuly 1,18 67

CASH CAPITAL

Losses

equitablv adjusted and promptly paid. Char¬
Cash dividends naid in 15vears,253 per cent.
JONATHAN D. STEELE, President
Notman, Secretary.

tered 1850.

$4^6 5 <>793 8~27

Liabilities

37

7,668 46

INSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY

Hanover Fire Insurance
COMPANY,

WALL

STREET.

>'

July 1st, 1867
Cash

capital

$400,000 00
187,205 93

Surplus
JAS. A.

ALEXANDER, Agent.

Germania Fire Ins.

PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP

Gross Assets
Total Liabilities

$587,205 93
83,480 09
WALCOTT, President.
J. Remsen Lane, Secretary.

.California,

And Carrying: tbe United

S'ates Mail.
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬
ER, FOOT 3 j Canal street, at 13
o’clock noon, on the 1st,
11th, and

Hope

CAPITAL,

«

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1867

$500,000 00
315,074 73

$815,074 73

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President.
JOHN E. KAHL, Vice President.
Hugo Schumann,

Fire Insurance

Company,

Secretary.

Caih

Capital

-

------

Assets, June 1, 1867

-

-

-

$150,000
-

222,433

This Company insures against Loss or
Damage by Fire
on terms as favorable as any other responsible Com¬

pany.

The Mutual Life InsuRANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
CASH ASSETS, September 1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00.
FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.
*

cetanes




B. A.

MoCURDY, Vice-President.

5 Isaac Ybbatt.

| Joirr

JULY:

1st—Ocean

Queen, connecting with Golden Citt.

tlth—IIenry Chauncey, connecting with Montana
:0th—Arizona, connecting with Sacramento.
Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with
steamers for South Pacific ports; 1st and 11th for
Central American Ports.

stuabt.

VC lary, Sheppard Homans

Those of 1st touch at Man¬

One hundred pounds

allowed e*ch adult.
An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
For passage tickets or further information, apply
it the Company’s ticket office, on the
wharf, foot o
Clanal street, North River, New York.
F. R. BABY Agent.

STEAM
TION

COifIMUNICA-

BETWEEN

TTTITir

NEW-

AND AUSTRALA¬

SIA via PANAMA.

OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY.
TOTAL ASSETS

31st of every month (except when those dates fall on
Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASP1NWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.

iSiiWlWl

No. 175 [BROADWAY, N. Y.

CASH

COMPANY’S

THROUGH LINE

BENJ. S.

Co.,

Broadway.

SAMUEL THOMPSON A
NEPHEWS’ Black Stab Line op
Liverpool Packets, and National
Line of Liverpool and Queenstown
Steamers, sailing every week. Passage office 73 Broadwav,corner of Rector Street (formerly 275 Pearl
Street).
Sight Drafts on the Royal Bank of Ireland, payable In
all its Branches, and on C. Grimshaw& Co.,
Liverpool,
payable in any part of England and Wales. Bankers
supplied with Sterling drafts and through tickets from
the Old Country to any part of the United States.

Baggage cnecKed through.

No. 45 WALL STREET.

NEW YORK AGENCY

62

•

zanillo.

FIRE.

NO.

$1,000,000
278,000

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1867

Co.,

Steamship Companies.

COMPANY.
No. 12 WALL STREET.

W. HOPKINS &

69 & 71

Niagara Fire Insurance

Charter Perpetual.

Roads,

FOR SALE BY

To

.

FOREIGN,

FOl.

ELLWOOD WALTER, President.
CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President.

Despard, Secretary.

The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal
Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of each
month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬
tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the
Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving
New-York
for Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each month
First and second class passengers will be conveyed
under through ticket at the following rates: From
New York to ports In New Zealand, or to Sydney or

Melbourne, $346 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $243

for second cl&ss.
The above rates Include the transit across the Isthmus
of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward
cabins of the Australian steamer: after cabin, latter

$25 additional.

Hoard of Directors:

coin.

Fares payable in United States gold
.

nenry M. Taber,
Riley,
Steph. Cambreleng,
Joseph Foulke,
Cyrus H. Loutrel,
Jacob Reese,
Theodore W.

Le’ be as B. Ward.
D. Lyd.g Suydam,

Joscpu Britton,

Frea. Schucbardt,
James E.

Henry S. Levericli.

Robert Schell,
William H. Terry,

Joseph Grafton,
Amos

Robbins,

*Thos. P. Cummings,
Jno. W. Merserean,
David L. Eigenbrodt,
William Remsen,

Stephen Hyatt,

.

JACOB REESE, President.
;•
r

Moobe, Secretary.

*

Railroad Iron,

This Company
continues to make Insurance on Ma¬
rine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks,
on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬
chandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight.
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Cur¬
rency, at the Ofllce in New York, or in Sterling, at the
Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liverpool.

J.

Incorporated 1819

York, No- 6 Pine Street.

CHARLES W. P'TANDART
Agent.

warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of
the year, will be divided to the stockholders.

James Freeland,
Samuel Willets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
William Watt,

3

prepared to write

AMERICAN AND

discount from the current rates, when premiums are
as the general experience of underwriters will

WADSWORTH, Secretary.

Insurance

are

RATES.

CENT.

paid,

F. H. Wolcott,
P. W. Turnev,
William T. Blodgett.
Charles P. Kirkland,
Watson E. Case,
John A. Graham,
John C. Henderson,
James L. Graham,
Clinton B. Fisk.

Joseph B. Varnum,
Lorrain Freeman,
Edward A Stansbury,

city, and

FIRE AND INLAND
NAVIGATION
RUSKS AT CURkENT
Office in New

scrip dividend to dealers, based
all classes of risks are equally
profitable, this Company makes such cash abatement or

Directors

Dudley B. Fuller,

PER

S. S. Gnthrie,
C. J. Hamlin,
O. L. NimB,
John H. Vought
James Adams, j

This Company has just organized with
paid up Cash
Capital, as above, and have established an Agencv in

During the past year this Company has paid to its
Policy-holders,
IN CASH,
a rebatement on premiums in lien of
scrip, equivalent
in value to an average
scrip dividend of

V Ice-President.

Franklin H. Delano,
Gilbert L. Beeckman.

$1,261,349

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844.

Henry Martin,

James N. Matthews,
Pascal P. Pratt,
James M. Smith,
Adrian R. Root,

this

STREET, NEW YORK.

Bullymore,

George W. Tift,

A. Reynolds,

Instead of issuing a
on the
principle that

intends hereafter to confine its fire business to the
city
of New York and
vicinity, and will also write Marine
Risks on Cargo only, at the office in the

I

No. 35 WALL

COMPANY.

Allen, Jr.,

Stephen G. Austin,

JAMES W. OTIS, President.

Agent.

Richard

L. K.
Plympton,
James H. Metcalfe
John Greiner,
James Brayley,
O. P. Ramsdefl,
Lauren Enos,

Peter J. Ferris,

JOHN P.

Isaac H.

Secretary

Directors.

to issue

MOSES H.

$200,000

FARGO, President.

This

Surplus
255 057 77
Casti Capital and Surplus.
January 1,
1867, *755.067 77.

R. W. BLEECKER, VicePres’t.
F. H. Carter, Secretary.
J. Griswold, General

Capital Paid In

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 faremen

servants berthed

forward,

women

^limited quantity of merchandise
der

do., in ladle*

will be conveyed

through bill of lading.
application to be made to

For further Information,

No. 28 William st. Nev Y

-

THE CHRONICLE

81,1887.]

Angust

PRICES CURRENT.
addition to the duties

f%

noted

J5,, a discriminating- duty of 10

per

\ltai

val. is levied on all imports
tags that have no reciprocal
treaties with the United States.
gSg* On all goods, ware*, and merrkZndite. of the growth or produce of

£££*
uL,

tide

If 10

east of the Cape of Good
when imported from places this
of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty

val. is levied in ad¬
imposed on any such
Glides when imported directly from the
•lace or places if their growth or produc¬
ed Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted.
1
The tor in all cases to be 2,240 lb.
Ancfc«r«—Daty: 2* cents yjb.
01209tt> and upward# lb
8|@
P*r cent. ad
dition to the duties

.

amIiak—Duty: 15

y cent ad val.

Ap5,l8t»o«.7.?llU0tt

....

@9 75

@12 50
HPMwax-Duty,20 y cent ad val.
American yellow.^ lb 40® 41
Bone®-Doty: on invoice 10 y ct.
ton45 00 @ ....
gto Grande shin
Pearl. 1st sort

Bread-Duty, 30 J cent ad val.
$
••
©
Pilot

J.

Breadstuff®—See special report

BoJmmon hard, .per M.

« 00 @ 9 50
18 <0 @20 00
Crotm
Philadelphia Fronts.. 40 00 @ —
Bristles—Duty, 15 oents; hogs hair

55. @ 2 00
and Cheese.—Duty: 4

Amer’n,gray &wh. y lb
Butter
cents.
Butter—

Fresh p*il, y H> * new.
Hl-fl k>n tubs y lb *
Welsh, tubs V lb. *•
Fine to < xtra Sta e,...
Good io a e State, —
Common St it-,
W« t«rn B j't^r,
Grease bn ter, ark.

85 @

24 @
28®
28 ®
‘2 @
1v @

18 a
$ lb 6*^

(lll6860 —
Factory Dairies
do Common....

1H
H
7

Farm Dairies
do Common

®
@
@
®

40

82
23
82
*5
20
26
8*
3»

12
12
10

Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; sperma¬
ceti and wax 0; u earine and ada¬
mantine, 5 cents $ lb.

Sperm,patent,. ..y lb

Refined sperm, oity
Stearic
Adamantine

-

..

® .55

®
30 ®
20 ®

4)
81
24

Cement—Eosendale^bl.... ® 1 60
Chains- Duty, 2* cents y lb.
One inch & up ward $ lb
Si8®
Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 y ton

of 28 bushels 80 fit) to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents y 28
bushels of 80 lb $ bushel.

Liverpool Orrel. $ ton
of2,240 lb...

Uverp’l House Cannel

Anthracite.
Cardiff steam

s

.

..

....

@12 00
@16 50

6 50 ® 7 0
—

....

®1 ■ 00

Cocoa—Duty, 1 cents y B>.
Caracas (in bond)(gold)
y *)
17 ®
Maracaibo do ..(gold)
®
St

•

i*.Steam 9 50 ® 9 75

Guayaquil do ...(gold)
Domingo.. ..(gold)

13®
l*@

18

1?*
10

Coffee.—See special report.

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot,
2|; old copper l cents 38 lb; manu¬
factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing
copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42
inches long and 14 inches wide,
weighing 14 ® 34 oz. $ square foot,
3 cents $ lb.

Sheathing,new..9 lb
Sheathing, yellow
Bolts
Braziers'.
Baltimore
Detroit

Portage Lake

33®
26 ®
<§)
33 ®
25 ®

254®
25 ®

81
27
35
84
25*
26*

254

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; unv-rred

Manila, 24 other nntarred, 34 cents
* *>.
Manila,
...$&
22*@ 23«

Tarred Russia.
Tarred American
Bolt Rope, Russia.

®
@
®

1*4
194

22

Corks—Duty, 50 y cent ad val.
Regular, quartsgross 55 ® 70
Mineral

50 ®

70

Phial...

12®

40

Cotton—See special report.
Drugs and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol,
*60 p-r

gallon; Aloes,Scents $ lb;
Alum, 60 cents $ 100 lb; Argols, 6

®; Arsenic and Assafoedatl,

*0; Antimony, Crude and Regains.
Arrowroot, 80 y cent ad val
Balsam Copal vi, 20; Balsam Tola, 30;
*aba* Peru, 50 oents y B>; Oalisaya




others quoted below; price.

Acid, Citric
(gold) ' 56 ®
Alcohol,
400®
Alees, Cape
2u ®,
.y lb
75 ®
Aloes, Socotrine
Alum

57

8j@
@ 1 4 1

Annato, good to prime.
75
Antimony, Regulus of
Argols, Crude
'H 18
Argols, Refined
82

®
®
®
34®

Arsenic, Powdered
Assafoetida
Balsam Copaivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

®
40
90®
® : 35
® 8 75

60. (ti
38 ®
@

...

castle
gold
Bi Chromate Potash...

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Relined
Brimstou

14
2o
35

25

Berries, Persian
Bi Carb. Soda, New¬

4ti

5

6

,

.

_

35 j

y
ton
(gold).38 50 @39 CO
Brimstone, mu. Roll
y lb
3*
.

Brimstone.

1

lor

Sul¬

phur
Camphor, . i;de, (in
bond)
(gold)
Camphor, Refined

6*
@
2J*
97i@ 1 ♦ 0
70 @ 1 9t>
.

Cantharides
Carbonate
in bulk

Ammonia,
18*@
284®
@ 3 25

Cardamoms, Malabar
Castor Oil Cases y gal 2 lb @
In
20 @
Chamomile' Fow’sy fl>
Chlorate Potash (gold)
«r*@
Caustic Soda
71®
19
19 @
Carraway Seed
14 @
Coriander Seed
95 @
Cochineal, Hon (gold)
2" @
Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d)
lm
Copperas, American ..
Cream Tartar, pr.(gold
29*@
Cubebs, East India....
®
17 @
Cutch
@
Epsom Salts
11
Extract Logwood
11 @
17 @
Feuneli Se d
Flowers,Benzoin.y oz. 80 @
.

gold

Gambier

Gamboge
Ginseng, South&West,
Gum

Arabic,Picked..

.

65
Si

9

_

..

20
l->

97

92*
U
30
3b

17*
4*
,

.

,

60

1 75 @ 2 0 ‘
85
£0 @
5i) @
<8@
So @
84 @
24®

Gum Damar
Gnm Myrrh,East

India

;3@
@

Gum, Myrrh, Turkey.

@
85 @

Hi

55®

Gnm Senegal
(g» Id)
Gum Tragacanth, Sorts
Gnm Tragacanth, w.

..

40
85

86
.25
45

28

flakey.
(g »ld) 60 @ 1 < 0
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and
Eng
(gold) 8 60 @ 8 80
Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 ®
Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 85 @ 3 9‘
85 @
90
lalap, in bond gold..
25 @
55
Lac Dye
33 @
24 @

Licorice Paste,Calabria

Lioorice, Paste,Sicily.
Licorice Paste

Spanish

84 @

Solid

Licorice Paste* Greek.
Madder, Dutch. .(gold)

dq, French, EXF.F.do
Manna,large flake.... 1

Manna, small flat; e.... 1
Mustard Seed, Cal..,.
Mustard Seed, Trieste.
Nqtgalls Bine Aleppo
.

Oil

Bergamot

7 00

2 fO @ 2 15
7 @
8
20 @

Salaratus
Sal Am’n ac, Ref (gold)
Sal Soda. Newcastle...

..

i*@

£*©

Sarsaparilla, Hond
Sarsaparilla, Mex

,

,

@

.

•

..

Seneca Root

4U

@
@

Senna, Alexandria....
Senna, Eastlndia

25

@

She'l Lac
Soda Ash

4tl

..

ex

30
25
£0

@
@
28 @
2 2d

36
25

..

dry

2* 25

@

6 75 @
51 @
U @
88 @
10 @

Tapioca

Verdigris, dry.,

,

.

..

Acid..(g’ld)yfi)

Vitriol, Blue

,

20 @

(Soyc.Xg’ld)
Sugar L d, W’t(gO'd)..
Tart’c

,

•

•

•

•

..

40

..

•

Duck—Duty, 30 y cent ad vaL
Raven3, Light, .y pee 16 00 ®
Ravens, Heavy
;8 0u @
Scotch, G’ck, No.l yy
@
Cotton,No. 1... y y.
(0®
.

72

.

Axes—Cast steel, best
biand
perdez
do
ordinary

Camwood,

.(gold)y t nl'.tO 0G@
Fustic, Cuba
3i 00 ® 82J)0
Fustic,Savanilla
®
Fustic, Maracaibo
25 00 ®
t ogwood, Hon
80 00 ®
Logwood,Laguna(g->ld)
®
Logwood, St. D-min.. 16 00 ®
Logwood, Cam.(gold)
®
Logwood .Jamaica <0
@16 00
Limawood
@12u 00
Barwood
(gold)
@ 5 00
Feathers—Duty: 30 y centad val.
Prime Western...y lb
to @
....

Carpe tir’s Adzes,....
do ordinary
Shingling Hatchets, Ct
ttteel, best br’ds, Nos.

...

....

...

...

80 @

Ct.tton

Gins, per saw... $5@fi less 20 %
Narrow Wrougnt Butts List 5 % dis.
Cast Butts—Fast Joint. List 10 £alv
“
Loose Joint..
List.

Fisk—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
y bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than bar¬

HingesW r»

2S

Fruits—See special report.

y cent.
Beaver,Dark..y skin 1 00 @ 4 00
do
60 ® 2 00
Pale...
Bear, Black
5 00 @i2 00
ao
brown
2 00 @ 8 00
Badger
50 @ 1 GO
Cat, Wild
50 @
75
do House
10 @
20
Fisher,
4 90 @ 8 00
Fox, Silver
5 0V @50 00
do Cross
3 00 @ 5 00
.......

1 00 @ i 5o

50 @
2 oO @ 4
5 00 @20
2 i'0 @ 5
: 3 00 @ 6
8 @

Lynx
Marten, Dark

pal<‘

do

Mink, dark
Musk rat,
Otter

75
« 0

0o
0o
00

2-Q
5 00 @ 8 0o

Opossum

-

15 @

@

Raccoon

;o

Skuik, B;ack

8()

5q

30 @

square foot; larger and not over 24
x39 inches 6 cents y square foot;
above that, and not exceeding 24x60
inches, 20 cents y square foot; all
above that, 40 cents y square foot*

unpolished Cylinder, Crown, ana

Common Window, not exceeding lOx
15 inches Bquare, 14; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not
over

24x30 ,24 ;

all

over

that, 8 cents

y fl>.

Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th
qualities.
Subject to a discount of 5 y cent.
6x 8 to 8x10. .y 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50
American

8x
I lx

tol0xl5
to 12x18

i2xl9to 16x24
18x22 to
20x31 to
24x31 to
26x36 to
80x46 to
32x50 to
Above

20x30
24x30
24x36
30x44

32x48
82x56.

7
9
9
11

75
25
50
75
14 50
16 00
17 00
18 00
20 00
24 00

@ 6 00

@ 6 50
@ 7
@ 7
@ 9
@!.0
@11
@12
@18
@15

00
50
00

00
00
00
00
00

Pr'tch Window—1st, 2d,
qualit;es.
(SUgleThiok)—Discount 85@45yeert
6x 8 to 8x10, y50 feet 7 75 @ 6 00

Si,

and 4th

.

L

st 30

% 8is

Door L ci> s and Latches List 7$
Door Knobs—Mineral. list 7}
“
i'orct-lain
Li-t 7*
Padlocks
N w List 25&?4
.

Locks—Cabinet, Eagle
'

“
Trunx
St cksanci Dies
3crew Wrencbt8—Coe’s

Paten:.

f
%
%
%

dia.
uis.

dis.
dis.
List Id % o1s.
List 15% dis
List 85^ dis.
List 25 % dis;
L si 65 % dia,

do
1 lift’s
Sm ths’ Vis

s
y lb 20 @ 22
Framing Chisela.NewLisi374 u jtdis,

tinner

<10

do
in sets

uo

insets.

List40£adv

handled,

List40jCadv.
List L5& 10 % dis
Phoft Ausrurs,per dz.NewList 30 % di*.
Ring
do
List 30 % dis,
CutTacks
Li&i75jtdis

Augur Bitts

Cut brads

Ir«

List 60 % dis.

List 5&40
Screws American.. .List 37@40
do
Eng ish..
List 2 @oU
Shovels snil Spades...
List 5
,

n

..

HorseShoes
Planes

% dis.
% dia.
% dis.

% dis.

6i@7|yfi>

List 30® 35 j6adv
Huy—North Rivor, in baleby 100 lbs
for shipping
80 @ 1 (0
Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila,
$-5; Jnte, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn
and Sisal, $15 y ton; and Tampico,
1 cent y lb.
Amer. uressed.y ton 840 00@860 00
do
Undressed.. 2i0 0d@<90 00
Russia, Clean
84‘i 00@ »6o ( 0
*

Jute

(gold) il2 00@120 00

Manila..y lb..(gold)

11 @
11*
13 @
lo*
Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 y cent ad val.
Dry Hides—
Pucnos Ayrssy Ibg’d
21®
22
Montevideo
do
21
@
Rh> Grande
do
20 @
2t
‘Orinoco
do
19
18*@
California
gold
20 @
H‘*
@
California, Mex. do
Porto Cabello ..do
16 @
17
Yera Cruz
do
is
17*@
Sisal

..

t»la*s—Duty, Cylinder or Window
Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches,
24 cents y square foot; larger and
not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents y

on

List 5 % ady

ht,

Carriage and Tire do List 1OS 61 % dis

Rivet

Furs— Du.y,lo

u.

Door B< Its, Cast Bbl.

rels, 50 cents y 100 R>.

Flax—Duty: $15 y ton.
y tt>
16 @
Jersey

16
14
27
25

.

82

Dry Cod......y cwt. 1 00 @ 7^,50
Pickled Scale... y bbl. 4 f «• @ 5 tO
Pickled cod
y bbl. 6 50 @
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass
shore
20 00 @21 00
Mackerel, No.l,Halifaxl8 00 @19 00
Mackerel,No. I, Bay..18 00 @13 50
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..! -t 0 > @
Mackerel, No. 2, Ha ax 16 • @16 50
Mac’el,No.3,Ma>s. l’ge 9 75 @
Mackerel, No. 8, H’fax
@
Mackerel, No. 8, Mass
@ 8 50
Salmon, Pickled, No. 1.^7 0t> @ —
8a mon, ri kled. p. tc
@
40 @
Herring, Scaledy box.
4*>
Herring, No. 1
16 @
13
Herring,pickledybbl. 4 50 ® 5 5U

15 @
13 @
24 @
21 @

1 to 3
8 00 @ 9 50
do ordinary
6 17 @ 7 50
Broad atch’s 3toS bst. 15 60 @25 00
do «) diary
12*0®....
Coffee Mil s
Listit % dis,
do Bri
Hopper
@ ....
do Wood Bacs
@ ...

....

do Red
do Grey

..

Hardware-

Dye Woods—Duty free.

»

8 25 @
9 75 @
10 50 @

$ 50
7 00
to 16x24
7 50
to 24x80
15 50 @1* 00
to 24x86
16 50 @18 00
to 30x44.
18 00 @15 00
to 82x48.
20 50 @16 00
to 32x56.
24 00 @18 00
Groceries—See special report.
Gunny Bags—Duty, valued at 16
cents or less, y
square yard, 3; ovo»
10, 4 cents y
Calcutta, light & h’y % 21|@
21 f
Gunny Clotli—Duty, valued at 1C
oents or less y square yard, 3; ovei
10,4 cents y lb.
Calcutta, standard, Y’d
@
24|
Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 2t
cents or less W lb, 6 cents
y lb, an
20 y cent ad val.; over 20 cents $
lb, 10 cents y lb and 20 y centad vat1
Blasting(A) y 261b keg
@ 4 00
Shipping and Mining..
@4 50
Rifle
6 50 @
Sporting, in 1 lb canis¬
ters y lb
86 @ 1 06
Hair—Duty free.
RioGrande,mixed y lb
86 @
«7
Buenos Ayres,mixed
@
St
Hog,Western, unwash.
11 @
12

86
80

@

..

Sago, Pei.led

English and

Oil Anis
•.«4
Oil Cassia..
8 75

.

,

4*

Gum Arabic, Sorts...
Gum Benzoin
Gum Kowrie
Gom Gedda

Quicksilver

8x11 to 10x15
to 12x18.

11x14
12x19
20x31
24x31
24x36
80x45
82x50

90

68 @
15 @

...

@
8 4®
8*@

Crude

Phosphorus
Prnssiate Potash.

....

@
19 @

..

OilLemon
8 87 ®
25
Oil Peppermint, pure. 5 b'*@
«0
6 87* @ 7 00
Oxalic Acid
88 @

Tennessee

21
b5

...

®

Liverpo 1 Gas Cann-1

Newcastle G.

Bark, 80 y cent ad val.: Bi Carb. Soda,
14; Bl Chromate Potash, 3 cents y lb;
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents y 1001b ;
Refined Borax, 10 cents y lb ; Crude
Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10
y ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 y ton, and
15 y oent ad v&l.; Crude Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents y fi>.;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 y cent ad vaL;
Cardamoms and Canth&rides, 50 cents
y lb; Caster Oil,$1 y gallon; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic .Soda, 14;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, 4; Cream
Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents y lb;
Catch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
y cent ad val.; Epsom 8alts, 1 cent
y lb; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Benzola and Gamboge, 10 y cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gam Arabic, 20 y cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per fi>;
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 y
oent 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 y lb; Oil Peppermint, 50
y cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents y B>; Phosphorus, 20
y cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents
y fi>: Quicksilver, 15 y cent ad
val.; Sal JSratus, 1* cents y fi>; Sal
Soda, 4 cent y lb; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 2u y cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; Soda Ash, 4; Sugar Lead, 20 cents
y lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 y cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 y oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
y lb; Sal Ammoniac, 2u; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 y cent ad val.; Eiherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts,$1 y lb; all

285

"

do

Tampico
Texas

cur

17*@

18

20 @

22*

15®

It

Dry Salted Hides—
Chli
(gold)
< > llfornia... .do
co
.
South & Wesr.

do

Bue Ayres.y
Rio Grande
California

lbg’d.

Tamp

do
Wet Salted Hides—
....

do
do

Western

Coutry sl’ter trim. A
cured.

..

@

4*@

If

11 @

12

11 @

11*

11®
J1 @
12*®

11*
11*
13

l-'«@

18

do
do
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip
y ft cash.

1«*@

14

2^ @

70

Sierra Leone— do

12 @

City

Gambia & Bissau do
25 @
27
Honey—Duty, 2 sent y gallon.
Cuba (in bond) (gr1
y gall. 68 @
60
Hops—Duty: 5 coui.6 y lb.

Crop of 1866
do of 1865

Foreign

.....

y lb

45 @

70

40 @

0Q

20 @

40

286

THE > GHROfclCLE.

IfDuty, 10 $

cent, ad val.
9 < 0®
7 00@
8 00

Ox, Rio Grande... $ C

do

St. Domingo,
ordinary logs.
do
Port-au-Platt,

....

Ox, America a
Indim Rubber-Duty, 10 $ cent

crotches
do
Port-au-Platt,

ad val.

Para, Fine
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

$ lb

do

Carthagena, Ac

40

Bengal

(.old) $ft 1 05 @ 1 70

(gold)

75 @ 1 85
60 @
10
65 @ 1 00
(gold)
Guatemala
(gold)
95 @ 1 ‘20
Caraccas
(gold)
75 @ i 0 i
Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1| cents $ ft.
Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 ft; Boiler
and Plate, 14 cents $ lb; Sheet, Band,
Hoop, and Scroll, 1| to 1| cents $ lb;
Pig, $9 IP ton; Polished Sheet, 3
cents $ tb.
Pig, Scotch,No 1.
$ ton 42 00® 45 00
Pig, American, No. 1
@ 44 0)
Bar, ReliM luig&Amer 1*5 l) @ 90 00
Bar, Swedes, assorted
sixes (in gold)
92 50(3)105 00

(gold)

^-Stobr Pricks—,
Bar Swedes, assorted
sizes
@155 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
ican, Relined

100

00@1 '5 00

do
do
do Common 90 00® 95 0
Scroll
132 50® 8 > 00
Ovals and Naif Round 127 50@137 50
Band
@182 60
HorseShoe
127 50®
...

Rods,5-8®3-16inch.. 105 00® 16. 00
Hoop
137 50® ,t»2 (0

Nail

Rod

$ lb

9 ®
2 > ®

Sheet, Russia
Sheet, Single, Double

lit]
22

and Treble

6®
Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 52 5 ® r8
do American
79 O '® r2
Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $ft 2 ^7® 3
East Ind Billiard Ball 3 no® 8
African, Prime..
2 87® 3
African, Seri vel.,W.C, 1 (0® 2
,

..

Lead—Duty, Pig, $2

100 lb

7$
Ou
50
12
25
12
50

Old

Lead, 14 cents $ lb; Pipe and Sheet,
24 cents $ lb.
Galena
$ 100 lb
@ 9 374
Spanish
(tro:d) 6 50 ® 0 62,
German
(g«*l ) 6 Ml ® 6 624
English
(goM) 6 50 ® 6 S?4
Bar
net
@ 10 Oft
net
Pipe and Sheet
@10 50
leather—Duty; sole .15, upper 3o
..

..

..

$ cent ad val.

.—cash. $ ft.—,
Oak, Slaughter, light
39 @
42
do
do
middle
44
33 @
iio
do
40 @
4’>
heavy.
do light Cropped ...
41 @
47
do middle do
47 @
50
do bellies
do
21
@
.

....

....

Heinl’k, B. A.,Ac..Ft.
do
do
do

do
do

3*4 @

middle.

heavy

yy

do middle.
do
heavy.

do
do
do
do
do

82

304®
@
3 @
30 @
21. @

.

Califor., light.

do

814
314

3th @

Orino., etc. I’t.

do
middlo
do
heavy.
do tfc B. A,

30
3 <4
80
*•

2'h@
27.®

datn’gdall w’g’a
do poor
do
do
Slaugh.inrouirh
Oak, Slaugh.in rou., I’t
do

25 @
19 @
37

@

do

41
37

@
@

do

do

mid.

and

4

30

•:«4
21
8*
41

41

4 ’
40 @
heavy
jlnifl—Duty: 10$ cent ad val.
Rockland, corn. $ bbl.
@ 1 10
do
heavy
@ 1 85
fiUmbcr, Woods, Staves,etc.
—Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood
and Cedar, frbk.
Spruce, East. $ M ft 18 00 ® 20 00

Southern Pine
White Pine Box B’ds
White Pine Merch.
Bor Boards
Clear Pine

30 iH» ® 85
3o 00 ®

80 00

® 100 00
3 00 ®

Black Walnut
STAVESWhite
oak,

® 65 0u
85 00 ® 10 00
100 DO ®120 00

pipe,

extia.

®-',oo on
@250 00
@200 0(i
@180 0(!
@250 on
@200 00
@12 • on
@100 00
@ 175 00
@140 no
@110 0(@ 60 00

do
pipe, hoavy
do
pipe, light.
do
pipe, culls . 1
do
hbd., extra.
do
hbd., heavy
do
hkd., light.
do
hhd., culls.
do
bhi., extra
do
bbi., heavy.
do
bbl., light..
do
bbl., culls..
Red oak , hhd., h’vy.
do
hhd., light..
.

@130 (M'
@ 90 00

HEADING —White
oak, hbrt

Sahofanf,

@150 00

Cedar,
WOM-Duty free.
Mahogany St. Domin¬




go

00

60 00

...

OTOtObM, V ft,,

Ho«c>

tt O

20
12
12
12

Salt—‘Duty: sack, 24

Rosin,

(280 lbs.)
Spirits turp., Am. $

@ 5 o2

Oakum

5 75 @ 3 00

68®

g.

61

Duty fr.,$ tb
11
S@
Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val.
City thin obl’g, in bbls.
$ ton.66 00 @61 00
—

Oils

-

in bags. 7 (H) @58 00

-

obl’g, do 55 0J @56 0»
Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and

rape seed, 23 cents; oiive and salad

oil, in bottles or flasks, $1 : burning
fluid, 50 cents $ galloa; palm, seal,
and cocoa uut, to $ cent ad
val.;
sperm and whale or other lish (for¬
eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val.
Olive, qs (gold per case 5 87f@
do in casks.$ gall.. 1 65
@ 1 65
Palm
$ lb
II @
114
Linseed,city...$ gall. 1 28 @ 1 31
Whale
do refined winter..

7

do
do
flolar

.

..

50

53

6A

2 50 @ 2

65

71

do

50 @
<®
50 @

52
52

_

coarse
....

white, xVinerican,

pure, in oil
do while, American,'
puie, dry

Zinc, white, American,

@
13 @

Nitrate soda

gold

Seeds—Duty; linseed,

35

134

$

Copper

.go.d

Cape
Deor,SanJuan$ftgold

8> @
40 @
@
@
81 @
40 @
85 @
50 @

...gold

374@

VeraCruz .fxold

Tampico. ..gold

..

Matamoras.gold

Payta

..

gold

Madras ....each

do

Bolivar

do
do
do
do
do
do

Honduras..gold

@
574®
CO @
@

Chagres ...gold
Puerto Cab .gold

524®

..

Sisal
gold
Para
gold
Vera Cruz .gold

..

104

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued

12

and 10

15

over 11

cents, 34 cents $ ft
$ cent ad val. (Store prices.)
English, cast, $ ft
18 @
23
German
11 @
16
.

.

American,spring......

2*

Amer

1)

12 @

English,spring.

‘-5

....

....

....

40
0>
40
80

.

871
oft
...

50
0>
35
00

Petroleum-Duty: crude,20 cents;
refined, 40 -.ent.s $ gallon.

Crude,40@17grav.$gHl.

@
17
Refined, free
4' @
do
in bond
254®
Naptha, refined
21 @
22
Residuum
$ bbl. 8 00 @ 3 70
...

Pluslpr Pn.ri«—Duty: lump,free;
calcined, 20 $ cent ad val.
Blue Nova Seotia$ toe
@ 4 00

c

19

n cast

15

@

i.nglisn maciiineiy

124

1*4®

English b ister

20
16

13f@

Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Sicily$ ton.. 150 00 @225 00

Sugar.—See

sp

cia’ report

llf@

...

Calcined,ear*,ern$ bbl

4 00

@

..

@ 2 40
Cftloined city mills
@ 2 50
Provision**—Duty:beef aud pork,
1 ct; lams, bacon, and lard, 2 ts $ ft.
3eof, plain mesa$ bbl..18 00 @24 00
do extra mesa....*. .24 00 @2S 01
Pork)meaa,new...«.-23 60 @2i 00
do me*• )ld
...22 92 @
.—

....

....

$ ft
do

124

—Duty: pig,bars,and block,15$

$ ft .’(gold)
@
264
(geld)
24|@
English
(geld) 23 @
Plates,char. I.C.$ box 13 00 @13 ’5
..

I. C. Coke
.1" 75 @12 5o
Terne Charcoal 12 50 @12 75
Terne Coke.... 9 75 @10 0)
...

Tobacco.—See special report.
Wine* and

per

tall on* other liquors, $2.50. Winks—
>uty value
50
»gMad

valorem;

net

over

cents

$ gallon and 25 $ cent

over 5* and not over 100.
$ gallon and 25 $ cent aa
valorem: over $1 $
gallon, $1 $ gal'
Ion and 25 $ oent ad val.

50 cents

the last

United

$ ft, ;2

$ ft and 10 $

Class 3 .—Carpet

cent, ad val.

Wools and other

sto'Olar Wools—The value
whereof at
the last place whence
exported to the
United States is 12 cents or
less S
ft, 3 cents $ ft ; over 12 cents
$ ft,
6 cents $ ft
Wool of all classes
Imported scoured, three times the

duty as if imported unwashed.
Amer., Sax. fleece $ lb
65 @ 65
do
full bl’d Merino,
50 @ (5
do 4 and 4 Merino..
45 @ 46

Extra, pulled

4 >
4>
r8
•c8

Superfine
No. 1,

pulled
California, unwashed.;

do
Texas

.

18
lh

Peruvian, unwashed..
Valparaiso, unwashed.
8. Amer. Mestiza, unw.
do
Entre

82
80

ta

...

8. American Cordova ;,

African, unwashed
do

3«
78

....

washed

do

@ 2S
@ 38
@
@ 80
@ 84
@ 8i
@ 46
@ 88

38
26
85

—

washed

,

@ 25
@ 40
@ 21
@ 80
@ 45

8-

Mexican, unwashed....
Smyrna, unwashed

85

80

,

28

common, w...

Rios, washed

@
® 50
@ 45

80 @
80®
24 @

common...

v

Zinc—Duty: pig
100

ft».;

sueeis

Sheet

or block, $1 50 #
24 oents $ ft.
$ ft
@ 11|

ft’reijftits—

To Liverpool :
Cotton
$ ft
Flour
$ bbl.
Petroleum

s.
..

..

Heavy goods. ..$ ton

Pork
To London

d.

s.

®

i

@ I
@4

..

@

..

@

..

$ bbl.

..

@2
@2

9

:

6

@ 5 0
@ 1 9
0®.
@8 0

$ bbl.

.

4

Beef
$ tee.
..
Pork
$ bbl.
..
@2
Wheat
$ bush.
@
Corn
@
To Glasgow (By Steam) :
Flour
$ bbl.
@ 2
.

Wheat

$ bush.
Corn,bulk and bags..

.*

Petroleum (sa

••

..

$ tea.
..$ bbl.

■*-■
•

*

9

**4
t4
0

@
@
@ 4

4
4
0
0

@.l<>
@ 4
@ 8

0

1)$bbl.
Heavy goods.. $ ton. 15 0 @25

To Havbk

8
3
6

..

Flour
Petroleum

Pork

6
0
6

12 6 @17
@20 0

Corn, b’k& hags$ bus.
Wheat, bulk and bags
Beef
$ tee.

Oil
Beef

Liquors—Liqitors

—Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8
:
lon 20 cents

Clothing

at

to the

Heavy goods...$ ton 15 0 @17

cent ad val.
Plate aud sheets and
terue plates, 25 per cent. a-J vai.

do
do
do

..

less $ ft, 10

or

Oil

Banca
Straits

n

47 ®
57 ®

.

,

Teas.—See special report
Fill

$ ct. off list*

20p,>r cent )

Oil

Talloiv—Duty :1 cent$ ft.
American,prime, coun¬
try and city $ ft...

$ ct off list

..

70i@

...

White Nova Scotia

cents

'0
62*
40
574
60
t24
57
55

10

D4®
Ochre,yellow, French,
dry
$ **•« ft 2 00 @ 2
do
jgr’ . i n oi I. $ ft
8 @
Spanish brown, dry $
100 ft
I 12 @ 1
do
8 @
gr’dinoil.$ lb
Pariswh., No.l$l«H>ft
@
Vfh’l'g, Amor..
2 @
Vermilion,Chinose$ ft 1 30 @ I
do
Trieste
1 00 @ 1
do
Cal. A Eng
1 26 @ 1
do
American.,..
-5 @
VeneCred (N.C.)$ewt 2 75 @ 2
Carmine,city tnade$ It> 16 uO @20
China clay
$ ton32 25 @
Chalk
$ bbl. 4 00 @ 4
Chalk, block
$ ton >2 5 @25
Chromeyellow... $ ft
15 @
Bar?tea
39 00 @42

3iidfc 5
35& 5

of at the last
place whence exported
to the Unitea States is 32
cents or
less $ ft, 10 cents $ ft
and ll »
cent, ad val. ; over 32 cents

44
424
424
83

Splee*.—See spocial report.

$ 1b;

....

$ ft aud 11 $ cent, ad
over 32 cents
$ ft, 12 Cents $ ftval.;
and
10 $ cent, ad val ; when
imported
washed, double these rates Class
2.— Combing Wools-The value
where¬

00

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and
plates, $1 50 $ 100 Ids.
Plates,foreign $ ft gold
64®
6|
lu @

20,®25 $ ct off list

....

cents

171@

domestic

do
do

States is 32 cents

cent ad val.

do

do

pbice whence exported

00
00
0•
50
t0

45r @

$ ft.

85

®

—

•Soap—'Duty: 1 cent $ ft, and 25 $
^astlle

7 00

90® 1 CO
9<® 1 15
85 00® 60 VO
2 65® <1
(to
11 01® 25
00

do

Wools—The value whereof

Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Goat,Curacoa$ ft cur
4? @
60
Buenos A.,

<0

....

50®
70®

...

Wool—Duty: Imported in the “or¬
dinary condition as now and hereto
fore practiced.” Ci.ass 1

!

91@

French, in

Plain
Brass (less

All thrown silk.

10 25 @11
do
medium,No3@4. u 5 I @10
Canton,re-reel.Noi@2. 8 75 @ 9
Japan, superior
11 50 @i3
do
Medium
*0 00 @11
China thrown
10 50 @18

8

Telegraph, No. 7 to il

cent.

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do

in cases.

V&1«
No. 0 to 18
No. 19 to 26
No. 27 to 36

...

superior,

"75

0 to 18,
uncovere4
$2 to $3 5t $ 100 ft,and 15
$ cental

Tsatlees, No. 1 @3. $ ft 11 50 @12 25
No. 1 @

4 50

Wire—Duty: No.

.

10 @

No. l,in oil

do

l4@

Taysaams,

*“*
"*•

75®
75®
76®

4
4
4

/•

d>

Champagne

12 @
1^4
@ 8 25
Canary
$ bus 4 3') @ 5 (10
Linseed,Am.clean$.tce
@
do Am. rough $ bus 2 8
4® 2 91
do Calcutta
.gold
@
Shot—Duty: 2| cents $ ft.
Drop
$ ft
lli@

Silk—Duty: free.

4

..

.

$ft

Buck

7W

®
5®

..

do

Malaga, sweet
do
dry....
Claret In hhds.

••

4 cent $ lb ; canary, $1 $ bushel of
ft; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent

..

G*1®
75®

4
4

do
do

10 06
9 ,0
10 00

~

Sherry

16 cts; hemp,

Timothy,reaped $ bus

5

do

Madeira
do Marseilles

60

ad val.
Clover

90®
90®

4

do

—

*

'

»4

at 7 oents $ ft or under,
24 cents;
over 7 cents and not above
11, 3 cis

dry, No. 1
do white, American,
whi o,
oil

144

„

..

9J@
84<®

oq

Whisky ( n b nd)
35®
4)
Wines—Port
(gold) 2 0® 8 50
Burgundy Port do
1 30
8‘®
1 90® 4
do
Sherry
50

cents;
refined and partially refined,
3 cents;
nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft.
Refined, pure.....$ ft
@
15
Crude

(M,

qq

Bourbon Whisky.cur.

..

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2}
'

4
4

do
75®
do
3 5( @
St Croix
d>
8 5<>®
Gin —Differ, brands do
3 90®
D m c—N.E.Rum.cur.

Rum—Jamaica

1 90

$ pkg.
@ S 0 •
F. F.... ...240 ft bgs. 2 75 @ 3 00

46

.

60

bgs. 1 tO &
$ bush.
42 <®

00
^

.

do

.

210 ft

do

20

red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents $ ft; Parit white and
whiting, 1 cent $ ft; dry ochres,56
cents $ 100 ft:
oxidesofzim, If cents
f* ft ; ochre,ground in oil,| 50$ 100
ft ; Spanish brown 25 $ ceLtad
val;
China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red
and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.;
white chalk, $ 10 $ toD.
Litharge, City.... $ ft
11 @
114
Lead, red,City......
11 @
114

do

do

Fine screened

87

unbleach. 2 30 @
Lard oil
I 15 @ 1
Red oil, city distilled
@
J
Bank
70 @
Straits
7e @
Parafiine, 28— 30 gr..
35 @
Kerosene
,,.(free).
50 @
Pali lit*—Duty: on white lead,

do

52 @

9
1
13
17
16

..

do

...

Onondaga,coin.fine bis.

2 0< @

do

L"ger freres

dodo
do
do

Alex. Seignette.
Arzac Seignette
P Romieux....

....^

85®

Sperm,crude .'.
»lo

@

Co.,
Jules Robin....
Marrette & Co.
V ine Grow. Co.

$ 100 I);

..

do
West, thin

(gold) 4 90®
Hennessy
(gold) 4 9«@
Otard, Dup. &Co.do 4 8 @
P< net Castil.&Oo.do
'
4
75®
Renault & Co.. do
5 00®
J. Vassal A

1 90 @ 1 95
do fin *,A»htou’s(g’d) 2 60
do fine, Aorthingt’s 2 »9 & 2 85

....

Pale and Extra

J. & F. Martell

Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack

...

8 87*@ ....
common
do strained ami No 2.. .4 00
@ 4 874
do
No. 1
-» t0
do

Brandy—

Other br’ds Cog.
Pellevolsin
A. Seignette
Hiv. Pellevolsin

50
8
6

..

.

cents

bulk, 18 jentft $ 100ft.
Turks Islands $ bush.
Cadiz.

iRolasses.—See special report.
Nails— duty: cut 14;
wrought24;
horse shot* 2 cents $ lb.
Cut, 4d.@6twl. $ luo ft 5 6 4® 5 75
Clinch
.72 @
Horse shoo, Pd (6d)$ tt>
28®
32
Norse hoe, pressed
20 @
22
Coppor
4i @
Yellow metal
v5 @
Zinc
13 @
Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 30cents $ gallon; crude
Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20
$ cent ad yal.
Turpont’e, f ..$280ft 4 75 @ 5 00
Tar, Am rlci
bbl 3 25 @4.5
Pi ch..
4 00 @ 4 2i

.

® 65 00

Cherry B’ds A Piauk 80 00 ® 90
Maple and Birch

Bahia

....

33 00 ® 3> Oft

wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00

15-

....

....

Laths, Eastern.fi M
Poplar and Whi e
Oak and Ash

00

Mansanilla
Mexican
Florida. $ c. ft.

do

!4
14

@
@

4®
8 @
8®
8 @
25 @
5®
4 @

Rosewood, It. Jan $ lb

..

..

14

Honduras

do
do
do

Lard,

40

10
fl

..

Mexican

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas

Indigo—Duty rncx.
Oude
Madras
Manila

Mansanilla

@

10 @
lo @

Nuevitas....

do
do
do

5

..

prime,

19 75 @20 03
...$lb
12*@
14
15 @
16
Shoulders,
11 @
114
Rice—Duty: cleaned 2| cents $ ft.;
paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents
$ ft.
Carolina ....• $ 1001611 50 @12 50
East India,dressed.... 9 25 @ 9 75

10

Hams,

30

logs.

',0 @
@
@
@
@

East Inaia

do

7@

[August Sir 188?.

0
0

$

:

Cotton.
ft
m
Beef and pork.. $ bbl. 100 @ .
Meaaurem. g’daJ ton 10 do @ .
6 6 @ 6
Petroleum.,...
Lard, tallow, cut m t
,

•••'

eto» ^ »m •»<•.$ ft
iilu, pot and pear!

-

^

8 00

O10 0®

287

THE CHRONICLE.

August' 91,: 1867. J
Safes.

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

IMPORTANT

Thompson & Co.,

Wm.

TO

E. R. Mudge, Sawy er&Co.

Merchants.

Bankers : &

IRISH

WASHINGTON MILLS,

LINENS,

BURLINGTON WOOLEN

Church

185

VICTORY MANUF.

offer for the consideration of Bank

This Company

era, Merchants and those desiring the best burgla
proof security the following certificates:

C. Holt &

MILTON

Co.,

Noa. 43 Ac 4 5 WHITE STREET.

119 CHAMBERS STREET.

•»

Lindsay, Chittick &Co.,

Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s
DOUBLE CHILLED AND WROUGHT IRON

COTTON.

SPOOL

AND BURGLAR PROOF

Also Agents

Oiler to Jobbers

IKrltlsli

MERCHANTS,
Staple,
And Fancy

only.

Good*,

Dress

White
Offiok of the Novelty Iron
New York. 18th December,

1800.

f

Lewis Lillie & Son,
Gentlemen,- We have subjected the sample of
double-chiiled iron you furnished us to the most se¬
vere tests (as regards drilling through it) we could
brine; to bear upon it, and without success.
It is our opinion that it can only be penetrated by
the use of a l'irge number of drills, and the expen¬
diture of much power with days of time, and we
Messrs.

think it

penetrate it at all.
Yours

truly,

IS AAG. V. HOLMES, Supt..
LYMAN G. HALL, Foreman.

Hinkley and Wultams

Works,

WOVEN

Linen

CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬

ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS RED
234 CHURCH

having made an attempt to drili a sample o
double chilled iron furnished ns by Messrs. Lillie &
Son, and failed to penetrate it more than five-eighths
(%) of an inch, after hours of labor, leel that we can
endorse the above Novc.ty Iron Works’ certificate

& Son,
Gentlemen,—We have tried a sample of d >ublechilled iron similar to that sent to the Novelty
Works, New York, and our experience with it is
about the same, viz : that it can only be penetrated
by a long continued operation of the most skilllui
mechanics and the best tools.
V ery truly,
W. II. BECH1ELL,

MLKS,
NEW YORK.

GOODS.

^IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS
FOR

40

Consignments solicited on the usual
terms of any of the Staples.
Spacious Counting and Reception Rooms* availa le
usually

for Americans iu London, with the facilities
found at, the Continental Bankers.
Orders for the above may be sent to

TYNG A

SCOTCH

LINENS,
Murray Street. New York..
AND

IRISH

IMPORTERS

li>4

Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

Merrick & Son’s Southworth

192 FRONT

Works, |
Chicago, Ill., March 13,1867.
f
Messrs. Murray & Winne,

Duck,

All Widths and

Large Stock always on hand.
POLHEMUS &

CO

MANUFACTURERS AND DEALEIiS,

59

Rroad

Northwestern ManVg Co., f
Chicago, March 11, 1861.
f
Messrs. Murray & Winne,
Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co.,
Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample yon fur¬
nished us (of a new combination of metals to be
used in the manufacture of Lillie’s Safes) to the se¬
verest tests of our Power Drill, and with the best

tempered drills

our

duce.

skill and experience could 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¬
through it: and that it was entirely out of the
j ower of even the most skilful burglar to penetrate

trate

And to which I request
trade.

♦♦♦-

Sawyer, Wallace & Co.,

Umi, President.

_JI»8 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.




the special attention of the

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 Iron, and for Blister and Extra Cast Stkkl
made from the Iron, at their establishments. Nos. 91 &
93 John Street, New York, and Nos. 183 & 135Fed¬
eral Street, Boston.

MERCHANTS,

Morris, Tasker & Co.,

NO. 47 BROAD STREET,
NEW YOWL

Pascal Iron

Works, Philadelphia.

Manufacturers of Wrought Iron

J. M. Cummings & Co.,
COMMISSION

Works Castings and Street
Mains, Artesian "Well Pipes and Tools,
Gas and Steam Fitters’

OFFICE AND

MERCHANTS,

Tubes, Lap-Welded

Boiler Flues, Gas

DISTILLERS

15 GOLD

STREET, NEW YORK,
BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE
WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Dis¬
tilleries, Kentucky.

Tools, &c.

WAREHOUSES

:

STREET* NEW YORK.

58 BROAD

Established 1855.

Offer for sale, IN

Geo. Bdw.

Parmele
SUCCESSORS TO H. L.

Brothers,

PINE

Yards: West22d street, near 10th Avenue,
and in Brooklyn.

Every Description
For the

Office use,
New York,

J. Pope & Bro,
METALS.
BEEKMAN STREET
„NEW YORK

292 PEARL STREET, NEAR

BOOKS*

’

of Stationery*'

use

of

BANKS, STOCK AND GOLD BROKERS, MERCH¬
ANTS AND INCORPORATED COMPANIES.

COAL,
Family and
32 Pine Street.

ACCOUNT

AND DEALER IN

PARMELE A BROS.

Of all the Best Kinds for

Sears,

Successors to Samuel S. Motley,
MAKER OF

ENGLISH AND AMERICAN COAL.

Lillie Safe & Iron Co., Thomas
LEWIS

©

Leufsta, in Sweden, 29th April, 1867.

,

Street, corner of Reaver

r

A full assortment of these unequalled Burglarproof Safes constantly on hand at onr Warerooms.
Also, safes of every description, designed lor both
Fre and Burglar-proof security. The public are lu¬
sted to call and examine for themselves as to the
merits of our Safes.

DANNE-

SWEDISH

LEUFSTA, W. JESSOP Sc SONS.

safe made of this material.

R. T. CRANE, President.

York.

bog to

AND

After operating upon it with different drills seve¬
ral hours without penetrating it more than hulf an
inch and at that point nnable to make further pro¬

a

I

©

Weights.

THEODORE

COMMISSION
of

MERCHANTS,

New

announce that I have this day entered into
a contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & Sons, of Sheffield
for the whole Annual Make of the above Iron, which
in future, will be stamped

STREET, NEW YORK.

Cotton
A

USE,

N. S. BOUTON & CO.

Office

Broadway,

GENUINE

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC

Offtce Union Foundry

Agents Liilie Safe and Iron Co.,
Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample of new
by you to
as thorough tests of the drill as we could, and fail
ed to penetrate the metal at all. We think it won d
be impossible for butglars to enter the safes made of
this metal by means of the drill during the longest
time in ordinary business they could have acce-s to
them—in lact, that ihe metal is proof against the
drill.
Truly yours,

COMPANY,

COMMISSION

MOBA IRON.

Foundry, Philadelphia, Pa.

combination of metals for safes sent us

AND

NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE

W. II. STRAHAN,
Foremen in Messrs.

Smith,

PLACE, LONDON, W.

Railroad Bonds and United States and other Amer¬
ican Securities negotiated, and Credit and Exchange
provided for United States or Continent.

Strachan & Malcomson,

Me-srs. Lewis Lillie

15 LANGHAM

N. J.

RAILROAD
IRON,
BESSEMER
RAILS, STEEL TYRES Sc METALS.

•

WORKS PATERSON, N. J.

LINEN

A.

Gilead

M A CHINE TWIST AND

SEWING

"We

Philadelphia, Pa., February 25,1867.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Mills at Patterson

Son,

MANUFACTURERS OF

No. 333 BROADWAY,

THREADS,

BARBOUR BROTHERS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Wm. G. Watson &

Threads,

SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC.
95 CHAMBERS

l

JARVIS WILLIAMS, Treasurer.

SHOE

•

LACE, COTTON YARNS, Ac.,

Boston, Mass*, January 22,1867. (

particulars.

NEW YORK.

Manufacturer of

SUPERIOR

in all

Linens, Ac., Sc,
150 & 152 DUANE STREET,

impossible foi a burglar with liis time and

power to

Goods,

Irish and Scotch

John Graham,

Works, )

COMMISSION

AND

IMPORTERS

for

MACHINE AND SEWING SILK. BUTTON HOLE
TWIST. FANCY GOODS, &C.

Safes.

CO.,

MILLS,

MERCHANTS,

COMMISSION

Lillie’s
FIRE

CO.,

lork

New

Street*

CO.,

CHICOPEE MANUF.

LIKENCAMB’C HANDK’FS,&C.
No.

AGENTS FOR

„

Importers of

No. 45 William

Street*

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

SENSENDERFER MINING COMPANY
The Trustees have declared a Dividend of ONE Per
Cent, on the Capital Stock for the month of June,

payable at the office of the Company. No. 19 Broad
street, July 25,1867. Transfer books closed July 20 to
the 26th,

^

H, A. SHERRILL, Treasurer*

288

THE CHRONICLE.
Commercial Cards.

S. H. Pearce &
No. 353

Commercial Cards.

Co.,

BROADWAY,

Petrie &

SILKS,

We invite the

attention

To

Silk,

DOMt STIC

our

Our “ IMITATION” has
as

appearance and

much

as

a

Alexander

58 LEONARD ST R LET,
IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF

H’dkfs,

And

CRAPES,

COMMISSION

Offers

Co.,

a

MERCHANT,

CINCINNATI.

importer of

Cano, Wright & Co.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

HOSIERY aud

Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions.

FURNISHING

GOODS,

newStoek of the above at

NO. 27 MAIN

ST., CINCINNATI, O.

364 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET.

Burnham

Erastus

STREET, NEW YORK,

George Hughes & Co.,

Importers of

Goods,

Importers Sc Commission Merchants,

Emb’s,

-

COTTON BROKER,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.
Special attention given to filling orders for Spinners

198 A 200 CHURCH STREET,

Handk’ffc,

ESTABLISHED IN 1826.

SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS,

British and Continental.

SPANISH LINEN. DUCKS, DRILLS,
LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS,

John O’Neill & Sons,

PATENT LINEN THREAD.
Sole

MANUFACTURERS OF

Agents tor

DICKSON>’ FERGUSON Sc

Sewing Silks,
Machine Twist

And F. W. HAYES Sc

Embroidery,
Organzine, and Tram,
84 CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK.

CO, Belfast,

CO., Banbrldge.

B. Holabird &

A.

CINCINNATI, O.,

Co.,
‘

ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS.
Particular attention Is called to our
IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAW MILL.
It is superior to all others In strength, durability and
simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber

day.
BEAD’S PATENT GOLD PREMIUM
WHEAT AND CORN MILAS.
per

Oscar

PATERSON, N. J.

Delisle

&

IMPORTERS

Wm. C.

STREET,

Consignments and Orders Solicited.

HANDKERCHIEFS,
MEN’S

MILLS AT

PEARL

J. Chapin,

PRODUCE

Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red
aud (Lawn

Tram Silk.

e

N.

Napier

Linen

Organzluc Silk,

Linen

NOS. 263 & 265 WEST

CINCINNATI.

D.

ENGLISH

Silk,
Oileci Cotton,

Laces and

Carpenter*

Bonded Warehouse.

(late of Becar, Napier & Co.)

Oilea

White

CO.

Commission Merchant,—United States

Agent for S. Courtauld Sc Co.’s

Pongee it’dkfs,

70 & 72 FRANKLIN

Daniel H.

DRAWERS,

Foreign
*

A

KID, CLOTH AND i.LRLIN GLOVES.

r

John N. Stearns,

George Pearce &

Sc

Goods,
GLOVES,

BUCK

Patent Reversible Paper Collar*.

HEARD

OF CHINA AND JAPAN.

Germantown Woolen

the

the most economical collar ever invented.

Cotton

AUGUSTINE

the

Hosiery,

superior finish, and
silk, which it equals in

durability.

Agents for the sale of

of

SHIRTS

very

real

Co.,

Large Stock of

Imitation Oiled Silk.
costs but half

&

28 Stale Street, Boston,

Jobbing Trade Only

HANDKERCHIEFS,

Oiled

Everett

Co.,

Cards.

AGENTS FOR

CHINA

and Manufacturers of

SILK AND COTTON

Commercial

75 & 77 LEONARD STREET.

Importers of

EUROPEAN AND

[August 31, 1867.

French Dress

Langley & Go.,

Muslin

COMMISSION MERCHANTS

Co.,

OF

Goods,

Built of solid French Burr Rock.

A.

Draperies,

Particular attention

given to Southern patronage.

L.

Cummins,

COTTON

Lace Curtains.

BROKER,

FOB

Machine

AMERICAN COTTON AND WOOLEN
GOODS.
From Numerous Mills.
17 &

19

WHITE

STREET,

NEW

Swiss Ac French White
Real Brussels

YORK.

imitation

Globe

Woolen

Co.,

’

Coffin, Treas.

Laces,

Laces,

Silk

Mixtures,

Beavers.

AND

Smith,

Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN

PLACE, NEW YORK.

Linen Manufacturers and

PARASOLS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Brand & Gihon,
Importers Sc Commission Merchants,

SON,

42 & 41 MURRAY STREET.

Bleachers,

IRISH Sc SCOTCH LINEN

SIX-CORD

WHITE

LINENS,
FLAX SAIL




AC.

ROBT. N. WILSON,

Merchandise,

Produce,

N ote Brokers.
corner

Stock,

and

of Lombard and Frede

streets, No. 39 East End, Exchange Place,

Baltimore, Md.
Sprigg, cashier; J. Sloan, Jr., cashier, Ba
timore, Md. And by permission to Jacob Heald®
Lord & Robinson, Balt.; Tannahill, Mclllvaine
Co.,
& Co.. N. Y.; Ambrose Rucker, President 1st Nation¬
al Bank, Lynchburg, Va.

F L O U B

JOHN

CLARK,

Jr.

9

GRAIN,

DUCK, AC.

Blair, Densmore & Co.,

A

CO’S.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

Mile Eud, Glasgow.

IS UNSURPASSED FOK HAND AND MACHINE

188

WASHINGTON

SEWING.

Parasols,

THOS. BUSSELL, Sole Agent,
88 CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y.
4

SHED®

AND PROVISIONS.

Spool Cotton.

DWIGHT,

STREET, NEW YORK,

WILSON, SON Sc CO.
JOS. H. WILSON,

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

No. 108 Dnane Street.

Umbrellas &

J. N. Falls.

j

Refer to D.

Agents for the sale of

SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK.

MANUFACTURERS OF

J. C. Johnson.

by permission to Caldwell & Morris, New York.

WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’

Thread.

DOUBLEDAY Sc

Refer

GOODS,

Jobbing and Clothing Trade.

CABLED

AUCHINCLOSS,

G. Falls.

Warehouse and office

In full assortment for the

J. & P. Coats’

Co.,

BUYERS,
Memphis, Tenn.

ick

BELFAST, IRELAND.

49 MURRAY

Street, Mobile, Ala.

COTTON

J

WILLIAM KIRK Sc

HUGH

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

G. Falls &

Manufacturers of

Agents for

Sc

GENERAL

65 Commerce

Hall,

UMBRELLAS AND

Anderson &

JOHN

England & Co.,

CGI TON FACTORS

73 LEONARD STREET, NEW YORK.

Byrd &

BEST

Wm. G.

TENNESSEE.

W. D. Simonton.

Fancy Casslmeres.

33 PARK

Goods,

Corsets, Ac.

r

198 & 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK.
W. W.

MEMPHIS,

Edgings,

*—1^

Chicago, Ilia.

STBJET.