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COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,

REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL

AND

NO. 77.

1866.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15,

VOL. 3.

—a

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers.

*W. H. Whittingham,

Jacquelin & De Coppet,

No. 8 Broad

Street,

Railroad

EXPRESS,

Stocks,

AND ALL OTHER

STOCKS,

Quotations and sAles lists furnished daily on
Orders prompty executed.

cation.

A.

appli

L. S.
MO. 11 BROAD

Southern Bills on London and

Paris,

Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile.

Warren, Kidder & Co.,
BANKERS,
No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬
cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED

deposits, subject to check at sight.

on

J. Van Schaick,
88 Broad

Street,

BANKER AND STOCK

BANK

SOUTHERN

Edwin

BROKER.

NOTES.

BROKER,
Bank Bills.

In Southern Securities and
68

BROADWAY

&

STREET, NEW YORK,

ALL V AMU TOES.

REMO V A L

5 NEW .STREET,

New York.

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

United States

Collections made in all parts of the
and British America.

BANKERS,
issue

.

Gilliss, Harney & Co.,
BANKERS,
Have Removed to No. 21 Broad St.
Buy and Sell at Market Rates.

Statq, Federal and Railroad

Jesup & Company,
,

Bonds and Loans for

Contract for
Iron or

.Railroad < o’sa

Steel Ralls,

Locomotives,

Cars, etc.,
and undertake

Southern Collections.

all business connected

with Railways.

Harrison, Garth & Co., Drake Kleinwort&Colien
BANKERS,
No. 18 NEW STREET, NEW YORK.

Harrison, Goddla Sc Apperson,
Bankxbs and Brokebs,

RICHMOND,
Collections made

on

VIRGINIA.

all accessible Southern points.

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

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

reoeived

on

favorable terms.

RxnBXNCKs:

„

J. H. Fonda, Pres. Nat.

C. B. Bum, Pres’t.

Mecb. Banking Ass. N.Y.

Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago.

Barstow, Edey & Co.,
BANKERS Sc BROKERS,
HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 80 TO
No, 36 Broad Street, Office No, 16,
PEALEB8 IN GOVERNMENT AND
OTHER SECURITIES.
Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬
rency^ ant^ect to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to
Merehanteund Bankers upon favorable terms.




LONDON AND LIVERPOOL.
The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys
in the United States, is
on

States, available in ail
use

COMMERCIAL CREDITS.

in Europe, east of

West Indies,

V

Kleinwort A Cohen

Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
credits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, Sonth America, Ac. Marginal credits
of the London House issued for the same purposes.
SIMON DE VISSER,
68 Exchange Place, New York.
London and

No.

Co.,

BANKERS.
No. 84 BROADWAY A No. 6 WALL STREET.
■DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND
OTHER SBCUK1TIE*.
Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬

subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned
Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. '*

rency,

Co.,

&

Keep constantly on
UNITER

York,#
baud for immediate delivery a
issues of

STATES

STOCKS

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 Per Ceut 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
6
“
“
^
1864,
“
“
6
1866,
5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
6 Per Cent Currency Certificates.
New Y6rk State 7 per

to

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

parte of Europe, etc., etc.

.

in a

Abo Ocmuceroial Credit#

2d, A 3d series

cent. Bounty Loan.

GOVERN

ADVANCES MADE ON

LIBERAL

MENT STOCKS TO

BANKS AND BANKERS

Compound Interest Notes of 1864
1865 Bought and Sold.

St

VERMILYE Sc CO.

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No. 32
.

Broad Street, New

York.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates,

STATES SECURITIES.

Solicit accounts from
and others,

MERCHANTS, BANKERS,

daily balances,

and allow interest on

subject to Sight Draft.
Make Collection* on

fitvorable terms,

the Purchase or

And promptly execute orders for
Sale of Gold. State. Federal,

and Rail*

road Securities.

ARAMS, KIMBALL Sc

no. 8 Wall street, new York, ,
Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers

United States.

BANKERS.
44 Wall Street. New

ALL UNITER

Lockwood &

the Cape or Good Hope,

South America, and the

ermilye

prepared to make advances

shipments to Messrs. Drake,

abroad and in the United.
the principal citiee of the

INCLUDING

BANKERS AND MERCHANTS,
84 BROADWAY.

Negotiate

For the use of Travelers

For

Securities.

AND CIRCULAR LETTERS

OF CREDIT,

world: also,

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, bANKERS
and others, and allow Interest on daily balances,
subject to Sight draft.
Make collections on favorable terms,
And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or

M. K.

NASSAU STS^

CORNER OF PINE AND
CIRCULAR NOTES

Sale of Gold,

Q. Bell,
AND

BANKER

COMMISSION,

SECURITIES,

GOVERNMENT

Watkins,

RANKER,
Classes of Govern¬
Sec unties and Gold.

ment

Foreign and Domestic Exchange,

on

BOUGHT AND SOLD ON

Hknry De Coppet.

»•

And Bealer in all

DXALBB 1H

Bill*

STOCKS AND BONES

ON COMMISSION.

BOUGHT AND SOLD
John H. Jacquelin.

C. Graham,

BANKER AND BROKER,
8 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

BROADWAY A 15 NEW STREET.

Securities,

Government

BONDS AND GOLD

Bought and Sold on Commission.

70

Bonds,
Gold, and

TELEGRAPH,
RAILROAD,

Co.,

Satterlee &

STREET, N.Y.

NO. 26 NEW

MINING,

T " *

Bankers and Brokers.

MOORE,

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

subject to check at sight.

746

THE CHRONICLE.

Bankers and Biokers.

Fourth

Southern Bankers.

National Bank.

Capital

[December 15,1866.
Eastern Bankers.

Page, Richardson & Co
STREET, BOSTON,

National

$5,000,000

Bank of the

NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STREET.

BILLS OF EXCHANGE

Republic,

809 & 811 CHESTNUT

,

114 STATE

ON LONDO

AND

JOHN HllNROE Sc

CO., PARIS.

▲LAO IS8UC

STREET,

Commercial Credits for the purchase of Merchan¬
England and the Continent.
Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers

dise in

All the Government Loans for sale.

PHILADELPHIA,

abroad.

Collections made for Healers

Capital
on

$500,000

best terms.
Ofl'ers

Central National

its

services

to

Banks

Dupee, Beck 8c Sayles,

and

Bank, | Banker. on liberal terms.

818 BROADWAY.

STOCK

No. 22 STATE

DIRECTORS :

Capital

....*3,000,000.

Joseph T. Bailey,
Nathan

Has for sale all

Hilles,

Collections made in all parts of the United State

William H.

Joseph P.

SANFORD, Cashier.

Tenth National Bank.

J.

291

Bank¬

ROB’T

H. MAURY.

R.

8c Commission |

MERCHANTS,
BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.

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

MERCHANTS,
No. 44 Broad Street, N. Y,
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold
bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬
.

Liverpool.

John Bryan 8c Co.,
i

BANKERS AND

BROKERS,

NO. 35 BROAD STREET,
Government Securities,

Bought and Sold

on

BANKERS AND BROKERS

1014 MAIN

I

Stocks, Bonds, and Gold

Commission.

Orders Promptly Executed.

Son,

STOCK COMMISSION If
OISE,
NO. 17 WILLLAM STREET.

Government Securities,
Railways Petroleum,
Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous
•hares of a 1 descriptions, bought and sold at the
,

different Stock Boards.

#

Collection* made In a*l the State* and
Canada*.
For the more thorough protection of all—both
Broker and “Principal
our business will be con¬
ducted entirely on-the basis of Certified Checks
none given or received unlee* certified.
To mere fully enable us to carry out this
principle,

parr Ian** «|

or

sold

an

‘Option.

prompt attention.
Quotation*

ha

can

be had

dad/

tantfaU If dualled.




*

NATIONAL BANK

Of Cincinnati.
Collections made

on all points WEST and
SOUTH,
promptly remitted for.
Capital stock,
~
*1,000,000. s
~

and

Directors.—John

B.

Harrison, William
Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S
,,

Edward P. Tesson.

BANKERS,
(No. 45 Second Street,
ST.

Especial attention paid to Collections.
Reler to Duncan, Sherman & Co., New
York;
Drexel & Co., Puiladelphia; Ths Franklin Bank,
and Johnston-Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury & Co.
Richmond, Va., Charles D. Carr * Co. Augusta, Ga.

McMahan 8c Co.

rnitrnriGCTniir

COMMISSION MERCHANTS
and Dealer* In Domestic and Foreign

Exchange.

National Park Bank, Howes & Macy, and
Spofford.
Tileston & Co., New York.
Second National
Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel &
Co. and D. 8. Stetson & Co.,
Philadelphia. T. F.
Thirkield * Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank
and Jos. E. Elder * Goodwin, St. Louis.
Fowler,
Stanaril A Co , Mobile.
Pike, lapeyre & Bro.,
New Orleans. Drake, Klelnwcrth* Cohen, Lon¬
don and Liverpool.

Pine),

J B. Cuaffee, Pres.
Gko. T. Clark, Cashier.
Rogers, V. Pres.

,

H. J.

FI It ST

NATIONAL

RANK

Of Denver,
DESIGNATED

Authorized

DEPOSITORY

Capital

-

-

OF

-

THE

-

U.

S.

$500,000

Paid in Capital
*200,000
Transact a General
Banking business corner of
Blake and F. Sts. DENVER
COLORADO.
D.
D.
L.
N.

A.

Given, of Watts, Given & Co., Paducah, Ky.

W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky.

M. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank of
Ky.
S. Ray, late Cash’r Com’l B’k of Ky.,

Lebanon, Ky

BANKING HOUSE OF

ac¬

REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT
EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.

corner of

LOUIS, MO.,

Founded in 1847, under the Style ot
Tessen Sc Danjen.

GALVESTON, TEXAS.
Special attention given to Collections of all kinds,

having prompt and reliable correspondents at all
cessible noints in the State, and

Edward M. Tesson.

Tesson, Son 8c Co.,

S. €.,

Given, Jones 8c Co.,

33 BROAD

STREET, NEW YORK.

Ray, Given 8c Co.,
43 CARONDELET ST., NEW OR¬
LEANS.
Orders for the

purchase or sale of Government

Securities, Stock*, Bonds, and Gold,
promptly executed.

George Butler,
BANKER AND

COMMISSION MERCHANT,

GALVESTON, TEXAS.
(Established in 1847.)

Clafiin A Co.

Guld &

Carrington,
LAW,

II i MAIN ftTHICXr.

RICHMOND,

Interest allowed

at

on Deposits, subject to
cheque*
sight.
Special attention piveu to the Foreign Exchange

Buslnei**.
Given, Jonkh A Co. are prepared to
dra«v Sterling; Bill*, at aluhl or sixty day*,
on

the Hank of Liverpool, in vim* to ault
purVhaaer*.
The Nctv Orleans llouae will make
t olled<ou« in that
City and at all accvrelhlu

point* houth, and remit

on tint day of payment.
We refer to Bank or Amkkica aid National
Ht*x «*r 8tatk or New Yo*k, New York

to any

T A.

City, and

of (be Kentucky (tank*.

E. S.

Broadway.

ATTORN 111* AT
•poo application, *t

TIIE FIRST

G

OHeo la Wow fork Wo. 11

Out-of town order* eotWited, and thnee
comp y leg
w.tk above requirement* nUl receive epectal
and

Lewis Worthington, V.-Prest.

Richmond, va.

I Collection* promptly attended to and remitted for
although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, She. man * Co.,
giving order* for stocks, of whatever description or Bankers, New York.
I red to cover
amount, will b* required to cover aame wltn proba¬ j
with uroba/inferences in Mete York •—Dnncan Sherman A Co;
ble amocat at time of
leaving order. Receipt* lor I. U. Froth Ingham. Ks<i., Pres t. Union Trust Co.;
each depoafta given aatlt etmk* are delivered.
Moees Taylor, Keq ; K. II. Lowry,
K*q, JYes t.
Bank of Republic ; Henry Swift A x’o.; II. II.
»• Heck*

day of payment.

UNION BANK OF LONDON.
FOR SALE.

Winslow.

REFER TO

B. C. Morris 8c

Street,

Theodore Stanwood, Cashier.

Co.,

Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes,
State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c,
bought and sold on commission.
£57“ Deposits received and Collections made on
all accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent, Vermilyb & Co.

NEW YORK.

on

on

J.W. Ellis, Brest.

T. BROOKE

BANKERS Sc DEALERS
IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE,
BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND BONDS.

.

J

Checks

Conner 8c Charleston,
Wilson,
Street,

BANKERS AND COMMISSION

-

Maury 8c

I Via
ft
Uvao il
No. 5 Broad

*

.

ROB’t

JAS. L. MAURY.

H.

POWELL, GREEN Sc CO.

chant®, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent, on
deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬
r--'obacco,
ton, Tobacco Ac., consigned to ourselves or to our
corres pondeifts, Messrs. J. K. GILL1AP &
CO., of

and remitted for

Pres’t.

attention to business connected
with the several departments of the
Government.
Full information with regard to Government loans
at all times cheerfully furnished.

Wilson, Callaway & Co.,

Fourth

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points

WASHINGTON,

especial

RICHAP.D BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

88

W'est

NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS,
BANK

Agent of the United State*.
We buy and sell all classes of Government
securities on the most favorable terms, and give

400,00k

Bankers

110

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Government Depository and Financial

BANK.

SURPLUS

C.

NATIONAL

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

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
$1,000, (XX

CAPITAL

Sc

Mumford, Cashier,
Late of the Philadelphia National Bank.

OF

Tradesmens^
NATIONAL

HENRY SAYLES

r

108

Washington.

Dealers’^ Accounts solicited.
D. L. ROSS, President.
H. Stout, Cashier.

The

JAMES BECK,

Gilmore, Dunlap 8c Co.,

Rhawn, President,

FIRST

No. 240 BROADWAY.

Designated Depository of the Government.

STREET, BOSTON.

Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BaNK

$1,000,000.

ers’ and

DUFKE,

Western Bankers.

,

Late Cashier of the Central National Bank.

WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK. President.

Capital.

Osgood Welsh,

Frederic A. Hoyt,
William H. Rhawn.

and Canadas.
WILLIAM H.

Edward B. Orne,
William Ervien,

Benjamin Rowland, Jr.,
Samuel A. Bispham,

descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on terms mos
fhvorahle to our Correspondents.

JAKES A.

BROKERS,

Tiiackston,

To barm, JVait and

Cxrhing* Orekir.

£

No. 1« OLD ULIF,

ron.

WATER »T

KKW TOOL

.

December

15,1866.]

FIRST

THE CHRONICLE.

MORTGAGE
OF

Interest at the rate

Semi-Annually,

Heath &

THE

BANKERS*
AND

GOLD, RAILROAD & MINING STOCK BROKERS

CALIFORNIA.

13 Broad

Cent, per annum, payable
the First days of January and July.

Issue, $7,336,000.

Tlie Bonds have

In Coupon Bonds of $1,000 each.

Thirty Years to run, and

are secured

by

a

First Mort¬

constituting an absolute prior lien on that portion of the Road, Equip¬
ments, Franchises, and Entire Property of the Central Pacific Railroad
Company, located in the State of California, and extending from Sacramento
City to the California State Line, forming a part of the GREAT PACIFIC
age,

RAILROAD

A. HAWLEY HEATH.

T. W. B. HUGHES.

Member of N.Y. Stock Ex

Jackson Brothers,
DEALERS IN

STOCKS* BONDS* GOLD* Sc GOVERN
MENT

SECURITIES*
Street* New York.

No. 19 Broad

L.

P. Morton &
30

ROUTE, adopted and aided by the UNITED STATES GOVERN¬

Mortgage Convertible Ronds
of the

The amount of these

First

Mortgage Bonds to be issued

ST.

per

mile, is

limited

by law to the amount of United States Bonds allowed and issued to
aid the construction of the Road, and the
Mortgage by which they are se¬
cured is declared by Act of Congress to constitute a lien prior and
superior
to that of the United States Goverement.
The aid received from the Government

(in amount equal to this First Mort¬
gage) is economically and judiciously applied to the construction and equipment
of the road, together with nearly $7,000,000, received from Stock
Subscriptions
and other sources. The First Mortgage therefore amounts to but about 35
per
cent, of the actual cost and value of the Property which it covers.
The road is now completed, equipped and running from Sacramento
City to
Alta, a distance of 73 miles, and the earnings for the three months ending August
1st, were

as

follows, viz.:

May, 1866
June

July

$65,115 88

.

“

“

67,429 78
85,000 00

IN

Co.,

RANKERS*
Broad Street* New York.
Offer for Sale the

First

MENT.

Street* New York.

Deposits received, subject to Check, and Inter#
allowed.

Principal and Interest payable in U. S. Gold Coin in the
City of New York.
Amount of

Hughes,

DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

of Six per

on

Miscellaneous.

BONDS

CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD CO.
OF

747

■

LOUIS* JACKSONVILLE
CAGO RAILROAD

Sc CHI

REDEEMABLE
1 894.
IN
Interest Seven per cent., Free of Government lett

Payable semi-annually on 1st April and 1st
October, in Neio York.
PRESENT ISSUE OF BONDS
£900*000
Limited to $15*000 per mile.
This Road is located in

one

of the mott dense! y

populated and most highly productive sections of
Illinois.

The Company have completed and In operation
ninety miles of road, and are constructing stity
miles, which will be completed within twelveJ

months.

Under

perpetual agreement this line has been
Chicago and Alton Rail?
road Company, thirtynnilea from St. Louis, and on
completion of the work now in progress will connect
with the same road one hundred aud
twenty-six
miles from Chicago. Under this agreement a bonus
of ten per cent, is paid to the St. Louis, Jackson¬
ville and Chicago Company, on all traffic delivered to
the Chicago and Alton Company, and harmonious
action in conducting the traffic upon the two lines is
effectually secured.
a

connected with that ot the

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS
OP THE

GOLD.

The

earnings are steadily increasing, and are estimated at over $100,000 in
gold for the month of August—the official report for that month not having been
received at this date.

The construction of the road is

ST. PAUL AND PACIFIC kAILROAD COMPANY
of Minnesota. Interest at Seven per cent., semi-

ever

offered.

Over

$1,000,000 has already been expended in grading beyond the point to
now
running, and the iron is bought and paid for sufficient to
lay the track the entire distance to the State lino.
The Road has been completed and equipped thus far without the sale of a single
dollar of its First Mortgage Bonds, and they are now offered to the
public for the
first time, after the
earnings of the Road have reached the sum of $100,000 per
month in Gold, only about twenty-live
per cent, of which is required for operating
which the road is

,

<*

expenses.

fhe Bonds

offered at 05 percent, and accrued interest from duly 1st, in
Currency. Orders may bo forwarded tons direct,or through the principal Banks
md Hankers in all
parts of the country.
Kemittanoes may be made in drafts on New York, or in l#egal Tender Notes,
National Hank Notes, or other funds current in this city, and the Bonds will be
are

forwarded

ticulars,

to any address by Express, free
by mail or otherwise, will receive

of charge. Inquiries for further
punctual attention.

par¬

gage Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com
pany, having thirty years to run. Coupon* paya¬
ble in New York on January 1 and July 1, in each
year. '
Before accepting, the agency fbr sale of these
bonds, we made careful inquiry into the condition
and prospects of the road, which was examined by
Mr. Win. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf,
and their highly satisfactory report enables us to rei
commend the bonds as first-class securities, and
safe and judicious investment.
The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 In all) wl.
be Uftca in extending a road, already completed 170
miles into North Miseonrl. to the Iowa State line,
where it is to connect with the rallroedt of Iowa,
and also westward to the Junction with the Facile
Railroad (at Leavenworth) and other railroads leadlug up tba Missouri River, so that the mortgage of
000,000 will cover a complete and well-sloe bed
roadoT M$ miles In length, coating at leeet $10,000,(UO, with a net annual revenae aAer the $ret year
of over $1^00,000, or a earn nearly tear time# he
rand the amount seeded to pay the Internet on thee#

bonds, the Income of the road of resist Increasing

9fT?« Kcdiocd connects the great City of ft Leals
with its «uo,aoo tshahtuau, not only

Fisk 6c

Hatch, Bankers,

No. 6 Naasau Btroot, N. V.
i1 H.—All kinds of Government Securities received at the full market
price In
fe- tb* aW.'d Bs-uio.




^

annually, first January and July, free from Gov-*"
eminent Tax, in the City of New York.
Principal
payable in 1892.
The road runs through one of the best portions of
the State, and has been completed to St. Cloud,
eighty miles, at an expense of over $3,000,000.
THESE BONDS ARE ONLY $10,000 PER MILE.
Government Bonds at the highest market price will
be received in payment. For particulars apply to
TURNER BROTHERS, Bankers.

going vigorously forward—24 miles additional
being nearly ready for the cars—and it will probably be in full operation to the
Corner Nassau and Pine Sts., New York.
California State Line—156 miles-from Sacramento City—during the
summer of
1867, when its earning3 must be very large, as the entire trade of Nevada, and a SEVEN PER CENT. FIRST MORT¬
GAGE BONDS]
OF THE
large proportion of that of Utah, Idaho, and Montana must pass over its line.
It has been shown by reliable statistics that in 1863 over $13,000,000 in Gold North
Missouri Rail¬
was
paid for freighting goods from California to Nevada alone.
road Company. '
This part of the Great Pacific Railroad Route is destined to be one of the most
We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort
profitable lines of railroad in the world, and its First Mortgage Bonds are among
the best secured and most desirable investments

-

eft.,

with Ua itch

portions of Mteraarl, Ml with the Staten el Kan
see and lews and the great rarlM Railroads.
The Im fcu.ouo have heea told at ioeeau4and the
mate***!* are newefrmdel * reels. AtrWfsrsM
they yield hearty Sty per cent, taeosae, and had «6
X
per e*et. to principal at matartm,

Any farther tngafrtca wul he aatwered s ha
4M IVOU ft W.

\

m

tHB
pz

X$' taette,

A

NEWSPAPER,

WEEKLY

^RESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL
SATURDAY,

fOL. 3.

NO. 26

Broad Street,

■„

RAILROAD,

ik-:

AND ALL OTHER

Bfr&V'
lit ■

sales lists furnished daily on
Orders promptly executed.

Government

appli

AND

l"ORK,

meat

Domestic Exchange,
mrjf .lonthem Bills on London and Paris,
ton Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile.

BANKERS,

Have

daily balances,
favorable terms,
And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or
Sale of Gold, Stat^ Federal and Railroad Securities.
and allow interest on

M. K.

Jesup Sc Company,

BANKERS AND MERCHANTS,
84 BROADWAY.

New Y'ork.

Southern Collection*.

|Urrison, Garth & Co.,

ifaY
BANKERS,
p#0. 18 NEW STREET, NEW -YORK.

Negotiate
Bonds and Loans for

■

■ifrtson, Goddln Sc Appersoo,
Brokers,

Tpl C HMOND, VIRGINIA.
y,’ ~}D8 ma^9 on aU accessible Southern points.

Steel Rails, Locomotives,
Cars, etc.,
and undertake
all business connected with Railways.

Drake KleinwortScCohen
LIVERPOOL.
The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys
in the United States, is prepared to make advances
on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen
London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
credits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits
of the London House issued for the same purposes.

|jL. Brownell & Bro.,
■f
BROKERS,
on

Gold

commission,
Banks, Bankers and Individuals

of
favorable terms.
Reference®:

rJ**oHDA, Pres. Nut. Mech. Banking Ass, N.Y.

gV~^^PresT. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago.

fstow,

Edey & Co.,

^BANKERS Sc FROM NO. 30 TO
BROKERS,
REMOVED
is** 86 Broad Street, Office No. 16.

P®s IN

GOVERNMENT AND

OMER securities.
it allowed upon deposits
of Gold and Cur^eck
Sight. Gold loaned to

“«»

and Bankers upon

favorable terms.




AND NASSAU STS.,

LETTERS
For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United
Suites, available in all ihe principal cities of the
AND CIRCULAR

OF CREDIT,

world: also,

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,

For use in Europe, east^of the Cape
West Indies, South America, and the

No.

52

Exchange Place, Now

BANKERS.
No. 94

BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL

DEALERS

IN

OTHER

SECURITIES.

deposits of Gold and Cur¬

Interest allowed upon
rency,

STREET.

GOVERNMENT AND

subject to Check at

Sight. Gold loaned to
favorable terms.

STOCKS
;

INCLUDING

Bonds of 1881,
PerCeat 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
“
1861,
“
“
“
1865
Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
Per Cent Currency Certificates.
Per Cent

New Y6rk

State 7 per cent.

2d, & 3d series

Bounty Loan.

LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS

Compound Interrsl Notes
1865 Bought and

of 1864 St

Sold.

VERMILYE Sc CO.

Taussig, Fisher

Sc Co.,

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No. 32

Broad Street, New

York.

Market Rates,

Buy and Sell at

York.

Co.,

York.

hand forof
immediate delivery a
issues

STATES

UNITED

ALL

Lockwood Sc

Co.,

RANKERS.
44 Wall Street. Now

Keep constantly on

6
6
6
6
5
7
6

of Good Hope,
United States.

Sc

Vermilye

SIMON DE VISSER,

BANKERS Sc

i

Railroad ( o’s

'Contract for
Iron or

LONDON AND

*

aunts

St.

subject to Sight draft.
Make collections on

NOTES.

and Sold exclusively on

Sc Co.,

Removed to No. 21 Broad
Buy and Sell at Market Rates.

and other.®,

& Co.,

BANKERS,
ISSUE

TIE**.

|ptKER AND BROKER,
pllilSouthern Securities and Bank Bills.
pDADWAY & 5 NEW STREET,

t

VARIETIES.

CORNER OF PINE

ALL UNITES* STATES SECURE
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, uANKEHS

BROKER.

J? BROADGovernment Securities, and
STREET, NEW YORK.
Bonds,

SECURITIES,

Duncan, Sherman

America.

Gilliss, Harney

pjEDwiN g. Bell,

and

United States

CIRCULAR NOTES

88 Broad Street.

Bankers

ALL

REMOVAL.

J. Van Schaick,
BANK

NEW YORK,

all parts of the

and British

BANKERS,
INO. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK.
4bb for stock’s, Bonds, and Gold promptly exeI FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLOWED
Its, subjeetto check at sight.

HIHERN

COMMISSION,

f

RANKER,
all Classes of Govern*
Securities and Gold.

Collections made in

Kidder & Co.,

STOCK

ON

BOUGHT AND SOLD

And Dealer In

DEALER IN

IKER AND

BROAD STREET,

NO. 11

BONDS

STOCKS AND

GOVERNMENT

Watkins,

S.

L.

k^Foreign and

Parren,

STREET.

Henry De Cofpet.

John H. Jacquelin.

BROKER,

p|| BROAD STREET, NEW

BROADWAY & 15 NEW

Securities,

COMMISSION.

SOLD ON

BOUGHT AND

|?A. C. Graham,
KER

70

Ronds,
Gold, and

STOCKS,

itlona and

Sc Co.,

STREET,

NEW

BONDS AND GOLD

iftnd Sold on Commission,

Brokers.

Satterlee

Railroad Stocks,

&S9,
telegraph,

NO. 77.

Bankers and

Brokers.

Jacquelin Sc De Coppet,
N.Y.

Whittingham,

p' No. 8

INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

DECEMBER 15, 1866.

Bankers and

I jankers and Brokers.
V H.
j£:--

Journal

GUommemat Wmt$, ftaitumy pmut#*, and insurance

SECURITIES.
MERCHANTS, BANKERS,
interest on daily balances,

UNITED STATES

Solicit accounts from

and allow
subject to Sight Draft.

and others,

favorable terms,
for tho Purchase or
Federal, and Rail¬

Make Collections on

And promptly execute orders
Sale of Gold, State.
road Securities.

Merchants and Bankers upon

ADAMS,

John Munroe Sc Co.,
RANKERS,
AMERICAN
NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE,

PARIS

AND

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW
Issue Circular Letters of Credd for

parts of Europe, etc., etc.

YORK,
Travelers in a

Also Commercial Credits

KIMBALL Sc MOORE,
BANKERS,-

No. 14

Wall Street, New

York.

Securi¬

Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government
ties, of all issues, and execute orders for the pur¬
chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur¬
rency,

subject to check at

sight.

THE ' CHRONICLE.

746
Bankers and Biokers.

Fourth

Southern Bankers.

National Bank.
$5,000,000

Capital
NASSAU

114 STATE

Republic,

SOD & 811 CHESTNUT

STREET,

Offers

Bank,

its

Bankers

services

to

and

Banks

descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on terms mos
favorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United State
Has for sale all

Dupee, Beck 8c Sayles
STOCK

No. 22 STATE

President.

$ 1,000,00 0.

Tradesmens^
BANK.

291

BROADWAY,

YORK.

NEW

$1,000,(XX
400,00X

CAPITAL.
SURPLUS.

RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

C.

POWELL, GREE!\ A; CO.

Bankers

NOTES, and all kiudsof

-

BANK

WASHINGTON,

D. II. COOKE (of Jay, Cooke & Co.),
WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

and remitted for

Pres’t.

Checks

Depository and Financial
Agent of the United States.
buy and sell all classes of Government

We
securities

especial

on

the most favorable terms, and give

attention

to

business

connected

witli the several departments pf the
Government.
Full information with regard to Government loans
at all times cheerfully furnished.
ROB’T

H. MAURY.

R.

JA9. L. MAURY.

ROB’T

H. Maury 8c

T. BROOKE

Co.,

BANKERS AND BROKERS

& Commission

MERCHANTS,
38 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.

No. 1014 MAIN

on

on

BANKERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
No. 44 Broad
Government

Street, N. Y.
Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold

bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬
chants, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent, on

The most liberal advances made on Cot¬
ton, Tobacco, Ac., consigned to ourselves or to our
correspondents, Messrs. J. K. G1LL1AT &■ CO., of
Liverpool.
deposits.

John Bryan 8c Co.,
BANKERS AND

BROKERS,

all accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent, Vermilye

Government Securities,

Stocks, Bonds, and Gold

Bought and Sold on Commission.
Orders Promptly

Everuted.

J.W. Ellis, Brest. Lewis Worthington, V.-Prest
Theudore Stanwo'od, Cashier.
THE FIRST

Collections made on all points
and promptly remitted for.

STOCK COMMISSION

Son,

NO. 17 WILLIAM STREET.
Government

Securities, Railways , Petroleum,
Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous
shares of a 1 descriptions, bought and sold at the
different Stock Boards.

Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis

EmvAKD P. Tesson.

BANKERS,
(No. 45 Second Street,

Richmond, Va., Charles J). Carr & Co. Augusta, Ga.

T. H. McMahan 8c Co.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS

Foreign

Exchange.

DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE U. S.
Authorized Capital - - - - $500,000
Laid in Capital
- - Transact a General Banking business corner of
Blake and F. Sts. DENVER COLORADO.

$200,000

D. A. Given, of Watts, Given & Co., Paducah, Ky.
D. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky.
L. M. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank ot Ky.
N. S. Ray, late Cash’r Com’l B’kof Ky., Lebanon,Ky

GALVESTON, TEXAS.

BANKING HOUSE OF

Given, Jones
33 BROAD

No

Stocks purchased

or

sold

on

“Option.”
Out-of-town orders solicited, and those comp
with above

BANKER AND COMMISSION

MERCHANT,

GALVESTON, TEXAS.
(Established in 1847.)
Collections promptly attended to and remitted for
by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, She.man <fc Co.,

Bankers, New York.

References in New York :—Duncan Sherman & Co;
I. H. Frothingham, Esq., Pres’t. Uuion Trust Co.;
Moses Taylor, Esq.; R. H. Lowry, Esq., Pres’t.
Bank of Republic ; Henry Swift & fcOo.; H. B.
Claflin & Co.

8c Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Ray, Given 8c Co.,
43 CARONDELET

ST., NEW OR¬

LEANS.

Orders for the purchase or sale of Government
Securities, Stocks, Bonds, aud Gold,
Interest allowed

on

Deposits, subject to cheques

at

sight. '
Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange
Business.
Given, Jones & Co. are prepared to
draw Sterling Bills, at sight or sixty days, on
the Bank of Liverpool, in sums to suit Purctlil8er£
..

The New Orleans House
Collections in that City aud at

_

.na

will mane

.all accessm
ol P^y^ent'
refer to Bank of America and National
of State of New York, New York City, au

points South, and remit on tho day
We
Bank

to any

of the Kentucky Banks.
—

•

9

E. S. Thackston,

Office in New York No. 71 Broadway.

ying

requirements will receive special ana
prompt attention.
be furnished if had daily
Snotations can be desired. npon application, or




Bank, Howes & Macy, and Spolford,

George Butler,

BANK

NATIONAL

Of Denver,

Special attention given to Collections of all kinds,
having prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac¬
cessible points in the State, and

Tileston & Co., New York.
Second National
Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel &
Co. and D. S. Stetson & Co., Philadelphia. T. F.
Thirkield & Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank
and Jos. E. Elder & Goodwin, St. Louis. Fowler,
Stanard & Co , Mobile.
Pike, Vaneyre & Bro.,
New Orleans. Drake, Kleinwcrtk& Cohen, Lon¬
don aud Liverpool.

J B. Chaffee, Pres.
V. Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier.

II. J. Rogers,
FIRST

Especial attention paid to Collections.
Keler to Duncan, Sherman & Co., New York ;
Drexel & Co., Philadelphia; The Franklin Bank,
and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. 1J. Maury & Co.,

of Pine),

corner

LOUIS, MO.,

Founded in 1847, under the Style ot
Tessen A Danjen.

S. C.,

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

Edward M. Tesson.

Tesson, Son 8c Co.,

promptly executed.

For the more thorough protection of oil—both
Broker and “ Principal
our business will be con¬
ducted entirely on the basis of Certified Checks
none given or received unless certified.
To more fully enable us to carry out this principle,
although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties
giving orders for stocks, of whatever description or
amount, will be required lo cover same with proba¬
ble ainount.at, time of leaving order. Receipts lor
such deposits given until stocks are delivered.

Worthington, L.

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

DEALERS

"i

Collections made in a?l the States and
Can u das.

stock!

Capital

B.

on

REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT
EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.

HOUSE,

WEST and SOUTH,

Surplus Fund, $250,000.

$1,000,000.

& Co.

Street,

BANKERS Sc

National Park

N AT IONA L BANK

Of Cincinnati.

REFER TO

B. C. Morris 8c

day of payment.
FOR SALE.

Conner & Charleston,
Wilson,

and Dealers in Domestic and

NEW YORK.

NO. 35 BROAD STREET,

accessible points

Winslow.

Sterling Exchange Gold and Silver, Bank Notes,
State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c,

No. 5 Broad

GOVERNMENTBONDS,

UNION BANK OF LONDON.

ST.

Wilson, Callaway & Co.,

Street,

ST., RICHMOND, VA.

bought and sold on commission.
8^° Deposits received and Collections made

Stocks, Bonds and Governments benight and told
exclusively on Conmiisnion.

Fourth

COLLECTIONS MADE at all

Government

Stout, Cashier.

NATIONAL

"West

Philadelphia National Bank.

NATIONAL

OF

Designated Depository of the Government. Bank¬
Dealers* Accounts solicited.
D. L. ROSS, President.

110

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Washington.
FIRST

No. 240 BROADWAY.
ers’ and

HENRY 8AYLE9

Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BaNK

Tenth National Bank.
Capital

&

108

Mumford, Cashier,
Late of the

JAMES BECK,

Gilmore, Dunlap 8c Co,,

William H. Rhawn, President,
Joseph P.

DUFEE,

BROKERS,

STREET, BOSTON.

Western Bankers.

William H. Rhawn.

WILLIAM n. SANFORD, Cashier.

The

William Ervien,
Osgood Welsh,
Frederic A. Hoyt,

Late Cashier of the Central National Bank.

WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK,

J. ri.

JAMES A.

Ddward B. Orne,

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

and Canadas.

CO., PAPi«

ALSO ISSUE

liberal terms.

on

DIRECTORS:

...$3,000,000.

LONDo

AND

JOHN MUNROE &

318 BROADWAY.

Capital

!

$500,000

best terms.

National

BOSTON
EXCHANGE ON

Commercial Credits for the purchase
of
Merchsndise in England and the Continent.
Travellers’ Credits for the use of
abroad.
01 lra^ners

PHILADELPHIA,
Capital

Central

Bankers.

Page, Richardson & Co
STREET,
BILLS OF

Bank of the

All the Government Loans for sale.

on

Eastern

National

STREET, N. E. COR. TINE STREET,

Collections made for Dealers

[December 15,18g8

Ould 8t

Carrington,
law,

attorneys at
11 >3 MAIN STREET,

RICHMOND,

VA,

Tobacco, Note and

Exchange

No. 12 OLD SLIP, cor.

Broker.

WATER ST.
NEW YORK.

December 15,

747

THE CHRONICLE.

I860.]

Miscellaneous,

ARST^MORTGAGE BONDS

Heath 8c

Hughes,

THE

OF

RANKERS,
DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD CO.

AND

o'

OF

GOLD, RAILROAD & MINING STOCK BROKERS

CALIFORNIA.

Street, New York.

1 3 Broad

Deposits received, subject to

Interest at the rate of Six per Cent, per annum,
Semi-Annually, on the First days of January and

principal and Interest payable

payable
July.

allowed.

A. HAWLEY

The

"

No. 19 Broad

Street, New York.

L. P. Morton 8c

constituting an absolute prior lien on that portion of the Road, Equip¬
Franchises, and Entire Property of the Central Pacific Railroad
Company? located In the State of California, and extending' from Sacramento
City to the California State Line, forming a part of the GREAT PACIFIC
RAILROAD ROUTE, adopted and aided by the UNITED STATES GOVERN¬
age,

Co.,

BANKERS,
30 Broad Street, New York.
Offer for Sale the

First Mortgage

Convertible Bonds
of the

MENT.

"

£>

•

The amount

ST.

issued per mile, is

of these First Mortgage Bonds to be

the amount of United States Bonds allowed and issued to
aid the construction of the Road, and the Mortgage by. which they are se¬
cured is declared by Act of Congress to constitute a lien prior and superior
to that of the United States Goverement.
The aid received from the Government (in amount equal to this First Mort¬
limited by law to

gage) is economically and judiciously applied to the construction and equipment
of the road, together with nearly 87,000,000, received from Stock Subscriptions
and other sources. The First Mortgage therefore amounts to but about 35 per
cent, of the actual cost and value of the Property which it covers.
The road is now completed, equipped and running from Sacramento City to
Alta, a distance of 73 miles, and the earnings for t he three months ending August
1st, were as follows, viz. :

$65,115 83
07,420 78
86,000 00

May, lSn6
“

July

DEALERS IN

and are secured by a First Mort¬

ments,

Juue

e

STOCKS, RONDS, GOLD, & GOVERN
MENT SECURITIES,

$7,336,000. Iik-Coupon Bonds of $1,000 each.

Bonds liave Thirty Years to run,

T. W. B. HUGHES.

Member of N:Y. Stock Ex

Jackson -Brothers,

in U. S. Gold Coin in the

City of New York.
Amount of Issue,

HEATH.

Check, and Iutcre

“
IN

GOLD.

earnings are steadily increasing, and are estimated at over 8100,000 in
gold for the month of August—the official report for that month not having been
The

received at this date.

additional
being nearly ready for the cars—and it will probably be in full operation to the
The construction of the road is

going vigorously forward—24 miles

California State Line—156 miles from

Sacramento City—during the summer

of

LOUIS, JACKSONVILLE A C1M CAGO RAILROAD CO.,
REDEEMABLE

IN

1894.

cmt., Free of Government lax
Payable semi-annually on 1st April and lsi
October, in Few York.
PRESENT ISSUE OF RONDS $900,000
Limited to $15,000 per mile.
Intend Seven per

-

This Road is located in one of

the most densel

y

populated and most highly productive sections of
Illinois.

The Company have completed and in operation
nineiy miles of road, and are constructing sixty
miles, which will be completed within twelve
months.
Under a perpetual agreement this line has been
connected with-that of the Chicago and Alton Railr
road Company, thirty^n les from St. Louis, and on

completion of the work now in progress will connect
with the same road one hundred and twenty-six
miles from Chicago. Under this agreement a bonus
of ten per cent, is paid to the St. Louis, Jackson¬
ville and Chicago Company, on all traffic delivered to
the c hicago and Alton Company, and harmonious
action in

conducting the traffic upon the two lines is

effectually secured.
FIRlfcT MORTGAGE

BONDS

OF THE

ST. PAUL AND PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY
of Minnesota. Interest at Seven per cent., semi¬

annually, lirst January and Julj% free from Gov¬
ernment Tax, in the City of New York.
Principal

payable in 1892.

The road runs through one of the best portions of
the State, and has been completed to St. Cloud,

eighty miles, at an exuen-e of over $3,000,000.
THESE BONDS ARE ONLY $10,000 PER MILE.
Government Bonds at the highest markpi price will
be received in

payment.

For particulars apply to

TURNER BROTHERS, Bankers.
Corner Nassau and Pine Sts., New York.

SEVEN

PER CENT.

FIRST MORT¬

GAGE BONDS]
1867, when its earnings must be very large, as the entire trade of Nevada, and a
OF THE
large proportion of that of Utah, Idaho, andMontana must pass over its line.
Missouri Rail¬
It has been shown by reliable statistics that in 1863 over 813,000,000 in Gold North
was
paid for freighting goods from California to Nevada alone.
road Company.
This part of the Great Pacific Railroad Route is destined to be one of the most
We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort
profitable lines of railroad in the world, and its First Mortgage Bonds are among gage Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com

the best secured and most desirable investments ever offered.
Over 81,000,000 has already been expended in grading
which the road is now running, and the iron is bought and paid

beyond the point to
for sufficient to

lay the track the entire distance to the State line.
The Road has been completed and equipped thus far without the sale of a single
dollar of its First Mortgage Bonds, and they are now offered to the publip-for the
first time, after the^earnings of the Road have reached the sum of 8100,000 per
month in Gold, only about twenty-five percent, of which is required for operating
expenses.
The Bonds

Currency.

from July 1st, in
the principal Banks

offered at 95 per cent, and accrued interest
Orders may be forwarded to us direct, or through
are

and Bankers in all

parts of the country.
Remittances may be made in drafts on New York, or in Legal Tender Notes,
National Bank Notes, or other funds current in this city, and the Bonds will be
forwarded to any address by Express, free of charge. Inquiries for further par¬

ticulars, by mail

or

otherwise, will receive

punctual attention.

Fisk & Hatch,
No. 5 Nassau
^ B.—All kinds of Government Securities

ttchauge for tfea above Bonds.



Bankers,
Street, N. Y.

received at the full market price in

pany,
ble in

having thirty years to run. Coupons paya¬
New York on January 1 and July 1, in each

year.
Before accepting the agency for sale of
bonds, we made direful inquiry into the
and prospects of the road,
was
Mr. Wm. Milnor Roberts and others, on our
and their highly satisfactory report enables us

which

commend the bonds as first-class

these

condition
examined by

behalf,

to re;

securities, and

judicious investment.
proceeds of these bonds ($0,000,000 in all)\n.,
be used in extending a road, already completed 170
miles into North Missouri, to the Iowa State line,
where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa,
and also westward to the junction with the Pacific
Railroad (at Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬
ing up the Missouri River, so that the mortgage of
$5,000,000 will cover a complete and well-stocked
road oT BS9 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,000, with a net annual revenue after the first year
of over $1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be¬
yond the amount needed to pay the interest od these
bonds, the income of the road of course increasing
safe and
The

'
*>
Railroad connects the great City of St. Louis
with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only with the rich

every year.

The

portions of Missouri, rat with the States ol Kan
and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads,
v
The first 500,000 have been sold at 80 centsuand the

est

sas

remainder are now offered at b5
they yield nearly 8# per cent,
pc’*

income, and add 20

principal at maturity.
further inquiries will b« answered a on
JAT COOKE & CO.

cent, to

Any

cents. At this rate

-

[December 15, 1866,

THE CHRONICLE.

748

Bankers, Brokers and Dealers in

To

CO.,

L. P. MORTON &

Government and other

Securities.

BANKERS,.
NO.

STREET, NEW YORK

BROAD

30

BONDS

ARE PREPARED TO RECEIVE

STOIEN!

SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR SHARES IN THE

INTERNATIONAL OCEAN TELSSRAPH COT,

$10,000 Reward!

INCORPORATED UNDER THE

LAWS

OF

THE

CAPITAL,

-

-

-

-

YORK.

NEW

OF

STATE

The ROYAL INSURANCE COMPANY will
pay a

REWARD OF TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS for

$1,500,000

IN

15,000

SHARES,

the recovery

OF

$100

EACH.

a

Deposit on Subscriptions ten per cent, the balance in installments as
from time to time, by the Board of Directors.

called for,

and will pay
any

CAMBRIDGE
ALFRED

LIVINGSTON,

PELL, Jk.

‘ '

5

EDWARD M. ARCHIBALD,
JAS. A. SCRYMSER,
WILLIAM T. BLODGETT,

THE INTERNATIONAL OCEAN
connect the United States, by way of

165G,

12986, 1.29S7, 12988, 12989,
i.

NEW YORK.

16769, 16770, * 6771, 1677 ', 16773,16774,16775,

TELEGRAPH COMPANY is organized to

Florida, for twenty years, for

12990,14493,14494,
1449% 1 4496, 14962, 15159, 15160, 15161,16761,
16762, 16763, 16764, 16765, 16766, 16767,16768,
16776, 16777, 16778, 16779.16780,16781,16782,
16783,16784, 16785, 16786, 16787,16788,16789,
16790, 16791, 16792, 16793, 16794,16795,167963
16797, 16798, 16799, 10800, 5989,14026.)

6 per

.

Payable to the order of Adam Norrie and Benja¬
Committee, and not endorsed. .

min B. Sherman,
Nos. 65997,

from the Government of Santo Domingo, dated 5th October, 1866, to
telegraphic lines in that republic.
According to the United Stales Treasury returns for the year ending June, 1865,
the value of the imports and exports between the United States and the countries
brought into telegraphic communication by this Company exceeds $124,000,000.
Official Statements prepared by the direction of the British Government in the
year 1866, show that the entire trade of the West India Islands amounted, in 1865,
land cables and operate

the trade of Cuba alone

amounted to $296,000,000, divided as

€6011, 66012, 66013, 66034,

66; 15, 66016, 06017,

66018, 66019, 66020, 66021, 66022.
7-30

Bonds, $1,000 Each.

Nos.12099, 20S99, Sir045, 25046, 25047,

25940, 34556,

75599,11663-1,117827117828,117829,117830,117881,
5-20
Nos.

Bond*, $1,000 |Each.

36551. 28870. 38806. 38805.

6 per cent. i8a*

Europe

i

$50,600,608

245,309,372

The commercial relations of the United States with Cuba are so extensive that a
sufficient amount of business may be expected from this source alone to yield a

large return upon the capital invested.
Havana, as the financial centre of the West Indies, would add largely to the
business in its connection as such centre with the other Islands.
But in addition
to the business with the United States, the relations of all the AVest India Islands
as colonies of various nations of Europe would both politically and commercially re¬
quire of necessity a large number of messages to be sent over this line for trans¬
mission to and from Europe.
Without offering any detailed estimate of the business, the suggestions already
made, with reference to the statistical tables of the trrade between tiie West Indies
and Europe, and the West Indies and the United States, point to a very large
profit, which is placed beyond the risk of competition for a long term of years by
the exclusive privileges granted to the Company.
In these suggestions the extension of telegraphic communication over this line
to South America, the Isthmus of Panama and Central America have not been con¬
sidered ; that this communication can be made, and will add largely to the business,

8909, 8911
8901, 8900, 8893, 8396,

8902, 8906, 8 '03, 8894, 8903, 8910,

Nos.

6907, ?-904, 8899, 8905,
S897, 8895.

IT. S. Coupon Bonn*

5 per cent.

successful operation.

10-40.

$1,000 each.
35276, 35277, 35278, 35279, 35280,135281,

Nos. 30289, 98813,

Nos. 35275,

15486,15487, $500 each:

98814, 102542,

35282, $500 each.

Registered Stock of

1881.

,

$10,000 Each.
Nos. 9662,

9663, 9664.

Registered Stock of

1881,

$5,000 Each.
Nos. 7224, 7278,

7279, 7280, 7281,

7282, 6911,

2618.

$1,000 EacE*
18310, IS,254.

Registered Stock of 1881,
Nos. 17404,

,

=48333, 16339,

Bond*.
$5,000 each. 11273, $1,000.

7-30 per cent.

Nos. 1782, 17S3,

doubted.

Responsible parties have offered to contract for cables of the most approved kind,
be laid and guaranteed for a reasonable time, and not to be 'paid for until in

38808,

Each*

Bonn*, $ 1,000

1267, 1266, 1264, 1265,

Trade between Cuba and

38807, 38804,

28867, 2SS68.

fol¬

:




6600S, 66009, C6010,

of $420,580,919.

sum

Trade between Cuba and United States

to

65998, 65999, 66000, 66001, 66002,66003,

118903, 124,719.

years.
A grant

cannot be

1881 Bondi)

66004, C6005, 66006, 66007,

Catholic Majesty’s Government, dated Madrid, 2(Jth August,
on the shores of Cuba, and to connect at Havana with the
Telegraphic System of the Island on favorable terms.
By telegram from Madrid, dated Dec. 8th, 1866, the Company is informed that
her Catholic Majesty’s Government has conceded to the Company the exclusive
privilege to laud cables on the shores of Cuba and Porto Rico for the period of forty

lows

eent. Coupon

$1,000 Each.

A grant from her
1866, to land cables

Of this

1657, 1658, 165% 4931,10695,10696,

11341, 1-950, 1*951, 12952,12953,12951,12955

Florida, with Cvba, the other West India
Islands, and by extensions to the Isthmus of Panama, to connect telegraphically with
South and Central America, and the Continents of Europe and Africa,
For these purposes the International Ocean Telegraph Company has obtained
the following valuable grants and privileges:
THE EXCLUSIVE PRIVILEGE from the Government of the United States, by
Act of Congress approved May 5th, 3 86t), for fourteen years, to connect the United
States, along the coast of Florida, with Cuba, other West India Islands, and the

to the sum

cent Coupon 1874 Bonds,

$1,000 Eacli.„
Nos.

SAMUEL E. LYON, Esq.

Bahamas.
THE EXCLUSIVE PRIVILEGE from the State of
the same purpose.

in that proportion for the recovery of

against negotiating said Securities.

per

r

OFFICE, 45 WILLIAMiSTREET,

instant,

ALFRED PELL, Jr.

Counsel

ALEXANDER HAMILTON, Jr.; Esq.

the 10th

on

S. Armv.

Directors.

CHARLES KNAP,
MATURIN L. DELAFIELD,
OLIVER K. KING,

ALEXANDER HAMILTON, Jr.,
WILLIAM F. SMITH,

Safe

portion of the said Securities. The public are

cautioned

President, WILLIAM F. SMITH, Brevet Major-General D.
YLe-President, ALEXANDER HAMILTON, Jr.
Secretary*
Treasurer MATURIN L. DELAFiEuD.

of Government Securities contained in

tin box stolen from their

56 WALE

STREET, NEW

DECEMBER 11, 1866.

YORK.

’THE

%

ir
x
■>

/ QJ

and fnomancc journal
NEWSPAPER,

gjwbrns’ 6a*dti\ Commercial ®imco, pailmag potato*,
A

WEEKLY

..

representing the industrial and commercial

CONTENTS.

Sot tied Finan-

„

NO. 77.

has‘the power to regulate its value or purchasing
power; and in the regulation of the value of the money by
which are carried on and measured the business activities of

gress

THE CHRONICLE.
The Necessity of a

,

interests of the united states;

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 18(>6.

VOL. 3.

.

752

Public Debt of the United States

Latest.Monetary and Commercial

thirty millions of the most energetic, prosperous, enterprising
754 people on the face of the earth, a responsibility is involved,
Trade of Great Britain and the
the magnitude of which may well appal the boldest..
United States
751
THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.
The probability is that during this short session we shall
Cotton
701
Money Market, Hallway Stocks,
Tobacco
7H3 not have much financial legislation.
U. S. Securities, Gold Market,
But it is of importance
Breadstufls
7H3
Foreign Exchange, New York
! Groceries.,,
'
7H4 that both in what is done, and in what is left undone, Con:
City Banks. Philadelphia Banks
Dry Goods
7<;5
National Bank's, etc
Imports
76(5 gress should be guided by the soundest principles which the
sale Prices N.Yr. Stock Exchange
[6d Prices.Current and Tone of the
Commercial Epitome
Market
707-OS science and art of statesmanship can supply.
The country
THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.
has arrived at such a pass that we cannot afford to make mis¬
Railway News.,
709 1 Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
772
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane773 takes, to tamper with the currency, to rush blindly into
Insurance and Mining journal...
770-71 | Advertisements
745-43,771-770
Bond List
danger, or to put in jeopardy any of our monetary interests*
The time is past for rash experiments. The people as yet are
oil)e
patient of their prodigious burdens; but it will be unsafe to
cial Policy
The Labor Market
tion

?

and Emigia-

719

I

English News

751 I Commercial
News

753

.

and Miscellaneous

.

,

..

ops

€l)ronifif.

[he Commercial and Financial Chronicle

is issued

Satur¬ add

to them. The w elfare of future years depends on the finan¬
day morning by the publishers of I funds Merchants' Magazine,
with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight cial wisdom with which our.monetary laws are contrived and
of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all administered to meet the existing crisis. Several measures
'■he Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to
have already been introduced into both Houses, whose de¬
the hour of publication.
sign it is to correct some evils, real or supposed, in our exist¬
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
On these several schemes it is *lireing financial machinery.

•

every

Commercial and Financial Oiironiolk, with Tntr. Daily
Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana mailed to al!
others, (exclusive of postage)
‘
The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, without. The Daily
Bulletin, (exclusive of postage)
lor The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financial

10 ‘Mj
5 09

Canvassing Agents hare no authority to-collect money.
Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. li ts, on the ChuoniCLE 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin
iE,
20 in advance.
WILLIAM E. DANA Sc CO, Publishers.
60 William Street, Nsw York.

the Chronicle or Bulletin can be

had at

THE NECESSITY OF A SETTLED FINANCIAL
The air is full of

rumors as

to

the [financial

POLICY.

procrastination which at
produced so much hasty
have to be again complained of.

anxiously, scrutinized

as

at present

harmonize itself.
First of

all, the country wants a

Congress has
legislated, and the people are determined, to put this impass¬
able limit on redundancy and high prices.
No measures of
the last session wore more popular than those m which it was
said to the rising waves of paper money inflation—“Hither¬
to but no farther, come.”
But we have decided further.
The tide has not only been prohibited from rising higher, but
it has begun to recede.
We have a law', which is now in actual operation, that as much as safely can be withdrawn ot
greenback currency shall be cancelled monthly, and lest
evil should come from the overzealous eagerness of some offi¬
cial in carrying out the .most delicate and dangerous opera¬
tion known to financial statesmanship, it is expressly provided
that in no single month shall the amount of greenbacks can¬
celled exceed four millions of dollars. The contraction may
fall below this maximum point, but never is it to rise

limits of the

policy of the

legislation will not
Seldom have the financial deliberations of Congress

so

our

influences,.however strong, ever move us from this resolve.
The National Bank circulation is fixed at 300 millions; the

We trust also that the
the close of the last two sessions
mid bad

legislation relative to the currency, the debt and the
National Treasury, should for the present be compelled to

all

settled financial policy.
Last Spring Congress adopted the excellent rule that no fur¬
this Office. ther addition should be made to the paper currency; let no

Secretary of the Treasury and of the committees of Con¬
gress. \\ e would recommend our readers to receive with
considerable distrust the rumors which come from Wash
ington on fiscal and monetary questions. These statements,
tor the most
part, are invented to operate on the markets.
It can
scarcely happen that previous to the holidays very
important developments will be made; though Mr. Chandmr s
unpopular bank bill may perhaps receive its quietus on

Tuesday.

present to offer any special remarks. We shall
therefore confine, ourselves to the general principles to which
mature at

f.U; 00

Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage).'.

Files for holding
Price $JL 50.

*

O

been

by all classes of our

greenback currency are known.

our

questions which have arisen,
expected to be up for deliberation, none are invested higher. Here, then, is our currency policy. The National
Bank notes are fixed at three hundred millions, and the
With so .much
general interest as those affecting the currency.
% controlling the volume of our circulating money Con¬ greenbacks are to diminish in volume just as slowly or a*?

citizens.

But of all the fiscal

°r are




THE CHRONICLE.

750

[December 15,1866.

This policy is settled, let doings of the Treasury, whether in regard to the cancelling
greatly to reassure of the currency, the sale of gold, or to the conversion of
the people, and might give an impulse to the retarded, hesi¬ securities.
tating wheels of business, if Congress would adopt a reso¬
THE LABOR MARKET AND IMMIGRATION.
lution complementary to Mr. Alley’s famous resolution of
last session, declaring on the one hand that the contraction
The present condition of the labor market presents
features
policy then affirmed shall not be deviated from by any in¬ of significant interest. * 4There is no longer that extreme
crease either of
government paper money or of National scarcity of hands which was one of the early results of the
Bank notes,'and on the other hand that no more rapid reduc¬ close of the war.
By one means or another the several
tion than that of four millions a month shall obtain sanction branches of industry have obtained as much labor as
they re
fast

as can

be done with

unsettle it.

us

not

or

become law.

But the

*

safety.

It would contribute

quire; and
the market.

now we witness the commencement of
In some branches of manufactures

a

glut in

people also require a definite policy as to the
employers
gold-in the Treasury. Let Congress cease to listen to are discharging a portion of their force ; and in most trades
the dreams of unpractical theorists or to the mischievous there is such an increased competition for
employment that
it is found practicable to commence a reduction of
schemes of greedy speculators.
The gold balance as well as
wages.
the idle currency in the Treasury belongs to the people, and
This changed aspect is due to a combination of causes
should be used wisely for public and not private ends.
We jt The natural result of high wages is to induce an increased
do not blame the Secretary of the
Treasury if he has fol¬ resort to the use of labor-saving contrivances;-and this pro¬
lowed sometimes the plan, to which he has been advised, of cess has doubtless been in active operation during
the last
three or four years, enabling producers to realize a given re¬
hoarding gold ; and sometimes the opposite plan of secretly
and suddenly selling it.
Congress has laid down no settled sult with a diminished number of hands. It may be presumed
policy on the subject, and if blame lies any where it lies also that, for some months past, all the returned soldiers have
with the legislative branch of the Government, which has found their way back into the ranks of'the laboring classes
failed to do its whole duty.
The questions involved are forming a most important accession to the productive force
too great, and embrace interests too vast and far
reaching, to of the country. The devastated condition of the South has also
be left to the unaided judgment of a single officer of the contributed to drive from that section to the border States
executive department, however great his integrity, capacity and the North large numbers of the more intelligent negroes
or
and not a few of the young men of the South, whose fortunes
experience.
Another point on which we need a fixed policy is the con¬ have been scattered by the vicissitudes of war, preferring to
solidation of our debt.
By the December statement, else¬ submit to the necessity of earning a living in the North,
where given, it will be seen that we have, within a few months, where they are strangers, to doing so among their friends
to redeem nearly nine hundred millions of short-dated in¬ and where their circumstances would constantly remind them
Again, the high price ol
debtedness, comprising 147 millions of compound interest of their changed condition.
notes and 724 millions of seven-thirties, besides other ma¬ labor lias, no doubt, induced many to engage in the lighter
turing claims. Now if we had a settled policy, which every employments who otherwise would have remained inactive;
one knew and could
rely upon, let us see what could be done and, in this way, minors and women have contributed more
relative to this threatening pile of maturing debt.
than their wonted share to the production of the country.
But the chief accession to the supply of labor has come
First, the anticipation that specie payments are to be re¬
sumed during the life-time of the seven-thirty notes,
The arrivals of emigrants at this port
qjr of the from immigration.
outstanding compounds, would cease to operate on the public during the present year have been on a scale exceeding any¬
mind.
The holders of these securities would be disabused thing within the last twelve years.
Up to the 12th inst.,
of the absurd hope that they may1 receive
gold at par 235,111 emigrant passengers had been registered at Castle
in payment of the principal and interest.
Thousands Garden ; and unusually large numbers have arrived at other
and tens of thousands of misguided expectant investors ports.
During the last three years 602,203 emigrants have
who hold fast their notes, under this singular hallucination, arrived at New York; which is about 400.000 more than
would be glad to sell them, or to convert them into five-twenties. for the three years next preceding the war.
This very large
The consequence must be that, as soon as the Treasury accession has gone far toward supplying the deficiencies of
Department could make the necessary arrangements, the the producing population caused by the casualties of war;
^ whole mass of these short loans would pour in, and would and one of the most conclusive indications that the vacuum
be converted into long bonds.
Suppose, housever, no such thus caused has been already filled up, is the fact that the tide
definite policy is resolved upon, the majority of the holders of immigration has now turned backward. Many of those
of this of short securities will believe the prediction lately arrived are suffering from their inability to find em¬
that specie payments may be soon resumed.
Of what use ployment.' We learn, indeed, that recently the number of
will it be to advertise that they may convert into Five- emigrants returned from Castle Garden has averaged about
twenties'?
Will they not hold their notes in hopes to get 2,000 per week, the majority being destined for Ireland. The
gold for them ? Can men with such expectations be expected offices of the European consuls, especially those of England,
to part w:ith seven-thirty notes, or compound
legal ten¬ Germany and Sweden, are still beset with crowds whose
ders, at present prices ? Is it not clear that the circulation of means have been exhausted while fruitlessly waiting for em¬
such delusive promises of early resumption is calculated to ployment; which indicates the probability of a continuance
have a very mischievous effect on the public credit, and to of this efllux.
contribute to produce serious embarrassment hereafter to
It is clear, from these facts, that we have reached a condi¬
the Treasury %
tion in which the supply of labor exceeds the demand for it.
For these reasons, as well as for others which have often We do not mean to imply that the supply exceeds our means
been urged, we trust that a fixed policy will be decided on, in capital for employing it; for while there is a surplus of
published, ond adhered to by Congress, and that by this labor, there is at the same time a large amount of idle capi¬
authoritative means prevalent mistakes may be corrected, tal. The truth rather is that our ability to produce exceeds
and threatening evils turned aside.
It is also of the highest our ability to purchase. The yield of goods and commodities
importance that full publicity should be enforced as to all the resulting from the labor at present employed exceeds what




December 15,

761

THE CHRONICLE.

1866.]

For the ten

in 1864.

If all the

value of the

months, the aggregate

people are prepared to buy at current prices.
shipments was £158,832,^92, whilst in the' corresponding
roducing resources of the country are to be employed, it period in 1865, the total shipments were valued at £185,264,J,ust therefore be upon terms which will admit of the pro 602, fand in 1864 at £130,275,652. The figures for each
ts being sold at lower prices than at present.
The moral month in each of the last three years are subjoined: 1866.
1864.
1865.
1864.
1865.
1866..
of the present, surplus of labor is thus very obvious; it
£
£
£
£
£
£
the

That result
inevitable. The competition for employment must neces¬
sitate reduction of wages.
This consequence is the more
jain from the fact that employers, in many instances, are
josin<r heavily upon their productions, necessitating them’
either to suspend operations or to reduce wages. The pro¬
is painful to the working classes, and one to which many
capitalists, out of consideration for their hands, are reluctant
yield. But it. is compelled by an inexorable natural neoessity; and the sooner it is yielded to the less will be the
suffering to all parties.
Legislation may afford a certain amount of relief, and
lower wages

■neans

and lower prices generally.

is

a

14,354,748 July. 11.304.301 14,113,410 14,057,834
11,376,214 15,116,063 Aug.. 16,274,260 14,158,648 17,150,156
13,555,674 13,770,154 17,520,354 Sept.- 14,087,012 17,310.631 10,671,078
Oct.. 12,871,401 15,547,225 16,805,804
April. 13,225.030 12,071,111 15,366,414
May
14,176,610 13,104,7 -8 15,870,134 Total
136,215,052 135,201,602 158,832,702
10,413,586 10,480,330

Jan..
Feb..
Mur..

12,608,121

.

June.

cess

to

prompt to yield it. The large advance in prices
necessitated by the. current heavy taxation tends to limit
the consumption of goods, and consequently to curtail the
demand for labor.
And the derangements and uncertainty

should be

of the inflated condition of the currency have a
direct tendency to discourage production generally; which
a?ain operates against the laborer’s interest. By appropri¬

arising out

it

13,227,062 14,030,120

13,078,526

computed real value of the imports of the principal art¬
in the month of September was £ 10,356,015 ; against £21,032,731 in 1805 ; ami £19,901,633 in 1804.
The total for the nine months is £l 74,1 07,005, against £137,303,105 last year, and £100,974,110 in 1804. The following
figures show the total value for each of the first nine months
of the present and last two years :
1865.
1866.
1801.
The

icles of merchandize

1865.
£

1864.
£

1866.
£

6,308,022 0.817,564
12,801,252 16,610,159 All£., 21,044,018
Mar.. 16,306,028 13,005,304 10,801,201 !Scpt. 10,961,633
Apr.. 17,587,565 13,078,755 22,4.^,068 Total 160,971,110
May.. 22,31*2,601 14,505,331 23,224,762
June. 21,498,185 15,407,688 23,243,701
7,520,356
Feb.. 15.214,541

Jail..

£

£

£

'

18,061,100 10,507,020
20.997.001 20,040,303
21.052,731 18,356,015

July.. 20,458.253

137,303,165 174,167,605

following is the total value
O
of the exports during the nine months ending.,Sept. 30 :
1864.
1865.
1 I860.
£12,850,275
To Atlantic ports, Northern.
£7,325.090 £10,868,044
Southern
257,196
279,030
21.883,970
Pacific ports
y
583,116
85,058
190,124
Total
£7,600,678 £38,042,133
£13,400,637
With

regard to this country,/ the
v

O

‘k

;

legislation upon the matters of taxation and currency
is therefore within the power of Congress to afford much
COTTON.
relief to the working classes in their struggle against the ad¬
The imports of cotton in October uere> -30,000 cwts. less
verse results of high prices.
The interest of the operatives
than in 1805, but from the United States, the arrivals
lies in yielding, without rash resistance, to the tendencies
the labor market above indicated.
It is very clear that em¬ showed an increase of 27,000 bales. The arrivals from
Mexico and the West Indies have now ceased, and from Egypt
ployers cannot longer pay the current rates of wages
incurring an injury in which workmen must suffer in com¬ only a small quantity of the new crop lias as yet been
mon with the capitalist.
If the demand for a reduction of ed. Our latest advices from Egypt state that the crop had been
wages is resisted, the resistance must therefore be unsuccess¬ over-estimated, the total growth being expected to reach a
ful, and can only inflict unnecessary suffering upon the work¬ total of 400,000 bales, or 2 00,000 bales less titan the. estimates
men.
By accepting lower wages production will be sus¬ first put forward. In the East Indies the crop is said to
tained, the demand for labor will be kept up, few will suffer looking well. The import of cotton into the United Kingdom
from lack of work, though all may have to partially curtail during the ten mouths ending October 30 was 10,610,271
their enjoyments, and ere long an important compensation cwts., against 6,315,565 cwts. in 1805, and 0,140,790
will be realized in a reduction of the costs of living; all 1864. The particulars of these imports are subjoined :
IMPORTS OF COTTON INTO GREAT BRITAIN IN NINE MONTHS.
that is taken from the laborer in the shape of wages being
1866.
1865.
1804.

ate

.

in

without

receiv¬

be

cwts.in

returned to him in

the form of

commodities.

From

received by the
last mail, show more conclusively the effect of the recent panic
the trade of the United Kingdom. A high rate for money
is said to stimulate-exports and to discourage imports, and the
at hand show precisely these results.
statements
In the
export trade of that country there is a. very large increase
this year as compared with 1SG5, viz.: ot about twenty-three
millions sterling and the total for the mon-h of October is

ber and the ten months

Turkey

802,410

E^ypt

3,355,747
600,136

British India
China
Other

countries

computed real value of

—and the

on

now

£1,600,000 greater than in the corresponding montl in 1805.
With regard to imports a decline has taken place as the year
has progressed, viz., from £23,243,701, the highest

months is

as

Bahamas
Mexico

under:

6,413
3,145
546,549
84,300
785,636

4,804,234
34,767
235,267

10,610,271

6,315,565

6,146,796

Total

4,100,960

303,450
351,630
178,289
1,256,803 *
3,125,005
300,031
362,545

270,006

Brazil

ending October 31,

209,215

158,607

117.726

....cwts

Mexico

BRITAIN AND THE UNITED STATES,
COTTON, BREADSTUFFS, PROVISIONS, ETC.
British Board of Trade.returns for the month of Octo¬

TRADE OF GREAT
The

United States
Bahamas and Bermudas....

nine

the imports for the

1S64.

anti Bermudas..

1865.

1866.

£1,504,480
3,422,227
2,261,430

£1,558.184

£30,424,834
*

1,370,306

2,453.940
2,670,663

3,373,050
1,565,160

414,816
28,501

4,147,407

4,915,209
2,955,006

14,181,006
1,440.687
2,651,760

517,354
6,951,304
10,012,050
144,640
1,564,136.

£56,334,266

Brazil

£36,167,355

£62,838,122

805,879

8,046,015

11,354,653

24,862.133

British India
China
Other

countries.

from Great Britain are about 950,000
touched in the month of June, to £18,350,015, the total for cwts. in excess of last year, all importing countries having
the month of September. Taking, however, the returns, as a taken an increased supply. The total for the ten months is
whole, the trade for the first ten months was most satisfactory 3,032,450 cwts. against 2,186,456 cwts. in FS65, and 1,876,040
1866.
in its extent, but it does not appear to have been so remunera¬ in 1801. These amounts are thus distributed :1865.
1864.
370,957
255,742
....cwts
220,727
55.507
tive
in former years.
Russia, Northern ports
36,807
Many branches, however, have evi
12,586
5,618
Prussia
14,673
45,500
608,500
Hanover
548,008
dently been carried on at a considerable profit, for unless large
430,453
477,26S
Ilanee Towns
351,713
370,765
Holland
1,424,510
profits had been made we should certainly have heard of more
070,333
787,000
Countries

point

The

exports of cotton

.

as

...

e

numerous

other side.
of the exports of

failures from the

British and Irish pro¬
duce and manufactures during the month of October was
£16,895,894, against £15,547,225 in 1865, and £12,871,491
The declared value




Other

1,876,040

Total

2,180,4jG

3,032,450

BREADST U FFS.

This market has

now

assumed an important

position

m

THE

752

[December 15,1866.

CHRONICLE.

LIVE STOCK.
throughout the world, and a considerable rise has taken place
in prices since the 1st of September.
There has been no abatement in the value of
In England the rise
butcher’s
is as much as 17s. 6d. per quarter of eight bushels, and in in England, consequently
a high point
prices remain at
^
other countries the advance is equally important.
In Eng¬ cattle plague cannot be said to have died away, for
sever}
land the crop is somewhat below an average ; but a consid¬ cases have
recently been reported; and as such have occurred
erable proportion ha3 been harvested in poor condition; feats are entertained that in the event of the
Government mod'
hence, the whole of the crop is not immediately available ifying or cancelling the present regulations in reference to
th
for consumption.
In the northern counties this is especially cattle traffic of the kingdom, further serious outbreaks will take
the case, and millers m those districts are therefore com¬
place. Some of the leading farmers, who have even incurred
pelled to go south to purchase the drier and better harvested much loss and inconvenience, are strongly in favor of an ad
wheats produced in that quarter.
The French crop is cer¬ herence to the existing rules for a further period of six month
tainly not so deficient as many persons would have led us to The following are the figures relating to the imports of liv
expect, and it is now a certainty that not only will the car¬ stock for the ten months:
1885.
goes which had been puichased at Black Sea ports be ordered Oxen, bulls and cows
head 12*J,568
170,008
v-vL
Calves
41,174
45,625
to EugJand, but that, without these, exports of flour from
25,605
Sheep and lambs
374,710
639,398
^17.888
58,928
French to English ports will shortly take place. Large sup¬ Swine and hogs
99,359
65,678
EXPORTS OF BRITISH AND IRISH PRODUCE AND
plies of Russian flour have for the last few weeks been re¬
MANUFACTURES.
ceived into the eastern English ports, at the rate of about
The following table shows the declared value of
the ex¬
25,000 sacks of 280 lbs. weight per week ; but as the naviga¬ ports of British and Irish produce and manufactures from
the
tion of the Baltic would shortly close, a termination to these United Kingdom to this country during the first ten
months
importations would ensue. The Prussian crop of wheat has of the present and last two years:
1864.
1865
certainly been injured by the recent war, for although prices AM*
£321.947 £356,025
Beer
are so
738,982
37,852
<JJS
high in England, the imports from the ports ofDantzic, Coalsand ale
11 .,966
95,014
78^194
Cotton Manufactures
(fee., show a considerable falling oT from last year. The ac¬
Piece goods
1,598,851 1,772,4S6
.7

.....

-

<rv*-

.

1Rfi»

—

counts we

have

received from

the south of Russia

are con¬

firmatory of the excellent crop produced in that quar¬
As fair supplies of
wheat and large supplies of
flour were expected from
the Baltic prior to the close
of navigation, and as theie were about 700,000
quar¬

ter.

afloat

wheat

ot

ters

Russia at the

ate

of

to

Great

Biitain

from

the

south of

latest

Tlm-ad
Earthenware and porcelain.

Haberdashery and millinery

34,281

Hardwares

and

Cutlery—

Knives, lurks, &c
Anvils, vices, &c
Piece goo/ls
Thread
Metals—

subjoined

1604.

^

From Russia
Prussia
Denmark

cwts

Schleswig, Iloletein, & Lauenburg
Mecklenburg

Hanse Towns

3.851,120
4,165,759
050,833
‘241.270
500,'*70
471.007

Prance

Turkey, Wallachia. and Moldavia..

Egypt

United State*
British North America
Other Countries

Castings
Hoops, sheets and boiler plates
Wrought

520,1)30
430,249
960.800
7,577.700

1,033’572

1865.

I860.

6,570.075
4,600,5=2
525,521
220,957

6,439,820
3,522,490

522,227
388,117
1,256,495
512.257 '
10.01*3
951.943
294.316

154.233

367,443
20,503
440,290

8,7=9

850,155

2,514,527

16,732,708

-

Oats

Indian

1S65.

277,843

195,795
1,997,746

1,576,904
1,709,898
396,477
103,452

226,964

1806.
237.166

3,243,638

110,127

225,f 84
26,822
261,966

4,220,626

2,723,096
6,634,043

4,580,066

4,000,236
6,013,810

6.489,312

7,472,011

4,751,401

...-r-.

corn

.

5,451,722

13,149,623

163.064

imports of these during the ten months were not mate¬
rially in excess of last year. Prices in England continued to
ruie high, but as the
supply of pigs in the kingdom was very
large, and as the pork season had opened at very moderate
quotations, it was expected that a fall in the value of salted
meats would take
place. The imports in the ten months are
subjoined :
1864.

Pork, salt, cwts
Butter, cwts
Caeese, cwts

Eggs, number...
Lard, cwts




1865.

595,075

581,584
155,315
153,716
889,142
608,091

790.702

'599,716
291,597,240
<

37585

33,178

47.118

72,199
17.270

58,021
1,404

113,155

27,983
75.189
37,215

34.997
97,156
34,046

90,295

10,874

Wool
:
Woolen and Worsted Manufactures—
Cloths of all kinds

37,242

11,121
11,682

091,982
274,530
60,765

398,735
251,845
25,533

..

Carpets and druLgets
Shawls, rugs. &c
Worked stuffs of wool only,
mixed with other material.

8,612
33.137

74,629
16,26-3

13,700
830,613
708,613
42,718

and of wool
1,983,885

2,829,942 3,248,205

SHIPPING.

The

following figures relate to the shipping trade between
month of Octo¬

this country and the United Kingdom for tiie
ber and the ten months ending Get. 31 :
VESSELS

ENTERED

AND

CLEARED

INTO

AND

FROM

ALL FORTS,

Number.

Tonnage.

24

23.136

do
1805
do
do
do
1866
Entered in ten months, 1864
do
do
1865
do
do
1806.
Cleared in October, 1804
do
do
186:5
do
do
1866
C.eared iu ten months, 1864
(to
do
1865.....
do
do
1866

38
17

37,571
18,270

373

406.159

OF

ALL

NATIONALITIES

267

375,104

48

•.

285,361

359

50,638

45

62,571
51,033

374

404,154

49

314,037
401,804

307
458
ENTERED

AND

CLEARED

INTO AND

Number.
-Entered in October, 1864

-80

Tonnage

64,84

84
72

,

JMJ
77,570

998

do
do
1865
do
do
1866
Entered in ten months, 1864
do
do
’1805
do
do
1806

do
do
’ 1865
do
do
I860
Cleared in ten months, 1864
do
do'
1865
do
do
1860

FROM

FORTS.

89m«

m

1,841

*'

1>3
1«

1,*1JJ"
38

96=

,2K
1»0lo,w<

1,215

1,250,S62

,

782

1866.

962,275
258,267
175,566

’

149,176
340,374
340,374
96,690

43,0S6

AMERICAN

The

hams, cwts

115.986

182735

43,086

VESSELS

Beef, salt, cwts

547338

47.040
,

PROVISIONS.

Bacon and

250,0*5
32,612

Entered in October, 1864

4,064,574

Barley

225.6S3

435,355
14,240

18,551,932

1804.

Tutal

16,242
286,759

71,900
115,127

686.18-4

FLOUR.

Franc*
United States
British North America
Other Count, ies

642.226

3,793

47,074

AMERICAN

.cwts

250,622
471,585

332,864

212,841
..:

Tin plates
Oilseed

3,327,975

20,263,2=3

From nan pc Towns

128.199

148,943

21 8.272

Steel—Unwrought
Copper, wrought.
Lead, pig

658,274

413,104

379,117

Total

82 430

60838

2,562.392 3,498,420
118,746
199,592

208,‘20
687,222
798,832
13,919

Bar, &c
Bail road

260,209

Spirits, British

:

WHEAT.
-n,

115,473

169,111

Iron-Pig, &c

..

7.),876
241,956

2 172 648

for the

ten months are

.

239,210

Salt
Silk Manufactures—
Broad piece goods
Handkerchiefs
7
Ribbons of silk onlv
Other articles of silk only....
Other articles mixed with other materials..

our

134,364
284,052
346,*97
6 9,632
695,765 1,016,170

^ppOl
<.,902

Manufactures of Germau silver, &c.
Linen Manufactures—

advices, there was a decided
pause in the wheat trade, and millers showed no disposition
to buy,
except at reduced rates. But as the- information at
hand from this port was to the c fleet that
very little produce
was
being shipped to Europe, holders of wheat and flour were
very firm, and lully the recent, advance in prices was demanded.
The import of wheat into the United
Kingdom in October
was
1,830,560 cwts., against 3.058,269 cuts.; and of fPur
258,623 cwts., against 205,306 cwts. last year. The figures
.

2,715 I'll

177,164
366,920

199,323

181,526
138,375

844,398
648,453
32 ',485,440
99,193

387,164,400

220,995

PUBLIC DEBT -OF TIIE UNITED STATES

from the books and Treasurer’s returns
Treasury Department, on tiie 1st of October, 1st of November,
and the 1st of December, 1866, comparatively :
Abstract statement, as appears

in the

debt bearing coin

i

r(iut

Per„ccul'

bonds'

„
„

0f 1807 and
of 1881..
5 20’S

u
»
u

Tension

Fund

Dt?c. 1.

Nov. 1.

$198,091,350 $198,001,350 $198,091,350

11,750,000

11,750,0 0

11,750,000

.

15,837,042
283,740,000
861,64' ‘,300

1 6,033,742
283,730,750
823 944,0U0

18,3-23.502
283,738,750
708,162,250

1868:...

$1,310,065,042 $1,333,558,842 $1,371,0CS,502
currency interest.

debt bearing
,

n,rceDt

$0,882,000
148,512,140

which interest has

ceased.

$23,302,372

bonds and notes

DEET BEARING NO

rnited States

$857,022,890

7-24,014,300 690,033,750

743,906,050

$930,930,190

fjrioHi

147,387,140

$832,408,440

155,512,140

Compound Interest Notes

{}£7.30 notes..-

DEBT on

$10,302,000

$3,022,000
22,500,000

bonds

ISoraryLoau...

$36,083,900 $22,605,794

INTEREST:

$399,165,292 $390,195,785 $385,441,819
27,029,273
27,588,010
28,620,249

Notes

ESnal currency

11,057,640

of deposit

10,896,980

19,636,500

$437.^52,205

Gold certificates

$428,680 775

$433,693,598

$2,701,550,709 $3,681,636,966 $2,684,995,875

debt

128.213,767 130,326,900 185,304,037
$2,573,330,941 $2,551,310,000 $2,549,631,238
Debt, less coin and currency
The following statement shows the amount of coin and currency sep¬
arately at the dates in the foregoing table :
Oct. 1.
Nov. 1.
Dec. 1.

Coin and Currency in

(v.u

Treasury.'

Total gold

$123,213,707 $130,320,960 $135,304,037

coin andcnrrency..

EXOIIANfiE AT LONDON, AND ON
LATEST DATES.

AT

EXCHANGE AT LONDON
i

Amsterdam

.,.

-...

Hamburg

Paris...“.

Paris
Vienna
Berlin
St. Petersburg
Cadiz
Lisbon
Milan
Genoa

:

6.25%@ 6.261-4
30%@ 30%
48% @ 48%

44

•

Hong Konw...
44

Bombay
4 i

4s.

Oct. 22.

!

60

1 Nov.

days.
“

90

days.

60 days.
44

4$.
>4
4 1

16.

Oct. 14.

4!>%@49%
44 %@—
24% @25

6 mo's, 4s. 5%</.@4 6

4 4

Nov. 13.
Nov, 15.

1

~

151%
2% ]>. c. prom.
27>J@24K@24%

41

Oct. 28.
Oct. 31.

l*ll%d@l 11%
nil %4@i 11%

[From our own

—

Nov. 27.
Oct. 24.
Oct. 18.
Nov. 9.
Oct. 30.
Oct. 3.
Nov. 5.

5K'l.

dis.

53K
V

-

1 p. c.

—

—

_

=4$. 5%'<i.
1 p. c. prem.
1*11
—

Sydney

81% @31%

3 mo’s.

—

—

.

—

—

Nov. 26. 30 days.

—

—

3 mo’s.

| Nov. 30.

'

days.

-

—

.—

00

-

25.19
25.25

—

—

Pernambuco..

13.6K@

.

—

Valparaiso....

11.77K@

25.20 .@25.22K

k*

41

...

-

days.
44

27.17K@-U.25

Havana
Kio de Janeiro
Buenos Ayres.

3

“

✓

RATE.

TIME.

“

—

Jamaica

Madras
Calcutta

Nov. 30.

51K@-51%
27.17K@27.25
27.15 @27.25

V

(4

New York....

Cevlon

DATE.

11 153k@ll.16K
short.
3 mouths. 25.40 @25.47K!
44
13. 8K@13. 9
41
25.35 @25.40
25.15 @25.20
short.
3 mouths. 13.10 @33.20

Naples

Singapore

LATEST

RATE.

TIME.

LONDON,

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.

DEC. 1.

ox—

Naps.

anb (ffommcrcial (Smgltsl)

fittest monetary

Antwerp.

30,913,942

41,953,858

BATES OF

$95,168,S15
40,195,821

$99,413,018

$86,259,909

roin

44

30

days.

6Kd.@—

of bullion for the week of
amounts

agricultural districts for completing the late tedious harvest.
contracted home trade, and universal caution in entering into
fresh engagements, the actual mercantile demand is not likely to be up
to the average.
But, at the same time, much money is refused for
numerous purposes.
Calls, to meet tho losses of defunct or semi-de¬
funct companies, continue to be freely made*and these rather than show
ing signs of diminishing, have certainly a tendency to increase. Scarcely
a
day, and certainly not a week, elapses, without some call being made
or some company applying for power to wind up.
The company mania
may now be said to have died out, and as many have evidently learned
a very enduring lesson, it will probably be some years before we shall
witness such a host of new undertakirgs in so short a time. The affairs
of Overend, Gurney & Co. remain in a state of abeyance.
The official
liquidators are said to have sufficient funds in hand to pay 5s. in the
pound to the creditors, but at present they do not seem inclined to move
in the matter.
The creditors appear, indeed, to be a patient people, for
although there has been so much discussion with regard to this concern,
they have scarcely moved at all, and even now seem disposed
to await quietly the announcement of the payment of the
first
dividend.
The Agra Bank will shortly commence business, a9
soon
as the requisite formalities have been gone through with at
the Court of Chancery.
The applications for shares have been
greater than was required ; but although they have been thus far
successful, the Directors will probably find some difficulty in raising the
new bank to the standard of the Agra and United Service Bank.
The
success of the new institution, however, is universally desired.
Several
meetings of the London, Chatham aod Dover Railway proprietors have
been held this week.
The new directors proposed a short time since to
raise £1,500,000, which should be a first charge on the line, the de¬
benture holders to have the first choice of subscribing to this new cap¬
ital. At a meeting of the debenture holders, on Monday last, this pro¬
posal was received with disapprobation. .'The-meeting wa9 very noisy
in character, and demands were made to sell the line, but eventually a
quieter feeling prevailed, and an arrangement was arrived at between
the directors and the debenture-holders, for the latter to inspect the
books of the company before they committed themselves to any arrange¬
ment.
Thus the matter stands for the present. The General Credit
and Finance Company have brought their proposals before their share¬
holders this week, and have obtained their consent to change the name
of the undertaking to the General Credit and Discount Company, and
to reduce the liability on each share.
These are the leading facta in
referenced public companies, although many minor cases might be re¬
lated, but they have very little interest abroad.^ They are chiefly in
connection wdth the preliminary arrangements of winding up third-rate
in the
With

2%@3 p. c. disc.
2s.
2s.
2s.

being attributable to the return of coin from the provinces,
metropolis, or had been retained

which had been withdrawn from the

0Ktf.
0>.A
0% d.

2% p. c. prom.

Correspondent.]
London, Saturday, Dec. 1, 1866.

present week is a very favorable statement,
position of the establishment is now one of great strength. The
Bank Directors, however, have considered it prudent to make no charge
in the rates of discount, and the minimum quotation remains, therefore,
at four per cent.
As the rate is at so moderate a point, the policy of
the Directors has not excited discussion, and it is now maintained that
we shall not witness a lower rate for accommodation during the present
year. We are fast approaching the close of 1860, and between now
and then numerous and heavy payments will have to be made. During
the whole of the present month we shall have considerable activity in
the demand for discount, in connection, partly, with ordinary payments,
and partly w:th the payments on new' loans, of which several for small
accounts, on account of our Australian Colonies, have, recently been
brought forward. The Russian loan of .£6,000,000 will absorb a large
amount in some shape or other; but as the Russian government is said
to be
largely indebted to the mercantile body in this country, it does
not seem probable that
any considerable portion will be sent away
on this account.
The mercantile demand for discount is ©till small.
but the recent loans have reduced the supply of available money;
hence, in addition to a better inquiry for accommodation, the source
of
supply has been to some extent contracted, and higher rates have,
therefore, been obtained. Money, however, is now returning freely
from the Provinces.
The Bank return shows this circumstance most
conclusively. During the six days embraced in that return, £203,000 in
bar gold was taken to the Bank, whilst £65,000 in sovereigns was
withdrawn from export, making a balance in favor of tho Bank of
The Bank return of the

The Bank return, however, shows an increase in the supply
£422,656, the difference between these two

£138,000.

interest.

Oct. 1.

753

CHRONICLE.

THE

18C6.J

December 15,

a

undertakings.

time, the liabilities of the banking department
are heavy, and tho circulation oi notes is still about £2,000,000 above
the average of ordinary times. The following statement shows the po¬
sition of the establishment at the commencement of the present year?
during the hei ght of the panic, and on Wednesday evening last : Bank

and the




the last few

greatly increased in strength dm-ing

The Bank has

weeks; but, at the same

C rculation.

January 3
2
8
9
12
17....
23

May
4 4
44

Advances.

Bullion.

£24,737,687

£13,106,183

Reserve.
£5,979,748

rate.

£22,221,807

23,309,819

20,380,395

13,509,140

5,636,140

22,806,060

...

20,844,217

15,150,140

5,811,745

7
8
9

26,650,817

12,323,805
11,857,786
11,878,775

1,202,810
1,388,216
859,980

10
10
10

18,175,570

10,688,820

4

.

30

“

Nov.

26,562,525

30,943,25y
31,050,406
33,447,463

28

44

23,003,209

19,166,003

.

...

8

10

higher than at the
commencement of the year, but £3,500,000 less than at the period
when the Bank’s resources wer6 most severely pressed upon. Ad¬
vances, since the 30th of May, have fallen to the extent of £14,260,000
whilst, as compared with the same period, there is an increase of £6,-;
300,000 in the supply of bullion, and of £9,800,000 in the reserve of
The note circulation is

notes

therefore about £S00,000

and coin. *
demand for discount during the present

The

above, ruled active,

and the rates in the open

.

week has, as stated

market are only about

one-eighth beneath those of the Bank of England. A large amount
has been required, viz.: £S50,000, to pay up in full the Victoria 6 per
cent, loan, and as the letters of allotment for the Russian loan will be
shortly issued, further sums will be required to pay the first instal¬
ment.

and

for £250,000 was

announced yesierday,

position of the money market i9 favorable for the introduc¬
foreign loans, there will probably be further applications. As
fourth of the month is approaching, we shall experience a good de
as

tion of
the

A New Zealand loan

the

As the week closes the trade for English wheat is very inactive
millers bid ls/to 2s. per quarter less money; but factors at present
re
fuse to sell.
Russian wheat, ex-ship, has, in some instances, been
die

To-day there is an
inquiry for accommodation, and the rates for the best paper,

mand to meet the
active

engagements then falling due.

having various periods to
Bankminimum

run, are ns
Per Cent. I

|

follows

:

Per Cent.

posed of at

4 @
bills.... 4%h5
3%©4 | 4 & 6 months’ bank bills„... 4 ©4%
little change in tho rate on the Continent dur¬
4

Open market rates:
30 to 60 days’bills
There has been very

@

3 months’ bills.

.

v

English Market Reports—Per Cable.

The supply of money at Paris has increased to the ex¬
and the open market rates for the best paper is 2£
per cent,, or f th9 to
per cent, beneath the official minimum.
In
other quarters the quotations rule stationary.
The following are the
rates at the leading cities:
Pank '

88^@Jfor
and SSf@£ for account. United States G’s (5-20’s) of 1866 have
scarcely varied a fraction from day to day. The series of 1864 and 1865
have now been admitted to call at the Exchange, and are selling from
1 to 1£ less than the old bonds.
In American railroad shares there hag
been increased activity, and prices have advanced. The following statement shows the daily closing price of Consols, and the specified Amer¬

3

5
4%

Vienna...
Berlin
“

p c.

$ c.
2% %

Turin

6%

Brussels

6
3

Madrid

5

5

--

quotations

Owing to the Fenian disturbances in Ireland there has been less firm¬
in the Consol market during the present week, and prices have
steadily declined. Yesterday, in consequence of the favorable returns
of the Banks of England and France, the market opened with increased
firmness, at an advance of nearly one-quarter per cent.; but at the close
prices were rather weak. There is very little business doing to-day,
and no material change has taken place in the quotations.
The highest and lowest prices each day during the week are sub¬
joined :
.
W’kend’g Dec 1

Friday.

S9%@% 1 S9%@,%

89%©%

mon’y 89%.@90

89%@90

S9%@%

77%
46%

\v

88%

71
77%

71

71

77%
47%

X*
71

77%
47%

77%
47*

47

m

United States Sixes, 1862, are

quoted at
Liverpool has been active, and

on

steady. The total business of the week has been from 75,000 to
80,000 bales, against 66,000 bales the previous week. Upland mid¬
dlings closed at 14 being a gain on the week of |@f d. per pound
The recent activity observed in the Breadstuffs market has noticeably
subsided. Prices, however, are not seriously affected. Wheat is id,
per cental lower. Western Corn, on the 10th, was quoted at 39s, per
quarter, and next day at 88s. 3d., being 9d. lower. No repdrt has been
received of later date than Tuesday.
The Provisions market has been generally inactive and dull. The in¬
creased firmnesb in Pork, reported on Monday, appears from later re¬
ports to have been lost.
American Turpentine is reported lower. Tallow is steady. Petro¬
leum unchanged.
The Manchester market is reported steady.

closed

Sat’day.

Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day. 1 Thursday

71

77%

The Cotton market at

ness

!

large busiuess has been done in the market for United States
Five-twenty bonds. Prices, however, owing to the receipt of a higher
exchange, and a heavier premium od gold from New York, have occa.
eionally had a flat tendency. Atlantic and Great Western Railway se¬
curities have ruled heavy, and at one period of the week there was con¬
Rather

46%

At Frankfort

last week.

Consl. for

71
71

jfirie Railway shares,...

demand, and the

88%

88%

88%
88)4

U. S. 5-20’s, 1862
Illinois Central shares..

Mon. 10. Tues. 11

Sat. 8.

Fri. 7.

somewhat lower, but there is no especial change from

are

:

Consols for money

3%
S©9

7

Continental cities have been in increased

on

ican securities

7

Hamburg
St. Petersburg

3%

—

2%
3%adv—

:

4

3%

market,
c,

rate,

5adv

Frankfort
Amsterdam

money,

Open

Open

market.

^ c.
At Paris

decline of Is. per quarter.

The money market has been remarkably steady through the week
with discounts at 3|(u)4 per cent,, uud consols, ex-dividend,at

ing the week.

Bank
rate.

a

4 & 6 months’ trade

tent of £712,000,

Bills

[December 15,1866.

THE CHRONICLE

754

a

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
In Illinois Central_Railway shares very little
business has been done ; but Eries have been dealt in to a fair extent^
Imports and Exports for the Week.—The following are the im¬
at lower prices.
The closing quotations to-day are subjoined : United ports at New York for week ending (fur dry-goods) Dec. 7, and for
States Five-twenty bonds, 70f to 7Of; Atlantic and Great Western the week ending (for general merchandise) Dec. 8 :
FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.
Railway debentures, 54 to 58 ; do. Consolidated Mortgage boDcls, 41 to
1866.
1865.
1S64.
1863.
41^; Erie Railway shares, 45^ toJGiV ; and Illinois Centrals,
to77f.
11,432,230
$228,304
$1,994,024
$1,IBS,379
Dry goods
The highest and lowest prices of American securities, each day during General merchandise.
3,196,052
3,149,605
1,278,576
3,278.562

siderable

depression.

the week, are

annexed

;

$4,466,941
169,543,121

,

HIGHEST PRICKS OF

For week

AMERICAN SECURITIES.

United States 5-20’s, 6 per cent, 1882 ..
do
do
do
1881
do
1865....
do
do
do
do
do
1874
....

....

Massachusetts, 1st May, 1st Nov. 5p.c.

Virginia65 per cent
do
per cent

Atlantic and Great Western, New York
section, 1st mortgage, 1880
Pennsylvania section, 1st m, 1877..
do
cous’ted rnort. b’ds, 1895 .
Erie shares. 100 dollars, all paid
do Convertible bonds. 6 per cent
Illinois Central, 6 per cent, 18 <5
do
7 per cent. 1875
do
$100 share's, all paid ..
Marietta and Cincinnati 7 per cent....
New York Central, 100 n^llar shares ...
Panama Rail, 7 per cent, 1872, 2d mort.

Pennsylvania It.lt. 2d mort., 6 p. c —
do
$50 shares
Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mortgage.
1881, (gua. by Penn. Railroad Co)
do
with option to be paid in
Philadelphia
Canada G per cent

70%

73

LOWEST

73

69%

69%

67

67

67

78
50

7S
50
42

78
50

50

42

one

following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Dec. 10:
EXTORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE

70

42%

4

41%
47%J

40%
46%

69
S3

09

83
67
77
69
70
102
8-4

48
69

-%
48%
69%

83

83

67%

67
77.

77%

69
70
102
S4

69
70

102
84

70.

67

77
69
-

70
102
84

■

45%

46

69
83

67%

69
70

70
70

S3

70
70

70
70
41
69

70
70

67%

77
69
70
102
84

34%

34%

34%

34%

Since

January 1
In the commercial

75

75

75

75

75

93%
77%

93%
77%

198,503,869

160,805,868

$3,101,416
175,383,922

$202,502,454 $160,423,887

$178,485,333

$163,294,343

department will be found the official detailed
imports and exports for the week.
The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive
of specie) for the past week, and since July 1, is shown in the follow¬
ing table :

75

75

$5,618,019

statement of the

34%

75

This
week.

Since

To
July 1, 1800
Great Britain... $1,663,853 $.36,664,117 Cuba.
France
3,512.723 1 Hayti
Holland & Belg.
175,595
2,283,345 Other W. i ".’. ’..
4,965,369 Mexico
149,972
Germany
199.583 New Granada...
Other N.Europe
io,dio
849,590 Venezuela
Spain
Other S. Europe
3,500,104 Br. Guiana
201,660
To

.

75

75

75

93

93%
77%

92%

75
93

7S

77%

Tues.

United States 5-20’s
Atlantic & Great Western consolidated

70%

70%

69%

69%

70%

70%

mortgage bonds
Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid
Illinois Central, 100 dollars, all paid

41%
47%
77%

41%
47%

40
47

40%
46%

40%
45%

41%

77

77

77

77

Wed. Thur.

Fri.

Sat.

.

following table shows the course of the market for United States
Five-twenty bonds during the week ending Nov. 29l:
The

Nov. 23.

Hamburg

..

..

.

..

Nov. 24.

74 %
74%
75 J*
%
75%

74%
75%
75%
68%

68%
63:

Nov. 2G. Nov. 27. hfov. 28. Nov. 29.
74 3-16
73%
73%
74%

75%

75

76%

75%

68%

68 '

Mexican stock is much firmer, and at one period of the
iatioo

.which

74%
75%
67%

73%
75%
68

day the quo.
was as high as 19f@|.
To-day’s price is 19£@£. Russian scrip,
has sold as high as 2^@$ premium, is now quoted at lf@f pre¬

mium.




China
Australia
Br.N A Colonies

The
46
77

Since
July 1-

This
week.

$168,916

$3,853,268
f

•

28,293

.

..

Mon.

Amsterdam
Frankfort
Berlin

1866.

1865.

$3,998,585

160,390,899

Previously reported

77
69
70
102
8-4

PKICKS OF PRINCIPAL AMERICAN SECURITIES.

At—

WEEK.

1864.

$2,903 444

Por the week

41%

34%

•7%

ending December 1.

found the imports of dry

The

6.750

East Indies

For week

$280,594,153

week later.

42

42

$197,905,236 $195,542,325

report of the dry-goods trade will be

our

goods for

69%

67

67
78
50
42

In

70%

73

275,965,871

1S03.

5 per cent

do

70%

73

....

67
79
50
42

$174,010,062

Sat.

70%

70
73

70%

73

Fri.

Wed. Thur

Mon. Tues.

ending December 1.

$4,628,282

$5,148,629
190,398,696

$1,506,880
196,398,356

14,904

1,440,7-0
1,61 ,983

60,007

Brazil

Other S. A. ports
All other ports.

230,264

'

120,803

26,445
18.865

3.399,861

2,065,316
374*45

470,848

118,650

V69.4W

77,791
52,681

89t,4«3

2.350,882

following will show the exports of specie from the
ending Dec 8, 1866 :

port of New

York for the week

American

gold

Silver com....
Gold coin

193.5S4

Spanish silver
1, ]

Spanish gold

165,700

Silver bars
German silver
Mexican silver

130,000

Mexican silver.....

Dec. S—S.S. City of Baltimore, Liv’l—
American gold
...
$19,962
“
8—S.S. Germania, Hamb’y—

26,000

Total since Jun.
Same time in
1865
1864
1863
1862
1861

2,000
6,000

$27,805,629
46

893

an onn a-td

ft? 9°.9 non
a aja os?
<19 nun quo

68,480,430

g0,596

Total for the week

ro

Previously reported

j8,5os,-ho

Same time In
1 Rftft
‘
1857

1858
1855
1854
1853..».

.t--

I

December 15,
TbjasuRE from
:

sure

port Dec. 10. The following is her trea¬

FROM

I am, very

SAN FRANCISCO.

$71,987
95 Wells, Fargo & Co
105,015
59 Dabney. Morgan & Co
217.755
Lees & Waller
00
550,000
00 Order
93
Total from S. Francisco.$l,168,316
51,000 00

Schall &Co...<■

Kelly & Co

.

24
14

Flour

70
00

$91,586 93

F. Gnndry

oeii &

for the years

510 00
13 4 CO
JaacsTotal trom both sources 700 00
& Aech
receipts of treasure from

The
i as

19

«n

$94,796 93

And from

H.Chamieey 799,706

H.Chaunccyl,209.048
Costa Rica..1,469,286
ar'l2 New York. .1,425.553
ar.23. Arizona.... 389,837
[ar31.H.Chauncey 673.615
nr 9.New York..
729,862
809,459
nr’20 Arizona
eb21

far 5

kvl Costa

Arizona... .1,276,505
31.Costa Rica. 324.552
949,906
ine 9.New York..
ane20. Arizona— 892,365

[ay 21
av

date.
Steamship. At date#
2.N. Light....1,017,899 18,038,242
9.New York..1,429,833 19,468,077
21. Arizona
2,051.456 21.519,536
31.II.Chaunceyl,055,481 23,175,019

12.977.019
14,253,524
14.578,077
15,527,984
16,420,346

1864.

Barley, bu.
Rye, hu...
Peas, bu..

1865.

4,84,906

T’l

35.074

1868.

1,601,379
118,358
328,421

4S,860

34,916

234,573

grain,b.l,676,732 2,455,700 3,973,917

opening of navigation to Dec. 1st for the years :
1865.

30,772

8,204

1864.

I860.

50,954

Wheat, bu.5,578,503 5.862,229 5,233.821

1S66.

1865.

Barley, bn. 1,731,785 3,096,690 4,25-1,118
Rye, bu.... 100.907
408.312 560,114
Pens, bu... 219,342
150,S49 356,526

Corn, bu.. 1.279.137 2,480,066 3, 75.207
Oats, bu... 791,763 344,046
316,798 | T’lgr’n, b.

1,485,314
2,430,198
3,879.206
5,08S,319 Aug.21. Nor. Light. 3,091,601 26,266,615
6,557,602 Aug.31 .Arizona... .1,386,058 27,652,6' 6
29,322,034
7,983,155 Sept. 9.II. Chaun’y.1,009,359 30,537,107
Septl9.New York.
8,372,992 Oct. 1. Arizona .1,215,073 31,646,647
9,1)46,607 Oct. 12. H.. Chau n’ 1,109,537 32,781,740
y. 1,135,093
9,776,469
34,210,444
10.585,901 Oct. 20.Oc n Queen.1,428,703 35,439,313
Oct. 31 .Arizona

Rica..1,318,271 11,904,199

O.New York...1,072.820

1,190

394,088

1866.

5,703

1864.

Date.

July
July
July
July

1865.

bu.1,030,545 1,524,385 1,492,515
Corn, bu
14,651
291,435 276,552
Oats, bu... 153,514
2,000
37,477

$1,263,113 39

of Nov.

:

Wheat

follows :

!h l'Atlantic.... 944,878
Jb‘ 9.New York. .1,449,074

fay

$2,000 00

Aspinwall

Oswego.—The following will show the

of

1864.

Flour, bbls

To date.
S.NewYork ..$685,010 $685,616

H. McCulloch.

13,513

California since January 1, .I8b6, have

Steamship. At date.

i,te

Total from

indicated

46
Flour, bbls

Dearborn & Bro

yours,

Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank, Buffalo, N. Y.

Grain Trade

and

truly,

receipts of flour and grain at Oswego, by lake, during the month

FROM ASPINWALL.
n

impracticable

no

"

Hon. E. G. Spaulding,

$15,150
33,515
00,000
30,800
33,091

Co

Sherman & Co.
f i W. Seiigman & Co..
Duncan,

Eocene

with great caution, and attempt

thing.
■

panama Railroad

tf

have in the past,

California.—The steamship Rising Star from Ae

pinwall,Dec. 2, arrived at this

755

THE CHRONICLE.

1866.]

9,701,4971.2,342,19214,196,584
Manchester Cotton Yarn and Goods’ Market, London Wool
Sales, etc.—Tn reference to these markets, our correspondent in Lon¬
don WTites

U9

follows

:

Manufacturers
conclude sales
by submitting to a reduction in the quotations. The trade is dull, both
as
regards borne trade and shipping yarns.
Jn cotton cloth very little
business is doing. There is no material change'to notice in prices, but

Manchester, Nov. 28.—The yarn market is very flat.
show no disposition to buy, and spinners are only able to

1,228,869

Nov. 9.IIChauncey 555,776 35,995,089
Nov. 20.Oc’n Qucenl,ll3,615 37,108,704
Dec. 2.Arizona
1,127,S85 38,236.589
Dec. 10.Rising Star.1,108,316 39,404,905

the tendency is strongly downwards.
London Wool Sales—These sales

with fair spirit, but ta¬
The best
An Act to Amend the National Currency^ Act.—On Wednesday
descriptions of wool move off freely at full prices ; but inferior qualities
of this week the Bank bill was reported to the House by Mr. Hooper, are
quite Li. to Id. per lb. lower than at the last series of sales. There
Chairman of the Committee on Banking and Currency. It is entitled is a moderate export inquiry.
an act to amend an act to provide a national currency, secured by a
We call attention to the advertisement by Messrs. L. P. Morton <fe
pledge of United States bonds, and to provide for the circulation and
redemption thereof, and is, in all its main features, similar to the bill re¬
Co., of the International Ocean Telegraph Company, the shares of
ported last year, as an amendment to the act of 1864, and for which which are offered
by them for subscriptions. The advantages under
this is a substitute. First, it limits the circulation of any one bank to
$1,000,000: second, redemption in New- York; third, reduction of the which this corporation commences operations, and the facts which should
circulation of existing banks $31,000,000 by scaling down the circula¬ make the
enterprise successful and profitable are stated very clearly in
tion of all banks whose capital exceeds $300,000 ; fourth, distributing
ken,

$30,000,000 of this circulation equally among Slate banks yet to be
converted into National banks, and to new banks in States that have
heretofore received the least ratable proportion of circulation ; fifth,
fuller and more complete returns to the Comptroller of the Currency ;
sixth, mure power to the Comptroller to close up defaulting banks;
seventh,

more severe

Specie Payment

punishment for counterfeiting.
Legal Tender Currency.—The following

and the

interesting correspondence between Hon. E. G. Spaulding
retary of the Treasury has been sent us for publication :
MR.

SPAULDING

TO

SECRETARY

and the Sec¬

pamphlet
only seen

copy of your
a synopsis of

a

favor

by sending to

day lists ol bonds, &c., lost, and
continued daily, and on Saturday
morning such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin
will be collected and published in the Chronicle.
Below will be found those

Wegivo in our Bulletin from day to
These tallies will be
dividends declared.

RATE

by mail

I

$5

Dry Dock, E. BMway &Bai.

j

5

Phil. Balt. &

money

for legitimate business
get some check it

Canals.
Illinois & Michigan

Nos
„

E. G. Spaulding.

Hon. Hugh MoJulloch, Secretary
6KCTETARY

of the Treasury.

m’CULLOCH’s RErLY.
Treasury Department.
Washington, Dec. 7, 1866.

Dear Sir.—Your favor of the 4th instant is received.
ive a copy of my report through the Comptroller of

)

f

You will re¬

the Currency. It

hastily written, but is, I think, sound in doctrine.
What we need is an increase of labor. If we could have the product)
industry of the country in full exercise, we could return to specie
yments without any very large curtailment of United States notes.
object has been to keep the market steady, and to work back to
lie payments without a financial collapse.
I shall act in future as I
ib

very

r




5
i

|

’OTiCompany’sOfficYDec 17 to Jan. 22.

5

BONDS.

20 to Jau. 9.
*

.

following is a List of Bonds Lost by tiie itoyal Insurance Company :
5 per cent. Coupon 1S74 Ronds, $1,000 Each.
1.656, 1,657, 1.058, 1,659, 4,93’., 10,045, b',69i), 11.341, 12,950, 12.951,
12,952, 12,953, 12,954, 12,955, ~ ~ ‘ '
^“
14,
16.

16,
16.

for at least a year to come.

plain.
1 hope
you will he able to reach the specie standard with at least
BO,000,001) of plain legal tender United States notes still outstanding.
The amount of gold and silver com now available in this country is so
Bmall that it constitutes a very inadequate basis on which to rest the
largely increasing volume of business to be transacted, and unless we
can have
legal tender in some form, other than gold and silver coin, I
think we will hereafter be very much exposed to panics and revulsion1',
to the
injury of legitimate business, and, consequently, diminished rev¬
enues.
If we can maintain $250,000,000 of the paper tender at the
specie standard, in addition to the supply of gold and silver, I think the
business of the country would in future be much more steady and unif°rm.
Yours truly,

Jan.2

'Jau 2 ’67;Nat. B’dwav B’lt Dec.
j fan. 2 ’67 j Company’sOflicel
1
I
!
Jan .2’67;89 Maiden Lane.

LOST
The

be occasional spasms

would be a good thing for
engaged in industrial pursuits would not com¬

Wilmington.. j

CLOSED.

WHERE.

Railroad.
New York A New Haven..

generally 1 shall look

plenty of

BOOKS

o't.

a

me

order to be able to
gold-bearing bonds, be¬

If the speculators should
the country, a d all men

V.

V
)

it, but it seems to me that you
situation, and have stated it with‘force and ability. I congratulate you
on the favorable exhibit of the public debt, which is in a great measure
due to your discreet and prudent management of the national finances.
You have no doubt now, to a large extent, control of the finances of the
.country, and I think that you will, of necessity, contract moderately, so

fur

DIVIDENDS.

1 have
understand the

to preserve a tolerably easy money market, in
fund the compound G's and the 7-30’s into long
tween this and the 15th of July, 1S68.
There may
and tightness for money with the speculators, but

,

&!)e Bankers’ ©alette.

NAME OF CO M IT AN Y.

documents.

report and accompany ing

as

-

PAYAULt.

Bank, )

Buffalo, Dec. 4, 1866.

me

the advertisement.

published the last week in the Bulletin.

m’cULLOCH.

Farmers and Mechanics National
No. 3 Spaulding’s Exchange,

Dear Sir—Yon will do

progress

whole, the biddings einnot be considered active.

as a

16,
6 per

cent. Coupon 1881

Payable to the order of Adam

an

Nos.

) not indorsed,

66.003, 04,0 >2, 64,015, 66,004,
66,011, 66.012, 66,013, 06,014,
64,017, 66,018, 04,010, 64,020, 66.021, 66,022.

65,997, 65 998, 6*.999, 65,0)0,
66.007, 66,008, 64,009, 66.010,

7-30 Bonds,
Nos.

Nos.

Nos.
Nos.

Nos.
Nos.

Bonds, $1,000 Each.

Norrie and Benjamin B Gherman,

Committee,

64,005, 04,005,
66,015, 66,016,

$1,000 Each.

25,046, 23,047, 25,940. 34,556, 75,599, 116,634,
117,850, 117,831, 118,903, 124,719.
5-20 Bonds, SI,OOO Each.
36,551, 28,870, 38,806, 38,805, 38,807, 3S,8 4, 3S,803, 23,867, 28,868.
6 per cent. 1881 Bonds, $1,000 Each.
8,902, 8,904, 8,903, S,S94, 8,908, 8,910, S,V 09, 8,911, 8,9Q7, 8,904, 8,899,
8,905, 8,901, 8,900, 8,1-98, 8,396, 8,897, 8,895
1,267, 1,266, 1,264, 1,265, 15,486, 15,487, $500 each.
U. S. Coupon Conds 5 per cent. 10-40.
36,289, 98.813, f8,814, 102,542, $1,000 each.
35,275, 35,276, 35,277, 35,278, 35,279, 35,280, 35,2 1, 35,282, $500 each.
Registered Stock of 1881, $lu*000 Each.
12,099, 20,899, 25,045,
117,"27, 117,828, 117,829,

Nos. 9,662,
9,663,
9,664.
Registered Stock of 1881, $5,000 Each.
Nos. 7,224
7,279,
7,2S0,
7,232, 6,911,
2,618.
7,278,
7,231,
Registered Stock of 1881, $1,000 Each.
Nos.
17,404,
^ - 18.338,
18,339,
IS,340,
18,254.
7-30 per cent. Bonds.
Nos. 1,782
1,783, $I',000 each.
No. 11,273, $1,009.
,

BOARDS.
The following shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regu¬
lar and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday:
BUSINESS

AT

THE STOCK.

.t

Mon.

Sat.
10

Bank Shares

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

Tues.

....

•

•

•

•

....

70

•

•

•

24,500

20,100

2,870

7,200

-

7,300

7,700

2,300
3,100

800

4,500
11,772

•

•

....

500

1,000

....

....

Marietta & Cin

4.700
....

400

2.750

10,030

10,600

52.900

1,800

1,400

2,000

350

60
300
10

...

1,200
6,150

1,300
7,760
1,150

....

....

1,100

640
200

4,150

5,400
20

286

550
20

2,200

2,800

1,000

7,200

2,370
13,300

2,400
17,900

1,610

2,700

10,680

9,275

500

100

200

....

....

20
000

1,200

30

....

....

1,100

11,580
64,055
950
20

«...

•

.

.

5,400

1,700
•

ioo
900

1,666

9,000

4,400

1,800
27

,

1.700

3,200

500
500

.

300

200
100

City....

Canton

3,428

“

45
600
970

....

50

900c

3,300
18,600

2,500

27

...

900

COO

3,700

1,900

2,4o0

600

400

17.600
2.300
1.100
100
205

100

....

....

200
700

200
100

•

300

3,400

600

“

•

2,000
5,000

200
•

2,300
15,390,

400

500

2,499

5

....

2.732

2.631
75

....

600

1.100
430

14,610

2.600
50
950

176

2,500

1866.

following;are the quotations for loans of various classes
sses:

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

Per cent.
« @ 7

0

Good endorsed
4 months

© 7
do

6%@

bills, 3

| ^p r A.pj

&

GMj

single names

7
8 am

Lower grades

-

United States Securities.-

The confirmed

depression
gold premium lias had the effect of putting down the price
Five-twenties ; and other (Governments have declined in

of the
of oil

sympathy,

Five-twenties of 1802 have declined 1£ ; do.

1801, £ ; do. 1865 1'
do. 1805, new issue,
and Ten-forties £. Seven-thirties are
§@i
per cent, lower. The decline in prices, however, has the effect of
drawing out buyers, especially from the interior, and transaction?
have been fully up to the average.
At London the price of Fivetwenties has ruled steady at 71
.
The London Exchange has au.
thorized the calling of each description of Five-twenties at its
board
Some sales of bonds upon foreign account have been reported dur¬
ing the week, but they were probably some inconsiderable lots held
here on account of foreign owners, rather than bonds returned
here
from abroad.

The

900

-

12

....

....

600

•

800

300

....

Wilkesbarre

Telegraph, West’n Union.
(Russian)
Steamship, Atlantic Mail..

700

1,100

7,900

Ashburton
Butler
Cumberland
Delaw’e & Hud. Can

“

250
350

350

....

200

Brunswick

1,300

13,400

Coal, American

‘ ‘

800

1,100

....

200

8.000
12
300

300

“

....

.

200

100

1,163

Toledo, Wabash &WeBt’n
600
Miscellaneous shares, viz.:

Quicksilver......
Land, Bos’n Water Power

13,500
55.903
100

168

....

Mining, Mariposa

3,100
1,400
11,431

380

....

3,000

Stonington

“

2,800
12,000

21
46.500

215

800

•

St. Louis, Alton & T. H..

“

12,600

13,400
1,700

100.

10

....

400

•

..

Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic.
Reading

“

.

....

Milwaukee & St. Paul
New York Central
New York & New Haven.
Ohio & Mississippi ($100)
Panama ....T

“

.

164,319
27,690

200

r

....

Mil. & Prairie du Chien

“

.

7,000

100

•

Long Island
Michigan Central
Michigan Southern

....

5,720

4,100
.

2,400

•

10

17,250 40*666 56*269

11

•

10
518
70

....

800

12,900

”38

The

750

10

500

•

6,200

Indianapolis £ Cin

Week.

Tl'JO

....

....

Chicago & Northwestern.

Illiiiois Central

125

40

....

Chicago, K. Isl. & Pacific.
Cleveland, Col. &Cinciu.
Cleveland & Pittsburg....
Cleveland and Toledo
Erie Railway
Hannibal & St. Joseph...
Hudson River

T-hurs. Fri’y.

Wed.

212

173

-

Chicago & Alton
Chicago, Burlington & Q..

--

(December 15,

THE CHRONICLE.

756

following

are

the closing prices of leading securities

pared with preceding weeks

:

Nor. 9. Nov. 16. Nov 23.
U, S. 6’s, 1881 coup
U. S. 5-20'e, 1862 coupons.
U. S. 5-20’a, 1864
“
U. S. 5-20's, 1865
“
U. S. 3-20's, 1865, N. iss...
U.S 10-40’*,'
U* S 7-80’h 1st series
U. S. 7-30’s 2d Series'
U. S 7-30’s 3rd series,

Railroad

com¬

114%
110%
107#
107%
100#
107 %

100%
106%
105%
105%

_

106

105%

J13

108%
106%

112

108%
106%

107%

107

106

108%

108%

105%

104%
104%

10S%

109%

133

105%

107
107

110

Nov. 30.

112%
108%
lo*;%
106%
107%
99 %

113%

105%

107 V

1(18%
100

100%

lOti

10$

105

1<>5%
105%

105

105
105

Miscellaneou^Skouritiks.—The general tone of
more buoyant.
There is a steady recov¬
600
300
400
m
1,400
800
100
900
700
000
4,100 ery from the depression resulting from the Hurry in the money mar¬
1,000
20
323
110
280
,20
1,287
2,040 ket last month, and more
Express, Adams
disposition jto buy for an advance of prices.
American
5
36
10
5
10
6
United States
90
10
50
30
During the latter half of The week a smart attack lias been madeThe Government, State, &c., bonds sold at the Regular Board, daily, last
upon the “short” interest, resulting in an advance of prices.. The
week, are given in the following statement:
rise has been somewhat irregular,'being confined to certain
specialSat.
Mon
Tues.
Wed.
Thur.
Fri.
Week.
U.S. 6’s, 1881
$
$52,000
$5,000 $12,000
$500 $
$69,500
itics, chiefly Northwestern, Cleveland and Pittsburg, Michigan
U.S 6’s (5-20's). 137,100
215,000 100,000 185,000 161,500 206,000 1,005,100
U.S6’s (old)
Southern, and Cleveland and Toledo. A party who had sold short
U.S 5’b (10-408)
20,000
1,000
132,666
59,000
47,000
5,000
largely upon Northwestern has been" “ cornered ” during the last
U.S 5’s (old)
2,000
1,000
1,<>00
U. S 7-30 notes.
56,500
1,200
12,400 127,350 122,500
19,900
239,850 two or three
days, with a consequent advance of the common stock
State bonds, viz. :
to 54 L and of the pie for red to 7G£.
The favorable exhibit in the
California 7's..
2,000
2,000
Illinois 6’s
1,090
annual report of the N. Y. Central road had the effect of
1,000
putting
Missouri G’s...
yuooo
51,000
71,000
-1,000
23,000
265,000
28,(WO
New York 5's..
3,500
3,500
up the price of the stock ld@2 per cent.
'The activity of the last
New York 6’s..
30.000
30,000
three days appears to have been spasmodic, and appearances indi¬
N. Y. State 7’s.
7,000
22,000
15,000
N. Carolina G’s.
24.500
4.di)d
7,000
68,500 cate a return to dulness on the
33,000
approach of the holidays.
Tennessee 6’s.. 109,000
10 000
37. (KK)
23,000
271,000
38,000
54,000
t'
Virginia G’s,
17,000
13,000
3,000
1,000
The total sales at the boards during the week amount to 55.1,033
H|City Bonds, viz:
shaies, against 322,400 for last week. The transactions in North¬
S. Francisco lo’s
1,000
1,000
western reach the very unusual total of 104,319 shares; in Erie
Railroad Bonds, viz :
Various
40,000 '11,000
55,500
28,300
27,000 27,500
189,300
55,903 ; in Cleveland and Pittsburg 40,500, in Michigan Southern
52,900, in Reading 04,055, and in Chicago and Rock Island
Friday, P, M., Dec. 14, 1566,
The Monet Market.—There has been no important change in 27,090.
the aspect of monetary affairs during the week. Fixchange with
The following are the closing quotations at the regular board to¬
the West still favors this city, and moderate amounts of currency day, compared with those of the six preceding weeks ;
continue to arrive from that section, consisting chiefly of National
Nov. 2. Nov. 9. Nov. 10. Nov. 213. Nov. 80. Dec. 7. Dec. 14.
Cumberland Coal
66
67%
69%
05*
Bank notes.
There is a slight flow of greenbacks to the South ;
51
46
53%
45*
55%
Quicksilver
44%
43%
46
57*
46
54%
55%
45%
but not sufficient to materially affect the course of the market. Canton Co
31
31
31%
27
29%
28%
Mariposa pref
24%
“

Pacific Mail...
S. Am. Nav. &
M. R.R
Union Nav....

“

*•

....

100

510

2,000

....

and

the stock market has been

1

....

“
“

....

•

.

....

...

,

,

r

..

....

.

....

m

,...

....

....

—

.

The demand from the brokers has been limited until

the week,
a

when

a more

the close of

general business is more settled. The recent fall in
the price of merchandise has removed the reluctance to operate
shown among buyers, and the view prevails very generally that the
present range of prices affords a basis for a moderately active busi¬
At the

same

time, there is in

some

117

Mich. Southern..

The tone of

ness.

110%
85%
125%

Reading

active speculative movement lias produced

somewhat freer demand for call loans.

New York Central
Erie
Hudson River...

branches of trade

a

be¬

93%

116%

Michigan Central
Clev. and Pittsb.
Clev. and Toledo.
Northwestern
“

91

120%
58%

preferred

Rock Island
Fort Wayne
Illinois Central

30%

111%
111%
126%

..

118%

111%

85

78

323%
117
'

91%
115

113%
85%
113

*

109%

113

8

71 %

112%

iii%

‘

122
81 >
Ill

81

%
112%

92%

87%

119%
57%
79%
-110%
309%
121%

114
52
74 %

312

113%

41

45

106%
106%

102%

122

%
110%
71%

83%

85

%
70%

303
119

73

104%
105%
119

110%
79%

no*
71/4
122*
109%
81*

110%
84%
112%
51%
70%
103%

112

105

104*
117*

118%

90*
113*
54*

76*
103*

The following statement shows the volume of transactions in
ginning of the reduction of wages, which, as it cheapens produc¬
tion, also affords hope of a freer commercial movement. These shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of
features of improvement in trade generally have not, however, erad¬ the week closing with this day’s badness :
Sat.
Mon.
Tues.
Fri. Week,
Wed.
Thurs.
icated from the discount market a certain degree of caution. There
756
Bank shares........
190
10
173
212
125
46
is a disposition to extend the term of credit to six months, which Railroad "
85,803
70,352
20,800
75,675 105,578 111,899 476,101
Coal
“
4,000 25,9*27
1,100
9,700
3,727
7,400
creates a certain degree of mistrust among buyers of notes, and
2,800 19,900
1,700
11
3,900
op¬ Mining
3,7*'0
2,500
5,300
1,405
Land
“
105
300
300
700
erates injuriously upon the credit of paper generally.
The gener¬ Telegraph “
700
2.706
2,662 14,822
3,473
2,499
2,782
10.000
850
750
Steamship1*
2,170
1,100
12,630
2,500
ally unhealthy condition of trade has a tendency to produce more Express “
2,686
40
146
20
335
333
1,292
than usual caution in the selection of names, and much
paper that
At Regular Board.. 14,600
44,698 228,683
32,814
37,864
51,771
46,936
has ordinarily ranked A 1 is now classed in a lower grade.
Prime At Open Board...
15,700
48,600
47^100 64,300 £ g 322,400
67,600
s
2 to 4 months paper passes at G$@7 per cent.; but a
large amouut Total current week. 30,300 81,414 105,461 94,036 116,071 123,798 551,083
Previous week
of “ good ” paper is negotiated at irregular rates.
56,336 401,049
36,388
70,086
81,776
94,942
61,521
On demand loans the rate is very generally 6 per
The transactions in shares weekly since the commencement of
^at., with ex¬
ceptions at 5(§7 per cent.
September are shown in the following statement:




•

•

.

.

1

.

1

l

December

Open
Weekending Regular Board.

Boatd.

Friday.

J? 7
S’14
cCP

^'^".‘.'.'.’.386,276
S ' it.
Sf
19

g;*:,......*9Wes

Both

Regular Open

Board.

Boards

343,038 332,301

Board.

....210,821

320,535

675,330
540,350

.255,433

383,250

63S.6S3

.340,156
441,222 Nov. 23...
810,870 Nov. 30... ...102,515
576.703! Dec. 7... ....167.340

387,550

736,706
423,295
401,010

272,258 Nov. 2
0...

284,317 Nov.

412,007INov. 16...

...

...

230,750

233,700
322,100

661,266 Dec. 14.... ....228,683

551,0S3

620,203)

338 305

following i3 a summary of the amount of Government bo nils

The

and notes,

State ami City securities, anti railroad and other bonds*
Board on each day of the past week :

the Regular

cold at

Mon.

Sat.

Fri.

Tliur.

187.000
B d3,«fcc.
40,000

12.100 127,350

22.500

19.9(H)

107, COO 100,500

59.000
27 000

36.000

285,400

55,500

27,500

239,850
681,000
180,300

329.500

337,400

2.318.750

615,000

621,000

3,852,10(1

" 28,300

Foreign Exchange.—The
cotton bills from the South

462,150
578,500 975,500

381,100

week.. 081,000
the

seven

last weeksi

are

shown in the

following

Nov. 23.
London Comra'l.
do bkrsVu#
do
do slut

Bonds.

The

807,000

820,000

446,400
960,500

511,900

2,920,6.* 0

368,000

1.031.0(H)

325,550

653,000

1,912.000

538.600

239,850

©109#
109#© 110#

Paris, lovg.

5.17#@5.10#
5.13#@5.12#
5.20

Antwerp..

©5.18#
6.20 ©5.18#
36#©
41/a© 41#
41#© 41#
79 © 79#
72#® 72#

Swiss

Hamburg

....

Amsterdam

681,000

Total
amount.

$350,500

$3,166,300

538.000
355,100
161.000
.141.000

4.334,700

*
Governments
Notes.
Bonds.

2,318.750

$952,900

:

Total
amount.

Mechanics’
Union
America
Phenix

November.

1,691,500

$3,035,500
1,692,100

3,006,700

2,903,600

781.210

3,739,650
2.258,250
2,485,250
2,108,750
2,577,000

1,670,500

838,700

$12,155,700
9,822,000
10,022,840
12,056,150

1,230,600

781.900

12,279,450

1,611,000

515,700
455.500

2.425.350

1,633,000
1,980,990
2,984,000

12.078.750
11,705:500

10,282,300
8,337,550

July....
August.

$3,310,100
2,591,900

6,151.300

June.. •

2,703.250
2,973,550

2,792,300
2,37(5,400

993,000

16,544,750

879,200

12.739,850

1,234,700
1,365,6(H)

17.012.550

15,253,100

transactions, the reader is referred
te the tables headed “ Business at the Stock Boards,” in the next
Is of the week’s

previous page.
The Gold Market.—Gold

continues

upon

the whole weak

supply upon the market is liberal compared with tbe limited
demand both for custom and export. At the same time a further
addition to the stock will come out of the Treasury, in January
The

payment of coupons, the anticipation of which tends to
further depress the premium. The -professions of Mr. McCulloch
in favor of a resumption of specie payments, and ihc proposal in¬
troduced into Congress for weekly sales of gold, have also-a certain
effect upon the price of gold. On the other hand, the extraordi¬
nary character of some of the po litical measures introduced into
Congress has au opposite tendency. The large ‘* short ” interest on
gold has been very generally covered during the week, and loans
are easy, 3@5 per cent being paid for having gold earned.
The following have been the highest and lowest quotations for
gold ou ear'll oi the last six days :
iu

Highest. Lowest.
137*1 Dec. 12
138#
137*
137*4
137#
137 | Dec. 13
137#
137#
137#
136#! Dec. 14
,
137#
The transactions for last week at the Custom House and the
Highest. Lowest.

Dec. 8
Dec. 10
Dec. 11

13S*

Sub-Treasury

were as

follows

:

Custom House.

Receipts.
$196,920 67

Dec. 3....;
“
4
“
5

“

Sub-Treasury
Payments.

6

230,102 61
225,600 22
Total

$1,419,235 71
3

e

Balance in Sub-Treasury morning of Dec

$5,025,720 49

2,173.919 68
1,013,494 27
1,418.648 79
5,287,876 13
1.551,410 31

311,168 48
217,809 19

7
3

Rcoeiots.

$4,709,979 32

237,628 54

3.000.928 25

$16,155,328 50

2,597,471 47
6.031,216 83
1,608,422 60
2,125,700 33

$20,389,460 02
102,455,273 46

Deduct payments during the week

$122,844,733 48
16,155,328 50

Balance on Saturday evening
Increase during the week

$100,689,404 9S
4,234,131 52

The

following table shows the aggregate transactions at the Sub*
T
reasury since Sept. 1 :
Weeks

Ending

Custom
House.

,

Sub-Treasury

>'

Payments. ■ Receipts. Balances.
$3,199,168 $47,807,365 $34,094,673 $82,294,542
16,820,266
19,089,713
84,563,995
3,222,265
3.105,457
19,047,272
21,568,121
87,048,843
2,399,270
6,680,903
12,453,160
93,857.100
2,876,717
25,238,192
19,223,924 87.842.S31
Oct. 6.
10,212,269
2,266,334
7,766,499
90,288,601
13....* 2,546,361
13,681,534
96,057,649
7,912,486
20..
2,629,828
13,703,774 101,290.053
8,470,788
2,460,886
19,082,535
38,575,927 100,784,026
y“ 3..
»ov,
2,262.774
20,133,229 86,389,713
31,527,538
10
2,'55.292
28,749,895
84.167.947
91,807,769
17...
1.964,529
‘‘
16,605,487
21.165,694 96,367,967
24...,
1,624,704
IS,765,711
25,085,903' 102,638,169
Dec. l
1,173,546
15,277^328
15,094.432 102,455,273
“
8;,;; 1,419,235 16,155,328 20,389,460 106,689,404

Bcpt.
11

“

“
“

1S...

8....
15....
22....
29....

“

“

“

“




discounts.

Merchants’

10,987,630

• •

....

©5.17#

©5.17#
36#© 36*
41*® 41*
41*© 41*
79 @ 79*

72*®

....
....

....

Changes in

Balances.
Dec. $13,712,686
Inc.
2,209,452
Inc.
2,520,848
Inc.
.6,772,26i
Dec.
6,014,261
Inc.
2.445,769
5,769,048
Inc.
5,232,98*
Inc.
Dec.
506,006
Dec. 14,394,308
Inc.
5,418,061
Inc.
4,560,207
Inc.
6,270,192
Dec.
182.895
Inc.
4,234,131

—Average amount of

Loans and
New York
Manhattan

5,798,31 >0
8,002,700
7,403,800
10,470.250

April...

5.20
5.20

Dec. 8, 1866 :

Banks.

Bonds.

109#© 109*
109*© 110*
5.16#@5.15
5.13*©o.l2*

following statement shows the
City of New Fork rt5r the
with the commencement of business on Saturday,
ending

week

3.552.100

State, See., RR. & other
Bonds.

108*© 108#
109*© 109*
110*® 110*
6.15 @5.12#
5.11#@
5.18*@5.17#
5.18*@5.17*
36# ©
41#@
41*@ 41#
79Vi© 79*
72* @ 72*

New York Gity Banks.—The

2,155,550

192,500
189,300

Dec. 14. *

108#© 108*

condition of the Associated Banks of the

$1,821,200
3,310,500
3,931.300

March..

“

....

2,603,200
4,410,150

shown in the statement which follows :
r—

1866.

“

.Bremen...
Berlin

Dec. 7.

108#© 108#
109#© 109#
310 © 110#
5.15 ©5.13#
5.12#© 5.11#
5.20 ©5.17#
5.20 ©5.17#
36#© 36#
41#© 41#
41#© 41#
79 © 79#
72#© 72#

109

totals of each class of securities sold in the Grst eleven months

of the year are

May.

1 tail road
1 ?onds.

909,000

1.208,000

Nov. lti
Nov. 23
Nov. 30
Dec. 7

$050,300

City.
$103,500

1,3 tf\S00

9

Notes.

$1,762,000
2,369,100

2

Nov.
Nov.

State &

,—Governments—

Week ending
Friday,

liberal supply of

a

been

Nov. 80.

107*© 108#

Frankfort.

statement:

expectations of

have

disappointed. There has,
however, been an unusually large amount of bills drawn against
shipments of cotton made from this port during the week. ‘The de¬
mand for bills has been quite active, and the rates of
Exchange are
firmer, having, this afternoon, verged upon the specie shipping limit.
Bankers’ prime 60-days’ sterling closes at 109$.
The following are the closing
quotations for the several classes
ot foreign bills, compared with those of the three last wreoks :

do short.

Wk*.

757

Week.

519,000

sie&Cityh’ds
previous

Wed.

56,500
182,500
11,000

1.200

Total Cur.

Tues.

$260,000 $110,500 $107,000 $221,1100 $254,000 .$1,208,600

$157,100
K.R.

Both |Week ending
Boards. 1
Friday.

107,208 f65,050
...133,403 150,014
180,407 223,170
198.S22 215,400
451,000
202,580
284.213 305,030
.200,236

ol

CHRONICLE.

THE

15,1866.]

$7,907,716
5,623,597
6,918,287
5,284,895
4,344.009
9,288,503
4,305,706

Circula-

Specie.
$3,122,958
555,597
768,554
'

267.160

185,459
1,511,814
319,547
977,446
53,855

3,472.528
2.942,331
2.153.778

City
Tradesmen's
Fulton
,
Chemical
Merch’ts Exchange
....

143,320

5,388,825

556,955
35,594

3,447,370

National

2,578,291
2,369,317
1,915,046
1,095,483
3,300,173
1,326,152
4,890,458
10,968.323
23,690,553
8,896,524
3,380,829

Butch. & Drovers..
Mech’s & Traders..
Greenwich
Leather Manufact’s

Seventh Ward
State of N. York...
American Exc’ge..
Commerce

498,028
244,092
175,000
5,160
183,113

21,576
5,578
223,207
51,585
400,962
615,984
•

3,532,078

Republic

4,990,277

Chatham

1,815,874

42,097

People’s

1,341,987

23,552

2,655,530

156,950
87,829

1,717,250

North America....
Hanover

2,638,918
1,726,000
10,790,871

.......

Irving

12,000

8,937,320
8,493.947

482,267
127,794
704,466
130,454
7,084

3-49,25S
292,430
197,350
1,550,575
135,983

89,463

34,797

522,800
756,417

5,420,300
4.676,566
4,086,466
2,714,369

50,260

921,180

4.463

38,638

11,415

120,353

550,284
211,927

Marine
Atlantic

1,288,228
1.883.779
1,457,588

Imp. & Traders...

5,267,117
14.276,838

749,332

1,000,000

1,153,695
1,414,619
1,509,801
969,534

26,338
6,146

307,42S

1,545,154

15,468,470
12,729,496

Park
Mech. Bank’g As’n
Grocers’
North River
East River
Manuf. & .Merch’ts
Fourth National...

Central
Second National...
Ninth National....
First National
Third National....
N. Y. Exchange...
Tenth National....
Dry Dock
Bull’s Heart
Croton National

17,443

265,000

98,428
504,796

83,617

27,571

11,887

7,458

20,240

283,500
1,100

157,203

2,888,755

152,162

1,040,967

1,125,930
6,050,386
2,997,411
3,398,962

83,752
20,950
57,072
5,659

2,565,225

5,847,720

2,S02,437

.

2,001,149
2,189.035
5,042,040

987,765

78,659
9,585
98.703
13,5-14
60,318

.

2.947,594
8,772,137
3,224,658
2,658,640

5,9.30,165
900,000
800,000

2,255,321

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

3,904,254

177,201
9,697

206,762
21,027
142,045

1,227,696

Citizens’

Net

deposits.
$7,898,065
4,135,808
5,260,643

951,738
1.598.855
1,443,218
935,309
2,582,446
841,967
3,911,773

2.665,074

Metropolitan

Continental
Commonwealth
Oriental

721,014
18,968
IS, 153
453,852

35,418

Mercantile
Pacific.

Ocean

$850,658
12,779
750,280
562,717
449,000
2,470
292,685

244,362

1,099,682
160,253
64,113
46,986
12,9S9
438,722

Broadway

tion.

270,000
920,700

2,478,1S9
3.235.384
1,400,389
4,075,817
1,735,220
1.205.855
2.558,168
1,578,349
1,657,000
5,560,075
1,269,405
I,658,114
2,011,711
1,335,753
3,792,500
3,50>,571

Legal
Tenders.

$3,196,241

1,290,278
1,441,350
1,104,378
681,856
2,258,128
657,804
711,947
848,662
1,184,360

1,641,053
792,216
358.881
280,957
306,480
290.882
o37,443

338,019
1,393,024
1,240,187

5,962,634
2,521,9)8
562,498
1,031,538
452,495

995,733
524,829

254,213
738,655
395.702

524,000

1,351,800
456,158
325,433*
757,199

546,139
1,168,000
239,000

2,254,995
2,671,547

586,000

1,035,449
1,613,904
1,245,653
4,213,743

237,202
470,600

17,451,066
1,264,734
1,713,211
1,003,161
698,276

1,245,026
II,956,491
12.534.384
879,943
6,700,738

639.45*2

340,694
1,240,172
3,736,210
479,125
621,007
154,771
229,045
274,276
4,003,558
3,175,372
324,129

1,675,907
1,074,138

449,583

3,008,363

796.284

2,552,482
814,484

891,546

268,653

7,830

912,100

1,423,000

242,973

4,638

237.578

7.113

10,924
18,782
48,571

640,700
24,000

1,089,188
662,556

.

1,408,982
651,069

148.2S5

1,063,320
2,481,700

...

40,733

314,118

$260,620,027 $14,582,050 $31,794,653 $203,676,S22s $60,946^857

Totals

1, 1866
8,1866
Balances for the week ending Dec. 1, 1866
Balances for the week ending Dec. 8, 1S66

Clearings for the
Clearings for t-he

week ending Dec.
week ending Dec.

The deviations from

$640,081,442
647,315,763
19,868,687
22,487,903

35
61
45
64

the returns of the previous week are as fol¬

lows:
LoAns

Dec. $2,391,611

Specie

Dec.

Inc..

Circulation

Deposits

371,957 Legal Tenders

Dec. $5,212,355
’..Dec.
538,601

400,804

The several items compare as

follows with the returns of previot s

weeks:
Circula¬
Aggregate
Legal
Clearings.
tion.
Deposits. Tenders.
Specie.
Sept. 1 $205,399,607 $6,381,600 $27,807,834 $225,191,282 $92,622,808 $586,864,052
7,455,910 28,506,288 225,107,991 90,194,25-1 591,403,135
Sept. 8.. 268,941,668
7,357,369 29.360,371 22*844,647 90.773,232 567,299,212
Sept. 15.. 270,806,504
7,662,611 28,770.381 253,394,663 90,428,1S9 605,290,424
Sept. 22.. 272,177,166
7,643,9 50 29.213,950 223,336,785 87,826,021 575,724,324
Sept. 29.. 269,807,383
Oct.
6.203,618 29,302,358 228,484,370 85,339,679 829,081,759
«.. 271,210.161
Oct. 13.. 276,413,219
5,576.002 30.176.908 226,858,897 83,189,422 770.359,908
Oct. 20
225,083,853 7S,625,469 824,721,933
279,135,796 VS
Loans.

-

.

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

27..
3..
10..
17..
24..
1..
8..

[December 15, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

758
274,725.456
271,790,4.35
275,698,288
273.3.38,390
267,920.415

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

78.064.925 762.261,041
74,990.842 761.934,453

7,848,239 30,243,437 223,840,572
9,1*6,623 30,466,207 224,841,695
13,145,381 30,968,940 226,325,317
15,511.121 31,233,502 221,892.500
15,202,865 31,361,418 213,414,984
14.957,007 31,393,849 203.8S9,177
14,582,050 31,794,653 203,676,822

71,512.495 776,604,339
68,120,361 842,575,299
62,359,254 917,436,876
61.485,458 649,081,442
263,011,663
260,620,027
60,946,857 647,315,763
Philadelphia Banks.—The following shows the totais of the

of the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for
previous weeks I
876.751

851.915

21.057,343
5.356,455

21,488,385
5.058,958

Decrease.

7.712.303
42,102,289

7,036.896
41.452,539

Decrease.
Decrease.

9,915,981

Specie.. .L..
Legal Tedders..

$15,442,150
51,250,352

10.021,527

Increase..

.

Due from banks..
Due to banks

Deposits
Circulation

following comparison shows the
phia Banks at stated periods :
Sept. 1
Sept. 8
Sept. 15
Sept. 22.
Sept. 29

,

649,750
105,546

On the other side of the account :
£12,846,363
19,186,008

Government securities
Ol her securities
Notes unemployed

41.162,627
41,604,903

802,922
793,395

9,605,817
9,-001,273

41.093.120
42.S36.971

0,598,497

9.631,863

43.093,875
43,800.423

9.639,176
9,631.498

43.152.02S
43.345.800

Increaee

pv.km-

Increase...

41 ‘'ft

..

ssS

Treasury balance

shows:
INCREASE.

43,953.737
44.385.162

9.665,040
9.673,236

9.055,525

.

Cash in hand

9,(*48,655

Increase

£22,480,750, being a de¬
crease of £457.506 ; and
the stock of bullion in both departments
is £18,175,570, shewing an increase of £422,056 when compared
with the preceding statement :
The Bank of France return for. the week ending November30

9,589 574

9 059.086

£25.036
330,314
817.446

The amount of notes in circulation is

the Philadel-

fr.17,800,000
1,990,000
22,333,000

44.217.308

£otcsCurrent

fr. 11,750,000 •

43,458.096

42,622.060

51.681.866

852,095

21 850.415

51.897,969
54.540.367

893.060
876.751

9.S51.089

21,057.343
20,488,385

.....

|

18,252,795

9.6OS.410

51.474.94S
50,973.584
50,655,176
54,190.217

24.140.6 >7

1

Decrease.
Increase.,
Increase.

6.161.157

806.815

51.316.400

.

£3,237.780

‘

826.315

23.631,130
24,369,566
24,671,396
23,452.466

568,958
297,497
675.407

Deposits.

788.021
769.272
770.676
791.018
799.652
821,184
847.458

w.

|J?&3C8

£42,721,191

Rost
Public deposits
Other deposits

i

23.377.073

Oct. G
Oct. 13
Ocr. 20
Oct. 27
Nov. 3
Nov. 10
Nov. 17
Nov. 24....
Dec. 1
Dec. 8

£io

&2,721,191
gives the following results when compared with the
previous week :

24.836

Circulation.

Specie.

Legal Tenders.
Loans.
50.095,890
24,040,254
24.134,918
50.320,068
49.SS0.051
24.528.35S
24.906 925
50,787.371
51.037,567
24,073.963
21.011.4S0
51,212.282

bills.

GoV.
Securities,(including
dead weight annuity)..
Other securities
Notes
Gold and silver coin

The return

$299,004

Decrease.
Decrease.

eouuit ion ot

The

Date.

Drcrease.

3,237,780
6,161,157
18,252.795
516,459

*

Dec. 8.

Dec. 1.

$15,142,150
51,519,357

Cauital
Loans...

Rest.
Public deposits
Other deposits
Seven day and other

last and

average

£14,553,000

Proprietors’ capital

9,615,989

851,915

10,021,527

.

41,452,539

accounts.
Advances

23.800,000

stationary

42.102,289

51,250,352

Bills discounted

BANK

weekly statement of the Boston National
banks is more favorable than the previous one, ami shows that the
banks are strengthening their position.
The loans have been de¬
creased £84,225. and although deposits have fallen off $130,723,

STOCK

LIST.

Boston Banks.—The

!

Companies.

(Marked thus *
not

are,

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

$130,550. National circulation has
decreased $57,245, and State circulation $2,455.

following

statements

the footings, with those of the two

are

previous

:

Dec. 10.

Dec. 3.

Nov. 26.

$41.900,000

$41,900,000

Loans

99.062,641

99,446,166

$41,900,000
99.898,562

Specie
Legal tender notes

589,364
16.t 88.280

601.502

509,205

16,6 to, 798

17,903,763

Due from oiher banks
Due to other tanks

12,792,295

12,631,745
14,765.087

12.205,266

14,381,529

41.089.605

42,647,995

24,593.257
320,864

24,633.970
323,076

Capital

14,324.879

Deposits

40,958,922
24,650,482

Circulation (National)
Circulation (State)...

The

past

following

318,409

are

the comparative totals for

series of weeks

a

l

■—Circulation.
rational.
State.

Legal

,

Specie. Tenders.
Deposits.
$95,387,808 S5264.863 $22,671,251 ;$39,856,550
Loans.

Sept.
ib

41
4b

3....
10....
17....
24....

Oct.

1....
8

4k

...

44

44
4 4

Nov.
il
44
44

15....
22....
29....
5....
12....
19....
26....

Dec.
44

Ot

•

t

•

10....

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

..

$344,773

94.878.769
91.788.268

3 i 4.201

21,580.730

39.1 19,497

24,295.875

356.075

328,830

2-'.303.4 i 6

38,857.208

93,825.673
93.676,888
94.708,912
95,039,305

316.771

20.977.951
21,087.880
20.612.639

40.014,189

351,401
*136,405

42.095.214

24.345,328
24.34 1,545
24,238,047
24,329,124

19,801.819

43,330,22(5

95.464.225

277,806
250,638
240,417
219,302

19.700.205

41.303.573

95,381,855

250.536

19,064.3:6

95.720,044 432,369
9S.537,998 443.892
99,622,706 486.161

19,889.005

41,694,104
44.117,030

19.140.829

44.954.478

38,035.014

43.543,251

37,908,763

42,647,995

16,640,798

41,089,605
40,958.922

99.898.562

99,446,106
99.062,641

569.205
601.502
589.364

National Banks—There

16,688,280

43,098,520

343.408

340,977
337,656

21,339.751
24,459.495
24.443,519
24,511,200
24,402,311
21,416,151

331.172
332.453

330,275
328.319

324,435

24.633.970

323.076

24,553,237
24,650,482

320,864

'

318.409

National Banks author-

was no new

izei

during last week, and none ceased to exist. „
Currency was issued to the tanks for die week to the amount of
$856,672. The total amount issued to Dec. 8 was $299,886,931.
From this amount there should be

celled $2,073,932,
The

following is

a.;

returned and

total of $297 812 999.
statement of the progress

leaving
a

deduct-d

can-

u

circuj.Ltiou for

several weeks past :
Date.

B'ks.

May 5.
May 12..
May 19..
May 26..

1,650
1,650
1,650

June 2..
June 9..
June 16..
June 23..
June 30..

Capital.

$271,252,165
272.878,895
274,653.195

1,650$414,921,479

276.540.510

1,650

277,379,660
278,905,6,75

1,650
1,653
1.653

280,263.890
281,234.460

Chemical
Citizens’

City
City (Brooklyn)
Commerce

Capital. Circulation

Continental
Corn Exchange*
Croton

.

Currency
Dry Dock*

Eighth
Fifth
First
Firsi (Brooklyn). ...
Fourth
Fulton
Far. & Cit.(Wni’bg).
Gallatin

50

100;
Importers & Trad... 100!
50'
Irving
Hanover

LeatherManufnct’re.

Long Isl (Brook.)

..

Manhattan*
Manufacturers’
Maim lac. &Merch.*.
Marine
Market.

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

£32,142,275

294

295.354,854
296.086,104
297,065,059
298,199,069

.

Oriental*

1,659

1,659
1,659

1,6.* 9
1,649

Government debt
Other securities

Gold coin and bullion....

£32,142,275

(Brooklyn)

1,659

636,689

299,886,931

£11,015,10'
3,984,90)
17,142,*275

£32,142,275

50|

50!
50'
30

100j
iooi

291,072,059
294,377,304

.

20!
100':
25 f

Greenwich*
Grocers’

1.659
1.659

293.032 903

National
New York
New York County..

NewYorkExchange.

Pacific
Park.

Peoples’*
Phoenix

Republic

St. Nicholas’
Seventh Ward

Second
Shoe & Leather
Sixth
Stated New York.
Tenth.
Thirl

....

.

Tradesmens.
Union

4
5 D4/4H5
6 104

'66

’66
’66
’66
’66
'66
'00
’66

6

5
12
5
5 1*7

6110

July ’66
25
450,000|Jan. and July Julyr ’66
July ’66
1001
300,0001.. Quarterly
25
400,000jJan. and July... July '66
100 1,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66
50
300,000 Jan. and July... Ju y ’66
10010,COO,000 Jan. and July, July ’60
lbo: 750,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
*
100 2,000.000 Jan. and July.. .'July ’66
100 1,000,000 Feb.and Aug...(Aug. ’66
j 1001 200,000
100
100,000 .Quarterly
IJu'y ’66
200. (KM) Jan. and July.. July ’66
30;
50:
350,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
100; 250,000 Jau. and July.. JJuiy ’66
100! 150,000 Jan. and July...(July ’66..
100
600,000 May and Nov...|Nov. '66
100!
100.
30!

200,000 Jan. and July

,...

Williamsburg City*.

100
25
50
50
25
100
50
50
100
100
100
50
100
100
100
100
100
50
50
50
50
100
25
20
100
100
100
100
100
100
UK)

July...IJuly ’66.,
July
J-ul. ’66
5,0(40,000
600.000 May and Nov... N v. ’66
Jan. and July.
160,000
July ’66
1.500,000 Apr.and Oct... Oct. ’66
200,00< Apr and Oct... Apr. ’66
300,000 Jan. and J uly. .-..'July ’66
1,000,000 Jan. and July.. .’July ’66
1,500,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66
600,000 Feb. and Aug... (Aug. ’66
400,00* Feb. and Aug...! Aug. ’60
2,050,001 Feb.and Aug.. .!Aug. ’66
252.000 Apr. and Oct...lOct. ’66
500,000 Jan. and July...'July ’66
400.000 Jan. and July... 'July ’66
Jan. and
Jan. and

6

5 125
5

...

30

$y\

• •

..5

••

4,100

51

••

10
10
5 110X 1 l'.'X
5
5
5 107X708
6

5

112
115

;..5l05
....6

112

•••

5 137
5 100
5
5
6

July ’66
5
5
July... July ’6'»
6
July... July ’66...
Nov.’66... ....5
500,000 May and Nov,..
600,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66... ....5
l,000,00u May and Nov... Nov. ’66... ....5

l,000,00(i •Tan. and July

2,000,000

3,000,000

...-IllS

6 110X113
5 :03
5

...

Jan. and
500,000 Jan. and

111#

6
8
6
5

..

3,000,000
1,235,000
4,000,000
1,000,000
300,0001,500,000

—

—

.

East River

Nassau

’60
’66

Nov.’66

3.000,OOOiMay and Nov

l1

..5 137#140

.

Ninth
North America
North River*
Ocean

292,214,720

,

*66

...

Commonwealth

Oct. 13.
Oct. 20..
Oct. 27
Nov. 3..
Nov. 10..
Nov. 17..
Nov. 24..
Dec. 8..

$289,021,085
289,510,8x0
291,179,045
291,8 4,315

Bid. Ask.

Last Paid.

.

50;

Ciuuham

1,658
1,658
1,659
1,659
1,659
1.659

.

ISSUE DEPARTMENT.




(Brooklyn).

Fkibat.

!

100, 3,000,000 Jan. and Julyv.. July
25:
100,000 Jan. and July .jjuly
100'
500,000 Jan. and J uly. ..'July

100

Nassau*...

is the statement of the Bank
England for the week ending Nov. 28 :

Notes issued

Central
C rival

Aug. 25
Sept. 1..
Sept 8..
Sept 15..
Sept 22..
Sept 29..

1,653
282,555,440
283,627,605
July 7.. 1,653
July 14.. 1,654
284,566,675
July 21.. 1,655
Aug. 4.. 1.656
286,894.515
Aug. 11.. 1,655
287.048,950
Aug. 18.. 1,656
288,403,775
Fop.eign Banking.—The following

of

B'ks.

Date.

|

Periods.

CO ;

100; 5,000,000 May and Nov... >Nov.
100:
300,000 Jan. and July... July
Atlantic
Atlantic (Brooklyn).
50i 500,000 Jan. and July...IJuly
250,000 •Tan. and July..IJuly
100
Bowery
Broadway. .'.
25j 1,000,000 Jan. and July...;July
50:
300,000 Jan. and July.. .IJuly
Brooklyn
50' 200,000 Quarterly.
July
Bull's Head*
800.000 Jan', and J uly
25!
Butchers & Drovers
July

Metropolitan
Circulation.

5 Amount.

i—-

from other banks has increased

The

9

*-

„~,n;

and amounts due to other banks to the extent of $440,208 have been

liquidated, the banks have still made a gain of $47,4^2 in legal
tender notes.
Specie has decreased $12 138. The amount due

1

O

•

National.)

Dividend.

Capital.

109

115

...

....5
Juno ’66
June and Dec
Jan. and July... July ’66... ....5
Jan. and July... Ju;y ’66
6 105
Jan. and July .. July ’66...
5
Jan. and July. v July ’66
....5
5
April and Oct. T. Oct. 66
Jan. and July.. . July ’66
5 118
..

..

l-c6
120
114
182

121
109

9*140
200,000 April and Oct... July ’66...
300,000 Jan. and July... Jniy ’fie
JL-i 120
1,000,000 Tan. and July... July 66
6|
1,000,000 Jan/and July...
400,00(1 Tan. and July...
1,000,000 Tan. and July...
300,001 Feb. and Aug... **»
s!l60
5
422.700 Feb. and Aug.‘. Aug. ’66
..7 145
Jan. and July... July ’60.
2,000,000
5
412,500 Jan. and July... July ’66.
4 110
1,800,000 Jan. and July... Jul; ’60.
Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66. .5&5&t:
2,000,000
5
i,ooo,oo(i Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’G6
120
600,000 Jan. and July.. July ’GO.
109X
Nov. ’65
3(H),(XX. May and Nov ..
5 115 in
1,500,000 •Jan. and July.. July ’66.
6 105
Nov. ’65
200,000 May and Nov...
109
5
2,000.000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66
5
100 1,000,00( Jan. and July... July ’66
5
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
7X 143
40 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
50
50

.

1'500,000 May and Nov...
600

OOOfJan. and July.

..

July ’66

...5 119

8*

759

THE CHRONICLE.

15,1866.]

December

SALE-PKICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK

STOCKS AND

SECURITIES

6s,
6s,
6s,

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

„w,

6s

6s,

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

~

l

1*2% j 11;%'.1*2%, 112

.

j

f

(iyeaili).
registered.
registered.
registered.
.{cur.).
..Istseries.

j ! ——! ——I ——( —

M series. j 10 %|

do

do

do

State :

twliiorniaTs.
Connecticut Os
Georgia 6s.

j

Illinois
do
do
do

Canal Bonds

i860

Registered, i860

•

:

—

101

-

j

War Loan

Indiana bs,

j

War Loan

I

—

Kentucky 6s,

jv

1868-72

;

Louisiana

Michigan 6s

j

• • •

-

j

187b

7s, War Loan,
Minnesota 8s
do

j
91%
91

^jaimi^a| HUq st. Joseph RR.)...1 S3
6s, (Pacific RR.)
I 92

100

100

r.4 v; —: 54
54

!

.

70

70

69% r
46

—

45

!

lu0|
1"9|
400j

Spruce Ilill
Wilkesbarre

•

100
25
20

(Brooklyn)

| IS ! 18%
70

Extension....

102

93%
112

Jersey City and Hoboken

..

Manhattan
Metrouoli tan,
New York

•

SS
..

82

S2

consolidated...

93%

93%

2d mortgage

3d mortgage, conv..
4th mortgage
...

75

93%

•101

101

100%

do 3d mortgage, 1883
j do 4th mortgage, 1880
j
do 5th mortgage, 1888
jj Galena and Chicago, extended

jj

94

99
94

,

i 62%

—

6\%

do
2d mortgage
do
Great Western, 1st mortgage
do
do
2d mortgage
Hannibal an*j Si. Joseph, 1st Mortgage

63

70

...
Harlem, Isl mortgage, 1*459-72
do
Consolidated and. Sinking Fund
do
?d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869

20j

50,
100 {
50j
50j

29%;

79;

I 46

1

■(.-

1885...

do
2d mortgage, (S. F.).
3d mortgage, 1875
do
do
convertible, 1867
Illinois Central 7s, 1875.

! 29

46%

;

30

2ib 29%
—, • • -700!
100
100 j
...100;

jj Lackawanna and Western

.

106

>

Bonds

,McGregor Western, 1st mortgage
Marietta and Cincinnati. 1st mortgage

_i

108

_jj Michigan Central Us, 1869-72
19%jj
do
do 8s, new, 1882
100 40% 4r>^ 48%; 19%; 49%) nr | Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund.
l.j 96%;
96%:
Western Union,Russian Extension. 100
do
2d mortgage, 7s
jiOO l
do
Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
100.103 (102 |M)5 171
j!
do
n
do
Goshen Line, 18f»S
73% 172
Pacific Mail
1091
11:2
!j Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort....
ir.%!U2
8. Am. Nav, & Mar. Railway
100:111
j! Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage
mortgage
do
2d
do
Union Navigation
100 102x
1 ransit.—Central American
100!
Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants
100

SS%! 88

-t 89

1st mortgage

’

—

Improvement.—Boston Water Power

United States
Western Union

97

97

—

50

Harlem

do

44%

93%
101%

j! Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund
i! Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort.
2d mort.
do
do
do
J 66% I 66% 65% !
,152% —_L; 1 Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 1879

68

1

do

do

19!

45

50

Pacific, 7 t er cent

do

10% |

—
—
—
—
—

.100j

Wyoming Valiev
^.•-Brooklyn

63

—
—

50;
100,
10,

Pennsylvania
Schuylkill
Spring Mountain

j Chicago. R. I. and

! j Cleveland and Pittsburg,

—

10pi

Lehigh & Susquehanna

Telegraph.—American

jlOl
42%) 43%! 43%

Interest,

I

—
—

i

——i -7-

1st mortgage....

)
59j

.*

100
100
'. 50

,! Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage

—

v

2.)%! «9% 28%

100

do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

...

120

—

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent...

j;

111% 110%

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

j: Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877...
i Central of N w Jersey. 1st mortgage
j j Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund
45gj j j
do
*
do
1st mortgage
do
do
Income.....:

69

i

io;;!l()4%;lC5% 105%jiOJ> :105% 109%
R)4%
50'110 !lH>%!:09% 110%: 109%
! 38%
| 89 39% 40%

.

6)

70

120

,

.

j Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage
jj Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund

Central
Consolidated
Cumberland
Delaware and Hudson

Canton
Cary

.100,

Railroad ISondM:
j! Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort

70%

69%

112% 110%

HOXjlllX
-;119

j 29 *29% 30
preferred....)
!
! 80
100j
261 1258

; —

Brunswick City

100
.100

ij

Stock

Williamsburg

.100

100

..

ij Toledo, Wabash and Western
jj
do
do
do
preferred

;

60

100

-Stonington....

—)

54%

55
69

68%

;

113
112
81% 81%

99

! SS

pref...100

pref... 100

jj! Sixth avenue

—

Loan

Ashburton
Butler

,

100

111% |U*2
80%! 813

S0%

»0%

.

6s
5s

Citizens

100
100

and Chicago

ij Chicago &, Great. Eastern,

Miscellaneous Shares :
Coal.—American

\

90%I

54%; 54% j

70%

j

St.

37

?8

100

Second avenue

55

|

) Panama
91 11! Pirtsbiugy^Fort Wayne
Reading
—

98%

—"

J

.•

6s, Improvement

do
do

■j

‘.91

—.107%;

!
1

Virginia 6s, coupon
Municipal:
Brooklyn 6s
do
6s, Water Loan
do
6s, Public Park Loan
do

O’*

j

j 77"
oa
j

*

Tennessee 6s 1868
do
6s 1890
6s, (new)
do

Jersey City 6s, water
New York 7s

-I

•••!
Bonds (coupon)..

North Carolina 6s
do
6s. (new)
Ohio 6s, 1870-75
do 6s, 1881-86
Rhode Island 6s
'

! 91

61

•

Missouri^

do
New York 7s, 1870
do
6s, 1867-77
do
59,1808-76
do
7s, State Bounty

50
ICO

do
do
guaranteed. ..100
|!
j | Milwaukee and Prairie du CJiien
100
do
do
do
1st
do
do
2d
do
Milwaukee and St. Paul
do
do
preferred
Morris and Essex
New Jersey...;
New fork Central
New Yo rk and New Ilaven
i New Ilaven and Hartford
Norwich and Worcester..
Ohio and Mississippi Certificates
do
do
do

122
122%
18% 118% 117%
87% 88

122

122

121
118

50
100

Michigan So. and N. Indiana

j-

—

coupon,’79, after 1860-62-65-10
do
do 1877,
do
do 1879

6s,

'do
do

-

’

—

50

100
100

2d preferred

• do
do
Michigan Central

i

—

(new)

7s

100 J
50 j

Long Island
McGregor Western
! Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred

:n

56

100

!
!

i 105%; 105%j 105
105% 105% j 105%; 105

\

114

Indianapolis'and Cincinnati
Jj Joliet and Chicago

,

do

>4

— i|

99%;

105%! 105

:05%jl05,%!l0*>%

—

|‘03%

99%; 09%

54

110

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

i

!

54% 52
100) 52>8 ,j 52%:j—
100
533,
74% 75%) 76%
1001 103% 104% 104% j105 104%ilo3^
100 70X!'72%i 74
90%
1001 85 jj S0%ijl09 j 92% 91% 113%
50;
8%%! 114
50!lll%J12% 113% 72% 73% 71%
72%
50}
81%
100
100| 71%';1 72% 83% 85

106% 106% —-,i0o% 106

—

Ill

100 —-130

i—— j Chicago and Milwaukee
,107)5* 113s; Chicago and Northwestern
nreferred
i —; -—j
j
do
do

j

127
110

1

100

11 Chicago and Great Eastern

i

i
j*07%|

i

„

_

Frl

I hurs.

Wed.

jTuea

110

100

!j
do preferred
do
~—! Chicago. Burlington and Quincy

“

registered.
coupon
registered
5-20s (1st issue)—coupon.
5-203
registered.!
5-20s (2d issue)
ooupml

1S6S
1881
1881

Chicago and Alton

j —- m

!

..coupon.

6s, Oregon War, 1881
..
do.
6s,
do.
5s, 1871
coupon.
5s, 1871
5s, 1874
coupon.
5s, 1874...
100% 100 1 99%
5s, 10-403
coupon.
5s, 10-40s
6s, Union Pacific R. R..
7-30s Treas. Notes..
....2 d series. j 105% 105% j 1 -5%
do
do
do
2d series.

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do

.

..100
100

...

Chicago. Rock Island and Pacific
6s, 5.20s
do
registered.•
!
M Cleveland, Colmnhus and Cincinnati
6« 5.20s (3d issue)..... ..coupOn\
,106%|106%!i06% —,
j| Cleveland and Pittsburg
r.. .registered]
1
J — 1106%; —— ;| Cleveland and Toledo.!'.
6s! 5.20s. do
-j
5.20s (new issue)...
. c •tf/)W2.jl09%|108%il09j8jl08%|U,8%%08%;j Delaware, Lackawanna and Western
register
F20s
j
do
.....registered
;
1
j
i| Erie preferred..
do

6s

do
do
do

do

J

J

j [ Central of New Jersey

,

registered.

6s. 1867
States 6s, 1868...,
do

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

.

Mon.

iiSuiur.

SECURITIES.

Kailroad Stocks;

137 %

!137^'1137

•

STOCKS AND

Iihurs) Pri.

Tues. I Wed.

Satur.l Alon.

r^rfcanGoldCoin (G> <i Room)
A»enca
National:
duited

the week ending Friday, December u.>

last sale reported officially on each day of

.^presented by the

EXCHANGE.

112

—-

96'

96

,

96

..

.....

—

—

Nicaragua

Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust
New York Life and Tru t
Union Trust

depress.—Adams
American
Merchants Union

United States
„

25 j
100
100<

100 j

5091
.100;
100j

Wells, Fargo & Co

100j

Mariposa preferred...

100!

Minnesota Copper
New Jersey Consolidated

Quartz Hill.,

—

100!

Copper...

i
!

74
80
78

78

12%




•30 1 •'

-

31%

82

—

—.

—

45%

O

■

46%
—r-

Mil
—

do
do

do
do

5

1st mort..

97%

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

Louis, Alton and Tone Haute, 1st mort ..
do
do
do
2d, pref...,
do
do
2d, income.
do
Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended.!
do
do
2d mortgage...
j
*riposa (Gold) 1st mortgage
I

St.
1

25

do
do

12%
31

-

,

Peninsula, 1st mortgage..
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago,

I

45

101

j

1

tuicksilver

Rutland Marble
Smith and, Parmelee

-

1

79

75

—

\W

31%

62%:

65
80

64
SO

13

50

15J

70

73
80

Morris and Essex, 1-t mortgage
New York Central 6s, 1883. T.
j
do
do
6s, 1887
do
do
7s, 1876
do
do
7s. convertible, 1876
d *
d<>3 7s, 1865-70 . ..
Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage

83

923^
75

82

82

91%
75

76

[December 15, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

760

Export* of Leading Article* from New York.

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in trade the past week. De¬
month; and current transac¬
tions are fully upTo the average volume, for the time.
Stocks
in dealers hands are quite reduced.
We have had a general
anticipation of a marked decline in prices ; and, for this
reason, long continued dulness; but imperative demands for
consumption cannot be longer held back.
£
Cotton has advanced with considerable activity.
Bread,
< *
stuffs have recovered from the depression heretofore noticedefi d
but the improvement is quite irregular and not well sup¬
ported. Groceries show rather more activity, especially in
g fi
O <3
Sugar and Molasses. There has been more doing in tobacco.
Provisions have been quite active, and in hog products
there has been a general though moderate advance in prices.
ca
The unfavorable weather for packing which prevailed last
week was followed by cold weather on Monday, upon which
«
live hogs have advanced in this market from G-^c. to 8^c. per
s
pound, and dressed hogs from 7£c. to Ofc. Pork has also
^advanced over a dollar a barrel, and lard nearly one cent.
>Naval Stores have been irregular.
Spirits Turpentine is
firmer, having sold at G8c.; but Com men Rosin lias declined
fe 'O
to $4, and finer
grades of Rosin are about a dollar a barrel
I S
lower.
Crude Turpentine, Tar, &e., are dull.
a
The business in Hides early in the week was quite large,
£ 2
prices ruling in favor of the buyer, and domestic slaughters
declined 1 cent per lb. The market closes quiet.
There
*
have been large sales of foreign Deer Skins.
Metals have shown no marked activity.
Some transac¬
tions in Pig Iron show steadily declining prices.
All East India Goods are dull, but Manilla
Hemp and
Calcutta Linseed are quite firm.
e
Eish and Fruit at some decline, close more steady.
Hops
are firmer.
Tallow has slightly improved in the past two
H
days.
Petroleum has slightly improved, with sales of several i <
thousand bbls. on Wednesday.
The extreme low prices f? ^
have encouraged a moderate speculative movement.
is
In Freights there is no
important change. The shipments g S 5
of Cotton to Liverpool have increased
; and on Tuesday and
Wednesday, the shipments of grain to Liverpool and out¬
posts were about a quarter million bushels.
But latterly
the offerings have been limited and rates are droopine,
6
'

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COMMERCIAL

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The

time in 1865, have keen

Cl

T-f

to'

[Of the items left blank in 1865
| This

Ashes, pkgs...

week.
432

Since

no

record

was

Same

Jan. 1. time’65

Rosin
Tar
Flour, bbls. .108,396 2,671,709 3,518,990 Pitch
Wheat, bush 746,198 5,889,0S2 9,150,505 Oil cake,
Corn
65S,216 *,595,942 9,657,636
lard

5,828

Breadstuffs—

X ©
©©
CO ©

•

Tfl

Rye
Malt

Grass seed...

2,222

Flaxseed....
582
Beans
357
Peas....:.... 122.127
C. meal,bbls.
C. meal,bans.
Buckwheat &
B.W. flour, bg

Cotton, bales
dQppper, bbls...

..

Copper, plates
Dnedfruit,pkgs
Grease, pkgs...
Hemp, bales
Hides, No

Hops, bales.^..

Leather, sides.
Lead, pigs

Molasses, hhds
& bbls
Naval Stores—
Crude trp,bbl

Spirits turp.

2,041
1,316

137,147

Eggs

391,772
194,994 274,820

Beef, pkgs.
Lard, pkgs...
Lard, kegs...
Rice, pkgs

..

80.864

618,264

70

16.674

.

Ol ©

.-f H

Stearine

6,571

850

360,191

2,918

bbls

Tallow, pkgs..
Tobacco, pkgs.
26,8G.F Tobacco, lihds.

19,011
56
45,4712,224,411 2,045,400 Whiskey, bbls.
6,819
Wool, bales....

Dressed

1,243
1,652

20,221
35,961
57,659

762

No

29,096
17,806

Rice,
bush

rJj

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642,785

101,760

148,525
125,522
65,863
100,885

■

215*980
98,865
97,510

Cl




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5,203
6,573
161,444
62.854
97.035

12.430

d
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r-TTtc-iri—Tr©©©co'MXXr-i©r-t©in©crN

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66,605

Tjl

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•
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X © X © © © © ©
r- Cl © © Cl © Cl

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119,032 133,525

rough,

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£• X X

in

00 tft

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at;

the exports of leading articles of com.
of New York since July 1, 1866, the principal

given

•

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•-

co

81,769

from that here

•

•

t Including bags roduced to barrels.

r okicli

© X

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ports of destination, and the total since January 1, and for the same
period in 1865. The export of each article to the several ports and the
total export fortiL* *a*L *** ^san be obtained
by deducting the amount

ia the last nura

•

:S

55

following table shows
from the port

Cl

3
.

101,825

7,781

3,755
315

o
»o

'x

3,967

Hogs,

cr ©

x>co

0.

74,667

338

N

d

3.941

2,628

T-t

17,782

610.170

367

20
391

Cl

© CV O*

10

a.

129,471

704,912

....

•

w

437.456

Spelter, slabs..
Sugar, hhds &

21.772

163

3,618
1,269

■Cd-Onr-OXKOO
gL* It SnnSOCfl 00

'

•

384,896
45,200

700
240

743,455 Starch

6,687

1,210

290

Pork

260,021

260
IS,886

8,124

© X 1- O o © -rtl (Mx

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Since
Same
Jan.l. time'65

2 877

Cheese
11,956
Cut meats...
674

66,013
46,598

Including barley malt.

merce

923

39,616 51S,108
Provisions—
474.0S5 4,827,103*2,974,030
Butter, pkgs.

Barley

The

11,5S4

•

©

3

pkgs
3,353 103,196
Oil,
4,155
5.330
1,016,549 22,576,187 15,458.455 Oil, Petroleum. 27,2601.029.773 523,910
163,0671,304,549 885,356 Peanuts, bags.£1,808
16,253

Oats

*

*16,830

since

made.]

This
week.

-rf
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follows;

as

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Week, a*t<I since

receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Dec, 14,
same

co

CSClHOtj-t^tr

January 1.
Jan. 1, and for the

~5

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Receipt* of Domestic Produce

© ti< 01 o 01 © *0 o
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761

THE CHRONICLE:

1866.]

December 15,

total

foreign imports of certain leading

following table shows the
rticlea of commerce at this port for
The

Hie week ending Dec. 7, since Jan.

and for the corresponding period in 1865 :
[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
Since
For
Same
Since
Jan. 1,
1866.
5,614

For
the

week.

LW?
57

422,557

Coffee, bags-.. 14,832

662,318

1,996

week.

29,443

63

bags'...

Cocoa,

Cotton, bales.
Drugs, &c.

p’wd’rs

22,864
15,695
1,074

05

Brimst, tns.

3

Cochineal...
CrTartar

40.721

236
820

Burk, Pernv

Blea

15.877

1 222

70

...

Gambier....

24,098

“di

Gums, crude
Gum, Arabic

13.772

72

16
35

Indigo..,...
Madder. ...
Oils, css ...
Oil, Olive...
Opium

4.261

3,409
7,692
4,115
80,411

135

2.163

7S5

138,021

bi-carb 2,050
Soda. sal....
264
Soda, ash... 1,08.0
Soda,

cloth

Hair
Hemp,

38,309
9,373

36
43
142
37

Flax
Furs
Gunny

35.877

bales..

.

4.512

24,037
4.776

4,131

11.4,394

28
215

2.427
11,074
21,567

Hides, &c.
Bristles
Hides, dres’d
India rubber..
Ivory. — • —

1.218

1,307
22

4,767

1,150 Sugar,bxs&bg
2,877 Tea

6,6561 Tobacco

231,240
125,749

156

Moiasses

6,423

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

time
1865.
4,857

31,618

21,790
14,153

29,516
11,874

108,501
370,238
56,036

1,676

626,952

60.529
109,807
55,662

2,516! Wines
6,407
36,438 Wool, bales...
614
1,010 Articles reported by value.
62.152 Cigars.
$7,667 $1,235,003 $866,552
13,558 i Corks
3,481
161,602 134.101
27,443jB’ancy goods.. 73,406 4,074,124 3,014,060
10,695!Fish
30,379 840,506 887,408
5,407.Fruits, &c.
3,785
Lemons
3,0361 Oranges

10,160

506,287

4,410

250,223

306.319

320,9S4
57,245 024,207 074.606
71,336 Nuts
| Raisins,.... 82.455 1,034,801 776,363
1,345 Hides,uiuh-sd.260.371 6,26-,053 4,012,834
23,647

6,2081 Rice
21,301 [Spices, *fcc.
621

54,065 1,032,881

150,200

6,314

Cassia

2,225

*

214.S33

46.309

144,790

640

181,031

115,289

914[Saltpetre....

110,015
07,494

33,315
153,150

Pepper

4!),035

230,386

143

217,3.2

101.520 Woods.

142,550

Fustic
Logwood
Mahogany..

2,SSS

66,150

AND BALTIMORE.

following table shows the exports from the above ports, of some
leading articles of commerce for the month of October, aud from Jan
The

1 to

Dec. 7, 1866 :
(Coal oil and kerosene are
Boston.

,

Nov.

-

.—Philadelphia.—,

,

Since
Jan. 1.

Breadstuff?—
Flour, bbls
Corn meal, bbls...
Wheat, bush
Corn, bush

16,360

3,002

..

Candles, bxs

..

..

Cotton, bales
Naval stores—

..

1.154

4,274
1,607

8
Turpentine, bbls..
Spts turpentine, bbls
5!)
258
Kosin, bbls
Tar, bbls
3,845
Oil cake, bags
..121,724
Petroleum, galls
•

V

..

Nov.

Pork, bbls
Beef, bbls
Butter, tubs, &c
Cheese, bxs, &c...
Lard, kegs & bbls.

..

..

..

..

2,309
<594
450
27 S
2.157
271

Tallow, bbls

pkgs

..

..

..

2,456

172,270
32,387

2,068

33,231
31.057

16,355
5,160

3,526

25,203
750,832
525,650
510,308

4,417

700,006
510,304

2,193

*48,000
*....
A...

404

10,721
63

.

624,500
482,732 1,821,713

*50,000

3,008

660
65

435
50

20,837
8,418
5,821
4,042
lo,7P8

266

*268,800
*123,918
*2,625
5,176

ofexports$l,S19,130 21,691,777

not

7,529

1,209

*10,346
*12,041

119,876

1,050,027 *205,381
6
2,000,400
257,510
7,652

1,772,569

80,608

*12,212
*3,700

4,061 ....

451

*503,3S0 S, 677,372
2,042,066 24,530,732

31,044

150,042

12,305

....

4,303

10
....

11,486
582
84

23

10,057
2.015

20,417

*49,500
1,017

33

....

03

1,111

Total val

42.876

37,616

reported

96,529
218

82,116;

10,756

70,633j

8,702

2S.703

2,581

20,219

74.067

S,497j

Fridat, F. M;. Dec. 14,1S66.

receipts of Cotton the past week at all the ports
amount to 63,041 bales, against 60,843 bales the previous
week, making the total receipts since September 1, this year,
521,703 bales', against 670,466 bales for the same period in
1865: The exports from all the ports for this week show a slight
increase, the total reaching 24,281 bales, of which 22,564
bales were to Liverpool, 101 bales were to Havre, 500
bales were to Spain, 617 bales to Hamburg, and 499 to
The

,

Havre.
5

Spain,
....

*

burg. Mexico.
617

34

New Orleans*

9,000

Charleston

499

Savannah.......
balreston
Total this week

500

500

*
These figures we have received by telegraph, our
wing failed to reach us.
•
'

The total

6,723
10,095
2,609
941

941

22,564

Total.

3,889

101

617

499

24,281

usual weekly mail report

foreign exports from the United States since
September 1 now amount to 184,135 bales, against 322,601
ales last year. Below we
give our usual table of the move-




.....

.

153.400

2.581

82,446

6,790:

611

8,497

....

.

,

,

i

....

19,868

•

•

•

24.292

3,210

+50,000

184,135

261j
10,867"

....

•

245,600 462,639

The market this week has been active and buoyant.
The
favorable advices from Liverpool, with no further increase in
deliveries at the ports, and a disposition to accept lower esti¬

have resulted in an increased export and

mates of the crop,

speculative demand. There has also been less said about the
New England spinners working short time, and it is now
doubtful whether any general movement of the^ sort will take
place. Very little was done last Saturday, but on Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday the sales aggregated 14,000 bales.
Yesterday less was done, and prices receded sbghily from the
advance; and to-day the market is also quiet, as the Liverpool
report is not quite so strong. Exchange is easier,, and ad¬
vanced rates of freight are demanded by the steamers for Liv¬
erpool. The stiles for the week amount to about 18,000
bales.
The

following

the closing quotations ’:

are

tt>

Ordinary

30

Florida.
30
32
33

82

...

34*
Good Middlin'

..

37

86

.

Exports of Cotton from New

N. Orleans
& Texau
Mobile.
31
30
33
32
34
33
35 J*
85
8S
37

York the past week amount

Liverpool, 5 to

0,723 bales, of which 6,101 were to
Havre, and 617 to Hamburg, as follows :
to

Liverpool per steamers : City of Baltimore 408, Aleppo 735, Queen
1,714 ; per ships Wisconsin 191 ; New World 251: Orient 1,194; Atmos¬
phere 882; per barque Anna Holzberg‘696. Total bales
:

To

To Havre per ship: HarpsVvell 5. Total bales
To Hamburg per steamer: Germania, 617.

Total bales...

.

6,101
5
617

of Cotton
last four
September
and in the last column the total for the same period

give our table-showing the exports
from New York, and their direction lor each of the
weeks ; also the total exports and direction since
Below

1, 1866;
of the

we

previous year :

Exports of Cotton

(balcs>) from New Kork since Sept.

X, 1866

ENDING

WEEK

"

Total
EXTORTED TO

"8,803
A...

41

Total to Gt. Britain..

1 Dec.

Nov.
27.

Nov.
20.

4-

1

j

7,808

1

...

date.

'•••

184

....

prev.
year.

3,708

74,067 134,189

6,101

80

Same
time

1 73,883 130,481

6,101

7,803

S,578

to

Dec.
11.

!

8.57S

!

8,344

5

•

305

Havre..
Other French ports.

.'

Hamburg

5,416

617

446

3,201
2,501

1,312
3,893

-

Other ports

....

Total to N. Europe

Gibraltar

•

-

■

617

021

740

781

..

203

89

5,99 b

5,874

795

•

....

Total Spain, etc

....

!

.

!

.A

0,313

Receipts of cotton at the port
Sept. 1 :

;

..

.

.

F,Kpp

....

6,723

This
week.

..

Since

Sept. 1.
Bales. Bales.
2,765
43,491
650
6.250
3,34 1
42,831
1,54 7
13,042
0,218
1,307

Total for the week.
Total since Sept. 1

....

795

169

82.446

145,648

of New York for the week

and since

.*

169

....

All others

From
New Orleans
Texas
Savannah
Mobile
Florida

....

1,589

4i.:6

204

301
480

Bremen and Hanover

5,416

5

80

305

Total French

Spain, Oporto and

1,589
....

24

2,609
3,889.^

96

1,589

8.702

j

....

2,919

Grand Total

follows:
Liverpool
6,101

|

....

.

12,971

5,843

Other British Ports

Ham-

.

23,905 60,933
82,677 10,605
53,815 15,819
7.783 21,255
110,000

10,776

j

521,703

Total

$1,372,6S3 10,313,400

Exported this week to

.

f

....

.

24,2921

Other

Liverpool

-

4

74,642

31,013

Pounds.

£ew York
Boston

20

81,756 193,426

i'j h-

12,974!

Virginia, Dec. 14..
p’ts, Dec. 14*

PORTS.

64.013

00 o

....

STOCK.

NORTH.

Total,

3,015:

42,730 18,250

46.858;

Florida, Dec. 7t

snir-

for'gn.!

11,606

N. Carolina, Dec. 14

TO—

40,784

COTfON.

„

Texas, Nov. 30
New York, Dec. 14*

T ranee

Britain

221,538!

162,077

500

mfd, lbs....

), as

Dec. 7..
Mobile, Dec. 7
Charleston, Doc. 7..
Savannah, Dec. 7...

25,313

25,090
46,840
11, 746

l.j

•

m’ntsto

.1
Other;

Jan.1.

Nov.

1,413

478

L

Since

0

1,70S,103

Tobacco

*

N. Orleans,

Baltimore—.

*95,837

Provisions—

Tobacco,

Since
Jan.1.

,

Sept. 1, and
*
’ :n
•

.

.

SEPT,

1

SINCE SETT.

EXTORTED

Upland.

16,198

Bread, bbls

PORTS.

included under petroleum.)

3

I

■.

; kec n 1
1 SINC E
j Great

211.173

278,030
384,456

682,513

i

Same

370,120
380.168

02

6,040 Wines, &c.
Champ, bkts
4,728

BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA

EXPORTS FROM

42,218

6,933
9,020
665

4,032 j Waste

1,126

1,077
2,300

Watches....

Linseed

233,470

receipts, exports, stocks, &c.:
Stocks at Rates Mentioned.

Lead, pigs.. 11,168 433,210 196.136
spelter, lbs .510,621 10,065,255 3,114,319
Steel
3,583
184 944
83,065
Tin, bxs.... 11,290 773,620 580.866
Tin slabs,lbsll8,5U6 6,408,019 6,553,605

17,749 Rags
656
8.932 [Sugar,
hhds,
3,1891 tcs&bbls.. 3,450

753

10j

13,02!)

Iron.RRb’rs 14,142

Ginger

Jewelry, &c.
Jewelry.....

1866.

615

Hardware...

3,637
301,564
5,693
667,914

Buttons
Coal tons....

Jan. 1,

the

time
1865.

showing at a

ports since Sept. 1,

Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since

1866,

1

at all the

otton

Articles.

Imports of Leading:

From
South Carolina
North Carolina

This
Since
week. Sept. 1.
Bales. Bales.

1,404
1,024

Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. 2,648
Per Railroad
4,200
Foreign
.....
•

• •

18.SS0

21,710
10,657
22,453

20,974
57

192,683

* The
receipts given for theso ports are only the shipments from Tennessee,
Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated.
*U the ports of Florida to December 7; except
t These are the receiufc*

Apalachicola, which
X Estimated. The

mber 8.
*kis also estimated.

L

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

were

and 61,540 bales to the trade.

now as

Receipts from—

New Orleans
Texas
Savannah
Mobile
Florida
South Carolina
Nort h Carolina

Virginia

1,230

Last

Since

week.

Sep. 1.
2,909

\

22,932

4,944

^-Philad'phia.->

....

•

....

•

•

3,022

11,992
36

151

.

2,879

....

.

1866.

Tennessee, Kentucky, &c...

624

.bales

9,398

70,046

1,300

Total

receipts...

..

52

527

3,998

506
....

Upland.......

12

Mobile
New Orleans.
Texas

12

Sea Island..

Upland

exports of cotton this week from Philadelphia
or Baltimore, and only 24 bales from Boston, all of which
were shipped to Liverpool per the steamer Africa. Galveston, Dec- 1.—We have received one week’s later statement by.
mail from Galveston. The receipts for week ending Nov. 30 were 6,-105
bales, against 3,572 last week, and the shipments were 2.493 bales,
of which 941 bales were to Liverpool, per bark Fiile de L’Air, 1,363
are no

New York, and the balance to New Orleans.
Below we give the
receipts, sales, and shipments for a series of weeks, arid the stock, price
of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price
of gold at the close of each week :

28
18

14

14
14%-14%

@13
@13
@13

20

a

«
27

22%

22

::

24
22

20%
20%

15%
16
16

N

Fair. Good

33

15%

1863. 1S64.
d.
d.
44
39

..

..

Mobile
Orleans

Reshipments.

There

34

24
16

Mid.

21

20%

comparison of the prices of middling qualities of cotton
is subjoined ;

A

at this

..

.

.

1865. 1866.
d.
d.
24
33
20% 14

25%

26%
26%
26%

2(i

20%
21

.

.

14

*0%

1863. 1864. 1665.
H66.
d.
a.
d.
a.
Pernambuco. 27
26
20
14
24
Egyptian .... 26
20
16*
Broach
20
15% 14% 9
Dhoilerah.... 20
16
14% 9

Middling—

14%

.

.

.

*

immediately prospective supplies of

The available and
now as under :

Freights.

1865.

Stock at

.

678,180
95,187

31,428

“

126.792

50,000
232,455

2".000

17,725

89,492
8,866

734,302

.

5..

Oct.
U

12..
19..
26..

it
it

Nov.

2..
9..
lb

it

it

it

23
30..

it

Stock.

Exp.
6

6.427

3,928
3,561

1,195

6.181
7,592

23@24

5,524

1.494

8.111

26@..

5.778
4.950
8.967
5.482

71

3,572

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

5,405

4,671

8

1
1

%@@-16
%@....
%@--

26@27

ylO
753

@%

@%

147(77150
147@149

%@.

.

—

145@148

1

%@...

150 V/'

@%
%@

145@148

-

•

10,159
25@..
25(5),
11,506
15,524 22% @23

%@...
%@...
>8.342 22 y.@.. 18 16@%
2,493 21,255 22% @23

3,073

.

•

1%@..146%@147%
1%@...138 @140
l>i@..14I @144

Total

The

918,497

following siateraent shows the imports of cotton at Liverpool
well as the sales of each description of pro¬

for tiie week and year, as
duce in the same periods :

the stocks of cotton are also included

SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
Total Total
Same
this
period
Specula- this
week
1865.
tion.
year.
Trade.-* port.
270 17,800 1,,207,180
349.830
bales. 15,520 2,010
American
350
6,690
350,220 3 9,850
Brazilian...
4,870 1,470
M0
190,580 483,960
4,540
Egyptian
4.130
230
85.480 102,320
1.440 West Indian
1,330
110
East Indian
2-,520 9,030 6,570 41,120 1 ,516,880 11.865,210
5S0
11,510 286,510
China and Japan..
440
170
..

7,370

51,540 13,260

Total

:

Aver:

weekly sales.
3866.

i8C5.

18,030 4.630
5.500 3.850
3.500 ‘7,110

1,450 1.850
17,670 16,490

..

*

Specie.
Per steamer.
The sales for the week amount to 1,942 bales,

are

1866.

356,210
46,484

bales.

Liverpool

“

London
Havre...
American cotton alloat
Indian
“
Alio it to Havre

Price
Price To Liver¬ To N ew
York.t
inid.*
gold.
pool.
24(5.25
%@9-lG 1 @% 1-13@145

1865.
3.214

1866.
690
7-16
1.419
1.663
2.119
4.419
4 064

Date.

Fair.

cotton

to

Receipts—

are

date in each of the last four years

12,622

803

good fair.

middling.

@13

12
12

Middling—

“L.

ly:
7,445

216

Sea Island....
Stained

and
22
15

.

....

13 260

;

current
-1865.

—,,

Good and
line.
48
70
21
22

Fair and

Ordinary

3.484
478

1,008

....

236
2.571
18.228
5.843

New York, &c*.

....

....

216

5.329

585
564

•

.—Baltimore.—,
Since
Last
week. Sep. 1.
618
207
224
3,837

The prices

under:
,

,—Boston.—>
bince
Last
week. Sep. 1.

1866.

72,170 bales, of which 7,370 bales were on speculation

bales for export,

ber 1:

*

[December 15,

CHRONICLE.

THE

762

120

72,170 3, 361,850 21,407,710

3.270

46,320 37,200

showing increased ac
-Stocks-linportsSarne
To this To this
tivity. Towards the close of the week there was less disposition to op \
This
Total
date Doc. 31.
This
date
date
erate, buyers being unwilling to meet the views of factors.
Freights j
dav.
1865.
'1865.
week.
1866.
1865.
1865.
are active, many p arties shipping on their own account, in preference to i
459,369 176,930 115,100 Hi,722
American
0,508 1,100,254 363,925
selling at the prices offered.
36.580
36 004
334.068
7.168
57,600
Brazilian
395,072 298 497
18,870
411.328
40,390'
Savannah, Dec. 8.— The receipts for the week ending Dec. 7 were Egyptian
2,376
174,363 3*5,613
31,023
18.620
8.850
9,796
1.191
113.328
87,212 102.167
6,831 bales (of which 222 were from Florida), against 6.460 bales last West Indian
Indian
20,941 1,516.8351,029.352 1,095,744 29.>,080 145,74) 144.759
week. The shipments this week were 8,240 bales, of which 3,889 were East
7,080
4.971
125,871
9,550
China and Japan
12,993 125,859
to Liverpool per ship Thomas Freeman, 2,967 were to New York, 1,048
Total
38,184 3,256,7292,304,783 2,539,708 578, ISO 356,210 370,275
were to Boston. 216 to Philadelphia, and 120 to Baltimore.
Below we
give the receipts, shipments, prices, etc., for a series of weeks :
The actual export of cotton from Liverpool, Hull and other outports,
Receipts. Shipm’s.
Stock.
Price Mid. from January 1 to date, is 847,210 bales, against 630,245 bales last
Oct. 5
2.847
3.274
3,29(5
38 ' @39
year. Of these quantities 199,725 bales during the present, and 49,520
12
5,939
3,726
5,509
36 @37
bales during last year, were American produce.
19
4.154
5,346
36 @37
4,991
26
8.*58
4,644
9.560
36 <&..
London, Dec. 1.—The trade during the greater part of the week has
Nov. 2
8,160
3.505
14.224
35 @35%
ruled quiet, with very little change in prices. The following particulars
9
7.614
6,958
14,880
33% @34
relate to Fast India, China arid Japan produce :
16
8,496
6.170
17,206
31 @32
“

“

“

“

.

“

23
30

“

8,562

7.017

5,944
Dec. 7
5,831
8,240
The transactions this week have continued very
6,460

15,691
16.107
15,819

31 @02
31%@32
31 @..

limited, sellers still
declining to meet the views of buyers.
Quotations r.re nominal.
Freights to Liverpool are 4(@|d., and to New York by steamship lc.
Sterling exchange is nominal at 160
Charleston, Dec. 8.—The receipts for the week ending Dec. 7
amount to 5,221 bales, against 4.899 bales last week.
Shipments for this
week amount .to 6,267 bales, against 3,8-SO bales iast week, of which
2,609 were to Liverpool [per ship Missouri), 2.524 were to New York,
and 126 to Baltimore. The receipts, sales, and exports for a series of
weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and
New York, and price of gold at the close of each week since Oct. 5, were
as

follows:

Ship¬

Date. Rec’te. Sales.:ments. Stock.
8. MS
Oct. 5.
2.096 1,500 1,076
tt
12.
2.620
2,663 1,153 3.851
It
2.9-6 1.177 2,666
19.
2.608
it
26.
5,395 2,086 1.599
6.401
Nov 2.
4,667 2,191 5.854
5,051
it
9.
5,096 3,472 4,135
7.4 9
it
16.
6,082 1.400 3,673 10.618
ii
23.
5,1.8$ 1,900 5,901 10,105
t;
30.
4,899 1.879 3,880 11,124
Dec. 7.
5,221 2.25S 5,267 10,(595
.

I’riice of
ir:id.
38 @39

To Liver¬

pool.
u@-

35
39
36
36
36

.

.

.

.

.

.

@30%

%@—

%@-

@82
@-

%@—
%@—

31

.

@-

31
32

.

@30

32

.

@—

@40

@—
@36%

%@—
%@>;@—
%@-

To New
York.

%@—
%@—
%@—
34 @.
1
@1
@—
1
@—
1
@%@—
%@-

gold.
145@148
1488/: 150
110@148

117@149
146@I4S

correspondent in London writes

other

as

are now a

shade lower than

at

IMPORTS

.

AND

140@142

Commercial & Financial Chronicle.




64,226

17,739
24,118
203,366

172,446

Per 50 Kilogs.
New Orleans
Mobile

15,851
49,899

418,234

31,428

126,792

151
152

150

1,454

1865.

23, 1866

Low. Very ord. Ord. Good ord.
215
180
195
230
173
190
205
168
185
200

Very low.

Georgia

20,123

■

50.990

273,605

PRIG ES NOV.

1866.
59.5.7

1865.

6,562

172,8" 1

including
511,062

STOCKS—i

-

1866.

1865.

201,615

256,674

e

—DELIVERIES

222,807

'23, STOCKS

23.

NOVEMBER

1866.

1867
American.. bales. 24,061
Brazilian
24,248
Indian
177,910

NOVEMBER

TO

eiyLow
228
226
224

235 to 250

TOBACCO.
Friday, P. M., Dec.

foilows respecting those markets:*
The

14.

from-all the ports have increased
.3,122 hhds., 5f>4 cases, 230 bales,
66 pkgs., Ill hhds. and 50 bales of stems, and 93,031 lbs.
manufactured, as may be seen in the following:

The exports of Tobacco
this week, the total being

Pkgs. ,—Stems—> Manfd
lh?.
hhds. bales.

own

respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph des¬
patches at the close of our London letter in a previous part ol this paper.—[Ed.
news

PRICES

IMPORTS

Hhds. Case. Ticrc. Bals. & bxs.
542
205
1,495

Exported from
New York...!

...

Baltimore
Boston

>.

111

1,596
12

29

...

2

Philadelphia
New Orleans

•

50

....

...

....

.

•

••O

OS«8

•

....

•

•

....

....

55
11

25

Portland
•

•

•

91,431
1,600
.

..

..

••

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

•

•

•
"

-

Total this week
Total last week

.

...

.

.

.

3,122

1,603

554
583

...

....

230
53

66

460

111
136

50
....

give our usual table showing the total
of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States,
,

For latest

(x

1

DELIVERIES FROM JANUARY

AND

143@.145

principal
changes, however, aie confined to middling qualities of American and
Brazilian produce, which exhibit a fall in price of £d per lb. The,
aggregate busiiu-ss done is moderately large, and the trade have taken
a lair
supply. rIhe total sales of the week ending Thursday evening
*

95,167

Havre, Nov. 9.9.—At the commencement of the week the cot ton
has since fallen off, and the

145@147
143@115

Cotton Markets.— Our

the close of last week.

,

.46,484

19,931

312,350
252,054

147@119

Liverpool, Dec. 1.—In the early part of the week tin re was a fair de¬
mand for cotton,' but since tln-n the inquiry has fallen
off, and the quota¬

tions

'

!....

Price

during the week, but has
with the dulness reported
at Liverpool and New York.
Middling closes at 31, low middling 8w,
strict middling at 82, and good middling at 33.
Sterling 60-day bills
were selling at §6 60@?6 62.
and

period

other kinds..

The market has exhibited some activity
shown considerable weakness, in sympathy

Liverpool, London, Indian

same

179,149
241,731

317.137
241,704

trade was very active, but the'demand
market closes quietly.

Total,

/—Freight for Upl'd—*

.

Deliveries
Stocks

1866.

1S65.

1864.

.bales.

Imports, Jan. 1 to Nov. 29

Below

we

direction, since November 1

:

93.031

106,511

exports
and their

1866.]

December 15,

1,

1,657

I.im

Great Britain
Gcrraany
Belgium

Holland

2.205

Spain. &c
Mediterranean

1,333
soo
14

.

^

Austria

Australia
5 N. Am. Prov..

T'l since

31,516
30,172

218

79

i.3

Circular for this month

155! 357

462
50

1

405
331
31

120

1°9

America...

Weet Indies
Eost Indies

Mexico
All others

36,411

’41

58
7

_

South

71.670

555

India, &c.

China,

171,166

229

8
4
96
50

1,927

France-

bales. &bxs.

66!)

437

quality, although the estimates made of the total yield of the
country are very contradictory. Some place it at only 140,090 hogsheads, while others give a much higher figure.
The
following dptabed estimate, in pounds, we take from Rader’s

lbs.

141

3,063

’ »tn

Italy

Bales, tcs. Stps. bhds.

Cases.
247

Hhds.

anct

Manfd,

,—Stems—, Pk^s.

Cer’s &J
To

Crop.—The crop of tobacco this year
promises to prove a very successful one, both in quantity

310
244

249
683

1,000,115
48,4 is
15,609

62,737
313

50

c

•• •

4,751 1,448

Nv. 1,’6615,275

141

1,623,544

1,548

2 9

669

following table indicates the ports from which the
above exports have been shipped : &
Tc<.
Bxs. & /—Sterns-^ Lbs.
prom
Hhds. Cases. Bales, crus. Strips, pk^s. bhds. bis. 1.018.903
229 maul’d.
S
364
Mew York
6.422 3,817 1,269 141
2
291
4,011
Baltimore..
7.631
3. ...
852
Boston
^399
917 1,9 ...
330
Portland
11
Mew Orleans
601
The

-

Other ports

Total since

~

jj4,751 1,448

Nov. 1.. 15,275

The tobacco market
The season is drawing

22

669

1,548

141

1,623,544

)

this week, in hogshead*, has been quiet*
to a close, and the assortment on the mar¬

The business of ti e week is only about
05 hhds., about equally divided between exporters and the trade.
The range of prices paid is from 4-ht. to 17c.
Tn seed leaf
there has been a pretty fair business, the sales footing up
some 1,000 cases in the range of 36@.’He., including iOS
cases old Connecticut, 34c.; 04 do. old Ohio, 6«Va.;
15 cases
New Pennsylvania, fancy wrappers, 31 pc.; 100 do. new Ohio
wrappers, 15c.; 87 cases old Ohio wrappers, private terms;
49 do. Ohio assorted, 6c.; 04 do. Ohio assorted, 9^-c.; 40o do.
Pennsylvania, new—a running lot—10c.
Foreign tobacco has been rather more active. The sales of
Yara amount to about 250 bales, part at auction, at 60@78e.
We also notice sales of 3 50 b iles Havana at 75@95c.
Manu¬
factured tobacco has met with an improved demand from the
trade, but no large transactions are reported.
much reduced.

ket very

LEAF

KENTUCKY

Light IP vy West.
& Ci’ksv’le.
Lui;s.. 4c@ 4>£c. — @> —

(HHDS.).

Kv. Light H’vy West.
Leaf.
& Ci'ksv’le.
11c @,12><
15 (a, 17c
18 @20
13 m 5

Kv.
•

Common
Good

ertl’.

7^@10>;
LEAF

SEED

N.Y.

16

@22

21

@18

(BOXES).
State.—Fillers,
Ohio.—Good runuing lots...
Average
“

7^@10c
5

Fillers

.Y" 40 ‘@12c
State.—Wrappery lots. 12 @20c
Running
“ . 7>4@12c
.

-

Penn.—Kunning lots

'.

Filleis

@ 7c

3
6
3

-

@12c
@ 5c

@ 5c

manufactured

West. &

West. & City. Virginia.
Tax paid.
,

City. Virginia.
Tax pa

d.

,

,

Navy X lbs. and lbs.—

X ana
lbs.—
30e@ 40c 30c@. 40c
Medium
45 @. 55
45 (d\ 55
Good and Cue 60 @ 72
60 @ 70

Black work.—5s, 10s,

3'* @ 40
So @, 40
Good and flne 60 @ 72
(10 @ 70
In bond
,
Black.—Common. 23c@ 25c 20c@ 22c
G’d & flue 27 @ 30
25 @ 30
Common

Common

,

Bright work.—X lbs. and lbs.—

85 @ 45
50 @ 60
75 @1.15

Common
35 @ 45
Medium
50 @ 60
Good and tine 75 @1.00

25 @ 35

Bright.—Common 25 @ 35
G’d & line 50 @

50 @ SO

75

“

Good.....
Fine

“

75@
80@i.

95

receipts of -tobacco at
Nov. 1, have been as follows:
From

NEW YORK
-This weekplugs.
hhds.

AT

11
.

321

220

Other...

....

The following are
for the past week :
EXPORTS

hhds.

case*.

Liverpool. 113

London.... 122

Hamburg

Antwerp

.
..

Genoa

Gibraltar..
Cuba
Other

2,628

338

Total

...

379
789
79

21.899

44

17

44

3,917

19,793

4,255

22,421

FROM

”3

Stems, Mfd.
British N.
A. Colo..

Brit’h Hon¬
duras
New Gra¬
nada

2,391
69

Total for week

*The exports in this table to




14,201

*

hhds. cases, bals. bals.

Argentine

8

233

from New York

NEW YOUR

6,6t0

'

1863.

States.
Alabama
Arkansas
California
Connec'icfit
Delaware...
Florida

lbs.

20,397.537
10,416,314

300.402*
26.8s t
113,912,938

Kansas..-.

Kentucky

LousiaiK.

Republic

Venezuela.

1,495

lbs.
2,390

.391

82
25

512 205

European ports are made up from

8,800,000

6,000.133
9,699

50

3,150

8.910,197

14.057

14,000

1S.S67.722
8,767,665
390,522
22,043

1 @190.388

14.000
600,000
600.000
16.600.000

7,8’.-0.359

7,100.000

20,941

16,000

20,349

56,956,469

51,260,823

61,000, (00

108,126,840

46,000

39,940

33 202 90S

33.292.9(0
5.745,000

35.300.000

38,410.965

4,400,000

3,233,198

218.473

210.000

828.815
919 318

6.885,202
7.993.378
303.168

325.000

380.159

7.000
48.271,415

Maryland

5,260.000*

Mas-sadi use tti:

1.583

248.473

43.321*

Michigan....
Minnesota
Missouri

6,76o!000

207.061*

34.659

32,057

20,600

121,099
38,938

13,679.063

12,327.357

10,500,000

25,086.196

...

26,340.505

50,000*
194,330*

10,088,017*

140.000
8,000.000

18,581
149,485
5.764.582

20,292,483

35,000,(00
26,000,000

32,853.250
25,092,581

5,971,437
1,1*48

4.600.000
,5(10

3,181,588

35.0( 0

104,412

39,500,000

..

Hampshire...

New Jersey
New York
North Caroline
Ohio

,

43,448.097

64,000
179,755

64.1 00

179,755
12.912,662

12,267.029

29,017,931v

......

...

2S.0S1.S09+

Oregon
Pennsylvania

5.567.774*
1,680*

Rhode Island
South Carolina....

6,124.551
1,8 IS

405
705

1

Tenne-sec
Texas

90,000

Utah
Vermont

70.000.000

40,000*

Wisconsin
Dist. of Columbia
Dacota
Nebraska
Nevada

.......

118,083

123,968.312

.

12,245

59.000

153*189*

Virginia

'59,000

97.914

148.083

87,340

I40,0v0

15,200
10

3,636

7’,044

New Mexico

10

Washington

276,850,870 197,459,089

185,576,869 330.501,500

434,209,461

Tobacco.
following, from a late
be of in¬

Segar Leaf, called Seed leaf.
+ Segar Leaf and Hogshead
With regard to the Virginia-crop, the
O
I q
'-v
number of the Richmond Times, will be found to
*

~

^

terest :
The nop of this year, though small, is in
made, and we have reason to believe there

r*

•

quality one of the best ever

for
of
Virginia

will be a good demand

pound of Virginia and North Carolina tobacco. The crop
North Onrohna finding a market in Virginia, and coming uuder the
same inspection, the crops of the two States are known as “

every

Tot/aero.”

get Wil.do not think the crop will
the war : certainly it will not ex¬

estimate-it in round numbers between forty and
fifty-five thousand hogsheads. The crop for several years previous to
the war was between seventy and seventy five thousand hog-heads.
In North Carolina the counties of Caswell, Rockingham and Person
produced fine crops this year, and probably as much tobacco as they
ever made previously.
In Warren. Granville and Franklin counties,
which, before the war, produced more tobacco than all the rest of the
state, th*» crop is very short, cotton, to a great extent, having taken the
place of tobacco. In Granville not over one-h df a crop, and in Cravenand Fran Gin not over one-fourth.
The crop of Warren County will be
wry much mussed, as it produced not only very fine “ m nufacturing ”
twbicco, but. a great deal of fine ‘■‘shipping,” suit-«bl1 for the continental
markets of F.urope.
In fact Wa’-ren produced more shipping tobacco
of good quality than ad the other counties of the State together.—Rich¬
"We

ceed tu.» thi;ds.

Maryland.—At Baltimore the

market is without any

material

of Maryland difficult
make.
at prices within our
former range.
Ohio and Kentucky continue inactive ; no sales re¬
ported. Inspected this week, 4 90 hhds. Maryland, 41 Ohio and 4 Ken¬
tucky—total 541 hhds. Cleared, 796 hhds. to Arnsterdoni, SU0 do. and
ine receipts of Virginia tobacco at Balti¬
111
stems to Bremen.
for the week, were 1J3 hhds. and 402 pkgs., with no sales it
change.
to

Receipts continue light, and selections
Sales amount to 300(3)100 hhds.. and

more

ported.

following, is from our

London correspondent:

been au improved
changed hands.
snips, in which a
have been obtained.
full
unsatisfactory quality.
The impost into London in October was-837 hhds. The deliveries were
1,014 hhds, against 8 It) hhds. last year. The stock here is 24,425 hhds.,
against 22,905 hhds hist year ; 18,059 bhds. in 1864 ; 18,084 hhds. in

London, Dec. 1.—During the past month there has
demand lor tob seco,-and upwards of i',800 laid?, have
With the exception of a fewT sales of Western old
slight concession in price has been granted,
rates
The new irnpoits are looked upon ns of very

1863, and 21,610
8

hhds. in 1862.

BRniTDSl’UFFS.
New York,

29
11.
8

989,980

9,900.218

50

....

232.914

...

Maine

.New

270,000

1,700,000

34,850*
7,500.000*
15,618*

Georgia

I860.

1866.

1865.

1864.

1860, 1863-66.

Estimated for

,

Illinois
Indiana ...’
Iowa

The

3,799

17

4,713

5)

55 j

2,1-24

3,478

1,904

..

11

315
174

«...

THE YEARS

■Crops in the Northern States.

uo.

pkirs.
18,022

1,625

546

277

•
OF TOBACCO

w.

Indies...

hhds.

pk'LS.
15,725

hhds.
1,556 r

the exports of tobacco

Stems, Mfd.
bales, bals. lbs
34,061

69
160

-Previouslv-

163

.

1868.
r-T’l sin. Nov

1.

SINCE NOVEMBER

10

38

week, and since

ork this

Ne

2,297

69
.

7u@i 05

Yura

95@1 10

The

RECEIPTS

1 50@3 00

Havana.—Wrappers

80

THE UNITED STATES IN

IN

mond 'Times.

foreign.

Havana.—Fillers—Common.

IRODUChD

TOBACCO

:

From the best information we < a reach two thirds of the mop before

4#@, 6c

N. Y.

40
@ 60c
Codil—Prime wrappers..
30 @, 15c
Average “
Com.
“ to b'd’rs 10 ,@25c

Fillers

.

@14

11

8 togO

.

Good Leaf
Fine (to
Selections.

5c (fa To.

5 @ 5X
6 (Tn 7#

do
Common Leaf.
Medium
do

Tobacco

The

United States since Novem1866.

from the
her

of *Tobacco

vrvortB
B P

763

THE CHRONICLE

The maifcet has been veiy irregular
The receipts are liberal, but as

ing inland navigation, holders
2,725" although stocks are somewhat

the manifests.

pressing than was

anticipated.

Dec. 14, 1866.

during the past week.

the period has arrived for clos¬
have exhibited more strength,
larger and the demand less

764

THE CHRONICLE

Flour ruled very

from New York has depressed the market; holders ask
5s. for the finest
are not practicable over 4s. 9d. per 60 lbs.
At. to-day's
there was a small attendance, and a limited demand for
wheat - prices
rather in favor of buyers, especially! Indian, of which several

dull and heavy early in the week; but
Tuesday the trade have bought more freely, and yester¬
day and to day there was considerable speculation, and juices
have improved 25@50e.
per barrel on the low and medium
grades. There was less buoyancy at the close, owing to the

pies, but sales

since

lotskvere off,ere

ex-quay. Flour was 6d. to Is. per sack lower. Indian corn boiiG
scarce
spot could not be had under 40s. per qr., but for arrival next wefk th™*.?, e
seders at 39s.
re Here
Quotations: Flour, extra State, per barrel, 81s. 6d.@33s. 6d.;

Canadinn oo
®35s.; Sour and heated, 283.032s.: Wheat—Chicago ami
Milwaukee no*
lbs. lls.®12s.9d : Amber Iowa, 16s. 3d.013s. Cd/ Indian
Corn—per 4S01bs i
low, 40s.; white, 40s.; mixed, 40s. Peas, Canadian, per 504 lbs.

fact that the movement was too entirely
speculative.
"Wheat h as arrived freely, and receivers have been forced to
sell a portion of the
supplies, under which good No. 2 Spring
declined to 62 18, but since Wednesday, with the advance in

4f>s.@4^’ yel‘

Average price of wheat
do
last year’s
Last week’s deliveries from farmers
Corresponding week last year

flour, there has been more demand and reduced stocks, upon
which prices have recovered 5@7c.
per bushel.
The strength
of the market is
mainly speculative, but millers are the only

foreign

at this

GRAIN

STOCKS OF

Dec. 3.

_

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush

GRAIN

1.138,200
2,959,000
2,071.000

at?, bush

Rye, bn eh

Barley, bush

1.352.700
3,051.500
2.210.000

437,100
1,516.500

.....

IN

STORK.

Dec. 10.

Dec. 3.
05.000
31.000

1,581,000

Malt, bush
Peas, bush

507,Suo

Total bushels

S.217.8U0

Extra State

Shipping R. hoop
Extra

Western,

mon to

bbl £7 750 9 40
10 00011 50
Ohio. 10 5iKc.ll 50

Wheat,
per

com¬

common

choice

Rye Flour, fine and

fine

^

Corn

meal,

The

Western Yellow
Western White.

0

Rye

5* 850 7 10

Jersey and

5

movement in

000 5 49

breadstuff's

at (.his market has

RECEIPTS

AT

NEW

Corn meal, bbls

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Rye, bush

853.350
799,125
158,690

Barley, &c., bush
Oats, bush

EXPORTS

800 3
000 3
100 1
110 1
110 1
070 1

Britain, this week..

eince July 1
Br. N. A. Col. this week
“
since July 1

bbls.

4)30
690

1 250 1 40
1 OR/ 1 50
2 00® 2 SO

526,685

1.241,375
5,382.835
8,1 6,135

15,453,445

81,305
142.865

885,355
2,974,030

373,210

9,657,635

NEW

7,747
51.694

416

3.107

Rye,

146,078

7,641
15,637

1.317

28.154

week.
7,062
since July 1 119,385

Corn,

bush.
54.363

6,016.904

425,235
600

3.064

....

750

....

“
‘

shows

ceipts at the following lake ports for the week ending Dec. 8
Flour.
bbls.

10,817

bush.
126.208
61.416
13.123

10,023

Chicago

Wheat.

24,525

32,254

Milwaukee

7.027

Toledo

Detroit
Totals
.Previous week..’..
Corresp’g week 65

00,721

225.272

89.129
57.727

..

47,172
702,093
12*:.913

Milwaukee,

has been
etocks ’
per qua

q

(if

ers
.


!


bush.

20,324

19.4*7

4,863

705

2.-920
3.342

102.0 ;c

703.180
352.035

0:11

s.

R-e, bu-1)

very

.

9,562

361.890

Doc. 8
i860.

The

6790,35-

and

:

72.691,791 lb?., against 50.179.972 in 1665
4,357,272
iL
3,387,*65 ‘ “
“
28,568
17,435 il

(Atlantic)

considerable increase

last year.
Coflbe, the stocks, December 1, at the- live
a

over

principal

Imports of the week have been only 350 pkgs Rising Star from
Aspinwall, and 242 pkgs per Denmark from Liverpool.
The following table shows the
shipments of tea from China and Japan
to the United States, from June 1 to Oct.
15, 1866, arid importations at

.

:

SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN.

There
u-iih very light

„

^
.

Congou & Sou
Pouchong
42.800
Oolong & Niag.499,600

176,872
200.670

")
53,166
685,137 250,768
Twankay
82,130 201,892
Hyson skin
55,845
Hyson
252,940 ?A 1,920 l, 0Q r,.Q
Young Hyson..
200
731,371 1,017,410 f■
Imperial
194,781 261.623 |
Gunpowder
3,3( 0
181,172 338,554 I
Japans
1,150,411 1,846,196 262.851
Total

(to 40s.

barley

,

/-—To Atlantic ports.—, To San
Oct. 1 to J tine 1 to Same FranOct. 15.
Oct. 1.
in ’65, cisco,
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
pkg?.

.....

quiet (his week.

Jndianc.

’

cwt

393.575

TEA.

48,283
21,086

329,173
155,341

pause in the demand for wheat and Hour Inn

s!6w sale thereat,

1, have been

New York and Boston since Nov. 1

357.836

bush

Barley, bush
\vl.<- t, k IP/mq i ushels.

meets a Yery

2,187

Dec.9 ,
1865.
4(6,179
81.173

1866.

0.82,719

Teas have been very quiet in both first and second
hands, with no
sales from firsi hands reported during the week.
Prices are nominal.
At the auction eale9 on Tuesday
nearly the whole offering was with¬
drawn. The market closes dull aud inactive.

,

Dee. S,

93,521

Rye.
bush.
7.375

2,462

resist any concea-ion in price.

but

Barley

48,152
18,721
7,370

6,659

Dec. 1 —The trade* has been

: a

:

74,978
29,048
192,161
93,008
61,024
130,226
106.189
120,303
.906,956 27 ,122,826 38.212,104 13..013.715 2,022,299
,304.870 27 ,472,571 27,532,383 12.,902.185 1,963,428

..

pi,,

Oats.
bush.

547.7-9
6 6 620

Dec. 9,
186 k

Livef.t

Corn.
bush.
71.060

458,426

qrs.

52,837 boxes against 39,175 last year.
figures indicating large stocks- at ports of
export and also of consumption, we must conclude that pri¬
ces will not be forced
up soon by short supplies. There has
been, however, a small business during the last two months
and with an increased demand in this month and
January
the excess in stocks may be cleared olF.

Oars,

bush.
46,415

57,228
....

748.125

was

'■

2,544

624,761

From these

bush.

50,515
294,084

....

9.150,505

YORK.

bush.

737,498

Oth. grain, FI & nil

ports New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore, and New
Orleans, were reported at 5,796 tons against 3,482 tons in
1865, being an increase of about 70 per cent.; (1m imports
since J-an. 1 having been 66,300 tons, against 4 9,177 last
year.
The excess is accounted for in a great degree by the increase
in imports of Rio at other ports than New York.
Of Sugar the stock at. the four
principal northern ports
was
reported December 1st at- 65,884 tons against 41,140
tons in 1865, the imports
having been since January 1st
367,374 tons against 347,306 in 1865. The stocks in Great
Britain are also in excess of last year.
In the four principal
ports there were reported at latest dates (raw sugar) as 194,403 tons against 179,246 in 1865, the
imports having been
461,190 tons against 438,051 in 1865.
The stock of Sugar at Havana and Matanzas Dec. 6th

So® 1 28

46,494
1,200
57,724
18.656
Total Export, this week 25,000
50.519 15,457
3,936
49,679
55.225
since July 1
393,300 76.548 318,538 39,499 6.841,900 445,13S
since Jan. 1,TO.. 876,775
141,902 410,032 238,699 10,933,597 1,190,326
same time
1865..1,292,110 113,728 2,144,178 155,496 3,777,749
71,226
Weekly Receipts at Lake Ports.—The
following
the re¬

At

Of

35
12
13
13
30
66

384.765

bbls.

Indies, this

Flour, bbl?
Wheat, bush..
Corn, bush

—showing

YokK.

Flour, C. meal, Wheat,
.

Since Jan. 1
Same time 1865

To Grout Britain
To United State?
To San Francisco

00

5.4(0430

FROM

qr?.

light,

June 1 to October

follows

as

I. corn,

encouraging. The favorable advices from the com¬
3-D (fa
ing crops of most kinds has tended to a further reduction in
-prices, and business1 is only moderate.
The stock of all the leading groceries is large, and a> far
as
Dec. 10prices in the future are to be influenced by the supply the
84,300
21,300 probability seems to be that the
tendency will not be upward.''*
8,809,800 In Tea, dullness prevails in the English market, with lar*o
stocks on hand.
The shipments from China and
Japan from

21.457.925

585,040
540,545
FOREIGN

We*t

been

73,032

KINGDOM

not very

-I860.1865.
Foi the w‘k. Since Jan. 1. For the
\v'k. S’e Jan. 1
101.190
2.006.330
121,325
3,513,990
4.829
251 810
4,665
274,820

Flour, bbls.

©«•

-..

.

Oats. Western cargoes...
.1 ersey and State
Barley
3
Malt
Pea-. Canada...
White beans

..

euper-

Brandywine

.

Corn, Western Mixed

to

extra

2
3
1
1
1
1

UNITED

13J37
71.902

Friday, P. M,, Dec. 14.
The trade in Groceries has become more settled and
steadier
than previous to the meeting of Congress, in
part from the
steadier price of gold.
But business is still rather

$2 000 2 40
2 100 2 35
0

Red Winter
Amber do
White

pood......

THE

100

GROCERIES.

Spring

Milwaukee Club

9 75012 50
Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
13 00(0,16 00
Southern supers
10 75012 35
Southern, fancy and ex. 12 50016 00

Canada,

Chicago
bushel

INTO

c’

2,947
8.747
6,931

173,125

-

1,110,759

Same time last year

Also, afloat in barges, December 10, about 450,000 bushels
wheat, and 300,000 bushels corn.
The following are the
closing quotations :

Flour, Superfiue..

98,770

.

sacks.

13.037
121.520

Sept. 1, 1S66. to Oct. 31, 1866....

have been

61

.

qrs,

shipped to Great Britain, and there has been an active specu¬
lation, the market closing firm. About 65,000 bushels
at

bblt
2,947

Wheat,

piime Canada West in bond, per 48
Kye lias been taken for England and Germany o
extent of about
50,000 bushels, mostly Canada in bond, at

Canada peas have been taken for Great Britain
1 do for Canada in
bond, closing quiet.

.

..

OF

•

—Flour.—^

qrs.

13,081

pounds.

oats

T. corn,

6,010
7,011

.....

.

IMPORT

n

WEEK.

qrs..

close is flat at 95o. for

A few loads of

IMPORT THIS

Since 1st Sept.. 1866
Same, time 1865.

entirely under speculative control. Ship¬
Europe have again ceased. The stock is large, and
the demand for
consumption very light ; but speculators are
very, confluent.
Earley was taken freely for Great Britain
early in the week, but the demand has since subsided, and the

$1 08(g) 1 10 per 50 pounds.

69 827

’’70^IP-

Europe, Ac

time hud year.

>

10* f Per qr.

46s.
:

America and Canada..

ments to

the

57?. 0,4

Wheat.

buyers who supply only immediate wants. The stocks of
wheat in the
principal maikets of the country aggregate about
4,500,000 bushels. The receipts at the principal points are

rouch smaller than
Corn has been

[December 15, 1866.

Hong

|

1,545,900 4.357,272 3,387,055J 28,503

-IMP’TS AT N. Y. A BOSTON.-*
Direct
*
Indirect
at New
At New
AtBosYork.
York.
ton.
lbs.
pkgs of all sorts.
/

662,666
81,000

From G't Britain.

1,648
From

0,800
29,800
16,000

Europe.

From East Indies.
From other

705,605
909,005

2,882

Kong, Oct. 15.—Advices from England have had

a

ports.

2S

1,234
,

28

depressing

THE CHRONICLE.

December 15, 1866.]

the market for shipments there, but buyers for the American
markets have been operating on an extensive scale at the several ports.
Amon& there ha9 been a steady inquiry for Oolongs for America at
$26 to $23 per picul for better grades. At Shanghae settlements of
green teas for shipment to America had been large.
Total settlement
amount to 27,200 chests, At Yokohama a fair amount of business has
been done.
The stock is moderately large but teamen are firm in their
demands, and there seems no immediate prospect of lower prices. The
purchases have been for the American market.
1

7^
Ten.

egect od

COFFEE.

Coffee

inactive, but with less

but still small, amount¬
ing to only 6,550 bags Rio. The market closes more steady but inactive.
The imports of coffee during the week have been of Rio 5,378 bags
per St. Arago, from Havre,.3,200, per Favorite, 2,540, per Mary Black,
3,802 per Way fare, 8,400 per Arreagon, 4,000 per Pryche, 3,250 per
Domitila. Total Rio, 25,576, against 18,090 last week, and 1,250 bags
of flayti. There have been no receipts at Baltimore.
The receipts for the week, and stock? of coffee in first hands (Dec. 11,)
follows
AT

Brant
Java

;

Hysofly-Common to fair
80 01 05
do
Superior to fine.. ..1 15 @1 85

NEW

YORK.

.

OF

I

Kc'd this Stock in
week. IFt hands
60.7:17
..bags 25,576

Rio

do

Ex fine to finest.. .1 40 01 65_

85 01 10
Y-g Ilyson; Com. to fair
do
Super, to flue. .1 15 01 40
...

do

Ex fine to finest.! 45 0

Philadelphia

3,703

60,797

.

li’ooo

6.604 Baltimore....
2.580 1 Savannah

Cevlou

Singapore
Maracaibo
Laguayra... —
St. Domingo..

6,462

Mobile
New Orleans

772

2,665

1.250

1,250

Total....

5; 020

Other

7G,791

25,576

SUGAR.

Sugar was very quiet and declining early in the week, but latterly
there is more activity, although at no advance. The sales of raw sugar
for the week are about 4,000 hogsheads Cuba and Porto Rico, and

8,700 boxes Havana, the market closing steady at our quotations. Re¬
fined sugar has been fairly active, biff at lower figures.
The receipts of sugar have been rather larger in hogsheads, &c\, and
in Cuba boxes than last week. The details of imports are given below
Ilhds.

Cuba

Ti’ces. Bbls.
57

1,625

a

51

Other West Indies.

Brazil..
Manila... .,
New Orleans

....

Boxes.

25
25

Rio, prime, duty paid ,.,,goId 18 ©
do good
gold 17J0
do fair
gold 1G}0
do ordinary
gold L> 0
do fair to g. cargoes
.gold 1 «40

IS]
17}
lt-f-

•

Bags

...

centrifugal

6 0

yS gall. 75 0 94

Havana.—In clayed sugar, the activity which has prevailed lately has
almost exhausted the stock of disposable sugars, the few lots left of
sugars

suitable for Europe

are

held at high rates. For the United States
only noticeable sales were 461 boxes
No. 9 at 6* rs. per arroba. Nos. 11 to

little has been transacted. The
No. 1709* rs., and 1,776 boxes
12

quoted at 8*@3* rs.
Shipments to United States have been 3,238 boxes, against 13,S 14
last week, and to New York 1,083 boxes, against 6,812.
Shipments
are

were as

follows

:

0 16J

».

15 @

151
15 0 15£
13}@ 14£
12}0 18*
42

0 44
60

5i 0

Spice*.
Cassia, in mats—gold ]9ft>

43

Ginger, race and African.
Mace
(gold)
Nutmegs, No.l
(gold)

‘0
99

do

Bunch

Currants
Citron, Leghorn

0
0
0

..

22
92

8-5 0

Raisins, Seedless. .$> }eask
do Layer ;.ew .%) box
^ ft)

Prunes, Turkish
Dates

I

I Pimento, Jamaica, (gold)

Pepper,

(gold)

21}0
20 0

21*

j Cloves

(scold)

27}0

33

Fruit.
08 60 Sardines
cjr. box
04 C
Figs, Smyrna
gold 78 lb
03 SO Brazil Nuts
0 17} Filberts, Sicily
0 33} Walnuts,
0 IS j Dried Fruit—
0 20
Apples
$ ft)
8G 0 87}
Blackberries
6" 0
Black Raspberries
24 0 25
Pared Peaches
45 0 43
Unpealed do
0
Cherries, pitted, now;...
88 0 40

8 50
3 9)
3 70
13
73
17
IS

Almonds, Languedoc
Provence

..

Sicily, Soft Shell
Shelled
$ box
$ hf. box

..

••

1"*0 18*
17 0 20
17 0 18

1' }0 12*
8 0 18
10 0 12*
0 28
0 60
0 85
14 0 16
50 0 55

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.

88,320

and barrels reduced to hhds.

....

do Clayed....
English Islands

69 0 70
48 0 tO

116,343

61,196

do 13 to 15 11 0 Hi
do 16 to IS 12 @ 13
do 19 to 20 13 @ 14
white
13 0 14

Ulolasses.
New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

...

61,670

30,681*

Includes puncheons, tierces, casks,

'

3,214
55,802

16^0 16$

~

Granulated
Crushed and powdered
White coffee, A
Yellow coffee

8 0 1'}

Mel ado

Sardines

4.119

..

bags ....gold 25 0 254
19 0 21
17}0 19J
17}0 19

.

do
do
do

r...

50
419

•Tuva. mats and
Native Ceylon
Maracaibo

Laguayra
St. Domingo..,
17
Sugar.
Porto Rico
lb f*0 12}
do
do
do
do
Cuba, Inf. to com. refining
9 0 9£
do fair to good
do
do
do
f j0 10
do
do
do fair to good grocery... 10} 0 l(q
do pr. to choice
do
11 @ l!j Loaf

do

1,731
1,105
42,984*

-

fUee.

.

4,119

55

Total receipts
Last week
Stocks on hand
Stock Dec. 12,1865

do
Ex fine to finest ..1 40 @1 75
Soue.
(long.,Com. tofair 70 0 80
* Sup'r to fine.
do
90 01 05
do
Ex f. to finestl 25 01 50

15
f9
99
To
80

—

*

1 75

Gunp. <fc Imp., Com. to fairl 00 01
do
Sup. to fine.1 25 ©1
do do Ex. f. to finest. 1 65 01
H.Sk.&Tw’kay,C, to fair. 60 0
do
do Sup. to fine 75 ©

7
Hav’a, Box. I). S. Nos. 7 to 9 9 0 9}
do
do
do 10 to 12 10 0 19}

INr THE SEVERAL PORTS.

New York...

do ^
do Ex f. to fln’st 85
Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. 90
do
Sup’-r to flne.l 00
do
Ex f. to finestl 10

...

do
do

....

/—Duty i aid.-'
0 9ft
0 95
01 05
@1 20
Oolong, Common to fair.85 0 92
do
Superior to fine.. .1 00 @L 25

—,

has declined from last week’s quotations, and with the favor¬

able reports ltio is dull. Other kinds have been
decline. The sales are larger than for last week,

are as

Duty p.Td

Friday, P. M., Dec. 14,1866.

The dry goods market lias met with little or no change tSis
week.
Business is light and irregular, although no uneasiness
or weakness is noticed
among the regular trade.
Some out"
side holders of goods are placing them upon the market at
nominal figures, which operates to depress prices of other

goods, especially in jobbers’ hands.

Agents profess to care
and hold their stocks quite firmly
at prices above the market.
A lew grades of goods and less
desirable makes are exceptions to this remark, since they are
but little about the matter,

somewhat nominal

in

price* ^especially for large lots. The
higher quotations for cotton and a more active market here
The following will show the receipts, exports and stocks at Havana
and in Liverpool strengthens holders somewhat, and leads to
and Matanzas
the belief that there will be but little further decline in prices.
Ftock*
Rec’d this ^-Expts to U. S.-^
.—Total export—%
The following table shows the export of domestic cottons
Tear.
week.
Since Jan. 1. boxes.
week. Since Jan. 1. week.
1866
52.837
17,214
1,365,008
421,429
3,238
and dry goods from New York and from Boston :
1865
377
39,175
1,245
1,436,356
458,703

New York
Boston

Baltimore
New Orleans

1,038
1,175

..

Philadelphia..

409
450

....

115

Mobile

1

„

1864

320

.

8,639

129,367

..

1,279,734

93.181

Muscovadofjs.—There is nothing new to report.
Receipts, exports and stocks at Havana and Matanzas are as follows
/—Receipts—*
For
week

r\n.r.
*

.

A)

...

1865

.

....

1864

...

Since

Jan. 1.

732
102
42

^

,—To U. States—!
Total exports—, Stocks,
for w’k. s’ce Jan. 1. for w‘k. s'ce Jan. 1. hhds.
452
860
1.050
79,340
65,217
341
93
66.326
81,908
66.942
931
1,351
34,833

MOLASSES.

receipts of Molasses this week, as shown below, have been less
bbls. of New Orleans against 1,159

than last week, they include 1 ,US 1
last week.

Receipts for the week and stock

.

on

hand

are as

Hhds. Punch’s. Ti’ces. Casks.

Cuba

54

394

Jorto Rico, .7
Other

.

Foreign

....

384

8

Orleans..

3

*6,501)
*3,200
1,200

1031

Total...

39t

384

62

'45

1,222
*

Bbls.

:
-Stock on h’d—>
hhds.
bbls.

”56

.45

.

5ew

follows

Receipts this week —

,

190

172

922

1,137
1,159

*9,700
*8,500

1,200
800

Includes puncheons, tierce?, &c., reduced to hhds.
FRUIT.

Fruits
A

light demand, but prices are very steady for most kinds.
limited, business is doing by jobbers, with little or no variations from
ate

in

previous report?.
^

SPICES.

Spices have been in a fair jobbing demand, but transactions,from first

hnds

are

very

closing quiet.

small.




Liverpool

~5

Loudon

There is but little change in prices, the market

/—N. York.-,
ties.

G’ds.

tics. G’da.

pkgs

cases,

pkgs. oa’M
78

.

33

*k

9

73

4,340
336

.

Venezuela
and

Shirtings

are

...

40

Brazil.
61
134
Total this w’k
since Jan. 1. 9.364
Same time ’65
194
“
I860.84.019

8U

Boston—*

Domes- Dry Domes-Dry

China

1

Hamburg
New Grenada..
British W. Iud
Cuba

Brown Sheetings

Molasses has declined considerably' from our last, and transactions
have been light. The receipts of New Orleans Molasses have been quite
free, aed prices are nominal. The sales for the week are reported at
1)198 bbls New Orleans and 815 hhd. of other kinds.
The

To

r-N. York.—. ^-Boston—, I
Domes- Dry Domes-Dry |
tics.
G’ds. ties. G’ds. Ij
To
pkgs. casea. pkge. ca’es
Africa
22

generally

very

33,696

quiet.

Lead-

ing makes of standard goods are held quite firmly at last week’s quo¬

grades of goods are lower. The following are
prices at which goods are now sold in this market. Nonantum 3-4
12*, Atlantic N do 12A, Massachusetts O do 16*, Indian Orchard L
do 16, Commonwealth Odo 11 *, Knox B do 15, Boott H do 15*-, Pepperell N de 15*, Indian Head do IS.V, Atlantic V 7-8 18*, Atlantic E
do 18, Pacific 'do 18, Tremont E do 15, Bedford R do 14 *, Boott O do
19,Indian Orchard \V do 17,Massachusetts E do 18,Lawrence G do 18,Pep*
perell O do 17*, Indian Head 4-4 21*, Appleton A do 21*, Wachusetts do
21,Princeton A do 21, Pacific extra do 21,do 11 do 21*, do L do 19,Atlantic
H do 21*, do A do 22, Lawrence E do 19*, do O do 21, do F do 19,
Stark A do 21, Amoskeag A do 21, do B do 21, Medford do 20, Pitts¬
field A do 17*, Kennebec do 14, Roxbury A do 20*, Indian Orchard B
tations.

While lower

the

do 18, Broadway best do 19, Sussex F do 1$, Newmarket A do 18, do
C do 22*, Nashua D do 20, Pepperell F do 22*, Great Falls M do 19,
do S do 17A, Laconia O 9-8 21*, Pequot do 26, Pocasset do 21, In¬
dian Orchard A 40 inch 22*, do O 20, Nashua 5-4 35, Naumkeag W do

32*, Pepperell 7-4 62*,
Bleached Sheetings

Monadnoc 10-4 70, Pepperell do 77*.
and

Shirtings have been

irregular offering of goods by parties

much affected

by the

outside of the regular market

were unable to hold them.
Mechanics three-fourths wide sell at
12*, Revere do 12*, Pearl River do 11*, Kingston do 11*, Boott R do
14, Lawrence H do 15*, Woodbury 7-8 15, Strafford B do 15, Newbury-

who

Waltham X do 21, Putnam B do 16, AmoikeagZ do 18, Harris AA do 17*, Great Falla M do 19, do 3. do 17, do A
port do 18*, Rockdale do 17,

THE

766
do 20, do J do 10 Lyman

Leicester $1 55, Middlesex $1 55, Garibaldi rep. $1 404 Errpl •
Raritan rep. $1 424, Glenham 81 55.
American Linen is steady and uniform in demand and prices
Foreign Goods are quiet in the absence of the auction sales a
j

Cambric do 20, Stafford do 19, Lawrence L do i

20, Lawrence A do 20, Bennington C do 19, James 8'> inch 20, Webster
4-4 16, Lewiston G do *21}, Windsor do 22-}. Pocumtuekdo 19, Putnam A
do 19, Newmarket A do 20, do 0 do 22}, Great Falls K do 19. Bar* Kits
do 25},Bates BBdo 25, Constitutional do 17, Indiana Love do 20, James
Steam do 22*, Indian River X do 21, Attawaugan XX do 21, Laurence
B do 23, Fountain do 22}, Hope do 22}, Tip Top do 26 4 Black stone do 23,

do O do 37}, Atlantic Cambric do 37.V, Lonsdale
York Mills do 42, Hill do 25, Amoskeag 4 2 inch
.80, Chickopee 42 inch. 28, Waltham 42 inch 24, Dwight’9-8 85, Warn*
eutta do 40, Lym m It 5-4 24, Naumkeag W do 30, Boott W do 30, Home
do 35, Bates do 32}, Wamsutta do 45, Amoskeag 46- inch 32*, Mattawamkeag 6-4 inch 45, Peppered do 45, Oneida do 45, Utica do 524,
Waltham 8-4 624-, Peppered do 62-}, Peppered 9 4 75, Utica do 95,
Phoenix 10-4 65, Monadnock do 70, Baltic do 72, B ites do 75.}, Waltham do 85, Allendale do 75, Peppered do 874, Utica do $1,,Mas-aWamsutta H do 37J,
Oainbnc do 49, New

besic 11-4 87},

?10r

’

j

jobbers report only
j tendency except for

{
Amokeag A do 23, Boot. B do 26, Forestdale do 28, Masonville do 26, |
do XX.do 32L Lonsdale do 29, Wauregan do 29, Lyman J do 32.V, |

small business. Prices still have
few fancy styles and staple goods.

a
a

H

'

a

IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW

York,
importations of dry goods at this port for the week endiog De
* 13.1866, and the corresponding weeks of 1864 and 1865,have been L
&
The

;

: follows:

!

-

ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR TITE WEEK

do red stripe 32.V, Brunswick 22, Blackstone River 25,

Hamilton 37-}, do J) 32-}. Somerset 20, Thorndike 28, Pearl River 50.
Hancock A A 31, Pittsfield 114, Omega B 37}, do A 50, do C 27},
Cordis A A A 45, Everett 28, Imperial 85, Boston A A 894, Lehigh

Valley A 224, do B 2<». do A O A 22}, Swift River 25, Eagle 82},
Pacific 30, Winnebago 18}, Baltic 154, Hampden CO. 30, Albany 14}.
Stripes have shown but littie variation in prices, although large lots
could be purchased low.
Amoskeag sell at 29 and 80, Uncasville 28
and 24, Whittenton A A 85, do A 8-3 80, do B B 25, Pittsfield 8-3 14,
Pemberton Awn 47}, Haymaker 28, Everett 26, Massabesic 6-3 2S and

29, Andover 25, Boston 25. Harvesters 3-8 22@27, do 6-3 22@27, Black-

28}, American 22{5328, Eagle 19, Hamilton 2S, Arkwright 23,
Easton 21, Jewett Cify 22@23, Sheridan G 21.
stone

Checks are in very light request and prices are more nr less uniform.
Park Mills Red sell at 25 cents, Lanark 4x2 17-}, Lanark Fur 184, Union

374, do 50 2x2 37}, do 20 4-2 35, do 20 2-2 35, Caledonia 35,do
29, Lancaster fur 18, Kennebeck 35,Wamsutta 20, Farmers it Mechanics
30, Star No. 800 16}, do No. 800 2-2 ‘224. do No. 900 4 2 26, Cameron
No. 90 224, do No. 80 20, Miners it Mechanics 32.

...

.

630

FROM

WITHDRAWN

Value

177,507

.

148,097
85,571
49,469

205

90,419

$451,063

INTO

market

DUBINQ

334

39,093
26.949

362

92,614

761

122
106
43
106
22

$136,224

123
36

THE

PERIOD.

TI1K SAME

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

14!)
467
83
172

1,076

THROWN

AND

Pk'£?e.

4,888 $1,875,403

$135,922

WAREHOUSE

13, 1866

c-—1866

Pkgs.
Value.
1,488
$638,340
1,258
395,649
302
297,790
1,367
368,144
473
175,4^0

.

.

ENDING DECEMBER

-1865,

-1864.Value.
Pkgs.
j
79
Manufactures of wool...
$22.28-4
:
90
do
cotton.,
5,210
,
02
Hilk
do
23,571
62.599
flax.... 353
do
j
Miscellaneous dry gooas, 125
22,258

Peppered do 85.
Ticks have been quiet during the week, and a few makes are offered |
by jobbers at a material reduction. Others are somewhat nominal. |
Jobbers are selling at the following prices : Conestoga extra 5'\ Amr.akeag A C A 55, oo A 42, Amoskeag B 37, do D 27, do C 32, Pember¬
ton A A 424,

[December 15, 1866,

CHRONICLE.

33,073

$55,558

280

35,368
67,389

82
70

35,860

960

3,133

$131,782
27.183
75,129

68,535
7.183

146'

.

Total..:
1,616
Add ent’d forconsumpt’n 630

$327,958

404

$197,308

135,922

4,888

1,S75,403

838
1,076

$309,812

Total thrown upon mak’t

$163,880

5,292 $2,072,711

1,914

$760,875

2,246

451,063

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD.

wool...

116

cotton..

Manufactures

159
26

194

55,906

34

19,079

silk
flax

Miscellanc

....

'

dry goods.

ous

84S
677
126
035
27

$28,899
59,135
27,069

01

do
do
do

$389,318

$269,261

199,856
19,979

595
302
66
645
24

1,632
1,076

$672,206
451,063

241,046
151.946

529

$131,088

620

135,922

2.313 $1,002,145
4,888 1,875,403

1,159

$317,010

7,201 $2,§77,518

Total

Add ent'd lor

consumpt’n

Total entered at the port

112,043
76,009
204,800
10,093

2,70S

60 4x2

Denims

Cottonades have been in better request,

but at very
irregular rates. Some makes ol denims have been thrown upon the
market at lower figures. Amoskeag Denims s il at 87} cts, Haymaker
80, do brown 30, York 87}, Warren brown 25, Boston Manufacturing Co.
and

25, Union 30, Monitor 21, Manchester Co. 27, Clark’s brown 274,Suffolk

27, Marlboro 22, Arlington 32}, Blue Hill 25, Whittenden

ditt Cotton¬

IMPORTS
(OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND
WEEK

are

in very

light request. A few bales

a»e

taken for

.......

Glass

40
29
Acids
Ammonia
...62
do
sal.. 16
Arrow root
.20

port. Winthrop sell at 19 cents, Amoskeag 23. Laconia 24. Minerva
18, India A 23. Peppered fine jean 22, Stark A 23, Bennington 22}, Globe
20, Massachusetts G 20, Woodward duck bags 32}, National bags 37-},
Stark A do 67}, Lioerty do 87}.

..

A noline
Alum's cake..
Bark Peru v 1.236
Blue vitrol
Bismuth

do 30,

Naumkeag do

dull and nominal.

Laconia Bro 80, Hamilton
28, Tremont do 224, Scott a extra do 20, Whit¬

are

tenton do 224, Naumkeag do
Corset Jeans are in light

28, Nashua A 24.
steady demand at unchanged rates. An¬
droscoggin \ 5}, Bates colored 15,do bleached 15, Naumkeag 22, Naum¬
keag, satteen 25, Laconia 22, Amoskeag 22, Tremont 12}.
Woolen Goods have somewhat improved during the week. The de¬
mand for spring goods is fairly active, and some particular
styles of
cloths and cassimeres are wanted for imrnedi to consumption.
American Printed de Laines are quiet but steady.
All dark 25,
Hamilton Co 25, Manchester dark 25, Pacific dark 25, Armure* dark

27, High colors 28, Pacific Merino? 40, Mourning 25, Shepherd checks 25,
all wool 42}, Skirtings 3'h
Linseys are in smail slock, and pi ices are well maintained?
Washington
35, Park 35, do 274, do 37}, do 524, do 574, Kensington 26, Union cot¬
ton and wool 25, Park Mills No. 65 424, Todd’s 82 4, Black Rock 30.
Carpets are uniform in demand and prices. Velvets, J. Crosslev*8
best $4, do A1 qual. £3 75, do patent §3 25. Body Brussels, Roxbtiry
$2 75, do Bigelow $2 75. Tapestry, Brussels, S. Crossley #1 90, Lowell,
ex S p $2 15, do super *1 75, do med
sup $1 60. Hartford Carpel

Co!

ex

3-ply $2 25, do Imp 3-ply *2 12}, do superfine *1 75, do med sud
Med and low pri Ingrains $1 25@1 45, Hemp pi, 38 inch 3U@

$1 69.

37}, do 36 inch 40@50, do twil 36 inch 55(5)60.
Ladies Sackings




and Cloakings

are

without particular

change.

855
8.663

18,036

Barytes

837

Blea Powder.829
Brimstone
..95
Carmine
1
Chalk
••

67,245!

Prunes

...19
Watches... ...22

jewelry

...

4,683
1,053 Leather, Hides, Ac
968

5,639
18,351
2,812
170
210
671)

Bristles....
.28
Boots & s" DCS .3
..

10,531
235

10,051
1,270

Boxes
Buttons

—

13,430

.

•

«

95,310

Cordials
Cin
Porter
Rum

.199
...61

2,363

6,405

16

1,035

Indigo
I-inglass

16

3,655
289

Whisky

Lie paste
Lie root
Madder

36

998

Wines

3,959

10,095

35

9,811

Magnesia

69

Oils, ess
135
do linseed.. 128
do olive.. .2,163
do

4,383
15.364

19,183

4

47

Oxide cobalt....

1,195
18,001

palm

Paints

Potash, hyd

..

7S4

.3

ehlo....

451

Reg antimony.17

843

do

Rhubarb

37

2,1:2

Sarsaparilia ..30

577

Soda, bicarb2,950

14,726
1,409
38,338
10,518
2.2,072

do
do
do
do

sal..... 204
ash.. 1,088
caustic. ^57
nitrate
...

Saltpetre

....

Safflower

817

Brass Goods.. 13
Bronzes
ChainsAanch.36
Guns

,.

...95

tons

..532

tons

....

14,142

.

7,430j

Saddlery

-

Total

Marble and man.
Matches
2
Molasses ..2,309
Oil paintings. 15

5,449

Paper hang’g.113
Perfumery....75
Pipes
• •

9,360

Provisions

63,365

.886

38,332
60,135

62,283

2,583
8.116

3,326
322
59,993

9,289
2,710

7,367

10,796

615

Rice

ME

Statuary

15,360

Seeds

Linseed... .1,077

6,832

5

1,854

16

10,759!

Sugar, hhds, tes
and bbl s. .3,450
Sugar, boxes

6,784

9S5;
..

14

5,209!

11
2

2,262

Steel

37i;

Spelter.. .110,521
Tin, bxs...11,290

21,296 Wire
1,144 Spices—
! Cassia

371

4,0051
2,479!

258'

3,5S3

.

3,481

C56 18,736
23)647

Rag*
13,039

.

3,804

Fruits, Ac.

7,876
58,917

Salt

tons

Tin slabs

3

Machinery. .126

.190

tons....

Vermillion... .24
Verdigris
23

932!

Ivory

Tron, other.

2,839

,

Ind. rubberl,248

Iron, sheet

Lead,pigs .11,168
Metal goods .15

6,094:

3

7.861

Iron, R. R.,

5,302!

V? hi ting
200
Yellow ochrelOU
Other
Furs, Ac—
Felting
1
Furs
.43
Hatters goods..2

7,657
4,645

3,726

Iron, pig,

1,000

Sumac

.57

Hardware.. ..515
Iron, hoop,

bars

2,776

77,014

Cutlery

181

34

Gunny cloth 852 22,813
7,864
5,875
Hemp
4,834 66,103
Honey
13
327

2,365

...

1,050

Hair
37
Haircloth... .11

17,544

640
986
2.810
661

1,083
91,282

1,626

Needles
Nickel
Old metal
Plated ware
Per caps

65
Sponges
Sugar of lead.52
Suiph zinc... 11

1,077

Champagne
baskets..

2,364

Cocoa, bgs
57 1,648
Coffee,bgs. 14,832 270,854
73,496
Fancy goods
Feathers
24,504
Firecrackers.
4,962
36
4,275
Flax
30,379
Fish

452

6,497

493
1,769

38,519

Corks
Clocks

1,763

...5
...11

8,344

Cigars
Coal, ton?..1,892

1,989

..100

...

317
737

63

Cheese

1,186 Metals, Ac.—

.

..

432

Clay

14,5991 Liquors, Wines, Ac.—
2.284
Ale
..141
1,187
1,409 31.207
1,848 Brandy
.,200
Beer
313
1,732

Arabic.72

do
Glue

16,131

Building stones.

231

280,371
.

..

38.933

1,477
1,193

1'Miscellaneous-439
39,287: Baskets
45,180 Bricks

Hides, undressed
Horns

89

Burr stones

..215

Gums, crude .41
'

Other
Voods—
Cedar
Cork
Rattan
Willow
Other

82.455

Hides, dressed

196

Engravings.. .32 6,322
Paper
1,172 30,316

14,087

1,340 Jewelrv. &c.670

Books

4,449j

Oranges

Raisins....
3,206 Sauces and pres.
2.588 Instruments—
1,785 Mathematical.!
775
Musical.... ..06
....4
17.670
Optical

Oobicynth
Cream Tartar.70
Chickorv
122
Cochineal
3
Cudbear
4

Nuts

1.592

..

at

Pacific dark 18, Freeman 15, Ooeheco 19, Lowell 15,
Naumkeag 144, Hamilton 18, Victory J4, Empire State 11}’, Lancaster
19, Wauregan 17, Belleville 15.
Domestic Ginghams are in very light
request. Lancaster sells by
jobbers at 28} cents, Hartford IS, Caledonia (new) 2;, Glasgow 22,1
Clyde 17, Berkshire 28, German 20, Roanoke 17, Bates 28}.

310

Argols

Print Clotus have been very quiet until the last two days, when the
advance in cotton has given souse firmness to the market.
Prints remain as at last report.
The jobbers are selling a few pieces

Canton Flannels

147

Gla-sfWarc ...160
Glass plate.. .121

ex

Wamsutta dark 11,

7, 1866.
.

Alkali

figures considerably below aganU' prices. Agents are firm and en¬
couraged by a better state of the market for the raw material. Many
of the works have turned up -n light work, and the stock of desirable
dark work is rather small. The prices below are those at which goodare sold by Jobbers :
American 174, Amo- keag dark 164, do purple
17}-, do pink 18}, do shirting 16}, Merrimac J> dark 17}, do purple
17-}, do W dark 19, do purple 20, do pink 20, Sprague’s dark 18, do
purple 19, do shirting 19, do pink 19, do indigo blue 17, London Mourn¬
ing 16}, Simpson Mourning 16}, Amoskeag Mourning 154. Garners light
18}, DunnelFs 17}, Allen 17, Richmond 17-}, Arnolds 15, Gloucester 1.7,

AT,THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE

DECEMBER

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
Pkgs. Value
Pkgs. Value.
Pkgs. Value
Bananas
543
China, Glass & E. -129j Ginger
Citron
455
ware—
Mace...
1,572
Bottles
$2,266 Currants
38,279: Mustard
249
Bates
China
494 28,8)0
870j Nutmegs
12,923
Lemons
19,400 Stationery, Ac.—
Earrh’nw’e.. .152
8,209

ades sell at 81(1589} cents,• Farmer’s and Mechanics Cassimeres 55,
Pemberton ditt 50, Rodman’s Ky J 474, Plow, L it Anv. 50, Everett 524
New York Mills 624.
Brown Drills

SPECIE)

ENDING

.2060,

118,506
57

Soap

and

426

152,461

bgs..6,933 U3,95o
150 L800
plants.. 2,M

Tapioca

80,416
6.1261
76.973
i

21,877|

Trees A
Tea
Twine

Toys

2,493

Tobacco
Waste

6,314

9,029 119,229
5
695

274

665
92

13,583

16,61*
4,295

Ollier

Wool, bales.. 614

48,521

$3,196,063

PRICES

Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstono, $10
79 ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and
cent ad val.; Crude Camphor,

CURRENT.

duties noted
discriminating duhj of 1(J per
centD(l^‘ levied on all imports
tnier flags that have no reciprocal
treaties with the United States.
On all goods, wares, and mer¬
chandise, of the growth or produce of
Countries East oj the Cape of Good
addition to the

In

a

token imported from places this
side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty
9t iu per cent, ad val.. is levied in ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such
Hope,

directly from the
of their growth or produc¬
tion; haw Cotton Olid Haw Silk ezcep'ed
The tor in all oases to be 2,240 lb.
inch"**—Duty: 2p cents $ lb.
0120DB) and upward^ ft 94© ...
Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val.
pot, 1st sort... $ 100 lb 8 7i © :i 0 1
@13 50
Pearl. 1st sort
Beeswax—Duty,2i) $ cent ad val.
American yellow. $ ft
4d© 41
flones-Duty: on invoice 10 79 ct.
ton35 00 @36 00
gio Grande shin
Bread—Duty, 30 79 cent ad val.
Pilot...,
79 ft .. ©
6}
Navy
© 5*

articles when imported
place or places

.

7 © 14
Breadstutf fs—See special report
Crackers

Bricks.

hard, .per VI. 12 50

Common
Croton

@13 50

22 00 @21 00
@,5 00

Philadelphia Fronts

Bristles*—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair
1^ ft.

Ainer’n,gray &wh.
Butter

and

cents.
Butter—

$ft 75 @300

Clieese.—Duty: 4

'

N. Y State—F resh pails
Fin. ins
Half tfikm mbs...

WeLh tubs, prime.
Welsh tubs, s. coud

quality
North Pennsylv-tn a —
Trains

erve—Fir-

Western Re

ki

ns

States—Firkins, yell >w
Firkins, .nd quality

..

©

.

43
50
08

38 ©
40 0i
85 ©

32 ©

34

32 ©

3»

2J ©

55
„

..

©

Wester
do Common
do

©
©
©
©

iO ©

,

27
'

Farm Dairies

17
16
V
.6
U

Caudles—Duty, tallow, 2J; spermaceti and wax «; stearino and a damantine, 5 cents 79 ft
50 ©
Sperm, patent,. .. 79 ft
40 ©
Refined sperm,city...
Stearic

3o

Adamantine

‘.24©

Cenieut—Rosendale.TRb)

..

©

Ml

234

@2 0)

Chains—Duty, 2.J cents
ft.
One inch & up ward 79 ft
8j@
9
Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 -$ ton
of 2d bushels $0 ft to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 2b
bushels of80 ft 79 bushel. ,
Liverpool Orrel. 79 ton
of 2,-40 ft
@15 50
Liverp’i House CannellS 00 @2-1 00
Anthracite
S t o © S 50
Cocoa— Duty, 5 ct nts
Caracas

79 lb.

(iu bondj(gold)

^ ft

nm

.. ©
.(gold)
Guayaquil do ...(gold)
15 @
Coffee.—See spec al r port.

Maracaibo do

is,
15}

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and incot,
2); old copper 2 cents 79 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. 79 square foot,
3 cents

79 ft.

Sheathing,

©

Bolts
Braziers’
Baltimore
Detroit

<

Portage Lake

-J7
2.3

tiC*©

Sheathing, yellow

43

VTJ©
27t©

79 ft

43
3i
43

@

new..

27

40 @
3)@

Cordage—Duty, tarred,3; untarred

Manila, 24 other untarred, 34 cents
V lb.
Manila,
79 ft
23 @ 24

.

Tarred Russia
Tarred American
Bo't Rope, Russia

@
©

19

@

22

Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
Regular, quarts^)
Mineral

gross

55 @

50 ©
12 @

.

Phial

70

70
40

Colton—See special report.

Drugs anil Dye* -Duty, Alcohol,
s 50
p r gallon: _»..ues, 6 cents $ lb ;
Alum,60 cexUo 79 100 ft; Argola, 6
"ents 79 ft
Arsenic and Assafcedati,
20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus,
10; Arrowroot, 30 $ cent ad val.;
BalsamCopaivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
,

Balsam Peru, 50 cents 79 ft; Calisaya
Dark, 30 $ cent ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda,
4; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ ft;
Bleaching Powder, 30 cents 79 100ft;
wflued Borax, 10 cents $ ft ; Crude




40©
33©
24 ©
j8 ©

Seneca Root
Shell Lac
Soda Ash

4‘.|©
35 ©

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20
cents or less $1 ft, 6 cents $ ft, and
20 79 cent ad val.: over 2o cents 79

45
39
30
45

Shipping and Mining..

©
Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬
ters 79 1b
40 @ 1 10
Sfuir—Duty free.
RioGraiule.mixed $ ft
^0 @
Buenos Ayres,mixed
33©
89

2}@
3
Sugar L’d, WY(go.d)..
30©
35
Sulp Quinine, Am $ oz 2 30 © 2 35
Sulphate Morphine... 7 25 ©
Tart’c Acid. .(g’ld)T91b
52©
Verdigris, dry,-, ex dry
50 @
53

.

,

.

VoJ

12 ©

Hardware—
A - es—Oast stee1, best
lua id
i er d- z
do
ordinary

ad val.
Ravens, Light,.79 pee 10 00 ©18 00
Ravens, Heavy
20 00 ©
Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 T^y
70
©
Cotton, No. 1... 72 y*
85©

Narrow

Hinger< u .ht
Door B Its, ('ast B »i

@
(gold)
Alcohol
79 gall. 4 65 ©
Aloes, Cape
TP ft
2j ©
Aloes, Socotrine
75 @
Alum
8m
*5 @
Annato, fair to prime.
@
Antimony, Regulus of
22 @
Argols, Crude
87m
Argols, Refined
3 ©
Arsenit, Powdered
25 @
Assafoetida
Balsam Copaivi
Si) @
Balsam Tolu
@
Balsam Peru... .(gold) 2 50 ©
Borries, Persian
40 ©
..

51

26

..

Carb. Soda, New¬
castle
Bi Chromate Potash

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Refined
Brimston

Crinle

•.

C srriiue and Tire Bolts
Door L c. sand Latches
Door Knobs—Mineral,
“
P<>rc lain

I

@o7 50

Feathers—Duty: 30 79 centad val.
Prime Western.:.^ ft
95 © 1 •()
Tennessee.,
70 v©
75

Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 : Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
7) bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, smok¬
ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬
rels, 50 ceuts 79 loo 1b.
Dry Cod
79 cwt. 6 50 © “ -5
Pickled Scale. ..^ bbl
©Go:
Pickled Cod
79 bbl. 7 25 ©
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass
shore.
1910©
Mackerel, No.l,Halifax
©IS 00
Mackerel,No. 1, Bay..13 -0 ©
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..17 00 ©17 50
Mackerel, No. 2,11a ax 17 00 @l-> 00
Mac’el,No.3,Mass. Fge ... © 4 i*1
Mackerel, No. 3, II'fax 14 15 @15 00
©
Mackerel, No. 3, Mass.
Salmon, Pickled. No.1.40 0 ) @42 00

,

7*) ft
Brimston.;.

phur
Camphor,

lor

1

Padlocks
N
Locks—Cabinet,

!

t

35

bond]
Canthurido
Carbonate
in bulk

G

i.de,

..

Camphor, Refined
..

@
SO
@ 1 00
@ 1 75

Ammonia,

19
~
Cardamoms, Malabar.. “ On
55
Castor Oil Cases 79 gal
5u
Chamomile K ow’sTpft
13
Chlorate Potash (gold)
9
Caustic Soda

Cochineal, lion (gold)
Cochineal, Mexic'n(g’d)
(lopperas, American...

Tarar, pr.(gold)
Cubebs, East India....

Cream
Cutcli

Epsom Salts
Extract Logwood
Flowers,Benzoin.TP

@
“
©
@
@
@
©
©
85 ©

3 25

Gamboge

Gum

Tragacanth,

..

©
@

GO ©

America

..

6.
23
40

90

Ipecacuanna, Brazil... 4 25 @
2 40 ©
lalap
25 ©
Lao Dye.
Licorice Paste,Calabria
©
24 ©
Licorice, Paste, Sicily.
Licorice Paste Spanish
....

34
30
7

©
©
©
7 @

Opium, Turkey.(gold) G <5 ©
41 ©.

Prussiate Potash

42©

Quicksilver

05 ©

RhubarbyQhina.(gold) 3 00 ©
Salaratus.. x.
SalAm'n ac, Ref

..

(gold)

Sal Soda,Newcastle...

©

104©
2 @

8) @

30

75

n

IVindow—1st,2d, 3d, and 4lh

(Subject to a discount of F @3579 cent.)
Ox S to 8xIU..79 50 ft 7 25 ((£ 5 50
10x15
7 75
1 lx
io 12x!8
9 25
12x19 to 16x24
9 50
11 75
18x22 to 20x30
20x31 to 24x30
14 50
24x31 to 24x36 .......16 00
25x86 to 30x44
17 00
S0x4G to 32xld
IS 00
32x50 to 32x00
20 00
Above
...24 00
8x

to

@ 0
@ 6
@ 7
© 7
© y
@10
©II
@12
@13
©15

00

50
00

50
On
00

List 7$ 0
list
%
Li t 7} ^
List 20&7§ %

\v

Ox 8 to S.xlO. 7950
Sxll to 10x15
11x14 to 12x13
12x19 to 10x24
20x31 to 24x30
24x31 to 24x36
24x36 to 30x44
30x45 to 32x48
32x50 to 32x50

firmer

co

o

do

>

1

9 75 © 7
10 50 © 7
15 50 @12
16 50 @13
13 00 @15
20 50 @16
,24 00 @18

List40^adv.

LBt 40 @dv.

in sets

List 20 % dis.
Auirurs,per dz.NewList 10^ dis.

Augur Bitts
bh.ut
Riner

do
■CutTacks.
Cut i’rads

List JO % dis.
List rftjfcin % dis.
List 55 % dis.

ivet
Irrii
List
Screws American.'. .List
•

,

|

25&30 % dis.
% ais.

do
Eng jsh...
List 2u % d;s.
Shovels and 8pades...
Lists % dis.
Horse Shoes
"j©
8
Planes
Li-t 3n@ 35 f?adv

tiny—North River, in bales$ 100 fts,
for shipping
*. 5 © 1 00
Hemp-Duty, Russian, $40; Manila,
$-'5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn

Groceries—See special report.

Hugs—Duty, valued at 10
less, # square yard, 3; over
10, 4 cents 79 ft
Calcutta, light & h’y %
2-$
24©

Gunny Clotli—Duty, valued at 10
cents

or

less $ square

10,4 cents 79 ft.
Calcutta, standard, y’d

yard, 3; over

28 ©

.

29

60@39f) 0 )
0n@300 <0

Russia, Clean

3.’5 00@38o 00
(gold) 100 00© 150 00
Manila..79 ft..(gold)
..
©
12
Sisal
(goM)
8 @ g 8jJute

Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
79 ‘tent ad val.
Dry Hides—
Ogenos Ayres TP ftg’d 19 ©
22

ed and Skins 10

Montevideo
Rio Grande
Orinoco
California

18 ©
17 @
©

do

do
do

gold

13 @
16 @

Tampico

...

...

^

14
15

14 ©

do

do

181

13 @
14 ©

..

Texas

17±

..

California, Mex. do
Porto Oahello
do
Vera Cruz
do

15

15 ©

16

Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ay res. 79
Rio Grande
California
Western

ft g’d.

10

do
do

11 ©

....

11 ©
lu ©

12
12^

26 ©
>30 ©

f8
82

24©

21

@

9i©

cured.

do

City

10
10
12

..

Coutry sl’ter trim. A
do

Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. <fc Rio Gr. Kip
79 1b cash.
Sierra Leone
do
Gambia & Bissau do
...

Honey—Duty,20 cents 79 gallon.
(dutv paid) (gold)
79 gall.

Cuba

82 ©

85

Hop*—Duty: 5 ceuts 79 ft.
Crop of 1866
79 lb
40 ©
of Im!5

do

70
45
55

2*' ©

40 ©

Foreign

Hos*fei*—Duty, 10 79 cent, ad val.
Ox, Rio Grande... 79 C 11 U0©
Ox, Buenos Ayres.... 12 00© 14 00
India Rubber—Duty, 10 79 cent
ad vai.

Fine..

,

79 Tb

bTi©

9>
70

65 ©
€0 ©

Imlijro—Duty free.
Bengal
( old)
ft 1 00 © 1 65
Oude
(cold)
75 © 1 35
Madras
.2.(goid)
65 ©
90
Manila
(gold)
G5 © 1 10
Guatemala
(gold)
80 © 1 15
Caraccas
70 ©
(gold)
00
„

Iron—Duty,Bars,1 to 1^ cents 79 ftRailroad,
and I

Hoop
Pig, $9
cents

Pig,

cents or

1 00

79 ton; and Tampico,

$ ft-

Para,

00
50
00
00
00
00
00

d;-s.
dis.

Old List 25 >tadv.

r..yjts.
bundled,

Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

feet 7 73 ©.6 00
8 25 © 6 50

0’s.

5 £adv.

Eagle

Framing Chisels

00
00
00

2d,

dis.

..

00

Guany

.

@

15 @

(SingleThick)—Discount25@3 -pcent.
41

OJ) Anis
3 75 Crh
Oil Cassia
4 50 ©
Oil Bergamot
5 75 @ 5 80
Oil Lemon
(gold) 2 95 © 3 25
Oil Peppermint, pure. 5 00 @ 5 50

Phosphorus

5 n0 © S 00

&

Eag'ish a ml French IVindow— 1st,
3d, and 4th qua lit es.

Madder,Dutch. .(gold)
do, French, EXF.F.do
Manna, large liake.... ! 0) @
45-©
Nutgalls Blue Aleppo

Oxalic Acid

rat,

qualities.

Eng
(gold) 8 7» © i CO
Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 ©

Solid...
Licorice Paste, Greek.

.M usx.
Otter

Window, not exceeding lOx
15 inches square, l£; over that, and
not over 10x24, 2 ; over that, and not
over 24x30 ,2£ ; all over
that, 3 cents
79 ft-

w

fiakey
(g Id)
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and

Mink, dark.

Common

©
©
82 ©
©
39 @

30

2 »0 © 5 00
,3 00 © 6 00
10 © 40

foot; larger and not over 24
fmu;
2-lxGO
inches, 20 cents 79 square fool; all
above that, 40 cents 79 square fqoi;
on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and

©

@
55 ©

.....

pale

inches G cents 79 square
above that,and not exceeding

42

Gain Myrrh,East India
Gum. Myrrh, Turkey.
Gum Senegal ...(geld)
Gum Tragacanth, Sorts

.......

xdi)

£5 ©
70 ©

Gum Kowrie
Gem Gedda
Gum Dainar

List 25 £adv.
L st 20 % c is.
List JO % flis.

List 10 % dis.
Trunk
Stacks and Dies
Li t 35 % dis.
3crew Wrenches—Coe's
Paten*.
List 20 % dis;
L s' *5@G0 % dis.
do 'raft's
Sin tbs’ Vis*s
79 ft 24 © ..
“

1 cent

square

©
©
30 ©
4«-

Gum Arabic, Sorts...
Gum Benzoin ..(gold)

21

C*1 as!«»—Duty, Cylinder or Window
Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches,
2J- cents 79 square foot; larger and.
not over 16x21 inches, 1 cents 79

2 ©
29 @
4’ ©
15 @

Ginseng,'South StjW est.
Gum .\rabic, Picked..

lt';j(aiv.

List.

Amer. g rossed .79 ton 3S’)
cio
Undressed
c- 9f)

Raccoon

..

..

List

urs—Du-y, 10 79 cent.
Beaver, Dark.. 79 skin 1 00 @ 5 00
50 @ 8 00
do
Pale
Bear, Black
5 00 @i2 OU
uo
brown
3 00 © 8 00
Badger
50 © 1 00
Cat, Wild
:....
50© 75
10 @
do House
2o
Fisher,
5 00 © S 00
.•
box. Silver
.10 (W @50 00
3 00 © 5 00
do Cross
do Red
1 00 @ 3 to
do Grey.
50 © 75
Lynx
2 0 © 4 10
Marten, Dark
5 00 @20 00

Opossum

..

Gambier

List

ss 20 %
5 % dis.

and Sisal, $15

do

11

oz.

)0 ©

25

©

$5 L

Fruits—See special report.

Sul¬

(in
....(gold)

79 ft

Jersey

TP

5J@
.

© 50
e* @ 40
5 50 @ 7 50
..

Flax—Duty: $15 79 ton.

22

©

.

Herring, Scalod79 box.
Herring, No. 1
Herring, pickled^bbl.

(gold).41 00 @42 50
nm. Roll
4}@
4

ton

Brimston

..

71©
@
64©
34 @

.

14

13 ©

Loose Joint..

kt

Logwood,Jamaica..14 50 @15 0)
..

Wrought Butts

Bntt-i—Fast Joint.

Cast

Camwood.

(gold)

Gins, per saw...

Cotton

15
21

Carpe ter’s Adzes,.

Dye iVoods— Duty free.

Limavrood

10 @

Hog,Western, unwasb.

DucEi— Duty, 30 $ cent

.(gold)72 t nlDO 0G©20 ' 00
Fustic, Cuba
aU 0" ©31 00
Fustic, Savanilla(gold).'2 50 @23 ( 0
Fustic, Maracaibo do.-3 00 © ...
Logwood, Cam .(gold).2» f0 ©

..

7 50

Rifle

(80^c.)(gkld)

Vitriol, Blue

val.
00
@5 50

1b, lo cents 79 ft and 2o 79 centad
Blnsting(A) 79 25ft keg .. © 5

....

Acid, Citric

Bi

,

26 ©
15
14
14
14

Factory Dairies
do
VVttht rri

30; Refined Camphor, 40cents 79 ft.;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents
$ ft ; Caster Oil, $1 79 gallon ; Chlo¬
rate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, !£-;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, £;’Cream
Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents 79 ft;
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent
$ ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Benzola and Gamboge, 10 79 cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 79 cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Dainar, 10 cents per lb ;
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20
cent ad val.; 11yd. Potash and Resublimed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange,
5u cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬
mot, $1 ^ lb; Oil Peppermint, 50
$1 cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 befits 4$ lb; Phosphorus, 20
79 cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5 ; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents
79 ft: Quicksilver, 15 79 cent ad
val.; Sal yEratus, I5 cents 79 lb; Sal
Soda, i cent 79 1b ; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 2o
cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
iO; .-oda Ash, £ ; Sugar Lead, 20cents
TP lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 79 cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 79 oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
TP ft; Sal Ammoniac, 2o; Mine Vit¬
riol, 25 TP cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $1 TP ft; all
others quoted below, free.

Sarsaparilla, Hond
Sarsaparilla, Mex
Senna, Alexandria
Senna, Eastlndia

w

Western

Cheese—

#

767

CHRONICLE.

THE

1866.]

December 15,

v

_

79 ton;

Polished Sheet, 3

ft.

Scotch.No 1.

79 ton 5 1 00© 53 00
Pig, American, No.l.. 9 00© 51 00

Bar. Swedes, assorted
sizes (in gold)

95 00©;C0 00

Stork Pricks—%

Bar Swedes, assorted
sizes

--©170 00

Bar,English and Amer¬
ican, Refined
115 00©
do
do
do Comtnonl05 00©

115 00(^195 00

Scroll

do

..

...

Rods, 5-8@3-lG inch. .1-0 00@175 00
Hoop
150 00@215 00
Nail Rod
t|@
1'J$1 lb
Sheet, Russia
21 @
23
Sheet, Single, Double
and Treble
0]@
S
Rails, Eng. (g\l) p ton 55 0, © ..
do American
85 00@ 90 00
Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime plb
3 2f@ 3 50
East Ind Billiard Hall 3 50© 4 50
African, W. Ch, Prime 8 25© 3 40
African, Scrivel.,AV.O. 2 00@ 2 50
Lead-Duty, Pig, $2 p 100 lb ; Old
Lead, 1* cents p lb ; Pipe and Sheet,
2* cents $ ft*
Galena
p 100 ft>
@
Spanish
(gold) 6 75 @ 6 37
German
(gol 1) 6 75 @ 6 S7
English
(sold) 6 75 © 7 12.j
..

,

......

..

net

/

.

Pipe and Sheet

@10 00

..

net

@10 -5

..

Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 30
p cent ad val.

Oak,
do
do
do
do
do

-cash. p ft.-,
8S
33 @
Slaughter, light .
•It
do
middle
38 @
40 @
4:1
do
heavy.
44 @
48 @
10 u

47
53
21

3"i@
32 @
S3 @
80 @
31 @
34 @
29 @
81 @
30 @

314

darn’gd all w’g’s

29 @

do poor
do
Slaugh.in rough

21
3;

30
21

light Cropped....
do
do

middle
bellies

....

....

Heml’k, B. A.,&c.,rt.
middle.

do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

heavy
Oalifor., light.
.

do middle.
do

heavy.

Orino., etc. Ft.
do
middle
do
heavy.
do & B. A,

do
do

Oak, Sluugb.in
'

@
@
30 @

Ft
mid.

rou.,

do

do

do
and

33
80
31
82
33
30
:>o

3!

3d
42

36 @
40
heavy
JLlme—Duty; 10 p cent ad val.
..
@ 1 70
Rockland, com. p bbl.
do
heavy
@ 2 20

Lumber, Woods, Staves,etc.

Lumber, 20
cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 $1 cent ad val.; Rosewood
—Duty

:

and

Cedar, free.
Spruce, East. p M ft 2C 00 @ 23 00
Southern Pine
40 00 @ 4'; 00
White Pine Box BMs 30 00 @ 32 00
White Pine Merch.
Box Boards
33 00 @ 33 00
Clear Pine
SO 00 @100 00

Luths, Eastern, p M

and

Poplar

4 00 @

Whi e

Cherry BMs & Plank SO 00 @ 00 00

CO 00 @ 05 00

Oak and Ash

Black Walnut
STAVES—
White
oak,
ext,

35 00 @ 40 HO

...

100 00 @120 00

pipe,
p M.

pipe, heavy

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

@300 Oil
@250 00

..

..

a

pipe, light.
@200 00
pipe, culls 120 00 ©ISO <JU
@250 (*0
hlnl., extra
hhd., heavy
@200 00
@12 • 00
hhd., light,
@100 00
hhd., culls,
@175 on
bid., extra,
do
@140 (tit
bbl., heavy,
do
bbl., light..
@110 00
do
bbl., culls..
@ Co oo
Red oak, hhd., If vy.
@130 00
do
@ 00 00
hhd., light..
..

.

HEADING —White
oak, hhd
•....

@150 00
Hose-

Cedar,

Mahogany*

wood—Duty free.
Mahogany, St. Domin¬

25

@

50

7

@

10

@

40

12 @

16

Nuevitas....
Mansanilla
Mexican
Honduras

12 @
12 @
15 @

>6

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas

i4 @
14 @

20
15

14 ©
10 @

15
14

go,
do

crotches, p ft.,

St. Domingo,
ordinary logs
do
Port-au-Platt,

30

crotches
do

Port-au-Platt,

logs
do
do
do
do

do
do
do

..

Mansanilla
Mexican
Florida. 79 c.

ft.

Rosewood, U. Jan. p lb
do

Bahia

16
17

50 @ 1 00
5©
8
4 ©

6

Molasses.—See special report.
Nails—Duty; cut H; wrought 21;
horse shoe 2 cents p lb.
Cut, 4d.@60d. p 100 lb 0 75 @ 7 00
Clinch
@ 8 5d

Horseshoe,fd(8d)pft>
Copper
.

Yellow metal
Zinc

2ft @
4S @

32 @

SO
..
..

@
20
spirits of

Stores—Duty:
turpentine 30 cent!* p gallon; crude
Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20
p cent ad val.
Turpent’e, < f .p280ft 6 75 @ 7 f0
Tar, America.
bbl 2 25 @ 3 00

Naval

.

Fitch

© 4 50

Jtscin. common*.
4 12 @
it fe(ralneaandNo.$.,.4 35 @ fc00




25 @7 £0

(2S0 lbs.)
8 00 @11 00
Spirits turp., Am. $ g.
65 @ 67
9;@
Oakum—Duty fr.,p ft
llj

Cake—Duty: 20 p cent ad val.
City thin obl’g, in bbls.
79 ton.56 50 @

Oil

do
West, thin

in bags.56 U0 @r6 ;0

obl.'g, do

@

-

-•

Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, $1 : burning
fluid, 50 aents $ gallon; palm, seal,
and cocoa nut, 10 $1 cent ad val.;
sperm and whale or other fish (for¬
eign fisheries,) 20 p cent ad val.
Olive, qs (gokl)per case 4 25 @
do in casks.$ call.. 1 70 @
Palm
...\9 lb
@
11
Linseed, city...$ gall. 1 35 @ 1 87
Whale
@ 1 25
do
refined winter.. 1 30 @ 1 3j
Sperm, crude
2 65 @

Oils

—

rape

....

do
do unbleach. 2 90 @
1 25 ©
Lard oil
".
Rod oil, city distilled .
90 @
1 10 @
Straits
Paraffine, 28 — 30 cr..
41 @
Kerosene ......(free).
£4 @

—
...

65

pme,

@

dry

13*

Zinc, white, American,

10@

12

do white,

No. 1,in oil
10 @
12
Ochre,yellow, French,
dry
p too lb 2 50 @ 3 50
do
gr’ tin oil.*{9 lb
8 @
10

Spanish brown, dry p
100 lb

1 50 @

....

9
8 @
Paris wh., No.lploOlb 3 25 @
Vermilion,Oliinesep lb 1 40 @ I 45
do

grMinoil.^9 lb

Trieste...... 1 10 @ 1 15
Cal. &l Eng.. 1 35 @ 1 50
American....
SO. @
40
Vonet. red (N.O.)pcwt 3 25 @ ....
do
do
do

Carmine,citymade^lblO ('0 @20 00
China clay
P *on29 00 @30 00

;..p bbl. 5 00 @
Chalk, block....p ton
@23 00
Chrome yellow... 38 ft)
40
15 @
...

Petroleum—^Duty: crude,20 cents;
refined, 40 :ents 73 gallon.
Crude,40@47grav.pgal. 19 @
Refined, free
* 4'* ©
47
do
in bond
30©
27
Naptha, refined
"...
25 @
Residuum
73 bbl. 4 50 @
Pluster Pari*—Duty: lump,free;
calcined, 20 79 cent ad val.
Blue Nova Scotiap ton .... @ 4 50
White Nova Scotia
5 (0 @ 5 50
Calcined, eastern 78 bbl
@ 2 40
Calcined, cilvT mills
@ 2 50
...

....

Provisions—Dnty: beef and pork,
bacon, and lard, 2 ts 79 lb.
Beef, plain mess78 bbl. .12 00 @18 00
do extra mess
.17 00 @23 (0
Pork, mess, new.
21 50 @22 21
do moss, Old
20 12 @21 50
1 ct;

wins,

do

prime, do. ...
17 50 @18 (10
Lard,
....pft>
l’,j@
12*
Bams,
10 @
12
Shoulders,

9 @

10

Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents p lb.;
paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents
73 ft*
Carolina ....‘.79 100 lb 8 75 @ 9 75
East India,dressed.... 9 00 @ 9 £0

Salt-Duty: sack, 24 cents 79 100 ft;
bulk, 18 cents 79 100 lb.
Turks Islands p bush.
57
56 @
Cadiz

@

Liverpool,gr’ndp sack 2 00 @
do
do

flnc,Ashton’s(gM) 2 75 @
tine,

Vorthingt’s

....

© 2 75

Onondaga,com.fine bis. 2 50 @ 2 00
do
do

do
do

210 lb

bgs. 1 bC* @ 2 04
42 @
45
50 @
52
43 @
50

79 bush.

Solar coarse
Fine screened
do
79
F. F
240 lb

pkg.

..@8 25
bgs. 2 85 @ 3 00

Saitpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents;
refined and partially refined, 3. cents;
nitrate

soda, 1

Refined, pure

cent'p lb,
p ft)

@
16
9;@
gold
4@
Seeds—Duty ; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,
i cent 79 ft); canary, $1 79 bushel of
60 ft,; and grass seeda, 30 79 cent
..

Crude
•
Nitrate soda

ad val.
Clover

pft

14 @

Timothy,reaped79 bus 8 25 @ 8 62
Canary

Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk,
35 79 cent.
Tsatlees, No. 1 @3.73ft 12 50 @13 00
superior,
.11
2
do medium,No.3@4 9
Canton,re-reel.No 1@2 9
-Japan, superior
11

tad valorem

50 @12
00,@10
60 @ 9
5u @13

No. 1 @

50 cents

@

00
50

75

50

....

J. Vassal
Co..
Jules ltobin....
Marrette
Co.
United V. Prop.
Vine Grow. Co.

do
do
do
do
do
Leger freres ... do
Other br’ds Cog. do
Pellevoisin freres do

Skills—Duty: 10 78 cent ad val.
@
Goat,Curacoap Bigold
85 @
do Buenos A...gold
37j
do
VeraCruz .gold
@
50
do
@
Tampico. ..gold
45 @
do
Matamoras.gold
87
85 @
do
l’ayta
gold
do Madras,eao cash
@
do
@
Cape
cash
50 @
521
Deer,San J uanTP ft gold
do
Bolivar ...gold
@
55 @
60
do Honduras ..gold
do Sisal
gold. 571@
.

..

.

..

.

•

Para
gold
Vera Cruz .gold

52

f'hagres ...gold
Puerto Cab .gold

@
@

.

Alex. Seignette.
Arzac Seignette
J. Romienx

do
do
Rum—Jamaica
do
St. Croix
do
Gin — Differ, brands do
..

Whisky-S. & Ir. do
Dnra’c—N.E. Rum.cur.

45

Bourbon Whisky.eur.
Corn Whisky (mb nd)
WTines—Port
(gold)

$ bus 4 26 @ 5 00

Linseed,Am.cleanptee
@
do Am. rough $ bus 2 80 @ 8 00
do Calcutta ,,,gold 2 62

19

mM

79 ft.

domestic.

do

do
do
do

Madeira
do ^^arseille8

Pherry
d »
Malaga, sweet
do
dry....
Claret, in hhds.

li

@

..

Burgundy Port, 'do
Sherry
do

and

prl ter—Duty : in pin s, bars,
plates, $1 50 ^ 100 lb s'!
6 @
Plates, foreign 79 ft’ gold
Spice*.—See special report.

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued
at 7 cents 79 lb or under, 2£ cents;
over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts
79 ft; over 11 cents, 3£ cents 79 ft
and 10
cent ad val. (Store prices.)
iSj@ 24
English, cast, 79 ft

do

American, spring..
English, spring....

..

.

val.
No. 0 to 18
No. 19 to 26
No. 27 to 36

American, prime, coun¬
try and city 79 lb...

12 @

12j

Tea*.—See special report.

Tin--Duty: pig,bars,and block, 15 79
cent

val.

ad

plates, 25 per cent,
Banca
$ lb (gold)
Straits
(gold)
English
(gold)
Plates,char. I.C.79 boxl3
do
do

do

ad val.
23 @
21 j@
2!J@
00 @13

21J

5‘

Conn.
Conn.
Penn.
Penn.
Penn.

N.Y.. Fillers.
& N.Y.,
& N.Y.,
& Ohio,
& Ohio,
& Oh o,

22

4

17

.

•

•

5

Foreign.
Hrvana,Wrap.(d’ty pd)
Havana, ass. (duty pM)
Havana, fill, (duty pM)
Yara, assort.(du>y pM)
Cuba, assort (duty pM)
Mavufactured (in bond)—

12

nominal.
SO @ 1 05
76 @ 1 00
90
70’ @
70 ©
80

ginia & N. Y.
X fts—Best.
do
do
ft>s

27 @
26 @

.

Medium
.

..

..

Medium.,
Common..

do
do

(Western)—Ex.fine,
bright

do

do

do

do

ft'S(Virginia)—Ex.fine,
bright
do
do
do

Navy

do
do
do
lbs

—

Fine....
Medium.
Common
Best Vir-

w

®

35 ®

...

ashed

80
25
40
25
25

45

@

20 @
22

...

Freights—
ToLiveepool:
Cotton
5. pjft
Flour
P bbl.

d.

e.

@ 2
@ 4
6 @ .

Petroleum'
Heavy goods., .p ton 17

80
28

Oil

35

®20

.

Com, b’k& bagsp bus.
Wheat, bulk and bags
Beef
p tee.
Pork
p bbl.

47*

s.

@

.

@3
@ 2

To London :

Heavy goods... P ton

@20 00

—

@25 0

Oil....:.
Flour
Petroleum
Beef
Pork

70
30

12

Wheat

p bbl.

..

@5

..

P tee.
p bbl.
p bush.

3
7

@2

.

@ 4

0

0
7

@5

©•
Corn
To Glasoow (By Steam):
Flour
p bbl.
Wheat
p.bush.
-

ginia & N.Y..
do
do

60
20
10

@
@
@
@

washed

46
45

Zinc—Duty: pig or Mock, $1 50 $
U»0 lbs.; sheets 21 cents p ft).
Sheet
p lb
PJ® 13

©
@

Fine

..

Mexican, unwashed.
Smyrna, unwashed

@

43 @
80 @

'w

Persian

10s and 12s—Best Vir¬
do

®
®
®
®

5

@

@

40
42
25
15
3 •

African, unwashed

Vi

3 @

32

@ 81
® 80
® 84
® 23

Donskoi, washed

45
12

Wrap..
R. lots.
Fillers..
Wrap
R. lots..

20
28
27
32
18

do
common, unw.
Entre Rios, washed .
do
unwashed.
S. American Cordova

Seed Leaf.
Conn.

full bl’d Merino.

i and i Merino..

Peruvian, unwashed...
Valparaiso, unwashed..
S. Amer. Mestiza, unw..

10J

@
@

10

Texas

ad valorem.
s
13

9 ®

48 ® 58
40® 45
Extra, pulled
* 3u ® 55
40® 50
Superfine
No. 1, pulled
10® 4ti
California, unwashed...
SO® 43
do
common...
20® 25
■do
pulled
30® 45

Tobacco—Duty: leaf 33 cents 79 ft;
and manufactured, 50 cents 79 ftCigars $3 per pound and 50 per cent

Medium to Good
Vine to Select

....

do

28J
2i

@

10 & 5 79 ct. off list.
25 & 5 p ct. off list
80 & 5 79 ct. off list*

.

....

do

@12 75
@13 50
Terne Coke.... 9 75 @10 00

Lugs and Com. Leaf..

00@150 00
25® 30 00
II ou® 25 00

do
do

Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or les
p ft», 8 cents p lb: o'ver 12 and not
more than 24, 7 cents; over 24 and
not over 32,10, and 10 p cent ad val¬
orem ; over 32,12 cents p lb, and 1
p cent ad valorem.; on the skin, 2
p cent ad val.
A mer., vSax. fleece 79 tt>
50 ® ft)

I. C. Coke
10 00
Terne Charcoal 13 00

4

15@
10®

Telegraph, No. 7 to II
Plain
p lb

Plate and sheets and

terne

OOfi

'

.

15
13

Tallow—Duty: 1 cent 79 ft*.

41®
2 00® g (»(
85®
I 15®

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered
$2 to $3 5i ip 100 lb, and 15 $ cent ad

17i

Sumac—Duty: 10 79 cent ad val.
79 ton..J50 00 @225 00
Sicily

4
4
4 85® 4 95
4 85® 4 95
4 i5®
4 25®
4 25(7
8 5W
2 90C
4 0U(L
2 45®
2 40®

1
1
81
2

do

cases.

@ 7 00

75(
756

do

Champagne

.

15J@
12 @
lli@

in

50

....

SO® 5 0
9l® 5 00
85® 4 9o

4

f o

.

....

...<a

4

do
do

00

....

1*® 10

•

Other Rochelle,

cent ail val.

Castile

®

do

.

20® 10

••••©
@

Hiv. Pellevoisin do

f0
00
55

@

--

55 @

Seignette

A.

0si(^ 10 (IQ

o

5

.

.

.

do
do
do
do

«

,

.

nv! .,5

79 gallon and 25
over $1 $ gallon. Si »
Ion and 25 79 cent Id val.
* gal
Brandy—
J. * P. Martcll
to>M) 5 20@ 10 „
llennessy
(gold) 5 20a Wt
Otard, Dup. &C0M0 5 lr,a n «
I’inet, Castil.&Co.do 5 (>0(& in
Renault & Co.. do
s ^ iiM1?
5 fii® 10
50
A

10 00 @li 00

Medium
China thrown,...:
do

$ Si
4 21?°°;

over 5c and not

;

valorem;

l'avsaams,

German

dry, No. 1
American,

gallon, other liquors, $2.50. Wisw
Duty: value net over 50 cents » 7
Ion 20 cents $ gallon and
25

Shot—Duty: 2} cents $ ft*
Drop
ft
10J@

b, and 25i P

Paints—Duty: on wrhit.e lead, rod
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
oil, 3 cents 79 lb; Parit white and
whiting, 1 cent $ lb; dry ochres, 56
cents p 100 lb : oxidesofzinc, lif cents
p lb ; ochre, ground in oil, $ 1 50 p 100
1b; Spanish brown 25 p cent ad val;
China clay, $3 79 ton; Venetian rod
and vermilion 25 79 cent ad val.;
white chalk, $10 $ ton.
Litharge, City... .pft
12l@ - ..
Lead, red, City
■.
12i@
do white, American,
@ .15
pure, in oil
do white, American,

Chalk

wood B’ds & PFk. 55 00 @ 65 0J

Maple and Birch

No. 1
5
Pale and Extra

do

00
00
00

Ovals and Half Round U0 00@150
Band.
@145
Horse Shoe.
.140 00@1£0

Bar

[December 15,1866,

THE CHRONICLE.

768

Medium
Common

32}@
28

....

@

25 @

86
30
26

Cigars (domestic).

Corn, bulk and bags..
Petroleum (sail)P bbl.
Heavy goods..p ton.

Seed and Havana,per M55 00 @80 00Clear Havana,
do
@..
do Connecticut Seed. 25 00 @45 00
New-York Seed, Conn*.
..

20 00 @90 00

Wrapper

Penn,
do
do
Common CIgare

Oil
Beef
Pork
To Havf.e :
Cotton

lo 18 00 @25 CO

18 00 @26 00,

Hops

Whalebone—Duty: foreign fish¬
ery, 20 p. c. ad val.
fcouth Sea
North west coast
Ochotsk
Polar

79 ft)
.

..

@ 1 20
@ 1 37
@

....

@

....

Wines and

Liquor*—Liquors
—Duty; Brandy, first proof, f 3 per

.

.

$
P ft

@30 0
@85 0
@ 5 0
@ 8 6
m

@
00 @
.

1

ton i0 (>0

Wheat, in shipper’s
bags
p Dush.
Flour
p bb
Petroleum
Lard, tallow, cut m t
etc

0

0

20
.

bbl.

P ft

Aihca, pot and pml

81

.

P tee.r
p bbl.

Beef and pork, .p
Measurem. gMs.p

«

..

6

@

©
6 @
_

I®

8a

!
-

769

THE CHRONICLE.

1866.J

December 15,

Railroad.—The following statements are i Western Union Telegraph.—This
■,
co:mpiied from the annual reports of the New low centra! Road : , ^ uw ,jne
tQ CalitV)rnia
SO.
EARNINGS YEAR
York Central

jtew

,

.

«

,

ENDING

678.042

$13,675,523

paspengeiB

$4,360.248
9,671,5*19
501,617

$14,596,7S4

8,776,0-7

;

••

Other

Total earnings

Operating expenses
exp
Sinking

Dec
Inc
Die

1,049,995

$12,631,693

$12,439,633

Total expenses

1.965,091

1,535,890

income....

Dividends paid-b per

.I

cent

1,478,460

1,469,469

$486,831

$66,430

Surplus

STOCK AND DEB!'.
1865.

COST OK ROAD IN

1866.

$24,801,000
14,095,801

$24,591,0)0

Stock...

14,627,442

Debt
Total

Railway

$38,896,802

$39,218,442

*,

5406.1873A»

60,000
396,155

60,000

411,924
974,169

Interest....

Erie

1866.

$11,013,44!
112,102

$10,882,358
111,182

...

funds

Buffalo

695,892
113,425

1865.

Rent...
U. S. taxes

Net

$ ■61,206

'.

Traffic.—The earnings of the Erie Railway and

Division for the month of November, I860, were ;

Erie Railway

$1,330,448 79—$1,417,
73
b0,878

-

7 R07

Buffalo Division
For November, 1865:
Erie RaiUvay....,

F.o

$1,522,471 55
115,121 00— 1,637,592 55

Ciu, llrjdRCr*a
This line is

Pa-s, and the overland stage route as now traveled.
in addition to that via Fort Laramie and South Pass.

1866.

$4,521,454

have opened

company

i

t>

o.

SFPTEKB :r

I860.

freights*

»

xr

XT

bill
the

ceding with the California and Oregon Railroad. By this
the State agrees to pa}7 7 per cent interest on $1,000,000 of
company’s bonds for twenty years.

tlje Railroatf Jltonitor.

The

com¬

opened their m.-w line between Salt Lake City and
Montana, thus bringing the mining districts of th.it country into
direct communication with the rest oLthe telegraphic* world.
Cedar Rapids & Missouri Railroad.—Tlie Chicago & North¬
western Company have completed this road to Woodbine 300 miles
west from the Mississippi.
it was opened for traffic on the 27th
! ult. It will be completed to Omaha by the 1st January.
Savannah, Albany and Gulf Railroad.—The Florida branch
j of this road is now open. This improvement, besides its convenience
to the public, and especially to the planters of Florida, is. destined
to advance greatly the interest of the parent road and the City of
Savannah. It also completes the Atlantic and Gulf connection
have uis

pany

>

from Savannah and St. Mark’s.

Chicago Railroad—This Cbm*
pain7, through their agents L. I\ Mortem A Co., 00 Band street,
7
advertise their first mortgage convertible bonds, limited to $15,000
per mile. The amount now oll’crcd is $000,000. These bonds bea
St. Louis, Jacksonville and

1

V

1

CJ

CJ

,

payable semi annually, April 1 and October
Decrease on Erie Kail way and Buffalo Division
$220,265 03 in New York, and are redeemable in 181)L Already about niuet
The earnings of November, I860, do not include tho^e ol the miles of tlie road are in operation, and six <v miles more are to
Sw ydvfrti-ement.
Canandaigua branch, as that branch is not now operated by this | caniplvittf d within twelve m miiis
Pittsburg & Connells villi: Railroad.—I’lie Sand Pat
company. The earnings of that branch should be added to those of j
pTTTST
Tunned on this line lias been cat through.
lis total length is
the Erie for November, 18(30, in comparing the relative earnings.
750 feet ; vidiii, 22 feet ; height, 10 feet.
It is intended for
Oregon Central Railroad.—The Oregon 'Legislature have
double track.
When the road is completed to Cumberland thei
Buffalo Divirion

.

the Oregon Central Railroad, which

passed a bill extending aid to
is to be

built from Portland to the northern

line of California, con.

_

207,913
Feb...
304.855...Mar...

275,282
299,063
258,480

154,41S
195.803
162,723
178,786

..

270.889..April..

322.277
355,270

835,985
409,250
401,280

1206,090
*224,257
312,165
351,554
320,879

833.432...JTlay...
326.870.. J uly

368.273.. J

8o 1,559...A llg.

347,085.. .Oct
322.749.. .lVov...

807,919
236,824

252,015

•

Year

—

1864.

1805.

(524 vi.)

$25(5,600
304,445
338,454
830,651
267,126
315,258
278,891

358,862
402,219
407,107
448,934

$363,996
366,361
413,974
365,180

$3I4,598_

»

tan.

.

283,177. .Feb..
412,393 Mar...
_

3.51,489

409,427 ’April..
426,493... May...

387,095

392,611. .June..

—

—

1290,676

457,227

1611,297
588,066

625,751

682,911
606,640
625,5 17
•••5,3)0

701,3>2
691,556
914,0*2

(468 m.)
$090,144
678,504
857,583
733,866
637,180
646,995

584,523
712.495

795,938

868,500
712,362
580,963

767,508
946.707
928.886

1,210,654

$327,900

989.058

1,005,680

(7H8 hi.)
$571,536

423,797

460,573

7,181,208

799,236
661,891

657,141

..

....OCl..

a

.Nov...

.

..Dec

..

(2:14 in.)
$102,749
115,135
88,221

140,-418

1865.

1864.

(251 hi.)

$77,010
7-4,409

...Nov...
...Dec...

—

—

228,020
310.594
226,840

Fail...

474,738... Feb...

654,390... Mar...
606,078.. April..
672,628... may..
644,573.. J line..
554,828. July...
641,848..Aug.. .
661,608 Sept

108,082. .April..

267,488... I»l ay...
262,172 June .
170,795.

.116,224.

150,989. ...Sep.
280,133. ...Oct..

—

742.0QC ..Oct
Nov

.

—

.

—

..

Dec

..

...

Year.*

$178,11!*..

202,771
109,209
177,625
173,722
162,570

166,015., July..

*218,236

.222,953 .Aug...
198,88-4 sept...
244,834 .Oct
,

2,064,074

2)240,744

155,803.

..

.

.

—

—

bbjL,U00

i. g

.

Oct
,.7ov
«
...

.

....

...

87,791
93.703

78,007
76,248
107,525
104,603
115,184

05,905

83,702
131.0-18

106,269
203,018
237,562
251,9; 6
241,370

3-0,841
895,579
346.717

171,125

2,535,001
1865.

(242 7/1.)
$1-14.084

.

JS,f»
*■247,158
343,736

329,105

324,986

346,781

413,501

460,661

359,60*
429,1

490,693
447,669

414,60**

.A ug...

.

405,510
376,470

.

.

365,196

335,989

328.869

3,970,910 -4,51*4,546

Year

—

401,456
365,663

405.115
410.802

.Sep...

—

Ohio & Mississippi.

—

$259,223 $267,541

186.).

260,466
309,26 U
269,443

...

121,904 ..April
2 55,511. ..may..

239,139

216,109

31.3,914

326.236
277,423

224,957

Feb.
121,175 ..mar.
122.621

1866.
(3-10 M.) (3-'0 in.)

$210,329

$131,707.

2v)0,!*16
304,163
3-19.285

*271,527

223,242

212.560 J line
J uly.
209,199
188.223. ..Aug-..

268.L76

..

344,700

31*2,596
332,-100

346,213

264,319

3,311,070

.

350,3 IS
372,61S
412,553

275,950

275,906. ..Sep..
416,138, ...Oct..
327,926 .No v..

3,75*3,005

278,006

.

...Dec

—

•

..Year.
.

1865.

1864.

i860.

(484 m.)
$286,05!*.

n...

132,896
123,087
127,010
156,338

155,753
111,001

250,407 ..mar...
270,360. April..
316,433...May...
.

325-91....J ime..
304,917. July..

£379,981

349,117. Sept..
436,065.. Oct

,Nov....

220.209

Dee....

265,154

T361.610
t 247,023

3,050,323

2,936,678

.

—

•

^

386-1.
1.310 hi.)

i860.
*234 in.)

396,248. .Aug...

.

279,18

341,228

263,244

1374.534

..Year

n

.July..

.

.

.,.)

J line..

194.167 ...Feb..

f 271,793

im.
<D5*w.

Ti*.

.

337,2 10

139,171

lO'UffO

—

338,276
271,553
265,780

may...

95.843

138 738
19-1.5"'

239,0

220,138

278,848
348,802

...Nov.
.Dec.

—
—

217.9

223.846

$252,435

Feb...
mar...
A pril..

108 538

64,993
126,970
99,002
86,-1 2
164,710
221,638

.Jan...

150,148.

1865.

189,4

-Michigan ny\Utl.-

116,495

1,224,056

195,1

243,413

1864.

125,252

—

198,C

243,417

(285 /h.)

81,264.
82,910.
82,722.
95,664.
106,315.
96,i '23.
106,410.

—

173.7

2,512,815

..Year..

i860.

110,146
105,7o7

151.9
167,0

2vd,169

..Dec
—

220,1 47

220.0 2

...

.Sept..

.

*9(1; 154
215,784
245,627

214,533
264,687
212.171
248,292

244,174
375,534
221,370

,

—

122121

.

(251 1/1.) (251 vi.)
$00,125.
$90,672

86,528

186-4.

160.497

20S, 098
162,694

1865.

40,474

(2 12 hi.)
$79,735

Feb...
102,138. ..Mar...
167,301. April..
168,600..Jlav...
167,1.'!)!* , June..

216,781
222.924

p” 396,050

A

..

180,140
222 411

2 i 0.31-4..

,

^-Toledo, Wab. & Western.

1866.

153,903

155,730

3,313,514

170,879

...

310,4-13

1866.

(201 m.
$173,557 $168*7

20a, 857
193,91!*
208,614

April..

101,779

(234 in.)
$08,1 SI

1,402,106

Haute.

$170,078

380,489
307,523
270.073

(234 in.)
$51,965

Hear..

.

117,185

144,942
218,236
234,194
203,785
202,966
204,726

91,375
93,078
90,576
96,908
95,453

.Dee.

.

$100,872

149,855

91.809

198,135
129,227

211,854. .Nov.

(210 m.) (210 VI.)

157,786

78,697

1864.

.Jail...
.Feb...
,ltlar...

—

214,121
306,231

Pittsburg.

1865.

(204 vi.)

$1:59,411

..Jan....
,
.

^-Milwaukee & St. Paul

1866.

110,664

1865.

80.901

1,038,165

..Year

—

240.331

-Marietta and Cincinnati.—>

639.195....0.t....

1,283
70,7-40
106,681*

170,555

3,095,470

83,993

81,897
72,1

217,150

336,617
321,037

72,389

(23-4 vi.)
$121,776

224,838

82 1.805

prii..

(234 hi.)
$98,183
7

331,494

may
560,025.. J line..
uly..
586,074... A Uff...
551,021 ..Sep...

603.402

586.964

...

271.140

516,822. ..Mar...

617,6.82
578,403
747,169
739,736
641,589
648,887
518,088

510,100
423,578

.

.

$582.828...Jail.
613,027... Feb.

516). 60S

406.373

July
..Aug...
Sep

1866.
(708 rn.)

1865.

459,762

.June.

.

..Year..

—

528,972
616,665

416,588

May

15,0~2

(210 7/1.)

$555,488




(708 rn.)

1864.

(468 in.)

-

778,281

^-St. L.f Alton & T.

I860.

W£0t4fi6 8,489,068

321.818

1,985,571

,icago.->
'"fkteb-, Ft.W. , & Chicago.
1864
(468 m.)

243,178
224,930

1,711,281

500,404...Oct....
416,690. .Nov...

1865.

922.892
77 .990

Mav
264,605
290.612 .h ne..
JjM j , r> ...s uiy...

vYrear..

52 4.760

..

429,191 ....Sep...

4,826,722

197,886

231,612

...Doe...

418,575
480,808

380,452.A ug-

4,120,153

196.580

198,679

146,943

338,499... July...

411,806

185,013

186,747
212,209
139,547
113,399
168,218
178,526
149,099
117,013

301,613

495,072
351,799

518,736 .April.

Illinois Central.

1804.

1866.

(524 m.)

280,403

.

-Mil. and Prairie du Chien.-

Mich. So. & N. Indiana.(524 m.)

243.150

183,385 ..Feb
u a rcii
257,230

6,329,-447

-

13,429,643 15,434,775

$158,735
175,482

717,912
702,092

186 4.

(667 in.) * (657 m.)
(797 m.)
$981,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188. Jit n
983,855... Feb...
917,146
934,183
1,114,308 1,256.567 1,070,431...Mar...
1,099,507 1,458,455 1.153,295..A i»ril..
1,072,293 1,333,401 1,101,60S... may ..
1, Ml, 975 1,177,872 1,243,142..June...
994,317
1,202,180 1,203,462.. ,S uly...
1,105,364 1,331,046 1,290,3 0...Aug ..
1,301,005 1.336.615 1.411.317 ..Sep ...
1,222,568 1.438.615 1,480.261 ...Oct....
1,224,909 - 1,522,472 1,417,927... Nov...
1,334,217 1,429,765
—
...Dee—

$241,395

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

$305,554

405,634
523.744

7,960,981

1806.

1865.

(238 vi.

468,858
585,623

716.378

—

Erie Railway.1864.

(228 hi.)

Pittsburg.

80-4.
(201 vt.)

1866.

1865.
(228 //?.)

482,161
499,296

317,839
390,355
421,363
466,830
50t>, 1 4«j
480,710
519,806
669,6115
729,759

..Year.. 0,114,566

Ii*ee...

1.361.

to

RAILROADS.
Cleveland and

(930 in.)
$523,566

563,401

...

—

direct route from ]Baltimore

(860 nt.)
$541,005

840,854
546,609

—

3,810,091

2,770,484

.

318,549. ...Sep...

357,956

307.803

tine..

a very

^-Chicago and Hock Island.—*

1866.

1865.

1864.
(800 m.)

(280 7?i.) (280 in.)
$280,503 $210,171.. Jan I.. $273,875

(257 m.)
$100,991

will bo

Chicago & Northwestern-^

Alton.——
1866.

1865.

1864.

^

t

EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL

COMPARATIVE MONTHLY
Chicago and

interest 7 per cent.,

•

Dec....
Year..

.

63,862

82,147

42,15*5

587,076

—

1866.

43,333

•68.118

54,942

—

37,265

41,150
48,659

56.871

—

32.378
38,9 »2

$43,716

37,-188
42 038

66,545

310,762

(177 in)
46,102
30,006

(157 tr.)

(110 m.)
$30,840

50,308
49,903

283,130
253,924
247,262
305,454
278,701

68,180
-

5",862
75,677
42,715
61,770
*37,830
689.883

39,299
86,9 3
102.686
85,508
60,098
81.462
100, .3'3

75,248
—

—

[December 15, I860.

THE CHRONICLE.

770

BOND LIST.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS
INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

Amount

N. B.- The sums placed aft.r
name of Company shows the
Funded Debt.

the outstaudiota!\

0-

Fayablc.

Railroad

do

!
j

do

1

iJan.

1850
1853

2d
do
"Btlvidere Delaware (.$2,193,000):
“1st Mort. (guar. < -. and A.
2d Mort.
do
3d Mort.
do
.

jv

.

stock

($10,204,408):

;

....!

000,000j

Central Ohio ($3.073,000):

[ Hartford & New-Haven. ($927,000):
ij 1st Mori gage...’
...)—
!\llartf.* Trov. A FishAul ($1,930,940)

.—j

450,000. 7 'Feb; & Aug. 1890
800.000 7 May A Nov F-90
800,000, 7 M'ch & Sep 18(35

7,330,not)'

j

i

:

!-•••

I

2d

:

1

Mortgage
Cleveland* Col. and Cine. ($475,000):
1st Mortgage
Cleveland t(i Mahoning ($1,752,400):
let Mortgage
.*
1st

do
do

0,000.000; 7
1.250.000:

5G0,000i

7 I

1,300,000

7

475,000

7

!

j

I

..

!

G

1st

9! %
98

'

1

2d
do
3d
do
Toledo Depot Bonds

102

;J’ne & Dec. 11876

ApT &

8

Jan. Sc

283.0ft

July

....

9GX

...

Valley ($2,088,000):

..

July

6

May & Nov.

1S73

6

May & Nov 1SS3

960,000

7

April & Oct

500,000

6

Jan. & Julv 1870

225,000

7

May & Nov.

1890

1,933,000

7

Feb. & Aug 1883
lOOO
do

j

do

7

|

do

509,000

6

l,50D,fHH:

7

G» R ),< K f* ’

«

;M’ch ife Sep: 1881

soo.ott

1

jJan. & July; 1871

jJan.

7. Jan.

314,100
681,000
399,000

6
6
6
‘A

7

1,092,900

Mortgage, sinking fund....

!niy

,740,000 8 'ApT & Oct.11887

100
100

103

Mortgage, sinking fund

Mortgage

11st Land Grant Mortgage. .
do
do
Morris and Essex:
1st Mortgage, sinking
do

......

fund

..,

....

Feb. & Aug. ’90J90
June & Dec. TU- ti

Apr. & Oct.
Feb. & Aug.

...

74- (0

1874

•

*

’

May & Nov. 18ISS2

8

April & Oct

4.855,000

May & Nov. 1885

651,000

7
7
7

7

Jan. &

7
7

Jan. & Jul j 1393

1,500,000

do

Mississippi and Missouri River:
2d

1S85

4,253,500
2,253,500

...

loco

4,600.001

.

....

1892

402,000

Sinking F’nd do

1st
2d

&July

1877

do

Feb. & Aug 1868

Jul) 1S91

April & Oct 1893

NovJl877

3,612,0W 7 May &
do
695,00C 7

93

....

1 »w

2,242,500 8 Feb.' & Ang 59-72

Dollar, convertible

Milwaukee and St. Paul:
....

7

1,294,000

2d
do
Goshen Air Line Bonds.
Milwa ukee A Prairie du Chien:

....

Aug
May & Nov.

7

1,000,000

.

$1,100,000 Loan Bonds
$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (P.& K.RR.) Bonds.
do
2d
(
do
) Bonds..

1st

Feb. &

2,362,800
300,000

—

Mortgage

1st

18—

jJan. & July

xTldy Cu 1NUV. 1872

300,560 7

...

;..
Hocking Valley mort

....

iOOJ

1,300,000

Mich. S. A, N. Indiana: ($8,537,175)

.

Mortgage, guaranteed
De.'.a.* Lacko. A: Western ($3.491.500):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund

Jan. &

Mortgage bonds
Michigan Central, ($7,403,489).

1867
1881
18—

169,500

l«t

7
7

Memphis A Charleston:

Oct.! 1904

7

<42.00!

1

Sep 1878

!

G;)f),00(;

Delaware ($500,600):

903,000

Maine Central: ($2,733,800)

2,081.00c 7 Jan. & July 1885
do
188G
300,000 7 ;

2,622,000

1st

....

1862

1,465,000

Memphis Branch Mortgage

Mortgage,
Scioto and

j 1861

do
do

1,000,000

do

1 CO

April & Oct1 LS70

6

6

Mortgage

1st

July ! 1882

250,000

($1,903,000):
Mortgage, Eastern Division...

j-

O

rarietta A: Cincinnati ($3,688,385):

' Jan. & July 1892

M'ch &

Jan. &

230,000 6

McGregor Western:

250,001

\pril & Oct, 1373

800,000

Extension Bonds
Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000):

1874

Sep; 1873
; 1875

jMay & Nov. 1881

son fioii

Mortgage
1st
1st

7

500,000 S

,thigh Valley ($1,477,000): .
1st Mortgage
,ittle Miami ($1,400,000):
1st Mortgage
'Altle Schuylkill ($900,000):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
tong Island ($932,000):

1

*

do |1870
jJan. & July;lS66

7

187,000 7

1st Alert gage
2d
do
3d
do
La Crosse A Milwaukee

do

July!l866

G;10,000

1st mortgage

2d

|

|

Mortgage, sinking fund

1st

I

7

500,000

' ' Kennebec and Portland ($1,280,000):

V2

„

.

GOO.OOOl 7 .Jan. &
364,00010

.

i j Joliet aralN. Indiana ($800,000):

!

Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

270,5(K

j

2d Mortgage

;Fob. & Aug 1880

7

.

jFcb. & Augjlb75

(i

L
i
6,837,000] 7 April & OctjlSto 106)4107
2.890,500! y j
do
ilSIS
2,503,0(.K); 5
do
]1S90

Joliet and Chicago ($500,000):

1

850,000 7 ; Feb. & Aug 1873
241.200 7 M'ch & Sep 1864
i 1875
do
648.200 8 I

1.108,124

Sinking Fund Mortgage!
Mortgage Bonds of 1866
Connecticut River ($250,000):
1st Mortgage
Conn, and rassumpsic P. ($800,000):
1st Mortgage
Cumberland Valley ($270,500):
Mortgage Bonds
Dayton 'and Michigan ($3,782,430):
1st Mortgage
'

j

!

M’ch &
do

.

164
99

jMay & Nov 1870

I

j Jeffersonville ($621,000):

Jan. & July 1890

1.129,000
1,019.509

2d Mortgage
do
3d
convertible
4th
do

'

102V‘.04

',1867

do

500,000'

Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,2S4)
1st Mortgage
93}e Indianapolis A, Madison ($610,000):
1st Mortgage

,

May & Nov! 1893

do

do

jl8U9

May <fc Nov.il875

j

Mortgage

2d

! 1885

500,000

—

AugJSiiO

do
J’ne & Dec.;1885

500.(H)0

($1,251,500):
1st Mortgage, (interest ceased)

i

May & Nov ,1880

7

Suubury and Erie Bonds




:!

Redemption bonds

J57G

192,000
523,000

I

..

2d
do
Indiana Central

i

Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,880,848);

l*

Mortgage.

1st

j 18116

do

000,000

s

Feb. &

| Jan. & July 1870

Dividend Bonds

■

7

e

7 May

Cle>\* Pain. A: Ashtabula ($1,500,000)

:g:eBonds

3,390,000'
110,000]

!

’

1.397.000) 7

Cincinnati «F Zanesville ($1,300,000):

Des X
Mo:.

Jan. & JulyjlS77

Illinois and. Southern Iowa :

& Nov. 1803
7 ! Quarterly. 1915
484,000, 7 ,Feb. & Augjl6S5

Mortgage

9d
do
Lap’-^'anjiaand Western..

0

73

New Bonds

2d
3d

191,000;

Huntingdon A Broad 2T>/i($l,436,082): j
1st Mortgage
!
‘2d
do '
'
!
Illinois Cen tral ($13,’231,000):
j
1st Mortgage, convertible
..;
1st
do
'Sterling
|

Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000) :j
1st Mortgage (consolidated)
; 2,000,0001 7 ! Jail. & July 1S9S
Chicago i£ Northwest. ($12,020,433): j
j
Preferred Sinking Fund
j 1,250.009, 7 Feb. & Aug; 1885
1st Mortgage
;1885
i 3,000,000; 7 !
do

.

C)

do
1st
do
s
2d
do
3d
Com ■ertible...

5,G00,000; 7 ApT & Oct.; 1895

Chicago, Pock Island A P. wife:
1st Mortgage (C. & K. I.)
1st
do
(new)
Cine.* TIam. A Dayton ($1,029.000):

!

1,000,000;

414

j 750.0001
lS70j 2,000,00o

'Jan. & Julv-1870

2d

1st

!
!
!
I 3,525,000: 8 ,Jan. & July 1883

Interest Bond?
Consol. S. F. Bonds, couv. till
Extension Bonds

7

1st

Mortgage.
do ’ sinking fund.|Ifousatonic ($191,000):
05 bj j 1st. Mortgage
—,
Hudson Hirer ($7,702,840) :

($5,751,400):i

($5,000,000):1

Feb. & Aug|lSS3

927,0(K)| (j

l!

i

519,O00j 7 M»y A* Nov. 187 7
7 Jan. & Juiv 1893
1,100,000’ 7 ApT & (Jet. 1883

\

!

Jan. & July 1883

1,037,590!

100

2.400.000

income

Chicago and 01. Eastern
1st Mortgage

:

;

I

;!

000,000; G .Jan. & July 75-SO;

Mortgage Bonds
Chicago and Alton (^3,f>19,0o0) :
1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pief

Mortgage (S. F.)

|

0

1,500,000; 7

0

•

j

May 25 Nov. 1875

;

7

700,000;

-! Jlarrishurg A Lancaster ($700,000):
; j
New Dollar Bonds

April & Oct 1881
Jan. &, July 1883

7

033,600;
!

—

.

1st Mortgage \V. Div.
1st
do w E. Div
2d
do
Central Pacific of Cal. ($8,880,00u);
1 st mortgage.."
Convertible Bonds
Cheshire ($000.000):

Chic.* Purl, ar-.d. Quincy

7

3,437,750!

Convertible Bonds.

i

,

..

...

($1,509,000):

..

jj Land Grant.Mortgage!

90

95

1,700.0(H)! 0 Feb. & Aug 1883 j ...
807,000, 6 May A-Nov. 1889 j
4,209.4001 G J'ne A Det. 1893 ! ...
;
| I
!
490.000| 7 :Jnn. Sc July 1873 !. ..
493,000! 7 iApT & Uet. 1879 !. ..
I :
i
j
l ll,00o' 7 Feb. & Aug 1382 !. ..
1
!
i
,
909.000; 7 Fob. .& Aug 1370 i ...

!

IfiO

!

1

I

,! 3,SI6,552 0 M’ch & Sep 1875
|,
I
j
|
j
149,000- 7 Jan. & Julv;lS70

1st Mortgage, sinking land
1,903.000* 7 Feb. A Aug 1882 98 ! 100
do '
do
1,080,000 7 May & Nov. 1875
!!Grand Junction ($927.000):
■ )
! 1
I
j
j| Mort gage
’. j 927,000; q Jan. & July 1870
-\Grtat Western* Id. ($2,850,000):
j
•! j
j ' j
1st Mortgage West. Division—...I 1,000,000 R) April & Oct ;1803 i 93
do" ^ East.
do
1 1,350,000. 7 Jan. & Ju)y;18S8 rJ ...
2nd do
do
do
’. j
j |
do
^ jlS93 ; 70
::
!
I
!
Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600):

1889

i

'

I

ij 2d

Jan. A July 1879

*

1

99^

4,441,600j 7 ■ Apri 1 & OctlSSO ,93 j 94"
920,500i 7 June «fc DeeilSSS

i

convertible...
do

11883

ji

!

;

500,000{ 7 ApT & Oct. 1800

do
2d
Catawissa ($141,000) :

Trust

!

....

do

0,000,000) 7

j Mortgage
1 Gat. A Chic. U.find. in C. A X. IF.)

....

.

.

2.000,000, 7 J'ne & Dec. 1S77
880,000, 7 .May «to Nov 1872

Cousoldnted_($5,000.000) Loan
Camden and Atlantic ($983,000;:
1st Mortgage

2d

]. ...1

.; 1,180,950' 7 April &’Oct 1870
\ 000,000! 7 I Jan. & July lb70

Dollar Loans
Dollar Loan.....

do
do

!

i
400,000! G
■

i

! Erie and Northeast

i

;

convertible

do
do
do
do

*

•

3,000.000 7 ]May & Nov. 1870 100^ 101
103
4,000,000; 7 M'ch & Sep 1879

i

Sterling convertible
($149,000):

J1S70. j.

200,000 0

!

2d Mortgage
i
Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000): (
let Mortgage
j
Burlington 'A Missouri ($1,902,110) : ;

1st

:

i

Mortgage

1st Mortgage
Central of Ac to Jersey
1st Mortgage
do
2d

1

•3d
41h
51 h

q(-,q)l 7 .Feb. & .Aug -1805
•1805
0

Mortgage Bonds
•
Buffalo* N. Y. and Erie ($2,095,00018

Camden and Amboy

j

j

Mortgage

1st
2d

150,000 0 May A Nov. 1871
■
1
; 1805

f

do

Sinking Fund Bonds
Boston, and Lou:dl ($-100,000':

84

|1894

Pailway ($22,370,082):

Erie

& Julyi’W-’TO!.
.

300,000! 7 Jan. Sc July 1803

—

'1880

'

734,000! 7 Feb. & Aug.1376

—■

589,500: 6 jFeb. & Aug! 1877

»

General Mortgage ...
Bonds corn*, into pivf.

- -

May & Nov. 1875
do
[1864

|

,

& Oct.,1885

do

,

.

.

)

do

«

;

000,000! 7 j
2d section
| 1st,
do
do
I Eastern, Mass. ($1,798,000):
420.000! 5 Jan. <fc July 1872
} —J Mortgage, convertible
789,200, 0 Feb. & Aug 1S74
|
I
do
do
!
j East Pm u sylvan ia ($598,000):
#.
j —J
Sinking Fund Bonds
| 598,000j 7 ApT & Oct.11883
!
j Elmira A IkiMiamsport ($1,570,000): j
j !.
,i
j
j lnt Mortgage
j 1,000.000) 7 Jan. & July|1873
1

J'no & Dec.. 1367
MY.h& Sep 1885

1.000,000) <5
MlO.OOui 0

Blossburg ami darning ($150,000):
Mortgage Bonds
Boston, Cone. A Montreal(%1,050.000):;
1st. Mortgage
I i
Mortgage.

1st

I

! S

:

—

i

& Oct. 1800
& Nov. 1878

iiio.OOO! 6 !
2,500,000) ti [ApT
11
l,225.00(t. 7 ; Jan.
483,000; 7 ;
!
!

Mortgage.

let

I

July 1883
.

&

•c
^

....

1870

•

iug.

ijDetroit. Monroe c(* Toledo ($734,000):
—:j 1st Mortgage—
....
i
jDubugut and Sioux City ($000,000):
j | 1st Mortgage, 1st section

| 1,128.500| 0 Jan. & July 1875

Beliefordain e (§1,745,000):
1st

1870
1881

do
do

|i

i-

j
:

g&l

the out stand-j g

total,

« 1 FRIDAY.

«

($3,500,000) :
$2,500,000 7
1st Mortgage, convertible.
2d
do
....j 1,000,000] 8

—j

:

1882

do

1,000,000) 0 JaAp JuOc 1807

;

1855

do
do

i

tJ’nc & Dec. IS96
i
i
ApT Sc Oct. 1877

Consolidated Bonds
! 13,858,000, 7 j
Atlantic A St. Lawrence{% 1,172,000) :i
>
Dollar Bonds
j 988.000j f» Ap’l
Sterling Bonds
;
48-1,0001 0 May
Baltimore and Ohio ($10,112,581):
j
j
do
do
do

^

B.—The sums placed after
name of Company shows the
Funded Debt,

INTEREST.

| Amount I-

N.

Ask’d

Bid.

-

g.OOO.OOOj 7 :Ap'l & Get. 1884
do
1895

Mortgage S'k’er Fund (Bull’, ex

DESCRIPTION.

Detroit and Milwaukee

!

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834

"T

C4

(0/iio)\ 4,000.000j

1st

FRIDAY-

.

*C p

Railroad :
Alexandria and Fredericksburg :
|
1st Mortgage t gold coupons)
! 1|OUO,000 7
Atlantic A (it. Western ($30.<!'.HVKt<)).:
!,.
let Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ta.)
jS2.50n.uiMt; 7
2d
do
do '
♦! 1,000.000; 7
1st Mortmvc, sinking fund. (i\r. F.)j 1,014.000* 7
2d s
do
do °
800,000; 7
1st Mortgage, sinking fund,
7
do ); 4,000,000! 7
2d
do
-

r—

;—

1883

3.500,00( 7 May & Nov ,1915

-

lio
96
J t

95
-...

91
*

•

*

...
.

•

•

...

December 15,1866.]

RAILROAD, CANAL AND

MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued).

! Amount
of ioutstaud-

Description.
after the name

‘SSS/lSw the total Funded

Description.

I The

Payable.

mg.

Company shows

I

450,000; 7
200,000 6 Jan.

^650;00^;

110,000 6

6.917.59S'

srdfbctoher, 1883 (renewal) •••
RealE?tat«,S fassumeiVstocks)
B'ds

(assumed debt s)..

a^ftSn.t.'lSSU.couYcrt....
vSSlie«««»mimm :■
Bonus

*

Mortage

....

|7
7

l,0S8,0o0 6 j April &
.

232,000: 6
•

Sinkinir Fund........

;...

!

jFeb. & Aug[

149.400! 6 April & Oet!
!
!
I

339,000; 6 Mar. & Sep.

Mortgage Bonds
Chattel Mortgage...;
nt

Morr>Ri're

M

d<?

:jd

dil

.

VShamokin V. d; TUlUwiite (§791.597) ;

•

18»4
1867
1896

1880

1887
360,00(:;10 April & Oct

do

j! 1st Mortgage..
j [i Tol>.do. Peoria and Warsaw
1st
Mortgage

Toledo Vabash and

General Mortgage..

IVfort~'^~*?

^fcfliYibo&t

300, uuo

?

*

(ffSgandL:Chain.i$3i^m):
Mortgage....
let

Ohio and Mississippi

(s3,6.jO,(iOO).

(§811.500):

225,000

Jan. &

:M6.()ooi

Mortcage, sterling
do *
do
2d
do
do
Peninsula (Chic, di N. IT.);
1st

do

1,150,000 7

1,029,000 7

let Mortgage

Pmiykanid ($16,750,121);

4,980,000

Mortgage

6

2,621,00(1
2,233,8-10

($575,000);

Mortgage

•

Philadelphia ami Erie ($13,000,000);
1st Mortgage (Sunbury A Erie)....
let
do " (general)
do
2d
(genera))]...
•
PhiMeL, Germant. &*Norristown:
Convertible Loan

Philadelphia &■ Reading (§6,900,003);
Sterling Bonds of 1836
:

1861
1,813 -4-S-9

575,000;

...

408,000
182,400
2,850,000
106,000

convertible
Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible
Philadelphia a/ul Trenton ($200,000);

Mortgage

PkMel., miming. <L Baltimore:
Mortgage Loan
PMnrg and Connellsnlle ;

Jan. &

Jan. &

Jan. &

0L>. I

Mortgage
do
do
..

1st Mortgage
2d
do

93

!l

Sterling (£899,900)
Dollar Bonds
Western Maryland;

1870
1875
1872

1st
1st

1877
1881

92

1901

July
July

1807
1880
1870
1871
1880
1880
18S6
1886

do
do

“1st Mortgage
Interest

Feb. & Aug

an’ally
do

April & Oet
July

Jan. &

Feb. & Aug
do

1912
1912
1912
1884

1,000,600

Mcli &

ht Mort

800,000

Jun. & Dec
Mch & Sept

1874
1880

Feb. & Aug
do

1803
1863

wnrmto Valley:
i*t
#

Mortgage
do

937,500
:




400,000
829,GU0i

Jan. & July 1875
Feb. & Aug 1881

590,000

6
.6
6

pan. A JiBv 1882

6

tJMuy

1.0('0,000
1,100,000
325,000

6
6

b

iMay&Nov.! 1876

I

!

Scptj 1872

Meh A

in.

A

i

do

6 |

Julyj 1878 i
1865

do

■

| 1864

6

|jan.

Mortgage

j

750,000

6

[Jan. A July
Jan. A

18'

July

July
;8

Jan, A J illy! 1881

..

Feb. A A uni 1871

600,OCX

Mortgage

Telegraph:
convertible

f

600 006

'

Western Union
1st Mortgage

A July] 1878

April A Oci

600,000

Quicksilver Alining :
do

,

Jan. &■

2,000,000

Mortgage

1883

‘

Jan. A July

1,500,000

’

!

.11

I

j

83

June A Dec
fan. A July

500,000
1

2,000,009!

83

6->j

66

ANov.j 1870

450,000

do

96

t

|

1,000,000

1876

April A Oct | 1876

J

Mortgage

Mortgage*

93

j lStd

July|

750,000

Jan. A

6 Wav A Nov.

Pennsylvania Coal:
1st
2d

do

586,500

Mississippi (Pock 7.) Bridge:
1st

1870

i

| 2,500,000

j 1st Mortgage

.

1868

do

6

3 980,670

1st Mortgage Bone's
Mariposa Mining:

124 X
62

,

Mch A Sept j

1,704,330

miscellaneous:
Amerivhn Dock & Improvement;
Bonds (guar; Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.)
Cincinnati and Covington Bridge :

i

;Mch A ?<-pt. 1870 ;

6

do

1st
2d

7

182,000

Mortgage

1st

Julyj 1878 j

Man. A

|

Wyoming Valley:

do
do

Sept

1885 i

1

-

6

'

Pennsylvania d) New Yotk:

1st

:
-

2,GG7,270j 6

(Pa.):
Mortgage
West Branch and Susquehanna:
Jan. & J ulv

I

|
|

Union

1,438,000

j 1890 |

do

....

3

Improvement
Susquehanna and Tide-Water:
Maryland Loan
Coupon Bonds
Priority Bonds,

1881

iJaApJuOc! 1870 !

'

Mortgage Bonds

2d

6
5
6 ;

414,158: 6

Mortgage Bonds

1st

July! 18SG

Jan. A

6

161,OOOj 6 j

(§3,081,43-1).

1st

1,800,000

May A Nov.' 1870

752,000] 7 !Jan. A July I860

Monongahtla Navigation:

101

1881

A Whitehall....
letMort. Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) .

do

96

611,000

1st Mortgage (North Branch)
'Schuylkill Navigation j

1890
1890
1880

Mortgage

j 1890

800,000

\

800,000

1890

*

Jan. A July! 1871
’ ; 1877
do

1,699,500j

Bonds

Loan of 1871.
I 0111 ol 1884

400,00(

May & Nov.

(Watertown A Rome)

I

(>8-’71
1875

ulv

^

do

6

2,000,WIO
4,375,(HH!

Morris.

400,000
340,000
500,000

“mndand Burlmgton ($3,257,-472) ;
1st

do

<> Jan. A

2,350.509

Bonds

Lehigh Navigation:

1S79

do

■'

500,000

Erie of Pennsylvania:

May. & Nov.

Mch & Sept

i'w-und Ogdens. ($1,00908) ;
gage (Potsdam & Watert.)

v

175.000
25,1 HXt

Mortgage
Hudson;
Mortgage, sinking fund

i

800,000

***

:

1st

250,000
140,000

JstMort. Saratoga

.....

April A Oct

596.000
200,000

Delaware and

1888
1888
1S76

WMlaer & Saratoga consolidated:
bl Mort, Rensselaer &
Saratoga .

j

850,000

Preferred Bonds

j

1,000,0)0

July' 1-7:3
April A Gel | 1818

4,319,52('

Chesapeake and Delaware;
1st Alert gage Bonds
Chesapeake and Ohio:
Maryland Loan
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed

July

200,000

—

Jan. A

554,908

guaranteed

;103)$

i

Feb. A

399,300

...

,,

Jan. &

5,200,001
5,160,000
-2,000,000

'

L...,

-Vu;.' !- 1875

600,OOo

Delaware. Division:

do
do

Semi

July 1883

May A Nov. j 1876

!

Bonds

I 84

do
do

Mortgage

,

1865

.

twAina and Columbia:

do

Jan. A

...

Canal

April & Oct
Jan. & July

60,000

500,000

Convertible Bonds

Mortgage

July' (

550.6(Ki

PhUadtljJiia (§962,300).

1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon
2d
do
.registered
Western (Mass.) (6,269.520):

119

1867 i

Jan. A

..

k

1861

A Dee

1,500,000

1st Mortgage—

[j Westchester

7 iJune

2.000.000

WVerm. Cen. W Verm, di: Can. Bonds
11 Warren (§600,000) ;
j| 1st Mortgage (guarant eed)

:

1st Mortgage
Mne and Mississippi (W. Union);
1st Mortgage
•.
(
Mritan and Delaware Bay:
..
lit
Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do

;

{[Vermontand Massachusettst
—

July! 1863
186

do

150.0U0: 6

do

2d

1-869.

516,000

letMort. (Turtle Cr. Div.)
Fb%Ft.W. and Chic.:-($12,573,500)

Bern Branch : 1st mortgage.
nlliburg and Steubenville:

|(Vermont Central ($3,500,000)

July

do

564,000)
200,000

I

500,000| 6 (Jan. A

do

do

1.000,00(i! 7 April,& Oct
5,000;00ui 6 April & Oct
4,000,000 6 April & Oct
183,000 6

Convert ible
Troy Union ($080,000);
Mortgage Bonds

!! York d- Cumberland (North. Cent.)
1st Mortgage
!Jan. & July,
i02^| 103 11 2d
do
April & Oct! 1875 97^) 97)* i| Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds

976,800

Dollar Bonds,

j!

3t•(),()(hi| 7 JApr. & Get.! 1885
650,000)'7 piav& Nov.| 1875
200,000 7'(Mar. A Sep.' 1582

i
'

1st Mort gage

IMch & Sept

1,521.000

Sterling Bonds of 1843

Toledo

91/*'j

,

•

2d

do
do
do
Dollar Bonds oflS-19

jFeb & Aug.

1894

June A Dec

1,391,000 7

Hi i (§6.653.868);

"

do

July

April & Oct

.

T8r»U

July;

bUO.UOOj 7 |Jan. & July

July

Jan. &

Jan. &

1,150,OOOj 7

1st Mortgage
do
2d
3d
do

May & Nuy.

416.000

let

fancy and

350,000’

I

&Sept! 1566

....

1874

Jan. & Jul v
do

,

hmm:

do
do

& Oct j

I

900,0001 7 iFeb. & Aug; 1865
1581
1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash)
2.500,000! 7 j
du
-.••-)
;j
1st do (extended)
l,U00,000j 7 jMay&Nov. 1875
i
2d
do
(Toledo and AVabasli)
1875
do
!
2d
do
(Wabash and Wes tern).. 1,500,0001 7 j1865
152.355J 7 |
do
•I
Sinking FuiVcl Bonds <T. W. & «V.)
1S74
92)8'! 92X-i.j Eijhipmeut bonds...
116 ii Troy and Boston (§1,452,000) :
300.00(11 7 Jan. & July IkS’V

..

1870

{April & Oct 1876

(!

.

U.)

Mortgage
M/ic, (S. W. Brand']:
Mortgage, guar, by Mo

do
do

| April

2,900.000
750,000

let

;
do
2d
do
, sterling
PhUa. and Balt. Central

7

1,191,000

Jan. & Jitlv
Feb. A Aug

1,139,000

Mortgage........
2d
do
( 'v .D.).... .....
imago & Home (§'550.000).
'
1st Mortgage (guar, by R. w. &
1M

Omjoand Syracuse

7
7

100.000

1867

jJune 25 Dee

63,0001 7 jMch

J Thud Avenue (N. Y.):

l,500.00o! 6 Jan. & July
do
fenar.byB.&O.KK.) 1,000.001, 6
do
6
( <1«
du ) 500.001!!i 6 I
OUO.UtK i
do
(not guaranteed')

($380,000):

1,400,000 7

Indianapoliu§«-0,000);
Mortgage, convertible

'

(

Jul) 1875

•••■ 200,0(X»I 7 [Jan. & July! 1S71
I

j, Terre Hattie d;
—!! 1st
91

i

,000.000) 5

! Syra. Bing.andX.Y. pM,595,191):
j! 1st Mortgage

•

U92

700,000) 7 j Feb. & Augj 1872
1866
[Jan. & July;i 68-74 !j
:
Various.*’
1,070, OOOj 5

,

jI
Lp,;l
)*11™Mortgagen \
{1 1st
100

1894

1,290,000 ; 7 j Jan. &
500,000 ; 7

IstMortgagc

100

19(H)
iM.iy A Nov : 1875

201,500)

do

?ioi !i
)i

73-’78j

6 Jan. & July

2.500.000!

•

May & Nov. j

Julv!

1893 .... I
loos | os

July

7 :Jan. &

•

(guar. b\ bam mou)

Yricichand Worcester

1st

M

1891

800,000! 7 Man. A
h 1
‘i
98j,000j 7 jl'Vb. A Aug!

1st, Mortgage
Second Arenvt:
1st Mortgage

Mh-Westem J irrjinia ;

let
2d
3d

3*

J 7 April A Oct. j

r..

South ('a rot in a :

,1,500,0001 6 |Jail. & July! L'red. |
2,500,000; 6 jJan. & July 1885
50,0001

r

1st Mortgage (tax tr« c>
'Sandusky and Cincinnati:
1st Mortgage (extended)

;
i

Oct1 1875 J
I 1886

Vi)fth Carolina;
Mortgage Loan

Mortgage (Sd.OOO llOU).
Pennsylvania (§3,Hk>, »bo) •

do

[St. Paul A: rat ifitc of Minn ;

'May&Nov! 1872 j

Mkrn&w Hampshire ($151.400) ;
Plain Bonds

let

1
I

do

7

1,700,000; 7

Mortgage

2d

1S76 jllO

do

jFeb. & Aug
i,aou,oo«, rj
do
|

1.000.000: 7

1st

I

1887 I
! 9j
L8N3
1883
1876 1103 '106
1S70 jilt)

do

I 71

!

lit Mortgage. • ■ • • • • •
o i n
Jcrtotfn Central (h*11’ *1•

i

2d

2,925.0()(»; 6 June * Dec!
165,000 6 ‘May&Nov !
663.000 6 !
do
j
1,398,000 7 j Feb. VAuc
....

preferred

Novi L9S3 j 9D.V 95>;{! Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark:

l,000,(HHi; 7

Consolidated Mortgage

let

M

_

7 Semi an’ally 1894

2,800,000

income
2d
do
iSt. Louis. Jacksonville <1: Chicago:

1869
Feb. & Augj 1873
!
“
Jan. A July! 1885

6 ’May &

3.000.0(H)!

% General M^tsagc,

j

t

$500,000 7 Man. A July!
1

Ia>nis. Alton ifc T. II. ($6,700,Out)); 2.2(H),OOt.i

1stMortgage
2d Mortgage

5

& July ji 1868

I

485,000 6

AforKi^e

| St.

300,0001 7,!Jan. & JulyjlSTG
'M’cli A Sen'll

Northampton

let

.s ^

Debt.

jiailroad:

ah Mortgage

4i

*CJ ^

ofoutstanding.
g ! Payable.
the total .Funded

|

Railroad:

""

‘

% 2

Amount

placed after the name

sums

Debt.

'

FRIDAY

INTEREST.

FRIDAY

INTEREST.

o/i

771

THE CHRONICLE.

!May & Nov.

187Q !

1878 j

lo67

i

THE CHRONICLE.

772

[December 15,1555

RAILROAD, CANAL. AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
j

j Stock \1

Companies.

Marked thus (*) are leased
and have fixed incomes.

roads, \

out-

’standing

Dividend.

Companies.
Marked thus (*) are leased
and have fixed incomes.

FRIDAY.

■

Periods.

iLast

p’d.

(Bid. Ask.

! Stock
roads, j
outIslanding.

Dividend.
Periods.

FRIDat

Last p’d.

BiT"
Atk

•

Railroad.
Alton and Sr Louis*
Atlantic & Great Western
do

New York and New Haven
New York and Harlem
do
preferred

-

100j

Oct...l%

j Quarterly.

50

....

....

NewYork

50. 1,010.000

preferred

106,13.188.902 April and Oct Oct, ...4
Washington Branch*... 100; 1,050,000 April and Oct Oct .*5
Bellefontaine Line
loo. 4,434,250 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3
Belvidere, Delaware
• • •!(•'>.
907,112

.

....

100j
501

Berkshire*

Bloseburg and Corning*

600,000
250,000

VcY.7.i% ;;;■

Quarterly.

June A Dec.

;i2o

ProviueneeABostonlOO) 1,755.281) Quarterly.

795.360'

Oct ,.3

99

iT
100“

3,068,400; May and Nov Nov..4 ’

4,518,900

Quarterly.

Oct.. .2

2.469,307

3%' 38'

2,363,600; Jan.and July July. .6’
Ogdensburg A L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000
do
preferred. 100 • 356,400; Apr. and Oct Oct.. .4

10>,

iiiijji".

.

Mississippi
100 19,822,85'0
do
preferred. .1001 2,950,500! January.
Jan.. 7
Old Colony and Newport
100) 4,8 9,760 Jan. and July July. .4 ns*:
” and
Aug Aug.. 4
'
Oswego and Syracuse
50| 4S2.4(K) Feb.
Pacific of Missouri
100) 3,581,598
j Panama (and Steamship)..
100j 7,000.000 Quarterly. Oct. ..6
Pen usylvania
50!20,(HMi.000 May and Nov Nov. .4 54 S"
!
54k
Philadelphia and BnltimoreCentlOO
218,100)
Aid
50 5,069,450 Jail, aud July Jan. ..3
....)! Philadelphia and Erie*
! Philadelphia auu iiuauiuf,
imimti^miu and Reading
u'j
50 .20,240,673; Jf-n. it it d July ,Jau.,, 5
129%! Phila., Germant’n, «fc Norrist’n* 50) 1,476,300 Apr. and Oct|(>ct...5
Quarterly. ,0ct...5
j Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 501 8,973,300
1 Pittsburg andConnellsville..... 50) 1,774,623
1 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO 9,312,442 Quarterly.
[Jan.. 2#
1 Portland.
Saco. <fc Portsmouth. 100j 1,500,000 June and Dec [June. 3 " j 103
28% Providence and Worcester—. .100 1,700,000 Jan. and July!July. .4
1ST
Raritan and Delaware Bay
100 2,520,700
Rensselaer & Saratoga consol. .100
800,000) April amiOct jOct. ..4#

••

•

5

July..4

50| 3,150,150

::::

June.2%

500; 1,S30,0(X) Jan. and July •July. .4
100; 4,0'6,97! Jan. and July -July. .5
100i 3,160,000 Jan. and Julv -July.. 5
100j 4.500.000 Jan. and J uly July. .5

Boston and Lowell
Boston and Maine
Boston and Providence
Boston and Worcester

....

i

100: S,500,000

Boston, Hartford and Erie

....

....

.

Nay.

50; 1,500,000 Jan.and July July, .4

t...

Ninth Avenue
.ILK)j
Northern of New Hampshire.. .100'
Northern Central
50|
North Missouri
100
North Pennsylvania
Norwich and Worcester
'.100

100i 2,404,000

Atlantic & St. Lawrence*
Baltimore and Ohio

100 5.000.000
Irregular.
50; 5,085,050 Jan. and July

Ohio and

..

131

....

...

146

Broadway & 7th Avenue
1 0; 2,100,000 Jan. and July July.. 5
100j 492.150
Brooklyn Central
Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3%
Brooklyn City..
366,001)
Brooklyn City and Newtown .100;
Jan. and Jnlv J uly.. 3#
Buffalo, NewYork, and Erie* .100'
Feb. A Aug. Aug. .5
Buffalo and State Line
100'
1*9
Camden and Amboy
100! 4,5 l3,y00 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 5
50i 3 78,455
Camden and Atlantic
do
do
preferred., 50; 682,600
<>oj 081.665 -Jan. and July -July .3)6
Cape Cod
Catawissa*
50 1,150.000
28
do
■)0{ 2.200,00.1 Feb. A Aug Oct...
preferred
.1(10 I0.605.94L
2% 125
Central of New Jersey
Quarterly.
Cheshire (preferred)
lOOj 2,085,925 Jan. and July July. .2% 63
Mar and Sep. Sep.. .5
116
112
113
i
Maraud Sep. Sep.. .0
pr*139
1*3
May A Nov. Nov. 5
.UK)! 4,090.00(1!
Chicago and Great Eastern.
Jan aad July July. .5
Chicago, Iowa and Nebrask;
Chicago and Milwaukee*
100! 2,250,000)
55 )a 55%
11
Chicago and Northwestern .... .100 13,Kin,TU!
dune A Dec. i)ee ’66.7 79
79V
do
do
prof. .100:
April and Oct Oct ...5 1U4X
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific.1U0|
Cincinnati and Chicago Air LineiOn
!
Apr and Oct. Oct.. .5
Cincinnati, Hamilton A; Davtou.100|
::::
470,0001
Cincinnati,Hami Pen <fc Chicago.loul
....

••

....

•-

.

...

.

...

a

....

...

...

j!
!|

....

'm4

Cincinnat i and Zanesville...... -10!*i 2,000.000 j
Cleveland, Columbus, A Ciucin.iooj 6.000.000 Feb. and Aug

Mahoning*
50' 1,000,on:;. May A Nov.
Cleveland, Painesvillo «fe Aelita.1001 5,000,000 Jan. and July

Cleveland A

7.

50j 5,403,910

■Tail, and -Jnlv

....

lot.

Housatonic

3,000,00(

100

do
preferred
Hudson River

100
ICO

McGregor Western*

p 0
p,o
50

do
do
1st pref. f0
do
do
2d pref.. 50
Manchester and Lawrence
1(0,
p 0
Memphis and CiiarFeton
Michig in Central
p,0

do

do

2d

jiref.160

Milwaukee and St. Paul.'
p 0
do
preferred
1(0
Mine II111 A Schuylkill Haven.. 50
Morris and Essex
5.0
Nashua and Lowell
p 0

Naugatuck

p0
1(0

New Bedford and 'Taunton
New Iia\en. N. Loud., A Ston .1(0
New Haven and Northampton..ICO

New Jersey
New London Northern
few York Control




100

.

:

.

1

Quarterly.

.

.

Miscciianeous.

Jau.and July
Feb.and Aug
Mar. A Sep.
Jan.and July
Ian. and-July

July. .3)$
Aug. .5
Sep .4
■Tulv. .3
•J

Quarterly/

...

.

uly. .4

Oct...

85

•

....

...

•

-

•

....

3.0S2,0()i
1,014.001
1,000.00:

i

.

3,50! (,00<
600,0( )•
1,P'!(.U(K
500.00!

738,53^

10<i
1()()
100

Cent ral

i

Quarterly.
Feb

67J*j

'lef..

68

Apr and Oct

;

....

....

Cumberland

*

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain
Spruce Hill

.!!!! i
1
....

112
Tan. and July July. 5
Feb. and Aue Aug. .3% 81%
Feb. and Aug Aug. .5
60
9 8%
Feb. and Aug Aug. .4
Feb. and Aug Aug. .3)4 90
..

"eb. and Augj Aug3%$.
‘•lav and Nov Nov. .4
Feh. .and Amr Allcr

(Brooklyn)

Metropolitan

52%
07%

39
22

lOu

New York..

50

115.;
112%!
82

70
99
95

54%
67%

58
*

*

*

*

85
125

7

Decj-Tune.4

j

Jan...5

51

Oct... 5
Jan..10
Jan...5

140

65#

63#

Aug
Aug
July..4

120

Boston Water Power

145

-July..5

1,000,000 May and Nov May

July

4,000, OfX)
100 1,000.000

riean
100 12.000.000
United Slates
100 3,000,000 •Tan. and July
Western Union...
-...100)28,450,006 Jan. and J nly
Western Union, Russ. Ex..100 10,000,000
Quarterly.
Express.—\ da ms
100 10,000,000
Quarterly.
American
500 3,000,000
Quarterly.
Merchants’ Union
100 20,000,000
United States.
100 6,(XX),one
Quarterly.
~

Wells, Fargo A Co

T?ansit.—Central American
.(Nicaragua

Steamship.—Atlantic Mail

46# 47#
28#

26’

Joly....
Jan. 2..

49#
96#

Aug. 3..
Aug. 3..

63

“

75

Aug. 3.

00

100 .10,000.006
100

4,000,000
100 1,000,000
100

Pacific Mail
100
Union Navigat ion
100
Trust..—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25
New York Life A Trust... .100
Union Trust...
100
United States Trust
100

4.000,000

Quarterly.
Quarterly.

107

GO#

Dec.. .5

20,000,006
103#
2,000,000 Quarterly. Dec...5 130
Jan. aud-July ;) illy..4
1,000,000
1;000,00(- Fel). and Aue Aug.... 106’
1,000,000 Jan. and July July .4
1,000,000 Jan. and July -July 5
12# m
Mining.—Mari posa Gold
100‘! 5,097,600
31#
Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 5,774,400
25i 1,000,000
Quartz Hill Gold
45# I #Ji
Quicksilver
100)10,000,000 Jau.and July Jan.. 5
Rutland Marble
25i 1,000,000 MayandNov. Nov 6
..

•’eh. and Aug
Varand Sen.

j Aug. .5

Sep...4

[24,801,OOOjTfeb. and Aug, Aug. .3

i;?0

150

2.8(H), (XXI

106

Brunswick City

125

150

750.600 Jan. and July July.. 5
50
Improvement.—Canton 100.(16* pd) 4,500,000

) Telegraph.—Am
j

6,000,006

2,000.000 Jan. and July
5,000,000
50 3,200,000
Quarterly.
50 1,250,000 Jan. and July
lo 1,000,000 Jan. and July
100 2,175,000 Apr. and Get
100 l.*':*().(WH' Feb. and Aug
25 2,000.000 Feb. and Aug
20 1,060,000 Jan. and July
50
644,000
20 1,000,000
50 4,000,000 Jan. and July

Williamsburg

.4

3y
.4

Citizens
Harlem

Manhattan

!

Aug Aug.
Jan.and July July.

Wyoming Valley
Gas.—Brooklyn
Jersey City & Hoboken

....

April.3

May and Nov \?ov.

June and

I

A n<*

1,010.061
r00.(KM

*25) 1,500,000 Feb. and Aug Aug..3%
50 2,(KK 1,000
fo 1,* 00,000 Jan. and Dec. Dec...4

Wilkesbarre

2,400,0()i Feb. and
3.708.2()i

Coal.—American
Ashburton
Butler
i
Consolidation
!

:::>9S !

2,029,770
6,586.1.3; Mar. and Sep ISep .3s
4,051,74- Mar. and Sep 1 ^ep ..35

3.014.00!

.....

....

I

5,000,000
PV

.

....

June and Dec Dec. .4
lan.and -July •July. .2
1.852,715
Quarterly. Aug. .2
1.109,59 Feb. and Aug Aug. .2
5,527,871 Feb. aud Aug Aug. .3)3

1,000,00C
5,312,725
6,9'2,S(i(
Michigan Southern andN. Ind..p0 9,381,8()(
do
do
guaran.R0 1,((89,70!

Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienH 0
do
do
3 st pref. P0

.

*

’

Maine Central
Marietta and Cincinnati

.

....

April aud Oct

2,800.01)(
1,500,001

10

2,989,090

....

820, (KT
1.180,01.(1 Mav and Nov

150

i'i

.

Hartford and New Haven

Macon and Western

3'#'
••••)

May. .7

....

1

•

iFeb. A Aug.
lot j 8,535.760 Feb. A Aug.
50
6(K),0()0 Feb. A Aug.
Fitchburg
1(’0| 3,540,000 fan. and July
loo 4,366.8'lU Mav aud Nov
Georgia
Hannibal and St. Joseph
.Kit, 1,900. OOP
do
do
pief. ..loo 5,233,83!

Louisville,New Albany A Chic.lt 0

Annually.

....

..

50
50
p 0

*

....

100!

Dong Island.
Louis\ ille and Frankfort
Louisville and Nashville

1,700,000

•...

Dubuque and Sioux City
mo 1,673,641
do
do
prof.. .,1()()l 1,987.351 March
Eastern, (Mass)
looj 3,155.00(1 j Jan. and July
Eighth Avenue, X. Y*
100 1,000,060 j Quarterly.
500,060!! Feb. aud Aug
Elmira, Jefferson. A < 'auandagualOOl
Elmira and Williamr-port*..
500,0U(l j Ian. and July
50j
do
do
pref... 5Uj
j inn. and July

Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50
do
do
pref. 50
190,750
niinois Central
1C:(> 23,374,400
Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50j 1,689,90(1
Indianapolis and Madison
100
412,000
do'
do
pref.. lio
407,9(0
Jeffersonville
r>0 1,997,.31.9
Joliet and Chicago*
.leO 1,500,006
Kennebec and Portland (new)..100
Lackawanna and Bloom sburg.. 50
835. (KM
do
do
5(K ),(H)i
pref. 50
Lehigh Valley
;
50 6,632,251
Lexington and Frankfort
.r0
511,60
Little Miami—
50 3,572,40;
Liit.tle Schuylkill*
50 2,646,10'

2,233,376

2.300,000

....

Detroit and Milwaukee
1001 952,350
do
do
pref.....109 1.500,00(1

Erie
do preferred
Erieand Northeast*

‘

1,091,900 Jan. and July July..5

....

1,514,3(K‘ i Jan. and J uly
1.591,100 •Jan. and J uly
1,582.169
2,384,931
Delaware*..
50
406,132 Jan. and -Iulv
Delaware. Lacka., A Western .: 50j 10,217,050 Jan. and July
Des Moines Valley
100; 1,550,050

.

500,(KH)| April and Oct; Oct. .3
8((0,000| April and Oct Oct.. .3

ji

..

500.000)

Coney Island and Brooklyn—.ion
Con’ticut and Passumpsic. pref.100!
Connecticut River
100)
Covington and I.exingtou
100
Dayton and Michigan'
100

■

...

50j 4,8-11,600 April and Oct
Quarterly.
5oj 1.490,800 •Ian. and July
50 1.500,000j ■:ay and N ov
Jan. and July
loo

Columbus and Xenia*
Concord
Concord and Portsmouth

100
Rome. Watertown & Ogdensb’gl00
Rutland and Burlington ...
100
St. Louis, Alton, & TerreHautelOOj
do
do
pref.100
St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chic*100
Sandusky, and Cincinnati
100)
do
do
pref.100
Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarkKK)

393,073 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 8
802,571
100 1,029.(100
Saratoga and Hudson River
Sayannah A Charleston
Id' 1,G'0,000 ..
J j Schuylkill Valley*
50
676,050; Jan. and July!July..2#
lio’ 110% Second Avenue (N. Y.)
.Aug. .4
100
650,000 Apr. and Oct
Nov.. 4
869,450 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2
....;) Shainokin Valley'& Pottsville*. 50
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
July..5
100
750,000 Quarterly.
Jan. ’65 0 91 M 9i% : South Carolina
lOdj 5,S19,27
M3#- 114
Oct. ..8
; Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100) 1,200,130
Oct.. .2%)
! Terre Haute A Indianapolis
50 1,929,150 Jan. and July July. .6
i Third Avenue (N. Y.)
July. .5
100j 1,170,000 Quarterly.
222
Nov 4
I Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw...100 1,700,000
jJ
1st pref.100 1,7(X),0(X)
do
do
•July..3%
jl do
do
2d pref.100 1,(HX).000
I i Toledo, Wabash and Western..
•July. .3
45)4
50j 2,442,350
do
do
July. .4
984,700 May and Nov Nov. 3% 69
])referred. 50
;
Troy and Boston
100
607,111
Troy and Greenbush*
100
274,400 Juneand Dec Dec ..3%)
; Utica and Black River
Jan.. .3
.100; 811,660 Jan. and July Jan ..4
Vermont and Canada*.
1601 2,860,000 Juneand Dec Dec ..4 ,101
July.. 5
....jl45
i Vermont and Massachusetts... .100)
2,860,000 Jan. and July -Tuly..l% 60
j
i Warren*
50) 1,408,300 -Tan. and -Tilly July..3
Western (Mass)
.1001 5,627,700 Jan. and July July..5 145 146
i
Western Union (Wis. & Ill.)...
i Worcester and Nashua
Mar 7*'..
75 1,141.650 Jan. and July July.! 5}
1
111
Jnlv. 4
-Jan... 2
Wrightsville.YorkA Gettysb’g* 50
317,050 January
...J!
Canal.
July
...J1 Chesapeake and Delaware
June.3
25 1,575,963 June
Aug.. 2 X
251 8,228,595!
! Chesapeake and Ohio
25
56
Delaware Division
50 1,633,350! Feb. and Aug Aug. .3
July. M/i
150# 154
100 10.000,nOOJ-Feb. and Aug Aug. .8
Feb..4
72% j! Delaware and Hudson
85
I1 Delaware and Raritan.
Feb.. 3%
100| 2.298,4"0 Feb. and Aug Aug. 10
Aug. .5
j Lehigh Navigation...
50) 5,104,0501 May and Nov Nov.. 5 56
iii
Morris (consolidated)
•1 uly.. 3
10!
10 1,025.000)Feb. and Aug Aug 5
Nov. .3%
;. 100 1,175,000! Feb. and Aug Aug. .5
‘
.....)! do preferred
56
58
Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,90S,207 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 6*'. 24#
do
68
!
Feb. and Aug Aug..6
preferred. 5<(j 2,888,805
13# hs
Oct. ..3
Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50) 2,051,000
Union
- 50
2,787.000
West Branch and Susquehanna. 109 1,100,000 -Jan.and July Tan...5
Nov. .4
122
Oct... 4
50
MX
Sept. .4
750,000 Quarterly.
122%,, Wyoming Valley
'

Cleveland and Pittsburg
Cleveland and Toledo

100

Saratoga and Whitehall

Troy. Salem & Rutland

.

1866.]

December 15,

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

list.

petroleum stock
nararaond

G’t

Uuion
1 United

Companies.

jjtna

Albany

& Boston

Manhattan

■

I73

Allouez

Amygdaloid
Arnold
Atlas
Aztec

:

i
!

Canada
Central

* '

.

Concord....

61 50 )'..
,
4

OOjI

2

Dacotah

Delaware
Dev a

Hope

6 00

15

45

00‘48 00
I 1 00

Dorchester

Eagle River
Edwards

Empire

—
—

Evergreen

10 50

Bluff

Excelsior

...

j St. Louis

6% 43 Off

j St. Mary's

I

171*13 00:14 00
i>

Hilton

2)

OUi

Hudson
Halbert
Humboldt

3

1

Hungarian
Huron

19

Indiana
Isle Roy ale*
Keweenaw

10

,

1 50 2 131

135

00.40 W);

i

1

....s

33
5

t Capital $500,000, in 100,( 00
Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares,
t Capital $200,000, fn 20.00:* shares.
^" Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in

*

shares.

20,000 shares.

GOLD AND SILVER
Bid.

Companies.

Alpine

10
10

..par

American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific

50j
—

Consolidated Gregory.. .100
Corydon
25
Crozier
j.. _

10

1

Eagle

10

Echla
First National

—

—

"

Fall River

Gilpin

8

—

5

Rocky Mountain

—

20

People’s...

Plucnix t Br’klyn. 50 i
Reliei
50

1,000,000

500,000;

150,000
150,000

25j
25)

200.000
150.000
150,000

250,000

50

400,000
287,400

Williamsburg City.50
Yonkers & N. Y
100

50

53

150,000
500,000

..

i 16

477,915!

Bid. Askd

C O

Foster Iron

1

par

^ake Superior Iron
Bucks

County Lead

Benbo Lead

5

....

.

Manhan Lead

....

100
5
_

.

.

.

Fnenix Lead
Iron Tank

storage




Long Island Peat

_
_

—

Tudor Lead

Raqrinaw. L. K. A M..
Wallkill Lead
Wallace Nickel
Rutlaud Marble

.

25 j
10

Commission Merchants

•

•

•

•

—

Russell File
Savon de Terre

—

2 S5

i’26

—

2 95

1 30
3 10

25
—

5

—

....

....

July ’65 .10

....

July '65 .5

•

•

....

.

.

Julv ’60 .5
Julv ’60.. S

....

.

....

July "60 .6
July ’65 .5
July ’66 .6
.

....

....

.

....

....

....

....

.

Aug. '06.. .5
J my ’66 . .5

.

....

92X

,

.

Ju'v ’60

Julv ’06
Jul v ’66

....

.5
.5

.

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

'

.5

.

....

•

....

.

•

•

•

•

•

♦

.

....

•

.

•

•

.

.

....

•

•

•

....

....

....

....

....

Feb. and Aug. Feb. '66. .4
Jan. and July. July '60 .5
do
July ’60 . .5

li'5
....

....

115%
....

ADVERHSI^G,

| Steamship Companies
Insurance.

Commercial Cards,

Bid. Askd

;.

....

.5
Julv *66
4
Julv ’60. ..5
.

ADVERTISEMENTS.

TO

INDEX

—I

..25

.

.

a line for each insertion
advertisement is continued

5

—

•

The rate for advertising in the Chronicle is 15 cents
A discount on this rate will be made when the
for three months or more.

—|

par

Julv ’60

•

.

July'00 ..5

Feb. and Aug. Auc. ’66. .5
K«b. and Aug. Aug. ’60...2
151.539 Jan. and July. July ’06 ..5;;
do
IJuly *66.. .5!
550.301

TERMS FOR

—

1

Copake Iron

•

....

50

—

.tPAyiKS.

.

.

ADVERTISEMENTS

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
companies.

.

.

•

"———

.

.

.

1

150.000

26j

.

....

.

200,000
200,000
200,000

25!

.

....

u!v’66.3j^:

50i1,000,000
50' 200,000
25!

5

.5
A
.4
.5
.5
.5

.

200,000

100j

.

.
.

do
* Julv ’65 .5
188,1701
J
do
457,258j
do
July'66.3X
208.9691
Feb. and Aug. Aug. '66. .5
206.9f
do
Aug. ’66.. 5
150,55 1
138,9( •fan. and July. Aug. '66 .5
; Feb. and Aug. Feb.’06.3>;
1.277,561 i
230,903 [Jan. and July. Julv '66 .5
do
July ’66 ..5
217.-8431

200,000
300,000

100

..

'66
’65
'66
’66
'66
'06

Feb. and Aug. Aug. 66..4
Id an. and July. Jan ’66..5

154
m

1,000,000

25j

3t. Mark’s
St. Nicholas!

do
do
do

194.317!
173,691

200,000

uly ’66

July '66 .5
April- and Oct- Apr. ’66..4

1

350,000
200.000

100!
1001

Rutgers’

20;

Vanderburg

__

200.000

Washington *+....

50

Smith & Purmelee
.Texas

_

separating..

210,000

*66.

July
July
Julv
Jan.
Julv
Julv

do
150.6461
do
216,184
do
235.518
do
811.976!
Jan. and July.
Feb. and Aug.
!, 175.505 |Jan. and July.
do
001.701

150.000
200.000
300.000

20

Cooper

■Tradesmen's

Ophir
Pah Ranagat Cen. Silver
People’s G. & S. of Cal.
25! i Quartz Hill

_

N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100
50!
Niagara
North American*. 50 j
North River..
27
Pacific
25
Park
100

J

V do

1,000,000 1,192.303)
150.000

7%

Sruvvesam

Montank
—
New York
10
—
Nye
—
Oak Hill
Ohio A Colorado G.&S. —

8 85
2 15

211,17?
640,000 1.322.469
228.644 ;
200.000
j

sterling *

25:

Mill Creek
Montana

1 90

Metropolitan * +.. .100;
Montauk (B’iyn). ..50
Nassau (B’klyn)... .50

107.633
150.18'

150,000
200,000

Star

20;

260.264

200,000

United States.

2

*.

Liberty
1 80

150,000
200,000

(B’kly).50
25i1,000.000 1,182,779
100 '500,000 704,303
KM)! 200.000 282,35

Standard

—

Liebig

Church Union.'
—
Columbian G. & S
—
Col. G.& S. Ore separating
Consolidated Colorado... —

100.
25 j

Security *t.

—

LaCrosse

1U

Downieville

90

Kip &■ Buell.

—

*

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

346,- 26
129.644

300.000

Meehan’ <& Trade’. 25j
Mechanics (B’klyn).50j
Mercantile
1001
Mercantile Mut’l*+100
Merchants’
50

Peter

Aug. j Feb.’65 . .0
do
Aug.’66.3^ | ,
do^
j Aug. ’66..5’..

and

161.252

150,000

Washington

—
..

86!

Keystone Silver....

5!

Burroughs

B. & 8. Ore
Gold Hill

par

50:! Hibbard
15; Holman
00 Hope... UN

—

..

10!

...

I Hiawatha

85

—

Ayres Mill & Mining.
Bates & Baxter
Benton
Hob Tail
Boscobel Silver
Bullion Consolidated

30; 1 60

1

50

.6

jJuly ’65

1 S.Ng-: j

138,1661 Feb

280.000

40;

Resolute*

Bid. 1 Askd

Companies.

.107

’65
'July *00
'July *65

100 1,000,000 1.024.762!
25 200,000 195,571 March and Sep,Sep.
30 200,0101 245,984

Republic*

MINING STOCK LIST.

j Aekd'j Gunnell...

.5!

.

150,000

Indemnity
International
Irving

National

4%:

Winthrop

61
..5;

! J uly

201,216!

2007000

New Amsterdam.. 25
N. Y. Equitable 3 35

West Minnesota....
Winona

8

KnowRon

21

Washington

i

..

1 75j 2 00
1 40j ....
2 75 3 30

8

; Toltic
Tremont
Victoria
Vulcan

....; 4 00
7 00 10 00

100

150,000

Manhattan
Market*.

11%

Superior

—

5

1
5%

..

.

Star

1>

Hope

lOOj

Import’ A Traders. 50 j

Long Island
Lorillard*

7 40,

3

Sharon
%
Sheldon A C.olumcian.21
South Pewabic
1
South Side
2
.

nanover

..

.5;.

j July ’66

349.591)

300,000
200,000

50

Lamar
Lenox

12

j j St. Clair
!

200,000

501

Howard.
Humboldt.

Knickerbocker

(]%
8

j Ridge
!'Rockland

m\ —!

Flint Steel River....
Franklin
French Creek
Girard
Great Western
Hamilton
Hancock

.

...

Lafayette (B’klv)..

38 00 i

10

11 Resolute

Everett

.

.

j July ’66

501 200,000 j 207,345!
.100| 2,000,000 2,485,017
252.057!

Jefferson

j 1 Princeton
S, Providence
!Quincy$

50

King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20

5% 3 00; 4 00
3%: 27 00 29 CO

i|Pittsburg & Boston... 5%

Dudley

59

215,079!

. .5 ■
50
Great Western*!. .100 1,000.000!8.177,437 Jan. and July. Julv’66.3)*j
25 200,000 228,128: Feb. and Aug. lAug ’66. .5|
Greenwich
Grocers’
50 200,000 186,17' [April and Oct. j Apr. ’65.. 5j
200,000! 172,818'Jan. and July.'July ’66
Guardian
—
| July *66
Hamilton
15 150.1'OOj 168,860j
■July ’66
Hanover ....'
50 400,000 450.995
I July *66
300.0001 253,214

Hoffman
Home...

50

Petherick

!

;

Harmony (F.&M.)+

7

80 ! Pewabic
!! Phoenix.

70i

Davidson

Gebhard
Germania
Globe

156,008;

$%\

11%
11

Ogima
Pennsylvania *

Dana

5%\ ....T6 00

Native

....I North western
49 75!5o" 00 Norwich

Copper Creek
Copper Falls
Copper Harbor

10 00

18y.
.......

Naumkeag
1
New Jersey Consol... .lu
New York
—
North Cliff
4

....! 7

Caledonia

••••

1%\ ••••!

j Minnesota
National
50;

2 bo

do
•July ’60
do
149,755!May and Nov. 'May
150,000
28 ',309 Feb. and Aug.jAug ’66
200,000
500,000! 592,3941 Jan. and July. |July '66
20u,()00' 195,875 'Jan. and July. j July ’65

150,000 j
200,000

10
25

Firemens Trust..
Fulton
Gallatin.

••••

! 1 50 2 00

s

...

Milton

107

.

....

-•!
....;
••••!

6X(

1 Mesnard

2X1

Boston

■•••'
....

■

1150

.

.

;

1

5

i Merrimac

....17%

Bohemian......

60

....

Bid.jAskd

1%\

.

Meudotat

!

2
4%

Bay State

Medora

-

—

Anita

;

4k>i

1
17

American

....

4^; ...J
5Jtfi ....!

j Mandan

3

Algomah

Madison.

:

10

...

,

.

....

8 60 ! 4

STOCK LIST.

1

i

j

•

10.

! Lafayette
..paid 1
Lake Superior..
1

1 00
25

O

.10*

Companies.

paid 3
2o%

Adventure

....

.10 |
01

;

•

80

r,

Pe’tl’m F’ms.

Bid.1 Askd

•

.

75

.101

Venango (N. Y.)

i

•

.25 !
.10

| United States

Consol
COPPER MINING

Western

0

.

.10

Ryud Farm.
j Second National....
| Shade River
'

;

1

.

12

*y

5
5

.

'

....

..

U

.

| Pit Hole Creek

Rational
Germania
Great Republic

25
70

....

5

& Philadel
N.Y.Ph. &Balt.Cons.
Oceanic

i
25 $300,000! 223,775!Jan. and July.!1
205,970 Id an. and July.
50 200,000 440,003! Jan. and July. [July '06.,. |
American *
50 200,000 213,590jrfan. and July. July '00 ..4
200,000
American Exeh’o. .100
Arctic
50 500,000
1
95 250,000
As tor
300,000
Atlantic (Br’klyn). .50
Baltic
25 200,000
05... 0
Pee km an
25 200,000 320, ill
and Dee.
00..5!
25 300,000 248,392!(June and Aug. j
Bowery
200.000
Feb.
Broadway
25
i Aug. *66. .5!
do
17 153,0001 241,5211
Brooklyn
July '64 .4;
Central Park
10Q 150,000 123,577 Jan. and July I July’60 .10)
378.440
do
300,000
Citizens’
20
Aug. 5 p. s.
70 210,000; 314,787(Feb. and Aug Aug.'60 5:
City
do
250,000! 231,793
100
Clinton
| July'64.3^!
Columbia*
100 500,000 391,913| Jan. and July July '66 .5
do
200,00(0 212,594'
Commerce (N. Y.).. 100
440.870!Fob. and Aug.! Aug. 5 6 .. 5
4 00. (tf)0 j
Commerce (Alb’y).lOO
244,296;
'00
Commercial..
50 200.000 208,893 Jan. and July.! J uly ’65... .5
April and Oct.'Oct.
.5
Commonwealth.. .1001 250,0001
Continental * \
100 600,000' 1,199,978 Jan. and July. July'00 ..7
36 ,970 March and Sep Mar. *64..5|
400,000
Corn Exchange... 50
200,000 168,32 ! Jan. and July. Julv'64..5|
loO
Croton
361,705 April and Get. Oct. *66..5j
Eagle
40 300,000 212,l4)jJan. and July. July'66 ..7*
200.0001
100 200.0001 258,054;
Empire City
** j July '60.. .5;
^ do
Excel si ov
50
140,324!Feb. and Aug.
Exchange
30 150,000 j 230,8 2'Jan. and July. ‘July"66 .5;
Firemen’s
17 204,000
jj' ly 66.3)*/ j..
do
150,000 j 149,024 i
Firemen’s Fund... 10
! July ’65 ,5j.

iEtna

2

•

Las
Sale.

Bid.

—

’ Last paid.

Periods.

Adriatic

.—

N. Y.

First

....

2

Mountain Oil
Natural .<
N. Y. «fc Alleghany ..
New York & Newark...

22!

»l

p

Ivanhoe
Manhattan

10‘

Excelsior

| Dirt.

dividend.

81, 1865.

participating, and (t) Capital, i Assets.
write Marine Risks.

Askd

20

HamiltonMcClintock

Clinton

Dec.

Vnrked thus (*) are

Companies.

j Rid. Askd
iitenWWght
par 10 ....j ....
Bemis Heights
5
10b 3— 4—>
genuehoff Run
85j 5
10,
Bergen Coal and Oil
Bliven....
10j !
Bradley Oil
B ....[ ....
Brevoort
10) —J|Brooklyn
B>
Bachanan Farm
lOi ...j 25
Central
...100; 1 OC, 1 15
Cherry Run Petrol’m— 2
'■
Cherry Run special
5i
Companies.

Oil
Empire City

CHRONICLE.

THE

2 50
5

3 95
5 00

:

770 )

Cordage
Cotton Duck

775
774-75

776 iFire
Life..

-

Navigation

...774-75
741

775

Marine and Inland

776 |

Bankers and Brokers in N.Y. .745-6-74
Bankers and Brokers— South
746
“
“
E-st...
*. 746
“
“
West
7i6
Miscellaneous Financial...
.747-8-74

j
775|

Drugs
Dry Goods
Guano

776 |

Express Company
Holiday Goods

775 |
775 I

Metals

776 I

Railroad Iron.
Stationers....,
Tobacco broker,.

775
746

ro

9

Financial.
..

...

Bonds, Dividends, &c

748

Farm Mills, <fcc
Lawyers (Southern)

746

Miscellaneous.

Corn Shellers,

776

774

THE CHRONICLE.

Bankers and Brokers.

L. P.

Morton

&

Financial.

Edmund

Co.,

13

ary and

Sight

Letters of Credit for Travelers’
L. P.

CEDAR

Use,

AND THE

BONDS.

LONDON,

Available in all the principal towns and cities of

United States

Europe and the East.

NEW

YORK, DECEMBER 10, I860.

Of all denominations
at the full

can

commissions

hundred dollars 'and upwards, 3 per cent.; five
hundred dollars and upwards 4 per cent.: one thou¬

Tay

l H. C. FAHNESTOCK,

fifty dollars and upwards, 2 percent;

upwards, 5 per cent; the commis¬
being payable in stamps.

sions

< EDWARD DODGE,
PITT COOKE.

)

COOKE,

II. H. VAN

|

Cooke

&

Corner Wall ami Nassau

Co.,

Sis.,

Drake

Philadelphia.
Fifteenth

Street,

Opposite Treas. Department,
Washington.
In connection with

our

houses in

NO. 16

ton

Washing¬

House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio,
give particular attention to the purchase,

SALE, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES of
all

issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks,

bonds

and gold,

and to all business of National

Banks.
March 1,1866.

JAY COOKE & CO.

c., Atc.

NEW

Taylor; John Munroe & Co

Jones 8c Westcrvelt,
BROKERS,

Government Securities,
Stocks, Bonds,
and Gold, bought and sold on
COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD
AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED.

NOS. 12 NEW A: 14 BROAD STREETS.

Lawrence

Street, New York.

DRAW ON LONDON AND

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

Allowed

8c

Travellers, avail¬

of Europe,
on

Deposits.

Pott, Davidson & Jones,
BANKERS AND

BROKERS,

(Messrs. Brown Bros. & Co.’s
59 & 61 WALL

building),

new

Co.,

BANKERS,
NO. 16 WALL STREET, N. Y
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
AND OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, Ac.,
bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only.
Deposits received subject to check at sight,
'

Accounts

ed

on

favorable terms.

Interest allowed

on

depos¬

its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quotaons furnished to correspondents.
References : James Brown,
Brown Brothers & Co.; John Q.
ident of the Chemical National

Esq
of Messrs.
Jones, Esq., Pres¬

F L O tJ K

,

(Secretaries.

COMPANY.

>:1,3GG,G99

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1811
The

Company has paid to its Customers, vptottt
present time, Losses a mounting to our
EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS.
For the

past nine years the cash dividends paid to

Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD
One

Hundred and Twenty-one and a

half per cent.
Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based
on the principle that all classes of risks are
equally
profitable, this Company will hereafter make such

year, will be divided to
the stockholders.
This Company continues to make Insurance on
Marine and inland Navigation and Transportation
Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks
on Merchandise of all kinds, Hubs, and Freight.
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or
Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling,
at the Ofiice of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬

TRUSTEES.

GRAIN,

S E E D S

Aaron L. Reid,
Ell wood Walter,
D. Colden Murray,
E. Haydock White,

Joseph Walker,
James Freeland,

as

AND PROV ISIONS.

Samuel Wiliets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
William Watt,

N. L.

Henry Eyre,
Griunell,
E. E. Morgan,
Her. A. Schleicher,
Joseph Slagg,
Jas. D. Fish,
Geo. W. Hennings,
,

Cornelius

McCready,

Daniel T. Wiliets,
L. Edgcrton,

Henry R. Kunhardt.
John S. Williams,

William Nelson, Jr.,
Charles Dimon,
A. William Heye,
Ilarokl Dollner,
Francis Hathaway, Paul N. Snofford.
ELL WOOD WALTER, President
Cl IAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest.
.

C. J. Despard, Secretary.

Hanover Fire Insurance

Blair, Densmore 8c Co.,

COMPANY,
STREET.

No. -45 WALL

January

€OMM I SSI ON

Gelston 8c
BROKERS

Bussing,

10 5

ItlERCIlA NTS,

WASHINGTON

IN

STOCKS, BONDS, AND^GOLD.
KQ, 187 WALh STREET, NEW YORK,

of the net

profits, have amounted in the aggregate to

York N. B. A.




Actuary,

0

pool.

,

Bank; James H.
Banker, Esq., Vice-President of the Bank of Ne>v

|

OFFICE No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK/

anks, Bankers, and merchant* receiv¬

ft

FEATURE,

SHEPPARD HOMANS,

Commercial Cards.

of

Premiums, or on PaidANNUAL CASH INCOME TO

ISAAC ABB ATT,
JOHN M. STUART,

with Banks.
DEWITT C. LAWRENCE,
Mernuer New York Stock Exchange.
CYRUS J. LAWRENCE,
JOHN R. CECIL,
late Butler, Cecil, Rawson & #o.
WM. A. I1ALSTHD.

Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and

an

securing to the beneficiaries Annuities for any num¬
ber of years alter the death of the
assured.
RICHARD A. McCUROY, Vice-Pres‘t

STREET, NEW YORK.

Government Securities.

as

maining at the close of the

Brothers

PALIS, MOBIL G AND

which

cash abatement or discount from the current rates,
when premiums are paid, as the general experience
o underwriters will
warrant, and the nett profits re¬

BANKERS,
27 A: 29 Pine

Policies,

;

W. Cockle, Peoria, Ill.;
Hon. F. E. Spinner, Treasurer U. S. Washington.

A

CASH,

Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866

YORK.

C, Savage, U.S. Appraiser;

BANKERS

AND IN

be used in payment of

INSURANCE

Exchange, Bonds, Notes,

References.—Moses

security.

DIVIDENDS, ANNUAL

BROKERS

STREET,

is consistent with

The Mercantile Mutual

Commission.

Winslow, Lanier & Co.,

as

INSTALMENT

John Cockle & Son,

will be resident partners.
We shall

able

Attention is called to the

Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬
ments made.
Orders Promptly Executed.

PINE

u

BANKERS,

Draft.

3 2

8

Company issues Life Endowment and PaidPolicies, in various forms, and at rates as favor¬

up

BROAD* STREET, NEW YORK,

In Foreign

1, isgg,

'THE ASSURED.

Philadelphia and

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

WINSTON, President.

This

up

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

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

Liberty street.

Casli Assets November

may

Brothers,

STOCK BROKERS AND

New York,

Street,

DYCK,

Assistant Treasurer.

BANKERS.

No. 114 South 3d

F. S.

one

sand dollars and
COOKE,
1
W.M. G. MOORHEAD, V
D

Broadway A

$17,316,001

amounts

JAY

\OliK,

obtained at this office
allowed by law, viz : On

II. Cruger Oakley.

of

NEW

be

Charles E. Milnor,

Walter II. Burns,

H.

Corner

Treasury,

INTERNAL REVENUE STAITIPS

Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and
Sale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New l~ork.

Comp any

OFFICE:

59 & 61 Wall Street.

BANK OF

Morton,

CENT.

Harbor, 20 years to run, SECURED BY SINKING
FUND, INTEREST PAYABLE IN NEW YORK
CITY, for sale by
POIT, DAVIDSON & CO., Bankers,

(58 Old Broad Street, London,)

Levi P.

Life Insurance

Louis

St.

of

C> PER

Issued for the Improvement of the Wharf and

MORTON, BURNS & CO,,

UNION

STREET,

OF

City
on

Mutual

July at Third National Bank in the City of

Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes and

or

The

Coffin,

New York.

STREET, NEW YORK.

STERLING EXCHANGE
At

Insurance.

Offers for sale, $50,000 20-year 7 per cent, bonds of
the City of St. Paul, Minn.
Interest payable Janu¬

BANKERS,
30 BROAD

[December 15, ^

Chicago, Ill*;

STREET.

Cash

1st 1866.

capital

Surplus!

Gross Assete
Total Liabilities

-

BENJ, S.
J, Reuses Lajds, Secretary,

j
a4«550 jw

WAXeOTT.eni

775

THE CHRONICLE.

December 15,1866.]

Steamship and Express Co.’s.

Insurance.

Insurance.

Sun Mutual Insurance

Security Insurance Co.,
Capital, One Million Dollars,
($1,000,000.)

rash

fire and

inland insurance.
HASTINGS, President.

A. F.

Fbank.

COMPANY.

W. Ballard, Secretary.

Company,

(insurance buildings,)

119 BROADWAY,

No.

-

-

$2,71G,421 32

Sailing on the 22d of every month.

DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT.
This Company insures against Marine Risks on
Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland
Navigation Risks.

Premiums

Fire Ins. Comp’y

gueen
OF

paid in gold will be entitled to a return
premium in gold.

LIVERPOOL AND LONDON.

-

Authorized Capital - £2,000,000 Slg.
Subscribed Capital - £1,885,220 Stg.

Capital <fc

Paid up

$1,392,115
Fund of $200,000, deposited in the Insur

Surplus

Special
ance

-

■

■

■

■

MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't.
EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't

I3AA0 H. Walker,

National

Broad

STEAMERS

WILLIAM H. ROSS, Secretary.

The Mutual Life InsuBANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK.
CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st,

1806, over $16,000,000 00

FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.
R. A. McCURDY,
0

Secretaries,

Vice-President.

I ISAAC ABB ATT,

f J0HN

M> STUART.

Actuary, snEPPARD HOMANS.

.

COMPANY.

ENGLAND..

li

ERIN

“

Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid.
Chartered 1850.
Cash Dividends paid in 15 years,
253 per cent.
JONATHAN D. STEELE, President.
P. NOTMAN, Secretary.

Germania Fire Ins.
NO. 175 BROADWAY,

CASH

Co.,

N. Y.

$500,000 O

CAPITAL,

SURPLUS, Jau. 1st, I860

205,989 83

Total assets

$705,989 83

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President.
JOHN E.

KAHL, Secretary.

knd
the

Assets, March 9, 18GG fetal Liabilities - - Losses
Paia la 1865
--

This
Ore

-

-

-

§200,000 00
- 252,550 22
26,850 00
-

Company Insures against Loss
lavorable

on as

terms

Company:
ONLY FIRST

as

201,588 14

e

any

or Damage by

othor responsible

CLASS DISKS SOLICITED.

Board of Directors:

HENRY M. TABER,

HPHFOlJLKE,
ffiCAMBRELENG,
?HP0RE w- RILEY,
tv£°5 rEESE,
n?uiVr- MERSEREAU,
mrrT?10 SU YD AM,
'ViLLlAM
REMSEN,

THOS. P. CUMMINGS,

ROBERT SCHELL.
WILLIAM H. TERRY,
FRED. SCHUC1IARDT.

JOSEPH GRAFTON,
L. B. WARD,
JOSEPH BRITTON,
AMOS ROBBINS,

HENRY S. LEVERICH.
JACOB REESE, President*

HAHTSHGI^E, Secretary,




Spanish Main.
Brazil, 8th; Pernambuco, 15th;
Balva, 17th; and Rio de Janeiro, 20th. Connecting
thence by semi-monthly steamers to Montevideo and
Buenos

Ayres.

For further

information, of freights or passage,
Apply to
GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents,
No. 5 Bowling Green *

Bankers, Merchants, and
others should send bv the
HARNDEN EXPRESS,
safe

lorwarding of

Gold, Silver, Jewelry, and Merchandise
of every

description. Also for the collection of notes,
drafts, and bills, bills accompanying goods, &c.

Commercial

Widths

and

Weights,

STOCK ALWAYS ON

HAND.

POLHEMUS

THEODORE

«fc

CO.,

MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS,
59

W. J. HURST,

Cards.

Cotton: Duck,
A LARGE

Fulton.

65 Broadway,

they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and

as

All

Broad

Corner

Street,

of Beaver.

Manager.

P.

PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S
THROUGH LINE

And Carrying the

United

States Mail,
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬

ER, FOOT of Canal street, at, 12
o'clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and
21st of every month (except when those dates fall on
Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for

ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.

P-

Oldersi-iaW,

ACCOUNTANT,

California,

02

STREET, NEW

BROAD

Books Examined.

Accounts

References
STEWART BROWN,
DAVID WALLACE,
C. II. HARNEY,

Files of this

YORK,
Adjusted.

:

C. S. BODLEY;
S. L. M. BARLOW,
McANDREW & WANN.

Paper Bound to Order.

BLANK BOOKS,

STATIONERY,

NOVEMBER:

EN Ol {AVI NO.

1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City.

11th—Henky Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis
21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento.

Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with

PRINTING,. &C., &O

V
4

Coof-er &

steamers for South Pacific ports; 1st and 11th for
Central American Ports. Those'bf 1st touch at Mun-

Sheridan,

26 EXCHANGE PLACE,
Corner of William St

zauillo.

Baggage checked through.

One hundred pounds

allowed each 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 ol
Canal street, North River New YTork.
S. lv. HOLMAN, Agent.

BETWEEN

SUCCESSORS TO
SCHSEFFELIN BROTHERS A

CO.,

IMPORTERS and jobbers of

D RU G S

NEW-

,

»

AND AUSTRALA¬

SIA via PANAMA.
The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal
Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of
each mouth from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., and
the Australian Colonies, connecting with the steamer
of tlie Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving

New-York for Aspinwall (colon) on the 11th of each
month. First and second class passengers will be

ticket at the following
rates: From New-York to ports in New-Zealand, or
to Sydney or Melbourne, $3-1.0 to $364 for first class,
and $218* to $243 for second class.
conveyed under through

The above rates include the transit across the
Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for

forward cabins of the Australian steamer; after
cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United

gold coin.
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 servants, one-half fare : female do., three-quar¬
States

ters fare ; men servants
do. in ladies’ cabin.
A limited quantity of

W. H. Schicffelin & Co.

C O M M U N I € A*

.

Cash Capital

West Indies and

Steerage Tickets, at the Passage Office 01
Company, 27 Broadway, and 275 Pearl street,

YORK

OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY.

time, arriv¬

Royal Mail Companies, to and from all ports of the

tor

TION

Fire Insurance Company,

Saturday, Sept. 29
Saturday, Oct.
6

COMPANY, 57 BROADWAY

STEAM

Hope

These fine steamers sail on schedule

and Cabin Passage apply at

The Office of thf.

.Oct. 22.
22.
22.

ing at St. Thomas 29th, and making connection with
steamships of the French, Spanish, West India, and

in Great Britain or on the Continent.

.

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865

LIVER¬

(Ogilvie)
“ Saturday, Oct. 13
Cabin passage, $100; Steerage, $30.
Steerage passage tickets, to briug parties from
Liverpool or Queenstown, for $35 in currency.
Through passage to Paris, Antwerp, Hamburg,
Bremen, &c., at low rates.
Drafts issued for any amount, payable at any Bank

near

$1,000,000
270,353

TO

HELVETIA

NO. 12 WALL STREET.

CASH CAPITAL,

Steam

POOL, CALLING AT QUEENSTOWN.
•^Leaving Pier No. 47, North Rivar, as follows :
SCOTLAND
Sails Saturday, Sept. 22

For Freight

Niagara Fire Insurance

(LIMITED.)
WEEKLY

Capt. L. F. Timmerman..

America, Capt. E. L. T^nklepaugli..Nov.
Guiding Star, Capt. W. C. Berry
Dec.
South

Navigation Co.

GEORGE ADLARD, Manager.

,

North America,

Arrive at Para,

Sec’y.

Steamship and Express Co’s.

Department at Albany.

United States Branch. No. 117
way, N. If.

FOR ST. THOMAS .’AND
BRAZIL.—REGULAR UNITED
STATES MAIL STEAMERS.

49 WALL STREET.

ASSETS, Dec, 31, 1S65

Steamship

Atlantic Mail

berthed forward,

women

merchandise will be

con¬

veyed under through bill of lading.
For further information, application to be made to
the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st.,
Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent,

No. 23 WttUma-#tMI*ew-Xdrfc*

INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES,
GOODS, PERFUMERY, ETC., ETC,,

FANCY

170 & 172 WILLIAM ST.
New York.

x

Joseph IT Westerfield.
William H. Schieffelin,

William A. Gkllatlt,

William N. Clark, Jr,

Holiday Goods
NOW READY.
SIXTY-SIXTH

ANNUAL

DISPLAY

OF

Fancy Goods, Rich Bohemian Glass, China, Bron*
Clocks, Berlin Iron, Terra Cotta and Cabinetware, Smokers Requisites, Morocco
Bags, Portemomiaies, Spa and
Carved Wood Articles,
Toilet Articles,
and

ST. GERMAIN

the

STUDY

LAMP.
Also, Toys and Games, comprising all that is nov
and suitable for Holiday Presents, and of as large
variety as can be found in the city, at

HINRICII’S,
WERCKMEISTER’S,
15Q Broadway* tup stairs) New Yorfc,
Late

Ml

ssjjB
[December 15,18«6. j'•Hi

THE CHRONICLE.

776

Commercial

Commercial Cards.

Commercial

Cards.

Brand & Gihon.

S. H. Pearce & Co.,

Importers &
No. 353 BROADWAY,

Commission Mcrchaht2,
STREET.

65 MURRAY"

LINEN GOODS,

IRISH & SCOTCH

Importers of

Jobbing and Clothing

and Manufacturers of

Imitation Oiled Silk.

appearance

much as real silk, which it equals

collar

24 Walker

Lindsay, Chittick &Co.,
COMMISSION

AND

IMPORTERS

CLARK, Jr. A
Mile End, Glasgow.

MERCHANTS,
British

Street, New York.

Spool Cotton.
JOHN

IS UNSURPASSED FOR

Staple,
Press

COMMISSION

TIIOS.

Goody,

'
CO’S.

Linens, Ac., Ac*,

COTTON

No. 101

■/

CALDWELL,

TRIM¬

OIM

FACTORS,

Merchants,

SLIP, NEW YORK.

j|§l

COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

NEW YORK.

NO.

BROAD STREET,

47

KELL

:§

NEW YORK.

Brooklyn.

II. J. PARMELE A

RKO.,

32 Pine Street,

trade to his samples of

'yi:.

Wilson, Son Sc Co., - f

LIVERPOOL,

Delivered from yards in New York
and

For^Grate Fires.

v

Sawyer, Wallace Sc Col

.

Coal
F R

MINGS,
Invites the attention of the

M0RRI8, n.

'

IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF
LADIES’ DRESS AND CLOAK

SCRIBE, PARIS,

BEST ENGLISH CANNEL A OR

Franklin Street,

C.

Morris,*!!

General Commission

STREET, N.Y.

97 FRANKLIN STREET,

Julius Garelly,

Petersburg, V»? GV

AND

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
NO. 7 RUE

of

Successors to BREWER &

Lane, Lamson & Co.,

DUANE STREET, NEW YORK,

McIlwaine & Cos'
B.

20 OLD

Irish and Scotch

150 & 152

Street, New York*

Caldwell Sc

HAND AND MACHINE

V?

PURCHASE

GENERALLY.

CALDWELL.

White Goods,

e

-

Consignment*

Martin & Tannahill,
of Petersburg, Va.
SAM L B.

RUSSELL, Sole Agent,

88 CHAMBERS

.Vffi

.

•

MERCHANTS

OF MERCHANDISE

SEWING.

And Fancy

on

FOR THE SALE OF PRODUCE AND

No. 79 Front

PARASOLS,

UMBRELLAS A

invented.

ever

Merchant*,

"

McIlwaineI
Co.,

&

DUCK, AC.

MANUFACTURERS OF

dollars,

Patent Reversible Paper

economical

Cash Advances made

Ellis, Knapp & Co.,

and durability.

'r

’

STREET, NEW YORK.

AC.

in

Agents for the sale of the

the most

’"

^

FACTORS
i"

Commission

40 BROAD

Tannahill,

FLAX SAIL

"w

Slaughter & CoA

Norton,
General

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

superior finish, and

Our “Imitation” has a very
costs but half as

LINENS,

WHITE

Oiled Silk,

B. H. Wisdom
Late Cash. Bk.

AND

Trade.

Agents for the sale of
WILLIAM GIIION & SONS’

HANDKERCHIEFS,

SILK AND COTTON

Norton,

Paducah, Ky.

COTTON A TOBACCO

In lull assort meni for the

CHINA SILKS,

EUROPEAN AND

Ex.
Late of
T. J. Slaughter,
Late of St. Louis, Mo.

Cards.

N.Y

Late of

V

Lynchburg, Va.,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
For the sale of produce and purchase 3
of merchandise generally,
y*

^

(Offices, for the present, 68 EXCHANGE PLACE),

BALTIMORE, MD.
NOVELTIES JUST RECEIVED.

C. E. Thorburn,
AND COMMISSION
MERCHANT,

SHIPPING

Barbour Brothers,
LINEN

109 WALL STREET,

SPINNERS,

FLAX THREAD

ern

MACHINE THREADS,

.

ETC.

NEW YORK.

E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co.
AGENTS

TO

FOK

WASHINGTON MILLS,

58 BROAD

STREET, NEW YORK,

sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE
WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class
Distilleries, Kentucky.

Offer tor

Jeremiah M. Wardwell,

CHICO “EE MANUF. CO.,
VICTOR V M AN I F.

(of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.)

CO.,

MILTON MILLS,

Importer and Dealer in Har-ware,
and

Commission

Merchant,

STREET, NEW YORK.
All orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬

are

Manufacturing

Richards’ Power Corn
Of ad sizes and capacity, ranging

Slieller*,

from 60 to LOW

Iron, and warranted tb
of grain, and clean th«
superior condition for the Mill or Market.

bushels per hour; built of
shell clean in any condition
corn

in

Engines, Small

Over 500 in Daily Use
Portable
Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c

RICHARDS’
190 A

BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.,

.

AND DISTIL LERS.
W’e

MERCHANTS,

attention.

MILLERS,

SHIPPERS,

GRAIN

AND

COMMISSION

Street, Chicago.

Orders will receive careful and prompt

D I ST I L L E R S

Mills at Paterson, N. J.

&«Co.,

BROKERS,

Kinzle

155

J. M. Cummings & Co.,

Bush

S.

HIDE

Products Solicited.

THREADS,

95 CHAMBERS STREET,

I.

NEW YORK.

Consignments of Cotton and all other South¬

THREADS,

SHOE

Refer by permission to Mphsir.
Jacob Ileald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore. J*
Tannahill. Mcliwaine & Co., New7 York.
G

IRONWORKS,

.92 WASHINGTON

STREET,

Chicago, 111,

Henry Lawrence & Sons,|
MANUFACTURERS OF

CORDAGE

45 CLIFF

Nos. 43 & 4.)

WHITE STREET.

DOUBLEDAY A DWIGHT,

tention.
solicited.

Consignments of Cotton., Wool, Hides, (tec.,

FOR EXPORT AND
192 FRONT

49 MURRAY

ST., NEW YORK.

Tracy, Irwin & Co.,
NO. 400

BROADWAY,

IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
OS’

Foreign and ^Domestic Dry

including

a

Goods,

superb stock oi

DRESS

GOODS,

AND

HOSIERY and, WHITE GOODS.




YORK.

%3

Metals,

a

Parasols,

STREET, NEW

Best of references given ll required.

MANUFACTURERS OF

Umbrellas &

DOMESTIC USE,

J. A.

BosTWICK,

COMMISSION MERCHANT
JN

Cotton, Produce and Provisions,
76 BEAVER STREET, NEW YORK.
Reference,
Tilford & Bodley,

Bankers, N. Y.

GUANO.
2,000 tons No. 1 Peruvian Guano.
1,200 tons Bruces Concentrated Fertilizer.
2,500 tons Swan Island Guano.
600 tons Coarse Ground pure Bones.
For sale in lots as wanted, by
CEO. E. WHITE & CO.,
150 Front St.

POPE, 92 John Street.:
Pig Irons, Ingot Coppet,||
Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New
Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons.
THOS.

J.

Anthracite and Charcoal

RailroadJj

Railroad Iron,
AMERICAN AND

FOREIGN,

||

FOR

Steam and Street
FOR SALE BY

S. W.

Road$|

HOPKINS & Co.,
69 & 71

Broadway.,^

774
Bankers

L. P.

Brokers.

and

Morton

&

30 BKOAD

Edmund

Co.,

78

or

STREET, NEW YORK.

CEDAR

City

CENT.

AND THK

BANK

OF

LONDON,

United States

Europe aud the East.

NEW YDRK,

Louis
BOND*.

OFFICE:

Charles E. Milnor,

amounts

H. Cruger Oakley.

hundred dollars and upwards, 3 per cent.; five
hundred dollars and upwards 4 per cent.; one thou¬

can

at the full commissions allowed

of

by law, viz

:

COOKE,
f
WM. G. MOORHEAD, V
H. D COOKE,
J

( H. C. FAHNESTOCK,

fifty dollars and upwards, 2 percent;

one

sions

< EDWARD DODGE,
/ PITT COOKE.

Drake

BANKERS.

Sts.,
New York,

Street,
Philadelphia.

Fifteenth

Street,
Opposite Treas. Department,1
Washington.

In connection with our houses in

attention to the purchase,

SALE, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Ol
all

issues; to orders for purchase and sale of
and gold,

bonds

stocks,

and to all business of National

Banks.

Brothers,

JAY COOKE & CO.

March 1,1866.

NO. 16 BROAD

leum and

Mining Stocks.

Draft.

on

ments made.

Orders

32

PINE

YORK.

References.—Moses Taylor; John Munroe & Co;
C, Savage, U.S. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, HI.;
Hon. F. E. Spinner, Treasurer U. S. Washington.

Jones & Westervelt,
BROKERS,
BANKERS

A

Government

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

COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD
AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED.

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844.
The

Company has paid to its Customer's, up to the
present time, Losses amountinq to aver
EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS.
For the past nine years the cash dividends
paid to
Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of the net
profits, have amounted in the aggregate to
One Hundred and Twenty-one and a

half per cent.
Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based
on the principle that all classes of risks are
equally

profitable, this

This

Co.,

BANKERS,
STREET, N. Y
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
rANl> OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, &c.,
bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only.
Deposits received subject to check at sight,

Risks, on

and Freight.
payable in Gold

pool.
*

a*

Butler, Cecil, Rawson A #o.

WM. A. HALSTBD.

TRUSTEES.

Joseph Walker,
James Freeland,

Aaron L. Reid,
Ellwood Walter,
Samuel Willets,
D. Colden Murray,
Robert L. Taylor,
E. Haydock White,
William T. Frost,
N. L. McCready,
William Watt,
Daniel T. Willets,
Henry Eyre,
L. Edgerton,
Cornelius Grinnell, Henry R. Kunhardt.

g. E. A. Schleicher, John S. Williams,
Morgan,
William Nelson, Jr.,
er.

Charles Dim on,
Jas. D.Fish,
A. William Heye,
Geo. W. Hennings, Harold Dollner,

Commercial Cards.

of

Francis

anks, Bankers, and merchants receiv¬

3

ed

on

favorable terms.

Interest allowed

on

depos¬

its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic qnotaons furnished to correspondents.
Rrfkrbncrs : James Brown,
Brown Brothers & Co.: John Q.
ident of the Chemical National

.

Joseph Slagg,

Bay and sell Stocks, Ronds, Gold and
Accounts

Esq, of Messrs.
Jones, Esq., Pres¬
Bank; James H.

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

FLOUR,

GRAIN,

SEEDS

AND PROVISIONS.

Hathaway, Paul N. Spofford.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President
CIIAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest,

C. J. Despakd, Secretary.

Hanover Fire Insurance

Blair, Densmore & Co.,

COMPANY,
No. 45 WALL STREET.

York N. B. A.

January 1st 1866.

commissiON

Gelston &
BROKERS

Bussing,

165

merchants,

WASHINGTON

IN

STOCKS, BONDS, ANDjGOLD.
HO. 27 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.




or

Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling,
Office of Rathbone, Bros.' & Co., in Liver¬

at the

Memoer New York Stock Exchange.
CYRUS J. LAWRENCE,
JOHN R. CECIL.
late

on

Navigation and Transportation
the most favorable terms, including Risks

Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls,
Policies issued making loss

STREET, NEW YORK.

Government Securities.

such

Company continues to make Insurance

on

DEWITT C. LAWRENCE,

(Messrs. Brown Bros. & Co.’s new building),

Company will hereafter make

Marine and inland

NO. 16 WALL

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

$1,366,699

underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬
year, will be divided to
the stockholders.

with Banks.

59 & 61 WALL

Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866

o

Brothers

Pott, Davidson & Jones,

COMPANY.

STREET, NEW YORK.

maining at the close of the

&

Deposits.

.

cash abatement or discount from the current rates,
when premiums are paid, as the general experience

NEW ORLEANS.

Interest Allowed on

,

[Secretaries.

OFFICE No. 35 WALL

Exchange, Bonds, Notes,
Ac., Ac.
STREET, NEW

HOMANS, Actuary.

INSURANCE

BROKERS
In Foreign

FEATURE,

The Mercantile Mutual

Lawrence

of Europe.

ANNUAL CASH INCOME TO

SHEPPARD

Promptly Executed.

John Cockle & Son,

DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AND

able in all parts

as an

ISAAC ABB ATT,
JOHN M. STUART,

Dividends and Interest collected and Invest-

NOS. 12 NEW A 14 BROAD STREETS.

Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, avail¬

Policies,

seenring to the beneficiaries Annuities for any num¬
ber of years after the death of the assured.
RICHARD A. McCURDY, Vice-Pres’t

deposit subject to

BANKERS,

Street, New York.

up

INSTALMENT

Commission.

27 A 29 Pine

is consistent with security.
DIVIDENDS, ANNUAL AND IN CASH, which
may be used in payment of Premiums, or on Paidas

STREET, NEW YORK,

Currency and Gold received

and

Winslow, Lanier & Co.,

able

Attention is called to the

Buy and Se’l on Commission Government Securi¬
ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and
Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬

Washington we have this day opened an office at No.
Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city.
Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.,
House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio,

Company issues Life Endowment and Paidup Policies, in various forms, and at rates as favor¬

THE ASSURED.

Philadelphia and

New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬

This

STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS,

1

will be resident partners.
We shall give particular

upwards, 5 per cent; the commis¬
being payable in stamps.
II. H. VAN DYCK,
Assistant Treasurer.

Jay Cooke & Co.,
Corner Wall and Nassau

$17,316,001 83.

On

sand dollars aud
JAY

1, 1866,

be obtained at this office

Leyi P.

ton

WINSTON, President.

Cash Assets November

DECEMBER 10, I860.

Sale of Slocks and Bonds in London and New York.,

r

Liberty Street.

Broadway A

F. S.

Treasury,

Of all denominations

No. 114 South 3d

Corner

INTERNAL REVENUE STAMPS

Telegraphic orders executed for the Furchasc and

Walter H. Burns,

YORK.

NEW

59 & 61 Wall Street.

Available In all the principal towns and cities of

Morton,

OF

Improvement of the Wharf aud
Harbor, 20 years to run, SECURED BY SINKING
FUND, INTEREST PAYABLE IN NEW YOKK
CITY, for sale by
POIT, DAVIDSON & CO., Bankers,

(68 Old Broad Street, London,)

UNION

Life Insurance Company

Issued for the

BIHNS A CO.,

Mutual

STREET,

St.

of

U PER

Sixty Days; also, Circular Note* uud

Letter* of Credit for Travelers’ Use, on
L. P. in OR TON’,

The

Coffin,

Offer* for »«W\ $50,000 *0-ye*r 7 per cent, bond* of
the Ciir of St. Paul, Minn.
Interest payable January anJ .July at Third Natloual Bauk lu the City of
New York.

STERLING EXCHANGE

Sight

Inauranoe.

Financial.

DANKER*,

At

[December 15,1866,

THE CHRONICLE.

Chicago, Ill*.

STREET.

Cash

capital
Surplus
Gross Assets
Total Liabilities

$400,000 00

156,303 98
$556,303 98
24,550 00
BENJ. S. WALCOTT,
Preniaent.
..

J. ZUmsK Lass, Secretary.

_

TV;';m^cr

1?! 1S0G.J

THE

Iniur&noe.

Iltt

Frank W.

f

Atlantic Mail

Steamship
Company, >

COMPANY.
(INOCR4MOB BUILDING*,)

Dollar*,

49 WALL

STREET.

ASSETS, Pec. 81, 1865

INLAND INSURANCE*
A. F.

Steamship aud Express Oo.’s.

Sun Mutual Insurance

nnOADWAl,

Capital, One Million
($1,000,000.)

F1IIK AND

775

Inauranoe.

Security Insurance Co.,
r»*h

CHRONICLE.

.

-

«aAA

nJBOlik

$2,710,424 32

STATES MM STEAMERS.

DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT.

HASTINGS, President.

Hallaro, Secretary.

Sailing

on the 22d of every month.
North America, Capt. L. F.
Timmerman. .Oct. 22.
South America, Capt. E. L.
Ttnklepaugh. Nov. 22.
Guidiko Star, Capt. W. C.
Berry
Dec. 82.

This

Company lusures against Marine Risks on
Vessels, Freight, aud Cargo; also, against Inland

Navigation Risks.

Queen Fire Ins. Comp’y
LIVERPOOL
OF

-

Surplus

-----

Special Fund

MOSES H.

GRINNELL, Preit.
EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't
Isaac H. Walker,
Sec'y.

£1,885,220 Stg.

Paid up Capital &

$1,392,115

of

$200,000, deposited
Department at Albany.

Steamship and Express

in the Insur¬

WILLIAM H.

SCOTLAND

ENGLAND

RANCE COMPANY OF
NEW YORK.
CASH ASSETS, Sept.
1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00

“

ERIN

“

HELVETIA (Ogilvie)

“

Cabin passage,

Saturday,
Saturday,
Saturday,
Saturday,

Sept. 22
Sept. 29
Oct.
6
Oct. 13

$100; Steerage, $30.
Steerage passage tickets, to bring parties from
Liverpool or Queenstown, for $35 in currency.
Through passage to Paris, Antwerp, Hamburg,
Bremen, &c., at low rates.

FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.
R. A.

McCURDY, Vice-President,
l ISAAC ABB ATT,
m

Sails

stuart>

Drafts issued for any amount,
payable at any
in Great Britain or on the
Continent.

Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS.

steamships of the French, Spanish, West India, and

Royal Mail Companies,

to and from all ports of the
West Indies aud Spanish Main.
Arrive at Para, Brazil,
8th; Pernambuco, 15th;
Bah a, 17th; and Rio de
Janeiro, 20th. Connecting
thence by semi-monthly steamers to
Montevideo and
For further

Insurance

COMPANY.

near

CASH

CAPITAL,
SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1S65

Fulton.

HARNDEN EXPRESS, 65
Broadway.
they have unsurpassed facilities for the
rapid and
safe

as

forwarding of

Gold, Silver, Jewelry? and Merchandise

of every

NOTMAN, Secretary.

CASH

BROADWAY", N.

And

Commercial Cards.

Cotton

CAPITAL,

$500,000

205,989 83

United

with one of the
Company’s
for SAN FRANCISCO,

steamships from Panama
touching at ACAPULCO.

59

$705,989

RUDOLPH

83

GARRIGUE, President.

KAHL, Secretary.

62

An

experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
For passage tickets or further
information, apply
at the
Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of
Canal street, North
River, New York.
STEAM
TION

OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY.

Cash Capital-

-----

Assets, March 9, 1866
Total

Liabilities Losses Paid la 18 65

-

$200,000 00

-

-

-

252,559 22
26,850 00
-201,588 14
-

-

This
Fire on Company Insures against Loss or
as favorable terms as

Damage by

any othor responsible

Company.

ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS
SOLICITED.
Board of
HENRY M. TABER,
JOSEPH FOULKE,
STEP.

Directors:

THOS. P. CUMMINGS,
ROBERT SCHELL,
CAMBRELENG, WILLIAM H. TERRY,
THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT.
JACOB REESE,
JOSEPH GRAFTON,
JNO. W.
L. B. WARD,
D. LYDIGMERSEREAU,
JOSEPH BRITTON,
SUYDAM,

WILLIAM REMSEN,

AMOS

ROBBINS,

HENRY S. LEVERICH.
JACOB REESE,

President*

HASTSHfRNE, Secretary.




One hundred pounds

HOLMAN, Agent.

C. H.

cabin, latter $25 additional.
States

after
Fares payable in United

gold coin.
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 servants, one-naif fare: female
do., three-quar¬
ters fare; men servants berthed
forward, women
do. in ladies’ cabin.
A limited quantity of merchandise
will be con¬

veyed under through bill of lading.
For further information,
application

the Pacific Mail

to he made to

Steamship Company, No.

Or to CHARLES W.

No.

59

BLANK

Beaver.

BROAD

STREET, NEW YORK,

BODLEY,
BARLOW.

S. L. M.

McANDREW

Paper Bound
BOOKS,
STATIONERY,

&

to

WANN".

Order.

ENGRAVING,
PRINTING,. &C.,

Cooper &
26

&C

Sheridan,

EXCHANGE PLACE,

Corner of William St

W. H. Schieffelin & Co.
SUCCESSORS TO

SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS

*

CO.,

'IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF

D RU G S

,

INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES,
GOODS, PERFUMERY, ETC., ETC.,

FANCY

170 & 172 WILLIAM ST.
New York.

Joseph H Westerfield.
William H. Schieffelin,

William A. Gellatly,
William N. Clark, Jr.

Holiday Goods
NOW

READY.

SIXTY-SIXTH ANNUAL DISPLAY OF
Fancy Goods, Rich Bohemian Glass,
China, Brona
Clocks, Berlin Iron, Terra Cotta and Cabinetware, Smokers Requisites, Morocco
Bags, Portcmonnaies, Spa and
Carved Wood
Articles,
Toilet Articles,
aud the

ST. GERMAIN

STUDY LAMP.

Also, Toys and Games, comprising all
and suitable for
Holiday Presents, and
variety

as can be found in the
*

Wall-st.,

WEST, Agent,

MWiUiam*st„Now*lPrk,

of

Files of this

COMMUNICA¬

conveyed under through ticket at the
following
rates: From New-York to
ports in New-Zealand, or
to Sydney or Melbourne,
$340 to $364 for first class,
and $218 to $243 for second class.
The above rates include the
trausit across the
Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares
are for
forward cabins of the Australian
steamer;

CO.,

Oldershaw,

WALLACE,
HARNEY,

BETWEEN

NEWYORK AND AUSTRALA¬
SIA via PANAMA.
The Panama, New-Zealand and
Australian Royal
Mail Company dispatch
a steamer on the 24th of
each month from Panama to
Wellington, N. Z., and
the Australian Colonies,
connecting with the steamer
of the Pacific Mail
Steamship Company leaving
New-York for Aspinwall
(Colon) on the 11th of each
month. First ana second class
passengers will be

P-

&

DEALERS,

Street, Corner

DAVID

and 21st connect at Panama with
steamers for South Pacific ports
• 1st and 11th for
Central American Ports. Those of 1st
touch at Man¬
zanillo.

S. K.

Hope
Fire Insurance
Company,

Broad

AND

Books Examined. Accounts
Adjusted.
References :
STEWART BROWN,
C. S.

Departures of 1st

allowed each adult.

Weights,

POLHEMUS

MANUFACTURERS

NOVEMBER:

Baggage checked through.

TuTAL ASSETS

JOHN E.

O

and

LARGE STOCK ALWAYS ON
HAND.

THEODORE

Sacramento.

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866

CHAS. D.

A

let—Arizona, connecting with Golden City.
11th—Henry Chauncey,
connecting with St. Louis
21st—New York,
connecting with

Y.

Duck,

All Widths

ACCOUNTANT,

Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,

Co.,

Also for

————

P.

States Mall*
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬
ER, FOOT of Canal street, at 12
o’clock noon, on the
1st, 11th, and
list of every month
(except when those dates fall on
Sunday, and then on the preceding

JONATHAN D. STEELE, President.
P.

NO. 175

HURST, Manager.^]

California,
Carryingtlie

Losses equitably adjusted and
promptly paid.
Chartered 1850.
Cash Dividends
paid in 15 years,
253 per cent.

description.

the collection of
drafts, and bills, hills accompanying goods, notes,
&c.

PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S 1
THROUGH LINE

$1,000,000
270,353

Germania Fire Ins.

W. J.

.

& ALLEN, Agents,
No. 5 Bowling Green.

Bankers, Merchants, and

The Office

NO. 12 WALL STREET.

of freights or passage,

others should send by the

Bank

Freight and Cabin Passage apply at
of the
COMPANY, 57 BROADWAY.
And tor Steerage Tickets, at the
Passage Office oi
the Company, 27
Broadway, and 275 Pearl street,

information,

.Apply to
GARRISON

For

Niagara Fire

on

Buenos Ayres.

STEAMERS

The Mutual Life Insu-

recre anes,
Secretaries

Co’s.

(LIMITED.)
WEEKLY TO LIVER¬
POOL, CALLING AT QUEENSTOWN.
Leaving Pier No. 47, North Rivor, as follows:

ROSS, Secretary.

schedule time, arriv¬
ing at St. Thomas 29th, and making connection with

National Steam
Navigation Co.

United States Branch, No.
117 Broad¬
way, N. Y.

GEORGE ADLARD,
Manager.

These fine steamers sail

return

"

£2,000,000 Slg.

-

..

a

premium In gold.

AND LONDON.

Authorized Capital
Subscribed Capital

ance

Premiums paid in gold will he entitled to

FOR ST. T11031 AS T AND
BRAZIL.—REGULAR UNITED

Late

15Q

that is
of

as

city, at

nov

large

HINRICH’S,
WERCKMEISTER’S,

Broadway, (up stairs)

New York*

,,

5 ~ Z

CHRONICLE.

THE

776
'"=

1

— ■ ""

No. 353

Brand & Gihon,

Co.,

S. H. Pearce &

Importers A Commission Merchaht2,
65 MURRAY STREET.

BROADWAY,

IRISH A SCOTCH

Importers of

CHINA SILKS,

and Manufacturers

.SILK AND COTTON
Oiled

Silk.

the most

COMMISSION

Street, New

Caldwell & Morris,

<■

CO’S.

FOK HAND AND

MACHINE

THOS.

Good*,

White

88

Successors to

RUSSELL, Sole Agent,

Julius Garelly,
TRIM¬

NOVELTIES JUST

samples of

RECEIVED.

LIVERPOOL,
Delivered from yards in New York

PARMEUE A BRO.,
32 Pine Street, N. Y

ern

ETC.

STREET, NEW YORK.

FOR

VICTORY MANUF.

CO.,

MILTON MILLS,

45 WHITE

STREET.

Orders will receive

MERCHANTS,

BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON
WHISKIES, from their own and other
Distilleries, Kentucky.

TO

GRAIN

and RYE
first-class

49 MURRAY ST.,

NEW YORK.

Tracy, Irwin & Co.,
BROADWAY,
NO. 400

IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS

;Domestlc Dry Goods,
of

including a superb stock
DRESS
,

«

GOODS,

AND

HOSIERY and WHITE

GOODS.

MILLERS,

SHIPPERS,

Manufacturing

Richards’ Power Corn Shelters.
Of ail sizes and capacity, ranging from 50 to 1,000

bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to
shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the
corn in superior condition for the
or Market.
Over 500 in Daily Use
Portable Engine*, Small
Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c.

Mill

RICHARDS’ IRON WORKS,
190 & ,92 WASHINGTON STREET,

(of the late firm of Neilson
Importer and Dealer in Hardware,
and Commission Merchant,

STREET, NEW YORK.
All orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬

Chicago, Ill,

Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

45 CLIFF

solicited.

Consignments of Cotton, Wocl, Hides, &c.,
Best of references given it

FOR EXPORT
192 FRONT

j. A. Bostwick,
COMMISSION MERCHANT

76 BEAVER

Metals,
POPE, 92 John Street.
Ingot Copper,
Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad
Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons.
THOS.

and Provision*,

Reference,

Railroad Iron,

Bankers, N. Y.

AMERICAN AND FOREIGN,

GUANO.
2,000 tons No. 1 Peruvian Guano.
1,200 tons Bruces Coucentrated Fertiliser.
2,500 tons Swan Island Guano.
600 tons Coarse Ground pure Bones.
For sale in lots as wanted, by
GEO. E. WHITE A CO
*

J.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Tilford & Bodley,

•

STREET, NEW YORK.

Anthracite and Charcoal Pig Irons,

,

IN

Cotton, Produce

AND DOMESTIC USE,

required.

FOR

or

Foreign and

Street, Chicago.

AND DISTILLERS.

MANUFACTURERS OF

Umbrellas & Parasols,

Co.,

careful and prompt attention.

We are

Offer lor

tention.

DOUBLED A V A DWIGHT,

Kinzie

155

Jeremiah M. War dwell,
Wardwell & Co.)

CHICOPEE MANUF. CO.,

& Robinson, Baltimore.

BROKERS,

HIDE

and all other South¬

WASHINGTON MILLS,
BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.,

EXCHANGE PLACE),

BALTIMORE, MD.
by permission to Messrs.

I. S. Bush &

AND

E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co.

merchandise generally.

DISTILL E R S

58

,

Tannahill, McIlwaine & Co., New York.

J. M. Cummings & Co.,
COMMISSION

AGENTS

of

(Offices, for the present, 63

Products Solicited.

J.

Lynchburg, Va.,

Refer
Jacob Heald & Co., Lord

SHOE THREADS,

Mills at Paterson, N.

Late of

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
For the sale of produce and purchase

STREET, NEW YORK.

Consignments of Cotton

LINEN THRE ADS,

05 CHAMBERS

Wilson, Son & Co.,

MERCHANT,

SPINNERS,

MACHINE THREADS,

NEW YORK.

COMMISSION

SHIPPING AND
109 WALL

FLAX THREAD

Brooklyn.

C. E. Thorburn,.

Barbour Brothers,

Co.,

BROAD STREET,

CANNEL A ORRELL

and

H. J.

of the trade to his

NO. 47

0:M

For Grate Fires.

MINGS,
Invites the attention

SLIP, NEW YORK.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

Coal
F R

Merchants,

Sawyer, Wallace &

STREET, NEW YORK.

BEST ENGLISH

MANUFACTURER OF
AND CLOAK

MERCHANTS,
SCRIBE, PARIS,

NO. 7 RUE

Franklin Street,

LADIES’ DRESS

Co.,

COMMISSION

97 FRANKLIN

IMPORTER AND

General Commission

CHAMBERS STREET, N Y.

Lane, Lamson &

DUANE STREET, NEW YORK,

FACTORS,
AND

20 OLD

Linens, Ac., &c>,




BREWER & CALDWELL,

COTTON

Goods,

Irish and Scoteh

Nos. 43 A

B. 0. MORRIS, JR.

SEWING.

Press

No. 101

Martin & Tannahill,
of Petersburg, Va.

Mile

IS UNSURPASSED

York.
McIlwaine & Co.,
of Petersburg, Va.

Street, New

SAM’LB. CALDWELL.

CLARK, Jr. A
End, Glasgow.

JOHN

And Fancy

150 & 152

OF

York.

Spool Cotton.

MERCHANTS,
British Staple,

MERCHANTS
SALE OF PRODUCE AND PURCHASE
MERCHANDISE GENERALLY.

No. 79 Front

PARASOLS,

UMBRELLAS A

Lindsay, Chittick & Co.,
AND

FOR THE

MANUFACTURERS OF

24 Walker

IMPORTERS

Co.,

&

DUCK, AC.

COMMISSION

Reversible Paper Collars,

economical collar ever invented.

McIlwaine

Tannahill,

Ellis, Knapp & Co.,

Agents for the sale of the
Patent

40 BROAD

Cash Advances made on Consignments

which it equals in

and durability. ’

Merchants,
STREET, NEW YORK.

General Commission

of

FLAX SAIL

FACTORS

AND

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

and

Slaughter & Co.,

COTTON A TOBACCO

SONS’
LINENS, AC.

WHITE

superior finish,

much as real silk,

Norton j

WILLIAM GIHON &

Silk,

Our “Imitation” has a very

appearance

Agents for the sale

HANDKERCHIEFS,

Imitation Oiled

LINEN GOODS,

Bk. Tena.

Clothing Trade.

Jobbing and

of

Ex. Norton,
Late of Paducah, Ky.
T. J. Slaughter,
B. H. Wisdom,
Late of St. Louis, Mo.
Late Cash.

asBortmeni for the

In full

EUROPEAN AND

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

costs but half as

(December 15,1866.

.

Steam and Street

Roads,

FOR SALE BY
v

,

150 Front St.

s. W. HOPKINS *
i

Co.,

69 & 71 Broadway,