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ante’ fetfttc, (tameraal §aitorajj pmwtot, and ftwtvjuict §ounuiL A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. YOL. 4. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1867. Bankers and Brokers. C.' 1 Foote?’ Bankers and Brokers. } ^ with Fisk & Hatch. F. A. Satterlee & . Johnson, Jr.t Hatch, Foote & Co., Western Bankers. Co., GOVERNMENT John Bloodgood & Co., 32 WILLIAM DEALERS allowed Late on GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. A NR deposits of Gold and Curren- Graham, * NO. 24 BROAD STREET. • and others, and allow interest subject to Sight draft. on Foreign and Domestic Exchange, on London and Paris, on Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile. President. Manager. General Ranking and Collections promptly attended to. daily balances, Southern Bills Bills M. K. Tyler, Wrenn & Co., BANKERS, NO. 18 WALL STREET, Bny and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, <fcc. Orders for purchase and gale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptty executed. Jesup & Company, BANKERS AND OF CHICAGO. Robert Reid make collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or 8ale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. DEALER IN on all accessible points and re¬ day of payment, less current rates J. Yoijno Scammon Buy and Sell at Market Rates Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS AND BROKER, STREET, NEW YORK, 3 BROAD Co., Gilliss, Harney & Co., The Marine Company BANKERS, ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. BANKER Kerr Ac LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS. mitted for on the of exchange. oa G. Scott, Co., Collections made all Timm SL subjectto accounts ofsight, and particular «ttengiven to check at country banks and bankers. A. & principal cities Alto, drafts os BANKERS, SECURITIES, STREET, NEW YORK. IN OTHER Interest Scott NEW YORK. Phenix National Bank. LOUIS, MISSOURI, on all the of the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, Co., BANKERS, STOCKS AND BONDS References: Fish Jb Hatch, N. Y. Jay Cooks & Co., N. Y. Benoist &. A. Buy and Sell Exchange AND DEALERS IN Two doors from New Street. L. ST. 70 BROADWAY A 15 NEW STREET. BANKERS GOVERNMENT SECURI¬ TIES, GOLD, &c. No. 11 WAIL STREET, NO. 86. MERCHANTS, 84 BROADWAY. Negotiate Established 1848. Haskell & Co., RANKERS, ST. LOUIS, MO. Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Ex¬ change collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of exchange. REDDEN, NO. 69 WINCHESTER Ac CO., Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..8150,566 Cars, ete., * all business connected with Railways* Haslbtt MoKiu. Robt. McKim. Brokers. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission only. Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on approved securities. Particular attention given to orders for the pur¬ chase or sale ot the Adams, AmericamUnited States, Wells, Fargo & Co., and Merchants’Union Express All orders faithfally executed. JOSIAH HEDDEN. O Lockwood, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN N ORTH-WESTERN STATES • bank or Geo. C. Smith & BANKERS, 62 WALL STREET. Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at 48 LASALLE other places. Special attention given to collections. M. Gelston & Bussing, BANKERS Ac BROKERS 27 WALL Sx’REET All orders receive our Personal Attention. Wm. J. Gklston, John S. Bussing#. SECURITIES, P. .. „ OFFICE OF George K. 24 Nassau Sistare, ADJOINING HOWES 4b MACY, WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Febbuabt 11, 1867. New York City and County Stocks 30 SPECIE, Street, New Yo k. The Spe fte Department will be in charge of J. S, Cbonibb, (tate of J. S. Cronise & Co.), who has my authority to sign the Firm name by procu¬ ration. , < M v; * T. M. Morgan. T. A. Lathbop. Wm. H. Catlin. & Morgan, Co., STOCKS, AND ;, , , . and other In Nos. Nos. Companies, Buildings . . 38, 39, 40, 42, 37, 64, 66, 69, 71, 73, 78 Ac 80 Broadway. 5, 7,17, 19, 34, 36, 49 At 53 New St. ALL NEAR WALL STREET. Nos. 4,6, ll, 17,19, 21 & 38 r , V 19 Wall v Nos. 55 At 57 Broad St. Street, And Exchange Place. , ‘ - Banks, Bankers, Brokers, Merchants, Lawyers, Railway, Insurance, J GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, 4 Family Aid Bonds, Soldier’s Bounty Fund Bonds,, Bought and Sold on Commission / •ud other County Stocks. Also, Nos. 32 New'Street Ac 36 Broad Street, Stocks due In 1868 to 1870 at a very *New York. : ■ *-r. t Digit price. "7 *- ;l Refer to JAY COOKE & CO., Bankers, New York. 1 Wanted. V improvements, splendid light ventilation, suitable for Nos. 4 Ac GOLD, 1' k. Offices To Let. and BANKER, Particular attention paid to Collections. Edward C. Robinson, „ John B. Lockwood, Late President Formerly of 8th National Bank. Geo. Opdyke & Co. . With all the modem Hayden, AND DEALER IN BULLION AND ' K phia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada. e ON COMMISSION. No. 26 Broad Street, New York. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. • ST., CHICAGO, Draw on—Drexel, Winthrop & Co., and Winslow. Lanier & Co., New York; Drexel A Co., Philadel GOLD, STOCKS, BONDS, AND GOV¬ r Bro., (Lake Bank of Montreal.) sight, and special attention given to orders from ^OOKE W.WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN. ERNMENT LOUIS, MO. Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬ E. D. JONES, Cashier. Jno. A. McKim. McKim, Bros. & Co., ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, Robinson & National Bank. ST. pondents. BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Bankers and Stocks. Second and undertake TYLER, ULLMANNACO., Chicago. Honda and Loans for Railroad Cos*, Contract for Iron or Steel Balls, L ocomotires, e APPLY AT THE OFFICE OF EDWARD MATTHEWS, No. 19 Broad St., Room No. 80. ——— - ■ ■■ Bank. Fourth National All the PINE STREET. E. COR. NASSAU STREET, N. Government T<oans for 809 A 811 BANKERS, Republic, Bank of the CHESTNUT STREET, Bale. Dealers on best terms. BROADWAY. 43,000,000. LCapltal Bankers on and to Banks liberal terms. Joseph T. Bailey, Nathan Hilles, 1 Benjamin Rowland, Jr., descriptions of Government Bonds— City and Country accounts received on terms mos favorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United Stats William H. H. D. P. WHEELOCK, President. H. SANFORD, Cashier. Bank. Tenth National $l,00<M>r>0. BROADWAY Cor. WORTH ST. Designated Depository of the Government. Bank era’ and Dealers^ Accounts solicited. 336 favorable terms, and tuve business connected with the several departments or the G o vernment. Full information with regard to Government loans especial attention to Rhawn. <gEastern Bankers. Butler, (Established in 1847.) promptly attended to and remitted for by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co-., York. New York /—Duncan Sherman & Co; ROSS, President. Frothingham, Esq., Pres’t. Union Trnst Co.; Moses Taylor, Esq.; R. H. Lowry, Esq., Pres’t. The Tradesmens 291 Cashier. Bank of Republic; Henry Swift Claflin & Co. Office In New York No. 71 NATIONAL BANK. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ROB’T H. MAURY. $1,000,000 400,000 CAPITAL URPLUS^. RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. No. & Co., Duncan, Sherman BANKERS, CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., ISSUE CIRCULAR NOTES CIRCULAR LETTERS abroad and in the United AND OF CREDIT, of Travelers available in all the Por the use States, world; also, principal cities of the CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. C. Bankers & BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. and sold ' Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold, bought and. sold on " Commission. COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD NEGOTIATED. BROAD STREETS. Co., MERCHANTS, BANKERS AND COMMISSION No. 44 Broad Street, N. Y. Bonds, and Gold bought and sold on the moBt liberal terms. Merhants, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent, on eposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, &c., consigned to onrselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. J. K. GILLIAT & CO., of Government Securities, Stocks, Liverpool. Warren, Kidder & Co., BANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. on check at sight. John Cockle & Son, ~~ [BROKERS In Foreign Exchange, Ac. |8S PINE Bonds, Notes, dec. STREET NEW YORK. Betseences.—Moses Taylor; John Munroe A Co; C, Savage, Hon. F.E. U.S. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, Ill.; Spinner, Treasurer U. 8„ Washington. Capital stock, for. Winslow. York. Dunlap & Co., Gilmore, Byrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants. New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff & Gillespie. Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hnrlbert. 110 West 108 & Company ot New York. New York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford. Fourth Street, J Home Insurance Underwriters Agency Ch >rles CINCINNATI, OHIO. New York, Walsh. Pre^dent Bank of Mobile. Schroeder. Pres. Southern Bank of Ala. Dealers in T. H. McMahan & Co. GOLD, SILVER, NOTES, and all COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Healers in Domestic and Foreign GALVESTON, TEXAS. Special attention given to Collections of all kinds, having prompt and reliable correspondents at all acceesiblepoints in the State, and REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. GOVERNMENT BONDS, MADE at all accessible points and remitted for on Checks on UNCURRENT BANK kinds of COLLECTIONS .Exchange, day of payment. UNION BANK OF LONDON. FOR SALE. REFER TO National Park Bank, Howes * Macy, and Spofford, Ky. Commercial Bank of Ky. Com’l B’k of Ky., Lebanon, Ky & Co., Paducah, D. A. Given, of Watts, Given D. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky. 1/. M. Flournoy, Pres’t N. S. Rat, late Cash’r National Tileston A Co., New York. Second Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel Co. and D. 8. Stetson A Co., Philadelphia. T. A F. Thirkield A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and Jos. E. Elder A Goodwin, St. Lonis. Fowler, Stanard A Co Mobile. Pike, litpeyre A Bro., New Orleans. Drake, Kleinwcrthos Cohen, Lon¬ BANKING HOUSE OF , don and 33 BROAD Charles D. Carr & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, AUGUSTA, COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY Conner & No. 5 IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC BANK NOTES, . REMITTED FOR. Wilson, a S. C., KXCHANGE,SPECIE, 8TOCXS, AND BONDS, Especial attention paid to Collections. Refer to Duncan, Sherman A Co., New York; Franklin Bank, Richmond, Ya., Charles D. Carr * Co. Augusta, Ga. Drexel A Co_ Philadelphia; The and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. STREET, NEW Ray, Given THE CITY H. Maury * Co., YORK., & Co., BANK OF N. ORLEANS, LA. G A. Broad. Street, Charleston, BANKERS & DEALERS Jones & Co., Given, Liverpool^ FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST AXLO WED deposits, subject to all points WEST and SOUTH, promptly remitted 61,000,000. Surplus Fund. $250,000. Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William Woods, James A Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A, 8 Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Dnrand, Bankers, New E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. V.-Prest. Cincinnati. Collections made on and Cashier. NATIONAL BANK FIRST of References: Henry A Jones & Westervelt, BANKERS & BROKERS, Wilson, Callaway & THE Vxrmilyb & Co. Foreign and Babcock Bros & Co., Brest. Lewis Wouthington, Theodore Stan wood. Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ ernment Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt attention given to Collections. Commission AND CURRENCY NOS. 12 NEW & 14 J.W. Ellis, HENRY BATIKS Bankers. Western No. 52 St. Sc CO. Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought exclusively on Commission. YA. BOSTON. JAMBS BECK, JAMBS A. DUPBB, Jas. M. Francis St., Mobile, Ala. Muldon & Sons, Dealers in STATE STREET, No. 22 United States. MERCHANTS, 88 Dupee, Beck & Sayles, STOCK BROKERS, Bank Notes, Stocks, Ac., bought and sold on commission. Deposits received and Collections made on Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and COMMERCIAL POWELL, GREEN & Co.; H. B. BANKERS AND BROKERS 1014 MAIN ST., RICHMOND, all accessible points in the N. Y. Correspondent, STREET, EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND ' JOHN MUNROE & CO., PARIS. ALSO ISSUB Commercial Credits for the purchase of Merbhan dise in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. BILLS OF & Co., R. H. Maury Richardson & Co, BOSTON, 114 STATE Broadway. JA8. L. MAURY. ROB’T T. BROOKS D. L. J. M. Stout, ■ Page, Collections I. H. cheerfully furnished. at all times MERCHANT, References in the most securities on BANKER AND COMMISSION GALVESTON, TEXAS. Bankers, New HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial Agent of the United States.> We bny and sell all classes of Government Edward B. Orne, William Errien, Osgood Welsh, Frederic A. Hoyt, President, of the Central National Bank. Muxtoed, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. George & Co.), Preb’t. COOKE (of Jay Cooke WM. S. Late Caahier Joseph WASHINGTON, OF WILLIAM A. No. promptly attended to. NATIONAL BANK FIRST H. Rhawn, William and Canadas. Capital Liverpool, England. Washington. DIRECTORS: Has for sale all Bank of Collections and remittances services its Samuel A. Bispham, WILLIAM New York, and Merchants National Bank, Draw on $500,000 Offers Bank, Central National 818 STREET, NEW ORLEANS, 54 CAMP PHILADELPHIA , Capital Collections made for Co., Burke & National $5,000,000 Capital Bankers. Southern Bankers. Southern Brokers. Bankers and [February 16,1867. CHRONICLE. THE 194 O., NEW , ] Government Orders for the purchase or sale of Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold, Interest allowed on Deposits, subject to cheque* at sight. Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange Given, Jones & Co. are prepared to Business. draw Sterling: Bills, at sight or sixty days, on the Bank of Liverpool, in snms to suit purchasere. The New Orleans House will maks Collections in that City and at all accessible points South, and remit on the day of payment. We refer to Bank or America and National Bank or 8tatb or New York, New York City, an* promptly executed. to any of the Kentucky Banks. 195 THE CHRONICLE. February 10,1867.J Financial. Financial. Financial. OFFICE OF THE - ; 1866. Southwest Pacific Railroad Mutual Ins. Sun Company, THE OF OFFICE CHICAGO Sc A ETON RAILROAD CO. Chicago, Ills., February 14,1S67. Co., Buildings, 49 Wall St. New York, January 30,1867. following *t tement of the affair* of this Insurance The published in conformity w*th the re¬ 10th section of the Act of its In¬ Company is quirements or the CENT. FIRST MORT¬ SEVEN PER GAGE BONDS* corporation Premiums on uu expired risks, ber 81st, 1865 Premiums received daring the year to Coupon In $1,000 each, Run, Twenty Years to Principal and Interest Guaranteed by the Atlantic ance property valued at and the the year through. For particu¬ Colonel A. ALBERT, respecting lauds address Land Agent at St. Louis, Mo. DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE IT. S. Authorized Capital • ■ ■ - $500,000 Paid In Capital - - - $200,000 Transact a General Banking business corner of December 00 Blake and The road of the latter Company, 425, f4S 42 91,778 04 948,564 68 not yet collected. . 84,245 25 Scrip of Sundry Mutual Insurance Companies 3,103 00 [STOCK NO. 16 follows : Expenditures for Marine Losses, turn Premiums, Expenses, &c have been as when completed, direct and continuous railway from St. Louis to San Francisco, shorter by 500 miles from New York to the Pacific than by any other Premiums, commissions &c., estimated at Less, to he received for ad¬ vance in value ot Real Estate, Stocks. NO. 11 Collections made in Deficiency Amount of outstanding Scrip called in * Missouri Rail¬ road We offer for Company. sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort Missouri Railroad Com run. Coupons paya¬ 1 and July 1, in each year. Before accepting the agency for sale of these bonds, we made careful inquiry into the condition and prospects of the road, which was examined by Mr. Wm. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf, and their highly satisfactory report enables us to re. commend the bonds as first-class securities, and safe and j udicious investment. The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 in all) wi., 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 $5,006, 000 will cover a complete and well-stocked road of 889 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,000, with a net annual revenue after the first year of over $1,600,000, or a sum nearly four times be vond the amount needed to pay the interest on these bonds, the income of the road of coarse increasing gage Bonds of the North pany, having thirty years to ble in New York on January •very year. The Railroad connects the great City ot St. Louis with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only with the rich eat portions of Missouri, but with the States ot b&8 and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads. The first 600,000 have been sold at 80 cents,land the remainder are now offered at 85 cents. At tnis rate they yield nearly 8# per cent, income, and add 20 per cent, to principal at maturity. further. inquiries will be answered a ou Any office. JAY COOKE *00. and not included in the above asset*. No Fire Risks, disconnected from Marine, have on Cash AND BROKER, In Soathem Securities and Bank Bills. $0 BROADWAY & 5 NEW STREET, New York. BANKER • Southern outstanding risks, 39 $632,731 80 $500,000 00 Capital subscribed, to be added. Harrison, Garth of Assets remaining with the Company, exc'nsive of the propo <ed sub enption of notes in ad¬ No. 18 Harrison, Goddin Sc Apperson, Bankers and Collections made on ADAMS, Brokers, VIRGINIA. RICHMOND, all accessible Southern points. KIMBALL Sc MOORE, BANKERS, No. 14 80 Thomas J. John Chadwick, William H. Macy, Samuel L. Mitchell, Fred. G. Foster, Slaughter, Joseph Gaillara, Jr., Alex. M. Lawrence, Isaac Bell, George G. Hobson, Percy R. Pj»ne, Samnel M. Fox, Joseph V. Onativia, Edward Si J affray, William Ootheut, Poirier, Louis Lorut, Samuel A. Sawyer, Peter Elias Ponvert, Simon De Visser, Jacob K. Nevius, Isaac A Crane, A. Yznaga del Valle, Ernest Caylns, Frederick Chauncey, George L. Kingsland, James M. Campbell. John S. Wright, William Von Sachs, MOSES' H. GRINNELL, President. EDWARD R. Broad Street, MINING, EXPRESS. TELEGRAPH, RAILROAD, AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD .-■i w illiam Toel, Edward R. Anthony, Roswell Sprague, Wall Street, W.' H. Whittingham, TRUSTEES : Grinnell, ISAAC H. NEW YORK. NEW STREET, No. 8 of Premiums) $1,132,731 By order ot the Board, ISAAC H. WALKER, Secretary. Moses H. & Co., RANKERS, Making amount vance Collections. NewYork* Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Seenri ties, of all issues, and execute orders for the par chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur $636,703 75)... 1,356,157 59 rency, subject to check at sight. Company, on tbe 31st December, 1866, beid Assets as above, valued at.$l,988,889 The total of all ascertained and estima¬ ted Liabilities on that day were, ex¬ clusive of the amount of Premiums The NOIEL £). Bell, Edwin Company. been taken by tbe United States America. BANK SOUTHERN v Govern* Gold. all parts of the and British $1,165,791 95 and cancelled $1,161,820 00 In view of the above result, the Board of Trustees have this day ordered, that the outstanding Scrip or Certificates of Profits heretofore issued by the Com¬ pany, be reduced their entire amount, and the Cer¬ For further particulars apply to tificates issued therefor called in and cancelled. Holders of Certificates not heretofore redeemed, WARD & CO.; are hereby notified of the action of the Board, and are requested to surrender such certificates at the No. 54 Wall Street, New York. office of the Company for cancellation. The Board of Trustees also resolved, that a sub¬ SEVEN PER CENT. FIRST MORT¬ scription of FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOL^ GAGE RONDS LARS Of notes in advance of premiums be taken OF THE up, in addition to the cash capital of FIVE HUN¬ DRED THOUSAND DOLLARS already subscribed present Issue of Bonds a limit¬ ed amount Is no w offered for sale at the low rate of 80 per cent., subject to ad¬ vance at tbe option of the Company. Of tlie Securities and ment $413,426 86- 285,185 07 NEW YORK, BROAD STREET, BANKER, Dealer In all Classes of And &c., and estimated at Watkins, L. S. $648,611 43 for sundry Salvage, Re¬ insurance and other claims due the company * North Brothers, BROKERS AND BANKERS, BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Se’l on Commission Government Securi¬ ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Total $1,988,8S9 39 Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬ leum and Mining Stocks. The foregoing statement has been made to con¬ form strictly to the requirements of the Company’s Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to C barter. Draft. Dividends and Into rest c l’.ected and Invest¬ The RECEIPTS and EXPENDITURES of the Company for the year ending 31st December, 1866, ments made. Orders Promptly Executed. will form a route. DENVER COLORADO. F. Sts. Drake Rents of Real Es¬ Re¬ $8,506,069 14 Receipts from Earned Premiums, Profits on Gold, &c 2,575,462 26 This Company has recently been merged with the Excess of expenditures over receipts $930,606 88 Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company, having The Company were liable a land grant of 55,000,000 of acres, thereby adding at the end of the year, for to the fullest to the security of these Bonds. Unpaid Losses, Return lars NATIONAL. BANK FIRST Cash Bills Receivable Premium Accounts temperature the same as in Virginia. The winters last about six weeks, and the stock can be Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. V. Pres. of Denver, $2,866,407 14 mean kept on the range H. J. Rogers, the year : $2,382,' 18 81 205,749 99 and Re-insur¬ 278,638 34 gages and Loans, tate, Salvage, &c Brokers. J B. Chaffee, $2,120,322 30 The assets of the Company on the 81st 1866, were as follows, viz : Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages $440,650 United States Stocks, Loans on Stocks, Accrued Interest on Bonds and Mort¬ per acre. is remarkably salubrious, premiums dur¬ Losses paid daring On Marine Risks On In and Risks Expenses L.ARRABEE, Secretary. Bankers and return premiums, was $7,500,000, con¬ sisting of 90 miles of completed road and 330,000 acres of rich agricultural and mineral lands on the line of the road. (By a provision of the mortgage, when lands are sold to the amount of $40,000, it is to constitute a Fond for the redemption of a like amount of bonds, which are also received by the Company at PAR in Dayment for land.) This land is now being disposed of at rates from $5 to $40 The climate W. M. 212,103 14-2,595,349 21 of earned ing the year, less and Pacific Railroad Company, And secured by next for transfers. $3,235,660 92 The amount riven Stockholders of the Chicago and Alton Rail¬ road Company that a Dividend of Five Per Cent. (5), free ot Government Tax, has been declared, out of the earnings ot the road for the last six months, upon the Preferred and Common Stock of the Company, payable at the office ot Messrs. M. K. JESUP & COMPANY, No. 84 Broadway, New York, on the FOURTH D .vY OF MARCH NEXT, to holders of said stock who may be registered a# such at tbe close of bnMness hours on the 23d day of February, 18»7, at which time the transfer books will be closed, and reopened on the 5th day of March $2,389,246 07 On Marine Risks On Inland Risks Rondo of $640,311 71 December 31st, 1866 : $2,000,000 Decem¬ Notice.—Notice is hereby Dividend to the ANTHONY, Vice-Pres. WALKER, Secretary. Bought and Sold on Commission. Quotations and sales lists furnished daily on cation. Orders promptly executed. Riker & BROKERS IN NO. 5 appli¬ Co., MINING STOCKS, and 80 BROADWAY. NEW STREET J. Van Schaick, 38 Broad BANKER AND Street, STOCK BROKER*, THE CHRONICLE 196 Bankers and and Brokers. Bankers [February 16,1867. Bankers and Brokers. Brokers. * L. P. Morton & Travellers’ Credits. Co., TORE. STERLING EXCHANGE Letters of Credit for Travelers* Use, on HORTON, BURNS Sc CO., Street, New York. Dabney, Morgan & Co., allowed. A. HAWLEY HEATH. 53 Exchange Place. S. G. & G. C. LONDON, principal towns and cities of Available in an the GOLD, RAILROAD & MINING STOCK BROKERS Deposits received, subject to Check, and Intere AND TBGB BANK OF Co., London, BY (58 Old Broad Street, London,) UNION AGENTS Ward, V Europe and the East. COMPANY, STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and Lxn P. Mobtow, No. 44 Wall Waltxb H. Burns, H. Csusxb Ojxlxt. Keep constantly LIVERPOOL. their representative ana Attorneys 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 The subscriber, in the United States, JAY COOKE, VX. G. MOORHEAD, H. D COOKE, ( H. C. FAHNESTOCK < EDWARD DODGE, ( PITT COOKE. ) V ) Jay Cooke & Co., of the London House issued for the same purposes. Corner Wall and Nassau VISSER, SIMON DE BANKERS. Exchange Place, New York. 69 handf or immediate delivery on sates Drake Kleinwort&Cohen LONDON AND Co., Street. New York, STREET, BOSTON. UNITED Chabus E. Hhjtob, & RANKERS. BARING BROTHERS Sc 56 WALL T. W. B. HUGHES. Member of N.Y. Stock Ex ERMILYE FOR * Sale ol Stocks and Bondi in London andNew York. SECURITIES, AND 13 Broad Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes sad I*. P. IN GOVERNMENT ISSUED FOR Messrs. J. S. Morgan Sc Hughes, BANKERS Sc COMMISSION DEALERS ELLERS IN EUROPE AND THE EAST. 80 BROAD STREET, NEW ▲t Heath & LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE USE OF TRAV¬ BANKERS, “ b - a of STATES STOCKS INCLUDING , 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 6-20 Bonds of 1862, “ 6 “ 1864, “ “ 6 1865, 6 Per Cent 19-40 Bonds, 7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, 6 Per Cent Currency Certificates. New York State 7 per cent. 2d, & 3d series* BountyJLoan. LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS Componnd Interest Notes of 1864 1865 Bought and Sold. Sts., A, YERMILYE St CO. New York. No. 114 South 3d Winslow, Lanier & Co., Street, Philadelphia. Fifteenth Street, Opposite Treas. Department. Washington. In connection with our houses in 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 <fc Co., New Street, New York* NEW ORLEANS. Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, able in all parts York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬ will be resident partners. We Bhall SALE, give particular attention to the purchase, Interest Allowed on bonds orders for purchase and sale of stocks, and gold, and to all NO. 26 NEW Railroad business of National tions furnished to correspondents. References : James Brown, E*|., of Messrs. Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬ ident of the Chemical National Bank; James H. Banker, Esq., Vice-President of the Bank of New York N. B. A. BRADLEY, Cashier. Jackson Brothers, DEALERS IN STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, St GOVERN SECURITIES. MENT No. 19 Broad Securities, Street, New York. Insurance. Henry Dn Cofpet. Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates, ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold,State. Federal, and Rallroad Securities. B A N KE RS, Insurance AND Securities NO. 7 WALL STREET. In Dealers Government Gold, Stocks, Bonds, &c., Bought and Sold at on Commission, Registered and Cou¬ Company, OF HARTFORD. Charter Perpetual. Incorporated 1819 market rates pon Interest collected without charge. the sale of First Mortgage 6 per cent. ing Bonds central Pacific RR. Co. M. T. RODMAN, ) D. C. FISK, >• General Partners. K. H. FISK, PLINY FISK, Agents for Gold Bear¬ $3,000,000. CAPITAL L. J. HENDEE, President. J. GOOD NOW, Secretary. ) Special Partner. Assets January J. L. Brownell & Bro., BROKERS, J BANKERS Sc 1, 1867.-.$4,478,100 74 received on John Munroe & Co., BANKERS, PARIS AKD No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, ' Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers in all partsof Europe, etc., etc. Also Commercial Credits. . 394,976 96 INSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY FIRE. 28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals NO. NEW YORK AGENCY, 62 WALL STREET. favorable terms. References: JAS. A. J. H. Fonda, Pres. Nat. Mech. Banking Ass. N.Y. C. B. Blair, Pres’t. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. Barstow, Edey & Co., RANKERS Sc NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, iETNA Liabilities BANKERS AND BROKERS, - on most favorable terms. Rodman, Fisk & Co., Taussig, Fisher & Co., AMERICAN Certificates of Bankers accounts received BROKERS, Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬ ed on favorable terms. Interest allowed on depos¬ its, aubject to check at Bight. Telegraphic quotas on BANK, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION. Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Accounts of Make Collections Deposit issued. STREET, N.Y. John H. Jacquelin. Government Securities. No. 32 Broad NATIONAL NO. 80 BROADWAY. Gold, and (Messrs. Brown Bros & Co.’s new building), 69 & 61 WALL STREET, NEW YOKK Deposit*. Government BANKERS AND AMERICAN Government Securities for sale. Stocks, Bonds, March 1, 1866. Pott, Davidson & Jones, deposits of Gold and Cur¬ subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. Jacquelin & De Coppet, JAY COOKE & CO. Banks. rency, AMOS A. and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Oi all issues; to avail¬ of Europe. House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, ton No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed upon AND DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE Philadelphia and 1 Co., BANKERS. BANKERS, 27 Sc 29 Pine Lockwood & BROKERS, HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 30 TO The Mutual Life InsuRANCE COMPANY OF Interest allowed upon rency, subject to Check Sy WINSTON, President. MoCURDY, Vice-President. l ISAAC ABBATT, f JOHN M. STUART. FREDERICK B. A. AND deposits of Gold and Cur¬ at Sight Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. YORK. $16,000,000 00 NEW CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, oveb No. 36 Broad Street* Office No. 16. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. ALEXANDER, Agent. secretaries, jgg Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS. gaute’ fectfc, Commercial limeo, gailwag gtotritor, and §nottrawce lowmal A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1867. VOL. 4 CONTENTS. THE CHRONICLE. The Demand Certificates The Principle of Publicity the Treasury Gold Sales 197 Debt and Finances of Michigan. Latest Monetary and Commercial and 198 Confederated British America The Prevailing Commercial De¬ 199 .. English News Commercial and Miscellaneous News 201 202 THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Cotton Money Market. Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City funks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc. sale Prices N. Y. Stock Exchange Commercial Epitome :. Tobacco Breadstuffs Groceries.. 204 207 208 Dry Goods Imports Prices Current and Tone of the Market 221-22 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE Railway News Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneocs Bond List JOURNAL. 215 I Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. Insurance and Mining Journal . 216-17 209 211 212 212 213 214 .” | Advertisements 218 219 193-96, 220, 223-24 djronicD. Thb Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every supposed, nothing outstanding which during the present year could produce embarrassment. This, we admit, was cur understanding of the Treasury movements, and we presume prevailed among the public generally. confess, therefore, to have been not a little surprised when it was publicly announced, a few days ago, that a bill was to be reported by the Finance Committee of the Senate to authorize the issue of a novel description of Certificates of Indebtedness, for liquidating 100 millions of Compound Interest Notes which fall due this year, and which the Treasury has no other available means to meet at maturity. It had no doubt been better to have left 100 millions of the old Certificates outstanding; but, if the new ones are actually indispensable, and no other expedient will meet the case, as Mr. Sherman implicitly declared in Congress on Thursday, the nation must, we suppose, accede to the temporary re¬ versal of its financial policy. The bill has undergone several changes since it was first published. The following is the form in which it passed thp Senate : A Bill to Provide for the Payment of Compound Interest Notes.— Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the the same conviction We 203 200 pression NO. 86. Satur¬ day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants’ Magazine, with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to the hour of publication. Congress assembled, That for the purpose redeeming and retiring any compound interest notes outstanding, the TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized and directed to issue Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with The Dailt temporary loan certificates in the manner prescribed by section four of Bulletin, delivered by carriers to oity subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage) $12 00 the act entitled “ An act to authorize the issue of United States United States of America in of and Financial Chronicle, without. The Dailt Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) 10 <M) For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Finanoiai Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 5 00 Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-oMce. It is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $120 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, 50 William Street, New York. Th* Commercial notes,” approved February 26th, 1862, bearing interest at a rate not principal and interest payable in said certificates of temporary loan may National bank holding or owning the same as a part of the reservep^ovided for in section 81 and 32 of the act entitled “ An act to provide asnational currency secured by a pledge of United States bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemp¬ tion thereof,” approved June 3,1864^Provided,That not less than twofiftbs of the entire reserve of such bank^hall consist of lawful money Files for holding the Chronicle or Bulletin can be had at this Office. of the United States : And provided further, That the amount of such Price #1 50. temporary certificates at any time outstanahig shall not exceed one hundred million dollars. \ The third volume of the Chronicle, from July to December, 1866, incluThe certificates here authorized differ from the old ones in sive, is for sale at this Office ; price, unbound, $5 00. THE DEMAND CERTIFICATES. The old Saxon exceeding three per cent, per annum, lawful money on demttBd: and constitute and be held byStny respects—first, they are payable in greenbacks on de¬ mand, and secondly, they are permitted to be held by the banks as part of their reserve. These new certificates are in reality due-bills, or sight drafts on the Treasury, payable not in National Bank notes, as are other maturing securities, but in greenbacks exclusively. Being thus exchangeable into greenbacks on demand, the certificates can be available as reserve wherever there is a Treasury office close at hand provided with a sufficient stock of greenbacks to meet them. two proverb which says that “ over doing is un¬ doing ” has received many an illustration from the political and social changes of this country. A financial illustration has just been furnished by Mr. McCulloch. When the Cer¬ tificates of Indebtedness were paid off, toward the close of last year, our readers will remember that we expressed doubts as to the expediency of taking such popular and harm¬ But in the smaller cities, where no Sub-Treasury exists, what less government securities out of the hands of investors, and are the banks to do ? They will be unable to hold this kind suggested that, in some future emergency, when the Treasury of reserve, for, in the event of a sudden run, they might be should be^in need, the issue, as experience had fully proved, obliged to stop payment before they could convert certifi¬ might be made available to the extent of 100 millions of cates into greenbacks. From such advantages as the issue confers on the banks those of the smaller cities would be dollars or more. Besides the old certificates, which amounted at one time thus excluded, and, on account of the inequality, an amend¬ to 280 millions of dollars, Mr. McCulloch paid off other ment has been proposed, to prohibit those banks which ehorf-time obligations of the^Treasuiy, leaving,^as it was hold the certificates from counting compound interest note* [February 16,1867. THE CHRONICLE. This arrangement, as is claimed, regarded as a model Government institution. Evidence being equalize the advantages between the banks of the given that the charges maliciously or thoughtlessly made could greater and of the lesser cities. not possibly be true, the labors of the'Committee were virSeveral other amendments have been suggested, of minor tually at an end. importance. But the only one which requires notice is that From the evidence thus given, however, we glean some permission be given to the Secretary of the Treasury to facts worthy of consideration in relation to the broader quesstop the payment of interest, by the publication of thirty tions of policy, the decision of which the Committee very days’ or sixty days’ prior notice. properly waived. The following passage from the report may That the adoption of this measure will tend to produce serve as an illustration: expansion, and that it will introduce an element of weakness Question.—You may state if you have with you the means of stating into the reserves of the banks, is much to be feared. Should how much gold and the mode you have of disposing of it, hasthat time posed of since the 16th of December. Answer.—1 think from teen dig it have these effects it will produce financial trouble and de- to the present I have sold about $2,000,000. These sales were made to the committee Myers. /The process is the^ame that^ was rangement, which the enemies of those institutions will be I through Mr. P. M. in my examination in New York last Fall. Mr. Myers quick to discern and eager to publish, with a view to pro¬ goes into the gold-room, and either by himself or through some other For example, if I person, sells the amount of gold J tell him to sell. duce a hostile feeling in the public mind towards the bank want currency, and if the price is high enough to justify it, 1 tell him to as part of their reserve. would • described ing system. The bill claims, allevia¬ What is however, to be only a temporary of the Treasury. by the necessities of the I op, and I can of the embarrassments tion further and above all demanded A, . ,. He goes and sells it, and within half an hour after with a written statement of the amount, stating how much he has sold to each individual, the name of the individual, and the price at which he has sold it. _ After such a sale, if the price goes sell $260,000 in gold. the sale furnishes me n n i ii i . i sell a larger amount to advantage, I give him another order, and he goes and does the same thing. The transaction is just aa 8ecre(, a8 that of any other man who goes into the gold-rocm and sells vigorously forward. Until the short obligations of the Govern- his gold. country is, pushed ment are , that the process of funding shall he all funded wre shall be In these few sentences we continually in danger of have the most lucid description of the Treasury policy of selling gold, in its practical working, | which has ever been published. The Treasury, it will be seen, to regulate the relations between the supply and the THE PRINCIPLE OF PUBLICITY AND THE TREASURY GOLD I demand of the precious metals at any time in the market And this regulation of the supply is conducted notin a manner SALES. On the recent Congressional inquiry into the alleged abuses patent to all the world, but secretly. The knowledge of what in the management and sales of government gold by the As- js done is confined to a few officials of the Treasury, and to the sistant Treasurer at New York we have hitherto refrained broker or brokers who may be employed to negotiate the sales, from comments, as we preferred waiting until the report of jn certain great crises, when the market is feverish, the effect the Committee was laid before the public, with any accompa- produced by a secret disturbance of the relations of supply and nying documents throwing light on the question mooted. Mr. demand, or even to a dread of such a disturbance, may for a Van Dyck has long been well known as an official of incor- short time be prodigious. And to require that when, by underruptible honesty, and the inquiry seemed likely to terminate paid officials, in a few hours thousands of dollars might be mysin simple emphatic expression of opinion by the Committee teriously received in return for a suggestive shrug, or a dark and by Congress, that as an officer of the Government, intrust* cautious hint, the money shall be refused, and no sign be made, ed with the carrying out of a certain policy, he has uniformly js to put our public servants under the pressure of temptations, acted with integrity. The result has been precisely as was and to expect an exalted degree of superhuman virtue and selfsacrifice, not onlj on the part of two or three trusty persons, anticipated. Some persons, however, from the gratifying fact that the but also of subordinates and acquaintances, who may be adroit being called upon in a critical moment to provide for some inconvenient claims or for some unexpected emergencies. assumes a exonerated from charges, some enough to master the secret. of which, if proved, would have provoked among other penalIf there were no other objections to the privacy of the ties that of felony, have inferred that as a necessary conse- of Government gold but that of their giving a gigantic power Assistant Treasurer has been sales approval of the policy of the Commander-in-chief, perpetuation of that policy by the supreme power in the State. 1 he doings of the subordinate officer may be approved, J while there is no approval either of the orders under which he acted, or of the strategical plans which he was carrying out. We may blame the policy while we exonerate the into the hands of a few men, which may be used for purposes of selfish gains, this reason ought to be enough, in a popular Government like ours, to secure the withdrawal of such a power as likely to be corrupting to public servants, and consequently mischievous to public interests. But there are other and even more forcible arguments which are entitled to attention. One 0f these, which is much discussed, is set forth by a cotemporary as follows: iCvery material interest in the community is connected with the nrl I price of gold, and here is one man with unlimited power and discretion to sell from the Government hoard such sums as his judgment may di¬ rect. He tells us that he limits his sales usually to a quarter of a mil¬ lion per day, and that much larger sums are sold by others. But there is material difference between a sale of gold already on the market man. and the policy of selling gold privately will be allowed to go on as heretofore. But it must be at once evident that the inference is illogical. A subordinate general may be acquitted by a court-martial of misconduct in carrying out his orders, but this acquittal, though honorable to himself, and vindicating him against traducers, can by no means be interquence preted and as an a to the the # . I J .I * vt — — _ — a a sale from a hoard not in use or * t♦ ri am n otherwise accessible. One or two than understand it, is in precise analogy to the case millions sold out of the Sub-Treasury will affect the market more general policy of selling gold was not referred g™nt s£ fa to sell Committee at all. The tribunal was convened for the | til he gives his order to the broker, and let us suppose tnat neither, This, before • as we us. gentleman in question ; but, the charges being personal, u“n- knowft^Hhe^seSt'TreMurer ^“1°“ The STpuresTtodivld^®"to >roduce such an effect in be the hands of even He exfrciTd by kirn at bis discretk ?unan¬ an discretion it, . Court was personal, too. The Assistant- may take a fancy to sell, when, without his suspecting ai nounced sale would be very disastrous to\a great variety of mercantile Treasurer found u easy to show that no such malfeasance in and monetary interest*). No such power should be vested in any office or perversion of trust, as were alleged, were possible I haads. ' ’ under the system of checks and safeguards against fraud But what, it may the verdict of the which have so long made the Sub-Treasury j of this city to ^ _ . I be asked, is the remedy ? The obvious be J remedy is publicity* In the excitement of the gold market 1 THE 16,1867.] February gold on several occasions was sold by Mr. Assistant Treasurer Cisco after a method which would probably work well for small sums, such as we are selling now. The transactions were public. They cost us nothing for commis¬ sions. Every body knew not only what amount of gold was sold, and at what price, but, moreover, there was nothing to prevent any importer or merchant from purchasingon as during the war good great capitalist legitimate business as reason we change coin into currency, to facilitate Treasury opera¬ all the objections against publicity have it is admitted that Mr. Van Dyck has managed a may tions, while vanished, and bad fidelity, with singular judgment, and with unim¬ peachable integrity, we maintain that the policy itself should be changed, and that future sales of Treasury gold should be policy with public. The which gradually to¬ also Prob¬ Govern¬ the powerful of these latter.or repelling influences. Every most the British Americans to exclusion to the development of new com¬ mercial relations with each other, will give force to these repelling influences. But without entering deeply or at year which accustoms from our commerce, and speculations upon this point, Jt may be safely establishment of the Confederation will re¬ tard, at least, if it does not avert, any drift of British Amer¬ ican sympathies and necessities and interests towards a po¬ litical union with ourselves. Let us confine ourselves, there¬ length into assumed that the fore, just at present, with which the new experiment of English Colonial Secretary, AMERICA. the Earl of Carnarvon, given a national life. Prince Edw’rd’s Is Newfoundland... 91,443 130,000 will, no doubt, be strengthened New Brunswick.. 295,084 Total 3,976,244 7^ 368,781 rather than weakened for a time by this consolidation ; but Nova Scotia it would be superfluous to repeat at this late day the reasons We include Newfoundland and Prince Edward’s here, be¬ which in these columns and elsewhere, have heretofore been cause it is well understood that their accession to the Con¬ given for believing that the ultimate result of an effective federation is a mere matter ot time. They stand out now North American Confederation must be the independence of only as Rhode Island and North Carolina stood out in ’89 the provinces comprised in it. The expectation of such a against the Union. result has probably done more than any other single cause The proportion of native born residents to those of foreign to secure favorable attention to the project in Great Britain; birth is not so large in these provinces as in the United for it is quite plain, and has for some time past been plain, States, being 79 per cent in the former, against nearly 90 per that the intelligent portion of the British public are more cent in the latter. The inhabitants of French descent bear anxious than is any considerable party in the North American smaller proportion than is commonly supposed to the provinces to sever the tie which unites those provinces with whole body politic. They are concentrated chiefly in Lower the metropolis. Canada, and number throughout the new confederation no The promulgation of the act of Confederation in England more than 961,466. They must, however, be regarded as an is to be accompanied, we are informed, by the publication of element likely to be at least passively unfriendly to any imperial loan in aid of the construction of a complete amalgamation with the United States; and it is probable railway communication through the provinces, and both by that we must view in the same light the fact that the Roman this means and by the substitution of a general revenue sys¬ Catholics number no less than 44£ per cent, of the entire tem in the place of the existing provincial tariffs, it is ex¬ population, and are no less than three times as numerous either of the two religious denominations ranking next to pected that the Canadian commerce, which has been repelled from our own borders by the abolition of the Reciprocity them in importance, the Church of England, which comprises Treaty and by the establishment of our own present tariff 15f, and the Presbyterians who stand at 15J per cent of the rates, may be diverted to and permanently knitted with the inhabitants. industries of the Atlantic provinces. Although the agricultural population of the Provinces It cannot be said that these expectations are upon the face has been falling off of late years relatively to the numbers of them wholly unreasonable. The British North American of those engaged in other occupations it still comprises very Provinces most certainly seem to labor under every disad¬ nearly 50 per cent of the whole, and the value of the farms vantage of soil, of climate, and of inter-communication, when of British America is set down at $546,345,330, being rather they are compared with our own great Northern tier of less than half of the total estimated value of the property States. But they do as certainly contain within themselves of the six provinces. The annual wheat crop is estimated many elements of a possible national existence and prosper¬ at a little less than one-sixth, and the annual barley-crop at ity, and now that this scheme of a Confederation, which was little more than one-third of the wheat and barley-crops long looked upon as chimerical, is on the eve of accom¬ of the Union; while of wool at the last returns the prov¬ plishment, nothing is to be gained by blinding ourselves to inces raised somewhat less than one-eighth of the amount the fact that it really may bring about, in the process of raised in this country. The Provincial Fisheries were nearly time, very serious changes in the political and commercial and the , its Book and Almanac ” notice of his intention to introduce into Parliament bill providing for the confederation of all the Eastern British North American Provinces, excepting Newfoundland and Prince Edward’s Island; and it may therefore be taken for certain that we shall shortly see the first steps accomplished towards the consolidation on our Northern frontiers of what may practically be regarded as a new nationality. Upper Canada... 1,802,056 The connection between the British American Colonies Lower Canada... 1,288,880 has trade” to an exposition of the “ stock in organization is about to commence of British North America, gives us the means of making such an exposition ; and we could sincerely wish that there existed among ourselves any exhibit of our own national and State resources at once so compendious and so clear. In this “ Year-Book ” the popula¬ tion of the new Confederation is estimated to be in January, 1867, very nearly four millions in number, the annual rate of increase in the six colonies ranging from 1.50 per cent, in Newfoundland to 4.34 per cent, in Upper Canada. The dis¬ tribution of this population is as follows : The “ Year CONFEDERATED BRITISH influ-: there are equilibrium of the Western Continent. If ences at work among the British American population may be expected to draw those populations wards a union with ourselves, there are other influences at work among them of quite the opposite tendency. ably the recently adopted fiscal policy of our own ment will be found in time to have supplied some of could the for bis speculative needs. “ A public sale,” it has been well said, w is a thing which speculators cannot control.” As the absurd argument is now exploded that the Treasury should sell gold in order to control and fix its price, and as the chief now assumed for selling Government gold at all is that for his terms 199 CHRONICLE. mother country a an as a so THE CHRONICLE. 200 [February 16,1867. Sire of locks No. o Length Depth approximate in value to our own, being equal on an average in feet. in miles, in feet. locks 200x46 5 8# 10 to 75 per cent, of the latter; and during the past year, as we Lachine Beanbamois 200x45 9 11# 10 Cornwall 200x45 7 11# 1C need hardly remind our commercial readers, the provincia Farrand’s Point: 200x45 1 9# 10 200x45 3 Plat.. 9# 10 ship-yards have pretty nearly monopolized the activity in Rapid Iroquois Point 200x45 1 9# 10 200x45 2 that direction of the North American Continent. 9# 10 This point, Gallop’s Welland 28 10 27 150x28# upon which it is not agreeable to dwell, has been set forth Totals 69 64~ clearly and with some not unnatural bitterness in a petition While the St. Lawrence canals, completing the system of navigation recently presented to the Senate by Mr. Fessenden in behalf from the ocean to Lake Ontario, can now j ass vessels of 800 tons bur¬ den, no vessels of more than 600 tons burden can go from Lake Ontario of the ship-builders of Maine. to Lake Erie, via Welland Capal, and the other lakes above the Falls of A good deal of enterprise has been directed during the Niagara. It will, however, we suspect be found, when the Confederate past three years to the development of the mining indus tries of the Provinces, but as yet with no results of com¬ system fairly gets into operation, that the maritime provinces manding importance. In the Report of the “ Commission will press for, and that the inland provinces will be led to on the Canadian Gold Fields 99 for 1866 the yield of the recognize the necessity of modifying this canal policy, and Chaudiere district is estimated at $116,000, but neither in of working together to bring the Canadas directly into re¬ the production of gold, lead or copper can the Provinces be lations with the Atlantic coast. • Without entering now upon the strictly commercial statis¬ considered to have done more than indicate their possession of resources likely to prove at some future day remunera¬ tics of the proposed confederation under existing circumstan¬ tive. ces, we may properly assume that the inter-provincial com¬ When we consider that the provinces now raise under merce at least must be speedily benefitted by the removal of their separate systems a total revenue larger than was founc the restrictions under which it now labors; and whatever necessary for the United States when we possessed a popula¬ may be its ultimate issue as a form of Government, the will be given by the experiment of tion no larger than theirs, it can scarcely be doubted that no stimulus which serious fiscal difficulty will be found to be in the way of the confederation to political thought and to commercial enter¬ experiment of confederation. Mr. Galt, indeed, who is ad¬ prise in the colonies can hardly fail, we think, to redound mitted to be the ablest of British American financiers, de¬ largely and directly to their advantage, while the operation clared recently in his place in the Canadian Parliament that of the experiment itself will certainly both deserve and com¬ during the year 1865-66 the receipts of the Canadas exceed¬ mand the very careful attention and study of our own states¬ men and ed the expenditure by almost sixty thousand people. dollars, even after allowing for the unusual militia charges of that year. THE PREVAILING COMMERCIAL DEPRESSION. The debt of the Provinces is very nearly as large as the debt of the Union in 1860, but as the charge per head of the Complaints are universal of the stagnation and the un¬ pop¬ ulation has been diminishing during the last five years, and profitableness of business, A spring season so depressed now ranges from a minimum pressure of only 20 cents per and generally unsatisfactory as the present is hardly within the memory of our city merchants. The trade of the head of interest yearly, in Prince Edward Island, up to a interior is generally reported dull and maximum pressure of $1 25 per head of interest unpromising. Al¬ yearly, in Canada, it ought to be easily practicable for the financiers of though the South has realized upon a large portion of its cotton crop, it is found devoid of trading spirit, and even the new confederation, if the experiment at all equals by its unable to liquidate much of its indebtedness on account of results the expectations of its advocates, to adjust any neces¬ last year’s purchases. In the Western States merchants sary burden of enlarged and prolific expenditure to the abil¬ complain of unusual difficulty in making their collections, ity of the population. and have on hand a heavy balance of fall The enormous sum, amounting to stock; the result nearly $150,000,000, which has already been laid out by the being that their obligations to the Atlantic cities, in many provinces upon rail¬ ways and canals, at once explains the origin of their existing cases, have to be renewed for 30 to 60 days. The New public debt, and proves that neither British capital nor pro¬ England cotton mills find the demand for goods so limited, vincial enterprise will be slow to come forward in under¬ compared with their production, that at the beginning of takings of general value to the provincial people. But here- this month some of the manufacturers made a still further tofore, as Mr. Hatch in his report on Canadian and Ameri¬ curtailment of their time of running. The woolen trade, can commerce has, we think, fully shown, this outlay has now one of our most extensive industries, although it recently failed to produce its expected results. The Provinces have diminished its aggregate production probably quite 20 per tried to divert American commerce with Europe into Cana¬ cent., finds little relief from the reduced supply of goods, dian channels, rather than to open a new Canadian commerce and manufacturers have to sell a large amount of their pro¬ through British American ports by connecting the St. Law- ducts at a discount from cost. In the leather and iron rence directly with New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. With trades similar complaints prevail; and, indeed, it would be difficult to find an important exception to the common this object they have lavished stag¬ money on canals which have i * . - ' so far failed to attract are still bent on the our same Western transportation, but thev policy. Says Mr. Hatch : nation. This condition of affairs must be extent, regarded as, to some natural reaction from the remarkable activity of navigable for ships, are also projected. The trade immediately longest is that proposed from Georgian Bay, on Lake Huron, to Montreal, succeeding the close of the war. For following chiefly the Ottawa River, and connecting it with the Matta- the first twelve months after peace all the markets exhibited wan, French River, and Lake Nipiseing. It is stated that of its whole an extreme distance, of about 480 miles, less than thirty eight would consist of buoyancy. Producers took no care about the artificial canal. It is estimated by the friends of this route that the dis¬ probable permanency of this activity, but strained every tance will be 842^ miles less by it from Chicago to Montreal than by resource for the present means of transit by meeting the unexpectedly brisk demand, all way of the lakes and St Lawrence; and the cost of its completion is variously computed by Canadian au¬ lattering themselves that^this was but an evidence of the thorities at from $24,000,000 to $60,000,000. It is also proposed to enlarge the Welland and St. Lawrence canals wonderfully recuperative energy of qur commerce. It •o as to permit the passage of seagoiDg vessels of 1,200 tons burden. turned out, however, that the large'trade of 1865-6 was but The present dimensions of the various canals required to overcome the a feverish natural obstacles of the route from Lake Erie to the impulse, inspired by hopes natural enough, but Other Canadian routes, Welland Canal, Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence ocean, are as a via the follows: more sanguine than reasonable; and we now witness ft gene- February 16,1867.] Tal prostration as THE CHRONICLE. the result, partially, of the overstrained production of manufactures. 201 and the oommercial interests of the country feel sorely ag¬ grieved that their convenience should have been disregarded potent causes of the prevailing depression, how¬ in keeping open disturbing issues longer than is ever, lie deeper. necessary* We are in the midst of a process of re¬ from such unworthy considerations. The present demoral covery from the derangements incidental to the war; and ized condition of the trade of the whole the recuperation is much more painful than was the country appeals loud¬ growth ly to Congress for moderation and despatch in the settlement of the disease. When, from the rise in the gold premium of these momentous measures. and the steadily-growing scarcity of products, prices and Certain movements among the operative classes have in wages were rapidly advancing, all flattered themselves upon no trifling measure helped to aggravate the embarrassments their rapid gains, and deemed war a singularly prosperous connected with the present reactionary period. It would ap¬ game, never for a moment dreaming that the pleasing pear to be very obviously to the interest jof the working prosperity was altogether fictitious—the hallucination of a classes that they should offer no unnecessary resistance to a disease. Soon after the war ceased the unhealthy stimulus process resulting in the fall of prices. No class suffers so was withdrawn, and the self-curative tendencies of commerce severely from high prices, and none would be so largely began to assert their force. The gold premium had to de¬ benefitted by a fall iq values. As, however, labor constitutes cline, if we would ever return to a safe business basis; and almost the exclusive cost of products, it is clear that unless the processes of supply and demand, in respect to products, producers will consent to be constantly losing on their busi¬ had to be restored to their normal relation to each other, in ness, by paying more for labor than they get for products, order that the ordinary range of values might be recovered. the laborer must consent to a steady reduction of pay, wait¬ The first thing to be anticipated was a curtailment of con¬ ing for compensation in the subsequent decline of prices. sumption, from the inability of the people to purchase at the This requirement, however, is steadily resisted by the work¬ prevailing high prices. The result of that process must be men ; who quote a steady gain of supply upon demand; and tho result cannot afford to existing prices as an evidence that they work for less. To make this resistance more of that a loss to producers and to merchants upon their effective they are combined in organizations embracing every stocks, especially of merchandise. These losses, again, have branch ot trade, and extending throughout the country. The a tendency to enforce a contraction in the consumption of trade associations dictate the terms upon which each member the classes employing their capital in trade and manufac¬ shall work, and this unanimous lesistance prevents that tures ; while they have also caused a certain amount of labor steady process of yielding by individual workmen which to be thrown out of employment, which has necessitated a would otherwise effect a gradual adjustment of the labor still further curtailment in the consumption of the working market to the downward tendency in prices. Many opera¬ classes. We are now in the midst of the operation of these tives are thus unnecessarily thrown out of employment; but, processes; and their effect is apparent in the general lack of as the associations support them, and virtually keep their profit upon producing or trading operations, and a conse¬ labor out of the market, those who remain in epnploy can, quent curtailment in th9 amount of capital thus employed. for a time, keep up their wages; and in this way the But while this process of reaction from high prices must al reduction is temporarily staved off. The effect gener¬ of this be regarded as the chief cause of the existing commercial combined movement of the working classes is more 'disasdepression, yet contemporaneous circumstances have materi¬ trous than may appear at first sight, and should be resisted ally aggravated the derangements. Taxation has pressed by capitalists. It involves manufacturers in with extreme severity unnecessary upon the trade and production of the losses, without any compensating advantage to the operatives country, on the one hand lessening the profits of the manu¬ at large; while, by keeping a large proportion of the pro¬ facturer, and on the other, diminishing the purchases of ductive power of the country idle, it tends to consumers. keep up the In many instances the taxes, by—as we have comparative scarcity of commodities and helps to protract heretofore shown—injudicious methods of impost,have driven the period of high prices. It impedes the free operation of capital from employments hitherto profitable; while the con¬ individual interest, and creates a large amount of sacrifice stant changes in the distribution of taxation have beset some and The more ^ branches of business with suffering for discouraging no adequate purpose. uncertainties. Again, Having indicated the principal causes of the existing de¬ the close of the war has naturally raised in Congress many pression of trade, we shall leave to our next issue the discus¬ fundamental measures of legislation, the discussion of which sion of such modes of relief as come within the scope of has developed differences of leg¬ opinion and political animosities, islation. which have been regarded by merchants as involving con¬ tingencies vitally affecting the prospects of trade. Questions DEBT AND FINANCES OF MICHIGAN. of reconstruction, of impeachment, of tariff, of internal reve¬ The funded and fundable debt of the State of Michigan on nue, of banking, of currency and currency the 30th November, 1866, amounted to contraction, have $3,979,921, and was been raised and no one of these earnestly discussed at Washington; but upon weighty issues has any definite conclusion made up as follows ; A protracted suspense as to the settlement of so many grave questions cannot but prove an important source of disturbance to business operations. Whilst so Six per cent. Renewal Loan bonds, Seven “ $2,000,000 “ “ Six “ “ “ “ u “ Six “ “ Six 11 “ “ “ Seven “ War Loan bonds, Seven “ War Bounty undetermined, upon matters which affect the conditions of production and Six per cent. St. Marie canal bonds 1, 1878 been reached. much remains directly distribution, the only alternative presented to capitalists is employing their means at a blind venture, or remaining idle ; and in many cases they choose the latter. We are not disposed to attach to Con¬ gress any undue responsibility in this matter. It must be conceded that some of these due Jan. 1, 1878... “ the time “ $216,000 250,000 500,000 500,000 760,000 1868... 1873... “ “ “ “ 1878... 1883... “ 1880. “ bonds, 1,111,500 463,000 .. May 1,1890.. (guaranteed by State), due Jan. Matured adjusted bonds, past dae and interest stopped fall paid $5,000,000 loan bonds, past due and in’t stopped. War loan bonds, called in Jan. 1, 1860, “ \ “ “ Past paid (unrecognized) bonds $125,000 adjustable at *• .... Total funded and fundable debt. The amount of this held J, by the several educational questions required to be raised as follows, to wit.: school they have been, and were too weighty to be dis¬ Primary cent, fund Five per primary school ftmd,. posed of hastily; their discussion, however, has been need¬ University fnnd Normal school fnnd lessly protracted by partisan harangues and party Total trust fund debt. schemes;. at “ “ $3,790,500 $100,000 4,000 12,000 1,100 72,321 $3,970,921 funds is $1,268,331 138,631 279.565 41,877 202 these educational funds in State bontl^bas been pursued for several years, the object being the ultimate withdrawal of the State debt from the public market, and the safe investment of the funds themselves. If this policy is continued, the Treasurer in his report says, that the amount thus received, added to the annual levy of 3-16th of a mill for the Sinking Fund, will probably be sufficient to pay the State debt as fast as it matures. Deducting the investments already made, viz.: $1,728,404, from the funded and fundable debt as above given, viz.: $3,979,921, leaves the net amount of thal debt outstanding cn the 30th November, 1866, $2,251,517. The State tax for the year 1866 consists of the following The policy of investing items, viz.: 1865) General $2,000,000 Loan, Sinking Fund. War Loan, Sinking Fund Military tax (Act 16, Laws of 1802)... Appropriation for Insane Asylum (Act 192, Laws of 1865) 2.7-10 Mill tax (Act 363, Laws of 1-8 Mill tax (Act 122, Laws of 1861) 1-16 Mill tax (Act 5, Laws of 1801) Total amount of State tax for 1866 £<xt*0t fllonetarg EXCHANGE AT LATEST and supported becoming important. A State military fund to aid, arm equip military organizations within the State, is from a tax of 15c. levied on each voter. The following statement exhibits the receipts and disburse¬ ments on account of the several funds administered by the State for the fiscal year ending Nov. 30, 1866 : Payments. War Loan 14,184 60 371,398 13 • Land Interest Asylum Fund State Building 6,000 00 124,531 00 52,766 65 14.693 75 12,'306 58 233,339 51 7,123 48 2,533 54 3,618 36 Fund Balance in Sub-Treasury, Nov. 30,1865... Ba ance in Treasury, JSov. 30, 1866 ..... 30 Sydney days. 25.10 25.15 3 mo’s. 32 X@ 30 — — — dis. 53X days. Jan. 29. 60 days. Dec. 26. 99 days. Dec. 31. 60 days. 44 Jan. 8. 44 Jan. 14. 44 Jan. 3. t« Jan. 16. 6 mo’s. Jan. 6. 44 Jan. 1. 44 Dec. 25.44 Jan. 16. 44 Jan.14. 44 Jan. 15. 30 days. Dec. 17. 4s. 5%d. 3 p. c. dis. 1 p. c. 1S.6X@ 8 mo’s. Jan. 22. 4s. 5X<*. is\\<m i8\\<m l«lld@ 44 108X IX >. c. prem. 20@23 23X@23 x @50X 46X@46X 24X@24X 50 2X@3 p. c. prem. Is. 11 Xd. Is. 11 Xd. Is. llXd. IX P- c. prem. [From our own Correspondent.! London, Wednesday, Jan. 80, 1867. Up to the present time the week has been one of great inactivity business has been transacted in any department of trade. There ha® been a tendency to depression in prices, the tendency in many cases having assumed the more certain form of au actual de¬ cline. So far as the Stock Exchange is concerned, the decline is some¬ what general, and, in particular instances, the depreciation is con¬ siderable. This fall is attributed to the continued withdrawals of gold from the Bank of England; to sales of certain securities—chiefly con¬ sols—by order of the Court of Chancery, in connection with companies now in liquidation, and to realizations of profits. To-day’s Stock Ex¬ change markets have been the most depressed we have witnessed for some time ; but as regards all good and safe securities the fall in prices will be only of a temporary nature. Commercially, there is not the slightest increase of business: in fact, and scarcely any caution is being observed in all quarters, aud merchants have departed from the course they have now been 10,000 00 for several months. At the same time, the advices at hand from our 440,000 00 various colonies and possessions, although more satisfactory than has 137,926 36 34,479 21 been the case hitherto, are not sufficiently encouraging to justify aug ■*"46‘6o mented shipments; hence, our export business is on a very 10,529 26 scale. We are, however, in all probability approaching a period at 217,723 90 289 92 which merchants will feel disposed to venture in enlarged operations, 46,031 50 5 00 but even now we can scarcely expect such a movement for six weeks or the utmost pursuing not therefore moderate 2,712 80 2,285 00 Fund... days. Madras Calcutta 261,800 00 Sinking Fund Soldiers’ Relief Fund Suspense Account Fund Primary School Fund Primary School Interest Fund University Fund University Interest Fund Normal School Fund Normal School Interest Fund. Swamp Land Fund Swamp $591,177 44 8,978 55 7,520 00 481,444 03 60 u Jan. 29. Valparaiso.... Hong Kong... 11.78 @ 25.12X® 44 44 Havana Rio de Janeiro Buenos Ayres. Singapore short. 44 Jamaica Pernambuco.. BATE. 44 New York.... Ceylon.. Bombay ON LONDON TINE. 44 Naples 1867 Specific Fund. Jan. 29. 1L15X@11.16X 3 months. 25.35 @25.40 13. 8X@13. SX 25.32X@25.37X Paris short. 25.12X@25.20 Paris 3 months. 18.45 @13.60 Vienna 6.25X@ 6.25X Berlin 81X@ BIX St. Petersburg 48*@48X Cadiz 51X@ 52 90 days. Lisbon 3 months. 26.70 @26.80 Milan 26.70 @26.80 Genoa 26.70 @26.80 sinking "Rpcpinf-a DATE. short. Amsterdam, Antwerp.' Hamburg (SitglUl) News. EXCHANGE ON LONDON. BATE. TIME. ON— 1867. $1,050,495 75 4,001 41 LONDON- JAN. 29. proceeds of which are destined for the service of The tax of 2.7-10 mills is levied, according to the Auditor’s report, on the equalized valuation of 1861, and the fund taxes of £th and 1-16th mill on the valuation of 1866. In 1865 the State tax proper was 3.2 mills on the taxable property; in 1866 it was reduced to 2.7 mills, and for a rate of 1.5 mills, it is thought, will be abundantly sufficient, provided no extravagant appropriations be made. taxes are derived from railroad, banking and insurance com¬ panies. These, especially the railroad and insurance taxes, are * ani (ttommercial EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND AT LATEST DATES. RATES OF $464,550 67 38,495 73 19,247 67 19,628 70 40,000 00 $581,922 97 —the General Fund Internal Improvement St. Marie Canal Fund War Fund (February 16,1867. CHRONICLE. THE $1,901,990 69 468,401 81 $1,791,385 18 two 579,007 82 months to come. With the existing contraction of trade, and the almost daily dimiou. the demand for accommodation falls off. The supply tion in its extent, and greatly and' of the following statement shows the principal is receipts and the chief object of expenditure on account of the remuneratively, general fund. and Amount from taxes, &c.. $458,351 35 sales 130,136 87 Judiciary Bank minimum, and Delinquent taxes and int. 160,605 11 Appropriations 7,926 77 clerk hire Railroad specific tax opinion, almost general, prevails that notwithstanding continued 160,667 14 of Auditors.. 53,955 71 “ 44 900 00 prison 68,000 00 withdrawals of gold from the Bank, a further decline in the rate must “ “ 40,039 74 Counties, account. 95,804 94 surplus funds. 15,411 18 debt 135,760 00 take place. As £138,000Jias been taken from the Bank of England Sundries, sales, redemp¬ 107,031 30 during the week ending this evening, it is not considered probable that tions, &c 84,354 36 $1,050,495 75 Total $571,177 44 the Directors will venture on a reduction to-morrow, although the Total From this showing it appears that the resources of the State portion of the money market out-of-doors, would fully justify such action. The rates current for the best paper are now as under: Cent Cent. greater than are necessary to cover ordinary expenditures, months bank bills 2%@3 Total amount seeking employment in the discount market is very large, in excess of the requirements of borrowers. Nearly all the banks sources discount houses have surplus balances in hand, for which interest allowed, and which they are not able to employ or $23,524 90 without considerable risk. First class bills are readily taken at 2f 36,697 07 40,476 75 2-f per cent., or at about £ per cent, beneath the $2,370,392 50 disbursed The Salaries Tax $2,370,392 50 Extra Awards State State Paid on Interest on Bank Insurance Interest on an Sundries are annually. The State being rapidly decreased, and will soon disappear, and that the debt is also Per Per credit balance is rising @3X Bank minimum 4 6 44 44 3 @3* 2X@2X 4 & 6 months’ trade bills.... 4 @4X 2X@2X the Continent, the rates for accommodation have not Open market rates: 30 to 60 days’ bills bills 3 months’ b ‘ ' On quotably by direct payment or by absorption into the trust funds. The whole annual cost of the State expenses, including the cost of changed daring the present week. Generally speaking the the debt, and reckoning the population at 850,000, is now very quiet. The following are the rates at the leading cities; Open Pank Bank Open rate, market. rate, market, only about 67£ cents per capita; and in relation to the wealth ft c. c. c. $c. \Turin 6 of the State only about 85 cents on the $100 valuation. This At Paris.... 3 2X Brussels 8 2X Vienna 4 4 SXadv estimate, however, does not include the school or other local Berlin 4 3X Madrid 6 4Xadv— \ Hamburg.. r**0 — Frankfort 3X 3X taxes, of which the State Report gives no account. The Bt. Petersburg 7 demand is ' 44 . equalized assessed valuation in 1866, as deduced from the rate and amount of the taxes levied for that year was $307,965,840. Amsterdam 4 foreign exchange are, on the whole, rather more this country. Short bills on Fans, however, are scarce, The rates of able to 4 favor and m February 16,1867.] THE CHRONICLE. demand for remittance to that quarter, £40,000 in bar gold—in the absence of arrivals from Australia—has been taken from the Bank of England this afternoon. there is some 208 COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Imports Exports for thx Week.—The imports this week show imports of specie this week have been limited. The Seine, from a large decrease ia dry goods, and an increase in general merchandise, the the West Indies, is hourly expected with a considerable supply, but total being $5,729,808 against $4,207,960 last week, and $3,663,970 recent arrivals have been small, viz : The Pennsylvania, from New the previous week. The exports are $3,840,850 this week, against York, with £22,000 in gold—the whole of which was immediately taken $2,881,102 last week, and $3,210,976 the previous week. The for export; the Oneida, at Lisbon, from the Brazils, with exports £22,877, and of cotton the past week were 11,797 bales, against 11,014 bales last week. the Washington, at St. Nazaire, from Vera Cruz, with £86,000. The The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry vessels now due from Australia will only bring small supplies of gold. goods) Feb. 8, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) The Consol market has been flat, with very little business. To-day Feb. 9 : the quotatioas have fallen quite £ per cent. In the railway share mar¬ FOREIGN IMPORTS AT fKW YORK FOR THX WEXX. ket there has been much less firmness, and in some instances a heavy 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. Dry goods fall has taken place in the quotations. Mexican stock is $2,925,551 $757,649 $4,741,870 $2,414,479 flat, and is General merchandise. 1,819,751 1,829,420 1,883,966 8,814,829 oDly at l7f@17£. Chilian scrip 1 is now f(a>£ premium. The highest Total for the week.. $4,245,802 $2,586,969 $6,574,986 $5,729,808 and lowest prices of Consols on the days enumerated are subjoined : Previously reported 18,430,314 9,757,918 25,170,072 19,163,477 The and „ .. Three days ending January 30. Mon. Consols for money Tues. 90%@91 United States Five-twenty bonds Erie 90%@91 Since Jan. 1 Wed. In 90%@90% goods for have been steady in price: but The Railway shares and Illinois Centrals have been materially affected by the news at hand from New York, per cable, of a panic in the share market, with numerous failures. Atlantic and Great Western gentlemen who one week later. a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Feb. 12: 1864. 1865. 1866. $3,475,880 13,187,472 1887. $4,808,182 20,317,172 $3,777,267 23,322,613 $8,640,860 16,789,651 $16,663,352 $25,125,354 $27,099,880 $20,480,501 Previously reported.... Since Jan. 1 In the commercial 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 January 1, is shown in the fal¬ lowing table: statement of the This To Great Britain... France Holland & Belg. Other Spain Jan. 1,1867 Other S. Europe East Indies China Australia Br.N A Colonies 169,133 85,581 912,969 459,520 671,416 1,796,777 23,157 42,428 88,206 238,136 269,542 70,731 This week. Hayti $79,145 29,440 83,658 42,988 18,983 16,766 OtherW. I Mexico New Granada... Venezuela Br. Guiana .... 104,751 800,396 155,926 435,572 69,821 113,425 287,258 219,444 51,424 22,248 Brazil Other S. A. ports All other ports.. 313,197 201,217 101,611 Since Jan. 1. $78,247 To Cuba $1,961,492 $13,021,347 N.Europe The Since week. Germany mortgage bonds 80 to 31 ; do. debentures. 41 to 43 ; Erie Railway shares, 39 to 40, and Illinois Centrals, 80 to 81. The following are the latest prices from the Continent for Five' 41,788 13,322 following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending Feb. 9,1867 : York for the week twenties: From Amsterdam 76 3-16, from Frankfort 76$, and from Feb 77-f. 6—St. Cuba, Liverpool— Mexican siiver .... Feb. The wheat trade $24,892,785 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry For the week officially informed, be made public on Monday. The public had been led to anticipate that some arrangement would by this time have been arrived at respecting the gentlemen selected to form the Committee of Investigation, but up to this evening no statement has been made pub¬ lic. This circumstance has necessarily operated injuriously to the secu¬ rities of the undertaking. United States Five-twenty bonds leave off this evening at 73 to 73£; Atlantic and Great Western consolidated Berlin $31,745,008 XXPORTS FROM XXW YORK FOR THX WXXX. to form the committee will, we are are $12,844,887 following is the port greatly depressed, and business has been transacted in the debentures and bonds at very low prices. In consequence of the unfavorable rumors in circulation respecting the financial position it has been decided to place the affairs of the undertaking in to competent hands, in order that a thorough investigation may be made, so that the shareholders, bondholders, and debenturers may be acquainted with the precise state of the company’s indebtedness. The of the $22,675,616 Railway securities have been names our has been very dull, and prices throughout the country have declined to the extent of 2s. per quarter. Our imports are very moderate; but millers appear unwilling to run into stock, being under the impression that as soon as the Europe, Havre- Gold bars Silver bars 10,000 8—St. French City of Paris, Liverpool— American gold Mexican gold Spring, if not before, shall have arrived, our importations will be sufficiently extensive to produce a large range of prices. 8—St. 5—Brig Allendale, Ponce— American silver... Feb. Feb. $10,000 $182,100 gold Feb. 8—St. Union, Bremen- Feb. 9—St. German silver 60,000 .... 1,000 Columbia, Havana— Spanish gold 18,275 6,0C0 Total for the week $276,507 Previously reported Total since Jan. The market for consols has been 2,974,879 4 1, 1867 $8,251,886 Same time in 1866 1865 1864 English Market Reports—Per Cable. 45,512 4,620 Same time In 1858 $7,722,788 1857 3,788,693 7,341,503 2,613,813 1856 5,540,329 1855 4,079,082 1854 1853 1,034,569 1852 563,447 remarkably steady through the past 1863 788,698 week, the extreme range having been 1862 90|<a)91£, closing at 91. Amer¬ 1861.... 2,045,043 ican bonds have advanced from 1,829,891 72£ on Saturday last, to 73£ close on 1860 6,695,727 Thursday. Erie has advanced since Monday from 39£ to 40 ; but Illi¬ 1859 3,274,209 nois Central, which had Treasure from California.—The advanced from 80£ on steamship Ocean Queen from Saturday to 81£ on Wednesday, closed on Thursday (probably ex-dividend) at 78£. The Aspinwall February 1, arrived at this port February 10. Her treasure following shows the course of these securities for the week Fri. 8. Consols for money Sat. 9. Mon. 11. 90% 72% 91% 72% 80% 39% 91 Illinois Central shares.. Erie Railway shares.... 81 40 Thursday at the first at 72£, and The Liverpool cotton market and prices have lost £d. however, the last some firmness on 73% el% 39% 81% are 78% 81% has experienced an Towards the - , , a per quiet but firm. Lard has declined also easier. Bacon on quarter. Date. _ Steamship. _ Total...- $788,027 I Jatn■ HSt?r * | Since At date. Jan. 1. (Date. I . Steamship. Nkvada Treasure Movemknt . _ for • At date. Jan. 1. iav’S*?’ Cha^n^eyl’2Il’r2« JS!!! ,, .. _... 1865-6.—The Gold Hill , , , . (Nevada) A , offices, showing an excess of $2,074,174 35 for 1866 over the preceding year, for these two places alone, The amount from other places—Carson, Aurora, Austin, Ac.—shipped in 1865, makes the total product for that closing at 60s. Pork is (middles) is quoted at 43a. Beef is firmer; prime past, 1866, it stands as follows: India Mess, 125s. per tierce. T From Virginia City From Gold Hill The produce markets are active. Sp. Turpentine is quoted at 37s. From Carson City 9d.; Petroleum, Is. 6d.; Pot Ashes, 35s. 6d.; Rosin, 9s. 6d.; Linseed From Reese River From Aurora Oil, £37 per ton. Tallow opening at 44 @ 45s., declined on the week Shipped outside of Wells, Fargo & Co 3d@6d. per cwt. Total for 660 2,500 I -V«e» °f Dec. 10 gives the following statement of bullion shipped Western | through Wells. Fargo A 0**J*P~ tor the year. 1865 aud l868 from the Virginia and Gold Hill in Com, Latest telegrams report— the week Is. per cwt., $459,807 following statement stale, flat and unprofitable, without pros-1 pect of immediate recovery ' Breadstuff, are without quotable change, except Mixed having fallen to 89|s. 119,940 Since close, Thursday, . Lees & Waller Miller & Houghton Flint & Hall 49,174 The arrivals of treasure from San Francisco and the Isthmus since the commencement of the year, are shown in the unfavorable turn, manifested, but without movement of price, quotations being 14£d. Advices from Manchester report the $13,011 30,243 196,000 7,300 Dabney, Morgan & Co Wells, Fargo & Co on was .... William Schall & Co at the latter at 76£. the week. martaf a market for goods and yarns as Duncan, Sherman & Co Eugene, Kelly & Co 40 higher, closing follows: Panama RH. Co 73% 78% 39% as FROM SAN FRANCISCO. Tnes. 12. Wed 13. Thur. 14 91 91 90% 72% 39% At Paris and Frankfort United States bonds list is : ... 1866. year $14,000,000. For the $7,807,626 7,100,263 341,866 400,687 171,684 18 00 80 00 00 850,000 90 $16,171,381 98 204 Bullion 1866: THE CHRONICLE. -1SG5. From From Gold Hill. Jan ^ Totals. $253,662 89 $949,152 13 $1,193,755 02 Feb.. 229,856 24 1,033, >-5 s 89 1,263,712 13 Mch. 265,435 68 1,154,749 76 1,390,335 44 150,102 45 1,191,172 00 1,841,274 45 197,802 30 1,012,435 59 1,310,237 89 246,725 62 694,356 11 940,981 73 260.001 59 513,127 57 771,129 16 314,808 93 550,730 73 866,539 71 399,613 99 492,203 79 891,817 78 496,165 00 547,365 58 1,943,530 58 408,307 90 539,217 76 947,525 66 354,425 00 619,455 28 973,880 28 May. June. Jnly.. Ang Sept. . Oct.. Nov.. Dec.. 1866. From , From Virginia. .. Apr.. Gold Hill. $432,044 28 475,491-63 490,123 89 413,196 17 562,074 83 673,111 40 673,386 93 672,690 14 700,940 36 726,464 08 613,779 62 666,984 70 Totals. Virginia. $520,177 20 $952,221 48 492,322 91 968,814 54 706,210 646,987 648,476 662,938 595,503 779,276 648,963 686,517 739,512 786,438 33 51 71 70 77 50 97 23 1,195,334 1,060,164 1,210,851 1,236,050 1,268,889 1,451,966 1,344,904 1,412,981 80 1,358,291 96 1,453,423 22 68 54 10 92 66 the gives the followiug in¬ and assessments of the leading dividends mines of Nevada in the year 1866 : Company. Assess¬ Dividends. ments. Alpha $144,560 Bacon M. & M. Co Baltimore American Belcher Bullion 18,000 13,000 143,520 175,000 Chollar-Potoei Confidence Crown Point $848,750 303,920 1,313,357 $234,000 486,778 32,400 Dancy Empire M. & M. Co. Exchequer i Gould & Curry Hale & Norcross Imperial Lady Bryan Ophir 5 252*000 350,000 176,000 Overman 15,000 27,953 184,800 208,000 1,805,800 ’360,666 2,310,666 ’300,666 180,000 $11,261,741 $1,794,400 Sierra Nevada Yellow Jacket on Sy: 55*r*o6 Feb. 24 \ No. Price per foot. Value. feet. 600 1,020 $612,000 Mines. Crown Point Empire i.. 75 Gould and Cnrrv Hale and Norcross... 1,200 400 184 800 Imperial Savage Yellow Jacket 1,200 3,200 1,020 1,030 Jan. 12 Price per foot. Value. Dividends. i— 672,000 3,500 3,150 1,950 480,000 840 400 1,380 Total, 4,459 $4,128,000 925 Average per foot The Lake Superior Copper Product $234,000 210,000 738,000 32.400 615 412,000 488,000 2,600 $840,000 252,000 350,000 176,000 360,000 390,000 1,400,000 580,000 1,560,000 1,596,000 $6,924,000 $1,794,400 402 1,552 1866.—The Houghton (Mich.) Gazette of January 24 gives the following statistics of the Portage copper mining business in 1866: Tons. Quincy Mine 1,380 1,071 Franklin Mine Pewabic Mine Huron Mine Hancock Mine Isle Royale Mine Grand 895 665 386 346 Portage Albany and Boston Mine 337 201 Lbs 34 1,558 j,2o: 818 12 51 930 in Tons. Calumet Mine Shelden Columbi’n Mine Hecla Mine. Concord Mine. 154 138 30 24 Lbs. 56 1,313 56 13 4 Douglass Mine Arcadian Mine South Pewabic Mine 300 2 .. 1,000 61 RECAPITULATION. 1866 Tons. , 1,380 1,071 y 8ranklinMine Fi Mine Pewabic Mine Huron Mine Hancock Mine Isle Royale Mine.... Grand Portage Mine Sheldon-Columbian Mine Hecla Mine Concord Mine ... 875 665 886 346 387 i>01 154 138 30 24 18 -1865. s Lbs. 34 Tons. 1,063 1,193 818 12 51 930 51 56 604 100 460 366 162 1,313 ’80 • * • , Lbs. 1,360 1,558 1,201 56 ' 1,900 1,319 1,432 736 1,436 393 1,489 1,745 1,288 . Mine, ingot,. 5 300 3 900 500 2 1,000 1,747 .... 5,415 638 232 Increase in 1866 Union Depot .... 1,100 Chicago.—The great Union Depot of the Michigan Southern and the Rock Island Railroad Companies at Chicago has just been completed. It is 610 feet long by 100 feet wide* and is in its general architectural appearance and interior ar¬ rangements said to be the model depot of the country. It has cost about at $250,000. ®l)c Bankers* ©alette. DIVIDENDS. We give in our Bulletin from day to day lists of bonds, Ac., lost, and dividends declared. These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday morning such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below will be found those published the laet week in the Bulletin. *800 3,125 4,700 3,420 3,100 113 6,700 *.”* Chicago, R. Isl. & Pacific. Cleveland, Col. &Cin.... • Clev. Painsville & Ashtab. Cleveland & Pittsburg.... Cleveland and Toledo Erie Railway Hudson River Illinois Central 13,100 1,100 6,550 16,900 300 4,700 200 • ”l3 *350 293 2,200 7,600 11,050 6,500 34,850 ........ . . • • 2,000 Mining— Cons. Gregory.. Mariposa • - 90 > 500 1,000 4,900 1,300 3,030 2,520 • • • • • » • • • • • • Pref 200 200 300 Quicksilver ft—Bost.W. Pow Improvin' “ Bruns. City.. Canton 100 ‘206 300 “ Express“ • . 457 982 85 ‘600 ‘*20 • -V • 6 ‘50 • 20 Wells, Far. & Co .... . • • . „ 1,500 8,960 1,200 s • . 400 . 700 200 1,430 • 100 700 200 2,374 375 1.400 .... 700 305 3,950 20 .... 10 64 • .... 600 1,400 1,000 200 ‘ • - .. . • 400 . .... 8 • '• • . . . ‘ioo 4 • 8 .... 800 100 300 850 • 400 317 20 . 500 700 300 230 100 100 600 ... .... . 300 300 100 • 1,600 1,130 • • 200 100 600 Pacific Mail.. S. Amer. Nav. Union Nav... -Adams American. United States... . “ • 1,400 • .... 200 300 40* 800 74 8,060 ' 100 100 • 200 200 1,800 1,600 29,476 • 7,667 .... .... • 24,660 . . • • • 6,000 2 0 100 .... .... 7elegraph—West’n Union - • • 2,350 • . .... 100 600 400 Steamship—Atlantic Mail. “ * • • G,600 .... 500 • 200 600 • 2,125 75 .... • • • • • 44 400 .... 5(0 200 .... .... • • 100 300 .... • • • 200 100 200 200 100 50 31 100 • • .... • • • .... • .... m « • 11,500 6,400 12,700 34 900 • “ “ 1,700 4,400 500 3,120 • • • 400 '250 100 Spring Mountain... Wilkesbarre 300 .... • .... • . • • 300 46 Pennsylvania • 3,456 • . • .... i • 200 .... “ "io • ••* Miscellaneous shares, viz.: Coal—American “ Central “ *100 • .... Cumberland Delaw’e & Hud. Can 96,175 3,100 - • 18,000 13.400 3,350 *500 4001 • 1,800 600 2,000 21,675 20,000 10 1,510 St. L., Alton & T. II Toledo, Wabash & West’n 5 700 40 • K u 200 900 .... • 7,800 2,800 150 • 5,700 ‘ 44 200 • . 100 100 10 4,200 Reading * • 45 2,920 22.275 38,060 23.275 112 1*500 2,300 Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. “ • • 200 400 2,800 New York & New Haven. Ohio & Mississippi ($100) “ • 453 10 200 3,800 11,250 6,720 3,385 112 Fri’y. Week. 20 800 4,900 8,200 850 .... • • 125 107 • ‘927 . . • • • 18 . 60 25 .... 225 6,709 1,600 7,511 .... 104 • 6,200 • ' Trust—Union • • • • • • • .... • 25 .... .... 130 364 25 The amount of Government, State and City and other bonds sold at the Regular Board, daily and for the week, are given in the following statement: Sat. U. S. 6’s, 1881 . U.S 6’s (5-20’s). U.S6’s (old)... U.S. 5’s (10-408) U.S 5’b (old) .. U. S 7-30 notes. Mon. $3,500 140,500 7,000 $20,000 252,000 • • • • • . Louisiana 6’s.. Missouri 6’s... New York5’s.. New York 6’s.. New York 7’s. N. Carolina 6’s. Tennessee 6’s.. 80,800 .... .... , • . • • • 11,000 6,000 .... 6,000 5,000 .... 19,000 234,500 • * • * .... Fri. Week. 1,000 . . 1,000 .... 6,000 35,000 .... 79,600 450,950 . 2,000 . . 1,000 2,000 11,000 10,000 . .... ..;. . .... ' Thnr. . . . . ^ .... .... .. 32,000 40,000 5,000 8,000 14,000 Company Bonds, viz Railroad Other . 47,000 5,000 , New York 6’s Wed. .... 20,000 13,000 41,000 . , 10,000 .... .-. Tues. $13,000 $55,000 $77,000 $56,000 $224,600 324,500 111,500 135,000 81,000 1,044,500 .* 50,000 67,000 1,666 10,000 70,666' 16,000 97,000 .... Virginia 6’s... City Bonds, viz Brooklyn 6’s.. « • .... 2.550 State bonds, viz.: California 7’s.. Illinois 6’s.. Indiana 6’s.... 11,000 Indiana 5’s.... Kentucky 6’s.. • .... 10,000 . 8 1,000 6,000 76,000 o . . . 8,000 6,000 10,<00 5,000 2S,000 1,000 92,000 5,UG0 19,000 55,000 .... 3,000 .... .... .... .... .... 4,000 5,000 1,000 10,000 .... 14,000 .... 3,000 .... 4,000 1,000 4,0 0 220,000 11,000 34,000 48.000 88,000 381,000 3,000 .... 9,000 4,000 .... .... : 27,000 .... 1,900 4 5,617 Arcadian Mine South Pewabic 1,150 1,217 820 87 2,500 4,8(H) • 4 Douglass Mine 15 200 Thurs. 65 Wed. 1,400 do .... 1,150 1,217 Tues. 60 Pref. 1 1,400 2,800 240,000 1,224,000 BOARDS. 35 Mon. ’ - and number of shares sold at day and for the week ending 100 2,250 from mines not embraced in the The market value of those mines have increased as follows since the tide turned with the new deep ore discoveries in February : CLOSED. 155 Broadway. 9 Wall st,” Chicago & Alton Chicago & Northwestern. brought down from the Nevada region for the year given in our annual report, $15,215,218. The balance came table, and from th"se which made no report. The result is that 81,794,400 in dividends has been paid to the stockholders of seven mines, one of which—the Yellow Jacket—in the early part of the year called for $180,000. Thus those seven mines have given $1,614,000 profit to their holders. f Co. N. Y. STOCK THE Sat. 153 Bank Shares Railroad shares, viz.: Central of New Jersey The total bullion , AT BUSINESS $1,272,380 Savage Feb. 15. Feb. 4. .,800 ’450*000 I The following statement shows the description the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each Milwaukee & P. du chien lft pref .. Milwaukee & St. Paul do do pref. ‘ Total 5 Irving Fire Indianapolis & Cine Michigan Central Michigan Southern * 1.605,228 1,199,768 910,187 (H. A. Oakley, Howard Ins. ■< Insurance. Greenwich. do Bullion Product. BOOBS WHERE. WHEN. Feb. 20.. 4 Oswego & Syracuse 73 The circular of Messrs. Woods dc Cheeseman teresting table of o’t. r. Railroad*. 70 30 31 PAYABLE. RATE VuAl AFTi - Total 3,546,897 59 9,286,822 24 12,833,719 837,100,268 007,807,626 18 14,907,894 18 was, as [February 16, 1867. shipped from Virginia and Gold Hill, Nevada, for 1865 and \9M g: .. . 32,000 .... 67,500 .... 28,500 5,000 21,000 .... 66,000 .... 242,000 5,000 Friday, Feb. 15, 1867, P. M. Market.—Monetary affairs during the week have features of special interest. The effects of the recent flurry upon confidence appear to be exhausted, and banking affairs have resumed their former steadiness. Exchanges at moat poin*s of the interior favor New York, and there is a consequent steady, though not heavy, influx of currency toward this centre. The banks have now a liberal surplus of legal tenders, and in¬ stead of curtuling loans, as of late, are offering money quite freely. Owing to the quiet of stock operations the -banks find themselves in a position to extend their discount line considerably, and com¬ mercial paper is much more current—piles of notes, which have been accumulating for weeks in the hands-of brokers, being dow readily taken by both banks and private investors. With the banks the rate on demand loans is generally 6 per cent, on stock collaterals, and 5 per cent, on Governments. Prime paper is generally taken at 7 per cent., with exceptions of Tery The Monet been devoid of any ► February 16,1867.] THE CHRONICLE. 205 choice at 6@6i» and of names are still very cent. The following long date at 7$ per cent. Second class shares, at the regular and difficult of negotiation, and pass at 8@L0 per the week, closing with are open boards conjointly, on this day’s bu-iness : the quotations for loans Percent. 6 <a Ctll loans bonds * mort.. prime endorsed bills, % Loans on ' @ Percent. 4 months do single names t Lower grades — Coal 7 8 8 Good endorsed bills, 3 & . 7 months.....'. Mining 44 Improv’t 44 Telegraph 44 Steamship44 @8 <g> 9 @10 Mon. 453 30,994 . . . . . Regular Board Open Board... Wed. Fri. 37 55 43,027 113 54,129 457 75,553 475 500 77,017 310,871 2,000 808 900 700 305 8,800 131 700 550 2,300 1,500 1,400 1,067 2,000 1,130 737 706 13,670 18,590 600 1,000 2,374 2,350 575 19,400 17,000 36.600 33,070 63,940 35,590 50,002 165,925 93,343 4,150 i 333 14,402 . 200 1,600 98 . Total current week. Total Previous w’k. Thurs. 60 30,151 346 400 400 500 457 20 . Tnes. 35 44 At At 20,949 37,700 182 27,957 40,275 43,900 83,257 84,175 76,560 58,649 90,407 2.310 6.800 6,709 9,388 1,439 25 55,300 39,943 The transactions in shares the year are shown in the 136.843 206,900 344,743 530,108 weekly since the following statement: Week ending— Jan. (I to4).... 44 11 “ 18 When it is considered that the amount held abroad has for some time been estimated at 9300,000,000, and that considerable amounts have been exported during late months, it is apparent that abroad. An 44 Trust generally firmer during the week. The high price of gold, concurrently with the firmness of bonds at London, have induced a steady foreign de¬ mand for Five-twenties of 1862. This demand has developed an extreme scarcity of those bonds, and has been met with difficulty. It is understood that of the issue of this series of Five-twenties about ^150,000,000 are registered, and held almost exclusively at home; leaving only 9350,000,000 of coupon bonds held here and “ 27........ Feb. very “ Rail- Bank. ro’d. a3 15 The 188.089 141 426 763 747 453 668,322 566.252 493,666 310,871 following is commencement of MinIm- Teleing. pro’t. graph. 3,600 7,850 1,700 4,328 12,559 9,600 4,300 12,005 3,316 9,600 3,200 8.536 2,601 16,050 5,400 14,569 2,577 24.375 6,0S0 10,613 3,566 9,900 6,350 7,325 Steam¬ Coal. 539,139 1,058 465,718 1 8 “ limited amount remains here for the purposes of shipments. active demand upon this very limited supply, has produced an a 44 . Express United States Securities.— Governments have been but Sat. Bank shares. Railroad 44 : . @ 7 6 of various classes each day of 2,310 6,800 6,800 6,709 ship. Other. Total. 1,257 200,715 17,836 1,018 596,851 14,170 1, 42 506,840 381 722,004 14,255 10,047 1,072 622,079 7,654 1,001 530,108 9,336 1,464 344,745 of the amount of Government bonds notes. State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds at the Regular Board on each day of the past week : advance in a summary Sixty-twos to 1091@110. All other bonds have sympa¬ and thisimprovement, and the advance has been $@1 per cent. sold Seven thir ties, mostly in consequence of the rise on Five-twenties, Sat. Mon. Tnes. Wed. Thnr. Fri. Week. and partly from an increased activity in conversion operations, have If. 8. Bonds... .$151,000 $272,000 $343,500 $226,500 $282,000 $154,000 $1,424,00# U.S. Notes 2,550 80,300 19,000 234,000 79.600 35,000 450,951 advanced At the same time, the discoura gements to invest¬ State* City b’ds 113.000 79,000 82,000 110,000 131,000 123,003 638,00fc Company B’nds. 27,000 32,000 67,500 33,500 21 000 66,000 247,001 ments in ordinary business pursuits tend to divert a certain amount Total Car. w’k.. $293,550 463,800 512,000 604,000 513,600 378,000 2,764.950 of money to employment in Government securities, and this has con¬ Previous week.. 244,600 442,000 411,200 491,300 299,000 909,500 2,797,50# tributed to the unusual activity in bonds which has prevailed for The totals, weekly, since the commencement of the year are shown some weeks. The total transactions in bonds at the Stock Ex¬ in the following tabulation : change for the last six days amount to 92,764,950, about the same Weekending Governments State & Total Company Bonds. Friday, Notes. City Bonds. Bonds. amount aggregate for last week. Jan. (1 to 4) $977,000 $146,100 $454,800 $207,500 $1,785,400 Jan. 11 The following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬ 1,873,200 855,4^0 623,500 165,000 3,517,161 Jan. 18 1,734,600 314,100 thised with • , pared with preceding weeks Jan. 11. Jan. 18. U. 8.6’8,1881 coup U. S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons. U. 8.5-20’s, 1864 44 U. S.6-20’8,1865 “ U. 8. 5-20’s, 1865, N. isa... U.S 10-40’s, U* 8,7-30’s 1st series U. 8. 7-30’s 2d Series U. 8 7-30’s 3rd series.— Railroad and Jan. 27 Feb. 1 Feb. 8 Feb. 15 : 107% 106% 105% 105% 104 99% 104 104 104 Jan. 25. 108% 107% 107% 105% 105% 104% 99% 108 *..... 106% 104% 99% 104% 104% 104% Feb. 1. Feb. 8. Feb. 15 107% 107% 105% 108% 108% 106 104 104 104 107 107% 105% 100% 105% 105% 105% 106 104% 99% 104% 104% 104% 109% 109% 107% 105% 101% 1,466,800 1,429,000 amount of Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday, 12 13 ... ... 14 15 ... weekly range ending, January 4 (3 da^s) 134 136% 44 the 351,189 481,072 457,061 410,878 300,699 44 Canton Co Mariposa pref.... NewYork Central Erie 45 49 32 110% 67% 41 46 30% 38% 46% 30% 45 44 23% 23% 110% 64 132 132 Reading.;' Mich. Southern.. Michigan Central 104% 82% 107% 88% 124% 106% 45% 41% 103% 104% 81% 102% 102% 121 119 Northwestern.... 44 preferred Rock Island.....» Fort Wayne— Illinois Central.. The 82 • • 33 ■ 108 101 63% Hudson River.... Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. 105% 80% 90% 123 125% 125% - 42 79% 98% JgH 120 • • • • • • • 107 83 120 112% 114% 104% 71% • ,,,, 40 45% 21% 109 36% 64% 95% 97% • 22% 102% 59% 180% 104% 75% 127 103% 81% 120% 86% 64% 96% 96% • 46% 66% 123 102 71 ‘ • 40 r X.d.99% 68% 103 78 107 90 . following statement shows the volume 44 Feb. 8. Feb. 15. 90 43 s 85% 120% 38% 68% 98% 98% 114% 44 138% 139 137% 8 9 Total Balance In Sub-Treasury as ■ follows: Highest. 134% 135% 137% 136% 136% Range. Closing 2% 4% 2% 2% 2% 137% 1% 134 13-4 136% 134% 136% 137% 136% Bub-Treasury for the week ending Sat¬ ^ Receipts. $584,151 03 44 Jan. 4. Jan. 11. Jan. 18. Jan. 25. Feb. 1. 137% 139 136% 136% Onstom House. 44 • 134 134% 8 136% 137% 136% 136% 136% 137% 137% 137% 136% 138% 136% 133% 133% 136% 137% 188% 136% 136% Lowest. 132% 133% February 1. 44 136% since January 1 has been 11 19 25 Closing. 137% 1344% 136% 136% Opening. Highest. 137 1 The 44 Lowest, .. Week 44 Opening. 137% 136% 136% 137% than half more 2,764,950 mi ... Current week Previous week 44 — 195,500 247,000 ... days at both boards amount 15 an ordinary week’s The transactions at business. Included in the sales are 96,175 shares Erie, North¬ western preferred, 36,050 ; Michigan Southern, 34,650 ; New York urday evening were: Central, 29,476; Reading, 24,560, and Rock Island, 23,275. Feb. 4 The following are the closing quotations at the 5. regular board to¬ 6. day, compared with those of the six preceding weeks; 7 Cumberland Coal Quicksilver 642,500 638,000 has been unusually steady, 1| points. The adoption of Saturday, Feb. 9 Monday 11 manent. 344,743 shares—but little 492,700 450,950 , 2.535,560 1,883,600 2,797,500 litary government of the Southern temporarily advanced the premium about but the price appears to yield slowly to any tendency favoring an advance. The demand for customs duties falls somewhat under $400,000 per day. The very slight reduction in the amount of gold in the banks shows that the market is receiving steady supplies from the interior. In¬ deed, the receipts from Colorado, Nevada and Idaho now consti¬ tute a much more important source of supply than is generally supposed. The following comparison shows the daily fluctuations : tinues to show the effect of the reaction to 155.000 2,035,20* 150,500 States con¬ The total transactions for the last six 3!M),000 550,050 Mr. Stevens’bill for the 105% 105% [from the la te crisis. The speculation' is merely nominal, and a certain amount of stocks bought by outside parties during the late fall in prices, in hope of realizing a profit from an upward reaction, are held weakly. This condition of the market has, during the last two or three days, induced an effort to break down the market. Yesterday and to day stocks have been freely thrown upon the market, with a conse¬ quent decline in prices, and quotations close 1@3 per cent, lower than a week ago. This afternoon an attempt was made jto rally the market by calling in a considerable amount of Erie stock, which had been freely loaned in connection with “ short” sales ; the strata¬ gem produced a temporary advance of i per cent., but had less ef¬ fect than was anticipated, and the price closed at 56f, against 59£ on Friday last. To-day the transactions show a large increase upon late days ; but, with the prevailing Jack of speculative interest, it would not seem probable that the improvement will prove per¬ 431,500 637,500 155,000 185.100 1,197,500 1,153,500 Gold Market.—The course of gold the fluctuations having ranged within 106 Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market , 29 75 ? 31 61 f 89 $2,585,047 83 morning of Jan. 28. Sub-Treasury » Payments. Receipts. $3,676,158 32 $2,553,136 83 »— 890,093 51 397,443 36 1,576,470 3,005,559 2,018,369 1,731.686 67 32 879,749 71 925,836 73 883,873 58 18 20 2,380,726 69 $7,633,155 21 $13,265,948 82 103,325,459 34 100 56% 130 104% 73 108 83 • • • • 36 66% 97% 97% 115% of transactions in Deduct payments daring the week.... Balance on Saturday evening Decrease during the week Total amount of $116,591,408 23 _. 7,633,155 21 $108,958,253 02 5,632,793 68 gold certificates issued, $1,900,000. Included receipts of customs were $170,000 in gold, and $2,415,048 in gold certificates. ; 1 The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the Sub' Treasury since Dec. I: in the THE CHRONICLE. 206 Weeks Cnstom House. TEndlng Balances. Dec. $182,895 Ine. 4,234,131 Inc. 1,999,771 Inc. 5.389.950 Pec. 16,726,920 22 “ Jan. “ 1,057,950 .. 29 5, ’67. 12.... 19.... “ 26.... Feb. 2 “ 10,525,233 29,541,684 1,332,919 1.584,037 1,944,622 2,860,714 2,399,815 2,004,760 2,586,047 ».... 12,804,498 24,387,977 9,450,690 8,601,270 19,158,396 7,633,155 15,915,183 114,079,126 12,814,763 97,352.205 102,613,658 101,164,996 104,823,359 108,586,401 103,325,459 108,968,253 17,565,951 22,939 314 13,109,053 12,364,321 13,897,446 13,265,948 Foreign Exchange.—There has been a more Inc. 5,261,452 Dec. Inc. Inc. Dec. Dec. 1,448,662 3,658,363 3,763,051 6.260.951 5,632,793 active demand for bills from importers and a consequent advance in the rates of ex¬ change. The New Orleans mail arriying at the beginning of the week (including four previous delayed mails) brought a large supply of cotton bills ; but as these proved to have been sold in advance of arrival, the receipts had but little effect upon the market. There has been a moderate augmentation of the supply by bills drawn against shipments of bonds, but as there are few New York com¬ mercial bills offering, the market is upon the whole very moderately supplied. The following are the closing quotations tor the several classes of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : Jan. 25. Loudon Comm’l. do bkrs’/n^ do do shrt Feb. 8. Feb. 1. Feb. 15. 108 107#@ 108 108#@ 108# 109 @109# 6.20 @6.18# 5.17#@5.16# @108# 107#@ 108 107#@ 108# 108#® 109# 108#@108# 108 @108# 109#@ 109# 109#@190# 109 @109# 5.16#@5.16 5.21#@5.18# 5.22#@5.17# 5.13#@5.12# 5.17#@5.16# 5.17#@5.15 6.20 @5.17# 5.22#@5.20 5.22#@5.18# 6.20 @6.17# 6.22#@5.20 6,22#@5.18# 36#@ 36# 86#@ 36# 36 @ 36# 41#@ 41# 41#@ 41# 40#@ 41# 41#@ 41# 41 @ 41# 41 @ 41# 2 79 @ 79# 78#@ 79 78#@ 79 72#@ 72# 72 @ 78 , 71#@ 72# aria, long do short. Antwerp Swiss Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin 5.*2#@5.18# 6.22#@5.18# 36#@ 36# 41#@ 41# 41 @ 41# 78#@ 79 71#@ 72 New York City Banks.—The following statement shows condition of the Associated Banks of the City of New York lor week ending with the commencement of business on Feb. 9,1867 : the the Saturday, Average amount ofLoans and Banks. New York Manhattan Merchants’ Mechanics’ Union <999,219 America Phenix 7,823,965 4,099,030 Circula¬ tion. discounts. Specie. $7,966,029 $5,158,416 5.485,049 6,421,114 City 12,654 426,670 617,247 265.913 205,270 1,923,219 316,164 239.913 30,515 212,292 591,210 53,198 140,796 41,869 21,056 4,358,836 3,843,397 Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merch’ts Exchange National... Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s <fe Traders.. Greenwich Leather Manufact’s Seventh Ward State of N. York... American Exc’ge.. Commerce $847,043 2,820,072 2,033,344 5,481,298 3,507,284 2,750,860 2,281,327 1,729,536 1,061,756 2,881,601 1, 21,431 4,743,847 803,923 569 144 474,607 2,155 291,848 r 324,631 Mercantile Pacific Republic Chatham 53,010 1,797,370 5,069,931 1,874,028 1,327,259 Ocean 21,888,827 6,506,096 3,276,415 29,010 635,714 885,709 662,073 119,518 88,598 8,300,858 Broadway *9,092 9,504,899 1,899,014 2,442,815 Irving Metropolitan 1,814,000 17,000 11,188,909 1,871.697 339,770 19,286 110,542 106,202 55,129 38,020 30,428 127,753 49,452 11,090 98,153 16,597 62,769 752,849 32,723 Citizens’ Nassau Market 8t. Nicholas Shoe and Leather.. Corn Exchange ... Continental - Commonwealth.» . Oriental Marine Atlantic Imp. & Traders... Park Mech. * Bank’g As’n Grocers’ North River East River Manuf. & Merch’ts Fourth National... Central Second National... Ninth National.... First National 2,183,318 2,601,909 2.571,032 5,380,500 4,174,433 3,895,557 3,074,498 1,183,443 1,819,521 1,237,981 6,902,164 13,4 .'8,701 1,127,511 1,-05,076 6,146 1,282,650 18,532 1,068,668 12,159 26,953 166,585 1,502,367 15,964,797 12,144,668 1,192.795 6,855,710 3,226,478 8,072,481 202,155 40,970 Croton National... 2,588,300 1,276,246 570,982 22,764 53,010 16,479 7,100 7,046 6,016 National Currency. 322,846 19,803 Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Tenth Nation^.... Bull’s Head 998 665 $3,598,882 801,349 3,785,285 5,556,752 7,173,602 6,782,157 2,509,252 2,990,224 1,669,589 6,992 North America.... Hanover $8,045,347 4,501,918 5,024,273 4,004,010 3,968,964 8,431,727 3,494,333 2,693,498 2,001,539 1,982,664 5,367,792 2,698,520 1,033,077 1,719,091 1,496,550 869,799 2,397,924 800,000 482,215 18 s,824 856,165 128,503 36,745 339,675 291,247 182,053 2,148,1 2 .88,820 4,441 554,800 754,937 948,704 10,489 585,O'# 238,093 12,933 315,000 99.515 Legal Tenders. 900,000 297,045 31,184 129,048 119,381 People’s 761,116 18,727 18*158 453,5 4 495,345 247,359 195,720 4,931 194,071 1/8,698 336,000 986,952 6,674,545 Net deposits. 3,895,260 1,771,004 1,263,141 1,603,916 1,619,347 1,725,000 6,173,612 1,332.026 1,661,534 I,876,769 1,124,159 8,417,000 3,229,954 2,358,594 2,976,999 974,952 1,445,367 984,495 504,488 4,763,443 1.000,000 116,599,834 308,861 1,364,629 82,583 1,313,913 11,831 1,219,754 283,600 778,840 1,050 1,183,420 2,922,422 12,'71,291 1,638,968 II,21*8,010 999 277 270,000 899,268 6,430,169 ’ 447,773 795,(00 268,822 8,432.223 2,493,486 768,478 810,300 14,183 180,000 90,000 1,385,000 1,384,423 829,420 649.012 1,698,036 2,047,083 2,689,204 1.139.774 676,504 892,683 986,507 1,817,652 821,643 347,778 479,402 595,>*40 179,5 1,003,187 292,124 1,298,343 2,838,717 6.860,341 1,826,369 1,012,205 563,707 1,180,871 442,114 3q2,944 692,891 612,203 469,000 1,868,558 404.805 514,008 690,995 563,069 1,194,160 542,< 00 719,000 685,981 194,067 303.025 446.305 302,524 308 791 233,940 3,903,382 3,298,942 361,488 1,840,536 969,S89 786,841 314,510 697,300 121,483 154,109 • Loans Dee. Speoie Dec. $995,530 Deposits. 175,727 Legal Tenders &roulation.»»« Dec. 218,317 The following are the totals for a Dec. $2,269,761 Inc.. 1,684,451 series of weeks past: 1. .$263,011,668 $14,957,007 $31,398,849 $208,889,177 $61,485,458 8 260,620,027 14,582,050 81,794,653 203,676,822 60,946,857 Dec. Dec. uie&rtfiM $649,081,43 647,815,736 . Dec. 15.. Dec. 22.. Dec. 29.. Jan. 5.’67 Jan. 12.. Jan.19. Jan. 26. Feb. 2. Feb. 9. 31,797,665 206,458,271 68,994,309 556,150,886 32,433,429 202,029,877 64,816,962 587.150,833 82,664,526 200,811,290 63,000,687 515,917,999 32,762,779 202,533,564 65,026,121 4 6,987,787 32,825,103 202,517,608 63,246,370 605,132,066 32,854,928 201,200,115 62,235,386 529,040,028 82,957,198 197,952,076 63,422,559 668,822,804 32,995,347 200,511,596 65,944,541 512,407,358 32,777,000 198,241,835 67,628,992 508,825,533 Philadelphia Banks.— The annexed statement shows the con¬ 258,45330 13,991,200 258,255.514 13,281,917 259,354,761 13,185,222 257,852,460 12,794,892 258,935,488 14,613,477 255,032,223 15,366,207 251,674,803 16,014,007 251.264,355 16,332,984 250,268,825 16,157,257 dition of the Philadelphia Banks for ' Circulation. Deposit* $9,615,989 $42,102,289 851,915 10,021,527 10,161,601 10,257,544 10,825,154 854,989 ... .. series of weeks: a Specie. $876,751 Date. Legal Tenders. Loans. Dec. 1 $51,549,367 Dec. 8 61,250,852 20,488,385 Dec. 15. 20,115,704 51,256,937 Dec. 22 61,536,821 19,677.741 ..... Dec. 29 51,769,765 19,777,051 Jan. 5 ’67.. 52,312,317 20,209,064 Jan. 12 20,006.255 52,528,491 Jan. 19 19,448,099 63,458.307 Jan. 26.'.... 19,363,374 62,168,473 2 Feb. 55,551,180 19,269,128 Feb. 9.. 62,384,829 860,111 867,647 903,663 903,320 10,381,5f5 10,384,683 10,430,898 10,449,982 877,548 871,564 873,614 .. Boston Banks.—The weekly statement of the shows decrease in loans of a 41,452,539 40,728,903 40,411,168 89,706,063 41,308,327 41,023,421 40,048,645 39,001,779 39,592,712 39,811,595 10,388,820 10,380,577 880.582 . Boston Banks nearly half a million, also a decrease in specie, legal tender notes, deposits and circulation. A detailed comparison is as follows: Loans have declined $478,299, specie $83,173, legal tender notes $291,125, amount due to other banks $109,393, deposits $233,694, National circulation $4,412, and State circulation $411. The only item which has increased is the amount due from other banks, which has increased $919,048. The returns are following the footings, with those of the two previous : Feb. 11. Feb. 4. Jan 28 $41,900,000 Loans 97,264,162 $41,900,000 Specie Legal tender notes Due from other banks Due to other banks 873,396 16,103.479 12,560,329 12,947,255 956,569 16,394,604 1,058,329 16,816,481 Deposits...: Circulation (National) 39.474,359 39,70S,053 13,504,944 39,219,421 Capital : The following past: are 97,742,461 $41,900,000 97,891339 11,641,281 18,056,648 24,686,663 305,603 Circulation (State)... 11,392,871 24,691,075 306,014 the comparative totals for a 24,716,597 302,298 series of weeks „ Legal Circulation.—, Specie. Tenders. Deposits. National. State $99,446,166 $601,502 $16,640,798 $4i,089,605 $24,593,237 $320,864 99,062,641 589,364 16,688,280 40,958,922 24,650,482 818,409 Loans. Dec. 3 10 697,902 16,561,288 582,112 17,038,272 589,137 18,090,512 97,009,3421,183,451 17,033,387 98,461,778 1,384,300 16,829,495 95,298,9821,078,160 16,596,299 97,891,329 1,058,329 16,816,481 97,742,461 956.569 16,394.604 97,264,162 873,396 16,103,479 99,127,027 Jan. Feb. 31 7 ’67.. 14 21 28 4 11.. .. 98,958,672 99,033,673 41,042,063 24,671,197 40,971,613 24,654,346 41,801,496 24,666,860 40,-24,618 24,580,367 316,243 315,140 313,562 40,246,216 24,997,446 88,679,604 24,275,162 311*749 39,219,241 24,716,597 39,708,053 24,691.075 39,474,359 24,686,663 812,664 801,911 302,298 306,014 305,603 National Banks.—The tion of the National Banks following is a statement of the condi. of the United States for the quarter the first Monday in January, compared with previoui ending on returns : RESOURCES. Oct, 1866. Jan., 1866. Jan., 1867. $608,411,161 58 $498,843,447 11 $601,238,808 37 1,806,662 08 15,436,296 16 3,193,717 78 2,423,822 60 17,1*2,117 01 5,298,375 86 2,490,891 81 18 861,137 63 items Due from National Banks.. Due from other banks and 89,817,684 5G 93,254,561 02 103,676,647 55 107,597,858 41 101,330,934 35 92,492,445 96 bankers U. S. bonds 14,658,229 87 12,136,549 87 12,981,445 40 Loans and disconnnts Overdraws Real estate fur ,an i fixtures Expenses account Premiums Remittances,and other cash cure deposited to se¬ 298,376,850 142,003,500 20,406,442 16,909,363 187,846,543 00 00 09 80 82 17,483,848 60 circulation Other U. S. bonds and sec.. Bills other banks. Specie Other lawful money Other stocks, bonds and m. 330,800 1,192,518 8,415,521 555,412 Tenders. leuurrs. Deposits. ucpwiie. tion. non. Specie. 816,892 Totals f$250,268,825 $16,157,257 $32,777,000 $198,241,835 $67,628,992 Clearings for the week ending Feb. 2, 1867 $512,407,258 67 Clearings for the week ending Feb. 9, 1867 .: 608,825.532 20 Balances for the week ending Feb. 2, 1867 24,220,284 70 Balances for the week ending Feb. 9, 1867 20,478,493 34 The deviations from the returns of the previous week are as fol- lows: Loans. 1.429.773 1,703,623 Legal Circula¬ Changes In Sub-Treasury Payments. Receipts. Balances. Dec. 1*. $1,173,546 $15,277,828 $15,094,432 $102,455,273 “ 8.... 16,155.328 20,889,460 106,689,404 1,418,235 “ 15.... 12,793,157 108,689,176 10,713.385 1,471,199 “ [February 1(5, 1867. 2,008,695 21 331,703,200 94,954,150 17,437,699 8,170,835 205,770,641 15,887,490 00 00 00 91 38 00 2,795,322 86 2,862,945 23 389,180,700 00 S8,940,000 00 20,381,726 10,634,972 186,511,927 15,072,584 00 10 23 00 ,$1,402,480,964 84 $1,525,493,960 50 $1,506,448,345 28 Aggregate LIABILITIES. Oct., 1866. Jan., 1866. $403,a57,346 00 Capital stock paid in Surplus fonds.r.. National bank notes out¬ - 43,000,370 78 banknotes outstand’g Individual deposits U. S. deposits 213,239,530 00 46,449,155*0 513,608,888 57 29,747,336 75 Deposit of U.S.disb’g offic’s Dividends unpaid 6,646,642 02 standing - State Due to National Banks Due other banks & hank’rs Profits Other items 96,7u9, 74 23,793,584 28,972,493 957,643 15 24 70 78 Jan., 1867. $415,278,969 00 $419,779,739 00 53,359,277 64 280,129,658 9,748,025 563,510.570 80,420,819 00 00 79 80 2,979,955 77 110,531,957 31 26,951,498 86 82,583,3*8 83 59,967,222 14 291,093,294 6,961,499 655,179,944 27,225,663 00 00 45 60 2,275,384 73 92,756,560 88 24,371,674 07 26,887,323 35 $1,402,489,964 34 $1,625,493,960 50 $1,506,448,245 88 Aggregate During the week ending Saturday last, there was issued of Na¬ tional Bank Currency $267,750 ; making total to date $301,294,886. From this is to be deducted the currency returned, including worn-out notes, amounting to $2,548,632, leaving in actual circu¬ lation at that date $298,776,254. \ The statement of securities held by the Treasurer of the States in trust for National Batiks, dated February 5, shows as United security for circulating notes a balance in $340,547,450; aid 761.450. as United States bonds of security for deposit of Total. $379,308,900. public moneys $38r 207 THE CHRONICLE Febrtuuy 16, 1867.] SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. (REPRESENTED BY THE LAST STOCKS AND American Gold SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. National: 5.20s (new issue)... do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 136* preferred Chicago, Burlington and Quincy 109* 108* IS* 109 Chicago and Great Eastern 109* 109* Chicago and Milwaukee 108* 109 109* 109* 109% 109* Chicago and Northwestern do ^ 107 107* do preferred 107* 166* Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati 108* 108* 106* 107* 107* 107* 107* 106* 166* 106* 105* 105* 105* 105* 105* 105* 105* .coupon. Georgia 6s 7s do 102* 101* 105* 105% 105* 106 105* 105* 105* 105* 105* 105* 105* 1860-62-65-70. 97 92 82 Louisiana 6s Ohio and do Panama Michigan 6s North Carolina 6s do 6s. (new) Ohio 68,1870-75 do 6s,1881-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 6s 1868 do 6s 1890 do 6s, 05 05* 105* 53 54 66* 65* 65* 65 65* 66* 65* 57 Consolidated Cumberland Delaware and Hudson Lehigh & Susquehanna Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 50 60 100 10 Wyoming Valley "-Brooklyn Citizens 147 (Brooklyn) Manhattan Metropolitan New York Williamsburg Improvement.—Boston Water Power Brunswick City Canton 146* 146 . Nicaragua Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust New York Life and Trust Union Trust United States Trust 20 50 100 50 60 20 100 26 100 100 160 100 27* 81* 47 47* 45* 45* 45 44* 43* 43* 103 104 158* 158 157 116* 116* 100 103 150 153 116* 50 41* 42 100 100 50 32 do do , 42 — preferred.... 50 Western, 1st mort ...... Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877... 100 Central of N w Jersey, 1st mortgage Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund Atlantic and Great do do do do 95 100 — 98* 1st mortgage Income Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage.... Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.... do do do Interest do consolidated... Extension 1st mortgage.... 82* . - 91 91 — 100 90* 100 91 .... 3d mortgage, conv.. 4th mortgage do do 84 84 - Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort. do do do 2d mort. Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880 do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended 75 ••— 100* - — 102 1 » 101* -101* 2d mortgage do Western, 1st mortgage do 2d mortgage Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72 do Consolidated and Sinking Fund..... 93 do 3d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 103* i do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885..... 102* 102 98 — 103 x§2 Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 ..... 97 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort..... Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage... do do 2d mortgage.... 95 95 . ..100 25 100 109 100 100 62* 63* 64 64 64 63* 64 Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s, 1887 . do do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, convertible, do do 7s, 1865-76 New York and Nsw Haven 96* 88* ; 1876.. — Ohio and 66* 68* 66 Mississippi, 1st mortgage Peninsula, 1st mortgage 65* 67* 67 Wells, Fargo & Co 100 Mariposa Gold 100 22 22* 100 Mariposa preferred Minnesota Copper . .. 50 New Jersey Consolidated Copper... 15 Quart* mil 25 Quicksilver 100 40* 40* 41* 41* Rutland Marble,.25 SafciU and Pannslae...,, 10 25* 34 Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants.. 100 . 25* 97* 97* 98 98* 98 104* 104* 105* 104* 1 100 McGregor Western, 1st mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage 26 100 600 100 100 67* . 26 3d mortgage, 1875 do do convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Lackawanna and Western Bonds 100 Express.—Adams 40 41 ^ Pacific Mail...... S. Am. Nav. & Mar. Railway Union Navigation Iransit.—Central American.' 100 25% do Great do 150 100 100 Western Union,Russian Extension.100 Steamship. —Atlantic Mail 100 American Merchants Union United States 146* 147 43* 50 Jersey City and Hoboken Cary Telegraph.—Western Union 36 100 Wilkesbarre Harlem 37 147 43 69* 69* 116* 26* avenue do do 100 25 20 43 60* 60 1 101* 101% 101* 100* 100 102 115 100 100 100 100 Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage Chicago, R. I. and Pacific, 7 i ercent Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage 59 60 89* 59* 100 do do do 87 60 108*. 109 V 15* 74* 78* 74* Railroad Ronds: 53* 66* 65* 109 100 Mississippi Certificates do do preferred do 53* 66 116* 116* H5* 11 109 do , Central 100 100 100 100 preferred 130 117 Louis, Alton and Terre Haute 100 do do do preferred. 100 95 95 100 50 10 60 100 100 100 100 Cameron 50 100 50 100 Toledo, Wabash and Western 105* 105* 105 56* 84 Stonington.’. 100* • Ashburton Butler ^ 100 120 50 Reading 93 x Miscellaneous Shares : tfoal.—American _ 93 Sixth HO 00 53 : 93 93 St. do 6s, Water Loan do 6s, Public Park Loan do 6s, Improvement Stock Jersey City 6s, Water Loan New York 7s do 6s do 6s Go#. 93 66* 97* 101 88 84* 84* 84* f 120* 121 11 85 120 100 130* 100 114* Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago 94 (new) Virginia 6s, coupon Municipal Brooklyn 6s 94 99 50 Morris and Essex New Jersey New York Central New York and New Haven New Haven and Hartford Norwich and Worcester Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 99 69* 99* 68 do do * guaranteed... 100 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chlen. 100 do do do 1st pref...100 do do do 2d pref...100 Milwaukee and St. Paul. 100 do do preferred 100 99* 86 8 68* 6 99* $ 37* 38* 38* 100 100 100 Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana (new) 94 2d do do 114* 50 Indianapolis and Cincinnati Joliet and Chicago Long Island McGregor Western Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred 101* 101* 123 56* 100 69* 58* 6C* 5-* i Erie do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem do preferred Hudson River Illinois Central Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s do 6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)... do 6s, (Pacific RR) New York 7s, 1870 do 68,1867-77 do 5s, 1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty Bonds (coupon).,., do do do do (registered) 50 Delaware, Lackawanna and Western 116 do Registered, 1860. — do 6s, coupon, ’79, after do do 1877 do do do 1879 do War Loan do Indiana bs, War Loan do 5s 100 100 50 12 — 113*1115*1 15* U 87* 6'* 100 Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo State: California 7s Connecticut 6s 100 100 100 100 Fri 122 100 113 100 100 do Wed. Tl raee. Mon. Railroad Stocks ; Central of New Jersey ... do 108* FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15.) STOCKS AND SECURITIES. Chicago and Alton 5.20s do ....registered 6s, Oregon War 1881 .. 6s, do. do. (* yearly). 5s, 1871 coupon. registered. 5s, 1871 5s, 1874 coupon. 58, 1874 registered. 5s, 10-40s coupon. 5s, 10-40s registered. 6s, Union Pacific R. R... {cur.). 105* 1 stseries 105* 105* 7-30s Treas. Notes do do do 2d series' 106* -05* do do do ... .3d series’ do do do do do do do do 137 Eri. . United States 6s, 1867 registered. do do 6s, 1868 coupon. do do 6s, 1868 registered do do 6s, 1881 coupon do do 6s, 1881 registered' do do 6s, 5-20s (1st iss ue).... coupon. do .... registered. do 6s, 5-20s do do 6s, 5-20a (2d issue) coupon do do 68,5.20s do ....registered do do coupon 6s, 5.20s (3d issue) do do do 68,5.20s, ....registered do Tues. 186* 137* Coin (Gold Room) Thun vv e4 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort.. 10 do do 21* St. „ 41 40 r ; do do do do Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort do .do do -1003,c 2d mort... 3d mort... - do 2d mortgage... Mariposa (Gold) 1st mortgage 94 75 90. - ... 94 .. 2d, pref.... do do * do 2d, income. Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. 69 do 101 — 77 77* TI* 94 [Februaiy W* 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 208 Exports of Leading!Articles from New York* Commercial ©imes. )t commerciaiTepitome. 09 S Friday Night, Feb. 15. *+ .5 The markets present quite an unsettled and irregular as¬ pect, subject to no general influences; but eaefy of the leading staples varying upon very slight influences. Cotton has been firm, with a good export demand. Breadstuffs have been dull and depressed. Gioceries have been dull, but close with a fair demand, and Sugars firmer. To¬ bacco has been active for seed leaf, but otherwise quiet. Provisions have shown very little animation. Pork has been somewhat neglected, but closed firm. Bacon has been shipped freely to Great Britain, but closed quiet at 10£c. for Cumberland cut. Cut meats have slightly advanced on an active demand for local and Southern markets. Lard, at slight decline, has been active for export. «o JO CO O EH >■» -2 .2 O xX 325 fh • nc cO © ei -r >-?p.-oot-t-55Tr»ot-©©«oi5 * ri tp io oo 25c t-T 3 >«©ooot-«o©—<fc“S>t-t-b»c© 35 "oc ;«H^io»(5cb« « -S o % £ CO : : : . • • tQco nS • • © • •© -on . • • ^ ; ;© •« . * : :g : : : :! ft . Jj II © O .es©io • •© •CSftOO • * ■ • • :g • V gf o i sg M •o • oo • CO • •© : .g : t-T CD ;§§5 7 CD CO .IOTP • •T-IJO :§ •oo v~4 | S §2' 5 o> o ® A o^o g :"§! oo . -Si : ** ® freights. • • : • o •« : . *8 .«ot~ « tp'jo*V 3 8 • co © el t? « cfiftio t-T r a Butter of the finer table sorts has advanced Naval Stores have been more active, part for export, anc closed more steady. ]p the past 48 hours about 1,500 bbls. Spirits Turpentine havb been sold at G8@69c. per gallon. In Oils we notice a small advance in Linseed, a large busi ness in Common Coast (whale) Oil at 80@82c. per gallon, other oils firm, ami Red Oils moving freely, for shipment. Metals have been depressed. No. 1 Scotch Pig Iron has sold at 843, ex ship Straits. Tin has sold at 22c. gold, which is lower, and Baltimore Copper at a slight decline. Lead and Spelter unchanged. East Tndia Goods are generally firmer. Linseed has ad¬ vanced to $2,55, gold duty paid; Gunny Cloth, 9c. gold, n bond, and Gunny Bags have sold at 22£c., currency, duty paid. Whisky has sold freely at 31@33c. for State Western, in bond. Petroleum has been dull and declining. Tallow, at a decline, has been more active. Hops have been quiet. The stocks in produce dealers hands in all American markets are estimated to amount to 15,000 bales. Hides are quiet; re¬ ceipts are liberal, and mostly sold before arrival. Leather steady. Fish have declined, and are unsettled. Wool has been moderately active and firm. Freights to Great Britain have been quite active at very high rates. Steamer room for Liverpool has been in demand at 8^d for Grain, 35s.@45s., and fd. for Cotton, and packet room at 6@6£d. for Grain, 22s. 6d.@25s. for Provisions, J( ^d. for Cotton, with shipments quite large. o Eh ^ ^ co« 9of kinds has been active and firm. Several hundred tierces of Prime Mess and India Mess have been taken for the British markets. Cheese has been depressed by the scarcity o steamer CO d Beef of all more JSS&SSSri®E: . N > • . co© O |g8 fc § rf CO . : : : . : • • : ;© * TP :8J s • • • ▼ • t- 00 • 00 . -oogco iO COt-4 : CO •rs -« • f « * * * 0 • u 3 O <7) . • • •© © :$? : : :3 ^ ,*H rH- ’oo' V* • $8^ : • • • •«»• : • ig : :w«3 r-«» , £ t-l ® 5 The receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Feb. 15, Jan. 1, and for the Ashes, pkgs.. same time in 1866. have been Flour, bbls.. 27,074 163,790 Wheat, bush. 23,978 97.078 Corn Oats Rve Malt 25,950 210,785 20,955 144,947 1,722 625 76,025 10,178 13,093 Barley Grass seed... 4,236 14.S30 Flaxseed 558 1,918 .... Beans Peas. C. meal,bblB. C. meal, ba era. Buckwheat & B.W. flour, bg 246 9.650 *720 2,904 6,501 11,204 110,315 501 5,641 Cotton, bales 25,243 147,669 Copper, bbls... 54 j-22 Copper, plates 1,019 Driedfruit,pkga 4,321 11,817 Grease, pkgs... 700 1,725 Hemp, bales... 32 188 Hides, No 11,186 42,959 Hops, bales. .. 162 2,021 Leather, sides 26,503 251,180 Lead, pigs 579 .. . Molasses, hhds and bbls.... Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl Spirits turp.. - 562 6,327 183 624 852 The 5,362 This 6,231 244 91,559 Provisions— Butter, pkgs.. Cheese Cut meats.... Eggs Pork 5,470 Beef,pkgs. Lard, pkgs.... Lard, kegs..'.. 5,316 Rice, pkgs Starch 149,735 ... 81,993 Same 19,359 1,453 536 151 from the port from that here given: • docs • * CO ift # ©cfjo <©»o •cFtoc • •©© • TT ri ■ • O ft *222^ *ootp»o io CO t— (M OO ’rH» •© © ; . . . .. • © # « © • t>\ *** * eS • * ft • *. -tHOOS Vc tP JO CO • ft * * • • • W • • • ■WrlO -T-l * Q ft • *o« * * *25 • •-•© ‘ft • 000( ’ * I 1*111 n CO • . ft . . . : : . : : • o * 'S* :§8g; : CO o<c2 •co' ■ TP CO . . . • •tHCO • • *©oo • .© •< • • • . * • . ’ JO ’8 § eo”af « sg . . • vjOthwo ■' .oo . K ' , « i . • ftCJO©CO • i§ • • oo o . ft of •*”© *©QO •' • • H « « • T-l fc- • ** • •< . . -00 • •^ • •© . © . *tjT • © -Sa , * : « t _ *4 :S • • W JS :l : : ••• : t i: i“ • • • • : : • | a CO S3 S. .....©• « ° •T-l© -JO • ^ :g| : :J3 : T-l • :{§ : 1 I • • • • 'OrlKW • ~ H vH •© • 786 • • • • • • • • • *05 %+ ® ft » O 3 S O M 2,376 A & S3 : • :| : :| : : :|S :S : ;S| of • tj |f I* : : ‘ : : : : : : : : ; ' T :|S :ww :8 : 1 I :1 if ' • • ■»& : _ ill iigii cb CJTP - Cl • tfjgg CO ;:- "S' « © _ ©T-l C4 9t JO *5> • • • ...•••••••©•• • * r • • , • • ; : : : ' • ' ■ 569 ♦j q to •«fi*o^5£?2S5 * 82 1,606 4,828 647 192 927 3,167 1,508 1,539 13,860 6,038 16,685 2,387 12,666 12,359 8,058 61,896 70,676 3,864 3,964 6,524 3 3 S : • oo •c5o<©t-os g 694 307 228 :f ; : j ■ "g- ' ' ' • :gS • • eoJO£- : *®'oT ’ t-T T-ICO • • -:58E= : : JO'trf §5 5,370 15,687 241 904 bbls 2,036 Tobacco, 291,902 Whiskey, bbls.. 1,222 Wool, bales Pressed Hogs. No 4,296 Rice, rough, 7,834 bush.......... 5,316 4,248 71,474 58,754 51,387 17,677 6,771 22,861 14,114 567 3,791 7,185 7,104 48,808 36,839 1,969 8,066 6,184 8,967 37,467 18,291 672 2.486 1,348 579 744 3,327 Spelter, slabs... 2,226 Sugar, hhds So Tallow, p! 102,846 157,258 8,742 400 % 8,667 579 4.739 656 64,946 Tobacco, 33,177 57,645 3,966 11,608 following table shows the exports of leading articles of com¬ of New York since January 1, 1867, the principal ports of destination, and the total for the same period in 1866. Tbe export of each article to the several ports for the past week can be ob¬ tained by deducting the amount in the last number of the Ouozuglx merce -t-cot-rs . • Hrt^sgH since 6,859 156 760 Stearine 152 . ©©oeo ft Since - pkgs 272,868 Oil, lard 260,112 Oil, Petroleum. 4,379 Peanuts, bags. 421 • ’ 33 : week. Jan.l. time’66. Rosin Tar 160,0S0 Pitch 50,266 Oil cake, 2,057 53,132 1,296 22,099 7,181 follows ooooeot-© • < CQ This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66 110 5J3 746 Breadstuffs— as S 03 January 1. * a « © t-< o M ' Receipts of Domestic Produce for tbe Week, »nd since * » “■ Id * ~ • tpoo co •coiooo©oocie<5©© -Tpctjo© gsft-' ' gf' IB 0D O 80 n - rvv: ■? x 209 THE CHRONICLE. February 16,1867.] Imports of (bales) since Sept. 1, Receipts and Exports of Cotton Leadinx Articles. Stocks at Dates following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port for the week ending Feb. 8th, since Jan lf 1867, and for the corresponding period in 1866 : [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] and Mentioned. — The week. Buttons Coal, tons.... 125 814 * Bark, Pernv Blea p’wd’rs Brimst. tns. Cochineal... Cr Tartar ... Gambier.... Gums, crude Gum, Arabic 98,876 596 752 32 40 752 20 2 10 Indigo. Madaer 1,151 60 74 227 31 Soda,bi-carb 7,941 Soda, sal.... 761 Soda, ash... 1,396 Flax—...... 25 Furs 48 Gunny cloth . 2,696 Hair H3 Hemp, bales.. 4,671 634 311 223 459 ... Oil, Olive... Opium 2,503 93 14,827 1,879 3,199 100 176 7,108 365 14,764 Hides, &c. \ 82 11 Hides,dres’d 253 India rubber.. 1,138 Bristles Ivory Jewelry, &c. Jewelry Watches.... Linseed Molasses 1,963 8,174 34 11 22 83 110 8,920 3,805 53,706 6,068 Metals, &c. Cutlery.... 200 1,608 1,669 15,854 42,310 7,686 35,933 Charleston, Feb. 8.. Savannah, Feb. 8... Texas, Feb. 1 New York, Feb. 15* Florida, Feb. 8t 3,843 Tin, boxes.. 4,261 Tin slabs,lbs 8,858 891 1,352 Rags. 597 hhds, 1,039 Sugar, 93 tcs&bbls.. 2,995 318 - Mobile, Feb. 8 Steel 493 1,596 50 151 61 Oils, ess 86,463 998 .... 1866. Iron,RR b’rs .... Lead, pigs.. 9,377 Spelter,lbs. 75,769 2,589 4 8BPT. j Same 407,269 23,731 18,104 50,097 171,883 2,128 46,379 731,524 110 Sugar.bxs&bg 696 37,239 2,762 Tea... 89 1,747 Tobacco ! 476 Waste 306 440 Whines &jC i 1,599 789 Champ, bkts Wines time 4,473 2,393 N. Orleans, Feb. 8.. 8,073 4,925 5,850 7,914 29,017 Virginia, Feb. 15... Other p’ts, Feb. 15* 5,019 1,71)7 3,542 968 11,999 12,101 " N. Carolina, Feb. 15 49,072 8,030 42,740 13,203 4,508 3,487 17,692 Wool, bales... 1,293 102 Articles reported by value. $34,236 $102,468 10,879! Cigars $3,861 3,619 8,619 2,800 29,091 Corks [2,346 Fancy goods. 81,842 467,195 476,457 97,247 205,201 9,656 1,356 Fish. 767 Fruits, &c. 47,484 9,679 9,679 3,084 Lemons 40,389 24,295 991 Oranges.... 26,903 78,t'46 140,696 22,349 11,136 Nuts 52,925 179,899 Raisins 29,581 983,014 849,584 170 Hides, andrsd. 372,030 31,939 38,268 1,250 Rice. <fcc. 3,813 Spices, <! 31,025 18,510 524 Cassia 6,159 4,170 2,275 Ginger 23,893 46,193 93 Pepper.f 12,463 126 Saltpetre 45,376 Woods. 2,746 10,724 Fustic 1,008 3,854 7.974 16,084 Logwood 777 12,559 2,145 599 Mahogany.. 812 m’nts 8INCE Since Jan. 1, 1867. Hardware... 1,039 5,944 4,047 2,993 Cocoa, bags... 1,060 Coffee, bags .. 23,051 4 Cotton, bales. Drugs. &c. rec’d PORTS. For the week. Same time 1866. 8HIP- 1. Great • 157,616 248,850 40,840 .... 10,153 40,840 11,410 177,889 .... 1,257 18,439 .... 4,181 155,269 • • • • 67 .... • • • • 1,970 .... 10,483 .... , . . 67 261 564,211 .... • • • 170,000 4,124 26,848 60,558 1,970 10,744 48,239 34,03S 481,934 • 32,573 .... .... • 48,673 81,655 48,379 16,760 66,686 29,160 29,571 36,153 - ••• STOCK. PORTS. 172,297 43,149 13,276 ; 228,722 801 51,467 50,666 4 909 41,102 40,189 498,509 176,9*8 97,017 150,509 86,031 54,960 82,573 26,848 60,558 10,553 .... • • » • • • • *50,000 490,904 636,714 little change, except off in receipts at New The market this week has exhibited an increase of business. The falling in Total. for’gu. Britain 1,194,486 Total France Other to NORTH. • For the Since Jan. 1, 1867. 675 1 TO— EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. Orleans, though partially made good by an increase at other points, has served to renew confidence and stimulate export buyers. Prices have thus been supported against less favor¬ able accounts from Liverpool and a slight decline i® ex¬ change. The demand for cotton goods has also improved, but this branch of trade is still in an unsatisfactory state. Sales of the week foot up about 14,500 bales, the market closing firm at the annexed quotations: Florida. Upland. Jb Ordinary ... ... ing.... Good Middli:na. ... ... 29 30 52 29 30 31 33 35 33 36 N. Orleans Mobile. & Texas 30 30 31 30 32 33 34 33# 38 37 ... 615 45 of Cotton from New Ym*k this week show slight gain over the total for last week, amounting in all to 11,797 bales. The particulars of these shipments are as fol¬ The exports a COTTON. Friday, P.M., Feb. 15, 1867. receipts of cotton at all the ports this week show a large decrease from the aggregate in our last statement, amounting in all io 71,727 bales (against 83,147* bales last week, and 77,941 bales two weeks since), making the total receipts since September 1, this year, 1,194,486* bales, against 1,124,123 bales for the same period in 1865-6. In the fol¬ lowing may be seen the details of the week’s receipts: The Receipts. Received this week att— bales 26,030 .-. New Orleans Mobile Charleston Savannah Texas 10,072 4,647 9,846 7,475 Receipts. 3,313 bales 1,338 Received this week at— Florida North Carolina 4,221 Virginia ' Total receipts for week lows : of Paris, 873 — Cuba, 605.... Hecla, 1,304 Chancellor, 1,7<)3. ...Alex. Marshall, 1,145 Per bark Joseph Hayden, 65. Total bales To Glasgow, per steamer—Caledonia, 880. Total bales To Havre, per steamer - Europe, 897 Total bales To Bremen per steamers—Union 1,189—Atlantic 1,484 — per ship Char¬ To Per a 1, of the previous year : Exports of Cotton (bales) from New lfork since Sept. 1,1866 WEEK ENDING Total EXPORTED TO 22. 10,466 9,1S6 7,817 768 880 .... Britain.. 10,466 6,264 ports • • date. Barce¬ lona. Malaga. From— pool. New York.... 7,817 New Orleans. 19,283 Mobile... 2,616 Savannah 4,393 Charleston.... 2,803 Galveston 1,10J gow. 880 Total this w’k 37,521 880 • • • • • • •• Havre. 397 4,023 2,703 126 ’827 '526 Vera Cruz. Total. *i38 11,797 24,923 •51,248 218,572 4,021 8,559 4,181 397 .... .... 4,393 2,303 1,109 4,420 2,829 827 526 138 ports • Total to N. Europe .. and Gibraltar • • • .... .... etc 767 4,434 .... .... .... .... 7,968 Grand Total foreign exports fromNhe United States since September 1 now amount to 564,2lL bales, against 681,083 bales for the same period last year.. Below we give our usual table of the movement of Cotton at all the porls since Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: • • 397 4,181 13,826 10,393 6,057 7,677 • 5,910 1,276 1,060 .... 1,060 .... . .. 1 11,705 Receipts of cotton at the port Sept. 1: .... 11,014 The total receipts last week were not correctly stated, en account of an in the Texas receipts as returned to us. + In this table, as well as in our general table of receipts, &c., we deduct 89 17,579 13,823 .... 860 644 7 .... 660 651 2,703 11,797 177,889 255,431 of New York for the week Since This week. Sept. 1. Bales. From New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida Total for the week. Total since Sept. 1. The following 994 . . 3,301 . 1,169 are Bales. 87,830 19,306 69,647 20,635 From South Carolina North Carolina Since This week. Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 1,853 1,289 .... Norfolk, Baltimore, Ac.. 3,846 Per Railroad 4,438 tember 1: * 34,864 22,465 49,314 57,228 * —— 18,085 .... 25,243 879,364 the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since * 8 and since 47,141 The total 13,815 2,703 • 767 1,434 2,616 • prev. year. > Hambnrg Total Spain, Same time 8,697 156,269 227,181 • .... 472 270 Bremen and Hanover Spain, Oporto spa: • .... .... Total French 9,954 472 270 Havre Other French to Feb. 12. Brit Total to Gt. Other Feb. 5. 6,264 Liverpool, ter Jan. 29. Jan. very Glas¬ 2,708 the exports of Cotton each of the last four direction since September 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period All others Liver- 7,817 880 897 Below we give our table showing from New York, and their direction for weeks ; also the total exports and 71,727 decided falling off at New Orleans, but from the Southwest (Arkansas, Tennessee, and Kentucky) and from Virginia, &c., shows an increase, and yet the total is over eleven thousand bales less than last week’s statement. The exports from all the ports are less again, amounting to only 47,141 bales (against 54,012 bales last week), of which 3,752 bales were to Liverpool, 880 bales were to Glasgow, 4,420 bales were to Havre, 2,829 bales to Bremen, 827 bales to Barcelona, 526 bales to Malaga, 138 bales to Vera Cruz, as follows : This statement shows ships J. Thompson 2,132 lotte, 5,285 Tennessee, Kentucky, &c.- per steamers—City Liverpool \ Sep¬ error from the receipts at each port for the Southern ports. from Florida to week all received at such port from other For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts mast be de¬ ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus par¬ ticular in the statement of this fact, as some of our readers foil to understand it. * The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee * Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated. t These are the receinf* at all Reports of Florida to February 8, except Apalachicola, which are only to January 19. $ Estimated* The stock at New York is also estimated. • 210 THE CHRONICLE. ,—Boston.—, Last Since week. Sep. 1. Receipts from— New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina 3,848 T • 11,197 21,812 • 8ince Sep. 1. 5.767 • • 813 • 301 • 7,201 28,190 10,553 • • • > • • • • . . 4,981 . .... 236 49 375 717 .... 850 207 .... 1,382 • Sep. 1. .... . ... . • • 629 receipts... 3,764 • Since .... 459 3,596 747 • • Last week. .... .... 36 Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... Total Last week. 39,397 813 Virginia New York, <fcc* * ,—Philad’phia.-N /—Baltimore.—, • 4,356 1,001 6,796 .' .... 123,424 • • • .... • * © .... 660 12,089 • » • 18,191 Reshipments. There have been no exports from either of these cities during the past week. Shipping News.—We have which the foreign shipments for Northern ports; we now given above the vessels in the week were made from the add the same information with re¬ gard to the Southern ports : Exported this week from— Total bales Castillian, 3,101....Squaudo, 3 164 Constitution, 3,669 ...White Jacket, 3,214 per barks Urnam, 1,038 Arlington, 1,754 To Havre, per ship Sandusky, 3,032 per bark Maximillian, 991.. To Bremen, per britr Superb, 126 To Vera Cruz, per ship Trade Wind, 138 To Barcelona, per brig Almirante, 409 Antonio Maria, 418 To Malaga, per bark Carmen, 526 Mobile—To Liverpool, per ship Gertrude, 2,616 Charleston—To Liverpool, per ship Confidence, 225 bales Sea Island, 2,078 Upland Savannah—To Liverpool, per ship Fannie Forsyth, 173 bales Sea Island, 4,220 bales Upland Galveston—To Liverpool, per brig Pacifico, 401.. per bark Cornelia, 708 .. .. 126 138 827 526 2,616 2,303 4,393 1,109 Total exports from Southern ports this week 35,344 Savannah, Feb. 9.—The receipts for the week ending Feb. 8 were 10,624 bales (of which 278 were from Florida), against 9,489 bales last week. The shipments this week were 7,711 bales, of which 4,893 bales were to Liverpool, 2,687 bales to New York, 846 to Boston, and S74 to Baltimore. Below we give the receipts, shipments, prices, <&c., for a series of weeks : Stock. Price Mid. Receipts. Shipm’s. Pec. 7 31 @.. 8,240 15,819 it 14 21 28. 4 Jan. it 11 ii 18 44 25 Feb. 1 Feb. 8 31 31 3,527 7,016 3,552 5,013 8,496 27,333 28,508 27,849 11,401 5,953 28,037 32,873 31X©32 16.112 ii 26,250 29,160 •31 X@— 31 @- 10,804 it dull through the week, holders not being disposed to meet the views of buyers, and prices have declined about $@lc. Freights have undergone little change—to Liverpool £d. for IJ pland is the general quotation. A steamer to go direct has been en¬ gaged full at |d. on Upland, and lfd. on Sea Island. To Baltimore the steamer takes cotton for Liverpool, to be reshipped by steamer through, at New York steamer rates. Sterling Exchange closes |6 05 @$6 55 to the pound sterling for 60 days’ bills. Mobile. Feb. 9.—By mail we have received one week's later dates from Mobile. The receipts for the week ending Feb. 8 were 10,072 bales, against 8,450 bales last week, and the shipments were 8,050 bales, of which 2,616 bales were to Liverpool, and 434 bales te New Orleans, leaving the stock on band and on shipboard, not cleared, of 81,665 bales. The receipts for the corresponding week of last year were 8,685 bales, and the exports 8,201 bales. The following are the weekly receipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week: Freight Date Dec. 8,295 7,837 11,589 18,80i 22,590 7,714 30 ©31X ©SIX ©iOX 32X© 31*@32 33 4» © c Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock’ mid. L’pool. York. ipt 10,447 7,100 2,879 60,933 30© X IX© % 12,719 11,050 6,272 67,330 30@31 X lX'tft % 13,899 16,500 9,938 71,341 32©— X IX® 1 14,746 6,100 6,267 79,820 3 @— X IX© IX 14,-500 9,257 77,468 32X — X IX© IX 9,508 9,200 7,-335 79,241 31X — X IX© IX 8,303 11,300 12,374 75,170 32@32X X IX© IX 12,097 5,450 7,059 77,771 30@31% X IX© IX 6,593 8,450 9,701 74,633 30X@— X IX© ix 10,072 9,400 3,050 81,655 30©— X IX© 1 • 7. 14. 21 21. 28 28. Jan 4. 44 11 11. 18 18. tt 25. Feb. 1. 8 it . The week has been by mail from Galvestou. one week’s later statement The receipts for *week euding Feb. 1 6,896 bales, against 4,789 last week, aDd the shipments were were 4,086 bales, of which 1,109 bales were to Liverpool, 716 bales were to New York, 1,213 bales were to Boston, and 1,149 bales were to New Or leans. Below we give the receipts, and shipments 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 : , -Receipts—, 1866. 1865. 4,4f'»3 5,042 6,667 3,569 4,546 3,842 6,139 3,824 5,451 4,182 4,879 6,44T 4,928 6,624 8,234 6,632 0,896 4,568 _ Exp. Stock, Freights. mid.* 23,628 21%©22 3,096 25,574 22@— 4,517 25,603 23%@— 1,385 30,357 24 @— 380 33,801 25%@— 5,009 34,243 25 @— 3,004 35;421 24% @— 9,814 30,896 23 ©— 4,086 36,153 24 @— York.t %©- l#©— %©% 1%@%©.. X®%©— IX®— %©- 1#©%@— %©% X®% %©- 136 133 133 IX®— 133 @ @ 136 © 135 © 135 1X@— 186$© 137$ 1X@— 133 @ 185 IX©— 135 © 137 * tPer steamer. Specie. The market this week has shown consideiable close l@l£ cent higher but weak at the advance. . activity, and prices The latest advices from Liverpool quoted middling uplands at 14£d., a rise of £d. for the week. Exchange on New York is selling at par to £ discount. Foreign exchange is nominal, most bills being sent to New Orleans or New York for sale. Charleston, Feb. 9.—The receipts for the week ending Feb. 8 amount to 5,011 bales, against 6,632 bales last week. Shipments for this week amount to 3,818 bales, (against 7,859 bales last week), of which 2,308 bales were to Liverpool, 1,229 bales to New York, 50 to Savannah, and 286 to Baltimore. The receipts, sales and exports of a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to yverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week since Dec. 7, were as follows: Ship- Price of Date. Itec’ts. Sales. meuti?. Stock. Dec. 7.. 5,221 mid. 2.258 “ 5,619 “ 6,464 6,265 5,378 4,248 6,233 6,252 6,632 5,267 10,695 31 ©— 3,712 2.444 13,870 32 @32% 2,496 2,474 17,860 33%@1,086 7,574 16,384 31%@3.347 4,353 17,409 33 ©34 1,668 1,634 20,023 33 @1,790 5,857 20,399 83 ©— 1,891 9,848 16,803 32%@1,827 7,859 15,576 32 ©— 5,011 2,049 3,818 14.. 21.. “ 28.. Jan. 4.. 11.. 4‘ 18.. 44 25.. Feb. 1.. “ 8.. 16,769 81 ©32# Stoek. 190,426 198,708 218,643 224,022 pool. %® X© x@X©x@— x®X©— x©- X@9-16 X@- To New York. X@— 1 ©— European 137@139 132©184 134©136 184©136 136@13$ 135© 137 135©187 136©138 1$©H@— 1$©l.@1 ©1 @- 133*©134 132%@133 137 ©137X 134X© — 135 ©135X 137X© ~ Indian and Cotton Marxets.—In reference to these correspondent in London, writing under the date of January our * Liverpool, Jan. 26.—The demand for cotton has ruled inactive, and the rates of last week are barely maintained. The changes in the quo¬ tations, however, are unimportant, the only alterations being a decline of id. per lb. in Smyrna produce, and a slight fall in East India and Egyptian qualities. Other descriptions are without alteration in value : Irom last week The total sales of the week are confined to 42,210 bales, of which 2,230 bales are on speculation, 7,790 bales for export, and 82,190 bales to the trade. In American produce, to arrive, con¬ siderable business has been done; the latest quotations are : New Or¬ leans, basis of middling, ship named, 14|d. per lb. The available sup¬ plies of all descriptions of cotton, and the quantities of Indian and American cotton afloat to the principal European ports are now as under: - 1866. Stock at “ Liverpool bales. London Havre American cotton afloat. Indian “ Afloat to Havre are the prices current of American cotton 90,000 156,100 18,505 880,066 and 21 middling. 15 Mobile 13X©14 13X@14 13X@14 13*@14 14% 14% 16% 15% -1866.- good fair. 23 16 27 18 16 16 . 16% 16% * 33 19 44 20 • fine. 66 21 • ^ .. .. 54,546 83,615 : -1867.Fair and Uplan< 478,300 978,835 . Total Annexed 1867. 424,460 46,774 34,502 60,000 394,750 18,349 “ Price gold. 140©142 140@141 Price gold. X@ 9-16 1$©— 139" @— 9-16© — H@—137 ©137X 9-16© — li@- 133X©133X 9-16© — 1$©- 182X0188* York.* pool. 30 ©31 32 @— 32 @33 31 ©— 218,491 33$©— 9-16@ll-16 219,543 32$@33 9-16©220,707 33 @— 9-16©— 231,202 32 @— X©11-16 251,727 31$@— X@ 248,850 81 @— 9-16© —Freight for Upl’d—. To Liver- -Freights- To Liver-To New team 1, and by sail nominal. Sterling exchange is quoted nominally l44@145 for bill of lading bills and 147@147| for bank. 26, thus alludes 139$@14Q% 23,050 21,701 32,000 23,343 30,200 31,103 Price Mid. The market this week has been quite active, especially during the first three days, but prices have been lower except on Thursday when there was slight improvement by reason of the favorable European advices. Later the improvement was lost, and the quotation at the close is about cent lower than last week. Freights are- quiet, the ates for Liverpool being by steam 1£ by sail 9-16, and coastwise, by markets 139 ©140* 32,750 30,289 . gold. pool. an Date. Rec’ps. Sales. Exp. Dec. 7.... 25,299 22,900 9,170 14.... 31,979 40,000 25,408 21.... 37,764 32,800 19,806 28... 29,461 22,900 26,219 Jan. 4.... 24,344 32,050 31,163 11.... 25,019 18,900 26,227 Price Price To Liver- To New 2 090 active one, and sales have been made as high middling; under the unfavorable news from Liverpool and New York, however, the market closes dull and lower, 30 being the quotation for middling, but factors were generally unwilling to accept the offers at that figure. Sterling exchange closes at 143@145, aud New York sight $@f discount. New Orleans, Feb 9.—The mail returns for the weekending Feb S' show the receipts to be 26,030 bales, against 41,656 bales last week, and 80,755 bales the previous week. The shipments for the last week were 81,103 bales, of which 19,283 bales were to Liverpool, 827 to Barcelona, 4,028 to Havre, 138 to Vera Cruz, 526 to Malaga, 8,958 to New York, 610 to Philadelphia, 81 to Baltimore, and 1,531 to Boston. Stock on hand Feb. 9 was 248,850 bales. The receipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week since Dec. 7, were as follows: . Galveston, Feb. 2—We have received gold. 138 ©139$ 137 ©138$ 133 ©135 132 ©133 134 ©135$ 134 @135 136 @137$ 134 @135$ 134 ©135 136 @137 31c. for as This has been a dull week, prices being lower, but holders not being willing to meet the views of buyers and accept the decline. Freights are without change: we 18 quote to Liverpool f@id. for square, and £d. 29,664 tor round bales. 25.... 30,755 Vessels of small capacity are readily taken, while ...1 larger ones fill up slowly. Steam to New York lc., to Boston, l@l£c., Feb. 8.... 41,656 Feb. 26,030 and to Philadelphia and Baltimore, £c. Sight on New York, par@£ * dia. Sterling exchange is variable, but sales have been made at 145@ By steam. 146 f Price of To New To Price of 44 19,283 4,023 [February 16, 1867. The market has been very it New Orleans—To Liverpool, per ships Murphy, 3,343 2 N- \\ ..‘ Mid. 33 22 19% 19% 19% 19% Fair. Good 89 60 24 . 1 27 20% 20% 21 20% * •- • • For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph dea patches at Hie close of our London letter in a previous part ol this paper.—[JW Commercial A Financial Chronicle. ) f comparison of the prices of middling for s' series of years is subjoined: The date d. d, d. 27# 22 27 22 d, 2C 21 17# . 16# .... 14 11 BALKS, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Same Total Total this Ex¬ Specula- this period 1866. tion. week. year. Trade. port. 230 14,530 92,280 63,440 American.. ..hales. 12,900 1,400 19,750 310 17,180 6,310 3,990 1,010 Brazilian 20,210 280 160 16,060 3,710 3,270 Egyptian 7,420 330 6,930 1.540 1,210 West Indian...... 140 140 950 1,090 1(0 189,110 220,810 33,400 .... Imports \ To this To this date date This 1866. week. 1867. This Total 344 9,874 86.700 , /— the past active, mainly for export, have been paid for choice stock. Ohio for export, private terms; 89 Connecticut, crop of 1865, 15@l7c.; has been quite and some extreme prices Sales embrace 1,083 cases -StocksSame Dec. 31t date 1866. 1866. 1866. day. 44,041 123,879 1,156,130 153,330 196,890 48,400 43,740 404,865 18,936 35.239 35,180 50,420 200,083 41,848 22,349 8,900 9,710 90,274 8,079 6,506 60,664 1,544,675 219,090 131,340 13,373 3,800 12,993 2,010 5,039 American Brazilian 120 80,060 229 2,482,963 ...2,688 1,586 172 In facturers. Seed leaf tobacco 12,540 84,600 7,790 2,230 42,210 32,190 Total 4,170 1,510 1,070 12,170 16,930 1,410 4,750 10,820 China and Japan.. 3,100 3,540 8,974 4,621 hogsheads, however,the business continues limited, and prices unsettled. About 60 hogsheads new, part Vir¬ ginia, have been sold in the range of 15@22c. In old Ken¬ tucky only about 100 hogsheads have been sold at 5@llc. The demand has been mainly of a retail character from manu¬ i860. 15,260 1867. 7,048 generally has shown more activity The market week.. Average weekly sales. 12,830 3,690 ... 37 Total since Nov. 1..30,099 following statement shows the imports of cotton at Liverpoo week and year, as well as the sales of each description of pro duce; the stocks of cotton are also included : ... 18 21 San Francisco The for the 46,660 782 11 1138 330 2,248 Philadelphia 11 14 14 14# 17# Hh<Is. Cases. Bales, eras. 142 12,071 7,487 3,966 15,255 23 655 36 484 1,400 20 14 From New York Baltimore Boston Portland New Orleans 1864. 1865. 1866. 1Sl67. d. d. Middling— d. d. Middling— Pernambuco.. 23 Sea Island.... 40 44 88 Egyptian ..... )land 27# 28# 19# 14# Uplan< Broach 27# 23# 19# 14# le Mubih 27# 24# 19# 16# Dhollerah Orleans Bxs. & /—Stems—, Lbs. Strips, 1209 hhds. 229 2,429,255 pkgs. 804 his. mant’d. Tc«. * qualities of cotton at thig 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. East Indian 211 THE CHRONICLE. February 16,1867.] Ohio, 4c.; 42 cases old Connecticut; 31c.; 100 cases choice Connecti¬ cut, 52^-@65c.; 84 cases Pennsylvania, private terms; 50 cases 400 167,270 41.760 cases Pennsylvania, 5^c. cases 23,181) only to notice sales of 100 Manufactured tobacco is iu China and Japan better demand, mainly for California, but no large business is 16,461 121,272 248,547 3,409,020 478,300 424,460 616,770 effected for the want of suitable stocks. Total Prices are firm for London, Jan. 26.—The demand for cotton is very quiet. In prices, good grades. Common and medium are neglected. however, very little change has taken place during the week. The an¬ The following are quotations at this port: nexed particulars relate to East India, China and Japan Cotton : (HHDS.). 1865. 1866. 1867. Egyptian......... West Indian East Indian 1,204 .... .... .... In foreign tobacco we have bales Havana at 82c.@$l 03. 11,620 270,100 2,840 LEAF KENTUCKY Deliveries 12,336 121,329 Stocks, Jan. 24 4,3<'3 13,517 54,546 25,537 13,634 46,774 24,599 bales. Imports, Jan. 1 to Jan. 24 Havre, Jan. 24.—The cotton trade is quiet, and the fluctuations in prices are trifling. New Orleans produce has sold at from 167 50 to 205 f the 50 kilogs. IMPORTS AND DELIVERIES, JANUARY 1 TO JANUARY 18. STOCKS JANUARY 18* IMPORTS . , DELIVERIES , 1866. 1867. 1866. American., hales. 6,765 4,434 1,697 Indian 4,480 1,708 2,925 2,500 5,850 Kilogs. Very Very 153 153 143 Georgia 233 230 1807. exports of crude tobacco from all the ports this week a considerable increase. At New York the principal movement has been in cases and bales, but at Baltimore there The show large shipment of hogsheads to Rotterdam, making the total clearances of all kinds from all the ports 2,020 hhds., 1,906 cases, 1,380 bales, 444 pkgs., and 53,045 manufactured a as follows: Hhds. Case. Tierc. Bals. & bxs. hhds. 444 110 451 1,585 .... 1,380 Exported from New York 1,369 2 208 Baltimore.. Boston New Orleans San Francisco we 284 lbs. hales. 33,173 18,872 .... the ports Export* ef Tobacco from 52,045 12,939 110 444 146 the total exports of the United States, and their 1, 1866: 2,598 since Novem¬ the United States 1, 1866. ber Hhds. good ,—Stems—, Pkgs. Cer’s <fc Cases. Bales, tcs. Stps. hhds. balee &bxa 187 142 600 499 229 1,424 2,191 . ... . ... Manfd, . lbs. 809,607 121.307 7 12 7 5 @ 7c 7#@10e 5 @ 7c 8 @ 4c 6 @10c 3 @4c Ohio.—Good running lots... 44 Average ... Fillers Penn.—Punning lots Fillers fine 44 good @30c. I Fine, tax paid. @55c. I Black Work, med. in bond.. @70c. ! gcod & fine *• @40c. Bright Work, med., “ @75c. I good & fine 44 25 40 60 25 45 “ BrigntWork.com., 44 44 80 @1 25 12#@18c. 20 @30c. 15 @40c. 50 @S5c. FOREIGN. 44 Nov. 1, Yarn 85 95 75@ 90@ Good Fine Virginia - Other 23,714 Stem.Mfd his. 17 .. Brement.87 1,325 1,321 . .. 86 # * * .. . • • 29,832 6,363 30,139 • from New York YORK.* cas. « . , 20 1 Cuba • • Brazil Venezuela. 8,906 1 Guiana • . • * 1 , . . New Orlr\ns.—The demand tions are reported. Stocks are .. 22 • .. • ► • 8,906 317 • « 135 37 5 — .. .. — 4,712 — _ 451 table to European ports are ifests, verified and corrected by an t Also 444 boxes to Bremen. -*-v .. , .. — Stem Mfd his. hhds. lbs. • # . -- exports in this 44 1 Mexico .... , ^ % 5,538 124 Leghorn.... 309 t)unedin,NZ.. 10,197 110 . 38 China 4 Australia Africa 39 Total this week 3,115 44 hhds. | hhds. lbs. 95 .. 5,374 TOBACCO FROM NEW EXPORTS OF London.. ..11 755 88 the exports of tobacco The following are for the past week : hhds.cas. 647 539 6,135 307 228 755 88 124 .... Total The pkgs. 1,938 23,571 1,926 2,899 164 216 Ohio, &c Rotterdam. T’l sin. hhds. pkgs. hhds. 647 539 Baltimore New Orleans Hamburg. . 1866. 1. NOVEMBER .—Previously—, ^-Tkis week-. hhds. pkgs. 143 12 From * York this week, and since SINCE YORK NEW 6Qd* 70 Yara, average lots receipts of tobacco at New have been as follows: RECEIPTS AT 4....1 25@2 50 55@1 06 60@ 70 Havana.—Wrappers Havana.—Fillers—Common. Liverpool.. 153 44 to h’d’rs 10 Work, com., tax paid ........ 1,380 30 (BOXE8). N. Y. State.—Fillers manufactured. . .. 37 direction, since November Great Britain Germany Mani’d give our usual table showing of Tobacco from all To , .... 2,020 1,906 347 515 Total this week Total last week Below -Pkgs. ,—Stems @50c @40c @20c @10c @18c @12c 40 “ State.—Wrappery lots. Running 44 . N. Y. The Friday, P. M., Feb. 15, pounds, Com. Fillers 44 TOBACCO. has been Average low 235 Choice. 215 to 260 205 to 220 200 to 215 Mids. 200 195 190 ord. 185 177 172 Ord. 173 170 168 ord. 167 164 164 Low. 155 low. New Orleans... 145 Mobile 143 .... 10 @12 Conn.—Prime wrappers 1866. Very Good — 5c @ 5# 6 @ 9 SEED LEAF 83,615 34,502 18, 1867 -PRICES JAN, Per 50 Medium @ — Leaf. 5#@ 7 > do ..5#@ 9 * Common , 39,779 11,115 31,465 & Cl’ksv’le. eafT Common Lugs.. 4c@ 4#c. Good do ..4#@5 1867. 1866. 11,530 1,812 19,360 18,709 13,780 9,675 14,231 other kinds.. _ STOCKS i Black including Total, . 8,600 2,148 7,500 4,800 Brazilian , 1867. * Ky. Light H’vy West. Leaf. & Ci’ksv’le. 13 @15e Good Leaf..... 10c @12 16 @17 Fine do 18 @14 18 @20 15 @16 Selections Ky. Light H’vy West, made up from man¬ inspection of the cargo. large transac¬ The principal sales were continues good, but no very small Good Leaf at 9c and l hhd. baling at 20c. per lb. The re¬ ceipts since the 1st of January have been only about 100 4,195 which were sold readily. A number of foreign buyers are in the mar¬ 2,978 705 France 3,464 466 212,354 ket, awaiting receipts from the West* Receipts for the week 28 hhds. 3,799 Spain, &c 50 81,586 Exports for the week, to Liverpool 63 hhds;, to Bremen 166 hhds., to 821 Mediterranean... New York 61 hhds. Stock on hand 2,700 hhds. The demand for 14 Austria 413 40,110 manufactured Tobacco has been quite brisk, and the stocks of all 79 41 475 Africa, &c 1 976 China, India, &c. 30 1,295,559 desirable descriptions are daily becoming more reduced. We have no Australia 568 64,223 change to note in prices. 33 102 B. N. Am. Prov.. 342 137,024 760 55 257 South America... Maryland.-—At Baltimore there is no Maryland leaf arriving, and 112 216,979 408 334 1,569 West Indies the transactions, which are limited, are confined to old stock, and at 268 East Indies 630 22 1 Mexico prices within our range. There were also no sales of Ohio and Kentuc¬ 37 Hono ulu... ky. Inspections this week—69 hhds. Maryland (included were 68 re50 8,906 All others.. inspee’ed), 8 hhds. Ohio, and 1 hhd. Kentucky. Cleared same period T»1 since Nv. 1, ’66 30,099 8,974 4,621 172 ... 1,586 229 2,688 2,482,963 —1,346 hhds. for Rotterdam,and 111 hhds. to Liverpool Stock to-day in warehouses and on shipboard not cleared, 16,442 hhds. There has The following table indicates the porta from which the been rather more inquiry for manufactured, with some sabs during the week, though quiet at the close. Prices remain stead above exports have been shipped : Belgium Holland Italy 10,008 1,255 5,761 « • 125 38 16 4 460 60 • • • • • V- • • • • • « • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - • • . • • • • • • • • • • • ... • ... • , • . • . • • 9 . • • « #. * • « 162 • ♦ • • • * • . • • .. . f * . # 9 .. . .... ... M • ... ... ... • • • 7,562 36,411 36 hhds. hogsheads, 212 THE CHRONICLE. Kentucky.—At Louisville, last week, prices were well sustained for desirable styles. On the 11th the market was active, and prices steady and firm, with 96 hogsheads offered, and no rejections. Sales—5 hogs¬ heads at 92 1602 95, 17 at 95, 5 at 94 05@4 80, 14 at 95@5 90, 4 at 96@6 60, 6 at 97@7 60, 11 at 98@3 90, 10 at |9@9 96, 10 at $10@10 76, 6 at 911@11 60, 5 at 912@12 50, and 3 at 9l3@l3 75. TOBACCO 3,936 Receipts since—country Receipts since—local bbls. 42,841 10,717 Stock on 3,844 4,201 hogsheads. BREADSTUFFS. Friday, Feb. 15,1867, P. M. The market the past week has shown great a decided decline which is most marked in flour and in corn. depression, with high grades of The flour market has been depressed by liberal arrivals by rail, which, with the California flour arriving by sea, and the production of local millers have not permitted any progress to be made in the much desired reduction of stocks. Prices have given way 25@50c. per bbl., and there have been some forced sales of high grades at fully one dollar per bbl. below the prices of last week—the market closing weak and irregular. While supplies since Jan. 1st, 1867, have been nearly equal to the corresponding period of 1866, exports have fallen off one hundred thousand bbls. The British Provinces, which in former seasons were regular buyers in this market have been supplied mainly from Montreal and Portland, and the tropical climates from Baltimore ; and receivers finding themselves de¬ ceived respecting current supplies, are determined to push sales and reduce stocks. The Western markets are generally lower. Wheat has not fully sympathized with flour, being ported till the last day or two by a steady demand from sup¬ city and country millers. Yesterday holders pressed sales at 5c. decline with such earnestness that buyers withdrew. Corn has weakened in sympathy with the Liverpool market, but the difficulty of finding freight room, and the high rates of freight, have contributed to the decline. Oats have yielded under a pressure to sell. Rye is 2@3c. lower, and Canada peas have sold at 5c. decline. Barley alone has been firm and moder¬ Oats. bush. Barley. 84,695 43,337 7,150 10,995 bush. 6,535 2,563 1.480 4,485 2,876 1,163 1,200 1,616 1,200 54,330 69,995 21,912 144,056 74,125 184,916 68,123 908 3,862 43,275 15,169 6,323 3,480 181,612 141,057 242,942 150,481 164,186 161,833 416.872 1,187,683 1,112,897 208,275 1,334,587 860,018 54,730 37,846 357 The receipts of the four tobacco warehouses in Louisville for the month of January were 1,039 Com. bush. 9,050 4,830 8,625 71,575 hand Feb. 2 Wheat. bush. 70,321 98,010 4.562 Hhds. Deliveries since 200 65 Total Flour- STATEMENT. Hhds. I Stock on hand Jan. 26 [February 16,1867. Rye. bosh. .... 760 .... 10,171 13,439 13,764 32.073 612,972 851,998 107,806 96,898 Liverpool, Jan. 26.—The trade during the week has continued very quiet. For wheat and Flour buyers show no disposition to depart from their hand lo mouth policy, while at the same time the light stocks have precluded any pressure on the part of holders. Indian Corn, ready for immediate delivery, has been sold to a moderate extent in retail lots at 43s. per qr., but there are sellers for delivery next month at 40s. At to-day’s market there was a small attendance of buyers and a very sluggish t»ade throughout. Transactions in Wheat and Flour were quite retail, and prices of both in favor of buyers. Indian Corn being in rather better supply, was with difficulty sold at a decline of 6d. per quarter. FARMBB8’ DELIVERIES Week endings January 19, 1867 Same time 1866 OF WHEAT. 66,505 qrs. at 62s. 8d. 68,723 “ 45s. 7d. ... IMTORTS. Wheat, qrs. United States and Canada... 80 119 France, Spain and Portugal. 2,906 • 506 .... • • 1,419 • • • qrs. 3,840 1,476 — 2,066 27,739 I. Corn, * • 1,360 Mediterranean and Black Sea. Other places Flour * bbls. sacks. , . 884 .. 2,906 2,894 9.103 16,936 34,631 4,724 12,754 48,144 20,728 85,040 Quotations.—Flour—Extra State, per bbl., 33s. 6d©35e., Canadian, per bbl., 35s.®39s. Wheat—Chicago and Milwaukee, Iowa, per 100 lbs., 13s. 6d@14s. Indian Corn, per 100 lbs., lls. 6d.@13s., Amber mixed, per 484 lbs., 42s. 6e. Peas —Canadian, per 504 lbs., 42s®43s. Oatmeal—Canadian, per 240 lbs., 32s. 6d. @35s. GROCERIES. Friday, P. M., Feb. 15. The trade in groceries has been last week. In part this is caused generally less active than by the general unsettled state of legislation in regard to duties upon foreign merchan¬ dise. The demand seems to have fallen off, and although, from the high rates of gold, prices are very steady, there seems no disposition to operate further than the immediate wants for consumption. Imports have been considerable during the week, including 18,447 pkgs. of tea, 21,202 bags of coffee, 1,568 boxes, 2,432 ately active, the demand being fair both for export and malt¬ hhds., 20,586 bags of sugar, and 3,569 hhds., 1,409 bbls. of ing. At the decline in corn, oats and rye, business has been molasses. At the other ports imports of sugar have been 550 considerably accelerated, but the close is rather weak, with boxes, 645 hhds., of molasses, 5,125 hhds. and 185 bbls. New more sellers than buyers. The Orleans. following are the closing quotations: Flour, Superfine.. $ bbl $8 75® 9 75 •Extra State Milwaukee Club 9 75® 11 40 Western, to mon good 9 65®11 75 fine Corn meal, Jersey Brandywine Wheat, per Chicago bushel 75® 8 00 5 00® 6 50 and Spring 1 Barley ... Malt Teas, Canada 90® 2 40 White beans :... The movement in breadstuffs at this market has been RECEIPTS AT NEW 24,795 &4,750 Barley, &c., busn Oats, bush 14,000 19,545 FOREIGN 56,420 187,214 1,670 bbls. . 2,076 bbls. • • • bush. Rye, bush. » .... • 14,086 • ■ • 6,515 .... 3,635 2,527 19,999 8,460 33,775 Total exp’t, week since Jan. 1, 1867 same time, 1S66. 184,251 Since Jan. 1 • from Boston 10,542 Philadelphia 3,337 Baltimore 10,431 . 2,280 1,826 11,879 2,189 15,052 9,764 Barley. bush. 122,697 314,886 Oats, bush. Corn, bush. 235,190 48,646 757,313 .... 704 ports .... .... .... 300 • • • • • •• • 57,682 18,586 75,042 59,629 25,427 505 2,030 .... .... 500 • ••» .... Weekly Receipts at Lake Ports.—The At the following lake for 26S.700 4,705 63,135 257,675 .. West Indie* since Jan. 1 .. 30,280 1,200 10,850 37,285 77,940 135,140 Flour, C. meal, Wheat, Br. ff. A. Col. since Jan. 1 follows: as EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK. • Gt. Britain, since Jan. 1 24 35 40 25 —1866- 74,865 .... 68 For week. S’e Jan. 1. 18,695 147,680 5,730 42,065 1,830 43,575 147,550 Wheat, bush Corn, bush Rye, bush 23,980 7,260 Corn meal, bbls *. 10 28 62 YORK. -1867For week, o’e Jan. 1. Flour, bbls... 05 20 11 ... Jersey Yellow Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State • • • • • • 131,136 323,225 400 49,964 • • % 25,435 1,191 .... following shows the week ending Feb 9: 1,750 6,938 237,540 767,161 674,846 .... * • 400 918 the 15 81,018 112*SQ2 receipts quite steady in price notwithstanding the considerable additions to the stocks, but the market is less active, either in first or second hands, than was noticed last week. Green teas of fine quality have been most inquired for. The sales include 5,990 half chests Greens 6,600 half chests Japans, 2,000 half chests Oolongs, and 810 half chests Souchongs from first hands The market closes ... 90® 3 So® 3 09® 1 ® © 1 09® 1 1 12® 1 58® €6® 80® 1 1 20® 1 1 25@ 1 1 75® 3 Western Yellow Western White 50®15 50 6 . 12 2 2 1 Corn, Western Mixed.... Double Extra Western and St. Louis 12 00®15 00 Southern supers 10 60@12 00 Southern, fancy and ex. Rye Flour, fine and super¬ @ Amber do Wrhite com¬ Tea has been $2 00© 2 40 Red Winter ShippingR. hoop Ohio. 10 50@11 25 Extra « TEA. quiet. Imports of the week amount to 18,447 packages, including cargoes as follows: per “Eliza Hands ” from Yokohama, 263,726 lbs. Japans; per “ Queen of the Sea ” from Foochow, 299,391 lbs. Congou & Sou¬ chong. 232,676 lbs. Oolong, 47,962 lbs. Youog Hyson; per u Queens¬ land ” from Foochow, 14,400 lbs. Congou and Souchong, 271,900 lbs. Oolong, and 114,600 lbs. Young Hyson. The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and Japan to the United States, from June 1 to Nov. 30,1866, and importations at New York and Boston since Jan. 1: # SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN. .—To Atlantic ports.—, To San Nov. 1 to June 1 to Same FranNov. 30. Nov. 1. in ’65, cisco, lbs. lbs. lbs. pkgs. , Congou & Sou. 60,685 770,255 349,2601 Pouchong 123,000 243,470 119.265 Oolong&Ning.1,524,749 3,224,497 3,094,7< 8 Twankay 49,628 168,419 282,693 Hyson skin.... 6,146 2,420 75,380 Hyson 138,635 505,227 430,578 Young Hyson 502,951 1,949,6912,349,219 Imperial 78,947 472,086 415,519 Gunpowder 133,525 461,167 517,990 Japans 2,221,054 748,876 Total —IMP’TS AT N. Y. Direct at New York. lbs. H’jxX) 3,665,255 118,146 - 33,733 A BOSTON.—% Indirect , , At New • AtBosYork. ton. pkgs of all sorts. From G’t Britain. 404 From Europe. From East Indies. 371,516 365,312 From other ports. 1,080,952 2,618,26610,032,346 8,401,388; 33,733 8,470,386 404 COFFEE. Coffee is less active, but prices are i<5)| cent sales early in the week were higher for Rio. The mostly Rios, but later sonfp. demand has prevailed for other kinds. The market closes steady and nofoderately ac¬ tive. The sales are 3,600 bags Rio ex Amur, 2,000 de ex Traveller 1,000 do ex St. Ursula, 918 do ex Guiding Star, and 4,606 do ex Queen of the Fleet, and 1,360 bags Jamaica, all on private terms ; and 1,610 FRUITS. bags Rio fix Mary Block, at 12c. gold, in bond, and 3,524 do ex Joshua and Mary, at ll$@12$c. gold, in bond, and 150 bags St. Domingo, at lie gold, in bond. The imports for the week have been 15,128 bags Rio, as follows : 4,000 per Palme, 8.828 per Joshua and Mary, 8,000 per Florence, Fruits are very quiet, but fair demand for peaches and We annex and follows: OF RIO COFFEE. Stock. Import. Baltimore New Orleans Galveston Mobile 44 .... 44 44 17,886 30,814 2,200 2<500 15,000 1,800 2,000 1,800 2,500 “ “ Singapore, Maracaibo, Lagnayra “ . “ 78,090 To‘al. . • . 7,196 426 Cuba, inf. to only moderately active, but prices for raw are steadily do do do do do early in the week, and £ firmer, only a light demand prevailing at the close. The sales of raw during the week include 2,500 hhds. Cuba and Porto Rico, 2,000 boxes Havana, 1,951 bags Bahia, and 5,8S0 bags Manilla, at prices within the range of our quotations. The imports continue to be larger than in January. They amount this week to 1,568 Havana boxes and 2,432 hhds., 10,535 bags of Ma¬ nila, and 10,051 bags of Brazil. Stocks and imports are as follows : Other W. New Brazil, Manila, «... 550 . . 382 do Baltimore New Qrleans do 1,033 do 296 * • • 347 38 6,928 • • 35 . . . * * . * * * . 16,367 10,051 Receipts the week have been 8,500 bbls., 1,308 31,846 Sugar, hhds... 21,616 546 2,804 11,926 55,442 17 Sugar, bbls... Molasses, bbls. Shipments——n Since Same, Week. Sep. 1. 1865-6. Price. 36 1,981 367 i —@14 9 1,452 1,211 } —@78 784 12,211 8,954 1865-6. Sep. 1. 594 Sugar and MolaBses trade of Cuba has been usual, by the publishers of the Havana Weekly Report, and extract from it the following interesting statistics : we as TOTAL EXPORTS FROM ALL THE CHIEF PORTS OF CUBA. 1866. Sugar, in boxes p 1S65. 1,455,975 ...... 1,507,632 431,982 435,937 in hhds following table shows the exports of sugar, and MataDzas, and of molasses denas for ten years past: Sugar vana * Spain. Britain. France. 239,061 585,725 112,460 241,254 460,023 207,212 637,421 1865 1864 1863 1862 684,921 264,307 264,272 701,147 242,530 328,821 251,523 567,881 171,243 252,844 275,233 606,501 230,576 321,302 211,071 521,446 249,357 518,168 133,696 448,635 111,621 364,176 213,053 515,876 149,187 359,099 216,386 471,032 75,554 311,866 213,624 329,034 100,694 .... 1859 1858 1857 Molasses , United Great good demand for low grades for distilling pur¬ poses, and with diminishing stocks prices are higher. Other kinds are somewhat neglected. The sales include 1,650 hhds. Muscovado, 66,7 hhds. English Islands, and 450 bbls. New Orleans. The imports of the week have amounted to 2,067 hhds, Cuba, 502 hhds. Porto Rico, 1,000 hhds. English Islands and Demerara, and 1,409 follows: 1,260 stocks Feb. 12 2,450 Y., imp’ts since Jan. 1. 6,237 New York, N. Portland 4a 44 “ Boston, Philadelphia14 44 44 44 945 1,592 • • • ' 44 44 • 44 t ' are 802 534 71 3,137 7,514 in ^ ^ 945 .... Includes barrels and tierces reduced to Spioxs 445 69 2,10 J held. • 89 567 44 Total.. 6,107 • T*-- 44 * 2,534 • 2,623 New Orleai a44 Baltimore • N. O. bbls. 800 ,—Porto Rico-^Other Foreign.—, ♦hhds. ♦hhds. ♦hhds. At If*® .- 15*® .. 14 ® 14* powdered 13 ® 18* 49 ® 43 45® 4T do Clayed.... B&rbadoes .. 144® 87 ® 83 ® $Tb 22| 19* 21*® 19 ® 27*® 9> j Pepper, Jamaica, (gold) Pimento, (gold) Cloves ... Sardines 17 ® 18 Brazil Nuts 17 ® 18 Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, 10*® 11* 79 qr. box bigs,Smyrna....go d $ lb 16 ® 20 8 ® 14 Drud Fruit— 10#®12* ..$ Apples .. ® 28 .. Blackberries Black Raspberries Pared Peaches ® 85 ® 60 Unpeeled do Cherries, pitted, new.... *19 ® 14 50 ® 55 TRADE. hogsheads. SPICES. only light jobbing request, but prices are quite • V4. v'>'' steadily steadily increasing activity the usual Southern trade passed by with only a very moderate demand, but the North¬ ern trade has opened with more briskness, although compared with previous years business is still rather light. The pro¬ duction of goods has been much curtailed of late but is even now above the demand, and stocks continue quite large. The tendeucy of prices has beeu downward steadily, and for large lots considerable concessions would be made. It will be seen, however, that there is an increase in exports this week, and as prices decline this outlet must become more effectual in drawing off* the surplus stocks; thus making a limit below which any lack of home consumption cannot reduce prices. , Total this week Molasses continues in Cuba. 42*® * MOLASSES. bbls. New Orleans. Stocks and imports are as .... White coffee, A Yellow coffee $ gall. 80 ® 88 45 ® 65 48 ® 55 Total Total. States. Britain, hhds. 1,667,402 181,764 25,961 213.167 Liverpool..*. 1,722,298 142,472 35,918 184,483 Cuba 1,586,326 136,278 i 6,360 172,954 Glasgow 1,447,741 124,354 44,155 180,367 Havre 1,546,140.106,442 60,629 177,894 Mexico 1,461,652 110,857 56,032 178,269 China 1,358,830 163,062 24,621 194,584 British West Indies 1,839,475 159,439 21,655 183,983 Brazil 1,281,981 135,949 29,120 171,344 British Provinces 1,129,095 132,565 42,631 184,079 Great 1866 1861 1860 in boxes, from Ha¬ from Havana, Matanzas and Car¬ / United States. 285,424 321,243 Molasses, in hhds The Granulated Crushed and 6 ® 8 ftlelado The Dry Goods Market shows a since last week. The season of The statement of the issued, centrifugal THE DRY GOODS t * Week. ... do do Friday, P. M., Feb. 15, 1867. Same, Since do .. prices show hhds,, closing * to choice 11* Hi® lc 8 ® 1»'* .. New Orleans, Feb. 9.—There has been an active demand for sugar, the receipts are decreasing, and with no stock in first hands an upward tendency ; sales of the week have been 1,200 at 14c. for choice. Molasses is in good demand, and with small receipts r— 9*® 9f le* Fruit. reduced to hogsheads. prices rule in favor of holders ; sales of closing at 7 8c. for choice. . Raisins, Seedless. .$ *cask 8 50 ®8 »0 ®4 0> do Layer $ box 3 60 ® do Bunch 11 ® 1*2* Currants ....$ fl> 29 ® :hi Citron, Leghorn 17}® 18 Prunes, Turkish ® Dates 84 ® 86 Almonds, Languedoc 29 ® 0 do Provence do Sicily, Soft Shell 24 ® 25 86 ® 40 do Shelled $ box Sardines 40 8j do # hf. box • ..... .... 2,573 232 1,713 • . .... .... . • 885 .... .... * refining Ginger, race and Af(gold) Mace (gold) Nutmegs, No. 1....(gold) 877 117 35 197 . . .... • . pr. com. good do ...10® good grocery... 10*® Cassia, in mats..gold 100,838 10,051 16,367 18,980 7,076 80 669 .... Includes barrels and tierces * • fair to fair to 12* 1 * do 19 to 20 U ® 14* white 13 ® 14* ® 16* de 18 to 15 11*® do 16 to 18 12*® Spices • • • . . .... 9,465 import • . 563 1,072 Philadelphia Total • • 6,327 6,127 Imports since Jan. 1. do Boston do Portland • .... 16|® 16* do do do do do do Loaf. $ !b 10 ® 12 New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado v 38,401 174® 181 St Domingo • • • IHolasses* bags. Indies, Orleans, Total bags. Cuba. v ' ♦hhds. boxes. ♦hhds. ♦hhds. *hhds. 106,704 22,165 37,068 12.. 17*® 19 L&guayra Hav’a, Box. D. S Nos. 7to - 9 9*@ 104 do do do 10 to 12 194® li* , At— N. York stock Feb. Same date 1866 . 19 ® 20 Maracaibo gold 16*® l._ Porto Rico Refined sugar was active maintained. but there is gold 15*® 16 .gold l i® !•! .►..gold 34*® 25$ Ceylon Native Sugar, SUGAR. Sugar has been Java.mats and bags ...gold IS}® 19 gold 18 @ IS* 7,437 Total. Oolong, Common to fair... 80 ® 90 do Superior to flne...l 00 ®1 25 do Ex fine to finest ..I 40 @1 75 Souo & Cong., Com. to fair 70 ® 80 do Sup’rtofine. 90 ®l 06 do Ext to flnestl 25 @11 50 do fair do ordinary do fair to g. cargoes 3,370 .... do do Rio, prime, duty paid do good .... - to fair. 86 ® 95 Sup’rtofine.l 00 ®1 05 Ex f. to flnestl 10 @1 20 UncoL Japan, Com. Coffee. .... 3,872 4,512 “ Other, 2,135 . 1,984 2,960 “ Hayti, • 3,641 5,369 2,080 r-Dutv r atd-% do Ex f. to fln’st 85 ® 95 do > .... 4,049 .... Dried fruits are in unchanged, — Hyson,Common to fair ... 80 @1 05 do Superior to fine.... 1 15 @1 85 do Ex fine to finest ...1 40 ®l 65 Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair... 85 ®1 10 do Super, to fine. .1 15 ®i 40 do Ex fine to finest! 45 @1 75 Gunp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 ®1 15 do Sup. to fine .1 25 @1 f O do do Ex. r. to finest l 65 @1 9>> H.Sk. &Tw’kay,C, to fair. 60 ® 70 do do Sup. to fine 75 ® 80 Imports. 9,716 bags 11,514 Java, 15,000 Ceylon /—Duty pa d I At Bost. import. Stock. - .... 44 Savannah 42,490 91,351 bags. Philadelphia 44 “ New York, OTHER SORTS. At New York, | the prices are apples. ruling quotations: Tea. 4*,800 per Insularens; 5,869 bags of Singapore per Marion, and 705 bags of Hayti. At Baltimore the imports of Rio amount to 17,886 bags, including cargoes by five vessels; and at Boston 8,641 bags Singapore, 1,095 of Hayti, and 426 from Zanzibar. The imports since January 1, and stock in firet hands February 12 > are as 213 THE CHRONICLE. February 16,1867.] Since Jan. 1. Same time 1866 44 44 1860 NEW YORK. pkgs. , Goods. Domestics. Dry cases. BOSTON , pkgs. 8 5 1 30 .... T - - 1- .... ...... 3 18 . . . . cases. • • • • • • • • « • • • • • «... - • • .... • • • • • • • .... .... . » Domestics. DryGoodff. .... .... .... .... .... .... 1 226 44 1 685 212 .... 124 ... 9,173 .... .... 33 5,113 '.... Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are fairly active but rather lower than last week. Standard goods are sold at 21 @22 ceota by Jobbers: Nouantum 8*4 11, Atlantic N do 12$, Massachusetts C do 15, Lawrence H O do 11 Knox B do do Atlantic V E do 14$, Bed¬ Lawrence G do 14^, Indian Orchard L do 15, Commonwealth 16, Union do 14, Pepperell N do 14, Indian Head 18$ 7-8 17$, Atlantic E do 16$, Pacific E do 16$, Tremont ford R do 12$, Boott O do 16$-, Indian Orchard W do 16, do 16$, Pepperell O do 16, Indian 4-4 22, Wachusetts do 21$, Princeton A do 21£, Pacific extra do Head Appleton A do 21J, 21$,doH do 21$, do L do 17$, Atlantic H do 21£, do A do 22, do L do 17$, Lawrence E do 19, do C do 21$, do F do 18, Stark A do 21, Amoskeag A do 21, do B do 20$, Medford do 20, Pittsfield A do 16$, Kenebeck do 1&$, Roxbury A do 20, Indian Orchard B do 17, Broadway best do 18J, Sussex F do 17, Newmarket A do 18, do G do 22$, Nashua D do 20, Pepperell E do 20, Great Falls M do 18, do S do 16$, Sagamore do 15, Albion do 16, Dwight W do 18, Standard do 17, Shawmut E do 17, Pepperell R do 18* Laconia E 16$, Laconia B do 18, Laconia O 9-8 19, Pequot do 25, Pocaa • set do 28, Indian Orchard A 40 iiich 20$, do do O 18, Nashua 5-4 32J, Naumkeag W do 24, Utica do 40, Pepperell 7-4 86, Utica do 60, Pep* perell 9-4 60, Monadnoc 10-4 67$, Pepperell do 68, Utica 11-4 96. 214 THE CHRONICLE. Bleaohed Sheetings and Shirtings hare been in better demand for medium grades, and these goods are quite steady. Mechanics 8-4 11$, Revere do 11 $, Globe do 11$, Kingston do 11$, Boott R do [February 16, 1867. American Linen is steady at former prices. Foreign Goods have moved more freely during the week, and the auction sales have been quite attractive and fairly attended, but prices are rather below the expectations of 12$, do Hdo 16, Lawrence H do 15$ Woodbury 7-8 14, Newbury port do 18$, Rockdale importers. The principal busi¬ do 17, Waltham X do 18$, Putnam B do 16, Amoskeag Zdo 16$, Harris ness has been jn dress goods, linens and laces. Jobbers are AA do 16$, Great Falls M do 18$, do S do 16, doing a do A do 20, do J do 19, very light business. Lyman Cambric do 19, Strafford A do 18$, Lawrence L do 16, do A do 18, Hill’s Sempldera do 22$, James 81 inch 16$, do 38 inch 18$, Bartlett 31 IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. inch 18$, do 88 inch 20, Webster 4-4 13$, Greene G do 16$, Lewiston G do The importations of 19, Windsor do 22$, Pocumtuck do 18, Putnam A do 16, Newmarket dry goods at this port for the week ending Feb A do 20, do C do 21, Bartletts do 23, Bates BB do 23$, Constitutional do 14,1867, and the corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been as 17, Indian Grove do 18, James Steam do 22, Newburyport do follows: 22$, Indian River XX do 19, Attawaugan XX do 19 Lawrence B do ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOB THE WEEK 2C, Foun¬ ENDING FEBRUARY 14, 1867. tain do 19, Hope do 22$, Tip Top do 24, Blackstone do 21, Franklin do 1866. 1866. 1867. 26, Amoskeag A do 25, Boot B do 21$, Forestdale do 28, Masonville do 26, Value. Pkgs. Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value 728 doXXdo 32$, Androscoggin Ldo 26, Lonsdale do 25, $287,408 530 2,650 $1,341,531 $272,061 Wauregan do 27$, do cotton.. 214 70,447 1,637 407 593,802 do F do 21 $, Bates XX do 26$, 153,537 do Arkwright do 30, Warasutta H 32$, do O silk 53 786 41,822 157 777,627 168,395 do 82$, Atlantic Cambric do do flax... 263 SO, Lonsdale Cambric do 32$, New 65,056 1,923 269 631,539 97,-99 i. 164 York Mills do 37$, Hill do 25, 704 24,231 215,483 3,613 126,254 Amoskeag 42 inch 26, Chickopee do 25, Waltham do 22$, Warasutta 9-8 87$, Lyman R 5-4 24, $488,464 7,700 $3,559,982 4,876 $818,146 Naumkeag W do 24, Boott W do 25, Nashua do 32$, Bates do WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE MARKET DURING 29, Wamsutta do 42$, -Amoskeag 46 iuch 28, Waltham 6-4 35, THE SAME PERIOD. Mattawamkeag do 37, Peppered do 36, Oneida do 42$, Utica do Manufactures of wool... 290 $118,778 586 $247,916 2,241 $1,054,066 60, Waltham 8-4 48, Peppered do 60, do cotton.. 170 600 54,9:36 190,369 Mattawamkeag 9-4 60, 1,8*24 628,063 do 74 silk.... 137 85,089 143,968 268 Peppered do 60, Utica do 85, Phoenix 10-4 65, Monadnock do 63$, 312,860 do flax.... 358 353 91,621 Baltic do 65, Bates do 65, Waltham do 68, 102,871 1,883 591,435 Allendale do 65, Peppered Miscellaneous dry goods. 105 853 15,749 572 35,562 112,168 do 70, Utica do 90, Masabesic 11-4 75, ^.moskeag do 76, Peppered , v , v , . . ... . • „ . do 80. Ticks have been in steady, moderate request, and there is but little change in prices, Conestoga C M 42, Amoskeag A C A 50, do A 40,do B 85, do D 25, do C 30, Pemberton A A 39, do Red Stripe 32$, Bruns¬ wick 20, Blackstone River 21$, Hamilton 36$, do D 82$, Somerset 18, Thorndike 26, Pearl River 47$, Oriental 39, Harvest 34, Hancock A A 29, Pittsfield 12$, Bunkerhill 24, York 82 inch 47$, do 80 do 36$, Omega B 37, do A 50, Cordis AAA 42$, Everett 25, Boston A A Imperial 35, 32$, Lehigh Valley A 21, do B 20, do A C A 22, Swift River 25, Winnebago 12$, Girard 30. Stripes are more steady in price and fairly active. Amoskeag 29 and 80, Uncasville 21 and 22, Whittenton A A 32$, do A 8-3 37$, do B B 2<», do 0 20, Napoleon 13$, Pittsfield 3-3 13, Pemberton Awn 45, Haymakar 24, Everett 26, Massabesic 6-3 28 and 29, Andover 23, Boston 22$, Harvesters 3-3 22@27, do 6-3 22@27, Blackstone 20&24, American 18 and 19, Eagle 17$, Hamilton 27, Arkwright 17, Easton 16 and 17, Jewett City 21@21$, Sheridan G 18. .Checks are quiet, with little variation in price. Park Mills Red 25, Lanark 4x2 29 inch 18, Lanark fur 18$, Union 50 4x2 35, do 50 2x2 36, do 20, 4 2 8*2$, do 20 2-2 32$, Caledonia 15 inch 84, do 11 inch 28, Lancaster fur 18, Kennebeck 32$, Wamsutta 20, Farmers & Mechan¬ ics 80, Star No. 600 16, do No. 800 2x2 22, do No. 900 4 2 26, Cameron No. 90 21$, do No. 80 20, Miners <fe Mechanics 80. Denims and Cottonades are in fair demand, and prices 'show but little change, Amoskeag denims sell at 37$, Haymaker 28 in. 25, do brown 87, York 28 in. 86, Warren brown 27 in. *22$, Pearl River 86, Union 80, Monitor 20, Manchester Co. 25, Clark’s brown 25, Suffolk 27, Marlboro 20, Arlington 27$ Blue Hill 22$, New York M 22, Fort Moultrie 29, Mount Vernon 29, Tremont 28. and Farmer’s and Meehan ic9 cottonades at 55 cents. Pemberton d<fet 45, Bodman’s Ky J 47, Plow L A Anv. 50, Everett 47$, New York Mdls 62$, Whittenden dAt 31@ 89$. Brown Drills are fairly active and quite steady in price. Winthrop 17, Amoskeag 22, Laconia *22, Androscoggin 12$, Minerva 16, Peppered 22$, do fine jean 23$, Stark A 21$, Boott *21$, Bennington 21$, Massachu¬ setts G 20, Woodward duck bags 32$, National bags 81, Stark A do 62$, Liberty do 31. Print Cloths are more active for immediate styles. Prints printing into Spring in fair request, and light gradesjare in 9mall stocks and steady. Dark goods arc rather quiet. American 1 7$, Amoskeag dark 16$, do purple 18, do pink IS, do shirting 16$, do pa^m leaf 17$ Merrimac D dark 18, do purple 18, do W dark *20, do purple 20, do pink 20, Sprague’s dark 18, do purple 19, do shirting 19, do pink 19, do blue checks 19, do solid 17$,do indigo blue IS, do Swiss ruby 18$, London Mourning 16$, Simpson Mourning 16$, Atlantic Mourning 16$, Amoskeag Mourning 16$, Garners light 18$, Dunnell’s ‘17$, Allen 17, Richmond 17$, Arnolds 15, Gloucester 16$. Wamsutta 13$, Pacific dark 18, Freeman 16, Cocheco 19, Lowell 15, Naumkeag 14$, Hamilton 17$, Victory 15, Home 1*2, Em¬ pire State 11 $, Lancaster 16$, Wauregan 16$, Belleville 16. Lawns are in steady request at unchanged prices. Canton Flannels are quiet and prices are easier. Ellerton N, Bro. 85, are do O do 32, do T do 19, Laconia do 28, Slaterville do 24, Hamilton do 28$, Rockland do 17. Naumkeag do 25, Tremont do ‘20, Scotts extra do 20, Whittendon do 22$, Ellerton N B!ea 37$, do O do 36, do P do 33$, Sal’n Falls do 31$, Methuen A do 32. Cor8kt Jeans in good demand, and prices are steady. Andros eoggin 16, Bates colored 14$, do bleached 14$, Naumkeag 21, Pepperell 22, Naumkeag eatteen 24, Laconia 21, Amoskeag 21 @22$, Newmarket 16$, Lewiston 14$, Indian Orchard 16, Berkeley 22, Rock port 21, Tre¬ mont are 12$. Cambrics and Silesias are called for steadily. Lonsdale Silesias sell at 28c., Victory 21$, Indian OrchaVd 21$, Ward 21$. Wash¬ ington glased Cambrics sell at 14, Victory 18, do E 15$, do high colors 14$, Hudson Mill 12$, Fox Hill 11, Superior 11$, Smithfield 18, Waverly 18$. and S. S. A Sons paper cambrics at 18 cents, do high colors 20, English 30 inch 20, White Rock 18, Masonville 19, Warren 18. Woolen Goods are not much improved; stocks of old goods move ■lowly and prices are very low. American Printed de Laines are in fair request at unchanged prices. All dark 25, Hamilton Co 26, Manchester dark 25, Pacific dark 25, Ar- dark 25, High colors 25, Pacific Merinos 40, Mourning 25, Shepherd Checks 25, all wool 42$, Skirtings 85. * mures Total Add ent’d 997 forconsumpt’nl,476 $361,173 488,464 Total thrown upon mak’t 2,473 $849,637 2,529 7,700 $720,686 3,559,982 6,788 $2,698,592 4,876 818,146 10,229 $4,280,668 11,664 $3,516,738 ENTERED FOB WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAMS PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... do do do 650 460 108 375 cotton.. silk .... flax.... $238,899 1,210 167,343 94,685 125,450 13,743 6^5 208 813 278 $524,458 205,210 $312,059 186,925 46,257 652 648 305 115 88 488,464 3,144 $1,232,492 7,700 3,559,982 1,808 4,876 $880,941 $1,128,584 10,844 $4,792,474 Miscellaneous drygoods. 718 Total .2,311 Add ent’d tor consumpt’n 1,476 $640,120 Total entered at the port 4,787 269,642 231,583 291,239 80,498 15,562 818,146 6,084 $1,699,087 IMPORTS (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND WEEK “ 8PECIE) ENDING AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FEBRUARY FOR THE .8, 1867. [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value. • Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. * “ ware— China .108 Earth’nw’e .1469 Glass 1085 Glassware.. .211 Glass plate.. .166 Drugs, &c.— Alkali Acids ‘ Woods— Brazil wood.... Cedar 274 Cork Other 4,661 Instruments— 1,250 67,120 Mathematical. .2 4,021 Musical.... ...20 10,135 Optical.... .8 2\968 Jewelry. &c.- 4,144 1,903 .. .. .52 Ammonia.. ..10 Arrow root. .205 Anoline Annatto.... Aluminous eke.. Chalk 482 611 541 2,238 664 168 Cream tartar. .10 24 Cochineal 2 Cudbear 6 Catch ...260 Gambier 752 Gums, crude. .50 Arabic 151 copavi..62 132 Indigo 61 Iodine, pot....5 1,978 328 274 681 1,858 6,«67 2,952 11,199 Bristles... ...11 Hides, dressed ..253 Hides, undress- 2,870 388 553 175 11,812 9,267 12,683 1,533 9,272 Opium 11,773 31 Paints 1,040 19,770 Potash, bich..20 chlo 1,572 418 Phosphorous. 20 817 Reg antimony.60 Sarsaparilla.. .46 3,215 ..HO 3,005 30,454 Shellac .. Soda, bierb 7911 do do do sal 761 ash... 1396 -caustic 160 Sponges 27 Sugar of lead.20 Snlph. copper.50 Tong beans.... 5 Verdigris 5 Other....- Felting Frnits, &c. Bananas Dates Lemons Nnts Oranges Prunes Raisins Plums 748 5,215 42,222 3,024 291 1,818 1,761 355 1,130 6,563 Fnrs, &c— 80 Furs 1,008 Logwood, M. 160 Manogany 777 812 6,670 104,077 48 Ale 251 435 580 9,fi79 22.349 26,903 8,359 29,581 2,692 Build, stones... Clay Cheese. 202 618 1,468 4,970 3,861 22,174 4,872 Cigars 8,709 1,265 2,145 Cocoa, bgs.1,069 Coffee, bgs23,051 390,367 Coal, tons... .814 8,033 .150 50 200 42 Gin Porter Rum Whiskey 2.728 1,346 .10 711 2893 24,607 .4473 45,438 .... Wines Champagne, baskets .. 34 11,429 Copper Cutlery 45 434 21,546 26 Hardware.... 200 2,602 21,548 Guns Iron, pig, ... . tons 2416 668 tons 22,833 81 3,998 215 11,231 Iron, sheet, Iron, tubes '..479 882 Iron, other, 1680 Lead, pigs.. 9377 Metal goods .. .9 Needles 5 Old metal Plated ware.... 7 Per. caps 13 Saddlery Steel 11 3843 Spelter....75,769 Tin, bxs..,.4,261 Tin, slabs... 100 Wire Clocks 54,957 52,919 1,399 1,735 11,393 1,823 3,189 2,»83 42,428 3,375 33,621 1,204 36 601 2,134 Ginger 2,275 645 Mace 422 Stationery, &c.— 75 Feathers. 83 778 4,868 5,583 9,656 ...... 25 Fish... Furniture Grain. 209 864 Gunny cloth 2696 66,028 Hair Hair cloth 118 ,7 Hemp Honey 4671 110 Machinery... .84 Marble man..... Molasses .3805 Oil paintings..3 .. 14,898 4,627 67,987 3,601 83,799 3,652 4,083 98,795 690 Paper hang¬ ings .109 Perfumery.. ..54 Pipes 7,496 7,277 9,125 3'002 Potatoes Provisions Rags r 697 Salt Seeds Linseed—8,920 Soap 1498 Sugar, hhds, tes, 18,026 9,746 89,102 5,079 & bbiS....2995 130,908 bxs. &, bgs 696 16,934 Trees & plants.. 3,415 Toys Tobacco Waste 37,239 596,032 83 89 806 Wool, bales.1298 Other TotSil. 3,012 2,308 14,127 83,893 1,299 $3,314,829 8,020 Our General Price* Current will be found on pages 221 and 222. 234 13,386 Sugar, 11,278 Engravings... .3 184 Paper .2,558 36,856 242 Emery 220 2,701 Fancy goods.... 81,842 Tea Cinnamon Cloves 2,800 7 Ind. rubber. 1138 Iron, hoop, tons Corks Cotton, bales..4 Flax Bronzea 3 Chains & an¬ chors 222 Other 889 1,749 Buttons......125 31,351 64 Beer Books Bags Boxes 24,865 Spices— - 4,271 1,753 13 615 Brandy tons 540 Animals Baskets ed 6,138 Metals, &c.— 6,528 Brass goods... 1 Leeches 7 Lie paste....400 do root....2512 Madder 60 Oils 44 do ess 74 do olive... 227 do Fustic ..11 Jewelry 7,308 Rattan 1,501 Watches... ...22 46,426 Other 4,327 Leather, Hides, &c.— Miscellaneous— 372,030 Barytes 3*22 82t) 2,842 Horns Blea powder.596 11,245 Patent leath.. .1 591 545 Liquors, Wines, &c.— Brimstone,ton 20 do do Glue 720 125 ... . Chickory 2,704 I 16,1867*] February ’ • ' ' • - . THE1 CHRONICLE. * the place Minnesota on the very highway of commerce It would open up to that State at once the and exchanges of Montana—the richest and most gold-mining regions. Four hundred miles of Falls of St. Anthony would connect the State with the at or near Fort Berthold ; thence to Fort Benton, 1,100 miles river navigation would give communication with Montana. road would $1)t Bailnjay JJlonttor* HKinneisotarIilroai^^ to in of construction Minnesota: opera- tion. Railroads. Southern Minnesota.. Minnesota Minnesota Central Valley Paul and “ Pacific—Winona Branch Watab Division.. St. 30 91 71 47 # Superior and 32)4 20 iox • , 816 4 60 30 , 15 20 • Waverly, has been City Rail¬ road Company. One of the conditions is that the latter company, shall all proper diligence in exteuding the road up the valley, with the view of connecting with the St. Paul roan, now being rapidly constructed towards the Iowa line.” Cumberland Coal Traffic.—The statistics of the Cumberland (Md.) coal traffic for the year 1866 are as follows : has been open 216)4 60)4 109 315 Total miles 45 8 26 • • Mississippi that the Paris, hag entered into a contract with the French Government for the .cod. struction of an interoceanic railroad across that Republic. Cedar Falls and Minnesota Railroad.—This railroad, which Interoceanic Project.—It is announced Government of Honduras, through its representative in Another 25 . 12 Main Line “ “ _ m 76 76 “ Lake 18 25 15 25 30 91 71 47 and St. Peter Winona To be road, op’d in ’G Opened Graded in’66. market productive of the railroad from the Missouri of of the world. the progress Legislature, gives the following table showing prospects of the several railroad lines in course the and Z\5 * leased for a time from Waterloo to some of 40 years to term the Dubuque and Sioux and, the companies, we actual tion—a greater extent of railroad than all the lines west of Chicago twelve years ago. Consolidation in New Jersey.—The Camden and Amboy and Transported by Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad to Baltimore 679,658 Railroad the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Companies have taken Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad to Chesapeake and Ohio 291,019 preliminary measures to consolidate the two interests. The papers By Cumberland and Pennsylvania Railroad to local 13,280 have been signed by the directories, subject to the consent of two- By Cumberland Coal and Iron Company’s Railroad to Baltimore and 46,663 Railroad thirds of the stockholders of each company and the ratification of Cumberland Goal and Iron Company’s Railroad to Chesapeake ai l 52,189 the contract by the State Legislature. Cumberland Coal and Iron Company’s Railroad to local 6,589 Northern Pacific Railroad.—The Governor of Minnesota, in By Hampshire and Baltimore Company (Virginia mines) to Baltimore ^ Railroad 80,709 order to show that this road, when constructed, will have a ready¬ 1,255 By Hampshire and Baltimore Company (Virginia mines) to local made commerce to support it, cites the following statistics of the 1,079,331 1865, 175,836 tons. trade of St. Louis with Montana, all of which would enure to this It appears from another tabular statement that from the com¬ road In 1866 there were 53 arrivals of steamers at Fort Benton mencement of the Cumberland coal trade in 1842 to 1866, inclu¬ from St. Louis. The value of merchandise transported was sive (25 years), 7,252,163 tons have been $6,605,000, and the cost of transportation was $5,500,000. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and 3,176,892 transported over the over the Chesapeake value of gold by return steamers, as shown by their manifest, not and Ohio Canal—total, 10,429,055 tons. including that brought by private hand, was $16,000,000. This COMPARATIVE MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. Pittsburg. -Cleveland ^-Chicago and Bock Island. (says the message) very satisfactory progress, if the present year shall realize the estimates of shall have at the end of the year 530 miles of road in opera¬ This exhibits “ use Tons. and Ohio By Canal Ohio By Ohio Canal...... By and Ohio Total in 1866 Increase over : and Chicago & Alton.1866. 1865. Chicago and 1864. (280 m.) (257 m.) 335,985 409,250 318,549. ...Sep.. 347,085. .Oct... 322,749. ..Nov.. 285,413. ..Dec.. 401,280 857,956 252,015 3,840,091 . 307,919 236,824 2,770,484 Erie (860 m.) $541,005 482,164 499,296 468,358 585,623 747,942 702,692 767,508 946,707 923,886 840,354 546,609 1865. 1866. <— * 1864. (657 m.) (797 m.) (708 m.) $1,001,007$1,187,188.. Jan ... $327,900 934,133 947,146 983,855...Feb... 416,588 1,114,508 1,256,567 1,070,434.1. Mar... 459,762 1,099,507 1,458,455 1,153,295.. April.. 423,797 1,072,293 1,333,461 1,101,668...May .. 406,373 1,041,975 1,177,372 1,243,142.. June... 610,100 994,317 1,202,180 1,203,462 .July... 423,578 1,106,364 1,331,046 1,290,310...Aug .. 586,964 1,301,005 1,336,615 1,411,347 ..Sep.... 799,236 1,222,568 1,438,615 1,480,261...Oct.... 661,391 1,224,909 1,522,472 1,417,927...Nov... 657,141 1,334,217 1,429,765 1,044,033... Dec.... 603,402 13,429,643 15,434,775 14,586,943., Year.. 6,829,447 -Mil. and Mich. So & N. Indiana.1866. 1864. . 330,651 267,126 315,258 278,891 358,862 402,219 407,107 448,934 411,806 4,120,158 1865. .. (468 m.) $290,676 467,227 611,29T 588,066 625,751 $32,911 506,640 625,547 675,330 701,352 691,556 914.0S2 . . 1,210,654 ., 1,005,680 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 524,760 495,072 351,799 140,418 186,747 212,209 139,547 392,641. .June. 338,499. ..July.. 380,452. ..Aug*. 429,191. ...Sep.. 113,399 168,218 178,526 149,099 117,013 600,404. ...Oct... 416,690. .Nov.. 339,447. ..Dec.. . 4,826,722 4,643,422 .Year.. 1865. (468 m.) $690,144 678,504 857,583 738,866 637,186 646,995 584,523 712,495 795,938 868,500 712,362 580,963 7,129,465 8,489,062 (210 m.) $100,872 Jan... 474.738.. .Feb... 654.890.. .Mar... $555,488.. . 147,485 160.497 606,078.. April.. 672.628.. .May.. 644,678 . June.. 554,828. July*. 641.848.. Aug- . 661,608_, Sept,v. 157,786 149,855 155,730 144,942 218,236 550,483^ Dec,.. 1204,726 742,60(;. Oct.... 681.568.. Not**.. * .Nov... .Dec... (708 m.) $582,828. ..Jan.. . — 284,194 203,785 202,966 7,454,006-Year- L2,084,Q74 $178,119. 222,924 208,098 162,694 72,389 83,993 78,697 91,809 94,375 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 .June.. tu .Sept... .Oct .Nov ... .Dec 1866. (251m.) (251m.) $96,672 87,791 93,763 i ‘ Jan... $90,125. ..Feb... 84,264. ..Mar... 82,910. 78,607 76,248 107,525 104,608 115,184 125,252 116,495 116,146 105,767 (234 m.) $51,965 46,474 . 64,993 83,702 131,648 126,970 99,662 86,4 2 164,710 .. . . 221,638 198,135 129,227 1864. $79,735 .Jan... 95.843 182,896 123,987 127,010 156,838 139,628 244, li4 192,138. ..Mar... 167,301. .April.. 168,699. ..May... 167,099 .June.. 2,240,744 2,251,525..Year.. 346,717 171,125 > 375,534 221,670 220.209 365,154 1865. (242 m.) $144,084 189,171 ..Jan.. 122,621. ..Feb. 124,175. ..Mar.. 121,904, .April. 245,511. ..May.. 242,560. .Jane. 209,199. ..July. 188,223. ..Aug.. 275,906, ...Sep.. 416,138 ...Oct.. 327,926 ..Nov.. 128,741. ..Dec,.. 155,753 144,001 138 738 194,524 (271,798 4374,534 i 879,981 376,534 f361,610 (247,023 1866. (484 m.J 278,848 348.802 338,276 271,553 265.780 263,244 346.781 408,445 410.802 405,510 376,470 $SUD.i 279,1a 401,456 365.668 829,106 413,501 460,661 490,693 447.669 328.869 3 3,736 3u5,196 835,083 324,986 359,665 429,166 493.649 414,604 308.649 8,970,946 4,504,546 4,260,125 1864. $210,329 260,466 309,261 269,443 224,957 223.242 268,176 302,596 332,400 278,006 846.243 275,950 1865. 866. (840 m.) (340 m.) $259,228 $267,541 239,139 313,914 271,527 290,916 304,463 349,285 344,700 350,348 872,618 412,553 284,319 246,109 326,238 277,423 283,130 253,924 247,262 306,454 278,701 310,762 802,425 3,311,070 8,793,005 — Western Union. » 1865. 1866. (157 m.) (177 m) (140 m.) 1864. 64. $30,840 37,488 42 038 41,450 48,369 68,118 60,308 49,903 6G,C65 325 691. .June.. 304,917- July.. 896.248.. Aug... 349,117 Sept.... 486,065.. Oct 354.830.. Nov...,. 2,060,323 2,926,678 3,694,975 „Year.. 344,228 337,240 (285 m.) $282,438 265,796 3? 1,158 —Ohio ..Jan... 264.741.. Dec 161,427 -1 1865. 194,167. ..Feb... 256,407. .Mar... 270,300. April.. 316,433. May... $226,059. 217,841 239,688 (285 m.) (340 m.) 1,402,106 Wab. 0A01Western Year.. 2,544,000.. Toledo, 2,535, (242 m.) 166,016, ..July.. 222,953 .Aug... 198,884. .Sept... 244,834. .Oct..... 212,228. .Nov:... 177,364. .Dec...* (234 m.) 800,841 395,579 198,C82 195,188 189,447 220,138 178,434 A (285 m.) $252,435 95,064. 106,315. .June.. 96,u23. ..July.. 106,410. ..Aug... Sep... 108.338 150,148. ..Oct... 110,982. .Nov... 111,665. ..Dec... $131,707. 173.732 Michigan Ol* * Central. -4 r\nr\ w 1866. 1866. 86,528 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9*6 241,370 161,880 167,607 223.846 OA-? 1864. ..May... (234 m.) 1866. 180,140 222,411 196,154 215,784 245,627 226,047 243,417 243,413 2,512,315 82,722. .April.. 1865. $98,181 1865. (204 m.) (204 m. $173,567 $168741 170,879 202,857 193,919 203,514 210,314 214,533 264,637 242,171 248,292 220,062 201,169 224,1*2 .July... 310,448 .Aug... 1865. 1864. 155,893. ..Feb... . $139,414 ..Year 1,038,165 1,222,017 Paul-—.08. .Year.. -Milwaukee & St. 1,186,8 1866. (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 290.642 396,050 307,523 422.124 270,073 S 331,006 201,779 q 339,447 (251 m.) $77,010 74,409 89,901 .I>ec.. (234 m.) (234 m.) $98,183 $121,776. ..Jan.. 84,897. ..Feb.. 74,283 72,135. ..Mar.. 70,740 108,082. April. 106,689 267,488. ..May.. 146,943 262,172 June. 224,838 170,795. .July.. 217,159 116,224. ..Aug.. 170,555 160,989. ...Sep.. 228,020 286,133. ...Oct... 310,594 244,854. ..Nov. 226,840 98,787. ..Dec.^ 110,664 1865. 244,121 306,231 389,489 271,140 331,494 824,865 336,617 321,037 . 1865. 153,903 202,771 169,299 177,625 173,722 162,570 218,236 216,783 175,482 243,150 185,013 198,679 243,178 224,980 (204 m.) .Jan— .Feb.... 183,385 257,230 .March 197,886 April.. 264,605 May... 246,331 289,403 196,580 234,612 321,818 1864. 512,027. ..Feb. 516,822. ..Mar.. 406,778. .April. 507,830. ..May 560,025. .June. 467,115. ..July. 586,074. ..Aug.. 551,021 ..Sep.. 639,195. ...Oct... 681,552. .Nov.. 7,181,208 (228 m.) (238 m. $305,554 $241,895 ..Year.. -Marietta and Cincinnati.—*..Year.. 3,095,470 3,313,514 3,478,325 1866. 1,711,281 1,985,712 Haute.- Year.. 2,012,700 Alton & T. •—St. L., 1864. (468 m.) ..Oct..* Prairie dn Chien.1866. 88,221 .. , 6y8,679 ;; 616,665 516,608 460,573 617,682 578,403 747,469 739,736 641,589 642,887 518,088 115,135 -Pittsb., Ft.W,,&Chucago.-* 1866. 1864. ■ $571,536 528,972 (234 m.) $102,749 (524 m.) (524 m.) fan. $363,996 $314,598. .Feb.. 283,177. 366,361 412,393 Mar.. 413,974 409,427, April. 365,180 426,493. ..May.. 351,489 $158,735 • (708 m.) $984,837 256,600 304,445 338,454 (228 m.) .Jan... . 405,634 ., Feb... 523,744 . .Mar... 618,736 . April.. 735,0*2 .. .May... 922,892 June... 77^,990.. .July . Aug... 778,284 989,063 .. ..Sep... 1865. (657 m.) 1864. 524 m.) (930 m.) $523,566 f 1865. 18647 1864. -4 Ol»£+ 1866. -4 OOP -4 OO 3,677,795..Year.. 6,114,566 7,960,981 9,(88,994 Illinois Central.- Railway. , 390,355 421,363 466,830 565,145 480,710 519,306 669,605 729,759 716,378 563,401 833,432. ..May.. 368,273. .June. 326,870, .July. 381,559. ..Aug.. 355,270 312,165 864,654 320,879 807.803 $273,875 317,839 304,885. ..Mar.. 270,889. .April. 322,277 £224,257 ..Jan.. 207,913 ..Feb.. 275,282 299,063 258,480 154,418 195.803 162,723 178,786 200,090 1864. (800 m.) (280 m.) $280,503 $210,171. $100,991 . 1864. Northwestern 1866. 1865. 66.871 54,942 . 48,195 $43,716 37,265 32,878 33,972 63,863 82,147 68,180 69,868 75,677 92,715 61,770 37,830 45,102 36,006 39,299 43,333 86,9 k 8 102,686 85,508 60,698 84,462 100,303 75,248 , 54,478 587,078 689,383 814,036 16 THE CHRONICLE. [February 16, 186?. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS interest. DI8GR1PTI01T. If. B.—The name placed aftpr the outstand-! of Company shows the total ing. Railroad: 4lexandria and Fredericksburg: let Mortgage (gold coupons)... 1,000,000 Uantic A Gt. Western ($30,000,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) $2,500,000 8d do do 1,000,000 1st Mortgage, sinking fond, (N. Y.) do 3d do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) td do do ) 1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex Consolidated Bonds Atlantic A St. Lawrence ($1,472,000): Dollar Bonds do do do 1,014,000 800,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 13,858,000j 988,000 484,000 Sterling Bonds Baltimore and Ohio ($10,112,584): Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834 1,000,000 1,128,5001 1855 1850 1&53 700,000 2,500,000j MHUfontaine ($1,745,000): 1st lid Mortgage 1,225,000 433,000 do Belvid*re Iwtaware ($2,193,000): 1st Mort. (guar. C. aud A 3d Mort. do 8d Mort. do Mlossburg and Corning ($150,000): Mortgage Bonds Boston, Cone. A Montreal ($1,050,000) 1st Mortgage I 1st do f Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell ($400,000): 1,000,000 500,000 589.500 150,000 364,0001 200,000 Mortgage Bonds 400,000 Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000): 1st Mortgage 2,000,000 ad Mortgage Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000): 1st Mortgage wiingtori A Missouri ($1,902,110): General Mortgage •.Bonds conv. into pref. stock Camden and Amboy ($10,264,463): Dollar Loans Dollar Loan Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan.... Camden and Atlantic ($983,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do Catawissa ($141,000): 1st Mortgage Central of New Jersey ($1,509,000): 1st 3d Mortgage 1st Mortgage W. Div 1st do E. Div 3d do Central Pacific of Cal. ($8,836,000): 1st mortgage."... Convertible Ronds Cheshire ($600,000): do do * income Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) Chicago and Ot. Eastern ($5,600,000): 1st Mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000): 1st Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago A Northwest. ($I2,020,4S3): Preferred Sinking Fund 1st Mortgage Mortgage (C. & 11.1) do New Bonds Cincinnati A Zanesville ($1,300,000) : 1st Mortgage Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($475,000) : Mortgage Cleveland 1st A Mahoning ($1,752,400): Mortgage 3d . do : Ctc*'., Pain. A Ashtabula ($1,500,000): Dividend Bonds Sunbury and Erie Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,880,S48): 2d Sd Mortgage. do convertible do Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280): 4th Sinking Fnnd Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 Connecticut River ($250,000): l»t Mortgage Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000): 1st Mortgage Cumberland Valley ($270,500): Mortgage Bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): 1st Mortage 8d do. Toleds Depot Bonds jjkawart ($500,600): l«t Mortgage, guaranteed Deux., Lacka. A Western ($3,491,500): lit Mortgage, sinking fond do %d Latkawanna and Western. J)ss Moines Mortgage do 1882 1879 1881 do 1876 Jan. & July 1883 Ap’l & Oct. 1884 do 1895 do do Ap’l & Oct. May & Nov. Ja Ap JuOc 1867 Jan. & July 1875 do Ap’l & Oct. Jan. & do July 1st 2d 3d 4th 6th 1880 1885 ’70-’79 1870 May & Nov. Jan. & 1,700,000 Feb. & 1883 May & Nov. 1889 J’ne & Dec. 1893 95 1879 100 1st 100 2.400,000 1,100,000 3,525,000| Jan. & no* 5,600,000 Ap’l & Oct. 1895 60 7C 2,000,000] Jan. & Joly 1898 85 86 1,250,000 8,600,000 Feb. & Ang 1885 94 July ’75-’80 July 1870 1896 1,250,000 500,000 May & Nov 1,300,000 1st 98* 1st 250,000 M’ch & 600,000 90 81 80 ICO mortgage Kennebec and Portland Ap’l A Oct 84 91 82* 1st 2d 3d Mortgage do do La Crosse A 1st Mortgage, 2d do ($1,286,666) ’:’ ? do Eastern Division.... do 11890 Mortgage Mortgage, 100 Mortgage...'. ’“ 400,000Loan Bonds **** (P.& Bonds.. 2d do ( do ) Bonds.. 90 Memfhis A Charleston : 74* Mortgage bonds Michigan Central, ($7,463,489)*. Dollar, convertible Sinking F’nd do ....!!!!?! Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($8,537,i75) 97 Mortgage, sinking fnnd.... 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds. ’. Milwaukee A Prairie du Chieri 1st • Mortgage, sinking fund 1881 1818— Mortgage do Mississippi and Missouri River: 1st Land Grant do do Mobile and Ohio 2d Income bonds 1,500,000 7 Jan. A J uly 1875 600,000 7 M’ch * Sep 1881 103 93 Mortgage.. Sterling bonds Interest bonds. Morris and Essex : ■. 1st Mortgage, sinking fond April A Oct do 1870 1861 1862 May & Nov. 1872 do May & Nov ** ; * :! 100 105 May A Nov. 1873 1883 |April & Oct 1877 500,000 225,000 Jan. A July May & Nov. 1870 1890 Feb. & Ang 1883 do 1883 Feb. & i,ooo,oooj Jan. 1,092,900 Feb. Aug May A Nov. 1892 1888 &July 11885 &Aug. [June & Dec. '90-’90 70-’71 Apr. & Oct. 74-’75 Feb. A Aug. 1874 314,100 681,000 899,000 1,294,000 May A Nov. 2.242.500 4.253.500 Feb. A Ang 169-72 106 April A Oct 1882 [18- 4 855,000 May A Nov. 1886 2,258,500 7 do 1877 651,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1868 Jan. A July 1891 4,600,00d 7 Jan. & July 1893 1,500,000 April A Oct 1893 3,612,000 do ($6,133,243) 1874 402,000! Milwaukee and St. Paul: 1st 2d July 2,362,800 300,000 il ,100,000 Loan Bonds Mortgage K.RR.) 1st Jan. & 1,938,000 300,560 m~m Maine Central: ($2,733,800) 74* July 1882 1881 960,000 Scioto and Hocking Valley mort McGreaw Western: 91 Jan. & July 1866 1,300,000 Memphis Branch Mortgage ! Marietta A Cincinnati ($3,688,385)7 1st May & Nov. 1870 .1,465,900 1st 1st 1st Jan. & & July 1866 do [Jan. & July 1869 Extension Bonds Louisville and Nashville ($3, 297'666): 1904 July|1871 105 1875 |jan. 903,000 Mortgage Sep 1878 Ap’l * Oct 1887 April & Oct 1875 do do 103 103 1870 1875 1,000,000 Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000) : Mortgage ($1,400,000) : Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($960,000): 100* 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 500,000 6 Jan. A July 1875 Jan. A May & Nov Ang Feb. & 230,000 250,000 ""‘’’I’ Little Miami Jan. & July 1867 do Feb. & Ang 1869 J’ne & Dec. 1885 May & Nov 1875 do 1867 800,000 ... Long Island ($932,000) : J’ne & Dec. 1876 270.500 1876 500,000 st Jan. A July 1885 do1886 & July 1876 do : Milwaukee’($i,90S,000):’ 83* Feb. & Aug 1880 do 1874 2,081,000 300,000 [jan. 800,000 1st Feb. & Ang 1873 M’ch & Sep 1864 do 1875 M’ch <8; Sep 1873 do 1875 Jan. & July 1892 70* 1883 640,000 Mortgage, sinking thud Joliet and N. Indiana ($800,000) 1890 1,129,000 1,619,500 1,108,124 Aug 500,000 ($640,666) V ’ Chicago ($500,000) :* 1st 850,000 244.200 648.200 July Feb. A 90 1883 600,000 864,000 ($1,362’284) Mortgage Joliet and 90 May & Nov 1893 Jan. A July 2,563,000 Indianapolis A Madison 1st Mortgage. 1880 1885 475,000 July |l870 : 1st do 97 97 . ceased) do Indianapolis and Cine. May & Nov. 1877 Jan. & July 1893 Ap'l & Oct. 1883 Jan. & 91 . 519,000| 1,740,000 . 2d do Indiana Central ($1,254,500): 1st Mortgage, (interest Jan. & 900.000 7 Mortgage 2d 1885 1863 1915 1885 1882 1875 Jan. & 2,896,500 Illinois and Southern Iowa 89 April & Oct 1881 Jan. & July [1883 6,837,000 Sterling Redemption bonds 600,000 283,000 2,622,000 642,00C 169,5<X do 102* 91* 92* April & Oct 1868 Jan. & July 1888 do 1893 500,000 500,000 do 1st 7,336,000 900,000 500,000 Mortgage 2d Feb. & Aug 1890 May & Nov 1890 M’ch & Sep 1865 May & Nov, Quarterly. Feb. & Aug Ang Jan. & 3,890,000 1,907,000 192,000 523,000 Illinois Central ($13,231,000): 1st Mortgage, convertible ':02 1880 Feb. & 700,000 . .tTTTTr. 102 3,437,750 633,600 Huntingdon A Broad 2^($1,436,082): 1st 1870 1875 July 1883 sinking fund |1888 1870 (May & Nov. . Mortgage do 3d do Convertible |l02* 102* July Hudson River ($7,762,840): 1st 2d 90 1876 1879 Jan. & # 88* Feb. & Aug 1882 Feb. & Aug May & Nov. April & Oct Hartford A New Haven ($927,666) :** 1st Mortgage 927,000 Hartf., Lrov. A Fishkill ($1,936,940): 1st Mortgage 1,037,500 2d do sinking fnnd 1,000,000 Jan. & July 1873 141,000 do Sep 1,000,000 1,350,000 Dollar Bonds Aug Ap’l & Oct. ... 97* 7 June & Dec 1888 6 M’ch & Sep 1875 927,000 * Convertible Bonds *. ‘ * Harrisburg A Lancaster ($700,000)’ New 1870 490,000 493,000 6,000,000] .: do East. do do do do Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600) : Land Grant Mortgage 90 ! 1872 1874 July 1873 M’ch& 1,963,000 1,086,000 .... 2nd April &'Oct do do Qreat Western, IU. ($2,350,000): let Mortgage West. Division July 1879 'May & Nov 149,000 AN.'w.) : Mortgage, sinking fnnd Mortgage Jan. & ..." 3,816,582 Grand Junction ($927,000): 1865 1889 t do Mortgage Feb. & Aug 1865 do do 1,000,000 convertible do Ap’l & Oct. 1888 July Aug 3,000,000] Gal. A Chic. U. (incl. in C. 1871 Jan. & Feb. & 4,000,000 6,000,000 4,441,600 926,500 Erie and Northeast ($149,noo): 1st 2d 82 1894 do 598,000 convertible Sterling convertible J’ne & Dec. 1867 M’ch & Sep 1885 Feb. & Aug 1877 |Jan. & July 1863 420,000 Mortgage..?........ do do do do 80 Ana 1876 739,200] do Pennsylvania ($598,000): Sinking Fund Bonds Elmira A Williamsport ($1,570,000): 1st Mortgage Erie Railway ($22,370,982): 1866 1878 [Feb. & 660,000 Mortgage, convertible ao 31 1875 1864 300,000 section 2d section Eastern, Mass. ($1,798,600): Jan. & July 1870 450,000 800,000 800,000 do do 734,000] 7iiedo’($734,odd): Mortgage, 1st s [May & Nov. $2,500,000 1,000,000 East 1,180,950 600,000 4,269,400 ($3,500,000) : Dubuque and Sioux City ($900,000) 1st 1st Payable. : Mortgage, convertible Detroit, Monroe A lBt Mortgage Ap’l & Oct. 1866 1,397,000 (new) Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629.000): 2d Mortgage 1st 1st FRIDAY. P-© sums Detroit and Milwaukee Ap’l & Oct. 1877 500,000 Interest Bonds 756,000 Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870| 2,000,000 Extension Bonds 484,000 Chicago, Bock Island A Pacific: 1st 1st < J’ne & Dec. 1896 J’ne & Dec. 1877 May & Nov 1872 8(57,000 B.—The placed after the outstand¬ name of 2 Company shows the total ing. Funded Debt. * 1,500,000! Mortgage Bonds Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000): 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref.... 1st XS N. Amount Railroad 380,000 909,000 600,000 do Control Ohio ($8,673,000): ad P Payable. INTXRX8T. DKBCBIPTIOH. TJ O <3 M Funded Debt. do do do FRIDAY. m® Amount sums BOND LIST. May A Nov. 1877 695,000 881,900 4,187,010 75,313 8 3,500,00017 a* |1883 [May & Nov. !Q67 do 1 do do 1882 1881 1876 MtyftHor. 11916 97 97 91 97 92* 86 89 85 217 THE CHRONICLE. 16,1867.] February RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued). interest. Description. placed after the name of Company show the total Funded fhe gums Amount outstand¬ FRIDAY. *3 p.® Description. SS sum s p.aced after the name of outstanding. Compan shows the total Funded ■O "C ►» s Debt. Debt. Railroad Ralfroad: Naugatuck ($300,000); 1st ' . A Northampton 200,000 ($650,000): ($140,000)) ; 1st General Mortgage New York Central ($14,095,804); Premium Sinking Fund Bonds Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal).. Real Estate Bonds Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stoeks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert.... Bondfe of 1865 New York and Harlem ($6,098,045) ; Mortgage .-. Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage N lork and New Haven ($2,000,000) : Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Bonds N. F., Prov. and Boston ($232,000): N^hem'^rdl($B,Stti*944j; State Loans 2d Mortgage Sinking Fund Northern New Hampshire ($151,400) Plain Bonds North Carolina : 1st General Mortgage ($6,000,000) North Pennsylvania ($3,105,785) .* Mortgage Bonds Chattel Mortgage North-Western Virginia: 1st Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore) General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage Ogdensburg andL. CAam.($1,494,000) 1st Mortgage ;... Ohio and Mississippi ($3,650,000); do W. A O Oswego and Syracuse ($311,500); 1st Mortgage Pacific, {S. W Branch); Mortgage, guar, by Mo 1st ao 2d do Peninsula {Chic. 1st Mortgage do do 1885 6,917,5! 2,925, 165, June & Dec May & Nov. do Feb. & Ang do 7 do 7 663,0001 6 1,398,000| 7 ($575,000): 101 103 % 1868 do 1,088,000 6 April & Oct 1875 232,0001 6 Feb. & Ang ’73-’78 1,500,000 6 Jan. A July irred. 2,500,000| 6 Jan. & July 1886 149.40o| 6 50,000| 7 99 Jan. & Sep 1867 July & 1896 500,0001 6 Jan. & July 1873 1878 do 1886 do 1885 do July 1874 Feb. & Aug 1870 1,500,000! 6 1,000,000! 6 500,i 1,494,000 7 April & Oct 92 1869 100 Jan. & July do 350,000 May & Nov 225,000 Jan. A Jan. & July April & Oct do Feb & Aug. Mch & Sept do 2,283,8401 6 Jan. & July (general) do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-4-8-9 .... Sterling Bonds of 1843.... Dollar Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible Philadelphia ana Trenton {%200,000); 188,000| 6 Jan. & 408,0001 5 Jan. & July do 182,400 2,856,600 106,000 1,521,000 976,800 664,000 60,000 5 1870 1875 1872 do 7 81 1884 97* 97* Philadel., filming. A Baltimore ; Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and ConneRsville ; 91 91* 1st Mortgage...'. 2d do 3d do Akron Branch: 1st do July 1871 1,400, OCX) M38,000| 8 Jan. & 101 96 April A Oc t 1876 7 7 June A De<; 1894 900,(XX 2,500,00f ' 1,000,00C 1,500,00( 152,366 7 7 Feb. A Ans 1865 1884 7 May A Nov 600,00C 7 7 7 do do Jan. A July 7 7 7 7 Jan. A do July Apr. A Oct May A Nov Mar. A Sep 1876 1875 1865 1874 Vermont Central ($3,500,000) ; let Mortgage June A Dec Jan. A July 1861 1867 7 7 650,600 6 Jan. A July 800,000 Mch & 1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga . 1st Mort. Saratoga A Whitehall.... 1st Mort. Troy, 9. A Rut (guar.) B. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,60 ,908) ; 400,000 340,000 500,000 1876 600,000 ’7 Feb. A Ang 1875 899,300 7 Jan. A July 564,908 8 April A Oct 1873 1878 4,319,520 5 April A Oct ’68-’71 1875 do 850,000 6 596,000 6 Jan. A >uly 1890 200,000 6 . do 1890 175,000 6 May A Nov. 1870 25,000 6 Jan. A July 1871 1877 do 500,000 6 Chesapeake and Delaware : 1st Mortgage Bonds Chesapeake and Ohio : Maryland Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed 2,356,509 Jan. A 6 July 1886 2,000,000 6 JaAp JuOc 1870 1890 do 4,375,000 5 ' 1,699,500 6 800,000 — 6 •••• 800,000 Burlington ($8,267,472); do^ 800,000 1 arm non 987,500 acromento Valley; ... .... 400,000, 329,0001 : 1.. 1886 Jan. A July 1878 752,000 7 Jan. A July 1865 1868 do 161,000 6 94 1870 1884 414,15S 2,667,276 6 6 Mch A Sept do 182,000 6 Jan. A 750,000 6 April A Oct 1876 690,000 6 May A Nov. 1876 1,764,330 6 6 6 Mch A Sept Jan. A July 1872, May A Nov. 1882 1870 825,000 6 6 6 Jan. A July do do 1865 1878 1864 2,500,000 6 May A Nov. 1883 450,000 6 Jan. A Jnly 1878 750,000 1st Mortgage (North Branch)... j,. Schuylkill Navigation : 1st Mortgage 6 Jan Jnly 3 980,670 do 2d 1st 1888 1888 1876 July 1876 586,500 1.000,000 1,100,000 Mortgage A 1878 Miscellaneous: American Dock A Improvement: Bonds (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) Cincinnati and Covington Bridge ; Sept 1879 2d 1,000,000 Jan. A July 1884 1,500,000 2,000,oor 7 7 Jan. A July April A Oci 1818 • 8 ran. A July 1881 *00 006 7 1 ?eb. A Aug ^ do lstMortgage Pennsylvania Coal: 1st Mortgage. Quicksilver Mining ; 1st Mortgage 69* 2d an ••09 •••» • do Western Union 1st Mortgage Jan. A July 1886 7 1871 • • • » Mississippi {Bock I.) Bridge: Feb. & Aug 1863 123 do 1863 .. 7 600,000 1st Mortgage Bonds Mariposa Mining: lstMortgage,.... 1890 1880 A July 1875 eb. A Aug im ••• 641,000 7 Mch A Sept 1870 1st Mo Jun. & Dec. 1874 Mch & Sept 1880 lstMortgage (Potsdam AWatert.) 2d do (Watertown A Rome) do do • : Wyoming May & Nov. 1890 . 40 1883 May A Nov. Mortgage 67 1863 1867 2,000,000 1,500,000 Verm. Cen. A Verm. A Can. Bonds Warren ($600,000) ; 1st Mortgage (guaranteed) Westchester A Philadelphia ($962,300) 1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon . 2d do , registered Western (Mass.) (6,269,520): Sterlin ,900) Bonds. Dollar Western Maiyland : 1st Mortgage 1st do , guaranteed... . York A Cumberland (North. Cent.): 1st Mortgage 2d do Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds ... 88* 80 77* 80 77* 80 188? 1886 1875 1882 600,000 6 Jan. A July do 180,000 6 do Improvement Susquehanna and Tide-Water: Maryland Loan. Coupon Bonds * Priority Bonds, ‘ Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage West Branch and Susquehanna: 84 July 1875 Beading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage Rensselaer A Saratoga consolidated : • 60, (XX ) 7 Mch A Sep t 1866 : Mortgage Bonds 1890 Mch & Sept do do Jan. A 300,000 300, (XX 660,000 200,000 Pennsylvania A New York : Feb. & Aug 1881 do 1881 7 dp 1866 68-74 Morris. 94 250,000 7 140,000 7 2d do Convertible Bonds Mortgage July Various. . 1st Me Lortj Racine a tssissippi (W. Union); 1st Mortgage ware Bay : Baritan and 2d Jan. & 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do Convertible Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Bonds ... 101 Quincy and Toledo: 1872 1,391,(XX Loan of 1871 Lo <n of 1884 1912 1,000,000 500,f* Ang 1,180,(XX) 7 Jan. A Juljr 1870 Lehigh Navigation ; ($3,081,484). 1912 1912 1884 April & Oct Jan. & July Feb. A ! Mortgage, sinking fund do 5,160,0001 2,000,6 200,0001 Aug 1900 May A Nov 3875 1867 ; Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage Bonds Interest Bonds Semi an’ally 5,200,( mortgage. Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage . 1st Mortgage * Delaware and Hudson: 1867 1880 1870 1871 1880 1880 1886 1886 400,000 6 Feb. & Ang 1889 (Turtle Cr. Div.) Feb. A July 1692 June A Dec Equipment bonds Preferred Bonds Delaware Division 516,000 6 Jan. & July 1884 Fb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 75* Canal 1876 200,000 6 May & Nov. 1868 Mortgage 82 2,000,000 1,070,000 Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) 1875 July 1865 6 April & Oct 6 Jan. & July do 6 do 6 do 6 Jan. A . July ’70-’80 91 80 700,000 \ do Vermont and Massachusetts > 1916 1894 1894 1894 600,000 Toledo U abash and West ($6,653,S6S) 1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash) V 1st do (ex (extended) oledo and Wabash). 2d "do (To 2d do (Wabash and Western). Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W & K. 1st 31 1875 ($791,597) 2d 1872 1874 2,900,000 750,000 « 1,290,000 7 Jan. A Joly Sterling Loan do ■d a 200,000 1st Mortgage Second Avenue: 1st Mo >rtgage In Shamokin V. A PottsvUle lstMortgage South Carolina : Jan. & 1,000,000 7 April & Oct 1877 6,000,000 6 April & Oct 1881 4,000,000 6 April & Oct 1901 Sterling Bonds of 1836.... Butlandand Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: Troy Union ($680,000) Mortgage Bonds May A Nov. 201,500 . 90 2,500,000 6 Jan. & July 1880 360,000)10 April & Oct 1887 116* 118* do 961,000 lstMortgage April A Oct 1874 Semi an’ally 800,000 do Domestic Bonds Staten Island: 1st Mortgage £& £ April A Oct. Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191); 1st Mortgage Terre Haute A Indianapolis($GO,0H 1st Mortgage, convertible Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage 92* Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw: 1886 1,000,000! 7 575,0001 7 Philadelphia A Beading ($6,900,663); - 93 May & Nov. 1872 Feb. & Aug 1893 3,000,000 1,000,6 1,000,1 2d <3 2,200,000 2,800,000 1,700,000 Sandusky and Cincinnati: 1st Mortgage (extended) 1887 1883 1883 1876 103 1876 104 1876 104 4,980,000 6 Jan. & July 1880 2,621,000 6 April A Oct 1875 Convertible Loan 2d 93 91 May & Nov 1883 1,029,000! 7 (general). Philadel., Germant. A Norristown; 1st Mort. July .. Philadelphia and Brie ($13,000,000) 1st Mortgage (Sunbury A Erie)... 1st Jan. & 1,150,000| A N. W.): 2d do 2d do , sterling Phila. and Balt. Central 1st Mortgage do do 140,000 416,000 346,000 sterling Pennsylvania ($16,750,124); 1st Mortgage 1st 2d Ang ($6,700,000); St. Louis, Jacksonville A Chicago: 1st Mortgage... 2d do St. Paul A Paiiflc of Minn : 1st Mortgage (tax free) 1873 1,139,000 6 ( W.D.) Oswego A Borne ($350,000). 1st Mortgage (guar, by R. Panama: 1st Mortgage, Feb. & ■§33 Payable. : «. Louis, Alton A T. H. 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage preferred 2d do income 1869 100,000 800,000 do (guar, by B. & O. RR do (do do do do (not guaranteed)... Norwich and Worcester ($580,000); 2d 3d 3d Mortgage July Jan. & $500,000 339,000) 6 Mar. Mortgage Loan North Missouri: 1st 2d M’ch & Sep 1861 Jan. A July 1868 July 485,000 Feiry Bonds of 1853 New London Northern 1st General Jan. & ($766,000) ; do N. Haven 187® 800,000 450,000 (convertible) Mortgage New Haven A N. London let Mortgage Amount The a a Payable. ing. FRIDAY. INTEREST. • • v. Telegraph: convertible. * 500,000 7 Jrime A Dec 1878 7 Jran. A July 1879 600,000 2^000(0001 UjANpt. lb$7 97 79* 80 60* 61 218 RAILROAD, out¬ leased roads, Railroad. p’d. Jan...l% Quarterly. 100 100 50 100 500 100 100 100 Belvidere, Delaware Berkshire* Blossbnre and Coming* Boston, Hartford and Erie Boston and Lowell Boston and Boston and Boston and Maine Providence Worcester Broadway A 7th Avenue 600,000 250,000 8,500,000 1,830,000 4,076,974 3,160,000 ..-JO Brooklyn Central 100 Brooklyn City 10 Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100 Buffalo, New York, and Erie*. .100 . 100 100 50 Buffalo and State Line Camden and Ounden and Amboy Atlantic do preferred.. 50 do 00 50 Cape Cod Catawissa* 50 preferred do .100 100 Central of New Jersey Cheshire (preferred) 100 Chicago and Alton 4,500,000 2,100,000 Quarterly. Jan. and 1,000,000 Dec ..2% • July Jan.. .5 Feb. and Ang Aug..3% July July. 15 .100 2,250,000 100 13,160,927 100 June & Dec. Dec. ’66.7 do do pref. .100 12,994,719 April and Oct Oct...5 6,500.000 Chicago, Rock Island A Paciflc.100 1,106,125 4,841,600 April and Oct Quarterly. 1.490.800 Jan. and July 1,500,000 May and Nov 50 Cent.100 50 Concord 50 Concord and Portsmouth 100 Coney Island and Brooklyn 100 Con’ncut and Passumpsic.pref.100 Connecticut River 100 Covington and Lexington 114% 116% Michigan Saratoga and Whitehall Troy, Salem & Rutland 130 25 35% 66% 86 .... 850,000 Jan. and July 500,000 Jan. .5 ** .... 134** 1,614,300 Jan. and July Jan...4 Jan...4 1.591.100 Jan.and July 1,582,169 2,384,931 Jan... 3 100 • • • • .... * 130 .... do do pref.. ..100 100 IHghth Avenue, N. Y* 100 Elmira, Jefferson,* CanandagualOO Elmira and Williamsport* 50 (Mass) do do Erie * preferred Brie and Northeast* do Fitchburg 3,155,000 1,000,000 600,000 600,000 500,000 pref... 50 100 16.670.100 100 8,535.700 50 600,000 100 3,540,000 4.366.800 100 100 July Jan...4 107% Quarterly. Jan.. Feb. and Aug Feb.. 2% 60 ? Jan. and July 84 Jan. and July Jan...3% 56% 56% Feb. & Aug. 72 75 Jan..7 January. Jan.and Feb. & Aug. Feb..5 Jan.and July Jan...5 May and Nov Nov.. 3% Oct...4% Oct ..3 500,000 April and Oct Oct.. .3 800,000 April and Oct Jan. and July Jan...5 1,991,900 2.300,000 1,700,000 32% 32% Annually. May. .7 63 64 2,989,090 393,073 Feb. and Ang Ang..8 862,571 1,020,000 1,000,000 676,050 Jan. and July Jan. ..2% 650,000 Apr. and Oct 869,450 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2 750,000 Quarterly. 5,819,275 1,200,130 Jan...6 1,929,150 Jan. and July 1,170,000 Quarterly. 1,700,000 1,700,000 1,000,000 2,442,350 Nov. 3% 984,700 May and Nov 63 197 40 41% 607,111 274.400 June and Dec Dec ..3% Jan ..4 100 811,660 Jan. and July Dec...4 99% 2,860,000 June and Dec 100 2,860,000 Jan. and July Jan.*..1)4 56% Vermont and Massachusetts... .100 Jan...3 Warren* 50 1.408.300 Jan. and July 136* .100 5.627.700 Jan. and July Jan...5 Western (Mass) Western union (Wis. & Ill.) Jan. ..51 75 1,141,650 Jan.and July Jan...2 Worcester and Nashua 317,050 January. .. WrightsviIle,York& Gettysb’g* 50 Troy and Greenbush* Utica and Black River...; Vermont and Canada* ’ Eastern, 100 100 Louis, Alton, & Terre HautelOO pref.100 do do St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chic*lC0 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 100 do pref.100 do Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO Saratoga and Hudson River.... 100 Savannah & Charleston ... 100 Schuylkill Valley* 50 Second Avenue (N. Y.) 100 Shamokin Valley & Pottsville*. 50 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) .100 South Carolina..; 100 Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 Terre Haute * Indianapolis.... 50 Third Avenue (N. Y.L • 100 Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 do do 1st pret.100 do do 2d pref.100 Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 do do preferred. 50 100 Troy and Boston Jan.. .2% Nov 4 J an... 3% 100 100 2.520.700 .100 800,000 April and Oct St. ’ ioi** 103* i>;6% .4 * Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOO Rutland and Burlington— —100 2,233,376 66% 97% 97 100 406,132 Jan. and July 125*’ Delaware* 50 Jan. and July July.. 5 Delaware, Lacka., A Western .. 50 10,247,050 1,550,050 Des Moines Valley 100 952,350 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 1,500,000 do do pref. 100 Dubuque and Sioux City Mar 7s.. 100 1,673,641 March 1,9S7,351 Dsvton and Providence and Worcester Raritan and Delaware Bay Rensselaer & Saratoga consol. 122% May & Nov. Nov. .4 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 82% 83 5,403,910 Jan. and July Jan.’66 4 119 120 Oct...8 50 Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo Columbus A Indianapolis Columbus and Xenia* Feb. and Aug 130 • • 65 Oct... 5 Feli. 116 .... * Apr and Oct. 99% 100 Fob. and Aug Feb ..8 ... 2,200,003 Feb. & Aug. 122 10,685,940 Quarterly. Jan...2% 58 Jan. and July Jan... 2% 2,085,925 114 1,783,200 Mar and Sep. Sep.. .5 114 Mar and Sep. Sep.. .5 2,425,400 129 Nov. 5 10,193,010 May & Nov. Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO 3,000,000 Cincinnati, Hamilton A Dayton.100 470,000 Cincinnati,Hamilton & Chicago.100 2,060,000 Cincinnati and Zanesville 100 6,000,000 Cleveland, Columbus, A Cincin.100 Cleveland A Mahoning*.... 50 1,036,000 Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta. 100 5,000,000 • .... 1,150.000 Jan and Last p’d Bid. Ask 1(X» 24.801 000 Irreonlar. Jan 100 5,000,000 Jan. and July Jail..4 and Harlem 50 preferred 50 Providence A BostonlOO Ninth Avenue 100 ’. Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 Northern Central 50 North Missouri 100 .... 366,000 850,000 Jan. and July J*n...3% Feb ..5 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug. ..5 4,513,800 Feb. and Aug Feb 378,455 682,600 681,665 Jan. and July Jan. .5% Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*.. Chicago and Milwaukee* Chicago and Northwestern York Central York and New Haven Periods. standing. 100 5,285,050 Jan. and July Jan ..4 1,500,000 Quarterly. Jan. .8 90 97 1,755,281 104)4 795,360 Nov..4 3,068,400 May and Nov Jan...2 4,518,900 Quarterly. 70 74 2.469,307 110 North Pennsylvania 60 3,150,150 Jan. and July Jan.. .6 Norwich and Worcester. 100 2,363,600 Feb. and Aug Feb...3 Ogdensburg A L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000 Apr. and Oct Oct...4 14% do preferred.100 356,400 25)4 25)4 70 75 Ohio and Mississippi 100 19,822,860 Janua: Jan ..7 ary. do 98 preferred.. 100 2,950,500 Jan...3 i43* 4,8’9,760 Jan. ahd Jul] Old Colony and Newport 100 482.400 Feb. and Aug Aug..4 Oswego and Syracuse 50 Pacific o£ Missouri 100 3,581,598 Quarterly. Jan ..6 260 114 114 Panama (and Steamship) Nov. .4 100 7,000,000 .50 20,000.000 May and Nov Pennsylvania 218,100 69% 60% Jan...8 Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO 5,069,450 Jan. and July Philadelphia and Erie* 50 20,240,673 Jan.and July Jan... 5 104% 104% 123 130 123% Oct...6 130% Philadelphia and Reading 50 Phila., Germant’n, * Norrist’n* 50 1.476.300 Apr. and Oct Oct...5 110 110% 8.973.300 Quarterly. Phila., Wilmington*Baltimore 50 Pittsburg and Connellsville 50 1,774,623 Quarterly. Jan.. 2# 96% 96% 60*’ Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO 9,312,442 Juneand De Dec. .8 100 Portland, Saco, & Portsmouth. 100 1,500,000 Jan.and July Jan.. .4 58% 1,700,000 . 492,150 out¬ roads, New York do New York Jan. and July Jan.. .4 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 Jan. and July Jnn .5 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 preferred 100 Chicago Burlington and Qnincy.100 4,390,000 Chicago and Great Eastern 100 1,000,000 do , June & Dec. tew New .... .... 153,000 100 11,522,150 50 1,910,000 do preferred 50 2,494,900 100 13,188,902 April and Oct Oct.. .4 Atlantic A St. Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio.. 100 1,650,000 April and Oct Oct...5 Washington Branch*.. .100 4,434,250 Feb. and Aug Feb..3 Bellefontaine Line 100 997,112 Jan...i% Alton and St Louis* Atlantic * Great Western Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. Bid. Ask. ITODAT. Dividend. Stock Companies. FRIDAY. Last Periods. standing. fixed incomes. and have MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. CANAL, AND Dividend. Stock Companies. Harked thus (♦) are [February 16,1367. CHRONICLE. THE 100 Canal. 25 1,575,963 25 8,228,595 Chesapeake and Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio Delaware Division. Delaware and Hudson... Delaware and Raritan in" 50 1,633,350 Feb. and Aug and 100 10,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug 100 2,298,400 Feb. and 50 5,104,050 May and Nov Feb. Ang 10 1,025,000 100 1,175,000 Feb. and Aug Lehigh Navigation Moms (consolidated) ' June Dec ..8 Feb. .3 Feb..8 Feb..5 Nov.. 5 Feb .3 . Feb..5 109 146 110% 146% 109 iio * I2i” preferred 45 Feb .6 Feb. and Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,908,207 Feb. and Ang Feb..6 Joseph 66*' 65 Aug 2,888,806 do preferred. 50 170** do do pref... 100 26 27 3,000,000 Quarterly. Jan. ..3 2,051,000 100 820,000 Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 Hartford and New Haven 2,787.000 Union 50 100 1,180,000 May and Nov Nov. .4 Housatonic Jan.and July Jan...5 West Branch and Susquchanna.100 1,100,000 do preferred 100 128 * 130' 106 106 April and Oct Oct...4 100 6,961,971 50 750,000 Quarterly. Sept.. 4 Hudson River Wyoming Valley 494,380 Miscellaneous. Huntingdon and Broad Top*... 50 59 60 190,750 Jan.and Juiy Jan...3% 115% 26 1,500,000 Mar.and Sep. Mar...8% do do pref. 50 115% Coal— American Feb. and Ang Feb..5 Ashburton 50 2,000,000 Illinois Central 100 23,374,400 Mar. & 84 Butler 60 1/00,000 Jan. and Dec. Dec...4 Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900 Jan.and Sep. Sep .4 July July. .3 412,000 Consolidation 100 6,000,000 100 Indianapolis and Madison 43% 44 407,900 Jan.and July July. .4 Central 100 2,000,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 do do pref.. 100 37 35 1,997,309 100 5,000,000 Cumberland 50 Jeffersonville 160 95 150 1,500,000 Quarterly. Jau...l% 3,200,000 Quarterly. Oct... 5 Pennsylvania Joliet and Chicago* 100 60 70 Jan...6 and Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100 Spring Mountain 50 1,250,000 Jan. and July Jan...5 Jan. July 835,000 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 Spruce Hill 10 1,000,000 40* 40 500,000 Wilkesbarre 100 2,175,000 Apr. and Oct do do pref. 50 127** Feb. and Aug Aug..... 6,682,250 Quarterly. Jan...2% Wyoming Valley Lehigh Valley. 50 514,646 Feb. and Ang Aug... 2 100 1.250.000 Feb. and Aug Aug.... 105 Gas.—Brooklyn 25 2,000,000 50 Lexington and Frankfort Jan...5 8,572,400 June and Dec Dec. .4 Citizens (Brooklyn) Little Miami * 50 20 1,000,000 Jan. and July 67% Jan.and July Jan...2 2,646,100 Georgia Hannibal and St. 1,900,000 5,253,83f 41 do . .. .... 644,000 1,000,000 150 146 Manhattan i 50 4,000,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 Louisville and Frankfort 50 1,109,594 Louisville and Nashville 100 5,527,871 2,800,000 Metropolitan... 100 Louisville,New Albany A Chic. 100 2,800,000 New York 50 1,000,000 May and Nov May.... Jan...5 Macon and Western 100 1,500,000 60 750.000 Jan. and July Jan... 6 Williamsburg 46% 45% Western* McGregor 100 Improvement.—Can ton 100.(161 Pd) 4,600,000 97 26 July 20 100 1,447,060 Maine Ceutral Boston Water Power 100 4,000,000 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 2,029,778 Mar.and Brunswick City 100 1,000.000 Jan. 2.... 43% 43% Sep Sep..3$ 1st pref. 50 6,536,135 do do Telegraph.—Western Union... 100 28,450,000 Jan. and July 9C 82 do do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. and Sep Sep..8« Quarterly. Western Union, Russ. Ex..100 10,000,000 Aug.3... 64 Manchester and Lawrence 100 1,000,000 May and Nov Nov. .4 Express.—Adams 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Aug. 3... 65" 5OO 3,000,000 Quarterly. American 100 5,812,725 Jan.and July Jan 5 108 108% Memphis and Charleston 12* 13 6,9-2,866 Michigm Central 100 M erchants’ Union 100 20,000,000 66 72% 72% 62 Feb. and Aug Michigan Southern and N. Ind..l00 9,381,800 United States ..100 6,000,000 Quarterly. Aug.3.*. 65 65% 1,089,700 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 do do guaran.iqp Wells, Fargo & Co 100 10,000,000 Feb.. 3 Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienlOO 3,014,000 4,000,000 Utansit.—Central America: 86*’ 92** do do 1st pref.100 3,082,000 February.... Feb..8 mcaragua 100 1,000,000 90 100 104 do do 2d pref.100 1,014,000 February.... Feb..7 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 100 4,000,000 39% 40 149% 100 1,000,000 Milwaukee and St Paul uarterly. Dec...5 149% Pacific Mail 100 20,000,000 F.lOsorSc 58% 59 and do preferred 100 2,400,000 Feb. and Ang Jan...4 South American NavigationlOO 114 July Dec...6 Mine Hill A Schuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 Jan. Union Navigation 100 2,000,000 Quarterly. Jan...5 Mobile and Ohio... 100 8,588,300 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 1,000,000 Jan.and July Feb. and Aug Aug3%«. 70** 74** Feb. and Aue Aug.... Morris and Essex 50 3,500,000 New York Life & Trust... .100 1,000/ 108% 108% 600,009 May and Nov Nov. .4 Nashua and Lowell 100 Jan. and July Jan. .4 Union Trust 100 1,000, 1,100,000 Feb. and Aug Aug..7 Jan. and July Jan ..5 Naugatuck 100 United States Trust 100 1,000, io* 10% 500,000 Jan. and July Jan...H New Bedford and Tannton 100 Jfiniru/.—Mari posa Gold 100 5,097,600 22% 22 Jan.. 8 do 738,538 New Haven, N. Lond., * Ston .100 Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 8,774,400 New Haven and Northampton..100 1,010,000 137 Quartz Hill Gold. 25 1,U00,UU0 89% 40 N«w Jersey 50 5,000,000 Feb. and Aug Feb! is" Quicksilver 100 10,000,000 700,000 Mar and Sep. Sep... 4 New London Northern 100 Nov. 5 Rutland Marble........... 35 1000,000 MayandNov. N. Orleans, Jackson &GtWest.l00 Little Long 50 Schuylkill* Island 50 1,852,715 Quarterly. Aug. .2 Aug Aug. .2 Aug Aug..3% Feo. and Feb. and Harlem 54* * _ 50 Jersey City & Hoboken.... 20 .... • .... • • • • . .... • .. • • • §1 IIP"' !? * February 16, 1867,] PETROLEUM STOCK Companies. 5 10 10 1J Heights Bemis Bennehoff Run Bergen Bliven Coal and Oil Bradley Oil 15 - 4 * ••• 10 j> Buchanan Farm 10 1 Central 100 Cherry Run Petrol’m.... 2 Cherry Run special 5 Clinton Oil 10 i Empire City 5 Excelsior 5 First National 5 Germania 5 Great Republic 10 G’t Western Consol 10 Brevoort Brooklyn 23 1 25 20 08 i American Amygdaloid ** . . . • • * Aztec Bay State Bohemian . »r — Creek.... Copper Falls . Copper 2# 3# . . — 20# 1 • Pontiac .»»» Portage Lake Bluff Excelsior Flint Steel River... Franklin French Creek Girard Great Western Hamilton Hancock Hanover Hilton ... ... ... .....17# 11 00 1# 2# 100 12 00 3 66 1# Hope Hudson Hulbert Humboldt Huron Indiana Isle Royale* Keweenaw r .. .... 5 8 Knowlton .... • 7 00 6 65 • • • 7 00 • \ - . Sheldon & Columfcian.21 South Pewabic.; 1 Burroughs Central” — 10 - .... — .. • 50 .. 5 .. _ — .. — — .. • • 8 21 1# 1# 6 1 60 50 25 25 1 1 3 1 .... • • « , , . . 2 40 m 1 4# . v 1 75 4 00 • • .... 2 00 a . 2 1 10 3 2 5C 2 50 CGj 40 85 1 75 6 • • • * .. Echla.. Fall River First National • • • .... . .... 1 00 .. — .... . . . 3 00 4 80 Bid. Askd Companies. Foster Iron Lake Superior Iron Bucks County Lead ..... 100 • • • .... • ••• .... 5 DenboLead — Manhan Lead Phenix Lead Iron Tank Storage — .... — • & Traders. j 10011,000,000 International J 200,000 30 King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20 Knickerbocker.... 40 Lafayette (B’ kly).. 60 Lamar 100 25 Lenox — • • • i io 5C 15 50 4 53 25 75 • • • • — • • • « • .... 300,000 150,000 200,000 1,000,000 500,000 200,000 200,060 150,000 200,000 e40,00C 1 00 Nassau 7 9 8 1 CO 15 60 __ — — — ... 45 5 Montana Montank New York 10 — Cen. Silver People’s G. & S. of Peoples’ Cal. — 6 25 10 20 Hill Smith & Parmelee Texas Yellow Jacket 1 10 7 1 25 9 1 50 2 00 2 2C 5 4 50 4 55 1 30 1 75 6 75 6 95 f — (B’klyn).... 50 National m 50 Liebig” Quartz ......... 280,000 150,000 70 __ 2 Lansenderfer Liberty Perry and 25 100 100 Meehan’& Trade’. 25 Mechanics (B’klyn). 50 Mercantile 100 Mercantile Mut’l*tl00 Merchants’ 50 Lorillard* 150,000 200,000 Metropolitan * t.. .100 1,000,000 Montauk (B’lyn). ..60 150,000 5 — Lacrosse Pah Ranagat (B’kly) .60 200,010 i 66 — Knickerbocker Kip & Buell Nye Long Island 1 05 25 f • • tt . — • •• 60 par — Saginaw, L. S.AM..*.. Wallkill Lead Wallar.fi Nir.kfil ;; T _ Rutland Marble •, . 25 Long Island Peat RussellFile Savon de Terre — — 3 35 70 Niagara 50 North American*. 60 North River 25 1,000,000 N.Y.Fire and Mar.100 75 15*66 8 90 5 25 5 —1 .... .... 25 PacificPark 100 20 20 Peter Cooper People’s Phoenix t Br’klyn. 60 Reliei 50 Republic* Rutgers’ Star Sterling * Sun Mutual t _ Stuyvesant Tradesmen’s United States — 25 3 40 200,000 300,000 210,000 Security t Standard Bid. Askd 150,000 35 St. Mark’s St. Nicholast Co «PANIKS. 7# 25 New Amsterdam.. N. Y. Equitable 3 Resolute*... — LIST. Tudor Lead par 5 • — 10 2 Holman MISCELLANEOUS STOCK Copakelron 50 200,000 150,000 Manhattan Market*.... — Rocky Mountain ... Gilpin Gunnell Union Mill Creek. ... , par 150,000 200,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 500,000 200,000 .... • 150,000 200,000 50| .... • 150,000 300,000 210,000 250,000 500,000 200,000 400,000 200,000 250,000 600,000 400,000 200,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 204,000 150,000 10012,000,000 .... * 153,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 400,000 200,000 .... * ‘ 300,000 200,000 Western*!: .106| 1,000.000 .... Bid. Askd Hope 25 Keystone Silver .. Gold Hill 50 3 50 LIST. Companies. Grass Valley Gunnell 1 78 15 — Consolidated Colorado. Consolidated Gregory. ..100 11 80 11 90 25 8 75 9 50 Corydon 11 10 Cipzier .. 2 5G — Des Moines 5 1 Downieville — .. 50 lu ... Winona 30 — .. S 50 100 Gallatin Gebhard • .... .... i 2 15 1 00 10 .. Church Union Columbian G. & 5 66 1 05 — .. 17 «... 2 11# SILVER MINING STOCK par 10 Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Pacific .... Ayres Mill <fc Mining, Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver . Bullion Consolidated... 30 Exchange .... . • 2# 3 Bid. Askd .. 50 Jefferson Companies. Alpine .40 100 Firemen's Globe Great .... + Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares. Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares GOLD AND Eagle Empire City Firemen’s Fund... 10 mens Trust.. 10 Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. Capital $200,000, tn 20,000 shares. Capital of (Alb’y).lOO Commercial 50 Commonwealth... 100 Continental * 100 Corn Exchange... 50 Croton 100 Germania 1 12 75 (N. Y.).. 100 • • % South Side Star 100 100 Excelsior 33 00 34 50 Winthrop 12 25 . 53- Toltec 33 • 43 00 75 1 00 8 # 6 2 00 2 87 Tremont Victoria 1 19 34 00 32*66 Vulcan 2 25 Washington ;.10 West Minnesota Hungarian • 313 3 75 22 00 23 00 5 25 12 3 1 Superior ....— • • 6> St. Mary’s Salem Seneca Sharon 6 2 2 ... • Commerce Commerce .... -... • — Rockland St. Clair 9# 34 6G 35 00 St. Louis 70 Columbia* ... Ridge 20 Clinton — Resolute 25 17 100 Brooklyn Central Park Citizens’ .... ••• 10 ... .... 10> Quincy}: 25 Bowery Broadway .... 53 ...>5# Empire 13 00 City i — ... . .... 15 Pittsburg & Boston... ... • • .... .. . • .... 50 ...10 1 Edwards • • 1 00 7 Princeton Providence ... • • .... 113 11 1 00 • 1# 3# 1# ... Eagle River Everett Evergreen • • .... •••• • .... .... 1# ... .... 4 Phoenix • 50 — Dorchester Dudley t . Adriatic AEtna .... .— Ogima Pennsylvania * 1 Copper Harbor... Dacotah Dana Davidson Delaware Dev n.. 62*00 24# 61 00 Fulton Ins. Co. at 83. DIVIDEND. Dec. 31,1805. are 25 $300,000 200,000 s 50 American ♦ 50 200,000 200,000 American Exch’e. .100 50 500,000 Arctic Aetor. 25 250,000 300,000 Atlantic (Br’klyn).. 50 Baltic 25 200,000 Beekman 25 200,000 • .... 1 Consol.... 10 North Cliff North western Norwich 3 50 . . .* • !... i 2 New Jersey New York Marked thus (*) participating, and (t) Capital. write Marine Risks. U 50 i 7 00 i’oo Naumkeag 3 25 4 Co. at 6, 53 shares voort Ins. Bid. Last - Last Periods. s. Sale. paid .... 5 6] i 8 11 i Native . «• • 4 50 i . • • • 4 1 .... 6 Milton .... Central Concord * Lake Superior Madison "50 60 — Canada Oak paid 1 2 Lafayette 9 75 • • .... Bid. Askd Mesnard • . 20 ,, INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Merrimac • • STOCK LIST. Mendotat • • 10 i Caledonia Charter ....... Companies. 9 00 9 5( • 70 i i 2# Boston • .... .... .... 7 00 Co. scrip of at Co. do. do. of 1866 at 68. Thursday. Albert H. Nicolay sold 25 shares Grocers’ Fire Ins: Co. at 60, 60 shares Beekman Fire Ins. Co. at 381, 20 shares Bre¬ day the same firm sold $1,870 Atlantic Mutual Ins. 1866 at 87, $270 Great Western Marine Ins. Co. scrip of 1865 76, $890 do. do. of 1866 at 70, $1,100 Great Western Ins. scrip of 1864 at 89, $3,000 do. do of 1865 at 74, $390 .... ••• ,, ....l Venango (N. Y.) ... 1 2 4# 13# 17# Arnold Atlas 4 75 .... • .... 20 8 paid 3 & Boston Algomah Alfouez . Fire ... • 10 Second National Shade River .10 Union * 10 United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2 4 20 United States Bid. Askd .11 25# 3 1# 1 17 . • • .... Rynd Farm 50 COPPER MINING ./Etna Albany • ,... .... Adventure... . 20 .... 6 5 5 5 1 . N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons ■ _ Companies. 2 .— Oceanic Pit Hole Creek.. 25 .... .... 2 Mountain Oil Natural N. Y. & Alleghany New York & Newark... N. Y. & Philadel .. ... Insurance Stocks.—On Monday of this Wilkins & Co. sold, by order of an executor, 100 shares Firemen’s Ins. Co. at 106, 20 shares N. American Fire Ins. Co. of N. Y. at 86, 18 shares Williamsburg City Fire Ins. Co. at 98. Also, for account of whom it may concern, 25 shares Howard Ins. Co. at 123, 50 shares Citizens Ins. Co. at 180. On Wednes! week Mailer, .... * Ivanhoe Manhattan 3 15 + 20 par HamiltonMcClintock— „ * Auction Sales of Bid. Askd Hammond n AUtu INSURANCE ITEMS. LIST. Companies. Bid. Askd 219 CHRONICLE. THE ....100 100 .*. 25 200,000 600,000 860,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 150,000 1,000,060 200,000 300,000 )76 508 >90 >43 232 156 200,000 60 100 100 25 . . . . Washington 60 Washington *t 100 Williamsburg City.50 Yonkers &N. Y.. 1001 500,000 Aug ’66... 5 • •- • ••* .... .... -a ... ..... Sep. ’66... 5 1 • • ... .... 88# .... ^•* -*• . 4> Jan. and 64 do 24 Feb. and 150 .... 180 107 .... • • • • • ••• , ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • .... • • • • • • • • • • • . Jan. ’67... E Ang July. Jan. '67 .6 July ’66.3# 24 do July’65 .6 do 08 Jnly ’66 .5 79 do 55 May and Nov 106 .... . . . • •• • . . 88 ••• • . • . Feb. and Aug. Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Feb. and Ang. • • ... .... July July’66 .*1 2 Jan. and 09 94 75 37 2-’ 7* • • a •-» m- . • • •- • •• Feb. ’67 ..E .... • • July’66 ..6 .... • •• • • • • • • • • • • *• , .. July’65 ..E Jan. ’67.3# Aug ’66..S April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5 nnri .Tnlv Jan ’67 3# Jan '67 ..5 60 do Jan.’67 .5 95 do July’66 .5 45 do Jan. '€T .5 17 do Jnly ’65.. 5 57 do Jan. *67 .5 do 21 July ’65 . .5 16 do July ’65 ..6 23 do 56 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’65 ..6 Aug.’66.3# do 32 Feb. ’67..6 n do 54 March and Sep Mar.'66 ..4 5 21 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 ..6 M do Jan. ’67 ..5 >2 do Jan, ’67 ..6 26 do July ’65 ..4 14 do Jan.’67..5 do 54 Jan. ’67 ..5 14 do do < Jan. ’67..5 >3 Jan ’67 33* do Jan.’67 ..5 do 3 Jan. ’67..6 6 do July '66 4 8 do July’66...5 9 do Jan.’67 .10 4 do July ’65 ..6 3 do Jan. ’67..5 do 5 Jan. ’67..8 4 do Jan. ’67 ..6 8 do Jan. ’67..4 6 do 6 Jan. and July. Jan.’67 ..6 9 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67..5 Jan ’67 5 ^ .Tun Hnri .Tnlv • • • • • • • •• t • • 60 • • • « 1ft Jfln . . . • 107 • • 185 • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• . . 123 • • • • ,,,, ...» ... • • • • • • > • ► • • • • • « . .... • • • • . ... • • • • * - • • • • • ••• r • • • • • • • ,,,, • • •■ ..... .... • . ••••« • . . . • • • • • . . . . ..... • • • • • • • • «••• • • • . • • • • • .... « • • . .... • . . . 1 9 do do do 7 i 7 Jan. 1 2 .... do . • . 127 .... • • • • • . • • • 86 . Oct. ’66..8 • • . Jan.’67 ..6 Jan. ’67 ..5 • m-m • • * .... • • • Jan.’67.3# • Tuly’66.3# .... • • • • • • • • • • . • • . • • .... • • • • and July. Jan ’67..5 July ’66. .5 do do > .... Jnly ’66 .5 April and Oct. July. Jan.’67.. 6 9 Jan. and ..... • . . . . . Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67. .5 ),eb. ’67..5 ’ do Jan. and July. iVug. ’66 .5 Feb. and Aug. 1Feb.’66.3# Jan. and July. *ran. '67 .5 . . ». 76 .... • • • • .... . . . . • • • • .... .... . do 600,000 400,000 287,400 150,000 .... . 200,000 200,000 160,000 250,000 Jan. ’67 . J. ’67.3fcr3 Jan. ’67. Jan. 65... 5 )52 Feb. and Aug Aug. ’65.. < 11 June and Dec Dec. ’66.. > > 192 Feb. and Aug Feb. ’67... Feb. ’67..E >21 do >77 Jan. and July July’64 Jan. ’67 .11 I 40 do '87 Feb. and Ang Feb. ’67.7>< 93 Jan. and July Jan.’67. July’64.3# do U3 Jan. ’67 ..E >94 do 570 Feb. and Ang Aug. ’• 6 . > > !96 Jan. and July July’66 ..£ *93 April and Oct Oct.’65...t >78 Jan. and July Jan.’67./ >70 March and Sei) Mar. ’64..J 2 Jan. and July July’64 ..{ 05 April and Oct Oct. '66..£ 200,000 25 26 .Tnlv . 200,000 100 a nr* Jan. and July Jan. and July Jan. and Jnlj Jan. and July Feb. and Ang March and Se p 200,06o 150,000 25 150,000 50 1,000,000 25 r>7K .Tan ruly ’66..5 t . 1 Feb. and Aug. lug. ’66 6 Jan. and July. Jran.'67..6 -do J an. ’67 .6 Feb. and Ang. Ipeb. ’67...6 F«*b. and Aug. F’eb. ’67...5 Jan. and July. J an. ’67 ..5 do J uly'66.. .5 . 569,628 581.689 151,539 550,301 . . . . . .... . , • • • 1 05 f .... . mm m . .... 1 15# 9 .... 98 70 THE CHRONICLE. 220 Insurance. No. 35 WALL OFFICE OF THE STREET, NEW TORE. $1,261,349 Mutual this Company has paid to its Policy-holders, IN a rebatement on lent in value to CASH, premiums in lieu of scrip, equiva¬ average scrip dividend of TWENTY Instead of based are issuing PER scrip dividend to dealers, a the on CENT. Risks, the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or on Currency, at the Office in New York, at the Office of in Sterling, or Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ pool. TRUSTEES. James Freeland, D. Colden Murray, Samuel Willets, E. Haydock White, Robert L. Taylor, N. L. McCready, William T. Frost, Daniel T. Willets, William Watt, L. Edgerton, Beery Eyre, Henry R. Kunhardt. Cornelius Grinnell, John S. Williams, Joseph Slagg, William Nelson, Jr., Jas. D. Fish, Charles Dimon, Geo. W. Hennings, A. William Heye, Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollner, Aaron L. Reid, Ell wood Walter, Paul N. Spofford. ELLWOOD CIIA8. WALTER, President NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest. C. J. Pkspabp. Secretary. THIRTY-FIRST Co., on the 31st December, 1866: cember, 1866 Premiums on 2,183,325 15 $10,470,346 31 No Polices have been issued upon Life Fire Risks discon- nor upon nected with Marine Risks. - , 1866 to 31st December, 1866 period JACOB Company, Broadway, Cor. Malden Lane. $400,000 February 1, 1867 New Expenses The $1,194,173 23 is this York, February 6, 1867. CENT. PER day de 1 ared, payable on demand, in cash, to Stockholders. Also, an Interest Dividend of (6) SIX PER CENT. on outstanding Scrip, payable April 1, in cash. Also, a Scrip Dividend of. (10) TEN PER CENT. on th* Earned Premiums of Policies ticipate in the profits for the ary, year < ntitled to par¬ ending 31st Janu¬ 1887. The Scrip will be ready for delivery on and after the First of April next. The Scrip of 18 81 will he redeemed on the First of April next with interest, after which date interest thereon wih cease. GEO. C SATTERLEE, President. HKNKY WESTON, Vice-President. WM. K. LOTH RO P, Secret-ry. WM. A. SCOTT, Assistant Secretary. No. 119 sets, viz.: United States and State of New York Cash Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $6,771,886 Loans secured by Stocks, and other¬ wise 1,129,350 Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages, 221,260 Interest and sundry notes and claims due the Company, estimated at..... 141,866 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable.. 3,837,735 Cash in Bank 434,207 Capital, (insurance buildings,) 49 WALL STREET. - - $2,716,424 32 DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. This Company insures against Marine Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland Navigation Risks. Premiums paid in gold will be entitled to a return premium in gold. MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't. EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't Sec*#. Marine Insurance. HASTINGS, President Ballard, Secretary. 24 $12,636,304 46 The outstanding certificates of tbe Issue of 1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders thereof, Germania Fire Ins. in New York, SATTERTS WAITE, Agents. WilUanfjStwet. CASH their legal representatives, on and Tuesday tbe Flftb of February next, from which date all interest thereon will cease. The certificates to he produced at the time of payment, and cancelled. or Co., BROADWAY, N. Y. $500,000 O CAPITAL, SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866 205,989 83 $705,989 83 RUDOLPH JOHN E. KAHL, GARRIGUE, President. Secretary. after Niagara Fire Insurance dividend of Twenty Per Cent. Is tbe net earned premiums of the Company, for tbe year ending; 31st A declared COMPANY. on NO. 12 WALL STREET. „ CAPITAL, SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 December* 1866, for which certificates will he issued on and after Tuesday the Second of April CASH next. Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Chartered 1850. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, 263 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, President. P. NOTMAN, Secretary. By order of the Board, J. H. CHAPMAN, Secretary. W. H. Jones, Dennis, H. Moore, Henry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, r R. Warren Weston, Royal Phelps, Caleb Bare tow A. P. Pillot William E. Dodge Geo. G. Hobson, David Lane, James James Low Bryce, Francis Wm. Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, Joshua J. Henry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gaillard, Jr. J. Henry Buigy, Cornelius Grinnell, C. A. Hand, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Fletcher Westray, Robt. B. Mintum, Jr. Gordon W, Burnham, Frederick Chauncey, OF JONES, President, DENNIS, Vice-President CHARLES W. H, H. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres’t, J• D. HEWLETT, 8d Vico-Preg’t. ......$300,000 NEW YORK OFFICE, , 155 Sc 157 BROADWAY. WESLEY E. SHADER, Manag r. Insures Against BY ACCIDENTS DEATH of any description, with liberal compensation in case of bodily injury. WANTED.—Active and energetic Agents to act for this Company. Apply as above. <_ . Hanover Fire Insurance COMPANY, William H. Webb. Paul Spofford. Charles P. Burdett, Taylor, Shephard Gandy. HARTFORD, CONN. Cash Capital No. 45 WALL STREET. Daniel S. Miller. Robert L. 270,353 Accident Insurance Co., George S. Stephenson, Skiddy, $1,000,000 HARTFORD trustees: JOHN D. 8, 1867, $1,763.287 23. ' Sisks made binding and losses adjusted and paid Assets. Jan. 61 Dollars, A. F. Frank W. TOTAL ASSETS Charles CATLIN & Million 41 81 ing certificates of profits will be paid thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday tbe Fifth of February next. John D. Isaac H. Walker. BROADWAY, One FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. 00 00 to the holders COMPANY. , BEESE, President. ($1,000,000.) 00 Six per cent Interest on the outstand¬ Sun Mutual Insurance ASSETS, Dec. 31, 1865 FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JOSEPH GRAFTON, L. B. WARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, AMOS ROBBINS, Security Insurance Co., Company has the following As¬ 711,200 A DIVIDEND OF (5) FIVE CUMMINGS, SCHELL, WILLIAM H. TERRY, DIVIDEND. Capital Assets THOS. P. ROBERT Returns of Premiums and NO. 175 Cash Damage by responsible CHAS. D. HARTSHORNE. Secretary. Washington No. 172 -201,588 14 - LEVERICH. $5,683,895 05 Total Amount of Assets Insurance - - Board of Directors: HENRY M. TABBR, JOSEPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, THEODORE W. RILEY, JACOB REESE, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, D. LYDIG SUYDAM, $7,632,236 70 paid during the same - This Company Insures against Loss or Fire on as favorable terms as any other WILLIAM RflMSEN Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ Losses Total Liabilities Losses Paid la 1865 $200,000 00 -252,559 22 26,850 OO ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. January. 1866. ary, . - Policies not marked off Risks; -~ - $8,282,021 26 Total amount of Marine Premiums.. - Company. on Marine Risks, January, 1866, to 31st De¬ Premiums received from 1st Company, OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. Assets, March 9, 1866 YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1867, Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of its 1st e< cash al when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, ana the nett profits re¬ maining at the close of the year, will he divided to the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Insurance The affairs an Fire Insurance Cash Capital- NEW ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. year Hope Atlantic COMPANY. Assets, Jan. 1st, 1867 During the past Insurance. Insurance. The Mercantile Mutual! INSURANCE [February 16,1867. Jaxuart 1st 1866. Cash capital Surplus $400,000 00 166,303 98 Gross Assets Total Liabilities $656,303 98 24,550 00 BENJ. S. WALCOTT. Prepiaent. J. ZtUKunv Laws, Secretary. THE CHRONICLE. February 16,1867.] PRICES CURRENT. gW" In addition to tko duties noted below, a discriminating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all imports under flags that have mo reciprocal treaties with the United States. fW“ On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Nope, when imported from places this of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places of their growth OT produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. side The top In all oases to be 2.240 lb. Anchors—Duty: Scents $1 lb. Of 2091b and upward# ft 9*@ Ashes—Duty: 15 $ oent ad val. Pot, 1st sort.. V 100 lb 8 25 @ 8 50 @11 50 Pearl, 1st sort. Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow.$ lb @ 40 Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 # ct. Rio Grande shin $ ton35 00 @36 00 Bread—Duty, 30 \$ cent ad val. Pilot 6* qp ft .. @ .. & 61 Nftvy «•••••••••«£*• 14 7 @ Crackers Breadstuf fs—See special report. .... Bricks. Common Croton hard..per M.l# 00 @ ... 18 00 @20 00 Philadelphia Fronts @75 00 Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 # B>. Amer’n,gray &wh. $ lb 75 @ 8 00 Butter and. Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. Butter— N. T State—Fresh pails Firkins Half firkin tubs... Welsh tubs, prime.. Welsh tubs, second 40 44 S8 82 @ quality 34 32 kins, yellow : Firkins,rad quality @ 35 30 @ Firkins Western Reserve—Firkins Western States — Fir- 25 @ 26 @ .. • • 27 Cheese— 19 @ Western Farm Dairies do Western do Common . 21 15 Factory Dairies do Id 20 @ 18 @ 14 @ 10 @ 17 14 Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; sperma¬ ceti and wax a; stearine and ada manttne, 5 cents # H>Sperm, patent,. . .# lb 4S @ 50 Refined sperm, city... 38 @ 40 Stearic 30 @ 81 Adamantine 21 @ 22 Cement—Roaendale.#bl .. <2> 2 25 Chains—Duty, 2* cents # lb. 81 One inch * upward# ft ' 8i@ Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 bushels of 80 lb # bushel. Liverpool Orrel. # ton ef2,240 lb... @ ... Liverp’l House CannellO 00 @20 00 Anthracite. 8 GO @ 8 50 12 00 @ .... Cardiff steam @ .... Liverpool Gas Cannel Newcastle Gas aSteamll 75 @12 CO Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ lb. Caracas (in bond)(gold) 20 # lb., Maracaibo do ..(gold) is* Guayaquil do ...(gold) 15 @ 10* 9|@ St Domingo....(gold) Coffee.—See special report. Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2*; old copper 2 cents 38 lb; manu¬ factured, 35 # oent ad val.; sheathing and yellow metal, in sheets42 long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot, oopper inches 3 cents # lb. Sheathing,new..$1 ft . Sheathing, yellow ^ 39 @ 28 @ Bolts Braziers* Baltimore Detroit 39 © @ 27 @ 28 @ Portage Lake 40 80 40 40 27 @ .- Cor dag e—Duty, tarred, 8; .. unv-rred Manila, 2* other untarred, 3* cents # *>• Manila, $ ft 22 @ 23 Tarred Russia. Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia. ... .. .. .. @ @ 19* @ 22 Corks-Duty, 50 # cent ad val. 70 Regular, quarts# gross 55 @ 60 @ Mineral 12 @ Cotton—See special report. Phial 70 40 Drug* and Byes—Duty,Aleohol, 9 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ lb; Alum, 60 cents # 100 lb: Argols, 6 cents $ ft; Arsenic and Assarted ati, 20; Antimony, Grade and Regains, 10: Arrowroot, 80 # cent ad vaL; Balsam Oopalvl, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; # ft; Caliaaya Balsam Peru, 50 cents Acid. Citric Alcohol (gold) @ 671 # gall. 4‘.*>6 @ Aloes, Cape # lb 25 @ 26 Aloes, Socotrine 75 @ 85 Alum 4 ij*@ Annato, fair to prime. 65 @ 1 ( 0 Antimony, Regulus of @ 12 Argols, Crude 22 @ 23 88 @ Argols, Refined 34 Arsenic, Powdered.... 2f@ .. .. North Pennsylvania— 1 @ .. 38 @ 40 @ 85 @ , Bark, 80 # cent ad vaL: Bi Garb. Soda, 1*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents # ft; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 1001b; Refined Borax, 10 cents # lb; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40cents 38 1b.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad vaL; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ lb; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, 1*; Citric Aeid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream Tartar, 10; Cnbebs, 10 cents # lb; Cuteh, 10: Chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salta. 1 cent # ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent ad val.; Gam Benzoin, Gam Kowrie, and Gam Damar, 10 cents per ft; Gum Myrrh, Gam Senegal, Gnm Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 # cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lio. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $J # ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 # cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents # ft; Phosphorus, 20 # cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents # ft: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad val.; Sal JSratns, 1* cents $ lb; Sal Soda, * cent $ lb; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 # cent ad val.; 8hell Lac, 10; Soda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cents # ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 # cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 # oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents # lb; Sad Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 # cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 $ lb; all others quoted below, frkz. AssafcBtida Balsam Copaivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Pern....(gold) Bark Petayo 25 @ 46 @ 70 @ 2 25 2 50 @ 2 75 60 go 46 @ 43 Berries, Persian Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle Bi Chromate Potash... 20 @ Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined 5|@ 83 @ Brimstone. 8 21 7f@ .. 6 34 Crude # (gold).42 00 @ Brimstone, nm. Roll # ft 4j@ ton Brimstone, 1 lor .... 4} Sul¬ phur Camphor, * •• nde, (in bond) (gold) Camphor, kofined..... Cantharidos Carbonate Ammonia, in bulk 5*@ 6 @ 80 90 @ @ 1 75 .. Cardamoms, Malabar.. 8 00 @ 3 25 Castor Oil (iases # gal 2 40 @ Chamomile F ow’sflb 50 @ 60 Chlorate Potash (gold) 82 @ Caustic Soda 8 @ 8} @ Carraway Seed 1$ Coriander Seed 14 @ 1ft Cochineal, Hon (gold) 95 @ 97* Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d) 85 @ 95 Copperas, American... if@ Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) 28 @ 58* Cubebs, East India.... 41 @ Cutch 14f@ „ ... Epsom Salts Extract Logwood @ 11 @ Fennell Be d 18 @ 19 80 @ 60 Flowers,Benzoin.# oz. 4* «*'«* Gambler Gamboge Ginseng, South & West. Gum Arabic, Picked.. Gnm Arabio, Sorts... Gnm Benzoin ..(gold) Gum Kowrie Gnm Gedda Gam Damar Gnm Myrrh,East @200 85 @ 1 Oo 70 @ 42 @ @ 83 @ @ 80 45 55 87 27 89 @ India . Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. 65 Gnm Senegal (gold) .. Gnm Tragacanth, Sorts 80 Gum Tragacanth, w. flakey —(gold) 60 Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng (gold) 8 65 Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 Ipeoaouanna,Brazil... 4 25 lalap 2 20 42 @ @ @ @ 65 28 40 @ 90 @ 8 75 @ @ @ .. Lac Dye Licorice Paste,Calabria 25 @ 41 @ 42 Licorice, Paste, Sicily. Licorice Paste Spanish 24 @ 25 88 @ 42 Solid Licorice Paste, Greek. Madder,Dutch..(gold) do, French, EXF.F.do Manna, small Mustard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste. Nutg&llft Blue Aleppo Oil Anis Oil Cassia . Oil Bergamot 55 30 @ T <a 2 00 @ ftak e.... 1 75 @ @ 17 @ 88 @ 74 • • • • • • • • 12 3 • . r * • • • 4 CO 400 @ 4 50 fi 25 8 75 ... Oil Lemon Oil Peppermint, pure. 8x11 to 10x15 11x14 to 12x18. 12x19to 16x24.... 20x31 to 24x80 24x81 to 24x86 24x36 to 30x44. 80x45 to 82x48. 82x50 to 32x56 Turkey, (gold) Oxalic Acid Phosphorus Prnssiate Potash • Quicksilver Rhubarb, China .(gold) Sago, Pes.led cents (80#o.)(gdd) Snip Quinine, Am# os Sulphate Morphine.... Tart’c Acid..(g’ld)#ft Tapioca... Vitriol, Blue 200 00 Camwood..(gold)#t'nl90 ( 81 00 Fustic, Cuba 30 0»» 28 00 Fustic, Savanllla(gold)23 50 Fustic, Maracaibo do.26 00 Logwood, Hon. «1 00 @32 00 Logwood, Laguna (gold)80 CO @ Logwood, St. Domin..20 00 @91 00 Logwood, Cam.(geld).25 60 @ Logwood,Jamaica.... 14 60 @15 00 Limawood 105 <0@110 00 Barwood (gold)c*0 00 @ .... _ ... Feathers—Duty: 30 # centad val. Prime Western...# ft 75 @ 80 70 @ Tennessee 75 Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 : Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 # bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents # 100 ft. Dry Cod # cwt. 6 00 @ 6 60 Pickled Scale. ..# bbl @5 5" Pickled Cod....# bbl. 6 50 @ 7 00 Mackerel, No. 1, Mass shore 20 90 @ Mackerel, No.l,Halifaxl6 75 Mackerel, No. 1, Bay.. 17 <0 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..lb 50 Mackerel, No. 2, Ha axl6 00 Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’ge Mackerel, No. 8, H’faxLi 75 Mackerel, No. 8, Mass Salmon, Pickled, No.1.40 00 8a mon, H kled, p. tc.43 00 Herring, Scaled# box. f0 Herring, No. 1 25 Herring, pickled#bbl. 6 60 Flax—Duty: $15 # ton. Jersey #lb 16 .... .... @17 00 @18 00 @17 00 @16 50 @L4 60 @ .... @ @42 00 @55 00 @ 65 @ 28 @ 6 50 @ 23 Fruits—See special report. 10 # cent. Beaver,Dark..# skin 1 00 Furs—Duty, 4 2 it 5 00 8 3 00 50 @ 1 50 Pale Bear, Black brown Badger Cat,Wild 60 .? 10 00 00 00 00 00 75 20 Fisher, ............. 4 00 @ 8 00 Fox, SUver 5 0C @50 00 do Cross 3 00 @ 5 00 do Red I 00 @ 1 60 do Grey 75 50 @ Lynx 2 i<0 @ 4 00 Marten, Dark 5 00 @20 00 do pale 2 ( 0 @ 5 00 Mink, dark 3 00 @600 Musk rat, 80 a 8 @ Otter 5 00 @ 8 00 . Opossum 15 @ 80 Racooon 10 @ 50 Skunk, Black 80 @ 75 til ass—Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches, 2* cents # square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents # square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents # square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents # square foot; all above that, 40 cents # square foot: unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding 15 inches square, 1*; over that, not over 16x24, 2; over that, and 24x30 ,2*; lOx and not all over that, 8 cents # ft. Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th qnalities. (Subject to a discount of80@35# cent) 6x 8 to8x10..# 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 American tolOxlO to 12x18 to 16x24 to 20x30 20x31 to 24x30 24x31 to 24x36 25x36 to 30x44 80x46 to 32x48 32x50 to 82x56. * Above 8x llx « 12x19 18x22 . .. ters # ft Hair—Duty . 40 @ 1 10 ranx. RioGrande,mixed# ft Buenos Ayres, mixed . Hog,Western, unwash. 85 @ 83 @ 12 @ P6 84 16 Hardware- Dye Woods—Duty free. over 7 50 @ - Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ Duck—Duty, 30 # cent ad vaL Ravens, Light. .# pee 16 00 @18 00 Ravens, Heavy .20 00 @ Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 #y. @ 72 Cotton, No. 1 # y. 80 @ on J .. Verdigris, dry a ex dry - less, # square yard, 3; ovei Rifle . Sugar L’d, W\s(goid).. do HGnse 00 00 00 00 00 22i@ * 22* Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less # square yard, 3; ovei 10,4 cents# ft. Calcutta, standard, y’d 20 @ 20* Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 oents or less # ft, 6 cents # ft, an 1 20 # cent ad val.; over 20 oents # ft, 10 cents # ft and 20 # centad valBlasting(A) # 251b keg .. @ 6 00 Shipping and Mining.. @5 50 Senna, East India..... do or 10,4 cents# ft Calcutta, light & h’y % Senna, Alexandria.... Shell Lac Soda Ash 10 50 @ 7 50 15 50 @12 ..16 50 @13 .18 00 @15 ‘.20 50 @16 24 00 @18 Gunny Bays—Duty, valued at 1C SalAm’n’ao, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. Newcastle... Sarsaparilla, Hond..... Sarsaparilla, Mex Seneca Root. 8 25 @ fi 60 9 75 @ 7 00 Groceries—See special report. 8 alar at us do 19 @ 221 7 75 @ 6 00 9 25 @ 6 50 9 60 @ 7 00 11 75 @ 7 50 14 50 @ 9 00 16 00 @10 00 17 00 @11 00 18 00 @12 00 20 00 @18 00 24 00 @15 00 English and Freneh Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qnalities. (Single Thick)—Discount 25@S0 #aaz.t fix 8 to8x10.#50 feet 7 75 @ C Axes—Cast brand .* steel, best yerdoz do ordinary Carpe > ter’s Adzes,.... do ordinary Shingling Hatchets, C*t Steel, best br’ds, Nos. 15 13 24 21 1 to3 8 00 @ 9 50 do ordinary 6 17 @ 7 50 Broad Hatch’s 8to8 bst. J5 60 @25 00 do oidi ary 12 * 0 @ Coffee Mil s-Iron Rop’r 8 75 @ 7 do Sri-. Hopper 6 60 @10 00 do Wood Back 4 3”> @10 50 Cotton Gins, per saw... $5 less 20 % Narrow Wrought Batts List 5 % dis. Cast Butts—Fast Joint. List 10 jtadv. u Loose Joint.. List. 56 HlngesWroueht, List 25 *adv. Door B< Its, Cast Bbl Carriage and Tire Bolts L'st 20 % dis List 40 % dis. Door L* cfe s and Latches List 7* f die. Door Knobs—Mineral. List 7* % dis. “ Pore lain List 7* % dis. Padlocks New List 20*7* % dis. . . Locks—Cabinet, Eagle Trunk “. Stocks and Dies Bcrew Wrenches—Coe’s “ , Paten r do Taft’s 8m ths’ Vis List 5 jfadv List 10 % die. LLt 85 % dis. List 20* dis. 55@60 * dis. # ft 24 @ . Framing Chisels.... Old List 26 *adv. Firmer insets. do do in sets List40*adv. handled, do Llst40*adv. Augur Bitts List 20* dis. Short Autrurs,per dz.NewList 10* dis. Ring do List 10* dis. Cut Tacks Cut Brads List 68&10 * dis. List 65 * dis. List 25*80 * dis. Rivet', Iron Screws American.. .List 10*2** dis. do List 2u * dis. English Shovels and Spades... List 5 * die. Horse Shoes 7*@ 8 Planes List 30@35 *adv Hay—North River, in bales# 100 fts for shipping 1 40 @ Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; 8unn and Sisal, $15 # ton; and fampioo, 1 cent # ft. Amer.Dressed.# ton 870 P0@3'« 00 do Undressed 270 00@975 GO Russia, Clean 375 00@; Jute (gold) 90 00@18fi 00 Manila..# ft..(gold) 11*@ Siaal 12 @ Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ ed and Skins 10 # cent ad val. Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres# ftg’d . Montevideo Rio Grande ^Mnoco do do do California gold California, Mex. do Porto Cabello .. Vera Cruz do do Tampico do Texas do Dry Salted Hides— Ch 11 Chllfornia... San .wich Isl’d South & Wesf. (gold) do do do . Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.# Rio Grande California Western ftg’d. .... do do 11 @ Coutry sl’ter trim. * * cured. City do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. * Rio Gr. Kip # ft cash. Sierra Leone.... do Gambia & Bissau do 11 10 @ @ 26 @ 28 80 2J @ @ 82 21 Honey-Duty, 20 cents # gallon. Cuba (duty paid) (gold) 85 # gall. 83 @ Hops—Duty: 5 oouta # ft. Crop of 1866 # ft 45 @ 70 40 @ 50 do of 1865 Foreign 25 @ 45 70 6** 45 60 @ Para, Medium Para, Coarse 61 @ East Inaia Cartoagens, &c Indinro—Duty FRKK. Bengal k Oude Madras Manila Guatemala • do f0®17 -'0 JO® .0' 5 1-2 .‘0® 170 00 Scroll Ovals and Half Round 17 t0@147 60 @142 50 Band 13 60@142 50 HorseShoe Rods,5-8@3-16inch.. 1-7 C0@172 50 14 50@210 00 Hoop Nail Rod # ft 9*@ le* Sheet, Russia 15 @ 17 Sheet, Single, Double and Treble .. 6[@ S Ralls, Eng. (g’d) $1 ton 52 0 @ C3 00 do American 83 C0@ 85 00 Ivory—Duty, 10 ft cent ad val. East India, Prime ft 1b 8 £@ 3 50 East Ind Billiard Ball 8 50@ 4 50 African, W. C., Prime 8 25@ 3 40 African, Scrivel.,W.C. 2 00@ 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 # 100 lb; Old Lead, 14 cents $ lb; Pipe and Sheet, ican, Re lined US do do CommonlOi 1 Leather— Duty: ft cent ad val. Oak, Slaughter, (280lbs.) Spirits turp., Am. do do do do do • light Oils 4. @ 1) @ .... 2> @ heavy . Califor., light. do middle. do heavy. Orino., etc. l’t. 8l;@ 2o @ 304@ 30 @ 2S @ 29 @ do heavy. do & B. A, dam’gdall w’g’s middle do 85 @ and heavy 42 36 @ mid. 46 Iilme—Duty; 10 ft cent ad val. Rockland, com. $ bbl. .. @ 1 White Pine Box White Pine ‘ 70 21 00 45 00 B’ds 8ii 00 @ 82 00 Merch. Box Boards 33 00 @ 83 00 80 00 @100 00 Laths, Eastern .ft M 8 25 @ 3 50 Poplar and Whl e wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 @ 65 0J Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 @ 90 00 Oak and Ash 60 00 @ 65 00 Maple and Birch ... 85 00 @ 40 00 Black Walnut 100 00 @120 00 Clear Pine exLa do do do do do do do do do do do oak, pipe, ))M. pipe, heavy pipe, light. .. .. nh<L,extra. hhd., heavy hhd., light. ~. hhd.,culls. ... .. .. bbl., extra. bbl.,heavy. bbl., light.. bbl.,culls.. Red oak, hhd., h’vy. do hhd., light.. HEADING —White Dahoranyi . ... _ _ _ @250 00 @200 04 @IS0 00 @250 00 @200 00 @125 00 @100 00 @175 00 @140 00 @110 00 @ 60 00 @180 00 @ 90 00 @150 00 Cedar, Rose¬ wood—Duty free. Mahogany, St. Domin¬ go, @300 00 .. pipe, oulls .120 o0 oak, hhd Ochre,yellow, French, ft MM) ft dry do gr’i inoil.fi ft crotches, ft ft., 85 @ 50 @ .. ,@ .. 124 @ 9 @ 12 14 ... 94 10 @ 11 14 @ 15 2 25 @ 8@ 00 10 1 50 @ 8 @ oil. ft ft wgh.,(No.l#lO0ft 8 GO @ 8 25 .100 1b do gr’d in Paris V$@ ’Wh'ting, Amer Vermllion,Chinesefift 1 40 @ 1 10 @ do Trieste do Cal. & Eng.. 1 85 @ do American.... 30 @ Venet, red(N.C.)ficwt 2 70 @ 46 15 40 40 3 0) Carmine,city madeftlbl6 00 @20 00 China clay V *onS8 00 @30 00 Chalk $ bbL 4 00 @ 4 69 Chalk, block ft ton @27 ..ft ft Barytes 15 @ 3> @ 85 45 Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; gallon. Crude,40@47grav.flgal. Refined, free in bond do Naptha, refined Residuum IS @ @ 29*@ 38* 47 @ ft bbl. 4 62 @ .... Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 ft cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia# toe ... @ 4 50 White Nova Scotia.... 5 00 @ 6 50 Calcined,eastern<® bbl .... @ 2 40 @ 2 50 Calcined, city mills Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ot: tarns, bacon, and lard, 2 ts $ ft. Beef, plain mess ft bbl.. 12 00 @18 00 Planter do extra mess. .. val. No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 No.27 to 36 silk. 2 75 do @ @ 57 @ 57*@ 62; @ .. Soap—'Duty: 1 cent fl ft, California, 60 @ and 25 f) 174 17 00 @20 00 Pork9mess, new *20 60 @20 75 do mesa Old ****...,12 00 @19 60 18*@ 2-24 12 @ 15 14 19 @ English, spring 10J@ 12 English blister 11 @ 19 English machinery.... 18 @ 14 Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily fl ton.. 125 00 @225 00 Sugar.—See special report Tallow—Duty :1 oent fl ft. American,prime, coun¬ try and city $ 1b... ll| 11*@ Tobacco.—See sperlal report. Whalebone—Duty: foreign fish¬ ery, 20 p. c. ad val. South Sea fl ft @ .... .... @ @ 85 @ .. .... .... S8 and Liquor*—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per gallon^ other liquors, $9.80. Wins— Duty; value net oyer 00 Entre Rios, washed .... do unwashed S. American Cordova 82 @ 84 25 @ @ .. Donskoi, washed do .. 40 @ 46 @ .. . @ Persian African, 27 82 @ 48 unwashed .... 20 @ 80 8i» @ 40 washed .... washed 20 @ 27 28 @ 82 85 @ 58 Zinc—Duty: pig or block, fl 60 ft 100 fts.; sheets 2* cents ft ft. Sheet 9 D4@ 1 i Freight*— s. d. To Livrrpool : s. Cotton ft*ft |@ Flour @2 ....f^bbl. .. d * 3 @4 6 Petroleum 25 0 @ Heavy goods., .ft ton Oil Corn,b’k&bagsftbus. @ 64 @ 64 @3 6 @2 6- .. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef ft tee. Pork ft bbl. ... @80 0 .. .. .. .. To London : Tin—Duty: pig, bars, and block,15 # cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent ad val. Banca $1 ft (gold) @ 284 Straits (gold) 22»@ English. (gold) 2!4@ 22 Plates,char. I.C.fl box 12 50 @18 n0 do 1. C. Coke 10 50 @12 00 Terne Charcoal 12 00 @12 50 do do Terne Coke.... 9 i5 @ 9 76 Wine* 18 @ 32 Heavy goods. ..ft ton Tea*.—See special report North west coast Ochotsk Polar 23 @ .. 80 @ 83 28 @ 80 do 18 @ Amer cm cast 22 @ common.... Smyrna,unwashed German . pulled....*. Mexican,unwashed.... 10 9*@ Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $ ft or under, 2* cents; over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts fi ft; over 11 cents, 34 cents $ ft and 10 f) cent ad val. (Store prices.) . 80 @ 40 80 @ 40 S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. do common, unw. . . Spices. ^-See special report. English, cast, fl lb 40 @ CO unwashed... Valparaiso,unwashed.. 6|@ domestic.... 45 @ 50 50 @ 55 Texas Spelter—Duty: In pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 fl 100 fts. do 48 @ 6) „Peruvian, 17 @ Plates,foreign flft gold 10 50 @ 65 unwashed... do do 45 60 cent ...tfft. fleece ft ft Superfine No. 1, pulled @ .. . full bl’d Merino. 4 and* Merino.. Extra, pulled @ .. do 9@ 47 @ 57 @ do do 60 .. 15 A 5 ft ck off list. 25 & 5 ft ct. off list. 80 & 5 ft ct. off list* ft cent ad val. 8) . @ 55 @ .... Amer., Sax. 474 @ . .... Copper 50 ...gold Honduras..gold Sisal gold Para gold ad val. Castile 2 i:6@ 30 uO Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or les ft ft, 8 oents ft ft: over 12 and not more than 24, 7 cents: over 24 and not over 82,10, and 10 ft cent ad val¬ orem : over 82,12 cents ft ft, and 1 ft cent ad valorem; on the skin, 50 @ @ .. Chagres ...gold Puerto Cab .gold 1 10@ 1 50 8) 00@I50 00 Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain ...#lb Brass (less 15 p< r cent) ad val. 40 @ 45 82 @ 34 .. VeraCruz .gold 75@ 1 10 1 - 5@ 1 75 11 0(@ 25 00 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to |3 5v ^ 100 1b, and 15 ^ cent ad .. lli@ .. do do do Marseilles Sherry d<* do Malaga, sweet . • o do dry.... do Claret, in hhds. do do iu cases. do Champagne .... do American, spring Spanish brown, dry ft refined, 40 -ents fl 10|@ .. Bolivar 4 00@ 8 00 75@ 1 jo do Madeira r Tampico. ..gold Matamoras.gold Payta gold Madras,eac cash Cape cash do do do do S5@ 1 2u 1 15@ 8 00 do 82 @ Vera Cruz ,^old Deer,SanJuan#ftgi>ld 12 @ do white, American, No. I,in oil do whi o, French, In oil Chrome yellow. STAVES— White 85 ... (free). dry. No. 1 Lumber^ Woods, staves,etc. —Duty: Lumber, 20 ft cent ad val.; Staves, 10 ft cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, fbbs. Spruce, East, ft M ft 18 50 @ Southern Pine ...... 40 00 @ 80 gr.. puie, dry Zinc, white, American, @ 2 20 heavy de — chalk, f 10 ft ton. Litharge, City ,ft ft Lead, rod, City . do white, American, pure, in oil do white, American, 23 23 37 84 @ rou.,T’t do do do do do do do do do do 2 60 6 00 42 (gold) 2 O0@ 8 00 Burgundy Port, .12 CO @11 60 Goat,Curacoa$l 1b gold do Buenos A...gold 4 00@ 4 90 Sherry medium,No3@4. 9 60 @10 50 Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent 1 30 1 <0 1 I'C @ 1 05 @ 45 @ . do 5 0 @ 7 00 4 90@ 5 0 4 9t@ .6 00 4 85@ 4 90 4 85@ 4 95 4 85@ 4 95 4 75flS .... 4 25@ 4 SC 4 25@ 6 00 8 5('@ 3 60 2 90@ 8 50 m’o—N.E.Rum.cur. 2 45@ Bourbon Whisky.fur. 2 40@ Corn W hisky ( n b nd) 35@ Wines—Port Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. 9 0 > @ 9 25 Japan, superior 12 00 @i3 50 Medium 10 00 @11 50 do Chinalthrown 12 00 @13 U0 white 80 27 @ 2i @ Slaugh.in rough Slaugh.in 80 21 @ do Straits Paraffine, 28 Kerosene 42 45 44 @ .... do do i Bank do 55 51 @ 46 Paints—Duty: on white lead, red 51 2« lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft; Parie white and 80 82 whiting, 1 cent ft ft; dry ochres, 56 cent! ft 100 ft: oxidesofzinc, 11 cents 824 30 fi ft ; ochre, ground in oil, $ 150 ft 100 ft ; Spanish brown 25 ft cent ad val • 814 China clay, $5 ft ton; Venetian red 81 and vermilion 25 ft cent ad val.; 20 do do do do do do Oak, No. 1 @ 40 @ 38 @ Cropped.... do poor and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1; burning fluid, 50 cents ft gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 ft cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 ft cent ad val. Olive, qs (gold)per case 4 25 @ .... do in casks, ft gal).. 1 65 @ 10 @ Palm ft ft Sperm, crude 2 70 @ do do unbleach. 2 95 @ Lard oil l 15 @ Red oil, city distilled . 80 @ .... Silk—Duty; free. All thrown 35 # cent. Tsatlees, No. 1 @3.$ft 12 00 @1 Taysaams, superior, do D< ft. Buck and Linseed,city...ft gall. 1 25 @ Whale.., 80 @ do refined winter.. 1 05® gold Shot—Duty: 2J cents fl Drop. #ft »8 31 @ do do seed, 23 cents; olive 9 @ 3*@ ....@ ... Whisky—S. & Ir. 16 @ .. do Cog. do Pellevoisinfreresdo A. Seignette . do Hiv. Pellevoisin do Alex. Seignette. do Arzac Seignette do J. Romieux.... do Other Rochelle, do Rum—Jamaica ..do St. Oroix d> Gin-Differ, brands do Other br’ds Linseed,Am.cleauf?tce .... @ '... do Am. rough fl bus 2 75 @ 2 85 do Calcutta ...gold .... @ 2 45 7 60 @ 9 00 67 @ 69 Duty: linseed, flaxseed, - rape @ Heml'k, B. A., Ac., l’t. do do middle. do 4 95 @ 6 00 8t @ . heavy. do g. $1 ft do L*ger freres 18 @ 15 #ft Timothy,reaped fl bus 8 fO @ 4 00 Canary fj bus 4 25 @ 4 75 City thin obl’g, in bbls. $ ton.56 00 @57 09 do in bags.-V 00 @C6 t0 West, thin obl’g, do 52 50 @ r-cash.ft lb.—, middle middle do do do bellies do ft cent fl ft. k0@ 10 &o 15@ 10 50 u0@ 10 00 &)0@/10 50 5 0»@ 10 00 5 20@ 10 00 >...@ .... ... @ .... 5 1*@ 10 50 do do do do UnitedV.Prop, Vine Grow. Co. .. ad val. Clover. 9|@ llj Oakum—Duty fr.,ft lb Oil Cuke—Duty: 20 ft cent ad val. 00 00 12$ 00 25 sole 35, upper 80 light Pale and Extra do (itold) 6 87 @ 7 ........(gull) 6 S7t@ 1 (gold) 6 8?4@ 7 Bar net .. @10 Pipe and Sheet.. ..net .. @10 Spanish German English No. 1 [do Renault A Co.. J. Vassal A Co., Jules Robin.... Marrette &> Co. Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, * cent $} ft; canary, 91 $1 bushel of 60 ft; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent Rosin, common 3 80 @ do strair.edaniNo.2. ..4 0» @ 4 50 , | nitrate soda, 1 Refined, pure Crude Nitrate soda 20 @ spirits of Stores—Duty; turpentine 30cents ft gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 ft cent ad val. Turpent’e, « f .. ft28f)ft 5 25 @ ... Tar, Am rlc*. bbl 2 25 @ 2 75 . Pi ch @ 4 25 @162 CO .. 30 28 @ Naval 95 00@!00 00 $ 100 lb 30 23 @ 48 @ Copper Yellow metal Zinc do Galena 21 hue, pressed .... 20@ 10 50 Hennessy Liverpool,gr’ndfi sack 2 <0 @ .... do fine, Ash ton*s(g*d) 2 75 @ .... do fine, Worthingt’s .... @ 8 00 Onondaga,com.fine bis. 2 50 @ 2 60 do 210 ft bgs. 1 SO @ 2 00 do do do $ bush. 45 @ 50 Solar coarse 64 @ 56 Fine screened 50 @ 52 do .. @ S 25 ft pkg. F.F ,.240 ft bgs. 2 85 @ 3 00 Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents; refined and partially refined,3 cents; 21; Martell (gold) 5 (gold) 5 Otard,Dup. ACo.do 6 Pinet,Castll.&Co.do 5 J. & F. 1 @ ... Brandy— 9 60 India,dressed.... 9 25 @ Cadiz report. Cut,4d.@60d.ft lOulb 6 50 @ 8 00 @ Clinch 28 @ Horse shoe,Fd (6d)ftlb Horse East Salt--Duty: sack, 24 cents ft100 bulk, 18 cents ft 100 ft. Turks Islands ft bush. 57*@ 15 Nails—Duty; cut 11; wrought horse shoe 2 cents ft ft. Bar,English and Amer¬ 2} cents $ lb. Bahia molasses.—Sea special /—Stork Pricks—, assorted 11 lfr @ 14 @ 60 @ 1 00 8 5 @ 6 4 @ Rosewood, R» Jan. ft lb do 16 14 10 Mansanilla Mexican Florida, ft c. ft. do 9i u @100 00 Bar, Refl’d rng& Amer Bar, Swedes, assorted i 20 .. Mexican Honduras do 65 @ 1 10 85 @ 1 10 70 @ 90 (gold) Bar Swedes, sizes Mansanilla Cedar, Nuevitas (sold) (gold) (in gold) 14 @ 14 @ 14 @ Nuevitas.... (American wood).. Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 14 cents ft lb. Railroad, 70 cents # 100 lb; Boiler and Plate, 1$ cents ft lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to If cents $ ft; { Pig, $9 ft ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $ ft. Pig, Scotch,No 1. ft ton 48 00® 46 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 46 00® 47 On sizes 16 16 Port-au-Platt, do do do do (.old)flft 1 00 @ 1 65 (gold) 75 @ 1 85 (gold) 65 @ 90 Caraocas 40 12 @ 12 @ 12 @ 15 @ crotches logs. 6TJ® 65 @ 42 @ # lb 30 30 @ Port-au-Platt, do ad val. Para, Fine 7 @ 10 ordinary logs do lon 20 cents f) gallon and 25 ft oent ad valorem; over & and not over 100, 50 cents ft gallon and 25 ft cen< ad valorem; over $1 ft gallon, fl ft gal¬ lon and 25 ft cent ad val. .16 f0 @17 00 Lard,:. ...ft ft 11|@ 13* 3ams, 10 @ lv* Shoulders, - 8*@ 9* Rice—Duty: cleaned2* cents ft ft.; paddy 10 cents, and nncleaned 2 cents m ft. CaroUna ....*.$ 100 ft 10 00 @10 50 prime, do. do St. Domingo, do Horn*—Duty, 10 ft cent, ad val. 0 10 00@ 10 00 Ox, Rio Grande... Ox, Buenos Ayres 8 00® 10 00 India Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent [February 16,1S67. CHRONICLE. THE 222 cents f* gal¬ @25 0 .... Oil .. @30 0 Flour ..@2 8 ft bbl. Petroleum 0 @ 5 0 Beef *...fttce. .. @4 6 Pork ft bbl. .. @3 6 Wheat # bush. *. @ 6 Corn @ 6 To Glasgow (By Steam): Flour ft bbl. .. @26 Wheat @ ft bush. .. 6 .. @ 6 (sail)ft^bbl. ..@50 ton. 20 0 @30 0 7... @85 0 Corn,bulk and bags.. Petroleum Heavy goods.. ft Oil..... @6 0 W tee. Beef Pork. ft bbl. To Havb* : Cotton .....ft Hops Beef and pork.. ^ @3 6 $ .. $ ® -• bbl. 1 00 @ Measurem. g’ds.ft ton 10 00 @ Wheat, In shipper’s bags Flcmr ft bush. V bb Petroleum * .. .. @ -► @ 5 6 @ 6 .. .. Lard, tallow, out m t eto......... poUnd pwl ;; U « 16,1867.] February Steamship and Express Commercial Cards. COMMUNICA¬ TION BETWEEN NEWYORK AND AUSTRALA¬ THE EXHIBITION. AND COMMISSION BANKERS MERCHANTS, allowed for Exchange on Lon Highest premium don. George. Farnham, Robbins & Son.) COMMERCIAL PAPER, ALSO, GOLD, &C., BOUGHT COMMISSION. SOLD ON 54 Sawyer, Wallace COMMISSION AND of Pine. William Street, corner gold coin. Special steamers run States region f . PACIFIC MAIL STREET, McIlwaine OF MERCHANDISE GENERALLY. [No. 79 Front Street, Martin A Tannahill, of Petersburg, Ya._ New York. McIlwaine & Co., of Petersburg, Va. B. C. Morris STOCK & Son, COMMISSION HOUSE, WILLIAM STREET. Government Securities, Railways Petroleum, Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrijp shares of a 1 descriptions, bought and sold at the different Stock Boards. Collections made in all tlie States Canadas. Miscellaneous and purchased or sold on “Option.” Out-of-town orders solicited, and those comp lying w th above requirements will receive ana special prompt attention. furnished if had daily Snotations can be desired. upon he i application, or James A. Robinscn, CALORIC ERICSSON PORTABLE AND Steam ENGINES STATIONARY Engines, Gins, Hoisters, and General 164 Duane St., Cor. Hudson, New York. Mills, Pumps, Cotton Jobbing. , W. H. Schieffelin & Co. SUCCESSORS TO SCHIEFFELIN IMPORTERS , BROTHERS Sc CO., AND JOBBERS OF ^ DRUGS, SPONGES, PERFUMERY, ETC., ETC., INDIGO, CORKS, FANCY GOODS, 170 A 172 . WILLIAM ST. New York. Joseph H Westerpibld. William H. Schieffelin, William A. Gellatlt. William N. Clark, Jr. Ould & Carrington, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, IDS MAIN STREET^ * RICHMOND, VA. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 58 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Offer for sale, and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports; 1st and 11th for Central American Ports. Those or 1st touch at Man¬ Departures of 1st , through. One hundred pounds An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and Baggage checked allowed each adult. attendance free. For passage tickets or farther it the Company’s ticket office, on Canal street, North River, New York. information, apply the wharf, foot of HOLMAN, Agent. National Steam Navigation Co., (LIMITED.) Steamers Weekly to Liver¬ pool, Queenstown. THE SPLENDID FIRST-CLASS STEAMSHIPS of this Line will be dispatched as follows from Pier Calling No. 47 at Norih River— DENM ARK, Thomson, Sails SATURDAY, Feb. 2. 16. 23. 2. VIRGINIA, Prowse, Sails SATURDAY, Feb. HELVETIA, Thompson, Sails SATUKDAY.Feb. ENGLAND, Grace, Sails SATURDAY, March 92 John Street* Charcoal Pig Irons, Ingot Copper, J. POPE, THOS. Anthracite and Spelter, Tin, Antimony, Ac., Old and New Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. Henry Lawrence & MANUFACTURERS OF 192 FRONT in $30 Hamburg, to bring persons from Liverpool or Queenstown .... $100 Through passage to London, Paris, Bremen, Antwerp, etc., at low rates. Steerage passage tickets currency, or Queenstown for obtained at No. 27 Broadway. Ko freight or cabin passage the Company No. 57 Broadway ; lor steerage at the passage office of the Company, way, or No. 275 Pearl street. F. W. J. HURST, Manager. Livei^ool $35, can be apply at the office of tickets, No. 27 Broad¬ and others should send by the HABNDEN EXPRESS, 65 Broadway, as they have unsurpassed facilities for the safe forwarding of rapid and Gold, Silver, Jewelry, and Merchandise of eve: ery description. Also for the collection of notes, drafts and bttls, bills accompanying goods, Ac. i, C. E. Thorburn, SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, 109 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Consignments of Cotton and all other South¬ ern Product* Solicited* CORDAGE STREET, NEW YORK. (of the late firm Importer and Dealer in Hardware, and Commission Merchant, 45 CLIFF STREET, NEW YORK. entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ Consignments of Cotton, Wocl, Hides, Ac., All orders tention. Best of references given it solicited. required. • ORRELL ENGLISH CANNEL Sc BEST Coal LIVERPOOL, FROM For Grate Fires. H. J. Delivered from yards in New York and Brooklyn. PARMELE Sc BRO., 32 Pine Street, N.Y P- Oldershaw, P. ACCOUNTANT, 62 Books BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Examined. Account* Adjusted* Retebences: C. S. BODLEY. STEWART BROWN, S.' L. M. BARLOW, McANDRfeiW & WANN DAVID WALLACE, C. H. HARNEY, YOUR Bankers, Merchants, Sons, Jeremiah ofM. Wardwell, Neilson Wardwell A Co.) ship, free of charge. Drafts issued for any amount, payable at any bank in Great Britain or on the Continent. Rate of passage, payable currency: Steerage: Caoin. Railroad DOMESTIC USE, EXPORT AND FOR Saturday thereafter. experienced Surgeon on each To and other flrat-claaa Metals, And every An BOURBON and RYE Distilleries, Kentucky. Louis S. K. IN BOND, fine their own WHISKIES, from 1st—Arizona,1 connecting with Golden City. lltn—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. list—-New York, connecting with Sacramento. ducted entirely on 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 to cover same with proba¬ ble amount at time of leaving order. Receipts lor such deposits given until stocks are delivered. AND FEBRUARY: of all—both will be con¬ the basis of Certified Checks, Stocks DISTILLERS United Mail. NORTH RIV¬ 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 Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. For the more thorough protection Broker and “ Principal our business & Co., J. M. Cummings And Carrying tlie States MO* LOUIS, ST. California a STREET. AND GREEN LEAVE PIER NO. 42 zanillo. NO. 17 No STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S WASHINGTON AVENUE BETWEEN be made to No. 69 Wall-st., SECOND ^STREET 150,152,154, & 156 N. Nos. 148, ER, FOOT of COMMISSION MERCHANTS SALE OF PRODUCE AND PURCHASE FOR THE ■i Co., FLOUR, RECEIVERS OF eight half-fare; 111** Yaeger & THROUGH LINE o MERCHANTS, Chicago, merchandise will be con¬ through bill of lading. Co., WASHINGTON STREET. For further information, application to the Pacific MailSteamship Company, Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William-at., New-York. Co., & 165 newly-discovered gold Zealand. under twelve veyed nnder NEW YORK. Tannahill, to the PROVISIONS* COMMISSION Children under three Years, free; nnder years, quarter fare; years, male servants, one-half fare; female do., three-quar¬ ters fare: men servants berthed forward, women do. in ladies’ cabin. A limited quantity of & Co., MERCHANTS, NO. 47 BROAD connecting with the steamer of Hokitika, New SEEDS GRAIN, , Blair, Densmore & through ticket at the following rates: From New-York to ports in New-Zealand, or to Sydney or Melbourne, $34C to $364 for first class, and $218 to $243 for second class. The above rates include the transit across the Tsthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian steamer; after cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United (Late of G. S. STOCKS, BONDS, Royal 24th of and passengers mail. U H AND conveyed under Special attention paid to securing apartments for Americans visiting Paris, and letters of enquiry replied to by return F L O The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the each month from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., the Australian Colonies, AUBER, PARIS. 14 RUE 5 “ ——— PANAMA. SIA via Co., Norton & AMERICAN Commercial Cards. Co.’s. STEAM UNIVERSAL PARIS 225 CHRONICLE. THE SOLICITED BY CUSTOM Francis & Loutrel,( STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTURERS. 45 Maiden Lane, New York* supply everything in our line for Business, Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Olden receive prompt attention. We File* of this BLANK BOOKS, Paper Round to Order* STATIONERY, ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. AC., AC, Cooper & Sheridan, 26 EXCHANGE PLACE, ^Corner of William jit [February J.j6,.1867. THE CHRONICLE. r 224 t-t- Commercial Commercial Cards. S. H. Pearce & No. 363 Brand & Gihon, Co., 66 MURRAY Importers ot CHINA SILKS, Oiled costs but half as much as real appearance and finish, and very superior a silk, which it equals in the most economical collar 70 A 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW Offers AC, BUCK, AC. Thompson & Co., LINENS, LINEN CAfflB’C HANDK’FS, AC. HAVE REMOVED FROM 36 TO Co., 185 No. Church Anderso YORK, 33 PARK AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, FOR & Smith, WILLIAM Handk’ffc, S. W. HOPKINS A Co., 69 & 71 Broadway. SAM’LB. Co., SON, BELFAST, . AND Wilson, Son & Co., Cambric Handkerchief Manufacturers INDIA George Hughes & Co., For the sale of produce and purchase of merchandise ol mercnanoise ffcucrflt i»y• nerair Importers A Commission Merchants, (Offices, for the present, 63 EXCHANGE PLACE), SILKS, HANDKERCHIEFS, NO. 106 Reade Street. 134 CHURCH STREET, Will Remove Lindsay, Chittick & Co., IMPORTERS British AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Staple, on January 1, to their 198 A 200 CHURCH new Warehouse BALTIMORE, MD. Refer by permission to Messrs. Jacob Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore. Tannahill, Mcllwaine A Co., New York. STREET, SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, Wm. Sole Agents for England & Co., AND GENERAL COMMISSION DICKSON, FERGUSON A CO., Belfast. Goods, G., COTTON FACTORS PATENT LINEN THREAD. And Fancy Dress Late of Lynchburg, Va., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, . And dealers in PONGEE Merchants, SLIP, NEW YORK. CO., LURGAN, Importers of CHINA AND General Commission 90 OLD JAMES GLASS A Munsell & MORRIS, JR. Successors to BREWER A CALDWELL, COTTON FACTORS, Linen Manufacturers. British and Continental. B. O. C ADDWELL. Caldwell & Morris, PLACE, NEW YORK. KIRK A Roads, FOR SALE BY New York. Street, n Steam and Street Agents for Emb’s, Linen GOOHS, Stock of the above at Railroad Iron, Goods, Laces and a new Importers of Importers of White HOSIERY and LINENS, FLAX SAIL IRISH George Pearce &; . 864 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET. Collars. invented. ever . BURLAPS, BAGGING, Wm. Patent Reversible Paper , MEN’S FURNISHING durability. Agents for the sale of the Madder, Turkey Red | HANDKERCHIEFS, WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ WHITE CRAPES, importer of and Lawn Agents for the sale of Silk, Imitation Oiled Silk. Our “Imitotton” has And Linen Camhrie, Jobbing and Clothing Trade. SILK AND COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS, ENGLISH i' GOODS, In fell assortment for the and Manufacturers ol • (late of Beear, Napier A Co.) Agent for S. Courtanld A Co.’s STREET. IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN Napier, D. Alexander Importers A Commission Merehahts, BROADWAY, EUROPEAN AND Oommerclal Cards. Cards. And F. W. HAYES A CO., 65 Commerce Banbrldge. MERCHANTS, Street, Mobile, Ala. White Goods, Spool Cotton. Irish and Scotch Linens, Ac., Ac*, JOHN 160 A 159 DUANE STREET, NEW YORK, E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. ' - AGENTS THOS. FOR CHICOPEE MANUF. MILTON CO., MILLS, JOHN ' A HUGH Co., Byrd & 200CHURCHSTo NEW YORK. w. D. Simonton. Silk .X’Beavers. 49 MURRAY Linen Parasols, THREADS, SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC. BARBOUR 96 CHAMBERS Mills at BROTHERS, STREET, NEW YORK LINSEED OIL AND OIL CAKE, CHICAGO, ILL. PARASOLS, I. S. Bush & HIDE Sewing Silks, Co., BROKERS, 155 Kinzte MANUFACTURERS OF Street, Chicago. Orders will receive’careful and prompt attention. Machine Twist Embroidery, Organzlne, and Tram. 84 CHAMBERS ' - - - MILLS AT Lane, Lamson & Co., MERCHANTS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, 97 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK.. GRAIN SHIPPERS, MILLERS, AND DISTILLERS. We ST., NEW YORK. PATERSON, N. J. COMMISSION TO are Manufacturing Richards’ Power Corn Shellers, Of all sizes and cap&cityy ranging from 60 to 1,000 bushels per hour; built ef Iron, and warranted to shell cleans in any condition of grain, and clean the com in superior condition for the Mill, or Market. Over 600 in Daily Use. "Portable Kifgines, Small lurr Mills, Farm Mills, Ac.' K ’ IC HARDS’ r Patterson, N. J. Co., LEAD PIPE AND SHEET LEAD, John O’Neill, & Sons, . SHOE E. W. Blatchford & Nos, 19 & 14 WARREN ST., NEW YORK ST., NEW YOR-. Threads, attention’at low¬ Middlings, Bran, &c., to all points East, saving ex¬ pense and damage from cartage. Orders lor pur¬ chase of Grain, Flour, or provisions in this market will be faithfully a1 tended to. ly Hall, UMBRELLAS AND DOUBLJRU9AV A DWIGHT, Umbrellas & Eastern orders will have prompt est market price. Our Chicago mills being situated on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour, Manufacturers of Mixtures,* MANUFACTURERS OF Oriental Mills, Chicago, Ill. Lockport Hydraulic Mills, Locaport, Ill. Sweepstakes Mills, West Lockport. HI. full supply of our well known brands of Flour always on hand. Manufacturers of to Fancy Cassimeres. YORK, No. 108 Duane Street. Woolen Coffin, Treas. AUCHIVCLOSS, SOLE AGENTS IN NEW Have Removed from 6 College Place, W. W CABLED Thread.- CO., Nas. 43 A 45 WHITE STREET. STREET, N.Y. SIX-CORD CHICAGO, ILL., PROPRIETORS OF J. & P. Coats’ BEST VICTORY MANfJF. 198 A MILLERS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 138 LASALLE ST., A CO., C9., (Established 1848.) RUSSELL, Sole Agent, 88 CHAMBERS BURLINGTON WOOLEN • CO’S. IS UNSURPASSED FOK HAND AND MACHINE SEWING. WASHINGTON MILLS, Globe CLARK, Jr. A Mile End, Glasgow. Norton & IRONWORKS, 190 & 199 WASHINGTON STREET, Chicago, Ill,