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lanhm’ tecttc, (Stommrmal Sim#, jtoitoNtjj Ponitor, and fttjmrmur |oumal NEWSPAPER, A WEEKLY representing the industrial and COMMERCIAL INTERESTS of the united states. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1867. VOL. 4. Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. D. B. Hatch. H’ C. B. Foots j- Late with Fisk A Hatch. F. A. Satterlee & Johnson, Jr., Hatch, Foote & Co., Bankers and Brokers. Co., NEW YORK. Phenxx National Bank. , BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, ALL TAUXTXZS. John Bloodgood & Co., 22 WILLIAM SEALERS STREET, NEW YORK. IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. OTHER Interest allowed cy, AND deposits of Gold and Curren¬ on subject to check at sight, and particular atten¬ to accounts of country banks and hankers. Morgan, Lathrop & Co., STOCKS, GOLD, * Bought and Sold DEALER IN on Refer to JAY COOKE A L. Tyler, Wrenn & Co., RANKERS. 18 WALL STREET, Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT sECURITI KS, GOL D, Ac. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks. Bonds and Gold promptly executed. c Chicago. t TYLER, VLLMANNft; Riker & NO. 6 SOUTHERN Edwin BROADWAY • NEW STREET, Harrison, Garth & Go., No. 18 NEW STREET, NEW YORK. Harrison, Goddiu Sc Apperson, W. H. on all accessible Southern points. Whittingham, No- MINING AND ALL OTHER .. ; / BONDS Bought and 8old on Commission. , STOCKS, AND GOLlJ Quotations and sales lists furnished daily on appli- canon. Orders promptly executed. Scott, Kerr Sc Co., BANKERS, LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS. Collections made on all accessible points and re¬ mitted for on the day of payment, less current rates exchange.. Wake collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. Company OF CHICAGO. J. Young Sgaxmon ...President. Robert Reid Manager. General Banking and Collections promptly attended to. Established 1848. M. K. Jesup & Company, Negotiate Bonds and Loans ror Railroad Cos*, Contract for or Steel Cars, ete., Ralls, Locomotives, and undertake f all business connected with Railways. Haskell & ST. LOUIS, MO. ’ Securities, Gold and Ex¬ change collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of exchange. Dealers in Government Second National Bank. ST. Hablett McKim. Robt. MoKim. Jno. A. McKim. McKim, Bros. & Co., BANKERS, 62 WALL STREET. r Interest allowed deposits subject to draft at sigbt, and special attention given to orders' from on Co., RANKERS, LOUIS, MO. Capital.. $200,0001 Surplus.. $150,566 Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬ pondents. E. D. JONES, Cashier. NORTH-WESTERN STATES bank or Geo. C. Smith & Bro., 57 X rU-J . * , Late Co., CHICAGO, (Lake Bank of Montreal.) ’ '> 4> given to collection*. Special attention * RAILROAD, _ Scott & Also, drafts on 48 LASALLE ST., TELEGRAPH, * Solicit accounts from and other places. EXPRESS, Co., LOUIS, MISSOURI, of the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. Brokers, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Benoist & A. The Marine Bny and Sell at Market Rates Iron HANKERS, Bankers. BANKERS, of BROAD STREET. BANKERS AND MERCHANTS, 84 BROADWAY. Southern Collections. Collections made Gilliss, Harney & Go., MERCHANTS, BANKERS others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight draft. and L. Collections made in all parts of the United States and British America. NOTES. New TorIt. Bankers STREET, NEW YORK, RANK 5 Western Buy and Sell Exchange on all the principal citiea ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. A Compound Interest Notes of 1864 Sc. 1865 Bought and Sold. ST. Watkins, BANKERS, AND BROKER, In Southern Securities and Bank Bill*, to CO., Bankers, New York. RANKER, STOCKS, Bounty Loan. LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN! MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS And Dealer In all Claeses of Govern* ment Securities and Gold. NO. 24 Q. Bell, BANKER Street, BROADWAY. and 1864, 1865, Pet Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, 2d, A 3d series Per Cent Currency Certificates. SECURITIES, 80 STREET NEW S. BROAD NO. 11 Co., BROKERS IN MINING “ " “ j. Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile. NO. Per Cent Bonds of 1881, Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, Commission New York. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Southern Bills on London and Paris, Bill* on STOCKS, VERMILYE Sc CO. Nos. 3t New Street Sc 36 Broad RANKER AND BROKER, 3 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, 6 6 6 6 5 7 6 AND GOVERNMENT G. Graham, Wm. H. Catlin. T. A. Lathuop. ' STATES New York State 7 per cent. T. M. Morgan. tion gi v en A. York, INCLUDING : Jay Cooke A Co., N. Y. No. 44 Wall Street. New UNITED STOCKS AND BONDS STREET, References N. Y. Fisk A Hatch, Co., RANKERS. issues of ties, GOLD, Ac. Two doors from New Street. & ERMILYE Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery a government securi¬ No. 11 WALL V 70 BROADWAY St 16 NEW STREET. BANKERS and dealers in NO. 84. ^ Gelston & Bussing, BANKERS Sc BROKERS 87 WALL STREET All orders receive oar Personal Attention. Wm, J. Gelston, John S. Bussing. *. Wlnthrop A Co., and Winslow, New-York; Drexel A Co., Fhiladel Draw on—DrexeL Lanier ACo., phia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada. Fourth National Bank. $ 5,000,000 Capital NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. All the Government best terms. Offers Central National Bank, 13,000,000. Bankers on of Government Bonds— City and Country accounts received on terms mos WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, William Ervien, Osgood Welsh, Frederic A. Hoyt, William H William H. Rhawn, Joseph P. No. 240 Bank. Bank Designated Depository of the Government. solicited. D. L. J. H. Stout, ROSS, President. BANK. NATIONAL BROADWAY, NEW YORK. $ 1,0* 0,000 4u0,000 CAPITAL URPLUS^. RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Co., Duncan, Sherman & BANKERS, CORNER OF PINE AND AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers States, available in all world; also, abroad and in the United the principal cities of the COMMERCIAL CREDITS, POWELL, GREEN Sc Bankers & Commission & and told Westervelt, Stocks, Ronds, Gold, bought and sold on Government Securities, Commission. COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 12 NEW Sc 14 BROAD STREETS. Wilson, Callaway & Co., BANKERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Broad Street, N. IT. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent, on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, &c., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. J. K. GILLIAT & CO., of Liverpool. No. 44 Warren, Kidder & Co., BANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stock s, Bonds, and Gold promptly on FOUR PER CENT, exe¬ John Cockle & Son, BROKERS In Foreign Exchange, Bonds, Notes, Ac., Scc» (8 2 PINE*STREET, NEW YORK. Rxrbxncks.—Moses Taylor; John Munroe & Co; C, Savage, U.3. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, Ill.; Hon. F. E. Spinner, Treasurer U. 8., Washington. York. References in New T. H. York :—Duncan Sherman & Co; Co.; K. H. Lowry, Esq., Prest. Henry Swift & Co.; H. B. Frothinghara, Esq., Pres’t. Union Trust Taylor, E-»q.; Moses York No. 71 Broadway. Office In New ROB’T U. MAURY. R. ROB’T T. BROOKE JA3. L. MAURY. H. Maury & Page, Richardson & Co STREET, BOSTON, 114 STATE AND ALSO ISSUK Commercial Credits for +he purchase dlse in England and the Continent. Credits for the use of Travellers bought and sold on commission. Deposits received and Collections made on all accessible points in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, Yermilye & Co. Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, St., Mobile, Ala. Francis Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt attention given to Collections No. 52 St. & Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Dnrand, Bankers, New York. E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, Netv York. Bibcock Bros Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff & Gillespie. No. 22 STATE Ala. Special attention given to Collections of all kinds, having prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac¬ cessible points in the State, and REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. , ¥ . , • Theodore Stanwood, THE FIRST V.-Prest. NATIONAL BANK all points WEST and SOUTH, promptly remitted for. Capital *tock, Collections made on and $11,000,000. Surplus Fund. $250,000. Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Winslow. Bishop, William Mitchell, A. 8 Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., 110 Sc Dealers in West Fourtli Street, GOLD, SILVER, NOTES, and all kinds UNCURRENT BANK of GOVERNMENT BONDS, COLLECTIONS MADE at all and remitted for on Checks on accessible points day of pajnnent. UNION BANK OF LONDON. FOR SALE. D. A. Given, of Watts, Given & Co., Paducah, Ky. D. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky. L. M. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank of Ky. N. S. Ray, late Casb’r Com’l B’k of Ky., Lebanon, Ky BANKING HOUSE OF Given, Street, Cliarleston, S. C., DEALERS IN FOREIGN& DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE, BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND B' »NDS. Especial attention paid to Collections. Refer to Duncan, Sriennau & Co., New York; Drexel & Co., Philadelphia; Tin Franklin Bank, and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury & Co., Richmond, Va., Charles D. Carr & Co. Augusta, Ga. Jones & Co., STREET, NEW YORK. Ray, Given & Co., BROKERS, Conner & Wilson,3 BANKERS Sc Cashier. Cincinnati. of 33 BROAD G A . COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. No. 5 Broad Lewis Worthington, J.W. Ellis, Prest. Charles D. Carr & Co., AND HENRY SAYLES JAMES BECK, . National Park Bank, Howes & Macy, and Spofford, Tileston & Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Seavef, Esq., Boston. Drexel & Co. and D. S. Stetson & Co., Philadelphia. T. F. Thirkield & Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and J os. E. Elder & Goodwin, St Louis. Fowler, Stanard & Co, Mobile. Pike, Ijapeyre & Bro., New Orleans. Drake. Klemwcrth& Cohen, Lon¬ don and Liverpool^ BANKERS ' CINCINNATI, OHIO. COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealers in Domestic and Foreign Exchange. GA L VESTON , TEXA S. refer to STREET, BOSTON. Western Bankers. 10S T. H. McMahan & Co. ...~ BROKERS, STOCK Swift & Hurlbert. Insurance Company of Hartford. Underwriters Agency New Yck, Ch srles Walsh. JPre ident Bank of Mobile. Henry A Schroeder. Pros. Sonthem Bank of Sayles, Dupee, Beck & JAMES A. DUPEE, 1014 MAIN ST., RICHMOND, VA. Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c.t of Merchan Travellers’ abroad. No. Henry A Hurlburt, late MUNBOE Sc CO., PARIS. JOHN Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS , EXCHANGE ON LONDON BILLS OF 43 AUGUSTA, INTEREST ALLO W ED deposits, subject to check at sight. cuted. Eastern Bankers. Aetna BANKERS Sc BROKERS, and Butler, COMMISSION MERCHANT, GALVESTON, TEXAS. (Established in 1S47.) Collections promptly attended to and remitted for by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, Shermau & Co., with regard to Government loans cueerfully furnished. Full information at all times Home Insurance Company ot New York. New York Life Insurance Company. ' STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought exclusively on Commission. J ones Bank. Byrd & Hall, New York. CO. MERCHANTS, 88 BROAD of the Central National References: For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, Soutn America, and the United States. C. Government. NASSAU STS., ISSUE CIRCULAR NOTES attention to business connected several departments of tlie especial witb the BANKER AND Bankers, New HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial Agent of tlie United state*. We buy and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, end ■•sve Mumpord, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. Bank of Republic; Cl a flin & Co. Cashier. The Tradesmens 291 Rhawn. President, George BROADWAY. era’ and Dealers’ Accounts FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF WASHINGTON, H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke <fc Co.), Pkes’t. President. $1,000.00 0. Capital Washington. WM. S. Edward B. Orne, Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, Cashier. Tenth National and liberal terms.* Late Cashier the United State Banks to Nathan Hides, and Canadas. WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Collections and remittances promptly attended to. DIRECTORS: Has for sale all descriptions favorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of Merchants National Bank, New York, and Bank of Liverpool, England. on $500,000 - services its Joseph T. Bailey, BROADWAY. ^Capital Draw STREET, NEW ORLEANS, PHILADELPHIA, Capital 318 54 CAMP CHESTNUT STREET, 809 & 811 Co., BANKERS, Republic, Bank of the PINE STREET. Bankers. Burke & National l oans for sale. Collections made for Dealers on Southern Southern Bankers. Bankers and Biokers. ? [February 2,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 130 CABONDELET ST., NEW OR¬ LEANS. Orders" for the purchase or sale of Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold, promptly executed. allowed on Deposits, subject to cheques sight. Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange Business. Given, Vone* & Co. are prepared to Interest at draw Sterling Bill*, at sight or sixty days, on the Bank of Liverpool, in s<*ms to suit purchasers. The New Orleans House will make City and at all accessible remit on the day of payment. We refer to Bank or America and National Bank op State op New York, New York City, and to any of the Kentucky Banks. Collections in ihat points South, and 7 ■ ■ I Financial. Financial. Annual Southwest MORTGAGE BONUS. and Pacific Ill Coupon due To OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, The January, 1867. The Directors have now the pleasure of present¬ ing to the Stockholders the Annual » eport. The statement cf the condition ot the Bank cd the morning of January 7th, compiled from the 10th December last, as the payment of the or Interest and the transfer or conversion of said Securities has been stopped by a Caveat filed against them in the Tteasury Department of the United States at Washington, and effective steps have been taken to make said securities unsaleable in Coupons LIABILITIES. $1,000,000 00 225,740 27 for the recovery of said Securities, or in that propor¬ tion for the recovery of any portion of them. 924,830 00 23,774 82 cent Coupon 18 74 Ronds, $1,000 Each. Nos. 1,656, 1,657, 1,658, 1,05 4,931,10,695,10,696, 11,341, 12,950, 12,951. 12,952, 12/53, 12,954, 12,955, 12,986, 12,987, 12,988, 12.989,12,990, 14,493,14,494, 14.49 14,496, 14,962, 15,159, 15,160, 15,161, 16.761, 16,762, 16,763, 16,764, 16,765, 16,760, 16,767, 16,768, 16,769, 16,770, 6,771, 16,77 16,773, 16,774, 16,775, 16 776, 16,777, 16,7 8, 16,779, 16,780, 16,781, 16,782, 16,783, 16,784, 16,785, 16,786, 16,787, 16.7^ 16,789, 16,790, 16,791, 16,79.*, 16,793, 16,794, 16,795, 16,796, * 16,797, 16,798, 16,799, 16,800, 5,989, 14,026. 6 per cent. Coupon 1881 Bonds, $1,000 rack. Act July 17, 1861. Payable to the order of Adam Norrie and Benja¬ min B. Sherman, Committee, and not endorsed. Nos.65997, 65,998, 65,999, 66,000, 60,091, 66,002, 66,003, 66,00-1, < 6,005, 66,006, 66,007, 66,008, 66,009, 66,010, 66,011, 66,012, 66,013, 66,014, 66,< 15, 60,016, 66,017, 66,018, 66,019, 66,020, 66,021, 66,022. 22,232 S9 Circulation Due Treasurer United States Deposits 8,399,968 35 ... 7 per cent, per $10,596,536 33 Annum, York on the First Days or $4,361,268 30 1,487.850 00 Loans and Discounts Government. Seemities Furniture and Fixtures 13,000 00 Specie and Legal Tender Notes Cash Items and Exchanges miles of completed road, now in operation to Kolia, in the State of Missouri, which cost to construct. $4,600,000 And 13 miles of road graded, with material These Bonds are issued on 77 hand to be completed 1867, at a cost of by January 1, on Together with 260,OuO acres of land, now being disposed of at a minimum of $5 per acre, $6,300,000 Say present total value of 1,0®,022 18 961,773 88 $10,596,536 33 This statement shows a surplus of Twenty-two per cent., and as there is included in the assets, at par, a large amount of Compound Interest Notes, we 1,300,000 (maximum, $40) 2,730,621 97 Due lrom Banks and Bank. re. 500,000 5 , feel.fully justified iu stating to the stockhold¬ that we consider their stock intrinsically worth more than Twenty-two percent, above par, alter ers paying, on January 2d, a semi-annual Six Per Cent. dividend of in our number caused by the death of our lamented associate, Nolomon L. Hull, has been filled by the unanimous election of Mr. 8. C. Parkhurst, one of our original stockholders. The impression seems to prevail that National Banks do not pay their fair share of taxation. This makes it desirable that we should state that, out of the earnings of this Bank, there have been paid dur¬ ing the past year to the United. States Government taxes to the amount of .$44,070 28 And there will be due, to be paid during this month, a further sum of 26,839 29 , 7-30 Bonds, By a provision of this mortgage, when lands are of $40,00 •, it is to consdtute a Special Fund for the redemption of a like amount of these bonds at a rate not exceding 105 per cent. Tuev are also receivable at PAR by the Company in payment of its sales of lands. e-^vill connect Southwest Paci pacir/c Kailroad paci: (its Eastern terminus) forming a direct and continu¬ At Springfield the with the the Great Atlantic Atlantic and ous Francisco. of $12,000,000 of land valued at... 10,000,000 route from St. Louis to Sau When completed, it will prepent a road 310 miles in length, costing about With 1,036,000 acres Showing a total value of $22/ 00,000 of Bonds authorized, with the guarantee as above, of $7,250,000, which may be issued at a rate not exceeding $25,000 per mile of completed work as it progresses. With a total amount dollars. If any of our shareholders have themselves 1hese taxes to the Tax Collector in the City of paid New York, they can have the same refunded by applying at of Bonds, a limited amount is now offer¬ Of tlie present Issue of $2,000,000 Bankers, No. 54 Wall Street, New York. FIRST MORT- PER CENT. GAGE BONDS! OF THE Missouri Rail¬ road Company. We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First gage Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad pany, having thirty years to ble in New York on January Mort Com mn. Coupons paya¬ 1 and July 1, in each year. • . Before accepting the agency bonds, we maae careful inquiry into the condition and prospects of the road, was 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 judicious investment. The proceeds of these bonds be used in extending a road miles into North Missouri, 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¬ for sale of these which examined by ing up the Missouri River, so that the mortgage of $5,000,000 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 $1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be yond the amount needed to pay the interest od these bonds, the income of the road of course increasing every year. The Railroad connects the great City of St. Louis with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only with the rich portions of Missouri, but with the States of Kan and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads. The first 600,000 have been sold at 80 cents,, and the remainder are now offered at 85 cents. At inis rate sas they yield nearly 8)4 per cent, income, and add 20 per cent, to principal at maturity. Any farther inquiries will be answered a on office. replied that had taken for itself and others. our total subscriptions had 20,899, 95,045, 25,016, 25,047, 25,940, 75,599,116,634, 117,827, 117,828, 117,829, 117,8:30, 117,831, 118,903, 124,719. 34,656, JAY COOKE * CO. 5-20 Bonds, $1,000 Each. Dated No¬ vember 1, 1864. Act oi' June 3o, 1864. Nos.30551, 28,870, 38,806, 38,805, 38,807, 28,867, 28,868. He also required to know what had received and disbursed for the government. Our reply was $81,452,450 21, without any charge whatever to the government. You will notice by our report that at present the amount of United States Deposits with us is only $23,774 82, and they are often much less. We draw attention to this fact to show, first, that we are not, as many suppose, using large amounts of Govern¬ and, secondly, to show you that we ready to confine our business and exertions are now to the accounts of mercantile community, and corre spoudeDce with interior Banks and Bankers. Tliis correspondence being very extensive, we have good facilities for making collections; and with our now complete and thorough organization we feel satisfied we can well serve the community, and desire to in¬ vite, and to have our stockholders invite, the ac¬ counts of the business public. We believe it to be the case that National Banks have in no instance objected to pay a full sharo of taxation, and by paying very large sums to the Federal Government they have greatly lightened the burdens of the whole people; but is it fair, or in any sense just, that Congress should compel these banke to buy United States bonds, which are in themselves exempt from taxation, and then tax the banks very heavily? as follows : For license, $2 on each $1,000 of Capital; then One-half of One Per Cent, on the Capital; One Per Ceut. on the Circulation ■ Half of One Per Cent, on Deposits; and then Five Per Cent, on Earnings; and again, by the ambiguity of ths language of the National Currency Act, the Supreme Court of the United States, by a majority of one, permits any amount of local taxation that State legislators, often hostile to Banks, may choose to put on the Government Bonds, represented by Bank shares. The whole people have a great interest in this question, as it involves the public faith and the honor of the nation; and no other nation has, under Nos.8,902, 8,906, 8,903, 8,894, 8,908, subject is it uot a dis¬ couraging fact that the public honor and faith, if not broken, nas been badly bruised ? directors. William A. Kobbe, Thomas A. Yyse, Jr., Geo. A. Wicks, Barney L. Solomon, Chas. MinzeBh3imer, J. O. Whitehouse, Joseph U. Orvis, S. C. Par^hurst, Geo. A. Fellows. JOSEPH U. John T. Hill, Cashier. ORVIS, President. Each* 8,910, 8,909, 8,911, ,901, 8,899, 8,905, 8,901, 8,900, 8,893, 8,896, 8,897, 8,895. 6,907, • 1,267,1,266,1,264,1,265,15,486,15,487, $500 each; cent. 10-40. U. S. Coupon Bonus 5 per 1st series. 36,289, 98,813, 98,814. 102,542, $1,000 each. 35,275, 35,276, -‘15,277, 35,278, 35,279, 35,280, 35,281, 35,282, $500 each. 7-30p» r cent. Ronds. 2d series. Inter¬ Nos. Nos. payable 15th of June & December. 1,782, 1,7S3, $5,000 each. 1,1273, $1,000. Registered Stock oi 1881. $10,000 each Nos. 9,662, 9,663, 9,664, acts of July 17 and August 5, est Nos. 1861. Registered Stock of 1 881, $5,000 each. Nos. 7,224, 7.278, 7,279, 7,280, 7,281, 7,282, 6,911, acts of July 17 and August 5, 1861. No. 2,618, act oi March 3,1863. Registered Stock of 18S1, $1,000 Each. Nos.~17,404, 18,333, IS,339, 18,310, 18,254, acts of July 17 and August 5, 1861. FIRST MORTGAGE RONDS OF 1 HE ST. PAUL AND PACIFIC hAlLROAD COMPANY of Minnesota. Interest at Seven per cent., semi¬ annually, first January and July, free from Gov¬ ernment Tax, in the City of New Tors. Principal payable in 1892. The road runs through one of the best portions of the State, and has been completed to St. Ciond, eighty miles, at an ex en«e of over $3,000,000. THESE BONDS ARE ONLY $10,1)00 PER MILE. Government Bonds at the highest market price will be received in payment. For particulars apply to TURNER BROTHERS, Bankers < Co»ner Nassau and Pine Sts., New York. Bankers and Brokers. J B. Chaffee, Pres. H. J. Rogers, FIRST Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. NATIONAL BANK: V. Pres. of Denver, DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE U. 8. ~ Authorized Capital- - Capital Transact a General Banking Blake and F. Sts. DENVER Faid Iu Drake - - j $500,000 $200,000 business corner of COLORADO, j Brothers, STOCK BROKERS AND taxation of its public any pretext, permitted the debt. And in this view of the' 38,804, 38,808, 6 per cent. 1881 Bonus, * 1,000 Dated June 15, 1864. A. We been ment money; North est ment loans it amount of money we particulars apply to WARD & CO., SEVEN of the Currency issued a circular asking eacn Bank to report the amouut of govern¬ $57,484,850. ed for sale. For further the Bank. The Comptroller August and February. Nos. 12,099, Nos. Making a total United States tax of. .$70,909 57 And in addition thereto, in consequence of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, just rendered, that the shares of Banks are taxable in the nands of its shareholders, whether :he Cap¬ ital is invested in the bonds of the United States or not, we have paid the state, county and city tax, which amounts to $23,000, makiDg a total for tuxes of $93,910 57, and all on a capital of one million 1st Series. $1,000 Each. Interest pay. The vacancy sold to the amount per , RESOURCES. January and July. Europe. The Royal Insurance Company will pay a REWARD OF $10,000 Capital Stork Surplus Profits Dividends Unpaid... SEPTEMBER 15, 1886, cautioned against negotiating any are pany, on Quarterly Report, is as follows : Run, public of the fo lowing Government Securities, which were stolen from the Safe of the Royal Insurance Com¬ 363 BROADWAY. Bonds of $1,000 each, Payable in the City of Neio Rankers, Brokers and Dealers in Government and otker Securities. Railroad Company, Interest at tlie rate of Caution. THE National Bank Ninth Guaranteed by the Atlantic Twenty Years to Financial. Stockholder* Report to the or Pacific Railroad Company, Principal and Interest 131 THE CHRONICLE. February 2,1867.] FIRST . : BANKERS* NO. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Se’l on Commission Government Securi¬ ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State 8tocks and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬ „ leum and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to Draft. Dividends and Inta rest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Execute / L. P. Morton & Travellers’ Credits. Co., Sight STREET, NEW YORK. Letters of Credit for Travelers1 L. P. ISSUED FOR Dabney, Morgan & Co., 53 Exchange Place. AND THK BANK OF S. G. & G. C. LONDON, Available in all the principal towns and cities of Directors. Edwin Hoyt, Joseph Sruart, John M. Fnrman, Charles L. W^ARDj For T. COMPANY, BARING BROTHERS <fc Europe and the East. 66 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, STREET, BOSTON. 28 STATE Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and duly elected: FOR AGENTS Timothy G. Churchill, Joseph B. Hoyt, Henry Swift, George Opdyke, Anthony, Philo C. Calhoun. Inspectors of Next Election. Belknap, Jr., At E. L. Bolles, Charles E. Milnob, Morton, subsequent meeting of the Board Mr. P. C was unanimously re-elected President, and Joseph Stuart, Vice-President. Calhoun B. Walter H. Burns, Drake Kleinwort&Cohen r , H. Crugeb Oakley. . LIVERPOOL. LONDON AND . The subscriber, their representative ana in the United States, is ) JAY COOKE, ( H. C. FAHNESTOCK < EDWARD DODGE, ( PITT COOKE. MOORHEAD, V ) CGOKE, WM. G. H. D Jay Cooke & Co., West them for use in China, the East and Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits of the London House issued for the same purposes. SIMON DE 62 Sts., Fifteenth Street, Philadelphia. Attorneys In connection with our houses in Philadelphia and Washington we have this day opened an office at No. Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., VISSER, Exchange Place, New York. Winslow, Lanier & Co., 27 Sc 29 Pine Street, New York* Ohio, MOBILE AND all issues; to bonds AUBER, PARIS. Highest premium allowed for Exchange on Lon¬ don. Special attention paid to securing apartments for visiting Paris, and letters of enquiry replied to by return mail. Farnham, (Late of G. S. Robbins & Son.) COMMERCIAL. PAPER, Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, avail¬ Interest Allowed on ON 54 William of Europe. able in all parts STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, &C., BOUGHT AND COMMISSION. Street, corner of Pine. Lockwood & Co., RANKERS. Deposits. No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. give particular attention to the purchase, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Of SALE, COMMISSION 14 RUE SOLD NEW ORLEANS. will be resident partners. We ehall AND ALSO, DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬ House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, BANKERS George 1 ton Co., MERCHANTS, BANKERS, Washington. New AMERICAN Americans Street, Opposite Treas. Department, ~ EXHIBITION. Norton & credits upon New York.. No. 114 South 3d ~ UNIVERSAL on BANKERS. Corner Wall and Nassau SEAMAN, Cashier. THE PARIS prepared to make advances shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile C. E. Detmold. a Sale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New York. Levi P. York, January 9, 1867. ew At the annual election for Directors of this Bank, for the ensuing year, the following gentlemen BY (68 Old Broad Street, London,) Billopp Seaman, Cash. Anthony Lane, Ass.Cash. N Co., London, were Use, on Calhoun, Prest. Stuart, V. P. Joseph Messrs. J. S. Morgan Sc MORTON, BURNS Sc CO., UNION OF THR CITY OF NEW YORK. P. C. Sixty Days; also, Circular Note* and or $5,000,000. Fourth National Bank ELLERS IN EUROPE AND THE EAST. STERLING EXCHANGE At CAPITAL. LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE USE OF TRAV¬ BANKERS, 80 BROAD Bankers and Brokers. Brokers. Bankers and and Brokers.. Bankers [February 2, 1867. CHRONICLE. THE 132 orders for purchase and sale of stocks, business of National and gold, and to all Jacquelin & De Coppet. iJtailroad JAY COOKE & CO. Banks. March 1,1866. STREET, N.Y. NO. 26 NEW Stocks, Ronds, Gold, and Government Pott, Davidson & Jones, BANKERS AND BROKERS, (Messrs Brown Bros & Co.’s new building), i>9 & 61 WA1X STREET, NEW YO UC Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Government Securities. Accounts of BOUGHT AND SOLD ON John H. Jacquelin. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. J. Van Schaick, Securities, 38 Broad COMMISSION. Henry De Coppet. AND BANKER AND Street, £ STOCK BROKER. . Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬ DEALERS its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ tions furnished to correspondents. References : James Brown, Esq., of Messrs. Brown Brothers & Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬ ident of the Chemical National Bank; Janies H. Banker, Esq., Vice-President of the Bank York N. B. A. of New _ Heath & Hughes, BANKERS, DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES AND Street, New York. Deposits received, subject to Check, and Intere allowed. T. W. B. HUGHES. Member of N.Y. Stock Ex UNDER Buy and Sell at John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN BANKERS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS - No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit lor Travelers in all parts of Europe, etc., etc. Market Rates: BANKERS Sc 28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, and Gold Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received on iavorable terms. References : J. H. Fonda, Pres. Nat. Mech. Banking Ass. N.Y. C. B. Blair, Pres’t. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. Edey & Co., Also Ccmrcexclal Credits. HAVE REMOVED No. 36 Broad DEALERS IN OTHER AND No. 32 Broad BANK, J. L. Brownell & Bro., BROKERS, Sc BANKERS STREET, U. S. 6? of 1881. U. S. 6-20 Bonds. U. S. 10-40 Bonds. U. S. 7-30 Treasury Notes. Ur S. Certificates of Indebtedness. U. S. Compound Interest Notes. And all classes of Government Securities. Barstow, Taussig, Fisher & Co., SECURITIES THE FOURTH NATIONAL BANKERS AND S. Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. GOLD, RAILROAD & MINING STOCK BROKERS A. HAWLEY HEATH. U. IN NO. 16 NASSAU Interest allowed on depos¬ ed on favorable terms. 13 Broad D. C. & R. H. Fisk, BROKERS, FROM NO. 30 TO SECURITIES. Interest allowed upon deposite of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at Sigpft. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. Street, New York. 8 ♦ Buy and Sell at Market Rates, ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from and MERCHANTS, BANKERS, on daily balances, others, and allow interest subject to Sight Draft. Make Collections on ftevorable terms, And promptly execute orders for tho Purchase or Sale of Gold, State. Federal, and Rail¬ road Securities. ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE, BANKERS, No. 14 WallvStreet, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securi¬ ties, of all issues, and execute orders for the pur chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur rency, subject to check at sight. Jackson Brothers, Street* Office No. 16. GOVERNMENT AND BROKERS, Dealers in STOCKS, BONIIS, GOLD, Sc GOVERN MENT SECURITIES- No. 19 Broad J Street, New York. - •• 3ommerna lanto’ fcctte, Commercial manqa ^ime-s, ftailwag ponitor, and fnottrancr journal. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, A representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1867- YOL. 4. sions Railroad Earnings for and the Year Review of the Month THE CHRONICLE. Debt and Finances of Indiana... Latest Monetary and Commercial Great & English News . December .. 185 135 Commercial News THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND U. S. Securities, T hk 137 138 COMMERCIAL TIMES. ... 145 —. 146 147 148 of capital annihilated by produce reaches an aggregate, the loss of which a few years ago would have appalled the most hardy of our monetary theorists, still the shock, produced comparatively slight, our financial barque soon righted surprising that although the mass the fall of stocks and was ,• illustration of the financial strength of the nation than is afforded by such incidents. They are not only full of hopes for the future, but we gather from them confidence in the present. ©l)c CtironicU. What is there in our financial system which gives it this Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning by the publishers of Ifuni1 s Merchants1 Magazine, amazing stability ? One of the causes of stability is no Railway Ne,ws Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneors 136 itself, and is now progressing to all appearance more hope¬ fully and cheerily than before she was struck by the storm. 140 Dry Goods 149 143 Imports 150 Nor is this state of things novel. In every panic and 144 J Prices Ciirreut and Tone of the | Market 157-58 monetary revulsion during the past three or four years our MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. experience has been the same. We find it impossible to Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange Commercial Epitome THE RAILWAY and Miscellaneous Cotton Tobacco Breadstuff* Groceries Money Market. Railway Stocks, suffered; except indirectly, by the convul¬ which for a time shook Wall street. It is not a little business has not CONTENTS. Lesson* fiom the Panic New Orleans, Jackson Northern Railroad NO. 84. Bond List. 151 1 Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. 154 Insurance and Mining Journal . 155 imagine a more convincing 153-53 | Advertisements .. .129-133, 156,159-60 and recuperative vitality by mail and telegraph up to midnight doubt its extreme sensitiveness. Our monetary machinery A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all is responsive to the earliest symptoms of abuse, and, when Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to hour of publication. overstrained, is quick to sound the note of alarm. Under a the with latest news of Friday. the the the provocative to speculation, overtrading and inflation of credit, have in every country $12 00 been found to be very great. Among a people so keen, others,(exclusive of postage).... Financial Chronicle, without. The Daily The Commercial Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) 10 00 quick, versatile and free as ourselves these provocatives For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financiai Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 5 Oft would be irresistible, if we were not kept in check by safe¬ ? Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. guards which we cannot long overlook without being swiftly Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It ts, on the Chroni¬ and with rude, salutary violence forced back to safe stand¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO.T Publishers, ing ground. Hence there are two peculiarities about all 60 William Street, New York. our recent panics. First, they are precipitated early. They Files for holding the Chronicle or Bulletin can be had at this Office. burst upon us before the malady in which they originate Price $1 50. has eaten deep into the vitals of our monetary organism ; and The third volume of the Chronicle, from July to December, 1866, inclu¬ secondly, they do not last long or reach far, because the evil is TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. system of paper money and Financial Chronicle, with, The Daily Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana mailed to all Commercial and sive, is for sale at this Office ; price, unbound, $6 00. LESSONS FROM THE PANIC. The worst of the financial sion in c* passing off leaves behind it a which result from so revul¬ weakness and languor panic is over, but the much overstrained excitement, destruc¬ capital and prostration of credit. When one has escaped some great peril it is an instinct of the human mind tion of to on back, that we may trace out the causes which brought the mischief, and to look forwards, that we may discover look experience is likely to repeat itself. The man who adopts this method in the present case will discover very little to justify that depression of hope and energy which has paralysed but too extensively our mercan tile and financial enterprise for some time past. For the whether our late bitter limits. In York and in our Western cities few prominent houses been seriously embarrassed, and the condition of general failures have been confined within very narrow New have dealt with in time. In strong contrast to this sensitive quality of our financial system is that of England, which has not inaptly been designated a “ cast-iron system.” On the 10th of May last the colossal monetary institutions of the British metropolis were suddenly shaken by an explosion which had for many years been secretly preparing, but which burst cut suddenly and without notice, reducing mul¬ titudes from affluence to poverty in almost every part of the British Empire. The whole mischief was the result of two simple causes, the force of which, if met in time, might have been easily dealt with. First, the banks had been borrowing sums their immense from depositors on call, and had lent these sums on doubtful securities, for terms varying from one month to twelve months, or even longer. Secondly; these banks, though doing such a dangerous business, were holding but small reserves of cash in their vaults. The notoriously bad business which the English banks were doing, and the absurdly small reserves on which they were operating, were THE CHRONICLE. 134 [February 2,1867. The rolling stock on the let December, 1865 and 1866, failure, and would have brought on that catastrophe much earlier and with less violence had compared as follows: 1865 1866 Increase, 1865 1666 Increase. the British financial system been as sensitive as our own, or Locomotives 10 21 11 age cars.... 3 6 9 the efficient causes of their .. even as Passenger that of France. Another thing which gives stability to the monetary movements of this country, and thus neutralizes some of the numerous evils of our deranged currency, is the union of all the banks, wherever situated, into one organized whole. Those who contemplate the disruption of our banking ar¬ rangements will do well to bear this fact in mind. In the union of the banks is their strength. It would be to little purpose- for our monetary system to be so sensitive to give the alarm when danger threatens if that system were not also strong enough to bear a great strain without breaking down. This quality it is impossible to deny to our banks and notwithstanding all the faults and shortcomings w7hich, with more or less of justice, are charged upon some of them, F? . cars. . 19 7 and since December 12 stock cars 72 236 164 1, 1866, there have been added—4 pas- and 30 freight (flat) cars. These figures are exclu¬ working cars. The repairs of the road and renewal of its rolling stock have been made entirely from earnings. The following statement shows the receipts and expendi¬ tures of the company on all accounts for the last year : senger sive of Keceitts. Expenditure. I $120,287 97 | Restoration of property Stock subscriptions 30,552 93 Redemptions, Interests, bills rec. for Discounts, Commiss’ns, 8,789 11 Second series Mori gage Taxes, &e., &c. $82,252 Balance, Dec. 1, 1865 k‘ 48 “ 462.212 97 142,978 25 325,! 79 04 - Bonds Cotton sold 241,000 00 28,894 79 Sundries debited Engines, cars & too.’s 39,296,49 i Road expenses .1,146,774 64 Real Estate 76,171 45 l Pay Rolls 128,722 82 U. S. due on purchases... 100,150 26 Road earnings 31,243 03 1,533,042 53 Cash on hand, Nov. 30, ’66 Foreign Road Balances these 1,600 institutions have rendered services to the Govern Total Total $2,197,440 41 $2,197,440 41 and to the public which, even did they cost the country The financial condition of the company at the close of the as much as some of their imaginative opponents affirm, w ould yeav, as per general balance sheet, is exhibited in the state¬ ment of accounts, of which the following is an abstract; perhaps be cheaply purchased. RECEIPTS. DISBURSEMENTS. In view of the importance of the stability of our financial sys¬ Capital stock $4,697,457 38 Roadway $6,184,172 12 mortgage bonds.. 2,741,000 00 Engines, cars & mach'y. 1,386,874 57 tem, and of the relations of that system to our national wealth First Bills payable 153,668 63 Discount on bonds 909,300 34 Small and material progress, Congress is evidently acting a wise and notes payable.... 127,488 20 1st mor. bond sink’g fn'd 470 00 Chicasaw school fund.. 200,000 00 Coupons on bonds...... 927,449 S3 3 per cent, lund 715,088 66 20,000 00 Interest prudent part in discouraging for the present all those schemes Miss. Second mortgage bonds 241,000 00 Expenses and commi's. 283,149 11 which, like Mr. Randall’s bill, and several other measures, pro Due road balan's&c 42,067 35 Taxes, &c., and legal ex¬ Foreign U. S. for purchases. 100,144 01 penses r. 168,574 02 26,093 22 4,552 10 Reduction of stock pose to unsettle the currency and to introduce radical changes Pay-roll account Earn'gs from com’ment. 8,256,435 97 Conied. States obligat's. 983,602 52 into our banking organizations. Sundries 157,932 95 on city & state We believe that in the well- Coupons bonds collected....... 264,480 00 Road expenses 4,777,016 61 informed circles at Washington it is regarded as certain that Sundries. 18,355 80 Current assets 316,682 41 Cash on hand Nov. 30,’66 31,243 03 no Total currency legislation whatever has the slightest probability $16,866,649 39 ment * ...... . Total of passing. This belief has contributed to promote the re covery from the late panic, and the conservative, cautious temper which has been shown at Washington on currency questions will, it is believed, be imitated by the newT Congress, w hich meets early next month. Should this expectation be realized, we shall probably have no more severe financial panics for some time to come, if, at least, our business men can be persuaded to lepress over-speculation and undue ex¬ pansions of credits. NEW ORLEANS, JACKSON AND GREAT NORTHERN RAILROAD. The expenses of the New Orleans, J ackson and Great Northern Railroad for the year ending November earnings and 30, 1866, sum up as follows: Earnings: Passenser, $426,760 49; freight, $1.090,953 02, and mails, $15,329 02. Total :... $1,533,042 53 Expenses: Maintenance of way, $510,020 35; conducting trans¬ portation, $260,473 79; motive power, $249,815 92; main¬ tenance of care, $81,247 69; stock damage. $7,628 92; repairs of depots, <fcc., $22,325 77; coBts of personal in¬ juries, $15,262 20. Total $1,146,774 64 Earnings, less The New extends from expenses of operating $386,267 89 The $16,866,649 39 following shows the disposition of the mortgage bonds, of which 3,000 of each class were authorized bondn. Sold At Jackson Central and Tennessee the railroads to it connects with the 68,000. 1,191,000 S’king fund.. Total 59,000 , $3,000,000 Mobile, the great carrier across the paralells north and south—a link in the chain which connects the region of grain to and beef with the land of cotton and the sugar cane. This road was badly damaged during the late war, and its rolling stock carried off to other roads. Since the close of hostilities, however, and especially during the past fiscal year, the work of restoration and re stocking has progressed steadi¬ ly and satisfactorily. The rotten cross-ties are said to have been removed, and the road bed made sufficiently firm and level to make travel perfectly safe, and passenger trains are $3,000,000 outstanding of the first mortgage bonds $2,941,000, and of the second $309,000. The floating debt amounted Nov. 30, to $724,390.18, accounted for as follows : Bills payable exclusive of interest' Loans from State of Miss.. Accrued int’ston do. Oct. 1 Small issues U. S. balances due Nov. 30. Of this sum count of bills $153,668 220,000 64,000 127,488 100,144 Foreign railroad balances. $28,152 22 63 Pay-rolls to Nov 1 1,692 25 00 Personal accounts, exclu¬ sive of interest 29,244 82 0Q 20 Total Dec. 1,1866....... $724,390 18 01 $28,714 61 has been paid since date on ac¬ payable and interest on the same, and the further of $268,000 is included in the mortgage debt as we have stated above. The total debt, therefore, exclusive of accrued interest, would be as follows : sum Fir?t m Second »rtgage bonds sold and pledged., do do do Total present on the 30th .... do debt The accrued interest Railroad, and through that line with Memphis, Nashville and the North generally. 1,500,666 This shows Mississippi It is to New Orleans what the Mobile and Ohio Railroad is bonds. 1241,000 200,000 Pledged to State of Mississippi Pledged as security for notes Unsold and on hand Cancelled by purenase through Cancelled ana destroyed Second mortg¬ age $2,741,000 Orleans, Jackson and Great Northern Railroad Floating debt, per report, $724,390 18, less $268,000 pledged for, and $28,000 since paid New Orleans, La., to Canton, Miss., a distance of 206 miles. : First mortgage out bonds $2,941,000 309,000 428,390 $3,678,390 the 1st mortgage bonds amountedt November, to $1,017,160. This amount is in on of being funded in the second series of mortgage and at date $100,000 of first mortgage coupons had jeen funded in New Orleans, and the signatures of bondholders to the amount of over $460,000 more had been obtained for unding in London. In relation to this funding process the President of the Company, Gen. G. T. Beauregard, remarks as process louds ; bllows^: During the month of May last the President and two of the directors of the road were appointed commissioners to confer with the Northern and European first mortgage bondholders, relative to the outstanding coupons and interest due them, and wtqch the company wjb unable to meet, owing to the troubles which prevailed in this country, and which eft the road in a most dilapidated condition. The commissioners re- laired immediately via New York and Liverpool to London, where running the distance between New Orleans and Canton in they met and conferred with some of the most prominent bondholders, who received them with great kindness and liberality, and entered into. 13J hours. February 2, THE CHRONICLE. 1867.] of the other held by including the coupons due 1st July last, and to receive in lieu thereof the second mortgage bonds of the company at par. In case of failure the part of the company to meet their new obligations in the payment of interest on the second mortgage bonds thu9 issued, or on the first mortgage bonds (commencing with the coupons due 1st Janu¬ ary 1867,) the bondholders to jeclaim their first mortgage coupons and surrender the second mortgage bonds which were issued for them, thus placing them in their original position with their first mortgage lien on the road.” The holders of our bonds in the United States are also com¬ ing under this arrangement, and we have already funded 2,500 coupons, $100,000 in this city (to 1st Dec.) aud the trustees in London hare obtained the signatures of the bondholders in that city to the extent of 11,601 coupons,or $460,000—the total amount being about 60 percent, following agreement to be submitted to the acceptance bondholders: “ To deposit with trustees the matured coupons them of the first mortgage bonds ot the company, tbe on or opening of the year cannot be said to have been auspi¬ cious. Monetary affairs during the past month have worn a very unsettled aspect, aDd business generally has been unsatis¬ factory. The tendency of Congressional legislation has been of a nature not to inspire confidence. Measures have been under discussion relative to radical changes in the currency, to an increase in the duties upon imports, to the privileges of the National Banks, to reconstruction, aud to the impeach¬ ment of the President; aud the natural consequence of so The DECEMBER AND THE YEAR. the public questions being crowded upon many important mind has been a shown RAILROAD EARNINGS FOR MONTH. REVIEW OF THE outstanding. of the entire amouut 185 wide disturbance of values. The banks have unusual caution. There has been a general revision of loans, borrowers being called upon to and the weaker class of collaterals keep up their margins, This being discarded. railroads for the month process proved to be a stronger test of the condition of the comparatively, and the differ¬ stock market than it could sustain ; and securities have conse¬ ence (increase or decrease) between two periods, are exhi¬ quently been thrown upon the market in large amounts, caus¬ bited in the following statement: ing heavy losses and several failures among the younger Difference* 1S66. 1805. Railroads. Dec. $107,142 stock firms. The average decline in the prices of railroad $368,581 $475,723 Atlantic & Great Western 48,5-9 Inc. 285,413 236,824 13,3 4 Inc. Chicago and Alton shares during^ the month has been 7A@10 per cent. 102,958 United S9,564 82,443 Inc. Chicago and Great Eastern 698,679 616,236 719 Chicago and Northwestern Inc. States securities, however, have stood with remarkable steadi¬ 232,450 231,731 Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Erie (including Buffalo Division, but Dec. 480,883 The more confidence has been shaken in other securi¬ 1,044,033 1,524,916 notiu 18fi6, inch Can.& E mira RR) 11,912 Inc. 53f,C00 518.088 5.893 Illinois Central Dec. ties, the more lenders appear to have sought safety in Na¬ 111,665 105,767 Marietta and Cincinnati 220 Dec. 308,649 328.869 17,465 tional bonds, and, as will be seen from tbe subjoined compar¬ Michigan Central Dec. 339,447 356,912 11.277 Michigan Sonthern 98,787 110,064 MilwauKce & Prairie dn Chien 42,384 ison, the course of prices has been upward, except on Seven128,741 171,125 Milwaukee and St. Paul earnings of the specified The gross and 1866 of December 1865 * • ness. 20 Dec. Dec. Ohio and Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago... Toledo, Wabash and Western Total (16 268,261 284,319 580,963 247,023 Mississippi 550.483 264,741 $5,332,890 $5,878,124 roads) Dec. Dec. Inc. 16,058 30,480 17,718 Dec. $545,234 exception of the Illinois Central and the Ohio & Mississippi, the above figures are official; for the two ex¬ cepted roads the earnings for 1866, are only approximate, but based on semi-official information. The results for 1866 Ten-forties. total number of shares sold in the thirties and The month of January, comparatively, is shown in the following and 1867, 1866 sta ement: With At “ board. Both boa’ds regular board. At open 1,658,325 2,423,684 :. 1,152,9*7 1,306,900 2,459,817 Government bonds and notes, State and 765,359 January, 1867 [1866 of The amount 1866 and city bonds, and company bonds sold in January, compared with 1865 show an aggregate‘decrease to an 1867, compares as follows : State and Company Total unusual amount, and compared with the figures for Novem¬ Governments. Bonds. No*es. city bonds, bonds. , amount. ber as follows: January, 1S67 $6,863,300 $1,988,200 $2,524,800 $732,500 $12,108,800 as , , Ncwember December Decrease . 1865. 1866. $7,541,521 5,8*8,124 $7,330.06S 5,332,890 $1,663,397 $1,997,178 Difference. $211,453 545,284 $333,731 Decrease.... Decrease.... Decrease.... larger than was anticipated, and can only be to the usual dulness that characterized the business This decrease is attributed throughout the last month of the year. The gross earnings of the same railroads for the twelve months ending Dec. 31, 18G6, are shown in the following- of the country table : Illinois Central.. Marietta & Cincinnati . Milwaukee & Prairie du Milwaukee and St. Panl Ohio and Mississippi Chien..... Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Toledo. Wabash and Western Union*.. Total Here also is Chicago. Western*. (16 roads) f an 3,677,795 1,289,710 3,840,091 3,103,876 7,960,981 Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific* Erie (incl. Buffalo Division, but not since Oct. 4, Can. & Elmira RR). Michigan Central Michigan Southern $5,548,359 $5,476,276 Chicago & Alton Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago jfc Northwestern* .. 14,586.943 16,501.063 7,1S1,208 1,222,017 4,501,546 4,826,722 1,985,712 2,535,001 3,793.005 8,489,062 2,926,678 689,383 6,430,195 1,186,808 4,260,125 $76,349,135 $74,077,621 Day of month. 4.643,422 2,012,700 2,544,010 3,367,228 7,454,006 3,694,975 814.036 Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Inc. Inc. Dec. Dec. Inc. Inc. 4... Saturday 5. Sunday 6... 7... 8... 9... Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1,914,120 751,013 35,209 244,421 183.300 26.9S8 8,999 425,777 1,035,056 768,397 124,653 Dec. i$2,270,514 Sunday Monday that will sur¬ . Saiurday Sunday Monday • 105 . . 99* 99* 106* .... 107# 107# 108# i09* ..... 108 10... 11... .... i07* 107* 108* 12... 108# 108# . First Lowest.... Latest • • • • • 108 • 105 100 .... 194# .... 10 # .... 1"4# .... 104 .... 104# .... ... • • 99# ' 99# 99* 99* ..... • • .... 104* 104* .... • • • • 104* .... .... 108 . .... ..... . 108 108 107* 24... 25... 108 108 107* 107# .... 105# . ••• 107 107# 100 99* 99* 99# 99* 99# .... 27... 2S... 29... . 31... 104* .... 99# .... 104# 104 99# 26... Monday Tuesday Wednesday 30. Thursday • . .. Tuesday Wednesday 23... Saturday Sunday 108 108 108 • 99* 99* 107# 107# 107* 107# 108* 107* • • • . . 17... 18... 19 20. 21... 22... Fridav .... • 13... 14... Thursday 106* 107* . - 99* 107 105 105 .... 100 100 107# 105* .... 105* 107* 108* .. Friday • ..... 15 Tuesday Wednesday 16... Thursday Day • 106# 197* 108# 108* . Highest... unlooked-for result, and one (New Year’s 1... Tuesday Wednesday 2... 3... Thursday Frida v 12,155,700 3,085,500 1867. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, JANUARY, 7-30’s 6’s, 5-20 yrs.-^ /—5’s, 10-40 vtb.—, ^--6*8, 1831.-—. 1867. Reg. Coup. Reg. Coup. Reg. Coup. Holiday.) * . 9,088,994 3,478,325 3,313,514 952,900 3,340,100 4,827,200 1866 PRICES OF Difference* Inc. $72,083 Dec. 102,296 Inc. 1S5.834 Inc. 1,123,013 Inc. 164,811 1866. 1865. Railroads. Atlantic & Great Western “ .... 99# 107* 107# 107* 107# 107* 107# 107* 107* 106* , 106* 108* 106# 107# * • 107* 107# 106* 105* 105* 108# 108* 107# 107* 108 106* 107* • • . .... .... 99# 99# .... .... 99* 100 105# 99# 107* 99* 104* . « 100 100 99 99* 104* 105 105* 104 104* The quotations for Three-years’ Compound Interest Notes observer. The decrease from 1865, certainly had a considerable amount of govern¬ on each Thursday of the month have been as shown in the ment or military business, is only $2,270,514, or 3 per cent. following statement: Jan. 81. Jan. 24. Jan. 17. 110*@tl7# But it must be kept in mind that several of the above named of— Jan. 3. Jan. 10. U6%@116* 116*@117 Juue,1864. 116#@116# 116#@116* 116#@H6* 116#@116# 116#@116% roads (those marked thus *) have operated an increased mileage July, 1864. 115*@U6 116*@116* 115#@115%. 115*@U6 115%@116# 114*@U5# Aug. 1864. 115#@115# 115*@115* 114*@115 prise the most accurate which year Issue in 1865 has -,1866. through this increase much of the military traffic of been counterbalanced in the aggregate of the year 1866, and On the whole, we may say that the railroad interest generally lias not been unprosperous, and the business done on railroads, being a reflex of the business of the country^ jdje .returns above given &re7 to say the least, satisfactory. Oct. 1864. Dec. 1864. May, 1865. 114%@114* 114%@114^ 113#@113* 113#@113* 111 *@111% 114#@114# 113*@113# in#@lll# 111#@111# Aug.,1865. 110#@110# Sept,,1865. 109#@110 Oct., 1865. 109*@10»* The first series the 110#@110# 110#@110# 110 @110)4 113#@114 111 #@1U% 110#@110*, 11©*@110* 110 @110* 110*@110# 109#@119% 110 @110* of figures represents the selling prioe at tjie 113% @114# 111#@111* 110#@110* 110%@,110% 110*@110# buying, and the las firstrclass brokers’ office^. 136 THE CHRONICLE. The price of Five-twenties in London has been, upon the whole, sustained, notwithstanding the unfavorable effect which at first resulted from the introduction into Congress of meas¬ ures looking to the impeachment of the President; and at the close of the month prices show unusual strength. COURSE or CONSOLS AND AMERICAN SECURITIES AT [February 2,1807. COMPARATIVE MOVEMENT IN 5167)$*@5 Jan. California. For. Ports. 1867-... $2,472,895 $146,000 1866.... 1,486,314 72,771 1865.... 2,043,457 62,268 1864.... 939,201 141,790 1863.... 2,337,682 101,906 1862.... 2,199,533 163,658 If61.... 4,185,105 7,262,229 I860.... 3,643,844 228,050 1859 2,587,013 71,308 1858.... 3,173,219 309,572 1857.... 2,730,007 886,509 LONDON-JANUARY, 1867- ... Cons Am. securities for U. S. m.c. I Erie mon. 5-20s sh’s. shs. Date. Tuesday Wednesday. 90* ... . . 72* 80* 73 Friday Saturday... 46* 90* 90* 73* 73* 90* 73 81* 45* 90* 73 82 46 91 72* 91 91 91 91 81* 45* (Friday 72*i 72* 72* 72* 81 80* 80* 45 . . Sunday.. Monday.... .. Tuesday.... Wednesday . . . Wednesday.. . Thursday Friday Saturday.... .12 .13 Sunday .14 91 Monday Tuesday .15 91* Wednesday. .16 90* ... 80* Thursday... 17 90* Saturday .. .. 44* Sunday 43* Monday.... 43* Tuesday.... 81* 44* 44* Highest 81* 44 Lowest ..18 90* .19 90* ..20 .21 90* .22 90* .23 90)$ ..24 90* .25 9u* .26 91 .27 .28 91 .29 90* .30 90* .31 90 .. U.S. Ill.C. 1 Erie £-208 sh’s. jsh's. 72* 72* 81* 81* 72* 72* 72* 72* 80* 43 81 43* 43* 43* 81* 43 73 hi” 42 73* 82 40* 81* 81* 39 72* • 91% • 73* 72* 90 ... London. cents ^9% 1.. 2.. 3.. — 46* 39 4.. 5.. 109*@109)$ 109)4@109), 109)% @109)$ 109*@109* 516* @515 517*@515 518*@515 516*@515 109*@109% 516*@515 17.. 18.. 19.. 20 21.. governments heavy amounts 5@6 per cent. Discounting has been 22?. 23.. 24.. but at the close of the month a healthier prevailed with respect to commercial paper, transactions being larger and at easier rates. The month opened with considerable speculative activity in the gold market; but the subsequent excitement in stock 28.. 29.. 30.. 31.. on placed-at severely checked by the prevailing mistrust, and by the high rates on . tone diverted attention from the on the last gold room, and days of the month was there any disposition apparent to renew speculation upon an extensive scale. The large supply paid out by the Treasury upon January coupons has kept the market abundantly stocked with gold, and pre¬ vented any vigorous combinations for forcing up the premium. The price opened at advanced to 132J, 137J at the middle o the month, and subsequently fell to 134closing at 135f. Date. | Tuesday 1 Wednesday... 2 Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 3 .... 4 5 6 Openi’g Lowest. 7 134* 8 134* Wednesday... 9 134* Thursday 10 133* It 132% Friday Saturday 12 134 14 15 .16 17 18 W) 3 be Closing. Date. 8. o J 136* 135* 134* 134* 133* 134* tfi a 136* 136* 135* 134* 134* 134* .2 *00 Jan.. 135 134* 135* 135* Wednesday.. 135* 135* 136% 135% Thursday 137 135* 135* 137 Friday. 137* 136)$ 137%! 136% Saturday 191 136* 13o* 136%, 136* o 136* 135* 134* 134* j 134) .1867.... 132)$ 132* 137* 135* 1866.... 1443$ 136* 144* 139* 1665.... 228* 197* 234* 210* 1864.... 151* 151* 159* 157 1863 133* j 133* j 160* 160* 1862.... 100 1100 |103* 103* ... The amount of treasure received at this port and foreign ports, and the amount from California exported therefrom to for¬ eign countries during the month of January, 1867, was as fol¬ lows: January, 1867. ! foreign ports (estimate) Total receipts from California and foreign ports Treasure exported to foreign ports Excess of exports over imports 146,000 131,105 / returns of the ten $2,472,895 $2,618,895 2,750,000 (approximate) Compared with the following results; • • . . 1,262,820 . 2,808,570 Bremen. Hamburg. cents for Berlin, cents for M. banco. rix daler. cents for thaler. 36*@26% 36*@36% 36%@36% 36%@36% 72 @72* 72* @72* 72*@72* 72*@72* 36*@36* T2*@72* 36*@36* 72* @72* 36*@86* 72*@72* 36*@36* 72*@72* 36* @36* 72*@72% 36*@36* 72*@72* 41*@41* 41 *@41* 41*@41* 41*@41* 516*@516* 108%@109% 620 520 @516* 41*@41% @515 41 *@41* 41 *@41* 78*@79 79*@79* 79 79 @79* 79 36*@36* 72*@72* 36*@86* 72*@72* ©79* 36*@36* 36*@36* 36*@36* 36*@36* 72*@72* 72 *@72* 72*@72* 72*@72* 79 36*@36* 36 *'@36* 36* @36* 36*@36* 72*@72* 72 @72* 72 @72* 72*@72* @79* 79*@79* 41* @41* Jan. 108*@109* 520 @513* 41 *@41% 78*@79* 36*@36* 72 @72* Year. 545 @507* 39 @42* 75 34*@37* 68 @75* London has been as 108*@109 108* @109 520 108 *@108* 105*@110 sight on Days. @80* follows Days. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 @ 109*@U0* 110 @1:0* 110*@:10* 110*@110* v @ .... 110 110 110 @110* @110* @110* 110*@110* 11.... 12.... 13.... 14.... 15.... 16. : Days. ... .. 17... 18... 19.... 20.... 110*@110* 110*@U0)$ 21 22 110 ,110 @ 23 110 110*@110* 110*@110* 110*@110)$ 110*@110* 110*@il0* 110 @110* @ 24 25 26 110 110 27 28... 29 @110* @110* @110* @110* @110* 109%@110* @ 109*@110 .... 109*@109% 109*@109* 109*@109* 30...' 31 The funded debt of the State of Indiana ber, 1865 and 1866, compared as follows previous years the on 1866. $1,191,092 3,829,936 309,000 66,585 $8,857,425 $5,396,613 Vincennes University bonds.. j The whole amount of the Decrease. $2,076,460 5,342,500 1,371,780 66,685 . Total the 1st Novem¬ : 1865. Two and a-half per cent, stock. Five per cent, stock. War loan six per cent, bonds and 5 per cents $885,368 *1,512,564 1,062,780 100 . $8,460^812 became re¬ deemable in 1866, and will be paid by The valuation of real and personal tion in 1865 and 1866, compared 1865. as the sinking fund. property subject to taxa¬ follows : ‘ 1866. Acres of land $22,186,088 22,380,504 Value of land $247,686,046 $257,746,560 Inc.. 60,758,441 29,388,021 Inc.. “ “ of improvem’ts thereon. of town lots of improveme’ts thereon Total real estate 60,309 071 28,319.072 30,209,7-50 33,993,888 Personal property $366,523,919 197,067,330 $381,886,910 Aggregate $563,591,258 $576,701,393 —which the Board of Treasure received at New York from California do do“ do • . @515 518*@517* “ Movement of Treasure at New York, i . (60 DAY8>—JANUARY 41 *@41* 41 *@41* O Friday 134* 133* 135* 133* Saturday 134* 134 134% 134* Sunday ..27 133* 134* 133% Monday. ...28 134)$ 134* 134* 134* 133 132% 133* 134 >8 134* 134% 134* 134 132* 134 134* 136* 135 134 134 133* Thursday.... 31 134* 135*1135* 184* 134* 134% 1:34% 4,745.611 1,307,946 , @79* 78*@79* 78%@79* 79 @79* <So JS o 156)$ 136)$ 135* 134)$ 25 133)$ 26 134* 11,388,440 3,018,332 352,633 DEBT AND FINANCES OF INDIANA. r2 (Holi day.) 20 Sunday 132* 132* 1183 132* Monday 21 132* 132* 134 134 Tuesday 22 134 133* |134* 134 Wednesday,. 23 133* 133* 134* 134* Thursday 24 Monday Tuesday Monday Tuesday 00 296,083 58,894 109*@109% 516*@513* 41 *@41* 79*@79* 41 *@41* 79 *@79* 109*@109* 516*@515 109*@109* 516*@513* 41 *@41* 78%©79* 109*@109* 516%@513* 41 *@41* 78 *@79* 109*@109% 516*@513* 41*@41* 73%@79* 109*@109* 518%@516% 41 *@41* 78*@79 COURSE OF GOLD AT NEW YORK, JANUARY. -t-2 • •»» 853,662 2,305,688 2,668,821 3,482,791 3,616,516 Exports. $131,105 1,148,249 1,089,128 4,378,088 2,184,986 36*@36% 72*@72* 36*@36* T2%@72* 36*@36* 72*@72* 36%@36* 72*@72* 36* @36* 72*@72% 36% @36* 72*@72* Short only two "h 11,447,334 3,871,894 109 *@109* 518%@516* 41*@41* 109*@109* 516*@515 41)$@41* 109 @109* 520 @516* 41 *@41* 109 @109* 520 @516* 41 *@41* 109*@109* 516*@515 41*@41% 109*@109* 518*@516* 41 *@41* 25 26.. 27 call loans ; movements 1,080,991 2,439,588 2,363,191 Imports. 79 @79% 78*@79* 78*@79 78*@79 79*@79* 79*@79% 109 *@109)$ 15.. 16.. currency to those points. While the gen eral rate*on call loans has been 7 per cent., yet tiie prevailing lack of confidence has caused money to be offered to the best have been @109* 109)$ @109)$ 109*@109% 109*@109% 7.. 12_ 13.. 14.. able remittances of and $2,750,000 2,706,3:36 3,184,863 0,469,079 4,624,574 2,658,274 (New Year’8 Day—Holiday.) 517*@514% 41*@41* 78*©79 @515 41%@41* 79 @79* 413* @41)$ 78*@79 517)$ @515 41%@41* 78)$@79 109 8. 9.. 10.. 11.- cotton from New Orleans and Mobile have called fur consider easy terms, for 6.. market has shown a very decided stringency throughout the month. In all parts of the country there have been complaints of a scarcity of money, and balances held at this centre have been naturally drawn down. The exports of on $2,618,895 1,558,087 2,095,725 Paris. Amsterdam. centimes cents for for dollar. florin. Davs. 54 pence. The money borrowers For. Ports. COURSE OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE 82* so* Excess of Exports to Total. foreign exchange market has been high and firm, but suddenly and weakened. This latter movement is due to the large shipments of cotton and govern¬ ment bonds which were made in the early part of the month. The following table shows the daily range for first-class bills: .... 73 AND THE TEN PREVIOUS TEARS. towards the close fell 80* 43* - _• The 43* 44* 81 81 72* 72* .... .... 81* 81* . 72* 72* 72* 72* (Thursday Wednesday 45* Thursday . for l mon. 82* 82* 46* 82* 46% . Thursday Friday...... Saturday.... Sunday Monday Tnesday 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 .10 . |Cons Am. securities. Date. 1867 Receipts from . Aggregate This shows ...» 194,416 $10,060,614 Inc.. Inc.. 449,370 1,068,949 3,784,158 Inc.. Dec. $15,362,991 2,252,856 Inc.. $13,110,135 Equalization revised and alloted, thus Lands and improvements Town lots and improvements.. Personal property Nnmoer of polls 194,814,483 Inc. : $311,133,724 62,257,337 197,067,339 $323,304,658 66,488,688 194,814,483 Inc.. $12,170,934 Inc.. 4,231,351 Dec. 2,252,866 $570,458,400 $584,607,829 Inc.. $14,149,429 Inc.. 30,607 198,271 228,878 increase for the year 1860^ of $14,149,429 in the valuation qf taxable property, and 30,607 in the number of polls. The debt divided among the polls registered in 1865 was an $44 67 per poll; divided among the poljs of I860, it was #23 58 per poll—being a proportionate reduction of the State debt to nearly one-half its amount. Compared with the tax able value of property, the debt of 1865 was 1.55 per cent.; but the debt from this of 1866 annexed table: $1,602,667 80 I Township tax : 1,030,063 26 j Special school tax 1,118,600 56 | Township library Sinking fund tax $290,690 25 9»‘2.877 28 44,492 154,480 874,167 275,647 tax.. $3,751,321 62 Bounty.tax 3,214,729 33 | Other local taxes Koad tax.. 562,702 50 I T’l, township & other $2,542,355 Total County tax $3,777,431 84 | $10,187,432 Aggregate amount of tax levy, 1866 Delinquencies for 1865 and previous years 1,389,786 Total State tax County tax proper ... Aggregate taxes collectable in 1866 79 00 30 41 03 G4 05 $11,574,218 69 The levy for 1866 was at the rate of $44 50 to each tax¬ poll, and at the rate of $17 42 to each $1,000 of taxable Of this valuation. estimate, the distribution to the State, the counties, and the townships and localities was as follows : Tax to each Poll Tax to $1000 valuation State. Counties. $16 39 6 42 $16 o0 $1161 $44 50 6 46 4 54 17 42 Townships. (fnglisl) Ntuis. RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND AT LATEST DATES. was improved, and that if the same rate of taxation and disburse¬ ment be kept up for a few years longer, the whole debt will be erased from the State ledger. The levy for taxes for the year 1866'was as exhibited in the able Catcst Itlonetarn anlr (ffomtmrtial only 0.92 per cent. It is evident showing that the financial condition of the State has State tax proper School tax 131 THE CHRONICLE February 2, 1867.] EXCHANGE AT LONDON— ON LONDON EXCHANGE ON LONDON. JAN. 16. LATE9T ON— TIME. Amsterdam Antwerp. Hamburg . . ... RATE. short. 11 15J*@11.163* 3 months. 25.37 3* @25.423* 13. S>4(^13. 8% 41 25.32 X @25.373* Paris Paris short. Vienna 3 months. Berlin St. Petersburg 44 Cadia Lisbon 90 da vs Milan 3 months. »4 Genoa Naples New York.... Jamaica Havana Rio do Janeiro Buenos Ayres. Jan. 16. short. 44 4 4 44 44 *4 44 44 Jan. 15. Jan. 6. 27.0 27.0 27.0 — — — — — — — 11.773*® — 25.15 @25.173* 13.63*® 25.00 82 3 mo’s. 30 - 25.153* days. @ - 633* @27.10 @27.10 @27.10 — — RATE. 3 mo’a. 4s>, @ 48% 51%@ 51 ?a — Pernambuco.. — Jan. 15. 00 days. 1093 a * Dec. 10. 99 days. 2 p. c. prem. Dec. 15. 60 clays. 20@23 Dec. 9. 24 @24 V 44 Nov. 27. 493*@49% 44 Nov. 18. 46 @46.3* 44 Dec. 16. 243* @24% Dec. 6. 6 mo’s. 4s. 634— 44 Dec. 15. 4s. 63*>d.@— 44 Dec. 14. 2%@3 p. c. prem 44 dan. 4. is. 11 %d. 44 Jan. 12. Is. 113*ci. 44 -Ian. 3. 2s. 0d. Nov. 24. 30 days. 13* p. c. prem. , 60 4s. 5%</. 4s. 5 1 p. c. dis. days. 4 Hong Kong. Ceylou ;. Bombay 4 44 44 Madras 44 Calcutta 44 Sydney @25.20 TIME. 13.45 @13.55 6.24 V@ 0.253* 3031 % — Valparaiso.... Singapore 25.10 DATE. 30 days. lslO?ri(/@ — isio%^@ — Is 1034 g@ — 1 p. c. dis. Total- These results ought to be extremely gratifying to taxpayers The taxation' in New York city is at least four [From our own Correspondent.! London, Wednesday, Jan. 16,1867. The anticipated reduction in the official minimum to three per cent, to¬ is not likely to take place. 1 advised you in my letter last week times these rates, and in New York state, taken as a whole, that the rate of exchange between Londou and Paris had fallen to a times. And three yet while in Indiana the debt is being point at which retinable gold could be sent to France by way of re¬ rapidly reduced, New York, on the contrary, appears to be mittance at a profit as compared with bills. During the la6t few days bills on Paris have been in active demand, and the quotations have seeking every means to increase its debt-burden. beeu adverse to this country, though not to any important extent. To¬ The receipts for the fiscal year euding November 1, 1866, day telegrams were received from Paris quoting she rt exchange on including balance from 1865, was $4,043,086 57. The pay¬ London at ‘25.12£, and orders were transmitted for the purchase of ments (warrants drawn) in the same year amounted to $3,661,- gold to be sent forward. With that object £50,000 iu bar gold was 564 68—leaving an undisbursed remainder of $381,528 89. withdrawn from the bank, and it is said that about £100,000 will be But at the close of the year the Treasury was indebted to the taken out to morrow, unless the exchange should become more favor¬ able to this country, or orders be forwarded delaying or withholding several Trust Funds managed by the State in the sum ot further operations. It is still maintained that these transactions are in #493,182 72.. which eats up this balance and calls for $111,- connection with the foreign loans recently negotiated on the continent 660 83 in addition. This last amount may be correctly but as some of these have proved a failure, while others have, for the styled the floating debt of the State, and as such will proba¬ present, been abandoned, the withdrawals of gold from this conntry are likely to cease, if not immediately, at least in the course of a short bly be satisfied as a current account. period. The loan for Spain which, it was said, had been arranged by The receipts and disbursements are classified in sufficient of Indiana. detail in the statement taken from the for the year several eminent French Report of the Auditor 1865-66, which follows: RECEIPTS. DISBURSEMENTS. Revenue Common School Soldiers’ families relief. Miscellaneous $1,764,653 59 1,114,345 02 82,428 33 455.395 74 Ordinary expeuses Office expenses Public institutions Military expenses College fund $242,281 71 27.100 86 426,359 44 306,394 01 24,217 08 1,164,114 27 423,009 42 Total, ex sinking fund. $3,416,822 68 Sinking fund 540,212 55 Commom School fund.. Aggregate receipts.... $3,957,035 23 86,051 34 Total, ex public debt.. Public indebtedness.... Aggregate resources Aggregate disbursem’ts. $3,661,564 68 Add balance from 1865.. . $4,043,086 57 Miscellaneous $2,613,476 79 1,048,087 89 —leaving a balance, as before stated, of $381,528 89. In the above account the general receipts and expenses of sinking fund is to exhibit more definitely what the cessation of taxation and expenditures on the latter accounts will effect for the people. It will be seen that the payments interest of and principal have amount¬ the government are separated from those of the and public debt. The object of this separation ed to two-fifths of the whole disbursements. There are other expenses, as the “ Military,” which must now be approaching extinction. The extinction of these will probably abate taxa¬ tion at least a million a about $3,000,000, or to State. If the the county and and limit the annual levy to about $2 for each inhabitant of the year, township, etc., accounts were admin¬ those of the State, the probability is that the local rates would be largely reduced. At istered with the same wise economy as present most of the counties and cities disproportionate debts, which have been in aid of railroad and neither dividends nor are encumbered with contracted principally other-companies, which frequently pay interest. morrow market bankers, and which was introduced on the Paris Saturd -y aud Monday last, has proved a That such has been the case is by no means a matter decided failure of surprise, for Spain has, for a long peiiod, shown decided want of faith with regard to her foreign creditors, while the state of that country affords no rea¬ son that she is likely to be in a position to render her creditors their due. With regard to the Egyptian loan, it is said that the Viceroy was willing to pay \ per cent., and offer 7 per cent, interest per aanum for one of eight millions ; but it appears he was unable to find parties willing to negotiate at that price in this country, and the mat¬ ter has therefore dropped for the present; A Chilian loan, and one for the Danubian Principalities, are also meditated: bat at present nothing certain can be stated. Money here is very abundant, and that is a leading cause why- a decline in the official price of money is anticipated. There is also but little, de¬ mand, and the present inactive and contracted state of trade undoubtedly justifies the assertion that the inquiry, in a commer¬ cial point of view, is not likely to increase for a considerable length of time. But notwithstanding the abundance of, and limited demand for money, there can be no doubt that the Bank directors will, with their usual custom, maintain the present minimum of three-and-a-half per cent, so long as the present disturbing influences, slight though they appear, affect the market. The rates of discount are now at so very moderate a point that a maintenance of the existing minimum, or a withdrawal of about £500,000 for Paris can scarcely have any injurious effect; the principal influence being iu the market for national secu¬ rities, in which, owing to the high prices now current, there is much sensitiveness, a decline being produced by the slightest improbable on rumor. During the present week there has been a fair demand for discount, activity or pressure bemg apparent in any quarter. There is an ample supply seeking employment in the discount market, and the rates out of doors are fully one-quarter per cent, beneath the official quotations. Occasionally the best bills have been taken kas low as 2£ no but the nexed [February 2. 1867. THE CHBDNICLE. 133 general quotations have been 3 and 3$ per cent. An¬ the rates for the best paper, having various dates to run : are Per Cent Per Cent. 3 months’ bills 4 & 6 mouths’ trade bills.... 4 & 6 months’ bank bills.... ©3* Bank minimum Open market rates : days’ bills 3 ©3# On the Continent the rates remain 30 to 60 ©8# 3 3# ©4 ©3# 3 At Hamburg the mar¬ stationary. (Jan. 31) United States 6’s, 1862, were quoted at 76| slight failing off in both cases from the highest At Frankfort more and at Paris at 72|, a closing prices of the week. The cotton market at Liverpool, owing to the depressed condition of the Manchester trade and large receipts, has been unsettled, and closed Thursday evening at 14f, being a decline of $d. on the week from 43,000 to 45,000, being near the average In ot'ner quarters the quotations have not materially varied from the close of last weekly amount for the two previous weeks. week. Annexed are the rates at the leading cities : Breadetuffs at Liverpool have been dull and declining all week. Corn Bank Open Pank Open (Western mixed) has lost 2s. per quarter since the 24th, and closed on market. rate, market, rate. c. $ c. the 31st at 4C(a)40$3. per quarter. .Wheat was quoted on the 22th at At Paris 3 2# Turin 6 — * ket is very easy, the lowest quotations being 2$ per cent. on The sales amounted c. c Vienna Berlin flat 3# adv “ 3# 13$@i3$s. per cental. 2% 3 Brussels 4 4 4 Liverpool provisions market h \9 been somewhat irregular, but Bacon advauced la. ou the 25th, but 4 4 Amsterdam 7 on the Slat closed at previous rates. Lard (29th) was firmer at 63s. With the exception of to day’s operations, the bullion transactions at per cwt. The latest report quotes the market steady. the Bank of England this week have been unimportant. Although American turpentine is 6d. dearer, and closed (28th) at 38s. per cwt two vessels have arrived from Australia with about £150,000 in gold^ Pennsylvania refined petroleum has advanced from 18d. to 19d. per no bar gold has been taken to the establishment, the above supplies gallon of 8 pounds. Wilmington rosin (30th) was quoted at 9s. 6d. per haviug been purchased for France, dhe only operations recorded are cwt., being 6d. lower. the withdrawal of £14,000 in sovereigns for Alexandria, and of £50,000 Manchester goods are held at an advance ou the lowest, but the mar¬ in bar gold for France. Unless coin has returned from the provinces ket remains dull and quiet. during the week, it seems probable that the supply of bullion at the lank this evening is somewhat less than on Weonesday last. The supply of silver here is small, and there is a demand for ship, COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. ment to Holland. The market, therefore, is firm, and 60$ i9 readily Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week show Dollars are worth 4s. ll$d, per ounce. obtainable for fine bars. ** 0 Madrid 4# adv 3# 3% Frankfo<t Hamburg fet. Petersburg • Consols have far fiom maintained the recent — duriug the present week, a steady decline having taken highest and lowest prices this week are subjoined : Three week United Stales 6-20 bonds' were the commencement of the At 90,#©91 # 90# ©91 90#@91 Consols for money. somewhat affected placeWed. Tues. Mon. days ending January 16. 'ihe — 2# 8©9 improvement in their value The — by the American news respecting the President and considerable firmness. with an increase, in dry goods and a 18574.u; large decrease in geueral merchandise, the only $3,663,970 against $4,229,355, last week, and 7,062,192 the previous week. The exports are $3,210,976 this week, against 2,724,291 last week, and$4,266,6o8 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 11,706 bales, against 7,968bales last week The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) Jan. 25, and for me week ending (for general merchandise) total being , Jan. 26 : Congress, inasmuch as the public showed an indisposition to operate' in these securities. There has not, however, been additional depression NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1866. 1865. FOREIGN IMPORTS AT 1864. Drygoods 1867. $496,109 1,597,296 $2,588,318 2,041,310 $2,520,061 $14,900,512 $17,405,006 $13,908,549 $1,650,631 .... 1,143,909 quotations, the fluctuations having been trifling. '1 o-day the. General merchandise... 3,598,#25 market is quiet, but with a tolerably steady tone. Erie Railway shares Total for the week.. $3,668,970 $4,629,628 $2,093 405 $5,248,656 11,291,547 13,317,871 4,699,336 14,181,658 and Illinois Centrals have been dealt in to a very moderate extent, and Previously reported but little change has taken place in the quotations. United States 5-20 Since Jan. 1 $14,955,517 $17,947,499 $6,792,741 $19,480,314 bonds close this evening at 72$ to 72$, Atlantic and Gieat Western In our report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry Railway debentures 51 to 52, do. consolidated mortgage bonds 38$ to goods for one week later. , < . • 38$, Erie Railway shares 44$ to 45, and Illinois Centrals 81 to 82. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from The latest prices from the Continent for United States 5-20 bunds are the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Jan. 22 : At Amsterdam 76, at Frankfort 76$raod at Berlin 77$. The highest EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. and lowest prices in the London market for the three days enumerated 1867. 1864. 1865. 1866. $3,210,976 For the week. $2,753,412 $6,333,663 $3,449,470 are subjoined : ^ 10,697,573 Previously reported 7,262,218 8,566,849 ' 13,955,5-6 in the .. .... HIGHEST AND LOWEST Three RATES OF PRINCIPAL AMERICAN Monday. days ending Jan. 16. United States 5-20’s Atlantic &j Great West. Erie shares, $100 Illinois Centrals $100 Tuesday. Wednesday. ©4034 72#©72# 41 ©403* 45#©45# 82 ©81 # 45#©45# 81 ,#@81# 72 #@72# Consol, mort. bds SECURITIES 41 with during the present week. the various markets lers show ments. no have been The small supplies of wheat on sale in. disposed of at full prices ; but mil¬ of their actual require¬ advance in town made flour to 60s inclination to purchase in excess With the exception of an noticed in the quotations. per 280 lbs, no alterations are The demand for cotton is very moderate and the trade is rather Pi ices, since Fi iday last, have fallen $d. per lb. '! he supplies of cottou afloat are increasing, and spinners are operating with extreme caution. The latest advices from India report the week’s shipments at heavy. of rs for bills on ludia took place at the Bank of England to The minimum was fixed at Is. lOfd. on each of the three Presi¬ dencies, showing no change. The result indicated a slight increase in the day. Advices from Florence state that $2,074,927 2 Germany... ... Other N.Europe Spain Since Jan. 1, 1867 This week. To Great Britain... France Holland & Be1g. $9,085 273 6,613 The £34,600,000, and the expenditure £40,960,000, deficit of £6,360,000, or £1,080,000 less than the estimated 34,526 195,708 33,260 deficit, .. 91,111 35,027 The Fri. 25. Consols for money U. S. 6’8 (1862) Illinois Central shares.. Erie Railway shares.... Sat. 26. 91 90# 72# 7234 72# 81 81# 43# 43 Mon. 28. Tues. 29. Wed. 30. Thur. 31 90 91 90# 90# 73 81 42 73# 73 o2 81# 39# 40# 72# 81# 39 55.361 New Granada. 123,494 107,438 296,826 42,565 58,920 95,146 139,614 193,670 297,*59 Mexico Venezuela Br. Guiana... 38,102 .’.... following will show the exports of specie from the port ending Jan. 26, 1867 ; of New Mexican gold Am. & British gold 25—S.S. Bremen, Brem- 16,000 12,800 25—S.S. Vine de Paris, Gold bars Silver bars Peruvian gold ... Mexican silver 25—S.S. City of New, 350,500 20,382 2,470 12,899 . Same time in 1866 1865 1864 1863 1862 1861 1860 1859 Statement Foreign silver .. January 2.967,573 4,931,355 3,212,847 2,347,790 37,754 514,762 3,305,690 of the 500 For London— American gold For 114,857 Total for the week $2/05,211 $4,745,617 A 1853 1852 „u $676,169 1,829,042 Same time In 1858 v 1856 6,500 63,141 Southampton— Silver bars Previously reported $2,535,236 for * Silver bars York, Liverp’l— 1,1867 quotations for consols and American securities at London, as brought per telegraph, (the correctness of which is, to say the leas^ questionable,) have been as follows : c 76,311 514,561 Brazil Total since Jan. English Market Report*—JPer Cable. .. 43,655 I OtherS. A. ports 130,486 All other ports. ... .... “ $51*,565 1,3 5 66,363 Other W. I Jan. 23—S.S. Persia, Liverp’l— Gold bars $63,000 Mexican silver 10,000 For London— British gold 3,120 Italy for the $145,961 814,817 Havre— the public revenue of Since Jan. 1. Hayti ^903,241 .. This week. To 657,163 182,1-23 Other S. Europe East Indies China.. Australia Br.N A Colonics last fiscal year was a of the lowing table: “ demand for remittance to the East. showing commercial department York for the week 12,700 bales. The biddin statement 8i#©si# Owing to the difficulty m the means of transit,, in consequence of the frost and snow, trade iD agricultural produce has been greatly interfered will be found the official detailed imports and exports for the week. The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive specie) for the past week, and since January 1, i*9 shown in the fol¬ in the 72#©72# 39 ©38 x c. 44 #©44# $10,015,630 Since Jan. 1 1,087,285 ; 104,834 116,621 1,845,682 747,679 2,884,990 United States Assay Office.— 189 CHRONICLE. THE February 2. 1867.] FRANCISCO. FROM SAN following is the statement of business at the United States Office at New York, for the mouth euding January 81, 1867 : The Assay DEPOSITS OF GOLD. $25,000 00 13,000 00 Foreign coins Foreign bullion United States bullion “ 451,000 00— DEPOSITS OF SILVER, Foreign coin* Foreign bullion United States oullion Nevada Total Total deposits, payable in deposits, payable in bars.... 2 coins stamped..., .f Transmitted to United States mint, Philadelphia, Gold bars Treasure Movement at San Francisco RECEIPTS have prepared the following : that the total domestic receipts through the regular channels than any previous year since 1862, as may be seen from the It seems less following: 1866 Uncoined. Coined. / 1865 , Total. , 39,7^,447 3,522,585 38,715,340 36,649,337 3,093,110 do S. mines 4,106,975 1,042.774 5,148,749 5,108.413 1,320,547 6,428,960 Coastwise recp’s... 5,397,lOO 537,436 5,940,536 6,948,511 543,205 7,495,~t6 Total for year.... 44,701,840 5,102.785 49,804,025 48,706,261 4,961.922 53,668,183 Rec’s fromN. mine* 35,792,755 5,743,399 53,513,383 I 1862.. 41,377,957 5,593,421 6,383,074 50,297,349 | 1861.. 32,325,863 9,363,214 On this subject of receipts the San Francisco Bulletin says : The receipts last year show a falling oft in the aggregate of the past year : From California and Nevada Coastwise ports, NortU and South, including British Columbia.. 47,471,378 41,689,077 foreign. foregoing statement comprises all the domestic treasure received through Wells, Fargo & Co’s Express, together with the estimated amounts received from the ii terior through- private channels, in the this aggre¬ gate we think should be added the amounts from Portland and Crescent City, consigned to other consignees than Wells, Fargo fit Co. There accessible means of ascertaining these amounts, except an they have been reported from time to time on the steamers’ manifests as deposited at the Exchange. Of the sums thus reported bv these northern steamers during the past two quarters, we tind the following consigned toother parties iu addition to the receipts per Wells, Fargo fit Co'/s Express: Third quarter $459,340; fourth quarter, $680,669— total, $1,139,909. The aggregate receipts per steamers from the north coastwise, and the imports foreign. To of the year were yearg; consequently, the sums received per the Express Company were proportionately smaller. We think, however, that at least $2,000,000 has been received by these private consignees in their own names duriug the past year, which should doubtless be added to the aggregate given above, making the total receipts of treasure at this port, from all sources, for tho year for the first two quarters than for the last half of the other consignees outside of h ,use were, as To for the six years 1861-1866, as follows 1S61-. 1862. $ $ : 1863. 1S64. 32,023,011 26,194,035 10,389,329 12,316,121 4,061,779 12,950,139 29,467,256 34,436.422 12,660,754 4,206,370 7,888.973 35.631 New York England China..:... V 3,541,279 Japan Manila. 349,769 Panama. Havana f ..I Hawaiian Isl'ds | Society Islands. { Mexico | Central America i Victoria, V. I France Chile .. . Q(- f | Qonj | Australia.. ... Ea&t Indies 1865. 1866. 20,583,389 29,241,891 15,432,638 6.532,207 6,963,522 6,527,287 106,130 214,006 17,916 34,564 66,200 150,135 156,505 2,593,296 378,794 1,224,844 511,549 3,000 32,302 31,253 8,000 130,603 45,920 187* 480 5,500 5,000 155,518 16,951 175,245 45,321 125,000 10,000 188,222 . 77,827 100,000 8.000 152,457 90,273 12*004 67,986 140,0 0 389,170 50,000 939,055 95,800 121 | J declared 35,652 434,508 j | 1 9,615,335 65 $1,260,518 57 $12,469,866 29 9,520,384 96 do do Decrease $2,949,480 33 1867. hand, in Assistant Treas. Office.... $110,494,040 59 2,791,550 11—103,285,590 70 Assay Office do Less temporary loan to be reimbursed do 10,u50 28 $103,275,540 42 A Balance Treasury Department—Copy of Same.—The following is an exact copy of the Examination of forcing a periodical examination of the Treasury thlo Bill En¬ Senate bill en¬ Department, with a which is indispensable to efficiency and responsibility on the part of public officers : Be it euacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the view to securing that publicity . That immediately December of each year hereafter, the President shall, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, appoint three citizens not holding aDy office under the Government of the United States, who are eminent for integrity and ability, and who are hereby authorized and directed to make full and thorough examinations of the Treasury Department, and such other de¬ partments as the provisions of this act may require, and present dupli¬ cate reports to the President and to Congress in reference to— 1st. The receipt" and disbursement of public money, including ex¬ considerably fighter penditures, in the executive are no at the Custom 19,725,421 18 $1,0S5,343 24 9,245,913 70—$10,331,256 94 7,485,945 07 1,594,793 30— 9,080,738 37 accounts B}'receipts for customs in dan. 1866 do do do 1867 $60,0S5,56G ... $62,036,566. exports from the port $9,441,064 94 10,284.356 24— currency. By funds in $89,133,436 49 ........ $10,110,085 53 do forcing The 1367 Balance The 1866, 661,282 01— 48,224,669 90 pavments—coin - $49,198,953 8,516,669 .. Grand total 1866 codst $47,563,387 89 . By balance, cr. interest By appropriations To 50,936,014 02 $137,358,106 39 month : By balance, cr. disbursing accounts. By receipts during the month To payments.. ... $57,715,622 2,369,944 hands of passengers 9,044,680 00 451,673 71 564,484 93 1,360.600 (X) 4,10o 00 29,990,082 42— ... Balance Jan. 31, miues for Total. Add imports $9,520,384 96 v. Post-office drafts $1,811,439, as compared with 1865, and $1,689,158 as compared with 1844. In arriving at the total product of our mines, it has been customary to add to these receipts from the interior, through public channels, at least ten per cent, to cover amounts received through private sources, and thirty per cent to the coastwise receipts for sums in the hands of passeugers. Observing this rule, we have the following as the product of our $86,422,092 37 Balance 47,769,9S4 43,913,375 1864. 1863.. Balance Payments during the Treasury drafts TOTAL RECEIPTS. r & Co DISBURSEMENTS. AND On account of customs do Coin notes Internal revenue do do Post-office Department... .4 do Transfers do Patent fees do Miscellaneous Total. Uncoil-ed. Coined. $2,020 00 | Hoadly, Eno 1,1867, by balance Receipts duriug the month: years, we are $1,072,175 31 Jan. the treasure for previous of the 9th of January furnish a review of for the past year, from which, and the papers Lees & Waller.... 13,552 06 $1,400 00 Total from both sources $1,075,595 31 January Statement of the Assistant Treasurer.—We are in¬ debted to the Cashier of the Office of the Assistant Treasurer for the following statement of the business of the month of January : 210,517 13 700.529 95 for coinage— for 1866.—The San Fran¬ cisco papers movement 154,200 0-1 Flint & Hall $10,000 00 8.000 00 5.000 00 1,300 00 100 00 3,000 00— $34,000 0U $70,000 00 450,000 00— 520,0-X) 00 • Eugene, Kelly & Co Bank, N. Y 54,248 92 3,500 00 681,996 31 .. FROM THE ISTHMUS. INCLUDING PURCHASES. (contn’d in gold) Old coins Idaho 23,425 51 First National Total.... $486,000 00 Dabney, Morgan & Co.. Wells, Far-ro & Co Y'uba. .T... 37,168 06 W. Schall & Co $19,034 45 Panama R R. Co Eureka Lake aud Canal Co 62,414 United States of after the passage 2d. The America in Congress assembled. of this act, and in the month of several departments actual amount of money in the Treasury of the specifying whether in coin, United Tates the amount of each, the several funds to States, United uotes, or national bank which it belongs, and the amount in each place where public money is deposited or held. 3d. The amount of money-deposited with designated depositories to the credit of the Treasurer, aud the mode of managing and securing the notes, same. 4 th. The amount and description of bonds deposited in the by national banking associations to secure the redemption Treasury of their cur¬ rency. 5th. The manner the bonds of the United States, duplication counterfeiting of coupons. of boudsand other of paying interest on and the safeguards against the or 6th. The s ile of gold, and the purchase and sale securities of the United States, rates of purchase or paid and to whom paid. The engraving, printing and issuing of commissions 7th. sale, and the amount of national bank notes, securities of national bank securities, and the mode of disposing of imperfect sheets of paper intended but not used to rep¬ resent value. 9th.‘The manner of keeping accounts, auditing claims and issuing United States notes, fractional currency, bonds and ocher the United States. 8th. The redemption, cancellation and destruction of notes, United Stales currency, bonds and other of money from the Treasury. suggestions or recommendations affecting the efficiency and security of transactions in the Treasury Department, or economy The following shows the total movement for the same years : Receipts at port. ^ Exports as Annual in the public expenditures. Interior. Foreign. Total. above. movement. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That for the purpose of the ex¬ 1866 $49,804,625 $2,837,028 $52,691,653 $44,364,393 Inc. $8,327,260 amination authorized and directed in the preceding section, said exam¬ 1S:>5 1,799,399 55,46?,573 45,308,228 Inc. 10,159,345 iners shall have access to all the vaults, safes, deposits, books, records, 53,668,183 1864 53,513,383 55,223,407 55,707,201 Bee. 479,794 1,715,024 52,453,961 46,071,920 Inc. 6,382,041 letters and other documents iu the Treasury Department, sub-treas¬ 2,156,612 1863 50,297,349 49,375,462 42,561,761 Inc. 6 813,701 1,904,084 1362 47,471,378 1,702,633 43,391,760 40,676,758 Inc. 2,715,002 ury, or any bureau thereof, and shall have power to summon witness¬ 1861....... 41,689,077 es, administer oaths, aud employ a clerk and stenographer. !Seo. 3. And be it further enacted, That said examiners shall each Treasure from California.—The steamer Henry Chauncey, from receive ten dollars per day and actual expenses, during the time actually A pinwall, arrived at this port Thursday, January 31. The following employed in making such examination and report; and for the pay of s he i list of treasure : 40,676,758 42,561,761 Total , 46,071,920 55,707,201 45,308,228 44,364,393 warrants for 10th. Any the payment * 140 said THE CHRONICLE examiw rs, their clerk and stenographer, and for their actual ex¬ hereby appropriated ten thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may h<» necessary, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated. Passed the House of Representatives January 23. 18117. St. L, Alton & T. H do do pret... penses, there is Postage Changes Bremen to Toledo, Wabash »fc 50 950 150 . West’ll 200 200 100 150 400 1,900 * * - 100 200 200 - 100 ibo 200 500 1,600 500 2,700 .... Miscellaneous shares, viz. .; Coal—American “ Hamburg.—An arrangement has and (February 2, 1867, 10 Ashburton.. “ • ibb Cumberland . . 710 15 » 15 100 200 500 900 Dolaw’e <fc Ilud. Can just been concluded with the Bremen and Hamburg 50 16 5 25 96 Post Department? Pennsylvania 14 42 56 revising and reducing the rates of postage to be hereafter charged Wilkesbarre 200 100 200 upon 300 800 letters exchanged Minina—Muripos& 700 2,000 100 400 300 3.500 by the Bremen and Hambuig mail. The postage Pref 1.960 4.700 2.900 2,200 2,100 1,800 15.660 charges in future wiil be as follows, viz : To Bremen by Bremen mail Quicksilver 600 850 1,015 550 200 3.215 Impwvm't- Bost. W. Pow 73(H) 230 600 1,6-00 10 cents; by 200 400 2,830 'k Hamburg mail, 15 cents. To Hamburg by Hamburg Canton 400 100 1,700 450 100 500 3,250 1 elegraph—\\ est’n Union 1.416 mail, 10 cents; by Bremen mail, 15 cents, To 1,75-1 4,120 1,800 550 1,772 10,908 Oldenbutg by Biemen (Russian) 5 5 mail, 18 cents; by Hamburg mail, 15 cents. To Mail. 1,200 200 1,500 600 800 200 Luxenhurg by Bre¬ Steamship—Atlantic 4,500 Pacific Mail.. HO 960 men mail, 15 ceuts 1,622 125 1,518 302 4,867 ; by Hamburg mail, IS cents S. Amer. Nav. To Austria, Prussia, 2(H) 200 20 200 620 Express—Adams 1U0 450 Bavaiia, Saxony, Hanover, Wurtenberg, Baden, 150 50 230 9>0 United States... Ltixenburg, Brunswick* 37 37 Mecklenburg Seliweiein and Mecklenberg Strelitz, Lubeck aud Tharab Wells, Far. & Co. 55 55 Fee taxes of the Postal The amount of Government, State and Department by Bremen or Hamburg mail is 15 City and other bonds sold at the cents ; to Schleswig Hobtein, and Denmark, by Bremen or Hamburg Regular Board, daily and for the week, are given in the following statement: Sat. Mon mail, 18 cents; to Sweden, by Bremen or Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri. Week. Hamburg mail, 21 cents ; to U. S. G’s, 1881 $.... $27,500 $19,000 $60,000 $30,000 $21,000 Norway by Bremen or Hamburg mail, 25 cents; to Holland, by Bre¬ D.S 6’a (5-20’s). 52,500 178,000 258,000 258,000 91,500 47,500 $157,aCO 885,500 U.S 6’s (old)... men or Hamburg mail, 1 8 cents ; to Kusi-ia, by Bremen or Hamburg IT.8 5’s (10-40S) 25,000 15,000 2,000 20 mail, 67,000 3,000 cents; to Belgium, by Biemen or 112,(it H) Hamburg mail, IS cents; to U.S 5’s (old) 1,000 1,000 U. S 7-30 notes. Switzerland, 1>) Bremen or Hamburg mail, 19 cents; to 19,000 37,800 3.000 43,300 20,000 62,000 Italy, by 185,100 Bremen or State Hamburg mail, 21 cents; to Turkey, by Bremen or bonds, viz. : Hamburg, mail, 32 cents ; to Greece, by Bremen or Hamburg mail, 35 Missouri 6’s... 50,000 4,000 7,00(1 5.000 10,000 76,000 New York 6’s.. cents; to Gibraltar, Spain and Portugal, 3,000 or Hamburg mail, by Bremen 3,000 New'York 7’s. 25 cents; to 13.(500 5,000 2,000 6,000 Australia, India aud China, by Bremen or Hamburg mail, N. Carolina 6’s. 26.000 [ 2,600 23,000 via Marseilles, :;7 cents 10,060 35,00(1 Ohio G’s ; via Trieste, 55 cents. Prepayment of postage Tennessee 7,000 is optional in each 7,000 6’s.. case, except only letters for Australia, India and 46,000 88,000 21,000 49,000 84,000 4.000 242,000 China, on w hich the postage is City Ponds, viz: required to be prepaid by stamps. Let ters coming from those countries to the United States by Bremen or Brooklyn 0’s.. 1,000 1,000 Hamburg mail are suVject to the same postage charge and the same Company Bonds, viz :* conditions of prepayment Railroad 36,000 23,000 with the following exceptions: From Lr.ne24,000 30,000 31,000 10,000 154,000 Other burg, by Hamburg mail, the charge is 20 cents; from 1,000 1,000 Schleswig-Hol¬ stein aud Denmaik, by Bremen and Hamburg mail, 20 cents ; from Sweden, by Bremen and Hamburg mail. 25 cents; from Norway, by Southern Bank Notes and Securities. Bremen and Hamburg mail. 28 cents; from Russia, by Bremen and, Hamburg mail, 26 cents ; iroru Italy, by Bremen and Hamburg mail, Many of our Southern subscribers have requested that we should 27 cents; from Gibraltar, Spain and Portugal, by Bremeu and Ham¬ publish the New York quotations for other Southern securities than burg mail, 30 cents; from Australia, India and China, via Trieste, by those given in our usual lists, and also the Bremen and Hamburg mail, 30 cents. quotations for Southern bank notes. We are indebted to Mr. Edwin Q. Bell, 80 Broadway, for the following table, giving the rates at the close of this week of bank notes kk ' “ .... .... kk ,,. .... . .... .... “ “ „ kk kk . k- kk .... • . . .... . . . . ...» “ .... .... .... .... .... . .... .... .... .. .... «... • ' .... .... ... .... .... .... .... .... Bankers’ For Southern securities (Sautte. on account of we are south Carolina. DIVIDENDS. ' COMPANY. p. Banks Leather Mauu acturers Manhattan - Company Nat. B’k of the .. Republic Long Island of Brooklyn... li all roads. New York Central Feb. 20. 3 At Bank: At Bank. — N,Y.... Jan. 31 to Feb 23 March 1. M. K Jessup & Co., New York. Feb. Insurance. Gebhard Fire 5 Feb. 4. AT THE 1 to Feb. 9. 141 Broad w >y. STOCK BOARDS. 140 152 20 763 500 100 100 950 200 565 Railroad shares, viz.: Central of New Jersey... 100 200 Chicago «fc Alton do Preferred Chicago, Burlin ton «fcQ.. Chicago & Northwestern. do do Pref. Chicago, R. Isl. & Pacific. Cleveland, Col. Cin Railway Preferred.... Hudson River Michigau Central 65 6,350 8,570 5,000 11.880 10 °60 11,725 13,000 10,075 7.000 . • 50 50 6,400 6,305 13,185 51,585 6,950 12,200 5,85« 9,700 5,460 2,435 37,110 6,700 5,600 40,400 700 300 7.100 500 17.300 100 800 30 5.600 1,100 12,000 1.300 16,050 28,570 25,725 24,9:30 20,680 100 400 45 425 600 70!) 200 100 800 3,200 1,205 100 25 . ■ • ‘ .... pref Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. . .... 1,700 ... Panama .... • 3.400 .... . .... 1 DO .... . 100 Michiuan-Southern 11.&50 Milw’kee & P. du C 1st pf 100 Milwaukee & St. Paul.. do do 600 pref. New York Central 5,100 New York & New Haven. Ohio & Mississippi ($100) 2,70» Reading.... 50 100 ■ do Illinois Central Indiana & Cincinnati Marietta & Cin. first .... 400 . Cleveland & Pittsburg.... Cleveland and Toledo Erie 100 .... ... . . . . 1.820 5,770 100 200 855 64.140 30 350 5,600 133,255 445 2,S00 5,S35 556 300 120 11,525 400 10,100 100 1.98 8,700 9,700 7,215 59.090 180 900 3. SI 8 .... .... ... . . 80 300 300 1.113 ioo 100 900 500 16,937 400 15,570 9,770 9.320 7 13 5,760 1,150 1,900 .... 6,750 9,2(30 1,100 780 1.200 46 5,213 15,200 kl Graham of North Carolina “ of Roxboro’ “ of Thomasville. kt of Wadesborouijh “ of Washington... “ of Wilmington ‘k of Vanceyville Commercial Bank, Wilmington .. Farmers’ Bank, of North Carolina. Merchants’ Bank, Newbern Miners’ and Planters’ Bank Greensboro’ M. I. Co ... 3,720 13,700 4,430 7,370 1,900 5,600 Merchants’Bank L'nion Bank GEORGIA. Augusta Ins. & Banking Co 8 35 40 Bank of Augusta “ “ kk “ 56,900 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 Louisiana State Bank Mechanics and ri raders’ Bank kk “ of Athens of Columbus of commerce of Fulton of Empire State of Middle Georgia of Savannah of the State of Central R. R. and “ Georgia Banking Co ” ’ V k* “ “ kk “ kk Chattanooga of Knoxville of Memphis of Middle Tennessee of Paris... of Tennessee (old) of We t Tennessee ’** ... Merchants’ ’ kk Ocooe “ Planters’ Traders’ “ Shelbyville “ *.!!!". ."*[*"* ’ * kk Union 90 90 45 41 05 90 90 15 75 90 80 75 “ VIRGINIA. Bank of Berkeley of Commerce “ of Charleston kk of City Petersburg “ of Howardsville secured “ of Old Dominion “ of Phillippi “ of Richmond... k" of Rockbridge “ of Rockingham kk of Scoitsville, secured “ of the Valley kk of Virginia “ of Winchester Central Bank. Virginia, secured 55 45 20 20 30 55 30 g 30 55 30 “ Corporation of Alexandria 35 . * ... Danville Bank Exchange Bank, Va., Norfolk Farmers’ Bank of Fincastle “ “ of Richmond Merchants’ Bank, Lynchburg, sec. Monticello Bank, secured N. Western Bank, Jeffersonville... k* S. Traders’ kk kt Wythesville Richmond 30 75 25 45 24 15 30 18 48 40 95 30 25 ALABAMA, 15 7 35 24 Bank of Mobile ki of Montgomery “ of Selma. 7: Commercial bank 78 35 Central Eastern Northern Southern 10 95 12 40 90 . 40 25 5 90 Crescent Bank 20 23,843 5 20 ‘4 70 . 62.397 8.S30 46 . LOUISIANA. Bank of Louisiana “ of New Orleans Canal Bank Citizens’ Bank kk Bank...!.! City Bank, Nashville Lexington 12.5 512 40(j of ’ ’’’’ Commercial Bank 24 24 3 12 10 10 20 35 35 35 24 5 20 30 10 95 95 4 25 8 jjj 3 7 TENNESSEE. Bank of 5'5 10 18 35 8 55 . “ following statement shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday: Sat. Mon. Tue9. Wed. Thurs. Fri’y. Week. Bank Shares * S5 Ill 6 NORTH CAROLINA. “ The 255 13 10 15 3 Bank of Cape Fear “ of Charlotte “ of Clarendon “ of Commerce k: of Fayetteville “ BUSINESS (old) (neic) People s’Bank, Charleston Planters’ Bank, Fairfield Plant. & Mech. Bank, Charleston. Duncan,Shcrm'n , ** 40 8 So. W. R. Ed. kk State Bank, Charleston Union kk “ -. — At Bank. Dubuque &Sionx f ify Scrip 4 Jan. 29 to Feb. 1. At Bank. & Co Div. Preferred Stock “ 15 17 Far’s" and Ex. Bank, Charleston.. Merchants’ Bank, Cheriw .., 15 WUICRK. Feb. 1. Feb 9. Feb 11. Feb. 1. 0 5 5 0 “ Georgetown Exchange Bank, Columbia o’t. WHEN. of of J lam burg of Newberry of South Oarolina of the St. of S Carolina “ Geo. R. R. & Bank Co Marine Bank Mech’s Bank Manufacturers’ Bank Mercht’s and Planters’ Planters’ Bank Timber Cutters’ Bank Union Bank 15 “ “ City Bank, Augusta Farmers’ & Mech. Bank, Suv’h 18 ., “ l* give any reliable quotations Rate. 40 ...... Commercial Bank, Columbia FAVAbLK. RATE Bank of Camd n of Charleston “ of Chester k* We give in onr Bulletin from day to day lists of bonds, lost, and dividends declared. These tables will be continued daily; and on Saturday morning snch 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 last week in the Bulletin. NAME Or unable to the feverish state of the market: • \“ “ Alabama “ “ “ “ 95 80 20 10 8 48 45 95 February 2,1867.] THE CHRONICLE. 141 Friday, Feb. 1, 1867, P. M. affairs retain the features 622,079 shares, against 722,004 for the previous week. The transactions include 133,255 shares of of irregularity noted in our last Erie; New York Central, report. The banks appear to be improving in loanable resources, but still exercise an unusual de¬ 62.397 ; Michigan Southern, 59,090 ; Reading, 56,900 ; Northwest¬ ern preferred, 64,140; do. common, 51.585. gree of discrimination in respect to collaterals and the standing of | The foMowing are the closing borrowers. There is, however, a quotations at the regular board to¬ growing feeliDg that the late panic day, compared with those of the six preceding weeks : and failures having reduced stocks to a safer level as the basis of Dec 21. Dec. 28. Jan. 4. Jan. 11. Jan. IS. Jan. loans, and having weeded out some firms of weak credit, 25. Feb. 1., lending Cumberland Coal 81 65* 90 33 44 maybe conducted with rather-more freedom. Money is offered Quicksilver 45 43 41 41* 38* Canton Co 45* 49 46* 46 45 44 46* quite freely to houses of good standing, in some instances at 6 Mariposa pref 30* 32 31* 30* 23* 30* 23* The Money Market.—Monetary — • . • • ...» ’ cent, on but the per stock collaterals and at general 5@6 per cent, on rate on demand loans is 7 per cent. the rate to 6 per cent, next week is very Governments, A reduction of generally anticipated. Two or three failures among stock-brokers, owing to the heavy tall in prices, have been reported daring the week. Many houses, recently largely committed to movements "for an advance in stocks, Lave suffered from the inability of their customers to keep their margins; and there is, at present, perhaps, more weakness among the younger firms than is apparent. The banks have shown disposition to discount a first-class paper in preference to lending upon second-rate stocks, and the rate for prime merchants’ bills is now generally 7 per cent., with exceptions of long date at 7$ per cent. Complaints are current of an extensive renewal of notes, owing to the inability of merchants in the interior to make collections adequate to their maturing obligations on ac¬ count of Fall purchases ; and, considering the generally depressed condition of trade, there is reason for supposing that the complain¬ ing is not without foundation. The following the quotations for loans of various classes are Per cent. Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, months 7 6 © © 7 2 7 ©- l : © S 8 ©9 ©10 8 United States Securities.—Government securities have shown a general improvement during the week. The unsettling of confi¬ dence in other investments by the panicky events of the last few directing increased attention affording greater stability, and steady demand from investors has caused cent., and of -£@| general advance on bonds of per Seven-thirties. At the same time, there was on 69 Reading x Mich. Southern.. a partial demand early in the week from foreign bankers, and again this afternoon. Early in the week rumors were current of fraudu a large amount, which for a moment un¬ ultimately discredited upon authentic Yesterday an attempt was made to de settled the market, but were denials from Washington. m Five-twenties by a report that the Rothschilds were selling securities; which, however, was a mere Gold press IT. U. XJU. U. . 7-30’s 1st series 7-30’s 2d Series 7-30's 3rd scries... . Railroad opened with and I 110 xc.108* 105* 107* 104* 105* 106 104* 107*xc.l04 99* 99* 104 104 104 105 104* 104* ELLANEOUS 107* JOS* 106* 10S 105* 105* 104 99* 104 104 104 . • • • • 106* 104* 99* 104* 104* 104* . .. , 47 8 103 7S * 108 107* 106* 87* 124* 41* 88* 124* 96* 107 90 123 45* 125* ,78* 80 82 102* 104* 116* 103* 103* 107* 118* 104* 41* 81 * 1«’2* 102* 121 119 127 103* 107 81* 120* 83 120 42 79 V 104* 71* 36* 36* 64* 96* 98* 64* 95* 97* 114* 95* 96* 120 56* 123 102 71 112* the volume of transactions in closing with this day's business Bank shares Railroad “ “ Coal Mining “ Mon. 255 71,460 122,056 Tues. : Thurs. Fri. Week. 111 Wed. 140 152 20 122.421 98,390 84,715 67.210 367 2.100 900 763 566.252 • :oo 310 170 616 1.01)5 5,260 7,550 430 1,755 3.215 2.7(H) 2.700 3.550 1.050 4,120 1.300 1,560 Improv’t “ 700 .300 1,772 945 105 Teiegraph “ 1.416 Steamship*1 Express kt 1.800 10O 3,332 1,718 450 150 26,821 49.02S 87,100 56.414 78.200 .39,206 67,400 136.121 134,614 107,939 106,606 118,893 91.694 176,852 72,116 207,436 At Regular Board At Open Board... . 54.100 . Total current week. Total Previous w’k. 80,921 55,602 55,282 2,577 24,375 6.080 550 702 267 10,913 10,047 30.394 25,894 61,300 46,222 227,757 391.322 1,672 625,0*9 722,004 Jan. 25. com Feb. 1 107* 107* 105* 105* 1043a 99* 107* 107* 105* 106 104* 99* 104* 101* 104* 104 104 104 Stocks.- -The stock market slight recovery from the heavy fall of last week. On Tuesday, however, the symptoms of weakness returned, upon the stocks of a somewhat prominent house being sold out at the Board and prices again took a sharp downward turn, touching lower figures than at any period of last week. It became appareut, however that the prevailing opinion on the street was that the weaker holder a shares weekly since the commencement of shown in the following statement: the year are RailWeek ending— Bank. ro’d. Jan. (1 to 4).... 83 1S8.0S9 11 141 5’>9,139 18 1,058 465,718 27 426 668.322 Feb. 1 763 566,252 The following is MinImTeleCoal. ing. pro't. graph, 3,600 7.850 1,700 4.32S ’ 2,559 9.600 4,300 12.005 3.316 9.600 3,200 8.536 2.601 16,950 5,400 14,569 Stenm- 14.255 3SI Total. 200,715 596.851 506.840 722.004 2,577 24,375 10,047 1,072 622,079 ■ 6,0S0 10,613 ship. Other. 80S 1.257 17,836 1,018 14,170 1, 42 of the amount, of Government bonds City securities, and railroad and other bonds Regular Board on each day of the past week : a summary and notes, State and sold at the Sat. U.S. Bonds... . U. S. Notes Stated Citvb'ds 19,000 46.000 Company B'nde. Total Cur. w’k.. Previous week.. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. 36,000 $176,500 318,150 37.800 103.000 23,000 43.300 53.000 25,000 3 4.300 398,300 421.000 417,000 329,400 497,500 3.000 20.000 68.000 107.000 30.000 31 000 346.000 501,500 The totals, Jan. dan Jan. Jan. Feb. Fri. Week. 1,153.500 $75,500 $220,500 $ 277.000 $320,000 $188,000 $72,500 weekly, since the commencement of the following tabulation : ending -Governments- Friday, following are the closing prices of leading securities, pared with preceding weeks : 6’s, 1881 coup 5-20’e, 1862 coupons 5-20’e, 1864 “ 5-20’s, 1865 “ 5-20’s, 1865, N. iss.. 10-40’s, Q 121* Sat. Week rumor. The S. S. S. S. S. S SS. S 105* 82* following statement shows the week Room U. U. *J. ’(J. 191* x.d.99* 58* shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of in the Jan. 11. Jan. 18. 125* 82* “ out their American Dec. 28. Jan. 4. 63* 105* 85 101 til so* . 108 no* 132 Northwestern.... preferred a lent issues of bonds to 67* 132 Michigan Centralx d.107* The no* 68 ? 8 123* Clev. and Pittsb. Clcv. and Toledo. Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central no* 119* d. 1(1-3* The transactions in 7 Lower grades. appears to have had the effect of to national bonds, as 110* Hudson River.... Per cent. Good endorsed bills, 8 & 4 months do single names days New York Central Erie Bonds. Notes. (1 to 41.. $977,060 11. $140,100 1,878.200 1.734,600 855,4-0 18 27 1 1.197.500 1.153.500 62.000 13.100 390,000 10,000 155,O')0 157,500 1.883,600 472,000 2.535,550 - year are State & Company City Bonds. Bonds.v $454,800 $207,500 623.500 185.100 shown Total amount. $1,785,400 3,517.150 314.100 431.500 550,050 185.100 165,000 155,000 637.500 159,500 2.535.550 390,000 155,000 1,883,600 2,635,200 The Gold Market.—The active speculation in gold has been by the excitement in the Stock Exchange and the derange¬ ments in the money market. Yesterday, however, with a more settled aspect of the stock market, there was a disposition to renew operations in gold, and upon lower quotations for Five-twenties at London considerable purchases were made, causing an advance of about 1 point in the premium. At the same time a rumor was checked circulated in the Gold Room to the effect that the deoline of bonds in London was due to the house of Rothschilds selling their American securities—a to be out statement, however, for which there seems authority. ' supply of gold in the banks is ample for meeting the com¬ had been “ cleared out,” and that consequently there was no ground paratively light demand for customs duties^ and with the present ffor apprehending further forcible sales. Buying then became the rates of exchange there is no probability of any export of specie ; order of the day, and confidence has since steadily recovered, the so that the course of the premium appears to be chiefly dependent market closing strong at an almost general advance upou I he figures upon the current of political affairs. The price has fluctuated be* of a week ago. The impression appears to be general that, for the tween 134£ and 136f during the week, and closes at 135f. present, prices have “ touched bottom,” though among cautious Gold has ranged during the week from 134$ to 136£. The fol¬ operators there appears to be an idea that, with the present gener lowing shows the fluctuations day by day : ally unsettled condition of affairs, another downward irjoyenjent Lowest, Highest. Closing. may occur at almost any time. The chief strength of fhe piarket at present is in the fact that, with a few exceptions, stocks now range at prices at which tlja banks are willing to ndyap.ee uppp £hem ordinary margins, ffl)e total trftosaot|Qus io on no The Opening Snturday, Jan. 26 Monday Tuesday Wednesday 28 Thui.si.dfly 31 Friday, Feb. 29 *. 30... i ,,. 134* 134% 134 * 134* 134* 134* 13 * 131* 134* 135# 134* 135* 135* 13-5* 135* 134* V»H mi 434* 134* 434* 136* 135* 134* 131* 334* 135 • gocka fQf 10 fjg fcp flmoflfit t? Qmpntwk... m' ■*& - [February 2,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 142 ‘ weekly range since January 1 has been as The Week ending, j January 4 (3 daT's) 19 25 133% 134 136%: February 1 134% 11 “ “ S urday evening were : Jan. 21 “ 22 “ : 390,228 419,003 391,630 517,498 395,517 • 26 2% Receipts. $2,035,100 30 $2,497,219 12 1,807,380 34 701,283 21 77 98 20 98 60 1,165.239 77 1,727,046 77 2,725,031 31 1.611,810 72 774,302 69 2,538,539 74 $8,601,270 41 $12,361,321 52 104,823.359 52 . $117,187,681 04 8,601,270 41 during the week $'0S,586,410 63 3,763,051 11 following table allows the aggregate transactions at the rfubTreasury since Dec. 1 : The Custom House. Ending Dec. “ “ “ 1 8.... 15.... 22 kt 29.... 12.... “ 19.... 26.... “ 24.3*7,977 9,450.690 20,138 *,460 12.793,157 15,915.183 12,814,7*53 17,565,951 22.939 314 13.109,053 8,601,270 12,364.321 1,419,235 4*5,155.328 1.471,199 1,037,950 10,713.333 10,525,233 1,332,919 1,584,037 1,944,(522 2,360,714 2,399,315 Jan. 5, ’67. “ Sub-Treasury , 29,541,684 12,304,493 Foreign Exchange.—The the week has been steadily Balances. Dec. $182,895 Inc. 4,234.131 Inc. 1,999,771 Inc. 5.389,950 course KH5.689.404 108,689,17*5 114,079.126 16,726,920 1 >ec. Inc. 97,352.205 102,613, *558 5,261.452 1,-148.662 Dec. Inc. Inc. 101.164,996 104,823,1859 108,586,401 3.(558,363 3,763,051 foreign exchange during There have been liberal of downward. receipts of bills from New Orleans, besides which bills against ship¬ of about 20,000 bales of cotton exported during the two* last weeks from this port are coming upon the market • their appear¬ ance having been delayed by the weather having prevented the The de¬ preparation of bills of lading with the usual despatch. ments mand for bills for remittance is limited nor ; does there appear to be any The of speculative inquiry resulting from the fall in rates. following are the closing quotations for the several classes foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : London Comm'J. do UkrsV/i<7 do shrt do aris, long Jan. 11. Jan. 18. 108%® 108% 109%® 109% 109%® 110% 108%® 109% 109%® 109% 110%® 110% 5.16%@5.13% 5.13%@5.11% 5.1S%®5.16% .@5.16,] 5.15 ® ©5.12% 5.20 ®5.17% 5.20 ©5.17% ® 36% 41 %® 41% 41%® 79%® 79% 72% ® 72% do short Antwerp Swiss Hamburg .... .. Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin 30%'® 41% ® 41 %® 78% ® 72%® 36% 41% 41% 78% 72 V Jau. 25. 108 ® 108% 108%© 109% 109%© 104% 5.10%®5.15 5.13%@5.12% 5.20 @5.17% 5.20 ©5.17% 36%® 30%" 41%@ 41% 41%© 41% 79 © 79% 72%® 72% Feb. 1. 107%® 108 108%® 108% 109%® 190% 5.21% ©5.18% 5.17%®5.16% 5.22%@5.20 5.22%@5.20 36 %(t/i 36% 41 %© 41% 41 © 41% 78%© 79 72 ® 78 New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the City of New York tor the ending with the commencement of business on Saturday, coudition of the Associated Banks of the week Jau. 26,1867 : Average amount ofLoans and Loansi discounts. Banks. New Fork... Manhattan $7,373,310 5,47*5.274 .., 6,523,601 5,232,386 Mechanics’ 4.509,106 8,326,918 America Phenix 3,864,00!) 3,515,689 City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merch'ts Exchange National... Butch. &Droveie.. Mech's & Traders.. Greenwich Leather Manufact's Seventh Ward State of N. Y jrk... American Exc’ge.. Commerce Broadway Ocean Mercantile Pacific ^.. Republic Chatham People’s North America.... Hanover Irving Metropolitan 2.823,7**2 Oriental Marine Atlantic 215,652 1,959,619 301,853 12,071 787,443 4.733.233 5.342,323 569.295 3.907.177 469.1*44 2,160 3.036,554 291,915 310,210 IS, 788 201,715 747,433 18.875 18,153 41*9,754 10,287,329 852,065 23,535,899 7,129,693 603,853 3,242.516 100,209 3,283,035 102.723 1.870,03!) 22,45*4 5,043,410 2,009,360 1,375,919 2,339,540 2,579.868 319,867 51.777 102.451 291.565 1,561,175 1,715.000 11,207.503 17,000 186,211) 328,958 2,174,379 139,444 4,447 1,632,000 6,147,353 1,350,617 1.935,291 2,677.307 2,716,697 5,302.500 3,960.050 19,568 144,569 113,103 80,293 722,474 1,013,349 1,800,831 54,377 20,732 1,158,556 240,7-«) 187,720 1,430,922 4.972 192.000 177.920 120.000 987.180 948,954 161,733 2,383,202 766,2.23 347,963 894.494 739,916 • 212,117 415,838 542,480 3,835,583 5,877,667 1,874,139 1.061.773 7,460,546 6,-447,710 0,429,304 *2,493,198 2,8)6.530 1,635,359 1,859,18-1 740.965 3,837.320 2,015,492 1,073,259 328,967 7,012 339,709 1,218,721) 1,71*0,051 5,948,250 900,0(H) 800,000 482,215 i:i3,998 855,325 , 1.061,120 1,20 ',862 1,657.393 1,980.440 5,358,1*10 2,270,756 1.746,102 1.004.070 3,138,373 1.333,850 5.014,4-2 33,1*03 29,800 1,906,692 2.695,653 749,338 1,041.017 458,619 495,808 SO,SOI 1,409,320 847.503 159,633 55.740 $3,110,219 1,910,626 101.246 310,374 Tenders. 7.988,127 2.920,705 2,733,653 2,624,968 2,416,696 . $754,741 532.163 1.009.2**2 27* *,034 Legal deposits. $7,191,596 3,500,069 Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather.. Corn Exchange ... Continental . tion. Specie. $4,150,761 Net 605,99S l.:'61.099 Commonwealth tlircula- 1,989,670 5,404,967 Citizens’ 504,549 4,705,407 1,278,251 967,256 1,000.060 307,799 17,587,136 4,239,928 1,304,710 1,253,030 1,135,630 582,116 34,369 As’n 1,009,288 1,277,774 Nort®Jtiver East River Manuf. & Merch’ts Fourth National... Central Second National... Ninth National.... First National Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Tenth National.... Bull’s Read Croton National 1,257.082 3,034,012 1.414,914 15,131,010 26.757 R2,833 11,833 283,500 1,050 353,135 210,029 1,641.589 6,146 18,329 12.213 12,046,167 2,7*15,593 3.128,656 932,712 2,489,700 1,223,748 58,978 71,103 28,410 268,908 7.100 910.700 7,043 514.375 1,967 14,881 3 8*1,0(4) 795,0**0 Clearings for the week ending Clearings for the week ending Balances for the week ending Balances for the week ending 326,913 1,884,896 2,9(H),646 2,-880,631 1,111,832 694,484 1.380,700 1,361,312 325,502 2S2,951 885.174 622,800 , 160,169 $197,952,076 $63,422,559 $251,674,803 $16,014,007 $32,957,198 Totals 305,338 293,157 3,784,812 3,392,b54 12,002,635 903,706 448,296 50,560 227,973 11,818,7 1 942,2*55 7,009,445 270.0*‘0 6.205,101 308,804 699,622 1,165,061 2,925,755 3,159,335 ... $520,040,028 90 568,822,804 85 Jan. 19. 1867 Jan. 26, 1867 26.901,315 87 20,343,585 76 Jan. 19, 1867 Jan. 26, 1867 of the previous week are as fob The deviations from the returns 553.900 754,953 949,048 3,999,926 2,966.798 45,373 27,024 253,t02 43,335 1,230,011 1,883,6S5 11.090 14,072 102,750 1,317.938 20,474 315,000 98,595 10.635 545,060 235.427 Loans Dec. $3,357,420 Specie. Inc.. Circulation 1,971,588 1.353,037 3,367,800 3,039.753 2,182,487 2,857,484 1.067,022 1,650.876 1,176,185 791,151 403.648 543,250 191,506 501,471 350,225 476,000 1,918,142 425,681 451,888 624,191 603.508 of weeks past ; 1. .$263,011,668 Dec. Dec. 8 260,620,027 Dec. 15.. 258.45 ‘,330 Dec. 22.. 258,255,514 Dec. 29.. 259,354,761 Jan. 5.’67 257,852,460 Jan. 12.. 258,935,488 255,032,2213 Jan.19. Jan. 26.. 251,674.803 . Clearings 206,458,211 63,994,309 202,029,877 64.816,962 200.811,290 63,000,687 202,533,564 65.026,121 202.517,608 63,246,370 201.200,115 62,2135,386 197,952,076 63,422,559 556,150,833 $14,957,007 $31,393,849 $208,889,177 $61,4S5,458 $649,081,442 14.582.050 31.794,653 203,676.822 60,046,857 647,315,736 13,991,200 31,797,605 13,231,917 32,433,429 13,185,222 32,664,526 12,794,892 14,613,477 32,762,779 15,365,207 16,014,007 32.854.928 32,825,103 32,957,198 following is the quarterly statement city of New York : The banks Deposits. Tenders. tion. 8pecle. Aggregate Legal ClrculaLoans. .Dec. $3,248,039 ...Inc.. 187,173 102,270 following are the totals for a series The 5S7.150.S3i3 515,917,999 4 0,987,787 605,132.066 52 ',040,028 56S,822,8l;4 of the Clearing-House ot the . RESOURCES. LIABILITIES. Jan. 7, 1867. Dec. 1, '66. 1S67. Dec. 1, *66. $84,797,200 $84,1302,200 Capital 25,050,895 Net profits... 25,169,724 30,593,121 34,788,673 Circulation... 72,984,150 57,389,930 Due banks Due deposit’s 150,928,983 175,014,708 1,189,707 1,796,795 Due all others Jau. 7, Loans & dis.. . Slocks Bonds & mort Real estate... Due from b’ks Cash items & banknotes. . . .... Total .. . Specie $363,871,305 $389,134,781 ■ Legal tenders Overdrafts ... of the leading items of the previous weeks : $15,847,150 52,168,473 53,458,307 1 •• Legal Tenders.. , 880,582 19,363,374 4.101,927 7.597,308 . ' 7,486.050 40,048,645 Deposits 10,381,595 Cirtulation 39,001,779 10,381,683 totals of the $374,990 1,289,834 Increase.. Decrease. Increase.. Decrease. Decrease. Increase.. Decrease. Increase.. Specie. Circulation. $876,751 $9,615,989 851,915 10,021,527 10,161,601 10,257,544 . .. 119,833 267,078 3,273 84,128 510,5.10 111,253 1,046.836 3,688 - Loans. Legal Tenders $21,057,343 $54,549,367 51,250,362 20,488,385 51,256,937 20.115,704 51,536,821 19,677.741 51,759,765 19,777,051 52.312,317 20,209,064 - 7,718.268 6,960,427 85,693,009 the totals ol the Philadelphia Banks for a are series of weeks past : Date. Dec. 1. Dec. 8 Dec. 15 Dec. 22..... Dec. 29 Jan. 5 "67 Jau. 12 Jan.19 Jan.26. 903.320 19,448,009 4,612.477 Due from Banks Due to Banks following 3,743,897 12,073,371 70,072,559 Jan. 26. Jan 19. Loans The 287,859 5,865,930 15,429,943 Philadelphia Banks for last and $15,442,160 Capital Specie 284,897 6,550,245 15,674,193 Banks.—The following shows the Philadelphia average $181,306,190 $19(>,972,852 76,086,560 73,898,966 $363,871,305 $389,134,781 Total 854,989 860,111 867,647 903,663 20,006.255 19,448,099 52,628,491 53,458,307 903,320 877,548 19,363.374 52,168,473 880,582 Deposits. $42,102,2S9 41.452,539 40,728,902 40,411,158 39,706,062 10,325,154 10,388,820 10,380,577 10,381,595 41,308,327 41,023,421 40,048,645 10,381.683 39,001,779 Banks.—The following are the footings of the state¬ of the Boston Banks for the week ending January 28. A Boston ment comparison with the statement of January 14, (that of the last week having been imperfect by the emission of the return from ODe bank), shows a decrease in every item in the list. The following are the footings, with those of the two previous returns : Jan. 21. Jan. 28. $41,900,000 Capital Loans 97,891,329 Specie Legal tender notes 1,058,329 16,816,481 Due from other banks Due to other banks 11,392,871 13,504,944 Deposits 39,219,421 • 24,716.597 302,298 Circulation (National) Circulation (State) Tlie past : following are “ 531.000 537.* 00 “ 846,4.50 “ “ Jan. *• “ Jan. 14. $41,900,000 $41,900,000 95,298,982 1,078,160 16.596,29!) 11,162,999 98,461,778 1.333,409 13,530,309 38.679,604 24,275,162 301,911 16,879,495 12,786,53$ 14,516,029 40,246,216 24,997,446 311,749 the comparative totals for a series of weeks " Loans. Dec. 1,143,500 240,235 482,150 410,676 Deposits.. 648.800 Legal Tenders .Inc.. Changes in . Payments. Receipts. Balances. $1,173,516 $15,277,328 $ 15,094.432 $102,155,273 . 75,674 lows: Balance on Saturday evening Increase during the week. Weeks Park Mech. Bank’g Grocers’ 1,573,253 03 1,149,202 93 Sub-Treasury morning of Jan. 21 Deduct payments 2% Payment*. $2,399,315 33 Total Balance in 136% 134% 135% —Su b-Treasury Rouse. Receipt*. $285,075 SO 23 24 25 “ 134% Custom , “ 131 1:34 184 2% 2% 4% Sub-Treasury for the week ending Sat¬ The transactions at the “ 132% 133% 133% 132% Range. Closing. Highest. 134% 135% 137% 136% 136% Lowest. Opening. 5,692,334 13,237,082 Imp. & Traders... follows Specie. Legal Tenders. -r—Circulation. Deposits. National. * State. 3 $320,864 10 17 24 316,242 $99,446,166 $601,502 $16,640,798 $4iX)89,605 $24,593,237 99.062,641 589,364 16,688,280 40,95S,922 24,650,482 99,127,027 597.902 16,561,288 , 41.042,063 24,671,197 98.958.672 582.112 17,038,272 40.971,613 24,654,346 99.033,673 589.137 18,040,512 41,SOI,496 &4,666,860 31 7 *67.. 97,009,3421,183.451 17,033.387 40,'24,618 24,580.367 14 98.461,7781,334,300 16,829.495 40.246.216 24,997,446 23.... 97,891,329 1.058,329 16,816,481 39,219,241, 24,716.597 318,409 315,140 ‘313,562 312,664 311k749 302,298' February STOCK EXCHANGE. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY (REPRESENTED BY THE _ Coin (Gdn American Gold United States do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 5s, 5s, 58, 5s, •|102 coupon. 1874 registered. 1874 10-408 coupon ! 99% | 99% 99% . Indianapolis and Cincinnati 99% registered. 6s,-Union Pacific R. R.. .(cur.). 7-30s Treas. Notes ls^sarks., do do 2d series. do do do do 3d series. Joliet and Chicago Long Island -! 104% 104% 101% 104% 104% 104% 104% (104%) 104% I McGregor Western 1104% ’104% Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred..... 04% 104% 104% do do 2d preferred Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana State : California 7». Connecticut 6s Georgia 6s .... 7s (new) Illinois Canal Bonds. 1860 * do Registered, 1860 do 6s, coupon, ’79, after do do 1877 do • do 1879 do do War Loan..." do Indiana 69, War Loan do 5s 1860-62-65-70. Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 Michigan 6s do 7s, War Loan, Minnesota 8s...T. 1S7S Missouri6s 92% 93 93 .... 92% 92 do do do do North Carolina 6s 105% .3 .do 6s. (new)... Ohio 68,1870-75 do 6s, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 6s 1868 ■ do 6s 1890 50% 05% 105% 105 51% 50% 52 — u 62% (new) Virginia 6s, coupon Municipal: Brooklyn 6s do 68, Water Loan do 6s, Public Park Loan do 6s, Improvement Stock Jersey City 6s, Water Loan 6b, too 100% — — 63% 63% 03 k 63 63% 56 57 100 65 60 10 50 Ashburton Butler. Cameron 500 Central Consolidated * Cumberland Delaware and Hudson ' Wilkesbarre Wyoming Valley * Bronkl)ur 143 40 145 40 Williamsburg 20 1 31%;. 32 60 j 62 62% 39% 39% 41 98 110% Extension... 1st mortgage 80 consolidated Island, 1st mortgage S9 S9 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust New York Life and Tru-t Union Trust United States Trust ; American Merchants Union United States Wells, Fargo & Co Mining.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Minnesota Copper New Jersey Consolidated do 4th mortgage, 1SS0. .. do 5tli mortgage, 1888 j | Galena and Chicago, extended do do 1 2d mortgage j Great Western, 1st mortgage... .) do do 2d mortgage > j I!; Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage, M mortgage, 1868 25 45 44% 45% 42 42% 44% 44 96 44%) 2d mortgage, do do 3d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885... 1875.... . j . 25 100 100 100 100 157% Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage. Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage. New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s, 1887 do do 78, 1870... do do 7s, convertible, 60 ' 67 66 67 25, lol 67 1 67 67 1 S8 21 23% % i 21% 38% 37% 36 39 Ij 1876..* 7s, 1865-76.... d> d-> 93 jj New York and New Haven lj Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage 5 j Peninsula, 1st mortgage / i; 1 . •. _ Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort.. r 2d mort... 21 %J 23% i. ’ do do do 3d mort... ! j - St. Louie, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort .. i 1; ^9 do 2d, pref i, i dp do do 2d, income. 9% 10 50; Copper... 15’ Hy»j — Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants 500 100 100 100 100 ........ 100■ ! 96 99 ! do do Goshen Line, ISflSj '.16%! Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort 99 97% 155 _|j" do / do 8s,new, 1882 L...... Michigan Southern, ,j Sinking Fnnd.,. do do 2d mort gage, 7s. J. 100 25 do 44%, | 100 ,..,. j convertible, 1867...... I j j Illinois Central 7s, 1375 j j j Lackawanna and Western Bonds.. 25%| 25%j! McGregor Western, 1st. mortgage. j • Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage!. L 42% 43% i I Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 100 Quicksilver 1101 | Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72 Consolidated and Sinking Fund do M do 2d 25%; 23% ;..100 100 Quartz Hill 69 —— 100 .100 100 Extension. 100 100 Pacific Mail s. Am. Nav. & Mar. Railway Union Navigation Transit.—Central American ;.. ;| Hudson Kiver, 1st mortgage, 1869 24% 10 f( do . do do 91 91 | 37%; , Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. do 2d'mortgage M^nposa (Gold.) 1st mortgage. do 97% ,100 mortgage, 1879 3d mortgage, 1883 !| 100 Canton Nicaragua 40 40 50 100 50 50 Improvement.—Boston Water Power Brunswick City.. Rutland Marble Smitl and Pormelee — 20 Manhattan Metroooli tan New York Express.—Adams 145% 135 143 50 ; Jersey City and Hoboken Cary Telegraph.—Western Union Western Union,Russian Steamskij).—ailantic Mail.. . j 35 38 3S% 20 ! (Brooklyn) 100 ..100 100 do 50 50 100 10 100 100 25 Lehigh & Susquehanna Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 34 ! 96 103% 104 104% 33 1 3 % 35 , Miscellaneous Shares : *• 96 94%; 95 102% 101 % ,162% • Voa\—American Citizens Ilarlem 100 Pacific, 7 i ercent Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do do 3d mortgage, conv.. do do 4ih mortgage Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund.. i Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort. do do do 2d mort. .101 i Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 100%! do 2d Chicago. R. I. and 25 Interest, do do do do Chicago and Rock 24%' 24 23% 24 97%; 99] 99% 260 Louis, Alton and Terre Haute. do do do preferred. 100 do do do do 95 67 53% Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877... Central of N w Jersey, 1st mortgage Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund 98 do 1st mortgage do do do Income Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.... 6s 5s... — 24% Stonington 100 Toledo, Wabash and Western 50 do do" do preferred.... 60 Railroad Bonds4 York 7s , 35 37% 55% 54 99%; 98% 100ji0ti% 114 i 114 — 71% 90 „ — j 63 63 1 ,.1001 100 50 100 1107 107 69% 90 100 lOOj 100 and Chicago Sixth avenue 99% ... (coupon).., (registered) 100 pref.. .100 pref ...100 Reading St. Joseph RR.)... do 6s, (Hannibal and St. do 6si (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 6s, 1867-77 do 5s, 1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty Bonds 114 13% I -j 28 100; — |l0>% Panama.... Pittsburg, Fort Wavne .. ‘ 100 .100 ! New York Central New York and NewIIaven 100 ...100 New Haven and Hartford Norwich and Worcester. .100 Ohio and Mississippi Certificates do • do do preferred — ’. Louisiana 6s 1125 50 100 50 100 104 71%' 100 guaranteed. ..100 do do Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien 1st do do do do do do 2d Milwaukee and St. Paul do do a, preferred Morris and Essex New Jersey j 7U 100 100 50 1 50 121 122% |130 100 113 ..100 112% 1 112% 85 S4 Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem do preferred IT udson River...... Illinois Central.. cou]K>n. registered. 1871 5s, 10-40s Q%s. ;ii2 69 100 preferred do .. 1881 (i ytut If,). do. do. 100 Erie registered do 5s, 1871 do do '110% 108% 107 ,108 100; Wod. Thur».| Fri - 6s, New i registered. 6s, 1867 do dQ preferred 111 .'...100107%: 130 129 6s, 1868 coupon. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy ....100130 130 ; — registered. 6s, 1868 •. 100! \ i — 107% 1 7% 107%: 107% 107%! Chicago and Great Eastern 6s, 1881 :—coupon. j — 35% 36 86% .100; 107% i07%:io:%i —io7%i Chicago and Milwaukee 6s, 1881 registered. 100, 36 j 34% j 34% 107% 107%, 107% i Chicago and Northwestern j 62% 63% 65% 6s, 5-20s (1st iss ae).... coupon. do do preferred 100; 64%; 61 59% I '107% 1 93%! 94% 95% 95% 69,5-203 registered. j :05% 100 96 ; 93 105 >105% 105%■ Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific .05%, coupon 6s, 5-20s (2d issue).. 1 1 -— 76% I 78 100 ; 105%; 105% j Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati. 6s, 5.20s do —registered 105*; 50' 82% 79% 117 119 119 105%; 105%: 105%: Cleveland and Pittsburg 6s, 5.20s (3d issue) coupon Cleveland and Toledo 50 *±8% US j 106%i i1 j 6s, 5.20s, do —registered 101%; 104% 104% 1104%; 104% 104% Delaware, Lackuwanna and Western 50 54% | 56 58%; 55% 5.20s (uew issue)... . c upon 6s, Oregon War do ...100 125 ..... . Chicago and Alton Tuee. Mon Satur. Railroad Stocks ; Central of New Jersey National: 5.20s do ENDING FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1.) SECURITIES. STOCKS AND 135%-135% 134% 134% 134% 135 Room) ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK Fri. I'liurs, ed. Tues. Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. STOCKS AND 148 THE CHRONICLE. 2,1867.] 92 90 THE CHRONICLE. 144 <£t)e 4Lo miner Exports of Leading Articles from New York. cial $ime0. al The streets and harbor continue in and ice ; © § a state of ee « © oo co co >0*0 IO •—< C • r— partial block¬ § 3 3 55 © t- ej O E-i ^ i t om Sm c* 55 05 .O ^ Tf H f 5 a © E ! r-. © -®®©co©©co©<NG:r-t-© .ijr'C{CiO'-'CCOr,*CO^I' • a i: o* cc c t- n t- 2 £-<?* • • • —I • • ct ’ ‘t-T ’ -4 • r-T© 8 -5* - CO • •©©©dOC'l.OOO® • co^ • • ’ccT ■ t-T r-T a c* ©Ot , 8* p COW i-i ® • • •© .©••••« • • COCO • • • 'if :*° : -if • o • o ■ • © • • • ■ © • • • • a • co © • ^ : : :§5 : -S .3 o to-day to he , «s 86,926 barrels, against 57,167 barrels last month, and 66,631 barrels Feb. 1, 1866. Lard has declined from the cessation of • a co If S— r—i .©©Hh ^ o—. T-t to © I Ot ■ a Q0 ^5 cj :8S : CO • © • co . 3 « :§ •i-* • •<?* • 3 « the expoit s? © © -O CO <—•>—. G^SttO t- : 3 * cn © 'i-Tr-T . 2 2 H demand; but bacon and cutmeats have been in large demand fi r the South and for city consumption, and have slightly improved, bacon closing at 10j@10Lc. for Cum. berland cut, ll^@ll£c. for short-libbed, and 12c. for short clear. This improvement in prices is partly to be attributed to the almost total suspension of receipts of live and dressed hogs, transportation being impeded by the snow. Pork packing continues, hut is not active, except, at Chic¬ ago, where the receipts for the week were 29,500 dressed* and 41,200 live; total 70,700. For the corresponding period in 1866 the receipts were, dressed, 40;553 ; live, 36,304 ; total, 76,857. The packing to the present time approximates to 533,344 head, At the corresponding period last year it was noted at 309,096 head. At Cincinnati the receipts of hogs for the week were 28,473, previously reported 407,915; total this season 430,388. The number packed each of the previous seasons, was as follows :—1805 6, 354,079 ; 1804-5, 350,000. It is now estimated that the number of hogs packed the present season will exceed that of last season about 750,000, and the hogs this season are a little heavier than last. The increase on last year is about 50 per cent. Beef of all kinds has been barely steady, without impor¬ tant transactions. Butter is dull. Cheese is arriving in quantities considerably in excess of last January, but prices are supported by liberal shipments to Liverpool. Hides are firm but quiet. Leather is dull, and heavy weights lower. Petroleum has further declined, and seems to be without demand of any character. Naval stores have been quiet. A few hundred bbls. Rosin have been shipped to London and Liverpool. But the ice in the harbor is particularly severe in preventing access to the yards for naval stores. Oils all rule firm. Crude sperm has been sold at' $2.60@ $2.65, and Linseed oil for future delivery brings 5c. per gallon on current quotations. Tallow has been taken mod¬ erately for export to France. Fish have further declined, and foreign fruits have been dull and drooping. Metals are dull and drooping. The demand forconsump tion is exceedingly small. Seeds have had a slight upward tendency, most apparent in Clover seed and Calcutta Lin¬ seed. Except Linseed all Calcutta goods have been dull and 'esicad© r-t r-» r~t 3 3 . statement C* C* ■ largely-increased stock, shown by the if *e s © suitable stock. Pork has declined under ©CO© ;H«Zos - <® many Provisions have been irregular. •® o • © c- © 5^ si important water courses’ are entirely closed with ice, and there is no disposition to do more than is absolutely essential to the requirements of the hour. Cotton has been quiet but firm. Breadstuff’s have been dull, and decidedly lower. Groceries (except coffee, in which some speculation has taken place,) have been dull and ne¬ glected. Tobacco continues dull, owing to the scarcity of snow -** <3 co ©j EPITOME. Friday Night, Feb. 1. ade from ■ ©m3 I rn COMMERCIAL [February 2, 1867. 1-1 * : : : * * ♦ : :S : • • • • •'* • O • :§IS © <* * J ®1 • • I-I * ; ; • c3 o © 3 ”3 C3 > N CO -© • © • © ©5 A* • -CO -too • • • • • ta . • cc o co > . • • <5 -if O* --qT a ■ • ^ a G ^ © _r r-* *4 • • • - '£■ T> CO O* y-4 • O* » O* 9* eo oo • os a • CO 1 ^ T—t O S | o 3 S ^ ® ■r3, ’ ■ a • TJ* • c* ■ o* n oo, ■ a o, a i-i • coo © »-l : QOi-O . oo ao »© t- o SC CO ■<£ r-1 • .«©<?» • ^ra ©* —< ■ ■ l-CO ■ ©* 1 r-1 <=><& a t-a t-cc a cc c* © x © , - ^ t- rCO a -O MHO .wte© ~ rl TJ» ► • 8 X3 O Tj* O ■ £53 H ^ H o *n ■ io ©* • • *“ cr^ • ■0*00 1 SO • • l- i-t -r O !-> OO ■ :3 ■ t- cci© i-* -t* oo co t-i ■ ”?* r-i © tO © OO 5* ■ • cs «■* ■ :S i-> 00 1 " 18 ffJKHiet- —I . • :^g : : . .1-4 • • CO . -00c© 03 • • K17 « OO CO T-< 05 an . io t— 5 » 2 e© tt- o ©* CO <n H CJ . © ©> •©©» « o • 3 . . • <1 a. H o? © c- H . . ’t: J3 . -© : :§ e© ■ o 3 rt W © =1 »—* 5 8 :?? : © S’ aj C. GO ^ d r-« ^ O o ^ is o w l>- c* ^ rt S § • o • 8 I o* . © . rt< ■©© to :8 rd W ■ ’ w ^ ■ ■ *-'t ,0* • r— © © -i* L- 00 Cf: •»-. • i-io ©O • © r— r-l • co -it oo" • • •«« • • ©r-» TT t- -*-> tsj si .in © © © o* © .CO —W-fMO to t— • -t* n; W obliged to resort to charters. Latterly, there is more by sail, and rates for grain have declined, but cotton, owing to the large offerings, rates have slightly advanced. 0 © © nj op H © l- • 22 C© oo -©rH©--*-©-“Tl<oo • -r n» co co to oo r-* to ©* © © Tt* © ir —J* ofr-4r-Tco oo CO r—( a © "V o* w t. tc tc C-5 £5 ^ - _ ftp tr^> - © ■ ■ — ■—■ r • ; • •- ai G ci n '^'4-4 O ft *73 ; >u o t; a; £ O V °= ,’4 -C ta . • u S « 1 rj - » ci • a> • :! r<r c. The H ■—■ oia oo g 3 ^ g ax: w- : c 3 gc © C* © o co ot oo © "Vriccc* GO -T tO ro -r © COrH CO r-* CO were from the port • • L-CO^ • HISC m © © — 8 r- co CO r-l oo © c© m 0)^0 .opinio©©'© f-K -fV * t- CO ' «o ©' © room i-i “S "d improvement that has been of January, but the demand following table shows the exports of leading articles of com¬ of New York ein- e January 1, 1867, the principal ports of destination, and the total for the same period in 1860. The 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 Cbsonici* from that here giver*: _ ■ »io T reights to Great Britain have advanced. The room on the berth, whether in steamer or sail vessel, became greatly reduced, and extreme rates were paid. Shippers of corn ^ ■tH ’ drooping. merce • co o CO • « £ 5 . . : g-g OJ"-1 toe! ci O O : O'« : -r- 75 . c cs . : : O | G 1.-Q « » • w -rs d « g v O , -- ct O .V ^0 Hil m IF I ’■ emma 'M bllpi . v G ■ - .oo-^to - Wool maintains the slight established during the month has fallen off materially. • o . c3 : :Eg S 'I | bl THE CHRONICLE. February 2, 1867.] 145 V The total foreign exports from the United States sinct following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading September 1 now amount to 461,762 bales, against 558,89? articles of commerce at this port for the week ending JaD. 25, since Jan .bales for the same period last year. Below we give ou/ Imports of Leading Articles. The 1,1867, and for the corresponding period in 1866: [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Since Jan. 1, 1867. 430 2,825 891 For the week. s Buttons 114 Coal, tone Cocoa, bags... Coffee, bags Cotton, hales. Drugs, &c. Bark, Peruv 208 .... 165 .. • • 465 io .... 15 ... Oil, Olive... Opium Soda, bi-carb Soda, sal Soda, ash... 1.876 57 6.886 sis 1,117 1,742 Flax Furs 12 52 33 115 .... . 3 572 Hair Hemp, bales.. Ivory Jewelry, &c. Jewelry—. Linseed . . 338 7,240 6,641 New York, Feb. 31S 1, 789 5.556 3.215 6,565 Florida, Jan. 25+ 27,806 Carolina, Feb. 1 Virginia, Feb. 1... Other p'ts, Feb. 1* 24,628 4.581 96 Wines Lemons 10,791 Oranges.... 3,1856 11,420 13,645 7.635 53,451 78,459 19,976 75.9S9 79.124 555.676 425,039 2,319 38,268 25,521 J... 18.510 15.402 114 46 84 Ginger...... Pepper Saltpetre 61 81 31,689 Woods. Fustic 3,278 Logwood... 42,786 20.865 . Nuts 31 6J’83 . . Raisins 141 Hides,andrsd. 861 Rice 2,( Or, Spices, Ac. ’ 478 Cassia 68 832 . 11957 6,657 10,277 50 75 . . . 1,895 . . . .... 11,022 .... 9,166 8,886 7.197 2,666 10,351 1,333 12,175 Receipts of Domestic Produce for the Week, end January 1. since 70 Cutlery.... The 2,263 536 Molasses Metals. &c. 337| 404 Mahogany. . . . ... receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Feb. 1, in !866, have been as follows : since Ashes, pkgs... 357 72 Breadstnffs— Flour, bbls.. 18,926 121.020 1,534 Wheat, bush. Com 37,000 160,835 Oats 20,500 110,080 Rve 490 1,690 Malt. 14,675 61.400 Rosin Tar Pitch 120.840 42.819 Oil cake, Flaxseed Beans. 874 Peas C. mcal.bbls. 2,<’42 C. meal,bags. 22,600 Buckwheat & B.W. flour,bg 515 1,360 9.077 2,096 5.129 — Cotton, bales .. Copper, bbls Copper, plates Driedfruit.pkgs Grease, pkgs... Hemp, bales... 17,742 1,622 196 8 Hides, No 3,953 1,579 Hods, bales. 520 55,384 187,396 Leather, sides Lead, pigs Molasses, hhds .. . . . • • and bbls... Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl 493 10 600 Spirits turp.. 702 4,362 pkgs 102 3t.O 98 24,350 572 Pork Beef. pkgs. Lard, pkgs Lard, kegs ... 8.752 5,302 373 586 32 326 — 199 2,196 1,1 S3 3,397 54 283 11,965 241 287 283 547 62 851 2.643 945 8,407 128 11,296 3,811 6,805 184 251 198 861 895 615 1.832 9,459 Hogs, Rice, 6,645 44,028 48,966 100 100 6;2 rough, bush... 1*. N. • France Other PORTS. 44,009 146,665 231.20f 10,124 184,227 801 44.9C0 43,734 20 4 32,591 3,784 1,257 14,676 25,498 6,918 155,078 138,298 35,805 .... 261 10.580 395,030 39,609 27 123 461,762 429,945 601.19f 72,293 45.531 136,618 s * .... . .... . . 48,342 1,970 .... 9,744 10,319 .... .... .... .... • • .... . 1,970 • the little a on the present moment, however, the weather is more mild, and of moving cotton bid fair to greatly diminished at at early day, when brisk spring a The export orders looked for. light, but there have been liberal shipments to Liverpool on consignment. The sales of the week are about 8,500 bales, the7 market closing dull at the following quotations : N. Orleans are under the money, pressure Middling.... , a Upland. £9 81 83 Florida. 29 31 33 33# 34 $ lb Ordinary Good Ordinary Low Middling 36 Good Middling. Mobile. 30 31 33 35 34 39 The exports of Cotton from New York this week show considerable increase over the total for last week, amount¬ The particulars of these ship¬ ing in all to 11,705 bales. ments are as follows: To Liverpool, per steamers—Persia, 2.013 City of New York, 349 954... .Manhattan, 2,175... .Thornton The Queen, 2,426 per ship St. Total bales Mark, 2.549. To Bremen, per steamer Bremen, 767. To Havre, per steamer \Tlle de Pans, Below 10,468 767 472 Tota> bales 472. Total bales give pur table .showing the exports of Cotton York, and their direction for each of the last four weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September 1, i866; and in the last column the total for the same period of the previous year : we from New Total The follows: Mobile town. 24,053 Charleston..,,...,,,,, 8,109 gftyannfth, 8,287 r-1.- W6e& frr m »t S8.9P5 Total. 76? 31,7"5 700 «... 8,256 — Bremen 472 .... .... 425 • » • t 9 - • • - * t . • » 0 . 734 . . .... » .... t • MM • • * 9 9 1 • 14,753 3,681 8,109 mi —vtKSfS+i trz'asf MS Jan. ; 15. Jan. j 22. Liverpool j. ! 14,640 Other British Ports i 204 ; 14,844 6,264 491 270 Total to Gl. Britain 10,660 j Havre Other French ports Total Frenclt Bremen and Hanover i .... • • • 491 • 4$6 1 29. ft date. prev. year. 134,245 1195,807 2,373 .... 6,365 136,618 202,172 10,466 472 3,784 11,151 8 .... 270 1,254 472 3,784 767 7,690 4,875 4,850 7,276 6,891 13,816 11,865 860 644 660 6 1,434 1,073 Other ports to Jan. i 10,466 6,264 .... Hamburg Total to N. Europe.. All others Havre. .... : 8. .... 1,559 1,254 4,434 767 Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar.... -Exported this week to pool. Jan. Same time 11,159 89 l receipts of cotton at all the ports this w eek show a further slight increase, amounting to 77,941 bales'(against 70,323 bales last week, and 61,280 bales two weeks since), making the total receipts since September 1, this year. 1,037,115 bales, against 1,090,740 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The exports from all the ports this week amount to 41,269 bales (against 41,099 bales last week), of which 38,905 bales were to Liverpool, 425 bales to Queens¬ town, 1,172 bales to Havre, and 707 bales to Bremen, as 10,466 734 & Texas 30 32 34 38 37 WEEK ENDING From New York Baltimore New Orleans . change. Early improved reports bf cable from Liverpool; but the demand was very moderate al the advance, and latterly under continued liberal receipts at the ports, and weak European accounts, the improvement has been lost. Long Island Sound is now closed with ice, and transportation to the New England mills, except by un¬ usual, expensive, aud inadequate routes, is suspended. At week it revived in the EXPORTED TO Queens¬ . without material The market this week is Friday, P.M., Feb. 1, 1867. LivorLiver¬ 77,77.* 45,218 16,8Ct 77,917 32,87 20,998 38,4t 150,0(t 22,448 4,124 24,628 4S.342 +50,006 Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York stnee Sept. 1,1866 COTTON. - 8TOC1T NORTH. Total. for’gn. 32,567 25,498 5,661 1,037,115 Total Great Britain 131,674 Texas, Jan. 18 5,516 4,597 21,221 4,203 2.076 499 .... 1. - 430,823 160,293 85,981 N. Orleans, Jan. 25. Mobile, Jan. 25 Charleston, Jan. 25. Savannah, Jan. 25.. 48,239 10,419 39,440 4,896 21,954 12,877 7,973 Tallow, pkgs.,. 4,968 .3,3S5 102 6,772 53.793 1,154 1,689i Tobacco, hhas.. 220,115 Whiskey, bbls.. 466| Wool, bales 3,678 9.331 5,610 40,626 11,718 2,638 3,392 51,817 Tobacco, pkgs.. 1 Dressed 3,008 No 36,258 72,285 118.879 2,155 4 1,128 518 7.076 4.598 Rice,fpkgs., 94,382 Starch 760 Stearine 656 Spelter, slabs... 1,475 Sugar, hhds & 414 bbls 4,890 Same 536 • Eggs 2,9:30 61,182 77,114 91.309 705 8-J7 3.547 4S0 151 17.429 * Cheese Cut meats.... 23.169 1.011 14,817 3.419 23,864 3,722 203 68,215 Provisions— 1,737 Butter, pkg.s. 8,917 2,105 610 7,892 190,772 .Oil, lard 194,974 iOil, Petroleum. 2,553 I Peanuts, bags. 2.915 Barley Grass seed... Since week. Jan. 1. time'66. 567 SINCE SEPT. demand is [Of the items left blank in 1866 no record was made.] This 8HIP- h’nts to ' PORTS. the difficulties in the way Jan. 1, and for the same time Since Same This week. Jan. 1. time’66 1 TO— EXTORTED SINCE SEPT. rec’d - 238 8 1,237 4.460 20.394 31.323 3.258 832 ... 495 Wool,-bales... 13,183 2,960 4 102 Articles reported by value. 8.716 Cigars $9,031 $25,125 $81,833 2,549 iCorks 1,031 3,518 5,819 341,944 263,529 1,393 Fancy goods.. 88,956 907 Fish 1,109 S7,307 97,151 513 Fruits, &c. dT)9 3 16 Watches.... 1,920 hhds, tes & bbls.. 485 2,450 23 150 333 3 Bristles Hides, dres'd India rubber.. 3,183 1,221 j Tobacco 279;Waste 264 Wines, &c. 1.041 Champ, bkts 3.756 Hides, &c. 1,531 95j Sugar, bxs&bg 163 371 • 129.451 2.6621 Tea 29? 220 Stocks at Dates Mentioned. Tin, boxes.. 10 718 slabs,lbs 41,278 glance the total receipts, export?, a Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, an* 17.895 831,500 Steel the porlt stocks, &c.: 3 782 Spelter, lbs^ 56 1,051 159 35 629 18 556 31,467 Sept. 1, showing at 26.134 1.109.290 9.278 38.187 424.693 135; Sugar, .... 67 25 ... Gunny cloth 298 0 15 • ... Same time I860. 823 Tin 857 530 Rags 1,000 since For Since the Jan. 1, week. 1867. 265 1,275 15:854 1.057 2,151 . 33 .... .... Cochineal... Cr Tartar Gambier.... Gums, crude Gum. Arabic Indigo Madder. Oils, ess 2,300 70,814 884 Blea p’wd’rs Brimst. tns. Hardware... Iron.RRb’rs Lead. pigs. 576 4,810 72,978 • - Same time 1S66. at all usual table of the movement of Cotton Total .... Spain, etc Grand Total * The receipts .... .... | .... | ... .... ’12,219 i 16,589 ! 7,968 .... : 11,705 : 155,078 225,83 given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessc e, Kentucky, <fcc., not otherwise enumerated. [February 2, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 146 prices were firm at 38 cents. After Monday, however, very little was holders refusing to offer any amount at the decline. Middlings were quoted at the close 311@32c. Freights are about the same. Several vessels are filling for Liverpool at f@$ for square, and $ for round bales. To New York the charge is lc., an l to Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week and since Sept. 1 : This week. Bales. From New Orleans . Texas Savannah Mobile Florida Total lor the week. Total since Sept. 1. 173 732 16,053 1,228 11,677 . . Hales. 77,342 15,065 63,685 2,654 This week. Bales. 860 Since Sept. 1. From South Carolina North Carolina Since Sept. 1. Bales. <£c. 3,485 30,811 19,553 41.542 4,233 47,276 1,138 Norfolk, Baltimore, Per Railroad done, prices declining, but Boston 1 $. Charleston, Jan. 26.—The — — 17,742 323,004 weeks, arid the stock, following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬ The 9 receipts for the week ending Jan. 25 6,252 bales, agamst 6,233 bales last week. Shipments for this week amount to 9,848 bales, (against 5,857 bales last week,) of which 8,109 bales were to Liverpool, 1,655 to New York, 70 to Philadelphia," and 14 to Savannah. The receipts, sales and exports for a series of amouut to New price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and gold at the close of each week since Dec. 7, York, and price of were as follows: Freight for Upl'd—> —Bo ston.—> 8iuce Last. week. Sep. 1. Receipts from— New Orleans Texas 1,092 33,459 . 328 avannah Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina • • • Since Last week. Sep. 1. 984 5.767 86 44 .... 4.9S1 3,764 459 255 .... .... .... 4,067 1,335 3,295 693 717 141 5,619 6,464 14.. 21.. 44 28.. Jan. 4.. *4 11.. “ IS.. 44 25.. 44 .... .... 9,086 17,288 Date. Rec'ts. Sales, merits. Dec. 7.. 5,221 2.258 5,267 Baltimore.-^ Since Last week. Sep. 1. 850 207 PhikuUphia.-^ 6.265 5,378 4,248 6,283 6,252 3,712 2.496 1.086 3.347 1,668 1,790 1,S91 To Liver- Trice of Ship- tember 1: 3l#@— 33 @34 33 @33 @— pool. #@ #@ #@#@— #@— #@— #@— 32#@- #@— Stock. mid. 10,695 31 2.444 =13,870 2.474 17,860 7,574 4.353 16.334 17,409 1.634 5,857 9,848 20,023 20,399 16,803 @— @32# 33#@— 32 Price To New York. * gold. #@— 140® 142 1 ®— 140@14t 1 @- 137@139 1 @- 132@13t 1 @- 134@t36 1 @- 134@136 1 1 C</>— @— 136@13S 135@137 light on account of the limited supply off rMuch of the stock on hand is held at a limit, which is above pre¬ sent. quotations. 333 Purchasers have shown a good disposition to operate, Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... and early in the week prices advanced, but later, under the unfavorable 97 17,219 1,380 Total receipts 12,012 bales 2,130 105,643 foreign advices and the fall in. gold, there was a decline, middling clos¬ ing at 32|, and strict middling at 33. Sterling exchange closed un¬ Reshipments. r settled at $6 33@4 44 for 60 day bills. There have been no exports of cotton from either of these Mobile, Jari. 26.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates cities except from Baltimore, which were to the amount of from Mobile. The receipts for the week ending Jan. 25 were 12,097 734 bales, all of which were to Liverpool per steamship bales, against 8,308 bales last week, and the shipments were 7,059 bales, of which 3,256 bales were to Liverpool, 4 25 bales to QueensMexican. town, 1,967 bales were to New York, 564 bales to Portland, and Shipping News. — Foreign Exports from Southern 847 bales to New Orleans, leaving the stock on hand aud on ship¬ board, not cleared, of 77,771 bales. The receipts for the correspond¬ Ports.—We have given above the vessels in which the ing week of last year were 15,450 bales, and the exp >rta 17,258 foreign shipments for the week were made from the North¬ bales. The following are the weekly receipts, sales and experts for a series of weeks, and the stock, priee of middlin', rates of freight ern Ports; we now add the same information with regard to Liverpool aud New York, aud price of gold at the close of each ' week: to the Southern Ports. Virginia New York, &c*. 377 . 629 6.107 26.004 9,744 ... .... Business still continues 6,421 97 ing. * — * Freight , Total bales. Exported from steamship Gladiator, 1,282... .per ships—Belgravia, 3,797 ...Cambria, 3,4-4 Jo?. Fish, 3,902 per Orleans*—To Liverpool, per New bark Elwood Cooper, 1,6 TS To Havre, per bark Marie Snzrnine, 700 Mobile—To Liverpool, per ship Lancastrian. 3,256 '. To Queenstown (and a market) per brig Kirke, 425 Savannah—To Liverpool, per bark—John Ellis, 2,228Upland... Sea Island— Charleston—Per bark Ost ndin. 112. Sea Inland, 026 LTpland The Sea 14, 53 790 3.25 • 425 .and 50 bark 8.109 from Southern Ports this week 28,830 shipments of cotton to foreign ports from New during the post few weeks there are now about 58 vessels having on board in all 60,204 bales of cotton detain¬ ed at the Smith w est Pass at the mouth of the Mississippi, the bar being blocked up by three or four vessels w hich are on it, the balance being inside the bar. This accounts for the non-arrival of steamers at Liverpool from that port which Of the Orleans overdue. “ 4* 44 “ The transactions for the week have been quite limited, and currency prices close about 2 cents lower, on account of the unfavorable advices from New York and Liverpool and the decline in gold. Sterling ex¬ change closes at 139@141, and New York sight has been-steady all the week at 4@| dismuut. New Orleans Jan 26.—The mail returns for the week ending Jan* 25. show the receipts to be 30,755 bales, against 29,664 bales last week, and 25,019 bales the previous week. The shipments for the last week were 21,701 bales, of which 14,053 bales were to Liverpool, 700 to Havre, 4,749 to New York, and 2,199 to Boston. Stock on hand Jan 25 was 231,202 hales. The receipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of midJli< g rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week since Dec. 7, were as follows : later statement by mail from Galveston. The receipts for week ending Jan. 18 were 4.182 bales, against 5,451 last week, and the shipments were 8.004 bales, of which 870 were to New Orleans, and *2,634 to Boston. Below we give the receipts, sales, and shipments for a seres of we«ks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liveipool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week : Freights. , Price To Liver- To New Receipts—x Date. Dec. 7... “ 14... 44 21... 44 28... J an ary 1... «“ 11... 44 18... * 1860. 1865. 4,4*3 5,667 5,042 3.509 4,516 3.842 6.139 6,447 3,324 4,928 5,451 0,624 8,234 4,182 Specie. The limited stock Exp. Stock, mid.* 2 090 23,628 21#(ft22 3,096 25,574 22@— 4,517 25.603 23#@— 1,385 30,357 24 @— York.t pool. %<&~ Freights 33,801 25#%— 5,009 34,243 25 @— 3,004 35,421 24#®- Date. Rec’ps. Dec. 7.... 25,299 4‘ 14.... 31,979 “ 21.... 37,764 44 28... 29,461 Jan. 4.... 24,344 44 11.. 25.019 44 18 44 25 . gold. * 1#@— 139 @140# 1#@~ 139*@14'J# #@— 136 @ — #@— 1#@— 133 @ 136 #@— 1#@— 133 @ 135 #@- 1#®.— 133 @ 135 #@# 1#®— 136*@ 137* tPe isteamer. offering at current rates has prevented much act¬ Holders are firm, and refuse to sell at present prices, except in isolated cases. The market is therefore unsettled and quotations ate nominal. Exchauge on New York l(a)± discount. ivity. Sales. Exp. Stoek. 22,900 9.170 190,426 40,000 25,408 198,708 32,800 19,806 218,643 22.900 26,219 224,022 32,050 31,163 218,191 to ow we Liverpool, 3,533 bales to New York, aud 530 to Baltimore. Begive the receipts, shipments, prices. <fcc., for a series of weeks : Receipts. Dec. 44 7 There was Stock. Price Mid. 8,240 15.819 31 ®.. 6,976 7,837 11,589 11,156 5,013 8,496 11,401 5,953 23,508 27,849 28,037 32,873 32#@ 31#@32 33 @ 31#@32 5,230 10,804 8,295 14 21 44 28 Jan. 4 “ 11 14 18 “ 25 “ ShipnTs. 5,831 3,527 7,016 3,552 considerable activity in the raaiket 18,802 22,590 27,3:13 31 31 30 @31# @81# @30# efirly in the week, anc Price pool. York.* gold. #@ 9-16 1*@— 139 @- Mid. 30 @31 32 @— 9-16@— 1*7/,— 32 @33 9-16@ — D@— 31 @— 9-16@ — 1*@— 33*@— 9-16@ll-16 1*@— 18,900 26,227 219,543 32*@33 9-16@29,664 32,750 30,289 220,707 33 @— 9-lH@— 1*@— 30,755 233)50 21,701 231,202 32^@— #@11-16 l.@— 137 @137# 133#@133# 132#@132# 133#@134 132#@133 137 @137# 134#@ — By steam. There curtency has been prices are a more lower, limited movement in cotton this week, and in sympathy with the fall in gold. Less en¬ couraging accounts from Liverpool has also had an unfavorable effect. Middling close nominal at 32 cents, low'middling at 31 cents, and ordi nary at 2Sc@29c. Freights are about the same as last week, except that coastwise are lower.. The rates for Liverpool being by steam H by $@11-16, and coastwise, by. steam, 1 and by sail 1£. Sterling exchange is quoted nominally 143@143^ for bill of lading bills, and 146il for bank. Savannah, Jan. 26.—The receipts for the week ending Jan. 25 were 11,156 bales (of which 283 were from Florida), against 11.589 bales last week. The shipments this week were 5,953 bales, of which 2,287 bales were , To Liver-To New Price , Price #@.. 380 Price of Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock* mid. L’pool. York. gold. 10,447 7,100 2,879 60,933 30® # * 1¥@ # 138'@139* 14 12,719 11.050 6,272 67.3*0 30@31 # 1# tn % 137 @138* 21 13,899 16,500 9,9:38 71,341 32@— # 1#@ 1 133 @135 28........ 1#@ 1# 132 @133 14,746 6,100 6,267 79,820 3 @— # Jan * 6,905 14,500 9,257 77,468 32#— # 1#@ 1# ' 134 @135* 11 9,508 9,200 7,T35 79,24131#— # 1#® 1# 134 @135 18.: S,30J 11,300 12,374 75,170 32@32# % 1#@ 1# 136 @137* .“’25.... 1#@ 1# 134 @135* 12,097 5.450 7,059 77,771 30@31# # .. Galveston, Jan. 19 — We have received one week’s , To New 44 2,287 • ' are To Date. Dec. 7 Queen, 300 hairs Sea Island, l.472 Upland... .bark Toscano, 301 Island, 1,909 Upland, Nereua 65 sea Island, 2,985 Upland ... Total exports Price of ' TOBACCO. . C* Friday, P. M., Feb. 1, 1867. exports of crude tobacco frdm all the ports this week are extremely small, amounting in the aggregate to only 107 hhds., 65 cases, and 205 bales. In manufactured there is a slight increase, the total reaching 78,065 pounds, against 77,105 pounds last week, and 61,469 pounds the previous The week. seen The movement at all the in the following : pdrts for the week may be. Exported from .... New York Boston 1 .= 9 New Orleans Total this week Total last week Total previous week. 65 . .... 30 504 166 .. .. . .. Received since. 205 149 20» 9 679 130 78,065 .... . 284 Sales & 77,105 61,469 ... 150 .... reshipments to Jan. 31, ’67.. February 1, 1867 Stock on hand we “ “ “ “ “ “ Hhds. 2,517 9.753 To , Germany 1,058 Belgium Spain. Ac Mediterranean Austria Africa, Ac 16 4 Australia . ... • . , . . . . . •’ > . . 79 . . . , . 212,354 45 332 Indies East Indies Mexico All others . , . . ... 723 . 1,516 . * . . ... . • 50 31,546 413 40,110 ... 206.688 ... .. . ... 312 112 313 ... . 50 172 3,088 6,721 5 2,417,979 2,098 229 1,476 .. the ports from which the following table indicates have been shipped : exports Bxs. &/-Stems—. Lbs. bis. mant'd. Hhds. Cases. Bales. eras. Strips, pkgs. hhds. 229 2,383,143 694 619 142 5,702 2,486 .11,105 From ... - Baltimore Boston Portland.... New Orleans ,, 2010 . .., 172 6,721 3,088 LEAF Ky. Light H'w West. enf & Cl'ksv’le. 4c@ 4}£c. — @ — r Common Medium do ..4%@5 Leaf. 7 do .5><£@ 9 . 5c @ 6 @ 9 10 @12 , LEAF SEED .. Ky. Light H'vy West. Leaf. & CTksv’le. 10c @12 18 @l;>c 18 @14 10 @17 15 @16 IS @20 N. Y. (BOXES) Ohio.—Good 5 : " ... Fillers Penn.—Kunninglots. State.—Wrappery lots. 12 @l8c Running “ . 7 @12c @ 7c 7X@10c 5 *@ 7c running lots... Average @20c @10c 7 Fillers 2,417.979 229 this port: N. Y. State.—Fillers @50c @40c Conn.—Prime wrappers 40 Average “ 80 “ to b’d’rs 10 Cora. 7,04S (HHD3.)., Good Leaf. Fine do Selections. .. 3 @ 4c 6 @10c 3 Filleis..... @ 4c manufactured. Black Work, com., good tax paid. 25 @30c. I “ 40 @75c. | Black fine BrigbtWork.com., good @70c. Fine, tax paid. 80 @1 25 Work, med. in bond.. 12J£@18c good & fine *• 20 @30c. “ 60 “ 25 @40c. Bright Work, med.. good & fine 45 @75c. I “ , “ 15 @.40c. “ 50 @85c. FOREIGN. The Nov. 1, “ Good “ Fine 85 75@ 90@ Yara. average 95 receipts of tobacco at have been as follows: RECEIPTS hhds. Baltimore . following are the exports the past week : The for 5,564 251 EXTORTS 4,842 44 Havre Bremen New Granada Brazil Cuba 59 .. cas. ;. .. 10 95 .. .. .. 1 705 9,430 2,596 44 27,954 » Mfd, Argentine Re¬ public 50 .... Md., Hhds. 23 106 lor 25 3 14,723 2 24 28 5 IE,128 2,130 23 12,998 .... 24 655 Total Hhds. 4,496 hhds 405 . 328 4,824 900 3,924 Feb. 1, 1867 16,932 1665. 31,140 32,614 demand, and upward of 500 hhds. stock lugs and light leaf were taken for export, at full prices. The on sale is very much reduced, and is now confined to about 600 hogsheads of desirable descriptions, for most of which negotiations are pending. The receipts of the new crop are light, and sell readily as soon as fered. A number of foreign buyers are in the market, awaiting receipts from the West, and supplies would meet with good and immediate of¬ We sale. annex quotations Inferior lugs Good do Inferior to common Medium leaf do • Fair : Light. Heavy. ... . .’ leaf do Choice selections 3 @4 c 4^j@ 5 c. 6 @ 7>*jC 8 @9 c. 10 @11 c 32^@15 c 16 @20 c @ 3*c @ 4.&C @ 6 c @ 8 c @11 c 12 15 @14 @17 c c hogsheads. Cleared for the week: To Liverpool, 9 hogsheads. Total. 283. not* cleared, 3,611 hogsheads. In manufactured tobacco the demand has improved considerably, ami has been pretty active, particularly for the fine bright medium descriptions, of which the stocks are now much reduced i here has also been an improved inquiry for old tax-free tobacco. Our quotations remain with¬ Receipts for the week, 14 New York, 274 hogsheads; to Stock on hand .and on shipboard out material change: 1, ft>s., bright. $1 10@1 26 I Half Extra No. Good and bright do Medium Common, sound Medium & com., $ 8o@ 50@ 65@ 65@ 66@ pounds, bright dark5 90@1 00 | do 70@ 85 | No. 1 5s and 10s &5@i 75 Navy, lbs 25@ 42 | Navy, ^ lbs ilnsound. 90 76 75 70 15 Richmond the tobacco market has of late exhibited a good deal of animation, and pi ices have ruled high. The breaks at the t obacco Exchange were small, in consequence of the light stock in market. We quote, for new : Lugs $4 5(’@7, Medium Leaf $8@1‘2 60 Good Stripping and Shipping $12@I 8, Common Bright $ If (5)20. Medium Blight $‘2<)@3u, Fiue $50(3)75, Extia Fine per lOU lbs. Kentucky.— At Louisville the market continues quiet but firm, and prices fully sustained, with an active inquiry for all good conditioned leaf and fresh receipts. The bulk of the offerings are reviews or resales, and the receipts and shipments continue meagre. As soon as navigati n is resumed the market will be active. The sales to-day were 24 hhds., with no rejections. Prices ranged as follows: 1 hh I. at $2 10,3 at $3@3 60, 5 at $4@l 90, 2 at $5 50@5 80. 3 at $7 25@7 60, 2 at $10, 3 at $11, 4 at $12(3)12 25, and 1 at $15 75. The entire sales of the week sum up 213 hhds, with 26 rejections. The weather has been too cold to strip and prize tobacco, and if the river had been open the receipts would still lnuve been light. The highest price for the week was for a hogshead of Hart county leaf at $25 50 per hundred pounds. Maryland.—At Baltimore there was little or nothing doing in leaf, for want of receipts and the unfavorable weather for handling of sam¬ ples. With reduced stock holders are firm. Inspections comprise 380 Virginia.—At $S0@lt-b hogsheads Maryland (371 of which were reiuspected), Cleared this wreek, 14 hogsheads to Liverpool. Ohio. 1,1867 Inspected of receipts this and 5 hogsheads :..hhds 19,595 Stock Jan. * do previously 14 week Total 115 19,724 . >2 Cleared for foreign ports and on shipboard, not cleared. inquiry for manufactured tobacco, in warehouses closed steady. 18,073" and the market ^ bis. bxs. lbs. ~ Other West Indies • 192 INSPECTION TOBACCO Hhds. 22 Hhds. 783 1,974 Inspection Warehouse, There was more cas. • • 175 Ohio, • Va.&N.C, 14,270 Oulf.ans.—Tobacco is in good New Stock to-day YORK.* hhds. his. bxs. lbs. .. 4,972 of tobacco from New York Mfd, hhds. 755 88 5.759 27,703 TOBACCO FROM NEW OF pkgs. 22,095 1.865 641 357 2.772 124 645 88 117 .... 195 195 Total . 130 48 7 .- . 1,864 pkgs. 22,084 633 226 2.724 110 131 Other v 11 ^-T’l sin. Nov 1hhds. /-Previously-^ hhds. pkgs. 1 8 Virginia.. 1. 1866. SINCE NOVEMBER /—This week—, From lots New York this week, and since NEW YORK AT 1 25@2 50 65@1 05 60*x* 70 60@ 70 Havana.—Wrappers.. Yara Havana.—Fillers—Common. 1866. “ Fine ..... . ■' , 2,093 1,476 .. - Good . ... KENTUCKY Lugs . . following are quotations at Common ... , • • Total since Nov. 1. .27,564 The 1138 330 ... is 21 Philadelphia 30 602 27,788 782 11 23 969 14 4b2 20 . Same time, * Tcs. & New York 2,984 1,119 • YORK .... Total stock.. 64,223 110,657 50S ... NEW - Stock in Brooklyn 1,286.653 ... . ... . . ... ... . 1 '6627,564 Total Delivered since 1 33 241 386 244 102 Brooklyn inspectionReceived since 705 462 ... • 127 ... 7,502 36,411 • • 12,296 -1,...... 121,307 ... ... ... ... ... . . . . • ... ... 30 B. N. Am. Prov.. South America... above • . 558 . The • . . . 41 Total. 299,410 ... ... 13,893 S77 1867 ..1 Received since.,/ lbs. . 50 50 ... ... . &c. T’l since Nv. 1, . . 360 50 821 14 436 ... *... Chino, Iudia, Stock January 1, ... • . 162 2,669 3.464 3,502 France West . 2,850 Holland Italy A bxs . 150 Kv. Hhds. Manfd, Pkgs. 10,703 .... 100 WAREHOUSE 1, 1866. Cer's & ,—Stems—, Cases. Bales, tcs. Stps. hhds. bales. 142 3S-S 229 1,314 no 3,967 150 THE STATEMENT OF STOCKS V MONTHLY November 1, 1866: Tobacco from tUe United States since Novem¬ ber Great Britain .... 3.0S4 11,908 1,200 10,455 2,961 1866 1865 direction, since Exports of .... 344 1.179 •••• give our usual table showing the total exports Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their Below of .... 1,450 2,001 .. 199 . . .... 2,740 150 10,729 bales. bales. hales. bales. Cienfu's, Yara, Cuba, ’’ Havana, ... .... .... SPANISH TOBACCO. OF STOCKS OF .... 14 Baltimore MONTHLY STATEMENT Manf d Pkgs. ,—Stems , lbs. & bxs. hhds. bales. 78,065 1 Hhds. Case. Tierc. Bals. 205 64 84 147 CHRONICLE. THE February 2, 1867.] .. BREADSTUFFS. 31,214 Friday, Feb. 1, 1867, P. 10,779 M. principal features of the market, the past week, have 11,988 been much the same as those of the previous week. With public 1 78,065 64 205 84 Total this week exceptional case*, trade has been dull, and prices drooping The exports in this table to European ports are made up from the man¬ under a strong pressure to sell. ifests. Flour has declined an average of 50c. per barrel. The de¬ Below we give the stocks of Spanish and Domestic To¬ mand has been curtailed by the great difficulty of moving bacco in New York to-day ? February } ; Cisplatine Re¬ * .. 4 110 .. British N. A. Colonies... 25 .. 11,363 The 148 THE CHRONICLE. heavy merchandise the receipts have continued nearly equal of the markets, and the principal receivers and to the wants Chicago.—The of flour and grain ; holders have acted [February 2, 1867. following statement shows the receipts and shipments for the week and for the season commencing April 1 : shift RECEIVED. Week. Week. Season, Season, irregular by forced sales of speculative lots for prompt cash. The re¬ duced stocks of good medium grades cause them to be held rather more firmly at the close. They form but a small pro¬ portion of the aggregate arrivals. The demand from the South 8 somewhat improved by the fact that the harbors of Baltin3ore‘and Philadelphia are entirely closed by ice. Wheat lias sympathized closely with flour, and the decline n Spring wheats is 5@10c. per bushel, being greatest in the poorer qualities. The inquiry from millers is more general at the decline, and part of the demand is for fine Spring to be shipped into Pennsylvania by rail. It is reported that some of the late sales were for France; but orders from that quarter are very limited. Winter wheats maintain their values, and 1867. 1866. 1866-7. 1805-6. their burdens. are become on determination a to diminish or Piiees have been rendered somewhat Flour, bbls in active demand for Flour, bbls Wheat, Flour, bbls Wheat., bush... 651,000 550,000 I Barley, busli... 2,540,000 a 2,200.000 1 3,900,000 ]| T’l grain,bush 14,192,000 2,700,000 1 11.300,0 0 2.680,000 Corn, bneh 4.716,000 Oats, bush Rye, bush 3,479,000 777,000 Decrease 000,000 Dec. 31, 1860. 1 tions Wheat, bushels.... “ Oats, Corn, “ .... Extra Western, mon to com¬ good 9 85® 12 00 Double Extra Western and St. Louis 12 50® 15 50 Southern supers 31 00®12 25 Southern, fancy and ex. 33 00®16 00 Rye Flour, fine and euper^ Corn finc-. meal, Jersey Brandywine Wheat, Chicago per The bushel 6 75® 7 85 and 5 movement Rye Malt NEW 3.335 Corn, bush Rye, bush 119.000 1,310 Barley. &e., busn Oats, bush 103,075 Flour, bbls. Gt. Rritain. EXPORTS C. FROM meal, Wheat, bbls. • 2.076 We*t Indie* since Jan. 1 • • bosh. • .... 917 1,0*. 8 3,145 960 12,644 1,807 810 • week 4.260 1 888 24,932 9,132 time, I860. 93,350 0.240 .... » PMla4ek>bh*r.-r,.! £$7 • • . 3(H) NEW 162,250 YORK. “ “ 1,724,866 9,499,122 1.034,294 15,250 14,985 33,113,607 8.946,584 1.429,865 1,249,551 23.972.943 740 4,860 12,661 1,649 as 1865-6. 6,703.005 8,888.121 843,429 467,416 follows 1st. 28,103 13,376 3S5 061 12,281 45.208 449.930 65.852 36,513 10:85! 10,148 1,000 46.632 2,665 150 7,250 71,143 52,452 15,943 14,503 2.216 Week Since ending Jan. 1 C ■) C : —-Shipments- / Jan. 26. 5,083 .... V been Season, ' % Same time 1866. 26,633 14,480 S80 650 ■ ... 15,084 90 , 4,62S ** Barley, Australia China Japan Wheat, 100-]b sks. 247.128 , .! Mexico British Columbia... Hawaiian Islands New York. Boston. etc Great Britain Other countries . . 160-lb sks. Oats, 100-lb sks. Flour, bbls. 613,202 174,066 3,030 1,613 207.724 121,520 2,763 1,490 4.*76 6.561 .10 107.280 0,849 3,880 66 246 10,855 3,040 7,518 14,645 32,612 2,513 1,632 273 30.920 868 488 366.192 1,047,251 83 26.882 1,694 296,646 2,267,933 183,448 .. 12,037 5.137 - 0 Total 324,353 GROCERIES. Fridat, P. M., Feb. 1. There has been steady moderate demand for almost all trade during the week. Business has, however, been somewhat less, from the difficulty of moving goods. Prices have been well sustained, and some a the articles in the grocery articles are firmer. We have received the San Francisco Mercantile Gazette and Prices Current of Jan. 9th, from which we take the following statistics of the grocery trade at that port in 1866 : —Imports. 1806 2.531.436 Coffee. Rio, lbs... Costa Rica, lbs Java, lbs Manila, lbs . 1,507.914 1,721,312 438.387 2,668,527 594,025 2,078,988 587,277 1.309,981 192,885 140,672 .. .. —Exports.- 1805. 107,102 Hawaiian, lbs.. Guatemala, lbs ....: 1,005.907 Other kinds, lbs .... Sugar, foreign, lbs 3806 Fkgs Bags Cases 14,993 2,482 93 - 1865. 10,900 3,429 299 111.315 ..39,707,924 8.821 29,091.952 6,528 31 24 23,970 15,665 Bbls Bxs Rye, Barley. Oats, bush. bush. Corn, bush. 51,212 140,539 bush. 1:3.918 6,549 .... 6,515 .... .... • • • • • • • • .... • 15.250 17,923 MU M • 4 • • • .... \ • t 9 140,539 Iff! > * 1 Mol'ses & syrups, bbls bbls These • • • • 468 * 1 (til 7,417 700 4,458 114,018 370.090 459.58 > 155 hW tut m Foreign,lbs. 480,500 Dom’tic, hds :o 276,500 3,300 2,52fi 2,5(52 4,758 Bbls Bxs 5 of more than ordinary interest to the trade at the present time, in view of the opening of the steamship line with China and Japan and the completion, in a few years, of the Pacific Railroad. Japan teas can now be laid down in New York in 40 to 50 days’ time, and, with telegraphic communication opened to the East, the tea trade must be much changed by thus bringing within reach the figures are native markets.' The effect commerce upon trade in other articles of with China and the East Indies will also be equally great. TEA. Tea has been in good demand, especially for fine qualities of green/ prices are m untamed. Other kinds are only moderately active, but prices are firm. The jobbing trade shows only a moderate degree of activity. The sales from first hands include 300 half chests Souch ongs, 5,911 ditto greens, and 5,350 ditto Oolongs. The imports of tea during (lie week have been large, including 7,654 pkgs. per “ Pegasus” from Shanghae, containing 51,0 35 lbs. Hyson, 309 731 Young Hyson, 92,887 Imperial, 51,475 Gunpowder; and ; 4,939 pkgs. per “Benefactor” from Yokohama, containing 6,745,000 bs J'pms. * The following table shows thG s-hipmepts pf tea from China and Japan to the fToit^d Stfttee, from June 1 to Wov. 30,1806, pod importations at Ysrtfaridcin«*MIs ! and 51,912 12,335 150,834 300 *$ 75® 3 53 follows: 48,000 «... fe«)ico44W» l.from gosm • . 7,835 6,89 > since Jan. 1,1807 aame M .215 36,704 1 as 1866- 30.' 20 FOREIGN 1 20® 1 35 1 30® 1 40 . For week. S’< e Jan. 1. 31,280 110,820 9.130 27,780 4,815 37,165 59,365 184,755 3.380 1,755 13,225 31,580 102,110 Rr« IV* A* Col,... since Jan. 1 59® 04 f.H® 68 82® 1 18 YORK. 1807 —» For week. b*o Jan. 1. Flour, bbls Corn meal, bbls Wheat, hush 'JFotal . 85® 2 35 in breadstulfa at this market has been since Jan. 1 1 13® 1 30 Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State Barley White beans AT 7,728 ^ Peas, Canada RECEIPTS 1806-7. . Milwaukee Club....... ft 90® 2 33 Red Winter ® A Tuber do 2 90® 3 05 White 2 so® 3 20 Corn, Western Mixed..-., l 09® 1 12 Western Yellow ® Western White ® Jersey Yellow 1 05® 1 09 00® 5 46 1 Rye, Barley, Teas, lbs ... Spring 1866. San Francisco. —We gave last, week the exports of breadstuff^ from San Francisco for December. The following table contains a resume of the exports for the past twel ve months, to which is appended the countries to which t‘ e same were shipped : ° Flour, Superfine.. $ bbl f9 CO® 9 85 Extra State 10 00® 11 05 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 10 85®11 GO 1867. 38.684 1st. 19,292 7,131 .... 11,300,000 : Season, Same time 1866. ending 1.9i’0,000 to-day’s market business was quite limited, and prices generallya shade lower. The following are the closing quota¬ Week, Since Jan. Jan. 10. 7.566 100.590 Flour, bbls ^ Weev, ReceiptsWeek 1867. At 1,446,732 . 21,292 U „ Jan. 31 | 1,541,023 Milwaukee.—The movement ih breadetuffs has bushel. comparative statement of stocks, with the figures for this date partly estimated : I 1,672,850 2,0S0 it Rye, Bailey, The foliowi ng is a Jan. 31, 1867. 9.419.207 10,475 7.576 it Oats, malting, with Dec. 31, 1806. 76,739 13,095 26,704 bushels Corn, moderate scale, and fine qualities have ad vanced 5c. per tt snirrED. materially declined under the decline in the Eng¬ markets, extreme rates of ocean freights, and great, pressure on the part of holders to reduce stocks. Eich day’s decline has brought in a few speculative orders, but not enough to have any effect. The decline in the Liverpool market has had the effect to stop consignments entirely; but, at the lower prices current, a few regular export orders are being filled, favored with lower freights and more room on the berth. Last week about 95,000 bushels of new yellow corn were cleared from Philadelphia and Baltimore for Belfast and Liv¬ erpool, but of this quantity only 32,®00 bushels for Liverpool have been successfully got to sea; the remainder is ice-bound* Oats are wanted for home consumption, but owing to the extreme difficulty of making deliveries they are taken only to supply immediate necessities ; under which circumstance prices have declined l@2c. Rye lias been dull, and closes slightly lower. a 58,970 It Bariev lish on 75.610 8,799.718 24.305,567 8,503.892 1,108,886 71.982 t; 1,134,704 1,747,640 11,143,191 32,413.643 .. . i. Rye very scarce. Barley has been 34,672 Wheat, bushels Cora Oats 'Corn has shipments ~\ ■ February 2,1867.] THE CHRONICLE. SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN. , -imp’ts » ,—To Atlantic ports.—» To San Nov. 1 to Juncl to Same FranNov. 39. Nov. 1. in ’65, cisco, lbs. lbs. lbs. pkg . Congon & Sou.. 60,685 Pouchoug 123,000 77«\255 lbs. From 1 f*5’t66 Europe. From East Indies. 3r 9,733 92,887 51,475 From other ports. 574,000 Total......2,618,26610,032,3468,401,388 J 33,733 Dried apples 1,849,306 /—Duty Hyson, Common to fair do Superior to line.... H) 1 it do Ex fine to finest.. .1 40 Y’gHyson, Com. to fair 85 do Super, to fine. .1 15 do Ex fine to fiuest.l 45 ... Qunp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 do Sup. to fine.1 25 do do Ex. f. to finest.1 » 5 H. 3k. StTw’kay,C, to fair. €0 do do Sup. to fine 75 404 Coffee has been in active request, especially for Rio, and prices firmer. Other kinds are more quiet, but prices close firm. The sales are 1,490 bags Maracaibo, 4,0u0 do. Rio, ex. Psyche, 2,015 do. ex. Jessie Scott, 2,000 do. ex. O. Anna, 965 do. ex. Knyphausen, 206 do. ex. Mary Black, 5,000 do. ex. St. Ursula, to arrive; 4,00o do. ex. Palmer, to arrive ; 4,718 do. ex. Libertad, and 2,200 do. ex. Eiclie -r alien private terms, and 481 bag3 Rio ex. Steamer South America, at 18*c. gold, in bond. The imports for the week have not been co isiderable—they include 4,00S bags Rio, per Danneborg, and 100 bags from Hamburg. The imports since January 1, and stock iu first hands January 29, are follows: Ruling quotations given are Tea, Duty: 25cents per lb. COFFEE. are as firmer. are : ... 51,035 ,oo below ton From G’t Britain. 404 578,937 I request, pkgs of a’l sorts. 131,239 119.215 j 8 | 49,628 168,419 282,693 Hyson skin 6,146 2,420 75.380 Hyson 138,635 505,227 430,578 Young Hvson..502,951 1,949,691 2,349,219 Imperial 78,947 472,086 415,519 Gunpowder 133,525 461,167 517,U90 Japans 2,221,054 748,376 At New York. York, Oolong&Ning.1,524,749 3,224,4973,094,7. Twankay -Indirect AtBos- at New 349,560] 243,470 atn. y. a BOSTON.- Direct 149 pa d —«, ✓—Duty t aid—» do @1 05 do Ex f. to fin’st 86® 95‘ Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. 90® 95 @1 35 @1 6o do Sup’r to fined 00 ®1 05 do ®1 10 Ex f. to fiuesll 10 ®1 20 @1 40 Oolong, Common to fair.. 85 ® 93 do @1 75 Superior to 8ne...l (0 ®1 25 do @1 15 Ex fine to finest I 40 ® l 7-5 Souc & Cong., Com. to fair @1 fO 70® 80 do ®1 9> Sup’r tofine. 90 ® l 05 ® 7" do Exf.toflnestl 25 ®i 50 ® 80 Coffee. .. Duty: When imported direct in American rf its growth or production; also, the or equalized vessels from the plac© growth of countries this side the Cap* ofJGood Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents cent ad valorem in additiou. tt>; all other lu Kio, prime, duty paid .. .gold IS ® 18 | Uva. mats aii I bags gold 24|® 95$ do good gold 171® 17$ j Native Ceylon 19 ® 20 do fair Maracaibo gold 10*® D| 17*® 18* do ordinary gold 15 ® !.% Gaguayra .; 17$® 18 do fair Lo g. oargoos .gold l«. ® 1 * St. Domingo... ® Sugar. . Duty „ ... brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on whit© not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 84 above 15 oud not over 2U, 4 : on refilled® ; and on Melado, 21 cents £ fl>. Porto Rico lb do do do 13 to 15 11 if® l? ® Ilf Cuba, inf. to com. refining do do 9 ® 9$ do 16 to 18 12*® 14 do fair to good do do 10 ® U'f do do 19 to 20 13*® 14 do fair to good do do grocery... 101® 10J white 13 @ 14* do pr. to choice 11 (® IU do Loaf. ® 16 do centiifugal 8® l * Granulated 15 ® do Melado 6 ® 7 Crushed and powdered 15 ® .. Hav’a, Bov. D. S Nos. 7 to 9 9;® s* White coffee, A 14 @ ll* do do do 10 to 12 10 (® In* Yellow coffee 33 ® : on raw or clayed, above No. 12 and or ... .. .. ... OP RIO COFFEE. .. OTHER SORTS. Import. New York, bags. Philadelphia ‘r Stock. 31,735 43,012 | . Baltimore New Orleans Galve don Mobile Savannah “ “ “ “ “ I ... 22,214 . 2,200 2,500 . 2.000 2,500 . Toral import Stock. Impoits. Java, bags 7.300 I Ceylon 20,000 j Singapore, . 2.300 2,500 „ .'.72,049 New York, At Bost. At 3,147 2,580 Lagnavra | St. Domingo | Other, 200 2,761 2,607 .... 3,136 The Cuba and Porto are are Rico, Havana. imports have been liberal scale for the week, amount¬ ing to upwards of 1,500 hhds. of Cuba. Stocks and imports on a more are as follows : Other W / Cuba.boxes. *hhds. *hhds. • do Baltimore New Orleans • • 2,094 • . .... ■ .... .... .... 60 2 35 .... 8 459 ...» ;... .... .... 428 35 467 88 ® 40 *, 44 . 4t j Pepper, ..(gold) 15} I Pimento, Jamaica (geld) I Cloves (gold) .. 8^ ® 9 ■ ® 45 1 21*® 20 @ *T*© 2d Fruit. Raisins, Seedless. .<{$* cask 8 50 @8 00 do do Layer box Bunch ® 55 ® 1 r® 21 ® If ® ® 84 ® 2-4 ® 2 @ 86 ® ® 3i ® 3 ■. Currants Citron, Leghorn Prunes, Turkish $ lb Dates ,... do do do 118,604’ 93,152 5,832 24,798 2,193 ^gold) (gold) Nutmegs, No.l *hhda. 22,703 > 39 5 421 382 do do • .... • Philadelphia • kiihds. 42J® 15 ® 9o ® Almonds, Languedoc...... New Brasil, Manila, Indies, Orleans, Total bags. 'bags. AtNew York stock Jan 29 34,957 Same date 1S66 45,366 Imports since Jan. 1. 2,570 Boston do 1,072 mats. Mace The sales include 2,513 hhds. 18* Spices. moderately active for Cuba refining, and prices Refined sugar has been in less demand, and prices and 1,155 boxes ...* 40 ® 50 .gold ^91b Ginger, race and A f(gold) Sugar has been unchanged. Molasses, do Clayed $ gall. 8> @ 88 45 ® 6 i English Islands New Orleans Porto Kico Cuba Muscovado Cassia, iu SUGAR. rather easier. .. .. 3,812 12,461 77,142 | .. , .. 4,740 I Maracaibo, .. .. Provence Sicily, Soft Shell Shelled Sardines..., $ box $ hf. box do J 9o Sardines b . ...30 igs, .-smyrna Brazil Nuts 12* .to 13 .. £6 0 25 40 .. 40 Filberts, Sicily Walnuts,’ box or. V ® 78 n ® 20 d ^ g > 17 Y ® 18 10*® 11* 8 ® Dried Fruit— Apples $ lb Blackberries 10#@12# tg) Tg> ® 12 ® .. Black Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpeeled do Cherries, pitted, 14 28 50 85 14 50 ® 55 ..... .. .. new.... THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Friday, P. M .... , , The Feb. 1, 1867. dry goods market has been quiet, with a softening ten¬ 97 3,123 5,832 dency during the entire week. Business does uot seem to Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hog sheads. have revived to any considerable New Orleans, Jan. 26.—The demand for degree since the storm two Sugar has been active, and weeks ago. During the early part of the week prices for prices have advanced under the anticipation of a reduction iu receipts; at the close, however, prices receded Sales of the week have leading goods were reduced to some extent, and on Monday been about 4,370 hhds., closing at 12f@l3c. for fair and 14c. for choice. and Tuesday the principal jobbers adopted new terms, giving Molasses has been in demand at prices a trifle better. The sales of the two per cent, off ten days, and one per cent, off for week have been 4,700 bbls., the thirty days, closing price being 74c.@75c. for and the Total import 4,024 2,523 503 * agents have since conformed choice. —Receipts- t— . Since the trade shows Shipment s , , Same, Since Week. 1865-6. Sugar, lihds... Sep. 1. Week. 3,945 27,081 10,308 Sugar, bbls... Mol asses, bbls. 29 511 557 4,592 46,318 19,434 56 56 600 Sep. 1. 1,861 1,438 9,521 . Same, 1305-6. Price. 268 ! —@14 1.122 f 7,756 —®75 to the material arrangement; but improvement. The consumption demand is very small throughout the country, and from ex¬ pectations of a duil Spring business, jobbers buy only to keep ' samples and fill immediate orders. A large number of mills are to no custail their productions Below we give the after to-day. from New York and Boston of Molasses have somewhat improved during the week. A moderate Domestics packages, and Dry Goods cases, this week and since distillery demand prevails. The sales include 800 hhd9. Barbadoes, January 1, and for the same period of 1806 and 1860. 450 do. Porto Rico, 65 do. English Islands, and 1,600 Cuba MuscovoMOLASSES. exports does, at prices within the range of our quotations. The imports of Molasses have been larger during the past week, in¬ cluding 1,656 hhds. of Cuba, 303 Porto Rico, 65 English Islands, and 885 barrels New Orleans. Stocks and imports are as follows: Cuba. ,—Porto Rico-^-Other Foreign.—v *hhds. *lihds. *hlids. New York, stocks Jan. 29 3,900 500 N. Y., imp’ts since Jun. 29. 2,034 803 327 Boston, ‘k “ “ At - N. O. bbis. 400 " Philadelphia “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ Baltimore New Orleai s “ Total * .... ‘*63 .... 240 2,294 303 390 3,415 617 534 Fruits are demand, but prices mostly in small lots to the trade. 4,566 firmly held. are improved demand from the trade, and prices are FRUITS. in , cases. 19 -BOSTON Djmestics. DryGoods. pkgs. cases. 9 Havre British West ladies. New Granada 3 ‘ Cisplaiine Republic. 30 Brazil 2 65 69 Mexico Argentine Republic. 3 20 0 1» 1 166 64 11 759 127 116 29 4*027 4,864 Shirtings have been only moderately active, and prices of standards have been reduced to 21 *@22 cents. grades are nominal. Nonantum 8-4 IV, Massachusetts O doLighter 15*, Indian Orchard Ldo 15, Commonwealth O do 11, Knox B do 16, Union do 14, Pepperell N dc 14*. Indian Head do 18*, Atlantic V 7-8 18*. Atlantic E do 17, Pacific do 17*, Tremont E do 15, Bedford R do 13, Boott O do 17, Indian Orchard W do 16, Lawrence G do 17, Pep¬ Brown Sheetings Sales are pkgs: Liverpool Glasgow. A.' Total this week. Since Jan. 1 Same time 1866.... *• “ I860.... 1 in small YORK. Cardenas SPICES. are NEW Domestics. Dry Goods. Hayti Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hog sheads. Spices , and business is reported in raisins and almonds. We perell O do 16*, Indian Head 4-4 22*, Appleton A do 21*, Wachusetta do 21*. Princeton A do 21, Pacific extra do 22*, do H do 22*, do mtice sales of 3,500 boxes layer raisins, 1,200 bags Ivica almonds, and L do 18, Atlantic H do 21*, do A .do 22, Lawrence E do 19*, do 1,100 do. of other kinds, on private terms. Dried fruits areum fair 0 4o 21*, do ¥ do 18, Stark A do 21*,, Amoakeag A do 22, do B do steady. Rather more [February 2, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 150 Pittsfield A do 17, Kenebeck do 18$, Roxbnry A do B do 17, Broadway be9t do 18$, Sussex F do 18, Newmarket A do 18, do C do ‘22$, Nashua D do 20, Peppered R do 20$, Great Falls M do 19, Sagamore do 15$, Albion do 10$, Dwight W do 18$, Standard do 17, Shawmut E do 17, Peppered R do 18$, Laconia E 17, Laconia O 9-8 19$, Pequot do 26, Indian Orchard A 40 inch 22, do do C 19, Nashua 5-4 .82$, Naumkeag W do 25, Utica do 42, Peppereil 7-4 39$, Utica do 50, Peppered 9-4 62$, Monaduoc 10-4 62, Peppered 21$, Medford do 20, 20$, Indian Orchard - ingtoo glazed Cambrics sell at 14, Victory 13, do E 15$, do high colors 14$, Hudson Mill 12$, Fox Hill 11, Superior 11$, Smithfield 13. Waverly 13$. and S. S. tfc Sons paper cambrics at 18 cents, do high colors 20, 30 inch 20, White Rock 18, Alasonville 19, Warren 18. ; English Woolen Goods are in but little tequest, and notwithstanding the ! approaching spring season show but little improvement. Some makes for manufacture are in demand, aud a light business is doing in fancy cassimeree. * American Printed de Laines are quiet but unchanged. All dark do 65$, Utica 11-4 90. 25, Hamilton Co 25, Manchester dark 25, Pacific dark 26, Armures dark Bleachkd Sheetings and Shirtings are very quiet, but there is 25, High colurs 25,.Pacific Merinos 40, Mourning 25, Shepherd checks 25, little change in price for medium goods. Wide makes and those of all wool 42$, Skirtings 35. low grades are lower. Mechanics 3 4 12, Revere do 12, Globe Linskys and Flannels are in light demand. do 12, Kingston do 11$, Boott R do 15$, Lawrence H do '15, ( American Linen is in rather better demand, and there is a growing Woodbury 7-8 15, Newbury port do 18$, Rockdale do 17, Waltham X do j firmness in price owing to the expected action of Congress on the tariff. 19, Putnam B do 15, Amoskeag Z do 17, Harris A A do 17$, Great Kalis j Foreign Goods are quiet and without interesting feature. A few M do 18, do S do 16$, do A do 20, do J do 19, Lyman Camb-ic do 20, i kinJs of goods suitable to spring trade are called for as well as staple Strafford A do 19, Ltwrence L do 19, do A do 19, Hill’s Setup Idem do | articles. The auction sales show but little animation, except in linen 22$, James .31 inch 17$. do 33 iuch 19$, Bat tle t 81 inch 18, do 33 inch 2o, i goods which are rather fitmer in price. Woolen goods are quiet, some Greeue G 4-4 18, Lewiston G do 20, Windsor do 22$, Pocutn- makes of fashionable dress fabrics are iu growing demaud. tuck do 19, Putnam A do 19, Newmarket A do 20, do 0 do 22$, do 17, Indian Grove XX do 20, Attawaugan XX 24. Blackstone do 21, do XX do 32$, Andros-» coggiu L do 26, Lonsdale do 26 Wauregan do 3<>, do F do 21$, Bates XX do 27$, Arkwright do 80, Wamsutta H 32$, do O do 32$, Atlantic Cambric <io 85, Lonsdale Cambric „do 35, New York Mills do 37$, Hill do 25, Amoskeag 42 inch 26, Chickopee do 26, Waltham do 24, Wamsutta 9-8 37$, Lyman II 5-4 24, Naurakeag W do 25, Boott W do 27$, Nashua do 32, Bates do 32$, Wamsutta do 42$, Amoskeag 46 inch 28, Waltham 6-4 37$, Mattawarakeag do 40, Peppereil do 39, Oneida do 45, Utica do 60, Waltham 8-4 52$. Peppereil do 52$, Mattawamkeag 9-4 62$, Peppereil do 65, Utica do 85, Phoenix 10-4 65, Monadnock -to 65, Baltic do 70, Bates do 72$. Waltham do 72$, Allendale do 67$, Peppereil do 76, Utica do 90, Masabesic 1 1-4 75, Amoskeag do 75, Peppereil Bartletts do 23, Bates BB do 23$, Constitutional do 20, James Steam do 22$, Indian River do 20, Fountain do 21, Hope do 22$, Tip Top do Boot B Jo 22$, Forestdale do 26, Masonville do 26, of cloths The dull and with large storks Conestoga C M 45, Amoskeag A C A 59,. o C 30, Pemberton A A 42$, do Red Stripe stone River 22$. Pearl River 47$^. 24, Omega prices are follows B 37$.do A 50, Cordis AAA 45, Everett 27, Lehigh Valley A 21, do B 20, do A C Miscellaneous dry gooae. . 126,598 . 129,099 575 129,164 63,143 2,491 5,179 WAREHOUSE AND THROWN FROM THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. do silk .... do flax ... Miscellaneous dry goods Total Add ent’d A 22, Swift $69,554 125 36 41,423 291 58,876 INTO THE $347,987 512 451 119 316 239 37 298 8,611 31, 1867. 1867. $707,314 463,643 1,276 245,079 321,918 163,415 269 1,160 546 4,591 $1,901,369 DURING MARKET 453 $224,952 242 109 474 75,297 115,960 97,123 8,745 144,195 148,270 98,076 17,243 1,039 $210,166 463,140 1,637 $755,771 2,317 12,385 2,978,959 4591 mak’t 8,266 £853.296 14,022 *3,734,720 733 Value Pkgs. 1,310 forconsumpt’n2,473 Total thrown upon they Un22$, 273 a. 558,187 606,574 185,921 12,385 $2,978,959 $643,140 2,473 Total WITHDRAWN $522,077 1,901,369 6,908 $2,423,44 WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. 1,136 1,444 $641,009 $42,393 95 Manuiactures of wool... 961 863 276,187 12,959 do : cotton.. 55 220 217 255 762 26,174 do silk 39 491 738 203,254 21,794 do flux 52 137 Pemberton Awn 47$, Hay¬ Andover 23. Boston 22$, 23, American 19, Hamilton 28, Arkwright 23, Easton 22, Jewett City 21@21$, do C 20, Napoleon 13;$. Pittsfield 3-3 13, maker 24, Everett 26, viassabesic 6-3>8 aud 29, Harvesters 3-3 22@27, do 6-3 22@27, Blackstone Eagle 17$, $194,1:36 502 469 2:30 495 786 Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. do silk ... do flax.... Value. Pkgs 2,222 $1,009,509 613,7r.8 1,918 Value. Pkgs. Imperial 35, 37$. Stripes are also dull and although prices show but little change must be considered nominal for large lots. Amoskeag 29 and 30, casviile 23 and 24, Whittenton A A 32$, do A 3-3 27$, do B B ENDING JANUARY 1866. > , CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK 1865. x , , nominal: Hamilton 36$, do D 32$, Somerset 18, Thorndike 26, Oriental 39, Harvest 34, Hancock A A 29. Buokerhill : ENTERED FOR A 40,do B 35! do D 25, do 32$, Brunswick 20, Black- Boston A A 35, River 25, Girard importations of dry goods at this port for the week eudiug Jan. and the corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been ns 31, 1867. do 85. Ticks have become AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS ENTERED FOR $478,674 335,326 226,070 16y,794 - Miscellaneous dry 1 Total Add ent’d lor goods. 244 41,611 35,449 73 11,089 475 consumpfn 2,473 $114,409 643,140 3,3:34 $1,401,661 2,978,959 2,945 $1,251,475 12,385 4,591 the port 2,943 $757,549 15,719 $4,380,620 7,636 $3,152,84^ Total entered at 1,901,369 Sheridau G 18. Lanark fur No. 600 No. 90 21$, without particular change. Park Mills Red 25, 4x2 29 inch 18, Lanark fur 18$, Union 50 4x2 37$, do 502x2 37 $ do 20 4 2 35, do 20 2-2 35. Caledonia 15 inch 35, do 11 inch 29, Lancaster 18, Kennebtck 35, Wauisutta 20, Farmers <fe Mechanics 30, Star 16$, do No. 800 2x2 22, do No. 900 4 2 26, Cumeron do No. 8u 20. Miners Jr .Mechanics 32. Denims and Cottonades are in light demand at last week’s prices, Checks are s-dl at 37$, Haymaker 25, do brown 37, York 36. Boston Manufacturing Co. 25$, Pearl River $6, Union 30, Monitor 20, Manchester Co.* 27, Clark’s brown 25, Suffolk 27, Marlboro 20, Blue Hill 22$, New York M 22, Fort Moultrie 30, Amoskeag denims Warren brown 25, Farmer’s and Mechanics cottonades Pemberton ddit 4 5, hodman’s Ivy J 4 7, PiOW L & Anv 50, Mount Verm.u 30, 55, cents. at Everett Trernont 28. and 47$, New York Mills 62$, Whittenden dJrt 81@39$. fur export; otherwise the market Amoskeag 23, Laconia 23, Androscaggin 14, do fine jean 24, Stark A .22, Boott 23$, Ben¬ nington 22$, Massachusetts G 20, Woodward duck bags 32$, National bags 40, Stark A do 62$, Liberty do 87$. Print Clotus ate very quiet. The last sales reported were at. il£. Prints have been only moderately active for Spring styles. Dark American 17$, Amoskeag dark 16$, do pur¬ makes are dull and lower. ple 18, do pink 18$, do shirting 16$. do palm leaf 17$ Merrimac 1) dark 18, do purple 18, do W dark 20, do purple 20,do pink 20, Sprague’? dark 18, do purple 19, do shirting'19, do pink 19, do blue checks 19; do solid 17$, Brown Drills are in light demand is quiet. Winthrop 17$, Minerva 18, Peppereil 23, Simpson 15$.Garners Gloucester Lowell 15, indigo blue 18, do Swiss ruby 18$, London Mourning 16$, Mourning lo$, Atlantic Mourning 16$, Amoskeag Mourning light 18$, Donnell’s 17$, Allen 17, Richmond 17$, Arnolds 15, 16$, Waidteutta 13$, Pacific dark 18, Freeman 16, Cocheco 19, do Nautnkeag 14$, Hamilton 17$, Home 12$, 16$, Wauregan 16$, Belleville 15. Domestic Gingh \ms are very quiet but Empire State 11$, Lancaster prices are the same. Lan¬ 23, Hartfoid IS, Caledonia (new) 20, Berkshire 22, German 20, Roanoke 17, Bates caster Glasgow 22, Clyde 17, 23$. Manchester 19. Ellerton SlaterviUe do 24, Ham¬ do 20, Scott8 O do 35, do P do 33$, Sal’n Falls do 31$, Methuen A do 32, Nautnkeag do 27, .Nashua A 21. Corset Jeans are in light request for local trade. Prices are steady. Androscoggin 15$, Bates colored 15$, do bleached 14$, Naumkeag 21, Peppereil 22$, Laconia 21, Amoskeag 21 @22, Newmarket 16$, Lew¬ iston 15$, Indian Orchard 16, Berkeley 22$, liockport 21, Tremont 12$. Cakbrio8 and Silesias are also moderately called for. Lonsdale Sile&iaa sell at 23c^ Victory 21$, Indian Orchard 21$, Ward 21$. WashCanton Flannels are in light request for primer makes. N, Bro. 35,doO do 32, do T do 21, Laconia do 28, ilton do 28$, Rockland do 17,Naumkeag do 25, Tremont extra do 20, Whittendon do 22$, Ellerton N Blea. 37$, do MPORTS SPECIE) AT WEEK ENDING THE PORT OK NEW YORK FOR THE JANUARY 25, 1867. 1 [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise Value. Pkgs. Value. PkgB. Value. Miscellaneous Pkgs Leather, Hides, &e.— China, Glass E. Bristles 23 3,085 Alabaster orna¬ ware— ments ...5 190 & shoes.*2 699 fiuots China. 1,028 23 1,898 Bags Hides, dress¬ Earth’mv’e .764 28,170 114 43,370 Buttons ed.. 150 60,818 Glass 427 4,878 Cigars 9,n31 Hides, undress¬ G la-s ware 19 2,231 tons....208 1,374 79,124 Coal, ed....^ Glass plate... .60 8,385 1.031 Corks... Liquors, Wines, &c.— Drugs, Ac.— 5 756 1,110 Clocks 134 Albumen 545 Ale.. U hiskey 9 1,077 Coffee, bgs... 165 2,347 Algols 20 1,494 Wines 88,956 318 7,162 Fancy goods Blea Powder 465 10.620 Flax 12 2,511 Carmine...... .3 2.321 Champagne, Fish 1,109 baskets ..1,957 22,386 Chalk 19u 383. Grindstones.... Metais, &c.— Cream tartar.. 10 1,840 Brass Goods. .12 2,500 Hair 3 1.944 Cutch 1.575 .368 Haircloth ..15 7 197 Flour sulpli. .100 524 Chains & an¬ Hemp 572 14,369 chors 131) 5,755 Gums, crude. .67 779 ..10 11,286 50 5,809 Hops; do Arabic .25 1,358 Copper .......70 28,263 Iud. rubber. .333 6,177 Indigo 15 1,620 Cutlery ,...3 1,061 72S Ivory Iodine pot... .10 1,26* Gas fixtures...253 2,-407 Machinery.. .116 7,803 Lie patte 56 1,6 9 Guns M arbl e man 14,292 Madder 159 36,672 Hardware.... 265 37,375 Maccaroni... 150 212 Iron, pig, Oils ess./ 35 3,31 4.194 550 tons 9,206 Molasses ....236 do olive... 629 1,895 Oil paintings.il 7,202 Railroad, Opium 18 5,600 Iron, bars. .1,057 17,966 Paper hang¬ Paints 2,661 ings.. 67 4,796 Potash, chlo.... 906 Iron, sheet, 3 Perfumery 1.185 tons...; .207 11,883 Prus ..8 1,000 do Pipes • ... 2,880 Iron, other, Soda, bi carb 556 2,968 923 554 22,872 Potatoes tons do ash.... 518 16,451 Provisions 551 Lead,pigs. .2,161 15,265 Sponges ,... 99 Metai Rice 2.319 goods .149 17,374 Soda caustic.131 3,509 1,359 18 356 Salt 393 1,89 i Nails..!. Sumac 2,616 10 2,937 Statuary Verdigris •. 1,492 Needles 1,139 1,536 Seeds Other 1,034 Old metal 2,003 5,069 Plated ware... 5 1,578 Soap Furs, &c— 8 1,729 Sugar, bxs. & Furs ..33 13,247 Per. caps bgs 495 11.038 2.662 Saddlery 9 Fruits, «$rc. Trees & plants.. 109 Bananas...; 118 Steel..!....3,282 53,044 Tea 954 50 Silver 396 Ware 2 Currants 431 757 Twine ....6 7.635 Tin, bxs...l0,718 75,995 Nuts 12 279 Wire.. 21 3,151 Toys Oranges 3,856 Tobacco 75 2,470 Sauces and pres. 3,381 Stationery, <bc.— ; 96 5,085 Books .88 9,115 Waste Instruments— 2,286 Wool, bals. 1,789 119,178 Mathematical.. 1 218 Engravings.... 7 289 1,861 19,149 Other 4,634 Paper Musical 14 Other 32 9,628 \ Optical 9 3,769 Woods— £.1,143,909 Total., Jewelry. &c.Willow specified . .... . . , .... „ Jewelry ... Watches Our ...8 16 2,696 34,419 Other ,2031 1,288) General Prices Current will 157 and 158. be found, on page* Burlington ®l)e Hail tool} Monitor. Railroads.—The following-, taken from City Passenger Report of the State Engineer for 1865-’66, shows the city railroads of New York. Sept. 30, 1866 : Capital Length, miles. Name of Road. Harlem Bridge, Niuth avenue Second avenue Sixth avenue Third aveuue . . 90,000 797,320 670, COO 750,000 1,170,000 Morrisania & Ford 4.75 4.60 8.00 4.00 8 00 ment 236,759 492,626 1,388,368 1,608,489 643,099 57 00 00 28 00 562,246 58 1,350,000 00 2,406,609 13 445,295 18 1,218,127 46 1,489,863 07 B’dway & Seventh are. 1,976,792 3,185,306 Brooklyn Citr Cen. Park, N. & E. R C’ny isl’d & Brooklyn Dry Dock & E. B’dway.1,070,991 4.669,750 1,660,827 70,522 9S5.906 73,276 1,561,547 6,857,224 420,524 S,323,737 655,346 20,000,083 1,237,870 $16,000 00 79,840 00 127,585 69 28,677 09 90,100 00 R. Eighth avenue Sixth avenue 442,188 86 655.346 41 Total surplus fund. 217,169 52 * 43,050 10 45,000 00 1864. (257 m.) $100,991 154,418 195.803 102,723 178,786 206,090 *224,257 312,166 354,554 320,879 307.803 252,015 2,770,4S4 -Erie (280 in.) (280 7/1.) $280,503 $210,171. .Jan.. 207,913 .Feb.. 275,282 304,885. ..Mar. 299,063 270,889. .April. 258,480 333,432. ..May.. 322,277 368,273. .June. 355,270 326,870. .July 335,985 381,559. ..Aug.. 409,250 318,549. ...Sep.. 401,280 347,085. .Oct... 357,956 322,749. .Nov.. 307,919 285,413. .Dec.; 236,824 . . . (657 m.) .Year 8,840,091 3,677,795. .. (797 m.) (657 m.) Jan .. . . 1,222,568 1,224,909 1,234,217 1.330.615 1.411,347 ..sep... 1.438.615 1,480.261 ...Oct... 1,522,472 1,417,927 ..Nov.. 1,429,765 1,044,033 ..Dec... 13,429,643 15,434,775 . 1865. (524 in.) $256,600 (524 m.) 304,445 338,454 330,651 2*57,126 315,258 278,-891 358.862 402,219 407,107 448,934 411,806 4,120,153 Pittsb., 18*94. 366,301 413,974 365,180 351,489 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 624,760 495,072 351*799 525,761 532,911 506,640 625,547 675,350 701,3)2 691,556 914(082 7,320,465 733,866 637,186 646,995 584,523 712.495 795,938 858,500 712,362 680,963 77 ,91*0.. 716,378 563,401 546,609 6,114,566 7,9(50,981 518,736 735.0>2 778,284 989,053 1,210,654 1,1 >05,680 6f8,679 .Jan... . . Mar.. . April.. . . . in.) ,900 416,588 459,762 423,797 ill.) 71,536 528,972 61(5,665 516,(508 40(5.373 460,573 510,100 423,578 586,964 799,236 661,391 657,141 617,682 578,403 747,469 739,736 198.679 234,612 264,605 243,178 224,980 321.818 290.642 July . •Aug... Sep... 271,140 ..Oct..* .Nov... 324,865 336,617 .Dec... 321,037 . . 331,494 1864. (251 in.) $77,010 74,409 89,901 72,389 83,993 78,697 . 516.822. ..Mar. 400,773. April 507,830. ..May 560,025. .June. 1864. (234 in.) $102,749 115,135 88,221 (524 in.) fan. $314,598 283,177. .Feb.. 412,393 Mar. 409,427 ’April. 426,493. ..May.. . ► 140.418 186,747 212,209 139,547 113,399 392.641. .Jane. 338,499. ..Jnly.. 380,452. Aug*. 168.218 429,191. ...Sep.. 178,526 500,404. ...Oct... 149,099 117,013 .Nov.. 416,690. 339,447. .Dec.. . 94.375 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 639,195. ..Oct— .Nov... 681,552. .Dec... 1,038,165 Year 7,181,208 Jan.... ieb.... .. .. March. . April.. Ma v... J une.. ., 224,i .2. July.., 310.443 7. Aug... 389,489 p_j 396,050 . Sept... 307,523 422124 . Oct.... 270,073 5 381,006 . Nov i01,779 8 339,447 . Dec.... 244,121 306,231 ... 1865. 1865. It (204 in.) (204 m. $173,557 $168‘741 151,£30 180,140 222,411 167,607 173.732 196,154 215,784 198, C82 195,133 245,627 226,047 169,447 243,417 243,413 217,£41 $139,414 170,879 202,857 193,919 203,514 210,314 214,533 264,637 242,171 248,292 223.846 239,C8$ 220,0*2 220,133 178,434 161,427 201,169 2,512,315 Michigan Central. 1866. 1864. 1865. 1866. (285 in.) (285 rn.) $3un,J $282,438 .Jan.. (285 m.) $252,435 87.791 84,264. .Feb.. 278.848 279,15 265,796 93,763 82,910. ..Mar.. 82,722. April. 95,664. ..May.. 348(802 344,228 337,240 401,456 337,158 343,736 365,196 365.663 335,082 329,105 490,603 324,986 359,665 429,166 493.649 447,669 414,604 328.869 308.649 (251 in.) (251 in.) $90,125. $96,672 78,607 76,248 107,525 104,608 115,184 125,252 116,495 116,146 105,767 . 106,315. June. 96,(23. .July. 106,410. ..Aug.. 108 338 Sep.. .. 150,148. ..Oct.. 110,932. .Nov.. . . 111,665. .Dec.. . Jan... 474,738. .Feb... -654,390. ..Mar... 606,078 .April.. 672,628. ..May.. 644,573 .June. 554,828 July. . 641,818. Aug* 661,608 Sept . . 742,800. .Oct.... 681,558. Nov, 550,483 Dec.... . 8,489,062 7,454,006.*Year.. 310,594 226,840 110,664 L., Alton & T. 1864 (468 m.) 1865. (234 in.) $98,183 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 (210 m.) $100,872 147,485 160.497 157,786 149,855 155,730 144,942 218,236 234,194 203,785 202,966 •204,726 1865 1864. 1866. (234 //t.) $121,776. .Jan... 84,897. Feb... Mar... 72,135. 108,082. .April. 267,488. ..May.. 262(172 June 170,795. July.. 116,224. ..Aug.. .. 150,989. ...Sep.. 286.133. ...Oct... 244,854. .Nov. . 98,787. . .Dec.„ Hante.-^ - (234 m.) $51,965 46,474 64,993 83,702 131,648 126,970 99,602 86,4 2 164,710 221,638 198,135 129,227 338.276 271,553 265.780 263,244 346.781 413,501 460,661 408,+45 410,802 405,510 376,470 1866. . . . . 1S65. 1866. (234 m.) $98,181 86,528 (234 m.) 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9' 6 241,370 3**0,841 395,579 346,717 —Ohio & Mississippi. —% 171,125 1864 $131,707. Jan.. . 122,621. .Feb. 124,175. ..Mar.. . 121,904 .April. . 245,511 ..May.. 242,560 4,504,546 4,260,125 3,970,946 1,186,SOS. .June. 209,199 ..July. 188,223. ..Aug.. 275,906 ...Sep.. 416,138 ...Oct.. 327,926 ..Not.. 128,741. ..Detv.. 1865. 268,176 302,596 332,400 278,006 346.243 275,950 (242 in.) $79,735 95.843 132,896 123,987 127,010 156,338 139,6? 6 244,1*4 375,534 221,570 220.209 265,154 1865. - - $259,223 $267,541 246,109 239,139 326.2:16 813,914 271,527 277,423 290,916 283,130 304,463 253,924 349,285 247,262 344,700 305,454 350,348 278,701 372,618 310,762 412,553 302,425 284,319 (242 m.) (484 in.) $226,059. ..Jan.., $144,084 194,167. ..Feb.. 139,171 256,407. .Mar... 155,753 270,300. April. 144,001 138 738 316,433. .May.. 325 691. J une. 194,52* 304,917 July.. (271,798 i374.534 396,248. Ann... i 379,981 349,117 Sept... . sj 375,534 f361,610 L 247,028 1865. 1864. <64. 1S66. 436,065.,.Oct 3/4,830.. Nov..., 264,741.. Dec 2,251,525..Year.. 2,060,823 2,926,678 3,694,975,*Year.. 1.866. (340 m.) (3)0 m.) (340 rn.) $210,829 260,466 309,261 269,443 224,957 223.242 1,402,106 2,535,001 2,544,000.. Year.. 3,311,070 3,793,005 -Western Union. Toledo* Wab& Western. 1864, (210 in.) (210 rn.) $170,078 $178,119. .Jail... 155,893. ..Feb... 153,903 192,138. ..Mar... 202,771 167,301. April. 169,299 163,699. ..May... 177,625 167,699 June. 173,722 166,015 July. 162,570 222,953 .Aug. 218,236 198,884, .Sept... 216,783 244,834, .Oct 222,924 212,226. .Nov.... 208,098 177,364, .Dec— 162,694 2,084,074 3*240,744 1,222,017 ^-Milwaukee & St. Paul.-N 1,711,281 1,985,712 2,012,700 Wear.. St. $555,488. 91,809 uly.. 586.074. .Aug... 551,021 ..Sep... .J 467,115. -Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.-* 1866. . 1864. (203 m.) -Marietta and Cincinnati.— (708 m.) 1532.823. ..Jan. 512,027. .Feb. 643,887 518,088 -Cleveland and Pittsb 3,095,470 3,313,514 3,478,325 ..Year 1866. 641,589 1305,554 246,331 289,403 .May... 9,(88,991 ..Year.. 1865. 196,580 (238 in. $241,395 183,385 257,230 197,886 June... . . 175,482 243,150 185,013 .Feb... . Illinois Central. 6,329,447 4,826,722 4,643,422 Year.. (468 m.) $690,144 678,504 857,583 702,692 767,508 946,707 405,6134 523,744 (228 7/1.) $158,735 1865. 228 in.) * Ft.W.,&Chi 1865. (468 m.) $290,676 457,227 Gil,297 588,066 $363,996 922,892 603,402 14,566,943.. Year Mich. Soi.& N. 1864. 747.942 1864. $984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188 983, &55 ..Feb.. 947,146 934,133 1,114,508 1,256,567 1,070.434 ...Mar.. 1,099,507 1,458,455 1,153,295 .April. 1,072,293 1,333,461 1,101,668 ..May .June.. 1,0-11,975 1,177,372 1,243,142. 1,202,180 1,203,462 .July.. 994,317 1,105,364 1,331,046 1,290,3 0 ..Aug 1,301,005 (930 in.) $523,566 - 1866. " 1864 (860 7n.) $541,005 482,164 499,296 468,358 585,623 923,886 840,354 fund, and $286,533 33—an in¬ from the trustees of the Illinois .—Chicago and Rock Island. 1866. (800 m.) 565,145 480,710 519,306 669,605 729,759 . Railway. stalment of 10 per cent.—received and Michigan Caual. EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. 1865. 466,830 . 1865. 1864. $1,261,464 73 from the State debt 1864. $273,875 317,839 390,355 421,363 paid from the Illinois Central fund 304,777 78 Chicago & Northwestern 1866. Alton.1866. Chicago and 1865. defray the ordinary expenses of the government. Through this and other fuuds the debt has been reduced from $11,246 210 67, as it stood at the end of 1864, to $3,638,252 21, as stated iu December, 1866—a clear abatement of $2,607,958 46 of which $L,059,960 40 was 56,338 17 COMPARATIVE MONTHLY , sufficient to $16,372 71 60,321 71 68,525 50 37,50** 00 of the gross Central 'Railroad.—Seven per cent, earnings of this road, by the act of its incorporation, is payable State Treasury, and pledged to the payment of interest, 5*2,087 65 into the 139,045 72 The re-, 404,660 52 paying State indebtedness until the extinction thereof. 661,726 68 66,388 06 ceipts from this source for the two years endiug Oct. 31, 1866. 82,077 39 amounted to no less a sum than $923,565 59—an amount nearly 78,077 39 389,538 05 574,796 31 140,400 CO usually 1,051,423 66 54,350 55 Surplus. $1,865 66 Illinois 93,058 25 677,195 31 16 837,751 15 1,181,531 99 Dividend. Name of Road. Missouri Railroad.—The line, now Chicago and Northwestern Rail¬ road, was completed to the Missouri at Council Bluffs on the 22d ultimo. It connects with the Union Pacific at Omaha across the river, aud in conjunction with that railroad and its own eastern extensions gives a continuous line of road of the same gauge from the seaboard at New 'York to the North Platte, 330 miles beyond the Missouri River. It will be fully occupied in transporting iron and other material for the extension of the Umou Pacific Railroad to the mountains and Denver City. During the present year the railroad bridge across the Missouri will'be built and full conuection made between the railroads eas^ and west of the river. 281,424 62 exhibit the surplus set following roads paid dividends and opposite to each : N. & E. 25 38 16 41 and $20,834 46 11,051,088 17,199,049 1,051,423 66 694,768 45 9,314,964 555,088 30 4-7,115 O'* 98 126,359 98 1,787,621 169,359 52 314,112 41 6,700,715 403,666 725,724 14 564.516 68 The Cen. Park, ments. receipts. expend’rs. $27,900 79 $20,334 46 281,424 62 177,834 24 77,058 21 93,266 35 677.195 31 408,749 91 3,273,958 12,095.602 Eighth avenue Har B. Mor. & Ford... 330,085 Ninth avenue & 470,820 Second avenue Sixth avenue •. 1,800.000 Third avenue 4,000,000 Total pay¬ Running Total Pass, carried. 143,794 Miles run. Bath,C’nyIsl’d & B’lyn. 56,881 Bleecker & Ful. Ferry. .1,015,092 Broadway, of B’lyn.... 472,550 62 24 1,300,971 92 223,230 08 : Name of Road. 16 04 69 in the following state¬ eudiug September 30, 1866, are shown year Cedar Rapids termed the Iowa Division of the carried, receipts and expenses for the The miles run, passengers 4 * 00 00 112,000 00 730,825 00 180,000 00 800,000 10.00 from Ottumwa and Chariton. 1,698,765 68 00 184,348 550,000 160,000 126,500 500,000 10.50 5.00 1,200,000 the road, etc. $153,414 35 G4 581,302 77 970,000 Railroad.—The contract for grad Missouri Cost of $152,871 704,000 39,410 1,500,000 170,000 $99,b50 900,000 200,600 2,100,000 1,000,000 and ing, bridging and tieing the division of this line between Charito and Aston, la., a distance of 60 miles, has been awarded to J. Z S. Wolfe & Co., the same parties now engaged upon the extension the condition of Debt. Stock. Bath, Coney Island and Brooklyn.. 6.50 5.50 Bleecker and Fulton Ferry 5.38 Broadway (of Brooklyn) 4.00 Broadway and Seventh avenue Brooklyn City 30.21 Central Park, North &East Rivers. 11.00 Coney Island and Brooklyn Dry Dock and East Broadway Eighth avenue 151 THE CHRONICLE. February 2, 1867.] (157 m.) $43,716 (140 m.) $30,840 37,265 32,378 37,488 42 038 33,972 41,450 48,359 68,118 50,308 — 1866. (177 m) 45,102 36,006 39,299 43,333 63.862 86,9 £ 82,J47 102,686 68,180 85,508 49,903 66,565 59.862 75,677 66.871 54,948 92,715 61,770 60,698 84,462 100,303 75,248 42,195 87,830 54,478 587,078 r 689,383 814,C$« THE CHRONICLE. 152 [February 2, 1867. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. ! DESCRIPTION. • N. INTEREST. Amount outstand¬ ing. Funded Debt. Payable. 2 cou let Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ar. Y.) 1,000.001 1,014.006 1st Mortgage, sinkiug fund, (Ohio) 800.00b 4,06)0.0061 do do do do Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, 7 7 $2,500,001 Sd let lid 2d let ) ex 7 7 iss ' . 6 2,500,000 0 2d do felvidere hetaware ($2,103,000): let Mort. (guar. C. and A 2d Mort. do 3d Mort. do Montreal ($1,050,000): Mortgage ( ) do 1 | rv 6 400,000 6 Jau. A 2,000,06M 380,000 7 J’ue A Dec. 1877 Mav A Nov 1S72 500,000 i Ap’l & Oct. i i j Aug July; 1879 . .... 1805 do . .... - 95 1860 ... 1st n 807.00O 4,209,400 1st • 490.000 Mortgage Feb. A Aug! 1883 May A Nov. 1889 91^ J’ne & Dec. 1893 do Jan. & 493,000 7 7 July Ap’l A Oct. 1873 1879 92 95 .... 1st 141,000 7 Feb. A 1882 1st 1st Mortgage Ventral of Ne w Jersey ($1,509,000): let 1st 7 Feb. & Aug 1870 600,000 7 May A Nov. 1875 r ($3,673,000) do do 450,000 E. Div 800.000 800,000 Ventral Pacific =. Mortgage Bonds Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000): 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref M’ch & 1,.^,000 7 600,000 6 Jan. A 619,000 income Jan. A till 1870 3,525,000 Jan. A 3 5,600,000 July July Ap’l A Oct. 7 99 97 88 1893 1883 • . 1st 1st 1883 no# Ill 1S95 .... 2,000,000 n 1,250,000 r* Jan. A • 3.600.000 7 756.000 7 2,000, (k)0 7 7 6,000,000 7 1st 2d Mortgage Cleveland, Cot. and Cific. ($475,000): 1st Mortgage., Mahoning ($1,752,400): Mortgage do do 1,300,000 7 j 1885 1 Mav A Nov'1893 - ' 648,200 7 8 ! M’ch & do Sep 1864 1875 Gle>\, Fain, A Ashtabula ($1,500,000): Dividend Bouds Sunbury and Erie Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,880,848): 2d Mortgage 3d do ~ convertible 4th do Cleveland and Toledo ($2,748,280): Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1806 %on nectlcut River ($250,000): lit Mortgage Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000): let Mortgage 900,000 7 500,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1880 do 1874 .... 9G 92 85 73 90 74 2d do 8d do Toled* Depot Bonds jpiaware ($500,600): Tat Mortgage, guaranteed 2,081.000 7 Jan. A July 1835 do 1886 300,000 7 48 Vestem ($3,491 ,500): Mortgage, sinking fund.. do Laikawanna and Western 3es Moines VaUt\ Mortgage Bo (£1,903,000): Mortgage, Eastern Division... do ~ do 600,000 J’ne A Dec. 1876 Sep 270,500 8 Ap’l & Oct. . . 7 '...] Mortgage . 1st ... . . .... 7 500,000 6 Jan. A 7 642,000 7 July 96# . - Jan. A July .... ♦ • • • . S <fm jV 1 * 100 ' Jan. A July - 1883 Feb. A Alt" 1883 1,037,500! 1,000,000 rr Jan. A July 1876 do 1376 o r* 4 192,000 7 523,000 i 500.000 l c 1877 r 1869 do J'ne A Dec. 1885 May A Nov. 1875 do 1867 6 () May A Nov 1870 Feb. A Aur 1S75 7 April A Oct ft do do 1875 1875 1890 100 .... 101% 98 .... :05 Trulin.rm .... 7 May A Nov. 1881 8 A July Tan. A 1882 July 1874 8OO.OO61 6 2:30,6X10 0 250,000 6 April A Oct do do 1870 1861 1862 903.00ft 1,000,00!) 7 May A Nov. Jan. A July 1872 1869 1,465,000 6 May A Nov. 1873 1,300,000 6 May A Nov 1883 960,000 7 April A Oct 1877 7 # * • . . « ™ ® . A „ ..... 95 97 500,000 6 Jan. A July 1870 225,000 7 May A Nov. 1890 7 7 Feb. A Aug 1892 May A Nov! 1888 Jan. A July 1,092.900 6 Feb. A Aug. 314,100 0 June A Dec. 681,000 0 Apr. A Oct. 399.000 6 Feb. A Ang. 1885 ‘90-’90 ’70-’71 • • • > 74*’75 1874 1,294,0061 7 May A Nov. 18- ..... Doliar, convertible Sinking F’nd do • (±<1 2,242,506) 8' Feb. A Ang 69-72 107# 4,253,500 8 April A Oct 1882 112 1 4 855,000 7 2 253,500 7 631,006) 7 May A Nov. 1885 do 1677 Feb. A Aug 1868 96 98 93 68 • 402,000 7 . 4,600 000 1,500,000 Mississippi and Missouri River: Mortgage do do do ~ Morris and Essex: 1st Mortgage, sinking fond***,***. 2d 6 April A Oct 1881 Jau. A July 1883 : Mortgage bonds. Michigan CentraL ($7,463,489) 1st Land Grant 1871 ! 1,740,000 8 Ap’l A Oct. 1887 * 927,000 1,000,000 . 1875 u 300,000 7 Mortgage 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds.. * Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien 1st Mortgage, sinking fond. Milwaukee and St. Paul; 1st Mortgage 2d do“ “ ........L ..... 700,000 2,362,800 . _. 1,500,006 7 Jan. A July 1875 600,006 7 M’ch A Sep 1881 900.000 7 » £ 69 1,938,000 7 Feb. A Apg 1883 do 1883 300,56o 7 $1,160,000 Loan Bonds $400,000 Loan Bonds 1st Mortgage (P.& K.RR.) Bonds.. do 2d do ( ) Bonds.. 1finh 1904 169,506 2,622,000 .... 4878 Jan. & July 1867 do 1881 18— do 18— 283,000 7 7 033,000 68 - Memphis Branch Mortgage Marietta J: Cincinnati ($3,683,385): 1st Mortgage, 6. Scioto aud Hocking Valley mort Memphis db Charleston M’ch A Steia., Lac/ca. db 1st 3d ....7 Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) 1 250,000 3,437,750 100 100 1°<6S Jan‘. A July 18S3 ()n 1S93 800,000 McGregor Western: 1,129,000 7 M’ch A Sep 1873 do 1875 1,619.500 7 1,108,124 6 Jau. & July 1892 Cumberland Valley ($270,500): Mortgage Bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): 1st Mortgage .... 7 ($1,280,000): Mortgage 1st 1st 92# July 1870 mortgage Extension Bonds Louisville and Nashville ($3,297 000) * ! Feb. & Aug 1873 « Jan. A non nnn<.„ JU 500,000 8 Jan. Long Island ($932,000): 1 7 927.000 Mortgage, sinking fund N7Indiana ($800,000): Lehigh Valley ($1.477 Of if i) 475,000 7 Jan. & July 1890 850.000 244.200 1,080,000 187,000 7 April A Oct 1873 1st MortgageT ( Little Miami ($1,400,000): 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($960,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund .... 92# Julv'lSJO *. Mortgage Chicago ($500,000): do do La Crosse cfc Milwaukee 100 91 T.... 1,963,000 640,000 89)* May & Nov 11880 | 4 t ' 621,000): May A Nov. 1863 Quarterly. 1915 Feb. & Aug 1885 99 1883 Feb. A An of 1882 M ay A N ovT 1875 . 101 OctllSSO Jau. A . 500,000 7 Jan. A July 1866 Mortgage Kennebec and Portland : 1,250.000 7 §§ 7 Mortgage 99 Jan. A Julv lSTO do 1896 • 201# BOV 600,000 7 Jan. A July 1866 do 1870 364,000 10 do 98 87 83 • : ($1,254.500): Mortgage, (interest ceased) Feb. A Aug 1885 w 1885 do ... • i Joliet and 80 • rr 88 1st 2d 3d .... 7 S3 1st 4 • .... MVh .fr Spivis-rn 7 ; 1898 July 7 8S - 1888 149,000 6,837,000 2,896,500 2,563,006) Joliet and 65 Ap’l A Oct. 6 Mortgage. Jefferson > Miytgage ($13,231,000): Mortgage, convertible do Sterling Indianapolis' db Madison ($640.000): .... r* 3.810.582 500,000 Indianajx)lis and Cine. ($1,302,284) • • 1st 1,397.000 7 New Bonds : Cincinnati A Zanesville ($1,300,000): let d 3d 1st 2d - 2d 484,000 Mortgage (C. A R. I) do (new) Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000) • ■ - conv. ’75-’80 97 • - Jan. & July 1872 Feb. & Aug 1874 June A Dec 1888 M’ch A Sepil875 110,o00 1,907,000 Redemption bonds..." May A Nov. 1877 7 1,100,000 7 Ap’l A Oct. Mortgage (consolidated) Cleveland A July 5 3.890.000 7 Feb. A Aug 1869 sinking fund 2d do Indiana Central Chicago, Rock Island db P cific : let 1805 1st 2.400,000 7 Interest Bonds Consol. S. F. Bonds, Extension Bonds 2d 1st 1st .... 80 6 .... 1876 7 Jan. A July 1863 1S94 do 191,000 (} Jan. A July ($7,762,840): Mortgage do Illinois Central , Chicago A Northwest. ($12,020,483): Preferred Sinkiug Fund let Mortgage let 1st Sep Mortgage 2d Feb. A Aug 1890 May A Nov 1890 7 7 7 ($191,000): Illinois and Southern Iowa „ Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) Chicago and Gt. Eastern ($5,600,000): 1st Mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee ($2.000,000): let .... • 7,838,000 o Convertible Honda...v. Cheshire ($600,000): do do L of Cal. ($8,836,000): mortgage.T 1st 2d .... * .. Huntingdon A Broad Topi$l,430.082): 1st Mortgage : Mortgage W. Div let 2d 1st 909.000 Mortgage— do Central Ohio 2d Aug .... do 2d do 3d do Convertible .... ..... .... ’ Hudson River .... Cdtawissa ($141,000): let V........... Mortgage Lroeitb. CishfUl ^$1 930 940) Mortgage 7..... do sinking fund 2d nousatonic Camden and Atlantic ($9S3,000): let 2d < ($927,000): Ha rtf., • Aug 7 l’350,000 do do New Dollar Bonds Hartford db New Haven . Feb. A 920 fit tn Harrisburg <(' 1-aswaster ($706) (MX1) • 1,180,950 April A Oct! 1870 600,000 7 Jan. & July 11870 1,700.000 East. rt do 6,000,000 7 4,441,0(H) 7 April A 2nd do do Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Laud Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds . . 6 6 6 4 non (mm> .... i 1889 do J ! 1875 1864 May A Nov. 4 3,000,009' 7 May A Nov. 1876 convertible Mortgage. Camden and Amboy ($10,204,463): Dollar Loaus Dollar Loan Cousoldated ($5,000,000) Loan <lo Gal: cfc Chic. V. (inch in C. J N. IF.): 1st. Mortgage, sinking fund.... 2d do do Grand Junction ($9°7 o00) * Mortgage 7../;.. Great \Ytstern, 111. ($2.350.000): Boston and Lcnvell ($400,000): Mortgage Bonds Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,305,000): let Mortgage 2d Mortgage iufalo and State Line ($1,200,000): let Mortgage— Arlington & Missouri ($1,902,110): General Mortgage Bonds conv. into pref. etock os S 1,000,000 7 Jan. & July 1873 do r do convertible do do Sterling convertible Erie aruLNortheast (.$149,000): ..... 1865 200,000 Sinking Fund Bonds UDV let. Mortgage 59S,00O ..... . 3d 4th 5th .... 1871 Feb. A do do •> 420,000 739,200 do Mortgage 2d . auaX nun *3 fd 060,000 7 ’... j Erie Railway ($22,370,982): .... .... ... J’ne A Dec. 1807 M’ch A Sep 1885 Feb. A Aug 1877 vJD 300.000 2d section Sinking Fund Bonds Elmira ,‘fc WVhumspoH ($1,570,000): .... . let 1880 May A Nov. 734,000 Eastern, Mass. ($1,798,600): Mortgage, convertible j 6 150,06)0 0 do . 1,000,000 'Uossburg and Corning ($150,000): Mortgage Bonds 8 Mortgage, let section 1st •. ... 433,000 6 n East Pennsylvania ($598.000): Ap’l A Oct. 1885 500,000 6 tost on, Cone. <&• 1st . . .... do Jau. A July ’70-’79 do 1870 689,500 I $2,500,000 Mortgage ' Dubuque andSioux Citv ($900,000): .... - .. . 1878 do Princpal payule. Payable. S j 1,000,000 i let ~ .... 7 7 1,225,000 » -r . ! 700,006 • . 1,000,000 6 Ja Ap Ju Oc l807 1,128,500 6 Jan. A July 1S75 1855 1850 1S53 'iiUefontaine ($1,745,0001: 1st Mortgage 1st let * 1881 |M*ay A Nuv. 1 ultimo re and Ohio ($10,112,584): Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834. .... Ap’l A Oct. !180B 6 C 484,000 ing. : Detroit and Milwaukee ($3.500,000): let Mortgage, convertible 2d So * Detroit. Monroe <fc Toledo ($734,000): • 'Ap’l 2.000.(H)C _ do do do < .... 1876 7 i Jan. & July 1883 7 A Oct. '1894 7 do 11895 4,00»),tKK. Sterling Bonds— do do do s B.—The snms placed after the of Company shows the total Funded Debt. Amount outstand¬ d name m THURSDAY INTEREST. • N. 44 Railroad do do 7 13,858,006 Dollar Bonds DESCRIPTION. i J’ne A Dec. 1996 | iAp’l A Oct. 11877 1882 do do 1979 7 1,000,001 OU3) do ' ■ * 30,U00,000): do ! TD 'd ; gold Mortgage (gc Uantic <£■ (It. Werestern ( Princpal payble. 6 -4-i Railroad: / lexandria and Fredericksburg 1 »t THURSDAY . 7 7 Jan. A July 1891 1893 April & Oct 1893 99 83 80 8,612,000 7 May A Nov 1877 do 1883 695,000 7 3,500,000 7 May A Not. 1915 88 85 .... • ••• ♦*-» * February 2,1867.] 153 jTffiCUHQNICLE. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued). THURSDAY * Description. rhe sums placed after the name of Company show the total Funded 'CJ T3 ing. Debt. •r-< 70 PQ < The sum 1st 1st 9d Compan ehows the total Funded Mortgage (convertible) ... Jan. 450,000 200,00< M’ch & Sep 1861 .Tan. «fc Juh l £68 &July ($650,000): $500,000 Mortgage New Jersey ($805,000): * Fei ry Bonds of 1853 .' New London Northern ($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 stocks) Sink. FMnd B’ds (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1659, convert — Bonds of 1865 New York and Harlem ($6,098,045): 1st General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage N iork and New Haven ($2,000,000) Jan. & July 1S69 1873 485,000 Feb. & Aug 140,000 Jan. & July 1885 6,917,598 May & Nov 1863 1,898,000 Feb. & Aug do do 3,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 May & Nov. Feb. & Aug 1,088.000 April & Oct do : 1,000,000 ($232,000): 232,000 Mortgage Northern Central ($5,211,244) ; State Loans 2d Mortgage Sinking Fund Northern New Hampshire ($151,400) : Plain Bonds North Carolina: : it. Louis, Alton A T. H. ($6,’700,000): 1st Mortgage 2*1 Mortgage preferred 2d do income St. Louis, Jacksonville A Chicago: 1st Mortgage 2d do St. Paul A Parific of Minn : 1st Mortgage (tax“ free) 93 2,925,000 6 June & Dec 16S7 165,000 May & Nov. 18S3 1883 do 663,000 . Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Bonds let 1876 300,000 ($766,000): Mortgage N. Y./Prov. and Boston North Missouri: 1st General Mortgage ($6,000,000). North Pennsylvania ($3,i05,785): Mortgage Bonds Mortgage 1,500,000 2,500,000 94 93 91 2d Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore). 2d do (gn&x. by B. & O. RR;.) let do do ) 3d do (not guaranteed) Aorivich and Worcester ($580,000): (do General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage 1st 101#i 1S67 50,000 Jan. & July 1896 2,500,000 360,000 Jan. & July April & Oct 1880 1887 1,500.000 Jan. & July 1873 500,000 100,000 300,000 1st Mortgage Ohio and Mississippi ($3,650,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do ( W.D.) Oswego & Rome ($350,000). let Mortgage (guar by R. W. & O.) Oswego ana Syracuse ($311,500) : Mortgage % Pacific, (S. TV Branch): Mortgage, guar, by Mo Jan. & Feb. & 2,900.000 750,000 Jan. * July do 1872 1874 May & Nov. 1916 350,000 225,000 1,139,000 Jan. & Jan. & July ° 416,000 346,000 . Pennsylvania ($16,750,124): let Mortgage do 2d 2d do , sterling Phila. and Balt. Central 1st Mortgage 1st let do (general) 2d do (general) PhiladelGermant. A No?ristoivn: Convertible Loan Philadelphia A Reading ($6,900,663) Sterling Bonds of 1836 do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849.. do do 1861 do do 1843-4-6-9: Sterling Bonds of 1843 Dollar Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valiev Bonds, convertible 1st ana Mch & 4,980,000 2,621,000 2,283,840 Jan. & 575,000 Jan. & Trenton ($200,0< Mortgage 1,000,000 5,000.000 4,000,000 183,000 408,000 182,400 2,856,600 106,000 1,521,000 976,800 664,000 60,000 200,000 Philadel., Wumimj. A Baltimore: Mortgage Loan 516,000 Pittsburg and Connellsville : 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) 400,000 Fb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 1st Mortgage 5,200,000 2d do 3d do Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. Pittsburg and Steubenville 1st 2d . IstMortgage 116 Mortgage do Raritan and Delaware Bay: Mortgage, sinking fund do Convertible Bonds Reading and Columbia: 1st 1st Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga . 1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitehall.... 1st Mort. Troy, S. & Rut. (gnar.) R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,60 ,908) : . 1st Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.) 2d do (Watertown* Rome) 91# too# Rutlandand Burlington ($3,257,472) 1st Mortgage 2d do fwramento Valley: Mortgage dQ .. do Vermont Central ($3,500,000) ; 1st Mortgage 2d do Vermont and Massachusetts< Jan. & Jnly 1875 June & Dec 1867 700,000 Feb. & Aug 1872 2.000.000 Jan. <fc July 1866 68-74 July 1871 April & Oct 1876 60,000 Mch & Sept 1866 1,180,000 Jan. & July 1870 1,391,000 -Tune & Dec 1894 900,000 Feb. * Ang do 1865 1884 1875 1875 1865 1874 1,400,000 Various. Jan. & 2,500,000 1,000,000 May & Nov. 1,500,000 do 152,355 1st do 300,000 300.000 Jan. <fe July Apr. & Oct. 650,000 200,000 May * Nov. 500,000 Jan. & July' do 1863 1867 June & Dec Jan. & July 1861 1867 116 40 Jan. * July May & Nov. 1883 1876 103 600,000 Feb. & Ang 1875 399,300 654,908 Jan. & July 1873 2,000,000 1,500,000 Mortgage 550,600 Mortgage (guaranteed) Philadelphia ($962,300) Mortgage (convert.) Coupon 1st 2d do , registered Western (Mass.) (6,269.520): .. Sterling (£899,900) Bonds 1875 93 93 Jan. & Mar. & Westchester A 99# 97# 97# 89 74 74 600,000 180,000 ....... 1st. 1884 July 78 188*7 1886 1875 Sep. ,1882 4,319.520 Dollar Bonds........ Western Maryland : 1st Mortgage 1st do , guaranteed York A Cumberland (North. Cent.): 1st Mortgage 2d do Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds ... 850’000 596.000 April & Oct 1878 April & Oct ’68-’71 do Jan. & do 200,000 175,000 1875 1890 1890 ,uly May & Nov. 1870 Jan. & Jnlv do 1877 2,356,509 Jan. & July 1886 2,000,000 4,375.000 1.699.500 JaAp JuOc 1870 1890 1885 25,000 600,000 96 1871 Canal July 1876 April & Oct 1877 April & Oct 1881 April & Oct 1901 Jan. & July Jan. & July 1867 do 1880 April & Oct 1870 Jan. & July 1871 do 1880 do 1880 do 1886 do. 1886 May & Nov. Chesapeake and Delaware: 1st Mortgage Bonds Chesapeake and Ohio ; Maryland Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed 91# ... Preferred Bonds Delaware Division: 1865 IstMortgage Delaware and Hudson ; 90 95 95 90 90 Mortgage, sinking fnnd Erie of Pennsylvania: let Mortgage Bonds Interest Bonds Lehigh Navigation: ($3,081,434). Loan of 1871 lonol 1884 Morris. Jan. & Feb. & July 1884 Aug 1889 Semi an’ally do Mortgage Bonds Pennsylvania A New York: 1st Mortgage (North Branch)... Schuylkill Navigation: 1,000,000 500,000 Feb. & Ang do 1881 1881 92 1st Mortgage 2d do 1st 1,438,000 Jan. & July 1875 1,000,600 140,000 Mch & Sept do do 1888 1888 1876 800,000 Mch & 1879 400,000 340,000 May & Nov. 1890 600,000 1880 1st do do Sept Mortgage .* Mortgage 2d Mch & Sept 1S70 752,600 161,000 Jan. & July do 1865 1868 414,158 Mch & Sept 1870 1S84 23 Mortgage ... Jan. & July 1876 750,000 April & Oct 1876 590,000 May & Nov. 1876 79 80 586.500 May & Nov 1.000.000 1865 1878 1864 62 325,000 Jan. & Jnly do do 62# 2,500,000 May & Nov. 1883 460,000 Jan. & Jnly 1878 750,000 Jan * July 1878 Jan. * July 1886 Jan. * July 1884 Jan. & July ^ 18— April & Oci *8 600,000 Jan. & July 1881 jOOOOO Feb. & Aug 1871 June * Dec Tan. & July 1873 1879 do Mortgage pppyertible 96 1872 1882 1870 Western Union Telegraph: l»t Mch & Se^ Jan. & Ju 93 £ Quicksilver Mining ; 1st Mortgage.: 59# 2d do 182,000 1,500,000 2,000,ov do Mississippi (Rock I.) Bridge: 1st Mortgage Pennsylvania Coal: 1st 400,00010 Jan * July 1875 839,000110 Feb. * Aug 1881 641,000 (guir. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) 1,000,000 ttanposa Mining; 1st Mortgage ; 1863 1878 Cincinnati and Covington Bridge : 1st Mortgage Bonds Jnn. &Dec. 1874 Mch & Sept 1880 do Susquehanna: Mlscellaneon*: American Dock A Improvement: 1890 Feb. & Aug 1863 122 Jnly 1,1* *0,000 Wyoming Valley : 1st Jan. <fc 1,764,330 Mortgage West Branch and 800,000 3 980,670 Improvement Susquehanna and Tide- Water; Mmyland Loan Coupon Bonds Priority Bonds, Union (Pa.): 1890 do 2,667,276 Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Bonds 1868 April & Oct Jan. * July 1,800,000 987,600 1900 3875 Verm. Cen. Verm. ACan. Bonds Warren ($600,000) : 1875 1872 1912 1912 1912 1884 800,000 800,000 Aug : do Bonds Mortgage Rensselaer A Saratoga consolidated : . Troy Union ($6SO,000) Mortgage Bonds ^o-’so 5,160,000 2,000,000 200,000 250,000 ; 2d do 3d do Convertible July 1880 April & Oct 1875 do May & Nov : Sinkiug Fnnd Bonds (T. W. & a7 Equipment bonds Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) ; 1st Mortgage 90 : Quincy and Toledo : 1st Mortgage Racine ana Mississippi (W. Union) ; 1st Mortgage 1st 2d Sept Mortgage Toledo TT abash and West ($6,653,868): 1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash) 1st do (extended) 2d do (Toledo and Wabash)... 2d do (Wabash and Western), April & Oct 1870 1,029,000 ($575,000): Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000): let Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie)... Philadelphia 1,150,000 Feb. * 200,000 Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw July do Feb & Aug. 951,000 201,500 1,070,000 1st Mortgage Terre Haute A Indianapolis{$>G0,0O0): 1st Mortgage, convertible Third Avenue (N. Y.): Panama: let Mortgage, sterling 1st do !do 2d do do Peninsula {Chic. AN. W.): let Mortgage Sterling Loan 91 July 1874 Aug 1870 April & Oct 1869 1S92 Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191) 1885 1,494,000 July South Carolina: 1873 1885 do do do 1,000,000 500,000 Jan. & 500,000 Mortgage Domestic Bonds Staten Island: 1st Mortgage July irred. July 1885 Mar. & Sep. 800,000 1,290,000 IstMortgage 1875 339,000 Mortgage 89 76 70 1894 1894 1894 April & Oct. Shamokin F A PottsviHe ($791,597): 1886 1874 May & Nov. do 1st Feb. & Aug '73-'7S Jan. & Jan. & 1,700.000 Second Avenue: 1872 100 1893 1868 98* April & Oct Ogdensburg andL. Ch am. ($1,494,000): let 3 « Semi an’ally do Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: 90 90 1876 103 1876 104 1876 104 149.400 Aorth-Western Virginia: do •d Payable. £ 2,800,000 2,200,006 Sandusky and Cincinnati: 1st Mortgage (extended) - Mortgage Loan Chattel ing. Debt. Railroad: do N. Raven A Northampton let Si Amount i p.aced after the name o:ft outstand¬ Railroad: Naugatuck ($300,000) ; New Haven A N. London THURSDAY INTEREST. Description. Amount outstand¬ *.000. - MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. RAILROAD, CANAL, AND Harked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. out- roads, i Last Periods. standing. p’d. Bid. Ask. Railroad. ..., 11,522 150 i 1,919,000 preferred 2,494.900 Atlantic & St. Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio 13,188,1102 100 113,188,902 1,650,000 Washington Branch*... 100■ 1,050,000 4.4:34.25(1 Bellefontaine Line Belvidere, Delaware — . . April and Oct jOct.. .4 April and Oct Oct ...5 Feb. aud Aug Feb.. 3 . . . .... .... .... .... * ' 8,5(X),000 andEru i 1,8:10,000 Jaii. and July 4,076.971 -Tan. and July 3,160,1)00 Jan. and July 4,500.000 Jan. aud July 2,100,000 Ian. and July Boston and Maine. Boston and Worcester. 4 Jan.. .5 •Tan .5 Jau.. .5 Jan.. .5 Jan .... ‘ok Camden and Amboy 100 Camden and Atlantic 50 do do preferred.. 50 Cape Cod 0° Catawissa* 50 . .... •• 100 Central of New Jersey Cheshire (preferred) 100 Chicago and Alton 100 do preferred. ...100 Chicago Burlington and Quincy.100 1(X> Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*.. 100 Chicago and Milwaukee* 100 Chicago and 4,390,000 l .01 <0,000 •Kin aud Chicago, Rock Sep...5 Sep... 5 Island & Pacific.100 107% 1U9 109 126 Nov. 5 Con’ticut and Passompsic.pref.100 Connecticut River 100 Delaware* - • • 100 50 50 loo Detroit and Milwaukee 100 do do pref.....l()0 Dubuque aud Sioux City.......100 Delaware. Lacka., & Des Moines Valley Western Fitchburg Georgia .. . - Hannibal and St. * Joseph do do do preferred Hudson River ' 50 OX 1,0X1 do 3,510,(XX) 4,366.8(X 1 100 1.900.0X> 100 .... .... :::: .... .... 120" i ... j ... Delaware Division/.. Delaware and Hudson Do la ware and Raritan 73 4 . 126 ’ Juiy •Ian...3% 1,997.309 Feb .5 112 h Sep .4 July..3 July. .4 85 .... .... . .. .... .... Quarterly. 1,500,00) jau. ..1% Cumberland ... * 835 'XX' 50HXX1 * j .... jan.. 6 .2% 514,646 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2 3,572,400 June and Dec Dec. .4 Quarterly. 6,632,250 ik .... 3i>i July -Ian... 2 Aug. .2 Quarterly. 1,852,715 50 and Aug Aug.. 2 50 1,109,594 Feb. 100 5,527,871 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 8% 32)5 .... .... :ston ijan do do gua ran. IQ Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienlO do do 1st pref.10 do do 2d pref.10 ] Haven.. ... > .... .... May and New jNov. .4 5,312.725 5 6,9'2,801 -Tan. and Julv 9,-381,800 Feb. and Aug 1,08-9,7<X) Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 !Feb..3 3,014.0(X) 3.082.000 February.... Feb..S iFeb.. 7 1,014,000 February 1,000,(XK) ., Michig do preferred Mine Hill & Schuylkill Morris and Essex SepjSep. .3s 4.051.744 Mar.and Sep Sep..3s 1, (XXI, 000 apt .... ... r;2.. .... 106X !107 OOa 69), . 36 and Taunton 2,400.000 Feb. and Aug F.10.sor5c; 50% 53X 3,708,200 -Tan. and July ! Jan.. .4 3,5(K\0tX) Feb. and Aug | Aug 3%X. 6(K>,(Xri May and Nov jNov. .4 1,109, (XX) Feb. and Aug Aug. .7 5(X),000 Jan. and Julv jJan.,.6 jan.. 3 do 738,538 1,010.000 )! 5,<KX),0o0 Feb. and Ang Feb..5 125 1 700,000 Mar and Sep. (Sep...4 >!l4 80l.OOO Feb. aud A up (Feb 1 .... 56X .... ... .... . Jersey.. New Loinlon Northern New York Central • ; P.OQO.OOO Irm-ular. • 114 • • .... • • .... • ... .... .... • 3# 40% .... .dk . . 99% . 54 Jan...IX Jan.. .3 Jau.. .5 57 135. Jan. and Julv jan.. .5} .... January Jan...2 ... June Dec and Aug and Aug and Aug and Nov and Aug Feb. aud Aug Feb. and Ang Feb. and Aug Feb. .3 Feb.. 8 Feb..5 Nov. 5 Feb ..3 Feb. Feb. Feb. Mav Feb. - ••• Quarterly. Quarterly. 121% 22 32 23 12% 32% 13% 52% 52% 56 57 • • • j I • • • • .... \ 49 Jan.. .5 00 35% Oct... 5 Jan.. .6 Jan...5 145 (0 55* 50' •Tan...6 140 145 65 644.000 ..300 20.000,000 100 000,000 • • May Jan...5 42% J uly 20 Jan. 2.... 44 25% 27 43% 44 96 A ug 3... Aug. 3... Quarterly. Ang.3... 100 >0,000,000 100 SO 121 50 1,250,000 Jan. and July lq 1.000,000 Jan. and July i<» 2,175.000 Apr. and Oct .PHI l.yMUK* Feb.aDd Aug Ang 25 2.000.000 Feb. and Aug Aug.... 20 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 50 54% .... Sept.. 4 Jan. and Dec. Dec...4 145 54% Feb. and Ang Aug.. 3# j 50 3,200,000 • 56" 57‘ . July . .... 140 Feb ..5 Feb .6 F-b ..6 1 Jan. and • .8 . Jan.and July Jan.. .5 5,000,000 • -'-• • 2,000,000 • • .... Dec Jan .4 Dec ..4 ion U 66 69 4.000,000 100 1,000,000 100 4,000,000 100 20,000,000 uarteriy. narterly. 96 97 Dec... 5 154 154 2^666,000 Quarterly. Dec...5 ....-101 125 I .... Pacific Mail South American Navi.at.ionlOO Union Navigation 100 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust.. 25 100 New York Life «fc Trust Union Trust 100 1,000,000 Jap .and J uly! Jan... 5 1,000,000 Fcli. and AngfAng 1,000,000 Jan. and July 1,000,000 Jan. and July Mining.—Mariposa Gold 100 5,097,600 Mariposa Gold Preferred .100 5,774,400 Quartz Hill Gold 25 1,000,w0 1.100 10,000,000 Quicksilver United States Trust .... New Ang. .8 June and Dec Jan. and Julv -June and Dec Jan. and July Jan. and Julv Jan. and July 70 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 37 53 34 64 31% 61% Nov. 100 100 mcaragua I 1 ..... 39% 50 Ttansit.—Central American .... {■' May. .7 May and Nov 25 Wells, Fargo & Co_ 70 90 .... 90 ...» New Bedford Merchants’ Union United States .... 95 • .. 1,000,000 Manhattan... 5p 4,000.000 Jan. and July Metropolitan 100 2,800,000 New York : 60 1,000,000 May and Nov Williamsburg. 50 I 750.000 Jan. and Jnh Improvement.--Canton 100.(16} pell 4.500,000 Boston Water Power 100 4,000,000 Brunswick City. 100 1,000.000 Telegraph.—Western .Union... 100 28,450,000 Jan. and July Western Union,ltnss. Ex.. 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Express.—A da ms 100 10.000,00(1 Quarterly. American. 500 3,000,000 Quarterly. .... 1.417.(XX) 2.029.778 6,586,135 Mar. and Oct. .A% Oct 3 Oct.. .3 Jan...5 Jersey City & H boken.... 20 * ,.. Marietta and Cincinnati do do 1st pref. do do 2d pref.. Wilkesbarre ... Quarterly. 50 * 29)4103* IOC % 61% 62 54%' 55 ;. Jan. and July Jan.. .6 50 Ilarlein Jan...5 1,500,000 Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill.. Wyoming Valley ; Gas. —Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) .... Jan. and 2,800,000 10 Ashburton Butler Consolidation Central 56%' • 50 miscellaneous. Coal.—American... 261% 56)4 Quarterly. 50 100 100 l! Wyoming Valley *1 — 260 Apr. and Oct Feb. and Aug Aug. .2 ■ 1 128 .... .... Jan. and J illy Jan...2# 25 25 .- 100 .... Lehigh Navigation.. . 24" . Morris (consolidated) Union. . 862,571 preferred 100 Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 do preferred. 50 Susqnehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 ... July . 97M Oct...5 Oct...5 Feb. and Aug do 70 55 63 . ; 393.0 Canal, mi .... 108 Jan ..6 Nov. .4 Annually. N. Y.100 Chesapeake aud Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio Jan. ..3 Mav and Nov Nov. .4 11X1.750 •Tan. and Jan. and Wrightsville,York& Gettysb’g* 50 .... .... .... 68" . April and Oct April and Oct April and Oct Vermont and Canada* lop Vermont and Massachusetts... .100 Warren* ...' 50 Western (Mass) 100 Western Union (Win. & Ill.).... . i Worcester aud Nashua 75 140 .... 23,374,400 Feb. aud Aug 1,689,901 Mar. & Sep. 412,000 Jan.and Julv 407,0X1 Jan. and July .100 100 Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 do do 1stprcl.100 do do 2d pref. 1(H) Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 do do preferred. 50 .100 Troy and Boston Troy and Greenbush* .100 Utica and Black River 100 . ... 94% Quarterly. Jan.. 2K 100 June and Dec Dec. .3 Jan. and Jnly Jan...4 Terre Haute & Indianapolis.... 60 Third Avenue (N. Y.). 100 .... .. .... 50 50 50 2,646,100 Island Syracuse, Binghamton & .... 494.3-80 50 Louisville aud Fraukfort. Louisville and Nashville. :i8 107k Quarterly. Quarterly. • * Jnly Jan...3 Apr. and Oct 100 South Carolina 77 120 Mar 7s.. July Jan.. .4 Quarterly. Jau Feb. and Aug Feb. .2% 29 •Tan. and Jiily^ •Jan. and Julv Jail.. .3% 40 54)s Feb. & Aug. 70 •Tan.. 7 ■Jannaryf. Feb. & Aug. Feb.. 5 116 Jau. aud Julv Jan.. .5 May and Nov Nov. .3% 6.9t.1.971 April and-,Oct Oct. Blooms burg.. 50 do pref. 50 liittlc Schuylkill*..- 106)6 .... 5,253.S3f 100 Lehigh Valley Lexington and Frankfort * Little Miami Eong 8,535.700 .100 Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50 do do pref. 50 Illinois Central 100 Indianapolis and Cincinnati..., 60 Indianapolis and Madison—..100 do do pref.. 100 Jeffersonville 50 Joliet and Chicago* 100 Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100 Lackawanna and ■ • .... 100 3,000.00'100 820.CMX' too 1,180.0X1 Housatonic l .... 105 March 3,155.0X1 Jan. and 16.570.100 pref... 1< K; Hartford and New Haven 94 • 1,550,050 952,350 1,50), (XX) 1.673,Oil 100 100 . 93% .... 4064 32 -Tan. and July Jan...3 10,247,050 Jan. and July July..5 Eastern, (Mass) 100 Eighth Avenue, N. Y* 100 l,O)0.<KXl 5(X).Oh> Elmira, Jefferson. & CanaudagualOO 503.0X1 Elmira and Williamsport*.. .. 50 500.0X1 do pref... 50 do Erie do preferred Erieaud Northeast* 61 % 2 -‘181 931 pref.. ..100 1,987,351 do do .. 34*g 61% * Jan.and Ju’y Jan...5 do pref. 100 Jacksonville & Chic* 100 Sandusky, and Cincinnati .100 do do pref. 100 Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO Saratoga and Hudson River.,.. 100 Savannah & Charleston 100 50 Schuylkill Valley*. Second Avenue (N. Y.) 100 Shatnokin Valley & Pottsville*. 50 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) .100 1,532,169 100 Lexington Dayton and Michigan Covington and 34 % ... 500.000 1,511,30- Jan. and July Jan.. .4 1,59J,100 •Jan.and July Jan.. .4 .100 Jan. and do St. Louis, July Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta.100 5,0X1.000 Jan. and Julv Jan.’66 4 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,403,910 Oct. ..S Cleveland and Toledo...... 50 4,841,601 April and Oct Jan.. .‘2)4 Quarterly. Columbus & Indianapolis Cent. 100 la-i. Columbus and Xenia*.. — 50 1,490,80) -Jau. and July Nov .54 viay and N ov Concord 50 1.500,000 350.000 Jan. and July Jan...3# 100 Concord and Portsmouth and Brooklyn. ... 1 .... 129 July •Inly. .5 Cincinnati and Zanesville...... .100 2,0X1.00) Feb. and Aug Feb. .4 Cleveland, Columbus, <fc Cincin.100 6,000.000 May & Nov. Nov. .4 Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 1.036,OX' Jan. Jan.. .5 and Coney Island Quarterly. May and Nov .100 Saratoga and Whitehall .100 Troy, Salem & Rutland .... 100 Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOQ Rutland and Burlington 100 St. Louis, Alton, & Terre HautelOO 124 06 470,000 Chicago.100 Providence and Worcester Raritan and Delaware Bay Rensselaer & Saratoga consol. 25 2 25% Jan... 2J* Jan.. .2% Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO 1,106,125 3.0X1.00) Apr and Oct. Oct...5 Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 Cincinnati,Hamilton & .... " * • * ... Jan .7 January. Jan. and July Jan... 3 Feb. and Aug Aug. .4 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO Portland, Saco. & Portsmouth. 100 13.101,927 12.991.719 June & Dec. Dec ’66.7 6.500.000 April and Oct Oct...5 100 pref. .100 do .... . 2,250.0X1 Northwestern do J-*n.. .3% Feb ..5 126 Feb 5 •- 1.150.000 2.200.0C ) Feb. & Aug 10,085,940 Quarterly. 2,085,925 fan. and July 1,783,20) Mar aud Sep. 2,425.400 Maraud Sep. 10.193.010 May & Nov. *’ • 106" Jan. and July -Tan.. .5 Feb. and Aug Feb...3 Oct...4 (and Steamship) 100 Pennsylvania 50 Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO Philadelphia and Erie* 50 Philadelphia and Reading 50 Phila., Germant’n, & Norrist’n* 50 Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50 Pittsburg and Connellsville 50 .... 631.665 -Ian. and July Jau. .5% 50 preferred do Nov. .4 Jan.. .2 ** 1 Panama . . 378,455 682,60.) May and Nov 409,307 100 Pacific of Missouri .... Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3# 2 100 50 Colony and Newport Oswego and Syracuse. 366,00!) Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100 850,000 Jan. and July Buffalo, New*York, aud Erie*.. 10*.) Feb. & Aug. 100 2,200,009 Buffalo and State Line 4.5 *3,800 Feb. and Aug Jan ..3 Quarterly. 100 Old ;. Quarterly. 705.800 • • .... . preferred.. 100 do . 136 492.150 1,000,000 . » 131 > 5,285,050 Jan. and July Jan ..4 1.500.000 Jan. and July Jan A 1,755,281 Ask Bid. p’d. Last Periods. standing. Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 Apr. and Oct do preferred.100 Ohio and Mississippi: —, 100 19,822,851 . . roads, Norwich and Worcester . 997.112 600,000 Quarterly. -Tan ..i % 250.000 ■1 une & Dec. Dec.. 2% v/v»-“ri Boston, Hartford Jan...l% Quarterly. 153.000 Louis* Alton and Sr out¬ New York and Harlem 50 50 do nreferred New York Proviuence &Bostonl00 Ninth Avenue 100 1 Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 Northern Central 50 Noiih M’ssouri ... .100 North Pennsylvania 50 1 THURSDAY. Dividend. Stock Comp Aimes. Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. THURSDAY. Dividend. Stock Companies. do [February 2,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 154 300 -Ian. .4 Jan ..5 !!! !jiio 21 i 21* .. • • '9 lii5 • 1 *nfl#q4 Ha X (mono lifeyW^QY, Nov.* 37%j 3$ THE February 2, 1867.] INSURANCE ITEMS. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Bemis Heights Hammond 10 par Wright 5 .... • . . 3 15 Bennehott' Ran 10 Bergen Coal and Oil Bliven ... 10 5 ...10 5 ....10 ...100 'Rf«dtpy Oil Brevoort IG 2 ... Empire City.... ... .. • 2 .. • year, it shows a surplus business of the company, . .... 2 .. • .... 15 .... . .... . in 1866 it received from the same source $1,435,475 .... .... .... 1 25 1 75 Ryud Farm .... .... .... .... t «... its losses • i • • • • • • • • • Venango (N. Y.) ...., 101 .. 5 15 4 CO .... .... Bid. i Askd i paid 3 Adventure ^tna .... .- 7 00 Albany & Boston.... ••25ft 3 Algom ih • .... I 1 ...17 American j .... ... .... ! ... Amvtrrtaloid 1| ! .... 1 Bay State 4# ! ••■133* i 8 5" 1C 00 Bohemian Boston ...17)* ! 2* • . - .. I • - • • 50 Caledonia . 50 ...— 1 00 . Copper Creek Copper Falls.... — Copper Harbor...i.. 3 00 ’3 5* 4 ...— . . . .... 49 30 50 00 ’ 2% | 1 .... ...20)* .... .... Davidson Dudley • 1ft 3ft .. ... Edwards • 1)* ... Eagle River ! 1 ... . • « • Everett «... 5)* Evergreen Bluft' Excelsior Flint Steel River.... ...9)* Franklin 8)* 32 50 33 00 .... • • . French Creek I-Jirnrd 5 .. Great Western Hamilton Hancock H anover Hilton .. Hope • • • 6 1 ..19 ..10 ..33 .. Hungarian .. * t .* . Naumkeag New' Jersey New? York . Consol... 2 1 .10 • . . . . .... . Brooklyn . . . ... 4 . City ... . .... Columbia* .11 7 .50 .... . .... - • • • Commercial Commonwealth... ’ 00 ’ 00 Continental * 2 87 3 00 334 20 50 21 on .15 16 00 5)* ..1. 1 00 Petherick Pew'abic Phoenix 5)4 . . 50 LX) 40 Eagle .... 00 Empire C 50 Excelsior 30 17 Firemen’s Fund... 10 Firemens Trust.. 10 25 Corn «... - .— .... .— .. 6)* . Kockland . . .... 32 00 32 50 10 Ridge 20 10 00 oo 00 00 50 . .... .lift Ogima Pennsylvania * 25 25 11 00 Bowery .... — North Cliff North w estern Norwich.. . . 8 12 3 1 . _ 7 50 4 00 * * * 7 75 4 25 • Exchange... 50 i • • * • - .... 2 00 Guardian.. 3 35 .... • • • • Hope ... Howard. 1 ! Winona * .... Winthrop Import1 & Traders. 4fti -. -( , Capita! $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.+ Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares Capital $200,000, In 20.000 shares. Capitil of Lake Superior corunauies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares Knickerbocker Lafayette (B’kly).. GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. | Bid. par 10 j Alpine Alameda American Flag Atlantic & Pacific * 5 1 3 25 1 50 1 1 05 1 3 2 25 3 3 30 20 1(1 ... Ayres Mill & Mining .. .. Bates & Baxter {tpntnn .. .. — — . 50 5 Hob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated.. ... Burroughs .. .. .. Central Church Union Columbian G. &■ S Consolida ted Colorado. Consolidated Gregory. Corydon — — — .. — . . . .... . 5 — • • • .. • .. . • • , • • . „ Eehla.. Pall River — First National .. — < . • • 1 50 4 60 Gilpin. Gold Hill — — .... 3 50 4 65 Nye — — 9 5 15 1 20 3 10 - Ranagat Con. Silver — People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5 Perry and Peoples’ — 25 Quartz Hill ftocky Mountain 10 .. 20 • • . 1 35 1 85 3 85 1 40 18 ... 30 50 ; Copake Iron Foster Iron par 5 — Lake Superior Iron .... 100 Backs County Lead 5 Den bo Lead — Manhan Lead — Phenix Lead — Iron Tank storage..... — <»•••- .... .. m «•> .... • • • • • • • • .... + .... • ., .... t r .... t OrfrANIKS. Bid. Tudor Lead par — Sa»rinnw. L. S. «fe M.. .25 Wallkill Lead — Wallace Nickel — Rutland Marble 25 3 15 Long Island Peat — Russell File Savon de Torre — |Askd 0 0 River... Park 0 9 j 5 5 ) 9 9 5 5 t) J Phcvnix ! Br’klyn. ) ) .... , , , , ... 31 0C .... 5 5 3 05 25 500. (XX) 200,000 200,000 200,010 150,000 280,000 150,000 300,000 150,000 200,000 640,000 200,000 1,000,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 300,000 210,000 200,000 1,000,000 500,000 350,000 200,(XX) 200, (XX) 150,000 150,000 1,000,000 200,000 300,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 .. Tradesmen's 25 United States..... 26 Washington 50 Washington *!....100 Williamsburg City.50 Yonkers & N. Y.. 100 Last Periods. Assets. 223.771 Jan. and July 205,91( Jan. and July 440,60- Jan. and July 213,591 Jan. and July 501,54.’ Jan. and Julv 253,285 Feb. and Aug 324.451 March and Se]p 200.365 May and Nov 181,055 Feb. and Aug 320, 111 June and Dec . . . . . Bid. Last bale. . 248,392; Feb. and Aug 211,521! do 123,5V •Jan. and July do 378,441 3l4,7Sr Feb. and Aug 231,71k Jan. and July do 391,91.* dO 212,51! 440,871 Feb. and Aug 244,21H Jan. and Jnly : 149,024 156,063 215,079 500,000 200,000 150,000 250,000 400,000 287,400 150,000 500,000 do do do paid. ..... .!!> Jan. ’67 J. ’67.?*c3 r Jan. *67 ..• Jan. 65...J Aug. ’66...! • Aug. '65. .4 Dec. '66..c Feb. '67...f l£0 Aug. ’66. .C July'64 ..A Jan. ’67 .1C Aug. 6 p. s Jan. ’67. £ 101 July’64.3ft Jau. ’67 ..£ Aug. ’< 6. £ .... July ’66 ..£ Oct.’65...5 Jan. '67 .7 Mar. '64..E . July’64 ..5 * 385,489 April and Oct. 229,729 Jan. and July. do 194,317 do 173,691 154,200 Feb. and Aug. . * . July'66 ..7 Jan.'67...5 . .... . Jan. '67 . .5 July '66.3ft July’65 .5 July '66 .5 . . do do do 207,345 do 2,485,017 do 252.057 do 349,521 do 201.216 do 168,82° 138,166 Feb. and Aug. do 1,024,762 do 195,571 245,9S4 March and Sep 159.721 Jan. and July. do 279,864 do 161,25? do 346,426 do 129.644 do 260,264 do 1,423,924 do 704,303 do 282,35 do 197.633 do 150,135 do 211,ITS do 1.322,469 do 228,644 do 1,192.30? do 150,646 do 216,184 do 235,518 311.976 do 244,066 Jan. and July. 222,199 Feb. and Aug. 1,175.565 Jan. and July, do 601,701 430.295 - Oct. '66..5 149,755 May and Nov. 2*29,309 Feb. and Aug. Feb. '67 ..5 592,394 ^an. and July. July ’66 ..5 195,875 Jan. and July. July '65 ..5 3,177,437 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67.3ft 228,12- Feb. and Ang. Aug ’66..5 186,17* April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5 172.318 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 3ft 168,860 .... Sep. ’66.. .£ . Jan '67 ..5 Jan. ’67 .5 . • • . . • . .... .... .... ..... .... .... • . . 101 . July’66 .5 Jan. '67 . July ’65 . Jnn. *67 . .5 .5 .5 July '65 .6 • . Julv ’65 .6 Feb.'65 ..5 . • . .... . ..... Aug.’66.3ft . . Ang. '66..5 Mar. '06 .4 Jan.’67 5 Jan. ’67 ..5 Jan. ’67 .5 Jan.’67 ..5 .... . .... .... .... . Jnly ’65 ..4 Jan. ’67 ..5 Jan.’67..5 . Jan. ’67 3ft Jan. '67 ..6 JaD. '67..5 . - . .... July 66 4 Jnly ’66... 5 Jan.’67 .10 Jnly '65 ..5 Jan. ’67. .5 Jan.'67. .8 .... Jan. '67 .6 Jan. '67 ..4 Jan.'67 .6 Aug.'66. ..5 Jan.'67 ..5 .... . .... . .... .... i July '66 .'.6 Oct. Ian. lan. Jan. 92# ’66..? ’67 ..6 • '67 .5 ’67 ..5 . .... 998,687 Jan. and July. Tan '67 ..5 do 188.170 luly '66 ..5 457,252 208,969 206,909 150,580 138,902 1,000,000 1,277,564 200,000 230,903 200,000 217,843 Star Stnyvesant, ,85 200,000 200,000 200,000 ... Sun Mutual! . 85 400,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 1,000,000 0 500,000 0 200,000 5 2<K),000 Standard. Bid. Askd Companies. 150,000 150,(XX) St. Miark’s. St MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. 200,(XX) 1,000.000 0 ers Rntf ttge 150,000 200;<XX) X' 6 05. 6 15 —} —! 150,000 200,000 K) !5 X) !0 0 0 10 5 (1 5 ) 3 75 1 10 150,000 200,000 Montauk (B’lynl. .. Nassau (B’klyn).... National I New Amsterdam.. N. Y. Equitable 3 DIVIDEND. 268,89c April and Oct 250,00C 500, OOf 1,199,97! Jan. and July 36 ,97( March and Set 400,001 168,32 Jan. and July 200, (XXI 861,702 April and Oct 300,000 212,14' Jan. and July 200,000 do 200. (XX 258,054 150.000 140,324 Feb. and Ang. 204,000 230,3 2 Jan. and July. >0 9 3 CO 2 00 . 200,001 200,000 0 0 North North 250,OOf 500,om 200,001 400,001 2,000,000 15 50 — Pah Smith & Parmelee Texas Yellow Jacket 9 50 300,00( 210.0IK [5 50 X) X) >0 id HI 75 8 75 SO 30 75 153. (XX 150, OOf 200,(XX) 20 75 200,(XX 25 50 48 50 — 1 Manhattan Mill Creek.. Montana Mon tank New York Meehan’ & Trade’ 200. (XX 200.0<X i 300.(XX 1,000,000 ’ 2 — ,. .. 25 50 . 45 ! 18 i 50 7 2 Liebig 35 . LaCrosse ;Askd io j 1 15 i — Liberty .. Crozier Des Moines Downieville — 10 35! . .. par j 10 2 00 w — 20 ..100 10 50 10 65 25 1 45 7 70 15 12 — — 3 00 1 15 .. Bid. CO! Kip & Buell.. .... 10 .. Grass Valley 25 Gunnell 25 Gunnell Union 50 Holman 00 Hope 9"! Keystone Silver 00| Knickerbocker 5 00 : oo 2 50 — Companies. Askd Lon nii 300,(XX X) 3 . 250.1XX 500,(HX) 200,< XX) - 3 75 : so $300,(MX 200,(MX) 200,001 200, (XX 500,00( 90 50 50 Great Western*!.. . .... 5 8 .. j . ... . . . .. Huron Indiana Isle Royale* Keweenaw Knowlton . . , % .. • ... . .... Hudson Hulbert Humboldt • .. ....j ..17)* 1)* 2 ft IX • . ... 2 2 .. • ... . i St. Clair St. Louis St. Mary’s Salem. 1 Seneca Sharon X 9 15 9 50 Sheldon & Colnmi:ian.21 1 South Pew’abic 1 J I 2 South Side Star lift 8 Superior Toltec 21 i 37' 2 75 Tremont 1ft ..! Victoria 1ft 29 50 30 50 Vulcan 6 2 00 Washington 1 10 25 West Minnesota 2ft .... .. National Native Resolute ... • .... .18)* 10 15 ’ll 00 5)* Quincy! • 25 50 50 American * American Exeh’e. J 00 50 Arctic 25 Aster. 50 25 25 Beckman.... 13* Princeton Providence .... .. . Portage Lake .... .... . .... .... i s . Capital. .... .... . 6ft j . • .... .... ! 5 . Pittsburg & Boston.. - ...10 i 1 Empire Mendotat Merrimac Mesnard .*. Milton • Pontiac • ... 1% ... .... .... 3)* ... Delaware Dev n. Dorchester .... 1 10 ! • . j i Dacotah Dana . ...— ... - Minnesota ... ... Canada Charter Oak Central Concord - • • • I . • 4)4 5)* ( 4)* j ■ . There has / s. 2 . Deo. 81,1865. re ■ .... -1 Arnold Atlas Aztec , Marked thus (*) paid 1 Madison Mandan Manhattan Mass - of loss, the INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Bid.; Askd Companies. Lafayette Lake Superior than 1866 they were no less an COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. m increasing profit each year, and in 1866 the business of the company was almost double that of the previous year. A com¬ pany exhibiting so much skill nnd energy in its management is sure to have the confidence of the public. been .... .. $20,786 20, and $1,128,394 29. And yet with such a great amount company’s net earnings for the year were $347,000. 80 20 . . were and In 1860 43. • .... .... . • ... i .... 10 ... i ... .... .. .... ... ...10 Second National 2 5 Shade River ...10 Union 10 2 United Pe’tl’m F’ms.. ...101 3 00 United States 15 6 .... ... .... ... Excelsior 5 First National 5 Germania ...JO Great Republic ..10 G’t Western Consol. 5 00 4 25 of $371,516 74. The statement of the since its organization, shows a great and In 1860 it received for premiums $37,887 30, rapid increase. . ... 25 1 20 .... 5 10 5 .... Clinton Oil 40 1 05 2 Cherry Run special. . .. ... Buchanan Farm.... Central Cherry Run Petrol’m , . .... 5 Natural N. Y. & Alle-hany .. ...5 Newark. 5 New York 5 N. Y. & Philadel 1 N.Y.Ph. & Balt.Cons. Oceanic ...25 Pit Hole Creek ... ... , ...— Mountain Oil.. .... .... .... Ivankoe Manhattan 8 25 30 20 par HamiltonMcClintock. . the last of $1,000,000, and, : Allen capital Hartford.—This compaDy has a cash notwithstanding the enormous losses of The Home, of Bid. Askd Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. 155 CHRONICLE. do Jan.'67.3ft 1 uly’06.3ft do 1 Feb. and Ang. Feb. '67. .5 do Aug.-’BH. .5 ,ran. and July. Aug. '66 .5 1 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’66.3ft Jran. and July. Inn. ’67 .5 do roly ’66 ..5 ,T . i , . . - . 177,916 208,049 1 reb. and Ang. ^Vug. ’66 5 142,830 Jten. and July. J an.'67..5 do 350,41? 569,623 V "eb. and Aug. 581.689 F’**b. and Aug. 151,539 J an. and July. do 550,3011 J an. ’67 ..5 JLug. ’66. .5 Atug.’66 ..2 J an.’87 ..5 J uly '66,..5 . .... 10 . ...! . . ii 156 [February 2, 1867. THE, CHRONICLE. Insurance. Insurance. Insurance. The Mercantile Mutual OFFICE OF THE Hope INSURANCE Atlantic COHIPANY. Fire Insurance Company, * No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Assets, Jan. let, 1867 $1,261,349 Mutual NEW Daring the past year this Company has paid to its Policy-holders, IN CASH, rebatement on lent in value to premiums in lieu of scrip, equiva¬ an average scrip dividend of TWENTY PEE CENT. Instead of issuing a scrip based on the principle that are equally profitable, dividend to dealers, all c'asses of risks this Company makes such cash abatement or discount from the current rates, 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 be divided to the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Marine and inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable iu Gold or Currency, at the Office iu New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ pool. D. Colden Murray, E. Haydock White, N. L. McCreadv, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Henry Eyre, Henry R. Kunhardt. Cornelius Grinnell, Johns. Williams, Joseph Slagg, William Nelson, Jr., Jas. I). Fish, Charles Dimou, Geo. W. Hennings, A. William Heye, Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollner, Aaron L. Keid, Paul N. Spofford. Ell wood Walter, ELLWOOD WALTER, President CIIAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1867, The Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of its affairs on the 31st December, 1866: Premiums received on Marine Risks, from 1st January, 1866, to 31st De¬ cember, 1866 $8,282,021 26 Premiums 1st on Policies not marked oft’ January. 1866 2,188,325 15 Total amount of Marine Premiums. .$10,410,346 31 No Polices have been issued upon Life Risks; nor upon Fire Risks discon¬ nected with Marine Risks. Company, Charter Perpetual. CAPITAL ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS L. J. HEN DEE, President. GOODNOW, Secretary. January 1,1867 ..$4,478,100 74 394,976 96 Liabilities LOSS AND DAMAGE SOLICITED. CUMMINGS, SCHELL, WILLIAM H. TERRY, STEP. CAMBRELENG, THEODORE W. RILEY, JACOB REESE, JNO. W. MERSEHEAU, D. LYDIG SUf DAM, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JOSEPH GRAFTON, L. B AARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, AMOa ROBBINS, WILLIAM REM SEN, ary, 1866 to 31st December, 1866 JACOB $7,632,236 70 BEENE, President. CBAS. D. HARTSHORNS, Secretary. Losses same paid during the period v $5,683,895 05 Expenses The Security Insurance Co., $1,194,173 23 No. 119 Company has the following As¬ sets, viz.: Cash Capital, United States and State of New York BROADWAY, One Million Dollars, ($1,000,000.) Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $6,171,885 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.. j 00 FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. 00 00 Frank W. Ballard, A. F. HASTINGS, President Secretary. 24 3,837,735 41 434,207 81 $12,536,304 46 Germania Fire Ins. I Six per cent Interest on the outstand¬ ing certificates of profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and af er Tuesday the Fifth of February next. CASH Co., BROADWAY, N. Y. $500,000 O CAPITAL, SURPL US, Jan. 1st, 1866 205.989 8 3 ...... $705,989 83 TOTAL ASSETS RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President. The outstanding certificates of the Issue of 1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and alter Tuesday lhe Fifth of February next, from which date all interest thereon will cease. The certificates to be produced at the time of payment, and cancelled. JOHN E. KAHL, Secretary. Niagara Fire Insurance COMPANY. NEW YORK AGENCY, 62 WALL STREET. JAS. A. Damage by responsible THOS. P. ROBERT TABER, JOSEPH FOULKE, BY FIRE. NO. 14 Hoard of Directors: $3,000,000. INSURANCE AGAINST 00 Company. NO. 175 Incorporated 1819 Assets This Company Insures against Loss or Fire on as favorable terms as any other OO 22 HENRY S. LEVERICH. iETNA OF HARTFORD. J. Capital- Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ Total Amount of Assets Insurance ----- 2200,000 - - 252,55.> Total Liabilities - - - 26,850 Losses Paid I.. 1865 - - -201,588 Cash HENRY M. Cash in Bank C. J. Dkspard, Secretary. ‘ OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. Returns of Premiums and TRUSTEES. James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, Co., Assets, March 9, 1866 ORGANIZED APRIL, 1&44. a Insurance ALEXANDER, Agent. of A dividend Twenty Per Cent Is the net earned premiums of the Company, for the year ending 31st December. I860, for which certificates will be issued on and after Tuesday the Second of April declared next. Sun Mutual Insurance NO. 12 WALL STREET. on By order of the Board, J. H. COMPANY. $1,000,060 CASH CAPITAL, SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 Losses 270,353 equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Chartered 1850. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years. 253 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, President. P. NOTMAN, Secretary. CHAPMAN, Secretary. HARTFOBD (tN8URAN0R BUILDINGS,) TRU8TEES: 49 WALL STREET. Wm. Charles Dennis, Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, W. H. H. Moore, Joshua J. John D. Jones, ASSETS, Dec. 31, 1865 - - $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 Isaac H. Walker, Sec'y. Henry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, Royal Phelps, Caleb Bars tow A. P/Pillot William E. Dodge Geo. G. The Mutual Life Insu- Hobson, David Lane, James Bryce, RANGE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. Leroy M. Wiley, $16,000,000 00 Daniel S. Miller. CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, over Henry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gaillard, Jr. : J. Henry Burgy, Cornelius Grinnell, C. A. Hand, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Fletcher Westray, Robt B. Minturn, Jr. Gordon W, Burnham, Frederick Chauncey, j I ISAAC ABBATT, per* Aries, j-J0HN Vice-Presi4ent. j*. STUART. Actuary, SHEPPARD BOMAF&, HARTFORD, CONN. ...$300,000 NEW YORK OFFICE, A 157 BROADWAY. WESLEY E. SHADER, Manag r. Insures Against DEATH BY ACCIDENTS description, with liberal compensation in case of bodily injury. WANTED.—Active and energetic Agents to act or this Company. Apply as above. of any Hanover Fire Insurance COMPANY, No. 45 WALL STREET. William H. Webb. Paul JONES, President, DENNIS, Vice-President CHARLES W. H. H. 155 GeorgeS. Stephenson, Spofford. Shephard Gandy. JOHN D. OF Cash Capital James Low FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. R. A. McCURDY, Accident Insurance Co., MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres’t, J, D. HEWLETT, 3d Vice-PrePt. January 1st 1666. $400,000 00 capital Surplus Cash Gross Assets Total Liabilities *.. 156,303 98 $556,303 98 i —; 24,550 00 BENJ. S. WALCOTT. President. J. 3tEMs*x Lank, Secretary. THE CHRONICLE. February 2, 1867.] PRICES CURRENT. addition to the duties noted In below, cent, a discriminating duty of 10 per ad val. is levied all imports on under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. pT* On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ Countries dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places >>f their growth OT produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The tor in all rases to be 2,240 lb. Anchors—Dnty: 2$ cents $ lb. 012091b and up ward $1 lb 9*® Allies—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... $ 100 lb 8 25 @ 8 .*>0 @11 50 Pearl, 1st sort. Beeswax—Duty,‘20 $ cent ad val. American yellow. $ ft .. @ 40 Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct. ttio Grande shin $ ton35 00 @36 00 Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Pilot ....$ lb .. @ 6| Navy @ 54 7 @ Crackers 14 Breadstuff*—See special report. .. Bricks. Common bard, .per Croton M.15 00 @ 18*00 @20 00 Philadelphia Fronts... .... @75 00 Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 $ lb. Ainer’n,gray &wh. $ft 75 @3 00 Butter and Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. .. ... @ 38 @ 40 @ 85 @ quality North Pennsylvania— 82 @ F'rfeins... Western Reserve—Fir- 32 kins 40 41 88 34 • 35 @ 25 23 @ States —Firkiss, yell >w @ 26 @ .. Firkins, ad quality , , 27 iheese— 18 @ 15 @ 17 @ 14 @ 10 @ Factory Dairies do Western Farm Dairies do Wester * do Common 2) l-i 19) 17 14 Candles—Duty, tallow, 2£; sperma¬ ceti and wax 0; stearine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ lb Sperm,patent,. ..$ Ib Refined sperm, city... Stearic Adamantine »8 @ 50 33 @ 40 30 @ 81 22 vl)@ Cement—Rosendale.$bl @ 2 00 Chains- Duty, 2$ cents $ lb. One inch & up ward $ lb Sj@ 8| .. Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25$ ton of 28 bushels 80 ft to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 bushels of 80 lb $ bushel. Liverpool Orrel. $ ton @ ... of2,240 lb Liverp’l House Cannell9 00 @20 00 Anthracite Cardiff steam 8 00 @ 8 50 12 Oo @ .... @ Newcastle G s a,8team!0 75 @12 CO Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ lb. Caracas (iii bond)(gold) $ lb.... 21 @ 21 Maracaibo do ..(gold) @ Liverpool Gas Caonel ... .. Guayaquil do ...(gold) St Domingo (gold) 15 @ 15) 9$@ Coffee,—See special report. 10) 11x14 12x19 20x31 24x31 24x36 80x45 82x50 lb Sheathing,new..$ lb Sheathing, yellow Bolts Braziers’ Baltimore Detroit Portage lake 40 @ 23 @ @ @ 27 m 28 @ 27)@ .. . * . 30 40 40 $ gall. 4 ?5 @ Aloes, Cape $ lb 2j @ Aloes, Socotrine 75 @ Alum uy@ Annato, fair to prime. *6 @ Antimony, Regulus of @ 22 @ Argols, Crude.... 33 @ Argols, Refined Arsenic, Powdered.... 2f@ Alcohol Assalcetida Balsam Copaivi... Balsam Tolu Balsam Porn.. ..(gold) 25 . .. Cordage-Duty, tarred,8; umarred Manila, 24 other uniarred, 3) cents $ lb. Manila, $ lb 21)@ 23i Tarred Russia @ Tarred American @ > m Bolt Rope, Russia..... .. @ 22 Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val. 7ft Regular, quarts$ gross 65 @ Mineral 60 @* 70 40 Phial 12 @ Cotton—See special report. 26 85 4 90 12 23 34 25 2 60 @ 2 75 Bark Petayo Berries, Persian Bi Carb. 8oda, New¬ 60 •*. 46 @ castle Bi Chromate 7 @ Potash... *11 @ Bleaching Powder 5|@ Borax, Refined 82 @ Brimston 1. Crude $ ton (gold).42 00 @ Brimston', am. Roll $ ft 4*@ 48 8 21 .. Brimstone. lor 1 4f 5$@ Camphor, \ de, (in bond) (gold) Camphor, Uofined 1 @ 92)@ .. Cantharido' @ .. Carbonate in bulk 34 Sul¬ phur A 80 95 75 Tennessee.. 19 @ Cardamoms, Malabar,. 3 0o @ 3 25 Castor Oil Cases $ gal 2 40 @ J 45 Chamomile K ow’sfft 60 @ 60 Chlorate Potash (gold) B vs @ 38 Caustic Soda ?*@ 71 * Carinway Seed @ t Coriander Seed 14 @ 15 25 @ Cochineal, Hon (gold) 97* 85 @ Cochineal, M exic’n(g’d) 95 Copperas, American... m Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) 28 ® ^8) 4' @ Cubebs, East India.... Cutch 14j@ Epsom Salts @ 4* 11 @ .... Fruits—See special report, f urs— Du*y,10 $ cent. Beaver, Dark.. $ skin 1 00 @ 4, 00 do Pale 50 @ 2 00 Bear, Black 5 00 @i2 00 do brown 3 00 @ 8 06 Badger 50 @ 1 00 Cat, Wild 50 @ 75 do House 10 @ 20 Fisher, 4 00 @ 8 00 - -• Fennell Se d.... '8 80 oz. Gambier •) Gamboge .. Ginseng, South&West. Gum Arabic, Picked.. Gum Arabic, Sorts. 85 70 a2 . Gum Benzoin Gum Kowria.. Grin Gedda ..(gold) 82 .. 89 Gum, Damar Gum Myrrh,Cast India Gum, Myrrh, Turkey. Gum Senegal .(gold) Gum Tragaoanth, Sorts Gnm Tragacanth, w. flakey (g Id) Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Ip lain La<* uye Licorice Paste,Calabria Licorice, Paste, Sioily. Licorice Paste 80 @ 60 @ 90 Spanish 87 @ 30 @ 7 @ t')@ Manna, small flak e.... 1 Mustard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste„ 40 n 6# 15 @ 80 Raccoon 10 @ 50 Skuik, Black 30 @ 75 Class—Duty, Cylinder Polished Plate not over 2) cents $ square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ sqnare 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 lOx 15 inches square, li; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 ,2i; all over that, 8 cents on $ ft. American Window—1st, 2d, 8d, and 4th qualities. (Subject to a discount of 8f @35$ cent.) 6x 8 to 8xlt):.$ 50 ft 7 25 @. 5 50 7 9 12x19 to 16x24 9 18x22to 20x30 ...11 20x31 to24x30........ 14 24x31 to 24x36 16 25x36 to 30x44 17 30x46 to 32x48 18 32x50 to 82x56. 20 Above 24 8x i lx to 10x15 to 12x18 75 @ 6 00 25 @ 6 50 50 @ 7 00 75 @ 7 50 50 @ 9 00 00 @10 00 00 @11 00 00 @12 00 00 @18 00 00 @15 00 ... Oil Cassia 4 50 Oil Bergamot 6 75 (Single Thick)—Discount 25@3fl $eert 6x 8 to8x10.$50 feet 7 75 @ C less $ square yard, 3; ovei or ft. Calcutta, standard, v’d 20 @ 20i Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or leaa V ft, 6 cento $ ft, an $ cent ad val.: over 20 oents $ ft, 10 cento $ ft and 20 $ centad val BIasting( A) $ 25ft keg @ 5 00 Shipping and Mining.. @6 60 Rifle 7 50 @ Sporting, in 1 ft canisters $ ft 40 @ 1 10 20 .. .. .. fVa.fr—Duty run. KioGrande,mixed$ ft Buenos Ayres,mixed . Hog,Western, unwash. Hardware— Axes—Cast stee', best brand do ordinary perd<z Carpe tor’s Adzes,.... do ordinary T9 85 8f)@ 81 @ 10 @ 15 13 13 24 21 Shingling Hatohets, < ”t Steel, best br'ds, Nos. 14 17 15 25 @ @ @ @ • • • • 1 to3 8 06 @ • 60 do ordinary 6 17 ~ 7 60 Broad aten’s 8to3 bst. <5 50 )25 10 do «idi»ary 12'0 Coffee Mil s-Iron H op’r 8 76 760 do Bri Hopper 6 f0 iio 00 do Wood Bac*....... 4 2 » MO 50 Cotton Gins, per saw... $5 less 20 % Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dis. Cast Butti—Fast Joint. List 10 £adv. l . „ ‘‘ Loose Joint.. Hlnge^Wrou^ht, Door B< List. . Its, Cast Bbl . List 25 jfedv. L st 20 % dis Carriage and Tire Bolts List 40 % dis. Door L ok 8 and Latches List 7i <f dis. Door Knobs—Mineral. List 7* % dis. “ Pore lain List 7* % dis. Padlocks New List 20&7) % dis. . Locks—Cabinet, Eagle 5 %adv. “ Trunk. ListtOjCdia. 3b cks and Dies Li 185 % dis, Screw Wrenches—Coe’s Paten* List 20 % dis. do Taft’s 8m ths* Vis List 55@60 % dis. $ 1b 24 @ a .. Framing Chisels.... Old List i*inner 00 do in sets.. co insets. 25 Jtadv. List40@dv. handled, LDt40j6adv. Augur Bitts List 20 % dis. Short Aneurs,per dz.NcwList 10% dis. do Ring List 10 * dis. Cut Tacks List 65&10 % dis. Cut Brads Litr. 55 % dis. Kivet , Iron List *6&80 % dis. Screws American.. .List 10&2} % dis. do List So * diet Eng'ish Shovels and Spades... List 5 56 dis. Horse Shoes ' )@ 8 Planes LLt 30@36 «(adv H ay—North River, in for shipping.... bales$ 100 fts, l 5 @ Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $<16; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and Tampico, 1 cent $ ft. Amer. Dressed.$ ton 870 00@8M) Oft do Undressed . Russia, Clean Jute.. 270 0<>@z75 €0 875 00< 90 00@185 00 Manila. Sisal 12 @ .. Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry ed and Skins 10 or $ cent ad val. Salt¬ Dry Hides— Buenos 4yres$ ftg’d Montevideo do Rio Grande do Orinoco do or Window 10x15 inches, English and French Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. Nutgails Blue Aleppo Otl Astis. @ 8 75 @ 8 85 6 50 @ 4 25 @ 2 20 @ 25 @ 55 41 @ 42 24 @ 25 Manna,large flake.... 2 Musk rat, Otter .. 3 00 @ 6 00 8 @ 5:0 5 00 @ 8 00 Mink, dark Opossum 65 23 40 2 I'O @ 5 00 pale io @ Licorice Paste, Greek. Madder, Dutch.. do, French, EXF’ do 75 5 Oil @20 00 Marten, Dark ‘ 60 ' 50 @ 2 * 0 @ 4'0 Lynx @ O 2 00 @ i 0o 80 @ 45 @ 55 @ 87 @ 27 @ 42 @ 5 ft? @50 00 5 00 I 00 @ i 60 3 00 @ do Cross do Red do Grey @ 55 @ .. Fox, Silver to 32x56 10,4 cents $ 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 01 @ 6 60 Pickled Scale... $ bbl. 6 00 @ 6 50 Pickled Cod $ bbl. 7 00 @ 7 2> Mackerel, No. 1, Mass shore 19 f-0 @ Mackerel, No.l,Halifaxl7 0 > @18 00 Mackerel, No. 1, Bay..17 <0 @18 00 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..l** 50 @17 00 Mackerel, No. 2, Ha axi6 00 @16 50 Mac’el,No.8,Mass. l’ge @14 60 Mackerel, No. 8, H1 fax la 75 @ Mackerel,No. 8, Mass @ Salmon, Pickled, No.1.40 00 @42 00 Sa mon, li kled. p. to.4 i no @55 00 Herring, Scaled$ box. 48 @ Oft Herring, No. i 28 @ ‘0 Herring, pickled $bbl. 5 60 @ 7 00 Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. Jersey $ 1b 16 @ 23 .. _ 70 @ to82x48. oents Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val. Prime Western...$ ft 75 @ bO mmonia, * Brag's and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 2 50 psT gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ lb; Alum, €0 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6 ("ents $ 1b; Arsenic and Ass&foedatl, vzu; Antimony, Crude and Begulus, 10; Arrowroot, 80 $ cent ad val.; BalsamOopaivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ ft; Calisaya 57* 46 7n ^ .. • @ ,. 16 18 20 .24 50 60 50 00 60 00 Calcutta, light &h’y % 22)@ 22{ Gnnny Gloth—Duty, valued at 1C .. (gold) to 24x86 to 30x44. 25 75 Groceries—See special report. Gunny Bays—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less, $ square yard, 3; ove 10, 4 cents $ 1b .... Flowers,Benzoin. Capper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2i; old copper 2 cents 39 ft; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets42 inches long and 14' inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot, 8x11 to 10x15.;...... 8 to 12x18. 0 to 16x24 10 to 24x80 15 . ... Acid, Citric . . Welsh tubs, second 3 cents $ Oil Lemon Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; BI Carb. Soda, (gold) 2 Oil Peppermint, pure. 5 1); Bl Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ 1b; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 1001); Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft; Crude OxaJic Acid Brimstone, f6; Roll Brimstone, $10 Phosphorus $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and Prussiate Potash 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, Quicksilver 30; Refined Camphor, 40cents W 1).; Rhubarb, China.(gold) 8 Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Sago, Pet,led.... Cardamoms and C&ntharides, 50 oents Salaratos $ lb; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬ SalAm'n'ao, Ref (gold) rate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, 1); Sal Soda. Newcastle... Citric Aeid, 10; Copperas, 1; Cream Sarsaparilla, Hond Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ 1b; Sarsaparilla, ilex Seneca Root Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent Senna, Alexandria.... $ ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Senna, Eastlndia Benzoin and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.; Shell Lac Soda Ash (80$o.Xg(ld) Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum KowSugar L’dx W’e(goid).. rie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per lb; Snip Quinine, Am$ oz Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Sulphate Morphine.... Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ ' Tart’c Acid. .(g’ld)$ft cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ Tapioca limed Iodine, *6; Ipecac and Jalap, Verdigris, diy ex dry 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Vitriol, Blue Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. mot, $1 $ 1b; Oil Peppermint, 50 Ravens, Light. .$ pee 16 00 @18 00 $ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Ravens, Heavy 20 00 @ Acid, 4 cents $ ft; Phosphorus, 20 Scotch, G’ck, fio.l $y @ 72 $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ Cotton, No. 1 $ y. 82 @ low 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, dOcents $ lb: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood, .(gold) $ tn 190 0G@200 00 val.; Sal ASratus, 1) cents $ lb; Sal Fustic, Cuba .30 Of @ 31 00 8oda, 1 cent $ ft; Sarsaparilla and Fgstic, Savanilla(gold)22 50 @ 28 00 Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, Fustic, Maracaibo do.Sf 00 @ 10; ?<oda Ash, ); Sugar Lead, 20 cents Logwood, Hon *T Oft @82 00 $ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad Logwood, L zuna (gnld)80 »0 @ val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents Logwood, St. D>min..ti0 00 @21 00 Logwood, Cam.(gold).2o 50 @ $ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬ Logwood,Jamaica.... 14 50 @15 00 riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ Lima wood @105 00 parations and Extracts, $1 $ ft; all Barwood others quoted below, fkkk. (gold)30 00 @ .... Butter— N. Y State—Fresh pails Fin-ius.... Half tiik>a tubs... Welsh tubs, prime. Western 157 California gold California, Mex. do , Porto Cabello VeraCruz .. do do Tampico do Texas do Dry Salted Hides— Ch li (y°hl) 1 >dlfornia... do San wich Isl’d do 8outh & Wes1, do Wet Salted Hides— . Bue Ay res. $ Rio Grande California Western ftg’d. .... do do 11 @ 11 @ Coutry sl’ter trim. A cured. City • do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip $ ft cash. Sierra Leone.... do Gambia & Bissau do 10 @ 26 @ ?8 80 @ 82 2i @ 21 Honey—Duty,20 cents $ gallon. Cuba (duty paid) (gold) $gall. 84 8 Hops—Duty: 5 coj-a $ ft. Crop of 1866 .....$ 1b 50 @ 70 do ofl865. Foreign 25 f • Horns—Duty, 10 <j9 cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... $ C IS 00@ 14 <*0 Ox, Buenos Ayres.... 12 00® 14 00 Indin. Rubber—Duty, 10 $ oent ad val. $ ft) Para, Fine 66 @ 16 @ Para, Medium Para, Coarse 61 6'* 45 42 @ @ Easf Inria Carthagen*, &o 60 @ 62 Indigo—Duty mi. Bengal ( old) #t> 1 00 @ 1 65 75 (sold) 65 n?o!d) 65 @ (gold) 85 @ (gold) 70 @ (gold) Iron—Dnty, Bars, 1 to 1| cents 19 lb. Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 9>; Boiler and Plate, 1J cents 19 lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 11 to 1| cents $ lb; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 Oude Madras Manila Guatemala Caraccas _ lb. cents Pig, Scotch,No 1. $ ton Pig, American, No. 1.. Har, Reft’d Kng& vmer Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 46 00® 48 00 40 00® 47 On 91 0 @lu0 03 95 00@;0ft 00 assorted @162 50 sizes ican, Refined 112 do doCommonlftl do Scroll 1:2 Ovals and Half Round l i7 Band.. HorseShoe 17. f>0@l'7 -r0 ?0@ 0? 5 50®110 00 50@147 50 @142 50 50@t42 5> Rods, 5-8@3-16 1 nch.. 117 50,® 172 50 Hoop 14 56@210 00 Nail Rod # lb fi*@ U'i Sheet, Russia l'@ 21 Single, Double 9 6}@ and Treble 55 0 @ 95 0;*@ 90 00 American do Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. 3 50 8 50® 4 50 African, W. C., Prime 8 25® 3 40 African, SeriYel.,W.C. 2 00® 2 50 Lead-Duty, Pig, $2 # 100 lb ; Old Lead, 1* cents lb ; Pipe and Sheet, 2$ cents 19 lb. Galena $ 100 lb @ Spanish (go'd) 6 S7 @ 7 00 German (g*»l 1) 6 S7‘@ 1 00 (g'dd) 6 S7|@ 7 li* English 8 2® East India, Prime $ lb East lad , Billiard Hall .. net Bar @10 00 .. Pipe and Sheet net .. @10 25 TeatUer— Duty: sole 35, upper 80 $ cent ad val. /—cash. 19 Oak, Slaughter, light - do do do do . middle do do heavy, light Cropped.... middle do .... b elites do Hernl’k, B. A.,4cc.. l’t. do middle, do heavy Califor., light, do middle, d<* heavy, Orino., etc Pt do middle do heavy, do & B. A, dam’gdail w’g’a do do . do do do do do do do 8laugh.ru rough Oak, Slaugh.in rou.,Vt do pomr do do lb.—, 81 @ 39 @ *8 40 44 41 @ @ @ 14 @ 301® 32 @ 82 @ 80 @ 31 @ 31 @ 29 @ 80 @ 2' @ 27 2i 84 @ @ @ 85 @ STAVES— pipe, V ■>»• pipe, heavy pipe, light pipe, cullss.120 . 1 00 hhd., extra. hhd., heavy hhd., light. hhd., culls. bbl., extra. bbl., heavy. bbl., light.. bbl., culls.. Red oak. hhd., h’vy. do hhd., light.. HEADING —White oak, hhd llahogany, go^crotches, $ ft.. @°00 00 @250 00 @200 06 @180 0§ @250 00 @200 00 @12 • 00 @100 00 @176 00 @140 00 @110 00 @ 60 00 @130 0C @ 90 00 @150 00 Cedar, wood—Duty free. Mahogany, St. Domln- @ 40 12® 12 @ 12 @ 15 @ 16 !6 16 11 14 @ U @ n @ 20 15 15 14 Honduras (American wood).. Cedar, Nue vitas Mansanilla Mexican Florida. # c. ft. Rosewood, R. Jan $ lb do Bahia do do do 10 @ 50 @ 1 00 5@ 8 6 4 @ 7Iola*ses.—See special report. Nails—Duty: cutlj; wrought horse shoe 2 eonts IP ft). Cut, 4d.@6i*d.$ 10U lb 6 50 @ 6 Clinch b 25 @ 8 Ilorseshoe,fd (6d)1Pft> i8 @ Horse hie, pressed .. 22 @ Copper 43 @ 2*; 75 50 82 24 36 28 @ Yellow metal Zinc @ 20 Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30cents ^ gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 19 cent ad val. .. Tiirpent’e, » f .. $2891b 5 2» @ Rose* S3® Pi ch 3 f7,@ Rosin, common do strained an No 2... No. 1 [do Pale and Extra do .... bbl 2 00 @ 2 75 @4:0 * .... 0» @ 4 50 5 00 @ 6 00 (230 lbs.) 8 0ft. @ 9 00 Spirits turp., Am. $ g. 66 @ 68 Oakum-Duty fr.,19 lb 111 9J@ cent ad val. Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ thin obl’g, in bids. $ ton.56 00 @5? 00 do in bags.5* 00 @?6 f0 West, thin obl’g, do 73 50 @ Duty: linseed, tiaxseed, and seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning fluid, 50 cents 19 gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 ^ cent ad val. Olive, qs(gold)per cose 4 25 @ .... do in casks.$ gall., t 65 @ Palm $ lb @j 11| Linseed,city...19 gall @ 1 20 Whale 80 @ 1 (0 do refined winter.. I 15 @ 1 20 Sperm, crude 2 65 @ .. . do do unbleach. 2 95 @ 8 00 Lard oil 1 20 @ Red oil, city distilled 85 @ Bank 7.,.. 1 DC @ Straits 1 05 @ Paraffine, 28 — 80 gr.. 4ft @ 55 51 @ Kerosene (free). Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ B>; Pant white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft); dry ochres, 56 cent* $ 100 ft): oxidesofzinc, 1$cents ft»; ochre, ground in oil, f I 50$ 100 Oils - rape .... . ... ; vermilion 25 cent ad val.; white chalk, $ 10 # ton. 12 @ .. Litharge, City... .$ft> 12 ® Lead, red, City do white, American, ...@ 14 pure, in oil do white, American, 121 @ pute, dry Zinc, white, American, 9 @ 9* dry, No. 1 do white, American, 10 @ No. I,in oil 11 . —Duty : Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. Spruce, Bast. M It 18 50 @ 21 00 Southern Pine 40 00 @ 4 > 00 White Pine Box B’ds 80 00 @ 82 00 White Pine Merch. Box Boards 38 00 @ 89 00 Clear Pine SO 00 @100 00 8 25 @ Laths, Eastern. Poplar and W wood B’ds & PI’k. 55 00 @ 65 00 Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 @ SO 00 Oak and Ash 60 00 @ 65 00 Maple and Birch ... 85 00 ® 40 00 Black Walnut ......100 00 @120 00 do do do do do do do do do do do Mexican do 30 and Lumber^ Woods, Stavcs.etc, oak, .. @ 10 Spanish brown 25 f* cent ad val; China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red do do mid. heavy 36 @ 46 Lime-Duty; 10 $ cent ad val. 70 Rockland, com. $ bbl. .. @ 1 do heavy @ 2 20 extia. Nuevita8.... Mansanilla _d2 lb do and White logs.... do do Tar, Am rlc* Bar.English and Amer¬ Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton ordinary logs do Port*au-Platt, crotches do Port-au-Platt, 7 . do whi e, French, in 14 oil French, dry # iOO ft> 2 50 @ 3 50 do gr’ in oil.19 ft) 8 @ 10 Spanish brown, dry Ochre. yellow, 1 50 @ 100 lb do gr’d in oil.$1 lb Paris wh., No. 1$ 100ft) .... 8 @ 9 3 12 @ 8 5 * ■Whitiig, Atner Vermilion,Chinese IP ft) 1 40 @ 1 10 @ do Trieste 1 85 @ do Cal. & Eng 30 @ American do Venet, red (N.C.)$cwt 3 00 Ch . I 1 1 Naptha, refined 24 @ Residuum....... IP bbl. 4 50 @ prime, do $ ft). #ft> 3 25 25 Salt—Dnty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 bulk, 18 cents 100 ft). Turk.s Islands ip bush. 57 @ do fin ,A8hton~s(<’d) do fine, Vorthingt’s 2 75 @ @ 8 .... Onondaga,com.fine bis. 2 50 @ 2 do 210 do ft) bgs. 1 DO @ 2 do do $ bush. 45 @ 54 @ 50 @ Solar coarse Fine screened .% pkg. do F. F.... ...240 lb bgs. bacon, andlard,2 ts $ ft). mess. do mass Old 17 00 @20 00 19 50 @20 00 Fork, mess, new - 19 00 @ 00 60 09 50 Crude Nitrate soda gold s#| 3| @ .... .... Rum—Jamaica ..do d» St. Croix Gin —Differ, brands do 4 25@ 8 5<@ 2 90@ Whisky—S. & Ir. 4 00@ 1.. 11<@ Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 $ cent. Tsatlees, No. 1 @3.^ ft) 12 50 @18 00. Taysaatus, superior, No. 1 @ 11 CO @11 60 do medium,Nc3@i. b 50 @10 25 Canton,re-roel.Nol@2. 9 2ft @ 9 fto 11 50 @i4 00 Japan, superior 10 00 @11 U0 Medium do China thrown do do Madeira do Marseilles do do S5@ 16® 00® 75® 75® 15® 1«*®. in do 8 @ 4 65 6 00 3 60 8 50 4 90 2 60 6 00 4£ 00 8 1 8 « 1 1 1 1 20 00 00 10 10 75 50 00@I50 00 vf@ 30 U0 Oo@ 25 00 > 2 11 do cases. Champagne 10J@ $ lb Buck Burgundy Port, Sherry Sherry d * do Malaga, sweet . f'o do do dry Claret, in hhds. do Shot—Duty: 2| cents ^ ft). Drop do D m’e—N.E. Ruin.cur. 2 45® Bourbon Whisky.cur. 2 40@ Corn Whisky( nb nd) 85@ Wines—Port (gold) 2 00® @ ... 2 75 @ 2 90 2 40 @ .... .. 4 85@ 4 95 4 75@ 4 25@ 14 ® 15 8 25 @ 3 75 4 25 @ 4 7i 1£!b Timothy,reaped $ bus C-.nary 1i) bus Linseed,Am.clean^tce do Ain. rough $1 bus do Calcutta gold .... do do J. Komieux Other Rochelle, Seed*—Duty; linseed, 1G cts; hemp, 4 cent $ tt>'; canary, $1 $ bushel of 60 lb; and grass seeds, JO ^ cent ad val. Clover ....@ @ ,... 5 15@ 10 50 @ .... 5 0r@ 7 00 4 90@ 6 0 4 9(@ 6 00 4 85@ 4 90 4 85@ 4 96 ... Pellevoisinfreresdo 56 52 9 @ 6 20@ 10 00 A. Seignette .do Hiv. Pellevoisin do Alex. Seignette. do A rzac Seignette do Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2} cents; refined and partially refined, a cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft). Refined, pure ft) 16 .. @ Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered $2 to $3 5« # 100 ft), and 15 # cent ad . val. No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 .... No. 27 to 86 .... 15 A 5 $ ct off list. 25 & 5 19 ct. off list. 80 «s 5 19 ct. off list* Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain.. ...19 tt> Brass (less 15 p r cent ) do Copper • 9® 10 47 ® 57 @ ... ool—Duty: costing 12 cents or les 19 ft), 8 cents $ ft); over 12 and not W ... than 24, 7 cents • over 24 and 82,10, and 10 19 cent ad val¬ orem : over 82,12 cents 19 ft), and 1 cent ad valorem; on the skin, 19 cent ad val. Amer., Sax. fleece 19 fi) £0 @ 65 do full bl’d Merino. 48® 6) do 40 @ 45 | and * Merino.. Extra, pulled 50 ® 55 Superfine... 40 @ £0 No. 1, pulled. 80 @ 40 California,unwashed... SO @ 40 do common... 20 @ 25 do pulled 80 @ 45 Texas 18 @ 32 Peruvian, unwashed... 23 @e 81 more Skills—Duty: 10 Ip cent ad val. Goat,Curacoa^ ftigold .. @ do Buenos A...go’d 82® ‘5 do do do do do do VeraCruz .void .. Tampico...gold .. Matamoras.gold Payta gold Madraa,eac cash Cape cash D eer,San Juan ^ ft) gold do Bolivar ...gold do Honduras ..gold .. Sisal do do Para VeraCruz .gold do do Ohagres ...gold Puerto Cab .gold Soap- Duty: 1 cent cent ad val. .. ^ @ @ 55 @ 60 @ 57 @ 45 57|@ 60 t>2j@ fc5 .. .. @ .. @ .. 60 Valparaiso,unwashed.. @ ^ ft), and 25 $ 17 @ 17* 10 8*@ domestic Spice*. -See special report. English, cast, $ fb . American, spring 13|@ 14* Yi @ 15 19 @ Arner c n cast English, spring 10)@ 19 English b ister H @ 19 English machinery.... J8 @ 14 Sumac—Duty: 10 ^ cent ad val. / Sicily 1? ton.. 125 00 @225 00 Tallow—Duty : I cent $ ft). American,prime, coun¬ try and city $ ft)... 11*@ Ilf Tin—Duty; pig,bars, and block, 15 $ cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent, ad va'. ^ ft) (gold) English. @ (gold) (gold) Plates,char. I.C.$}boxl2 do do do I. C. Coke. ....10 Terne Charcoali: Terne Coke.... 9 22 @ 21*@ 5o @13 fO @12 ‘.5 @12 50 @10 24 .. 21| 00 00 75 00 Whalebone—Duty: foreign fish¬ ery, 20 p. c. ad val. South Sea 19 2) @ 1 15 .... North west coast Ochotsk Polar Persian 7 African, unwashed .... washed do ■ Mexican, unwashed Smyrna,unwashed .... i#tt 22 @ @ 1 25 @ .... .... Wine* and Llanon-Lioaou —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50. Winks— Duty; value net over 50 cents 9 gal¬ 25 85 @ washed 45"] block, $1 50 Zinc—Duty: 100 ft>fc.; saeet8 2* cents 19 ft). Sheet 19 ®> L*@ 12 pi g or To Liverpool : Cotton 19Jlb Flour $ bbl. Petroleum Heavy goods... 19 ton Oil d. s. • 22 6 @ Beef.. Pork.. To London ... @26 @ .. Corn, b’k& bags19 bus. Wheat, bulk and bags d s. *@ 6 16 ..@20 •@50 .. 0 7* tee. 19 bbl. @36 Heavy goods... 19 ton @22 6 @21 6 @28 , : Oil Flour 19 bbl. Petroleum Beef 19 tee. Pork ...JB bbl. Wheat 19 bush. Corn To Glasgow Flour 19 bbl. Wheat. 19 bush. . Tea*.—See special report. Banca Straits ...... 27 @ 80 82 @ 84 18 @ 28 .... @ 22 @ 24 40 @ 48 42 @ " 45 25 @ 80 15 @ 25 8 » @ 40 20 @ 25 I'reights- 18 @ . .....; .. Donskoi, washed do Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents # ft) or under, 2* cents; over 7 cents and not above II, 3 css $ ft>; over 11 cents, 3* cents 1b and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store prices.) German S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. do common,unw. Entre Rios, washed .... do unwashed..^. 8. American Cordova .. Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 $ 100 its. f*@ Plates.foreign $1 lb gold d« not over . $lb. Castile 50 50 47* 35 t2 @' gold gold do @ @ @ 1 c0 @ lams, . 2 1-5 @ 3 00 Provision*—Duty: beef and pork, Beef;plainmess^ bbl..12 00 @18 Ml Renault & Co. do J. Vassal A Co., do Jules Robin.... do Marrette & Co. do United V.Prop, do Vine Grow. Co. do L ger freres ... do Other br'ds Cog. do lb; 60 50 50 00 IS 60 5 OiKrA 10 00 5 Pinet,Castil.&Co.do @ 3 25 .. 10 10 10 10 10 (gold) 5 Hennessy (gold) 5 2 Otard, Dnp. A Co. do 6 1 Liverpool,gr’ndlp sack 2 !0 @ Planter Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 19 cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia$ toe ... @ 4 60 White Nova Scotia 5 CO @ 6 50 Calcined,eastern 19 bbl .... @ 2 40 Dalcined, city mills @ 2 50 1 ct; J. & F. Martell @ Cadiz $1 19 gallon, $1 $ gal¬ $ cent ad vaL over Brandy— East India,dressed.... 9 25 @ Tobacco.—See sperial report. ... valorem; lon and 25 ....^# 100 IblO 50 @10 75 9 CO Carolina Sugar.—See sp.cial repo-t Carmlue,city made$nbl6 00 @20 no China clay IP ton .... @34 00 Chalk 19 bbl. 4 00 @ 4 50 Chalk, block....$ ton .... @27 (Ml Chrome yellow.. .19 ft) 15 @ 85 Barytes 3» @ 45 Petroletim—Duty: crude, 20 cents; refined, 40 ?ents $ gallon. Crude,40@47grav.$gal. 19 @ @ Refined, free 4ft do In bond 2P*@ 80 do extra 50 15 lon 20 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over 5 and not over 100, 50 cents 19 gallon and 25 $1 cem ad 16 f0 @17 00 HI® 13* Lard,:. Tams, 10 @ 1 * Shoulders, 8*@ 9* Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* eonts $1 lb.; paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents do St. Domingo, do Naval Store Prices—, Bar Swedes, Sheet. [February 2,1S67. THE CHRONICLE. 158 @50 @46 @36 @ 7 @ Corn, bulk and bags.. Petroleum Heavy Oil Beef Pork To Havre: Cotton Hops 3 (sad)^ bbl. goods.. $ ton. 20 0 $ tee. $ bbl. ^ I) ; Beef and pork.. $ bbl. 1 00 ton i0 00 Measureiu.g’ds,f9 Wheat, in shipper’s bags 19 bush. bb Petroleum. i......... Lard, tallow, cut m t Flour etc.. V 1b ▲afctf, pot and pear! 7 5 6@6 :■ ■*, :ir f:'r"- P COMMUNICAv NEWiTOBK AND AUSTRALA¬ TION Holiday Goods BETWEEN SIA via PANAMA. The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 21th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., and the Australian Colo ies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail Sieamsho Company leaving New-York for Aspinwall Colon) on the 11th of each mouth. First and second class passengers will be conveyed under through ticket at the following From Ncw-York to ports in New-Zealand, or to Sydney, or Melbourne, $340 to $364 lor tirst class, and $218 to $243 for second class. The above rates iuclnde the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabius of the Austral an steamer; after cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United States gold coin. rates: Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold of Hokitika, New Zealand. Children under £hrec years, free; under eight reirion quarter fare; nnder twelve years, half-fare; one-half fare : female do., three-quar¬ ters fare; men servants berthed forwariL women do. in ladies’ cabin. A limited quantity of merchandise will be con¬ veyed under through bill of lading. For further information, application to he made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st., years, NOW READY. Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Ageut, No. 23 William-st., New-York. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE C To ware, United States Mail, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTn RIV¬ ER, FOO L’ of Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and list of every month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, aftid then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINvVALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Pauauia for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. FEBRUARY: 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis 21st—New York, connecting with Saoramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at steamers for South Pacific ports* Central American Ports. Those of zanillo. Baggage checked allowed each adnlt. Panama with 1st and 11th for 1st touch at Man¬ through. One hundred pounds Smokers Requisites, Mor^co PorUmonnaies, f* pa and Bags, attendance free. For passage tickets or at the Company’s ticket Canal street, further information, apply office, on the wharf, foot of North River, New York. S. K. HOLMAN, Agent. National Steam Navigation Co., (LIMITED.) Weekly to Liver¬ pool Queenstown. at Steamer* Calling THE SPLENDID FIRST-CLASS STEAMSHIPS of this Line will be dispatched as follows from Pier Jfo. 47 Nor h River— DENMVRK, Thomson, Sails SATURDAY, Feb. 2. 16. 23. 2. VIRGINIA, Prowse, Sails SATURDAY, Feb. HELVE'I Ia, Thompson, SailsSATUJKDAY.F- b. ENGLAND, Grace, Sails SATURDAY, March Saturday thereafter. experienced Surgeon on each ship, free of And every An charge Drafts issued for any amount, payable at any bank in Great Britain or on the Contineut. Rate of passage, payable in currency: Oaoin. Steerage. $30 Liverpool or Queenstown .... $100 Through passage to London, Paris, Hamburg, Bremen, Antwerp, etc., at low rates. steerage passage tickets to bring persons from Liverpool or Queenstown for $35, currency, can be obtained at No. 27 Broadway. Fo*- freight or cabin passage apply at the office of the Company No. 57 Broadway ; lor steerage tickets, ' i ST. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, STUDY LAMP. GERMAIN Also, Toys and Games, comprising all that is nov and suitable for Holiday Presents, and of as large variety as can be found in the city, at HINRICIIS’S, WERCKMEISTER’S, .150 Broadway, (up stairs) New York. WASHINGTON 165 Chicago, HI*. Yaeger '& James A. Robinscn, ENGINES CALORIC ERICSSON PORTABLE AND STATIONARY 152, lr;4, & 156 Nos. 148. 150. the passage way, or office of the Company, No. 27 Broad¬ No. 275 Pearl street. F. W. J. HURST, Manager. Bankers, Merchants, and others should send by the HARNDEN EXPRESS, 65 Broadway, as they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and safe forwarding of Gold, Silver, Jewelry, and Merchandise of every description. Also for the collection of notes, drafts, and bills, bills accompanying goods, Ac. C. E. Thorburn, SHIPPING AND 109 Consignments of Cotton ern COMMISSION MERCHANT, WALL STREET, NEW YORK. and all other South¬ Co., FLOUR, ' RECEIVERS OF N. SECOND STREET AVENUE BETWEEN WASHING ION Engines, Steam Mills, Pumps, Cotton Gins, Jobbing. Son, STOCK COMMISSION HOUSE, NO. 17 WILLIAM S1REET. Railways Securities, Government Boards. Collections made tn all Canadas. the States and For the more thorough protection of all—both Broker and “•Principal”—our business will be eon ducted entirely on the basis of Certified Check*, given or received unless certified. To m -re fully enable us to carry out this principle although starting with a sufficient capital, all parlies noue giving orders for stocks, of whatever description or amount, will be required io cover same with proba¬ ble amount at time of leaving order. such deposits given until stocks are purchased or Hold on •‘Opiion.” Out-ol-town orders solicited, and those comp lying with above requirements will receive special anc prompt attention. Quotations esn be had daily upon application, ei will if desired. be furnished Ex. Norton, Late of Paducah, Norton, Ky. B. II. Wisd. m, Late Cash. Bk. Tenn T. J. Slaughter, Late of bt. Louis, Mo. Slaughter & Co.. COTTON & TOBACCO DISTILLERS AND - FACTORS AND General Commission Merchants, 40 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Tesson, Son & Co., sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Distilleries, Kentucky. Metals, POPE, 92 John Street. Charcoal Pig Iron9, Ingot Copper, Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &e., Old and New Railroad Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. THOS. J. Anthracite and Henry Lawrence & Sons, MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE FOR EXPORT (of the late firm of Neilson Importer and Dealer and Commission Franklin Street, OF DRESS AND CLOAK TRIM¬ MINGS, of the trade to his samples of NOVELTIES JUST RECEIVED. C. Myers, Counsellor and Attorney at Law, NATCHITOCHES, LA. Collection of 0 to his care. Cla’ms Particular attention paid to the and all other business entruete J Government promotl? Refers by permission to—Louis Dupleix, Natchi¬ toches. La.; Hon. John L. Lewis, Minuen, La ; against the United States attended to. Campbell & Strong, New Orleans. - In Hardware, Merchant,' STREET, NEW YORK. will receive prompt at¬ 45 CLIFF Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hices, Ac., Best of references given U required. tention. solicited. BEST ENGLISH CANNEL A ORRELL Coal LIVERPOOL, Delivered from yards in New York FROM For Grate Fires. and H. J. Brooklyn. PARMELE A BRO., 32 Pine Street, P- P. 62 Books N.Y Oldershaw, ACCOUNTANT, BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Examined. Acconnts Adjusted. References : C. S. BODLEY, J S. L. M. BARLOW, McANDRhW A WANN STEWART BROWN, DAVID WALLACE, C. H. HARNEY, Invites the attention H. , All orders entrusted to him , IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER NEW YORK. well, Jeremiah M. Ward Wardwell A Co.) A Uaujen. Julius Garelly, AND DOMESTIC USE, 192 FRONT STREET, (No. 45 Second Street, comer of Pine), S C. LOUIS, MO., Founded in 1847, under the Style ot ' LADIES’ 4 Offer for BANKERS. No. 101 v3 STREET, NEW YORK, 58 BROAD Edward M. Tesson. Tesson - MERCHANTS, COMMISSION Cash advances made on Consignments. Edward P. Tesson. * Receipts lor delivered. 4 Stock:* MO. J. M. Cummings & Co., Petroleum. Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous shart-s of a 1 inscriptions, bought and sold at the different Stock LOUIS, ST. Hudson, New York. B. C. Morris & No it Hoisters, and Geneva , 164 Duane St., Cor. STREET. AND GREEN To at STREET; Late experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and An Blair, Densmore & Co.,- Carved Wood Articles, Toilet Articles, and the ALIFORNIA And. Carrying; the PROVISIONS. AND SIXTY-SIXTH ANNUAL DISPLAY OF Fancy Goods, Rich Bohemian Glass, China, Brons Clocks, Berlin Iron, Terra Cotta and Cabinet- seeds grain, flour, ' male servants, • Commercial Cards. Commercial Cards. Steamship and Express Co STEAM 159 THE CHRONICLE. February 2, 1867.] YOUR CUSTOM SOLICITED BY Loutrel, Francis & STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTURERS. Lane, New York. supply everything in our line for Business, Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders 45 Maiden We receive prompt attention— Files ofAhis Paper Bo and to Order. BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY, ... ENGRAVING, Ould & Carrington, AT LAW, ATTORNEYS 11 8 MAIN STREET, RICHMOND, V A. . __ . PRINTING,. &C., AC Cooper & Sheridan, _ v 36 EXCHANGE PLACE, Comer of William St Products Solicited. ■n : *v THE CHRONICLE. 160 Commercial Commercial Cards. S. H. Pearce & No. 353 Brand & Co., Cards. : Gihon, STREET. 56 MURRAY Importers ot ' COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ’ r • •: i t NO. 47 BROAD STREET, v • t . CHINA SILKS, 4 IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN Commercial Cards. Sawyer, Wallace & Co., Importers A Commission Merchahts, BROADWAY, EUROPEAN AND [February 2, 1867. GOODS, . In full assortment for the NEW YORK. . and Manufacturers ot Jobbing and Clothing Trade. SILK AND COTTON HANDKERCHLEPS, OUed WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ WHITE Imitation Oiled Silk. Our “Imitation” has a superior finish, and very Tannahill, Agents for the sale of Silk, coate but half as much as real silk, which it equals in & AC. LINENS, COMMISSION MERCHANTS FOR THE SALE OF PRODUCE AND PURCHASE BURLAPS, RAGGING, FLAX SAIL * Patent Reversible the most economical collar m -» * Wm. Thompson & Co., Paper Collars. ever Importers of IRISH invented. OF MERCHANDISE GENERALLY. DUCK, AC. appearance and durability. Agents for the sale of the No, 79 Front SAM’LB. LINENS, No. 185 Church Street, McIlwaine & Co., of Petersburg, Va. CALDWELL. B. C. Caldwell & LINENCAMB’C HANDK’FS, AC. REMOVED FROM 36 TO Co., Street, New York. Martin & Tannahill, of Petersburg, Va. HAVE George Pearce & McIlwaine Co., Successors to BREWER & New York. COTTON MORRIS, JR. Morris, CALDWELL, FACTORS, AND 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK, Anderson & Importers of While S3 PARK Smith, General Commission 20 PLACE, NEW YORK. Goode, Laces and WILLIAM Handk’ft, KIRK A SON, JAMES GLASS A Lindsay, Chittick & Co., AND Late of Lynchburg, BELFAST, Cambric Handkerchief Manufacturers George Hughes & Co., • Staple, Dress NO. Goods, White 134 CHURCH Will Remove Goods, on STREET, January 1, to their 198 A 200 CHURCH Irish and Scotch Linens, Ac., Ac*, 150 & 152 DUANE AOKNT8 new SPANISH CONTON FACTORS AND GENERAL 65 Commerce STREET, MILLERS A Oriental DICKSON, FERGUSON A CO., Belfast. Spool Cotton. CO., CHICO FEE MANUF. CO., VICTORY MANUF. CO., MILLS, Eastern orders will have prompt attention'at low¬ CO’S. est market price. ■ Our Chicagomills being situated on the railroad track cars are loaded with IS UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE oense and damage from cartage. Orders ior pur¬ chase of 6 rain, Flour, or provisions in this market will be taithfully a'tended to. JOHN CLARK, Jr. A Mile End, Glasgow. ; . MILTON Mills, Chicago, Ill Lockport Hydraulic Mills, LocKport, iil. Sweepstakes Mills, West Lockport. Ill. full supply ofour well known brands of Flour always on hand. . A BURLINGTON WOOLEN THOS. 88 Nos. 43 A 45 WHITE STREET. SEWING. ■< Flour, Middlings, Bran, &c., to all points Fast, saving **x- RUSSELL, Sole Agent, CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y. E. W. Blatchford & £ DOUBLEDAY A J. & P. Coats’ MANUFACTURERS OF , Linen SHOE BEST ST., NEW YOIU Threads, A HUGH . STREET, NEW YORK. NO. 7 RUE Manufacturers of MERCHANTS, SCRIBE, PARIS, v ... PARASOLS, Nos, 12 & 14 WARREN ST., NEW YORK. W. H. Schieffelin & Co. STREET, NEW YORK. Cotton Duck, All Widths and Weights, ▲sen STOCK ALWAYS ON HAND. POLHEMUS A CO., , INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES, FANCY GOODS, PERFUMERY, BTC., ETC., V* /170 & 172 WILLIAM ST. New York. ~ f # MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS, Street, Corner of Beaver. TO GRAIN SHIPPERS, . Joseph H Webterpocld. William H. Schuppllin, « William A. Gxllatly. William N. Clark, Jr. MILLERS, AND DISTILLERS. Richards’ Manufacturing Power Corn Shellers, Of all sizes and capacity, ranging from 60 to 1,000 bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the corn in superior condition for the Mill or Market. Over 600 to Dally Use. Portable Engines, Small Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c. RICHARDS’ IRON WORKS, i92 WASHINGTON STREET, Chicago, Ill, Railroad Iron, AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, FOR \ * Steam and Street * ■ Street, Chicago. Orders will receive careful and prompt attention. SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS A CO., D RU G S Co., BROKERS, 155 Kinzle 190 & SUCCESSORS TO IMPOSTERS AND JOBBERS OP 53 Broad HIDE We are UMBRELLAS AND Patterson, N. J. COMMISSION THEODORE I. S. Bush & YORK, Hall, BROTHERS, LEAD, CHICAGO, ILL. d AUCHINCLOSS, Byrd & CAKE, LEAD PIPE AND SHEET No. 108 Duane Street. Lane, Lamson & Co., 97 FRANKLIN JOHN a LINSEED OIL AND OIL THREADS, HARBOUR Mills at h*f\e . CABLED SOLE AGENTS IN NEW SEWING-MACBiNE THREADS, ETC. 96 CHAMBERS SIX-CORD T Parasols, 49 MURRAY Co., Manufacturers of DWIGHT, Umbrellas & Co., (Established 1848.) COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 138 LASALLE ST .CHICAGO, ILL., PROPRIETORS OF 9 ’ Agents for WASHINGTON MILLS, MERCHANTS, Street, Mobile, Ala. Norton & LINEff, DUCKS, DRILLS, And F. W. HAVES A CO., Banbrldge. FOB COMMISSION Warehouse LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, PATENT LINEN THREAD. Sole .. ^rn. G. England & Co., SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, STREET, NEW YORK, E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. * e .. Refer by permission to Messrs. Jacob Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore. Tannahill, McIlwaine & Co., New York. • Importers A Commission Merchants, And Fancy - , BALTIMORE, MD. CD., LURGAN, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, British Va COMMISSION MERCHANTS, For the sale of produce and purchase of merchandise generally. (Offices, for the present, 63 EXCHANGE PLACE), Linen Manufacturers. British and Continental. IMPORTERS Wilson, Son & Co., Agents for Emb’s, Linen Merchants, OLD. SLIP, NEW YORK. f FOR. SALE BY : * Roads, . ?• S. W. HOPKINS 6c Co.* '■ v . t: , 3 69 * TCDroadvWo