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ponitot, and §nmtmt immutl anto’ fefttf, (tfmwmomt NEWSPAPER, A WEEKLY REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1868. VOL. 6. Bankers and Biokers. Brokers. Bankers and Bankers and Brokers. Hatch, Foote & Co.., L. P. Morton & Co., BANKERS AND DEALERS John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN BANKERS, IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, 80 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Miller, Campbell & STERLING BANKERS, AND DEALERS IN (58 Old Broad Street, STREET, NEW YORK. H. Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Ac., NEW YORK. W. Dimock & Co., A. 16 NASSAU T elegraphlc orders executed for the Purchase and London and New York. Bale of Stocks and Bonds In given to tho accounts of Banks and Bankers. Interest allowed upon Gold and Currency Deposits subject to check at sight, at the best rates. Charlies E. Milnob. H. CrugbbOaklby. L*yi P. Mobton. Waltbb H. Bubns. Belding, Keith & Co., American Bankers 30 LOMBARD Special Attention SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW. Gardner, BANKERS AND BROKERS, Merchants, Gold a EXCHANGE, U.S. BONDS AND ALL AMERICAN SECURITIES. European Products promptly executed. Liberal Advances made on Approved Con siguments. Collections made and drafts retired. or CIRCULARS (PUBLISHED WEEKLY) ON APPLICATION. FORWARDED Money received upon deposit and interest allowe current balances. Hott, Jamks Gardner, Vioe-rres’t. Gold Exchange, formerly of Georgia B A IV K. £ R S CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., ISSUE CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United States, available in all the principal cities of the John J. Cisco 8c Son, Have Removed tlteir Banldog House 54 William Street. Lockwood & Co., world; also, NO. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. DEALERS GOVERNMENT IN AND OUT HER SECURITIES. Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. Washington M. Smith. John E. W. McGinnis. McGiNNrs, Jb. McGinniss,Bros & Smith, BANKERS AND BROKERS. BROAD YORK. NEW STREET, Government Securities. Stocks, Bonds, Exchange, Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on Commission. Deposits received and interest allowed same as with Incorporated Bank. Bonds and Loans negotiated an for Railroad Companies. Wilson, Callaway & Co., Bankers and Commission Merchants Duncan, Sherman & Co., Specialty. upon 1. A. James G. King’s Sons, NO. 4 NEW STREET, NEAR WALL, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought ana sold exclusively ou Commission. STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. STREET, LONDON, E.C. Orders for American Hoyt & and DEALERS IN A. W. DIMOCK & CO. NO. 44 BROAD STREET, Gold Mer¬ chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, <fcc., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. K. UILLIAT & CO., Liver po 1 ___ Central National COMMERCIAL CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hop West Indies, South America, and the United State NEW YORK Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Bank, 318 BROADWAY. $3,000,000 Capital descriptions of Government Bonds^ City and County accounts received on terras most fa vorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United States au Has for sale all TO NO. 59 WALL EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. RANKERS. STREET. Government Securities of all issues, Gold and Stoeks bought and sold upon commission only, and advances made upon the same on the most favorable terms. NO. 5 ELLERS. LONDON# and cities of Also Commercial Credit*, LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬ TUB Available In all the principal towns Europe and the East. RANKERS, NO. parts of Europe, etc., etc. London.) UNION BANK OP Fisk, COMMISSION DEALER IN NO. 3 BROAD STREET, AND STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers In sB GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, Richard Government Let¬ BURNS & CO., L. P. MORTON, STOCKS, BONDS, &C., NO. 6 WALL EXCHANGE, Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes and ters of Credit for Travellers’ Use, on AX PARIS. AND NO. 8 WALL STREET. BANKERS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, GOLD, &c. No. 12 WALL NO. 137. ST., COR. HANOVER, Drake Kleinwort&Cohen LONDON AND BROWN, BROTHERS & OO.’S BUILDING. LIVERPOOL. CftHBdus SOUTTER & Co., BANKERS, No. 53 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. Dealers In Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds Stocks. Geld, Comnvercial Paper, and all Negotiable Securities. interest allowed «n Deposits subject to Sight Draft or Check. Advances made on approved securities. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collect ‘VnhbOtli Inland and foreign promptly made. Foreign uid Domestic Loans Negotiated. subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys in the United States, is prepared to make advances shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for use in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits on London and of the London House issued for the same purposes. SIMON DE VISSER, 26 new Marvin’s Safes, Jose per cent .less than cost, the bought will be sold*ior 26 owner having now no use lor them. The safes will b warranted new andl a perfect oraer. Address SAFE P.Q LOKim, AGENTS Ward, FOR BARING BROTHERS & 66 WALL William H. Sanfobd, Cashier. The Tradesmen’s NATIONAL BANK# 291 CAPITAL. SURPLUS Exchange Place, New York. S. G. & G. C. Two Safes For Sale. One large and one small WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President. The $1,000,000 450,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY. Cashier. Tenth National Bank. Ca pltal COMPANY, STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE BROADWAY, NEW YORK. STREET, BOSTON. . $1,000,00O. No. 29 BROAD STREET. Designated Depository of the Go vernme nt. Ban ker and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. D. L. I. H. Stout, Cashier. EOSS, Preside [February 8, 1868. CHRONICLE THE 162 Western Bankers. Southern Bankers. Eastern Bankers. W. B Hayden Jos. Hutcheson. BANKING HOUSE OF P. Hayden. Dupee, Beck 8c Sayles, Charles STOCK BROKERS, No. M STATE G A• COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. HENRY BAYLE8 STREET, BOSTON, , Do a General Banking, Boise CO., PARIS* IMtJI Commercial Credits for the purchase of Merchaa otss in England and the Continent. Teav euuug* Cekdit* for the use ef Trar^Uera ftbr>f<i OHIO, Collection, and Exchange Business. Established 1848* Fill ST NATIONAL BANK OF IDAHO AND A LAO NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET, COLUMBUS, Western Bankers. RILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON JOHN SHJNROE Sc Hayden, Hutcheson 8c Co AUGUSTA, Page, Richardson 8c Co 114 STATE BROKERS, AND BANKERS STREET, BOSTON, JAMES BECK, film A. DCPI1, D. Carr 8c Co., Haskell 8c City, I. T. Organized March 11, 1867, (wflh circulation), under Act of Congress approved June 3,1864. Capital, $106,000. Authorized Capital, $500,0001 B. M. DU KELL, Pres. C. W. MOORE, Cashier. New York Correspondent,—National Bank of North Co., BANKERS, ST. LOUIS, MO Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Ex change. Collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of ex- hange. America. Collections principal places in Idaho Terri¬ “ Telegraph Transfers,” Sight and Time Exchange, for Gold or Currency, can be purchased on this Bank, of National Bank North America, New York City; National Bank of Com- of Mass. merce, Boston, National Bank the on L. 809 & 811 CHESTNUT • Benoist 8c A. Republic, the ST. STREET, LOUIS, MISSOURI, the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. J. L. Brownell 8c Bro,, BROKERS, BANKERS Also, drafts on favorable terms. References Its Offers Service? Banks to and Second Bankers on Liberal Terms. ST. DIRECTORSJ Edward B. Orne, Joseph T. Bailey, Nathan Hillesl William Benjamin Rowland, Jr.# Samuel A. Bispliam, Osgood Welsh, Frederic A. Hoyt William H. Ervi*n, Rhawn, • National Trust 423 PENN Washington. $100,000 BA N KE liS & H. D. WM. B. at all times regard to Government loans cheerfully furnished. collections, and a JAS. L. MAURY. H. Maury 8c Fourth West CINCTNN ATI, Dealers in GOLD, on Commission. G 8c AND A N S , DEALERS IN U. S No. 14 WALL STREET Franklin M. Kktchum. George Phipps. Taos. Belknap, Jr. Gilmore, Dunlap 8c Co., 110 Securities, &c. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. CorrespondentsNational Bank North & Marsh, BROKERS. Street, cor. New. R A N K BANKERS America; Knautn, Nacliod & Kuhne. T. BROOKE Co., F nes 108 BOB’T No. 9 Wall BROKERS, cf H. KAUUY. Dealers in Government general Banking, Exchange and Collection husi¬ New York Fred. Wendell Jackson BANKERS AND pro PITTSBURGH. Do STREET, NEW YORK. Henry Jackson. Temple 8c PA. J. F. Stark 8c Co., NATIONAL BANK OF WASHINGTON, COOKE (of Jay Cooke * Co.), Pbeb’t. FIRST government. Full information with Wrn. STREET, Capital SECURITIES, Arc,, NO. 19 BROAD Company , BONDS, GOLD AND GOV¬ ERNMENT Prompt attention given to the business of corres " E. D. JONES, Cashier. Particular attention given to eeeds promptly remitted. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and financial A^ent of the United State?. Wo buy and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and give especial attention to bnsiness connected wltli the several departments of the STOCKS, pendents. P I T T S « U R G II National Bank. DEALERS IN. LOUIS, MO. Capital..$200,OOO | Surplus $150,560 William H. Rhawn, President, Late Cashier of the Central National Bans. Joseph P. Mumford, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia Jackson Bros., Bank. National : J. K. FoNDA-Pres. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y. C, H. Blaie, Pres’t Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. $1,000,000 Capital Sc STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received 28 BROAD on all the principal cities on Ox PHILADELPHIA. Co., BANKERS, Buy and Sell Exchange R. Bankers and Brokers. tory promptly attended to. Southern Bankers. KETCHUM, PHIPPS & RELKNAP, BANKERS AND BROKERS, Street, No, 21 Broad Street, New York. Government securities, railroad and other bonds, railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and OHIO., exchange bought and sold on commission.- Mercantile paper and loans in currency or gold negotiated. Inte¬ rest allowed on deposits. SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK BANKERS AND BROKERS No. 1014 MAIN ST., RICHMOND, VA. Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ae., bought and sold on commission. Deposits received and Collections mads tn all accessible points in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, Vkkmilye A Oe. Drake NOTES, and all kinds ot GOVERNMENT BONDS, COLLECTIONS MADE at all Ld remitted lor Checks on accessible points STOCK BROKERS AND No. 16 BROAD day oi payment. on UNION BANK OF LONDON. No. 52 St. Francis FIRST Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ ernment Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt attention given to Collections. References: Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers. New York, E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. Byrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolft A Gillespie, Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hurlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York. ew York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford. Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala. DANK John W. Ellis, Pres. Lewis Worthington, Theodore Stan wood, Cashier. CAPITAL $1,000,000 Collections made on SURPLUS all accessibly promptly remitted for at best rates. OF Gilliss, Harney 8c Co., V.Pres. BANKERS, NO.-24 BROAD STREET. ~ Buy and Sell at Market Rates. ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. '.$314,852 89 points and Directors: Babcock Bros. & Underwriters Agency New York, Charles Walsh. President Bank of Mobile. Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Executed Cincinnati, Ohio. St., Mobile, Ala. Dealers in NATIONAL John W. Ellis, Jas. A. Frazer, William Woods Cash Lewis Worthington, R. M. Bishop, A S. Winslow, Capital, $150,000. L. B. Harrison, Robt. Mitchell, Joe. Iiawson. Real Capitalv$l,000,000. Jos. F. Larkin 8c Co., . Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and others, and allow interest on daily balances, subjeetto Sight draft. Make collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. BANKERS, Cohen 8c CINCINNATI. Jos. F. Larkin, John Cochnower, (Thomas Fox. I general I John M. Phillips, Adam Poe, f partnership. | Thos. Sharp. Decamp, J Harvey (John Gates. - BANKE11S |g--A 64 CAMP STREET, NEW ORLEANS, Draw on.Merchants National Bank, New York, and Bank of Liverpool, England. t*>ilection» and remittances promptly attended to. The Marine Company OF CHICAGO. AND DEALERS UNITED IN BULLION, SPECIE, AND STATES SECURITIES. No. 1 Wall Street. WlNTHROP 8c BAYLEY,. 49 EXCHANGE PLACE. J. Young Scammon President. Robert Reid., Manager. General Banking and Hagen, BANKERS, ) - ^2§BurKE & Co’> BANKERS, STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to FOR SALE. jas. M. Muldon 8c Sons, Brothers, Collections promptly attended to* jg&ggy DEALERS IN Foreign Exchange, Gold, Government Security &c., on commission. Eugene Winthkop, J. Roosevelt Blylhy Late otf Lftteof Grenville Wintttrop & Co. Henry Clew* A Co* - February 8,1868J THE CHRONICLE. Bankers and Brokers. Vermilye & Bankers and Brokers. Co., Garth, Fisher & Hardy, National Trust York, Company BANKERS, delivery all STATES ? S TOC No. 18 NEW 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, 6 “ “ 1801, “ 6 *• " 1805 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, 1 Per Cent Currency Certificates. Hardy). M. K. BANKERS AND Boug-ht and Sold. CH. C. FAHNESTOCK BANKERS. Corner Wall and Nassau Fifteenth Street, Philadelphia. Street, Opposite Treas. Department, Washington. In connection with our houses in Philadelphia and have this day opened an office at No Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Washington 1 Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.' New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will be resident partners. We shall give particular attention to the purchase, and issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks. JAY COOKE & CO. March .-1,1866 No. 2^ Wall Of Jameson, Cotting & Co. St. Louis. Taussig, Fisher & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS. Street, New York, others, and allow interest on Sight Draft. Make Collection* on fhvorable term*, and promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad Securities. * I and Smith, Louisville, Ky. checked sight. Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly and only on Commission. EXCHANGE BROKERS IN PLACE, Foreign Exchange, Gold^ Government, and other Securities. Partners ; James B. Hodgskin, eNERAL Chas J. Special Partners John Randall, J. Nelson Tappan, Geo.G. Hobson. K. Randall, Lowry Hobson, Warren, Kidder & Co., BANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly ex* rated. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED sa deposits, subject to check at sight. Murray & Hedden,Winchester&Co NO. B. Cheney, STREET, Murray. Jr Haslett McKim. V Robt. McKim. McKim, Bros. Jno. A. McKim. & BANKERS, 62 WALL STREET* ’ I). Ohknky Go., Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at sight, and special attention given to orders from «mer places. capital stock. By its charter, no loan can be made, directly directly, to any trustee, officer or employe of the or in¬ Com¬ pany. The Trustees are compelled to exhibit annually a full statement of their affairs to the Supreme Court, and it is made the duty of the Court to see that they are properly conducted. 1 he charter restricts the investment of its Capital to United States Government Stocks, or New York State Stocks, or Bonds of Incorporated Cities of this State ; or on Loans on Bond and Mortgage on unin¬ cumbered Real Estate In this State, worth double the amount loaned. The Company will make loans from its Deposits and Trust Funds on Government and City Stocks of this State Securities, State Stocks ; but it is not permitted to discount or deal in coemercial or business The above provisions constitute this Company a very Depository for Money and for trusts committed secure to its charge. ADVANTAGES TO Banker* and security, convenience and Star Fire Insurance NO. 96 Broker*. Particular attention given to orders for the purchase sale of the or Adams, American, United States, Wells Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks All orders faithfully executed. JOSJAH HEDDEN, ISAIAH C. BABCOCK LOOKE W. ROBT M. HEDDEN. Surplus, Jan. 1, *o8 THE CHATHAM NATIONAL BANK, New York, December 21,1867.—A semi-annual divi¬ dend of SIX (6) Per Cent, has been this day declared, free of government tax, out of the profits of the last six months, payable on and after January 2. An extra dividend of TWO AND 67-100 Per Cent., free of Government tax. has also been declared, to pay the taxes levied by the city and county against the shareholders of the Banks. The Transfer Book will remain closed from the 24tli instant to January 2d, inclusive. By order bf the Board. O. H. SCHREINER, Cashier. DIVIDEND. NO. 96 BROADWAY. Capital.. Surplus Jau. 1, 1868 $200,900 4,900 OO The Board of Directors of this M. M. York, Jan. 10,1868. OO 60,267 33 Company have day declared a Semi-Annual Dividend Cant., free of Government tax, payable on and after Tuesday, the 14th instant. Now Co., John Bloodgood & Co. 22 WILLIAM $253,000 ' . D. Randolph Martin, Chas. H. Applegate, O. W. F. Randolph, John F. Pupke, Martin V. Bunn, DEALERS IN OTHER Interest allowed John H. Holdane, Chancellor H. Brooks, Stephen S. Chamberlin, Charles Spear, William w. Owens, John M. White, Alexander Bonuell, Robert P. Getty, on GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. deposits of 'Gold and AND Curren cy, subject to check at sight, and particular atten tioagiven to accounts of country banks and banker Marshall Q. Roberts Horace K, Thurber R. Cornell White, Erastus T Tefft, Allan Hay, Eben Sutton, David Wagstaff, James Flanagan, James Walikce, Chris’n H. Lillentha Adolph Eberhardt Charles B. Richafa. Timothy C. Kimball, JohnK. Flanagan, Robert McLoughlin, At a meeting of the Board of Directors, held Mon day. December 30, 1867, the resignation of GEO. W. SAVAGE, Esq., as President, was aooepted, and the following resolution was unanimously adopted, Iiesoleed, That the thanks of this Board are due,and are hereby tendered to Geo. W. Savage, Esq,, (who resigns to assume the Presidency of the International Insurance Company,) for his devotion to the interest of the stockholders, and the able manner in whioh he has performed his duties as President of this and that this Coard congratulate Mr. Company Savage upon the present prosperous condition of the Company, whioh is largely due to his efficient administration. Subsequently NICHOLAS C. MILLER was unani mously elected President, and MOSES M. BRADLEY appointed Secretary. MOSES M A. M. Late Pres. Foute, Gayoso Bank, BRADLEY, Secretary. W. W. Lorinq. Memphis, Tenn. Foute & Losing, BANKERS AND BROKERS, 33 BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET. Government Securities of all -v STREET, NEW YORK. 53,000 DIRECTORS: Levi Apgar. this of FIVE Per at their office BRADLEY, Secretary. $200,000 . Asset* Edgar Pinchot, Financial. Co., BROADWAY. Capital Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission only. Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬ proved securities. Star Fire Insurance DEPOSITORS. As the National Trust Company receives deposits in large or small amounts, aud permits them to be drawn as a whole or in part by Check at Sight and without notice, allowing interest on all daily bal¬ ances, parties can keep accounts in this institution, with special'advantages of BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Unsettled Losses— BANKERS AND BROKERS, 2 7 WALL or amount of their profit. ' 39 f erience, who are also personally liable todouble the all obligations of the Company to depositors paper. and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT per annum on daily balances which may be WINCHESTER. Hodgskin, Randall & Hobson, James D. STREET, NEW YORK. Receive Deposit* in Currency and Gold, SECURITIES, BANKERS, and daily balances, subject to I | of the late firm of James [ Low & Co., New York BANKERS, NO. 69 Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, COMPANY. The Capital stock of One Million Dollars is di¬ vided among over five hundred Shareholders compris¬ ing many gentlemen of large wealth and financial ex- Street, N.Y., NOS. 14 & 1C WALL Buy and Sell at Market Rates* NO SECURITY OF THE Jameson, Smith ScCotting Will purchase and sell of Co., & CO., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND BROKERS. Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬ mission. Particular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous Securities. Collections made on all accessible points. Interest allowed on Balances' Joseph A. Jameson, Amos Lotting, at the Special Deposits for one year or more may be made at five per cent. The National Trust Company discharges all the various duties of similar institutions. It acts as Trus¬ tee for Corporations and Individuals, and Mortgagee for Railroads, and as Financial Agent of State and City Governments, and foreign and domestic corpora¬ tions, banks and bankers. It will act as administrator or executor of estates, and as guardian for minors and as receiver in litigated cases. The Company is also constituted by its charter a legal depository for money paid lato Court. R. P. Sawters. N. P. Boulett* (PETTY, SAWYERS for at ALL UNITED STATES same rate. Railways P. D. Roddey & EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Of all No. 32 Broad balances, to Check ai Sight. Certificates payable on demand are issued Cos., we Mr. Edward SALE, ON daily Sts., New York. No. 114 Soutli 3d Roddey, Petty, and Subject all business connected with P D. J. N. accounts of Bankers, Corporations, Individuals, 'AND ALLOWS and undertake Jay Cooke & Co., STATE. FOUR PI R CEnT. INTEREST Rails, Locomotives, Cars, etc., EDWARD DODGE, { PITT COOKE. the Banks, MERCHANTS, Bonds and Loans for Railroad Contract for Iron or Steel VERMILYE A CO. THE THE NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY RECEIVES 12 PINE STREET. Negotiate BY (Of the old firm of Garner & Co.) Henry C. Carter, First Vice-President. Barnet L. Solomon, Second Vice-President. James Merrill, Secretary. J esup & Company, Compound Interest Notes of 1864 A ^ CHARTERED Darius R, Mangham, President. Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought, sold and collected. 2d, & -3d eeriess YORK, Capital, One Million Dollars. sion only. Bounty Loan. JAY COOKE, WM. G. MOORHEAD, H. D. COOKE, Henry Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc. bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Broker and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬ LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. 1865 OF THE CITY OF NEW NO. 336 BROADWAY. STREET, Successors to Harrison, Garth & Co. and K's INCLUDING >4ew York State 7 per cent. Financial. THE B A N KE RS. No. 44 Wall Street. New Keep constantly on hand for immediate issues of UNITED 163 kinds, Gold, State, Bank, and Railroad Stocks and Bonds Bought and Sold. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to check at sight. Collection made in all the States and Canadas. [February 8, 1868. TBE CHRONICLE. 164 Insurance. MILES 540 1798. INCORPORATED OF THE RAILROAD, UNION PACIFIC The New York Mutual INSURANCE COMPANY, NO. WILLIAM 01 STREET, NEW YORK. January 23, 1808. Omaha Across the Continent Running West from ARE NOW THE THICK MOUNTAINS. SUMMIT OF THE ROCKY 1 Total... WITIIlN TRAINS RUNNING road-bed to be sufllcientl packed to receive the rails. The work continues to be pushed forward in the rock-cuttings on the western slope with unabated energy, and a much larger force will be employed during the current year than ever remaining ten miles will be q elore. The prospect that the finished as soon as the weather permits the whole 293,110 87 $<82,912 03 , No Policies have been issued upon Life Risks, nor upon Fire Risks, disconnected with Matine Risks. Earned Premiums to Jan. 1,1808...' 11,418 30 The Company have Cash in Banks United States Stocks the following assets: $29,809 57 272,92§ 00 40,785 15 92,000 00 and Mortgages and Bills Receivable Premium Notes <-{ in 1870 was never better. -‘•"■i . = $630,309 72 83,399 12 Y Re-insurance, Accrued Interest and other Claims due the Company Insurance Scrip and Sundry Isotes at esti- Salvage, Grand Line to the Pacific will be Completed —. 4 194,790 00 Bank, City and other Stocks Loans on Stocks, and Cash due the Company Real Estate,Bonds $307,390 93 $207,661 23 Losses and Expenses Return Premiums The $89,855 49 31, I860 Outstanding Premiums to Dec. Premiums received COMPLETED, BEING LAID AND TEN MILES OF THE The Trustees submit, the following Statement of the affairs of the Company in conformity with the require¬ ments of the Charter : 81,037 69 . mated value 22,803 20 $707,549 73 The means provided for the construction Work are ample. The United of this Great National States lien Bonds at the rate of from $1(1,000 to $48,000 per mil#, lor which it takes a second as security, and receives payment to a large if not to the full extent of its claim in services. These are Issued as each twenty-mile section is finished, and alter it has been examined by United States Commis¬ sioners and pronounced to be in all respects a first-class road, thoroughly supplied with depots, stations, and all the necessary rolling stock and other equipments. grants its Six Per Cent Bonds SIX PER CENT/] outetandiug Certificates of Profit will Interest on the paid on and after Tuesday, ary, 1808. be repair-shops tlie lltli day of Febru¬ TWENTY PER CENT. and the United DIVIDEND the net entitled thereto, lor the year ending 1807, for which Certificates may be States Tax, is declared on earned premiums makes a donation of 12,800 acres of land to the mile, which large revenue to the Company. Much of this land in the Platte Valley rs among the and other large portions are covered with heavy pine lorests and abound in coal The United States also will be a source ol most fertile in the world of the best quality. 31st December, FIFTY of the and is also authorized to issue its own First Mortgage and no more. Hon. E. I). Morgan and Hon. Oakes deliver the Bonds to the Company only as the work progresses, arid Bonds to an amount equal to the issue ot Ames are Trustees for the Bondholders so that they always represent an actual preductlve value. Tlie Company the Government, after the 1st day of May next. issued ou and PER CENT. outstanding Certificates of Profits of the issue redeemed and paid to the holders there¬ of, or their legal representatives, on and after Tues¬ day, the lltli day of February next, from which date of 1859 will he all interest thereon will cease. The Certificates to be and cancelled to presented at the time of payment that extent. The authorized capital of the Company is One already been paid in upon Hundred Million Dollars, of which over By order of the five millions have Board, W. P. HANSFORD, Secretary. the work already done. TRUSTEES: Edward Kaune, Henry Oelricns, J arnes R. Smith, George Mosle, Gustave H. Kissell, Gerhard Janssen, Stewart Brown, EARNINGS OF THE rr At present the profits of the Company more than sufficient to pay the interest on are COMPANY. derived only from its local btephen Johnson,* Arthur Leary, Henry Mever, Edward H. Li. Lyman, George Moke, K. V. Thebaud, Francis Hathaway, traffic, but this is already much all the Bonds the Company can issue, if not another mile were built. It is not doubted that when the road is completed the through traffic of the only line connecting the Atlantic and Pacific States will be large beyond precedent, and, as there will be no competition, it can always be done at Lloyd Aspinwall, E. P. JOHN H. LYELL, profitable rates. THEO. B. It will be noticed that the Union Government Work, built under the Government money, and that it« bonds are issued, Germania Is so carefully guarded, and certainly u» Pacific Railroad is, in fact, a pervision of Government officers, and to a large extent with under Government direction. It is believed that no similar security other is based upon a larger or more valuable property. As the Company’s . CASH FIRST are now MORTGAGE BONDS ' SIX PER CENT. President. BLEECKER, Jr., Vice-Fres. Fire Ins. Co., No. 175 BROADWAY, N. Y $600,000 OO CAPITAL, 376,815 50 SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 18G8 They pay offered at PAR. William Paxson, John H. Earle, Francis Skiddy, $876,815 50 TOTAL ASSETS RUDOLPH GARRIGt B, President. JOHN E. KAHL, Vice president. IN GOLD, IItoo Schumann, Secretary. or over maturity. Subscriptions and by the investment and have thirty years to run before York at the Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau Street, NINE PER CENT. Upon Will be received in New CONTINENTAL NATIONAL RANK, No. 7 Nassau 14TII DIVIDEND. OFFICE OF THE Germania Fire Insurance Street. CO., Bankers, No. 51 Wall Street. JOHN J. CISCO A SON, Rankers, No. 59 Wall Street. HENRY CLEWS A CO., Rankers, No. 72 Wall Street. HEDDEN, WINCHESTER A CO., Rankers, No. 69 Broadway, COMPANY. CLARK, HODGE A New The Board of Directors have drafts the Company's or advertised Agents throughout the United States. Remittances should be in New York, and the bonds will be sent free of charge by return express, other funds par subscribing through local agents, will look to made in Parties them for thei^isafe delivery. -> semi-annual Dividend of FIVE I'ER free from CENT., demand, at the Government tax, payable on office, No. 175 and by York, Jan. 8, 1808. this day declared a Broadway. HUGO ' SCHUMANN, Secretary. Gibson,Beadleston & Co., BANKERS, NEW YORK. Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold and sold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock, 50 EXCHANGE PLACE, A NEW s' owing the Progress PAMPHLET AND of the Work, Resources Ccnipany’s Ofllces or of its advertised for Construction, and MAP Government bought Value of Bonds, may be obtained at the AgeuW qt' will be sect free aa application. JOHN J. CISCO, Treasurer. NEW YORK. JFebr** 5 1868 Mining stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem¬ bers. Interest allowed on Deposits. Dividends. Coupons and Interest collected. Liberal advances on Government and other Securities Informal ioncheer fully given to Professional men, Executors etc., desiring to invest. D • tn 5 Messrs. Lockwood & Co., Refer i.w by.pe1 mission to | ** Dabnby, Mobqan & Co 'THE ommfrriaj &iitmanqft tfcctic, Commercial lames, Railway |Uonitor, and ^nsurmuc gmirnal. ankers’ A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 6. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1868 169 165 I Coin and Bulliou Movement .. Statistics of the National Banks Our British Difficulty. Tennessee Railroad Bonds Boston Stock Fluctuations 166 | Latest, Monet-ary and Commercial 167 | 163 168 English News ) Commercial and Miscellaneous j News 169 171 THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. 177 179 179 Cotton Tobacco Breadstufl’s Groceries., Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc Sale Prices N. Y. Stock Exchange Commercial Epitome 189 172 Dry Goods 181 175 Prices Current and Tone of the 176 | Market ISO-190 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News Railway. Canal, etc., Stock List. Railroad, Canal and Miscellane- 185 188 1 ous Bond List 184 Insurance and Mining Journal 186 j Advertisements ....161-4, 1SG-7, 191-2 11) e CljronicU. 1 he For a Our THE CHRONICLE. Unsettling the Public Credit little quiet and to rest from such costly experiments. busy millions of workers have, in the. progress of the manipulation and consolidation of the debt, been subjected to impoverishment and loss, which they can no longer afford, and are no longer willing to afford. We have spent vast sums of money in funding the national debt in its present form, and in its present form it should for the present rest. with CONTENTS. NO. 137. Such are well known to be the views of the men who are subject in the chief cities. And yet, oil Thursday last Mr. Sherman reported a measure which stands in almost as direct opposition to them as was the recent project which lie has seen so emphatically and so unanimously rejected. If correctly reported in the newspa¬ pers, this new bill provides as follows: entitled to be heard on this to issue bonds bearing payable in coin, and due day morning by the 'publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, in forty years but redeemable in ten years, to an amount sufficient to with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. cover all outstanding obligati ns of the United States ether than five per cent, bonds, and to be exchanged for such oblig itions or dispocedof TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. otherwise at not less than par, and said bon Is or proceeds thereof to be The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier exclusively used for the redemption or in exchange of existing secur¬ to Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ city subscribers, ana mailed to all ‘others, (exclusive of postage,) For One Year.,. For Six Months Postage is 20 cents WILLIAM JOHN <}. : 6 00 per year, and b. DANA, FLOYD, jr. j f $10 no is jiaid by the subscriber at his own post-office WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, 60 William Street, New York. The Secretary of the Treasury is authorized interest at five per cent., principal and interest ities of the United Slates. The bonds to be issued shall be known as the consolidated debt of the United States, an 1 shall be exempt from all taxation by State or local authority, and the same, with the interest thereon and the income therefrom, shall be exempt from the payment of all taxes or duties to the United States, other than such income tax may be assessed upon other incomes. And in consideration of the reduction of the rate of interest, there shall he appropriated, out of the import duties, an amount equal to one per cent, on the bonds issued, which shall be applied to the purchase or p lyment of the national debt. In addition to the sums necessary to pay the interest and maturing bonded d^bt of the UnitedStat.es there is ap-! as Remittances should Office Money Orders. - invariably be made by drafts or Rost Soliciting Agents make no collectiony Complete files of the Chronicle from July 1, 18(30, to dute eati be had at the office. UNSETTLING THE I’lJHLIU CREDIT. If it be a sound maxim of financial debt should be left to itself ted, and will soon now policy that the public that it is almost consolida¬ be entirely so; and that the'currency should be also allowed to its propriated out of the Treasury a sum which, including the said interest and maturing debt and the one per cent., as aforesaid, shall amount to $! 35,000,000 annually, which sum shall be applied to the reduction of the debt in lieu of the sinking fund contemplated by the act of Febru¬ ary 25, 1862. Five twenty bon is shall, before the expiration of five years from date, at the option < f the holders, be exchanged for the new bonds, and such as are now redeemable shall be presented for exchange before the 1 st of November next, and not thereafter, and the residue not later than six months after the. expiration of Jive years from date for lawful money of the United States. And the consolidated bonds and United States notes are to be ex¬ equilibrium without any further changes either by increasing or lessening the mass of paper money in circulation—then the people who changeable recover generally believe in and hold fast by this maxim would be much relieved if Congress would bj sonic positive act give expression to it at an early day. We had hoped that the universal disapprobation which Mr. Sherman’s funding bill evoked throughout the whole for each other when pres* uted to the Treasury, unless the outstanding shall be equal to four hun¬ millions, or uuless the United States shall have resumed payment amount of United States notes dred in coin for their notes. The last section provides that any contracts hereafter specifically made in coin shall be legal and valid, and may be enforced according to the terms of said contracts. If, as is often said, the brokers and speculators always find country when it was introduced into the Senate, on the 17th their harvest where financial confusion reigns, this bill ought December last, would have prevented any further efforts of to be a great favorite with that much abused order of per¬ the same mischievous tendency. There are two reasons sons. For should any such measure ever become a law, which are conclusive against tampering at present with the nothing is more certain than that an era of distrust would national securities. First, we have just funded the debt, and begin for our public, securities, and that the resulting confu¬ puerile extravagance to undo all we have done sion would shake the vast fabric of our financial machinery in order to try experiments, and begin the work over again. which is built upon them. To the stable foundations of the Secondly, we have for long, weary months suffered the busi¬ public credit this measure would apply itself, and insidiously ness of the nation to be deranged, and its financial machinery undermine or dissolve away their solid strength, till the to be overstrained and disturbed by the funding operations imagination shrinks from contemplating what would coma of the Treasury* The country now-wishes to bo indulged after. it would be 166 The in the THE CHRONICLE. leading feature of this bill is, that for the first time financial history of this country it resorts to semi- confiscation.' The holders of securities either to our six per cent. Government give them up, and to take instead a bond; or, if they refuse to do this, this bill threatens to pay them oft’in greenbacks at par six months after the five years option expires. For the 514 millions of 6 per cent. Five-Twenties of 1862, this law proposes to issue immediately an equal amount of 5 per cent, new bonds, and should the holders refuse to submit to the compulsory ex¬ change, then at an appointed time the interest is to be stopped. From that day forward all detached FiveTwenty coupons of subsequent maturity will, if presented at the Treasury be dishonored and repudiated. The same policy of repudiation is to be enforced towards the remain¬ ing 860 millions of Five-Twenties of the later issues, until are five per cent, r the holders have all submitted to the loss, or, in disgust, have generally approved. The offence charged against the institution was the failure to keep up its reserves, though warned repeatedly by the proper officer of the Bureau* When at length, after patient delay the bank was closed by the appointment of a receiver, every one anticipated the indications of over expansion, which were really found and reported, when the books were subjected to official examina tion. We are glad to be assured, however, that this case is an exceptional and isolated one. All such defaults should be dealt writh resolutely and firmly, for a terror to other evil doers, and a protection to those who do well. It is a familiar principle of jurisprudence that penalties deter from crime not'so much because they are severe as because they are sure, relentless and not to be escaped. Of course we do not demand that every bank which at any time and to any extent is short of its reserve should be subject to severe discipline, and still less that every default shall be punished in the same wray. What is needful is to discrimi¬ nate between the default which indicates bad banking and so sold their bonds to other persons at home or abroad, if in the general overthrow of our credit there can be found any investors more pliant in the enforcement of their vested That which is rights. We shall not discuss here the last clause of this extraord¬ inary This final section is merely a “rider.” It gold contracts, and has no plan in a bill dealing with the public debt, and the-contracts of the nation with its creditors. If passed, the gold contract bill must rest on its own merits. Mr. Sherman’s project is certainly broad enough in itself; and does not admit of any heterogeneous matter being tacked to it for any purpose whatever. When the official copy of the bill comes to us from Washington we may perhaps have something further to say about those parts of it which we have purposely refrained from discuss¬ ing in this place. measure. seeks to legalize STATISTICS OF THE NATIONAL BANKS, We [February 8,1868. an unavoidable incident of business, Such contingency the law contemplates as possible, and provides way for meeting it. The Comptroller is specially directed to notify the bank of any defect, and on receipt of this official note the bank is prohibited from making any new loans un¬ til its reserve lias risen to the legal average. Thus carefully has the law provided on the one side for the safety of the public who deal with the bank, and on the other for the re¬ covery of a sound institution w hich from temporary causes may be subjected to a drain on its reserve. But this is not all. W eekly reports are to be sent to Washington giving an. exact statement of the condition of the bank, duly attested by its responsible officers, and tlie directors, we believe, are usu¬ ally very prompt in getting back again into a condition of assured strength and legal solvency-. Wherever a bank fails to do this, and fails persistently, the presumption is very strong that there is some reason for the shortcoming. To meet this difficulty and to prevent recourse being had to any severer measures than are absolutely necessary, a special examiner is sent to investigate the condition of the bank. a complete today our tabular exposition of the state banks, as shown in their quarterly'- reports of the 6th January. The tables are all official, and though more exhaustive than those of any previous quarter, they The powers and duties of these officers are often misunder¬ have been completed and placed in the hands of the public stood. In the 54th section, which authorizes the appoint¬ with unusual despatch. The chief facts for which these ment of such officers, we find the following provisions : voluminous masses of figures are valued, are such as throw And be it further enacted, That the Comptroller of the Currency With the approbation of the light on the stability [of the banks. These institutions are Secretary of the Treasury, as often as shall be deemed shall suitable person or persons so important a part of the financial machinery by which to make an necessary or proper,affairs appoint a banking association, which examination ( f the of every their business is done by the most person shall n t intelligent, enterprising, affairs he shall bebe a director or other officer in any association whose app inted and v ho shall have power to energetic trading nation in the world. So great are the priv¬ make a thorough examination to examine, affairs of the association, into all the and, in ileges conferred on the banks with a view to make them sta doing so, to evamine any of the officers and agents thereof on oath; and, shall make a full and detailed condition of ble and effective, that the people want to know whether to the Comptroller. And the report of thesha 1 not le the association association subject to any the banks are a safe depositary of the nation’s hopes, and other visitorial powers than such as are authorized by this act, except such as are vested in the several courts of law and whether our financial barque may be relied on not chancery. only when every person appointed to make such examination shall receive forAnd his the atmosphere is clear and no special danger threatens, but services at the*rate of five dollars for each day by him employed in of the National such examination, and two dolla’s for every await us when storms necessarily travel in the peiformance of his twenty five miles i.e shall duty, which shall be paid and tempests put it to a much severer trial. Once let it be by the association by him examined. To the wise use which the practically and thoroughly demonstrated that out banking Comptroller has made of this system is really more sound, more elastic, more adapted to and the other powers for checking bad in those troublesome times which may banking, is largely than any other that wc tire likely attributable the success of our new7 complex organism of to get in its place, and there will be little danger of the banks, which consists of over 1,640 institutions, many success of any of those, plausible and mischievous schemes of which are new7, w hile others wrere badly managed as State which have been urged in Congress and elsewhere for its banks, and stood greatly in need of reform when they wTere destruction. converted under the National Currency law. We find from It is because of the prevailing anxiety for the Mr. Ilurlburd’s last report that less than a dozen banks have safety and strength of the banking system that the reserves of these failed in four years and a half, and the total aggregate of loss institutions are so closely scanned by the public. The be¬ to the public from such failures has not reached $250,000 a lief is that if any directors allow themselves often or habitu¬ year for the wholes' country. ally to be short of reserve they are otherwise doing bad We ventured to express the opinion a fortnight ago that business. It was on this account, wre suppose, that the at present the reserves of the banks would be found more closing of the Farmers’ and Citizens’ Rank of Brooklyn was' adequate than they were 15 months ago, when some 50 were the wants of the country a February 8,1868.] iTHE CHRONICLE reported deficient. In confirmation of this opinion we pub¬ subjoined table which shows the facts in a compend¬ OPR BRITISH DIFFICULTY. lish the ious form: LAWFUL . MONEY RESERVE On deposits. Mass 52,216,507 R. I I’d. 19,606.344 Conn 30,232,860 N. York 78.211.027 .. . NewVJer 21,('28,436 Pennsyl Delaw'c 45,923,S62 2,514,876 MaryTd 4,406,632 D. of C. 206,528 5,451,793 4,686,304 950,996 1,018,807 3,618,092 726,532 144,685 1,414,486 Vira’ia. w.vir c. N. Car.. S. Car.. Georgia A labam Missit-s. Texas.. Arkan.. Kentuc. Tenn... 765,683 2,880,500 4,511,938 30,463,014 Indiana 18,093.231 Illinois. 14,437,742 Michi... 6,478,351 Wise on. 5,460,371 Iowa... 9,060,552 Minn... 3,411.488 Ohio. . Misson. Kansas. Nebras. 2,282,845 1,350,534 1,998,130 1.103,308 Col Ter. Utah 14 Total 191,859 .405,395,131 BANKS —Reserve. i $ Mnine.. 12,810,407 N Ham 6.735,456 Verra’t. 7,085,866 RATIONAL hand. $ 1,196,6^4 680,166 JANUARY Re¬ > 6TH, 186S* In app. In approved Aggre- quir¬ On redeem, icdeem ag’ts. gate. ed. hand. agents. Totab S 1,82S,556 1,259,407- % 15 15 15 15 3,025,060 1,939,573 1,668,714 832,667 836,047 5,755,905 7,020,862 12,776,767 2,003,404 2,346,990 4,350,394 15 3,154,830 3 766,403 6,921,233 15 8.685,597 9,124,675 17,810.272 15 2,797,006 3,649,085 6,446,091 15 6,552,979 3,939,3S6 10,492,365 15 290,973 301,734 592,707 15 747,205 366,627 1,113,832 15 27,008 12,443 39,451 15 7- 0,997 267,727 1,948,724 15 685,565 326,423 1,011,988 15 141.025 122,463 263,488 25 236,155 416,152 652,307 15 1,018,127 353,911 1,372,038 15 124,940 136,067 261,007 15 31,135 4,810 35,945 15 430,988 227,794 664,582 15 102,944 60,393 163,342 15 309,047 265,517 604,564 15 708.239 285,859 991,098 15 4,747,374 2,243,8S5 6,991;259 15 3,137,373 888,759 4,026,132 15 2,303,326 1,287,406 3,590,732 35 1,070,073 575,102 1,645,175 15 995,516 536,063 1.531,579 15 1,730,194 652,504 2,382,698 15 577,637 168,050 715,6S7 15 331,416 221,007 552,423 15 227,405 106,298 333,703 15 309,928 34,767 344,695 15 241,705 90,348 332,053 15 28.213 4,600 32,813 i5 53,089,566 43,728,125 96,817,691 % 9 3-10 34 2-10 10 1-10 18 6-10 10 4-10 10 4-10 11 13 4-10 30 2-10 11 9-10 10 4-10 12 4-10 11 1-10 10 3-30 11 6-10 15 1-10 12 1-10 8 5-10 11 5-10 11 9-10 16 9-10 8 3-10 13 1-10 6 14 3-10 4 9-10 14 6-10 6 9-10 14 8-10 12 8-10 23 1-10 40 8-10 28 1-10 9 7-10 17 3-10 18 9-10 21 5-10 3 3 10 30 8-10 16 1 10 13 4-10 7 9-10 13 8-10 9 2-10 15 6-10 6 3-19' 15 6-10 7 3-10 17 3 10 4 9-10 15 9 10 8 9-10 16 5-10 8 8-30 18 2-10 9 8-10 19 1-10 7 2-10 16 9-10 4 9-10 14 5-10 9 6-10 16 8-10 7 8-10 15 5-10 1 7-10 21 9-10 8 1-10 14 7-10 2 4-10 23 28 20 24 % 5-10 7-10 8-10 4-10 22 1-10 22 8 10 21 4-10 26 7-10 20 6-10 23 4-10 25 2-10 19 1-10 19 3-10 21 5-10 27 6-10 63 9-10 37 8-10 36 2 10 24 8-10 46 9-10 21 3-10 23 21 9-10 22 9-10 22 2-10 24 8-10 25 3-10 25 26 3-10 21 8-10 21 1-10 21 6-10 17 2-10 30 17 1-10 17,223,365 71,087,316 12,264,359 52.442,792 17,629,020 Albany Phi'a... Pittsb’g 14,323,247 Baltim Wash New Or'. Louis v.. . .. Cincin.. Clevel’d 18,696 021 4,329,673 2,077,464 1,341,633 10,093,627 5.276,669 Chicago 14,419,895 Detroit. Milwau. St Louis 3,572,642 2,671,975 5,569,134 1,974,275 2,8-14,263 1,831,361 2,910,744 1,335,644 4,686,979 1,489,743 864,641 338,670 782,60941,487 331.384 68,200 2,139,731 490,475 966.385 540,608 3,183,150 1,640,034 678,921 683,02S 538.584 337.510 22,792,499 25 71,087,316 25 4,818,538 25 19.460,381 25 4,246,388 25 6,176,722 1,203,311 827,096 399,584 2,621,206 3,5 6,993 4,823,184 1,361,949 876,09-1 2,909,135 24 3 10 34 2-10 16 1-10 33 5-10 20 8-10 25 25 25 19 9-10 25 37 6-10 25 24 7-10 25 21 1-10 25 18 3-30 25 22 1-10 25 19 25 20 1-10 25 21 8-10 pretending to apportion accurately either to our government or to the government of Great Britain such blame is justly due to somebody for the protracted mis¬ understanding which now enters upon its seventh year be¬ tween England and America, we must he permitted to say, in the interest ot both countries and of that commerce as wdiich is the y common should be done to life of put an both, that it is time something end to a state of things so unsatis¬ factory and so perilous. It is probably true that the diplomatic discussion of the “ Alabama claims,? under which general it has now questions at issue between the two nations, has, on the whole, been conducted with more coolness and a larger regard to consequences by the American than by the British Foreign Office. Thus much, at least, is certainly conceded by Lord Hobart, an in¬ telligent English member of the House of Commons, and heir apparent of a seat in the Lords, who has undertaken re¬ cently to bring the matter sharply up for settlement before the British public. Even Mr. Vernon Harcourt, who, under the now well known signature of Historicusi attempts to con¬ travene the position-of Lord Hobart in letters to the British press, fails to attack Lord Hobart’s impeachment of the tem¬ per in which the American claims were originally met by name become the fashion to describe all the the late , CITiES OF REDEMPTION. Boston. 70,773,263 N. York 207,410,561 Without own STATES. Circulation an OF 1 167 7 8-10 7S-10 32 31 39 37 29 32 27 21-19 5 1-10 4 8-10 10 2-10 11 3-10 19 1-10 12 6-10 4 7-10 29 25 28 33 38 32 26 231-10 3 6-10 9 3-10 7 9-10 39 1-10 2 lo 2-lu 1-10 6-10 9-10 7-10 7-10 8-10 9-10 5-10 4-10 1-10 Whig occupant of the British foreign office, Earl On the other hand, it is only just to admit that so far as our difficulty with England has been made a theme of debate in the British Parliament and in our Congress, the advantage in point of judicious language and statesmanlike self-command rests rather with the elder of the two legisla¬ tive bodies. This being the case,.it is clear that the matter has by no means past the stage at which a rational and Russell. 7 10 5-10 manly settlement of it is practicable. For, wrhile in respect Total. 430,644,235 127,378,378 17,732,018 to our foreign relations, the action of 145,110,396 Congress is less deci¬ RECAPITULATION. sively important than the action of the State Department, the Total Amount reserve. reverse required. Excess. precisely is true of the comparative importance of Aggregate in all the States $96,817,691 $6 ',809,270 $36,008,421 cities of redemption... 145,110,396 the British Foreign Office and of the British House of Com¬ 107,661,056 37,449,340 Total $241,928,087 $168,470,326 $73,457,761 mons in respect to the like relations of Great Britain. It is In the foregoing table the banks are arranged in two fortunate, therefore, that on both sides of the Atlantic we groups. The first group contains such banks as are situated find a disposition to forbearance manifested in exactly that outside of the redemption cities. These banks are required quarter in w hich forbearance is most important and can pro¬ to hold “ ’ 10,950,414 2,390,274 518,861 44 15 per cent, reserve, the hands of their where. three-fifths of which may redeeming agents in New York The other two-fifths of the or be in duce the best results. else¬ still in power This would be true were Earl Russell in England. But Earl Russell has been suc¬ statesman, Lord Stanley, whose treatment of the revenve must be cash in ceeded by a hand.' w case so far has been much less open to criticism than that The second group of banks are in the redeeming cities, of his predecessor, saving and excepting that he, too, while wnich are compelled to keep 25 per cent, reserve, one-half of conceding arbitration in principle, has insisted upon certain which may be in New York, while the otner half must be reservations in the submission of the difficulty to arbitration cash in hand. which neither the American State Department, nor the Con It will be observed that the foregoing aggregates of gress, nor the people of this country can accept. The arrival exactly with the figures in this country of a new British minister brings the matter of Mr. Ilulburd’s report, as we published them in our last prominently forward at the precise moment when it is two issues. The discrepancy arises from the circumstance apparent that something decisive must be done, and that in these tables the net deposits are taken as the basis, makes it desirable that public opinion here should find full while in the former tables we preferred to take the gross and moderate expression upon the real demands of the deposits. Strictly speaking neither is exactly correct, and United States. These, as we have said before, are not rep¬ the figures before us are certainly too low if all the clearing resented by the -average tone of recent Congressional items of 6th January are deducted from the gross deposits utterances on the subject. It is unfortunate that the suspen¬ of that day. At any rate the receipts by the morning mail sion just at this time of the habeas corpus act in Ireland should have been deducted. We give Mr. Hulburd’s tables should have led certain local authorities in that part of the exactly as he has prepared them, and after making all the British Empire into measures which have exasperated popular concessions we have suggested, the exhibit affords very feeling here; but thoughtful Americans, sincerely desirous gratifying proofs of the results which the zeal, activity and- to have the real difficulty between ourselves and Great deposits and circulation do not agree intelligence of a good administrative officer is able to secure Britain properly adjusted, will not permit themselves to a banking system w'hich is neither exempt from faults in confound with that difficulty a its machinery, nor composer] of the best or most homogeneous matter, about which there can merely passing and temporary be no sort of question either materials, as to our abstract rights, or as to the impolicy of interference for THE 168 respectable or responsible British organ of opinion, no British public man would for a moment think denying that the arrest of American citizens on British soil, *for words spoken or deeds done beyond the sphere of Bi itish sovereignty, is utterly indefensible. This is so certain to be No with them. of of American citizens in such may make an excellent topic of popular declamations, it will hardly be so much as debated in any diplomatic conference. Putting that aside, therefore, as a point already settled in our favor, and about which only the details of the satisfaction proper to be made to persons aggrieved can re-1 main to be discussed, let us reiterate our hope that serious public opinion here will at once make itself felt in favor of peace between the two countries, by giving the new British Minister and his Government to understand clearly and unthe case, [February 8, 1868. CHRONICLE. that while the arrest cases the recent civil war would really be to her a humiliation. Modern political economy has at least revealed this truth that whatever clearly establishes the right between any two countries is a positive boon to both. Now that Mr. Thornton is in Washington, certain acts done by her subjects during and the most important business a British Minister has for years been called upon to transact is vividly “ on the order of the day,” let it be distinctly made known that the opinion of this country insists upon a prompt and final reference of the matters in dispnte between U3 to a competent arbitration. TENNESSEE RAILROAD BONDS. Comptroller of the Treasury of the State of Tennessee, in October last sent to the Assembly a report on the financial and, incidentally, on the material condition of the State. In The people, not the passionate and weighty public of the United this on page a State bonds loaned to rnilroad companies. $21,465,000 . States, expect of England now to make the offer to us which, debt in form as when made by US to her, was so hastily declined. State Interest on sameturnpike1, I860, funded compa’s $3,732,843 bonds loaned to to Jan. and plank road 490,000 i interest on same to jan. l, i860, funded 102,060 2,350,0 0 A decided demonstration in this sense here cannot oe r* * Bonds endorsed for Rii. companies & city of Memphis. .. i considered in a just sense a hostile demonstration by ureat state debt proper ... ... 3,£44,60? ntaill. The questions upon which we asked before, and state bonds loaned to Agricultural Bureau 30,000 i •< 4.* flmm Interest on same to Jan. 1,1866, umded 7,200 $4,585,156 $27,679,607 should now be willing to accept arbitration, are not 111 them-1 4,585,156 mistakeably that the American unthinking, but the grave and will be found, herewith transcribed v 11 1 •li* l , 4. • 1 , , . ., 12, recapitulation of the State . -1 . ... amount of funded interest. formidable by OVCl’long gestation. Whether Great Britain was or was I Total amount of original and interest bonds $32,264,763 not over-hasty in conceding belligerent rights to the Southb.°nd8.ran.ce.n';d.$7!:000: cad'.’r8^ h0Dds.“I1;?"?* sh.ooo States, Lord Russell chose to consider a question not $32 050,763 511,561 proper In ho dkrn^pd in an Arbitration linon rnmsu resnon- | Assumed by Governor: Debt due United States by Edgefield comto oe discussed in ar Duration upon British icspuu Kentucky, and Memphis, Clarksville and Louisville railroad and selves so formidable as Total they have become ern nrnnor panics. by, sibility for certain results not perhaps brought about but Certainly made possible by that concession. But surely the question is of a large general interest—affecting not merely Great Britain and the United States, but the relations of all states. We never asked such a decision of . $32,562,324 I Entire State liabilities, actual and contingent On the 1st October, 1861, the railroad debt was in gross possible $13,959,000. Between March, 1866, and October, 1867, the State issued additional loan bonds to the amount of $8,172,000 should require of Great Britain, were that decision un- These issues, less unimportant cancellations, make up the favorable her policy, either apology or compensation for #21,465,000 as given in the first part of the above table, that policy. We simply insisted and insist that to a decision To this amount must be added the interest on the original concerning her responsibility for losses inflicted upon our com- bonds up to January, 1866, $3,732,343 ; the bonds endorsed by vessels which would never have got to sea had she by the State $2,350,000, and the bonds assumed by the govrecognized the belligerent rights of the Southern States, an ernor for certain roads $511,561. Including these the total examination of the propriety of such recognition by her is railroad debt and liabilities in October, amounted to $28,058,necessarily germane, and must be of interest to herself and 004* From this, however, must be deducted $214,000 cancelled other powers as well as to ourselves. I by the railroad sinking fund, leaving the actual railroad debt As has been frequently set forth in these columns hereto- at date $27,844,904. fore, the question whether Great Britain did or did not In Ike Chronicle of January 4, p. 26, we gave a list of properly execute her existing laws is ot less significance than the railroads in favor of which the State legislature had rethe question whether her existing laws, so far as they affect cently authorized the further issue of aid-bonds, with the international relations in time of war, are or are not suited amounts assigned to them respectively. These, in the aggrethe requirements of international justice and amity in gate, reached $4,550,000, and are, it is now said, being issued, these days. In short the “ British difficulty” is far more a which will make the railioad debt foot up no less than $32,diffieulty of temper and feeling than of conflicting national 394,904. dignity and inherent rights on the one side and on the other. The actual securities for these large sums of money are the This, which makes it particularly dangerous should also railroads that have been benefitted by their issue. On page make it particularly easy of settlement. The longer it re- 18 of the Comptroller’s Report, the length and cost of the mains under discussion the more dangerous it becomes. It several works is summed up. The length is there shown to keeps up a sort of feverish, vague, national ill feeling on be 1,390^ miles, and the cost $35,362,565. The new loans both sides. It inflames every such incident as those to when expended will bring the cost up to about $40,000,000. which have alluded in connection with the actual politi- This is the nominal cost. , Whether they are worth this it lies ready to the use of political amount depends chiefly on their productiveness, and this decal condition of Ireland, parties in this country as a means of capturing this or that pends in turn on the business activity oLtlie country, of popular sympathies. It is always in the mind of We give the above facts in relation to this State’s indebtedthe Continental cabinets in their calculations upon the part ness in answer to many inquiries, and we think they furnish which England may be made or expected to play in the) all that is necessary for our readers to form an opinion as to the value of the securities now being offered/ it as to merce not to to we class growing complications of Europe. Let it then be settled—settled for the benefit of both countries, even though the apparent triumph in the settle. ment should be with the United States. We have no wish! to humiliate England, no interest in her humiliation, no sort of belief that a decision in our favor as to her liability for* I BOSTON STOCK FLUCTUATIONS, We are indebted to Mr. Joseph G. Martin, of Boston, for the following tables of stock fluctuations at the Boston Board of Brokers: February 8, 1868.] THE CHRONICLE. fBOSTON- NATIONAL BANK*. ,—Dividends. r-1866.-^ r-1867.-s Atlas 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 Broadway,.... 5 City 4 0 .. Blackstone.... 5 .Boston (Old) Boston tfoylston Highest .. 5 5 5 5 6 5 5 96# 108 5 GO G 98 EJiot 5 Everett 3 3# G G .... all G , .... Howard B. ofRedemp.. 4 New England . 5 • North 5 N. America... 4# Pawners’ 4 124 118# 100# 123# 1G0 100 102 Republic 5 5 G 101# 116 10(1# 108# 4 5 G 110 5 . .... 134# 152# 121# 135# 112# 125# 92# 107 5 5 4# 3# 125 Second 7# G b 7# 120 Shawmut Shoe & Leath 5 G 4 4 G 5 G Suffolk. ..... Third 4(J 4 4 ...4 5 4 4 98 4 Traders’ 3# 3# nemont....... 5-5 3# 3# 5. Union 105 102 5 5 Washington... G G G 4 4 * 127 103 112 100 141 114 121 111# 92# 103# 110# 125 112 128# 14G 103# 140 4 153 103# 117 88# 105 G 5 Webster 133 123 109 105 5 5 5 102 130 119# 139 140# 113 97 129 112 97# 107 123# 150 G7 *105 State 125 114# 100# 120 98 108# 125 95 94# 102# 302# 115 113# 130 +4 144 111 115 120 107 115 100 100 115 96# 105 4# 144 127 98 102 107 98 103 107 ... Revere 128 118 132 110 120 1G9 13G 130 115# 13Q 93# 113 98# 10G Massachusetts Maverick Mechanics’... Merchants’. ..5 Mt. Vernon 5 125 115 112 103 H’ghest 108# 120 HI# & lowest. 114 121# 119 1C8 63 131 105 1(5 113 129# 128 118 116# 141 135 115# 109# 120# 112# 121# 117# 110 110 106 114# 144 120 120 118 104# 148 131 iro 131 140 125 142 l4 1S3# 145 103 110# 105 111# 115 125# 109# 117 104# 122# 90 121# 108# 110# 123# 128# 107# 117# 102 109# 90# 104 125 128 13G 13G 12',# 151# 110 120# 121 80 133 112# 111# 120 108 112# 97# 105 113 138# 117# 127 118 101# 111 128 Dividends. . Boston & Lowell 5o0 8 Boston & Maine 100 9 Boston & Providence 100 10 Boston & Worcester... 100 10# Bust., Con. & Montreal 100 Boston. Hart. & Erie 100 4 5 5 4 5 5 5 5 &lowesr. 4 5 5 5t 3 Highest 3 . 90 115 100 Cape Cod GO 70 o 9 Cheshire, preferred.... 100 Concord Connecticut River 4# §1# 6# GO 5 2# ' 60 0 5# 5 100 8 8 4 Passum., pref. 100 6 3 100 4 Fitchburg 100 Granite Railway...... 100 Indianapolis *fe Cinn... 50 8 7 6 19 96 8 8 5 6 5 .. 50 0 100 10 1(;0 0 100 8 100 11 Nashua & Lowell. Northern (N. H.).;,.... Ogdensburg& . .Cham. 100 Ogde. & L. Cham., pfd. 100 Oid Colony & Newport. 100 Poit., Saco <fc Portsm.. 100 Bundusky & Cincinnati 50 Taunton Branch Vermont & Ca ada 100 100 Verm.&MuSsachueetts Western ... Wilmington Worcester & Nashua 4 8 G G 100 100 11 3 50 r’r' $8 75 50 69# 125# 104# ' 105# *78# 100# 114# *40 28 332 32# 113 50 129 120 141# 112# 58# 106 *96# 108# 94 304# 3 4 26 *35 105 iy 116 91 104 39 70 4 O +5 4 1 8 112 HI *108 87# 101 52 122# 9.7 58 149 134 111 100 39 128 60 300 *35 104 52# *53 ^ 188# 56# *52 # 117# *114 Nashua & Lowell. 20 p. c. in stock* Aug 3. Western, 3!) stock, July 10. X Boston and m ore. & V estern, consolidated as Boston & Albany, share for share, Dec. 1; quotations ot the latter since. The 13. <fc A. pays the Worcester 10 p c. extra, teb. 1, 1668. § Camb. Jess State a; d Government taxes in October. p, c. in STATE, CITY AND RAILROAD BONDS. -1806. Interest. Albany city (municipal) G’s, long... Albany city (Western Railroad) G’s. Augusta (Me) city, 6’s, 1870 Bangor (Me) city; 6’s, 1874 Bath (Me) city, G’s, 1891 Boston city (gold interest) 5’s, loug. Boston city (currency mt.) G’s, ’71-6 Boston and Lowell Railroad, G’s, ’79 May Nov. Jan. July May Nov. Apl. 2 Oct. Jan, July Divers. Divers. onnecticut state, G’s, 1881.. and Jan. July Ea-u-rn Railroad, 6’«, 1874 Feb. Au<*. Han’bal & St. Joseph I’d g’t 7’a, ’81 Apl. Oct? Lynn city, 6’s, 1887 Feb. Aug. St te, G’s, Jong Divers. MdBsach’etts State (gold int) G’s, ’76. Jau. 97# 101# 98# 88# 98# 90 93 98 102 103 95# 1 <# Highest lowest. 93# 98 92# 90 90 100 100 90 Ex-interest* . 96 98 95# 96# 90 95# 92 105# 105 102# 102 100 97 9.# 37# 91# 96# 93 38# 66 59 99# 100# 97# 99# 99# 98# 92 92 97 94 100 9># 94 90 97 97 July 106# 118 108# Massach’etts State (gold int) 5’s,long Divers. 93# 101 98# Michigan Central Raiilroad, 8’s, 1882Apl. Oct. 106#*112# 107 New Hampshire State, G’s, 1874 Jan. Juiy 90 100 97 N. Y. <& BostRR “ Air Line”:G’fl,73 pasted. 34 26# 45 ♦ 96 101 97 100 95 112 90 ♦108 100 100 94 97 100 100 100 95# 120 98# 95 93# 99 116 105# 103# 113# 110 100 55 42 104 93 90 93 100# 90# 95 100# 97# 41# 96# 103# X‘5# 101 15(i7 40 1868. BULLION Increase. Decrease S2,065,889 7,330,131 $...... 48,258 shows the eight NEW YORK. $2,472,895 $1,941,169 $ 126,719 124,720 ...... following statement AT 1868. $533,726 1,999 ...... $5 3,725 $4,778,775 $5,264,242 $5,312,500 $ receipts and shipments in the years : -ReceiptsExports to Excess of Excess of Total, Foreign. foreign ports, receipts. expoi t-. $1,941,169 $124,729 $2,065,889 $7,330,131 $5,204,212 2,472,89) 120,719 1,48 .,314 1865 ISM 1863 1862 1861 939,201 2,337,682 2.199,533 163.568 4,185,105 The 7,262,229 18G7 and 1868, GENERAL ' . , comparatively: MOVEMENT OFCOIN 48.258 2,706,336 8,184,858 5,459,019 4,624,574 2,6o8,2~4 58,394 11,388,440 AND BULLION AT NEW 1868. Receipts from California $2,472,895 Imports from foreign ports..... ' 126.719 7,485,945 .' 31,577,951 Total reported supply E sports to foreign ports Customs duties .. 324,720 4,468,550 $2,462,980 Bal. derived from unrepo’d sou’s $14,584,721 $6,133,944 specie in banka ...... ~ $3,577,609 $ 1,986,182 3,147,762 January, 1807 and 1868, 12,983,351 $9,405,742 1,936,182 ’ 9,835.589 $1,271,798 at the opening and closing' of follows: was as 1867. ntfwi on $10,971,969 22,955,320 Increase, Decrease1 16.332 9*4 ~ 16^332,984 $ $2,213,268 $3,147.762 closing 1868. $13,185,222 opening Increase i ‘‘ $8,026,771 $4,778,775 $ 2,315,795 $ At l’yqy .... 4,092.806 4,468,650 $10,085,559 $18,112,330 $2,551,356 $7,330,131 9,62j,385 •7,804,590 Excess of reported supply Excess of withdrawals.. Bank specie increased Bank specie decreased At YOFK. $12,071,741 .... Total withdrawn The amount of 295,173 Increase. Decrease $ $513 726 $1,941,109 Coin interest paid bv u.t Com for bends of 1847.. 4^378,088 2,184,986 , 1367. , 1,148,251 1,089,128 ....... the details of the geueral move¬ port in the month of January, bullion at this „ 2,551,356 11,447,334 following formula furnishes ment of coiu and T. 2,599,614 1,558,085 2,095,725 1,08 i/»91 2,439,588 2,363,101 72,771 52,208 141,7*0 101,906 2,043,457 .... $12,963,351 $9,835,589 the month. 7,623,336 ftlotietarg anb (Hoinincrciat ®nglisf) JLi. RA'AES Of E ACIIANCrE AT LONBOiXj AND ON Al LATEST OATES. u. LONDON ■ —r EXCHANGE AT LONDONJAN. 24. EXCHANGE ON LONDON. LATEST ON— TIME. BATE. ; DATE. TIME. RATE. 2. GO 97 88# 95# 90 IOC# 114 108 91 100 95# 92 100 98# 100 76 54 25 > 1868 Jan. and 91 95 95 AND 1867.' 18G7.—» lowest. 93 98 90 __ Apl. Oct. Bbeton, Concord-& Montreal, G’s, 89 Jau Ju.y Boston, Hartford <fc Erie R.R, 7’s,84 Passed Cambridge city, G’s, 1875 May Nov. Charlestown city, 6#, 1874 Apl. oct. Cheshire Kailroad, G’s, 1880 Jan. July Chic., Burl’ton & (Quincy RR, S’s,33 Jan. July Chicago.city, 7’s, long. " Jan. Ju y < Highest When payable. 100- 99 75 99 62 77# CalUorna. * Ex Dividend. t Extru Dividends. COIN $2 599,614 2,551,356 month of the last 1863 1867 1366 *55# 85# 98 99# 102# *101 32# 34 $33# 132# 149# 0*13^ 62# 4 75 99 81 *107 49 110#- 102 36# 77# 50 3 same 321# 28 123 115 90 The 118# 51 50 OF Excess of exports.... Excess ol imports 98 *12u 102 34 SHIPMENTS Tot >1 receipts ports 110 *108# 126 55 44 123 AND Export to foreign 105 180 104 114 *112 100# 74# 98# 1121# MOVEMENT—JANUARY, Receipts from California Imports from foreign ports 141# 72# $72# 112 90 3 $4 65 39 0 4 1# 119 60 46 59# 99# J17# 4 RECEIPTS 100 130 134 & lowest. Jau. 2. 112 125 *121 125 138# *132 130 143 *131# 139 150 + 338# 70 80 75 a# 17 13# 86# 95 90# 70 *66 ' $08 52# 05 ♦GO# 95 June X Dec. 79 June* Dec. 23 May Nov. 100 Jau. July 90 Apl. Oct. 94 111 1868, 76# receipts und shipments of coin and bullion at New York in January, 1867 and 1868, compand ively, were ai fol¬ lows. This table usually accompanies our Moulhly Review, but wc were unable to obtain last week some of the figures necessary for 13 preparation : 320# —, Highest 62 the month of 119 105 45 5 0 to 5 5 80# 112# *27# 104# 121 . . 4 4 ■ 3 73 06 70 112 98. 104 U 8 8 3 04 43 59 102 4 5 5 0 5 4 3 4 3 3 0 .. 4 3 4 4 4 Manchester & Lawreu. 100 85. 0 5 4 Metropolitan (hor .e) Michigan Central Middlesex (horse) 133 12G# 142# 127# 14S .. Cambridge (horse) 116 ,—1867 93 .. Mar. Sept. June Dec. The from GO to 100, in 1305. par ^-1806.-^ , Jan. Par. ’66. ,—1867—, ’08. COIN AAD BULLION 104 112 114 109 110 RAILROAD COMPANIES. 91 96# 93 97 91# 91 101# 97 100# 98# 97# 98# 93 97# 93 '90 <D# 90 96# 90 92 99 90# 96# 94 90 100 97# 100 98# 67 li5# 120 150 139 .35 22# 61 60 40 84 89# 76# 86# 82 Ex-interest. t Vermont Central Old, l9t Paid in bond scrip Juue and December, 1867. mortgage in 186G. + 100 121 125 120 143 1(0 105 131# 100 107 ♦ 128# 128 Divers. 1900 Vermont State, G’s, 1816 Vt. Cent. R, consoli’ted 1st m, 7’s,’86 Vermont Central R.R. (2d m) 7’s, 91 Vt. Cent., & Vt. & Can. R, 8’s, ’76-7 \ermont & Mass R.R. (m’t)O’s,’a3 Western Railroad, G’s, 1875.... 105 116 120 122 Passed. ...May Nov. Sandusky & CincinnatiRR., G’s, 110# 107# 120 110 103 99 R tilroad (2d mort.) 7’s.’63 St. Louis city, G’s, long. Salem ci‘y, G’s, 1877 67 63# .... Colony A Newport R.R, 6’s* 76. Mar. Sept. Passumpsic Railroad. 6’s, 1876 June Dec. Portl’d city (nay’e in Boston) 6’i,’77 Apl. Oct. Rhode Island State, 6’s, long Divers. Rutland Railroad (1st mort ) 7’s, 63. Passed. Rutland 1868. Jan. 2. 121 114# Eagle, actual sale at auction, Sept. 23, 1S65. July and Jan. } State, changed Central RR* 6’s, 1883 May Nov. Ogdensburg Railroad (lsr m) 7’s, TG9 Jau. “July " Old ,—1S67.—^ 12G t Dividends Conn. & Eastern 120 120 1 25# 94# 103 118# 150 112# 174 5 4 5 4 5 Market *168# 115 120 104 123# 102 110 108 125# 134 5 G Freeman’s 5 Globe 5 Hamilton G Hide & Leather 7 14G 110 112 119 110 140 11G 110 5 103# 112 3#New. 100 .. 71 125 100 103 10G 103 105 105 101 108 5 i. GO# 93# 108# Eagle Exchange 83 117# 130 5 4 5 .... & lowest. 105 130 104 120 115 130 102 120 120 117 5 Continental... 5 M.aine Highest 97 105 Columbian,... 5 Commerce Faneuil First ,—1860.—, Apr. Oct. Apr. Oct. & lowest. 5 5 5 5 97J£ 111 Atlantio New York ,—1865.—, , 169 Amsterdam I. short. Antwerp. - 3 months >. Hamburg Paris Paris I - ii,n#@ii.i8# i J an; 24. ......... short. 11.92#® 11.93 25.32# @25.37# 13. 9#@13. 9# 25.16“' @26.17 25.3d <4^25.35 “ short. 25.12# @25.20 ’3moDths, 12.l7#<2li2.28# Vienna Berlin u- 13. 8 ’@ 25.15 @ ' “ Valparaiso.... Pernambuco.. Singapore 60 days. Hong Kong... Ceylon 45. id. is. id. 8 p. c. dis. 98# Bombay 1«. 52 Madras Calcutta U. lOi^lj 1 s. 10id-lsl0|d lQid-U 10id l.p* +T — 25.32#@ — lOfcf a «<* m .Ji Jan. 24. Jan. 23. 3 mo’s. 80 S3 dayB. 53 Jan. 24 '60 days Dec. 27. '90 days. Jan. 24.- De . 4. Dec. 12. Dec.. 10. Dec. 31. Dec. 18. Jan. 1. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan'. 109# 1 p. c. (60 days. H #@ 12 20 ® 2 49 - S 45# @ 20 6 mos. iS. 16. 17. 14. 16. • Us 2 4#rf.@ 3#rf.@ a- lk®»# ' 4 @ _ pe 1*. 1 l#rf U. 11 d is. no- ' 8Qday^Lal® l#p< £ v \ — 6.26#(& 6.2G# St. Petersburg; 32 % 32# Cadiz...... 485«@ 48# Lisbon j-90 days. 61#® 51# Milan 3 months, 29.40 @29.45 Gepoa I “ 29.40 @ 29.45 Naples 29.40 @ 29 45 j “ New York j Jamaica I Havana 1 Rio de Janeiro j Buenos Ayres. jftydney3Qdays. 8 mo’s. i 4 » s THE 170 [From our own Correspondent.] London, Saturday, January 25, 1868. previous two weeks to have been inducted more cautious principles. At Manchester manufacturers have been demanding rather higher prices. Buyers, however, are by no willing to purchase at any .advance, and hence since the rise there been fewer transactions. As regards cotton and cotton goods’ there appears to be no doubt that buyers are acting wisely in only pur chasing to supply immediate wants, although should manufacturers run stock they would not operate prejudicially to their own interestsbecause further decline in prices can scarcely be expected. But the other hand, there is no great prospect of any important advance comparative state of activity noticed in the week somewhat subsided, and busiuess appears The has this on c means have into any on during planters are in order to and moving in India the is likely to average that of last season. By some it is remarked the East Indian cotton planters will not sell at the piesent low price?. But when we come to examine the matter more closely, we find that India will be compelled to export freely of her produc tions, else she will be compelled to make large shipments of specie this country. A fu ther slight fall in the Indian exchanges would the export of silver more profitable as a remittance than the shipment of bills of exchange. In order, therefore, to meet what would of trade agaiust her, India, if it is in her power to do so ship cotton rather than gold or silver. The heavy fall in the value has materially altered the relative p sition of England and While cotton was so dear, silver w;s transnntte l to India in large quantities, and the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company was deriving an annual profit of £120,000 from the traffic there is not only no demand for silver for shipment to the but the exchanges indicate that specie is now likely to be trans¬ mitted from Bombay to England. Probably, however, shipments of will be checked by increased exports of Indian productions, and is yet a large supply to come forward ,the present season, and it seems clear that the Southern not in a position to hold their produce, but must sell freely meet the expenses they have incurred in planting, picking the crop. lu Egypt the prospect is not encouraging, but Of American cotton there [February 8, 1868. CHRONICLE. bales will bo favor of state Thursday in March, and it is probable that about 120,000 brought forward. It is expected that prices will go rather in buyeis. The iron trade continues dull, and m an unsatisfactory while nearly all other branches of business are quiet in the extreme. The trade for wheat has been in a most inactive state. Millers have shown but little disposition to purchase freely ; nevertheless, the trade, as regards all good and fine qualities, has been firm, and, in some stances, a slight rise has been established in prices. Inferior wheats are dull and difficult to sell. The weather is now very damp and mild, and the condition of the samples has been affected to a considerable extent. From Sept. 1 to Jan. 18 our imports of wheat into the United Kingdom were nearly 6,500,000 cwts., and our exports from the Kingdom about 144,000 cwt. greater than in the corresponding in 1866- 07, Our imports (f flour are about 20,000 cwt. less, and our exports 3,000 cwt. more than in 1866-67. The particulars of imports and exports are subjoined : iu. period these WHEAT. Imports Fr January 4 Week ending that “ “ 468,985 567,256 455,336 is*.’.’.! Total lull or to a Sept. 1 to Dec. 28 Week ending January 4 of uottou India But now East, silver especially of cotton. '■ 9.118 9,340 17,716 2,333 1.485 15,612,712 258,368 402,401 1,319,735 6,175 9,930 1,335,925. “ “ 44,756 80,058 50,771 60,689 386 716 954 311 7.'7 135 1,541,103 “ 1.512,153 8,031 11,103 86,121 74,301 11..., 13.... Total balance will 380 FLOUR. render be 389,460 237,932 9,102,456 crop cwt. cwt. 13,261 114 871,159 684,485 825,954 7,610,829 l to Pec. 28 Sept, 18G6-67. cwt. cwt. m— Export? > 1867-68. / —, 1867-68. 1360-07. improve- market remain without position of the money supply of money seeking employment T lie tone and in the discount mar¬ ket is still very large,"and is considerably in excess of the requirements of borrower?. At present there appear to be uo signs of any material increase in the demand for accommodation, for notwithstanding there has been a slight augmentation iu the extent of our trade, business is still carried on at low prices, and therefore the supply of capital re¬ quisite is comparatively small. Foreign loans are sp ken of; but foreign loans do not meet with much favor, and it is uot therefore ex peefed t’ at they will be rapidly introduced. The loan for Hungary has at length been advertised in England ; but as it has also been ment. The companies which have introduced at Paris, Frankfort and Vienna, it will not probably attract the United States by means of theelectii the Atlantic Telegraph Company and the much attention iu England. It is also said that a Turkish loan will Anglo-American Telegraph Company. It will be remembered that the shortly be brought forward. The rates of discount, so far as the best latter the company which laid successfully the cable, and managed descriptions of papes are concerned, are now as under: bills days’ bills lii@l% months’banktrade bills.... 2 @2% pick up an l join the broken cable of I860. According to the months’ 2%@3 months’bills original undertaking the Atlantic Telegraph Com} any hive the power bank bills 1%@2 of buying up the Anglo American Company, and the Directors have On the Continent, the value of money has not materially changed lately issued proposals to their sharehol ?ers, and the public to subscribe during the present week. At the leading cities much quietness con¬ £1,800,000 preference stock, beaiing ten per cent, interest, and being tinues prevail, but the quotations are mostly unchange 1. The sup¬ second charge upon the property. A meeting was held yesterday to ply of bullion held by the Bank of France now amountsrates of to £41,084,652 the discouut consider the proposal: but nothing definite was arrived at, the meeting while discounts are at £20,465,820. Annexed having been adjo :rneI until the 25th of February to obtain time to the leadiug cities ; Op. m’kt—, /—B’k rate—* Op. m’kt—* further consider the matter. Many persons seem to be in favor of the 1867 1868. 1SGS. 1867. 1863. 6 whole concein falling into the hands of the oiiginal company, and it 3 2% 2% 2-2% 2% 3 2% 2%~2% 4 4 4 4 would certainly be advisable that the management of the two cables 6 4 8% 2\ Hamburg. —2% 2% should be in the hands of one board of directors, and that there should Frankfort. 3% 2% 3% \%-2 Petb’g. 7 7 8-9 8-9 4 3% 3 unanimity in the management. Latterly, however, the two boards Bills of exchange have continued iu demand, and the rates obtained have held different views in respect to important matters ; but so far management i9 concerned, I am far more inclined to the Anglo- indicate that the outflow of gold is likely to continue. All the recent amounts of gcId have now been absorbed, and as our American than to the Atlantic Telegraph Company. The former com-, pany has been in favor of a more moderate tariff, while the latter was expected arrivals will be small, it is believed that some considerable very perverse in its opposition to the reduction from £10 to £5 5s.; withdrawals from the tank will be rendered necessary. The American the experiment h:s now been tried, and has proved successful, eagles, which have been received from New York this week, have been but it is to be hoped that should he Anglo-American Company fall by dispose 1 of on Continental account, at an advance of £d. per ounce. purchase into the hands of the Atlantic Telegi aph Company, the Silver remains extremely quiet. There is still no demand for trans Atlan ic Company will have previously been converted to moderation mission to the E ist, yet prices remain unaltered. The quotations for in their charges, not only for the benefit of the mercantile body, both lullion subjoined ; for the benefit of themselves and here and in the United States, but also <&standard. the shareholders at large. If, howe^ er, the Atlantic Telegraph Com¬ do Refinable @77 pany should persist in making heavy charges for the transmission of last price. messages, the Directors will by such acts be in firectly promoters of Spanish Doubloons American Doubloons. 3\ last price. States Gold Coin.... lines, which will ultimately not only compel them to reduce their charges, but will necessarily withdraw from them a large portion of 0% ©standard. their business. containing 5 grs. gold do last price ®In the early part of the week the cotton trade was dull, and prices Silver 10% last price. little squabble connected Great Britain and telegraph, namely, between There is a between the two was to r'er 6 4 & 6 30 to GO 3 4 Pgi* Cent Dent months’ to to a are at B’k rate— 1867. At Paris.,... Vienna Berlin 4 Brussels Madrid ... - .. 0 - . - St. Amst’rd’m 4 be 1867. 1868. 0 Turin as a9 are GOLD. 8. Bar Gold do Fine do .per oz, . .. new ' do .per oz. . South United 77 77 78 76 73 76 .. .. do do SILVER. S. the close there has been au ac¬ £d. per lb. has been established in the quotations. The sales of the week are larger than for many weeks past, the totalling 100,890 bales. In the trade for wool much inactivity continues to prevail. The first series of public sales for the present year will be commenced at the end of February, or on the first had tive drooping tendency; but towards demand, and an advance of about a Bar Silver do Fine Cuke Mexican Dollars d. 9 9 0 0 9 d. — ©- s. 0% 5% 4 cent. degree of firmness, Quicksilver, £6 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per In the Consol market there has been a fair — — — d — 5 per oz, d. — 5 r @- 5 .per oz. ...... s. — — — and Consols have been as high a9 93 to supported during the closing days abundance of money, and prices have somewhat improved. 93£, but that quotation has not been of the week. However, with the continued THE CHRONICLE. February 8, 1868.] indisposition shown on the par t of the public to invest in the shares of pub ic companies, it seems manifest that, if there are no political complications, the Consol market must continue to rule firm. The highest and lowest prices of consols each day of the week are subjoined: 171 Fri. d. Thur. ending Jan. 25 Monday. Tuesday Wed’y. Week Consols for money 92%-93 92% -93 92%-93 Sat. Friday. 92%-93 • Sat. d. Mon s. d. 6 6 s. Rosin (com Wilm ).per 112 lbs “ middling.... ‘ “ fine . 3 3 11 0 29 0 1 2 24' *6 ' b. Tu. d. 24 *6 42 0 8. 6 3 11 0 3 , 11 0 29 0 1 2 pale “ Sp turpentine “ etroleum (std white).p. Slbs spirits.... per 8 lbs ~ugar (No.12 Dch std) p. 112 lbe Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs. 11 11 0 28 6 1 2 29 1 24* 42 6 0 Thd- s. 3 0 0 6 2 6 0 2 24 "6 42 0 Wed. d. 11 29 1 6 3 11 0 0 11 29 6 1 2 “ Clover seed (Am. red) 92%-93 92%-93 8. 6 with the • • 42 “ • 3 • .. • • .... . . 24 ”6 42 0 . 24 42 6 0 ... London Produce, and Oil Markets.—The quotations of last week quiet, and rather dull. are unchanged. Linseed cake £10 10s., linseed oil £36 10s., sperm oil United States Five-Twenty bonds, though firm in the early part of the £110, and whale oil £36. week, are now dull, while the securities of the Atlantic and Great Fri. Bat. Mon. Tu. Wd. Th. Linseed cake (obl’g).p ton 10 10 0 1010 0£10 10 0 £10 10 0 £10 10 0 10 10 0 Western hailway Company have slightly relapsed. Erie and Illinois oil “ 3610 0 3610 0 3610 0 86 10 0 36 10 0 36 10 0 Central railway shares are steady. United States Five-Twenty bonds Sperm oil “110 0 0 110 0 0 110 0 0 110 0 0 110 0 0110 0 0 Whale oil p. 252 gals.36 0 0 86 0 0 36 0 0 36 0 0 36 0 0 36 0 0 close this evening at 71 £ to 72-|; Atlantic and Great Western railway debentures 24£ to 25 ; do. Consolidated Mortgage bonds 23 to 24 ; Erie Latest: Friday Evening, February 7# Railway shares 48£ to 49£, and Illinois Central 85^ to 86£. The Consols are unchanged. U. 9.6’s are lower, the quotations being 71$. highest and lowest prices of the principal American securities on each Illinois Central shares 87|, and Erie 47£. day of the week, are subjoined : Including 9,000 on speculation, and 18,000 for export, the total sales Week ending Jan. 25 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday. of cotton at Liverpool last week foot up 105,000 bales. The stock io port and on shipboard counted 840,000 bales, of which 184,000 are 72 U. S. 5-20’s 71%-72 71%-72 72 -72% 171%-71% 71%-72 Atlantic & G’t West¬ 1 American. The market continues active and strong, the sale* to-day ern consol’d bonds 24%-2G 24%-25 2i%-24% 24 -25 I23%-21% 23%-23% Erie Shares ($100).. 49 48%-49 48%-49% 48%-49% j 48% -49% 48%-49% laving been 16,000, at8d. for Uplond3 and 8J for Orleans. Illinois shares ($100) 85% S5%-85% 85 -86 85%-8o%!86 85%-86% There is no change in provisions. Advices from Frankfort state that with the exception of American Peas have declined to 45s. Tallow has advanced to 42s. 8d., and securities, which were dull in consequence of the fluctuations in the lard to 64 s. All other articles of the reported list are unchanged. The London produce and oil market continues dull but gold premium at New York, the Bourse was firm, and the tendency of steady at old prices was favorable. There appeared to be but little disposition to quotations. invest in United States Five-Twen-y bonds. The market for American securities has been “ -.... -.... COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Kiiffllsh Market Reports—Per Cable* The daily losing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬ pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as following summary ; Money and Stock Market.—Consols, which fell off £ point on Monday have fully regained last week’s closing prices 93£@93&. U. S. 6’s have been steady, and close at 71£@72. Illinois Central shares are firm at 87@371-. Erie shares are lower by 2 points than at the shown in the London opening, the last price being 47. are selling at 26(326 J. Fri. “ for account.. 49 Tues. Wed. 93%@% 93%®% 93%@% 93%®% 93%®% 93%®% 72%®% 72%®% 72®?;*% 86% 86% 87% 48% 48% 48% 1 26% 26% 72% 86% U. S. 6’s (5 20’8) 1862. Illinois Central shares Erie Railway shares,. atl. & G. W. (consols) 93% 93% 76% Franktoit 71% 87 48 87% 47 76% 76% 76®76% 76 75%®% Liverpool Cotton Market.—Sales week ending Jan. 24 (for expor^ Stock then in port (146, 000 Amer.) 396,000 bales. Sales reported by telegraph during current 80,000 bales. The market, after prices advancing, the closing quotations per lb. on Fri. Sat. • *• Orleans Mid.Upld8.to arrive 8%d dull turn, is again active and showing an average gain of ± Mon. 10,000 7% Tue's. 10,000 . Wed. 10,000 7% 7%®% 8% 8®8% Thu. 15,0r0 7%®% 8®8% 7% 8 7% .... 20,000 7%®8 8%(g 7 %®% Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—Wheat and flour have lost in price— wheat 3d. per cental and flour 6d. per bbl. Corn is 9d. lower than at the opening, but 3d. above the lowest of the week. Barley aud oats maintain their established quotations. Peas are 3d. lower. The mar ket close! quiet. Sat. Fri. s. Flour, (Western)—p. bbl Wheat (No.2 “ Mil. Red) p. ctl ( Jalifomia whitej “ (West.mx’d) p. 4801bs Barley( American) per 60 lbs Oats (Am. & Can.) per 45 lbs Peas.,(Canadian) pr504 lbs Corn d. 37 6 14 6 16 0 43 9 5 6 3 11 46 0 Mon. d. 37 0 14 3 16 0 d. 37 0 14 3 16 0 43 9 5 6 3 11 46 0 s. 43 6 5 6 3 11 46 0 s. Tues. s. d. 37 14 16 42 5 3 45 0 3 0 9 6 11 9 Wed. s. Thu. s. d. 15 9 42 9 5 6 3 11 45 9 37 1 14 9 15 6 43 0 5 0 3 18 45 9 d. 37 0 14 3 Liverpool Provisions Market. -Beef, pork and bacon have been dnl throughout the week, and close at a material decline of prices. Beef is 2f. 6d. lower, closing at 117?. 6d., pork is lower, closing at 73s., ant bacon 6d. lower, closing at 39s. L ird has advanced to 53s. 6d. Cheese remaios at the old quotation. Fri. d. 0 0 39 6 52 9 52 0 8. Beef (ex. pr. mess) p. 304 lbs 120 Pork(Etu. pr. mess) p 200 lbs 74 Bacon (Cumb. cut) p. 112 lbs Lard (American) Cheese (fine) it tt tt tt Sat 8. 120 74 39 53 52 d. 0 0 0 0 0 1866. I860. 1867. $749,634 $4,380,620 General merchandise... 2,215,643 2,841,953 $3,152,844 Total for the week.... $2,965,177 6,792,741 $7,222,573 17,917,499 $4,207,960 Since Jan. 1 $9,757,918 $25,170,072 $19,163,477 Dry goods In our Mon. B. d. 119 74 39 53 52 0 0 0 3 0 Tues. s. H9 74 39 53 52 d. 0 0 0 6 0 Wed. B. 117 73 39 53 52 d. 6 6 0 6 0 Thu. s. 117 73 39 53 52 d. 6 0 0 6 0 Liverpool Produce Market.—Rosin of all grades is unaltered. Tur pentine is 6d. higher, closing at 29s. 6d. Tallow closed at 42s., being 3d. loss in the week. Sugar is without change. The market is steady 1868. $1,821,856 3,055,116 2.626,769 $3,947,624 14,955,517 9,557,989 $13,505,618 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Feb. 4: The the port EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1865. Previously reported 1866. 1867. 1868. fM16,660 14,900,512 For the week $5,917,607 17.405.006 $2,881,102 $3,218,009 $23,322,613 $16,789,651 17,405,006 $20,317,172 Since Jan 1 13,908,549 18,360,704 __ $16,578,713 The value of of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive specie) for the past week, and since January 1, compared with the corresponding time of last year, is shown in the followingtable; -1868.- This week. To Wdfek. , Since Jan. 1. $1,974,582 J6,673 781,077 59,122 1,717,795 743,836 873,939 222,120 1,125,361 12,355 Europe. $8,672,270 1,156,808 652,152 Germany Other Northern 1867. / Since Jan. 1. $1,710,930 216,829 167,761 Great Britain France Holland and Belgium 65,693 505,884 31,789 Spain Other Southern Europe... East Indies China aud Japan , 48,432 $11,059,855 65,049 195,708 * 9,700 43,655 176,484 Australia British N A Colonies.... 26,518 642,893 690,251 253,128 845,847 202, m 716,738 53,63i Mexico New Granada 10,400 123,333 121,102 Other West Indies 780,262 193,551 130,486 101,511 11,765 Hayti. 352,295 144,161 Cuba 46,512 82,719 British Guiana Brazil OtherS. American All other ports The 75,311 ports.. 5,500 112,938 119,763 416,589 849,918 32,257 1,800 397.279 49,480 Venezuela 42,566 91,177 195,470 11,585 61,771 146.278 219,444 38,102 following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending Feb. 1, 1868 : Fork for the week Jan. 30—^t. “ Weser, Bremen- Foreign silver .... 30—St. Weser, HavreForeign silver.... Foreign gold Gold bars “ Week.—The imports this week small increase in a the lowest of the week. Bale sold 15,000 Pri > Micid. Uplds. ?%d the Previously reported.... 93%@% 93%®% 71%®72 19,000, and cn spec. 12,000) 113,000 bales. week for dry goods and a large increase in general mer¬ chandise, the total being $3,947,624 against $2,614,435 last week, and $3,687,491 the previous week. The exports are $3,218,009 this week, against $3,269,323 last week, and $8,678,601 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 17,276 bales, against 9,647 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week end¬ ing (for dry goods) Jan. 81, and for the week ending (for general mer¬ chandise) Feb. 1 : a Thu. daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort were— The show Exports and FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. Mon. Bat. 93%@% 93%®% Consols for money.... Atlantic and Great Western Consols Imports SO—St. Weser, Total for week London- Previously reported Total since * . January 1,1868 American gold. $12,500 American silver 2,500 Gold coin 10,000 Jan. 31—Bk. Damom, Buenos .. $1,200 15,000 8,000 88,200 .. Ayres— Spanish gold 41,600 $169,100 7,270,726 $7,439,826 11885538.. ;. . i72 Strue time iP„ 1867. 2,827,804 3,253,070 J&M 1865? Ieo4: 2363 1862 1861....-; 8,919,535 at this port during the week have been as imports of bpocie ... cran:‘25,—'Sch; G. Banker, Aruba, follows:' Gold ore 1-Villede Paris, Havre- Feb. Gold $2,009 “ Chauncey, Aspinwall— . ; Gold i the week.* Previously reported.... Total i< Total since Jan. 400 $3J,484 91.286 $124,720 — * 1,1868 California.—The steamship Henry Chauucey, from Aspinwall January 24' arrived at this port Feb. 1, with treasure to Treasure from _ following consignees: the FROM SAN Belmont <& ,Co,t A, & Co Eugene Kelley We 1 A Ob.'.-. ... Moritz M yer Totallrdra & Lsnmau FRANCISCO, CAD. Duncan, Sherman <feCo Leps & Waller Wblls, PaTijO & Co 78 98 00 59 84 $10,563 238,780 94,700 67,118 70,839 RfitfroadCo. Panama Kemp—from $31,634 ?3 $<,298 583 80 540 00 Aspinwall 1,299,123 88 ihe arrivals of treasure from San Francisco since the commence meet of the year, are shown in the following statement; Tbtdl from San Franc’SCO . arid Aspinwall............ 'Since I Since -J*a. U j Date. Steamship. At date. Jan 1. Jan. $989,464 I Feo. l.H .Chaunceyl,298,i84 $ <239 ’ 7f8 ,• , . 1,941,170 j; National Treasury.—The following forms present a eumm iry of cer¬ tain weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom Houses. —gtesuiBlilp. AVdate. 9 Jfieing Star $939,464 22. Arizona. .’.I *051706 tmtbT 1.—Securities held by , Date. the U S. Treasurer in trust for National banks Total. For U. S. Deposits. For Circulat on. . ■«” “ . , 11 T8-. 25 ' 378,760,700 87,817,950 , 341,210,400 1.. Feb. 37,817,950 378,873,500 37.767.950 87.827.950 37,827*950 . 341,055,550 341,450,950 841,175,590 . .. $378,815,700 $37,817,950 • Dec" 23 '.....$310,997,750 Jau.' A. „.<... . 340.942,750 “ 379,003,540 373,038,350 379,^*18,900 (weekly and segregate), and the notes) returned, with the amount id circu¬ Sole. issued. Notes Notes in returned. Aggregate. Circulation. —national batik currency imued ' S (including worn-out amount lation at date:> WpH. weeK $55,650-■ 71,770 150,150 'Dec 4 Jan. •*- If “ ia “ ■ ' *"'• .Current week. $305,486,461 ■'ending.' 25 t.. 560,931 711,081 805,849.961 805,912,711 305 9 .8*751 305 305 138,880 02,750 1'.....U6,040' Feb. ' - $299,833,606 $5,625,555 5,726,955 6,228,065 ' 6,283,655 6,322,965 ■ 6,435,815 - 299,833,976 299.483,016 249,566,296 299,589,746 299,542,936 received from the Currency Bureau by U. S weekly ; also the amount destroyed; Receive!. Distributed. DestrovM $539,500 458,604 $264 606 •: 399,000 358,628 253:600 434,009 194 571 391 400 590,000 544,514 451 400 560,500 371,736 349 100 ..... 613,000 281,476 . . 623,245 ...• ....530,000 502,186 ^lOO account of Internal Revenue weekly, and the total 8.—Fractional currency and distributed Treasurer •Weekending. 21. Dec.. 28 4 “ Jan. 11 “ < J8. ........ 25....;....;.,' M i . 1 Feb. 4.—"Receipts on July 1 to date : • from • •, Curreritweek. Total to date $2,140,600 $98,26l,00n Jan. 4 •; 0,251,172 - 104,512,542 7.744,807 107,579:77? ‘ 13., 2,178,00-1 109,757,77? 25... 3,429,224 313,187,Ool Fpb. 1. . 1,567,310 114,754,81g ^Assistant Treasurer’s Statement for January.— The following ia official statement of the business of the office of the Assistant Treasurer of the United States, in New York, for the month of J, nuary Y/eek ending. Dec. 28... ’ - .... . 1 " an 1868 ; RECEIPTS AND Dec. DISBURSEMENTS. 81,1867, by balance.. Receipts during On account the month: Gold notes. Internal revenue per ivnt. 1,775,010 00 Certificates. Miscellaneous Disbursing accounts Assay office Interest accounts ... Total Payments during - ' the month: Treasury drafts....;. Post-office drafts. B i sbifi^ing aecunnts r.p Aesa»-Office .. •. •. Interest accounts, viz,: In coin ■ v. .... Ill currency Balance ... ■''Balanceto Cr. Treasurer , U. 8............,„r* 2,500 00 . 600 00 Superior 6,000 00- Total deposits, payable in bars.. Total deposits, payable in coins Gold bars stamped Transmitted to U. S. Mint, Philadelphia, $57,000 00 $269,000 00 160,000 00- 429,000 00 197.962 47 23,958 00 for coinage. &l)e Bankers' ©alette. DIVIDENDS, The following Dividends have been declared PPR name of WHEN CENT. company. pay’ble Banks. Manhattan Company "National Bank during the past week :' 6 5 5 Brooklyn Feb. 10 Feb. 10 Feb. 1 At Bank. At Bank. At Bank. 5 6 of Republic. BOOK# CLOSED. WHERE PAYABLE Feb. 3 Feb. 4 Feb. It- Company’sOffice — • " insurance. Irving F re New York Fire. City Fire (per share) $5 • Compan^’sOffice Company’sOfllce Friday, Feb The Money — 7, 1868, P. M. Market.—The bank statement showed a departure from the late tendency in favor exhibited an increase of 33,200,000, while in decided of ease. The deposits the loans there was the unexpected gain of #8,000,000, and the legal tenders were down nearly #2,000,000. The large increase of loans was partially dtie to the purchases of United States Securities by the banks, which they usually include in their statement of loans. The loss in legal tenders was chiefly the result of withdrawals into the Sub-Treasury. The currency thus taken out of the banks, however, has been returned probably this week, through payments for Seven-Thirties bought by the government at the close of January. This change in the position of the banks, however, has had no perceptible effect upon the loan market. The supply of funds has been very abundant through the week, and on call loans the rate has remained easy at 4@5 per cent. At the close of the week the banks are making an effort to put out their balances, and in some cases offer round amounts on stocks at 4 per cent. The commercial demand for money is very limited. There is more movement in trade, but as yet little paper has come upon the market, and rates are easy at 6@7 per cent, at banks. The following are the quotations for loans of various classes : Per cent. , Per cent. 4 @ 5 Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 3 months v- United States .. Good endorsed bills, 8 <fe 4 months © 7 single names 6X t Lower grades I -- 6 do 6#® 7# 8 Qh 9 10 ©20 than of late in Securities.—There has been less movement this class of investments. week ago. As prices are now so unusually high, there railroad bonds and to be a disposition to employ money in rather than in Governments; so that any perhaps not to be anticipated until other further advance securities have risen. Committee of the Senate has reported a bill for con¬ 41 904 21 17,214:220 90- 92.181,219 95 solidating the public debt, which virtually gives to the holders of Five-Twenties the option of having their bonds exchanged for a 5 - $193,264,443 11 --per cent. Ten-Forty bond, or of having them paid $63,197,893 48 ... States notes. There is considerable doubt on the street whether 987,418 35 The Finance off in United $60*546,682 43 through Congress, and therefore there ia little disposition to di?count its effect. The bondholders are persistently indisposed to believe that any measure will be ultimately adopted which at all sayors of repudiation. such 16,046,501 84 1,169,408 00— 95,771,736 52 ' • gold).. Nevada is 221,629 01 - Colorado Lake in stocks 14,128,91:0 85 ,v.. r. $18,000 00 25.000 00 5,000 00 Foreign coins appears 817,540 46 13,911,000 00 6,024 25 19,515,971 82 16,424,320 01 — SILVER, INCLUDING PURCHASES. Foreign bullion United States onllion (contained in tions of a 587.128 61 Post-office Department ; Transfers Patent fees $3,000 00 4,500 00 864,500 00— $372,500 00 The unusually high prices have partially checked buying, and it would appear that the advance movement has about culminated. The speculative operations among dealers have abated, the market being too steady to afford encouragement to such transactions. The firmness of gold, together with the steadiness of Five-Twenties supported the $101,083,223 18 market; and at the close prices are abroad, liasabove the quota¬ per ceut. 69 $7,204,683 14,< 54,620 00 of customs Three States Assay Foreign coin.' Foreign bullion United States bullion. ... r “ Office for January.—Below we give the statement of business at the United States Assay Office at New York for the month ending January 31, 1867: United 504,U00 00 79,7^7 22 201,722 12 iDabuey, Mo’gan & Co Francisco.- San Assay oflice— interest accounts DEPOSITS OF 23,454 Gold disbursing accounts. Balance to Cr. Balance to Cr. DEPOSIT# OF GOLD. $800 1—Henry 6,821 29-^. Georgia, Vera Crux—. . • ** • Belize— 27—Bark Pallas, Gold “ 142,385 127,064 1,846,608 913,744 942,21911852 I860....*... The $2,912,659 7,673,888 2,265,097 1857 1856 1855 1854 ' 6,121,695 ' 4,624,574 2,658,274 68,894 13,098,175 45 2,476,018 12 . 1,880,189 59— 97,492,706 59 Receipts for Customs in the month of January, 1867 ... $9,520,384 99 7,204,589 66 Receipts for Customs in the month of January, 1868 Decrease in January, 1868 $2,315,795 27 Balance to Cr. Same time in 1859. $3,190,309 [February 8,1868, CHRONICLE. THE $97,492,706 59 .. a bill can pass THE CHRONICLE. February 8,1868.] following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬ and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds sold at the Regular Board on each day of the past week : pared with preceding weeks: The Dec 27. Jan 3,’68 Jan. 10. Jan. 24. Jan. 31. Feb. 7. U.S. 6’s, 1881 coup........ U. S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons. U. S. 5-20’s, 1864 “ U. S. 6-20’s, 1865 “ U.S. 5-20’s, 1865, N. Ibb... U. 8. 5-20’s, 1867, c U. S.10-40’s, “ U. S. 7-80’s 2d Series U. 8 7-80’s 3rd series... 108# 107# 105# 105# 105# 106# 10S#x C 104# ioe#x.c.i04# 101# and 101# 104# 104# 104# 104# 111# HI# 108# 110# 111# 108# 109# J12# HI# 109# 107# 107# 104# 107# 107# 107# 107# 103# 107# 109 no 107# 107# 104# 107# 107# 105# 101# Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market has . Railroad 109# 108# 100# 106% 105# 105# 102# 105# 112#x.'c.l08% been unsettle ! and, on the whole, weak. There has naturally been period of reaction and quiet s ucceeding the late upward excite¬ incapable of persistence in any mood—and certain cliques who had realised on their stocks when prices were highest have availed themselves of the temporary dullness lor break¬ ing down the market and getting in stocks at lower prices, pre„ paratory to a new advance movement. Outside operators have been somewhat confused and intimidated by these operations, and have sold a good many stocks, but the cliques appear to have held on firmly. Prices have declined at periods during the week 2@4 per cent., and a considerable amount of stocks appears to have gone into the hands of the new combinations. Yesterday and to-day the market has shown much more firmness, and the “bearing” operations seem to have been suspended on most of the shares except Erie. The supposition is that a leading director in Erie requires a considerable amount of the stock, and is_endeavoring to keep down the market with a view to buying ; t here are however, large holders of the stock inter¬ ested in keeping up the price, and they resist his efforts persistently. Apparently, as the market now stands, there are few interested even temporarily in keeping down prices, and the predominant policy among the cliques seems to be to promote a steady advance. Rock Island has fluctuated violently, in sympathy with the litigation in the company’s affairs. The price, after touching 103, suddenly fell off* to 97$, in consequence of the introduction of a bill into the Iowa Legislature confirming the action of the Directors in selling the 49,000 shares of new stock; the price closes at 98$@99. The prospective result of the pending suits appears to be involved in much uncertainty. The following were the closing quotations at the regular board, compared with those of the six preceding weeks : a ment-—for Wall street is Jan 17. Dec. 27 Jan3,’68 Jan. 30. Cumberland Coal 32 22 51 Quicksilver Canton Co Mariposa pref.... New York Central Erie Hudson River.... . S2# 21# • • 117# 72# 132# Reading 96# x.d.92% 6o# 85# 107 Michigan Central xd.107# 87# 89# 98# 97# 7i# 94# 97# 132# 300 • 33# 26 - 36# ... 27 25# 53# 23# 58% 58# 123# 124# 76#' 74% 3 41) 143 94# 92# 87.# 87# 108# 98# 101# 131# xd.129# 74# 74# 145 146# 95# 95# 89 24# 61 • 27# 30# 88% 128% 74 147 91# 91% 112 94# 103 96# 60 64 60# 72# 72# 97# 109# 133# 31% 9«# 112 61 70# 99# .. Jan. 24 Jan. 31 Feb. 7. .... • 58 preferred Rock Island Fort Wavno Illinois Central Ohio & Miss • 50# • Mich. Southern.. “ • 15 13# 117# 72# 332 Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... • 96# 100 73# 97% 304% .185 .... 32# 30 32# 99 102# 136# 32% The following statement shows the volume of transactions in shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of the Week, closing with this day’s business SaL 157 65,335 Bank shares,. Railroad “ Coal “ Mon. 72,542 67,987 156 Mining “ Iroprov’t “ • Telegraph*1 Steamship** Express “ • 1,000 400 650 800 984 5.605 4,810 2,165 Wed. 116 There. 167 77,116 62,574 55,755 388,809 500 330 310 900 400 3,066 4,710 1,800 3,200 7,325 6,270 2,250 6,275 4,350 13.370 Fri. Week. 239 985 3,023 4,6*28 5,780 11,513 4,00) 7,060 6,200 5,785 100 400 200 600 5.261 200 Exchange Board 24,290 24,795 43,698 57,787 51,357 47,320 29,196 51,991 34,179 Open Board... 31,541 57,135 Total current week. 67,988 Total Previous w’k. 124,249 82,582 139,695 83,676 98,677 75,955 81,187 92,398 76,639 495,749 shares for Guano At At ** . Tfie transactions in the 94,154 Company B’nds. several weeks 200 42,460 87,177 are 19,667 35,4 5 32,097 1,700 195,858 300,391 613,628 shown The totals for several lation*. Weekending 1*3 ,10. “ 17 11 {24 “ Feb. 31 7 Im¬ Coal. Min¬ ing. prest Tele- The following is 888,304 3,066 a summary Steam- Friday. 8 Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 4,'710 13,370 19,667 14,673 16,858 27,525 44,681 25,041 27,057 32,379 21,073 82,850 31,645 28,495 23*688 42,498 31,831 292,821 836,028 404,775 251,464 364.061 356,604 459,590 54,073 30,013 461,909 26,475 15,511 xo^io id,on 18,375 17,515 365,405 569;569 23,365 27,269 558,805 36,608 15,211 6*6*124 41,146 18,738 613,628 85,445 33,797 495,749 of tbe amount of Government bonds 152,000 < 137,000 44,00o *- 87,000 151,200 69,000 .-448,200 following tabu¬ , Governments—)—, Notes. Bonds. State & Company.. City Bonds: Bonds. * 297,000 930,500 295S 00 245.500 1,63'',350 .292,250 191,250 136,900 697,500 1,091,5' 0 491,0 0 359,500 544,500 267,000 175,000 220,500 241,000 157,800 174,000 Total . amount 181,300 8,396,600 2,005,200 -. 1,623,600 13 20 2,019,100 3,121,500 1,497.500* 2,256,400 5,003,600 4,379,500 398,500 170.500 111,600 188.500 8,805,450 4,567,000 8,ol7,000 2,6*9,100 2,415,360 2,858,300 ' 3,864.500 2,150,000 392.600 639 000 102,000 92, £00 191,800 247.000 862,5U0 3.908,100 4,144,500 7 1,425,900 439,000 931,600 912,0 0 1,088,000 42b8,600 27 3 10 17 24 31 Feb. 108*800 > - 2,497,450 15 22 29 6 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. 29,000 -* Week. 758.500 ~4,!44;$00 74,000 - 10,009 - 329*300 72,000 -207,000'' - 778,000 past weeks are shown in the 527,200 329,500 742,000 315.000 8/471,200 6,501,250 7.140,000 5,672,600 6,492,300 778,000 448,200 6,700,000 893,850 - The Gold Market.—There has been • speculative move¬ Congress of the. correspondence between the President and Gen. Grant, relative to ment in the Gold Room. more The introductioa into the reinstatement of Sec. Stanton in tbe War J)epar!mentf-apdThe investigation of the letters by the Reconstruction Committee with view to finding therein a basis for impeachment, has produced an unsettled feeling in Wali street, and revived the political excitement upon which the late advance in the premium was chiefly predicated. Yesterday and to-day large amounts of gold have been bought, causing an advance to 142$. The Senate debt consolidation bill, and Mr. Henderson’s measure for increasing the circulation of the National Banks has also had a tendency to strengthen the market. The steamers sailing on Wednesday and Thursday took out #826,Q#0 in treasure, which had its effect in confirming the expectation of a renewal of the exports of specie. The “ short” interest continues comparatively light, coin being loaned at 5@6 per cent, for carry¬ ing, which so far indicates a prevailing expectation of lower prices. The price closes at 142$. ••-••• • -;jThe fluctuations in the gold market, and the business at the Gold ' Board during the week closing with Friday, are shown in the fol¬ lowing table : ;.' ■ •/ a ’ • Vi * . . -Quotations. * HighCiosTotal est. Range, ing. cleuriDgs. Open- Lowiug. est, Saturday, Feb. 1. 140# 140# 3. 141 140# Monday, “ 4. 141# 141# Tuesday, “ 5 141# 140# Wed n1 day, “ 6. 141# 141# Thursday, Friday, “ 7. 141# 141% . .—Balances,-r-^— Gold... Currency. 140# $58,964,000 $2,398,960 $8*5171300 141# 30,467.000 1,438,1)^7 ■ 2,0291784 141# 49.817,000 1,652,*44 ‘ 2,249*607 141# 43,608,000 1,915.01$ 2,77-2,116 141% 51,202,000 2,170,524 8,069,074 0# 142# 67,186,000 1,3.10,555 as^5(8 MO# 0# 141# C# 141# 0# 141# 0# 0# 142 142# 138# 142# 142# 286,804,000 10,051,452 15,620,479 2# 140#$S22,916,000 11,062,714 15,628,912 9# 142# The movement ot coin and bullion at this port for the Week Current week .... 2 140# 140# 142# 139# 141# formula ending on Saturday, Jan. 3L, was as shown in the following i 1' ' Treasure ».*•>> *. *■ Mports of coin and bullion from foreign ports Com interest paid from U. S. Treasury — Coin payment of bonds of 1847 (principal) Jan. 1 to Feb. 1 new supply thrown on Withdrawn for export . Withdrawn for customs market •83,434 • : ; 8,09t,95L ' 72^,450 $3,806,590 $169,100 n 2*244,948 2,075,843— Withdrawals in excess of reported new supply Reported new supply in excess of withdrawals Specie in banka on Saturday, Jan. 25 Specie in banks on Saturday, Feb. 1 Increase of specie Decrease of specie : $961,706 receipts from California in banks in banks .$... ....... 1,651,647 v r........ $25,106,808 23,055,820 - . ri - . $—/ 'S.Z — ...1,151,488-- 1,161,483 .... $^0,’64 Actual excess of reported supply: balance retained in private hands Actual deficit in reported supply: balance from unreporied source* -» w.... 1 ; :, t . • The transactions for the week at the Custom Houseiaa<3 , * Sub- Treasury have been as follows : Custom House. Sub-Treasury , Receipts, $204,949 26 Total 916,907 87 798,135 41 447,610 63 4121,106 21 419,356 31 30...; 31 Feb. 1 “ Balance in Payments. $2,326 595 06 319,479 18 272,335 22 29 “ graph. ship. Other. Total. 227,961 1,256 4,450 4,650 21,912 603 235,204 720 1J600 4,760 21,835 390 327,571 1,171 1,050 4,700 17,032 906 160,215 394 5,000 1,800 17,607 738 178,852 493 lfriO 2,750 16,138 936 12&30 4,900 12,428 813 273,119 850 7y906 7,265 24,370 470 344,402 210 318,603 3,860 5/750 12.050 37,350 371 270,060 2,755 2*650 14,100 24,483 6 3 487,891 8,970 14]970 10,400 16,315 1,542 458,052 2,500 15,260 16,950 13,277 414 586,791 1,060 *8'522 23,530 14,038 999 513.729 6,850 6,260 13,950 11,956 985 , Fri. Thnr. : “ 1, 01 “ ' Wed. Tries. 615.000 -899,500 542,060 740,000 1232,300' 839,2001,044.500 3,70d,0f 0 1,88:1,750 510,600 739,600 1,013,550 5'492,300 Total Cur. w’k.$ 881,000 1,463,000 Proviousweek.. 1,095,5001,000,$00 “ Jan. 52,000 Jan. 27 28 Rail¬ road. * in following statement: Weekending— Bank. 45,000 Reported : 412 000 100 1,248 1 600 101 Tucb. 211 . Previous week. .. 140 Jan. 1 ’68, to date 133# 97 112 74# 100# 102# Sat. Mon. J. S. Bonds... .|272,000 1,-157,500 U. S. Notes..... 12,0 0" ’ 95 500 State* City b’ds 52,000 K8,0*)0\ '* 2,58',290 54 - '' 17,653,217‘26 548,783 28 - Receipts. $4,7Q5,221 44 1,648,987 11 2,238,380 01 2,4$ifJ82 18 4,38,64 : 95 1,^7 04 $15,990,Ei 8 53 107,684,4; 5 69 $24,S26,878 92 $2,075,842 81 Sub-Treasury morning of Jan. 27. $123,524,999 27 Deduct payments daring the Balance week Saturday evening. Decrease during,the week. • • • r -TS* • ... *. • <>•*•• % • . f • a, Total amount Of Gold Certificates issued, in the receipts of customs were •in Gold Certificates. U • 17 on • • • « « * • •• < c • \9 ’.7-ilX 1.. $98,698(120 35 * .i; . 8,830*315 34 m<y* ! I.O^ftded gold, «$d 01,9^.84. following table shows the aggregate Treasury since Sept. 7 : The Custom Weeks House. 1,688,123 Ending Nov. 2...“ » 1,023,857 1,732,655 1,466,212 1,234,300 1,513,528 1,077,723 1,195,245 1,057,759 1,158,795 ... 41 16 23 “ 30.... Dec. 7. 44 14 4^ 21.... 44 28.... Jan. 4.... 44 11.... “ 18.... Feb. 1.... ... “ .. .. 1.633,802 1,532,133 2,075,842 transactions at the Sub Balances. Dec. 13,370,657 Inc. 4,170,020 Inc. 4,864,488 1.352 315 Dec. Payments. Receipts. Balances. 35,004,751 22,525,004 101,254,567 36,505,760 40,771,780 105,430,587 14,083,338 10,827,827 110,295,076 24,237,034 22,874,687 108,032,729 80,105,136 28,228,390 107,055,082 38,446,544 36,029,049 104.62S.488 7,618,195 8.642,314 105,652,607 21,656,778 18,237,767 102,233,596 8,301,20 5 10 317,156 104,240,546 12,582.646 07,564,723 10,267,464 41,181,472 41,441,821 07,825,078 11,094,740 18,437,114 105,167.453 24.826,878 15,990,553 98,098,120 Foreign Exchange has been Dec. 2,427,496 Dec. 3,410,011 2,015,950 6,084.810 269,350 Dec. Dec, Inc. Inc. Dec. 1,024,119 7,342,371 8,83(5,315 the week, firmer throughout from any activity of demand than the mid-week mail rate3 for prima 1,87(5,747 Dec. Inc. less For from the scarcity of bills. bankers, sterling, 60 days, were 109} @110; to-day rates have ruled } lower. The following are the closing quotations for the several classes of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : F- b. 7. do do bkrs’/rt# do shrt Paris, lonrj —— do Short Jan. 24. 108%® 109% 109%® 109% 109%® 110 5 17%®5.15 5.15 @5.12% London Comm’l. 108%® 109 109%®.... 108%® 1' 9% 109%® 109% 110 ® 110% 6.16%@5.15 5.13%@5.12% 5.20 @5.16% 5.18%g>5 16% Antwerp 6.20 Swiss 6.18%@5.16% ©5.16% 36%® 86%@ 36% Hamburg 110%® 110% 5.15% @5.14% 5.13%@5.1T% 5.16%@5.15 Manhattan Merchants’ Mechanics’ Union America Phoenix... City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical..1 Merchants’ Exchange.... National Butchers’ Mechanics and Traders’. Greenwich Leather Manuf. National Seventh Ward, National. State of New York American Exchange Commerce Broadway Ocean ; Mercantile Pacific.. Republic Chatham People’s North American Hanover Irving Metropolitan rr. Citizens Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange Continental 5.16%@5.15 516 @5.15 @5.15 30%@ 36% 30%@ 36% 41%®.... 41%@ 41 © 41% 41 © 41% 79 © 793a 79 @ 79% 71%@ 72% 71%@ 72% .... 1,000,000 2,000,000 750,000 300,000 400,000 300,000 1,500.000 2,000.000 500,000 300,000 400,000 350,000 Marine Atlantic Traders’.. Mechanics’ Banking Ass. Grocers’ North River East River Mcr Central National Second National 300,000 1,000,000 Ninth National First National 500,000 1,000,000 Third National New York N. Exchange. 300,000 Tenth National 1,000.000 Bull’s Head 200,000 National Currency 100,000 Bowery National 250,000 Stuyvesant Eleventh Ward Eighth National New York Gold Deposits. Tenders. $869,311 $7,795,613 $2,2537,568 1,407,190 11,506 '4.066,798 893,550 5,563,664 1,159,916 592,000 4,122.189 1,203,145 785,267 4S5.749 8,5382,348 1,455,040 1,820 7,429,8 >1 4:31,0053 322,890 3,083,405 3,950,1-15 1,385,8353 G67,4l2 760,745 1,921,015 tion. 132,660 80,006 20,181 22,511 481,135 49,729 11,167 49,227 2,813,601 2,673,036 4,989,500 4,145,1 IS 4,591,377 2,9 57,165 Exch’gc 590,249 753,490 945,015 7,245 561.081 116,033 242,127. 7,140 369,000 98,473 500,002 944,007 4,913 6,680 19,718 992,440 808,611 75,283 11,54 4 1.142 1,1(51,887 1,358,036 1.196.267 8,157,158 233,500 22,9532 13,171,455 9(52,464 814,624 1,440,735 854,399 1,390,877 500.000 19,0(53,(562 5,000,000 3.000,000 14,156,539 Park Manufacturers & Fourth National 736 12,(24 817,346 2,950,328 16,043 1,701,785 270,000 50,274 889,242 419,074 209,297 794,604 32,406 268,611 3,498 27,5300 900,400 8.514 6,789 32,639 90,000 225,000 3,519 1,152,872 5,550,842 3,556,247 3,5309,731 995,287 2,837,200 1,368,3534 255,577 635,581 412,043 417,003 999,978 735,583 2,500 1,060,220 250.000 ....... 82,520,200 266,415,613 23,955,82034,062,5 1 Total. Legal Net Circula Specie. $3,000,00 $0,339,696 $6,120,074 375,445 5,417,876 2,050.0000 962,270 3.000,000 7,494,412 384,312 2,000,000 5,395,671 290,640 1,500,000 4,726,523 2,423,336 3,000,000 7,519,393 312,393 4,354,692 1,800,000 1,'000,'000 3,859,994 1,172,050 18,195 1,000,000 8,104,172 128,717 .1,833,5324 2,094,704 600,000 598.313 5,291,470 5,525,920 300,000 451,933 2,612,721 18,695 3,357,556 1,235,000 856,991 492,909 198,527 1,500,000 2,689,950 1,694,100 262,800 40,5300 2,377,100 800,000 195,720 1,352,915 18,015 600,000 1,950,727 675,186 3,038 200.000 1,029,999 469,948 265,384 2,530,164 600,000 3,281,194 7-77,159 178,325 48,278 500,000 1,250,486 4,658,383 3530,0(0 401,170 2,(XX),000 4.562.267 0,800,388 991,858 629,751 5,000,000 10,190,691 9,506,108 10,000,000 24,590,169 2,064,701 5,983,537 119,523 900,000 4.818,091 1,000,000 5,938,323 2,011,598 796,932 17,871 1,000,000 3,077,742 481,197 3,107,058 59,163 1,000,000 3,645,402 1,332,154 134,085 15,419 422,700 1,721,712 858,750 3.167,442 437,931 4,451,507 2,000,000 2,031,481 2,031,203 129,051 75,469 450,000 6,492 1,091,5353 35,904 412,500 1,330,632 1,981,728 61,540 333,000 1,000,000 2,207,651 1,505,511 291,5386 93,5339 1,000,000 2,435,519 1,121,000 187,431 10,000 500.000 1,609,000 8,138,921 4,000,000 11,707,209 2,033,303 2,209,780 1,311,288 20,702 132,201 400,000 1,419,048 2,047.743 4,093 58,565 1,000.000 2,179,782 Commonwealth Oriental Importers and AMOUNT OF- Loans and Discounts 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 The deviations from the returns 1,956,884 1,214,810 2,724,8533 3,1 42,5382 2,5534,814 2,076,818 94.3,704 1.561,797 1,036,473 7.504,219 17,5302,264 1,094,546 769,085 1,158,194 514,957 1.027,871 10,951,401 14,159,581 851,514 5,92:3,155 3,971,157 2,42;,790 684,089 1,908,700 89(3,844 2,104,595 - 817,116 227,5388 506,(300 4553,958 105,299 799,006 319,535 2,399,551 2,2.-7,109 5,948,902 1,730,535 742,611 811,866 45313,0533 1,099,057 537,8536 125,102 - 608,300 420,567 469,000 1,914,333 3(58,326 521,113 688,566 507,898 921,8533 520,0. 0 321,000 621,SIS 211,079 698,120 *861,713 1,910,150 4,071,409 5»*,4U0 259,118 202,0.7 224,315 175,8 )3 4.482,062 4,57.,090 211,086 2,289,978 1,072,442 845,895 234,549 70(3,100 1,621,051 313,041 3053,914 5341,8153 319,068 9 IS, 150 77,177 11-1,818 *50,842 2'30,269 1.406,498 213,330,524 65,197,153 of the previous week are as fol¬ Inc. $8,023.512 Loana Dec. 1,151,480 Specie.' Circulation The Dec. Deposits Legal Tenders 15,645,265 16,074,305 16,32 >,383 16,607,491 . 16.782 432 . 10,827,423 16,836,937 7 . . 21. 28. 4. 11. 18 25 1. Legal Aggregate . . Philadelphia tion. 244,165,353 13,468,109 34,019,101 244,620,812 10,971,969 34,134,400 249,741,297 12,724,614 34.134,-391 253,170,723 19.222.856 34,094,137 256,033,938 23.191.857 34,071,006 268,392,101 25,106,800 34,082,762 266,415.613 23,.-55,320 34,062,521 52,604,919 17,064,184 177,632,583 178,713,191 187,070,786 194,835,525 205,883,143 210,093,084 58,311,43 i 60,657,932 62,111,201 63,753,116 (6,155.241 67,154,161 213,330,524 65,197,153 473.151,502 449.140.304 10,646,30! 202.436 205,142 10,642,669 10,636,835 196.747 10,632.599 235,912 Deposits 34,987,676 34,609,821 34,479,328 Circulation £04,041 10,639,000 400.615 320,973 279,393 248.673 34 800,235 36,621,274 37,131,830 37,457,089 37,312,540 £7,922,287 10,639,096 10,641,752 10,645,226 10,638,927 Jan. 20. Specie....' Legal tender notes Due from other banks Due to other banks Deposits Circulation (National) Circulation (State) $42,100,600 97,533,435 841,196 16,344,037 16,980,161 15,832,769 17,901,063 14.707.379 1 Boston STOCK (Marked thus * o[ d; O National.) u CO Broadway Brooklyn Bull’s Head* 500,00( 25<>, 00( 25 1,000,0(X 6() 300,00( 5() 200,00( 2;5 800,(MX 50! 100' Continental Corn Exchange* ... Currency Dry Dock East River Eighth Filth First First — (Brooklyn). ... Eleventh Ward Fourth July.. Jau. ’68 Jan. and July. Jan. ’68.0 Jan. and July.. Jan ’6S Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’68 . Quarterly— Mech. Bank. Asso.. Meehan. & Traders’. Mercantile Merchants’ Merchants’ Excli... Metropolitan Nassau*... (Brooklyn) National (Gallatin) New York County. NewYorkExchange Ninth North America. — 1,000,00: 2,000,00'. 50 3,000,001 i... Republic St. Nicholas’ Seventh Ward Second. Shoe & Leather Third 637,449,923 York. Stuyvesant* 619,797,o69 528,503,223 .... Union .. Tradesmen’s - . .... Williamsburg City* 600,CO 600,00 1,000,00 100, 3,000,00< 1001 lOOl 200,00: 300,00' 100, 100 1,000,0(M 1,000,0G 60 7.. 500,00' 50- 1,235, (MM 100 4,000,00: 100; 1,000,00 100 300,0(M 50 1,500,00< 50; Oriental* Pacific . 100 25 50 50 25 100 50 50 North River* Tenth. . . . . Jan. Jan. Jan. Nov. Jan. Nov. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. ’63 ’68 ’68 ’67 ’63 ’67 ’63 ’63 ’68 500,001 ! 200,001 100! 5,000,(MX Fan. and July... Jan. ’68 30 600,(MM May and Nov... Nov.’67 500, (MK Mechanics’(Brook.) Sixth State of New Jan. ’68 ’68 Feb. ’63 100“ 1,000,0(M Feb.and Aug... Oct. ’67 100; 100,(KM SO! 200,00( Jan. and July.. Jan. ’63 5(>! 350,001 Tan. and July... Jan. ’68.. 100 250,00( fan. and July... Jan. ’68 lOOj 150,006 Jan. and July... Jan 68 lOOj. 500,00( .Quarterly Tan. and July... Jan. ’6S 100 25 50 100 Mechanics’ Park .j. Jan. and . 200,000 300,000 Grocers’ 1.000,000 Hanover Importers & Trad... 101 1.500,000 50 600,000 Irving LeatherManufact’rs. 50 600,000 400,00 Long Isl. (Brook.) .. 50 50 2,050,00 Manhattan* 30 252,00 Manufacturers’ 100 600,00 Mauufac. & Merch.* 100 400,00: Marine New York . . Market Bid 400,00( 1,000,00: 300,00' 422,70' 100! 2,000,001 25 20; 100! 100 100 KX) 100 too LOO LOO LOO 100 40 5( 50 412.50 1,800,00 2,000,00'. 1,000,00' 500,00 300,00 1,500,00 Fune and Pec.. Dec ’67 Nov. ’67 May and Nov.. Fan. and July... Jan. ’68 Fan. and July... Jan. ’68 Fan. and July.. -. iJan. ’68 Fan. ’68 Fan. and July.. fcb. ’68 Feb. and Aug.. ’eb ’68 Feb. and Aug.. '’eb. ’68 Feb.and Aug.. Fan. ’68... Tan. and July. FaD. ’68 Ian. and July.. Fan. and July... fan. '68 Tan. and July... fan. ’68.. Tan. and July... Fan. ’68 fan. and July... Fan. *68 May and Nov,.. Nov. ’67 May and Nov... *ov. ’67 May and Nov... Nov. ’67. Tan. and .Inly.. Fan. ’68 Fan. and July... Fan. ’68 fan. and July... Fan. ’68 Jay and Nov.. Nov;’67 ran. and July... Fan. ’68 Vpril and Oct... Jet. 67 fan. and July... Fan. ’68 fau. and July... Fan. ’68 fan. and July... Fan. ’68 ran. and July... Fan. ’68 fan. and July... Fan. ’68 ran. and July... Fan. ’68 fan. and July... Jan. ’68 Jeb. and Aug... Feb. ’68../ Feb. and Aug.. ?eb. ’(IS ran. and July!.. Ian. ’68 ran. and July... Fan. ’68 'an. and Jnly... Fan. ’(8 '’eb. and Aug... feb. ’68 ‘’eb. and Aug... •eb.’63 fan. and July..-Jan. ’68 Fan. and July.. «.ran. ’68 fan. and July.. «] an. ’68 Jav and Nov... 1,000,00 1,000.00 1.500. O'! 50GrKl I .... 1125 118 f ..X .... i 6 -r 12 ”* c • l. . . . .... 5 101% 1 6 6&£ . .. . 6 5 6 5 5 no’ 5 iOO 4 1 10 3% . .... ( 110% 1)9 HO .... .... • . I 99 - . .... ... * C\ * f f .... .... f . ... .. f 208 t .... .... .... t 103 f 156 4 103% 1C t t ms' ’ 5 117% . .... 4 1( ! t t . .... its’ ’ .... .... .. ... .... . 104 .... - U7’‘ . . .... .... . ? 114 ! f f t . .... 4 ( < t 5 . . • .... .... .... .... 1 107” 6.? 129%; 130 OS r ! t 09 1 i 40 ( ! 4 % 1 f. f' •... .... .... .... • .... • • 104 04 04 .... 122 02%! 103 ... ... j . 7;i 1, 43% " 04% ! • 112 • , . . .... • • • ...» .... . 01 .... 07 • ’67 !' 09 .'iJan. ’68 Juty...JJnn. ’68 f 200 00 an. and %n. and 0m. and 135%' i < ! ! 200, (XM 2,000,00' Jay and Nov... Nov. 1,000,00 Ask 4 : Greenwich* 1221,563 f .. Fulton. Gold Exc.lv nge Nassau Nov.’67 Jan. ’68 . Commonwealth 24,628,103 Friday. JaD. ’68 Jan. ’68 300,0(M .Quarterly— 400,00( Jan. and July.. 100! 1,000,00< May and Nov.. 50! 300,00( Jan. and July... 10010,000,001 Tan. and July. 100 750,001 Ian. and July... 100, 2,000,00( fan. and July.. 10( ) 2.r Commerce 42,891,128 j Jan. and July Batchers & Drovers 10(j 3,000,00< Tan. and July Central 5() 200,00( Tan. and July Central (Brooklyn). 2.' 450,00< Feb. and Aug Chatham Chemical Citizens’ City City (Brooklyn) 14,655,358 Last Paid. Periods. Amount ' (Brooklyn). 18,816,036 LIST. 100j 3,000,00( Jan. and July.. America* 100, 500,00( Jan. and July.. American American Exchange. 100 5,000,00( May and Nov. v 75 300, (KM Jan. and July.. Atlantic : Atlantic Bowery 777,627 3 6,73*,229 Dividend. C’AriTAL. Companies. F«b. 3. $41,100,000 96,895,300 14,887,337 41,991,170 24 561,906 226,258 41 904,16.1 24,700,091 217,372 BANK not Jan. 27. $12,100,000 97,4(34,763 926,942 .. 483.266.304 603,884,525 Banks.—The following shows th§ totals of the Specie. the Banks.—The following are the footings of National banks for this week and last: Phoenix of weeks past Deposits. Tenders. Clearirurs. 247,450,084 15,805,254 34,09-’,202 174,926 355 52,595,450 472,956,918 4,954,308 447,000,000 246,827,545 14.886,828 34,118,611 177,044,250 Specie. Loans. 50,971,222 50,676,686 51,029,2S1 51,268,269 52,002,304 52,503,707 53.013,196 52,325,599 Boston Peoples'* following are the totals for a series Loans. 14 Inc. $3.2)7,440 Dec. 1,957,008 20,241 Circula¬ Feb. Legal Tenders. Date. Dec. 7.... Dec. 14.... Dec. 21.... Dec. 28 4.. Jan. Jan. 11.... Jan. 13.... Jan. 25... Feb. 1 Ocean lows: Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. . Loans 5.16 -AVERAGE Capital. . Capital statement shows the condition of the Associated Banks of New York City tor +he week ceding at the commencement of business on February 1, 1868 ': Banks. New York . 10S%@ 109% 110%® 110% 5.15%@ 5.14% 5.18%©5.U% Feb. 1. $16,017,150 $16,017,150 Decrease. $220,680 Loans 52,825,599 52,604,919 Decrease. 30,720 227,244 Specie 279,393 248,673 Increase Legal Tenders 16,836,937 17,064,181 Increase 609,747 Deposits 37,312,640 37,922,087 Decrease. 6,299 Circulation. 10,645,226 10,638,927 Decrease. 74S,34S Clearings ' 32,117,721 31,369,378 Increase 175,827 Balances 3,052,701 3,228,523 The annexed statement shows the condition of the Philadelphia Banks for a series of weeks. Capital 109%® 109% 4t%@ Frankfort 40%© 41 Bremen 78%® 79 Berlin 71 %@ 71% New York City Banks. -The following ® 41% 41 @ 41% 79%© 79% 72 @ 72% 41 Amsterdam weeks: Jan. 31. Jan. 17. and previous Philadelphia Banks for last leading items of the Jan. 25. Changes in Sub-Treasury , [February 8, 1868 CHRONICLE THE 174 July.. • • • ... 10 • • .... • 1 . 00 { 37 July.Jan. ’68 ( Lay and Nov.. JiSov.’67 . ...ft 15% an. and Jgly. Jan. ’68; '....3> l - . 175 THE CHRONICLE. February 8, 1868.] SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDA Y,*FEBRUARY 7, TOGETHER WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK. STOCKS AND Satur. Mou. SECURITIES. V\ ed. Tues. — United STuCkS AN L) Week’s Sales — — — YV eu. Mon. ’lues. c>aiui bEoi/iviTiES. No. 100 100 100 136 Chicago and Alton do do preferred....100 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy 100 143X Chicago and Milwaukee 100 Chicago and Northwestern 100 74 Boston, Hartford and Erie 141% Central of New $2,000 115 116 ,135 — Jersey 135 135 _ _ - do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 111% 111% 112X 111% 111% 111% 111% 108% 108% 109 108% 109 — — — 109% do no ;C7% 107% 107% 54l.50c Delaware, Lackawana and West 50 Dubuque & bimix City 100 1 9,000 * — — — 'do do do do — — 7-30sT. Notes. Vdse. 107% do do 3d series • State: California 7s Connecticut 6s 107% 107% 107% 107% 107% 107% — 1,025,000 102,500 191,950 129,350 99% — 81 80 80 — , , — — 95 - Michigan 6s do 7s, War Loan, 1878 101% Missouri os, with 7 coupons do 6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.) do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 102 do 6s, 1867-77 do 5s,1868-76 do 7s, State B’yB’ds (coup) do do do (reg.) 99 — — _ do do Ohio 68, 68 6s, — — 50 60% 67,000 50% 17,000 64 64 60% 44% 60% 60% — 4,001' 95 6s, Public Park Loan.... Cb'cago City 6s, Water Loan Jersey City 6s, Water Loan — — — — — — - 100 Central 100 104 City 100 100 10 102 Commerce Continental — — 101 100 Importers and Traders 100 — — Manufacturers and Merchants.. 100 Merchants’ Exchange 50 — — — 118 — — 50 ..' 103% — — 100 100 100 100 20 104 107 103 110 — —;i02 107 114% — 115 -03% 118 40 15 30 no 110 — — 107 do Great do 47 72% , — Ocean Par* — Phoenix 104 104 103 102% 103 _ .... — 100 100 100 100 100 50 Seventh Ward St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather State of New York 102 — - — — 110 — — 74% — — — — 82% — Tradesmen’s Union Miscellaneous .Stocks : Coal,—American 100 Cameron 1< 0 110 — — — — — — j \ - ” 36 1*18 149 149% 149% 50 Gas. -Ci'izens 36% ; — — — 149 — t Metropolitan 21 37 9) 111 1. United States Merchants’ Union i *13% 57% 61 11,100! 36 36% 19,587 95% 110% 109% 12,400 21,045 95% ! 72 72 ) 36% i 36 13 1 74 66 73% 68% j 32% ; 33 34% 34% 73% i 70 74% 1 74 44 41*! ! i2 1 lS — 41% 42% 69% 74 43 14 t 15% — 23% 25 12 12% 12 25 to — 25,280 550 300 2,660 46% 127 * 65 $2,000 V*oo 3,000 11*1 5,000 1,000 — 109% 74% 74% 75 i6 86% 86 95 16,000 41,0 0 22.1 00 1,000 — — 103 — — 72 LOCO 3,000 — 104 97 104 18.000 3J00 1,000 6,000 — — 99 92% — 103 5,000 6,000 1,000 92% 93 — . .. 90% 93% — 6,000 —— 101 101 — 1,000 2,000 1,000 — — 91 91 2.000 85 3,000 — 97% 2d mort. 3d mort. _ — ----- _ _ — i 78% equipment.. 81 82 — — 81 85 — . 90% 90% 90% ” 79 6,C0f 98 1 1,000 7,000 11,0(0 1,COO 14,IX)0 5,000 98% - T nif 5,500 2,0: 0 3,500 — _ 97 , 89% 99 - 93% - — 17,000 ■ 83% 1,000 34,000 — 89% 89 - — —— .. „ 89 S9 1,300 Long Dock. 3;oio Mariposa, 1st mortgage (new)..... Union, 7s. — — . — do 103,0(0 73% — 6s, 1887 do do 73% — Pittsb’g, Ft,. Wayne &Chic., lstm. 102% Western 1,000 — — 84 12,536 5251 do do ' do 2d, inc. 14/'55i Tolede, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort 860 Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort.. ext.. 90 do 2d mortgage, do 8,351 i,700lJ 2,000 — . Peninsula, 1st mortgage do — 95 . do 10,000 — — 72% 74 do do 78,1876 do do 7s, conv’le, 1876 New York and New Haven....... Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage do 6,000 19,00) 12,(00 — — do do Goshen Line,’68 Milw’kee & Pr. du Chien, 1st mort do 101% 87% — — Quincy & Toledo, let mort St. Louis, Alton & TerreH, lstm. do do do 2d, pret 2.500 8% — 14%i 25 i 26,9£8 92% — •3_ 2d mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati, 2d mort. do do 1 75% — .. {109% 400 - - i 77 75 44 Quicksilver New York Guano.,., '109 56% 35% 95% do — ; ! Union Trust. Express.—Adams... 20% — 58% 58 36% i 35% 9 < % ! 96% 58% Telegraph.—Western Union. Steamship.—Atlantic Mail... Western, 1st mortgage do — 62 — 128% 2d mortgage.. do 2,0)0* Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort.. do do 2d mort.. 1,066 Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage... do do 2d mortgage.... New York Central 6s, 1883 * New York 46% 80% 97 Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund, 1 do do 2d mort.,7s... ' 11,800 , 97 McGregor Western, 1st mortgage.. 50! 137 4,500 66% 72 95 — 2d mort. do 11 102 50 50 87 86 85 — Illinois Central 7e, 1875 Illinois & Sonthem Iowa,1st mort. Lackawanna & Western, 1st mort. — xl02 101 91 — — — 18 — -= 34,400 — — ICO 163 — — 32% — do Cons’lidated & Sink Fund do 3d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869. do 2d mort, (S. F.), ’85 do 3d mortgage, 1875... do convertible, 1867... 80 104 30 -100 Republic 104 — — — 81 — Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72 32 — 31% — -- Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mort. 100 Ninth North America — —1— — Nassau 25 100 —— — 104 Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 100 do 3d mortgage, 1883 93% do 4th mortgage, 1880 .. do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended..... 48 — — 100 — 13,700 — 116% 116% 116H 103 ,100 103% Fourth Gallatin 104 2,820 2,170 101% 100% 100% 101% mx 93% 94% 94% 94% 94 — do 10 p. equipment do 1st mort . consolid’ted do do No. : 147 29,309 Delaw’e,Lackawan. &West,lstm.. • Bank Stocks American Exchange 651) 32% . — — — — — 31% 32% Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort Chicago, R. I. and Pac, 7 per cent.. 95 Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort.. do do 8d mort, conv. 96 do do 4th mortgage.. 75 Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund do do new 7s. 1,000 — — New York 7s 6s do do 5s 8,475 47% 51% Income do do do do 15,000 ' — 81% 60 * 1 ■ 43 25 — — — Chicago, Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort 74% Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort. Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund do Interest do 418,000 41 41 — 50 do 48,000 44 25 — 100 103 Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 1st mort., ’77 Central of N, w Jersey, 1st mort.. do do 2d mort... Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund do do 1st mortgage.. 50* 64 — Municipal: Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan — Railroad Bonds: 12,COO 63% 64 60% 60% 44% 44% 77,895 « 33 —100 100 Atlantic & Galveston, 1st mor — 6s, (new) .. 50% > 74 73% 80% 59% 144% 144% 146 — 100 .100 138% 2,000 — Virginia 6s, (old) Merchants 10,000 108% 50% — — . 1 51%' 101% Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 5s do 6s (old) 6s, (new) do do 154,000 — ... 5,000 — 255 05 64% 61% 65% 132 132 T 188% 128% 4i * 1*7% 126 St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100 do do do pref.100 Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100 R< nsfelatr and Saratoga 100 • — 112 65% pref...l00 100 Reading — — 1870-75 6s, 1881-86 3,000 — — 52 (old) (new) 103% 80 — 147 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic.100 95% 1.000 103 — — North Carolina, 6s 93 — 102% 103 103 02 1,000 — — 72% — 25 100 New York and New Haven Ohio and Mississippi do do pref Panama ; ' Louisiana 6s 18,700 21,600 — 133% 134% 134% 135% 136% pretlOO New York Central 10,000 — 95 — 152 97 95% 2d preflOO do New Jersey — — do 74% .. Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 101 108% ■71,401 do Milwaukee and St. Paul do do — 53,497 __ — 113 113% 113 112 U2% 113 Michigan Central 100 88% 91% 90% 89% 91 91% Michigan So. and N. Indiana .. .100 g!99 14,000 Milwaukee & P. du Ch. 1st prellOO do do do 2d preflOO 47 48 48% 49% — 99% 9'% 100 1,300 5^000 — do do do 1877 do do do 1879 do War Loan Indiana 6s, War Loan do 5s 37,500 25% Registered, 1860 6s,cou., ’70,aft.’60-62-65-70 do — 58% 50 Long Island 95 6 GC0 — 74% 74% no% 109% 111 — do 7s (new) Illinois Canal Bonds, I860 do 100 Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st IT ^ ~~ . Georgia 6s 3,000 — _ 108 ,108 96% 74% .74% 82% 80% Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 do do pref...l00 Harlem 50 do preferred 60 Hartford and New Haven 100 Hudson River 100 147 Illinois Central 100 — 119 72 DU 100 Erie do preferred — 2 0 108 — 50 111% 1,335 138 72% 97% 98 106 JSC 134% 134% 59% _______ 1871 ..registered. 1U% coupon. 1874 1874 ..registered. 10-40s ...coupon. 1C4% 104% 104% 104% 104% 104% 101% 101% 5b, 10-40s .registered. 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 73% 2,900 — 141 59% 72% — 97% 50 95% 112 Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo — do do do -— — pref.100 do 256,000 — do — Chicago, Rock Island and Pac 100 101% 101% 256,500 Cleveland, Columbus aisd Cin. ..100 ictK 110 Cleveland,Paincsv.& Ashtabula. 100 109 ~~ do do do do do do do 207,000 32,000 1,1 *.6,600 49,000 524,500 107% 107% my,. —— 1 — eek’fc Sal® t ri 1 hurb. Railroad Stocks l 141% 141% 142% lioom). 140% 141% 141% National: States 6s, 1868 coupon. do 6s, 1868 ..registered. do 6b, 1881 coupon. VAX 111% 111% do 6s, 1881. .registered. do 6s, 5-20s('62)cow/?o». 111% 111% 111% do 6s, 5-20s do regisVd mx 108% do 6s, 5-2Os(’64)c0«?*w. mx 109% 109% do 6s, 5.20s do regist'd 110% no do 6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon no do 6s, 5.20s do regist'd 108 do 6s, 5.20s (’65 n.) coup. § ^ do 6b, 5.20s do regist'd 108% 108 do 6s, 5.20s (1867) coup. 108 108% do 6s, 5.20s do regis'd do 6s, Oregon War 1881 do 6s, do. (ky'rhj) do 6s, 1871 coupon. American Gold Coin — FrL 1 iiurs r 80% j- - 5,000 THE CHRONICLE. 176 [February 8, 1868* Erporti or Leading Articles from Now York. (Ht)c tfommerrtal iimts. The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New Ycik since January 1, 1868. The export of oach article to the several ports for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount ?n the last number of the Chronicle from that here given: EPITOME. COMMERCIAL Friday Night, February 7. and prices are on the whole well supported, except for articles which have been held at a high speculative valuation. But not rising above the legitimate needs of the times, no special activity can be noted. The followiug is a statement of the stocks of leading articles Trade is at a fl s r1 « • T-* T— Ci ^}> rf ct TT t row uv «o o <aa fair average, t-1-t- <© &S s a « c* c? o a a A © T— c5 ot © P o ^«C©<-; 6o © VQO xrH < » r-»-~ w—. ~ CO CV -r— O \ ifi , ? ''t ■ o ri - *0 »i^O 10 1— © Z* CO CO r-1© , id . SO w * - - ««ot- CO aS 3 C1 *—« X CO © © © © ©©£ SS 1C igc* isoeooac CO rr Cl © AG VO = C» t*I OO OJ © © -7 £*0 ^ t4 CZ COH CTjr-C ig © ^ Cl © C* r-1 r-> t- , ft T-t ' of merchandise at dates given.: 18(17. Foh. 1, 23,046 Beef, tierces and barrels Fork, barrels. Tobacco, foreign, bales Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads Coffee, Rio, bags Coffee, other, bags... Coffee, Java, mats Sugar, hogsheads Sugar, boxes Sugar, bags 89.926 9,834 16,922 42,028 26,243 ..; ....' . ' ■ ' . Petroleum, crude, barrels. 7.135 20.659 138,99.1 19,484 =3 26,590 ' turpentine, barrels....'. . ... Rice, E. I., bags Rice, Carolina, tierces Gunny Cloth, bales /. Gunny Bags, bales..... Linseed, bags Saltpetre, bags Jute, bales Manila Hemp, bales Tin, slabs Spelter, tone.... ...: .. . . : t- ro - © •■s • ^ ■ <0 • o : 1> -C rt* ■ .'2E: Cl rr P rr 73 o < 5,853 3,178 2 8.274 CQ 1,075 194,100 d 165,000 21,505 150,000 105,185 1,557 8,466 33.740 5,353 4.811 5,176 54,2 1 SI,524 1,660 1,578 2,236 4,312 921 14,750 8,960 6,700 37,200 36.500 26,000 93,515 29,242 4,165 14,500 20,040 11,900 ...... 1,100 2,500 2,000 . : CL 10,:163 . ' ; . * 17,218 238 '. - 28,876 116.8'6 [1lg: . :j 7,746 18,342 '. Tar, barrels ; 04,900 44,700 16,82) Petroleum, refined, barrels Cotton, bales Rosin, barrels Crude turpentine, barrels. r. 62,087 N ' juides, No ..... — Jan. 1. 428 Molasses, barrels Tron, tons Lead, tons... Feb. 1. 51.002 74.754 13,576 24,837 23.539 32,384 116,325 6,751 Molasses, hogsheads Spirits 1 1? , 550 11.0(H) 3,800 ■c * :« • • 10 ' yt' ■ • o T, — . » . • ' S 32,600 30,400 53,246 co ^ '» ie> »~t . « | f. . Ci opt.- .c*r?co Ci —< C- Tj* ■ irp T-< ri ;o • s w o CO 83.100 ■' . 1,370 3,425 rf 2 § 2,450 2,652 J 'jt > N • 328 X3 ^ • — £ as h © 3 ^ P5 2 35,150 26,650 103,000 • fcO t- y~t Si tS C- 'Xr : >0 O? S : — O' O IG GO O (?» O O »G O • -r • O' ot to •=> • . «C f- CC • c: ro co (ft o 19,630 7,7S0 21,890 • 0 « y 0D 7.900 700 12,000 ^ vO O • U2 o >0 oi CO t- -T) 0*.cc rs ' ■ ' . . » - • • C. o* t- -r 00 00 -r co ^-1 vc cg o oCn OZ' TT ■ ••5 -GO v -ST r-i CO CO .<£ l -v* CO V. Oi 00 ■ co • • • 10 t)4 cc » o» ^-1 -w ' r~ CO s's ■P Coffee has advanced with large sales in the past few da} s. OO CO QC rOSC® cc'?' O . HHIflHOO ‘2 " 3,800 . -o« •10 r- r-1 g.ir- o w c to . « ao . • y 1 cc cc —• rH , CHCl 1 * •a ■ -Tf —< CO --nA V. Breadstuff^ been have fairly active. declined. Tobacco has The business- in Groceries has not been pretty generally large, but prices have ruled firm. quite active, with considerable varia¬ tion in prices. All hog products, except Lard, close very firm. The receipts of prime at this and Western markets have become so small at all the leading points, that prices are advanced beyond the reach of packers. Only five cars w C5 I S5 to-day, viz.: two at Communipaw, and three at For. cars in two days, and the fresh trade are hungry, not quite fancying Western d ossed The two cars at Communipaw were Ohio and Illinois hogs^ lbs.,-sold at S|c*_ Two more cars were sold, to arrivej poor 1Y0 lbs. Illinois hogs, 81c. We hear of sales at Pitts¬ burgh, prime heayy hb^s^forllhe Philadelphia market; at 9c. At FortietlCstreet, two cars were sold before arriving, 160 lbs. Illinois hjDgsf_at 8£c. The market is stiff at 8£@8£c. City dressed are T>ringing tlcrLwith Western dressed at 9^@9fc., while the demand for Bacorr, Hams and Shoulders is quite pressing. Pork is still-neglected. The sales of Beef have fallen off; while Butter and Cheese rule in favor of buyers. Hides have become dull and weak. Buenos Ayres, of me¬ dium weight, 19Jc., gold. Leather is also easier, except for prime qualities. Skins are very dull. Naval Stores-have been advancing, closing at 61c. per gal. tor Spirits Turpentine, and $3 10 for Common Rosin, Oils have been doing better, the sales including about 35,000 gallons prime Lard Oil to-day at $1 20. East India goods s • t- CO —J lO co'-o ' ‘c$ 15 WO CO co ■ —f 00 n® • OC lO eo t- ig <r. ■ ' . ■ TJ< ^ o> ** < <?» CC .-I c: ' .. O © s <3; rf* O , Iss :S‘: ■ « g >G G> c« rr gv g « O S' ■ at, OO u © rH ■ CO « d J o * 1 H 3- ^ cj 1 : ; o o, VC 1 © O P. :0 ■ O 5 S O H 00 • ® _ . a •S £*5 cS t- :• : -O O. p> t- CG, * £2 <?f ^ H *—4 I * • • . - •« »-< . T-l cr. CO CO » « »h a © o A S3 o « . i'j :8 >> l a & ■ : ■ «» a ■ ^ • • • ■ •GCO 0»G» CO -o • C" rr ' • * ' -O' . t- • ■ © ‘vP?* • • . l- I ©_ CO . CO © rti • t"- • ii ■ :■»& • co CO , © 1— C'. T-l H c~7 , ■ ©«5 I :f I t- © co t- 1 ■ ’ • co o hM i-f .00 . © • •G> t - * . r-f *•©©•• © «r r- i- ' ■ CO 2 rf- a us co t, -.S i © ;© o CO «■« © o: © * •© © © is >0 ^ ' © -o rr co cooi' a S ®a ' ■ t- •© s 0 :®t , • T-l © ■ , lo st © I - - - © ■ • : ; ’ • ; o m I ?0 © Si *-> CO O' C*-> cc t- iC r, fl* ® (- x G © t r- *G X, CO v 1,-2 rj, CO CO Ot © © © rr © , -oi © co • • tCO © Cl) . . —< C» of IG © © t-- -o, © CO s4 ©r © -H L- © rjf 35 'i* ; t-i © © ■iOr«® r* © © © ><?» o» * »C co' t-i" ©' HrlH OO £3riarJcccn(n*BCcntnin®at>c«ifl0,n'XifnTDiw®w)'<ri»3tn(n'RO7;'r ©us js ua ^5 K a to a © 2 33 £5=3 ^ at, au Ti <n ”S rO rC fcrrc d« £ 3 a-a a ;-C 1 « ! IS-isi343lSS3|a6as§SsSisS'fts5-:'; JO rK i-t and Metals.have. ruled • ►» 1-62 qufet^but are quite firm, with dimin¬ ishing stocks. Petroleum has advanced on light supplies to 11c. for crude, and 25 c for standard refined in bond.. Tallow has been'more active for export. Wool has been steady, and some large “lines have been sold. Freights have materially declined, and exports-are-not active, but reduced room on the berth, the close is again better. oeojee T-* o •—1 ’ ◄ in tieth street.-We have had but 17 t- iG ■g Provisions have been came ^r :3- ' ■a © . • - .^©a g 2 I'Tiw I ■grr >»«e ca c«3 © : 1 « a PQ I I * . t : : *S ■ ■ oo . . • • . . • . * © - T3 „ a «j . gS ? “ s c3 ^ 35S6,SflK«l ^ ; ^ ® tl ® CD «,hC V. ©+i ©tri • ; : . . © • o-e © c . • : . . • . *b ‘ S a fL "i •r* CO r* n o J1'ii J, M CL - ^:ss ? "-3 : S-S r .c. * a T) ® xj © >- « © aT © X3 •a o s's?sSmi3fflo4 V I • :l-i g01 " ' ^ n 03 $<► ‘ • . « ! . r» • c_: " : co t-t « cia oq © 1 a a! Cj u So o • 2 3 .<t February 8,1868.] Aches, pkgs.. , Corn Oats 292,9881,468 311 23,230 128,414 Bye 3,085 Mult 8,100 1,250 1,900 ' Barley Grass seed.. Flaxseed.... B ans Reas. 16,3’6’ 6,927 408 •; 1,086 Btic^wheH' & B Wrfldiir.bg C >tton, bales. * 23,089 117,830 Copper, bbls.. 80 57* 423 47,848 575 5,512 83,487 2,795 8,551 54,840 23,178 62,732 46,648 2.2 :.5 4,751 32,464 16,090 8,759 3,224 46,899 802 25.027 8,427 6,160 23,637 28,490 912 707 725 660 Errors 2.917 3,334 676 2,748 1,097 2.01-2 .... 1,103 1,025 45 156 .... 9,921 8.364 •' ■ .... 241 904 i bbls 1 468 718 82 912 Tallow, pkgs. 105 1,397 5.007 co,hhds 4,521 169 1.165 1,311 1,173 1,568 10.283 5,515 10,693 4,530 i 10,52S 57,272 53,835 1.859 Toba- 27,4 T3 269,480 = *.i a » i Molasses.hhds Dressed 6,765 No Rice, 7,026 . hogs, rough,' 177 changes will be noticed. For instance—the total New Orleans and Texas reaches for the week this year only 21,425 bales, against 47,395 bales for the same time last year, Mobile, Charleston, and Savannah, the is 49,778 bales, against 21,425 bales in that notwithstanding this large falling off at New while at the ports of week’s total this year 1867 ; so Orleans and Texas, the aggregate at all the ports for the week shows an increase of 2,441 bales over the figures for last year. In the exports the total at all the ports show a further increase, reaching 72,395 bales, against 67,807 bales last week, and 71,3 35 bales the previous week. The following table furnishes the particulars of the week’s shipments from all the ports : 4,970 ; 1,569 224,677 Whiskv, bb’s. 579 Wool, bales 795 1,842 6.097 31,773 Tobacco, pk-s 35,283 104 and bb:s Naval Stores— 6,859 . 273 bales.. Leather, sides Lead, pips 3,382 9,726 5,140 nice, pkgs. 122,426 Starch 768 Stearin© 1,019 pelter, slabs. 7,496 digar, hhds.& Grease, pkgs. Hemp, biles.. Hides, No.... 536 340 135 ■ 923 3,722 298 Pork j Beef, pkgs... Lard, pkgs.. Lard, ke. @ 5,781 382 5,630 H ps, 26,946 Cut meats.'.. 99.111 1,264 lat'S 21,702 1,864 230 181,835 Oil, lard 123 992 Oil, petroleum 1,722 Peanuts, bays 75,100 Provis ons— 2,915 Bmter, pkgs. 10,594 Cheese Dr’d fruit,pkg ’opper, 1,106 .. 7.772 ' ' Same time *67 68,100 Oil cake, pk?s 4U0 15.609 .... •'*’ Since Jan. 1. Rosin Tar 9,404 2,900 85,705 > at This week. 1,360 2,646 i i remarkable since-JaD. 1 41,116 Pitch 1,135 13.204 - G.meal. bags. Same time ’67 429 5.207 ' .. C'.meal, bbls. < 8,168 40,835 4 t << > The receipts of domestic produce for the week and and for the same time in 1867i have teen as follows : Breadstuff's— Flou bbls.. 34,473 211,191 Wheat, bush 63 463 204,189 r:\ and since for the Week Jan. 1. Since Jan.l. 314 i * THE CHRONICLE. Receipt* of Domestic Produce This week. 58 ' Lvcr '•* From New York ... -Exported this week to Glae pool. gow.Havre.Iona. 103 2,227 12,195 Portland, Me. . M .. . , Bre- Ant- Rotter- men. werp dam. MajorcaCruz. Total. 1,968 110 Vera 673 17,276 257 257 New Orleans. 19,598 Mobile., Barce- 400 5,235 1,012 1,012 6,710 Savannah.. 12,631 Charleston 6,496 Galveston.... 72,395 639 .. 521 .. Total week.. 57,887 26,245 6,710 13,270 7,017 1,6*20 1,620 103 7,462 400 4,227 110 673 521 For the corresponding week of 1867, the shipments from amounted to 54,012 bales, showing an increase Imports of Leading Articles. for the-week this -year of IS,383 bales, and making the total The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port increase in the shipments of the season up to this date 231,803 for the week ending Feb. 1, since Jan. I, 1868, and for the correspond¬ bales over the same period last season, and a decrease in the ing period in 1867: stocks at the ports of the Uuited States of 241,654 bales, com¬ [The quantity, is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] For Since Same The total foreign exports from For Since Same pared with this date of 1867. the time Jan.1, the Jan. 1, time the United States since September 1, 1867, now reach 748,487 veck. 1867. 1868. week. 1868. 1867. Buttons 130 723 550 Hardware... 90 805 1,408 bales against 576,684 bales for the same period last year, and 186 Coal, tons 5,725 3,233 Iron,RRb’rs 5,695 16,223 15,854 843 Cocoa, bags.... 3,924 2,400 Lead, pigs., 6,491 37,468 32,933 the stocks at all the ports are at present 361,542 bales ,654 101,088 against 75,825 Speller, lbs. Coffee,.bags 110,324 881,500 "Cotton, hales. Steel.. 1 1,891 11,465 19.888 603,196 bales at the tame time in 1867. Below we give Drugs. &c. Tin, boxes.. 9,989 34,* >47 45.836 Crude trp.bbl ftp.rite turp. . 660 €69 2,255 4,728 . 398 hush......',. 100 all the ports . .... .., ’ - Bark. Peruv Biea p’wd’rs Brimst, tns. Cochineal... Cr Tartar Gambier.... ... 1,769 699 205 42 70 998 Tin slabs,lbs 93,617 1,100 Iwgs... 581 - 298 80 30 290 149 ,30 , Gums, crude Gum, Arabic 190 67 2S0 532 752 Oils, ess.... Oil, Olive... Opium. Soda, bi-carb Soda, sal.... Soda, ash. *. Flax Furs Gunny cloth , Hair Hemp, bales.. Hides, &c. Bristles Hides,dres’d India rubber.. lvorv Jewelry, &c. Jewelry. Watches.... Linseed Molasses Metals, Ac. Cutlery 3,091 6,422 1.930 67,749 3,442 14,046 7,218 1,001 Tobacco 62 70 12 2,060 700 333 817 9,193 2,314 11 30 111 308 550 2,465 2 2,276 ,390 te .: Champ, bkts 4,725 Wines 1.167 252 499 10,093 30 86 987 1 47 795 71 Oranges 21,124 52,737 57.357 ... Nuts Raisins 87,586 73,785 359,657 Hides, undred. 362,011 1,073,816 ' 1,0101 Rice 10,049 7,036 Spices, &c. 5,314 34 117 72 88 203 97 88,267 « Cassia • • Ginger > • Stocks at Dates Mentioned. 7,526 EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO— 5,637 3,215 59 Pepper.... . Saltpetre. .... .... .... 44,786 Woods. Fustic 2,263 7,480 22,442 Logwood 570 Mahogany.. 3,257 338 13,486 55,6147 23,341 610,1-84 23,646 38,268 1,472 18,510 1,896 46,193 • .. 30 9,021 6,966 1,789 Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, and rec’P PORTS. ^.Orleans, Jan. 31.. 46 100 17,033 9,716 53,991 — 314,OSS 32,800 61,308 18,907 21,043 66,195 NORTH. Stock. FORTS. 47,272 22,609 74,280 144,217 6,603 *261,744 102,6*22 59,267 107,589 10,487 197,146 92,919 82.123 21,633 60,783 16,715 55.124 6,183 2,*245 21.013 1,996 16,103 Total this year.. 1,268,524 Same time last year 1,116,371 1,333 for’gn. 128,239 74,364 59,041 87,696 7,623 7,303 47,511 1,115 10,641 94,869 6,032 6,688. 5,346 5,111 141,265 17,250 38,631 150,460 ' Total. 7,2? 7 1,996 7,636 399 514.259 106,284 748.487 443,147 516,6 4 12?,844 43.819! 29,718 64,199 730,010 1385,406 361,542 466,834 603,196 7,197 6,372 Mobile, Jan. 31 Charleston, Jan. 31. Savannah, Jan. 31. Texas, Jan. 21 New York, Feb. 7*. Florida, Jan. 31t.... N. Carolina, Feb. 7. Virginia, Feb. 7... O ther ports, Feb. 7 * 1. Britain. France Other 332,418 255,205 SHIP- m’ntsto Great SINCE 8ErT. ' 16,329 5,708 223 902 reported by value. £6,864 $41,820 $30,375 Corks 7,914 5,819 15,715 1,803 Fancy goods.. 20,069 110.571 385,853 75 Fish 14.136 37,883 87,591 12 Fruits, &c. 4,412 Lemons..., *■33 14,358 82 2,100 2,011 74 stocks, &c.: 11,833 4.930 1,401 6,886 2,473 38 18 1,735. 20 62 Articles 91 our 1,531 Sugar,bxs&bg 23,673 483 250 163 385 usual table of the movement of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, 168,025 hhds, tcs&bbls.. Tea... 54 Indiero Madder Sugar, ‘ “27 145,576 2,268 , 2,572 ‘ The market the past week has been active but somewhat an advance of ^c. on the quo¬ irregular, closing, however, with COTTON. tation of last Friday. There considerable depression on Saturday and Monday, and on Tuesday as low as 18fc. was touched for Middling Uplands. The receipts of cotton this.week show a further small in No other intluence appeared in the market e.\C3pt the decline in Liverpool, and this was crease, the‘total at all the ports reaching 84.528 bales, asciibed to a misunderstanding in that market of the precise .[ (against 79,182 bales last week, 77,690 bales the previous I terms of the"law repeaHn^the tax. Hence our holders gave week, and 78j822 bales Three weeks since) making the aggre;-1 way reluctantly and the business at the reduced pric was prices 5gate0 receipteesinee Sept. 1, 1867, 1,268,524 bales, against limited. On Wednesday the” reports from. Liverpool again 1,116,371 bales for the same period in 1866-7, being an excess improved, and with a decline of a farthing in freights and a rise in gold led to renewed activity and a sharp advance until this season over last season of 152,153 bales. The details of to-day—20c. is the ruling quotation for Middling Uplands the receipts for the past week, and the corresponding week of with gold at 142£ and freights by steam 7-16d. The sales of the week foot up 28,732 bales of which 6,567 were taken by 1867, are as follows : r-Roceipts.—v <—Receipts.-^ spinners, 9,034 bales for export, 5,260 bales in transit, and Received this week at*— 1868. 1S67. Received this week at- 186S. 1867 New Orleans bales. 18,355- 41,656 Florida..... bales 2,073 The following are the closing 1,454 7,871 bales On speculation. Mobile ' 16,368 6,563 North Carolina 1,340 882 quotations: Charleston 10,210 6,599 was Friday, P. M., Feb. 7, 1868. j ! <: - - .... . , Savannah Texas.. 23,200 Tennessee, &c In the * In this 3,070 4,31G 10,312 5,739 4,051 | Virginia Total receipts Increase this year foregoing table of receipts for the two table, as well in .5,596 5,031 . 84,528 82,087 ,...# ib Florida. 3sm:8j* :sx@i8# 18%@1» Good ©ur * immQ wmwx Good Middling. years somip general table of receipts, Ac., we dedudt from the receipts at each port lor the week all received at such port from other Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped from Flor da to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipt* must be de¬ ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus par¬ ticular in the starement of this fact as some of our readers fail to understand it. as Ordinary Ordinary Low Middling.. Middling 2,443 Upland. 20X@21 wtmo 39%<§>20 20%@21 Mobile. N. Orlear s A Tex»*. 18^©18^ ©19X 19^@»9X 19 20X(®20% S1X©21# 18& 19X 19^ 20X 21* The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated. + These are the receipts at Apalachicola to January 11, and at the other ports of Florida to Jan. 17. 7 Estimated From— Charleston j Liverpool.. Jan. 21. Jan. 28. 8,209 9,554 6,530 12.195 < 568 8,348 10,062 2,140 577 Other French ports - and Gibraltar 17,047 3,784 2,227 203 .... .... 3,784 2.870 1,615 1,968 783 24,507 8,322 2,745 1.958 2,911 2.751 35,574 14,876 • • • 327 • .... 35 1,912 7 18 .... 11.S96 r . • 860 917 . 17,276 .... 3,057 860 197.146 166,092 .... • 9,647 15,131 . the port of New York for the week Receipts of cotton at Sept. 1 : This Since This week. Since week. 25,178 1,066 2,121 j North Carolina Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. 4,454 5,255 117,550 ' " 3,12!) 5,178 Per Railroad 4,791 633 Savannah Mobile. Florida Total lor the week Total since Sent. 1 Bales. From South Carolina From . ,46,377 ... The following are 1867: Receipts from- 19,992 Mobile Florida South Carolina. North Carolina. 7,780 • 50 Kentucky, &c... 41,336 14,181 97,5 6 6,929 bales. • • a • .... 659 .... • . . . and . 24,273 17.081 17,883 18,646 23,200 6,268 6,023 Reshipinents. t These do not Shipping 16 9 Mobile.... N. Orleans Texas. . Markets.—In reference to these mar¬ Indian Cotton 21 12 18 11 .. .. 7 8 8 . . a .. a a . Paraiba,&c 7# Vi 1# 15# 15# 14# 8 following statement show's the date since 1865 : .... .... .... 7,280 169 . . 1 S68 . 1.376 15,300 .... .... +612 2,784 1,922 S4,076 price of middling qualities of 1865. 1866. Mid. Sea Island Upland... 1865. 1866. 1867. J8GS Mid. Pernamk. 22d. 20 d. 15#d. 7# 1867. 1868. 33d. 23d. 18d. 23# 19# 14# 7# 44d. Mobile.... 23# Orleans... 24# 19# 19# Egyptian.. 22 21 14# 6# Broach.... 14 14 11 5# Dhollerah. 14# 7# 8 14# 15# 14 11 5# Annexed is a statement showing the stocks of cotton in Liverpool and London, and also the quantities of American and Indian produce ascer¬ tained to be afloat to those ports: 155,100 108,730 777,946 — 4C6,140 103,209 736,079 States the past week have give a list of the vessels from all the ports, both North and ACTUAL EXPORTS FROM LIVERPOOL, Belle, 110.... , 257 . Gladiator. 995—perships Northampton. 3,24S.. K nduek Fish, 3,752 I. H. Ryerson, 3,071 Golconda, 3.160... per barks Nouvellc <t Westmoreland, 3,451 11C 673 257 . .. 19,598 Europa, 3,563 5 235 490 2,023 half bales 1,012 \V. A. Campbell, 4,114 — Sandusky, 6,710 Helve ia, 100 Ei-tham, 1,818 To Havre, per ships Canova, 1,673 . To Barcelona, per brig Aiinable Rosa, 400 To Vca Cruz, per steamship Dudley Buck, ships 2,596 Savannah—To Liverpool, per ships Speculator, 2,019 Upland and 84 Sea 78 Sea I-land... per Quickstep, biras Island VVm. Rathho/ie, 2,941 Upland... 2,327 Upland 12,631 To Bremen, per brig Arago, 639 Upland 639 Charles i on—To Liverpool, per Bhip Elizabeth Hamilton, 148 bags Sea Island and 2,460 bales CJp’aud. ..per harks Annie, 148 bags Sea I-laud and 1,638 bales Upland .. John Fy.'e, 74 bags Sea Island, 2,023 bales Upland 6,491 To Majorca and a market, per brig Fortnna, 521 Upland 521 Galveston—To Bremen, per bark Texas, 1,620 ' 1,620 of cotton from the United States this week . .bales. 72,395 Telegraph,—The following telegrams have been re¬ ceived by us to-night showing the receipts, exports and stocks By of cotton at the ports named for 7, and price on that day : the week ending February . OTHER OUTPORTg TO TBI8 BULL, AND DATE. 2,144 721 4S5 Egyptian. &c 266 26,678 | China and . 632 Japan Total 39,570 . The following figures show the week and year, and also last compared with 1867 : 27,047 bales. 8,756 | West India, &c.. 3,268 1 East India, &c.... 9,997 American Brazil 1867. bales. 785 1868. 1867. 1 bales. | 1868. hales. 41,209 the sales and imports at Liverp ol for the stocks on the evening of lhureday . . SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. , —Sales this wTeek. , Ex- SpeculaTrade. port. tion. Total. American....bales. 24,S90 2,750 2,300 29,940 Brazilian 10,010 410 260 10,680 Egyptian 6,190 360. 700 7,250 \Vest Indian 2,570 160 80 2,750 East Indian 27,150 16,5v0 6,590 50,260 China and Japan 10 — 10 ... 70,870 20,150 9,870 100, S90 Total Total Same this period year. 1867. 6\410 44,920 17,13) 22,5:0 9,100 136,560 16,060 6,930 84,600 10 This week. 33,555 13,752 6,628 Brazilian Egyptian West Indian China and Japan 59,153 Total Of .... the ... .... Total. 1867. 894 212,903 121,27231,223,276 present stock of 2 l(0 19,100 1867. 12,830 3.690 3,540 1,070 12,170 100 312,810 189,110 58,050 33,460 44,041:1,220,335 18,936 433,946 41,843 197,788 3,079 107,047 13,373:1,263,266 2,936 47,598 2,197 East Indian orts. 1867. 103,742 36,236 22,396 2) American I 1868. 20,980 10,6*0 4,720 950 Irn- To this date 1868. Average weekly sales. 99,730 -Imports Lydia Skollie d, 3,445 Upland and Melbourne, 1,687 U. land and 50 ‘ea < 125,000 the To Antwerp, per bark Northern To Rotterdam, per bark Loveland, 673 Portland. Maine-To Liverpool, per New Orleans To Liverpool, per steamship Total exports 1868 1867. 478,300 54,546 90,000 Bales Stock in Liverpool “ London American cotton alloat Indian “ of the year the exports of cotton from the Kingdom have been as follows: Exported this week from— Total bales Liverpool, per steamer City of Antwerp, 730 ...France, 3,094 An - trainsinn, G98 Aleppo. 1,485 per ships Marlbor¬ ough. 2.919.... Quebec, 3,107 Upland and 22 Sea Island... per barks Santa Rosa. 160 Mozart, 109 ...‘ 12,195 To Glasgow, per steamer United Kingdom, 103 103 Toll vre, per ship Fawn, 2,212 Upland and 35 8ea Island 2,227 To,Bremen, per steamer Woser, 952 ...per bark Jenny, 1,016 .••• 1,968 Island . Since the commencement New York—To Mobile—To Literpool, per . 15# 16# 15# 16# United exports of cotton from the United reached 72,395 bales. Below we . .. cotton at this 7,706 .597 News.—The foregoing tables show that shipments South, have been made : 16# 16# 15# 8# 7# The —1867Mid. Fair. Good 44 23 27 20 16 18 16 14# 16 14# 25 13 8# 8# 8# 7# 6#&7# 6# @7# 6#@7# 6#@7# Fen am... include the railroad receipts at Philadelphia. in which these 4,999 7,174 4,704 9,832 11,401 6,509 3,961 2.S12 5,518 7,308 6,233 3,178 4 841 9,739 5,803 3,070 5,739 10,210 6,399 Total. * 5,659 . .... +17,697 20,031 2,640 2,893 3,847 2,523 5,397 9,701 9,122 9,935 5,159 9,568 9,114 7,718 6,609 11,154 10,466 10,312 Mid. Fair & G’ d fair. G'd & Fine, Upland.... .... .... . 22,072 1867- 1 ... 349,055 . .... • 1,256 . 2,258 .... • a 203 267 274 Sea Island. Stained -Baltimore.Since Last week. Sep. 1. 11,316 • .... 24 . • a « 232 545 Sep. 1. 3,261 715 7,535 1,633 • • 5,399 Virginia Since Last week. 338 1,007 150 678 742 Texas.. -Philad’phia.- 18,445 31,919 20,833 12,719 37,764 23,860 13,899 29,461 23.101 14,746 6,905 24,344 16,537 9.508 25,019 17,058 8,303 29,664 15,575 30,755 15,922 12,097 41,656 16,368 '6,503 , Middling— for the last week, and since Sep¬ —Boston.— Since Last. W'cek. Sep. 1. , our Bales. Boston, Phila¬ the receipts of cotton at delphia and Baltimore Total receipts ^-Savan’h.—, -CharVn.—, ,—Texas.—, 1867-8. 1866-7. 1867-8. It 66-7. ’67-8. ’66-7. '67-8. *66-7. 27,703 15,188 10,193 21,081 7,047 9,078 5,388 2,400 3,572 9,649 19,678 6,088 7,859 4,069 2,140 5,997 28,836 16,650 25,299 13,721 19,447 14,171 6,285 6,796 5,221 2,342 5,003 1866-7. 1867-8. correspondeut in London, writing under the date of January 25, remarks :* Liverpool, Jan. 25.—During the early part of the week cotton was in extensive demand, and a rise of about fd. per lb. was established m the value of most descriptions of produce. On Wednesday the market was flat, and prices were rather lower, but since then there has been a good demand, and prices show a decided improvement as compared with the close of last week. American cotton shows an improvement £d., Brazilian ^d. to ^d., Egyptian ^d., and East Indian ^d. to fd. per lb. The total sales of the week amount to 100,890 balep, of which 9,870 bales are on specidation, 20,150 declared for export, and 70,870 bales for the trade. The prices current of American cotton are subjoined: kets, 51,686 17,507 55,503 68,492 Sept. 1. 835 New Orleans Texas.; series of weeks this season and last season. Sept. 3. Bales. Bales. From a ~N. Orkane.—. ,—Mobile.—, Euuopean 2.140 18 .... , Nov. 22. 20,530 “ 29. 25,477 Dec. 6. 20 470 “ 13. : 4.278 “ 20. 26.010 “ 27. 26,431 Jan. 3. 31,160 “ 10. 22,195 “ 17. 20,235 “ 24. 20,858 “ 31. 18,355 7,690 6,910 1,276 etc and since Tennessee, 146,572 17,250 .... Grand Total tember 1, 137,223 143,431 3,141 4,042 2,227 .... Total Spain, de¬ the prev. year. 780 Hamburg Other ports .. ese Week 940 380 63S Total to N. Europe T» follows for as ending 2,140 Hanover All others j receipts at the different ports have figures are the receipts proper, that is, the total each week after ducting the amounts received from other Southern ports. Under head of Texas are included all the ports of that State. 1,590 Total French Spain, Oporto ! to date, 1.420 4,590 7,000 18,500 Mail Returns.—The courBe of been 12,298 141,265 203 .... ! 103 6,925 1,590 Havre.. i 4. 395 139 Total to Gt. Britain.. Bremen and Feb. Jan. 14. Other British Ports - Sept. 1,1867 Same ! Total I time WEEK ENDING EXPORTED TO for week. 12.190 Savannah Price foreign. Exports, Middling. Stock. 18# 21,830 6,010 61,(00 7,000 Great Britain Continent. Receipts bales last week. Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last foa? weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September 1, 1867; and in the last column the total for the same period of the previous year : (bales) from New York since Total '—EXPORTS TO—. bales, against 9.647 Exports of Cotton CHRONICLE. SfECIAL TELEGRAMS TO TH* exports of Cotton this week from New York there is considerable increase, the total shipments reaching 17,276 -In the a [February 8, 1868. THE CHRONICLE. 178 This day. 117,400 Stocks . Same Dec. 31» date 1867. 1867. 42,170 153,330 43,740 50,420 8.430 9,710 178,360 219,090 2,010 58,600 1,180. 406,110 478,300 103,420 66,030 38,990 13,640 224,200 1,180 447,460 cotton at Liverpool 28| per cent, last year. American, against 3-4 per cent, is ♦ For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph disDfttcheg at the close of our London letter in a previous part oi this papers—{Ed> Commbrcial & Financial Chronicle, THE CHRONICLE February 8, 1868.] London, January 25.—There has been a good demand for cotton, and prices show an advance of ^d- per lb. The following particulars relate to East India, China and JapaQ produce:— 1867. 26,537 Deliveries 17,714 18,542 13,617 13,634 Stocks, Jan. 23 1868. 4,303 1866. Bales. Imports, Jan. 1 to Jan. 23 46,174 179 ranging from 7 to 25c. Seed Leaf lias also been quite active, but mostly in fillers, which are taken by cutters in consequence of the scarcity of Lugs and Low Leaf Kentucky. The sales have been 100 cases old Ohio wrappers on private terms, 68 cases Ohio fillers and cases State fillers at binders, 5c.; 46 cases Ohio, 6c.; 74 4@4fc. Spanish tobacco has been in Alexandria, January 11.—Our market is very firm, and the value of fiQe qualities ha9 an improved tendency. Fair White is quoted at good demand, the sales embracing 400 bales Havana at 7d. ; fair, with staple, 7£d.; good fair staple, 8d.(a8£d. per lb. The 90@95c., and 70 bales Yara at 84c. for I cut, and §1 11 for II cuts. Manufactured tobacco is very dull, a reduction in exports siDce^November 1, 1867 have been: Great Britain, Continent, Total, the tax being anticipated. bales b&lcs bales. From Nov. 1 1867, to Same period 1866-7 “ “ 1S65-0 “ “ 1861-5 62,839 66,821 a 1806. bales. 64,393 56,538 14,540 80,825 27 were QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY. KENTUCKY Light. G @7# Lugs.w. C mmon Medium Leaf.. 8 @ 9 do. 9,%@12 1867. bales. ' 45,661 | China SEED LEAP 1866. bales. 4,322 41 Assorted 44 Assorted lots, 44 Ohio crop Assorted lots, Pennsylvania 44 .... of ?836 44 of 1SG5 and 1866 44 14 SPANISH Havana.—Fillers—Comm on. 75 44 @ 80 82)tf@ 90 90 @100 Good Fine “ York, and 1 hhd., 165 cases, Bremen, 20 hhds. to Rotterdam, 97 hhds. to -Antwerp, and the balance to different ports. The full particulars of the week’s Black work—com., tax paid. 15 good 44 - 50 (BALES), Havana.—Wrappers Yara, assorted lots 44 44 65 Bright work—common 44 15 II cuts 682 165 *22 1 New York Boston Philadelphia •• • 847 538 256 • 30 • ••• RECEIPTS Black Bright work, 1,080 .... 890 . 136 .... .. • • • • 126 .. .... .... 14*917 45,327 25,751 166,7t6 give our usual table showing the total exports Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their of direction, since November 1, 1867: Below .. .... Ohio, &c Other .... The for the 169 Hhds. 4.145 50 S3 646 To Great Britain Germany Belgium Holland Italy France Spain, Gibralt.&c. Mediterranean ... Austria Africa, &e China, India. &c. Australia, Ac .... 11. N, Am. Prov.. South America... West Indies East. Indies Mexico 2,644 2, '99 3,232 4,494 50 88 297 4 62 49 76 Cases. 1,009 2,168 221 575 200 .. .... .... .... .... .... "20 575 146 116 322 156 489 2 4 14 .... .... .... 2 6 43 .... . .... . • . • . . .. • • .... . • ( YORK SINCE - 1 5C@2 75 80-' 92>£ 1 C8@l 15 14 @80c 90 @1 20 44 work, in bond 15 .....— @40c 35 @80c this week, and since NOVEMBER 1867. 1- ^-T'l sin. Nov. 1hhds. pkes Previous! v- hhds. pkgs 2,193 22,S99 2,222 23,723 610 391 725 38 771 160 2,959 4,983 117 1,529 708 209 3.013 117 • . . .... • • • . • • 41 . • • • • 2,338 26,847 20,613 3,038 6,100 FROM Lbs. llhds. Cases. Bales. M’fd. Liverpool.. Bremen Rotterdam.. Antwerp.... . . . . 249 139 20 97 a 2C6 473 6,151 .... .... Cuba 5,029 *1,529 31,212 6,269 30,174 .... .... YORK.* NEW Hhds. Cns s. Lbs. Bales. Mfd. 19 Hayti 5 12 Olher W. Ind. Brit. Guiana. .... ... 18 ... for week.... 172 .... 3 40 1,201 (82 77 30,410 New Granada 22,886 522 * The exports in this table to European ports are made np from mani¬ fests, verified and corrected by aD inspection of the cargo. The direction of the other ports, foreign exports for the week, from the has been as follows:' From Philadelphia—To Matanzas 14,917 lbs. manf d. From Boston—To Melbourne 50 cases and £5 h If tierces Hayti 2 half hhds., 5 cases, 25 bale* and 140 half bales inccs 10 10 • .... IXPORT8 OF TOBACCO Total export .... .... 353 States since Novem¬ Cer’s &,—Stems—, Pkes. Manf’d tee. Bales. hhds. bales. & bxs. lbs 197 142 497 566,808 4 597 381 8,794 20,588 31 828 4,100 ..-.. @32 @14 @5# following are the exports of tobacco from New Yc:> k past week : we Exports of Tobacco from the United ber 1, 1867. NEW -This weekhhds. pkgs. 29 £24 46 63 122 18 54 46 From Virginia.. AT Total 96 •••• . 13 11 @18 30.U0 •••• • .... 172 516 week.. 1,317 • 13 .... I 523 1,66 > Total this week Total last week Total previous 77 95 )bp. Man’f , Fine, @40c line New Orleans. Pkge. * Bright work—good, tax paid 45 @30c @60c @70c Baltimore -Stem* . hhds. bales. @45 MANUFACTURED. to shipments from all the ports were as follows: @ 8 @16 20 10 18 8 4 .. - exports of crude tobacco are very from New 5 8 — 95 bales and 13 The receipts of tobacco at New York tierces were from Boston. The direction of the shipments of Nov. 1, have been as follows: leaf hhds. were as follows: 249 hhds. to Liverpool, 139 hhds* were 12 @16 20 @45 16 @25 .... wrappers, crop Asssorted lots, @20 @22 15 @35 New York Ohio and Pennsylvania Fillers. small this week, the total from all the portsri’eaching only 523 hhds., 847 ca^es, 172 bales, 13 tierces, against 1,666 hhds., 538 cases, 516 bales, 11 tierces and 390 hhds. of stems for the previous seven days. Of these exports 522 hhds., 082 cases and 77 bales The 17 21 (CASES). , FU’ere, 1805 aM Wrappers, 44 1863 ...12^@14 14>$@16 .17 @16 York assorted lots, 1865 and 1366 ew Friday, P. M., F*b. Heavy. i4>r@i6 Light. . 44 44 1866 “ lota, Wrappers, 44 956,446 TOBACCO. (HHDS.). Connecticut Wrapper*, crop of 1865— , 1,177,211 LEAF Heavy, j 7%@ 8>£ Good do 9^@11 | Fine do 11X@14 | Selections : I 916,777 I 33,347 | 1,067,157 To Great Britain Continent Total 12,970 is in strong demand, and prices are strong demand for cotton goods. The shipments from January 1 to December 1867. bales, 86,626 83,242 66,285 There is also higher. 19,710 16,421 43,748 Jan. 9, 186S Bombay, January 22—Cotton much 103,209 54,646 . C alcutta ICO cases ... To British Prov- <case*. 66 .... “23 "i-8 1 1,50 5 4 ‘37 120 » .... 20 . 518 - 1,445 • -*o . . . ... # 247,382 . 20 .... 530 649,0.37 31,868 49,462 903 2,201 BREADSTUPPS. Friday, Feb. 7, 1868, P. M. The market has been dull all the declined for week, and prices have leading articles. come forward only sparingly ; hut the subsidence 207 1,425 12,288 6,348 Total since Nov 1. 24,8:5 2,608 1,610,614 of speculation, and in its place an increasing pressure to real¬ The following table indicates the ports from which the ize, with very limited inquiry from the trade, have led to a above exports have been shipped : decline of 25@50c. per bbl., the low grades being taken for Tcs. & -—Stems—, Bxs & Lbs. BaVs. cet’s. hhds. bales. pkgs. Hhds. Cases. From Manfd. the British Provinces, were rather better supported than the 123 283 11,478 New York 4,751 810 14,489 30 1,142 Baltimore 23 9,531 £714 I high grades. *683 24 281 1,463 Boston 1,023 29 Philadelphia... 53,715 I Wheat has also declined 3@5c. per bush., the greater de¬ 125 *518 New Orleans 20 2 ’ioo 603 San Francisco decline being in Winter Wheats, the stock of which is said *30 66 33 Virginia 96 Portland 266 I to be disproportionately largo. But in these there has been 207 12,288 Total since Nov 1. 24,885 6,343 1,425 2,608 1 more doing at the decline. Spring wheat remain very dull. Tobacco lias been fairly active, and the lower grades have An account of the stocks of wheat at various points between done rather better. New York and Milwaukee, inclusive, gives a total of 5,200,000 Kentucky Leaf has met with a good demand for the low bushels, against about 3,500,000 bushels at this date last year* grades ; and these, being in small stock, much of which is The receipts at Chicago and Milwaukee have latterly increased held with speculative views, somewhat better prices have been paid. Fine selections arc also scarce, with some inquiry, but materially—to be attributed no doubt to the good sleighing. good grades, ranging from 14 to 18c., are plenty and dull. At to day’s market Amber Canada sold at $2 81, and No, 2 The sales were about 700 hhds., of which half for export, prices Spring was in some demand at $2 40(£2 42. Honolulu, &c.... Al! others .... .... .... .... .... «... " ' .... Flour has .. . . — ... M . .. , . . . . ... . .... .... — .... .... • • • • .... • • ... ••• ... - . , . , . t f *.i it i > ii f ? [February 8, 1868. THE CHRONICLE. 180 than for number of years past; and this fact has, enabled stocks are holders to advance a fraction in prices, which remain firm at everywhere large and accumulating. Prices, however, have the higher rates. The circumstance gives additional interest given way but little, being supported in a measure by con¬ to our tables of receipts published below, as the market must siderable speculative confidence, favored by an advance in gold be for some time to come much .influenced by the quantity decline in ocean freights. The decline at Liverpool ha6, and however, had a depressing effect, and at to-day’s market, with imported. The imports of the week have included several cargoes of the quotation from Liverpool at 42s. 9c!., and gold at 142^, Rio coffee at New York, Baltimore and New Orleans. A cargo the export business was mainly at $1 27 lor prime new Western of new crop green teas has come to hand from Shanghae by mixed, with freight by steam at lOd. There is more White the Amicus, which sailed Oct. 11 from that port, this is the Corn going forward to British markets at slightly below the first arrival of some twenty-two vessels which sailed within a freely at all points, and Com continues to arrive a days of that date, and which we may now look for laily. Full details of the imports at all the ports for the week aud since Jan. 1 are given below, under the respective heads. fifteen mixed. cost of dull and depressed. The demand from the trade is very limited. Rye also has been dull and unsettled. Barley and Barley malt continue Very scarce and been Oats have very The totals .. firm. are as follows : . „ .. .... .. 642,161 Tea The following closing quotations: are Extra western, mon 9 50®11 50 good to pcrbushel com¬ Double Extra Western and St. Louis 11 75®15 25 Southern, fancy and ex¬ tra California Rye Flour, fine and super¬ and meal, Jersey Corn Jersey and State Barley 7 25® 9 25 5 75® 0 30 Brandywine -1867. 21,430 123,570 49,160 50,070 36,440 9,260 162,460 324,420 .. 13,140 49,735 42.860 360 12,725 11,600 Wheat, bush Corn, bush Rye,-bush Barley, Ac., bush ’ 2,669 1,670 216,116 54,955 1 970 63,940 12,750 34,780 From Janl to date-^ r 1868. - 1,200,398 1867. 7,235,833 2,832 404 132,334 43/17 19,547 5,953 28,590 7,451 9,845 114,240 .... 7,4-17 5,679 5,832 8,393 6,920 report as yet. A cargo of greens ar¬ blacks (per Jane Russel) is reported below There is not much business to rived this week, and o e of 173,535 1,324,850 34,860 2,718 r- TEA. -1868.Since For the Jan. 1. week. . Since Jan. 1. Corn meal, bbls MoJasses, Now Orleans 170® 2 CO 1 50® 1 65 For the week Flour, bbis..., 2 85 3 2. YORK. NEW AT . «... hhds. M masses this port has been as follows: The movement in breadstuffs at RECEIPTS .... Malt Peas Canada • 1,153 1,429 Sugar Sugar. 1 70® 1 80 83>$® 85 —® 1 85® 2 12 Oats, Western cargoes... • 8, *32 2 70 2 50 1 27® 1 35 1 20® 1 28 ....: Rye • 40,493 nags 1 24® 1 35 Western YeHoW Southern White........ 11 25® 15 00 12 50®13 75 fine $2 30® 2 48 ’. Com, Western Mixed.... 10 U0®11 15 Southern supers (indirect import) Coffee, Rio Coffee, other Sugar Spring ; Milwaukee Club.2 33® Red Winter.. .*.. ...... 2 60® Amber do 2 75® White 2 75® 9 75®10 60 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. pkg*- Tea ‘,r _ Chicago Wheat, Flour, Superfine..^ bbl. $8 50® 9 15 Extra State 9 90® 10 75 ; This week. 7,820 49,315 125,315 to-day ; and further arrivals of the new crop are constan ly expected. Its quality as compared with last years is somewhat iuferior in the leaf> but equal in drawings. A more active business may of course be looked for as the arrivals increase. Among the sales of the week have been 650 half chests Oolongs, 6,600 half-chests greens (and 600 to arrive,) and 1,720 chests Japan. The imports of tea for the week include one cargo from Shanghae, per “ Amicus,” amounting to 642,161 lbs. of greens, as follows: 37,716 Twankay, 2,81! Hyso • skin, 64,287 HysoD, 891,466 Young Hyson, 71,915 Imperial, 84,627 Gunpowder; also 10 packages from Hong Kong per Jeanie. The “Amicus” sailed on Oct. 11, being one of twenty-two vessels which left China and Japan ports from the 8d to the 31st of that month, so that we may look for considerable receipts FOREIGN EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK AND SINCE JAN. 1. of the new crop tea from to-day. Corn / The following table ehowe the shipments of Tea from China and Flonr, C. meal, Wheat, Rye, Barley. Oats, bush. bush bush. bush. bush. bbls. bbls.’ To Japan to the United States from June 1, 1867, to Nov. 30, the date of 153,702 14,430 1,790 Gt. Brit, week 793,456 latest advices by mail; and importations into the United States, from 166,207 since Jan. 1 13,536 Jan. 1 to date, in 1867 and 1868: 430 750 N. A. €ol. week., :::: 500 4^666 shipments prom china and japan since since Jan. 1 4,299 10,184 -IMFORTS FROM CHINA A JAPAN Oats, bush 115,595 .... West Ind. week, since Jan. 1 5,224 27,208 2,275 10,210 3,055 Total exp’t, week 13,676 since Jan. 1,1868 66,947 21,367 30,3i5 12,913 same time, 1867. Since Jan. Boston I, from Philadelphia Baltimore .. . 24,901 12,131 150 14,430 168,507 18,586 3*000 17,360 192,189 r 1,290 5,931 158,292 820,037 529,611 12,900 49,564 1. 1866. June 1 to Nov. 1. lbs 770,255 g 27,09Q 6,695 14,530 8,111 50 . -- • 49,496 2,469 160,8:36 165 -• at bNi Oolong & Pekoe 213,470 .3,224,497 .. ... 2,420 ...1,949,691 From 27,570 7,1 (-4 Chicago Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Cleveland ;. P Totals Previous week Correspond^ week,’67. The at the Wheat. bueh. 122,492 108,202 7,401 6,416 7,169 4,03b 52,350 50,081 54,730 “ 6,383 11^00256.378 250.501 141,057 Oats. bush. Barley.bush. bush. 527,750 26,572 113,430 17,427 10,156 4,796 6,000 176,661 14,098 52,000 6,050 8 52 5,188 15,000 4,055 174,258 32.800 161,283 26,169 69,995 32,073 bush. 797,081 899,974 164,186 34,590 * - 29 875 420 11,700 14,81s 13,439 1867. 1868. 1866. 264,214 Oats Barley 845,297 170,4 >9 1,059,792 3,164,614 641,202 1,003,071 153,188 bash. Wheat Corn 162,994 97,6134 1,051,645 698,18^ 707,940 43,998 82,134 962,416 658,612 1'—, 1867. SINCE JAN 284, *56 63,000 .185,224 5,663,653 2,800 203,021 38,188 283/380 2,162,584 2,976,966 448,044 517,980 6,800 37,716 10,312 118,146 636,097 58,959 2,208,158 510.007 402,607 1,604,068 450,864 89,456 371,546 557,109 112,587 381,241 365 312 1,200,398 7,235,832 212,513 8,595 2,436,841 ...10,032,346 12,517,495 3,203,671 6,657,794 827,726 The above table includes all following will show the comparavtie receipts of flour and grain same p^ rts from January 1st to February 1, for three years; Flonr, bbls. 8. 1868. - 461,167 Rye Corn. • 472 086 .. ... ' 1867. , Junel Nov. 1 to to Nov. 1. Nov. 15. 600.258 542,972 ... - Lake Ports.—The Flour: bbls. INTO U. JUNE following shows the receipts the following lake ports for the week ending Feb. 1 : 1 Weekly Receipts at 10,474 3,966 150 .... .... — shipments to the United States, except San Francisco importation since Jan. 1 into the United States has been 21,541 packages to The indirect 2,842 pkgs. COFFEE. There has been steady demand, and the trade has been good. All grades of Rios have been in request, and the weeks footings show a large business. Prices have been firmly maintained, and the market is steady at our quotations. Among the sales of the week we note 13.962 bags Rios, 17,548 mats Java, 600 bags Ceylon, 500 do San Domingo^ a 282 do Maracaibo. ’There have been considerable imports of Rio coffee during the week, amounting to 23,103 bags by vessels, as follows Eaglet” 4,406 bags. "2,583,902 “Tereeina” 1,907,’ “Valkyrieo” 5,600, “St, Ursula* 4,900, “Ida” 2,784,757 5,085,976 The receipts of grain from January 1st to February let, 1868 are 8.306, “ Juliet ” 2,984. Besides the above 2,486 bags of Maracaibo, •1,297 Jamaica, and 405 of sundries have been received. nearly double what they were for corresp ondin'' period in 1866 and The stock of Rio coffee Feb. 4, anil the imports from Jan. 1 to date 1867. The receipts of flour are leas than in 1867 anil more than in in 1868 and 1867 were as follows: 67,220 Rye 1866. . New York. In Bags. Stock 119,178 Same date 1867. 53,898 GROCERIES. Friday Evening, Feb. 7, 1868. « f Business lias been considerable in Rio coffee and In y raw sugar molasses, tea and fruits there bas been comparatively little generally firm with the steady price of gold, and the absence of any signs of a decline* in the premium. The stock of sugar has become extremely small, lower, in fact, done. Prices do 86,619 76,226 in ’67. Phi ladel. Balti¬ more. 5,500 • • • • • • • • .... New Orleans. 30,000 8,000 19,413 ... 38,000 15,000 22,802 30,814 Savan.<5b Gal¬ Mobile. veston. 3,500 4,000 3,500 5,000 Of other sorts the stock at New York Feb. 4, and the several ports siiice Jan. I were as followe : In bags. Java - - Ceylon ...; Singapore .. • • • 2,000 • • * • 2,200 Total. 196,478 82,898 132,334 114,240 imports at the Phila. Balt. N. Orl’s Total Import. Import. Import. Import. Import. 7,000 6,700 13,750 ^-New York—, are • Boston -Stock. Import. 2,978 .... .... Maracaibo.... 6,678 .... 13,160 Laguayra Hi. Domingo.. • 2! 602 Other 5,603 Total Same ’67 ..; 2,544 t 4,579 1,344 23,365 20,265 15,011 181 THE CHRONICLE. Februjyy 8,1868 J • • IC' x .. * • ■ • • • • • ••• • /f: V. ‘ 5 2,275 • • • ruling quotation* of goods in first bands '* Duty: 25cents per lb. 43,617 /—Doty pa’d —. Hyson, Common to fair 90 @1 ‘JO do Superior to fine.... 1 05. @1 25 do Ex fine to finest ...1 3J ®1 50 ... and prices maintained firmly by holders,, •who, in view of the very light stock here, have obtained an advance of $c. per pound on raw sugars, followed by. about the same advance in refined. Large arrivals, however, are expected, and this has operated to both prevent any very sharp advance and retard buy.ers. We note sales during the week of 8,800 hhds.Ouba, 105 do Dem do t .... .. The A' n * ' Cuba OtherManil, Brz’l bx’s. hhds. hhds. bags. bgs. , At— , 450 684 .... 825 .... .... Stocks Feb. 1, At— boxes, .3,419 ! 36,524 Portland Boston do do Philadelphia do . .. .. do do Baltimore New Orleans .. .. Total import Same time 1867.... 4,266 1,740 301 410 511 follows ; : on tew or brown Porto Rico 'hhds j— do do do do 153 .... .... do 107 ........ .... com. ... ... Melado .... 2,710 1,081 11,000 17,590 5,935 5,679 do do 10 to 12 — ® 17$ 16 ® 17 16 ® 16 Tirl, 14 «« . 12$® 18$® 14$® 14$® ® ® 16 ® 16$® ® .... j Granulated. Crushed and powdered. White coffee, A Yellow coffee.... 12$ 14$ 15$ 17 17$ 17$ 16 15 .. 15 46 ® 48 Molasses* • 97l . Duty 8 cents : gallon. New Orleans $ gall. 7^ ® 95 Porto Rico 1. 48 ® 65 Ouba Musjovado, n. c. 48 ® 49 ...... Havana, Feb. 1:—Sugar (Clayed).—Owing to the briek demand do 18 to 16 do 16 to 18 do 19 to 20 white i Loaf 12i® 12| 200 5,832' ... 13$ 91 7$® ..... 14* 11? 12 j 124 Hav’a, Box. D. 3. Nos. 7 to 9 Hi® 111 do .... 16 Laguayra 8t. Domingo sugar, not .... .... 64 18 ® 19$ Maracaibo ll$® 12 12$® 15$ # fl) I2 ® refining 10$® fair to good do 12® fair to good grocery... 121® do 13 ® pr. to choiee centrifugal 1<’$® .... Cuba, inf. to .... ..19,547 3,243 7,447 4,598 bags ....gold 25 or Includes b&rrela and tierces reduced to hogsheads. * . Java,mats anl Native Ceylon 15 @ 15| 18 ® 13$ above No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutoh standard, not refined, 8} above J5 a» not over 20,4 ; on refined, 5; and on Melado, 2} oents $1 1b. ; 2,S00 263 Ex f. to flnestl 25 ®1 65 Sugar. Brazil, Manila J bgs. &c bgs, N O . 599 263 1,748 830 do ordinary...... Duty 5,853 104,304 8;S00 17,590 4,580 210 189 .... gold gold gold .gold .... ... were as 1,999 .. do good do Fair .. 24,566 — Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold 17 ® 17$ do fair to g. cargoes ... 6,165 — 11,413 2,581 Imp’tB since Jan 1. A - P. Rico, Other hhds. hhds. hhds. ... Other At— *• * v ;... and imports since Jan. 1, 1868, do 60 80 05 Duty: ‘When imported direct In American or equalized vessels from the place or production; also, the growth of count! les this side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels* 5 cents 9 fi>; dll other 10 $ cent ad valorem iu addition. 20 —Cuba. % P Rico. For’n, Tot’l, b’xs. ♦hhds. hhds ♦hhds. *hhds. N. York stock Same date 1867 1 "* Philad’l.;. Baltimore. N. Orleans ... Boston. . Imp., Com.to fairl 00 @1 J5 Sup. to fine.1 25 ®I 45 of its growth , .. £ . /——Cuba - , N. York 1,153 Portland 1 “mn ‘ they foot '<6 10 Coffee. imports at all the ports still continue to be Small, for the up 1,153 boxes, against 4,470 -and 1,429 hhds. against 1,507 last week. The details are as follows: ' week 70 ® Ex fine to finest ..1 26 . , . - 90 80 ®1 ®1 Souc & Cong., Com. to fair 65 ® do Sup’rtoflne. 9 • ®1 do do do Ex. f. to finest. 1 55 @1 8> H.Sk. &Tw’kay,C, to fair. 70® 75 do do Sup. to fine 75 ® SO 188 hhds. and 85 bbls. clarified do 2,402 boxes. . Oolong, Common to fair. do Superior to fine... Exfinetoflnest.l 40 @1 65 unp. Su do 86® UncoL Japan, Com.to fair. 80 ® 90 -do Sup’rtofine. 90 ®1 00 do Ex f. to flnestl 10 ®1 20 Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair 75 ®1 (O do Super..to fine. .1 15 ®l 65 The trade has been very active r-Duty raid-* do Ex f. to fln’st do ... «•*• SUGAR. ara, : Tea. 6,952 ....- • annex 7ri8i V , ... 5 2,544 12,623 We 13,160 * • do Clayed, n c Batbadoes - 50 (® 68 • •<-.» . , , which has Spices. prevailed this week, mostly from buyers for the; United: States, the market has been firm, with sales of about 9,000 boxes at! Duty: mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50; oassia and doves, 20; from 7}@7£ ra. per arrobe for No. 12 up to yesterday, and'one lot at 8! pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents % 1b. rs. to-day. The demand for Europe has continued dull; the above Cassia, inmats gold $i1b 53 ® 65 (gold) j Pepper, rates^ at which holders are firm, not corresponding with the. low ones; Ginger, race and Af(gold) U>$® 11 I Pimento, Jamaica.(gold) Mace (gold) 90 ® 92$ I Cloves (gold) ruling in London. As only one (uninportant) sale has been, closed at 8 90 1 rs., we base our quotations on 7f rs. for No. 12. : , ; Nutmegs, N o.l.... (gold) 87® Receipts, exports and stocks at Havana and Matanzaa have been Fruit. as follows: ' Rec’d this /-Expts to U. S.—> Year. 51,752 42,795 1865.'. week. week. 1868 1867 40,449 Since Jan. 1. 4,836 : _ Total export—Stocks week. Since Jan.l. boxes , 3,460 14,466 13,419 82,241 81,030 117,239 .... .... 11,924 19,568 23,318 107,975 12,432 103,698 The market is quiet, and the transactions][of the week have beep rather limited. Prices are, nevertheless, firmly maintained, and in some instance slightly advanced. We note in the sales for the week 660 bbls N. O. at 79@93c, and 1,105 hhds. of other sugars at prices within our quotations. The imports at all the ports for the week are not heavy, amount* ing to 2,718 hhds. of foreign, against 2,618, and 2,659 bbls. New Orleans against 1,209 last week. The details are as follows : , Hhds PortoDeme- - tN. O. Cuba. Rico. rara. Other, bbls. 259 , Hhds. r /tt at Philad’a. 2,451 Duty: Raisins, Currants* Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds, Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1$, Filberts and Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb..; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits,35 1 $8 cent ad val. Raisins,Seedless. do Layer $cask 9 25®9 37$ ^ box 3 95® 4 00 3 90®.... $ 1b 12 ®.... 28 ® £0 do Bunch.. Currants MOLASSES. Citron, Leghorn Prnnes, Turkish 8® do do 9 37 ® 38 Almonds, Languedoc...... 8" @ 31 ‘ Provence Sardines 34$® b8 - 28$® 29 box $ lb qr. Figs,Smyrna Brazil Nats ... Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, Pearl Sago Tapioca Macaroni, Italian Dried Feuit— Sicily, Soft Shell 5 18 ® 21 : Shelled. .,;;,.. Sardines. $ hi. box do Apples ; 17 ® 1?$® 7® 11$® 12$® .. ® ® 21 ® 9 lb Blackberries Peaches, par. d Peaches, unpared *. I7f 80 9 12$ 14 ... .. 23 8 £> 9 9$ ® 10 18 ® 23 8$® 9 THE DRY GOODS TRADE. ^PortoDenver; 997 ® 13$ Dates -.i 1N. O J Cuba. Rico. rara.Other bbisj -• pepper and B ' We have rid ay, P. M„ February 8, 1868. fair business to report for the past week, every prospect of a steady remunerative trade Stocks, Feb. 8, and imports since Jan. 1, 1868, were as follow*: .fpr Jthe Spring campaign. This refers mainly to domestic cot¬ DemePorto Other Total, N.Oi ton goods, which are scarce in many leading brands, and very rara.' Cuba. Rico. bbls; ♦Hhds at— foreign.' forT fgn.' 38 473 3,991 4,502 New York, stock 371 6 018 f ^rm consequence of the rise in cotton. The ease in the 1,049 2,470 Imp’ts since Jan. 1 York Portland 288 Boston.. 633 N. .... i!03 . Baltim're N. Qrlfi’*... .... 203 .... j ' 433 . ... .j and there is i-f a very now _ fort land Boston, Philadelphia Baltimore New Orleai s “ “ ...... Same time * 66 £09 ‘ 1,356 174 226 359 I money niar^et a^so tends to increase confidence, and if trans- 217$ restricted to the demand for consumption, it is thought probable that we have seen the last of the severe crisis through which the trade has just passed. L66$ |.actions 1*504 ....... Total import,.,. 1867 . .. 108 1,086 — “ 4‘ 5.541 6,264 7.451 1,686 9M 8,393' 646 1,762 443 6,92t Stocks generally reported light in domestic goods, so jobbers have bought freely even at the advancing pricesQuotations are now based upon the value of the raw material, knd it depends greatly on the firmness of cotton if present Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads . SPICES. The trade in these has been, since our last, and is at present, very quiet; thU is in no measure owing to a surfeit of the market, however. aa the stock of spices, both here and throughout the country, is believed to be quite light, not to the views of holder*, who are maintaining prices ~ " , very firmly. ...I. 1 FRUITS* *^.u u . • / v are j fates can are be fully, maintained. The trade buying with are J > 1 & L caution, but orders aie much more freely placed than [generally anticipated a short time since. I was . The exports of dry goods for th« week ending Jan. 21, and moderately active trade only. Turkish january 1, 1868, and the total for the same time in prunes have arrived so freely as to affect the price, and we have to jggy antj $860 are shown in the following table : note a further slight decline of Jc*y They are selling readily at l&Jc —•PROM BOSTON -YBOM NXW TORK.—Domestics.—. D, Goods, Val. Domestics. Dry Goods In raisins the extreme firmness with which holdera^owing to the advice, pkgs. cases. pkgs. Val. packages. : Exports to 46 from Malaga, have held their stocks, has rendered the trade very quiet Hayu 5 10 ' 1 l,C0O “• Brazil.. Figs have been sold largely within the week at auction, somewhat to Liverpool 87 : 30,9^2 1 140 Cuba!.......... the detriment of the legitimate trade. Business in fruits show* a r— —-> . u .... . —..... , • •«•#« - ' <74;* X :x yy*.* *r V ***** I > *v •*' r - — X 4 -v [February 8, 1868. THE CHRONICLE. 182 New Granada Cacutta • • » • • • • 2 • .... Singapore • .... .... • . .. • 119 .. - 15 38 2 .... .... do 800 16, do 900 18, Union No. 20 224, do 12*, Star Mills 600 10*, 50 25. Denims have shown a very fair trade at advancing prices. Stocks holdeis are firm in their views. Ark¬ 101 90 15 $31,241 $1,692 Total this week wright, bro’n 17, do blue 16*, Amoskeag 30, Blue Hill 1?*, Boston 391 5S3 1,904 35,832 163,472 Since Jan. 1, 1863.. brown 13*, Beaver cr. blue 19, do bro’n 15, Chester Dock B 14, Colum- , l-'l 41 359 dame time 1867... bian extra 2**, Haymaker 16*. Manchester 17, Liugard’s blue 18*, do 4,864 I860.... 6,422 brown 12*, Otis AXA 27*, do BB 25, do CC 21, Pearl River 27*. Pitts We annex a few particulars of leading articles of domestic field 10, Thorndike 15, Tremont 18, Union 14, Uncasvills 16, Warren brown 16, Workingman’s 21*, York 27*. manufacture, our prices quoted being those of the leading Corset Jeans are selling freely at our revised quotations. Amos¬ jobbers: keag 13, Androscoggin 11, Bates 11, Everetts 15, Indian Orch, Imp 12, Laconia 134, Naumkeag 13*, do satteen 17*, Newmarket 12, Pepperell Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are firm at the advance noted last 15*, Washington satt 17. week, and we have again to revise our quota iona in many brands. Cambrics and Silesias are but in slight demand, and jobbers in 4-4 especially are scarce. Agawam 3d inches 1*2, Amoskeag A 36 some instances are'selling beneath Agents’prices. Pequot cambrics 16, do B 36 15*, Atlantic A 36 16, do H 36 15*, do P 36 12*, do L 10, Superior 7*. Victory H 8, Washington 9, Wauregan 9. Blackburn 86 12*, do V 33 12*, do N 27 9, Augusta 36 14*, do 30 12*, silesias 15, Ellerton 12*, Indian Orchard 12*, Lonsdale twilled 14* Broadway 36 13, Bedford R 30 8£-, Boott H 80 9*, do O 34 11*, do S 40.13,do W45 17*, Cabot A 36 15, Commonwealth 0 27 7, Exeter A Victory twilled 12, Ward 12*. Canton Flannels are neglected aud prices are nominal. 36 12, Golden Ridge 36 12, Grafton A 27 8, Great Falls M 36 12, do Ellerton N S 83 11, Indian Head 30 16, do 30 12*, Indian Orchard A 40 13*. do brown 27, do O 24, do P 22, Hamilton 20, Laconia 20, Naumkeag F 16*, Ellerton N bleached 29, do O 26, do P 24, Naumkeag F 29, Pemberlon C 36 12, do BB 36 10*, do L 30 9, do VV 34 10, do F 36 13, do G 83 11, do do NN 36 13, Kennebec 36 9, Laconia O 39 13, do B 87 12*, do A 12. E 36 12, Liwrence C 36 15*, do E 86 18*, do F 86 13, do In Domestic Woolens business is still dull, although the demand is G. 34 11, do H 27 9*, do LL 86 12*, Lyman C 86 13*, doE 36 15*. Massa¬ becoming more brisk as the Spring approaches. The clothiers are chusetts E 33 11, do BB 36 13, do C 27 9*, do J 30 10*, Medford 86 buying very prudently; but the suspension of a well known city firm 15, Nashua fine O 33 18*, do It 36 15*, do E 39 17*/New Hartf ird A 36 during the last week has caused a revival of caution as to credits. 11, Newmarket A 36 12*, Pacific extra 36 15*, do H 36 15*, do L The»e is still an inquiry for medium and heavy cloths, doeskins, Ac., and 36 12*, Pepperell 6-4 25, do 7-4 26,do 8-4 27* do 9-4 82*. do 10 4 some agents report a fair demand for fancy cassimeres. Nevertheless 87*, do 11-4 45, Pepperell E fine 39 14*, do R 36 13*, do O 33 12*, trade in this branch is in a very unsatisfactory state. do N 30 II*, do G 30 11*, Pittsfield A 36 12, Pocasset F 80 8*, do K Foreign Dress Goods show a slight improvement since our last 36 12*, do 40 16, Saranac fine O 33 18, do R 36 15. do E 39 17, 'report. The demand a? yet is very limited, but age <ts and importers -Sigourney 36 8*, Stark A £0 15*, Swift River 36 11*, Tiger 27 8, are showing their new styles, and are holding them at about last year’s Tremont C 36 12, do E 38 9*. rates, no* withstanding the increase in the tariff. Piques are more ac¬ Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings have been in great demand, tive, and there is a steady inquiry for bla^k alpacas suited to the Spring and many orders have been received from the countiy trade, which trade. There is every probability of a sound remunerative business if have .been difficult to fill except at a material advance. Amos- importa ions are not excessive, and especially if the cable is not used keag 46 inches 18*, do 42 17, do A 36 16*, do Z 33 11, An¬ to flood the market at a later stage of the season. droscoggin 36 17*, do Z 86 21, Ballou Son 36 13*, do 33 11*, We clip from the Economist under date of Jan. 25, a review of the Bartletts 36 15, do 33 12*, do 30 11*, Bates 86 19, do BB 36 164, do B 33 12*, Blackstone 36 14, do D 36 12, Boott B 36 English market at Manchester, 13*, do 0 83 11,do H 28 10, do O 30 11*, do R 27 9, do S 86 13, do Manchester.—-We have to report a large and general business W 45 17*. Canoe 27 8, Dwight 36 17, Ellerton 90 37*, do W S 31 throughout the week, both in yarns and goods at a further advance, say 12, do E 42 17, d i 27 8*, Forestdale 38 154, Fruit of the Loom 36 17, of *d. per lb. in yarn, and 8d per piece on shirtings and similar goods. Globe 27 8, Greene M’fg Co 36 11*. do 30‘l0, Great Falls K 36 13, We have had large sales of cotttn at Liverpool at advancing rates, do M*33 12, do S 31 11, do A 83 13, Hill’s Semp. Idem 36 17, do and thL has compelled producers here to ask more far their yarns and 38 14, Hope 3G 13*, James 36 14*, do 83 12*, do 31 11 4, Langdon 42 goods, and buyers, fearing a higher raDge of prices for a time, have 16, do 46 18, do 36" 13*, do 33 12, Lonsdale 36 17*, Masonville 86 bought 17*, New York Mills 86 25, Pepperell 6-4 25, do 8-4 35, do 9 4 40, do decided largely, though owing to the advance asked, there has been a falling off in the demand since Tuesday. Shirtings for India 10 4 46, do 11 -4 50, Rosebuds 86 16, Red Bank 36 11*. do 32 10, Rey¬ and 9-8 printing cloths have been again largely dealt in, and makers nolds A A 36 12*, Slaterville 86 13*. do 33 10*. Slater J. & W. 36 13*, are under long contracts for these light goods, as mulls and jaconets Tip 'fop 86 154, Tuscarora 36 20, Utica 5 4 27 4, do 6-4 35, do 9-4 55, have not been in so much request, and. domestics, <tc., are only in do 10-4 60, do 35 20, do 36 22, Waltham N 33 11 *, do 42 15*. Warnvery moderate demand. Yarns for the home trade have been .in great eutti 46 29, do 40* 20, do 36 22*, White Rock 36 174, Washington request at full prices, but shipping yarns have not been dtalt in so 33 '9*. largely, and are relatively" lower in value. The cotton market after Brown Drills are quiet, but we notice more activity i i first hands. two days quietness, is again active, at advancing rates ; but we hardly The export demand was not very large during the past week. A'^os- fancy that buyers here will follow the market if it goes up, as they keag 15*. Boutt 16, Globe 11*, Laconia 16*, Massabesic 14*, Pepperell have already largely supplied themselves with goods at lower rates 16, Stark A do 15*, do H 14, Wintbrop 12*. than they can now be bought at. Print Cloths are somewhat easier in price ; 64x64 is worth 74 cents, and the eale3 at Providence last week amounted to 180,000 pieces. Prints are fairly active. The new styles are all on the market, and IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. many of the Spring patterns are very tastiful in design and brilliant Prices are firm, and should there be no decline in the raw in finish. The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Feb material, there is a probability of a fair business on the basis of present quotations. Jobbers purchased freely before the advance in cotton, and 6, 1868, and the corresponding weeks of 1866 and 1867, have been i s are thus in a posi ion to ellect sales on favorable terms. Allens 12, follows : American 12, Amoskeag 11*, do p’k «fc purple 12*, do mourning 11, Ar¬ nolds 104, Cocheco 134, Conestoga II*.Dunnell’s 12, Freeman 11, Mallory ENTERED POR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING FEB. 6, 1863. 12, Gloucester 12, Hamilton 12*, Home S**lIovey 7, Lancaster -1867, -1868. 1866. li*, do shirt, camb. 15, London mourning 12, Manchester 12-1 24, MerValue Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. rimac D 124, do p’k it pur 13*, do W 13*, do p’k ifc pur 14, Oriental 636 9S7 Manufactures of wool...2,755 $1,380,989 *323,249 $456,412 715 do cotton.. 1,922 234,979 653,465 1,202 343,750 12, Pacific 12*. Richmood’s 11*-124, Simpson Mourning 12, Sprague’s 215 479 do silk..., 739 289,513 421,581 836,187 >ur and pink 13*, do blue and wh. 14, do fancy 12*, do shirtings 13*, pu 586 812 do flax.... 869 155,7ol 363,936 194,962 Vi 791 604 ictory 11, Wamsutt:» 9, Wauregan 11* 151,35) Miscellaneous dry gooas.5,744 192,133 240,117 Ginghams show a slight inquiry. On a more active market we shall Total 9,029.|3,379,694 3,003 $1,154,852 4,084 $1,608,813 probably see them higher in price, as they are selling now at about last season’s rates. Caledonia 12*. Glasgow 15, Hadley 12*, Lancaster WITHDRAWN PROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE MARKET DURING 16, Manchester 124, Union 12*. THE SAME PERIOD. British Provinces.. ... .... are low, and in consequence .. • « “ ••• .... .... ... , * , Muslin Delaines are doing well. Pacifica are iu fair demand. Spragues are reduced to 17 cent9. Armures 20, do plain 24, Hamilton 18, Lowell 18, Manchester 18, Pacific 18, Pekins 28, Piques 22, Spragues 17. Tickings are selliug freely at our revised quotations. Albany 8* Ameri an 184, Amoskeag A 0 A 36, do A 28, do B 25, do do C 24, do D 19, Bunker Hill 18, Blackstone River 16, Conestoga 27*, do extra 82*, Cordis 274, do BB 164, Eagle 22*, Everett 21, Easton A 14*, do B 13*, Hamilton 25, do D 19, Lewiston 36 32, do 32 27*. do 30 25, Mecs. and W’km’s 28, Methuen A A 28*, Pearl River 8 2, Pemberton A A 27*, do X 17, Swift River 16.*, Thorndike 16*, Whittenden A 22*, Willow Brook 27*, York 30 25, do 32 32*. Stripes show less There is more doing activity, but there is a small and steady deman 1. in first hands. Albany 8|, American 14, Amoskeag 22*, Boston 18*. Easton 14*, Everett 18*, Hamilton 21*, Haymaker 10, Sheridan A 114, do G 12, Uncasville dark 15*, do light 14*, Whittenton AA 20, do A 18, do BB 14, do C 12*, do D 10*, York 21*. Checks are neglected. Caledonia No. 70 25, do 60 22*, do 12 26*, do 10 22*, do 9 19, do 7 16, do 11 20 do 15 25, Kennebeck 21, Lanark No. 2 11*, Park No. 60 15, do 70 20, do 80 22*, do 90 25, Pequa 1,200 Manulactures of wool... do cotton.. do silk do flax .... .... Miscellaneous dry goods. 799 8S2 126 844 73 9 99a Tfds) Add ent’d forconsu’pt’n 9,’o29 $372,184.. 265,328' 130,016 95,409 28,815 1,310 972 131 1,780 604 $611,036 349,500 109,940 338,403 52,053 509 497 85 616 235 $191,630 133,260 107,337 153,152 39,531 $891,793 4,847 $1,600,936 1,942 $624,910 3,379,694 3,003 1,154,852 4,084 1,608,843 Totalth’wnxpon mak’t.11,253 $4,271,487 6,850 $2,755,788 6,026 $2,233,753 ENTERED POR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manulactures of wool... 1,620 do do do cotton.. 924 silk.... flax.... 116 970 Miscellaneous dry goods. 1,422 $714,941 80,289 143,747 193,467 24,732 1,166 9l)7 163 649 137 $615,678 1,182 318.352 191,455 182,484 564 194 661 51.718 3,835 Total 4,762 $1,362,176 Add ent’d lor consu’pt’nJ 9,029 3,379,694 8,007 $1,259,687 TfUlenWred at the portl3,791 $4,741,870 6,010 $2,414,539 8,003 1,154,852 6,406 4,084 $.455,084 151,858 204,197 115,493 61,723 $989,455 1,608,84 i 10,490 $2,098,293 J? THE CHRONICLE. February 8, 1868.] Coal ®l)c Railroatj Jttonitor. Railroad Earnings (weekly).— In pare the reported weekly earnings railroads in 1866 and 1867 : (g “ 2 ti, “ “ “ “ road 1 3d, 4th, “ J 3d, Dec. 1 4th, “ i “ “ “ “ 1st, Jan. [ 2d, “ J “ Chic., R. X. “ 280 4312.8679 2d, “ 3d, 4th, “ “ “ i and Pacific.. 1st, “ S’ t 1,15- ;i “ 2d, 3d, “ w 183 “ “• “ 1st, Jan. | ** “ 2d, Michigan “ w “ • ^d, a P"*'" ‘ w 1 J J . “ “ 3d, 4th, “ v Western4th, Dec. 1 “ Tol. Wabash & 1st, Jan. [ »» “ Western Union w 2d, “ ( “ w 3d, “ 2d, 31, 4th, “ “ vv ~50 * 52,427 56,285 59,752 65,911 \ { 524 159,993 168,273 242,233 79,100 60,100 71,100 67,100 IT ‘ M (460 in.) (507 m.) $2S9,400 $50-4,992 403,804 327,269 388,480 399,870 $361,137 12152 197 89 162 83 103 93 128 03 175 146 157 159 00 402,674 528,618 520,959 596,dS3 540,537 587,121 541,491 497,250 308,581 014,849 475,723 —Erie 1865. Railway. I860. (798 m.) (798 m.) $1,070,890 $1,185,746 1,011,735 987,936 1,425,120 1,252,370 1,274,558 1,418,742 1,435,285 1,101,632 1,243,636 1,208,244 1,331,124 1,070,917 1,538,313 1,153,441 1,295,400 1,416,101 ,476,244 ,416,001 524,917^1,041,115 Jan.... ... 5,094,421..Year .. 5,548,359 5,476,276 $906,759. 67 91 123 0° 44 52 04 116 14 122 117 102 97 1866. (524 m.) (524 m.) $363,996 366,361 413,974 865,180 1351,489 1387,095 £301,613 418,575 “486,808 ,624,760 495,072 i851,799 1,826,722 $312,846 277,234 412,715 418,970 418,024 384,684 339,858 384,401 429,177 496,655 429,548 352,218 .. 1,139,528. ..Mar... 1,217,143. .April.. 1,122,140. ..May 1,118,731...June... 1,071,312 .July... 1,239,024. ..Aug 1,444,745 ..Sep.... 1,498,716. ..Oct .. 1,421,881. ..Nov... ..Dec— 16,501,063 14,596,413 14,139,264.. Year -Mich. So. & N. Indiana. 1865. 75,107 75,428 72,044 65,639 75,925 257 20 263 90 24 v* 59 224 89 260 38 264 63 252 78 230 3X 64,086 67,016 70,136 66,831 95,700 ' 83,790 83,381 128,946 87.377 64,925 48,161 48,161 9,792 9,904 8,819 10,546 54 65 144 159 158 246 87 74 08 167 71 113 50 92 44 92 41 214 124 122 122 04 61 63 90 127 13 •; 127 182 111,517 64,036 64,030 9,193 9,257 11,527 16,438 .. (524 in.) $305,857 . fan. 311,088. .Feb.. 379,761 Mar.. 391.163.. April. 358.601.. > May.. 304.232.. June. July.. Aug*. Sep.., .Year.. 55 55 49 59 699,806 575,287. .April. 578,292. ..May.. 858,500 712,362 680,963 8,489,062 7,467,213 506,586. .June., 634,733 July. . 602,069 >AUgn.. 685,068 95 85 S8 61 93 52 30 65 12 92 8q 32 95 82 58 in.) 226,152 222,241 290,111 269,249 329,851 871,543 321,597 387,209 322,638 360, «23 323,030 271,246 1866. (708 m.) $571,536 528,972 616,665 516,603 $603,053 460,573 617,682 578,403 747,469 739,736 641,589 643,887 618,038 505,266 505,465 411,605 569,250 567,679 480,626 578,253 671,348 661,971 588,219 504,066 (235 in.) $98,183 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 110,664 1,985,712 Sept«. 765;668. Oct.,.. (235 in.) $121,776 84.897 72,135 108,082 267,488 262,172 170,795 116,224 150,989 245,701 244,8.54 98,787 (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 $178,119 155,893 153,903 202,771 192,138 167,301 169,299 168,699 177,625 167,099 173,722 166,015 £162,670 222,953 218,236 198,884 216,783 244,834 222,924 691,005. Nov..., 208,098 212,226 572.772. Dec, 162,694 177,364 . < a 7,337,18$ *Year~ ' 2,240,744 3,251,626 Increase. Decrease. 49,285 &c) 1,155,730 1,148,807 9,000,UUU 5U0JX)0 1(>, 195,017 013,294 10,737,433 547,410 521,305 121,989 Total bituminous &c.... 10,838,311 11,258,738 579,573 8,500,000 .The whole may ' 0,809 supply of coal in the United ^States for the two be aggregated thus : years 1308. 9,055,730 (343,294 . 1S67. 12,379,490 2,0i'0.000 12,050.571 2,000; 00 588,500 10,148,867 521,305 23,217,SOI Anthracite sent to market Anthracite consumed near mines Semi-anthracite sent to market Bituminous mine l, &c Bitumiuous imported 25,909,309 539,281 (tons) supply The total 1867, was from the quantity of coal imported in the year ending June 30, (as above) 521,305 tons, of which 338,452 ton3 came British Provinces and 182,813 tons from other foreign countries. exported in the same year was 266,758 tons, of which 192,912 toes was anthracite, and 92,181 tons domestic and 1,657 foreign bituminous. The value of the coal imported was $1,455,044 or $2 77 (gold) per ton; and of the coal exported, $1,801,528 or $0 49 per ton. These are shipping prices. The amount 1867. 1800. 1805. 1866. (860 in.) (1,032 m.)(l,152 m.) $240,238. ..Jan.. $541,005 .. (708 m.) $660,438. ..Jan. 554,201. ..Feb. 417,352. ..Mar.. 420,007. April. .. June. .July. .Aug.. ..Sep.. ..Oct... .Nov.. .Dec.. 238,926 317,977 f 404,000 . 93,763 78,607 76,248 107,525 104,608 115,184 125,252 116,495 116,146 105,767 . .Jan.. 78,976. .Feb.. , 84,652. ..Mar.. 72,768. .April. 90,526. ..May.. 84,357 81,181 96,388 103,373 98,043 106,921 104,866 113,504 112,952 123,802 $131,707 ..Jan*. $98,181 86,528 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 96,535. .June. 1*6,594. ..July., 114,716. ..Aug.. 121,217 ..Sep.. 142,823. ..Oct.., 132,337. .Nov.., 123,383.. .Dec... . . . 130,000. ..July.. 251,906 244,376 208,785 241,370 188,815 277,830. ...Sep.. 7300,841 276,416 §.171,125 32S,539 129,287 . m .. § 395,579 346,717 2,535,001 Year.. 416,359 2,538,800 r-Toledo, Wab. 1865. 1867. (242 in.) (210 m.) Jan.. 149,842 ...Feb.. Mar.. 174,152 ... ... $144,084 , 189,171 155,753 144,001 , 188,162 ..April. 138 738 171,736....May., 194,524 156,065 ..June. 172,933 July.. r271,798 220,788 Aug... J,374,534 219,160 ..Sept... S 379,981 375,534 230,340 ..Oct 204,0 5 ♦•Nov:... f381,610 171,499 ..Dec.... (. 247,023 , . . . . 123,404 123,957 121,533 245,59S 113,404. ..Aug.. ...Oct... .Nov. Dec. S315,027 S200,268 g'517,702 g 558,200 3.415,400 (351,000 Michigan Central. (251 in.) $94,136. (251m.) (251m.) $96,672 $90,411 85,447 87,791 85,000. ..Feb.. 72,000. ..Mar 87,510. .April. 119,104. ..May.. 114,579. .June . S428,474 1865. 1867. 1866. 283,669 375,210 362,783 333,952 284,977 313,021 398,993 464,77d 506,295 365,196 335,082 324,986 859,645 429,166 493.649 414,604 412,933 330,373 4,504,546 4,260,125 4,371,071 i860. 186T. (340 m.) $242,795 281,613 336,06« 272,(*$ Year... 3,793,005 3,380,583 3^59^319 - (521 m.) $226,059 264,741 $282,438 265,796 337,158 343,736 $259,223 $267,54* . 200,793 270,630 317,052 329,078 304,810 309,591 364,723 382,996 406,766 351,759 807,948 2,207,930.. Year^. 8,926,678 8,694,975 8,788,820 239,139 313,914 271,527 290,916 304,463 349,285 344,700 350,348 372,618 412,553 284,319 246,109 326,236 277,423 283,130 253,924 219,067 279,648 284,729 282,989 240,135 234,683 322,521 365,371 247,262 305,454 278,701 310,762 302,425 379.36? —^Western Union.1865. (521 m.) $237,674 396,248 349,117 436,065 354,830 308.649 1865. 1867. 304,917 328,869 1867. (285 in.) $304,097 (340 in.) (340 m.) A Western.- 325 €91 (285 m.) $146,800.. .Jan.. 130,000.. .Feb. 134,900.. .Mar.. 192,548. .April. 230,497.. .May.., 7221,690..June., £ 193,000. ..July.. ®205.436. ..Aug... £,403,658....Sep... 1,101,600. ...Oct... — .Nov... — ...Dec.... I860. 194,167 256,407 270,300 316,433 1866. (285 m.) $3un,i 279,13 344,228 337,240 401,156 365,663 329,105 413,501 460,661 490,693 447,669 —Ohio & Mississippi.—, r-Milwaukee & St. Paul.—* 1865. I860. 1867. (275 m.) (234 m.) (370 m.) 1867. ^400.941 274.809 7,976,491 9,424,450 11,712,248 .. Year.. 3,466,923 4,105,103 1,224,058 1,201,239 1,258,713 .Year. .Year m. 224,621 277-5U5 -Marietta and Cincinnati. 1865. 1867. $143,000. 183,385 257,230 209,Q99 306,693 . , (235 in.) $292,047 1*283,600 (452 272,454 280,233 251,916 261,480 . , 302,407. .Dec.. 679.160., $241,395 . . .May ..Jan.. ..Feb.. ..Mar.. . . ■ 1868. (410 m.) . 283,951. .April. 338,691. ..May.. 343,678. .June. 356,142. .July 421,484. Aug.. 422,164. ...Sep.. 439,108. ..Oct... 364,196. .Nov.. 477,607. 496,616. 497.521., 684.377., 705,259 761,499. $590,767 $696,147 1867. (228 in.) 459^007 574,604 . 482,164 613,974 765,398 . 499,296 G24,174 774,280 .April. 468,358 880,993 895,712 ..May.. 585,623 925,983 898,357 .June.. 747,942 808,524 880,324. .July. 702,692 797,475 1,0 .8,824 . ..Aug.. 707,508 940,707 1,000,086 1,451,284 . ...Sep.., 932,683 1,200,216 1,508,883 . ...Oct.., 754,671 1,010,892 1,210,387, .Nov.., .Dec.. 712,359 918,088 547,842 142,947 ..Feb. 238,362. ..Mar. $149,658 Chicv, Rock Is. and Pacific -Chicago & Northwestern-^ 1,943,900 1866. 1887. 588,500 Total (tons) Add imported Alton AT. Haute.-i 1865. follows: EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. 7,181,208 6,546,741 1866. 271,081 the mines at least near 539,281 Bituminous (Cumberland, Bituminous (all other) (280 m.) 280 71,464 quantity of semi-anthracite and bituminous coal mined in Semi-Anthracite (Penna) 3,840,091 3,095,152 3,884,368..Year ^St. 733;866 712,495 307,919 236,824 226,840 662168 795,938 357,956 423,341*4«Nov. 370,757**, Dec.., 857.583 633,667 552,378 648,201 654,926 757,441 379,935 555,222 335,985 409,250 401,280 310,594 678,349. ..Mar.., 682.510 355,270 539.435....0.t... ,. 637,186 646,995 584,523 258,480 322,277 1865. 1867. (468 m.) (468 m.) $690,144 $559,982, $560,115. Jan... 522,823. ..Feb... 480,986 678,504 1866. (468 in.) 12,630,571 as I860. -Mil. and Prairie du Chien.- ?ittsb., Ft.W.>& Chicaeo.1865. $280,503 275,282 299,063 1867. 4,650,328 4,613,743 98 114 57 129 31 141 63 (708 m.) 917,639. ..Feb... 1,041,646. 10619 30,029 35,145 24,856 1865. Jan . ....12,379,400 be added for consumption the United States is estimated -Illinois Central. 1867. (775 in.) 485,007 203,007 40,451 591,718 2,000,000 tons. 46 30 01 119 64 140 00 139 89 (280 m.) . 451,477 474,441 399,304 429,009 472,483 557,101 (tons) To which may 1865. 377,852, I'c !>.... 438,046 .March 443,029 April.. 459,370 .May... 3S0.796, J une.. 400,110, .July... 475,257. Aug... 483,857. .Sept... 477,528. .Oct.... 446,596. .Nov 350,837. .Dec.... 894,533 343,408 . .4,736,282 4,331,820 2,502,054 5.328,000 ... Total —Chicago and Alton.—~ 1866. 1867. 1807. (507 ill.) 209 30 148 70 138 98 215 57 173 16 23,124 19,964 18,432 21,835 59,133 r 521 -Atlantic & Great Western. 1805; ► 4° 213 146 42 150 56 COMPARATIVE MONTHLY I860. • m‘4 201 0~ 247 01 187 21 235 60 171,376 71,133 1st, Jan. | “ 4 61,006 :5.i'3 QQK J “ 1887. 4,033,487 2,452 560 .r Grand total 1st, Jan.) Michigan Southern “ j 4th, “ . 2d, Jan. f 3d, “ J “ • 73,303 251 3d, Dec.) Central“ IV • 28,758 32,466 25,069 Marietta and Cincinnati.3d, “ 69,161 Increase. Decrease. I860. Schuylkill Lehigh The 23,062 22,168 19,260 18,330 “ “ 1867. 16813 193 50 202 95 • 52,512 J 4!0-> Dec.) 4th, “ ! * p. m-x 1866. 155 06 181 68 177 97 98,170 102,897 92,056 90,235 66,760 67,211 452 Km’OL k* “ 4t3, “ leading Earn’gs Gross earirgs—* 1866. 1867. ',8.618 85,245 81,136 Jan.*j Mihvaukee.lst, Jan. Detroit and of the lows : Regions. • Wyoming 168,684 173, 45 149,213 199,490 J & •• •• mile) we com f W est’n. 1st, J an. “ and per ross table l Chicago and Alton ‘ “ Chcia^o and N. { i1- 507 “ following Traffic, 1867.—The quantity of anthracite sent to market Pennsylvania in 1866 and 1867 compares as fol¬ from the raiuos of Shamokin Week. Miles of Railroads. Atlantic & Gt. Western. 1st,Jan. the 183 (157 m.) .. Jan... ...Feb.. 92.715 6L770 75,248 79.431 Dec.. 37,830 54,478 64,718 -Year.. 689,888 814,086 774,957 April.. ..May .. .June.. ~ 37,265 32,378 33,972 63,862 82,147 39,299 43,333 86,913 102,686 85,508 60,698 84,462 100,303 ..Mar... . $43,716 1866. 1867. (177 m) (177 m.) 45,102 $39,679 27.666 36,006 July.. .Aug... .Sept... .Oct .Nov.. ,. 68,180 5'*,862 75,677 36,392 40,710 67,852 60,558 68,262 73,525 126,496 119,667 THE CHRONICLE. 184 [February 8, 1868. RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Subscribers will confer a great favor by I\ ,K. — name, Tlie figures after the refer to the vol. and giving: us immediate notice of any error discovered in our Tables* Dividend. Stock ; out- ! page of Chronicle containing standing, j last report. * means “leased. N. If. FRIDAY. Periods. Last Date, paid. irate name — The figures after the to the vol. and refer Dividend. Stock FRIDAY. page of Chronicle containing out¬ last report. * means “ leased. standing. Bid. [Ask. v Last paid. Periods. Date, (rate Bid. Asfe 125 50 5,285,05: Jan. & July Jan. ’68 130 V' 1.500.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 N. V. and New Haven (5 p.55)100 6,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 139 New York, Prov. & Boston.. .100 1,755,2S1 Jan. & July! 90 Ninth A venue 100 797,320 Northern of New Hampshire.100 3,068,400 June & Dec!Dec. ’67 ii.i Northern Central, 4, p. 568.. 60 4,518,900 Quarterly. Nov.’67 North Eastern (S. Car.) (5, p. £05) 898,950 146 do 8 p. c., prei 155,000 May & Nov May ’67 15*; 16* North Carolina (5, p. 264) 100 4,000,000 North Missouri 100 2.469,307 63 Feb. ’67 North Pennsylvania 50 3,150,15u 137' Norwich and Worcester 100 2,368,600 Jan. A July!Jan. ’68 94 60 ,.Feb. A Aug; Aug. ’67 Ogdensb. & L. Champ(5 p.H9)100 3,077,000 1 v* do preferred.100 356,400!Apr. & Oct]Oct. ’67 Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 20,226,604 32* 32* 74 do 76 preferred.. 100 3,353,180 January. Jan. ’67 Old Colony and Newport.... .100 4,848,300 Jan. & July!'Jun. ’68 92* Orange and Alexandria 100 2,063,655 Burlington A viasonri. R'ver.100 125 126 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 482,400 Feb. & Aug] Aug. ’67 4*1 Oswego and Syracuse 50 Camden and Amboy. 4, p. 509.100 6,936,025 310 Panama 100 7,000,000 Quarterly. Jan. ‘68 6 Camden aud Atlantic 50 522,350 ill>9* noPennsylvania 600,000 50 20,000,000 May & Nov Nov. ’67 do do preferred 50 Jan. ’68 3* 54* 721,926 Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,091,400 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 Cape Cod 00 1,150.000 Jan. A July Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50 22,742,867 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 94*1 95 Catawissa* 50 54 Phila., Germant. A Norriet’n* 50 I,507,850 Apr. & Oct Oct. ’67 do I,? 1136 50 2,200,000 April & Oct. Oct.' ’67 3* 53* preferred Phila., Wilming. A Baltimore. 50 9,019,300 Jan. & July Jan. ’63j Cedar Rapids A Missouri RivlOO June A Dec June ’67 Pittsburg and Connellsville... 60 1,776,129 Central Georgia & Bank’g Co. 100 4,666^800 115 Jan. 68 102* Pittsb.,Ft.W. A Chic.,4,p.471.100 II,440,987 Quarterly. Jan. "6Sj Central of New Jersey(],p80-)10uj 13,000,000 Quarterly. r.ul o u» ru u\ Portland A Kennebec (new)..100 Feb. A Aug. Aug. ’67: 2,600.000 ..50 Central Ohio 102 Portland, Saco, A Portsm’th.100 1,566*666 June A Dec Dec. ’67 400,000 Apr. April. do preferred 50 Oct. Providence and Worcester... .100 1,8 K),000 Jan. A July Jan. ’63} 970,000 Central Park, E. A N. River.. 100 Mar A Sep sep. 134* Raritan and Delaware Bay... .100 2,530,700 Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 329. .100 3,886,500 135* Rensselaer A Saratoga consollOO 800,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67! do preferred.. 100 2,4*5,000 Mar A Sep.: Sep. ’67 114 & Sep Sep. ’67 500,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67 Saratoga and Whitehall... .100 Cnic.Biir. A Quincy, (5, p.584)100 12,500,000 Mar. 800,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67. Troy, Salem A Rutland 100 Chicago and Great Eastern.. .100 4,390,000 Jan. A : v .:(* • Richmond and Dan., 4, p.456.100 2,000,000 July July ’67 Chicago, Iowa A Nebraska*...100 1,000,000 72 Richmond A Petersb.,4,p.488.100 1,008,600 2,227,000 Chicago aud Milwaukee* ....100 59*! 60*! Rome, Watert. &Ogdensb’g..l(H) 2,400,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’6s Chicago A Nor'west (5, p. 264)100 13,232,496 74* 74*| Rutland -. 100 do do pref. .100 14,789,125 Annually. Dec. ’66 98* 98* Oct. ’67 do preferred 100 Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific..100 9,100.000 April & Oct Oct. ’67 51 St. LouiB, Alton, & Terre H... 100 2.300,000 j 53 Cine., Ham. A Daytou(5 p.87)100 3,260,800 April & Oct do do 362,950 ! 73 pref.100 1,700,000 Annually. May ’67 Cincin.,Richm’d A Chicago...100 St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*100 1,469,429 Cincinnati and Zanesville 50 1,600,250 108 110 50 2,989,090 Sandusky, and Cincinnati Cleveland, Col & Cin (5,p. 105)100 6,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb, ’68 Nov. do do 893,073 May A Nov Nov. ’67 May A pref. 50 Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 2,044,60ft Jan. A Nov Jan. ’67 111 ‘68 July 900,236 Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100 8,750,000 Cleve, Pain. A Ashta('»,p.711)100 Second Avenue 10ft 1,"00,000 Sep. ’67 Cleveland and Pittsburg TO 5,424,091 Schuylkill Valley* 576,050 Jan. A July Jan. ’68 60 Cleveland and Toledo(5,p.301) 60 6,250,000 Jan. & Jub Jan. '68 Shamokin Val. & Pottsville*. 50 869,450 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 Columbus A Indianap. Cent..100 nnil Yoniil* 50 Shore Line Railway 100 635.200 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 50 1,786,800 Jan. & July fan. 68 Columbus and Xenia* Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)... 100 750,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’67 Concord 50 1,500,000 May A Nov N’ov. ’67 South Carolina 50 5,819,275 Concord and Portsmouth 100 350,000 .Tan. A July Jan. 63 Jan. ’68 South Side (P.LSX.T 4, p. 521.. 100 1,365,800} Conn. A Paseump.3,p.21G pref.100 1,514,301 Jan. A July South Wesr.Georgia(5, p. 648)100 а,203,900 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 Connecticut River 100 1,650,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’63 Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..100 1,200,130 50 1,316,900 Apr. & Oct Oct. ’67 Cumberland Valley Terre Haute & Indianapolis.. 60 1,983,150 Jan. A July Jan.’6" Dayton and Michigan 100 2,38 <,063 Jan. & July •Tan. ’68 Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 1,170,000 Quarterly. Delaware*-. 50 406,132 110 1115 Jan. A July Jau. ‘63 Toledo, Peoria, A Warsaw.. .100 776.200 Delaware, Lacka., A Western 50)11,288,550 do do 1st prel.100 1,651,314 scrip. 100 do do do do 2d pref.100 908,424 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 452,350 46 Toledo, Wab A West(4.p.743)100 5,700,000 17 do pref. ..100 1,500,000 do do do preferred.100 1,000,000 May A Nov Nov. ’67 Drv Dock, E. B‘ way A Bat... 100 1,200.000 Utica and Black River 100 834,400 Jan. A July Jan. ’68 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 1,673,952 Vermont and Canada* 100 2,250,000 June A Dec June’67 pref... 100 1,983.170 December. Dec. 67 do do U2* Vermont and Massachusetts. .100 2,860,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’68 14* Eastern, (Mass) 100 3.383.300 Jan. A July Jan. ‘68 Virginia Central, 3, p. 678 100 3,353^079 fiist Tennessee A Georgia.. .Iu0 2,141,970 530s Virginia and Tennessee ..100 2,94 ,791 East Tennessee A Virginia . 100 1,902,000 do do pref.100 555,500 Eighth Avenue 100 1,000,000 Quarterly. Jan. ’68 4 Western (Mass), 4, p. 247 600,000 May & Nov Nov. ’57 2) 100 8,72-MOO Jan. A July J an. ’68 Elmira and Williamsport*.. . 50 Western (N. Carolina) 600,000 Jan. & July Jan. 63 3} ..100 2,227,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’64 do do pref. 5n I 74*!) Western Union (Wis. & HI.) 2,687,237 100 16.574.300 Feb. & Aug Feb.’68 4 Erie, 4, p.599 :; 82 January. Jan. ’68 7 i Worcester and Nashua 75 1,141,000 Jan. A July jan. ’68 5* do preferred 100 8.536.900 Jan. A 63 4 Canal. July Jan. Fitchburg 100 3,540,000 ; Chesapeake and Del. (5 p.lS3) 25 1,818,963 June A Dec June ’67 Georgia . .100 4,156,000 Apr. A Oct. Apr. ’67, 6 106 Delaware Division........... 5()| 1,633,851: Feb. A Aug Ang. ’67 -8*! 65 Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 1,900,000 71 Delaware and Hudson 149 100 10,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’68 do do pref. 100 5,253,836 200 Hartford & N.Haven(5,p.7*8)100 3,000,000 Quarterly. Jan. ’68 j Delaware & Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,521,300 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’68 57* j Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50 б,968,146, May A Nov Nov. ’67 Housatonic preferred 100 1,180,000 Jan. & July Jan. ‘(>8 728,100! •lan. A July Jan. ’65 I Monongahela Navigation Co. 50 Hudson River 100 9,981,5U0 April A Oct Oct. ’67 ; Morris (consolidated),4, p.631.100 494,380 1,025,000 Feb. A Aug Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 190,750 Jan. A July Jau. ‘68 i do preferred 100 1,175,000, Feb, A Aug Feb.’ ’68 do do pref. 50 £7* 135* | Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,'207 Feb. A Aug Ang. ’67 Illinois Central, 4, p. 311 100 23,386,450 Feb. A Aug Jau. ’63 do Feb. A Aug Aug. *7 prefer.. 50 45* Indianapolis, Cin. A; Laluvette 50 1.689.900 Mar. A Sep Sep.*’67 28 ; Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 Jeffersouv., Mad. A Indianap.100 2,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’66 Oct. 95 Union, preferred 5U 2,907,850 Joliet aud Chicago* 100 300,000 Quarterly Jar.. ’67 West Branch A Susquehanna. 50 1,100,01K' Tan. A ’68 300,000 Jan. A July Joliet and N. Indiana 100 July; Jan. ’G5 70 Wyoming Valley 50 Lackawanna and Bloomshurg 50 1,835,000 800,000 Irregular, j Sept.’66 IOC ‘04*1 Miscellaneous. Lehigh Valley 50 10,734.100 Quarterly. Jan. *68j Coal.—American.. 25 1,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Mar. ’67 3* 50* 514,641 May A Nov Nov. ’67 Lexington and Frankfort 100 50 2,500.000 Little Miami— 50 8,572,400 June A Dec June ’67 .•*••] 25 500,000 Jnn. A Dec.] i)ec. ’67 o' Little Schuylkill* 50 2,646,10< Jan. & July Jan. ’68 .100 5,000,00i Long Island 60 3,000,0 >0 Jan. & July! Aug. ’66 100 2,000,000 Tan. A July Jau. ’67 5 Jan. ’68 50 1,109.594 Louisville and Frankfort 36* * 36* Cumberland 100 5,000,000 Louisville and Nashville 100 5,492,638 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 1U 50 3,200,000 Quarterly. Aug. ’67 5 17S Pennsylvania Louisville, New Alb. A Chic. .100 2,800,000 jan. ‘68 50 1,250,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 6 Macon and Western. 100 1,500,000 1,000,000 Jan. A J uly 100 1,600,860 Maine Ce itrai Wilkesbarre .100 3,400,000 Apr. A Oct 30 Marietta & Cincinnati,1st pref 50 6,586,135 Mar. A Sep Sep.* ’66 .100 1,250JXV, Feb- A Aug Aug. ’66 do do 2d pref.„ 50 4,051,744 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66 Gas. lyn. 2,000,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 5 Manchester and Lawience... .100 1,000,000 May A Nov Nov. ’67 Mar.’62 on 1,200,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’68 5 Memphis A Charlest.(*.p,52 0100 5,312,725 Jan. 113 >113 Harlem A July Jan. ’68 50 644,000 Michigan Central, 5. p. 151... 100 7,502:860 91*! 91* 20 386,00f. Tan. A July Jan. ’68 5 Michigan Southern A N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’65 do do guar.100 787,7Ck, Feb. A Aug Aug.’67 4,000,000 Jan. A July Jan. ‘68 5 •••! 50 Metropolitan 2,800,000 ICu Milwaukee & P. duChien New Yor,c...i 100 do do lstpref.ioof 3,204,29c. February...jFeb.’67 1,000,000 May A Nov Nov. ’67 90 William burg 96 750.000 Jau. A July Jan. ’ub 5 841,400 February... I Feb. ’67 do do 2d pref. UKr 49 .100 4,500,000 49* Improvemen t. Canton 59* 69* Milwaukee and St. Paul ioo 3,627,00<' Fau. A July Boston Vv ater Power.... .100 4,000,000 66* 66* do 2ft* so* July ’6f •20 preferred 100 7,371,000 January, plan. ’67 113* 111 Mine Hill A Schuylkill Ilaven 50 3.775,60< Tan. & July! Jan. '68 Telegraph.— vSrestern Union. 100 40,350,400 Jan. A July Juiy ’67 2 j 3o* 36* Transit.—Central America.. .100 '. Mississippi Centra' (5,p. 265). 100 2,948 785 10,000,000 Quarterly. Nov ’6f 2 825,40'. Express.— A dams 74* 74* Mississippi A Tenu.4, p. 489.10b American. 70 Mobile and Ohio/1, p. 663).. 100 3,588,300 70* 9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’tit 3 Merchants* Union .100 20,000,000 ■34* 34* Montgomery and West Point. 100 1,644,104, United States .100 6,000,m Quarterly; Dec. ’6( 3 Morris and Essex 50] 3,500,000 Mar. A Sep Mar. ‘67-j3*$ 50 Oct. ’67 Nashua aud Lowell 100 Wells, Fargo & Co.. .. .100 0,o00.000 720,00; VIay & Nov NOV. ’67 42* 43 .100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Sept.’67 2* 95* 95* Nashville A Chattanooga 100. 2,056,544 20,000,000 Quarterly. Sept. ’67 3 109 209* Naugatuck 100 1,408,600 Feb. & Aug F. b. ’68 500.001 Tau. A July Jan. ’.6S. 25 1,000,000 Tan A July Jnn. V 5 New Bedford and Taunton ... 100 .100 1,000,(XX Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 10 1,334,001 Tan. & July Jan. ’68 New Haven A Northampton.. 10 132 New Jersey, 4, p. 183 1,006,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’68 4 100 6,250,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68j 895,000 Mar & Sep. Sep.’67 .100 1,500,000 Jan. A July Jan. 68 5 New London Northern.. .. 100 8 .1(X 5,097,600 8* N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO 4,093,425 iposa1 i 13 .100 5,774,400 34* id. O.yJackson & Gt.N.,4,p.l84100 4,697,457 Mariposa Gold Feb .100 10,000,000 Quicfciilyer 24* 25* HlW York Central, (5 p, 777),IQQ Railroad. par Albany and Susquehanna.... 100 1,675,139! Atlantic & St. Lawrence* 100 2,494,900; Jan. A July Jau. ’68 100 16,151,962! April Oct Oct. ’67 Baltimore and Ohio Washington Branch* 100 1,650,000! April A Oct Oct. ’67 \llg. Bellefontame Line 100} 4,420,000[Feb. A Aug Jau. ’67 ‘68 Berkshire* 100 600,000i Quarterly. Di c. ’67 A Blossburg and Corning* 50 250,0001June A Dec Jau. ’68 B ston and Albany 100 13,725,000 Jan. July 100 14,884,000 Jan. A July Jan. 68 Boston, Hartford and Erie Boston and Lowell 500 1,891,500 Jau. & July Jau. ’O'* Boston and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .10C 4,076,974 Boston ana Providence 100 3,360,000 Jau. A July Jan. ’68 Jan. A Boston and Worcester 100 5,000,000 Jan. & July Feb. ‘68 10 2,100,000 Feb. A July July ’67 Broadway & 7th Avenue Brooklyn City 10 1,000,000 June & Aug Aug. ’67 Dec Dec. ‘67 850,000 Batfalo, New York, A Erie*..lO0 Buffalo aud Erie 100 2,200,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’68 York and Harlem New York A Harlem pref iw ... .. |lU2* • ~ ’ . • . . * •' — • .... . • « . , # t . .... * ... . .. .... . . . .... ... • ....... ,,. • * • « • * .... * . ...» • . . . .... .. .... ...... .. • ... • • • « ... • . .. a • - * »»• » * - • v • • • • ?k » « > v * ■;#; - <-* ■ V* i f A-i Vi-t . « • ■ » • • 185 THE CHRONICLE February 8, 1868.] RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.—Page 2. C Description. I will 73 INTEREST. DKSORIP TION.» 0.0 1Rate. X) q a •d >» Os Pu Payable. OQ S is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ it is expressed by the figur in brackets after the Co’s name. umn < niSAT, INTBBXST. p, <D t Amount N. B.—Where the total Funded is not given in detail in the 2d col outstand ing. nmn it is expressed by the figure s in brackets after the Co’# name. » week. appexr In title place next FRIDAY. . • • > Bond Lilt Page H Amount outstand¬ Rate. ing. jt Payable. 3 a a. ! Railroad: Harris and Essex: 1st Mortgage, 2d 6.000,00(9 do Bonds.. Hampshire & Hamden R.R. New let . Mortgage} Jackson & Of. North.: Mortgage Sinking Fund New Orleans, 1st, 2d do - of 185!3 Fund Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts) Convertible Bonds New York and Harlem ($0,098,045); 1st General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage N. F, Pwv. and Boston: .. 1st 2d r 6 Bonds... do North Carolina: Loan North Missouri: 1st Geueral Mortga e ($6,000,000). North Pennsylvania (: 3,124,737): 250,OK 100,00' Mortgage Equipment Bonds Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Old Colony A Newport R.R.: Bonds do do Orange A Alexandria ($2,923,004): 1st Mortgage do or 1st Extension dp 2d 3d or 2d Extension .. ... Oswego A Rome ($657,000). 1st Mortgage Income (guar, Oswego and Syracuse 1st by R. W. & O.) ($311,500); do Pacific, guaranteed by Missouri..... Mortgage construction bonds do do .Tap, A 7 50 000 1st 3d do Pfiila. and Balt. Central ($800,000): Mortgage Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000); 1st 1st Convertible Loan 7 April A Oct 8 7 Jan. A July do 7 Coupons Bonds Pittsburg A Conndlsville ($1,500,000) 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) PZb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) lsi Mortgage 2d do 3d do Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. Pittsburg and Steubenville : 1st 2d 2,900,000 750,000 do Feb. A A Kennebec ($1,394,661) .* 1st mortgage bonds, ext 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 3d do Convertible Bonds Reading and Columbia; 1st Mort... Rensselaer A Saratoga consolidated: 1st Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga 1st Mort. Saratoga A Whitehall.... 1st Mort. Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) Richmond A Danville ($1,717,500): ' . . 4thMortgage Interest Bonds Richmond A Petersburg. ($319,000): Bonds, coupon & registered General Mortgage Romo, Watert. A Ogdens. .-($1,827,000) Sinking Fund (Wat. A Home) Potsdam A Watertown, guar * • .... . . .. • ... • • • • • . • • • • • • • • uioleoo 570,000 * .... .... .... 7,000,000 1,500,000 Jnly do. Tan. & July lan. A July 7 7 • * 90 .... .... 99 9i • »• 4,904,840 6 i Vpril A Oct 2d 3d • • • • . • • • 110 .... ... .... • • • Convertible Vt. Central A VtA Canada : 1st mort Vermont Central: 1st Mort (consol.) 2d do Vermont and Massachusetts 1st 90 .. . .... 1 00 97 do 1,521,000 do 976,800 6 do 228,500 6 200,000 5 »lay A Nov. 1880 1880 1886 1868 1,000,000 400,000 5,250,000 5,160,000 2,000,000 200,000 .... ... .... .... Iphia 1st Mortgage (convert.) Conpon do 2d registered Western (Mass.) (6,269,520): Sterling (£899,900) Bonds A lbany City Bonds 97 k • • • . • • . . • • • . .... .. • • • • • • • • • April & Oct Jan. & July 1912 1912 1912 1884 . .... April & Oct 1883 do 1895 1,000,600 250,000 208,000 800,000 Mch & Sept do do Mch & Sept 1888 1888 1876 1879 400,000 340,000 600,000 May & Nov, 1890 826,000 140,547 Feb. & Ang 73’75 do 69’76 130.500 June & Dec 1875 Mar. & oep. 1870 175,000 do do 1890 1880 104 98 90 731,600 611.500 Sep. 1880 fun. A Dec. C9-’74 Tan. A July *70 ’75 ’70 ’72 do '66 ’63 do 800,000 175,000 Jan. A 1871 1886 April A Oct 1876 1870 1894 Jan. & July June A Dec D90 1890 1878 1878 1883 1871 Feb. & Aug W 1 ouu,uuu i do Jan. A 560,000 6 June A Dec 1861 1867 1883 Jan. & 70 71 32 32k 73 1884 1866 1875 7 Jan. A July 8 April & Oct 562,800 68 A Dec I 1872 (Feb. A Aug I 511,400 1873 1878 5 April A Oct|'68-’71 6 Jan. A July ’70-’76 6 April A Oct 1875 6 I Jan. A >uly 1890 6 do 1890 7 200,000 2,000,000 July do do 1,000,000 448,000 60 1885 1875 1882 (June 600,OoO 90* July I 188* Apr. A Oct. I 650,000 7 May A Nov 200,000 7 Mar. A Sep. 8 [Feb. A Aug I 1896 7 7 |Jan. May A Nov. 1873 |May A Nov. 1870 |Jan. A Julyl 1886 1870 1890 1886 1878 1870 6 A Dec. 1886 25,000 6 Jan. A July 1871 1877 do 600,000 6 1,699,500 800,000 6 5 (JaAp Ju Oc| do 6 6 |Jan. Julyl & 636,000 *7 Mch A Sept 752,000 | Jan. A July| 1866 ; below M. Chunk)... do do 2,000,000 148,000 Bonds |Jan. A July [April A Oct | 768,250 232,087 Pennsylvania A New York: 1st Mortgage (North Branch) 690,000 do 6 I Improvement Susquehanna and Tide- Water; Maryland Loan Coupon Bonds . 686,600 1,183,701 | 1,093,000 A Tan. A 3 980,670 6 Sept] Julyl [May A Nov. . .... go Western Union Telegraph: 1st Mortgage) OMTtrukit.. 1,000,000 1S76 1872 1882 1870 Jan. A Julyl 1865 1 1878 do 227,669 Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bondfUnion (Pa.): 1st Mortgage 8,000,000 May A Nov. West Branch and Susq.: 1st Mortgage 750,000 |Jan. A July Tan A July WyomingValley: 1st Mortgage.... 600,000 Miscellaneous: American Dock A Improvement: Bonds (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) 2,000,000 7 Jan, A July Covington and Cincinnati Bridge : 1st Jan. A July e Bonds 429,fi00( Jan. A July Consolid. Coal Co.(Md.); Mort.( cony.] 629,000 Cumberland Coal: IstMortgage 417,000 ...JJan. A July 1,500,000 I Jan. fc July Mariposa Mining; 1st Mortgage 2d do 3,000,0(X. 7 April A Oct 600 000 7 Feb. A Ang Pennsylvania Coal; Mortgage Bonds. Quicksilver Mining ; June A Dec 1st Mort.,prin.Aint. payable In gold 500,000 do 1884 1897 1887 1876 May*Nov. 1876 |Mch 1,764,330 do 1870 Quarterly, 414,158 1 5,434,351 Morris < Mortgage Boat Loan 2d 75 July Jan. A July 6 Schuylkill Navigation ; 1st Mortgage 70 July Varions 175,000 2d Mar. A Jan. A I Preferred Bonds | Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage... Delaware and Hudson.; Bonds (coup) Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage • 1872 1870 1686 68-74 300,000 j 689,000 (North. Cent.): • 1875 1875 1867 Feb. & Aug Mar. & Sept 600,000 Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Feb. & Aug 1881 1881 do 1890 Jan. A Jnly 7 Jan. A Jnly 7 June A Dec 700,000 65,000 2,286,111 1,070,000 4,319,520 . • 61 1900 Feb. A 7 | Loan of 1870 Lo .n of 1884 1st mort. (RH. 102* Ang 6 400,000 I 84 80 Canal . • 92 Feb. & Aug 1889 an’ally I . Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds.... July im April & Oct *71 ’76 do I (1st, 2d and 3d series). 2d mortgage York A Cumberland 1st Mortgage 2d do ... Jan. & Semi ; 93k 94 700,000 7 Jan. A July 1592 1,20 ,000 7 June A Dec 1892 1,500,000 7 Jan. A July MortJ 3d do Incomo Mortgage Warren. 1st Mortgage (guaranteed).. Lehigh Coal and Navigation 450,000 1900 Chesapeake and Delaware ; 1st Mort. 2,254,000 Chesapeake and Ohio ; Maryl’d Loan 2,000,000 \pe i Sterling Bonds, guaranteed I 4,375,000 .... — t \.pril A Oct 1901 f ipril A Oct 1870 J an. A July 1871 8 J. A. J.AO. 2,000,000 7 Dollar Bonds Western Maryland : IstMortgage... 1st do , guaranteed | Western Union: 1st Mortgage Wihning on A Manch'r ($2,600,000); .... . 87 Jran. A July 1882 6 6 6 I , 1 t.pril A Oct 1881 6 1594 1881 do 7 7 May A Nov do 7 600,000 7 [Apr. A Oct. I do do 1st mort. 6 6 April A Oct. Westchester A Ph • 675,000 7 Jran. A July 1876 5,000,000 4,000,000 7 1,400,000 ($1,452,000); Virginia A Tennessee ($2,177,000) IstMortgage .... 1880 1875 . •. • • 1,872,000 200,000 Mortgage let Mortgage... • ... • May A Nov. 2,000,000 Mortgage 7 rey ana Boston .... .... .... i880 Tan. A July 6 7.1 jupment (Tol. & Wab. Rdlway) • • 1,700.000 1894 1894 1894 Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage 1,180,000 Toledo. Peoria and Warsaw .1st Mort I 1,600,000 Toledo Wabash A Western ;(13,300,00) 1st Mort. (Tol. A lllinois RH) 900,000 1st Mort. (L Krie,Wab A St L. RR.' 2,500,000 2d Mort. (Tol. & Wab. RK) i,000,000 2d Mort. (Wab A West. Rsilwf-y). 1,500,000 .... . do Sinking Fund (T. W. A W. R’way; 1,000,000 7 91 ... 70-’80 1885 1872 1884 Mortgage Special If Mortgage Pacific, Railrond: Bonds guar, by At. & Pacific R.R.. loo 1872 1874 Semi an’ally 7 7 800,000 600,000 ' 1st 7 2,200,000 2,800,00(1 1.290,000 1st Mortgage Shore Line Railway: 1st Mort. bonds South Carolina ; Sterling Loan.... Domestic Bonds South Side ($1,631,900): 1st Mortgage (guar, by Petei sburg) 3d Mortgage Staten Island: 1st 1875 981,000 : Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,695,191); .... P’eb A Ang. Mch A Sept Mortgage bonds Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: Southern Minnesota: Land Grant B’d • .... .... April A Oct ’ 70-'75 7 7 Sandusky and Cincinnati: ... 350,000 7 May A Nov. 1916 200,000 6 Feb. A Aug 1*9! Jan. A 2d Mortgage preferred 2d do income St. Louis, Jacksonville A Chicago : let Mortgage St. Paul A Chicago ($4,000,000); 1st Mort. land grant, S. F. guar ... St. Paul A Pacific of Minn : (1st Div) 1st Mortgage (tax free) 1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax free) 1st Mortgage Funded Bonds Second Avenue: 1st 10 Jan A July 10 Feb. A Aug 400,000 329,CW» S. W. '. 1866 Jan. A July 1875 May A Nov. 1873 6 8 1,800,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1868 141* 1863 do 50* 946,000 7 Skamokin Valley A Pottsvule: . 98 Apg 1870 230,000 300,000 Consolidated bonds Raritan and Delaware Bay: * May A Nov. 400 000 600,000 600,000 Quincy and Toledo: 1st Mortgage Portland • 97 180,000 6 April & Oct 67-’69 37-’84 var. 223,000 5 var. r75-’76 1,458,000 6 1,000,000 Mortgage • .... 1869 1,494,000 106,000 Sterling Bonds of 1843 Dollar Bonds, convertible Philadelphia A Trenton : 1st Mort. Philadd., Hilining. A Baltimore; Mortgage Loan ... 1874 Philadelphia A Reading ($6,900,663); Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-4—8-9 ... 1896 2,661,600 (general) PhUadel., Germant. A Norristown; do •* 1891 547,000 7 Jun. A Dec. fund ?t. Louis, Alton A Terre Haute: 1st Mortgage . 102* 1885 1900 1874 143,800 Mortgage^(general) 2d . ... iried. .Tap, A July 7 7 4,980,000 Mortgage . . ... 1880 1887 1,150,000 1,075,000 Pennsylvania ($18,209,040): . . ... 2,500,000 6 Jan. A July 360,000 10 April A Oct 762,000 7 Mortgage, sterling do do Peninsula : 1st Mortgage July . . ... 1869 186S 1867 Mar A Sep . . • . 1872 Feb. & Aug 1893 1868 do April A Oct 1875 Feb. A Aug '73-’7f Tan. & July 1881 Panama: 1st 2d . May A Nov 198,500 7 189,000 7 Mortgage 2d do Feb. A Aug do 7 . . * May & Nov 145,00) 7 339,000 8 . 1883 93* 1887 92 92* 90 92 1883 92 1883 90 101 1876 101 1876 127 June A Dec 1,500, OK] 6 Quarterly. 2,500,000 6 Jan. A July 724,50 6 April & Oct 145,400 6 April A Oct . 1889 7 7 7 6 6 7 300 000 1st . 1873 1885 6 100 000 Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage Ogdensburg and L. Champlain: May A No\ . .... 1869 1874 7 7 Norwich and Worcester ($580,000); General . 1881 6 700 000 Mortgage 1876 6 1,068,50 1st Mort. do do Northern New Hampshire : North Eastern: r 3,000,00 1,000,00 1,000,00 i Improvement Bonds Northern Central ($5,424,500); 1st Mortgage, Slate (Md.) Loan.... 2d 3d do 180,00 3 6 450,00 J 7 Jan. A Jubf 200,00) 6 April A Oc t 485,00) 6 Feb. A Au$ 140,00) 6 Jan. A Julj 6,450,4313 2,925,001 165,00 606,00) 1,398,00 460,(XX Real Estate Bonds . Jan. AJubr 1,730,00) 8 Apr. A Oct Mortgage Construction Bonds Subscrip. Bonds 7 7 . 2,741,003 8 Jan. & JuljT 1686 1,01 -,oo3 8 April & Oc 1890 Mortgage Orleans, Opelou. cfc Gt. West.: New York Central: Premium Sinking May A Nov 1916 224,001 > Naugatuck ; 1st Mortgage (convert. ) New Jersey ($855,000); Bonds New London Northern: 1st 7 676 00 ) sinking fond New Bedford & Taunton xV. Haven <& Northampton ; Railroad: R. W. & O., sinking Rutland: 1st Mortgage do Sacramento Valley: 1st Mortgage.. .1 do Jan. A July 71* 72k 58* 0 1883 1878 1878 188 ’74-’84 1885 1879 18— 18 1881 1873 1879 4667,109 ’I/May A No?: IbW • ^ ***i 186 THE CHRONICLE. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Companies. Bid. Askd Allen Wright Bemis Heights Bennehoff Run par Bergen Coal and Oil. ....10 Bliven 10 • • • • • • INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Companies. Bid. Askd . . — .. Bradley Oil 1 75 « • .— Mountain Gil National N. Y. & Alleghany New York & Newark... N. Y. & Philadcl .... 5 Brevoort 10 5 Brooklyn Buchanan Farm ....10 Central ...100 2 Cherry Run Petrol’m ... .... . 30 ... .... 60 .... ... 3 40 33 56 N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons . .... • Cherry Run special.. . 10 5 ... Empire City ... 1 20 • .... • r .... .... . . .... B . . 3 00 3 00 oo 1 85 Arctic Astor 50 25 . 600,000 250,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 200,000 153,000 . .... . • • • • • • • • 1 20 1 30 10 17 10 Bowery (N. Y.) 25 25 17 . . Broadway Brooklyn ... . Central Park.... Citizens’ — . 2 15 1 25 COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Clinton Columbia* 806,666 20 70 .100 .100 Commerce 12 2 30 (N. Y.).100 . City 210,000 250,000 600,000 200,000 400,000 200,000 250,000 500,000 400,000 . Commerce (Alb’y)lOO Commercial 50 Commonwealth .100 Continental * .100 . Companies. Bid.! Askd Companies. Bid. Aiskd ■ Adventure J3tna .paid 3 Albany & Boston. Algomah Lafayette Lake Snperior .... 25 % 3 CO 1% American 3 13 .... • Amygdaloid Atlas"" „ . 0 . , , • • • t « • .... < • 4% 5% • •• •m , Mass M p.dnrn .... 2 .. Madison Mandan Manhattan ... Allouez paid 1 • s 4% Bay State 17% 2% Boston Caledouia Calumet Canada Charter Oak Central • .. . • • • Milton Minnesota • 1% ..18% 5% *• 10 00; National 26 00.30 00 Native .... i .... Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor.... 3s 3 00 Dacotah • • 1 ..10 .... Lana Davidson .... 75 35 Delaware Dcvn Dorchester New York North Cliff North western . .... Dudley 1 ....| Edwards Empire.... .... Evergreen Bluff... .j . • • 14 25 is 66 1 25 .... . 6 00 .. 6 13 l Pittsburg & Boston. Pontiac * ■ • • .... « • . , • • , (Too 2 75 3 1 .. .. • % .. • • • « • • • • .. .. 63 75 88 .... 8 ..21 60 1% 1% .... 6 1 ' - r - 3 • • 4% -25 . . . . Bid. Askd 45 001 1 Hope .... — — • *‘gl Opliir Gold Des Moines Downieville 00'( 50 00 65 1 4 75 4 80 1 25 39 42 ! 1 .. Eagle • .... • • . ,,,, .... 3*25 Kdgehill I — .... Gunnell... Gunnell Union 10 i 1 10 j I — .... . Owyhee People’s G. & S. of Cal Quartz nill 8 (0 1 00 40 1 00 1 75 3 00 15 00 30 CO 5 35 25 1 20 1 25 4 10 18 20 5 10 39 85 __ .... ... • . Symonds Forks. • 2*60 20 — 'Twin River Silver 4 oo: Lafayette (B’klyn) 50 Lamar Lenox 100 25 Lor.gIsland(B’k]y) 50 Lorillard-* Manhattan Market* 25 100 100 25 50 loo 50 Metropolitan * + loo Montauk (B’klyn) 50 Nassau (B’klyn). 50 National 7% 100 1 4* 1 Vanderburg 70 00 75 10 — 45i iTexas 8*00 2 70 1 00 — Companies. Bid. Askd [ Copake Iron Foster Iron Lake Snperior Iron Bucks County Henbo Lead Manhar Lead ! t Lead . pa^* , - . .... ... . s'wdx Lead storage..... Tudor Lead .par — Saginaw, L. S. <fe M. 25 Wall kill Lead Wallace Nickel Rutland Marble ..; 25 5 100 ** 5 — .... — — T^ong TfOnnd Pent,.... ... .... Rnsse.. FLe 1 Savon do Terre : - - 350,000 200,000 ... United States... Washington 150,000 26 250,000 400,000 393,700 150,000 50 .100 Washington *+.. WilliamsburgCity 50 fonkers & N. Y.100 500,000 12* 14* Feb’68 7| 10 12 io 10 5 14 10 14 14 10 10 io 10 , m 6 10 Aug ’66.6 Apr ’65.5 J’y’87.3* 10 i2 10 • 10 7 10 10 14 10 10 10 10 10 10 16 10 15 8; Q 13* 11 10 5 20 15 10 14 If. 5 8 12 11 10 8 10 10 8 20 15 14 8 8 I'1 8 8 10 7 7 10 5 5 15 10 9* H 7 5 . 10* 5 , % 7 Jan’68.10 July ’65.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan’68.10 J’y’66.3* Feb.’686 Feb.’67.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan.’68.5 6 li m 10 10 in July *67.5 Jan. ’68.5 10 10 * 5 Jan. ’68.5 Aug.*67 5 F’b.’66.3* 5 10 10 14 8 5 Jail’68.3* 10 10 , July’67.5 Jan. ’68.6 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.7 Jan ’68 5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan’68.3* 11 10 12; Sept.’67.6 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.6 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.6 Feb-’68.6 Jan. ’68.5 Jon* ’68.5 Oct ’67.5 Jan. ’68 8 Jan.’68.5 Feb. 68.5 Jan. ’68 5 Jan.’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 3* do Feb.’68.5 10 8j 10 10 , . 10 18 12 10 10 0 10 10 10 12 10 10 10 10 July’65.6 Aug’66 3* 11 10 5 , .. 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 14 10 10 7" 10 10 10 20 . io 12 10 . Jan.68’,5 .. 18 10 15 . • .. 6 5 # Jan.’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’66.5 Jan. ’€8.5 Jan.’65 5 Jan. ’68.5 ,. 5 12 Feb. and Aug. Feb. and Aug. 158,733 Jan. and July. do 336,691 630,314 Feb. and Aug. 190,206 F^b. and Aug. 179,008 Jan. and July. do 501,244 J’y’67.3* • io Aug. July. Ji •. 10 5 10 Sept’67.5 J’ne ’64.5 Oct. ’67.6 Jan.’68.7 Jan.’68.5 Feb. ’68.5 n ’68.5 Jan.’68.5 12 10 7 7 10 10 7 8 uo Jan. 10 , io Jap.’68.5 Jan. '6*.5 Jan.’68 7 May ’65.6 . • , 8 12 do Jan. Feb. . 10 10 10 10 7 1C 20 Aug.’i 7.5 Jan.’68.7 Jan’66.8* July ’65 5 Jan.’68.6 ^ , . 6 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68 5 Jan. ’68.5 . io io 5 10 10 7 14 5 Jan’68.10 . 3j do Feb. p 10 14 10 10 14 12* 5 10 do do do do and Aug. do and Julv. and Aug. and July. . * Dec.’67 5 Feb.’68.6 Jan’68.10 July’64.4 . 10 10 10 10 14 5 10 10 and Aug. Jan. and Julv. Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Feb. and Aug. Feb. and Jan. and . # 10 10 Aug.’65 4 15 12 20 . 244,293 Jan. and July. 20 26 25 20 10* 10 379,609 April and Oct. ... Tradesmen's 20 , , # do do 511,631 200,000 212,521 150,000 185,365 People’s 150,000 141,203 Phoenix + Br klyn 50 1,000,000 1,077,288 Rebel 50 200,000 190,167 100 Republic* 300,000 453,233 Resolute*...."... 100 200 000 185,952 25 Rutgers’ 200,000 216,879 St. ^Mark’s 25 150,000 140,679 St. Nicholas* 25 150,000 156,220 50 1,000,000 Security + 962,181 Standard 200,000 226,756 Star 100 200,000 195,780 1(0 Sterling * 200,000 206,731 25 Stuyvesant 200,000 198,182 Cooper , do 516,986 t • Aug.’67.5 Sep. ’67.5 20 150,000 150,000 200,000 ■300,000 210,000 500,000 • • Jan. ’68.5 Jan.68.5 10 12 20 149,689 May and Nov. 255,657 10 10 10 10 ••••••••• 525,762 200,015 .. . 9 10 12 20 200,000 170,225 April and Oc*. 200,000 177,173 Jan. and July. do 150,000 162,571 do 400,000 419,952 152.229 do 200,000 do 2.000,000 2,271,387 do 150,000 135,793 do 500,000 546,522 do 200,000 195,926 do 200,01X1 167,833 1,000,000 800,604 Feb. and Aug. 200,000 206,179 do 200,010 238,808 March and Sep 150,000 176,678 Jan. and July. do 280,000 302,741 do 150,000 141,43d do 300,000 363,006 do 150,000 121,607 do 200,000 284,605 do 1,000,000 1,118,66*1 500,000 610,930 do do 200,000 288,917 200,000 do 222,921 150,000 146,692 do 200,000 195,546 do 200,000 do 245,169 300,000 , Jan.’68.5 n* Jan.68.3* 10 7, 10 10 # do 161,743 do 259,270 do 228,628 New Amsterdam 35 do 319,870 N. Y. Equitable.3 35 264,703 Jan. and July. N.Y.Fire and Marl6 200,000 247,895 Feb. and Aug. 50 1,000,000 1,053,825 Jan. and Niagara July. Peter 16 5 5 204,790 May and Nov. 170,171 Feb. and Aug. 345,749 June and Dec. 266,868 Feb. and Aug. 238,506 Jan. and July. 92,683 384,266 Jan. and July. 338,878 Feb. and Aug. 275,591 Jan. and July. do 309,622 do 214,147 424,1S9 Feb. and Aug. 228,696 Jan. and July. 234,S72 Jan. and July. 1,289,037 Jan. and July. 404,178 March and Sep 36,518 424,295 April and Oct. 203,990 Jan. and July. do 229,276 134,065 Feb. and Aug. 241,840 Jan. and July. 122,468 165,933 paid J’e’64.,5 10 5 14 8-* 227,954 Feb. 200,000 10 10 ! 1 5 10 10 Aug."67.5 Aug.’67.5 Jam ’68 5 Jan. ’68.6 Aug.’67.5 Feb. ’fP 5 Jan. ’(8 5 Jan. '68 5 Stock and Bond Sales at Philadelphia.—The following taken from Bowen and Fox’s Monthly Report of the Philadelphia Stock and Bond Market, shows the January highest and lowest prices in : Philadelphia, 6’s old 97%@ 95% 6\s, new 102%@100 Pennsylvania 5's, coup... 99 @96 “ “ 6’s 105 Allegheny Co. comp— Pitts bur* 6's Cam. & Amb. RR “ 35 “ 1886. N. Penn. RR “ 12 00 ... 5 scrip Phil. & Erie RR, “ 6’s . ;;;; @103 71 @73 @71 @*125 scrip... 102 @102 bonds, 1883. 93 @ 97% “ “ 1889. 88 @ 86% “ : 11 mort.G’sl889. 97%@ 92% Penn. RR E7%@ 57% 1st mort 100 @ 98 “ 2d mort 97 @93% Reading RR 4811-16@ 45% I bonds, 1870 97%@ 90% I “ “ “ ‘ ”33 . 71 131 “ “ .. . — July. 282.127 Jan. and July. 257,753 Feb. and Aug. 336,470 March and Sep 1,000,00(5 2,3S5,657 “ Bid. Askd and 1865 lfc66 1867 Last 325,233 Jan. and July. 515,890 Jan. and July. 222,073 Jan. and July. 200,766 200.000 “ MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Companies. 151,002 Jan. ... — Sensenderfer j 40 Periods. — Smith & Parmelee... — — . Seaver — Fall River First National Gold Hill .. j Reynolds Rocky Mountain — .... 45 100 150 — ... : ... . y ... Montana New York New York & Eldorado 10 Gregory... 100 . 10 25 6 00 35 42 I liberty 1 00 .... . — Manhattan Silver... Midas Silver \ .... 25 16 o LnCrossc OOj 2 E — 00, Kipp & Buell 5 00 02 — 2 25 Harmon E. & S 45! 35 1 30 nnr Holman — ... Cent rah Columbia G. <fc S Combination Silver. Corydon Companies. 6" 1 35 4 25 DIVIDENDS. 150,000 200,000 500,000 North American* 50 North River 25 Pacific 25 Park 101 - 2% .. Winthrop 55 75 85 50 5 1(H) Irving. 1867. 200,000 . 50 .. HnmiltmnG Xr. K hM« par — 25 Merchants’ % ..11% Winona Bid. Askd — International Meehan’ & Trade Mechanics (B’kly) GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. 10 Import’&Traders Mercantile 1 2 .. .. 3 00 • ‘*' 1 .. • • 5% •• West Minnesota \ 66 8 .. Washington .... .' j — ICO . Koclrland • 4 • 25 00 26 10 .... 5 8 "... Humboldt 25 50 Knickerbocker.. Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000:shares. t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares $ Capital $200,000, In 20,000 shares. Capital of Lake Snperior comnanies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Pacific Bates & Baxter Black Hawk Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated .... Jefferson * Ada Elmore 50 100 King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20 Shelrinn A Colnmhiftn.21 Isle Companies. .. Howard 8 00 "Ho 3 75 5 00 5% 23 00 25 00 .. .... , Hoffman Home Hope . 3% ..10% .. oo; South • * . - 60 5V • South Pewabic Side 1 Star 40 00 50 00, Superior % i Toltec 65 87 Tremont 1 Victoria Vulcan ... • • • .... Knowlton • • Seneca Sharon ... 1% 2% 1% Royale* Keweenaw • .... . 2 2 Huron Indiana • — St. Clair St. Louis St. Mary’s . .... Hungarian • • Resolute .. . Excelsior Hec.a Hulbert Humboldt • •11% • Quincy* .... Everett Hope • 200.00(1 Providence ... 17% • 200.000 150,000 204,000 150,000 150,000 30 Firemen’s 17 Firemen’s Fund. 10 Firemen s Trust. 10 Fulton 25 Gallatin 50 Gcbhard .100 Germania 50 Globe 50 Great Western**. 100 Greenwich 25 Grocers’ 50 Guardian Hamilton 15 Hanover 50 Princeton ... 9% • • 7 00 Portage Lake Eagle River Flint Steel River. Franklin Gardiner Hill Girard Great Western.... Hamilton Hancock Hanover Hilton • i 4 ^ .... 1% 1% ... — Phoenix 1 . • 366,606 Exchange — 37; Pewabic 20% • • .... Ogima Pennsylvania * .... <i t .... 24% 23 50 24 00 Norwich • § 3 00 4 00 .. .... •i , .. 25, Naumkeag New Jersey Consol. Concord Consolidated * Merrimac .... Corn Exchange. 50 Croton 100 40 Eagle 100 Empire City • ■ 4% .. ... Excelsior • > K Aztec Burroughs. „ , Capital. Netas’te Adriatic 25 $300,000 iEtna 50 300,000 American * 50 200,000 American Exch’e.100 200,000 Atlantic (Br’klyn) 60 Baltic 25 Beekman.... 25 .... . ... Shade River Union 10 United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2 United States 10 Union • .... . . Rynd Farm ... Excelsior. First National Germania 5 Great Republic ...JO G’t Western Consol. ...JO . i 5 5 5 5 1 . Jan. 1 are, . 1C Oceanic Pit Hole Creek Rathbone Oil Tract . .... Clinton Oil .... — . Marked thus (*) participating, & write Marine Td sks5 Hammond par 20 HamiltonMcClintock. Ivanhoe 2 Manhattan 2 -. 1 50 [February 8,1868. * Ex-dividend. ... Catawissa RR 27%@ 23% Lehigh Valley RR 52%@ 50% 6’s, 1873 93%@ 91% “ “ • Norristown RR Minehill RR 'N. Central RR Camden & Atl. 2d mort. 66%@ 66% 58 @ 56% 44%@ 43 Sunbury & Erie 7’s 95 War’n & Frank 7’s W. Jersey RR. bonds 75 @ 75 @95 77%@ 77% 88%@ 85 Schuylkill Nav. Co 13%@ 11 * “ “ pref. / 22%@ 21% “ bonds, 1872 85 @ 85 bonds, 1882. 72 @ 69% Lehigh Nav 30%@ 27% 6’s, ’84 86%@ 86% 96 @96 I Morris Canal, pref .90 @90 33%@ 30 istmor 93 @ 98 I Susq. Canal 80 @80 12%@, 12% 30 @ 26% 6’s 59 @ 56 93 @ 92% | Delaware Division Canal. 51) @51% “ “ .. “ February 8, 1868.] THE CHRONICLE. Insurance. Insurance. OFFICE OF THE INSURANCE Company, submit the 31st on Premiums received from 1st the following Statement December, 1867: on Marine Risks, January, 1867, to 31st 1st on of its Policies not marked off $7,322,015 75 January. 18G7 2,838,109 71 Total amount of Marine Premiums.. No Polices have been issued upon $10,160,125 46 The following statement of the affairs of this Com¬ pany is published in conformity with the requirements of the 10th Section of the Act of its Incorporation : Expenses, Rc-insurance, Taxes Commissions, &c $7,597,123 16 and after 631,640169 February the outstanding certifi¬ cates of the issue of 1865 will be redeem ed and pail to the holders thereof, representatives, on and after or their legal Tuesday the Fourth of February next, from which date interest on the amount so redeemable will cease. The certificates to be produced at the time ef pay ment, and cancelled to the extent T R U S T E E S Moses H. Grinnell, John. P Paulison, declared of the of Thirty Per Cent, is the net earned premiums Company, for the year ending 3ist on December, 1867, for issued on ^evlin, Chadwick, William H. Macy, Samuel L. Mitchell, John and after which certificates will be Tuesday the Seventh of next. Secretary, Elliot C. Cowdin, Percy R. Pyne, Samuel M. Fox, Joseph V. Onativia, Henry Foster Fitch, Ponvert, Simon De Visser, Crane, A. Ernest Wright, MOSES II. GRINNELL, President. PAULISON, Vice-Pres. ISAAC II. WALKER, Secretary. JOHN I\ The Corn TRUSTEES: Jones, Charles Dennis, WT. H. II. Moore, Henry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, Royal Phelps, Caleb Barstow A. P. Pillot C. A. Hand, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Westray, Robt. B. Minturn, Jr., Gordon W, Burnham Frederick Chauncey,| David Lane, James Bryce, James Low Francis Bkiddy, Daniel S. Miller. William H. Webb. Robert L. Taylor, Charles P. GeorgeS. Stephenson Spofford. Shephard Gandy. JOHN D. Burdett, JONES, President, DENNIS, Vice-President. CHARGES W, II. H. J. D. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres. HEWLETT) 3d Vice-Pres’L STREET, N.Y. Bonds, Gold) and Government Seenrfties, BOUGHT AND SOLD OF COMMISSION. iesM EL Jaoqrou*. Hjekby Da Com?. FLOUR, AND GRAIN, SERBS PROVISIONS. OF NEW Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, Joshua J. Henry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gaillard, Jr. J. Henry Burgy, Cornelius Grinnell, Paul COMPANY YORK, by Fire and the Danger of Inland Kavigation- DvttYCr^ JuvQ«t Railroad Stocks, INSURANCE Wm. Fletcher William E. Dodge Robt. C. Fergusson, Exchange • NO. »• NEW Caylug, James M. Campbell, Anson G. P. Stokes. Wm. Von Sachs, r John D. " Frederick Chauncev, George L. Klngslaud, Yznaga Del Valle, John S. •• Jacquelin & De Coppet, Edward S. Jaffray, William Oothout, Kevins, Isaac A. April CHAPMAN, IN SIGHT CURRENT RATES, DOdIOIi. JL/avAvI wB Co. and D. 8. Stetson A Co., Philadelphia. T. F« Thirkleld A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and Job. E. Elder A Goodwin, SL Louis. Fowler, •tanard A Co., Mobile. Pike, Vapeyre A Bro., Few Orleans. Drake, KleinwcrthA Cohen, Lo* sad Liverpool. Joseph Gaillard, Jr. John H. Macy, By order of the Board, J. H. AT : Alex. M. Lawrence Isaac Bell, Fred. G. Foster, Richardson T. Wilson, Jacob li. A dividend EXCHANGE Secretary, Frederic Sturges, Win. Tool, Thomas J. Slaughter, Elias paid, Dlepoim REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE ism to John E. Fifty per cent, of Forelgm Exchange. Marine, have ISAAC fi. WALKER, Fourth ol next. from Board, oi COMMISSION MERCHANTS Wid Dealer* In Domestic and $1,126,914 04 „ No Fire Risks, disconnected been taken by the Company. the Europe to all parts of the United ** T. H. McMahan & Co. and Com¬ Total Assets Thompson’s Nephew, States. 12,371,80 & CO., Exchange Tlace, N. Y. EUROPEAN PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE OFFICE, 73 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Drafts on England, Ireland A Scotland Bankers furnished with Sterling Exchange and through tickets from 213,000 00 169,597 35 the outstand Tuesday tlie the pany By order of S. Sff*. lie-insurance,, other claims due 373,374 02 $13,108,177 1 $236,671 54 jSBHjj Sundry Salvage, 252,414 82 3,232,453 27 04 $495,273 35 lection Accrued Interest on Bonds and Mortgages and Loans, Rents of Real Estate, and 210,000 00 No. 47 00 57,007 31 in advance of not matured Cash Premiums in course el’ col¬ profits will be pal to the holders thereof, or.their legal representatives on anced the entire issue 268 Bonds of $1,000 each, ar offered on favorable terms. The subscribers have sold over a million dollars o these Bonds at par to parties investing for estates an to Capitalists. The principal of these Bonds can be registered payable to the holder. now 58,925 Subscription Notes 2,175,450 00 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable.. Cash in Bank on only Mortgage on a completed Railroad, 162 miles in length, running from Keokuk to Des Moines, the capital of Iowa. The bal¬ : Premiums, Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages, Interest and sundry notes and claims due the C-ompany, estimated at Six per cent interest Estate, Bonds and Mortgages $379,341 Stocks, Bonds and other follows, viz BONDS $2,310,000 the first and are GILMAN, SON -were as able $6,864,485 00 Stocks, and other¬ Total Amount of Assets These Bonds December, Premium Notes and Bills Receiv- wise i»g certificates the 31st on United States Stocks Cash sets, viz.: United States and State of New York secured by Total Issue... 177,510 09 1867, Company has the following As¬ Loans Company Valley Rail- COMPANY’S FIRST MORTGAGE EIGHT PER CENT. FOR SALE. $1,030,255 42 Real $1,305,865 93 and other Stocks. ROAD $1,207,765 51 The Assets oi the Returns of Premiums and Stock, City, Bank DesMoines $1,67 ,251 90 Losses paid during the same period.. $4,224,364 61 The Assistant Treasurer. The amount of Earned Premiums during the year, less return Losses during the year : Premiums, was.. .$1,226,090 60 On Marine Risks $991,285 70 On Inland Risks 38,969 72 Risks; nor upon Fire Risks discon¬ nected with Marine Risks. Expenses H. II. VAN DYCK. STREET, New York, January 29, 1868. 1,038,467 96 Life Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ ary, 1867 to 31st December, 1867 BUILDINGS, Premiums on Unexpirecl Risks, Dec 31,1866 $634,783 94 Premiums received during the year to Dec 31,1867: On Marine Risks $965,967 96 On Inland Risks ;... 72,500 00 De¬ cember, 1867 Premiums received for examination at the United States Trea¬ sury. NO. 49 WALL of the Treasury, Schedules of (SO) THIRTY OR MORE SEVEN THIRTY Coupons due January 15th, 1868, will now be Co., SunMutual InsuranceCo. Insurance YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1868, Trustees, iij. Conformity to the Charter affairs United States OFFICE OF THE NEW The Financial. 18 6 7 Atlantic Mutual 187 Insures against Loss NO. Ca*li 104 BROADWAY. Blair, Densmore Assets, Jan. 1, ’67.~$501,207 54 R. F. J. S. ROBERTS, Vlcc-Pres Georgk A. Dresser, Secretary. Phenix Mutual Life Insurance Co OF HARTFORD, CONN, Assets, nearly Annual lbcome Annual Dividend COMMISSION MASON, President. $3,000,000 ... . 50 Per Cent. Agent, Co., MERCHANTS, WASHINGTON STREET. Chicago, Ilia. Winslow, Lanier 1.500,COO Issues Life, Non-Forfeiting and Endowment Policies on the most favorable terms. This Companv^s strict¬ ly Mutual, giving to its members (in equitable ratio), all the profits. Its Annual Dividends nave averaged Fifty per cent upon all its tables; it has throv n out all restrictions on Tr vel, Residence, Occupation, &c. It will take premiums all Cash or part Notes, as the Insured desires. The number of Dividends wil always equal the number of outstanding notes, so tlia there are no deductions from the face of a Policy. I has been in operation seventeen years, and never con tested a claim. New York office 153 Broadway. S. L. FRALEIGH, General John E, Dewitt, Resident Director, 1«| & & Co., BANKERS, S7 * *9 Pino Street, New Pork. DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AND NEW ORLEANS. Issue Circular Letters of Credit for able in all parts of Interest Allowed Travellers, avail¬ Europe. on 188 THE CHRONICLE. [February 8, 1868. Insurance. Insurance. THE United States LIFE INSURANCE In the City oi York.. NO. 40 WALL STREET. .771 ASSETS Mercantile Insurance Co $2,300,000 annually thereafter. JOHN OF AND EDINBURGH. . LONDON important plans of Life Insurance hare been adopted by this Company. See new Prospectus. Profits available after policies have EADIE, President. Sun Mutual Insurance WALL STREET, (INBUBANCR BUILDINGS) $10,000,000 12,695 000 4,260,635 Income Policies issued in Gold or plicant. Currency at option of Ap¬ Incorporated 1841. $1,614,540 78 This Company having recently added to its previous assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000. and subscrip¬ tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues to Issoe policies of insurance against Marine and In¬ sod Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected xom Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are entled to participate in the profits. MOSES H. GRINNELL, President. SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq AYMAR CARTER, Esq DAVID DOWS, Esq EG1STO P. FABBRI, Esq SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, Dabney, Morgan & Co of E. D. Morgan & Co. of Ay mar & Co. of David Dows & Co. of Fabbri & Chauncey. Esq., of S. B. Chittenden & Co. SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq..of Sheppard Gandy, & Co. T^ C.^AXLYN^’} A8SOCiate Managers CHAS. E. PAULISON, Vice-President. WHITE, Assistant Manager. LORD, DAY & LORD, Solicitors. INSURANCE Assets, January 1st, 1867 COMPANY HARTFORD, CONN. OF COMPANY. STREET, NEW YORK. $1,261,349 PHOENIX Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t FIRE INSURANCE CO., 7 Capital and s^urpius $1,000 000. During the past year this Company has paid to its Policy-holders, IN CASH, a rebatement on premiums in lieu of scrip, equivalent In value to an average scrip dividend of TWENTY PER CENT. W. B. Clark, Sec’y. Instead oi issuing a on the principle that J, N. Dunham, Sec’y. scrip dividend to dealers, based all classes of risks are equally 8 iscount from the current rates, when premiums are roiltable. this Company makes such cash abatement or paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of the year, will be divided to the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Ma¬ rine and Inland. Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬ chandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Cur¬ rency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone, Bros. &, Co., in Liverpool. TRUSTEES. James Freeland, D. Colden Murray, Samuel Willets, E. Haydock White, Robert L. Taylor, N. L. MoCready, William T. Frost, DaDiel T. Willets, William Watt, L. Edgerton, Henry Eyre, Henry R. Kunhardt, Cornelius Grlnnell, John S. Williams, William Nelson, Jr., Joseph Slagg, Jas. D. Fish, Charles Dimon, Geo. w. Hennings, A- William Heye, Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollner, Aaron L. Reid, Paul N. Spofford. Ellwood Walter. ELLWOOD WALTER, President. CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President. J. Despard, Secretary. Niagara Fire Insurance COMPANY. H. Kellogg, Pres t SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY, SPRINGFIELD, MASS. 7 Capital and Surplus $700,000. E. Freeman, Pres CONNECTICUT FI RE INSURANCE CO OF HARTFORD, CONN. Capital $2 7 5,000. M. Bennett, Jr„ Sec’y. J. B. Eldredge, PreB’t. . Losses promptly adjusted by the Agents here, and paid in current money. WHITE, ALLYN A CO., Agents, NO. 74 WALL STREET. C^SH^C^PITAL ... . . . ..... ...„ JANUARY 1st, 1868 Insurance Charter Pej petual. CAPITAL... year $595,275 36 as earned during the 1867 Losses and $449.1% 24 Expenses paid during the period Assets July 1, 1867 - $4,650,938 27 Liabilities 37 7,668 4 6 NEW YORK AGENCY NO. 02 JAS. A. FIRE WALL Return Premiums The Assets of the Company were as on follows: United States Stocks $253,S00 00 - - 222,433 This Company insures against Loss or Damage by Fire favorable as any other responsible Com¬ pany. Board of Directors: Henry S. Leverich. Robert Schell, William H. Terry, Joseph Grafton, Amos Robbins, Thos. P. Cummings, Jno. W. Mersereau, David L, Eigenbroat, hen 273,604 01 80,001 98 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable Insurance Scrip, Accrued Interest, Sundry OFFICE 114 BROADWAY, THIRD INCORPORATED 1823. Capital Surplus ...$500,000 00 Cask Capital Notes at estimated value.... - Company 17,845 1 ;? Total Assets $1,101,303 02 SIX PER CENT, interest the on outstanding Cer¬ tificates of Profits will be paid on and after Tuesday tlie 11th day of February, 1868. THIRTY-THREE AND ONE-TBIRD PER CENT DIVIDEND, and the United States Tax, is declared on the net earned premiums entitled thereto, for the year ending 31st December, 1867, for which Certificates may he issued on and after the 1st day of May next. outstanding Certificates of Profits paid to the titicates to be presented at the time of payment and cancelled. - DANIEL DRAKE SMITH, President. ADRIAN B. HOLMES, Vice-President. HENRY D KING, Secretary. Home Insurance Co., BROADWAY. Capital $2,000,000 00 Assets, Jan. 1, 1868 3,6^3,n96 7s* 107,49o> 55 Liabilities FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. CHAS. J. MARTIN, President. A. F. W1LLMARTH, Vice-President. OF LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. Authorized Capital Subscribed Capital Paid-up Capital and Surplus Loss or Damage by Fire at Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of the Company, or at its various Agencies in tbp principal cities in the United States. JAMES W, OTIS. President, R. W. BLKECKfiR, Vice Pm JH. Cahtss, General Agent. Gniewona, Secretary. 1,893,220 $1,432,340 United States Branch, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y. GEORGE ADLARD, Manager. William H. Ross, Secretary. Hanover Fire Insurance 255 057 77 Insures Property aganst the usual rates. £2,000,000 Stg. Special Fund of $200,000 Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany COMPANY, No. 45 WALL STREET. 1867, $755,057 77. . 11.654 67 Salvage and Reinsurance claims due the and Surplus, January 1, Casli Hyatt, $864,119 49 208,183 68 Queen Fire Insurance Co INSURANCE. BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE, AVENUE. William Rempen, JACOB REESE,President* Stocks on Cash in Banks ALEXANDER, Agent. American Fire Insurance Co., $150,000 - 257,213 50 J. H. WASHBURN, Secretary. GEO. M. LYON, Asst. Secretary. T. B. GREENE, 2d Asst. Secretary. D. A. IIEALD, General Agent and Adjuster. STREET. Company, North ------- same $191,971 07 66,609 58 135 Ob terms as Premiums marked off GOODNOW, Secretary. OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY. Jams* E. Moors, Secretary, Total Premiums 403,877 54 $3,000,000. L. J• HEN DEE, President. J. Hope Lydig Suydam, Joseph Britton, Freo. dciuchiwdt, $191,397 82 holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, the 11th day of February next, from which date all interest thereon will cease. The cer Company, Incorporated 1819 Notman, Secretary. D. ber, 1866 OF HARTFORD. $1,000,000 363,000 , iacob Reese, ebbeus B. Ward. : outstanding 31st Decem¬ Premiums received during the year 1867.... The whole of the ^Etna Losses e squitahly adjusted and promptly paid. Char•redl850. Cashniviaendspaidin 15years,253 percent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, President Jowph Foulke, Cyrus H. Loutrel, Ri6ks of the issue of 1860 will be redeemed and N&URANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DA 1AGE BY FIRE. No. 12 WALL STREET. St^ih. Cambreleng, December, 1867 on Capital and Surplus £1,500,000. Geo. M. Coit, Sec’y. OF HARTFORD, CONN. ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. Taber, Theodore W. Riley, Premiums New York State, City and other Stocks and Bonds, and Loans Hartford FIRE ry M. the 31st Bank Stocks The Mercantile Mutual - on the 3lst Dec. 1867 ‘DABNEY, MORGAN & Co.. Bankers. Isaac H. Walker, Secretary. Assets, June 1, 1867 York, 17th January, 1868. CHAS. H. DABNEY, Esq., Chairman. of Cash.Capital New The Trustees, in conformity to the Chnrter of the Company, submit the following statement of its affairs Losses promptly adjusted and paid in this Country. New York Board or Management: 49 WALL STREET. Fire Insurance YORK. (IN GOLD): Capital Accumulated Funds Annual COMPANY. No. 36 WALL Co., Nos. 57 & 59 William Street. NEW CAPITAL AND ASSETS INSURANCE Insurance UNITED STATES BRANCH, Subscribed JOHN P. Mutual 1809. established in 74 . INSURANCE. run one year, Nicholas Dr Gboot, Secretary. Capital and Assets, FIRE Commercial AND f3F“New and and AND North British COMPANY, New MARINE July 1st, 1867 Cash capital Surplus. Gross Assets Total LlablUUe* 206,634 79 It 5Q,U4 3$ BKNJ, %< WAljGQTT, President. February 8,1868.] THE CHRONICLE PRICES CURRENT. In addition to the duties noted below, cent, a discriminating duty of 10 ad val. is levied all on per imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Nope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places of their growth OT produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The top in all cases to be ‘2.240 ft. Anchor*—Duty: 2} cents # lb. 01200ft and upward# ft 8}© .. Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... # 100 It 8 25 © 8 37 Pearl, 1st sort.........10 25 ©lJ 50 lleesivair—Duty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow.$ ft 40 © «. Bones—Duty : on invoice 10 # Rio Grande shin # ton4U 00 © ct. .... Bread—Duty, 30 # cent ad val. Pilot # ft .. © 7} 5} Navy © Craokers 81 © 13* Breadstuff*—See special report. Brick*. Common hard, .per M.10 00 ©11 50 Croton 18 *. 0 ©22 00 Philadelphia Fronts...40 00 ©43 00 Bristles—Duty, 10 oents; hogs hair 1 # lb. Amer’n,gray &wk. #ft Butter and ©175 40 Clteese.—Duty: 4 cents. Butter— Fresh pall State firkin*, —43 @ 43 © 39© 44© 86 © 39© ... 86© 28 © Western reserve, lair. 20 © 25© Western, good 18 © Western, fair Canada 25 © Grease.. ..; 18© 48 45 43 47 40 43 40 33 28 prime State firkins,ordinary State, hl-flrk., prime.. State, hf-fir ordin’y Welsu tube, prime Welsh tuhe, ordinary. Western reserve, goad . ., . Chee*e— _ _ Factory prime.. .# lb Factory fair Fa m Dair-es prime.. Farm Dairies lair Farm Dairies c ;mmon Skimmed 81 25 87 20 14}@ 15 18}© 14© 12 © 10 © 8 © 14 14} 18} 12 10 Drag:* and Dye*—Duty,Alcohol, 2 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ 1b; Alum, 60 cents # 100 1b; Argols, 6 cents # ft ; Arsenic and Assafoedatl, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulns. 10; Arrowroot, 80 38 cent ad val Balsam Copaivi, 20; Balsam Tola, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 oents # ft ; Cal is ay a Bark,80# centad val.: BiCarb.Soda, 1}; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents # ft; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents # 1001b ; Refined Borax, 10 cents # lb ; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 # ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and 15 # cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor,40cents # ft.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 # cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents # ft; Caster Oil, $1 # gallon; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 1}; Citric Acid, 10 ; Copperas, }; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents # 1b ; Cutch, 10: Chamomile Flowers, 20 # cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent # ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 # cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 #cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Darnar, 10 cents per ft; Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 # cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, *5; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anls, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 # 1b; Oil Peppermint, 60 ?cid, 4 ad val.;#Opium, $2 50; Oxalic cent cents ft; Phosphorus, 20 # cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low^; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents # ft: Quicksilver, 15 # cent ad val.; Sal ASratus, 1} cents # ft ; Sal Soda, } cent # ft; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 # cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; Soda Ash, }; Sugar Lead, 20 cents # lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 # cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 # oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents # ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; blue Vit¬ riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts,$1 # ft; all others quoted below* free. Alcohol, 95 per cent. * Alaes, Cape #ft Aloes, Socotrine . Alum 75 © 1 4 > © 10} Argols, Crude 18 © 20 Argols, Refined, gold. 21|© 96 Arsenic, Powdered.... 2|© 8 Assafcetida 25 © 40 Balsam Copivi 95 © 1 00 Balsam Tolu 1 40 © 1 60 Balsam Peru © 8 75 Bark Petayo 60 © Berries, Persian, gold. Bl Carb. Soda, New¬ Reflued sperm,city... Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined wax 8; it earine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ lb. Sperm, patent,. ..# Tb 45© 55 © Stearic Adamantine 30 © 21 © 48 62} 31 23 Cement—Rosendale#bl2 00© 2 25 Chains—Duty, 2} cents # lb. One Inch & upward# lb 8© 8}© Annato, good to prime. ceti and sperma¬ .. Antimony,Reg.of, gold castle gold Bl Chromate Potash... Candle*—Duty,tallow, 2}; © 4 25 2o © 75 © 85 Brimstone. 80© 4}© 81}© 4} , 4} 33 # (gold).39 00 ©40 00 Brimstone, Am. Roll ton ft./.... Brimstone, 1 lor © Sul¬ 3| phur ..© f} Camphor, Clide, (in bond) (gold) © 28} 1 00 © 1 05 Camphor, Refined. . Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 ft to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 bushels of 80 lb $1 bushel. Newcastle0*8.2,240lb. 10 00 ©10 Liverpool Gas Cannel. .14 00 ©15 Llverp’l House Cannel ©18 Liverpool Orrel 15 CO © Anthracite. # ton of 2,000 ft 7 00 © 7 Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents # ft. Caracas (in bond)(gold) # ft 16 © Maracaibo do ..(gold) .. © .... 50 (>0 0J .... 50 • Guayaquil do ...(gold) St Domingo.. 10J© ..(gold) 8© Coffee.—See special report. 17 11} 8} 2}; old copper 2 cents 38 ft; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 lnohes long and 14 Inches wide, square Bolts 35 © 35 © Braziers’ Shea'hing, &c., old.. Sheathing,yellow met*l Bolts, yellow meta',.. Pie Chile American Ingot .. © in bulk 17}© 17} Cardamoms, Malabar © 3 26 Castor Oil cases $ gal 1 90 © 2 00 ChamomiloF!ow’s#ft 15 © 60 Chlorate Potash (gold) 81}© 82 Caustic Soda 4*© 5 Carraway Seed 18}© 19 Cochineal, Hon (gold) Cochineal, Mexlc’n(g’d) Copperas, American Cream Tartar, pr.(gold Cubebs, East India.... .. Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and Ingot, weighing 14 © 34 oz. $1 3 cents $ 1b. Sheathing, new.. 9 ft Cantharidos 1 70 © 1 75 Carbonate Ammonia, Coriander Seed foot, 33 ^ 16© 26 © 27© — © 18 22}© 23} Manila, 2} other uutarred,3} oents # lb. Manila, # ft 21 © 22 Tarred Russia © 18} Bolt Rope, Russia. © 22 Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val. 1st Regular,qrts # gro 65 © -70 do Superfiue 1 40 © 1 50 1st Re uiar, Pints 3* © 50 lft 90 © 80 © 1}© 98 85 28}© .28} 3s 16 33 © 15}© Epsom Salts Extract Logwood 3}© 10}© 17 © 4 80© 60 Flowers,Benzoin.# oz. Gambler... gold 4}© 42 Gamboge 1 75 © 2 00 Ginseng, South&West. © Gum Arabic,Pioked.. 78 50© Gum Arabic, Sorts... 85 31 © Gum Benzoin Gum Kowrie Gom Gedda G»am l)amar Gum Myrrh.East India Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Cordage—Duty,tarred,8; uniLrred 14 © Cutch Fennell Se^d Senegal (gold) GumTragacanth,Sorts Gum Tragacanth, w. flakey. (gold) Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Ehg (gold) 8 Iodine, Resubllmod... 6 Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 Islap, in bond gold.. Lac Dye Gum — Paste,Calabria Lioorice, Paste, Sicily. Licorice 60© 84 © 19© t3 © © 65 © .. © 85 © 60 © 12 © Cotfoi$-~0ee special report. 70 40 27 60 © 1 00 60 © 8 70 50 © 85 © 8 90 85 © 25 © 31 © 24© Licorice Paste Spanish Solid Lioorice Paste, Greek. 29 © 31 © 9© do, Freaefy EXFT.do 85 86 20 48 . Madder, Dutch., (gold) Mineral Phial Manns, large flake 1 70 © Manna, small flake.... 95*© Mustard Seed, Cal Mustard Seed, Trieste. Nntgalls Blue Aleppo Oil Anis Oil Cassia . Oil Bergamot Oil Lemon 1 75 a“© 12 14 © • Phosphorus Prussiate Potash P6 73 2 55 8 20 . Rhubarb,China Sago, Pea.led Salaratus SalAnfn>ac, Ref (gold) • • • 87 80 25 9 •. Sarsaparilla, Bond 44 Sarsaparilla, Mex “ 9 n© 1? 25 qualities. 28 25 Senna, Eastlndia 20© Shell Lac 85© Soda Ash (80#c.)(g’ld) 2|© Sugar L’d, W’e(goid).. 25© Sulp Quinine, Am# oz 2 10 © Sulphate Morphine. 6 80 © Tart’c Acid. .(g’ld)#ft 49}© Tapioca 13 © V erdigris, dry A ex dry 47} © Vitriol, Blue © 45 2} 60 50 11 Duck—Duty, 30 # cent ad val. 6t 8 to3x10. Ravens,Light..#pee 16 Go © 8x11 11x14 13x18 18x22 20x30 24x31 25x36 28x40 24x 54 32x58 34x62 .... Ravens, Heavy i8 Oil © Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 #y © Cotton,No. 1 # y. 48© Dye Woods—Duty free. Cnmwood,go!d, # tn Fustic,Cuba “ 38 59 Fustic, 'J'ampico, gold Fustic, Jamaica, “ 72 © .. . © 34 i0 © © 30 00 © 32 00 26 00 © © © 19 00 © .... Fustic, Savanilla “ Fustic,Maracaibo, “ Logwood, Laguna Logwood, Cam. I ogwood, Hond Logwood, i abasco Logwood,St Dom. Logwood,Jamaica “ “ “ “ .... . .... . .... ... .... cents ... 90 56 35 25 80 9} Jo brown Cat, Wild do House - Fisher, Fox, Silver ... do Cross do Red do Grey do Kitl Lynx Marten, Hark do pale Mink,dark do Otter ... pale Musquash, Fall Opossum Raccoon 10 © Skunk, Black 80 © Skins—Duty: 10 # centad 35 Goat.Curacoa# ft cur do Buenos A...gold 27 do Vera Crux gold do Tampico. ..gold do Matamoras.gold do Payta gold do Cape 40 Deer,San Juan# lbgold . 50 00 00 £0 © © 46 © © 33 © do Missouri...gold do Te*a»..'...&old Ayres, mixed . 20©" 11 © 251 22x 12* 1 cent # ft. Amer.Dressed.# ton 835 00©885 06 00 do Undressed . 170 00©180 00 Russia, Clean..(gold) ©250 CO Jute (gold) 120 00©125 10 Italian (P0ld) 230 00©240 00 Manila..# ft..(gold) © 10} Sisal 11}© 12 .. 00 00 00 50 60 50 00 00 00 Hide*—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ ed and Skins 10 # centad val. Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres#ftg’d 19 © 19} Montevideo.... Rio Grande firinooo California SanJnan Matamoras VeraCruz 00 00 .. .. 46 ,47 f0 36 14}© do do 14 © 15 © PortoCabello ..do Maracaibo do Truxilio do Bahia do Rio Hache dry & dry salted, do 00 28 42} do Tampico Bogota 50 40 28 15 © 15 © 18 © IS © - 50 00 00 15 12 50 60 do .... 0O 60 3i} 42} Honduras..gold Sisal gold Para gold do Porto Cabo.gold 19} Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila $26; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Bunt and Sisal, $15 # ton; and Tampico, 45 25 © Central America Bolivar ...gold 19 © Hay—North River, in bales# 100 lbs for shipping 1 16 © 1 30 ... 40 33 do do do do do over free. Hog,Western, unwash. 00 © © © © © © © # square yard, 3; RloGrande,mix’d# ft gold.. © Buenos val. © less Hair—Duty 50 22} 75 © 2 5 00 ©i2 2 00 © 8 10 © 25 © 10 © 4 00 © 8 5 (X ©50 3 00 © 5 75 © 1 40 © 80 © 50 © 1 5 00 ©20 1 00 © 3 3 00 © 8 1 00 © 3 3 00 © 7 12 © 6© or .. 50 60 Beaver,Dark..# skin 1 00 © 8 00 Badger 00 32x56.(3 qlts).20 60 ©16 00 84x60.(3 qlts).24 00 ©18 00 .. Fur* and Skin*— Du..y,10# cent Pale 00 00 00 00 00 # cent ad val.: over 20 oents 9 ft, 10 cents # 1b ana 20 # cent ad va. Blasting(B) # 25ft keg © 4 00 Shipping and Mining.. ©4 60 6 60 © Kentucky Rifle Meal 6 00 © Deer 5 60 © .. Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ ters # 1b 86 © 1 06 .... do to to to Caloutta, standard, y’d .... Flax—Duty; $15 # ton. North River # ft 15}© Fruit*—See special report. 00 60 Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less # ft, 6 cents # ft, and 20 Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 # bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried, In smaller pkgs.than bar ... 75 10,4 cents # ft. Feat Iters—Duty: 30 # centad val. Prime Western...# ft 85 © 90 Tennessee © 81 rels, 50 cents # 100 ft. Dry Cod # cwt. 5 00 © 6 Pickled Scale. ..# bbl ©3 Pickled Cod # bbl. 4 50 © Mackerel, No. 1, Mass shore. 14 60 ©15 Mackerel,No.l,Halifax © Mackerel,No. 1, Bay..17 06 © Mackerel, No. 2, Bay ©13 Mackerel, No. 2,Ha ax © Mac’el,No.8,Mass. l’gell 25 ©11 Mackerel, No. 8, H’fax © Mackerel, No.8, Mass. 9 60 ©10 Salmon, Pickled, No.l ©30 Salmon,Pickled, #tce © Herring,Scaled# box. 40 © Herring, No. 1 22© Herring, plckled#bbl. 6 10 © 8 #50 feet 6 25 © 4 6 75 © 6 7 60 © 6 8 50 © 6 to 18x80 19 00 © 7 to 24x80 12 50 © 8 to 24x86. 14 00 © 9 to26x40 16 00 ©10 to 30x48.(3 qltfs).18 00 ©14 to 10x15 to 12x18 to 16x24 40x60.(3 qIts).26 00 ©21 00 English sella at 15 # ct. off above rates. Groceries—See special report. Gunny Bag*—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less, # square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents # ft Calcutta, light <fch’y % 18 © 18} Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 1$ ... ... © . “ 13 00 © 13 50 44 © 13 60 “ Limawood © 70 00 Bar wood 44 © Sapan wood, Manila...80 00 © Bear, Black Window Subject to a disoount of 35©40 # cent, fix 8 to 8x10. # 50 ft 6 25 © 4 76 8x11 tol0xl5 6 75 © 5 00 11x14 to 12x18 7 60 © 5 50 18x16 to 16x24 8 60 © 6 00 18x22 to 18x30 10 00 © 7 00 20x30 to 24x30 12 60 © 8 00 24x31 to 24x36 14 00 © 9 00 25x36 to 26x40 16 00 ©10 00 28x40 to 30x48 18 00 ©14 00 24x54 to 82x56. 20 50 ©16 00 82x5S to 34x60. 24 00 ©13 00 34x62 to 40x60 26 00 ©21 00 Frer.ch Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (SlagleThick) Ney*11st of Sept. 35 Discount 20©25 # cent. 27 14 >8© 25 © ....... Senna, Alexandria.... or 10x15 inches. 6 cents # square foot; and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents # square foot; all above that, 40 cents # square foot: on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, 1}; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 ,2}; all over that, 8 cents # ft. American Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th 92} 81© Sal Soda. Newcastle14 Seneca Root. * © © © © S © © .. over x39 inches above that, 7 25 86 © .. 2} cents # square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents # square foot; larger and not over 24 2}© Opium, Turkey.(gold) 7 12}© Oxalic Acid . Polished Plate not 40 35 © 5 J‘7}0?t 8 70 © 8 80 © © .. Glass—Duty, Cylinder *'• » 6 87 © 7 00 3 87 © 4 00 © 4 75 Oil Peppermint, pure Oil Vitriol Quicksilver Deer, Arkansas .gold do Florida ....gold .... 4|© 18}© .. Crude 189 • do do do do do 19© 18}© 17}© 18}© 15 © 19 18 19 16 16 If} 15 16 14} 14} 16 13 © 14} 12 © 14 Curftcoa,drysaltddo 12 © 14 Pt. au Platt., do Texas do Western do 10 © 12 © 14 12© 14 13}© 13«© 10}© S. Dommgo & Dry Salted Hides— (hill gold Payta do Maranham do Pernambuco.... do do Bahia Matamoras do Maracaibo do Savanilla do Wet Salted Hides— ... Bue. Ayres.# ft g’d. Rio Grande California .... do do Para do New Orleans...cur Oitysl’htsr trim.* eared. 12 10}© 9}© 11} 14} 11} 11} 10} 12 © 10 © 11 © 11 12 10}© 10} 13 1G|© 10}© 10 © 1J}© 10} 10}© 1} 11 11 11 190 THE CHRONICLE. Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Qr. ft White Kip gold 22 © 25 © 21 @ 17 © Sierra Leone., cash Gambia & 3issi.u. Zanibar Bast India Stock— . 26 * •a IS 14 © Calcutta, de id green do buffa!o,30ft> @ 11 © $ lb 11 11* © 11* .. .. . . ,, HEADING jab ..... 45 30© 45 © 53 Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grands.. $ C 7 0 »© 8 0«» Ox, American 7 00© India Riibfrer--Duty, 10 cent ~ .. — 70 © 57* © © © © East India Cartbageni, &c IttdiffO—Duty free. ' do 4o log3 do middle do do do do do do do do do do do do 4i) 38 33 38 26 Oriuo., heavy, 25 © 25 © 25 @ 23 © middlo 24*© 24*© 85 © 21*© 17 © do 27*© 25*@ light. Califor., heavy do middle, do light. do do rough good damaged do poor Oils Black Walnut STAVES— White Oak, hhd., West India.. $ M pale. ... 6 uo © 7 00 30 ton. 54 50@p5 00 bags. 52 00@ obl’g, do 49 00© in .... .... - @ © Parafline, 28 & 80 gr. Lubricating Kerosene (free). 65 70 £0 @ 40 centt 30 100 ft): s$ ft); ochre, ground in oxidosofzinc, l*cents oil, f 5030 100 ft>; Spanish brown 25 $ oettad val • China clay, $5 $ ton ; Venetian red and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 30 ton. Litharge, City.... 30 ft* 11 @ 11* Lead, red, City 21 © Hi do white, American, pure, in oii © 13 39 24 20 .. *- white, do American, dry Zinc,white, American, dry, No. 1 pure, 85 00 © 40 00 24 00 @ 27 i>0 do 8 white, American, No. 1,in oil do do in© White,French,dry while, French, in oil .. 14 Ochre,yellow, French, dry : eround, in oil.. Spanish brown, dry 30 do 00 41 00 © 55 00 85 00 @ 40 00 75 00 @100 00 100 ft) do gr’d in oil. Paris wh., No. 1 30 ft» Chrome, yellow, dry.. Whiting, Amer @135 00 © © 2*@ 8 © 8* 12 13 14* 3 10 1 CO @ 1 25 8 © 9 2*@ 16 @ 2} 35 2 Vermilion,China, 30 ft 1 20 I © 8 @ 12 l S5 (gold) 24 © 24* (gold) 23*@ Plates,char. I.C.30 box! 1 50 @12 2 > English — do do do Petroleum—Duty: crude, 20 cents; reflned* 40 jents $ gallon. 16 @ Urude,40@47grav.$gai do in bulk..,. 42© do In bond,piime L. S. to W. (116© 115 test) do do, prime white giav Residuum Gasoline Plaster Jo Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 allonother ‘ 23 © 24*@ uty 25 cG @ valorem; 30 bbl. 3 0J © 3 50 .... . J. & F. Martell 4 00 4 70 2 40 2 50 # Renault & Co.. J. Vassal & Co., Marrette&Co. Vine Grow. Co. ct; lams, bacon, and lard, 2 ts %) lb. do mess Hams, dry 30 ft* Hams, iu pickle Shoulders dry Shoulders Lard in ©21 49 29 00 ©31 50 12 © © 8 @ @ 13 @ pickle ArzacSeignette P Romieux.... Rum—Jamaica 9* .... 11$ $2 to $3 5i val. , Cadiz 46 © Liverpool,gr’nd30 sack 1 85 @ 1 00 do flue, A.shton’s(g’d) 2 60 @ do flue, Worthingt’a 2 75 © 2 80 .Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents; relined and partially reflned, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent 30 lb. Refined, 30 ft* pure Crude Nitrate soda @ 9^@ b*© •• gold 10* Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, * cent 30 lb ; canary, $1 $ bushel of lb ; and grass seeds, JO 30 cent 60 ad val. Clover 301b 12*@ 13* Timothy,reaped 30 bus 8 00 © 3 25 Canary 30 bus 5 00 © 5 50 Ilemp. 3 06 Link’d do do @ 3 25 Am.rough30bus 2 80 © 2 90 Cftlc’fl,Bost’n,g’d © 2 20 do New Yk,g’d 2 iG © 2 2/ .... Sliot—Duty: 2f cents 30 ft). Drop $ lb 11*© Buck All thrown silk, 35 30 cent. Tsatlees, No. 1 ©3.30ft) 10 25 @11 0) Taysaams, superior, No. 1 2 9 25 @ 9 75 do medium,No3@4. 8 60 @ 9 00 Canton,re-reel.Nol@2 7 50 @ 8 00 Canton, Usual Reel @ 10 £0 @12 60 Japan, superior -. Medium China thrown . 8 09 @10 00 ; nomiaal. Soap—Duty: 1 cent 30 lb, cent ad val. Castile Spelter—Duty . 3P 7b* a 13 nd25 $ © 16* in pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 30 160 ft>s. : Plates,foreign 30ft> gold do domeBtio l’f@ lo @ 6* 10* 7 cents and not above 11, 30 lb; over 11 cents, 3* cents and 10 30 cent ad val. 3 cts 30 ft) (Store prices.) 18 @ 23 10 © 12* English blister 20 H*@ hnglish machinery.... 16 13,© English German 14 © 16 American blister 17 111© English, cast, $ ft) English, spring . . Amer cm cast TojI American spring do Americau ma:h’y do American German.do Sumac—Duty: 10 $ 21 © 23 12 © 14 © 14 13 .. do do do 10 © 4 4 3 8 3 .. 75© 00© 75© 5 15 75© 50© 50© 4 50 00© 4 75 ....© ....© "35 28© cent ad Iron No. 0 to lfc22;@25 $ ct. off list. No. 19 to 26.... 3 i ^1 ct. off list No.27 to 36.... 33 30 ct. off list Telegraph, No. 7 to il Plain 30 ft) 8*@ ** Brass (les3 20 p->r cent ) 43 @ 45 do Copper 53 © . Wool—Duty: Imported in the “ or¬ dinary condition as now and hereto¬ fore practiced.” Class 1 —Clothing Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ tt>, 10 cents 30 ft* and 11 ^ cent, ad val.: over 32 cents 30 ft), 12 cents 30 ft) and 10 30 cent, ad val ; when imported washed, double these rates. Class 2.— Combing Wools-The value where¬ of at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ ft), 10 cents 30 lb and 11 30 cent, ad val. ; over 32 cents 30 ft), 12 cents 30 ft* and 10 30 cent, ad val. Class 3 .—Carpet Wools and other similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 12 cents or less 30 ft), 3 cents 30 ft); over 12 cents 30 ft>, 6 cents 30 ft** Wool of all classes Amer., Sax. fleece 30 ft) do full bl’d Merino. do * and J Merino.. Extra, pulled Zinc—Duty: pig or 100 cent ad val. Sicily 30 ton.. 125 00 @225 00 Sugar.—See special report Tallow—Duty :1 cent $ ft). American, prime, coun¬ try and city |0 ft).I0f@ Ilf 55 @ 48 © 44 © 45 © 60 £2 47 5u block, $1 50 30 tt>s.; sheets 2* cents 30 ft>. Sheet 30 ft» U*@ 111 Freights— To Liverpool : Cotton 30 ft* Flour 30 bbl. Petroleum Heavy goods... ton Oil Corn, b’k& bags$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef 30 Pork 30 bbl. d. 8* Oil... 8. 7-16© a • * (@ 4 © 5 0 6 32 6@40 0 40 @00 0 n © 10 9* © 6 0@ 7 10* 0 @ 5 0 30 0@60 0 0 .. : Heavy goods... $ ton Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at T cents $ ft) or under, 2* cents; over 00 iO tO 9 00 ....© To© 4 4 5 $ 100 ft>,und 15 % To London Spices.-See special report. 0 (0 10 0(J Imported scoured, three times the duty as if imported unwashed. M@ Silk—Duty: free. 0-t© i Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered .Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 cents 30 100 ft); 45 © 9 (0 15 13 17 16 14 5 01 © 10 CO 75© 7 50 Whisky(m bond),... Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents 30 ft*.; bulk, 18 oents 30 100 ft). Turks Islands 30 bush." 35© 4 do do St. Croix d > Gin —Differ, brands do Dnm c—N.E.Rum.cur. Bourbon Whisky.cur. 18* ... paddy 10 oents, and uncleaned 2 cents 30 ft*. Carolina 30 100 Ibid 00 @11 ?5 Rangoon Dress -d, gold duiy paid....' G 50 © 7 00 cent ad $1 *j0 gal¬ U0© 5 00© 5 5J@ 5 0J© do Alex. Seignette. 38 60 hams 100, 30 59© 20© do A. Seignetto . Hiv. Pellevoisin © extra mess do do do do Pellevoisin @ Beef, plainimess.... .-.13 00 ©1J 00 do do cent 5 ... 29 CO @20 75 prime, 30 over 5 5 5 5 Leger freres do Other br’ds Cog. do Pork,new ni(.ss,30 bblil 87£@2l 95 Poik, prime (gold) Uennessy (gold) Otard, Dup. &Co.do P)net,Castil.&Co.do Provisions—Duty:beof and pork, 1 m-ss — 70 gal ¬ Brandy— Paris—Duty: lump,free; .. $1 30 gallon, 30 oont ad'vat over lon and 25 21 per Wines ad valorem; over 5'i and not 50 cents 30 gallon and 25 .... 70© liquors, $2.50. : value net over 50 cents lon 20 cents 3)» gallon and 25 23* calcined, 20 30 cent ad val. 31ut* N(*vaScotia30 toe 3 87*@ White Nova Scotia.... 4 50 © Calcined,eastern 30 bbl @ Calcined city mills.. © Pork, old 1. C. Coke 9 50 @10 50 Terne CharcoallO 25 @11 75 Terne Coke.... 9 0D © 9 59 Tobacco.—See special report. 16* l> * 43 © Eetlned,1’ree, S.W do 45© Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents 30 ft*» Paris white and whiting, 1 cent 30 ft); dry ochres,56 18 00 @ 20 00 .. .. Bank Straits wood B’ds & Pl’k. 50 00 @ 55 09 ... ... val. Plato and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent. a9 vah Banca ft) (gold) 26© Straits , 80 _ While Maple and Birch 27© 41 @ Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, .$1 : burning fluid, 50 cents 30 gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 30 cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other llsh (for¬ eign flsheries,) 20 30 cont ad val. Olive, Mar’s, qs (gold) 4 00 @ 5 00 per case do in casks.30 galh © l 20 Palm 30 ft> li 10*@ Linseed,city...30 gall. 1 15 @ 18 Whale, crude 63 @ 65 do bleached winter 75 © Sperm,crude 2 Oi) @ 2 05 do wint. unbleach © 2 2) Lard oil, primewinter 1 15 © 1 29 Red oil,city dist. Elam 60© do saponified, west’n 68 @ 27 00 @ 80 00 60 00 © 65 00 Laths, Eastern .30 M 3 0u © Oak and Ash (6d)30 ft> rape Duty: Lumber, 20 30 cent ad val.; Staves, 10 30 cent ad val.; Rosewood Cherry B ds & Plank 75 00 @ 80 7 00 © 7 25 — do West, thin Lumber^ Woods, Staves,etc. am. $ lb. 100 ft) 6 37 © 5 50 Duty fr.,30 ft> 8© 11 Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ ceutadval. City thin obl’g, in bbls. .. poplar extra Oaltum fame—Duty; 10 30 cent ad val. Rockland, com. 30 bbl. @ 1 75 do heavy © 1 85 and Cedar, free. Spruce, East. 30 M ft Southern Pine White Pine Box B’da White Pine Merch. Bex Boards Clear Pine 12 c0 8 6 ... do 25* middle " 20 12 12 26© IS© Naval Stores—Duty: spirits oi turpentine 30cents $1 gallon; crude Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 30 cent ad val. Turpent’e, 8 .ft. 30289 ft) 4 25 © 4 50 Tar, N. Co imy bbl © 2 75 Tar, Wilmington.... 3 25 © 3 50 ri en City. ' 3 25 © 3 50 Spirits turpentiue $g. © 61 Uosin, corn’ll. $} 280 ft) 2 75 © 3 81J do strainodanuNo.2.. :3 00 @ 3 12* No. I do 3 50 © 4 00 do Pale 4 50 @ 5 60 25* light. do ’ 11 @ 8 © 8 © 8 © 25 @ 5 © 4 Yellow metal Zinc 43 49 45 28 28 23 27 27 27 26 © 15 Bahia Coppor 43. © Mansanilla Mexican Florida. $ c. ft. Clinch Horse shoo, f’d 44 © © J1 © Honduras Cut,4d.@60d.$ 40 @ 14 14 shoe 2 cents ft).-. 46 33 @ 86 © light., docrop, heavy do middlo light.. do do Oak, rough slaughter. jHemi’k, B. A., ifcc.,h y © 10© Molasses.—See special report. 35, upper 80 do lo 14 Nails—Duty: cut 1*; wrought 2*: horse .. @ 10 © Mexican do .... 33 40 Nuevitas.... Mansanilla Rosewood, R. Jan. 10 lb .. cash.$ 10 .. do do do .. 0.ik,sl’hter,heavy$ lb © 30 © Port-au-Platt, (American wood).. @150 00 sole 7 S.'> Tin—Duty: pig, bars, and block,15 $ cent ad ... Naptha, reflned. 60@63 25 © Domingo, Cedar, Nuevitas ordinary Leather—Duty: $ cent ad val. ” do do do PRICES—\ .... r.t. crotches — ' tfrt.. ordinary logs Port-au-Platt, Bar,English and Amer¬ 95 00@1*0 00 ican, Refined io do do Common 85 00© 90 00 125 0 @1.0 00 Soroll Oyals and Half Round 120 00© 150 00 Band 125 00© Rorso Shoe. 1-5 00© Rods,5-8@3-l<>iuch.. U’0 cu@lfl0 O') H00p’ 180 50@1S5 00 Nall Rod lb 9 © lo Sheet, Russia 15© 16 SheeJt, Single, Double and Treble 5 © 7 Rails, Eng. (g’d)$ ton 51 00© 52 *0 do American 73 00© 75 OO Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime 30 ft* 3 00© 8 15 East Ind, Billiard Bali 8 25© 3 50 African, Prime.. 2 76© 2 87* African,Scrivei.,W.C. 1 60© 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, *2 30 100 lb ; Old Lead, 1* cents $ ft); Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents $ ft). Galena @ $ 100 lb Spanish.... (gold) 6 45 @ 0 50 German (g»d 0 6 4) © 6 75 English (gold) 6 4 3 @ 6 87 Bar net ..@10 50 @12 00 Pipe and Sheet... .net do do do do ' Teas.—See special report. ... Chalk $ lb. @ 1* Chalk, block....30 ton22 50 @23 00 Barytes, American 30 ft) @ 11 Barytes Foreign 39 00 @42 75 Rose* do . Bar Swedes, sizes . .. v.aho'fBxtv St. Pomin- 6 * 45 ( uld) j0£> 1 O'* © 1 70 Oude (gold) 75 © 1 85 Madras (gold) 65 © 15 Manila (gold) G5 © 1 CO Guatemala (gold) 90 © 1 20 Caraccas (gold) 75 © I 0) Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 1* cents $ ft». Railroad, 70 cents 30 1U0 ft); Boilex and Plate, 1* cents $ lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1* cents 30 lb; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents 30 ft>. Pig, Scotch,No 1. 6 30 ton 37 0^41 00 Pig, American,No. 1.. 35 00© 6 00 P.g,-American, No. 2 35 0 ©36 00 Bar, Refi’d Eng&Amer 80 9 ©85 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 37 50© 92 00 * c p.k 00© Ccdtir, Duty free. vv Bengal t—S 240 luiiogJiijj, .. .. @149 00 double bbl 74 .. White — hhd do $ ft> _ HEADING-White Oak ad val. Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse 1 00 @ 1 10 Cal. fit Eng.. 1 29 @ 1 25 Amer.com.. -5 © 35 Venet. red(N.G.)30cwt 2 85*@ 3 CO •armine,city made $11)16 00 ©20 00 Plumbago 4 @ 6 China clay, 30 ton 80 00 @31 CO do do .. .. Honey--Duty,2 cent $ gallon. Cuba (in bond)(?r’ 30 gall. 61 © 6:2 Hons—~*uty: 5cc*H«30 m. Crop of 1867 30 ft* 60 40© do of 1866 Bavarian Vermiliion, Trieste .. .. .. 15 18 12 Manilla & Batavia, buffalo ©275 00 pipe, heavy @225 00 pipe, light. @175 00 pipe, culls .110 00 @170 00 do ; ipe,culls,It @110 00 do hhd.,extra. @235 OU do hhd.,heavy @175 00 do hhd.,light. ©lie 00 do hhd., culls. @100 00 do bbl., extra. @150 00 do bbl.,heavy. @115 00 do bbl., light.. @ 90 00 do bbl.,culls.. @ 60 00 Bed oak, @120 0C hhd.,h’vy. .do hhd., light.. © 30 00 .. gold P* pipe, V M. do do do .. Calcutta,city al’hter 10 oak. extra [February 8, 1868. .. ©40 Flour $ bbl. © 3 6 Petroleum © 5 6 Beef 30 tee. 7 @10 0 Pork 30 bbl. © 0 Wheat ’..30 bush. © 10 Corn © To Glasgow (By Steam) ; Flour 30-bbl, @40 Wheat 30 bush, .. .. .. .. Corn, bulk and bags.. Petroleum (sail)30 bbl. Heavy goods.. 30 ton. Oil Beef .. .. .. $tcs. © }(* @ 10 © 5 6 @40 0 @15 0 @70 Pork 30 bbl. @50 To Havre : $ c 4 c Cotton 30 ft* i*@ Beef and pork.. $ bbl. @ Measnrem. g’dfl.^p ton i0 60 @ Petroleum 5 6 @ 6 0 Lard, tallow, out m t ieto.,~. # lb *@ . .. .. Ashes^ot&p’l^ton 8 0o @10 QQ February 8, 1868J THE CHRONICLE. Financial. OFFICE OF THE „ Commercial Cards. Everett & 28 State Henry Lawrence : Outstanding Premiums, Jan, 1, 1867 1 to Dec. $149,480 31, MA 796,612 87 Total Amount of Marine Premiums The Cash in Bank and on U.S. and other hand..'. 40 BROAD Cash Total Assets on pauy, of ihe issue of 1863, redeemed and paid in cash, to the holders their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, the 4th day of February next, from which date interest thereon will cease. The Certificates to be produced at the time of payment and cancelled. A Dividend in Script of FIFTEEN PER CENT, is declared on the net amount of Earned Premiums for the year ending December 31st, 1867, for which Certifi¬ cates will be issued on and after the first day of June next.. John K. Myers, A. C. Richards, Frederick B. Betts, Moses A. Hoppock, W, H. Mellen, B. W. Bull, Horace B. Claflin, Ephraim L. Corning, A. S. Barnes, Egbert Starr, A. Adam T. Wesson, Ofl'er for sale, IN MERCHANTS, and RYE and other first-class Dis¬ own G. Falls & Co., Memphis, Tenn. j. c. Johnson. Refer by permission to Caldwell & ^ Morris, New York. Gano, Wright & Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Cotton, Flour, Grain and NO. 27 MAIN Bruce, JOHN K. MYERS, President. WILLIAM LECONEY, Vice-President. Benedict’s SINGER SEWING of the world 2ND Financial. Jewelry and Silver Ware, Articles for Wedding Presents and Silver Weddings. UP-TOWN, 691 B Between Amity and Fourth Streets. BENEDICT BROS., BENEDICT BROS., Jewellers, 171 Broadway Fulton St. Sole Agents for the Remontoir Church Clocks. Also, agents for the American Waltham Watches. By The “Benedict’s Time Watch” having proved an exact time-keeper, we those wishing to keep the confidently recommend it to correct time, and in order to introduce it throughout the country, we offer to send it by express at our own expense. BENEDICT’S TIME TABLE OFFICE NO. 95 LIB ERTY STREET. Agents for Isaac Reed & Son’s Gold Fountain Pen which writes four pages with one dip. And Carrying tlie Unit Slates Mail, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH ER, FOOT o i Canal street, at 1 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, an list of every month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. connecting with Montana Hankers, rbgfc. cV •§/>., ? ^CcL&ACLU. YYAVuAtv. <36e.cLLe.lk *utn—Arizona, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama witk steamers for South Pacific ports; 1st and 11th lor Central American Ports. zanillo. flL. &P. <§.^ecu.tLtieS. jp~cch.cLn.Qe> and memLelk afi ^Lach and ^aid fp:ccfhCLn(pek in. Lath citLeA. ZfLccauntk af /^culLcA and j^anheiA tcceiaed an * LLLetal lh. ^ffateict-n. pound allowed each adult. An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines ana attendance free. For passage tickets or farther information, appl it the Company’s ticket office, on the | canal street, North River, New Yor*. wharf,f oot F. R. BABY V. S. 'Box\A% a Agsn'; Commercial Cards. telmk. S^eewxW\> George Pearce & Co., BANKING HOUSE w TURNER Those of 1st touch at Man¬ Baggage cnecked through. One hundred DeLolme Benedict, Agent fortbe Na¬ tional Watcti Company, office No. 691 Broadway. California. FEBRUARY: and Brooklyn, 234 To 1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City. 11th—Henry Chauncey, ROS BROADWAY, further information, application to be made to Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st MACHINES, Watches! E N E D I C T For the Pacific Mail re- Suitable B A limited quantity of merchandise will be conveyed under through bill of lading. NEW YORK. ?hes Fine Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold region of Hokitika, New Zealand. Children under three years, free; under eight years quarter fare; under twelve years, half-fare; male ser, Vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters faremen servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies cabin. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE SingerManufacturingCo. BROADWAY, nowuec?61018 and Manufacturer8 steamer; after cabin, lattei Fares payable in Uailed States gold Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William st. New Y ST., CINCINNATI, O. 458 COMMUNICA¬ BETWEEN The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬ tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving New-York for Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each month First and second class passengers will be conveyed under through ticket at the following rates: From New York to ports in New Zealand, or to Sydney Melbourne, $346 to $864 for first class, and $818 to or $243 for second class. The above rates Include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian Provisions. THE THOMAS HALE, Secretary. near NEWAND AUSTRALA¬ SIA via PANAMA. $25 additional. J. N. Falls Streets, YORK coin. BUYERS, and NEW EDWARD MATTHEWS. No, 19 Broad Street. & Co., BOND, fine BOURBON Albert B. Strange, Time Apply to STEAM STREET, NEW YORK, WHISKIES, from their tilleries, Kentucky. ■ G. Falls. Henry C. Southwlck, Wm. Hegeman, James It. Taylor, * 58 BROAD COTTON Leconey, Bartow', John A. Alex. M. Earle. John A. Hadden, Oliver K. King, Benjamin D. Smith, Wm. T. Blodgett, Lewis Buckman, Chas. H. Ludington, Jos. L. Smallwood, Thomas Eakin, Sheppard Gandy, W. M. Richards, G. D. H. Gillespie, C. E. Milnor, Martin Bates, BROADWAY, BROAD STREET. AND : Wiilinm On WALL. Steamship Companies. DISTILLERS COMMISSION PARKER, Cashier. Offices To Let, Consignments J. M. Cummings or TRUSTEES JOHN Netll, Bros., & Co., Com* will be thereof, o t this Bank have this day declared a Dividend of FOUR (4) Per Cent, free from Tax. payable on and after Jan¬ uary 2, 1868. The Transfer Books will be closed from date until January 2. TION outstanding Certificates of Profits, will be paid holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday, the 4th day of February next. The remaining Fiity Per Cent, of the of the PHENIX NATIONAL B4NK. York, December 28, 1867.—The Directors New Merchants, ADVANCES MADE ON OF COTTON TO 134 PEARL to the Outstanding Certificates CONVERTED INTO WATER BONDS HAMBURG. 52,477 92 COTTING, 5-20s, 10-40s, and 7-30s FRIENDS IN LIVER¬ POOL HAVRE AND Interest, the U.S. USE, OUR $1,050,378 95 Six Per Cent. on Sc BANKERS, NO. 16 WALL STREET. CONSIGNMENTS $626,877 64 279,584 45 91,438 94 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable Subscription Notes in advance of Premiums Re-Insurance and other claims due the Company, estimated at JAMESON, SMITH STREET, NEW YORK. Advances made LIBERAL $84,029 31 stocks(US.$433,100) 476,298 33 Loans on Stocks drawing interest 66,550 00 interest, iu currency. CORDAGE AND 603,270 41 74,421 12 assets. & Sons, STREET, NEW YORK. General Commission Savings, Company lias the following OF Gold. The subscribers are the authorized Agents for the Sale of these Bonds, and offer them at 95 and accrued COTTON & TOBACCO FACTORS Premiums marked off as Earned during the Period as above $827,044 19 Paid for Losses and Expenses, less Return Premiums In CO* Norton, Slaughter & Co., taken period UFACTURERS 192 FRONT upon Time upon Hulls of Vessels. same & FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC $946,093 62 THIS COMPANY HAS ISSUED NO POLICIES EX CEPT ON CABGO AND FREIGHT FOR THE VOYAGE. &c., during the Twenty-Year Six Per Cent. Bonds, Principal and Interest Payable OF CHINA AND JAPAN. New York, January 11, 1868. The following Statement of the Affairs of the Com¬ pany is published in conformity with the requirements or Street, Boston* AUGUSTINE HEARD TRINITY BUILDING, 111 BROADWAY. No Risks liave been St. Louis Water Bonds. Co., AGENTS FOR COMPANY, Premiums received from Jan. 1867, inclusive Financial. , Pacific Mutual Insurance of Section 12 of its charter 191 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW BROTHERS, NO. 14 NASSAU STREET, Corner of Pine, Opposite U. S. Treasury. We receive Deposits and make Collections, the same as an incorporated Bank. Government Securities Bought and Sold at Market Rates. We also execute orders for Purchase and Sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold on Commission. TURNER BROTHERS, YORK, Importers of White Goode, Laces and Emb’s, Linen Handk’ft, British and Continental, Co., S. H. Pearce & No. 353 BROADWAY, CHINA SILKS, EUROPEAN AND Oiled CHICOPEE MANUF. CO., HANDKERCHIEFS, VICTORY MANUF. Silk, finish, and real silk, which it equals in has a very superior much as osts but half as Reversible Paper Collars* most economical George Hughes & Co. STREET, IRISH LINEN GOODS, DRILLS, SCOTCH AND PATENT LINEN And F. W. Sc CO, Belfast. Banbrldge. Linen MILLS AT PATERSON, J. & P. Coats’ CABLED Thread. Offers No. 108 Duane Lace In full assortment for WILLIAM GIHON A Curtains. LINENS Sc C GOODS. Strachan & Malcomson, MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS 40 Murray Nob. 12 & 14 119 CHAMBERS STREET. Thread Company’s COTTON. Agents for MACHINE .AND SEWING SILK. BUTTON-HOLE Twist, fancy goods, &c. OfiW to Jobbovs only* 292 PEARL ‘ t. STREET, NEAR BEfCKMAN STREET NEW YORK 11 F. & F. A. comotives, Old Rails GO’S. UXBURPA88KD FOR HAND AND MACHINJ « BUSSELL, Soto Agent, Duck, All Widths and Weights. band. THEODORE POLHEMU9 Sc CO MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS, IS Broad Street, corner of Beaver Large Stock always on NEW YORK, A. B. Holabird & Co , CINCINNATI O., CHAMBERS STRUT. H.I. Cotton Re-rolled or Exchanged for new. ESTABLISHED IN 1826. SEWING. TIOI. and other Metals, Lo¬ Railroad Chairs A spikes, WALL STREET, 67 CLARK, Jr. Sc Kills End, Glasgow. Dana, FOREIGN Sc AMERICAN RAILROAD IRON, OLD AND NEW, Pig, Scrap Iron N. .7. Spool Cotton. A Also & Son, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. merchants, Agents for the Glasgow SPOOL Co., J. Pope & Bro. METALS. YORK SILKS, WORKS PATERSON, PARASOLS, C. Holt & commissiON NO. 299 JOHN WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. WAREHOUSES: STREET, NEW YORK. Thomas MACHINE TWIST AND SUPERIOR Hall, UMBRELLAS AND OFFICE AND MANUFACTURERS OF SCOTCH LINENS, Street, New York. Manufacturers of Works, Philadelphia. Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. Manufacturers of 15 GOLD Wm. G. Watson SEW ING Byrd & YORK. Co., SKIRT MATERI¬ CHURCH STREET NEW roR RISK AND Street, Boston. Pascal Iron WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED LACE, COTTON YARNS, Arc., 234 eral & SONS, in Morris, Tasker & ALS, FLAXSAIL DUCK,AC (IMPORTERS AND Laces, LEONARD STREET, NEW WOVEN CORSETS, BURLAPS, BAGGING, LINEN White Goods. Manufacturer of SONS’ in Sweden, 29th April, Genista,CARL EMANUEL DE 1867. GEER, Proprietor. referring to the above notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers oi, Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders far this Ikon, and for Blister and Extka Cast Steel made from the Iron, at their establishments. Nos. 91 & 93 John Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬ John Graham, Agents for the sale of I have this day entered into W. Jessop & Sons, of Sheffield of the above iron, which Ajul to which I ^request the special attention of the WM. JESSOP Corsets, Ac. Trade* beg to announce that contract with Messrs. LEUFSTA, W. JESSOP Sc SONS. the Jobbing and Clothing DANNE- whole Annual Make In future, will be stamped Imitation Laces, 78 SWEDISH lor the ^ Real Brussels LINEN GOODS, IRISH Sc SCOTCH 1 a Draperies, MURRAY STREET. , MORA IRON. Machine Edgings, Street. York. CONSUMERS OF THE NOTICE TO THE Freneh Dress Goods, Commission merchants* WHITE New OF IMPORTERS Brand & Gihon, 42 & 44 MANUFACTURERS. & Co-, Delisle ; Muslin STEPHENSON Sc CO., GENUINE FRANKLIN STREET. Swiss Sc French Importers Sc Broadway. Omnibuses. Cars, JOHN Turkey Red Stock of the above at BROADWAY CORNER IN NEW YORK. SOLE AGENTS Napier D. FURNISHING GOODS, a new Oscar AUCHINCLOSS, HUGH Street Napier & Co.) Cambric, Madder, MEN’S 361 Sc Mills. NEW YORK. HOSIERY and N. J. SIX-CORD Sc Co., WOOLEN HANDKERCHIEFS, Organzine, and Tram. OHANBERS ST., NEW YORK. JOHN S. W. HOPKINS Agent for S. Courtauld Sc Co.’s ENGLISH CRAPES, And importer of Embroidery, % FOR SALE BY and Lawn machine Twist REST From Numerous 19 WHITE STREET, (late of Becar, MANUFACTURERS OF 84 & Alexander John O’Neill & Sons, Sewing Silks, Roads, Steam and Street GOODS. THREAD. V? HAYES Sc CO., FOREIGN, FOR 69 & 71 COTTON AND AMERICAN Sole Agents for DICKSONS*’ FERGUSON AMERICAN AND F0R WHITE GOODS, Securi provided for Railroad Iron, MERCHANTS COMMISSION other Americrn Continent. YORK. Langley & Co., SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, LINEN CHECKS, Ac., or Beavers. Wm. C. W.’ Consignments solicited on the usual terms of any of th« staples. Special Counting and Reception Rooms available for Americans in London, with the facilities usually found at the Continental Bankers. Commission merchants, 0 CHURCH 198 A 2 U. S. Silk Mixtures, Casslmeres, LONDON, negotiated, and Credit and Exchange s W. D. Simonton. W. W. Coffin, Treas. Fancy STREET. CHURCH ST., NEW 198 Sc !£00 collar ever invented. Importers A CO., Woolen Co., Globe aad durability. Agents for the sale of the appearance Patent 45 WHITE Nos. 43 Sc LANGHAM PLACE, Railroad Bonds and U.S. and MILTON MILLS, Imitation Oiled Silk* Our ** IMITATION ” WOOLEN CO., BUR LING TON 15 RAILROAD IRON, BESSEMER RAILS. STEEL TYRES. AND META I S. WASHINGTON MILLS, and Manufacturers of SILK AND COTTON Gilead A. Smith, E. R. Mudge, Sawyer&Co. AGENTS FOR Importers of Cards. Commercial Cards. Commercial Commercial Cards, e [February 8, 18< 8 THE CHRONICLE. 192 ENGINE AND MILL Particular attention is MANUFACTURERS. called to our IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAW MILL. superior to all others in strength, durability and simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumbar It to ^er day. REED’S PATENT GOLD PREMIUM WHEAT AND CORN MILLS. BoUt of solid French Burr Bock. Particular attention T»n to Southern patronag