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'.v' mantra! §attwajj §$«m*t0*, and fttjsmmr |oumal ianto’ taette, (Stommflmal NEWSPAPER, INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. A WEEKLY REPRESENTING THE } **** wlth Fiek & Hatch' B.' Foot*?’ BANKERS, Hatch, Foote & Co., BANKERS CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., NEW STREET. 70 BROADWAY A 15 ISSUE , CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United GOVERNMENT SECURI- AND DEALERS IN TIES, GOLD, &c. No. 11 WALL STREET, Two doors from Co., Duncan, Sherman & Co., Satterlee & Jr., F. A. Johnson, Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. a NO. 82. SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1867. YOL. 4. STOCKS AND BONDS ' NEW YORK. New Street. States, available in all the principal cities of the world; alao, COMMERCIAL CREDITS, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, References : Fisk A Hatch, N. Y. Jay Cooke & Phenix National Bank. Co., N. Y. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. ALL VARmnS. John BloodgoodNEW&YORK. Co., WILLIAM STREET, 82 GOVERNMENT AND IN DEALERS OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Carren Vermilye Morgan, Lathrop & Co., STOCKS. subject to check at sight, and particular tten /oagiven to accounts of country banks and hankers GOLD, cy, SECURITIES, C. Graham, ranker and broker, 8 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Refer to JAY COOKE & DEALER IN Bill? on NO. 11 Tyler, Wrenn & Co., 18 NO. Buy and Sell at BANKERS, a ALL STREET, most liberal rates, BROAD STREET, NEW Mobile. Memphis, New Orleans and GOVERNMENT bECURITIRS, GOLD, &c. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks. Bonds and Gold promptly executed. TVLER, ULLMANNACO., Chicago. CO., Bankers, New York. Watkins, S. L. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Southern Bills on London and Paris, Broad Street, C}a«iet of Govern* Securities and Gold. And Dealer in all Collections made in all parte of the and British America. NO. 24 BROAD STOCKS, 80 BROADWAY. NO. 5 NEW STREET SOUTHERN Edwin - and NOTES* BANK Q. BROKER, Bell, BANKER AND In Southern Securities and Bank Bills. NEW New York. 80 BROADWAY & 5 Solicit accounts from and other?, and allow JeSUP & COMPANY; Negotiate Harrisonj Garth & Co., ^ — 1 No. 18 Cars, etc., . ■■■ Harrison, Godditi Sc Apperson, Bankers and Brokers, VIRGINIA. RICHMOND, Ronds and Loans for Contract for Iron or ‘ - Steel Buy and Sell Exchange on all Scott Railroad Cos*, Ralls,.Locomotives, all business connected wltk Railways. McKix. Hasle'Jt McKik. Robt. McKim. Jno. A. on McKim, Bros. & Co., : all accessible Southern points. BANKERS, W. H. Whittingham, . MINING, No. 8 Broad Street, ' EXPRESS, : .. TELEGRAPH, * V : railroad, _ 62 WALL STREET. Interest allowed on deposits subject sight, and special attention other places. . - : BONDS AND GOL Bought and Sold on Commission,-. >j- to draft at given to orders from : ' ;l. .... and all other stock V- ' . . • Gelston &Bussing, BANKERS Sc BROKERS - '.i jrj WALL STREET ^ : AH orders rajrtww Wi. j. gbiaton, « ■ -/-T Pwnw^ Atteetton. r* Buumo. Also, drafts on & Co., Seott, Kerr Sc BANKERS, Co., Ltman t coTT. Luceen Scott. The Marine Company OF CHICAGO. President. J. Young Scamjcon Robert Reid.... .... ....Manager. .. General Banking and - Collections made the principal cities LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS. - and undertake Co., LOUIS, MISSOURI, of the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. favorable terms, the Purchase or Securities. BANKERS AND MERCHANTS, 84 BROADWAY. Soutliera Collections. , balances, ST. And promptly execute orders for Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad M. K. Bankers. BANKERS, MERCHANTS, bANKERS subject to Sight draft. make collections on > Bounty Loan. Benoist & A. Late STREET, BANKERS, NEW STREET, NEW- YORK. Western L. STREET. interest on daily 2d, & 3d series VERMILYE Sc CO. f STATES SECURITIES. ALL UNITED STOCKS; Compound Interest Notes of 1864 St 1865 Bought and Sold. Buy and Sell at Market Kates. BROKE BS IN MINING ; ! 0 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Ceut 5-20 Bonds of 1882, 6 44 44 186-4, 6 44 “ 1865, 5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 7 8*10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, let, 6 Per Cent Currency Certificates. Gilliss, Harney & Co., Co., Riker & STATES including United States BANKERS, • issues of LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN! MENT STOCK8 TO BANKS AND BANKERS BANKER, ment } No. 44 Wall Street. New York* New YCrk State 7 per cent. YORK, • Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery a UNITED Bought and Sold on Commission Noi.82 New Street Sc 36 New York. Co & BANKERS. AND GOVERNMENT A. Wm. H. Catlin. T. A. La-throb. T. M. Morgan. Collections promptly attended to. NORTH-WESTERN STATES 7». -bank or • « • •.*; . Geo. C. Smith & 48 LASALLE Bro., ST*, CHICAGO*? ; : (Lake Bank of Montreal.) Special attention given td collections. and Wiuelow, A Co., Philadel¬ Draw on—Drexel, WinthropAUo., Lanier A Co., New York ; Dra»el phia, and Bank of Moottcal,Cai»da. [January 19,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 66 Southern * Southern Bankers. Bankers and Brokers. National Bank. Fourth $5,000,000 Capital NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. Washington. National PINE STREET. on best terms. Central National Bank, 318 BROADWAY. *3,000,000. Capital Has for sale all descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on terms mos favorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United State and Canadas. WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President. WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Cashier. Tenth National Bank. $1,000,0 0. Capital No. 240 BROADWAY. Bank¬ Designated Depository of the Government. Dealers^ Accounts solicited. ers’ and D. L. ROSS, President. J. ll. Stout, Cashier. Offers services its DIRECTORS I Joseph T. Bailey, Edward B. Ome, Hilles, Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, William Ervien, Osgood Welsh, NATION A I« 291 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. $1,000,000 CAPITAL URPLUS^. C. POWELL, GREEK Sc CO. Bankers & Commission MERCHANTS, STREET, NEW YORK. George BANKER AND BANKERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. 44 Broad Street, N. Y. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold bought and. sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent, on deposits.^ The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, &c., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. J. K. GILLIAT & CO., of LiverpooL . Jones & Westervelt, BROKERS, BANKERS Sc Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold, bouglit and sold on Commission. COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 12 NEW Sc 14 BROAD STREETS. Drake Brothers, STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS, NO. 36 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Se’l on Commission Government Securi¬ ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬ leum and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to Draft. Dividends and Int1 rest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Collections Office In New York No. 71 H. MAURY. Broadway. ROB’! JAS. L. MAURY. R. H. Maury Sc BANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED on deposits, subject to check at sight. John Cockle & Son, BROKERS In Foreign Exchange, Bonds, Notes, dee., dee. 82 PINE STREET, NEW YORK. Bstskences.—Moses Taylor; John Mnnroe & Co; C, Savage. U.8. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, HI.; L on. F. E. Spinner, Treasurer U. 8. Washington. JAMX8 A. »‘JAMES BECK, HENRY SAYLES Western Bankers. J.W. Ellis, Brest. Lewis Worthington, Theodore Stanwood, Cashier. V.-Brest. THE FIRST NATION A IBANK of Co., RICHMOND, VA. all accessible points in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, Vermilyh & Co. Cincinnati. Collections made on all points and promptly remitted for. WEST and SOUTH, Capital stock, $1,000,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000. Directors.—John W. Ellis, B. Harrison, William Glenn, Lewis Worthington, L. K. M. Bishop, William Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S Winslow. Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, St., Mobile, Ala. 108 No. 52 St. Francis attention DUPEE, BOSTON. T. BROOKS Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c., bought and sold on commission. Deposits received and Collections made on ernment BROKERS, No. 22 STATE STREET, BANKERS AND BROKERS No. 1014 MAIN ST., STOCK , (Established in 1847.) promptly attended to and remitted for Exchange, Gov¬ West Fourth Street, 110 Sc CINCINNATI, OHIO. Securities. Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt given to Collections. References Babcock Bros : Dealers in & Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. &■ Durand, Bankers, New York. E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. Byrd & Hall, New York. Niartin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff & Gillespie. Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hurlbert. Home Insurance Company oi New York. New York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford. GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible and remitted for Underwriters Agency New Yo'k, Claries Walsh. Pre-ident Bank of Mobile. Checks on T. H. McMahan & Co. UNION BANK OF LONDON. FOR SALE. J B. H. J. Rogers, FIRST COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealers In Domestic and Foreign REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. , Chaffee, Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. V. Pres. NATIONAL BANK of Denver, Exchangee. GALVESTON, TEXAS. Special attention given to Collections of all kinds, having prompt and reliable, correspondents at all ac¬ cessible points in the State, and points day of payment. on Henry A Schroeder. Pres. Southern Bank of Ala. DESIGNATED depository Authorized Capital - - of the U. - - 8. $500,000 Paid in Capital $200,000 Transact a General Banking business- corner of Blake and F. Sts. DENVER COLORADO. REFER TO National Park Bank, Howes & Macy, and Spofford, Tiles ton & Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq.. Boston. Drexel & Co. and D. S. Stetson & Co., Philadelphia. T. F. Thirkield & Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and J os. E. Elder & Good win, St. Louis. Fowler, D. A. Given, of Watts, Given & Co., Padurah, Ky. D. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky. U. M. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank of Ky. N. S. Ray, late Cash’r Com’l B’k of Ky., Lebanon, Ky Stanard & Co, Mobile. Pike, "Lapeyre & Bro., New Orleans. Drake, Klein werth* Cohen, Lon¬ don and Liverpool. Orders Promptly Executed. Warren, Kidder & Co., Dupee, Beck & Sayles, MERCHANT, by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, Sherman «fcCo., Bankers, New York. References in New York :—Duncan Sherman & Co; I. H" Frothingham, Esq., Pres’t. Union Trust Co.; Moses Taylor, Esq,; K. H. Lowry, Esq., Pres't. Bunk of Republic ; Henry Swift & Co.; H. B. CO., PARIS. ALSO ISSUE Commercial Credits for fhe purchase of Merchan disc in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. \ GALVESTON, TEXAS. Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Wilson, Callaway & Co., AND JOHN MUNROE Sc Butler, COMMISSION , BOSTON, BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON Joseph P. Mumford, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. 38 BROAD Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought and sold exclusively on Commission. 114 STATE STREET, William H Rhawn. <. 400,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Page, Richardson & Co William H. Rhawn, President, Late'Cashier of the Central National Bank. ROB’T BANK. Eastern Bankers. Frederic A. Hoyt, Cladin & Co. The Tradesmens attention to business eounected espt-cial Bankers on liberal terms., Nathan Depository and Financial with the several departments of the Government. Full information with regard to Government loans at all times cheerfully furnished. and Banks to Pres’t. Agent of the United State*. We bny and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and Hive $500,000 Capital Collections made for Dealers Government STREET, PHILADELPHIA, All the Government T-oans for sale. WASHINGTON, H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke A Co.), WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Republic, 809 & 811 CHESTNUT BANK NATIONAL FIRST OF Bank of the Bankers. Charles D. Carr & Co., BANKERS AND Ray, Given & Co., 43 CARONDELET ST., LEANS. G A. NEW OR¬ Orders for the purchase or sale of Government Securities, Stocks j Bonds, and Gold, Wilson, 5 Street, Charleston, S. €., BANKERS Sc DEALERS IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE, NOTES, STOCKS. AND BjNDS. Especial attention paid to Collections* Refer to Duncan, Sherman * Co., New York; Drexel * Co., Philadelphia; Tha Franklin Bank, and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury & Co., Richmond, Va., Charles D, Carr * Co. Augusta, Git* BANK Co., STREET, NEW YORK. PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. Conner & No. 5 Brodd Given, Jones & 33 BROAD BROKERS, AUGUSTA, COLLECTIONS BACKING HOUSE OF promptly executed. Interest allowed on at ' - _ Deposits, subject to cheques sight. Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange Business. Given, Jones & Co. are prepared to draw Sterling Bills, afoight or sixty days, on the Bank of Liverpool, in sums to suit purchasers. The New Orleans House will make Collections in that City and at all accessible points South, and remit on (he day of payment. We refer to Bank or America and National Bank or State or New Yobs, New York City, and o any of the Kentucky Banks. ‘ January 19,1867.J THE CHRONICLE. Financial. Financial. Southwest Caution. Pacific Railroad To Dividends. NATIONAL Of the FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS NEW YORK, DECEMBER 27* 1866. Government and other Securities. 10th December last, as the payment of the Coupons or Interest and the transfer or conversion pany, on of said Securities has been Principal and Interest Guaranteed by the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company, In Coupon Bonds or $1,000 eacli, Twenty Years DUE SEPTEMBER Run, to 15, 1886, Interest at tke rate of 7 per cent, per Annum, stopped by a Caveat filed against them in the Treasury Department of the United States at Washington, and effective steps have been taken to make said securities unsaleable The Royal Insurance Company will pay a REWARD OF $10,000 for the recovery of said Securities, or in that propor¬ tion for the recovery of any portion of them. 5 per cent Coupon 1874 Bonds, $1,000 Each. Nos. 1,656, 1,657, 1,658, 1,65 V 4,931,10,695,10,696, 11,341, 12,950, 12,961,12,952,12,953,12,954,12,955, 12,9S6, 12,9S7,12,988,12,989,12,990, 14,493,14,494, 14.49 \ 16,764, 16,765,16,766,16,767,16,768, 6,771, 16,77', 16,773,16,774,16,776, 16,778,16,779, 16,780,16,781,16,782, 16,785, 16,786, 16,787, 16,7*8,16,789, 16,79,;, 16,793, 16,794,16,795,16,796, 16,797,16,798,16,799,16,800, 5,989,14,026. 6 per cent. Coupon 1881 Bonds, $1,000 Each. Act July 17, 1861. Payable to the order of Adam Norrie and Benja¬ min B. Sherman, Committee, and not endorsed. Nos.65997, 65,998, 65,999, 66,000, 60,001, 66,002, 66,003, 66,004, ('6,005, 66,006, 66,007, 66,008, 66,009, 66,010, €(.,011, 66,012, 66,013, 66,0J4, 66,i15, 66,016, 66,017, 66,018, 66,019, 66,020, 66,021, 66,022. 7-30 Bonds, $1,000 Each. 1st Series. are issued on 77 miles of completed road, now in operation to Rolla, in the State of Missouri, which cost to construct $4,500,000 And 13 miles of road graded, with material on hand to be compltted by January 1, 1867, at a cost of 500,000 Together with 260,000 acres of land, now at a of being disposed of minimum $5 per acre, (maximum, $40) 1,300,000 Say present total value of • $6,300,000 u By a provision of this mortgage, when lands are Interest pay. August and February. , Nos. 12,099, 20,S99, 25,045, 25,046, 25,047, 25,940* 34,556, 75,599,116,634, 117,827, 117,828, 117,829, 117,830, 117,831, 118,903, 124,719. 5-20 Ronds, $1,000 Each. Dated No¬ sola to the amount of vember these bonds at Nos.36551, 28,870, 38,806, 38,805, 38,807, 38,804, 38,808, 28,867, 28,868. $40,00 ', it is to constitute a Special Fund tor the redemption of a like amount of a rate not exceding 105 per cent. They are also receivable at PAR by the Company in payment of its sales of lands. At Springfield the Somhwest Pacific will connect with the Great Atlantic and Pacific Railroad (its Eastern terminus) forming a direct and continu¬ ous route from St. Louis to San Francisco. When completed, it will present a road of 310 miles in length, costing about $12,000,000 With 1,036,000 acres of land valued at 10,000,000 .. Showing total value of. $22,< 00,000 With a total amount of Bonds authorized, with the guarantee as above, of $7,250,000, which may be issued at a rate not exceeding $25,000 per mile of completed a work as it progresses. 1, 1864. Act of June 3u, 1864. 6 per cent. 1881 Bonus, $1,000 Dated June 15, 1864. A. Each. Nos.8,902, 8,906, 8,903, 8,894, 8,908, 8,910, 8,909, 8,911, 6,907, >“ ,904, 8,899, 8,905, 8,901, 8,900, 8,893. 8,896, 8,897,8,895.. Nos. 1,267*1,260,1,264,1,265,15,486,15,487, $500 each; U. S. Coupon Bonus 5 per cent. 10-40. 1st series. Nos. Nos. 36,289, 98,813, 98,814,102,542, $1,000 each. 35,275, 35,276, 35,277,35,278, 35,279,35,280, 35,281, 35,282, $500 each. 7-30 per cent. Bonds. 2d series. Inter¬ est payable 15th of June Sc December. Nos. 1,782, 1,783, $5,000 each. 1,1273, $1,4*)U. Registered Stock ot 1881. $ 10,000 each Noe. 9,662, 9,663, 9,664, acts of July 17 and August 5, . A DIVIDEND OF SIX (6) PER CENT., free of United States of this Bank GEORGE ELLIS, Cashier. Office of the Central Railroad Company. January 15. 1867. AT A MEETING OF THE BOARD OF DIREC- Illinois tors of this Company, held this day.it was resolved that a Dividend of FIVE PER CENT. in cash, free of Government Tax, be paid on the first day of Feb¬ ruary on the nineteenth day of January instant, and that the Transfer Books be closed on the said nineteenth day of Janaary and opened on the sixth Of the present issue of $2,000,000 of Bonds, a limited amount is now offer¬ ed for sale. For farther 17 ami particulars apply to WARD & CO., Bankers, No. 54 Wall Street, New York. SEVEN Registered Stock of 18S1, $1,000 Each. Nos. 17,404,18,338, 18,339, 18,340, 18,254, acts of July PER CENT. FIRST GAGE BONDS. MORT¬ August 5,1861. QUARTERLY Office North Missouri road Rail¬ Company. We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort gage Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com pany, having thirty years to run. Coupons paya¬ ble in New York on January 1 and July 1, in each year. Before accepting the agency for sale of these bonds, we made careful inquiry into the condition and prospects of the road, which was exammed by Mr. Wm. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf, and their highly satisfactory report enables us to re, commend the bonds as first-class securities, and safe and judicious investment. The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 in all) \*l., be used in extending a road, already completed 170 miles into North Missouri, to the Iowa State line, where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa, and also westward to the junction with the Pacific Railroad (at Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬ ing up the Missouri River, so that the mortgage of $5,000,000 will cover a complete and well-stocked road of 889 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,000, with a net annual revenue after the first year of over $1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be vond the amoant needed to pay the interest on these bonds, the income of the road of course increasing every year. The Railroad connects the great City of St. Louis with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only with the rich est portions of Missouri, but with the States ot Kan and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads. The first 600,000 have been sold at 80 cents,land the remainder are now offered at fe6 cents. At this rate they yield nearly 8% per cent, income, and add 20 per cent, to principal at maturity. Any fhrther inquiries will be answered a on sas office. JAY COOKE & CO. Panama Railroad Company, I J New York, December 24,1866. THIRTY-NINTH DIVIDEND.—THE board of directors have this day declared a dividend of FIVE PER CENT, out of the earnings of the road for the three months ending 31st instant, and ONE PER CENT, out, of the earnings of steamers, sailing vessels, etc., payable to the stockholders or their legil representatives on and after January 5. Transfer books will be closed from the evening of the 26th inst. until the morning of January 7. HENRY SMITH, Treasurer. NEW YORK, DECEMBER 12 1866. -HAMILTON FIRK INSURANCE COMPANY, The Directors have this day No. 11 Wali Street. declared a semi-annual dividend of FIVE Per Cent, free of Government Tax, payable on and after Janu¬ 1st, 1867. ary JAMES GILMORE, Secretary. Metropolitan National Bank, No. 108 Broadway, New-Yorx, Dec. 18,1866. I f DIVIDEND.—THE DIRECTORS OF THE METROPOLITAN NATIONAL BANK have this day declared a semi-annual dividend of Six (6) Per Cent., Iree of Government tax, payable on the first Monday of January next. The transfer books will be closed until January 10, 1867.GEO. I. SENEY, Cashier. FIRST MORTGAGE RONDS OF THE ST. PAUL AND PACIFIC i< AILROAD COMPANY of Minnesota. Interest at Seven per cent., semi¬ annually, first January and July, free from Gov¬ ernment Tax, in the City of New York. Principal payable in 1892. The road runs through one of the best portions of State, and has been completed to St. Cloud, eighty mile?, at an exoen?e of over $3,000,000. THESE BONDS ARE ONLY $10,000 PER MILE. Government Bonds at the highest market price will be received in payment. For particulars apply to the TURNER BROTHERS, Bankers. Corner Nassan and Pine Sts., New York. 14ikDIVIDEND-STANDARD FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, Office No. 11 Wall Street, New York, January 8,1867. A SemiAnimal Dividend of FIVE PER CENT., Free of Government Tax, has this day been declared* paya¬ ble on demand. WILLIAM M. ST. JOHN, Secretary. REPORT Bankers and Brokers. Market National Bank of New of the Tontine Buildings, 88 Wall Street, OF THE CONDITION OF THE OF THE THOS. E. WALKER, Treas. day of February. 1861. 7,279, 7,280, 7,281, 7,282, 6,911, acts August 5, 1861. No. 2,618, act of next to the holders of the Full Paid Shares registered Registered Stock of 1881, $5,000 each. Nos. 7,224, 7.278, of July 17 and March 3,1863. Tax* will he paid to the Stockholders WEDNESDAY, the 3d day of Janu¬ on next. ary 14,496,14,962,15,159,15*100,15,161, 16,761, 16,762,16,763, 16,769, 16,770, 16.776, 16,777, 16,783, 16,784, 16,790, 10,791, These Bonds C' in Europe. Payable in the City of.New York on the First Days of January and July. Commonwealth, Bankers, Brokers and Dealers in The puttfic are cautioned against negotiating any of the fo.lowing Government J&curitiee, which were stolen from the Safe of the Royal Insurance Com¬ Company. BANK York, Taussig, Fisher & Co., ON THE MORNING OF THE First BANKERS AND Monday of January, 1867. BROKERS, RESOURCES: Notes and Bills discounted Suspended debt 2,734 80 146,200 00 Invleb edness of directors Oveidrafrs - Current expenses . Cash items—Uncollected checks, etc.,. Due fromjbanks and bank rs U. 3. Bondsito secure circulation Bond and stocks Notes of other National Banks Market Bank notes 35,000 125 455,895 178,194 00 60 54 26 672,000 00 1,000 00 20,000 00 431 00 63,252 47 400,000 (X) 371,812 00 Specie Compound Interest notes Legal Tender Notes. Total $4,133,512 49 LIABILITIES : $1,000,000 00 225,189 40. Capital Surplus Profit and loss 25,398 99 Circulating notes outstanding—Nat’al. Circulating notes outstanding—State.. Individual deposits Uncollected checks Dividends unpaid Due hanks aud bankers P. Tesson. 558,800 00 10,200 00 1,832,452 59 383,500 00 28,170 58 74,800 93 : Total $4,133,512 49 Edward M. Tesson Tesson, Son & Co., RANKERS, (No. 45 Second Street, comer of Pine), ST. Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates, 814 73 Banking-house Edward No. 32 Broad $1,786,052 09 - LOUIS, MO., Founded in 1847, under the Style of Tesson A Danjen. ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES* Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. and Make Collections on fkvorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold,State. Federal, and Rail¬ road Securities. ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE, ; BANKERS, No. 14 Wall Street, New York. Bay and Sell at Market Rates Government Secnrlties, of all issues, and execute orders for the pur¬ chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to check at sight. Jackson Brothers, DEALERS IN STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, Sc GOVERN MENT SECURITIES. No. 19 Broad Street, New Y«rk* Bankers and Brokers. Brokers. Bankers and Bankers and Brokers. [January 19, 1807. CHRONICLE. THE ’68 Co., L. P. Morton & 80 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. ISSUED FOR STERLING EXCHANGE (58 Old Broad Street, 53 Exchange Place. and cities of Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and Sale ot StockB and Bonds In London and New York. Lxvi P. Morton, Charles E. Milnor, Walter H. Burns, H. Cruoeb Oaklxy. COMPANY, BARING BROTHERS Sc STREET, NEW YORK, 56 WALL STREET, BOSTON. 28 STATE The subscriber, LIVERPOOL. their representative ana Attorneys is prepared to make advances in the United States, WM. G. MOORHEAD, H. D (E. C. FAHNESTOCK 1 EDWARD DODGE, ( PITT OOOKE. 1 JAY OOOKE, V ) OOOKE, Jay Cooke & Co., Corner Wall shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile them for use in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits of the London House issued for the same purposes. credits upon and Nassau Sts., No. 114 South John M. Furman, Charles L. Anthony, Philo C. Calhoun. For T. Inspectors of Next Election. subsequent meeting of the Board Mr. P. C Calhoun wa^ unanimously re elected President, aud At a Lockwood & DEALERS Washington. 27 Sc 29 Pin© Street, AND SECURITIES. Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants aud Bankers upon favorable terms. J. Van Schaick, Street, BANKER AND STOCK BROKER. Insurance. BANKERS, Opposite Treas. Department. GOVERNMENT IN OTHER York. Winslow, Lanier & Co., Co., BANKERS, No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. 38 Broad Fifteenth Street, C. E. Detmold. E. L. Bolles, Belknap, Jr., York. 8d Street, Philadelphia. Timothy G. Churchill, Joseph B. Hoyt, 4 Henry bwift, George Opdyke, * Hoyt, Joseph Smart* SIMON DE VISSER, Exchange Place, New 52 New Directors. Edwin on BANKERS. gantlemen Joseph Stuart, Vice-President. B. SEAMAN, Cashier. Drake Klein wort ScCohen LONDON AND York, January 9, 1867. f >r Directors of this duly elected: FOR AGENTS Europe aud the East. £ Ward, S. G. & G. C. BANK OF LONBON, Available in all the principal towns New Bank, for the ensuing year, the following Dabney, Morgan & Co., London,) NEW YORK. Billopp Seaman, Cash. ' Anthony Lane, Ass.Caeh. At the annual election were ▲XD TOT UNION OF THR CITY OF P. C. C.« lhoun, Prest. Joseph Stuart, V. P. Loudon, BT and MORTON, BURNS Sc CO., L. P. • Morgan Sc Co., Meeers. J. S. Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes Letters of Credit for Travelers’ Use, on At Fourth National Bank LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE USE OF TRAV¬ ELLERS IN EUROPE AND THE EAST. BANKERS, $5,000,000. CAPITAL Travellers’ Credits. iETNA New York. I In connection with our houses In Philadelphia and Washington we have this day opened an office at No. 1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. My, Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., New ton of our Washing¬ and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, DRAW ON LONDON Issue Circular Letters Insurance OF of Credit for Travellers, avail¬ of Europe. able in all parts Interest Allowed on give particular attention to the purchase, and exchange of government securities oi sals, all issues; to CAPITAL Deposits. bonds of stooks, all business of National orders for purchase and sale and gold, and to [acquelin & De Coppet, NO. 26 NEW (Railroad JAY COOKE A CO. Banks. March 1,1866. STREET, N.Y. Pott, Davidson & Jones, BANKERS AND BROKERS, (Messrs Brown Bros & Co.’s new building), 59 A 61 WAI L STRKKT, NEW YOriK Buy aud sell Stocks, Ronds, Gold and L. J. Government Securities. Accounts of Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬ Interest allowed ou depos¬ its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ ed on favorable terms. tions furnished to correspondents. References : James Brown, Ea^, of Messrs. Brown Brothers & Co. J John Q. Jones, ident of the Chemicu National Bank; James H. Esq., Pres¬ Banker, Esq., Vice-President York N. B. A. of the Bank of New Securities, IN U. S. SECURITIES S. 6s of 1881. S. 5-20 Bon<is. S. 10-40 Bonds. S. 7-30 Treasury Notes. U. U. U. U. U. U. Hughes, BANKERS, DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES AND GOLD, RAILROAD A MINING STOCK BROKERS 18 Broad Street, New York. Deposits received, subject to Check, and Intere allowed. T. W. B. HUGHES. Member of N.Y. Stock Ex A. HAWLEY HEATH. ASSETS, Dec, 31, 1865 favorable terms. References: J. H. Fonda, Pres. Nat. Mech. Banking Ass. N.Y. C. B. Blair, Pres’t, Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN BANKERS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS - AND No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit lor Travelers in all parte of Europe, etc., ete. Alsu Ccmrrercial Credits. Navigation Risks. Premiums MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't. ANTHONY, Vice-Preft Isaac H. Walks®, See’y. EDWARD P. Hanover Fire Insurance COMPANY, No. 45 WALL STREET. BROKERS, HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 30 TO No. 86 Broad Street,,Office No. 16. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. AND Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. paid in gold will be entitled to a return premium in gold. Edey & Co., Sc $2,716,424 32 - This Company insures against Marine Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland 28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals BANKERS - DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. BANKERS Sc BROKERS, Barstow, ALEXANDER, Agent. 49 WALL STREET. J. L. Brownell & Bro., on NEW YORK AGENCY, 02 WALL STREET. (insurance buildings,) S. Certificates of Indebtedness. received AND DAMAGE COMPANY. Market Rates: and Sell at 1,1867. $4,478,100 74 394,976 96 Sun Mutual Insurance NO. 16 NASSAU STREET, NATIONAL BANK, Buy Secretary. AGAINST LOSS BY FIRE. JAS. A. UNDER THE FOURTH S. Compound Interest Notes. And all classes of Government Securities. Heath & NO. Henry De Coppet. *D. C. & R. H. Fisk, DEALERS Assets January INSURANCE $3,000,000. HENDEE, President. J. GOOD .VOW, ON COMMISSION. BOUGHT AND SOLD John H. Jaoqueldt. ..... Liabilities Stocks, Bonds, Gold, and Government Charter Perpetual. , will be resident partners. We shall Company, HARTFORD. Incorporated 1819 > York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, House, AND PARIS, MOBILE AND NEW ORLEANS. January 1st 1668. Cash \. .* ' capital Surplus Gross Assets Total Liabilities .......... ... V. $400,000 00 156,803 98 $566,303 98 34,550 00 BENJ. S. WALCOTT. President; J. Rxxszx Lane, Secretary. ganto’ feettc, Commercial ^imeo, Railway §ttonitoc, and §njuttrattce fournal. WEEKLY A NEWSPAPER, ^ REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 4. SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1867 have referred. CONTENT8. Panic The Public Debt of Virginia .... Trade of Great Britain and the United States Latest Monetary and Commercial 69 69 70 quotations are liable to be elevated or by what are often called " speculative manipula¬ tions.” Thus, a clique of capitalists, at a suitable time, agree to club their funds together, and combine their influence to operate either as “ bears ” or as “ bulls,” that is, to operate for a rise or a fall, or alternately for the one and the other. To that large and honorable class of our business men who never speculate in stocks or gold these conflicts and feats of strategy between the gambling speculators in Wall Street 71 73 74 English News I Commercial and Miscellaneous 76 News j - 76 THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Cotton City Banks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc . sale Prices N. Y. Stock Commercial Epitome Exchange 82 Tobacco Foreign Exchange, New York ' Breadstnffs . Groceries.,,.. 77 80 80 88 84 86 ' Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneous Bond List Prices Cm rent and Tone of the Market 87-89 89 j Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. Insurance and Mining Journal ... 90-91 92 93 65-68, 94-96 | Advertisements &I)c <£I)ronicit. I hk Commercial and of almost Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ f and TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Files for holding Price $1 50. the Chronicle or Bulletin can reach merchants, farmers and manufacturers can rest satis¬ so far wither up to as business. . began, and will not and destroy the opening spring , That this is the true view of the situation we do not ven- positively to affirm; but it is held by some eminent sagacious men, who support it by very convincing argu¬ ments. There is, however, enough uncertainty about the future to make every prudent man wary, watchful and averse be had at this Office. to long engagements or risky enterprises. ture and BUSINESS HOPES AND EASINESS FAILURES. of the Chronicle,from July to December, 1866, incluis sive, for sale at this Office ; price $5 00. The third volume . our fied that the trouble will end where it Financial Chronicle* with The Daily Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana maiiod to all others,(exclusive of postage) $12 00 The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, without Thr Daily Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) * 10 no • For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Finanoiai Chronicle, (excluBiveof postage) 5 00 Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It ts, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO, Publishers, 60 William Street, New York. and no use . day morning by the publishers of Hum's Merchants' Magazine, urith the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight 9f Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to the hour of publication. Commercial whatever. They are recorded in the money articles which no newspaper of the day can afford to be without, but they fail to afford any such positive indica¬ tions as to the state of public confidence or general credit as may be of service in the pursuits of legitimate business. Now the question is ©n which of these two themes shall we explain the present condition of financial affairs. Depression prevails; securities are going down; almost everything on the list except government bonds is heavy and shrinking. Do these phenomena forbode disasters to private and public credit all over the country ? If the movements of the stock market are due to manipulations originating within its own bosom, then they will be merely temporary, as we have said, are S4 85 Dry Goods. Imports THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News Stock lowered THE CHRONICLE. The Flurry in Wall Street Business Hopes and Business Failures Taxation of Banks The Liverpool Cotton Market ’or 1866 and the Returns of the Banks of England and France —How affected by the London NO. 82 The credit records of an era of paper money, in every com¬ mercial country which has been cursed with a depreciated currency, have uniformly exhibited two sets of phenomena. The flurry in Wall street last, evening is variously interr During expansion credits are stimulated, the monetary preted. The prevailing opinion is that it is merely specu¬ unit-of-value shrinking, debts shrink too, debtors find it lative and temporary in its nature, and, if so, the present easy to pay up their obligations, and, consequently, the number of bankruptcies are few. When contraction com¬ spasm will probably prove the harbinger of an improvement THE FLURRY IS WALL STREET. A* general business. At any rate, we do not see any ground mences, however, a totally different set of facts are de¬ for widespread anxiety so long as the excitement is confined veloped. The monetary uhit growing larger, debts esti¬ mated in this appreciating money grow larger, and command in its area to such narrow limits. 4 The Stock Exchange has been called “ the barometer of, an augmented amount of property to pay them. At the public confidence, and the index of mercantile credit.” It is same time credits are generally contracted, and debtors can¬ certainly sensitive to all the mutations of the money market, not get the accommodation they have been taught to rely These symptoms are aggravated by the monetary and responds to the slightest movement which animates or on. depresses the popular mind. But the dealings at the Stock spasms, and by the losses of merchants and dealers who hold Exchange are also subject to a second and very different sort commodities which depreciate on their hands. These mis¬ of changes, which do not originate in the causes to which we chiefs connected with contraction are severe in proportion as in . i • . ..1974668811686. 81 [January 19,1867. THE CHRONICLE. payments is slow, and is gradually thy the attention of thoughtful men who, oppressed with doubt and perplexity, are in danger of letting golden oppor- ^ and skilfully made. Both these sets of phenomena, but particularly the former, tunities and favorable chances of business enterprises slip by ' *■ are illustrated by the annual report of the bankruptcies in them unimproved: ' Ever since the suspension of specie payments and the creation of an the United States during the past ten years. In the care¬ inflated currency the community has been led constantly to anticipate a fully compiled circular of Messrs. Dun & Co. these failures crisis, which for magnitude and extent should exceed all other events of that character in our previous history. But another year has passed and are reported as follows : = uo great calamity has befallen us. Yet while the year has not produced a crisis, it caan hardly be said to have yielded an average return of FAILURES. profit. While in 1865 me re money was made in proportion to the num¬ IN NORTHERN STATES ONLY. IN ALL THE STATES. ber engaged than ever before in the same period, it may safelydbe said Date. No. Liabilities. Date. No. Liabilities. 4,257 $265,818,000 00 of 1866, never before was there less money realized from a volume of 4,932 $291,750,000 00 1857 3,113 73,608,747 00 trade of the same extent. 1858 4,226 95,749,000 00 1858 Many manufacturers have barely held their 2,959 61,314,000 00 3,913 64,394,000 00 ia59 while own, importers jobbers have made but small returns ii pro¬ and 61,739.000 00 2,733 1860 3,676 79,807,000 00 1860 5,935 18-,632.000 00 perty n to the extent of business done. Farmers and all others who till 6,993 207,510,000 00 1862. 23.049,000 00 .the soil have doubtless realized good profits, while lumberers have had 1,652 1863 495 7,899,000 00 a success quite equal to, if not better than, the average of years. The S,579,000 00 1S64 520 1865 530 17,625,000 00 commercial community however, as a class, have not added largely to 1865 : 632 47,333,000 00 tbeir profits by the year’s operations. It is questionable whether this is 1,505 63,783,000 00 1806 either to country or to the' prevailing state of The Southern failures during the war are not reported ; but chargeable If money has not been made, it is the result of the finances. they were very numerous, in consequence of the collapse of individual indiscretion rather than of any serious disadvan¬ under which trade has labored. Generally speaking credit on the outbreak of the rebellion, the feverish stimu¬ tages manufacturers have produced more than the demand of the market, and lus to credit which attended the prodigious emission of a importers have imported largely in excess of their requirements. So far as the resources of the country are concerned, they never were more paper currency, the shocks which attended the sudden calling apparent or more easy of development than dow ; and keeping in view in and cancelling of one-third of the currency in 1804, and their variety and extent, the genius of our people and their marvellous the still greater convulsions which attended the final collapse. productive power, there seems nothing in the immediate future to call for any great anxiety. If our merchants will but pursue a conservative In the Northern States the failures in 1801 were in amount policy, if our manufacturers will only keep in view the probable de¬ below those of 1857, though exceeding them in number, mand, and if our Congress in its legislation will but persist in the steady, curtailuieut of the redundant curiency, we cannot see why any great showing that in consequence of the general inflation in 1857 catastrophe should overtake us in the year upon which we have entered. The elements of the crisis of 1857 were mainly these three—excessive people in business had ventured much deeper and had got prices, excessive credits, and excessive stocks. In 1867 we may not be more seriously involved than in the anxious year of 1861, able to avoid excessive prices, because of the reduudaut currency; but when everybody was afraid of debt, and eager for quick he who holds a light stock is on the side of safety, while, with respect to credits and speculative operations, the merchant ought to, and can, returns and short credits. For analogous reasons the to a very large extent, control his own fate. average amount of failures for 1800 was almost three times We cannot conclude without drawing attention to the fact as large as that for 1865. In 1860 the people w ho failed that notwithstanding the amount of currency contraction owed more in proportion than did the bankrupts of any effected last year was 50 millions, or as much as is fixed for previous year. This fact, with others to which we need not the maximum at present by law, still the failures were com¬ the transition towards coin ■' “ . refer, showrs that it is an error to suppose, as is sometimes paratively few and the interruption of business incon done, that in the present methods of doing business a less siderable. The recent languor and depression has its cause amount of credit is given. This was the case a year or two .not so much in contraction, as in suspense and apprehension ago, but now people trust one another to almost as great an as to what organic changes Congress may make in the cur¬ amount as formerly in proportion to the aggregate of business. rency, or in the taxes. Once let it be settled and known It is true that they do not give credit for so long a time, and that no important revolutions are to be made in the currency therefore the credits run out oftener, so that there is not —which we believe will prove to be the fact—and one chief as much of risk, and the aggregate of mercantile indebted¬ cause of the depression of our mercantile and manufacturing ness does not accumulate so disastrously. The circular classes will be got rid of. before us has on this subject the following judicious remarks and cautions: TAXATION OF BANKS. , greatest element of safety which the mercantile community possessed throughout the perils of the past five years has been that the internal indebtedness of one to another was very slight; that transac¬ tions on credit were limited in time and amount, and that the assets of traders were in an available shape. Where liabilities were light fail¬ ures were few. No matter what the losses may have been through de¬ preciation of goods, or fall in values, as long as men were not largely indebted they could not fail. With the leturn of peace the tendency towards undue credit transactions is again becoming apparent, and it is much to be feared that the excessive stocks, both of manufactured and imported goods, has recently caused an expansion in this direction, which, if persisted in, may result disastrously. Unwise and injudicious credits cannot fail to be at all times prejudicial to a community, and in periods such as this, with an excessive currency and exorbitant prices, the danger is doubled. If caution is exercised, and discrimination used in the granting of credits—if parties only are trusted whose character and capital entitle them to confidence, and all others refused, a great step will be taken towards averting, or at any rate mitigating, auy cri ais many believe to be in store for us. Safety can only be found in a cautious policy with regard to credits. The same remark will apply with regard to all speculative operations. If merchants will confine themselves exclusively to their own business, leaving all outside oper¬ ations to those not engaged in trade—if they will be content with mod¬ erate gains, purchase only for the legitimate wants of their trade, and exercise strict caution in granting credits, the uncertainty and doubt as to the future, which seems so prevalent now, may be dissipated, and a year far more satisfactory than the last may be realized. It is certain that an opposite policy will hardly fail to precipitate a crisis which many expect, and all dread.” “ The On mp&y accounts we are gratified to find that the hopeful views expressed in many quarters as to the business pros¬ pects of th$. current year are supported by the authority of Messrs. Dun. Their suggestions on this subject are well wor¬ To the Editor of the Commercial and 1 observe in the article ©n Financial Chronicle. “Proposed Changes in the Banking Law,” in the number for January 12, you express approbation of the late decision of the JJ. S. Supreme Court compelling the banks to pay local taxes, and add that you might not object to the imposition of a heavier Federal tax than the present.” Allow me to inquire if you have fully considered the situation of the banks with reference to taxa¬ “ tion? . So far as I am aware, the banks do not seek to evade a public burdens. They ask only that the shall treat them in good faith, entitled as they fair share of the Government consideration as an important part of the necessary machinery in the general work of production in the country. I can say with confidence in behalf of the banks of the country, that no interest throughout the late lifestruggle of the Government stood by it with more constancy are to proper and firmness than they. object to, but welcome, a fair taxation, they do with good reason object to that which is excessive and unequal. The present rate, if con¬ tinued, adding the usual local taxation through most of the States, will inevitably put out of existence three-fifths of the But while the banks do not share of THE CHRONICLE. January 19,1867.] 71 banks of the country, and damage the soundness of the whole. pated. One of the leading features then most apparent was impossible that they can continue to live under it. Re¬ the resumption of trade with ourselves. During the closing lief must be afforded from either the National or State Gov¬ months of 1865 we were very extensive buyers of goods in ernments, or they must go under. English markets, and it was chiefly owing to this activity The writer of this article is Manager of a bank which has that considerable stringency was produced in the London been doing business since 1839 in one of the principal cities money market. The first week of the present year the min¬ of one of our largest States, and he finds by a careful exami¬ imum rate of discount at the Bank of England was raised nation of the accounts of the bank that its total average to 8 per cent., inducing much more caution on the part of amount nett earnings for 22 years, up to the suspension of merchants, so that matters soon assumed a more satisfactory position. On the 22d of February the rate was reduced to specie payments in 1861, without any deduction for losses, is 7, and on the 15th of March to 6 per cent. But this improv¬ less by * of one per cent, than the amount of taxes paid for ing position suddenly received a serious check. During the the past two years, 1865-66, if the tax levy on its shares is early months of the year there had been an uneasy feeling added. I believe this to be by no means an isolated case. respecting the Joint Stock Discount Company, and at a meet¬ Here then is a bank organized with reference to profit to the ing of the proprietary, in January, it was decided to make a call of £o per share; eventually it was decided to wind investors in its capital, occupying a fair field for business, up the concern. The failure of this company, however, would carefully conducted, in good credit, and without undue com¬ probably have passed away without more than ordinary com¬ ment had it not been apparent that several other institutions petition, which, as a matter of fact, in twenty-two years, un¬ were similarily situated, and the fear on the part of many there¬ der a natural condition of the currency and business of the fore that this collapse was but the commencement of a series country, did not earn sufficient to meet its present taxation. of failures. Great uneasiness was consequently felt, and this Does this afford encouragement to still heavier taxation ? was increased by an advance in the bank rate on the 8th of The taxation of the banks is so divided up—they are called May. The previous tendency of money had been of a favorable character, and yet on a Tuesday the Directors had upon to contribute in so many different ways—that the gen¬ deemed it advisable to raise their quotations to the extent of eral public know little with regard to the burdens they bear, one per cent. The fact of the bank rate being raised on any and even financial men fail to appreciate their extent. There day except Thursday is a certain sign that the position of is first the license tax of $2 on each $1,000 of capital. Then affairs is unsatisfactory, and such proved to be the case on For some time the public had shown much the tax of half of one per cent, on the capital, one per cent, this occasion. curiosity to ascertain the reason why the shares of Overend, on circulation, half of one per cent, on deposits, five per cent, Gurney & Co., limited, with the handsome dividends they on earnings—and, in addition to all, stamp taxes on almost had paid, should be at so low a price (lOdis.) in the market. every transaction. When to these is added the heavy local The inquiries commenced in the Metropolis, extended to the and municipal taxes levied under authority of the States provinces, and at length Overend, Gurney & Co’s shares (from three to five per cent, on the entire capital), the banks became almost unsaleable. The Directors of this Com¬ pany foresaw that without extensive and prompt aid may well exclaim with exiled Cain, u my burden is heavier there was no alternative but to close their doors. It was It is „ than I can bear.” the bank-rate that the Directors of Overend’s at the time that It is quite evident that both the National and State Gov¬ ernments have each levied their taxation upon the banks with the view of subjecting them to about as heavy exactions as they could bear, and they thus become the victims of dou¬ ble taxation. The National banks have not objected to the burdens -imposed by the General Government, because they have rested in the plighted faith of that Government, that so far as their capital was invested in securities of the United States it should be exempt from State taxation. In this faith they have invested largely in the securities of the Govern¬ ment, and at its invitation have embarked their capital thus invested in the business of banking under its laws. Of the late decision of the United "States Supreme Court, subjecting the banks to all the exactions of the States and municipal authorities where they are,located, in addition to the taxes above enumerated, I have'but two objections to make, viz.: first, that it places the Government in the atti¬ tude of violating faith with the banks; and, second, it places the Supreme Court of the United States in the position of making a rule of law for a given set of cases, and an exactly opposite rule for another and analagous set of cases. Nei¬ ther the Government nor the Supreme Court, it seems to me, can well afford to stand in their positions. In the judgment of the writer, if choice is to be made by the banks between the direct strangling proposed by the Hon. Mr. Randall’s bill, and the slower and more prolonged death by depletion through excessive and unequal taxation, the former should be adopted by all means. ' was raised to 7 per cent, endeavoring to raise enable them either to reclaim their posi¬ tion or to delay the period when they must succumb. A meeting of the leading bankers was held, but in consequence of the v ery unfavorable state of the accounts, and the little prospect of surmounting their difficulties, the Bank of Eng¬ land and the other banks declined to grant the accommoda¬ tion required. Hence there was no alternative left to the were sufficient money to Directors but to announce their failure. This announcement made on the 10th of May at the close of business, and the excitement produced by so important an event was, as our readers will remember, intense. Unlike the Joint Stock Discount Company, the name was famous, the private firm of Overend, Gurney & Co. having, for adong series of years, been considered one of the most respectable and wealthy in the Kingdom. The suspension having occurred on the after¬ noon of Thursday, the 10th of May, the effect of the failure was not felt until Friday, the 11th, and those who witnessed that day will probably forget the excitement which prevailed. The run upon the banks was very was ntver the resources of the bank the extreme, but, fortunately, their payments promptly, and some, indeed, kept their establishments open two hours be¬ yond the usual period. Nevertheless, man y institutions were compelled to succumb, viz. r the English Joint-Stock Bank, the Imperial Mercantile Credit Association, and the private firm of Peto, Betts & Crampton, including many others of lesser note. The failures of the year may be considered to great ; the strain upon of England was heavy in all the principal banks met reach a total of about one hundred, of which seventy were of considerable importance. The course of this monetary table we of England trouble, and its effect, may be seen in the following have prepared, showing the position of the Bank each week in the year. From the commencement of May to the period when the rate was reduced to 5 per cent, the THE LIYERPOOL COTTON MARKET FOR 1866 AND THE RETURNS figures are extremely interesting. It. will be observed that on the 30th of May the strain upon the establishment was OF THE BANKS OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE. the greatest, and that the Bank was almost compelled to HOW AFFECTED BT THE LONDON PANIC. suspend The year 1866 in Great Britain opened with flattering make use of the liberty, granted by Government, to their charter. Such a course, however, was unnecessary, and as the year closes the bank holds a position of very great Notwithstanding the high rate of discount, an extensive healthy and remunerative trade was fully antici¬ strength. prospects. V The returns are as follows: RETURNS OF THK BANK OF ENGLAND FOE it’n. De Depoeits. Deposits. Securities, Bullion. ending, Circulat'n. 3. £22,221 ,867 £5,759,437 £14.727,958 £24,737,687 £18,106,183 £5,9 »9, «48 6,091,324 10 21,901,410 3,463,638 16,231,562 22,331,194 12,887,829 6,275,584 17. 21,841,009 8,270,495 14,385,209 19.999,599 13,031,884 6,748,880 ti4. 21,377,195 8,439,945 14,130,091 19,428,203 13,070,760 13 165,480 6,752,255 44 81. 21,481,674 4,145,939 13,390,352 19,414,046 6.690,793 Feb. 7. 21,425,501 4,549,904 12,344,200 18,857,681 13,056,993 7,182,874 14. 21,166.537 4,930,382 12,176.119 18,583,393 13,296.114 8,260,345 21. 20,973 521 5,048,777 12,591,493 38,020,460 13,822,935 8,198,474 28. 21,174,286 5,448,781 12,7^2,313 18,812,117 13,966,574 8.316.079 Har’h7. 21,163,605 6,057,725 12,700,588 39,305,809 14,050,504 8,804,543 14. 20,906,227 6,304,819 12,723,104 19,052,576 14,327,618 8,819,923 •• 21. 21,033,449 6,824,602 12.478,479 19.392.802 14,455,523 7,740,667 •* 28. 22,007,934 8,375,046 13,3:12,000 21.879.802 14,362,397 6,619,332 14,251,947 22,094.787 18,851.065 7,692 911 April 4. 22,776,472 7,188,768 14,234,118 14,956,004 19,382,831 11. 22,517,179 4,057,018 6,685,317 44 18. 22,744,025 4,045,459 13,971,790 18,976.716 13,889,1»2 6,694,661 “ 25. 22.588,244 4,417,147 13,294,641 18,501,854 13,855,776 5,636,140 May 2. 23,3-9,819 4,922,990 13,507,965 20,380,395 13,509,140 Jan. Bank of France also presents many fea¬ tures of interest to the mercantile world, and the particulars for-the present year are therefore subjoined. The existing in England show's its effect here in an increase confidence, and as the reserve of the Bank of England was reduced the bullion in the Bank of France began to increase. ** Bank rate. : 8 8 distrust of 8 “ 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 “ 44 “ “ “ r “ 8. 9. 22,806,660 12. 16. 26,650,817 28. 26.020,693 80. 26,562,525 44 44 “ “ 44 Jnne 6. 26,020,626 “ 18. 26,578,446 44 20. 25,691,874 44 27. 25,383,308 6,649,515 7,126,969 7,288,344 7,965,331 July 4, 26,497,624 6,800,251 44 . 44 Aug. 1 44 8. 15. 22. 29. 44 44 44 Sept. 6. 12. 19. 26. 44 44 Oct. 44 81,050,406 33,447,463 31,771,845 31,270,277 81.209,162 80.883,810 30,749,551 29,189,534 27,752,249 26,742,316 26,567,368 8. 10. 44 17. 44 24. “ 81. Nor. 7. “ 14. 44 21. “ 28. Dec 5. 44 12. 44 19. 2,726,739 2,161,726 2,517,449 3,189,5S0 COURSE THE IKfiK bales. From January 1— To Januarv 4 * 11 <1 M 18 26 u February H ... 1 8 <• .... = 14 22 —March M 1 8 14 14 44 1 9 tf 26 8 10 —May m M 17 <1 24 u 81 7 14 21 28 —Jon* •4 44 44 . ... —July 44 12 19 26 u U —August 44 ..... 27 4 —October « M . * 4 11 « 44 u M H 20 27,, SX sx is so full it needs no 101.894 5 111,528 141,480 821,086 869,440 404,476 462,292 43,487 122,284 167,260 608,144 45,768 658,681 134,268 161,018 200,020 51,407 442.008 596,744 66,206 173,210 61,911 67,845 78,883 79,161 185,298 186,101 629,528 642,301 704,690 763,068 946,885 955,266 1,014,582 1,085,937 1,558,011 1,591,648 2,804,783 2,845,101 2,418,599 2,476,604 895,146 42,027 91,521 240,563 253,964 102,149 272,552 1,584,684 118,428 1,706,477 1,788,731 154,828 800,296 323,717 833,091 187,689 1,881,487 1,920,185 2,084,218 2,091,118 2,139,217 2,288,006 2,245,004 180,620 204,223 842,473 234,086 368,698 266,749 381,814 289,424 311,952 828,398 886,771 347,537 2,*266,044 2,344.820 2,481,153 856,842 867,616 384,086 391,073 2,482,480 2,560,033 2,598,398 2,678,842 403,517 428,619 2,701,176 2.754,482 2,884,878 . 27,704,604 28,415,204 28.580.984 3 8 8 8 8 8 8 3 8 8 8 8 market during the 644,986 719,854 657,884 8,011,247 566,193 8,129,087 580,018 8,148,748 694,999 8,179,209 8,207,892 ' 618,544 620,248 8,248,545 680,245 8.286,729 642,222 8,805,384 657,192 3,334,290 6T7.880 8,368t758 745,894 768,816 798,722 809,442 698,096 698,515 833,776 847,201 858,428 872,992 867,688 671,930 488,160 622,060 65^,890 704,890 864,780 1,014,820 1.094,810 1,143,920 1,211,410 1,275,400 1,815,650 .1,400,870 ' 1,461,800 1,651,900 1,697,680 1,632,270 1,647,680 1,669,710 1,699,630 1,727,680 1,757,450 1,785,550 928,250 983,960 1,877,760 1,915,860 1,980,220 2,015,110 2,051,260 2,100,180 2,129,160 2,171,950 2,223,490 2,270,150 2,889,200 2,401,690 1,941,no 2,446,600 1,881,890 '25* 417,710 24* 23* 22* 858,820 276,990 308,030 1,040,550 / 1,080,620 1,142,890 1,207,740 1,933,900 892,200 541,770 506,420 494,450 440,100 406,490 778,620 828,570 1,272,260 1,317,700 1,S73,800 1,418,610 1,447,980 1,505,210 1,542,780 1,583,600 1,617,590 1,669,120 1,787,350 1,806,850 1,884,480 610,290 509,340 499,350 600,040 536,660 520,160 537,010 740,320 , 496,260 600,580 575,480 644,180 1,062,740 679,930 821,891 548,570 868,230 361,070 382,700 S22,390 . 847,580 878,740 470,690 • , 1865. bales. 402,630 589,360 688,410 571,110 603,030 580,010 605,920 616,450 ,-Midd. Upl’d-^ > 1866.' per lb. *26 556,970 675,660 412,610 1,000,860 482,851 607,790 636,012 662,675 682,928 606,782 631,308 649,173 665,309 ' 470,870 875,480' 893,390 920,860 968,390 460,624 1865. bales. 225,890 262,1*20 306,280 400,850 604,330 Stock. , , 18*2,540 816,070 870,070 420,567 1866. 67,810 881,000 423,180 665,440 728,250 766,910 442.528 2,975,896 8,409,020 27.167.984 107,100 146,800 606,210 397,207 415,759 2,989,557 , 25,&97,S88 26,612,880 , 35.110 230,960 280,750 801,270 826,730 868,490 852,367 445,987 465,255 506,182 524,745 2,916,487 « 208,675 229,376 1,034,188 1,099,879 1,291,306 1,867,166 1,383,733 85,669 25,334,340 bales, 10,850 81,090 44,440 * 39,483 788,505 25,391,880 25,802,416 25,822,064 26,185,504 26,8^0,752 25,487,896 26,382,340 24,825,088 26,081,748 25,898,860 25,793,972 26,308,132 25,614,852 25,466,424 1866. 1865. bales. 1866. bales. 12,975 36,502 * 24,924,872 26.618.392 8 8 3 explanation: ,—Consumption. > 1 6,837 11,510 18,171 8 3 8 27.248,712 FOR 1865 AND 36,602 22 December 6 4 4 4 4 4 871,477 432,667 2,073,063 . 4X bales. bales/ 24,000,068 23,762 264 24,775,3 6 24,106,000 34 in this connection. In great part the anticipated—a dull un¬ by some weeks these monetary troubles. The direct and immediate result, how¬ ever, is seen in a decline of about 6d. in the prices of Mid¬ dling Uplands from April 12 to May 10; while the unsatis¬ factory state of business at Manchester since that time, which has prevented any decided recovery, may be stated as a more remote effect, but as working the greater injury to the trade. The following table shows the movement for two years, and 227,298 271,582 16 29 4X 4)4 ' Si 3* 3* Si 28,143,5 ?2 , 3* 27,728,596 27, 65,828 26.744, 04 25,668,476 24,959,992 2-,781,744 *.4,014,012 29,097,504 Oct. 4 4 year is also of interest effect of the crisis on this staple was settled trade at Manchester preceding 4% 4% 1865. 1H66. 26.876,716 29,858,724 29.116.776 of the Liverpool cotton 76,587, 8 u course 80,761 18 26 —November 1.... 29,068,044 70,900 91,270 124,860 1,748,982 1,768,823 1,796,043 1,886,190 M 25,984,912 60,918 18 44 The 28.789,336 24,828 23 it 8 7 6 5 5 5 29.803.776 23,903,008 25,166,936 26,575,392 28,002,788 28,469,352 80,488,196 28,144,512 28,731,852 25, 96,908 248,547 293,654 16 M 21.. 28.. 29,-238,700 29,763.120 ,427,424 24,606,612 23,175,588 23 223,524 21.275,808 21,382,904 23,265,792 23,105,164 23,64 ,896 . 9,021,000 v 2 . 28,680,^76 25,867,856 27.588.392 28,275,056 27,574,608 18,906,604 19,807,560 20,333,602 April 5 . 20,192,958 12.. 20,149,028 20,418,272 19.. 20,706,952 26 21,076,580 May 3 10.. 20,809,982 17.. 20,585,048 21,466,104 24.. 81.. 22,528,808 June 7.. 24,093,128 14.. 24,528,320 Export. , x 29.672,232 28,718,454 29,626,324 28,805,87 i 28,173,064 . Bank Discounts, rate. £26,729,508 £30,426,300 2»,561,180 26.291,640 £28,989,824 18,‘-89.892 186 739 1,837,863 » . 8.. 15.. 22.. Mar. 1.. 8.. 15.. 22 29.. 105,356 128,276 166,771 M 55,922 1,188,125 1,252,117 2 Feb. 1 67,311 850,074 892,222 ..... 15,942,828 15,503,172 15,655,124 15,716,893 16,224.064 16,820,044 17.710,856 16,975,540 11.. 18.. 25.. 113,109 606,879 12 44 4.. £16,747,092 LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET THE OF ending Jan. 86,487 5 —April 13.993.470 Bullion 46-, 144 499,161 620,881 22. 29 a 859,980 13,278,961 9,826,041 14,481,895 8,515,550 14,851,120 4,744,330 15.042,399 5,218,409 14,876,949 4,065,080 Import. , * — 12,323,805 1,202,8 0 11,857,786 I,83-,216 11,878,775 Wrcek 7 8 9 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 30 10 10 10 10 10 10 8,800,640 13,645,975 8,224,595 13,716,829 8,453,789 13,793,310 3,278,890 26,236,388 26,156,555 13,602,429 8.680.229 25,665,018 3,160,456 25,234,029 8,353,525 18,125.2S0 25,224,817 14,150,956 4,610,866 24,797,723 8,411.639 18,763,474 24.888,158 14,772.220 5,590,105 6,933 510 24,502,486 4.137,048 18,473,050 23,937,484 15,832,020 6,973,967 24,866,518 4,778,487 17,462,300 23,225,787 16,195,212 7,502,722 24,124,264 5,184,758 17,308,397 22,481,941 15,974,777 7,906,816 23,932,216 5,551,717 16,921,755 22,123,554 16,223,516 8,679.597 23,626,660 6,389,183 17,023,547 21,761,954 16,729,262 7,548,507 24,995,953 6,169,451 17,209,6^5 22,941,313 16.879,137 24,586,250 6,266,199 17.451.673 22,149,550 16,407,506 7,494,341 24,718,769 8,392,982 15,773,523 21,244,986 16,133.363 7,046,828 24,853,932 8,218,291 18,764,066 20,553,187 16,377,358 7.659,6i)8 24,436,278 3,921,153 17,859,471 20,07S,85S 16,728,596 7,913,141 24,203,592 4,875,714 17.150,191 19,330,391 16.891.606 8,330,276 24,869,584 5,145,772 16,687,127 19 061,238 17.144.607 8,f67.762 23,526,425 5,830,843 17,435.349 19,184,781 17.752,914 9,808,599 23,003,209 6,161,157 18.252,795 19,186,008 18,175,570 10,688,820 23,218,411 6,537,783 17,740,867 19 395,744 38,237,044 10,523,869 22,585,003 7,388,241 18,425.551 19,636,741 18.551.470 II,459,675 22,591,312 8,070 235 18,181,096 19,825,202 18,815,714 11.715.229 22,383,975 8,706,361 18,592,224 20,241,256 19,247,859 12,314,494 11. 25,899,211 18. 26, r6,629 25. 25,927,644 44 SO,943,259 18.620.672 18,790,917 20,467,080 20,206,683 20,127,347 21,171,357 20,819,750 19,939.607 21,472,486 19,820.939 18,546,769 17,738,851 17,660,244 1866. OF THE BANK OF FRANC* FOR Bank I WT’eek Bullion. Discounts, rate, endim RETURNS 6 6 5.18^82? 13,515,537 20,844^7 13,156,140 5,811,745 5,936,219 5,994,761 6,188,512 867. The return of the 1866. Private Private Public Week - [January 19, THE CHRONICLE. 72 430,060 411,760 361,140 427,690 849,870 261,500 271,960 201,970 280,870 303,099 823,070 806,260 291,430 369,820 856,210 839,230 848,090 352,750 m,m 424,460 418,200 1866. per 19* 18* 19* 22 429,310 442,970 20* 18* lb. 20* 19* 19* 19 16* 18* 18* 18* 19f 420,470 16 19* 652,783 663,840 14* H* 13* 18* 418,680 400,850 366,750 340,250 - 18 16 676,220 13 819,890 821,950 784,680 869,980 970,500 1,005,330 975,030 998,770 1,039,950 1,042,660 958,670 967,570 923,100 878,170 882,830 902,830 898,500 14* 14* 14 H* 15* 16* 16* 18 16f 14* 16* IS* 12* 12* 12 13* 13 17* 14 19* 19* 19* 12* 18* 19 14 14 19* 19* 13* 19 14 19 18* 13* 13* 13* 856,050 18* 18* 18* 18* 827,570 18* 13 871 960 19 24 18* 14* H* 24* 23* 15* 883,230 865,740 880.210 774,480 787,040 692,720 647,000 . 702,500 665,160 630,990 618,690 604,710 678,180 6 9.010* 484,820 442,280 426,700 21* 22 20* 20* 19* 19* 20* 21* 21* 14 IS 15 15 15 1‘* 14 14 14 18$ 14, 21 14 ?0i 14 THE CHRONICLE. January 19, 1867 ] public debt of the Commonwealth of Virginia, on September last, amounted to $34,977,131 88, with¬ out including $1,951,596 21, being interest funded into prin¬ cipal and redeemable generally at ten years. The details, so far as returned in the Report of the Second The the 30th Auditor in the following statement: are as Certificates and Bonds issued prior to Jan. 1, 1862 Debt created since January 1, 1852 : Between January 1, 1852 and January 1, 1853...... do do do do do do do do do do do . 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 and do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 1564 1855 1856 1857 ! do ; do do do 186^ 1864 1865 1866 $ 10,200,252 OS . . . . 1858 1859 . 1860 1861 1862. . . . 00 S7 37 09 10 00 00 00 00 00 02 00 18,100 00 5,800 00 $2,979,087 4,605,916 4,112,184 1,504,403 2,653,570 630,260 1,866,800 1,454,600 3,621,825 1,146,870 131,380 41,350 The following, which is $36,928,894 59 the character of the Securities of which it is also shows recapitulation of the above debt, a composed and the rate of interest: 1. Under acts prior to April 17, 1861, viz.: cent, certificates, registered debt 6 per 6. 6 “ “ “ coupon Total per “ “ “ 6“ 108,000 00—$22,004,298 38 11,118,000 00 1,865,000 00— 12,973,000 00 “ 2,1866, (funding) viz cent, certificates, registered debt. “ “ “ “ “ “ “ $34,977,298 88 public debt under acts prior to April 17, 1861 2. Under act of March 6 6 6 5 $21,896,298 38 “ bonds “ “ 6“ “ “ coupon : $ 1,379,500 00 6,309 00- 1,385,800 00 71,448 71 347 50— fractional certificates “ “ 71,796 21 494,000 00 bonds ($590 each) Total public debt under act of March 2,1866 Total public debt, October 1, 1866 $1,951,596 21 $36,928,894 69 The issues under the act of March 2, 1866, are payable—in 1868, $71,038 91; in 1839, $757 50; in 1876, $1,350,900 00 ; in 1886, $489,300 00 ; and in 1900, $39,600. Of the Coupon debt, embraced in the above schedule, viz.: $12,937,000, there is payable—in Richmond, 6 per cents., $63,000; in New York, 6 per cents., $10,900,000; and in London, 5 per cents., (£373,000) $1,865,000. The remain¬ der, $145,000, is accounted for as “ lost at sea.” The bonds issued since January 1, 1852, have all to run 34 years after date. The interest on the sterling debt will amount 1st January, 1867, to £93,250 or $466,250. on the This will be funded on the 1st July, 1867, in bonds of the Com¬ monwealth, through the agency of the Messrs. Baring. The following i9 a statement of subscriptions by the State to Joint Stock' Companies and appropriations for State im¬ provements upon which payments have been made, showing the amount authorized by law, the amount paid and the amount remaining to be paid September 30, 1866 : , 1C 18 10 161 13 30 Railroad Companies Navigation do Plank Road do Turnpike Bridge do do State Roads Total ;. Aathorized. Paid. To be Paid. $22,704,523 22 $18,584,928 28 $4,189,594 94 12,277,290 11 465,800 00 12,234,116 30 399,755 41 2,674,540 37 106,100 00 2,371,009 10 104,461 66 303,531 27 1,628 34 $35,520,109 59 $4,576,242 63 1,868,098 40 $40,096,352 11 ' 43,173 81 66,044 59 42,269 57 1,825,828 83 The total of investments of the Fund for Internal Improve¬ ment, chiefly railroad, bank and canal stocks and bonds of the State, is $5,178,233 33 ; but of this very little is at present available. Besides the . „ - issue of James River and Kanawha Canal act tioned. foregoing it will be seen that the funded debt of amounted, on the 30th September, 1866, to $36,928,994 59. To this must be added the interest accrued and not funded up to Jan. 1, 1867, amounting to $6,237,391 93— making the total funded and unfunded debt, at the date men¬ tioned,'$43,166,286 52. This sum does not embrace the From the the State corporations, guaranteed by the Commonwealth, amounting to $1,953,455, but it includes $1,997,315 46 standing on the books of the Second Auditor in the name of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund for the liquidation of the public debt. The Auditor does not think that the magnitude of this debt need excite apprehension as to the ability of the State to pay t ... Aggregate Public Debt, Oct. 1,1866 an above mentioned bonds of 4,900 00-24,777,046 35 $1,951,596 21 Sept. 30, 1867 Debt created under Act, March 2 (funded interest). $200,000 of State stock to the Company, issued under an passed March 18, 1862, the validity of which is ques¬ There is also THE PUBLIC DEBT OF VIRGINIA. But he adds that is due to the creditors to state it. the losses of the “that Commonwealth, growing out of the war, have been of such magnitude as, in my opinion, to render it full interest on the public debt for several impossible to pay years to come.” With this prelude he proceeds to unfold hisjplans for relief. They are two in number : the first proposes the consolidation of the debt, and the second, the scaling of the debt down to 66| per cent., the 33^ per cent, excised to be taken upor not* as the result may be, by West Virginia. It will be seen that the first project is not very unlike the plan adopted by Mis¬ souri. “Supposing the debt consolidated,” says the auditor, “I propose to pay the interest upon it according to a graduated scale risingYrom three to nine per cent, per annum, and running through a term of thirty years, thus: for the first four years, 3 per cent.; for the next four years, 4 per cent.; for the next four years, 5 per cent.for the next six years, 6 per cent.; for the next four years, 7 per cent.; for the four years, 8 per cent. and for the last four years, 9 per cent. The scale averages, it will be observed, six per cent, per annum ; and I may statQ here that the basis upon which it rests is the prospective ap¬ preciation of the taxable property of the State, and is so ar¬ ranged that only a moderate tax will be required while the State is recovering from its prostrate position. The Auditor is of opinion also that the Sinking Fund should resume its func¬ tions contemporaneously with or before the issue of the new certificates and all the means of the commonwealth properly assignable thereto, be turned over to the commissioners of that fund to be used The as the law directs. theory and nature of the scaling system proposed may be best understood from the author’s own words. He says: . beg leave to call the attention of the General Assembly to a plan which has been suggested for reducing the public debty which claims attention from the number and respectability of its advocates. I will state it briefly. From figures (given in another part of this re¬ port) it will be seen that one-third of thewhole population of the State in 1860, nearly one half of its territory, and about twenty-five per centum of the value of its real estate, are now included within the ter¬ ritory of West Virginia. Assuming one-third as a proper proportion of the debt to be paid by that State, it is proposed to scale the whole debt by paying two-thirds ourselves and leave the remaining third to be adjusted between the creditors ef this State and West Virginia. This would, 1 think, be an equitable ratio of settlement. But I should be unwilling arbitrarily to assign any portion of the debt to West Vijginia, or to assume for ourselves any specific part of it, until the Legis¬ lature of that State can have an opportunity of appointing commissioners t* confer with ourselves upon all unadjusted matters of account be¬ tween the two States. Should West Virginia fail to appoint commit* sioners, or should those commissioners, when appointed, decline to asj sume any equitable portion of the public debt, then, I think, we would be fully justified in resorting to the expedient of scaling the debt ac¬ cording to the propositions indicated above.” * “ I public debt proper, the Commonwealth has guaranteed the bonds of several corporations, viz: bonds of the James River and Kanawha Canal Company to the amount of $314,955 ; of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company $500,000 ; of the city of Petersburg, for the construction of the South Side Railroad, $323,500 ; of the Virginia Central There is very little probability of the Legislature adopt¬ Railroad Company $109,000; of the Richmond and Danville Railroad Company $200,000 ; of the city of Wheeling $500,- ing this plan. The debt is certainly large, and the taxation 000, and of the Alexandria Canal Company and Corporation required will be heavy; but we incline to the belief that any of Alexandria $15,000—total, $1,953,455. burden will be endured by the people of the State that it is [January 19,1807. THE CHRONICLE. 74 1866. 1865. 1864. 1866. 1865. 1864. I £ £ £ £ £ £ possible for them to endure, before they will consent to even Jan.. 7,520,356 6,398,922 9,847,564 July.. 20,458.253 18,964,190 19,597,929 Feb.. 13,214,541 12,891,252 16,610,159 I Aug.. 21,944,048 20,997,691 20,940,303 partial repudiation. Previous to the war the bonds of Vir¬ Mar.. 16,396,928 13,005,394 19,891,204 Sept. 19,961,683 21,632,731 18,856,015 22,455,963 I Oct.. 20,809,746 23,606,789 19,530,442 ginia sold readily at 96@98. They are now sold at 40@42. Apr.. 17,587,665 13,078,755 May.. 22,392,601 14.695,334 23,214,762 | We learn that Governor Pierpont has submitted to the June. 21,496,185 15,407,688 23,243,701 | Totall81,283,866 160.909,954 198,698,047 bondholders a proposition which is in substance to sell to the .COTTON. bondholders the States interest in the railways for a like The import of cotton iuto the United Kingdom in Novem¬ amount of State of Virginia bonds, giving or receiving the ber amounted to 645,227 cwts., of which 126,001 cwtg. were differences. He divides the roads as the James River runs, from the United States, 425,743 cwts. from the East Indiesi giving to the buyers all the roads on the south side of James and 17,533 cwts. from Brazil. The total received in the cor_ River, which are five ieet (with the exception of twenty-two responding month in 1S65 was 630, 588 cwts., and in 1864t miles), in one transfer, the State to pass such laws as will give 621,100 cwts. The 11 months’ importation was 11,255,498 the new shareholders all equal rights with the present share¬ cwts., against 6,946,153 cwts. in 1865, and 6,767,896 cwts. in holders ; and he proposes to make a like sale of all the State’s 1864, of which the following are the particulars: 1866. 1865.* 1864. railway shares and bonds on the north side of the river. The From United States4,235,961 433,773 119,(95 : —cwts 6,714 329,990 158,607 Bahamas and Bermudas gross receipts on the five railways on the south side of James 3,145 821,213 198,046 Mexico 564,082 River last year were about $1,600,000, and are about six hun¬ 390,798 288/80 Brazil 84,430 186,573 153,637 Turkey dred miles. Three-fifths of the capital in most of these roads 814,885 1,328,092 912,227 Egypt 5,229.977 3,422/80 British India 3,784,562 is owned by the State, beside her mortgages of $2,700,000. 44/84 315,836 China 691,594 : 271,520 388,431 . . 290.365 Other countries STATES. TRADE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND THE UNITED COTTON, BREADSTUFF8, TOBACCO, PROVISIONS, ETC. mouth* of No¬ The British Board of Trade returns for the vember, and the eleven months ending November, have now been received, and the figures made public show that the trade of Great Britain for last year was very extensive, and much in excess of former periods. This result is, in a very considerable ourselves and the United Kingdom, for we find that the value of our cotton imported in the ten mouths was £31,250,000, against £2,534,000; and the value of the exports of British and Irish produce and manufactures from Great Britain to United States ports £24,225,000, against £14,844,700 last year. These measure, due to the great trade carried on between items alone account for portion of the great increase in some the trade of Great Britain last year, at the returns we observe that, with and Uoking carefully on South America and Can¬ ada, the outward trade of the United Kingdom has also been very great. The crisis appears to have had a somewhat un¬ wholesome effect on But from these annexed are EXPORTS OF somewhat in 1864. Total. The The declared value of the exports of British and Irish pro¬ duce and manufactures from Great Britain in November last £15,080,430, against £15,567,742 last year, and £12,065,213 in 1864. These amounts raise the totals for the eleven months to £173,913,222, £150,832,344, and £148,340,865 in 1866, 1865 and 1864 respectively. The totals for was 1864. £ £ subjoined: 1884. £ 1866. £ July. 14,394,384 14,113,410 15,116,063 Aug.. 16,274,269 14,158,648 13,770,154 17,520,354 Sept. 14,687,942 17,316,681 April. 13,225,039 12,071,111 15,366,414 Oct.. 12,871,491 15,547,225 May.. 14,176,640 13,194,7.8 15,870,131 Nov.. 12,065,213 15,567,742 June. 13,978,526 13,227,082 14,630,120 Total 148,340,885 150,832,344 Jan.. 10,413,588 Feb.. 12,698,121 Mar.. 13,555,674 With 10,489,339 1*. ,376,214 rfionths ending October 30 Turkey regard to this country, we 1864. ** Total ... 16,671,078 16,895,894 15,080,430 . £14,252,741 £22,487,069 199,615 816,418 892,348 1,073,414 663,713 £15,403,017 £14.844,704 computed real value of the principal articles imported in October was £19,530,442, against £23,006,789 in 1865, and £20,309,746 in 1804, For the ten months, the total for 1866 is £193,698,047; for 1865, £160,909,954; and for 1864, £181,283,856. Annexed are the particulars for each * r. ^ ' 11,438,506 29,183,930 5,174,553 3,119,031 £62,098,915 £43,899,564 £67,175,970 .1 ‘ 46,816 - 28,591 4,349,262 517,354 7,065,017 22,030,060 151.281. 1,736,133 ourselves are concerned, the British trade re¬ encouraging in this department. In November, the import of Wheat from the United States was only 35,158 cwts., and of Flour only 23,834 cwts. Flour continues to be received from France, including small quanti¬ ties of Wheat; but the bulk of the importations is from Russia. The following statement shews the imports of cereals by no means Kingdom in eleven months: WHEAT. 1865. 1864. cwts 4,711,510 4,592,982 710,181 Schleswig, Holstein, & Lauenburg Mecklenburg 249,118 620,498 From Russia Prussia Denmark Hanse Towns... France . ‘ ". 554,497 445,966 E?ypt 366.870 r.. Total Barley Oats Peas Beans Indian 7,127,634 6,034,306 603,691 250,782 603,582 458.692 1,663,502 562,541 4S4,288 ' Turkey, Wallachia, and Moldavia.. United States British North America.. Other Countries - month: .. as we turns are £24/24/9G The 1866. £31',251,466 BREADSTUFFS. 1S60. 87,819 1865. 8,650,451 1,575,791 Total.. .u 173,913,222 £14,498,780 3,221,690 £2,534,992 1,879,838 2,599,739 2,935,654 919,099 10,516,019 18,555,442 1,509,235 2,920,040 China.. Other countries. under: 1865. 2,398,559 1864. British India.... find that the exports in the first ten months of tho last three years were as To Atlantic porta, Northern Southern Pacific porta 17,450,156 2,052,778 £1,604,378 3,924,267 2,4*8,008 Egypt into the United 14,957,834 5,618 762,725 6u8,978 1,492,923 15,141 was : From United States Bahamas and Bermudas.... Mexico Brazil £ 14,354,743 879,269 77,177 computed real value of the cotton imported in the ten 1868. 1865. £ 1866. 1365. 49,663 481,786 491,821 S82,021 • .... .... ELEVEN MONTHS 276,013 44,074 14,688 603,703 382,464 1,077,617 222,346 cwts To Russia Prussia Hanover Hanse Towns .Holland Other Countries.. So far 1365. COTTON FROM THE (JMTED KINGDOM IN of 1865 and excess each month in each of the last three years are : 1864. possessions in Asia. were considerable deduction-must be a in the eleven months, reached a being 970,000 cwts. in excess of the corresponding period in 1865. In the mouth of November, however, the shipments from Great Britain were confined to 189,240 cwts., against 212,103 cwts. in 1865. Figures, show, ing the shipments in the eleven months ending November 30- the trade of Great Britain with her col¬ eleven months of 1866 totals, 11,255,498 made for exports. These, total of 3,221,690 cwts., Towards the close of the year, however, the transactions were on a more extensive scale, and the total exports to India, China and Australia in the first onies and 6,946,153 6,767,896 Total ........ com 10,063 ■ 1860. 7,765,207 8,776,641 431,577 160,645 688,232 765,617 8,854,694 426,494 82,648 7,836,020 1,164,627 406,579 1,016,531 294,316 * 475,443 931,651 2,661,256 22,143,081 18,557,281 20,547,088 4,544,323 4,979,896 7,099,943 6,987,608 1,041,897 842,337 581,368 896,771 5,695,627 6,223,446 7.053,423 8,017,291 1,008,957 1,017,534 13,936,409 8,789 FLOUR. From Hanse Towns France United States British North America Other Counti ies Total cwts 1864. 1865. 807,376 1,659,504 1,7 7,417 472,760 118,257 222,889 2,356,943 236,526 166,668 156,070 4,290,314 a 3,139,091 1866. 277,754 3,380,582 249,418 32.393 462,980 4,408,133 January 19,1867.] For THE CHRONICLE. time past there excitement in the some to create has been attempt in England trade by spreading reports corn 75 IMPORT. an Stemmed..... that large quantities of wheat were being taken by French buyers. Our London correspondent has, on several occasions, stated that these reports were wholly without foundation in truth, and the return showing the exports of breadstuff* from Great Britain confirm the truth of those observations. lbs. 13,534,054 85,840,526 2,265,274 14,409,537 28,576,043 11,156,8S6 23,998,260 763,054 12,876,989 23,929,697 el4,410 288,549 14,977,768 1,364,517 583,749 18,805,894 1,906,842 0,752,955 tl,388,183 Unstemmed ; Manulactured and snuff I860. 1865. 1864. „ 6,892,790 2,766,640 CONSUMPTION. Stemmed Unstemmed Manufactured and snuff lbs. Stemmed Unstemmed Manufactured and snuff lbs. Sev¬ 11,883,028 22,356,281 705,353 EXPORTS. eral cargoes have, indeed, been taken from off the coast, but the aggregate export is small. The following statement shows the export of foreign and colonial wheat in the eleven 743,975 11,731,486 3,118,655 .. months: . Wheat cwts, , Floor in addition to which and flour have been about 1804. 1885. I860. 40,748 38,603 £9,513 20,850 46,813 18.01* Catfst 200,000 cwts. of English wheat shipped to all RATES OF EXCHANGE AT quarters. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— JAN. 1. The supply of pigs in England is much larger than in for¬ mer years, and fresh pork is selling at low prices. Butter, bacon, hams, lard and most other provisions still command high quotations. The imports in eleven months were : 3 Bacon and ' 1365. 1864. hams, cwts Beef; salt, cwts Pork, salt, cwts.i Butter, cwts Cheese, cwts Eggs, number Lari* cwts - LONDON, AND ON LONDON, AT LATEST DATES. PROVISIONS. „ Jlloiutarj) ctni> (Eommerrictl (Englis!) HXtwB. 990,758 624,974 270,275 180,016 888,5S9 673,853 307,461,728 203,374 193,406 145,271 937,776 731,677 340,909,200 107,625 EXCHANGE ON LONDON. LATEST ON— TIME. Amsterdam... Antwerp. Hamburg % i RATE. short. 1116X@11.16M 3 months. 25.35 @26.40 *4 13. 8*@13. 8X 44 Paris 25.S7X@25.42* Paris short. 25.17X@25.22* Vienna 3 months. 13.35 @13.40 44 Berlin 6.25' @ 6.26 44 St. Petersburg 30*@ 302* 44 Cadiz 48* @ 48* 90 days. Lisbon 51X@ 51& Milan 8 months. 27.10 @27.20 44 Genoa 27.10 @27.20 4 27.10 @27.20 Naples New York.... Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Buenos Ayres. 1366. 593,283 161,518 155,875 982,646 693,257 407,861,280 ‘ 222,105 The cattle STOCK. plague having broken out afresh in several parts of the country, time. Jan. 2. short. 44 44 44 44 44 44 44 RATE. V ■ 11.77 25.20 @ @ 13.6*@ — — — 25.20 25.00 8 mo’s. ... ... 3 mo’s. Dec. 23. • LIVE DATE. 81*@ 3 mo’s. 58* - % _ Dec. 29. 60 days 109* Nov. 24. 9‘J days. 2 p. c. prem. 20 *@21 Nov. 3». 60 days. 44 Nov. 29. 24*@— 44 Nov. 28. 49*@49* 44 Dec. 3. 45*@46 44 Nov. 29. 24* @25 22. 4*. Nov. 6 mo’s. 44 4*. 6*d.@— Nov. 25. 44 Nov. 30. 8 p. c. disc* 44 2*. 0d. Dec. 13. 44 2*. 0d. Dec. 10. 44 Dec. 13. 2*. 0*d. 44 Nov^ 12. 2* p. c. prem. much anxiety is still felt in Great Britain with regard to the supply of butchers’ meat. The supply in the Valparaiso.... Pernambuco.. 4*. 6*d. * 60 days. country, however, has decidedly increased; but meat, though Singapore 4s. 5%d. Hong Kong... 1 p. C. d:9. below the recent high rates, is still a dear commodity. The Ceylon 1*10 Bombay 1*10 Government orders relating to the cattle traffic of the king¬ Madras' Calcutta 1*10 1 p. c. dis. dom are still in force, and are likely to remain so for some Sydney 30 days. time to come. Several ports in Holland are still prohibited [From our own Correspondent.! from sending stock to the British markets, owing to the exist¬ London. Wednesday, Jan. 2,1867. The New ence of the Year has opened as satisfactorily as could have been ex¬ plague in that country. The following are the im¬ pected, and with the promise of a favorable future. Money continues ports of live stock in eleven months: 44 44 44 — 44 — 44 Oxen, bulls and head cows Calves.... Sheep and lambs bogs Swine and EXPORTS OF 1865. 1800. 141,773 44,678 196,030 190,135 48,926 412,469 763,084 117,766 27,081 762,620 71,083 68,777 BRITISH AND IRISH PRODUCE AND to accumulate at the MANUFACTURES. following statement shows the exports of all the prin¬ cipal articles of British manufacture to the United States in the eleven months ending Nov. 30: 1604. Earthenware and porcelain Haberdashery and millinery Hardwares and Cutlery— Knives, forks, Ac Anvils, vices, Ac Manufactures of Germaa silver, Ac Linen Manufactures— ... Piece goods. Thread Metals— Iron—Pig, Ac ; Steel—Unwrought .. 47,270 104,974 1,632,685 2,414,200 2,867,657 179,495 380,413 745,514 169,701 401,079 809,810 318,521 111,097 85,102 254,163 142,938 86,0-18 312,288 209,917 703.601 800,067 462,947 yy.y.y.y.y.y.y. 14,983 231,4 82 627,618 47,074 34,506 Lead, pig...77.. piece goods Handkerchiefs, scarfs, &c Ribbons of silk only Other articles of silk only Other articles mixed with other materials.... Spirits, British Wool Woolen and Worsted Manufactures— Woolen cloth ... 28,183 11,079 37,242 18,251 * 94,341 41.093 • in The latter will arrive here in the course of With these arrivals in prospect, their balances from abroad. indeed, commerce The Board of Trade off in the crisis; but all branches busiuees has been conducted with extreme caution. The import and export trade ha9 not undergone a so great a crisis as that through which we have passed seems to show that although business has, in many cases, beeu carried on in a reckless manner, its general condition has been sound and healthy. Probably much has yet to be revealed and to transpire ere the crisis can be considered to have wholly subsided, but matters seem now to have assumed a sufficiently stable position to withstand a considerable short. As yet we have not received infor¬ mation from China respecting the firm of Dent A Co., whose bills were returned by Messrs. Dent, Palmer A Co. several weeks since. News from that quarter is, therefore, anxiously looked for. In Australia the fact, however, that 1,862,629 354,606 103,102 36,942 sent overland- our sudden and considerable diminution in 42,338 168,992 108,518 14,7o9 19,410 of 621,706 121,464 8,012 34,642 probability that the do not show any. material falling our extent of trade during the existence of the iu the home trade there is undoubtedly a decline, and in 775,841 316,629 207,737 call returns 841,756 534,300 67,015 2,907 17,270 £37,567 to 664,757 140,; 54 865,957 63,835 69,823 73,349 75,459 284,890 95, 99 4,811 seems every and the limited demand for money, there appears to be a decided probability that we shall shortly witness even a lower rate of interest than that now exist, ing. At present the rates tend strongly downwards, the best paper having been discounted to-day as low as 8f per cent. This state of affairs is the effect of the recent crisis, and the high rates current during the greater part of last year. The determination of the Bank Directors to keep up the rate of discount as high as may be necessary to check spec¬ ulation, has caused trade to decline materially, and to compel merchants 731,424 93,979 146,667 309,193 38,248 n about three weeks. 1,055,140 850,800 200,346 387,874 244.813 ... had be 3,097,654 8,837,513 133,369 214,858 14,u73 218,170 Copper, wrought Broad 40.478 124,849 £900,886 70,789 82,042 176,661 Castings Hoops, sheets and boiler plates Wrought * 3 1866. £419,299 * 2,308.847 Bar, Ac Railroad Bait..; v.y.v.y. Bile Manufactures— 1865. £340,771 bank, and there supply held by that establishment will, in the course of a few weeks, be larger than for many years past. Our latest advices from Australia re¬ port considerable shipments of gold to England, about £400,000 having been shipped in four weeks by sailing vessels, whilst about £320,000 The Alkali Beer and ale....; Coals Cotton Manufactures— Piece goods Thread — 78,108 17,913 13,700 the aggregate liabilities stopped payment did not exceed £500,000,and it was not anticipated that any further disasters would ensue. The with other material 2,006,970 8,221.240 8,871,431 crops in the colony promised abundance, aud it was thought there TOBACCO. would be no need of an importation of breadstuffs from the coast of The imports, consumption and exports of tobacco in the Chili. At the present moment there seems to be but one branch of eleven months were : our commerce likely to hiave an unfavorable influence on our market! Carpets and druvgets Shawls, rugs, Ac Worsted stuffs of wool, and of wool mixed 699,528 278.601 61.809 484,618 329,597 29,731 863,703 crisis has almost become 759,041 43,149 of the firms which bad ( an affair of the past; vif.: tea, to erence we Jan. respect. On Monday, of the close of the year, the inquiry in all quarters was heavy in the extreme, and in the open market the bank rate was charged for the best paper., Yesterday the demand fell off; but at the same time the market presented a tolerably active appearance. Out-of-doors the rates declined one-eighth, the best paper being taken at 8f percent. In to-day's discount market there is a fair average degree of activity, but there is also a further decline in the quotations, the rate for the beat paper being 8£, and occasionally per cent. Annexed are the quotations for the best descriptions of paper, having various periods There has been a good demand for this week. money 1S63. 1864. s. d. s. d. 45 10 39 10 46 10 40 2 47 10 40 10 48 4 41 3 2 47 11 40 8 1862. s. d. ..62 1 ..61 11 ..61 4 ..60 3 Feb. 3. ..60 10. ..60 17. ..69 24. ..59 Mar. 8. ..59 10. ..59 17. ..59 24. ..59 31. ..58 Apr. 7....58 14....57 21.,..57 28..,.58 May 5..,.58 12.,,.58 19..,.57 26.. .56 Juue 2.. .55 run: Per Cent. Per Cent. 6. 13. 20. 27. in consequence to 4 47 4 47 10 47 8 2 0 5 11 5 6 9 2 10 8 11 9 2 7 9 1 4 . 3% @4% 4 & 6 months’ trade bills 4 & 6 months’ bank bills 3%@ 3%@ 30 to 60 days’ bills 3 months’ bills 3%@ % 9.. 16.. 23.. 30.. ■ On the Continent the rates have not nexed • An . quotations at the leading cities: the are changed during the week. Bank Open Pank Open rate, market. rate, market. so c ^ M 3* At Paris Vienna Berlin $ c. r Turin Brussels 2%-% 4 3% 4 Frankfort Amsterdam In the rates of 6 3 “ 4 4% adv — 3% 3% 4% 4 “ Hamburg bt. Petersburg very ;.. .... — 6 — — 3% % 7 8@9 little alteration has taken place this week. exhibited increased firmness, and The consol market has further ad' a .54 .53 .54 .55 7 7 2 7 2 3 40 4 40 4 1 6 2 4L 40 46 46 40 45 40 1 45 0 39 9 45 4 39 11 45 9 40 2 45 6 40 1 45 6 40 1 45 8 39 7 45 9 39 2 46 2 38 9 46 9 89 3 46 8 39 8 46 5 39 5 46 10 38 11 46 11 39 6 46 9 40 3 46 5 40 0 38 7 38 10 38 6 38 4 38 4 38 4 38 2 38 6 88 4 3S 3 88 4 38 11 39 8 40 1 39 7 39 5 39 10 40 11 41 8 41 9 41 1! 5 41 41 1 41 3 41 6 46 ft 45 7 45 6 45 10 45 5 45 9 45 5 45 7 45 4 45 6 45 3 44 11 44 9 44 5 44 9 45 5 45 9 45 9 46 1 47 47 47 47 48 51 4 5 1 4 ENGLAND AND WAIJSS.. 1862. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. d. b d. s. d. s. d. s. d. 1866. 1866. s. d. s. d. 3 38 2 46 s. July 7...56 7 46 11 40 9 42 6 64 6 6 45 11 43 9 43 1 65 10 6 43 0 54 X 0 42 10 62 n 8 46 11 44 0 42 6 61 i Sept. 1...58 4 46 9 42 5 46 7 49 7 14 ..57 0 46 10 41 21. ..56 11 46 7 42 Aug. 4...57 1 42 6 43 7 45 10 46 3 44 .18...57 4 45 11 43 25.. 57 9 46 5 42 8 ..58 4 44 15. .55 10 44 Oct. ' ‘ Dec 6. ..51 13...49 1...47 8...40 5 0 2 42 1 42 3 4 0 11 8 9 1 6 9 11 9 0 50 2 1 50 o 4 60 In 46 0 47 44 7 47 42 0 49 40 10 51 41 1 62 41 11 52 42 1 52 42 4 52 43 4 54 46 3 57 46 11 66 46 10 67 46 6 60 46 6 61 46 8 60 46 8 59 9 44 9 42 2 43 9 40 1 42 2 39 6 41 0 38 11 40 4 38 4 40 0 38 739 10 £8 2 40 0 38 4 39 10 38 9 39 11 38 9 8 40 3 38 8 9 40 9 38 6 1 41 1 88 4 6 41 2 38 1 7 40 5 37 10 46 11 60 Nov. 3...48 10 49 29 ..45 4 X o X 0 7 L 2 X q Z ‘ ” 2 J j? English market Reports—Per Cable. market remains unchanged, and ha9 been remark¬ ably steady throughout the week, the closing price of consols having varied only one-eighth. American Securities, except Erie, have also held up well under the rise in gold at this side. Erie, however, is no lower than at this time last week, but has fallen oft from the highest (Monday) If. The following table shows the daily closing prices ef consols and the specific stocks : The London money — 2% 3%adv Madrid foreign exchange, fc. 212076..4489 AVERAGE PRICE OF ENGLISH WHEAT IN receive reliable intelligence from China in ref¬ the matter of Dent <fc Co. but little can be said in this and until 21298.. 5665374 [Jannary 19,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 76 Mon. 14. Tucs. 16. Wed. 16. Thur. 17 Fri. 11. Sat. 12. 91 91 for money 91 ' 91% 90%. 90% place in the quotations. !The Three per cents., for the Consols U. S. 6’s (1862) 72% 72.% 72% 72% 72% 72% 81% ol% account, were done as high as 9Of to-day; but at the final close of the r Illinois Central shares.. 80* 80% 81% 81% Erie Railway shares.... 43% 45% 43% 44% 44% 43% market, owing to numerous sales on account of the bankers who, during At Frankfort the raised from market for U. S. 6’a has 76$@76f, and the period when money was little wanted, placed some of their sur¬ at Paris from 72@7‘2f. ' plus funds in consols, prices were much weaker, the latest quotation for The cotton market at Liverpool has been dull and steady, with small time bargains being.90f-£. The tone of the market, however, is good, sales ; in the first four days prices fell from 14$@14f. On Wednesday and the tendency of prices will undoubtedly continue in au upward di¬ more activity prevailed, and the sales, which on Tuesday amounted to rection. The highest and lowest prices on each of the last three days are subjoined : only 4,000 bales,reached 10,000. Thursday’s market was marked by increased buoyancy, with sales to 10,000 bales, and a gain in prices of Wed." Tues. Mon. Three days ending January 2. a quarter penny per pound. 89% @90 90@90% 90%@% Consols for money The Manchester trade is dull, and the market failing. Prices nomi- has taken vance . - » „ " United States 5-20 bonds has continued firm, and The market for nal. The Liverpool breadstuff's market has shown a steady firmness. to-day as high as *73£. Atlantic and Great Western mixed corn has ranged from 42s. to 42$s. and at the latest re Western Railway securities are fla(, but Illinois Centrals are firm, aad have sold at 82f. Erie Railway shares are fiat. United States 5-20 port (15th), closed at 42|8. per quarter. American provisions, with the exception of pork, are advancing. Lard bonds close, to-day, at 72£ to £. Atlantic and Great Western Railway which at the opening of the week sold at 63s. per cwt., had risen to debentures 51 to 68 ; do. Consolidated Mortgage bonds 40 to 41; Illinois Centrals 81£ to 82^, and Eries 46 to 46£. The latest price of United 54@55s. per cwt., and cheese had advanced 4d. in the week. Pork was States 5-20 bonds from Frankfort is 76f ; from Amsterdam 76$ ; from reported on the 11th at 46s., and declining. The produce market has been less active, and a general giving way is Berlin 77$. noticed. Tallow is 3d. lower, and petroleum (Pennsylvania refined) has In the wheat trade, during the present week, there has been no ac* fallen Id. per gallon of 8 pounds, closing at Is. 6d. Ashes (American tivity, and to-day’s market, owing to a heavy fall of snow and interrup¬ pot) have advanced Is., closing at 35s. tion of communications with the agricultural districts, ha9 beeu quite The advance in gold at New York will probably work the effect of a nominal in character. The tone of the market, however, is decidedly further decline in all American products in European markets. firm, and there is a decided tendency to a further advance in prices business Mas been done . . Annexed the leading particulars of the wheat trade for the present The first table shows the imports and exports of wheat into and from the United Kingdom in each week ourmg the year, whilst the second table shows the average price of English wheat in England and Wales in each week in each of the last five years. The figures are are COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. year. taken from official IMPORT8 AND sources ; EXPORTS OF WHEAT INTO AND FROM IN , Week Wheat, . ending cwts. Jan. “ 44 41 Feb. “ IMPORTS 303.710 13.. 403,693 20.. 337,035 27... 849,559 3..1,102,824 cwts. 97.712 94,579 143,877 267,833 19.. 532.537 17.. 453,296 196,104 418,312 Mar. 3.. 498,180 85,983 182,023 10.. 407,355 17.. 330,398 24 322,765 31.. 290,415 126,449 “ 44 44 44 44 24.. . 44 cwts. cwts. 305 2,143 403 4,161 7,838 119,959 103,883 193,941 112,593 96,585 114,573 • • • • • • • 235 7,188 2,500 3 3 1,149 .... 44 44 - ‘4 12.. 400,706 44 19.. 679,742 26 402,585 44 . Jane 2.. 449,950 9' 638,534 44 44 44 16.. 465,375 23 443,134 30.. 560,008 . 44 80,637 88,078 • • • . • • • .... 90,261 14,794 87,300 15 127,447 4.790 1,800 83,486 5 76,047 70,890 4,365 14 97 13 . • “ . 71 142 802 129 41 308 526 245 778 866 923 555 911 703 303 14.. 409,189 21 679,088 28.. 470,334 . 44 Aug. 4.. 461,455 11.. 306,347 18.. 390,012 25.. 442,523 Sept. 1.. 332,459 8.. 282,064 44 44 “ 44 44 " “ “ exp’ts—, IMPORTS Wheat, cwts. ending July 7.. 543.875 201 1,293 April 7.. 301,598 18 14.. 305,292 21.. 406,472 143.283 2,231 28.. 411,681 106,014 3,476 May 5.. 443,529 122,620 44 / Week Flour, Wheat, Fl’r, 117,964 UNITED KINGDOM 1866. exp’ts-> > THE flour, Wheat, Fl’r, cwts. 93,776 50,787 cwts. cwts. 233 .... • • • • 71.471 1,183 41,532 67 4 82 60 97 423 31.260 47 43,025 £7,297 694 183 64,589 51,314 45,266 .... - 5,792 1,088 184 11,676 6 S,546 22,424 r285 4 2S,789 15.. 314.855 22.. 229,450 29.. 293,324 22,727 391,443 24,499 350,770 55,292 20,503 Oct. 6.. 13.. 20 “ 27.. Nov. 3.. 44 10.. “ 17.. 44 441 24.. 3.784 Dec. 1.. 44 8.. 3,610 44 15.. 2,909 “ 22.. 169 i 44 29.. S6 1 44 44 . 301,467 394,462 602,871 254,025 273.215 586,259 813,608 543,601 22,088 28.S47 685 410 67,673 20.619 317 75,881 43.849 118 68,186 20,586 77,180 22,254 1,823 42,412 4,760 206 5.629 222 127,601 150,419 2,669 126.C54 135 716,775 381,907 111,119 593,941 136,143 668,679 116 244 .... i 2,750 27 4 195 352 249 imports this week show large increase, both in dry goods and in general merchandise, the total being $7,062,192, against $4,140,074 last week, and $2,426,214 the previous week. The exports are $4,256,658 this week, against $3,716,624 last week, and $2,426,214 the previous week. Tha exports of cotton the past week weie 16,589 bales, against 12,219 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) Jan. 11, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) Imports and Exports for the Week.—The a Jan. 12; * • FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK-' FOR THE WEEK. Dry goods . General merchandise... Total for the week Previously reported .... Since Jan. 1. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. $1,043,235 1,367,605 $532,384 1,500,437 $4,897,258 1,969,930 $4,034,964 3,027,228 $2,410,840 6,431,554 $2,032,'821 $6,867,188 [$7,062,192 $8,842,394 0 $2,032,821 $6,867,188 $7,062,192 - e report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for ooe week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Jan. 14: In our EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1866. 1867. Previously reported..4. $2,474,055 1,916,598 $1,905,726 2,596,818 $5,003,593 4,091,567 $4,266,658 8,716,624 Since Jan. 1 $4,390,653 $4,502,544 $9,095,150 $7,973,282 1864. For the week 1865. January 19,1867.] - — ■ - —- THE CHRONICLE . ■ - department will be found the official detailed and 82 foreigners; and in the December quarter 4 ships, with 440 Eng¬ lish, 56 Scotch, 372 Irish, and 29 foreigners—total for the year 5,587. statement of the imports and exports for the week. To South America one ship in the September quarter, with 1 English The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive and 71 Irish—total for the year 72. These show a grand total of steer¬ of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol¬ age emigrants for the year of 36,145 English, 3,047 Scotch, 46,697 Irish, and 20,870 foreigners—total 106,757, There were also 5,922 cabin lowing table: This * Since Since This passengers, whose nationalities were not known, and also 9,712 emi¬ Jan. 1. Jan. 1,1867 To week. To week. Great Britain... $2,926,878 $271,619 grants by short ships, making the grand total of emigrants for the year $5,311,376 Cuba $150,207 219,926 Hayti France 78,996 from this port 122,393, which shows an increase, compared with the 67,252 219,926 Holland & Belg. 282,836 previous year of 1,337. 98,251 314,817 OtherW. I 145,464 One principal feature is that the Irish are emi¬ 52,077 52,077 232,60 > # Germany 699,810 Mexico in grating great numbers to the Southern States of Amer ica, and to the New Granada... Other N.Europe 171,998 147,504 In the commercial .... ^ Spain Other S. Europe East Indies... China 10,600 33,260 44,667 44,667 •V. 43,655 130,486 25,449 Australia Br.N A Colonies 43,655 130,486 56,084 Venezuela Br. Guiana Brazil Other S. A. ports All other ports. 58,94’. 42,565 58,920 78,492 51,552 6S, 245 14,086 19,435 34,824 34,9S4 following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending Jan, 12, 1867 : The York for the week 9—S.S. Eagle, Havana— American gold $25,000 12—S.S. Pennsylvania, Jan. it Liverpool- ' Gold bars Silver bars “—S.S. City of tw* 95,300 15,000 r Balti¬ more, Liverpool— Copper coiu American gold .... “—S.S. Pereire, Havre- it Gold bars 739 14,703 . 329,888 . Jan. 12—S.S. Hansa, Southampton— Gold bars $87,081 Silver bars 50,703 “ “—S.S. Hansa, LondonSilver bars 224,217 American gold...... 15,000 American silver.... 20,000 “ “—S.S. Hansa, Bremen—. Foreign silver ' 600 Total for the week........ 1862 1861 I860-.... 1859. ~ : Immigration into thk Germany 101,716 England ... Scotland .. Sweden ... Switzerland... France ... ... 36,186 4,979 3,907 3,685 West Indies Poland Belgium ... 1,526 Portugal Holland ... 1,506 Mexico Nova Scotia Canada | | 40 28 : 1 26 15 15 12 12 8 7 5 1 233,418 Total vessels ; 849 being sailing the aggregate, on the pas¬ arrivals, according to the month¬ each month, have been about as follows : 1,667 deaths and 245 births. The ly returns 14,831 March.... April The 14,856 16,798 40,049 I September 36,242 | October 10,132 | May 6,286 j June January February Company publishes to-day in our ad¬ vertising columns its annual statement, which shows a cash capital of $200,000, a surplus of $366,439, and total assets of $565,439. This is one of the companies which is fortunate enough to have declared a dividend this month, after a year of such severe losses by fire. The American Fire Insurauce 35,u89 I November.... July DIVIDENDS. give in onr Bulletin from day to day lists ot bonds, &c., dividends declared. These tables will be continued daily, and on . 17,863 1847 1348 1849 1850 1851 129,062 189,176 220,791 212,603 289,601 1862 1853 1854 1855 1856 300.992 1857...; 284,945 319,223 136,323 142,342 1858.... 1859.... 1860.. 1861.... .. .. .. . . 79,322 105,102 1862... 1863... 1864... 1865.. 65,529 1866... ... ... ... ... ... 76,306 156,844 225,916 196,347 233,410 From the foregoing, it will be seen that the influx of population from foreign countries the past year has been larger than ever before, with exception of the years 1850 to 1854, during the great “Irish exodus.” when great numbers fled to the United States to escape the the horrors of famine. Emigration from Liverpool During 1866.—The Government emi¬ Saturday published the last week in the Bulletin. PAYABLE. R/vTB BOOKS o’t. p. Banks, Pacific National —,. do Extra N Y. County Nat’l Ex. Tax WHKN. WHERE. Feb. 1. Feb. 1. On proof that the tax oi *66 has been At Bank. At Bank. paid. ITS allroads. Jan. 21. Central o: New Jersey.... *M lwaukee & St. t’aui in Common Stock Or Ca-h Macon & We-tern of Ga.. Cleve. Col. & Ciu Illinois Central Conn.&Passump.River pre Insurauce. Peter Cooper Fire... Williamsburg City Firei Manhattan Lorillard Fire j 103 Liberty St. Jan. 11 to Jan. 22. Jan. 1 to Jan. 20. 1 Company s Office 10 to Jan. 21. *21. Nat B’k Rep.NY 1. U.S.Tr istCoNY Jan 21 to Feb. 2. 1. Company s Office Jan. 19 to Feb. 6 21. 7 Merch Ex Bost |Jan. 11.1 15*2 t-roadway. 3^1 Jan. 2.j 1*3 Broadway. _ Republic Canal Company, & At Bank. - 3d Ave cor 9th st Feb. | Jan. 21. 12 Wall Street, |Jan. 11. j Com.sanya Office iJan. 10. j 03 Wall.Street. Niagara Delaware ;] THE Sat. 89 Bank Shares BOARDS. STOCK The following statement shows the description the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each Friday: Jan. 20. option of Company. At AT BUSINESS Jan. 1, to I Feb. 1. ICompanys Office 8 Huuson...^ * on CLOSED. [June Jan. Feb. Feb. Jan. Mon. 355 Tues. 3*28 100 50 100 and number of shares sold at day and for the week ending Thtirs. 64 Wed. 195 Fri’y. Week. 27 1,038 Railroad shares, viz.: 100 Chicago & Alton Preferred do • • • • .... 11.200 12,600 13.100 2,500 3,15 > 4,000 3,S00 4,SQ0 1,900 7,35i 2,900 7,005 30 6,500 2,600 800 • . 100 100 . . .... . 700 2,156 -100 25.550 450 — . • % . 200 300 100 . ^ “ .. .... . 700 200 600 2,100 600 7,750 • • • • • • • .... 1,260 2,100 1,350 .... .... 3,500 5,300 5,200 4,IKK) 300 200 .... .... .... • 22 .... 1> .... 1,200 200 400 300 .... 200 99 200 600 800 300 600 1,000 2,100 3,929 40 100 29 300 “ .... 5,85G 6,400 1,600 “ 6 5,230 8,400 “ “ b60 12,700 .... 300 85 30,900 8,109 109,680 13,400 ** .... .... . .... 20,700 24,7 5 300 170 9,800 50 72,750 600 600 6,800 4, 25 8,831 100 150 2,030 40,600 1,500 1,400 57,750 106 ■ . .... 5,700 9 “ .... .... .... 417 2,200 “ 900 .... 200 400 5,600 10,250 ... l’ooo 210 100 .... . .... 900 100 .... . .... 1,200 230 600 .... 4.000 400 15,200 6,900 1,500 .... — “ . 19,4(J0 6 .... .... . 3,300 1,900 4,100 . 14,630 5 .... .... 2.000 18,800 .... .... «... 1 . .... 11,100 .... • 3,500 100 .... 100 16.700 50 Chicago, Burlington & Q.. Chicago & Northwestern. 8,050 Tio Pref. 5,600 do Chicago, R. Isl. & Pacific. 1,600 Clev.rCol. & Cincinnati. Cleveland & Pittsburg.... ll.OOO gration offieials at Liverpool have completed their return of the emigra¬ tion from the Mersey during the past year. There sailed to the United Cleveland and Toledo 2.800 16,100 Erie Railway States during the March quarter 72 ships,nnder the Act, carrying 5,800 10 do Preferred.... & St. Joseph, pref.. English, 510 Scotch, 7,910 Irish, and 4,394 foreigners ; in the Junequar. Han. 1,300 Hudson River ter 96 ships, with 10,375 English, 931 Scotch, 21,084 Irish, and 7,352 900 Illinois Central Indianopolis A-'Cin foreigners; in the September quarter 65 ships, with 8,443 English, 557 Marietta & Cin. first pief 29 327 Scotch, 7,170 Irish, and 3,361 foreigners ; and in the December quarter Michigan Central 5,800 63 ships, with 5,567 En dish, 507 Scotch, 5J19 Irish, and 2,895 foreign¬ Michigan Southern & St. Paul ers—-making a total for the year to the United States of 92,224. To Milwaukee 166 do' do pref. Canada there were no departures during the March quarter. During New York Central 6,600 10 the June quarter there were 10 ships, with 1,170 English, 685 Irish, and New York & New Haven. 90 • «& Mississippi ($109) 1,661 foreigners ; in the September quarter again there were 10 ships, Ohio Panama with 810 English, 12 Scotch, 352 Irish, and 467 foreigners; and in the Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. 1,800 December quarter 5 ships, with 421 English, 55 Scotch, 207 Irish, and Reading 5,716 St. L., Akon & T. II. 318 foreigners—making a total for the year to Canada of 200 do do pref.:... 6,058. To Nova Scotia in the June quarter there were 2 ships, with Se'cdnd avenue 700 463 English, 100 Scotch, 70 Irish, and one foreigner—total for the year, Toledo, Wabash & West’n 634. To New South Wales one ship in the March q rnrter, with 66 Miscellaneous shares, viz. :g English, 23 Scotch, and 269 Irish—total 358. To Queensland in the Coal— American 200 Butler March quarter 3 Bhips, with 946 English, 74 Scotch, 3S6 Irish, and 10 Cumberland foreigners; in the September quarter one ship with 14*2 English/13 Delaw’e & Hud. Can 400 Scotch, 69 Irish, and 2 foreigners ; aDd in the December quarter one Maryland ship, with 94 English, 23 Scotch, 65 Irish, and 2 foreigners—total for Mining—Mariposa Pref... 1,300 the year 1,8*26. To Victoria in the March quarter 5 ships, with 433 100 Quicksilver 800 English, 44 Scotch, 608 Irish, and 28 foreigners; In the June quarter Improvin'?—Canton 987 6 ships, with 542 Euglish, 78 Scotch, 1,000 Irish, and 18 foreigners ; in TeUovavh— VVest’n Union (Russian) the September quarter 5 Bhips, with 491 English, 64 Scotch, 1,151 Irish, • lost, and morning such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below will be found those 9,376 20,059 | December immigration for the previous twenty years has been as follows j 17,462 I August C&tnette. ®l)e Bankers’ 1,874,762 155 ! Turkey 154 Japan 96 1 Greece 56 Sicily These passengerswere brought over in 750 vessels and 401 steamships. There were, in sage 1,452,202 529,159 1 Denmark Norway .. From— 540 China 315 1 East Indie s 216 | Africa 231 1 Australia 157 |1 Central America. South America... Russia 918 583 ....$3,444,174 3)5,990 42,642 for the last twelve months, ac¬ From— Wales 3.246 Italy high standing. 1866.—The following for The references of the firm are bankers at No. 11 Wall street. We the Commissioners of Emigration, show¬ Spain Ireland as pr-iMK <‘F OUMrANY. ing the Dumber of arrivals at New York cording to nationalities : ... ness to houses of 784,512 Same time in 1858 1857 1856 1855 1854 1853 1852 United States statement is from the office of From— pleasure iu calling attention to the card in our advertising Foote, who have lately commenced busi¬ $1,662,340 $1,192,530 1,640,604 1,791,523 1,051,784 1,477,169 15,799 173,562 1,270,607 1864 1868 We take columns of Messrs. Hatch $S77,828 Previously reported Total since Jan. 1,1867 Same time in 1866 1865 We9t Coast of South America. .... .... • . • 200 .... .... j 850 300 200 730 1,300 2,300 100 81 28,603 41,147 .... .... • • •* 500 200 15 ’260 3,000 2 502 500 500 214 .... 15 100 600 600 560 31 11,978 14,200 .... . 41 100 200 1,600 ’■250 1,400 5,300 700 300 350 lilt 3,100 3.200 8,396 140 200 200 427 Ae” 60 Steamship—Atlantic Mail. “ Pacific Mail... 44 44 . S. Amer. Nav. Union Nav.... • 200 jErprew— Adams 200 44 American 24 44 United States.... 10 l'he Sat.. 1,800 1,200 1,800 670 165 7,200 1,175 1,160 '300 2,400 140 16 12 • • • • • 5 and • • • • « • • m . • • • • .... • • . .... «••• Wed. Thnr. $58,000 3,000 6,000 3,666 210,000 10,503 82,000 Fri. $.... 79,000 289,000 44 Mining 44 Week. At At 8.000 7,000 8,000 82.000 14.666 6,000 8,000 27,000 6,500 40,000 2S,000 4,000 65,000 1,000 18,000 3,000 10,000 18,000 26.000 5,000 1,000 20,000 20,000 6,500 314,100 4,000 .... 86,000 9,000 26.000 .... 54.500 6,000 .... 86,000 20,000 547,0(0 7,000 .... .... 52,000 30,000 17,000 .... 10.500 155,000 Friday^ January 18, P. M. The Money Market.—The market opened this week quiet at 7 Saturday that the “ tying up” process was to be renewed this week, they proved to be without foundation. Tuesday the United States Treasurer began to pay out the currency interest accruing on the third series of the Seven thirty Treasury notes. The amount of these notes is almost Although there $200,000,000, and the were rumors on sum total to be disbursed on this account than $7,000,000. Under the influence of these payments the market has become easier, but to-day is rather more more Tnes. Thurs. Fri. 828 195 64 27 71,642 82,961 67,487 84,212 78,839 600 1,300 2,1(>0 799 315 2,400 1,150 23,139 . . 90,584 4t5,718 302 950 . 8,316 9,600 3,200 8,636 14,170 1,242 1,098 28 145 670 165 89,982 60,600 27,348 39,700 40,392 54,000 34,466 49,000 90,582 67,048 68,871 83,466 04,713 606 840 94,392 98,52% 98,525* 165,558 146,784 596’861 76,630 62;656 52,656 . Total Previous w’k. . 1,929 3,960 600 53,500 . Week. 1,068 2,140 800 987 8S7 234 Regular‘Board.. Open Board... . Wed. 1,600 1,300 2,400 3,700 1,400 . 64,475 800 350 2,200 200 780 2,325 .... 195,440 811,400 30,113 64,600 weekly since the commencement of shown in the following statement: The transactions in shares RailMinIm- Tele- SteamWeek ending— Bank. ro’d. Coal. ing. pro’t. graph, ship. Other. Total. Jan. (1 to4).... 898 1,257 200,715 83 188.089 3,600 7.850 1,700 4,328 11 141 5)9,139 12,^9 9,600 4,300 12,005 17,836 1,018 596,861 “ 44 18 3,200 8,536 14,170 1,*42 606,840 1,058 465,718 3,316 9,600 . The of the amount of Government bonds and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds sold at the Regular Board on each day of the past week : following is a summary Sat. ' 18,500 Mon. 855 ...... .... 6,000 19,000 5,000 13,000 7,000 41,000 1,U00 . Sat. 89 Steamship44 Express 44 $141,000 1,551,600 .... 6,000 26,000 will amount to Coal the year are City Bonds, viz: Brooklyn 6’s Company Bonds, viz: per cent. Bank shares...... Railroad 44 40 27 City and other bonds sold at the given in the following statement: 14,500 $50,000 109,000 178,500 . 20,000 24,500 80,600 State bonds, viz.: ..... • .... 2,000 Missouri 6’s... New York 6’s.. New York 7’s. N. Carolina b’s. Ohio 6’s Tennessee 6’g.. Vinrinia6’s • • 860 are Tnes. 431,600 • .... .. . 2,110 4,000 200 400 .... Mon $3,000 $20 503 464,500 200 600 100 1,800 amount of Government. State U. S. 6’s, 1881. U.S 6’s. (5-20’s). U.S6’s (old)... U.S 5’s (10-408) U.S 6’s (old) U. S 7-30 notes. 825 800 410 798 Regular .board, daily and for the week, Railroad {January 19,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 78 Mon. Tnes. Wed. Thnr. Fri. Week. $4>9,000 $454,600 $126,500 $234,500 $135,000 $295,000 $1,734,600 80,600 24,500 210.0U) 10.500 82.000 6,600 314,100 State* City b’ds 46,14)0 135.000 95,500 28,000 50,(00 431,600 77,000 Company B’nda 18,500 52,000 30,000 18,000 26 000 10,500 155,000 U. 8. Bonds U. 8. Notes Total Cnr. w’k* Previous week. 666,100 443,500 358,500 221,000 362,000 2,685,200 940,500 867,500 201,4501,271,200 567,000 8,517,150 $584,100 160,000 The totals, in the weekly, since the commencement of the year following tabulation : ,—^Governments Bonds. Notes. Week ending Friday, Jan. (1 to Jan. 11 Jan. 18 4). State * . $977,000 $146,100 1,873.200 1.734,600 855,4r0 are shown Total Company City Bonds. Bonds. $454,800 $207,500 623.500 amount. $1,785,400 8,617.360 2,635,209 365,000 155,000 314,100 431.500 The Gold Market.—Gold has been active daring the week, un¬ speculative operations, and shows an advance of active. But there is an adequate supply of capital seeking invest¬ 2$ on the closing price on Friday of last week. The market ment, lenders preferring to place their funds on call rather than on continues to be so much influenced by the operations of strong time. The rate is 7 per cent, to the brokers on miscellaneous secu¬ rities, 6 per cent. beiDg in some instances accepted on governments. cliques as to prevent the formation of any opinion as to what the course of prices will be in the immediate future. The discount business is light, choice bills passing at 7£@8, and less The price to-day fluctuated between 137$ and 136f, closing at current names at 9@12. The treasury payments on account of in¬ Sensation rumors in relation to the action of Congress on terest on the seven-thirties do not seem, as yet, to produce much 136$. impeachment, and others»calculated to influence the marketj change in the working of the money market. are said to have been originated for purely speculative purposes. The following are the quotations for loans of various classes : The following table shows the price of gold coin daily since the Per cent, Per cent. Call loans Good endorsed bills, 3 & commencement of the year and month : Loans on bonds & mort.. 7 6 tin 7 4 months, Prime endorsed bills, 2 months 7 @ — @ 8 @ 9 8 ®10 do single names, ii Lower Lower grades Opening. 8 Tuesday Unit 2D States Securities.—The price of Governments has fallen off a little through the week, large amounts being pressed for sale. There has been, however a steady demand by small investors, and the market ernment has Dut the to-day closes steady. It is rumored that the Gov¬ sold, within a few days, 5 millions of the new ’65’s, lacks confirmation. rumor The following are the closing prices of leading securities, pared with preceding weeks : Dec. 14. Dec. 21. U. TJ. U. U. U. tr. U* 8. 8’s,1881 conp 8. 5-20’s, 1862coupons. S. 5-20’s, 1864 44 8. 5-20’s,1865 44 8. 5-20’8,1865, N. iss... s io-40’8, 8 7-80’s 1st series 106 106 108* 99* S. S. 7-80’b 3rdSeries.. .. 7-30’s 2d series..... . 112 107* 8 105 105 105 Dec. 28. Jan. 4. 110 xc.108* 105* 107* 104* 106* 106 104* 107*XC.104 99* 99* 111* 106* 105* 105* 108 99 105 105 105 104 104 104 105 104* 104* com - Jan. 11. Jan. 18. 107* 108* 106* 106* 105* 108 104 99* 104 104 104 • der the influence of Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday board, this afternoon, there was a sudden break, quotations were decidedly lower, for which flurry, however, be able to account. the closing quotations at the regular board to¬ day, compared with those of the six preceding weeks: are Dec. 7. Dec. 14. Dec. 21. Dec. 28. Jan. 4. Jan. 11. Jan. 18. 90 81 65* 65* Cumberland Coal — . Quicksilver Canton Co Mariposa pref.... Erie Hudson River.... Reading Rock Island * l\ort Wayne Illinois Central.. The 44 46 46 45* 31* SO* . , , no* 79* Southern.. Michigan Central preferred .... 45* , Mich. 44 . . 31* no* 71* New York Central Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... . 43* no* * 84* 112* 51* 70* 103* 105 118* no*. no* 69 71* 122* 119* 100*x.d.l03* 80* 81* 112 x.d.107* 90* *5* 113* 124* 47 64* 76* 78* 103* 102* 104* 104* 117* 116* 44* 46* 81* 45 49 82 no* no* 68* 67* 128* 105* 82* 108 87* 124* 44* 132 104* 82* 107* 88* 124* 45* 43 46 44 44 46* losing with 383* 185* 134* 184* 133* 183* 134* 133* 134 134 134 134 133* 132* 132* 133* .... * 134* 134* 135* 135* 136* 134* 135 as follo ws 7 8 9.. 10 11 12.. 1,879,852 27 2,141,951 01 2,155,285 34 2,020,468 67 1,293.867 10 2,435,914 32 $24,887,977 06 $22,939,314 82 -102,613.658 89 833,726 91 289,788 65 . 295,144 75 231,616 38 Total.....: $1,944,622 53 Sub-Treasury morning of Jan. 7. Deduct payments during the week Balance on Saturday evening Decrease during the week $101,164,996 08 1,448,662 24 Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $2,464,000. Included in the receipts of customs were $134,000 in gold, and $1,810,623 in Gold Certificates. The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the Sub- Treasury since Dec. 1 : 123 125* 120 day of $125,552,978 14 24,887,977 06 — 103 78 107 90 118* 134* 135* $5,172,711 61 9,005,689 70 3,011,213 42 105*. 80* 106* 90* 119 . Sub-Treasury Receipts. House. Payments. Receipts. Balances. $1,173,546 $15,277,328 $15,094,432 $102,455,273 79* 98* 96* # 134* 135* 136* Payments. $4,430,340 90 10,143,858 28 3,636,669 26 Ending 42 183 : Custom House. 68* 125* 30* ^ 134* 135* 135* 187 137 185* 136* 187* 137* nsactions for last week at the Custom House and the Receipts. $425,136 50 309,210 80 Balance in 134* 184* 54 132 121 ? 11 183* 133* 134 134 Custom 103* 104* day’s busses? “ 134 - 134 134 12.... 13 14 15 132* 132* Weeks shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, pn each 41 following statement shows the volume of transactions in week 134* 134* 134* 183* 132* 8 9 133 108 107* 103* 82 7 ' Closing. — 132* 30* no* 41* 81* 102* 102* 80 138* Jan. after the second following 6 ... 134 104* steady through the week until yesterday, but the transactions have been unusually small. Yesterday and to-day prices fell off slightly, and The 332* 332* Sub-Treasury were The Stock Market.—The stock market has been dull but no one seems to 2 3 4 100* 104* 99* 104* 104* Lowest, Highest. /.. 17 Thursday Friday “ and the 1 Dec. 44 1.... 8.... 15.... 22 29.... Sub-Treasury 1,419,235 16,155.328 .. 1,471,199 1,057,950 1,332,919 10,7)3.385 10,525,233 Jan. 5, ’67. “ 12 1,684,037 1,944,622 44 “ 44 29,541,684 12,304,498 24,887,977 , 20,384,460 106,689,404 12,793,157 108,689,176 15,916,183 114,079,126 12,814,763 97,352.205 17,565,951 102,613,658 22,939 314 101,164,996 Changes In Balances. $182,895 Inc. 4,284,131 Inc. 1,999,771 Inc. 5,389,950 Dec. 16,726,920 5,261,452 Inc. Dec. Dec. Foreign Exchange.—Exchange has been firm to 1,448,662 day for to¬ morrow's steamer at 1091<i£109f for bankers’ 60 days bills on Lon¬ don. The course for the week has been unusually steady and firm. Exports of cotton to Great Britain have been on a liberal scale, and, if continued,iDU3t have the usual effect in the co»qjeroifti bills, production 9t Jan. 4, '67. 108 @108% 109 @100% Dec. 28. 107% @ ios% 109 ©109% 109%© 110 5.16%@5.15 do isAorf. 5.20 5.20 Bremen.... ..... 5.15 © 5.20 5.20 @5.17% .... ©5.12% ©5.17% ©5.17% @ 36% 41%@ 41% @5.17% 86%© 41%@ 41% 41%@ 41% 79%© 72 @ 72% 36%@ 41%@ 41% 41 %© 41% 79%@ 72 © 72% Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort.. Berlin 5.16%@5.15 5.13%©5.12% 5.20 @6.17% 5.20 @5.17% Antwerp Swiss. 108%@ 10S% 109%© 109% 109%© 110% 109%© 110 5.13%© Jan. 11. - 108%© 109% 109%© 109% 110%© 119% 5.16%@5.13% 6.13%@5.11% 6.18%@5.1U% ©5.16% 36%@ 41 %@ 41%@ 78%@ 72% © .... 41%@ 79%@ 79% 72% © 72% tional Banks shows 36% Banks. New York • Manhattan Merchants’ statements: $7,514,720 6,767,893 6,766,059 Union America Phenix City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merch’ts Exchange National Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. Greenwich Leather Manufact’s Seventh Ward...... State of N. York... American Exc’ge.. Commerce. Broadway Ocean Mercantile Pacific St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather.. Corn Exchange ... Continental Commonwealth . 5,276,909 493,518 800,000 89.523 23.392 482,215 134.006 982,670 391,750 51,519 39,086 40,4.50 65,179 858,650 2,885,463 . 1,029,439 1,361,141 1,254,022 1,006.129 1.473,790 15,985,344 13,192,172 1,172,808 6,085,048 3,151,011 in JAi . * 1,000,000 83,217 11,850 288.000 1,050 11,126 19,283 199,0-'8 2,911,255 216,355 1,644,209 7,100 4,639 7,013 3,383 Balances for the week Balances for the week The deviations from Inc., f 1,083,028 Inc.. 1,818,685 Inc.. 62,234 Specie Circulation The following are . Philadelphia 371.423 ’827,832 34,000 206,146 1,449,275 479,101 162,024 26,901,315 87 week are as fol¬ of weeks post: tion. $15,442,100 Loans 52.312.327 Specie 903,663 20,209,964 903,320 -20,006,455 Deposits 4.900,540 4,765,087 7,289,000 41.808.327 7,339,462 41,023,421 10,388,820 10,380,597 following comparison shows tfce Banki at stated periods ? The Aggregate Deposits. Tenders. Clearlnars $208,889,177 $61,485,458 $549,081,442 14,582,050 31,794,653 203,676,822 60.946,857 647,315,736 13,991,200 31,797.665 206.458,271 63.994,309 556.150,833 13,231,917 32,433,429 202,029,877 64.816,962 587.150,883 18,185,222 32.664,526 20u,811,290 63.000,687 515,917,999 12,794,892 32,762,779 202,533,564 65.026.121 4 6,»S7,787 14,613,477 32,825,103 202,617,608 63,246,370 605,132,066 Banks.—The following shows the totals of the Specie. $15,442,100 62,528,491 Circulation Legal $13,956 1,779,751 $14,957,007 $31,393,849 of the leading items of the Philadelphia previous week : Jan. 12. Jan 5. Legal Tenders.. Due from Banks Due to Banks.,. Deo. Dec. Banks for past and P . . Chemical .. Citizens’ City City (Brooklyn) Commerce Commonwealth Continental. .... 6 113 112 5 102% 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug., Aug. ’66 5 100,000 Quarterly.... 200,000 Jan. and July.. 350,000 Jan. and July.. 250,000 Jan. and July.. 150,000 Jan. and July.. 500,000 May and Nov.. .. Dry Dock* East River. Eighth Jan. and and July.. July.. Jan.’67 600,000 May and Nov.. Nov. ’66 67 1^ 160,000 Jan. and July., ’66 1.500,000 Apr.and Oct.. '66 200,000 Apr and Oct. '66. 300.000 Jan. and July.. ’67. 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. $216,164 543 Greenwich* Grocers’ 1,500.000 [Jan. Importers & Trad... Irving . LeatherManufact’rs. Long Isl (Brook.) Manhattan* .. 252,000 Apr. and Oct.. 500,000 Jan. and July.. 400,000 Jan. and July.. 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. Manufacturers’ Manufac. & Merch.*. Marine Market 2,000,000 |Jan. and July.. Mechanics’ Mechanics’ (Brook.). Mech. Bank. Asso... Meehan. & Traders’. Mercantile Merchants’ Merchants’ Exch— 500,000 Jan. and July.. 500,000 May and Nov,. 600,000 Jan. and July.. 1,000,000 May and Nov.. 3,000,000 [June and Dec. 1,235,000 Jan. and July.. 4,000,000 -Tan. and July.. Metropolitan Nassau*... (Brooklyn) . National New York New York County.. NewYorkExchange. Ninth North America North River* Ocean Oriental* Decrease. Decrease. Increase.. Decrease. Decrease. 203,709 1 35,455 60.462 284,906 8,243 . Pacific Park Peoples’* condition of the Philadel- Nicholas’ Seventh Ward. ...:. Second Shoe & Leather .... Sixth State of New York.. Tenth. . Third Tradesmen s Union and July.. 500.000 [Jan and July.. 600,000 Feb. and Ang.. 400,000 Feb. and Ang.. 2,050,000 Feb. and Ang.. * ..... Wl&ABSBbwgOit**, .-w. 40 50 W 1,000,000 (Jan. and July. 300,000 Jan. and July.. 1,500,000 April and Oct.. 3,000,000 [Jan. and July.. 200,0001 April and Oct.. 300,000 Jan. and July.. 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 400,000 Jan. and July.. 1,000,0001 Jan. and July.. 300,000 Feb. and Ang.. 422,700 Feb. and Aug. 2,000.000 Jan.and July.. 412,500 Jan. and July.. 1,800.000 Jan. and July.. 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug.. 1,000,000 Feb. and Ang.. 600,000 Jan. and July. 800,000 May and Nov . 1,500,0001 Jan. and July. 200,000 May and Nov.. 2,000,000 May and Nov.. 1,000,000! Jan. and July.. 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 1.000,000 Jan. and July.. 1.500,OQOjMay and Nov.. l50G OQOjJsiL and July. 170 5 5 109 5 6 5 6 . Gallatin St. 5 . Republic Decrease. Jan. ’67.”....10 3U Jan. ’67 '.5 Jan. '67 Jan. '67 5 Jan. ’67 6 Nov. ’66 10 Jan. ’67 10 5,000,000 Jan. Phcenix Increase.. Jan. ’67....5&32I Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 4 Nov. ’66 .5 115 6 Jan. ’67.. Jan. ’67 6 Jan. ’6? 5 Jan. ’67 12 5 Jan. '67 Jan. '67..4&2%tf2 Jan. ’67 5 Nov. ’66 6 Jan. '67 6 Jan. ’67 8 6 Jan. ’67 5 Jan. '67 Nov. '66 6 ....5 Jan. '67 Jan. '67 5 112 200,000 Fifth First First (Brooklyn). .. . . Fourth. Fulton. Far. & Cit.(Wm’hg). Bid. Ask Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 .. Nassau Last Paid. Periods. . Chatham Fribat. Dividend. . Hanover $202,517,608 $63,246,370 LI8T. . (Brooklyn).. Currency r. 857,100 average Capital Central STOCK . Bull’s Head* Butchers & Drovers Central 800,968 1,545,200 the totals for a series 40,-24,618 24,580.367 40,216,216 24,997,446 100,000 Jan. and July 600,000 Jan. and July.. 5,000,000 May and Nov.. 800,000 Jan. and July.. 600,000 Jan. and July.. 259,000 Jan. and July. 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 300,000 Jan. and July.. 200,000 Quarterly.... 800,000 Jan. and July 3,000,000 May and Nov 200,000 Jan. and July 450,000 Jan. and July 800,000 Quarterly 400,000 Jan. and July.. 1,000,000 May and Nov., 300,000 Jan. and July., 10,000,000 Jan. and July. 750,000 Jan. and July., 2,000,000 Jan. and July.. . (Brooklyn). 250,053 911,100 10,S60 15,a55 180,000 Legal Tenders 818,409 816,342 315,140 313,562 312,664 , 811‘749 41,SOI,496 24,666,860 3,000,000 Jan. and July.. City) Corn Exchange* .j Croton 322,035 Deposits. « State. $320,864 40,971,613 24,654,346 17,038,272 18,090,512 17,033.387 Amount Brooklyn 561,07.5 509.639 747,786 ® Broadway $486,977,787 18 605,132,063 04 19,769.003 09 Circula- Loans. Dec. 1.. $263,011,668 Dec. 8 260.620,027 Dec. 15.. 258,45:,330 Dec. 22.. 258,255,514 Dec. 29.. 259,354,761 Jan. 6.'67 257,852,460 Jan. 12.. 258,935,488 Atlantic Atlantic Bowery 2,234,806 1,076,7 0 2,536,402 the returns of the previous of weeks 16,688,280 40,958,922 24,650,482 16,561,2S8 41 042,063 24,671,197 Capital. American American Exchange. 226,278 4,0*8,715 3,354,63n • Loans . j National.) America* America (Jer. 1,292,838 4,068,891 3,237,351 ending Jan. 5, 1867 ending Jan. 12, 1867.. lows: not 358,250 380,865 • •- (Marked thus * are 391,715 771,942 518,128 1,169,000 323,000 758,5(H) 806,267 256,93b 7,182,139 5, 1867. 12, 1267 *4,666,860 318,66* Circulation. . 98,461,7781,334,300 16,829,495 Companies. 2,028,971 388,915 12,544,882 1,003,027 last week. Clearings for the week ending Jan. Clearings for the week ending Jan. 97,009,3421,183,451 BANK 345,601 563,000 269.128 $268,935,488 $14,613,477 $32,825,103 Totals 17 24 31 7 ’67.. 14 Jan. 589,083 234,107 746,661 1,125,484 12.651,224 27o,000 924,830 448,915 795,000 106,170 22,100 72,989 18,683 2,548,600 224,569 1,281,196 640,740 ■ 307,125 ' 6,146 28,663 9(54,265 National... as 1,060,120 14,846 3,146,494 Exchange... Same 98,651 504, (k>3 O 1 ^ Tenth National.... Dry Dock Ball’s Head Croton 33,219 113.070 99,062,641 539,364 99.127,027 597,902 98,958,672 582,112 99,033,673 589,137 10...... 1,010,246 1,123,442 1,57*,292 1,322,720 4,636,605 18,466,465 1,215,208 1,552,301 1,142,971 707,855 290.000 • . Legal 3 Dec. 1,854.041 6,116,275 1.’>66,047 945,403 950,418 529,311 3,793,560 3,144.078 2.179.793 8.041,763 550,131 231,76.0 14,936 1-’7,557 5,5S5,544 National Third National.... • ~ 14 034,934 Grocers’.. North River East River Manuf. & Merch’ts Fourth National... Central Second National... Ninth National.... 23,519 10.867 191.245 71,292 10.577 1,263,727 1,934,706 1,455,713 Bank’g As’n 9:>4,9o3 are 1 422,565 1.756,515 755,255 88,179 58,249 41,801,496 24,5*0,367 312,664 the comparative totals for a series Specie. Tenders. Deposits. National. $99,446,166 1601,502 $16,640,798 $41,089,605 $24,593,237 597,978 156,091 838,020 331,003 3,774,945 1.928.793 1,216,438 2,283,926 1,525,905 1.676,000 6,103,26.) 1,322,725 1,813.468 2,026,039 1,272,965 553,817 40,824,618 18,090,51* 12,6€ j«158 13,534.118 638.357 2,636,936 824,887 4,2-20,426 6,054,105 8,244,576 5,514,940 2,637,323 6.181,190 140,042 4,448 97,177 74,123 $41,900,000 99,033,678 689,137 24,997,446 311,749 : 210,108 967,469 2,209,304 247,229 21,047 4,292,650 3.832,899 . 1 17,000 following Dec. SI. $41,900,000 97,009,342 1,183,451 17,003,387 Loans. ’939,694 1,844,271 129,183 7,024 339,780 291,917 ’191,062 past 1,102,850 1,383,168 1,871,000 177,596 46,696 Atlantic Imp. & Traders... N. Y. 1,301,710 797,067 137,712 Marine -*-r 463,712 24,379,118 6,321,532 3,380,294 3,512.079 1,962.424 Oriental First 18,153 192.000 9,635,956 Market* 18,919 ' 40,246,216 * The the two previous 13,844,823 14,757,289 12,786,5:38 14,516,929 Circulation (National) Circulation (State) 981,058 2,010.’)49 2,018,514 4,859,132 2,855,023 853,752 743,634 Deposits 1,174,904 1,199,966 1,004,640 1,013.364 1,206,866 789,161 526,537 3,117,930 2,633,120 • 270,912 40,921 l,6r0,000 11,218,399 1,350,672 2,361,160 2,671,277 2,767,089 5,640,100 Nassau • 175,000 5,002 2,532,690 ....... .. • 20,745 5,953 1,889,906 Metropolitan • 496,825 246,565 1,352,160 Citizens’ 1 233,816 435,858 26,575 203,985 689,264 53,066 102,666 987,444 5,810,115 900,000 Chatham Irving 2,160 292,445 1,612,546 791.759 People’s North America.... Hanover 464,530 10,575,862 “ Republic • 259,592 220,551 1.334,409 -16,870,495 Due from other hanks Due to other banks $3,066,810 4,882,346 3,*68,629 2,742.695 7,390,405 98,461,778 Loans Specie Legal tender notes Tenders. 4,527,031 12,741 789,056 564,763 661,443 1,062,968 197,631 64,807 4 $7,337,215 $771,199 Boston Na¬ specie, and a Jan. 7. Jan. 14. $41,900,000 Capital Legal Net deposits. tion. Specie. $2,793,827 5,811,678 4.366,135 8,652,832 4,112,258 3,891,214 2,806,645 2,045,242 5,364,977 3,475,946 2,726,843 2,290,734 1,748,371 1,180,570 3,368,840 Mechanics’ Park Mech. Average amou: Circula- Loans and discounts. legal tenders. following are the footings compared with The Associated Banks of the City of New York tor the ending with the commencement of business on Saturday* Jan. 12, 1867 : an 41,308,327 41,023,421 10,388,820 10,380,577 last weekly statement of the increase in loans, an increase in Deposits. $42,102,289 41,462,539 40,728,902 40,411,158 89,706,062 decrease in other 41% 41% 78% 72% condition of the week 860,111 867,647 903,663 903,820 52,312,317 52,528,491 20,209,064 20,006,255 10,021,587 10,161,601 10,257,544 10,825,154 851,915 854,989 Boston Banks.—The shows the City Banks.—The following statement New York Specie. Circulation. $876,751 $9,615,989 Legal Tenders. Loans. $21,057,343 $54,549,367 20,488,386 61,250,352 20,115.704 51,256,937 19,677.,il 61,539,821 19,777,051 51,759,765 Date. Dec. 1 Dec. 8 Dec. 15 Dec. 22 Dec. 29 Jan. 5 '67 Jan. 12 following are the closing quotations for the several classes of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : Jan. 18. The London Comm’l. do bkrs’ Ing do do sArt aria, Ion 79 THE CHRONICLE. 19,1867.] i January 67.4&2 3-10J • • • .... • • • .... • • • .... • • «... • • • • • • • • • • • ’66. ..: ...5 6 ’66. 190 5 ’66. 5 ’66. 100 ’66. 5 '67. 6 ...-. ’67 5 ’67. 5 115 ’67. 6 ’67. 5 ’66. 5 ’67 ’66. 5 ’6T 5 ’67. 6 125 ’67. ;.5 ’67. 121 i.B '67. :.s 109 66. 5 116 ? ’67. ’6r. .9&g2% 6 ’67. 5 '67. 6 ’67. 6 ’67. 105 5 ICO '67. 6 ’66. ’66. ..5&* 165 150 7 ’67. 5 ’66. 106 ’67. 4*-ear ’66. .5&5ex U6% c ’66 5 ’67. 5 109% ’65 6 110 ’67. 6 105 ’65 108 5 106 '66 5 ’67 5 ’67 ’67 7% 149 .... • • • .... • • • .... • • • ... . . ... .... • • • • • • • • • • .. • . • • .... • • • • .... .... • • • • • • * - - .... . • • • ioi* ‘ .... • • •. • • • • * * • , • • • . . . .... .... . ... . .... • • • • • • • • .... • Nov ’66 ’6T . ...6 . f*M * t f ♦ • • JSC 4 V [January 19,1867, THE CHRONICLE 80 SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOQK EXCHANGE. ENDING FRIDAY, JANUARY 18.) (REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPOSTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK AND STOCKS Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. 134 American Gold Coin (Go/s Boom) Wed. Tues. Thors. FrL 1136% 134% 135% 135% 137 do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do ;v -*do do do do do do do do registered. 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 1868 coupon. registered. 1868 1881 coupon. 108% 1881 registered. 105% 108% 5-20s (1st issue)—coupon. 107% 107% 107% registered. 5-20s 5-20s (2d issue) coupon 105% 105?4 do 6.20s registered 5.20s (3d issue) coupon 105% 105% registered l j — 6.208, do 5.20s (new issue)... c -upon. 105% 104% 104% . 5.20s do registered 104% 104% 6s, Oregon Wac 1881 do. G yearly) 6b, do. coupon. 58, 1871 5s, 1871 registered 102% 6s, 1874 coupon. registered. 5b, 1874 99% 5s, 10-40s coupon. 99% 5s, 10-40s registered. 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. (cur.). 7-30s Treas. Notes 1 siseries. 104% 104% il04% do do do 2d series 104% 104% 104% do do do ....3d series' 104%' 104% 1<'8 108 108 108 ) Jersey .... Chicago and Alton .. • . do preferred do Chicago, Burlington and Quincy 108 . .. >! 111 91% 91 — — j 106% 1106% 104% 104% :104% 77 99% 104% do do 2d '. Registered, 1860 6s, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62-65-70. preferred. — —- 86 —- — 107% 107% 106% 106% 106% 107 89% 79% 79% 79% 78% 78 ruaranteed. do do — 1st pr 2d pr< — do 1877 do do 1879 War Loan do Ohio and do 110X 115 94 6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)... 6s, (Pacific RR) New York 7s, 1870 do 99 6s, 1867-77 do 5b, 1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty Bonds (coupon).. do do do do (registered) NorthCarolina 6s x do 6s, (new) Ohio 6s,1870-75 do 6s, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 6s 1868 do 6s 1890 do 6s, (new) Virginia 6s, coupon 3% 93 80 — do do Sixth avenue 99% 99% 52% 100 66% 66% 66% 65 65% 65% 65% •65% 65 58 59 Miscellaneous Shares CM.—American Ashburton Butler Cameron Central Consolidated Cumberland Delaware and Hudson Lehigh A Susquehanna Pennsylvania Spring Mountain 59 . : 63 70 Wyoming Valley Gar.—Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) Harlem 88 92 x!46 90 140 142 50 60 20 100 Cary 100 49% 49% I—Western Union 100 46% Vestem Union, Russian Extension. 100 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 100 109 Pacific Mail 100 168% S. Am. Nav. & Mar. Railway 100 117% Union Navigation 100 108% 49% 47% 46% 46% 46% 46% 46% 46 96% 96% 107% 110 * 108% 168 108 167 166% 163 108 117% 117% 116 107% 108 107% 100 ...» New York Life and Tru-t Union Trust United States Trust 162 100 25 100 100 100 100 67 70 500 .100 100 67 67 98% 66% 12% do do Cleveland and do do 1 84 Toledo, Sinking Fund dWe Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort. " 91 , onvr — — ' de do do - 2d mort 1C1 100 Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880, do 5tb mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended do 2d mortgage do Great Western, 1st mortgage — 69% Joseph, 1st Mortgage do — — 2d mortgage do — 99% *. 100 98 90 69 — 68% — im - 103 — McGregor Western, 1st mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage... Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort... Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage — z_ — — . 96 91% — — ' 88 88 2d mortgage Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage 12% do do 30% St. 43 83% 81 — 95 !.. 96% 96 96 94% — — -• 1876 .03 • . Consolidated Copper... 15 25 100 48% 25 10 84 3d mortgage, conv 4th mortgage >-tL Mississippi, 1st mortgage. Peninsula, 1st mortgage Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort.. 30% 98% E consolidated.,.,. New York Central 6s, 1883.. do do 6s, 1887 do do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, convertible, d" do 7s, 1865-76 New York and Ne^ Haven 66% 65% 32 ! 88% Ohio and 100 100 100 50 43% 48% 43% 43. ‘ do Consolidated and Sinking Fund do 2d mortgage, 1868 Hndson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885 do 3d mortgage, 1875 do ' convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Lackawanna and Western Bonds 100 Canton Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust 44 Interest Extension 1st mortgage Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1S69-72 Williamsburg 1 ransit.—Central American do do do do 100 25 20 New York 260 99% 96% Income Hannibal and Sr. 50 100 ImprowemenL.—Boston Water Power Brunswick City do 100 20 Manhattan Metropolitan 26% • Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking iTund.... do 50 Jersey City and Hoboken do do 10 Wilkesbarre 10C 5C 50 Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage Chicago. R. I. and Pacific, 7 j er cent........ Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage 50 10 50 100 100 100 100 26% 27 261 1C 2% 102% 101% Western, 1st mort. Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877... w Jersey, 1st mortgage Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund. do do 1st mortgage do do do do 60 50 100 Spruce Hill Quicksilver Rutland Marble fimtti nd Parmelee 108~ Atlantic and Great 90 63 27 100 : Stohington 95 100 27 "Central of N New York 7s do 6s do 5s. New Jersey Quart* Hill 115 Railroad Ronds: Municipal: Wells, Fargo & Co Mining.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Minnesota Copper 108% 108% 108% 67 do Toledo, Wabash and Western... do do ' do preferred 66 6s, Water Loan 6s, Public Park Loan 6s, Improvement Stock Jersey City 6s, Water Loan American Merchants Union United States 61 105% 104% 104% 104% 103% 108 38% 38 98 93% 93% 100 x 93% 79% 105% 105% 105% 54% 54% 54% 54% 54 53% do do do Express.—Adams 109 115 27% Mississippi Certificates do do preferred. 103 do do Nicaragua 61 63 ■ —£ do 7b, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s Brooklyn 6s 47% 63% — 62 do do preferred Morris and Essex. New Jersey New York Central New York and New Haven Louisiana 6s 63% 35 do do do Milwaukee and St. Paul Michigan 6s - 64% 64% 75% — Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 _ 65% 75% — do do Indiana bs, War Loan do 5s - ' 90 122% — 7b (new) Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do do do do do 110% 89% 57 > Georgia 6s - Uoc% >131 125% 125% 126% 126 125% 20% 120% 120 >119% 119% 120 Indianapolis and Cincinnati Joliet and Chicago. Long Island. McGregor Western. talifornia 7s Connecticut 6s 79% 98% — preferred do 42 79% — 99% V1 104% 104% 104 j.u'aT-g 104% 104% 42% -125% 125 — Harlem do 65% 75% 64% Eiie do preferred.. Hannibal and St. Joseph do do j 90% 91% >125% 125% State: do 181 43* 43% 42% 81% 80% 80 192% 102% 102 101% Chicago, Rock Island and i?. Pacific... 105% —— 131 ) ) ) 43% ) 81% referred: do 108% -111 — ) 107% 101% do — 109% 109 )jl09 . do do do do do do do do do do do do do do ♦do do do do do do Fit Railroad Stocks : Central of New National: United States 6s, 1867 Wad. Thun. Tum Mon. Satur STOCKS AND SECURITIES. . 42% 42% 42% 41 do do do do — 1 01 94% 2d mort... 3d mort... Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort do do. do 2d, pref.... .. -do do do 2d, income. Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. do do 2d. mortgage Mariposa (Gold) 1st mortgage — 91 i — 76 93 77 —— THE CHRONICLE. January 19,1867.] Exports of Leading Articles from New York. COMMERCIAL EPITOME. Friday Night, Jan. 18. & :2 : : ; 2 CO N © .igSSSSSS-SgSg o€5«h wsfi-nVco'®’ * *55 * ■ ' 2 d generally unsatisfactory ^tha^/Ts^the an¬ g ~ ticipations that were formed have not been realized. The .5S £b g The advance in gold, on exciting political rumors from Wash¬ g 4 ington, has not been responded to in the markets. There is even more doubt and distrust of the future than in the really tO tp © 1-4 CO • 32,42 *ocoo ’««V Trade has been period of December. change. Tobacco has been fairly active. Provisions, especially pork and hcg products* have been doing better. The advance in gold and better foreign ad¬ vices have led to an improved business for export. About 3,000 tierces of lard have been taken for the Liverpool mar¬ ket at 12f@13^e. per pound, and shipped by steamer at 25s. per ton, closing quiet at the advance. Bacon has been taken for export, but very moderately., Mess pork has advanced fully $1 a barrel, and the general trade in hog products has £ 32 o b < £ ® a u « Tallow is In Oils, we slightly firmer. to • Tf co owt* ■Nf • : 2 :8 : •NION :*°8 • • ■o : ■—X : :88 : : CO ... : co. • • • ■ ( h t-ci t- iWt-» QO g t-i * SiS JO Cj O M a ■JL ;| -• O C_> s — fs 32 5 mco'fcio xj» . • • • • t- O' -r<(N COCO t- CO —I N • ©©.—< .^na . ’Mho • ttco X}* . CO CO a to St to © •OSi-t to St ■ •eS co©©1-1 §5cSco b • 33 o ■ © © ® w ~ .xt< o 't-oci • co co « • • r-t • . aooetbNco • • n 55 CO • i . co.. —i . • a • .© oo 5 ©io ^ io« iwao ‘S' HH • —■ to . • c- St . *8 o nn N t- m gallon, with v PS more o • CD 03 . 39 os c- • a o <?* - :8 2 - C3 IN Q m 0D 53 2 £ w Other oils have been quiet a HH £ Ci. XI P o a barrel. .co . o lO ’8“ cS a m Metals, without exception, have been dull and week from various influences, such as the uncertainty about the tariff', the stagnation of trade, and want of speculative confidence. Fruits and fish, at some decline, have been doing rather no new features. Manufacturers are buying steadily but cautiously. The fate of the proposition before Congress to increase the tariff on foreign wools is very doubt¬ tO S O , o. o * W >> s g ® • oS a :g :« • • :S :8 ■© t- • o • o • active; rates for the principal and at the close the room in the The shipments to Great Britain the past week embrace about 350,000 bushels grain, and 5,000 packages Lard, Bacon and Beef. The shipments of Cotton have been less liberal. Some Tobacco is going to the Con¬ ^ • cs Tj' • to n :§ ' in 1 - • t- • . .f-IO •r-t • .©-n . . .co -TP • I- 00 ’ . . •« p *o —' ca i"H ■ GO •fife ao Cj o © lb o t© .wiooaH® CO • « * • co >o CO o >-< XT' ©_io cs co .© • • • of ‘t^CC tecs'coos' PQ n C- ■© .COCDOsNOS • oo © co 20 ^o ■ T-( T-t 06 • • • 'of * tO CO • CO ■ CO © © 00 © CO © CT©_ |th • N co_o ’n • cfcf ^ C- N n — c3 ® £ © OkT . v — —i i. _ T-I 32 a ® J tj-M C t! • a, cj aj O ® flSr" fa s a 32 • 2 f3— g £ ° «0 ^ • “ tuns ® « siailis* |2 S3 C b 32 M Cm O ^ V fTS o 0 =1 M ■*3 i £ - OCO © © •«h®o • CO t—( CO N ocfco * ^ tinent. following table shows the exports of leading articles of com¬ merce from the port of New York since January 1, 1867, the principal ports of destination, and the total for the same period in 1866. The expert of each article to the several ports jot the past week can be ob¬ tained hy deducting the amount in the last number of the Chroniglk from that here given : •Crf t- CO ■ • os cJ very • • as British ports are higher, berth is quite reduced. t- *2. ’rr : eo n ■CON tin COen ■COC{ • • ’t4 ■« N % M W © :8 ; a ful. Freights have been ‘8 & 6 better. : i-t • ^ O Kt-t- E< and unchanged. Naval Stores have been depressed by large receipts and stocks, and the absence of export orders. Fine Rosins, how ever, have sold moderately for export at $5 50 to $8 50 The : : : 3 5S a notice sales of about 1,100 bbls. Crude Sperm Wool shows co a* 32 J export at $2 60, which is firmer. Linseed Oil has been sold in whole lots at $1 14@$1 15 per gallon, but closes per n a} <* for firmer. ■ §■§8 » ). . •© :3 : ■c packing season is about closed with 170,000 hogs, against ' ' 85,000 last season. -. Beef of all kinds has been selling moderately at steady prices, and Bqtter and Cheese are without important change. Hides are in very reduced stock and firms. Leather is business. £ CQ the Petroleum has advanced one cent per si io co si a xf CO ■ packing at the West proceeds briskly. At Cincin¬ nati, last week, the receipts of live hogs were 42,784; pre¬ viously reported 340,832, total this season 383,616, same time last season 325,670. At Chicago last week the receipts of hogs were: dressed 51,940, live 61,583, total 113,528. For the corresponding week last year the receipts were: dressed 51,020, live 20,441, total 77,461. The packing to the present time approximates to 382.381 hogs, against about 202,995 head to the same period last year. At Louisville -• ’ -a Pork ^ Nt-5 o been brisk. w © N iO © ~ L- © OC OS <© fc- 1 Groceries have without essential ; - ? n^c n n o©rr_ •£ Cotton and breadstuff's have been dull. quiet.. co eo eo o •w © co co 1 duller Nsc«>iaoo:oN^£*'-N»oso©©co lOW'HOQOQ®®® ow*®o “ .* fHritemeteiocoo Cu; iooo«0( • go' Imports of Loading Articles. 1, 1867, and for the corresponding period in 1866 : - - usual since 127 212 Same time 1866. 313 794 Coni, tons 541 Cocoa, bags... 20,488 Coffee, bags Cotton, bales. Drugs, &c. 363 Bark, Peruv 278 Blea p’wd’ri 97 Brimst, tns. 1,665 2,824 8'*1 597 For Buttons .... • • Cochineal... ... 80 , , 6 ,, • 212 142 4 Madder 61 Oils, ess,„. 745 Oil, Olive... 24 Opium Soda, bi-carb 4,665 Soda, sal.... 1,045 885 8oda, ash... . • 889,864 8,178 19,677 325,716 1,228 1,431 1,899 Rags Sugar, 331.500 hhds, 2,105 1,581 4,962 328 3,852 4,0.29 10,011 2,245 3.l>n7 8,?49 1.986 2,710 951 1,051 292 2,876 4,918 4,838 1,121 1,254 4.075 165 2,269 849 3,915'Wool, bales... 47jArticles reported by value. $14,458 $83,077 5,S28 Cigars $5,987 2,420 4,581 1,031 2,965 Corks 733 Fancy goods. .105,758 185,062 121,313 12.319 8:34 Fish 41.200 30,700 327 Fruits, <!fcc. 4.665 1,045 1,037 21 2,730 2.730 99 9» 997 307 1,104 2,962 10,229 65 ' 1 SHIP¬ MENTS TO SINCE PORTS. SEPT. Jan. 11. Mobile, Jan. 11 — Charleston, Jan. 11. Savannah, Jan. 11.. Texas, Jan. 4 New York, Jan. IS*. Florida, Jan. 11+ N. Carolina, Jan. 18 N. Orleans, Great 1. 139,893 73,885 109,028 61,795 40,361 22,801 20,418 9,982 18,596 4,709 119,888 • . 18,596 5,966 135,405 J. 1,257 3,042 12,475 .... • • • • .... • • • # . 1 .... • 8,912 8,873 888,851 315,483 36.575 .... . 41,854 261 9,134 24,776 376,834 - .... . .... .... .... .... .... The market this week has . .... .... X , 127,304 219,543 85,699 79,241 41,295 20,023 70,591 27,849 14,498 87,167 120,000 16,107 2,327 20,418 20.604 .... .... STOCK. PORTS. 151,598 35,331 801 20 20,784 41.&54 NORTH. Total. for’gn. 108,103 88,513 84,530 370,404 Total France Other Britain r Virginia, Jan. 18... Other p’ts, Jan. 18* 5,514 7,019 36,516 19,976 TO— rec’d ‘ 9.960 Lemons Sept. 1, and Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Stocks at Dates Mentioned. EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. tes & bbls.. Tea 745 Tobacco 114 Waste 200 Wines, &c. 632 Champ, bkts 383 Wines stocks, &c.: 13,052 Sugar, bxs&bg .... • 22 61 Flax. Furs Gnnny cloth • 967 262 142 4 265 747 24 867 Gums, crude Gum, Arabic Indigo Steel 7,471 14 979 Tiu, bxs Tin slabs,lbs 61,583 11,719 18,686 831,500 11,538 25,657 129,451 Spelter, lbs. 235 539 39 69 10 612 535 97 Same time 1866. 317 Since Jan. 1, 1867. 679 For the week. 458 6.998 Lead, pigs.. 10,521 83 • 30 5 Cr Tartar Gambier.... Hardware... Iron.RRb’rs 23,725 63,195 .. • Since Jan. 1, 1S67. now bales for the same . [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] the week. amount to 376,834 bales, against 470,708 period last year. Below we give our table of the movement of Cotton at all the ports Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, September 1 - The following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port for the week ending Jan. 11, since Jan. ••••' ... $50,000 367,766;556,150 been rather irregular, being in¬ by the decline in prices in Liverpool and the fluctua¬ gold. In the early part of the week there was con¬ 260.466 26 12 195,475 Bristles 427 8,577 209 Hides.dres’d siderable activity, but on Tuesday prices declined to 34c. for 623 Spices, &c. 112 3,117 India rubber.. 13.303 178 18,510 Cassia 31 7 Ivory..; Middling Uplands, with some sales at lower figures. On 114 809 V36 Ginger Jewelry, &c. 37 3,302 27 17 Pepper Jewelry Wednesday the rise in gold caused an advance to 34^-c., and 44 Saltpetre..... 47 4,076 24 Watches.... 28.518 10,3351 Woods. there was a further advance to 35c. from same cause on Linseed 20,003 697 Fustic 8,7S4 1.402 764 1,935 Molasses 7.127 5,819 Thursday, at which the market closes firm but business is Metals, &c. Logwood ... 5,795 8.473 906 1S1 255 1,333 143 Mahogany., Cutlery somewhat restricted by the storm and the firm views of holders. The sales of the week are about 11,300 bales. The following Receipts of Domestic Produce for tlic Week, and since January 1. are the closing quotations: N. Orleans The receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Jan. 18, since Upland. Florida. Mobile. & Texan Hair Hemp, bales.. Hides, &c. Oranges .... 2,657 3 6,115 Nuts Raisins 2,214 88 Hides, nndrsd .205.305 613: Rice 25,950 74,369 fluenced tions in .... Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1866, have been as follows ; [Of the items left blank in 1866 no record was made.] Samel This Since This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66. week. Jan. 1. time’66' 14.696 23,464 3631 Rosin 6,40S 203 104 Ashes, pkgs.., 5,738 2,683 j Tar 430 dreadstufts— 82 510 75.3071 Pitch 411 Flour, bbls.. 82.043 83,259 4,951 5,030 30,250 Oil cake, pkgs 1,460 Wheat, bush. 1,534 1,5:34 211 125 92,791'Oil, lard „ Com 61,437 102 810 S8,852 66,847 92,744 Oil, Petroleum. 7,611 Oats 36,420 63,700 605 25n Peanuts, bags. 1.263 274 Rye 700 450 19.tnK) Provisions— Malt 10,210 31,970 712 Butter/pkg.s. 12,153 36.048 25,1 0 Barley..2,915 13.240 26.736 1.640 102 1,213 Grass seed... Flaxseed.... Beans Peas C. meal,bbls. 500 C. meal.baas. 21,727 Buckwheat & B.W. flour,bg 1,611 Cotton; bales .. 5,332 9,267 750 7,933 1,500 350 194 691 461 2/4 1,191 274 Driedfruit.pkgs Grease, pkgs... 760:Stearine 453;Spelter, slabs... 6l6;Sugar, hhd3 & 2111 bols 90lTallow, pkgs... 16,671 j Tobacco, pkgs.. 532 Tobacco, hhde... Hemp, bales... 102 Hides, No 1,012 11,639 Hope, bales. .. 843 139 33,463 103,627 Leather, sides 114,112|Whiskey, bbls.. . Lead, pigs Molasses, hhds and bbls Naval Stores— .,.. trp,bbl 67 Soixitft turp.. 1,201 Crude 416! Wool, bales IDressed Hogs, 1,389! No — 1,057 .10,106 Pork 1,243 Beef, pkgs. ... 24,610: Lard, pkgs.... | Lard, kegs.... 1,594 Rice,‘pkgs 59,903 Starch 617 2,413 iRice, 2.495 29.957 3.339 9.760 218 242 6,705 3,947 * 2,397 2,880 6,298 ‘418 1.430 754 358 515 33 1.264 6,849 141 113 Middling./. 128 268 62 544 2.113 660 £4 605 1(0 1,575 382 27,577 31,407 428 1, 1866; previous year : Exports of Cotton receipts of cotton at all the ports this slight increase, amounting, however, to only The week show a 69,504 bales (against 61,280 bales last week, and 77,554 bales the previous week, and 86,898 bales two weeks since), making the total receipts since September 1, this year, 88S.85L bales, against 416,796 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The exports from all the ports this week amount to 49,701 bales (against 44,425 bales last week), of which 44,186 bales were to Liv¬ erpool, 204 bales to Glasgow, 3,179 bales to Havre, 1,254 bales to Bremen, 651 celona, as Exported this week to From New York Boston New Orleans Savannah... **. Mobile Liver- Glas- pool. 14,640 2,741 16,799 6,570 gow. 204 Havre, 491 .... 2,6S8 1,254 .... Bar- 204 863 c: 3,179 ..... 227 651 . 1,254 661 227 16,589 2,741 20,365 6,5^0 3,436 49,701 from Mis .United States since « • • • 4,722 7,567 Jan. to 15. date. 14,640 117.515 178,925 4,020 204 2,873 10,660 14,844 119,888 182,945 8,042 491 316 284 .... — Same time prev. year. 1,122 9,538 4,722 6,704 Other British Ports Jan. 8. Jan. Dec. 25. Liverpool .... .... .... 9,290 8 491 8,042 9,298 1,254 6,923 3,416 7,276 6.099 89 11,615 9,399 860 602 7 660 609 i135,4 5 202,25 Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the and since Sept. 1 : week 284 Total French 316 . 825 Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar • 486 825 . . • . . ! 1,073 . 1,254 1,559 829 • « » • r .... — 8,676 Grand Total This week. 6,867 j 12,219 | .... j 36,589 This week. Since Sept. 1' Bales. Bales. 2,882 69,258 11,996 1,712 3,341 67,373 1,149 15,321 9,679 8,911 ' ... Total Spain, etc Total for the week Total since Sept. 1 • • • .... All others Mobile Florida • .... Total to N. Europe.. From • • 829 Bremen and Hanover Hamburg Other ports Savannah . Genoa, celona. Total. „ Tfee total foreign osports Bremen. 3,43G Total this week..., 44,186 - EXPORTED TO New Orleans Texas , 39 Total bales to Genoa, and 227 bales to Bar¬ follows: 36 38 (balds) from NewYork since Sept, 1,1866 Other French ports Friday, P. M„ Jan. 18, 1867. 35X 87 WEEK ENDING Havre ^ 35# 32 34 September and in the last column the total for the same period Total to Gt. Britain.. COTTON. 31 of Cotton 3,649 rough, 30 31 34 The exports of Cotton from New York this week show a further increase, amounting in all to 16,589 bales. The par¬ ticulars of these shipments are as follows : To Liverpool per steamers City of Baltimore. 844; Pennsylvania, 2.Q8S; Hibernia, 1,192; Australasian, 542; Chicago, 2,243 ; per ships Cultivator, 1,456; Palmer, 2,136 ; Southampton 2,220 ; Calhoun, 1,919. Total bales 14,640 To Gla-gow per steamer Hibernia, 204. Total bales 204 To Bremen per steamer Uausa, 1,254. Total bales 1,254 To Havre per steamer Poriere, 491. Total bales 491 Below we give our table showing the exports from New York, and their direction for each of the last four weeks ; also the total exports and direction since 5.861 769 4.865 6,932 2,475 9,741 30 31 33 36 Good Middime of the bush 2,6631 2,488 590 3,101 6,017 6,667 1,834 8,650 481 Eg#? 1,500 3,779 54,8*3 Copper, bbls... Copper, plates. 3,4 7 2,817 44,817 19,204 Cheese Cut meats.... ^ Tb 30 31. 33 35 Ordinary ...... Good Ordinary..c Low Middling Since Sept. 1. From Bales. Bales. -~ South Carolina 577 28,595 North Carolina 1.578 17,484 Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. 3.956 35,786 4.914 41,076 Per Railroad 97 Foreign 19.204 ... 286,670 The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee, Kentucky, <tec., not otherwise enumerated. t These are the receinu <*n the ports of Florida to January Ilf except * Apalachicola, which are only to December 29. $ 8iHss£ii4 The sioch at Saw York Ja also mU nvat&d, T Exports the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last two weeks, and since Sep¬ The following are tember 1: Two New Orleans Texas Savannah Since weeks. Sep. 1. 2,507 32,367 Receipts from— 842 24 Virginia Total receipt* 676 2,726 465 24.283 8.4S1 bal** 6,564 98,202 10,062 rCO There have been 6,147 cities the past two weeks, except from Boston, 1G,606 which 2.891 800 ... The were above 108,190 7,562 36,411 162 16 4 228 60 3,464 .. 229 1,030 299,410 50 41 143 7is 14 4i 3f'0 79 462 60 177,955 81,546 ais 84,222 558 1 33 231 763 244 502 341 112 1,286,658 75 45 260 623 1.309 62,870 66,906 v 175,731 818 60 6,152 2,262,809 229 1,889 1,192 143 2,731 which the following table indicates the ports from exports have been shipped : Bxs. & St< ms—, Lbs. Strips, pkgs. hhds bis. mant’d. Tc*. & From BostonLast week—To Liverpool, per steamer Java This week “ per ship Avalaache, steam* r 2,669 T’l since Ny. 1, ’66 26.017 follows: as 2,850 Italy Australia B. N. Am. Prov.. South America... West Indies E^st Indies Mexico All others of these exports of cotton from either no 1,058 Holland.. Africa, &c China, India, &c. Reshipments. * Belgium Mediterranean Austria 698 1,517 384 3,602 Spain, <fec 4,*067 325 353 811 1,335 2,4->7 9,014 1, 1866. ,—Stems—> Pkgs. Manfd, Cer’s & Bajes. tc*. Stps. hhds. bales. & bxs. lbs. Cases. Germany France 4,774 459 5,639 .... <fcc*., Tennessee, Kentucky, &c.... New York, 288 3,509 241 469 8,173 15,589 36 3,005 629 Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina 207 .... ... - T\vo weeks. Hhds. To Great Britain -Bnltimore.Since Two Since Sep. 1. weeks. Sep. 1. 618 4.7S3 United States since Novem¬ of Tobacco from the ber -Philad'phia.- ,—Boston.—, 83 CHRONICLE. THE January 19,1867.] Peruvian, 316 bales. 7S1 bales. 1,644 bales; per 1,960 Total '* 44 ——- 2,741 Making the total exports for the two weeks Hhds. Cases. Bales. From New York Baltimore Boston Portland New Orleans; “ 23 918 14 .13,200 4 6 20 2020 . 618 ... 2 939 3 ii Total since Nov. 1. .26,017 149 551 .. 21 Philadelphia New Orleans Jan 12—The mail returns for the week ending Jan 11 show the receipts to be ouly 25,019 bales, against 24,344 bales last 5,156 2.183 .10 800 erns. '.. 330 . • ... . 229 2.236,928 694 493 • 19,835 . 4 . 7,048 ... . 0,152 2,734 142 229 1,8S9 1,192 ... 2,262,809 Kentucky leaf opened tin’s week with the quite active, and poorly supplied with good samples of the new crop, and prices rather tending upward. The inquiry has been mainly for export, and the sales of old and new foot stock, price of middling rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week shoce Dec. 7, were as fol¬ up about 600 hhds., at prices in our range. The inclement lows : weather, and the almost impassable condition of our streets, -FreiglitsTo Liver- To New Price Price has checked business at the close, but prices are well sup¬ pool. York.* srold. Date. Recaps. Sales. Exp. Stock. Mid. %@ 9-16 1*@- 139' @Dec. 7.... 25,299 22,900 9,170 190,426 30 @31 ported. 9-16@ 1 *•:?'.— 137 @181% 14.... 31,979 40,000 25,408 198,708 32 @— “ Seed Leaf Tobacco has been fairly active and firm. Sales 9-16@ L@— 133J^@13o>4 21.... 37,764 32,800 19,806 218,643 32 @33 9-16@ 1J@— 13-;>4@132^ 28... 29.461 22,900 26,219 224,022 31 @— include 119 cases State, a running lot, at 84c.; 50 cases Con¬ 9-l(i@ll-16 @— 133^ @134 Jan. 4.... 24,344 32,050 31,163 218,491 38*®— 9-lb@— li@— 132#@133 11.... 25,019 18,900 26,227 219,543 32*@33 necticut, private terms; 32 cases, a mixed Jot,, 4@10e., and 150 cases Pennsylvania, various qualities, 2-*@8c. By steam. week, and 29,461 bales the previous week. The shipments for the last week were 26,227 bales, of which 16,799 bales were to Liverpool, 2,688 to Havre, 651 to Genoa, 227 to Barcelona, 4,086 to New York, 641 to Providence, and 1,135 to Boston. Stock on hand Jan. 12 was 219,643 hales. The receipts, sales and export*3 for a series of weeks, and the “ The market for demand — — “ — “ ♦ • . Business has not been active through the week, and hoidefs have Havana Tobacco has been in better demand, mainly for re¬ compelled to accept reduced rates to realize, middling closing at exportation. Sales 70 bales for consumption, on private 82-£@33. Sterling exchange is quoted nominally 1394@141 for bill of terms; 5ti0 bales for export, at 7c., gold, in bond. In Yura lading bills, 142@142£ for commercial, and 143^ for bank. we hear of no sales. Manufactured continues dull; some sales Mobile. Jan. 12.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates have been pressed at low and irregular prices. from Mobile. The receipts for the week ending Jan. 11 were 9,o08 KENTUCKY LEAP (HHD3.). bales, against 8,905 bales last week, and the shipments were 9,200 Ey. Light H’vv West. Ky. Light H’vy West. bales, of which 3,436 bales were to Liverpool, 605 bales were to New Leaf. & CrkevTo. eat. & Cf’ksv’le. York, 902 bales to Providence, 1,584 to Portland, and 1,308 bales to New Common Lues.. 4c@ 4%c. 10c @12 Good Leaf. 13 @l!>c @ 13 @14 Orleans, leaving the stock on hand and on shipboard, not cleared, of Good 16 @17 do ..4%@5 5c @ 5% Fine do Selections 15 @16 18 @20 6 @ 9 79,241 bales. The receipts for the corresponding week of last year Common Leaf. b%@, 7 Medium do ..5^@ 9 10 @12 were 16,702 bales, and the exports 17,489 bales. The following are the 6EED LEAF (BOXES). weekly receipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks, and the 5 ® 7c Conn.—Prime wrappers 40 @50c N. Y. State.—Fillers stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, Average “ 30 @-!0c Ohio.—Good running lots... ~%(&lQc and price of gold at the close of each week: Cora. “ to b’d’rs 10 @20c Average 5 @ 7c been < — — ..... ... —Freight • Date. Dec. 7 14 21 28 Price of To New To Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock* mid. L’pool. York. X IV® % 10.447 7,100 2,879 60,933 Fillers . Price of N. Y. gold. *• “ < “ “ 40 fine 44 60 “ 25 44 „ 5c. 70c. 40c. 75c. 45 44 60@ 75® 90® Good Fine 44 . ’ Friday, P. M., Jan. 18, 1867. ■ The 137,356 pounds last week. Baltimore New Orleans.:. be seen in the following Pkgs. .... * Below of s les. -.1 25@2 50 55@1 05 60 ^ Yar-a, average lots 70 2.886 .... 1 679 149 for EXPORTS 61,469 Liverpool - 130 150 61,469 106 3 137,366 we Jfoywsfeer 1, 1868} * • 1. 1866. T’l sin Previously-^ hhds. hhds. phi's. SINGE • 635 NOVEMBER 1.862 21,585 4S6 174 571 28 2,387 3,SSI 117 44 5,040 26,109 OV 1—, pkgs. 21,990 1,862 619 226 2,653 117 620 88 4,682 44 27,424 5,177 following are the exports of tobacco from New York the past week : Jbs. .... 166 238 100 Manfd give our usual table showing the total exports Tobacco from all the ports of the Unite*} gnd their faction, 60 The .... 2,004 s Total : /—Stems /—St( 38 62 Ohio, &c Other 61,469 pounds, against movement at all the ports Hhds. Case. Tierc. Bals. & bxs. hhds. 511 S99 166 100 150 1,097 30 8 163 .... Yara 145 43 00 417 Virginia the manufactured reached in all only Total last week... Havana.—Wrappers 85 95 YORK NEW AT * .... 70 /—This week—N hhds. pksrs. From *■ of tobacco from all the ports are small this week, ^mounting in the aggregate of crude tobacco to 2,004 hhds., 166 cases, 679 bales and 150 hhds. of stems, while Total this week... 15 j Bl ight Work, med.. “ 1 good & fine 44 receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since 1, have been as follows; RECEIPT8 The exports Boston , The •. Baltimore @ 4c FOREIGN. Havana.—Fillers—Common. TOBACCO. New York 3 .. Fine, tax paid. 80 | Black Work, med. in bond.. 12& g od & fine *• 20 paid. 25 @30c. good BrigH Work.com., good Nov. Exported from Filleis manufactured. !. for the week may @ 4c 6 @10c Penn.—Hnnninglot* State.—Wrappcry lots. 12 @18c Running “ 7 ®12c Black Work, com., tax Holders, however, are firm, believing that better prices must be realized when the limited nature of our crop is understood abroad. Middling cl isedat 81^. low middling 30^, good ordinary 29@H0. Sterling ex¬ change 189@ 41. 8 Fillers @ldc . 138 @1394 137 @138* 133 @135 132 @133 131 @1354 134 @135 1M"» V% 12,719 11,050 6,272 67,380 80@31 % .^43,899 16,500 v,938 71,841 32@— X 1%<& 1 Ds® IX ’.77 14,746 6,100 6,267 79,820 3 @— X Jau 4 6,905 14,500 9,257 77,46S 32*$ — % 11... 9,508 9,200 7,135 79,241 81% — X L*(2> IX There has been a fair demand through the week, but prices are some¬ what lower under the influence of unfavorable advices irom Liverpool. “ 7 London Bremen Lisbon Gibraltar Cuba TOBACCO mfd. hhds. C3. bis. bxs. lbs. 127 50 70 170 99 353 5,917 156 132 16,721 Hayti Other Westlnds *£»«*> OF ... ... .... a ... • „ ... ... ... ■ 4 I 4 ... ... 185 ... ... 11,902 FROM NEW YORK.* mfd. hhds. cs. bis. bxs. 60 Brit. N. A. Col British Guiana lbs. .... 26 Canary Islands.. 18 New Granada. A... Venezula — ... 277 ... 4 — — 4,050 5,8S6 1,062 — Total for week..899 166 511 ICO 61,469 15- [January 19, 1807. THE CHRONICLE. 84 New Orleans.—The receipts of the new crop are light, and have eold readily, while the stock on hand of the old crop is small and the desirable descriptions are selling well. The principal sales were 5 hhds. new leaf at 15 old at 7c., 1 new lugs at 4£c., 30 hhds. lngs at —, and one hhd. new low leaf at 6c., and 1 do 8£c. per pound. Receipts of the week 21 hhds. Kxports for the week : to New York 34 hhds.,. to Brazos Santiago 1 hhd, total 35 hhds. Stock 3,798 hhds. Maryland.—Receipts are email, and there is but little doing ou that account in Maryland pradee. Of the stock of this description in ware¬ houses on the 1st inst., but 5,100 hhds. were in first hands. In our annual statement the quantity thus held was given as 6,000 hhds. Of Ohio there have been sales the past week of 70 hhds., and of Kentucky we reporta sale of 29 hhds.. Mason County, terms not transpired. In¬ spections for the week were 157 hhds. Maryland, (of which 67 were reinspected,) and 14 hhds. Ohio. Shipments same time 1,097 hhds. leaf, composed of 955 Md., Ohio and Ky., 132 Va, and 150 do. stems to Rotterdam. Prices are steady. Kentucky.—At Louisville the tobacco sales continue light at firm prices, and, until the receipts are more liberal, transactions in this department will be small, though at this season more inactivity is usual than any other. The stocks on hand are gradually disappearing, while buyers are plenty for all good-conditioned manufacturing leaf, at full bbls. bbls. Gt. Britain, since Jan. 1 ...» Br. N, A. Col.... since Jan. 1 We>*t Turtle* since Jan. 1 Total exp’t, week since Jan. 1 time, 1866. same Since Jan. .... 2,076 ' .... 1,203 719 2,228 729 6,114 9,284 9,781 1,143 4,476 2,162 17,737 5,635 56,237 2,742 l,from Barley. Oats, Corn, bush. 6,515 bush. bush. bush. 6,549 73,142 7,835 6,515 22,195 46,640 • • • • • - • 6,346 90 1,700 • Baltimore Total 13,060 2,290 500 • • • • • • .... .... • 500 • • « • r. 10 2,000 25 .... 2,010 1,321 • Lake Ports.—The Flour. Wheat. 48,705 96,297 100,663 Corn. Oats. 159,555 20,950 119,174 22,817 10,155 1,659 17,470 15,288 37,355 11J60 6.429 Cleveland 9,767 9,255 1,807 4,866 77,228 212,858 244,208 171,277 56.79-4 132,277 139.798 107.032 CorresDondinn week, '66 32,920 134.022 Since Jan. 1, 1867 263,197 185,835 384,006 180,781 278,309 221,340 8,864 3.463 time, 1866 125 following shows the receipts ports for the week ending Jan. 12 : at Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Same 2,312 3,308 1,191 .... • .... • • 75,654 262,239 2,541 246,646 .... .... .... 7,292 7,292 22,195 46,640 6.550 • • 343 .... • .... .... 343 « * .... 500 • • 6,549 196,911 .... .... 5,261 2,4^8 4,286 Chicago • 12,335 15,260 50,284 15,419 Philadelphia Weekly Receipts at the following lake • .... 300 300 Boston Totals Previous week... Friday, Jan. 18, 1867, P. M. Rye, bush. 761 Flour, C. meal, Wheat, rates. BREADSTUPFS. FROM NEW YORK. FOREIGN EXPORTS 345,135 380,751 59,985 . 390,916 Barley. 24,760 4,862 1,414 4,622 1,350 Rye. 19,735 87,008 28,680 6,803 26,897 65,688 20,646 3,642 2,820 .... 700 12,645 19,800 39,542 36,142 '' - The. market the past week has been generally depressed. GROCERIES. Buyers have operated with the utmost reserve and caution, and sellers have grown daily more anxious to realize. The favorable accounts from Europe, and the advance in gold, have had little or no influence in favor of sellers. Flour came forward early in the week in large quantities, more than 9,000 hbls. being received in one day from New Orleans by sea. The large supply encouraged buyers to limit their orders to their most pressing needs, and prices have steadily declined, until nearly all the advance that took Friday, P. M., Jan. 18. There has been liberal business done in ail branches of the a trade for immediate consumption, although there is a general absence of anything like speculation. The general belief is in lower prices, and there is considerable caution manifested, from an uncertainty as to. the action of Congress and the future. At the close of the week there is less activity, the from prevalence of the storm and nou-arrival of mails, but prices are very steady, and in some instances rather firmer place early in the month has been lost. Speculative holders from the higher price of gold. • have been pressing sellers, and some low figures have been TEA. made for prompt cash. At the close, with receipts again Teas continued active up to the latter part of the week, when the very small, there is more steadiness, but. the impassable con¬ trade ie much interrupted in both first and second hands by the inclem¬ dition of the streets, owing to the late heavy fall of snow, ent weather. The sales for the week are reported at 1,400 half chests grocery7 ' checks business. Wheat Las sympathized - is fully 10c. dications of bushel per a marked on closely with flour, and the decline all descriptions, but with fewer in¬ recoverv The in tone at the close. re- though still less liberal, upon which there is a slight increase of stocks. Prices have declined in Western markets in sympathy with this, and pri¬ vate advice^ speak of much less confidence in the realization ceipts at Milwaukee and Chicago are increasing, moderate, and the shipments thence eastward are of the extreme views entertained a month ago. Corn has been dull. Notwithstanding a considerable mar¬ .'1 gin in favor of shipments to Liverpool, it has been impossible to effect sales for that purpose, and the shipments are almost entirely in first hands on consignment. A few orders have \:i Corn, which is suit¬ shipment, and has been in fair supply at $1 10@$1 12, delivered alongside. Oats and Barley have also been largely shipped to British ports on eon-ignment; never¬ theless, lower prices are quoted. Rye in bond, from Canada, bas been taken to the extent of about 50,000 bushels for ex¬ port to Germany, and as high as §1 15 paid—now held at $1 20—but in the product of the country little has been done. Canada Peas are nearly nominal. TJie market to-day closed steady at. the following quotations, but business, checked by the difficulty of making deliveries, owing to the obstructed condition of the streets and harbor : been executed iu New Southern Yellow able for steamer ' Flour, Superfine.. $ bbl $9 50®10 40 Extra State 25' 10 50® 12 Shippin" it. hoop Ohio. 11 25®12 25 Extra Western, mon , to com¬ 10 00@13 CO good Double Extra Western and St. Louis.. Southern supers - '13 50®16 50 11 25®12 75 Southern, fancy und ex. 13 50® 16 50 Canada, common to choice extra @ .. Rye Flour, fine and super¬ fine 4 6 50® S 00 Corn meal, Jersey and Brandywine 5 00® 5 40 Wheat, Chicago Spring $1 90® 2 40 per bushel... Milwaukee Club. Red Winter Amber do White. 2 00®:2 35 @ 2 90® 3 05 2 85® 3 20 ... Corn, Western Mixed.... Western Yellow Western White.. ® ® Jersey Yellow Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State....... Barley 1 Malt 1 White beans 1 Flour, bbls — Corn "meal, bbls... Wheat, bush Corn, bush Rye, bushi. Barley, &c'., busn. Oat®, bush — AT The Direct importation . .1,749,757 Indirect importation.. 223,271 12,500 19,420 135 135 56,430 64,340 375 625 17,820 32,150 29,265 44,710 lbs. • 3,461,438 2,857,619 166,362 398,877 8,633,953 43,204 115,870 138,525 .... 520,870 Total stock 1,973,028 3,504,642 2,973,389 304,887 898,877 9,154,823 Estimated stock of teas on haud in unbroken parcels, both in bond and duty paid, at the dates named: Total. Congou & Green. Oolong. Souchong.Pouchong. Pounds, Date. Japan. ' . lbs. lbs. ' Jan. “ “ 1,500,000 450,000 425,000 2,600,000 9,180 28,375 2,000,000 225,000 330,000 500,00® lbs. 8,953,504 12.225,000 6,560,000 9,025,000 imports during the .week. shows the shipments of tea from China and Japan to the United States, from June 1 to Oct. 23, 1866, and importations at New York and Boston since Jan. 1 : There have been no The following table -IMP’TS AT N. Y. * BOSTON.-IndireetDirect ^ -shipments from china and japan. ,—To Atlantic ports.—> To San Oct. 1 to J une 1 to Samo Fran-' Oct. 1. Oct. 23. in ’65, cisco. lbs. lbs. lbs pkgi. .453,360 42,300 Oolong&Ning.1,960,423 Congou & Sou. Pouchong Twankay Hyson skin at New AtNew York. York, lbs. AtBoston pl-geof all sorts. 176,872 200,670 63,166 685,137 250,768 82,130 201,892 From G’t Britain. From Europe. 55.845 Hyson 145,416 Young Hyson..723,015 159,938 146,030 Imperial Gunpowder 252,940 34L920,9R 374,868 1,816,196 262,851 Japans...... From East Indies. ^ 734,3711,617,410 f^’000 194,784 264,623 I 184,172 3:18,584 | From other ports. . - Total......3,963,040 4,357,2723,387,055 J 28,568 COFFEE. . .... . Coffee has been very with the are as follows: other sorts. OF RIO COFFRE. 4,020 5,895 53,395 280,000 76,663 steady, and prices have remained unchanged, exception of Java, which is one-quarter of a cent lower for low 67® 68 grades. The market closes quiet, with sales for the week of 11,247 80® 1 16 20® 1 35 bags Rio, mostly below our quotations, 1,000 mat3 Java at 24£ cents, 30@ 1 43 75® 3 50 gold, and 200 bngs Laguyara, aud 200 Maracaibo. The imports since January 1, and stock in first hands January 15th follows: For week, 25.055 lbs. 651,313 1,000,000 1864.... 3,04)0,000 1868.... 3,500,000 Import. --1866- lbs. lbs. 1,1866..^. .5,155.000 1865 5,500.000 850,328 . “ - 2,220,200 4,000.000 2,500,000 NEW YOliK. 1867 < For week. S’e Jan. 1. 33.690 59,510 Congou & Oolong. Soucnong.Pouchong.Total lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. Japan. Green. lbs. ... 1 08® 1 12 1 15® 1 30 63® 65 Peas, Canada The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been as RECEIPTS 1 17® 1 19 aud 4,300 do Oolongs. following statement stocks on hand January 1st and for previ¬ ous years, is from the circulars of Messrs. Young dt Knapp. Stock of teas iu bond duties uupaid January 1, 1867. Green, 8,375 do Japan9, 56^949 6,816 19,955 66,910 250 12,080 55,880 New York, 27,018 Baltimore “ New Orleans “ Other ports “ 10,0S4 bags Philadelphia “ Total.... 7,900 .... * 6,000 .51,002 York, At Boat, import. Stock. Imports. Java, bags 3,654 .11*666 Ceylon ** 5,129 16,000 Singapore, bags 2,580 .... 5,076 .. 4,500 Maracaibo, “ . “ ...200 5,796 ' .... Laguavra St. Domingo “ 100 93,577 Other, “ :.. 148 11,277 Stock. 62,077 At New f- ; Advices from Rio to Dec. 7 report coffee scarce and advanced for fine superior and superior qualities, and also state that the previous low prices have been caused by tightness in the money mar set, and that an advance may be looked for on account ^f supplies being held back.. Clearances since Nov. 23d had been 40,296 to New York, 3,835 to Bal¬ timore, 2,675 to Hampton Roads, 2,200 to Galveston, 5,800 to New Orleans. Total to the United States 54,106. To other ports 67,900. Leaving a stock on hand of 55,000 bags. ,-Duty pa’d.—, Hyson, Common to fair ... 80 @1 05 do Superior to fine....I 15 @1 85 do Ex fin© to finest,. .1 40 @1 65 Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... h5 @1 10 do Super, to fine..1 15 @1 40 ' Sugar do do Ex. f. to finest. 1 65 @1 Of H. 8k. fc Tw’kay, C, to fair. 60 © 70 do do Sup. to fine 75 © 80 continued in active demand from refiners up to near the close advance in gold prices firmer. Refined were do good do fair do ordinary * do fair to g. cargoes . been in good demand and firm at last weeks’ prices. The Sugars are reported at 3,080 hhds. and 2,800 boxes Ha¬ vana at prices within the range of our quotations. Stocks and imports are as follows : Other W. New Brazil, Manila, raw Cuba. , boxes, Jan. 8 38,572 52,789 At— New York stock Same date 1866 hhds. .... .... 36 459 — 5 382 Total import .... 185 2,417 594 .... 29 409 2,035 Imports since Jan. 1. do Philadelphia do do Baltimore s New Orleans do] Boston hhds. ' 29.686 28,710 hhds. 112,772 93,816 5 459 185 9 © Pf good do ...10© good grocery... 10*© pr. to choice do 11 © centrifugal 8© lif 10* 1!* If fair to fair to ..... following table, compiled from the circular of Messrs. H. E. Moring <fc Co., furnishes a very complete summary of the statistics of the sugar trade during the six last^ears : Imports in 1866 1865 1864 1863..; 1862 1861 .tons 2&5,170 248,696 160,272 204,236 229,500 ...% . .. . Baltimore Total. 5,088 7,382 55,490 203,464 67,945 44,720 48,225 41,584 29,973 26,662 33,769 33,452 30,914 31,255 34,215 21,347 in tne year. in the year. in the year. Jan. 1. 379,670 365,300 ..tons 47,284 30,364 32,399 30,277 27,640 . 1,200 22,125 232,385 287,418 316,655 263,979 56,394 2,995 5,220 31,760 . Prunes, Turkish in good demand. have been sold as fast as they came in. Inferior is quoted at 7$@Sc„ choice at 12(5)12$* Sales have been 2,550 hhds. in the week. Molasses has been in good demand, and receipts have sold easily. Common has sold at 69c. Choice at 71 @74c. Sales of the week amount to 3,200 bbls. -Receipts-Since Same, Week. Sep. 1. 1865-6. 2,920 20,095 8,241 Sugar, hhds,.. Sugar, bbls... Molasses, bbls. 18 455 4,430 37,441 78 61 550 15,910 1,050 Price. 243 \ 1,621 1,321 7X©12* 1,080 f 6,837 7,196 do do do Sardines do 40 © . .* . . .... .. 45 .. © 50 si m (gold) 20 .. © 27*© 23 © @74 has been a little animation in the market but the stock is too small to leduce the price, and No. 12 is still held at 8 rs., buyers not offering over 7f. The following will show the receipts, exports and stocks at Havana Havana, Jan. 12. —There and Matanzas: ,—Total export—, Stocks week. Since Jan. 1. week. Since Jan. 1. boxes. Year. 1867. 392 4,114 83,699 13,260 ’ 392 4,114 .... 41,279 1866. 13,678 1,399 ' 3,828, 8,828 17,533 5,237 55,603 .... 3,420 9,612 1866. Muscovadoes.—Little has been done in new crop as yet. a sale of new was made at Cardenas of 125 hhds. fair refining at 6$ rs. per arrobe. Rec’d this /—Expts to U. S.—> week. , .. 84 © 86 Provence....... 28 © -0 Sicily, Soft Shell 2* © *25 8) © 88 Shelled © 88 © 40 ^ box $ hf. box box . Figs, Smyrna go Brazil Nuts d $ lb 1'*© 12 3 © 18 Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, Daiki> Fruit— ...$ lb Apples Blackberries Black Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpeeled do Cherries, pitted, 17 © 18 17 © 20 17 © 18 Pi© .. new.... .. © 28 50 © 55 THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Friday, P. M., Jan. 18,1867. at the close of last materially improved on Tuesday, and has continued fairly active to the present time. The.storm yesterday interfered with business, but prices re¬ The Dry Goods Trade was rather quiet week and at the opening of this week, but leading makes of domestic goods. There is general complaint of dullness in the country, and it is found very difficult to forecast the future. There is also a general uneasiness felt in regard to the probable action of Congress, which has destroyed confidence, and jobbers as well as retailers decline to buy more than is necessary tor immediate wants. main firm for the a /—N. York.—, /—Boston—, for clayed sugar, . .. Almonds, Languedoc 32,399 30,277 27,640 Shipments ^ Since Same, Week. Sep. 1. 1865-6. 15$© Sardines .. 21 © .Hj 17 © 18 Dates New Orleans, Jan. 12th.—Sugar has continued There is no stock in first hands offering, and receipts > 83 © Citron, Leghorn 55,490 47,284 30,364 308,798 265,973 • .. 22 I Pimento, Jamaica, (gold) 92 I Cloves (gold) 9) ] $ box 3 80 ©3 85 3 55 ©3 65 $ lb li© 12$ do Bunch Currants Jan. 1 ,’67. 363,884 347,180 212,295 282,101 2,580 - > • Spices. 43 |.Pepper, 42*@ V0© SO © fcask 8 50 © Raisins, Seedless. do Layer Stock Consumpt’n Exported Imported Stock - 30,300 15,478 17,958 ' 19,488 13,254 do 13 to 15 11 © Ilf do do do do 16 to 18 12*© li do do do 19 to 20 18*© 14 do 13 © 14f do white do Loaf.,. © 16* Granulated Iff© .. Crushed and powdered .. White coffee, A 134© 141 13 © lof Yellow oofiee Fruit. 379,670 365,300 232,385 287,218 316,655 268,979 38,300 17 © 17* 15*@ ltt ... 40 © 50 Ginger, race and African. Mace (gold) Nutmegs, No. 1....(gold) AT THE FIVE PORTS. stocks and DISTRIBUTION TOTAL 1866 1865 1864 1863 1862 1861 Philadel’a. 10,038 32,982 75 80 05 Java,mats and bags ....gold 24*Q> 251 Native Ceylon 19 © 20 Maracaibo 17 j© 181 English Islands -15 © ' 0 Cassia, inmata—gold $lb AND STOCKS. Boston. New-York. Stocks Jan. 1, ’67.. 25 Exf.toflnestl 25 @1 50 do Clayed....* gall. 65 © 88 New Orleans Porto Rioo Cuba Muscovado The IMPORTS 92 Molasses* ..... 1,123 Lx f. to iinestl 10 @1 20 Laguayra St Domingo Sugar. Melado 6© 7 Hav’a, Box. D. S Nos. 7 to 9 9.1@ \'i do do do 10 to 12 10 © li4 474 36 493 do do do do do • , do do gold 15 © 15* .gold 15J© 161 Cuba, inf. to com. refining bags. Indies, Orleans, Total bags. v hhds. gold 16 © iof $ lb Porto Rico 95 85 © Com. to fair. 90© 95 Sup’r to fine .1 00 @1 05 Uncol. Japan, do ...gold 18 © .. gold 17 © 17* Rio, prime, duty paid Sugars have sales of Ex fine to flnest.1 45 @1 75 do Duty»aid.—, do Ex f. to fln’st do Oolong, Common to fair.. 86 © do Superior to fine.. .1 00 @1 do Ex fine to finest ..1 40 @1 Souc. & Cong.. Com. to fair 70 © do Sup’rtofine. 90 ©l Gunp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 @1 15 do Sup. to fine .1 25 @1 50 SUGAR. oLtbe week, and with the 85 THE CHRONICLE. January l'\ 1867.] Domes- tics. To Liverpool Dry Domes-Dry G’ds. tics. G’ds. pkgs. cases, pkgs. ca’es 2 London Du. W. Indies.. B. W. Indies.. New Granada.. Brazil 9 2 2 58 20 .. • .. .. To /—N. York.—, /—Boston—. Domes- Dry Domes-Dry tics. G’ds. tics. G’ds. pkgs. cases, pkgs. oa’es Havti B. Provinces Total this w’k. “ since Jan. 1. Same time’66 “ “ 1860. .. .. 82 188 11 46 .- 261 6 12 18 20 5 4,349 .. . . Receipts, exports and stocks at Havana Receipts For and Matanzas are as follows Exports , ,—To U. States—. • : s /—Total exports—. Stocks, week, for w’k. s’ce Jan. 1. for w’k. s’ce Jan. 1. hhds. 814 J 9 9 145 2,898 145 Year. 1867 1866 1865 2,004 1,140 .... ... 366 ... 366 3,256 3,989 .... .. * 366 MOLASSES. Molasses haB been rather quiet, and there is a slight decline noticed prices. The sales are very light, and parcels to the jobbing trade. Stocks and imports are as follows: in York, stocks Jan New York.imp’ts since 15 5,800 Jan 1.181 .... 1,050 260 N. O. bbls. 800. 1,375 jobbers, and give are still quoted above the selling price of we these of the latter. Nonantum 3-4 11*, Atlantic N do 12$, Massachu¬ setts C do 15$, Indian Orchard L do 15$, Commonwealth O do 11, Knox B do 15, Union do 14, Pepperell N do 15, Indian Head do 18$, Atlantic Y 7-8 18$, Atlantic Edo 18, Pacific do 18, Tremont E do prices 15, Bedford R do 18, Boott O do 17, Indian Orchard W do 16$, Law¬ G do 17, Pepperell O do 17, Indian Head 4-4 22, Appleton A do 22, Wachusetts do 21$, Princeton A do 21, Pacific extra do 22, do H do 22, do L do 18$, Atlantic H do 22, do A do 22$, do L do 18$, Law¬ rence E do 19$, do C do 21$, do F do 19, Stark A do 21$, Amoskeag A do 22, do B do 21$, Medford do 20, Pittsfield A do 17$, Kenebec do rence 18$, Roxbury A do 20$, Sussex F do 19, Cuba. /—Porto Rico-vOther Foreign.—» hhds. hhds. hhds. At New confined principally to small Brown Sheetings And Shirtings are generally firmer for the leading standard makes, and stocks arc light with a fair trade inquiry. Agents’ Indian Orchard B do 17$ Broadway best do 19, Newmarket A do 18, do C do 2z$, Nashua D do 20, Pepperell E do 21, Great Falls M do 19, Laconia O 9-8 19$, Pequot do 26, Indian Orchard A 40 inch 21$, do do O 19, Nashua 5-4 32$, Naumkeag W do 25, Utica do 42$, Pepperell 7 4 40, Utica do 52$, Pepperell 9-4 65, Monadnoc 10-4 66, Pepperell do 67$, Utica 11-4 96. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings have been very steady and fairly active, especially for the leading makes. New York Mills are 63 Baltimore “ | firm at 87$, Wamsutta H <fc O 82$, Mechanics 8-4 12$, Revere do 12$, “ * New Orleans “ ) “ Kingston do 11$, Boott R do 13$, do H do 16, Lawrence H do 16$, Wood¬ 323 1,724 181 bury 7-8 16$, Newburyport do 18$, Rockdale do 17, Waltham X do 19, Total..v Putnam B do 16, Amoskeag Zdo 17$, Harris A A do 17$, Great Falls M SPICES. do 19, do S do 17, do A do 20, do J do 19, Lyman Cambric do 20, Spices have continued in a fair jobbing demand, but the higher price Strafford A do 19, Lawrence L do 19, do A do 19, Hill’s Sempldem do of gold has somewhat restricted transactions, buyers declining to pay 22$, James 83 inch 17$, do 88 inch 19$, B&rtleit 81 inch 18, do 38 inch 20, Webster 4-4 14, Greene G do 18, Lewiston G do 21$, Windsor do 22$, Pothe advance. cumtnck do 19, Putnam A do 19, Newmarket A do 20, do C do 22$, FRUITS. Bartletts do 28, Bates BB do 28$, Constitutional do 17, Indian Grove Fruits have been in fair request up to the close of the week, at' es¬ do 20, James Steam do 22$, Indian River XX do 20, Attawaugan XX do 20, Lawrence B do 22$, Fountain do 22, Hope do 28$, Tip Top do 26, sentially unchanged prices. Raisins are most in demand. Amoskeag A do 26, Boot B do 23, Forestdale do 26, Mason * Dried Fruits are quiet and unchanged. Boston, “ Philadelphia “ [ “ “ 349. 44 .... ,,,, 44 • • . • 44 . . • • • . .... 44 .... ..... .... [January 19, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. XX do 82}, Androscoggin L do 26, Lonsdale do 30, do F do 21}, Bates XX do 27}, Atlantic Cambric do 35, Lonsdale Cambric do 35, Hill do 25, Amosbeag 42 inch 26, Chickopee do 26, Waltham do 24, Wamsutta 9-8 37}, Lyman R 5-4 24, Naumkeag W do 25, Boott W do 27, Nashua do 3*2}, Bates do 32}, Wamsutta do 42}, Araoskeag 46 inch 28, Waltham 6-4 38, Mattawamkeag do 40, Pepperell do 40, Oaeida do 45, Utica do 50, Waltham Ji-4 62}, Pepperell do 62, Pepperell 9 4 67, Utica do 85, Phoenix 10-4 65, Monadnock do 70. Baltic do 72}, Bates do 70, Waltham do 75, Allendale do 75, Pepperell do 77}, Utica do 90, Masabesic 11-4 85, Amoskeag do 87}, Peppereil do 85. ville do 27, do 26, Wauregan do Ticks are in fair demand and lower grades are in large stocks leading makes are steady in prices, but aud slow of sale: Conestoga C I 45, Amoskeag A C A 55, do A 4*2, do B 87, do D 27, do C 82, Pemberton A A 42}, do red stripe 8*2}, Brunswick 20, Blackstone River 28, Hamil¬ ton 87}, do D 82}, Somerset 18, Thorndike 26, Pearl River 50. Oriental 41, Harvest 86, Hancock A A 81, Pittsfield 14}, Buukerhill 26, York f.0t, do 38}, Omega B 37}, do A 50, do C 27, Cordis A A A 45, Everett 27}, Imperial 35, Boston A A 37}, LehighValley A 21, do B 20, do AO A 22, Swift River 25, Pacific 80, Wiunebago 13}, Baltic 15}, Girard 87}, Hampden C C 30, Albany 14}. Stripes are rather nominal for all but leading makes as stocks are quite large. Prices are easier. Amoskeag 29 and 30, Uncasville 23 and 24, Whittenton A A 82}, do A 8-3 29}, do B B 25, do U 20, Napoleon 13}, Pittsfield 3-3 14, Pemberton Awn 47}, Haymaker 26, Everett 26, Andover 23, Boston 25, Harvesters 8-3 22027, do 6-3 *2*2@ 27, Blackstone 23, American 19, Eagle 19, Hamilton 28, Arkwright 28, Jewett City 21 @21}, Sheridan G 21. Print Cloths have been rather inactive from the easier tone of the market for prints. dark 20, do purple 20, do pink 20, Sprague’s dark 18, do purpie 19, do shirting 19, do pink 19, London Mourning 16}, Simpson Mourning 16}, Amoskeag Mourning 15}. Garners light 18}, Dunnell’s 17}, Allen 17, Richmoud 17}, Arnolds 15, Wamsutta 13}, Pacific dark 18, Cocheco 19, Lowell 15, Naumkeag 14}, Hamilton 17}, Empire State 11}. Domestic Gingh ms are quite and unchanged. Lancaster 23}, Hart ford 18, Caledonia (new) 20, Glasgow 22, Clyde 17, Berkshire 22, German 20, Roanoke 17 Bates 23}. Manchester 20. Canton Flannels are dull except for prime makes. Ellerton N, Bro. 87}, doO do 35, do T do 21, Laconia do 29, Slaterville do 24, Hamilton do 29, Rockland do 17, Naumkeag do 26, Tremont do 21, Scotts extra do 20, Whittendon do 82}, Ellerton N Biea. 37}, do O do 35, do P do 83}, Sal’n Falls do 31}, Methuen A do 32, Naumkeag do 27, Nashua A 22. Corset Jeans are in fair demand and steady. Bates colored 15, do bleached 14}, Naumkeag 21, Androscoggin 15}, Pepperell 23, Naum¬ keag, satteen 25, Laconia 21, Amoskeag 21@22}, Newmarket 16}, Ijewiston 15, Indian Orchard 16, Berkeley 22}, Rockport 21,Tremont 12}. Cambrics and Silesias are in good request at steady prices. Lons¬ dale Silesias sell at 23 cents, Victory 21}, Indian Orchard 21}, Ward 21}. Washington glazed Cambrics sell at 14, Victory 13, do E 15}, do high colors 14}. Hudson Mill 12}, Fox Hill 11, Superior 11, Superior 11}, Smithfield 13, Waverly 18}. S. S. & Sons paper cambrics sell at 14 cents, do high colors 20, Euglish 20, White Rock 18, Masonville 19, Warren 18. Woolen Goods are rather tion of some animated from the general expecta¬ improvement in the tariffs, but prices are strJl wholly more nominal. American Printed Laines fair demand at unchanged prices. All dark 25, Hamilton Co 25, Manchester dark 25, Pa¬ cific dark 25, Armures dark 25, High colors 25, Pacific Merinos 40, -Mourning 25, Shepherd checks 25 all wool 42}, Skirtings 35. Linsets are hardly as active, but stocks are small and prices steady. Washington 85, Park 45 inch 38, do 35 inch 27}, do 60 inch 37}, do 70 inch 52}, do 75 inch 57}, Kensington 26, Union cotton and wool 25, Park Mills No. 65 42}, Todd’s 82}, Black Rock 30. Cloths and Cassimerks show some improvement io demand, espe¬ cially for spring styles, which are placed on the market sparingly. Carpets are very steady in prices. The demand is fair. Velvets, J. Crossley’s best $4, do A 1 qnal. $3 75, do patent $8 25. Body Brus¬ sels, Roxbury $2 75, do Bigelow $2 75, Tapestry, Brussels, S. Crossley $1 90, Lowell, ex 8 p $2 15, do super $1 75, do med sup $1 60. Hartford Carpel Co. ex 3-ply $2 25. do Imp 3-ply $2 12}, do superfine $1 75, do med sup $1 60. Med aud low pri Ingrains $1 25@l 45, Hemp pi, 38 inch 3 .'@37}, do 36 inch 40050 do twil 36 inch 55060. American Linen is unchanged. Foreign Goods are rather unsettled by the speculates regarding the tariff and some goods are depressed. Silks and finer woollens are firmer in importers hands, but trade i9 light. Checks are in light demand, at steady prices. Park Mills Red 25, Lanark 4x2 18, Lanark fur 18}, Union 50 4x2 37}, do 50 2x2 37}, do 20 4 2 35, do 20 2-2 35, Caled »nia 85, do 29, Lancaster fur 18, Kennebeck 85,Wamsutta 20, Farmers <fe Mechanics 30, Star No. 600 16}, do No. 800 2x2 22, do No. 900 4-2 26, Cameron No 90 21}, do No. 80 20. de Miners A Mechanics 32. Denims and Cottonade9 are m are quiet, with some Union 80, Monitor 21, Manchester Co. 27, Clark’s brown 25, Suffolk 27, Marlboro 22. Blue Hill 24, Fort Moultrie 80, Mount Vernon 82}, Tremont 28. Farmer’s and Mechanics cassimeres 55, Pemberton dtfct 45, Bociman’fc Ky J 47, Plow L <fc Anv 50, Everett 47},"New York Mills 62}. Whittenden dtfct 81 @39}. in fair request at former prices. Winthrop 18, Amoskeag 23, Laconia 28}, Androscoggin 14, Minerva, 18, Pepperell 23, * IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Jan. corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been oc 17, 1867, and the follows: ♦ are .WEEK ENDING JANUARY ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOB THE 1866. 1865 Value. Pksrs Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. silk... do do flax.... Miscellaneous dry gooas. 318 $107,016 260 68 712 61,7i9 1-7,789 203 59,450 Pkgs. Value 410 $270,730 273,007 178,503 124,753 1,434 127,161 3,408 $974,156 MARKET DURING 677 817 170 . 9 7,263 $2,633,026 $397,400 FBOM 17, 1806. /——1867. . Pkgs. Value. 1,865 $910,757 1,331 474,123 538 598,911 1,297 461 630 1,232 187,605 61.426 Total.... WITHDRAWN WAREHOUSE THROWN AND INTO THE THE SAME PERIOD. $159,641 584 18*2,247 50,590 159,888. 27,497 694 142 463 35 $275,967 218,641 193,691 130,089 21,354 Total.... 1,842 Add ent’d forconaumpt’nl,559 $529,863 397,400 1,918 7,263 $839,732 2,633,026 Total thrown iDon mak’t 3,401 $932,463 895 Manufactures of wool.. 463 do cotton. 53 do silk 821 do flax Miscellaneous dry goods. 105 ... .. 932 $474,988 539 119 759 182,650 143,380 252,394 19,793 623 2^972 $1,073,205 974,156 3,408 6,380 $2,047,361 9,181 $3,472,758 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... cotton.. do do silk do flax Miscellaneous dry goods. 153 $49, 34,863 4,883 6 1,579 $422,087- 1,251 406,369 113 107,387 228,147 82,867 1,121 640 $98,709 397,400 3,117 $1,269,869 2,638,026 4,041 $1,246,847 3,408 974,156 $496,109 10,380 $3,902,895 7,449 $2,221,003 consumpt’n 1,559 Total entered at the port 183 640 67 834 2 138 320 Total Add ent’d for 965 . 916 $555,254 831,143 180,533 172,212 24,622 1,312 8,579 21 .... 7,263 IMP OBTS (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND 8PECIE) ENDING WEEK AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE JANUARY 11, 1867. [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. Pksrs. Value Prunes 15,367 Pap China, Glass <fc E. 45,669 Baisius ware— .159 10,291 2,214 Other. Other 793 Sauces and pres. 13,599 Woods— Bottles Cork China 599 24,513 Instruments— 2,053 637 LorgW Mathematical.. 2 Earth’nw’e. 1,717 73,126 gwood, M. lbs Musical 136 1444 .84' 7,597 Glass 1,676 5,795 . .. Glassware.. 122 Glass plate.. .87 Drugs, &c.— .45 .12 .35 Alkali Acids • Nautical 5,68b 13,011 ..3 .. Algols . Anoline Arsenic Aloes Bark. Perav.353 .30 Barytes Blea Powder 278 .... Brimstone, tns97 Castor oil... 150 Cream tartar ..5 Cochineal 80 do copal..685 Glue » 2,480 Liquors, Wines, &c.~ 1,973 656 5,985 660 142 16,249 Indigo 10,031 Iodine Ale.. Wines 45 3,199 1,169 1,515 Madder 30 4 Magnesia 18 1,096 4,385 1,920 Cutiery 3,147 Iron, hoop, . 8 palm 369 24 18,722 Opium Persian berries. ...... 671 1.677 12,019 989 Prus..8 do 1,000 Quicksilver 6,611 Rhubarb 124 9,437 Paints Potash, chlo.... ...2 Shellac Senna 233 83?. Soda, bi erb 4665 18,545 do sal....1045 ash....885 caustic 337 6,795 28,189 9,77C do nitrate 35,8K do do Sugar of lead.. 20 Sulph copper.86 250 Tong beaus.... 3 Sumac Whiting 59 Yeilow berries.. 3,071 1,317 288 150 450 917 7,653 Other Furs, &c Furs 1,303 .. .-..61 Hats, goods. .,3 Fruits, <fcc. - Bananas.. Citron Currants— Dried trait Figs..... Nuts... Oranges Brass Goods.. .1 Bronzes 3 200 chors Copper... 143 Guns 68 Hardware.... 458 906 646 725 2,502 369 701 202 607 tons bars. 53,604 51,604 Iron, tubes.. .709 Iron, other, 1,259 ......1453 70,532 59,369 tons Lead, pigs. 10,521 Metal goods . .42 12,877 Needles 21 Nickel ...6 Old metal Platina 3 Plated ware.... 2 Per. caps 39 Silver 17,693 1,034 Fish 30,700 Furniture 6.988 3 800 794 Grim; stones... Hair 99 2,606 5,486 45,736 2,669 Haircloth... .12 Hemp 1,104 Hops...... ..15 Ind. rubber..312 9,003 2,864 15,164 1,698 .7 Machinery.. .204 ... Marble man M&ccaroni. .2595 Molasses 762 Oil paintings.20 4,104 17,364 1 Statuary Sago. 450 229 5 2,058 ..... 828 Stationery, &c.— 18,803 809 442 8,817 1,265 10,629 Engravings... 10 4,019 .74 6,063 1,198 17,879 1,567 1228 84,778 9,853 7,842 2,661 315 7.094 .. Seeds Linseed...20,008 92,482 Soap... 2 8 1,312 Sugar, hhds, bbls and tes—828 Sugar, bgs .' 9,491 Nutmeg Parasols...... 35 Provisions 15,664 61,583 Ginger 10,525 . Perfumery..1283 12,815 Pipes 6,156 Potatoes 1,159 Salt..... 17 ware Plaster 8,057 Tin slabs. ...909 Books 2,530 Firecrackers... Feathers Flax 22 Rag* Rope Tin, bxs.. .14,979 111,988 Pimento 14 Cocoa, bags.. 541 17,629 Coffee,bgs.20,488 351,413 Emery 2 268 Fancy goods.... 105,758 4,030 7,546 8,619 2,843 Steel 7,471 111,480 Spelter... 831,500 16,178 Saddlery Corks Clocks. Paper hang’s. 57 .491 tons 3,030 6,987 2,676 1,031 .... .6,998 . 371 458 Cigars Coalr tons... .794 Ivory 10,691 Mustard........ 2,657 58,218 .650 4,355 16,105 58.890 10,899 Iron, Railroad, Iron, sheet, 84,063 Gunny doth2730 67,421 9,790 2,3 >4 1,450 1,075 2,335 152 2i6 29 tons..: Iron, pig, Cassia..., 49 557 Chains & an¬ 29,346 Wire 33£ Spices— . 160 baskets..2,876 27,161 4 61 Oils ess do linseed 24 do olive...745 113 445 Champagne, 80 212 65,224 Porter Rum... Lie 400 4075 .... 2,465 Metals, <&c.— Lie root Manna 8,128 16,355 2,079 Beer Cordials Gin 50 paste 311 660 201 7 6 17 5 Brandy Lac dye. Leeches Plumbago Mahogany 1,604 , 8,025 10 Cudbear 1,606 Gums, crude. 867 18,944 do Arabic 212 20,809 do 1,050 Rattan Willow Jewelry. &c.— 893 Jewelry... .17 19,451 Other Watches .24 29,*88 Miscellaneous— 1,347 Alabaster om. .22 2,683 Leather, Hides &c.— .12 13 4,652 Bristles 1,985 Baskets 569 Bricks 1,302 Boots & sroes.3 4 Boxes 1,074 Hides, dress ed 347 209 100,475 ButtQns 127 Burr stones Hides, undress18,034 ed. 2,326 205,305 Clay 916 Cheese 69 5,630 Pat. leather. ..1 Optical . Actitate..'... Yellow ochre.34 concessions for low grades of goods. Amoskeag denims s-ll at 37} cents, Haymaker 30, do brown 87, York 86, Warren brown *26, Boston Manufacturing Co. 25, Brown Drills Liberty do 37}. * Prints have moved quite freely, but jobbers buy only for immediate demand. Agents made some concessions at the latter part of last week, and stocks are less burdensome. Prices with jobbers are the name as last week. American 17}, Amoskeag dark 16}, do purple 18, do pink 18}, do shirting 16}, Merrimac D dark 18, do purple 18, do W Boott 28}, Bennington 22}, Massachusetts 32}, National bags 40, Stark A do 62}, do fine jean 22, Stark A 22, G 20, Woodward duck bags Trees & Tea 14,292 bxs. & 3,852 75,448 807 4,029 65,711 plants.. Toys.... 3 161 Tobacco....2245 66,757 951 41,298 Wool, bales .165 10,850 Waste . Other 783 Total $3,027,228 PRICES CURRENT. duties noted below, a discriminating’ duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all imports under fiags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. jgy On all good$y wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Gentries East of the Cape of Qood Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 p*r cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from Vie place or places if their growth or produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Rqw Silk excepted. The tor in all eases toNbe 2,‘240 It). Ancb *r«—Duty: 2* cents $ 5). In addition to the upward# ft 9*® Aahes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... $1 100 lb 8 25 @ 8 50 Pearl, 1st sort. H f0 @12 00 liech wax—Duty,20 # cent ad val. American yellow. $ lb .. 40 @ Bones— Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct. Rio Grande shin # tonS5 00 @86 00 lireatl—Duty, 30 $ oentad val. Pilot .....# lb .. @ 61 Ot2u9ft and © Navy 7 © 14 Breadstuf (s—See special report. Crackers Bricks. hard..per M.15 00 @ ... .18 00 ©20 60 Common Croton Philadelphia Fronts @15 00 Bristles—Duty, 15 oents; hogs hair # .ft. Amer’n,gray &wh. #lb 1 cents. 75 @8 00 Clieese.—Duty: 4 and Batter - . Butter— N.Y State—Fresh pails Firkins Hilf Oikia mbs... Welsh tabs, prime. Welsh tubs, s co id qua'liy Pennsylvm a — North F rislns Western Reserve—Fir¬ kins @ .. 40© 42 45 85 @ 40 38 @ yell kins, w / Firkins,.nd quality 82 @ 34 32 @ 33 23 @ 25 @ 26 @ 27 18 @ 20 .. Cheese^— Factory Dairies do Wrest.ra...... Farm Dairies do Western do Common - ' 15 @ 17 © 14 @ 10 @ l-< 20 17 14 Candles—Duty, tallow, 2$; sperma¬ ceti and wax a; stearine and adaman tine, 5 cents # ft Sperm, patent,. . .# ft 49 @ 50 Refined sperm,city... 3S @ 40 Stearic 30 @ 81 23 Adamantine VI @ Cement—Rosendalo.#bl @ 2 00 . Chains-"Duty, 2* cents # ft. One Inch & upward# 1b 8;@ 8| Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 bushels of 80 lb # bushel. Liverpool Orrel. # ton of 2,240 lb ..@15 00 , Liverp’l House CannellS 00 @<20 00 Anthracite 8 00 © 8 50 . Cardiffsteam ,..12 00 @ .... Liverpool Gas Ca-<n L. 18 00 @ .... Newcastle Gag A.Steaml0 50 @11 00 Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents # lb. Caraoas(in bond)(gold) # lb 21 © 32 Maracaibo do .. .(gold) .. @ Guayaquil do ...(gold) 15 @ 151 8t Domingo.. ..(gold) 9|@ 10* Coffee.—See special report. Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2*; old oopper 2 cents # ft; manu¬ factured, 35 # cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot, 3 oents # 1b. < 8heathing, new.. # lb yellow 40 @ @ 8 heaihing, Bolts Braziers’ Baltimore Detroit -.. © @ 2C*@ 29 @ 30 40 40 2r*@ Cordage—Duty, tarred,8; unv-rred Manila, 2* other untarred, 3* cents Portage Lake # lb. Manila, # lb Tarred Russia Tarred American 22,@ ..* @ @ 23* 1 i 19* © 22 Corks—Duty, 50 # cent ad val. Regular, quarts# gross 65 @ 70 Bolt Rope, Russia Mineral PhiaL 50 @ 12 @ 70 40 Cotton—See special report. . Drag's and Dyes—Duty,Alcohol, z 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ lb; Alum, 60 cents # 100 lb; Argols, 6 rents $ lb; Arsenic and Assaffcdati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 80 # cent ad val.; Balsam Copalvi, 30; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balaam Pern, 50 oents $ ft; Callsaya Oil Lemon Bark, 80 # cent ad vaL: Bi Carb. Soda, (gold) 2 95 @ 8 25 Oil Peppermint, pure. 5 00 @ 5 50 1*; Bi Chromate Potasn, 3 oents 9 ; Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 75 Bleaching Powder, 80 cents # 100ft; Refined Borax, 10 cents $ lb ; Crude OxaJJc Acid 41 $0 @ Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstono, $10 Phosphorus 15 Prus8iate Potash 42 # ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 # ton, and 15 # cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, Quicksilver 96 Rhubarb,China.(gold) 8 CO © 8 50 30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents $1 lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 # cent ad val.; Sago, Pei.led.... S@ S* @ 20 Salaratus... Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents SalAm’n ac, Ref (gold) 10i@ 10# # lb; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬ Sal Soda, Newcastle... 1 © rate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, 1*; V* Citric Aeid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream Sarsaparilla, Hond 35 @ 40 Sarsaparilla, Mex; 33 @ ' Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents # lb; Seneca Root. 4i*@ Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 Senna, Alexandria..24© 30 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent Senna, Eastlndia 18 © > 80 # lb; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.; She’lLac ’.. © 49 Soda Ash (80^o.)(g.ld) 2*@ 3 Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 # oent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Guip KowSugar L’d, WV(goid).. 80 @ 85 rie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per lb; Snip Quinine, o* 2 80 @ 2 35 Gum Myrrh, Gum Sulphate Morphine T 25 © Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 # Tart’o Acid..(g’ld)^ft 52 @ .. cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and EesubTapioca <2 @ 1» liined Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, Verdigris, dry., ex dry 50 © 53 Vitriol, Blue 12 © 12* 50; Lie. Paste, 10;, Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 30 $ cent Duck—Duty, ad val. 5u cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ Ravens, Light. .|i pee 16 00 @19 01 mot, $1 $ lb; Oil Peppermint, 60 20 00‘© Ravens, Heavy $ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ ft; Phosphorus, 20Scotch, G’ck,No.i $y @ 72 Cotton, No. 1 82 @ $1 y. $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents Woods—Duty free. # ft: Quicksilver, 15 # cent ad Dye Camwood, .(gold)$} t n 190 0G@200 00 val.; Sal A2ratus. 1* cents # 1b; Sal Fustic, 30 01 @ 81 00 Cuba. Soda, * cent # ft; Sarsaparilla and Fustic, Savaniila(gold)'2 50 @ 28 (0 Senna, 2o # cent ad val.; Shell Lac, Fustic, Maracaibo do.25 00 @ ... 10; Soda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cents .1 0U @32 00 Logwood, Hon # lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 # cent ad Logwood,L zuna(g<ld)80 (0 @ .... val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $1 oz.; Log*ood, St. Di'iuln..‘i0 .'0 @2i to Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 oents Logwood, Cam.(gold).2» 60 @ # ft; SaA Ammoniac, 2o; Blue Vit¬ 14 5o @15 00 Logwood,Jamaica riol, 25 # cent ail val.; Etberial Pre¬ Limawood (gold) @67 60 .. parations and Extracts, $1 # ft; all Barwood (gold)’0 00 @ .... others quoted below, fr*e. Acid, Citrio (gold) @ 51* Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val. Prime Western...1b 75 @ SO Alcohol $ gall. 4 55 © Tennessee "70 @ 75 Aloes, Cape § ft @ 26 Aloes, Socotrine fc5 75 @ Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, Alum 4 8|@ $1 : Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 Annato, fair to prime. 90 £5 @ $ bbl.; on other Fish. Pickled, smok¬ Antimony, Regulus of .. © 12 ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ Argols, Crude .22© 23 rels, 60 cents $ 100 ft. Argols, Refined 88 @ 34 Dry Cod ...... ^ cwt. 6 5U @ 7 2 > Arsenic, Powdered Pickled Scale...$ bbl. @6 5!> Assafoetida 25 @ 45 Pickled Cod fl bbl. 7 25 @ .... Balsam Copaivi @ 7o Mackerel, No. 1, Mass Balsam Tolu : . . .. States —Fir¬ Western 87 THE CHRONICLE. January 19,1867.] .... , .... .... @ 2 25 Balsam Peru....(gold) Bark Petayo 2 50 @ 2 75 6> >u 46 @ Berries, Persian..: Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle BI Chromate Potash... Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined ’ 8@ 20 @ 5*@ 82 @ .. 48 8* 2l 5* 34 Crude $ —(gold).42 00 @ Brimstou ton shore .... Brimston Am. $ ft... I Brimstone lor Roll Sul- 80 @ 92f@ 95 @ 1 75 .. Cantharidos.. .. mmonia, 19 @ Cardamoms, Malabar.. 8 0o @ 3 25 Castor Oil (iases $ gal 2 40 @ 2 45 Chamomile. F ow’s#ft 60 50 @ Chlorate Potash (gold) 82 @ 38 Caustic Soda 7,@ a Cariaway seed 19 @ 21 Coriander Seed 14 @ ... 15 ......... Cochineal, Hon (gold) CochinealjMexic’nfg’d) 9 @ 85 © Copperas, American... Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) Cubebs, East India.... 2@ Cutch Epsom Salts Extract. Logwood Fennell Se d Flowers,Benzoin.# ox. 18* @ 11 © 18 @ 80 @ 4* South&West. Arabic, Picked.. Ginseng, Gum Gum Gum Gum Gem Gum Arabic, Sorts... Benzoin ..(gold) Kowrie Gedda Gam Myrrh,Fast India Iodine, Resublimed... Ipecacuanna, Brazil... laiap Lae Dye 45 @ 82 @ 55 © 89 © © 27 42 55 @ © 80 @ 6> 28 60 © 90 87 40 8 73 © 8 S5 6 50 4 25 © © 2 20 © 25 © 41 24 © @ 87 @ 30 @ Licorice Paste, Greek. Madder, Dutch. .(gold) do, French, EXF.F.do Manna, large flake.... 2 Manna, small flake.... 1 Mustard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste. Nutgalla Blue Aleppo -.,. Oil Cassia Oil Bergamot 42 @ •. Lioorice Paste,Calabria Lidorice, Paste, Sicily. Lioorice Paste Spanish Solid... ;.. . 60 >t .. Damar Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Gum Senegal ;. .(gold) Gum Tragacanth, Sorts Gum Tragacanth, w. flakey. ........(g Id) Hyd. Potash, Fr. and 19 @ 2 00 65 © 1 01 70© 80 Gamboge Oil Anis 27f@ 4i @ 145 @ 7* Gambler 97* 95 .. 4 • , , 55 42 25 40 • « .... Mackerel,No.l,Halifaxl7 0 ©IS 00 Mackerel,No. 1, Buy..17 -0 @18 u0 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..io 50 @17 00 Mackerel, No. 2, Ha axi6 00 @1 60 Mac’el,No.3,Ma&s. l’ge —^ @i4 50 Mackerel, No. 3, H’faxLo 75 © .... Mackerel, No. 8, Mass -» © Salmon,Pickled,No.1.40 Of) @42.00 8a mon, bi kled. p. to.4- • >1 @55 00 Herring, Scaled^ box. 4* @ 60 Herring, No. 1 2 @ 2-1 Herring, pickled^bbl. 6 Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. Jersey lb phur ... ede, (in Camphor, .(gold) (gold) bond) Camphor, Refined..... Carbonate A in bulk.... 19 (0@ .. 60 @ 7 50 16 @ 23 do House . Fisher, Fox, Silver do Cross do Red do Grey Lynx Marten, Dark do pale Mink, dark Musk rat, Otter . Raccoon Skur k, Black 00 00 00 75 10 @ 20 4 00 @ 8 00 5 00 @50 00 3 00 @ 5 00 I 00 @ i 60 60 @ 75 2*0 @4*0 5 00 @20 00 2 ( 0 @ 5 00 3 00 @ 6 00 S@ >0 5 00 @ 8 Oo 15 @ Opossum 00 00 10 © 80 50 80 © 75 —Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches, 2* cents ^ square foot; larger ami not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents $ square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ square foot ; on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, i*; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 ,2* ; all over that, 3 cents $ ft. American Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th Common qualities. (Subject to a discount of ^30@35$ cent) 6x 8 to 8x10. 8x to 10x15 12x»8 16x24 20x30 24x30 24x36 llx -a to 12x19 to 18x22 to 20x31 to 24x31 to 25x36 to 30x44 80x46 to 32x48 32x50 to 82x56. Above 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 7 75 @ 6 00 9 25 @ 6 50 9 60 @ 7 00 11 75 @ 7 50 14 50 @ 9 00 16 00 @10 00 17 00 @11 00 18 00 @12 00 20 00 ©18 00 24 00 @15 00 English and French Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (Single Thick)—Discount 25@3f> ttttit 5 6x 8 to8x10.50 feet 7 75 @ C 8 8 10 15 16 to 10x15 to 12x19 to 16x24 to 24x30 to 24x86 24x36 to 30x44. 25 @ 6 75 © 7 50 © 7 50 @12 50 @18 50 00 60 00 00 18 00 @15 00 20 50 @16 00 24 00 @18 00 80x45 to82x48. 82x60 to 32x56 Groceries—See special report. Bags—Duty, valued at 1$ yard, 3; ovet Gunny cents or less, $ square 10, 4 oents # ft Calcutta, light &h’y % 2$ 22© Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less $ square yard, 3; ovet 10,4 cents $ ft. Calcutta, standard, v’d SO© Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 ft, and less 18 ft, 6 oents centsor 20 $2 cent ad val.; over 20 cents %t ft, lo cents $1 ft and 20 $1 centad val. Blasting(A) $ 251b keg .. © 5 OO Shipping and Mining.. .. @5 00 Rifie 7 50 © ... Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ ters $ ft 40 © 1 10 Hair—Duty rax*. RioGrande,mixed# ft 8?*© ?6 Buenos Ayres, mixed 8> @ 85 Hog,Western, unwash. 10 @ 1* . . Hardware— A\es—Cast steel, best bia»d perdez do ordinary 15 © 13 © 17 15 Carpe ter’s Adzes,..,. 24© 25 do 21©.... ordinary Shingling Hatchet*, C’t Steel, beat br'dslNos. 1 to3 8 do ordinary...^. 6 Broad ;alch’a 8to3bst.i5 do * ;di ary 12 Coffee Mil s-Iron Hop’r 8 00 @ 9 60 17 @ 7 50 50 @25 bO '0 © .... 75 © 7 60 do Bri Hopper 6 CO @10 00 do Wood BacK 4 2 ’ @10 5<> (:otti<n Gins, per saw... $5 leas 20 % Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dis. Cast Butt*—Fast Joint. List 1C Jtalv. . List. Loose Joint.. “ List25jfadv. HlngesWr^u^ht, L st 2u % List 40 % Door L c!- s and Latches List 7* (p Door Knobs—Mineral. List 7* % Door B< Its, Cast Bbl . C^rrla^e and Tire Bolts Pore lain Li*t 7* Nt-w List 20&7* “ . Pa-Ho iks Locks—Cabinet, Eagle “ Tiun< 3t< cks aad Dies ccrew dls. <’is. die. <l‘s. % dis. % dls. 5 jCadv. List 10 £ dis. Li 185 % dis. Wrencnes—Coe’s Paten* do l aft’a Sm tbs’ Vis List 20 % dls; List 65@6U % dis. # ft 24 © a,. binner no insets. do co .. Old List 25*adv, Framing Chisels List40£adv. handled, Li«t 40 jtadr. in sets List 20 % dis. Ausmi8,per dtNewList lOjf dii, do List 10 % dis. Rinsr Cut Tacks... List6t&lo % dis. Augur Bitts Fhoit Litt 65 % dis. Cut Brads List 26*80 % dls. Screws American...List l0JS2*j4dis. do Eng'jsh. List 2o % dio. Shovels and Spades... List 5 % dis. Horse Shoes 7*© 8 Planes IJat 30© 35 £adv Bivet Fruits—See special report. Furs—Du.y,10 $ cent. Beaver,Dark..^ skin 1 00 @ 4 do Pale 50 @ 2 Bear, Black 5 00 @12 do brown. 3 00 © 8 Badger 60 @ 1 Cat, Wild 60 @ 8x11 llx 14 12x19 20x31 21x31 , Iron ..... Hay—North River, in bales# 100 fts, for shipping 1 0 @ Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $26; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and fampioo, # ft. Amer.tressed.# ton 8SO 00@890 00 do Undressed.. ij90 0(<@800 00 Russia, Clean 875 00@885 00 Jute (gold) 100 00@15f) 00 1 cent llj@ Manila..# ft..(gold) 12 (toll) tt @ 8* Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Balt* Sisal # oent ad val. ed and Skins 10 Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres# Montevideo Rio Grande lbg’d Orinoco do do do 19 © 18 @ IS @ 17 @ 23 18* 17* California gold California, Mex. do 18 @ 16 @ 19 Porto Cabello ..do VeraCruz do 14 @ 14?@ 15 @ 14* 15* 15 16 do Tampico do Texas Dry Salted Hides— t-hli ..(gold) llfurnla... do S m w ch Isl’d do South & Wes’, do Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.# ft g’d. Rio Grande do California do Western i * . .... Coutry sl’ter trim. * cared. 14 @ If*© 16* 12© 13 @ la @ 12 f*@ 10 @ 10 10 9 .. 9i@ 11 @ 14 12 11 © IS City 10 © 12* 26 © 80 © 28 do Gambia & Bissau do do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip # 1b oash. Sierra Leone... 2J © Honey—Duty, 20 cents # gallon. Cuba (duty paid) (gold) # gall. 84 © Hop»—Duty: 5 oents # ft. Crop of 1866 # ft 40 © do of 1865 Foreign 83 21 65 70 20© .45 40 © $5 St. Domingo, ordinary logs do Port-au-Platt, do Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... $ C 13 00© .4 00 Ox,Buenos Ayres.... 12 00© 14 00 crotches India Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent. ad val. Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse $ lb 65 @ £5 @ <?2 @ © East India Carthag3na, «fec Indigo—Duty fbee. .. © .. assorted @162 50 Bar,English and Amer¬ 112 50@1’7 *0 ican, Refined do do do CommonlO-** 00© Scroll 1 *2 00©'70 00 Ovals and Half Round 17 £0@147 50 Band ©142 50 HorseShoe..., 131 50© 142 50 ... Rods,5-8©3,16 inch.. ti7 C0©172 50 Hoop 14, 50@210 00 Nail Rod '•$© 1<$ $ lb Sheet, Russia 20 © 22 Sheet, Single, Double and Treble S 6$@ Rails, Eng. (g\l) $ ton 55 0 © do American 85 00© 90 00 Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime $ft> 8 2.r © 3 50 East Ind Billiard Mall 8 50© 4 50 African, W. C., Prime 8 25© 3 40 , African, Scrivel.,W.C. 2 00© 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 lb ; Old Lead, 1$ cents $ ft); Pipe and Sheet, 2$ cents $ ft). Galena $ 100 ft) © .. (gold) Spanish \i\ © 6 97$ German (g,»l I) 6 87j@ / 00 English (gold) 7 0.) © 7 12$ net Bar .. ©10 00 Pipe and Sheet net .. ©10 25 Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 80 $ oent ad val. /—cash.79 5).—, Oak, Slaughter, light do do do do do 8i middle heavy, do <lo light Cropped.... middle bellies do do .... .... Heml’k, B. A.,Ac., l’t. do do - - do do do do do do do do do 40 44 45 1» . 80 heavy, Orino., etc. l’t. do middle do and heavy do 36 © 46 White Pine Box B’ds 80 00 © 32 00. White Pine Merch. Box Boards....... 33 00 © 39 00 SO 00 ©100 00 Clear Pine 8 25 © wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 © 65 0J Cherry B’ds <fc Plank 80 00 © 90 00 60 00 © 65 00 Maple and Birch 85 00 © 40 00 ... 100 00 ©120 00 Black Walnut STAVES— White oak, ext,a. pipe, $ M. ©?00 00 . do pipe, heavy ©250 00 do ©200 00 pipe, light. do pipe, culls . 120 1 00 ©ISO DC do nbd., extra. @250 00 do hhd., heavy ©200 00 do @12' 00 hhd., light. do ©100 0 0 hhd., culls . do ©175 00 bbl., extra do @140 00 bbl., heavy. do bbl., light.. @110 00 bbl., culls.. do @ 60 00 Red oak, hhd.,h’vy. @130 00 do hhd., light.. © 90 00 . . . , . . . . . HEADING —White oak, hhd flahofrany* 5 4 Bahia. do Iflolasaes.— See 15 14 © © flm,Ashton’s(*’d) 2 15 © ..« Vorthlngt’s 2 85 @ 2 90 Onondaga,com.fine bis. 2 50 @ 2 60 do do 210 5) bgs. 1 90 © 2 09 do * do $ bush. 45 @ 50 do do 6 special report. Horse 8 25 © 8 50 ; fd (6d)$ ft) 5:8 © 3i hoe, pressed... 22© 24 3D© @ Yellowmetal. Zino ,... do , ,.$ft> Timothy,reaped $ bus CaDary !..$ bus Linseed,Am.clean$tee do Am. rongh $ bus do Calcutta ...gold £0 * China thrown do do 80 ... 55 $100ft): oxidesof zinc, 1| cents $ cent ad val • pure, in oil while, American, puie, dry Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 do white, American, No. 1,1 noil do whi e, French, in oil Ochre, yellow, French, dry $ 100 ft) grM in oil.$ ft) Spanish brown, dry $ do 100 ft) do Paris gr’d in oil.$ ft) wh.,No.l$l00fl> Whiting, Amer 12 12 .. @ © J2$ 32$ © 14 12i@ 9 • 9$ © 10 @ 10© 11 50 8 15 @ © 3 50 10 © 1 50 © 8 © 3 75 75 @ © ?i© ?$© • • t • 9 • • • • ‘ 2* . @150 00 Rase* 85 © 50 .... do do do , , . .. .. Vera Cruz .gold .. gold Puerto Cab .gold Chagre8 , . . orem ; .. .. * 60 65 , 17 © 6$@ domestic Trieste 1 10 © 1 15 Cal. & Eng 1 35 © 1 50 80© American.... 40 Venet. red (N.O.)$cwt 3 25 @ .... Cai mine,city made$ft)16 00 @20 00 China clay $ ton80 00 @32 00 Chalk $ hbL 5 00 © Chalk, block....$ ton .... ©23 00 Chrome yellow... $ ft) 15 © 49 . ... Barytes, oreign.......' 40 © 55 Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; refined, 40 )ents $ gallon. Crude,40©47grav.$gal. 20 @ 21 Refined, free © 46$ do In bond 30$@ 26 Naptha,refined,... ... 25© Residuum.. $ bbl. 4 50 @ Plaster Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 $ cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia$ tox @ 4 50 do White Nova Scotia . Calcined, eastern $ bbl Calcined, city mills 5 00 © 5 50 .... @ 2 40 @ 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct; lams, bacon, and lard, 2 ts $ ft). 00 00 87 Beef,plainmess$ bbl..12 00 @18 do extra mess. 17 00 ©20 Pork, mess, new 20 50 ©20 do mesa Old .......19 25 @10 50 24 46 Donskoi, washed-...... 48 © 45 Persian 25 © 80 80 © 40 . .... washed 20 © 25 22 © 25 85 © 46^ washed d. 5-16 @ 2 0 '© 4 6 1010© 0 © . _ . Corn, b’k A bags$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef... d s. $@ Oil .* ..« tee. Pork $ bbl. @20 0 4 © . @ 2 4 0 . © 1 6 . @20 0 6 To London : Heavy goods.. .$ ton . Oil @27 Flour $ bbl. @ 2 Petroleum © 5 Beef ♦..$ tee. © 4 Pork... . $ bbl. @ 3 Wheat $ bush. Corn © To Glasgow (By Steam): Flour $ bbl. .. ©2 Wheat ..$bush. © . Ilf . - 0 . 6 6 6 . . 24 © Corn,bulk and bags.. © (sail)$bbl. © 5 Heavy goods..$ ton. 28 0 ©30 0 .. Petroleum Oil Beef Pork.. Tobacco.—See sperial report. To Havre: Cotton Whalebone—Duty: foreign fish¬ ery, 20 p. c. ad val. .. $ tee. $ bbl. $ fl> @85 0 © 5 0 ..@8 6 $ $ $@ .. . @ ^ ;. 100© Measurem. g’ds.$ ton i0 00 © ... Wheat,, In shipper’s © ... bags $ bush. ... Flour $ bb V ® •• Petroleum 5 6 @ 6 Beefand pork..$ bbl. ..... . .... and Liquors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per Wines gallon, other liquors, $2.50. Wines— Duty; value net over 50 cents $ gal¬ .. Hops South Sea $ ft) © 1 15 North west coast @ 1 25 Ochotsk @ Polar 1 c0 © 1 82$ r. 0 5 5 6 .. J.*C. Coke. 10 75 @12 50 Terne Charcoall2 01 @12 75 Terne Coke.... 9 50 @10 00 .. .... 40 © Heavy goods... $ ton .... ... © 22 © Petroleum 12 19 14 22 @ (gold) 22$ English (gold) 2 !$© Plates,char. I.C.$ boxl2 5p @13 TO do washed To Liverpool : Cotton $‘ilb Flour $ bbl. cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent. ad va’. . 84 28 18 © Freights— Tin-Duty: pig,bars,and block,15$ do 82 © common, unw. Zinc—Duty: p!g or block, $1 50 W 100 lbs.; saeeta 2$ oents $ ft). Sheet— $ ft) 12 © 12$ Teas.—See special report. $ ft) (gold) 27 © 80 do t. Tallow—Duty ;1 cent $ ft). American, prime, coun¬ try and city $ lb... 11 @ Banca Straits 81 Valparaiso,unwashed.. Mexican,unwashed.... Smyrna,unwashed .... Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. $ ton.. 125 00 @225 00 Sicily. repo 32 do 1-) © Sugar.—See spr-cial 18 © African, unwashed 6$ 40' 25 45 28© .. Spices.—See spocial report. 10$@ 11 @ 18 @ pulled unwashed.... S. American Cordova 17$ Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $ ft) or under, 2$ cents; over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts $ ft); ever 11 cents, 3$ cents $ ft) and 10 $ cent ad val. (8tore prices.) English, cast, $ ft) . 18 © 2;’$ German..; 1 $@ 14$ American, spring 15 12 © English, spring * English blister English machinery.... 80© 20© ' 80 © do 10 @ Amer c.n case 40 © 50 30 © 40 common..., Entre Rios, . do 82,12 cents $ ft), and 1 Peruvian, unwashed... do Spelter—Duty; in pigs, bars, and plates, |1 50 $ 100 lbs. Plates,foreign $ft> gold over S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. «• cent $ ft). and 32,10, and 10 $ cent ad^ val¬ do do Texas Soap—'Duty; 1 cent $ ft), and 25 $ ad val. Castile.'. costing 12 cents or les 12 and not Superfine ....; No. 1, pulled California, unwashed... .. ... 10 $ cent ad valorem; on the skin, $ cent ad val. Amer., Sax. fleece $ fl>* 50 © 65 full bl’d Merino. 48 © 6) do do $ and $ Merino..' 40© 45 Extra, pulled \ 50 © 55 60 , 9© 47© 57 © than 24, 7 cents; over 24 not over 60 # 15 $ ck off list 25 & 5 $ ct. off list. 80 & 6 $ ct. off list* $ lb, 8 oents $ ft): over • . .. do 11 00© 25 00 No.27 to 86 Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain $ ft) Brass (less 15 p r cent) do . Copper , .. .... W ool—Duty: . 14 Vermilion,Chinese$ ft) 1 40 @ I do do do © © 55 © 55 @ © @ 57 © 57$© 62 j@ © © © @ Madras,eac cash Cape. cash Deer,SanJuan$ ftgold do Bolivar ...gold do Honduras ..gold do Sisal ....gold do Para gold 50 00 2 25© 30 U0 do cases. 10 75 val. .... • .. in No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 .. .. 8 00 1 10 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to $3 5< $ 100 ft), and 15 $ cent ad .. .. . 45 @ 80 gr.. (free). do Champagne.... , 4 00© 75© do do Sherry do do 75© 1 1 15© 1 Malaga, sweet . do do dry.... do 1 10© 1 Claret, in hhds. do 83 00©150 Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. © Goat,Curacoa$ Ibgr li do Buenos A.. .gold 85 © 37$ do VeraCruz .gold 50 © do Tampico.. .gold 50 © do Matamoras.gold © 85 do Payta 87 gold 85 © @ .. ' 1 05 © — © t 35© 42 2 00© 8 00 85© 1 20 1 16© 8 00 do do Burgundy Port, Sherry more •- 1 0C © ... Corn Whisky(*nb nd) Wines—Port (gold) Madeira do Marseilles Japan, superior........11 60 @13 50 do Medium 10 00 @11 00 20 75 © . .... .. Taysaams, superior, No. 1 © 2 ...11 50 @12 00 do medium,No.3@4 9 00 @10 50 Canton,re-reel.No.l@2 9 80 © 9 75 .... city distilled (gold) 5 20© 10 50 Hennessy (gold) 5 20© 10 60 Otard, Dnp. &Co.do 5 15© 10 50 Pinet, Castil. &Co.do 5 00© 10 00 5 10© 10 50 Renault & Co.. do 5 00© 10 00 J. Vassal A Co.. do 5 20© 10 00 Jules Robin.... do Marrotte & Co. do ....© ©'.... United V. Prop, do 5 15© 10 50 Vine Grow. Co. do ....© L'-gcr freres ... do Otfier br’ds Cog. do 5 0 © 7 00 Pellevoisinfreresdo 4 90© 5 0 A. Seignette . do. 4 90© 5 00 Hiv. Pellevoisin do 4 85© 4 90 4 85© Alex. Seignette. do 4 95 4 85© 4 95 A rzac Seignette do 4 75© J. Romieux.... do Other Rochelle, do 4 25© 4 fcfc Rum—Jamaica^... do 4 25© 6 00 8 50© 3 60 St. Croix di 2 90© 8 50 Gin-Differ. brands do Whisky—8. & Ir. do .4 00© 4 90 Dum’c—N.E. Rum.cur. 2 45© 2 60 Bourbon Whisky.cur. 2 40© 6 00 Silk—Duty; free. All thrown silk. 35 $ cent. Tsatlees, No. l@3.$ft)12 50 ©18 00 do nnbleach. 8 00 @ 3 05 Lard oil 1 15 @ 1 25 Red oil, Bank Straits Ilf© " * J. & F. Martell .... Buck casks.$ gall.. 1 65 @ l 70 $ ft) @ 11 Linseed, city.. .$ gall. 1 18 © 1 20 .. Brandy— - 2 2 Shot—Duty: 2| cents $ ft). Drop 10|@ $ ft) eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. Olive, qs (gold)per case 4 25 @ .... 2 60 © 8 4 $1 $ gallon, $1 $ gal¬ $ cent ad vaL over lon and 25 12$@ 15 25 @ 8 50 25 @ 4 7i © f0 © 2 70 30 @ Clover .... do valorem; ad val. Oakum—Duty fr.,$ 5) 9$@ 11$ Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val. City thin obl’g, in bbls. $ ton.56 00 © do in bags. @54 00 West, thin obl’g, do £8*0© Oils - Duty; linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $l : burning fluid, 50 oents $ gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut. 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ Sperm, crude lon 20 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over fir and not over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 2b $ can* ad Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, 1 oent $ lb; canary, $1 $ bushel of '60 ft>; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent 00 Whale 1 15 @ 1 do refined winter.. 1 20 @ @ S 25 .. 85 © 3 00 .. (230 lbs.) 8 00 @11 60 Spirits turp., Am. $ g. 67© 69 do in Palm 56r 52 Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2$ cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda,' 1 cent $ ft). Refined, pure $ ft) @ 16 Crude ’ 9 © 9t Nitrate soda gold 3i@ 20> . ..$pkg. F. F....O...240 ft) bgs. 2 Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30cents 79 gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 79 cent ad val. Turpent’e, • f .. $280ft) 5 25 @ ... Tar, Am rio, bbl 2 00 © 2 75 Pi ch @ 4 .'0 Rosin, common .... 4 ‘26 @ 4 37 “ 54 @ 50 © coarse Fine screened Naval do atrairedan :No 2... * fO © 5 ?do No. 1 5 £0 © 7 Pale and Extra do fine, Solar 48 © Copper . .. Nails—Duty: cutl$; wrought 2$; horse shoe 2 cents 79 ft>. Cut,4d.@6ud.$ 100 lb 6 50 © 6 75 Clinch Horse shoe, .... Salt—Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 lb ; bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft). Turks Islands $ bush. 55 @ Cadiz © Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 1 90 © 1 95 20 15 60 © 1 00 Rosewood, R. Jan $ ft) @ .... 14© 10 @ ft. <0 @10 50 Carolina....- $ 100 lblO East India,dressed.... .. Cedar, wood—Duty free. Mahogany, St. Domin¬ go, crotches, $ ft.. do do —Duty: Lumber, 20 79 cent ad val.; Staves, 10 79 cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. Spruce, East. 79 M It 19 00 © 20 00 Southern Pine 40 00 @ 45 (Xl Oak and Ash $ ft). 14 © Litharge, City.... $ ft) Lead, red, City do white, American, fiUmberj Woods, Staves,etc, Laths, Eastern.79 M Poplar and Whi e @ © China clay, |5 $ ton; Venetian red and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $ ton. Lime—Duty; 10 $ cent ad val. Rockland, com. 79 bbl. .. © 1 70 do heavy © 2 20 - Mansanilla Mexican Florida. 79 c. do do ft>; Spanish brown 25 36© mid. © 14© 19$ 9$ 8$@ Rico—Duty: cleaned 2$ cents $ ft).; paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents 15© (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas 10© Bams $ ft); ochre, ground in oil, $150 $ 100 28 © 21 © 85 © Slaugh.in rough Oak, Slaugh.in rou., I’t do © © © 39 © dam’gdall w’g’s do poor do .. Mexican..... cent? 29 31 heavy, do do & B. A, .... 16 50 ©17 00 li|© 13$ Shoulders, Kerosene 63 @ Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft); Parig white and whiting, 1 cent 79 ♦ dry oohres, 56 31 © 34 © do Nuevitas Mnnsanilla Paraffine, 28 32 © 35 © middle, do middle, •' © © © © 3(‘$@ heavy Califor., light, do © 39 @ . 40 $ ft> Lard, ■ Honduras /—Store Prices—, = 30 @ 12 12 12 logs. 6“ 45 (.old)$fb 1 00 © 1 65 Oude (gold) 75 © 1 35 Madras (gold) 90 65 © Manila (gold) 65 © 1 10 Guatemala (gold) 80 @ 1 15 Caraccas 70 © (gold) 90 Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1$ cents $ lb. Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 lb ; Boiler and Plate, 1$ cents $ lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1$ to If cents $ tt>; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $ ft). Pig, Scotch,No 1. $ ton 4« 00© 49 00 Pig, Amerioan,No. 1.. 46 00© 4< 00 Bar, Refi’d r.ng&Amer 90 0 ©100 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted sites (in gold) 95 00©100 00 Bar Swedes, sizes 10 prime, do do <• 7 © Port-au-Platt, do 61 Bengal •• [January 19,1S67. THE CHRONICLE. 88 ’• Lard, tallow, out m t etc..... $ S> Aahes, pot and pear! f© .. 8 © 10 o t 89 THE CHRONICLE. [January 19, 1867. Telegraph Company earned as follows from ftailtoatj iHonitor. all Philadelphia and pense accounts of pare as follows : Reading Railroad.—The 1865. 4 August and 1866, com.. September $410,2-2 40 $562,292 27 340,742 31 298,931 99 . 023,523 31 571,036 00 Total 5 months. Expended for construction. $151,910 57 $118,474 77 201,974 65 94,322 66 258,023 96 46,526 10 Net earnings, m’ts to oth. lines, sources, J548,716 96 556,956 95 October November Difference. 1866. j.... July receipts and ex¬ this Company Tor the years 1S65 Jaly to November, both months inclusive: Receipts from Exp’s and pay- * 279,283 24 245.527 00 344,245 07 3/2,508 00 $1,139,719 42 $1,722,709 77 $2,862,524 49 53,075 66 27,937 00 $840,336 19 $1,065,847 $1,024,217 Deer. $39,630 Coal Trade by Railroad and Canal.—The Philadelphia 1,165,277 1,42!,539 Incr. 256,262 S,627,292 8,245,697 Deer. 381,695 Mail.. 28,871 27,719 Deer. 1,152 Ledger sums up the coal business of Eastern Pennsylvania for 1865 MiBcell neoue 25-'-,232 181,647 Deer. 73,585 and 1866, as follows : 1S65. 1866. Gross Receipts $11,142,519 $10,902,819 Deer. $239,700 Rail 00 Inc.. $623,672 00 Reading road., $3,714,684 00 $3,090.812 Gross Expenses 6,380,248 . 6,738,747 Iucr. 408,499 Schuylkill Canal 1,066.302 00 Inc.. 230,748 15 1,297,045 15 829,197 96 1,731,474 12 1,402,276 16 Inc.. Net Profits $4,812,271 $4,164,072 Deer. $048,199 Lehigh Valley Railroad 888,784 05 Lehigh Navigation 1,066,702 17 Inc.. 177,918 12 From which were paid as follows : LackawannaA West. R. R 1,516,300 15 1,007,073 16 Inc.. 509,816 99 577.471 06 Dec. 41,136 88 536,3-4 18 Interest and Sinking Fund $840,441 $465,241 Deer. $375,200 Pennsylvania Coal Co 640,272 00 ^62,622 00 Inc.. Dividends (10 per cent.) and taxes 2,226,474 2,570,188 Incr. 343,714 IVlaware & Hudson Canal. 1,302,694 00 Wyoming Canal 619,278 09 316,28'! 00 Inc.. 202,993 (4) 452,660 00 401.975 00 Inc.. 60,705 00 Total interest, Sink. Fund, dividends,&c.. $3,066,915 $3,035,429 Deer. $31,486 Tioga Railroad 29,765 00 Barclay Coal Company 99,453 00 69,658 00 Inc.. Surplus. $1,745,526 $1,128,643 Deer. $616,883 Total tons ...12,235,963 17 9,581,086 08 Inc.. 2,654,278 14 Surplus last year 1,237,767 1,643,857 Incr. 406,090 At an average price of $5 50 per toD, the total value of the Balance to credit $2,983,293 $2,772,500, Deer. $210,793 Travel (’65, 393,359, & ’66, 384,902 pass).. Mch’dijse (’65, 846,105, & ’66, 1.307,121 tons Coal (’65, 3,090,814, &’66, 3,714,684 tons.. * Which was would amount to $67,396,800. Pensacola Railroad.—The Directors of the Pensacola Railroad have entered into a contract for the reconstruction of their road from Pensacola to its intersection with the railroads from Mobile to above coal at tide-water appropriated thus : $868,078 $1,021,803 Incr. $153,730 471,363 1 47,*39 Deer. 323,924 Total new work and rolling stock.. $1,339,436 $1,169,242 Deer. $170,194 Leaving undivided/. $1,643,856 $1,603,258 Deer. $40,598 Montgomery at Pollard. The work of cutting the cross-ties has The report says of last year’s coal trade: „ already been commenced, and, according to the terms of the con¬ The coal traffic of the past year opened with moderate activity, tract the road will be completed in five months. and so continued until September 1, when it was evident that a Atlantic fND Pacific Railroad.—Negotiations for merging continuation of the same rates of increase to the end-of the year the Southwest Pacific Railroad into the Atlantic and Pacific Rail¬ road were concluded on the 7th inst. ; and Henry II. Waid, Leonard would overstock the market. At that date the coal tonnage of the W. Jerome, Robert L. Cutting. (President of the Board of Brokers.) Company was 851,803 tons in excess of that to the same period of Paul S. Forbes and Charles Gould were elected to the Board of the previous year. This result demonstrates the capacity of the Directors of the latter company. Instructions have been forwarded rolling stock to be equal to a business of 4.000,000 tous of coal per to the contractors on the Southwest Pacific Railroad to place an additional force of fifteen hundred men ou the work of construction New New engines and cars construction “ annum, and 1,000,000 ton3 Western Union of other freight.” Company.—The Western Union Telegraph 1864 1865. (257 to.) (280 to.) $100,991 1154,418 $280,503 276,2S2 299,063 258,480 822,277 355,270 335,985 409,250 401,280 195.803 i* 162,723 178,786 1206,090 224,267 312,165 354,554 320,879 307.803 252,015 . 857,956 307,919 236,824 (800 to.) (280 to.) 333,432. ..May.. 868,273. .June. 326,870. .July . 381,559. ..Aug.. 818,549. ...Sep.. 347,086. ..Oct... (667 m.) (657 to.) 669,605 729,759 716,378 563,401 . . .. .Jan .. .. Year. 18,429,643 15,434,775 Mich. So A N. Indiana.• 1864. (524 to.) $256,600 (524 in.) $363,996 (468 to.) $890,676 457,227 £11,297 088,066 085,751 532,911 W6,640 025,647 $314,598^ fan. 283,177. .Feb.. 412,393. ^ Mar.. * 4,826,722 4,643,422 .Year.. P'5,830 W1,3S2 691,556 914,082 (468 to.) (468 TO.) $690,144 $555,483. 678,504 857,583 733,866 637,186 646,995 584,523 712,495 795,938 858,600 712,362 580,968 1,210,654 1,005,680 698,679 —Illinois Central, 1865. 708 to.) (708 to.) $327,900 416,588 459,762 423,797 510,100 423,578 586,964 799,236 661,391 657,141 .Jan.. 554,828. J uly641,848. .Aug. 661,608 Sept 742,0<X. .Oct. 681,558. Nov . ... .. .Dee... tYeftjr,* 157,786 149,855 155,730 144,942 218,236 284,194 203,785 202,966 204,728 VMW4 243,178 224,980 271,140 331,494 324,865 386,617 321,037* 3,095,470 ..Jan.. $96,672 $77,010 83,993 78,697 .Dec.. . ..Year — (234 to.) $121,776. 72,135. 103,082. 267,488. 26'2,172. 170,795. 116,224. 150,989. 286,133. 244,854. April. 83,702 131,648 126,970 99,662 106,269 203,018 June .July.. 237,662 251,9 6 . 86,4-2 164,710 221,638 241,370 3i >0,841 395,579 .Nov.. .Dec.~ 198,135 129,227 171,125 , ..Year. 220,0 2 201,169 1,402,106 346.717 2,535,00! 1864. 1866. 155,893. ..Feb... 192,138. ..Mar... 167,301. .April.. 16S,699. ..May... 167,099 June.. 166,015 July.. 222,953 .Aug... 198,884 Sept... 244,834 .Oct 212,226 Nov:.., . . Dec..., rl (242 m.) $79,735 '1865. (242 TO.) $144,084 139,171 155,753 95.843 132,896 123,987 127,010 156,338 139,65*8 244, L4 375,534 221,570 -220.209 235,154 - 144,001 138 738 194,521 (271,798 J,374.634 §379,981 sj 875,584 ?361,610 (247,028 1866. (204 m. $173,557 $168*741 161,180 180,140 167,COT 222,411 • 173.732 96,154 198,C82 215,784 196,138 245,627 189,447 226,047 243,417 217,(41 243,413 223.846 239,C88 220,188 Michigan Csntrth 1866. $90,125. 110,932. .Nov... . .Dec... . Year • . 8,970,946 . 1S64. (340 to.) $210,329 .Jan.. 122.621 ..Feb. 124,175 ..Mar.. $131,707. . 337,240 401,456 865,663 829,106 413,601 460,661 490,693 447,669 $262,438 266,796 887,158 843,736 885,196 835,088 824,980 859,665 429,166 493.649 828.869 4,504,546 4,260,125 >i.—> ..Year.. $269,223 $$67,541 302,596 832,400 278,006 846.243 275,950 8,311,070 8,793,005 223.242 ..Dec... 1866. (340 to.) (840 m.) 277,423 283,180 253,924 247,262 305,454 278,701 310,768 802,425 268.176 327,926 ..Nov.. 1865. 271,627 290,916 804,463 349,286 344,700 350,848 872,618 412,558 284,319 209.443 224,967 .. 808.649 246,109 309,261 242,560 .June. July. 209,199 188.223. ..Aug.. 275,906. ...Sep.. 416,138 ...Oct.. 414.604 239,189 813,914 260,466 121,904 .April. 245,511. ..May.. — 279,1a 844,228 —-Ohio A 1866. (234 m.) — 1866. (285 to.) 410.802 405,510 876,470 . . 1865. (285 to.) 408,415 150,148. ..Oct... — 1864. (285 m.) $252,436 278,848 848.802 338,276 271,553 265.780 203,244 846.781 .Jan.-. . 84,264. .Feb... 82,910. ..Mar... 82,722. .April.. 95,664. ..May... 106,315. .June.. 96,'23. ..July.. 106,410. ..Aug... 108 338 ..Sep... — 1865. (204 in.) 2,512,315 .Year.. . 326236 — -Western Union.- -Toledo. Wab. A Western. Haute.-^ . 218,236 216,783 222,924 208,098 162,694 (234 m.) $51,965 ..Aug.. ...Sep.. ...Oct... . 162,570 1865. 95,905 . - 1,224,056 1,038,165 64,993 (210 TO.) (210 TO.) $170,078 $178,119. .Jan... 163,908 202,771 169,299 177,625 173,722 105,767 ..Mar.. ..May.. 110,664 — 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 46.474 . 810.594 226,840 94.375 (234 to.) $98,181 86,528 ..Jan-. 81,897. .Feb.. * 91,809 1864. 1866. (234 to.) $98,183 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 203,514 210,314 214,533 264,637 242,171 248,292 Ma v... ^-Milwaukee A St.!Paul.-^ Chien.- 1865. April.. 107,886 264,605 (251 in.) (251 TO.) 72,389 . .iUnrch Cincinnati.—* 1865. 406,773. .April. 639,195. ...Oct... 681,552. .Nov.. 170,879 202,857 193,919 .Feb... . 257,230 8,313,514 3,478,825 507,S30. ..May 660,025. .June. 467,115. ..J uly. 586,074. ..Aug.. 551,021 ..Sep.. .Jan— . ... Marietta and (251 to.) (201 to.) $139,414 . 1864. 1866. and Pittsburg, 1864. 321,818 200.642 . .June.. 244,121 224,1.2. .July... 306,231 810,443 A n g... 396,050 .S*pt... 389,489 307,523 dg 422124 .Oct 270,078 B 881,006 .Nov ‘-01,779 q 339,417 Dec.... 616,822. ..Mar.. L., Alton A T. 1865 160.497 106,580 234,612 198,679 616,665 616,608 460,573 617,682 578,403 1,711,281 1,985,571 147,485 185,013 93,763 78,607 76,248 107,525 104,608 115,184 125,252 116,495 116,146 7,181,208 (210 m.) $100,872 289,403 89,901 6,329,447 * 243,150 528,973 603,402 178,526 149,099 117,013 ..Year.. 175,482 (228 to.) $305,554 $241,395 246,331 183,3S5 87,791 747,469 739,736 168,218 . $158,735 ■ RAILROADS. -Cleveland 1866. (238 in. 74,409 641,589 643,887 518,088 $102,749 115,135 88,221 140,418 186,747 212,209 139,547 113,399 ...Oct.., .Nov.. .Dec.., . (228 in.) 1865. 512,027. ..Feb. 1864. . . (708 to.) $582,828. £571,536 406.373 <-St. 474,738. ..Feb.. 654,890. ..Mar.. 606,078. .April. 672,628. ..May. 644,573. .Jane. 99 546,609 (234 to.) (624 to.) *-Pitt8b., Ft,W.,A Chicago. 1866. 1865. 1864. 923,886 840,354 1864. 1866. 366,361 304,445 413,974 388,454 April. ..724. 90 4 865,180 830,651 426.498.. .May.. 351,489 367,126 892.641.. June. 387,095 815,268 838.499.. .July.. 301,613 378,891 380.452.. .Aug*. 418,575 858,862 429.191.. ..Sep.. 486,808 402,219 500.404.. ..Oct... 524,760 407,107 416.690.. .Nov.. 495,072 448,984 339.447.. .Dec.. 351,799 411,806 4,120,153 702,692 767,508 946,707 -Mil. and Prairie dn . 1865. . 747.942 1864. $984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188 ..Feb... 983,855. 947,146 934,133 ..Mar... 1,114,508 1,256,567 1,1170,434. 1,099,507 1,458,455 1,153,295. .April.. ..May.. 1,072,293 1,833,461 1,101,668. .June... 1,041,975 1,177,373 1,243,142. 994,317 1,202,180 1,203,462. .July... 1,106,364 1,331,046 1,290,3 0. ..Aug 1,301,005 1.336.615 1,411,847 ..Sep— ..Oct— 1,222,568 1.488.615 1,480.261. ..Nov... 1,224,909 1,622,472 1,417,927. ..Dee.... 1,384,217 1,429,765 — . 6,114,566 7,960,981 9,088,994 1866. (797 m.) (930 in.) $523,566 . ..Jan.. 405,634 . .Feb.. 523,744 . ..Mar.. 518,736 . .April. 735,0-2 ..May.. 922,892 . .June.. 77 ',900. ..July 778,284 . ..Aug... 989,053 . ..■Sep... (860 in.) $543,005 482,164 499,296 468,358 685,623 619,306 822,749. .Nov.. 285,418. .Dec.. 3,840,091 3,677,795..Year Erie Bailway. * 1865. 390,355 421,368 466,830 565,145 480,710 270,889. .April. 3,770,484 1864. $273,S75 317,839 $210,171. Jan.. Feb.. 207,913 804,885. Mar.. 1S647 1865. 1864. .* -Chicago and Bock Island.-^ Chicago & Northwestern 1866. Chicago and Alton.1866. the Gasconade River. EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL COMPARATIVE MONTHLY , west of 1866. 1864. (484 TO.» (140 TO.) $226,059. ..Jan... i 194,167, ,..Feb.? 256,407 ..Mar... 270,300. April.. 316,433. .May... 825 691. June.. . 304,917- July.. 396,248. Aug... 349,117. Sept.... 436,065. .Oct 354,830. .Nov...,, Dec >Ytwr» $80,840 37,488 42-038 41,450 48,359 68,118 60,308 49,903 66,565 66.871 54,942 42,195 mm 1865. (167 TO.) $43,716 87,265 82,378 83,972 63.862 82,147 68,180 60.862 75,677 92,713 61,770 87,880 1866. (177 TO) 45,102 86,006 89,299 48,833 86,913 102,686 85,506 60,698 84,462 100,303 75,248 54,473 [January 19,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 90 RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. Amount N. B.—The sums placed after name of Company shows the Funded Debt. the outstand¬ ing. total Railroad: tlexandria and Fredericksburg: 1 st Mortgage (gold coupons) Atlantic A Gt. Western ($30,000,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fond, (Pa.) 2d do do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.) 2d do do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, {Ohio) do ) 2d do 1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex Consolidated Bonds | Atlantic A St. Lawrence($1,472,000): Dollar Bonds - Sterling Bonds «... Baltimore and Ohio ($10,112,584): do do do ao 1855 1 Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell ($400,000): Mortgage Bonds Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000): ist Mortgage 2d Mortgage. Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000): Mortgage Burlington A Missouri ($1,902,110): General Mortgage . 1st into pref. stock Camden and Amboy ($10,204,463): 7 Ap’l & Oct. 800,000 4,000,000 7 4,000,000 7 do do do do Jan. & July 2 Ap’l Jk Oct. 1,014,000 000,000 13,858,000 7 7 7 7 do do 1877 1882 1S79 1881 1876 1883 Ap’l & 1880 Oct.! 1885 .Tan, July do 6 7 7 do 150 000 6 MayA Nov. 7 200 000 6 0 Feb. & Aug 1865 1865 do 1889 do 400,000 6 Jan. & 364,0001 <> ono non 7 380,000 7 j May Ik Nov 500,000 7 1 Ap’l & Oct. 1,ISO,950 600,000 7 April &'Oct 7 Jan 7,336,000 Mortgage Bonds Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref 6 6 .... . .... . Mortgage (S. F.) Aug 6 7 600,000 6 Jan. & July . 95 93 .... .... 1st do 3d do 3d do Convertible 7 1st 2d Extension Bonds 7 .... * .. . 98# 98 90 6,000,000 Aug 18S5 Jau. & July do 1870 1896- Feb. & 7 1,397,000 7 (new) Mahoning ($1,752,400): do do Cle‘\, Pain. A Ashtabula ($1,500,000): Dividend Bonds Snnbury and Erie Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,880,848): Mortgage convertible. do 4th Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280): Sinking Fond Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 Connecticut River ($250,000): 1st-Mortgage Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000): Mortgage Cumberland valley ($270,500): Mortgage Bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): Mortgage do do Toledo D mot Bonds ($500,600): T*t Mortgage, guaranteed Deux., Lacka. A Western ($8,491,500): 648,200 7 88# 89 89 83 * 85 ***'• 93 .... 100# Jan. & Julv 1890 7 l . 1874 do 7 ■ M’ch & Sep - 690,00( Ap’l A Oct. 1904 283,000 7 Jan. & July do 2,622,000 7 642,000 7 do 169,500 7 1867 270,500 8 Mortgage, sinking fund do 2d Laak&waanaand Western.. 6 Julj 1875 1,500,000 ) 7 Jan. A Jul3 1875 ) 7 M’ch A Set >1881 900.(XX) 7 Des Moines Mortgage Jan. A 1,740,(XX) 8 Jan. A Juljr 1871 »Ap’l& Oct .1887 1876 1879 1883 1880 1888 • • • • • • • * • V V* .... 102 103 100 90 90 1876 92# 92# • • . • • • July 1870 Feb. & Aug 1882 May & Nov. 1875 Jan. & July •« • 100 ... • 7 • • - i 1870 April & Oct 1881 Jan. & July 1883 rt 1 927,000 6 T * .... « • t • • .... O Jan. & July 1863 Feb. & Aug 9S 1,000,000 191,000 6 Jan. & • . 1876 do 6 100 - 1883 1;O37,50O 7 Jan. & July 1876 July 1877 * . « . . i * 3,890,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1869 do 1869 110,000 £ 1,907,000 7 J’ne & Dec. 1885 do .. . . . • • • • • • • ft 102 98 98 500,000 6 May & Nov 1870 500,000 6 Feb. & Aug 1875 A . • • 192,000 7 May & Nov. 1875 do 1867 523,000 7 2,563,000 .... ..... 106 107 ‘ • . . 1890 7 Tf 1 600,000 7 Jan. & July 1866 do 1870 364,000 10 500,000 7 Jan. & July 1866 Mortgage 640,000 7 mortgage d ' do 500,000 8 Jan. & 800,000 8 Jan. & July 1874 July 250,000 do 6 • • . • • . 1881 ...» 1882 S00,000 6 April & Oct 1870 do 1861 230,000 6 Mortgage, Eastern Division.... do May & Nov. ..... 187,000 7 April & Oct 1873 . .. Mortgage 100# 103 .... Michigan Central, ($7,463,489) Dollar, convertible 96# Sinking F’nd do Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($8,527,175) lit Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee A Prairie du Chien ; -• ..... $1,100,000 Loan Bonds $400,000 Loan Bonds lBtMortgage (P.& K.RR.) Bonds.. 2d do ) Bonds.. (do Memphis A Charleston : Mortgage bonds * ... Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) , .... 1st Mortgage, sinking ftmd Milwaukee and St. Paw : 500,000) . ... July 1873 Mortgage. 1st ... 1881 18— 18- «... : 1st Memphis Branch Mortgage Marietta A Cincinnati ($3,688,385): 1st Mortgage, Scioto and Hocking Valley mort .... 1878 J’ne & Dec. 1876 ffCtt ! 6,837,000 7 April & Oct 1875 1875 do 2,896,500 6 McGregor Western: 2,081,000 7 Jan. & July 1885 1886 do 300,000 7 ! ..... i Jan. & July 1888 do 1893 700,000 do 1st 1875 do 8 1 97 1888 7 A Mortgage. 1st 2d .... .... .... .... • • • • • 1862 903,000 7 May & Nov. 1872 7 Jan. A July 1869 .... . 1,000,00C . imaware 1st ; ... Lefiigh Valley ($1,477.000): 1st Mortgage Little Miami ($1,400,000): 1st Mortgage... Little Schuylkill ($960,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Long Island ($932,000): Mortgage Extension Bonds Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000): .... May & Nov 1893 7 1,129,000 7 M’ch & Sep 1873 do 1875 1,619,500 7 1,108,124 6 Jan. & July 1892 250,000 o Kennebec and Portland ($1,280,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do ' La Crosse A Milwaukee ($1,903,000): 96 900,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1880 500,000 927,000 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Joliet and N7Indiana ($800,000): S8 j 8S .... tr • 3,437,750 633,600 Mortgage, convertible do Sterling.... Redemption bonds 2d Mortgage 850,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1873 244/200 7 M’ch & Sep istu Mortgage 1st 2d 3d 475,000 7 7 Joliet and Chicago ($500,000): .... : Mortgage 1,963,000 1,086,000 Jeffersomitle’(%621,000): Cincinnati A Zanesville ($1,300,000): 1,300,000 7 Mortgage let Ill Jan. & .. • * Joseph ($7,177,600): pinking fnpd.. i Ap’l & Oct. Jan. & 149,000 1,350,000 .. Mortgage 7 May & Nov. 7 M’ch& Sep 7 7 April & Oct 7 June & Dec 6 M’ch & Sep Indianapolis A Madison ($640,000): .... 1,250,000 7 May & Nov 1880 1885 500,006 7 New Bonds 3,000,000 4,000,000 Indianapolis ana Cine. ($1,362,284) . Cine., Earn. A Dayton ($1,629,000): Mortgage... 7 Indiana Central ($1,254,500): 1st Mortgage, (interest ceased) 2d do “ '. , 99 ... Feb. & Aug 1885 1885 do' 7 • i 1,000,000 10 April & Ocr 1868 1st 1st .... .... 756,000 7 May & Nov. 1863Quarterly. 1915 2,000,000 7 484,000 N. W.): do Illinois Central ($13,231,000): 1st 7 till 1870 1,000,000 Huntingdon & Broad 7<?p($l,436,082): i66 . • • Hartjord A New Haven ($927,000): 1st Mortgage Hart/., Prov. & Fishkill ($1,936,940): 1st Mortgage.; 2d do sinking fund Housatonic ($191,000): 1st Mortgage Hudson River ($7,762,840): 1st Mortgage 1st Chicago, Rock Island A Picific: 1st Mortgage (C. & R. I.) 1st ($149,000): « Hannibal A St. .... . 91 3,525,000 8 Jan. & July 1883 5,600,000 7 4,441,600 926,500 3,SI 6,582 Harrisburg A Lancaster ($700,000): May & Nov. 1877 Jan. & July 1S93 Ap 1 & Oct. 1883 1,250,000 do convertible do Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds ’75-’80 Preierted Sinking Fund 2d 3d do do I 598,000 ' 1898 1st d 3d 4th 5th 1st 2d 2,000,000 7 Jan. & July Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago A Northwest. ($12,020,483): 1st convertible Great Western, 111. ($2,350,000): 1st Mortgage West. Division do East. do 2nd do do do .... 1882 1st Cleveland A do CKic. U. (incl. in C. A 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do doGrand Junction ($927,000): 1866 1895 1st Mortgage Mortgfloee. . • I New Dollar Bonds Ap’l & Oct. Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($475,000) 1st 2d Gal. A ... . — . * • 420,000. 5 ! Jan. & July 1872 739,200 6 1 Feb. & Aug 1874 .... 1870 «Tnlv 1870 Feb. & 7 1,500,000 1,100,000 Chicago and Gt. Eastern ($5,600,000): 1st Mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000): 2d ... Sterling convertible. J’ne & Dec. 1893 2.400,000 7 income do ... . — Aug 1883 May & Nov. 1889 519,000 7 Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): 1st - • • 1894 do 660,000 7 1 Elmira A Williamsport ($1,570,000): 1st Mortgage Erie Railway ($22,370,982): - ...» d do ••• • 300,000 7 1 Jan. & July 1863 ($598,000): Sinking Fund Bonds .... J Feb. & Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000): conv. dd .... .... Illinois and Southern Iowa mortgage. T 2 . 6J# Eastern, Mass. ($1,798.600): Mortgage, convertible .... 450,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1890 800,000* 7 May & Nov 1S90 800,000 7 M’ch & Sep 1865 Convertible Bonds Cheshire ($600,000): M •H ! 2d section do 1st .... 1877 1872 Mortgage W. Div Central Pacific of Cal. ($8,S36,000); 2 T3 T3 734,000 7 j Feb. & Aug 1876 Dubuque and Sioux City ($900,000): 1st Mortgage, 1st section 69# ... July 1879 1st 1st 2d EV Div Princpal payble. Payable. $2,500,000 7 May & Nov. 1875 1S64 do 1,000,000 8 Detroit, Monroe A Toledo ($734,000): 1st Mortgage - do Central Ohio ($3,673,000): ing. FRIDAY. - .... 1871 909,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1870 600,000 7 May & Nov. 1875 1st Mortgage Interest Bonds Consol. S. F. Bonds, .... 69# Erie and Northeast Mortgage Trust • ’70-’79 1870 1st 2d do do » .... 988,000 6 Ap’l & Oct. 1866 4&1 000 0 May &• Nnv 1878 141,000 1st let 2d • vt#. .... 1884 1895 Mortgage Central Qf Mew Jersey ($1,509,000): 1st • .... East Pennsylvania Catawissa ($141,000): do do Detroit and Milwaukee ($3,500,000): 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d do 490,000 7 Jan. & July 1873 493,000 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1879 Mortgage 1st CD < 7 J’ne & Dec. 1896 1,000,000 7 4,269,400 Consoldated ($5,000,(MX)) Loan Camden and Atlantic ($983,000): 1st 2d $2,500,000 1,700,000 867,000 Dollar Loans Dollar Loan N. B.—The snms placed after name of Company shows the total Funded Debt. eA 1,000,000 6 J’ne & Dec. 1867 500,000 6 M’ch& Sep 1885 589,500 6 Feb <fe Aug 1877 Blossburg and Coming ($150,000): Mortgage Bonds Boston, Cone, A Montreal ($1,050,000): 1st Mortgage. i conv. 1,000,000 ’433,000 do Belvidere Delaware ($2,193,000): let Mort. (guar. C. and A. 2d Mort. do 8d Mort. do Amount the: outstand¬ c5 Railroad: 1 225,000 do Princpal payble. T3 ■d INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. ». 2,500,000 2d Bonds Payable. 2 700,000 6 1850 1853 tieUffontain* ($1,745,000): 1st Mortgage let 6 1,000,000 6 Ja Ap JuOc 1867 1,128,500 6 Jan. & July! 1875 Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834 do do FRIDAY. interest. DESCRIPTION. .... loo 97 \... .... 1st 2d Mortgage • • • do 1st Land Grant Mortgage 2d do do do ....... Morris and Essex: • • • • 6 May A Nov. 1873 1,300,000 6 May A Nov 1883 let Mortgage, sinking fluid , tr 960,000 7 April & Oct 1877 .... - 500,000 6 Jau. & July 1870 225,00C 7 May & Nov. 1890 • . • • . • • • • • 1,938,OOC 7 300,560 7 do ° 1883 1883 2,362,800 7 Feb. & Aug 1892 300,000 7 May & Nov. 1888 1,000,000 7 Jan. 1,092,900 314,100 681,(XX 6 Feb. & Aug. ’90-’9C 6 June* Dec. ’70-’71 6 Apr. & Oct. 74-’7£ 6 Feb. & Aug. 1874 1,294,000 7 399^000 85 &July 1885 May & Nov .... * 18— • 2,242,500 8 Feb. A Ane 69-72 100 8 April A Oct 1882 4 855,000 7 May A Nov. 1885 do 1877 2,258,500 7 651,000 7 Feb. A Aug '1868 402,000 7 Jan. A Jtily 1891 4,600,000 7 Jnlj 1893 1,500,000 7 April A Oc 1898 3,612,000) 7 May A Nov .1877 do 1883 695,000) 7 3,500,000) 7 May A Nov • 1915 • • • 108 112 4,253,500 Jan. Jk Mississippi and Missouri River: 103# 1,465,000 95# 91 97 oo .... * 89 90 31 M • • • ** • • .... * • • ♦♦ ♦ • • RAILROAD, CANAL AND interest. I Description. Mortgage (convertible) New Haven ft N. London ($766,000) 1st Mortgage 8d do 1st ($650,000) Feiry Bonds of 1853 ... . New London Northern ($140,000)) General Mortgage : Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Bonds N. Y.,Prov. and Boston - ($232,000): / Fund. Hampshire ($151,400) North Carolina: Mortgage Loan North Missouri: 1st Gerieral Mortgage ($6,000,000) North Pennsylvania ($3,105,785): Mortgage Bondb Chattel Mortgage North- Western Virginia: ... (not guaranteed) Norwich and Worcester ($580,000); General Mortgage... Steamboat Mortgage Mortgage do ... :... W. & O. ($311,500); 1st Mortgage Pacific, (S. W- Branch): Mortgage, guar, by Mo....... — sterling do ' do do do Peninsula (Chic. ft N. 1st 2d :. W.): 1st Mortgage Pennsylvania ($16,750,124); 1st Mortgage 2d do 2d do , PhUa. and Balt. 1st Mortgage :. sterling Central ($575,000) : Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000) 1st 1st 2d Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie)... (general) (general): i. Philadel., Oennant. & Norristown: do do Convertible Loan Philadelphia ft Reading ($6,900,663): Sterling Bonds of 1836.... do do do .... Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-4-8-9 Sterling Bonds of 1843.... Dollar Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible Philadelphia ana Trenton ($200,000): 1st Mortgage Philadel., miming. <fc Baltimore: Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and Connellsville: (Turtle Cr. Div.) Pb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 1st Mort. 1st Mortgage do 2d 3d do Akron Branch: 1st 485,000 Feb. & Aug mortgage. .. do 1st Mortgage Racine ana Mississippi (W. Union): 1st Mortgage Raritan and Delaware Bay: 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Convertible Bonds Reading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage Rensselaer <fe Saratoga consolidated: 1st Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga . 1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitehall.... 1st Mort. Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) . R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,60 ,908) : 1st Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.) 2d do (Watertown & Rome) Rutlandand Burlington ($3,257,472) : 1st Mortgage 3d do? acramento Valley: do » July May & Nov J une & Dec- 663,000 6 do Feb. & Aug do do 1,398,000 7 7 7 • ... Payable. 93 1887 . 94** - . 7 Princpa payble. 1Bid. t5 M 4 ’73-’7 8 Feb. & 1,500,(XX l 2,500,(XX 6 6 Jan. & Juh irred Jan. & Juh f 1885 149.4(X 6 April & Oc t 1874 339,(XX 6 50,(XX 2,500,(XX 1,500,001 Sep 7 Jan. & Julj 1,000,001 '500,006 500,000 1,494,000 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 7 1st 1st Mortgage Terre Haute <fe ... Jan. &Juh Jan. & Juh do do do 1896 1880 1887 1874 Feb. & Aug 1870 April & Oct 1869 Jan. & 7 350,000 7 225,000 7 Jan. & .... .... 89 J* 116 1,139,000 .... 6 1874 July '70-’80 Jan. & July April & Oct .... do Feb & Aug. 1,029,000 7 Mch & Sept 1884 4,980,000 2,621,000 6 6 Jan. & 1880 1875 1875 4,000,000 July April & Oct do 6 Jan. & July 1876 April & Oct April & Oct April & Oct 1877 1881 1901 1865 408,000 182,400 2,856,600 106,000 1,521,000 976,800 564,000 60,000 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 7 Jan. & July do 1867 1880 1870 1871 1880 1880 1886 18S6 200,000 6 May & Nov. 1868 516,000 6 Jan. & July 1884 400,000 6 Feb. & Aug 1889 5,200,000 Semi an’ally do 2,000,000 200,000 7 7 7 7 Jan. & July 1,000,000 600,000 7 7 Feb. & Aug 6 Jan. & April & Oct Jan. & July do do do do 9iii 100 Vermont Central ($3,500,000) : 1st Mortgage. . JOOtf ... 1st Mortgage. Venn. Cen. <ft Venn. Warren ($600,000) : .... 8 1,000,600 7 250,000 7 140,000 7 April &_Oct do 1912 1912 1912 1884 ... 5 5 Jan. & Juh 1866 68-74 Various. 200,oa 7 Jan. & Julj 1871 .... 1,400,0a 7 April & Oct 1876 .... 60,oa 7 Mch & Sept 1866 ... 1,180,0a 7 Jan. & Julj 1870 1,391,ax 7 June & Dec 1894 9oo,oa 7 Feb. &, Aug do 2,500,0a 7 1,000,000 7 May & Nov. do 1,500,000 7 do Jan. & July 1865 1884 1875 1875 1865 1874 300, ax. 7 Jan. & Julj 300,(XXI 7 Apr. & Oct. 650,00(1 7 May & Nov. 200,001 7 Mar. & Sep. 18S'* 1S85 1S75 1882 Jan. & July do 1863 1S67 •7 June & Dec 7 Jan. & July 1861 1867 6 8 4an. & July 1883 7 Feb. & 6a\ooo 6 180,000 6 2,ooo,axj 1,500,000 / 550,600 ft Can. Bonds 7 7 .. . ., • • • • • • • • • :« -«*x 2,000, oa 1,070,0a Aug v • • . Feb. & 600,000 Mortgage (guaranteed) 1st ($962,300) Mortgage (convert.) Coupon . Westchester ft Philadelphia .... .... 1st 2d — do • ... I • • • • • • — % • • I .... • • • » .... • • 93 95 ... 75 77 77 75 . .... .... ,,,, • • • . .... .. . • ** • 4ix .... 103 May & Nov. 1876 .... Aug 1875 .... • • .... • • 399,300 7 Jan. & July 1873 554,908 S April & Oct 1878 registered , (6,269,520): Western (Mass.) 25 Dollar Bonds. 4,319,520 850,000 .. Western Maryland : York ft Cumberland (North. 85 ... 99^ 9b K Cent.): 1875 Itch & Sept do do 1888 1888 1876 400,000 7 1Stay & Nov. 1890 1890 do 340,000 7 1880 do 500,000 7 800,000 7 Fun. & Dec. 1874 800,000 7 1Stch & Sept 1880 1S70 1871 1877 May & Nov. Jan. <fe July r.... 2,356,509 6 Jan. & 2,000,000 4,375,aX) 1,699,500 6 5 6 Ja 800,oa> 6 Jan. & July 1878 641,000 7 Mch & Sept 1870 752,000 161,000 7 6 Jan. & July do 1865 1868 414,158 2,667,276 6 6 Mch & Sept do 1870 1884 Mortgage Bonds 182,000 6 Tan. & Mortgage Bonds 750,000 6 April & Oct 690,000 6 May & Nov. 1876 < do ' vpe 1st Mortgage Bonds.. ( .... .... Maryland Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed 93 .... 1 1st Mortgage 1 Delaware and Hudson: ... Mortgage, sinking 90 .... .... . .. fund. 1 Irie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage Bonds Interest Bonds .... L Loan of 1871. Lo n of 1S84 .... A[orris. P sylvania ft New York: 1st Mortgage (North Branch). S 1st 2d 1 01 95 100 94 84 .... do -* .... 96 ... • • . - .... .... Improvement sSusquehanna and Tide- Water: Maryland Loan 1.000,000 6 1,100,000 6 325,000 6 • • • • Priority Bonds, ^ (Pa.): 1st Mortgat Mortgage TlVest Branch ai 1st Mort; H Mortgage. Miscellaneous: rican Dock ft Improvemer .... a .... .... .... Bonds (guar. Cen.R.R. c'Cincinnati and Coving' 1st Mortgage Bonds osa Mining: it 2d do \'W IstMortgage st 1 21 7 1 ?eb. & Ang 1863 1 20 50 1863 do 7 Mortgage Q icksilver Mining ; do .... .... • .... • .... msylvahia Coal; pi • % Jf \degraph: invertible. IstMortgage cony 1S76 , • . . 6 Jran. & 750,000 6 Jran «]ran & 1878 July 1886 7 Jran. & July 1884 1,500,000 7 Jran. &l July 2,ooo.oor 7 iipril & Oci 18>8 * 8 J'an. & July 1881 7 7 J une & Dec s 1873 J an. & July 1879 2,ooo,ooa 7W[ay & Not. lb$7 • M»-l • • • • « • -V . .... 93 • • . • . .... tM 96 .... 81 .... • • .... • » .... .. • . . % A V • • • • • • • •Mi ... • • •%'t • ••V • .... *oooa> 7 I^eb. & Aug 1871 500,oa500,000 • .... Jnly 1878 &July • • .... 62 & Nov. 1883 • • • ' . .... 1865 1878 1864 Fan. & July do do 450,000 600,000 • . 80 1May M .... July 1876 • Sept 1872 July 1882 May & Nov. 1870 6 Co. of N.J.) 1,000,000 IstMortgage^ 1890 1885 Mch & Tan. & 2,500,000 . 1886 Ap Ju Oc 1870 .... 3 do July do 1,764,830 6 980,670 0 586,500 6 Mortgage Coupon Bonds .....: < 400,0001 0 «]ran 4b July 1875 329,000(10 Ireb. & Augl 1881 1890 1890 6 6 6 175,(XXI Mortgage— Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds. l July ’68-’71 1875 to • Canal .... 1890 Tan. & do 2o,tK\> 500,000 1st 2d 99** 97** April & Oct > 'guaranteed do 5 6 696,000 6 Jan. <fc uly do 200,(XX) 6 Mortgage 1st 1st 1881 1881 800,000 7 1Itch & Sept 1879 1,800,000 937,500 '. do 2d • % 7 A 7 1,438,000 1872 7 ... 700,oa do do Preferred Bonds July 183^000 1867 600,00(1 Sterling (£899,900) Bonds. 7 7 6 6 7 June & Dec ... Convertible 1870 1875 1872 1,150,000 1,000,000 5,000, (XX) 1875 Troy Union ($680,000): Mortgage Bonds May & Nov. 1916 7 7 675,000 7 JqI] 152,355 • • • Jan. & 1st Mortgage 2d do do 3d ... Vermont and Massachusetts 416,000 346,000 2,283,840 (Toledo & Wabash) (extended) (Toledo and Wabash). (Wabash and Western • • ... 1900 1^75 Equipment bonds Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) : July 1872. 89 do 750,000 1st Mort. 1st do do 2d 2d do ... • .... fr Au£ May A N ov Indiana]X>Iis($S0,0QQ) Mortgage, convertible Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw : IstMortgage oi“ .... 1873 1873 1885 1885 Jan. & Juh ($1,595,191): 1894 96 80 75 9S1,00(3 7 Feb. 1st .... 1867 r Mortgage Syra. Bing. andN. Y. t Mar. & 6 ... 1886 6 Auj? Sterling Loan 1894 1S92 3 Domestic Bonds Staten Island: 1894 SCO,0C( ) 7 Jan. & Julj 1,290,ax ) Shamokin V. ft Pottsville ($791,597) : IstMortgage South Carolina: 98~ April & Oct 7 7 • Second Avenue: 1st. Mortgage. 1875 232,(XX ) » 201.50<l 1st Mortgage 100^ ( 1,088,(XX ) 6 April & Oc t . Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: 1876 5 *. . do ?d 94 92 . 81) 89 102 107 2,200,001: 7 Semi an’alh do 2,800,00' ) 7 1,700,00( ) 7 May & Nov . Sandusky and Cincinnati : 1st Mortgage (extended) 1S85 & Am; 1893 i.ooojxx) 7 Feb. do 1S68 1,000,(XX } 7 Quincy and Toledo: Mortgage Jan. & 2,925,000! 6 5,160,000 Pittsburg and Steubenville : 1st Mortgage 2d July * ! Mortgage 2d Mortgage preferred 2d do income... St. Louis, Jacksonville ft Chicago : 1st Mortgage...' 2d do St. Paid <fc Paiijic of Minn : 1st Mortgage (tax frie) * Oswego ft Home ($350,000). let Mortgage (guar. byB. Panama: 1st Mortgage, Jan. & 300,000 ■ ( W.D.) Oswego and Syracuse Rate. ing. Debt. < 1st $500,000 100,000 Ogdensburg andL. C%am.($1,494,000) 1st MortgageOhio and Mississippi ($3,650,000): 1st 2d &July '360,00Cno April & Oc _ Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore) do (guar, by B. & O. RR do (do do do do 450,000 200,000 M’ch& Sep 1861 Jan. & Jtih 1808 1,000,00( Plain Bonds.... 1st 2d 3d 3d Jan. 165,000 6 May & Nov. ($5,211,244); Mortgage Sinking i\ m 1876 300, <HK) 6,917,598 Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts) BoDds of August, 1659, convert.. Bonds of 1865 New York and Harlem ($6,098,045) 1st General Mortgage — Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage N lork and New Haven ($9,000,000) 2d Bid. Payable. 140,000 New York Central ($14,095,804) : Premium Sinking Fund Bonds .. Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal) Real Estate Bonds Noi'them New AJ ■ ft Northampton Mortgage New Jersey ($805,000): 1st Northern Central State Loans Amount f outstand : Naugatuck ($300,000) .* Mortgage Description. 0 aS FRIDAY INTEREST. FRIDAY . G.S) Railroad: Railroad .1st MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued). S3 placed after the name of outstand lug. Company show the total Funded s Debt. 1st os Amount The sums N. Haven 91 THE CHRONICLE. 19,1867.] January •.-.TV** • • • • ,. rr [January 19, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 92 STOCK LIST. RAILROAD, CANAL, AND, MISCELLANEOUS Dividend. Stock Companies. Marked thns (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. road*, Alton and St Louis* Atlantic & Great Western...... oat* Q-ltarterly* oO (:11,52*2.150 p’d.lfBid. (Ask. Last Periods. standing. Companies. Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. FRIDAY. j ] 100S 2,494,900] -.. | Baltimore and Ohio 100113,188,902: April and Oct jOct . ..4 211 ..5 Washington Branch*... 100] 1,050,000! April and pet Oct. 4,434.250, Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3 Lawrence* Atlantic * --JJJ! Bellefontaine Line Belvidere, Delaware Blossburg and Quarterly, j Jan... IX 250,000jJune & Dec. Dec.. 2% 600,000! BO Coming* . preferred do 1,830,000 Jan. and July 4,070,974 Jan. and July Jan. .5 3,160,000 Jan. and JulyiJan .5 . 4.500, OOOjJan. 1,000,0001Feb. and Aug! Aug. .3% 866,000 2,200,00'.•!Feb. 4.5 Chicago and do t!i * Aug.!Aug..5 3,800] Feb. and Aug; Aug. .5 378,455! 13<>% 131 ..I /.. 682.600! 681,665! Jan. and JulyiJan. .3% 1,150.000 29% Jan...2% Jan. and Mar and Maraud July Jan...2% Sep. Sep. 100 Milwaukee* 100 Sep.jSep...5 pref. .100 do ' Chicago, Rock Island & Paeific.100 Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 Cincinnati,Hamilton & Chicago.100 Cincinnati and Zanesville—... 100 Cleveland, Columbus, & Cincin.loO Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 Nov.jNov. 5 2,250,000 13,160,927 12,994,719 June & Dec.!Dec ’66.7 6,500.000 April and Oct:Oct. ..5 1,106,125 3,00O,(MX)iApr and Oct. Oct...5 470,OX) j ' : 2,060,000 ........ 6,000.000! Feb. and Aug; Feb. .4 1,036,000 j May * Nov. Nov.. 4 5,000,000 i Jan. and July! Jan.. .5 42% 40% 79% SO 100% 100% no* its Cleveland, Painesville & Aelita.100 July! Jan.’66 4 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,403,910]Jan.riland Cleveland and Toledo 50 4,S41,600 Ap and Oct! Oct. ..8 Quarter!•ly. iJan. ..2% Columbus * Indianapolis Cent.100 ulyj lao* Columbus and Xenia* 50 1.490,800 Jan. and Ju! • 100 89X| 122 X M 850,0001 Jan.and July; Jan...8% 100 Coney Island and Brooklyn Jan. and July Jan.. .4 Con’ticut and Passumpsic.pref.100 1,514,300 Connecticut River 100 1,591.100 Jan. and July J.in...4Covington and Lexington 100 1,582,169 Dayton and Michigan 100 2,381,931 406,132 Jan. and July Jan.. .3 Delaware*. 50 Jan. and July July. .5 Delaware, Lacka., & Western .. 50 10,247,050 Des Moines Valley 100 1,550,050 952,350 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 do do pref. ....100 1,500.1 KH) Dubuque and Sioux City— .. .100 1,673.641 do do pref.. .. 100 and July] Jan.. .4 Eastern, (Mass) 100 3,155,000 Jan. Quarterly, Jao.. Eighth Avenue, N. Y* 100 1,000.000 eo. 500,0001 Fe and Auj Aug.. 2% Elmira, Jefferson,* CanandagualOO 500,000] Jan. and July Elmira and Williamsport* 50 500,000 Jan. and July Jan 3% do do pref... 50 Brie 100 16.570.100 Feb. & Aug. January.. I Jan.. 7 do preferred 100 8,535.700 Feb. & Aug.!Aug..5 600,000 Brie and Northeast* 50 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 Fitchburg 100 3,540,000 Georgia 100 4.366.800 May and Nov Nov.. 3% Hanmbal and St. Joseph 100 1,900,000 do do pref. ..100 5,253,83t Hartford and New Haven 100 3,000,000 Quarterly. Jan. ..3 820,000 Bousatonic 100 do preferred 100 1,180,000 May and Nov Nov. .4 Hudson River 100 6.563.250 April and Oct Oct. .4 494,3S0 Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50 190,750 Jan. and .Inly Jan...3% do do prel. 50 100 23.874.400 Feb. and Aug Feb..5 Htinoi8 Central Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 60 1,689,900 Mar. & Sep. Sep .4 412,000 Jan. and July July.. 3 Indianapolis and Madison 100 407,900 Jan. and July July. .4 do do pref.. 100 Jeffersonville 50 1,997,309 Joliet and Chicago* 100 1,500,000 Quarterly. Oct..’.i% Kennebec and Portland (new). .100 835,000 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 500,000 do do pref. 50 Quarterly. Oct... 2% 50 6.632.250 Feb. Lehigh Valley and Aug Aug. ..2 514,646 Lexington and Frankfort..' 50 Little Miami 50 3.572.400 Juneand Dec Dec. .4 Jan. and July Jan... 2 Little Schuylkill* 50 2.646.100 Aug..2 Long Island. 50 1,852,715 .andAug Aug..2 Louisville and Frankfort 50 1,109,594 Louisville and Nashville 100 5,527,871 Feb. and Aug* Aug. •3% Louisville,New Albany & Chic.100 2,800,000 Macon and Western 100 1,500,000 Apr and Oct. (April.3 100 McGregor Western* Maine Central 100 1,447,060 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 2,029,778 do 1st pref. 50 6,586,135 Mar. Sid Sep Sep..Zs do do do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. and Sep!Sep..3$ Manchester and Lawrence 100 1.000,000 May and Nov Nov. .4 Memphis and Charleston 100 5,312,7*25 .... . Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienlOO do do do do gt f Tci* JNri t • . .. ... 107% 3,014,000 Uwm,,,, 100 BeOOOpQOU Irregular. F.10sor5c Jan...4 63% 75 . 116 6S ■ 70 67 • . • 125 • 62% * 126’ -19% 120” ... Nov. Oct.. 86’’ 38" 71 - 26’ 26X 78 99“ li 56% 56X 30X 31% 103%, 104 62 62% 55 55% ""98X 98% 100% 1,700,000 1,000,000 42% 43% 2,442,350 70 984,700 May and Nov Nov. 3% 65 607,111 274.400 Juneand Dec Dec ..3% 811,660 Jan. and July Jan. .4 2,860,000 June and Dec Dec...4 100 5S% 2,860,000 Jan. and July Jan,\.l% 67 1.408.300 Jan. and July Jan...8 136% 5.627.700 Jan. and July Jan...5 Utica and Black River .100 Vermont and Canada* 100 Vermont and Massachusetts... .100 50 Warren* Western (Mass) 100 Western Union (Wis. & Ill.) 75 Worcester and Nashua ’1,141*650 Jan. and July Jan...5£ Jan.. .2 817,050 January Delaware Division Delaware and Hudson Delaware and Raritan 25 1,575,963 25 8,228,595 50 100 100 Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 do preferred. 60 Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 1,633,350 10,000,000 2,298,400 5,104,050 1,025.000 1,175,000 1,908,207 2,888,805 2,051,000 60 2,787.000 ... Lehigh Navigation Morris do 50 (consolidated) 10 preferred 100 Union West Branch and Miscellaneous. Coal.—American .. Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill... 30 Aug Aug.. 3 Aug Feb..8 . . wilkesbarre Wyoming Valley Gas.—Brooklyn...; Citizens Harlem (Brooklyn) Feb. and 50 28% 13% 52 Aug Aug.. 3% Jan. and July Jane..5 Quarterly. Oct.*. .6 Jan. and July Jan...6 Jan. and July Jan...5 Apr. and Oct Aug.,..*.* Feb. and Aug Feb. and Aug Aug...;. Jan. and July Jan.. .6 126 644,000 1,000,000 750.000 Jan. and July . 50 Improvement.—Canton 100.(16J pd) 4,500,000 Boston Water Power 100 4,000,000 Brunswick City r 100 1,000,000 Telegraph.—Western Union... 100 28,450,000 Jan and July Western Union,Russ. Ex..100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Express.— Adams 100 10,000,000 Qua» terly. American 500 3,000,000 Quarterly. .. Jan...5 47% 48% 28 30 July 20 a Jan. 2... 46% . . Merchants’ Union.. United States Wells, Fargo & Co Transit.—Central American Nicaragua Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 100 20,000.000 100 6,000,000 100 10,000,000 100 4,000,000 100 1,000,000 100 4,000,000 Pacific Mail... 100 South American Navi^ationlOO Union Navigation 100 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 New York Life* Trust.... 100 Union Trust ..100 United States Trust..... 100 20,000,000 96% Aug. 3.. 65% Aug. 3.. 68 Quarterly. Aug. 3.. Quarterly. Quarterly. Dec...6 13% £666,000 Quarterly. Dec. ..6 Jan. and July Jan...6 1,600.000 Feb. and Aue Aug.... 1,000,000' Jan. and July Jan. .4 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan ..5 107 162 109 107* 107% 162% 1,000,000 107 100 5,097,600 :2V 30% Quartz Hill Gold*. 14% 6S Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 6,774,400 Mining.—Mariposa Gold Quicksilver 33% 4,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...6 100 2,800,000 50 1,000,000 May and Nov May.... York 103% ms im 115 23 33 50 Williamsburg Feb” 5* 88 125% Jan. and Dec. Dec...4 20 1,000,000 Metropolitan New Jan...6 Jan.. 3 54% . 100 1. *>50.001 25 2,000,000 Manhattan 61 142% Aug Aug.10 May and Nov Nov.. 5 Feb. and Aug Feb .5 Feb. and Aug Feb..5 Feb. and Aug Feb ..6 Feb. and Ang Feb..6 1,600,000 2,000,000 1/00,000 6,000,00-; 1 2,000,000 5,000,000 50 3,200,000 50 1,250,000 1.000,000 lou 2,175,000 Jersey City & Hoboken.... ] Feb. and Feb. and Feb. and 25 50 to .100 100 100 Consolidation 66 * Dec ..8 June Susquehanna.100 1,100,000 Jan.and July ■Tan... 5 Sept. .4 Wyoming Valley.* 60 750,000 Quarterly. Central Cumberland Aug.. 7 Aug. .3 .... . 1,700,000 Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 do 1st prel.100 do do do 2d pref.100 Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 do do preferred. 50 Troy and Boston .100 Troy and Oreenbush* .100 .... Aug 3%« J .... . 50 Ashburton Butler Nov..4 Bep.. .4 Ask Canal. F..S Feb..7 pref. 100 3,032,000 February.... 2d pref. 100 1,014,000 February.... Jan Jan Jan 100 2,363,600 Jan.and July Jan.. Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000 Jan.and July]Jan.. do 356.400 Apr. and Oct j Oct., preferred.100 Ohio and Mississippi 100 19,822,85U Jan. do preferred. .1.00 2,950,500 January. Old Colony and Newport 100 4,8:9,760 Jan. and July Jan.. Oswego and Syracuse 50 482.4001 Feb. and Aug Aug. 100 8,581,598 Pacific of Missouri Panama (and Steamship) 100 7,000.000 Quarterly. Jan. Pennsylvania....... 50 20,000.000 May and Nov Nov. 218,100 Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO Jan., Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,069,450 Jan. and July Jan., Philadelphia and Reading 50 20,240,673 Jan.and July Oct., Phila., Germant’n, & Norrist’n* 50 1.476.300 Apr. and Oct Oct., Phila., Wilmington*Baltimore 50 8.973.300 Quarterly. Pittsburg andConnellsville..... 50 1,774,623 Jan. Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & CliicagolOO 9,312,442 Quarterly. Portland, Saco, & Portsmouth. 100 1,500,000 June and Dec Dec. Providence ana Worcester .100 1,700,000 Jan. and July Jan., Raritan and Delaware Bay 100 2.520.700 800.000 April and Oct Oct.. Rensselaer & Saratoga consol. .100 500,000 April and Oct Oct Saratoga and Whitehall...... 100 800,000 April and Oct Oct.. Troy, Salem & Rutland .... 100 Jan.. Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOO 1,991,900 Jan. and July Rutland and Burlington 100 2,233,376 St. Louis, Alton, & Terre HautelOO 2.300,000 May. .7 do do pref. 100 1,700,000 Annually. St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chic*lC0 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 100 2,989,090 do do 393,073 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 8 pref.100 862,571 Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO Saratoga and Hudscn River.... 100 1,020,000 Savannah & Charleston...... 100 1,' 00,000 676,050 Jan. and July Jan.. Schuylkill Valley*.. / 50 Second Avenue (N. Y.) 650,000 Apr. and Oct 100 Shamokin Valley * Pottsville*. 50 869,450 Feb. and Aug Aug. Sixt h Avenue (N. Y.) 750,000 Quarterly. 100 South Carolina. v 100 5,819,275 Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 1,200,130 Terre Haute & Indianapolis.... 50 1,929,150 Jan. and July Jan...6 Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 1,170,000 Quarterly. Chesapeake and Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio . 1st ' Wrightsville,York& Gettysb’g* 50 Jan. and July Jan 5 106% 106% Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3* "9% 79%j 131 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 100 1,000,000 do preferred 100 2,400,000 Feb. and Aug Mine Hill « Schuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 Jan. and July Morris and Essex 50 3,500,000 Feb. and Aug Nashua and Lowell 100 600,009 May and Nov Naugatuck 100 1,100,000 Feb. and Aug New Bedford and Taunton 100 500,000 Jan. and July do 738,538 New Haven, N. Loud., & Ston .100 New Haven and Northampton.. 100 1,010,000 New Jersey 5C 5,000,000 Feb. and Aug 700,000 Mar and Sep. New London Northern —.... 10( *f*w York Central 100 24.801.000 F»b. and Aug Milwaukee and St. Paul • • — .100 6,9-2,866 Michigan Central Michigan Southern and N. Ind..l00 9.381.800 do do guaran.100 1,089,700 60 5,085,050 Jan. and July 50 1,500,000 Jan. and July BostonlOO 1,755,281 Quarterly. Ninth Avenue 1 100 795,360 Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 3,068,400 May and Nov Northern Central «. 50 4,518,900 Quarterly. North Missouri .100 2 469,307 .• Bid. Last p’d • 50^1.500,000 viayandNov;Nov Concord Concord and Portsmouth Periods. standing. . 10,193.010 May & Chicago Burlington and Quincy. 100 4,390,000 Chicago and Great Eastern 100 1,000,000 Jan and July'Jnly. .5 Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*...100 Chicago and Northwestern II Jin.:. 3% 850, OOOjJan. and July (preferred) 100 2,085,925 1,783,200 —100 2,425,400 Chicago and Alton do preferred.... 100 Cheshire &t and JulyiJan.. .5 2,100,000]Jan. and JulyiJan.. .5 492.150 | , Central of New Jersey 133* . ^ Feb. & Aug 50 j ! ~'^00,00j 0,605.940 Quarterly." 100 Catawissa*......... 10% 8,500,000! Boston, Hartford and Erie 100 Boston and Lowell Boston and Maine Boston and Providence 105 Boston and Worcester iuo Broadway & 7th Avenue 10 i00 Brooklyn Central Brooklyn City.. ..■•••• Brooklyn City and Newtown . .100 Bnffhlo, New Yorkt and Erie*. .10u Buflklo and State Line 100 Camden and Amboy 100 Oamden and Atlantic.... — • • • 50 do preferred.. 50 do Cape Cod 00 roads, North Penns3rlvania. Norwich and Worcester 997,112! 100 .100 out¬ New York and Harlem preferred do New York Proviuence & j FRID AT. Dividend. Stock ' 25 1,000,UU0 .,,.100 10,000,000 Jan. and July Jan.. 5 m J. 09U,000 MaywuJNov Nov. 5 41%],4itf . ♦ rfc • » a r ’ INSURANCE STOCK LIST. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Dec. 31,1666. Marked thus (.*) are TTr^rrVif .11 Hammond 10 r»ar Bemis Heights 5 .. .... and Oil.. ...10 10 B liven .... .. • • • 5 10 Brevoort 5 Brooklyn * ...10 Buchanan Farm .100 2 Cherry Run Petrol1 m. 5 • • • ..... • .... ... • • • .. .. - Ivanhoe Manhattan Mountain Oil Natural N. Y. & Alleghany ... New York & Newark. N. Y. & Philadel .... .... .... 21 1 11 24 1 20 Excelsior First National Germania ... • 1 25 10 5 6 .. . .. .. .. 66 Rynd Farm 2 5 r..... ...10 Great Republic G’t Western Consol.. ...30 • ... • • • • ♦ • • • • • .... • • • • . ..10 ...J • . Bowery .... 5 2 • 15 10 3 55 4 0C • .... .. • • 9 * - • 300,000 200,000 25 25 .... Broadway Brooklyn 95 20 60 10 t.... COPPER MINING STOCK LIST .... ... ..25 .. .... .... • ... .... .... .... 5 00 .... ..10 Second National 6 Shade River ...10 Union United Pe’tl’m F’ms.. 2 ...1ft United States 10 Venango (N. Y.) 20 1° 3 15 1 .. .... .... 5 5 5 5 . .r.. • ..— Oceanic Pit Hole Creek ... Clinton Oil........... 2 2 . N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons.. ... 25 $900,000 Adriatic 60 200,000 iEtna 50 200,000 American * 200,000 American Exch’e. 100 50 500,000 Arctic 25 250,000 Astor. 300,000 Atlantic (Br’klyn) ..60 25 200,000 Baltic 25 200,000 Beckman .... . 153,000 ...17 Central Park..... 100 20 Citizens’ 70 City 100 Clinton .100 Columbia* Commerce (N.Y.). .100 Commerce (Alb’y).lOO 50 Commercial Commonwealth... 100 .100 Continental * 50 Corn Exchange.. 100 Croton.... 40 Eagle 100 Empire City 50 Excelsior 30 Exchange 17 Firemen’s Firemen’s Fund.. 10 Firemen s Trust. 10 25 Fulton 50 Gallatin .100 Gebhard 50 Germania 50 Globe Great Western*t. .100 150,000 300,000 > 210,000 250,000 500,000 200,000 400,000 200,000 250,000 500,000 400,000 .... Bid. Askd Companies. , .11 Algomah Allouez American 1* . T - - .... .... —. .... .... • • .... . • 1 2 . ...... - 7 00 4)4 • ... ! 9 00:10 Bay State. • | Bohemian Boston • • • | ' .... 2* 1 . • Central Concord Copper Creek Copper Falls .... . • • . .... •> «... • .... .... .... .... • 6* i 60 8 IK is* 5K ... .. . 11 37 1C 00 . «... .... — Copper Harbor Daeotah Dana Davidson Delaware f)Av n .... .... .... • ! • Dorchestor Dudley . TCacde River Edwards . 3* • l'K .... .... Everett Evergreen Bluff Excelsior Flint Steel River Franklin French- Creek (Jirard Great Western Hamilton Hancock . , • • . • • • • .... 10 00 • • • • . . 9* 8* 34 00 34 75 • .. .. 5 2 2 .. . . • • • • . • * . .... 10 CO 11 75 hanover • • • • .... 1 00 Bilton Hope 1* .. Huclson Halbert Humboldt 5 1 .19 .10 4 Hungarian • .... • • • i .... . • . Huron Indiana Isle Royale* Keweenaw Knowlton , • . i % • f , • . • 50 .... 31 25 31 50 4 00 .33 5 8 . 4 00 . 66 . Hoffman Home . . . . 500,000 200,000 1,000,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 ... 50 .100 50 .100 Import’ & Traders 60 .100 Indemnity .100 International 25 Irving 30 Jefferson.; Howard Humboldt 33 00 34 50 10 6* 8 12 • . • 3 St. Clair 1 St. Louis St. Mary’s u Salem Seneca 1 Sharon X Sheldon & Colnmcian.21 1 South Pewabic 2 South Side Star 11K 8 Superior 21 Toltic Tremont IK Victoria IK Vulcan 6 1 Washington West Minnesota Winona 3 .... 8 00 4 10 8 ‘/5 4 25 .... .... I.pnnT 9* . r- f,,# .... • • • .... .... • 1 25 2 00 3 75 4 00 .... • • • • . 6 149,755 May and Nov. May 229,309 Feb. and Aug. Ang ’66 ..5 692,394 Jan. and July. July’66 ..6 195,875 Jan. and July. Jnly ’65 ..5 3,177,437 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67.3K 228,122 Feb. and Aug. Ang ’66..5 186,176 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5 172,318 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 8K Jan '67 ..5 do 163,860 200,000 500.000 • • • • • • • . .... 200,010 150.000 280,(H)0 150,000 800,000 150,000 200 000 200,000 150,000 200,000 640,000 200,000 1,000,000 150.000 150.000 200,000 300,000 210,000 200,000 50 1,000,000 North American* 50 500,000 North River 25 850,000 Pacific 25 200,000 Park .100 200,000 Peter Cooper .... 20 150,000 20 People’s 150,000 Phoenix + Br’klyn 50 1,000,000 Reliei 50 200,000 .100 300,000 Republic* Resolute* .100 200,000 Rutgere’ .... i.... 25 200,000 St. Mark’8....'.,^. 25 150,000 St. Nicholas*25 150,000 50 1,000.000 Security *t 50 Standard...^, 200,000 Star 100 200,000 100 Sterling * 200,000 Stuwesant 25 200’000 Tradesmen’s 25 150,000 United States 26 250,000 50 Washington 400,000 Niagara . ..... . 2 00 .. . . * 1 Capital *1,000,000. in 20,000 shares. Capital $-.$00,000, tn 20,000 shares. + Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares. . Capital r*f Lake Superior comnanies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares. . . GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. Bid. Askd Alpine par 10 Albin American Flag . Atlantic & Pacific .. .... Ayres Mill & Mining Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver .. — .. — .. 50 _ . — .. — .... Bullion Consolidated.. Burroughs. — 10 .. ... Central Church Union Columbian G. <fc S Consolidated Colorado. .. s.... .... 1 50 2 50 1 3 30 2 1 3 1 5 .... 1 1 2 1 80 10 00 50 ... 10 90 50 00 25 20 CG 75 00 40 20 50 95 2G 25 401 26 30 20 2 1 — 1 80 5 Consolidated Gregory. ..100 14 60 15 6 30 6 Corydon. Croxier 10 — Des Moines — 1 80 Downieville 1 12 14 — .. . — ,. .. . .. Echla.. Fall River First National Gilpin 60 — 65 4 25 3 50 ... , Gold Hill Grass Valley Gunnell Holman Bid. 1 Askd par ; 4 25 .... — 10 . . 2 1 05 1 20 1 451 1 47 21 23 15 Hope Keystone Silver 2 75 *0 8 3 00 1 43 10 1 45 12 50 2 00 1 00 rt — Knickerbocker — Kip & Buell LaCrosse . Liberty Manhattan Mill Creek Montana Montauk New York Nye ; Ohio & Colorado G.&S Pah Ranagat Cen. Silver • 2 Liebig’ — . People’s G. & S. of Cal. Perry and Peoples1... 60 5 2 00 8 . Smith & Parmelee... Texas Yellow Jacket . 5 2 20 7 25 10 20 4 75 7 66 30 . Washington *+... .inn Williamsburg City.50 honkers & N. Y.. 100 2 35 15 5 05 2 00 7 45 45 Copake Iron -p par 5 oster Iron Lake Superior Iron Backs County Lead Denbo Lead Manhan Lead Phenix Lead Ifon Tank storage .... ... ... .100 5 • • • • .... .. • • • • • ••• . , . — • • • .... Bid. Askd Wallkill Lead Wallace Nickel Rutland Marble . . 25 1 10 . , , t ± .... Russell File Savon de Terre • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ..... . 349,521 July’66 July ’66 July ’66 July ’65 ..« 107 • •• • • • • • • Jan.'67 .5 .5 . • .... # • • . • do 245,984 March and Sep Sep. ’66.. .4 159,721 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 6 Jan. ’67 ..6 do 279,864 do Jan. ’67 ..5 161,252 do Jan, ’67 ..6 346,^26 do July ’66 . .4 129,644 Jan. ’67 ..6 do 26l>’264 Jan. ’6i. .5 do 1,1S2,779 Jan. ’67..5 do 704,303 Jan. ’67 8J6 do 282 35 Jan.’67 ..5 do 197!633 i 50.D35 do Jan. ’67 ..6 do July '66 4 211,178 do 1.322,469 July’66... 5 Jan.’67 .10 do 228,644 « do July ’66 .6 1,192,308 Jan. ’67. .5 do 150,646 do\ 216,184 July ’66..8 Jan. ’67 ..6 do 235;618 Jan. ’67..4 811.976 do 244,066 Jan. and Jnly. Jan. ’07 ..6 222,199 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’66...6 1,175,565 Jan. and July. Jan.’67 ..6 do July’66 ..6 601,701 • • • • • • ••• Jan.’67 ..6 Jan.’67 ..6 Jan. ’67 ..5 Aug. 66. .4 . . . . 500.000 550,301 . . * • « • . . .... . . . .... .... .... .... .... ..... .... .... • • • • .... . . . . ..... ... • . .... 107 .... • .... • • • • • .... • • • • .... ••• .... .... • • • • • • .... • • • •• • • • • • . . . . . . -w . . . . . .... • • • • • .... • • • . . . . • • • 0 • • • • • • • « * • .... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • «... • • • • • • * •... ...» • .... • • «... • • • • • • • • • • • • • .... .... .... . . . . • • • • . . . . • • • • . . . . 92* ..... • * • * - • • .... • • • M* m • m m. .... • • • • •• • • • • * . ..... .... .... . • « • ..... • • • .... . . . . « . July ’65 .6 do Jan.’67.8K do July’66.3K 206.909 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’67..5 do 150,580 Ang.’66..6 138,902 tJan. and Jnly. Aug. ’66 .5 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.3K 1,277,564 230,903 Jan. and Jnly. Jan. ’67 .5 do July ’66 ..5 217,843 . . Jan ’66. .6 457,252 208,969 . . # . ..... * Apr. ’66..4 . .... . 385,489 April and Oct. 229,729 Jan and July. do 194,317 do 173,691 154,206 Feb. and Ang. 998,687 Jan. and July. do 188,170 • .... ..5 Aug.’66.3K Aug. ’66..5 • . . do • .... . • • .... • Jnly ’66 .6 July ’65 .6 Ang. Feb.’65 • .... .5 . • «>M 9- .... ..5 ..5 . . 1W .... .5 . 287,400 150,000 . ^ . . ^ . .... • • • • • .... . .... . . . . . . ..... . .. .... 106 . INDEX TO do .... .... 115* t July 6<?.. .5 ADVERTISEMENTS. i 15 25 5 6 SC 9 80 6 .0 8 25 Steamship Companies Commercial Cards, Cotton Duck % 96 ,.....* Drugs . 96 Dividends 67 Express Company 95 Holiday Gtoods Metals Railroad Iron Stationers.. . 95 , 95 Insurance. *95-96 95 ' Dry Goods — Long Island Peat .... • Saginaw, L. 8. & M;. ... 1ERHS FOR ADVERTISING. Cordage.... nar 252,057 Jan.’67 177,915 208,049 Feb/and Ang. Feb. ’66...4 142,830 Jan. and Jnly. Jan.'67..5 Jan. ’67 .5 do 350,41? 569,623 Feb. and Ang. Ang. ’66.’.6 581,689 F°b. and Ang. Aug.’66 ...2 151,589 Jan. and Jnly. Jan. ’87 ..5 Commission Merchants Companies. Tudor Lead .... a. — MISCELLANEOUS stock list Bid. Askd • • • The rate for advertising in the Chronicle is 15 cents a line for each insertion A discount on this rate will be made when the advertisement is continued for three months or more. . COMPANIES. • • • ADVERTISEMENTS. — — Rocky Mountain 2 60 14 95 45 2 45 10 ' .. Qnart.z Hill -— .. Companies. do do do do do do do do Feb. and 450,295 201,216 200,000 1 8,825 200,000 150,000 188.166 1,000, OIK) 1,024,762 200,000 195,571 . • • • • • . 300,000 253,214 200,000 207,345 2,000,000 2,485,017 National New Amsterdam. 25 N. Y. Equitable 3 35 N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100 • ..... • ........ Long Island (B’kly).50 200,000 25 1,000,000 Lorillard* Manhattan 100 500,000 100 Meehan’ & Trade’ 25 Mechanics (B’klyn) .50 Mercantile .100 Mercantile Mut’l*tl00 50 Merchants’ Metropolitan * t.. .100 Montauk (B’lyn). ..50 Nassau (B’klyn).. .,50 Saie.l paid. »•••••• • . . 4K Lamar Lafayette (B’kly).. ... • 40 50 100 Knickerbocker... Bid. Laa / Last Periods. 223.775 Jan. and July. 205,976 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 .5 440,603 Jan. and July. J. ’67.8*arS* 213,590 Jan. and July. Jnly ’66. 4 501,543 Jan. and July. Jan. 65. ..5 253,232 Feb. and Aug. Ang. ’66...5 324,456 March and Sep Sep. ’66... 5 200.362 May and Nov. 181,062 Feb. and Aug. Ang. ’66. .4 320, ill June and Dec. Dec.’65...6 248,392 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66..5 do Ang. ’66..5 241,521 123,577 Jan. and July July’64 ..4 Jan.’67 .10 do 378,440 314,7S7 Feb. and Ang. Aug. 6 p. s. 231,793 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67. 5 do July’64.3K 391,913 Jan. ’67 ..5 do 212,694 440,870 Feb. and Aug. Aug. 6 . 6 244.296 Jan. and July. July’66 ..5 268,893 April and Oct. Oct.’65...5 1,199,978 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 ..7 86 ,970 March and Sep Mar. ’64..5 16S,32 Jan. and July. July’64 ..6 861,705 April and Oct. Oct. ’66..6 212,145 Jan. and July. July’66 ..7 Jan. ’67... 6 do 258,054 140,324 Feb. and Ang. 230,3 2 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 .5 do July ’66.3K 149,024 do July’65 ..5 156,068 do Jnly’66. .5 215,079 400,000 King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20 — Winthrop 200,000 15 50 Harmony (F.&M.)t 50 Princeton Ridge Rockland 150.000 200,000 150,000 — . 48 66 1 00 . Resolute 150,000 204,000 150,000 50 Grocers’ Guardian.. /. Hamilton Hanover . Portage Lake Quincy* .... . . 10* Providence .... 6* T....... 1 Pontiac 1 . .... .. . • ! ..10 1 Empire . 200,000 Hope 5* 45 Pittsburg & Boston.. IK IX . ... lj>' j1 Phoenix l . 3 00 5* 3* 23 00 23 50 65 1 Pewabic .50* . 2 50 Petherick .V 55 . Ogima Pennsylvania * • • . . . .. 7 50 .... .* .. .... 1 , ...» . . , , .... . 800,000 200,000 Greenwich ? 1 Naumkeag...;.. 200.000 . •110 New Jersey Consol... 10 35 0>»l New York 5 3 00 4 OOi North Cliff 4 4 North western ..— 11K 11 •**K 46 25 146 50 Norwich .— • IK j Minnesota 45 1 0 ■» —* Charter Oak . .... 5 Native Panada . . .... • • *-« • 4* 5# 4K CO! National .... • « 2 6 Madison Mandan Manhattan Mass Medora Mendotat Merrimac .1 Mesnard 00 ! Milton .... ! -« t* 1 ! 1 .17 . Arnold., j 3 . .... ‘AA paid 1 Lafayette Lake Superior ... • ..25* j Albany & Boston At'a* 1 paid 8 Adventure zEtna Bid. Askd Companies. dividend. Assets. Capital. write Marine Risks. 20 nar HamiltonMcClintock. . • 3 40 30 8 00 10 Bennehoff Run Bergen Coal • . participating, and (+) Bid. Askd Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. 93 CHRONICLE. THE 1867.] January 19, 95 95 95 Fire Lite-., Marine and Inland 63-94-95 94 ......... Navigation....68 94 Financial. Bankers and Brokers in N... Y65-6-7-8 Bankers and Brokers— South 68 “ “ Eist 68 “ “ West 65-8' 67 Miscellaneous Financial... .. Bonds, Dividends, &c— ........ Mi®C C 11m HCOIHt Bondsstolen I Uvysrt (Southtrn) ft 6T 99 [January 19, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 94 Insurance. Insurance. Insurance Company The Atlantic Mutual COMPANY. INSURANCE OFFICE No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. INSURANCE COMPANY. Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866 $1,366,699 . NEW YORK, JANUARY 27th, 1866, 1844. ORGANIZED APRIL, NEW YORK. OF OFFICE OF i The Mercantile Mutual Citizens’ The Company has paid to its Customers, up oresent time, Losses amounting to over The Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of its affairs on the 31st December, 1865: Premiums received on Marine Risks, from 1st January, 1865, to 31st De¬ cember, 1865 $6,933,146 80 to the EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. OFFICE: 156 NO. BROADWAY.k For the past nine years the cash dividends paid to Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of the net profits, have amounted in the aggregate to ball' per AUTHORIZED CAPITAL—$2,500,000 CAPITAL, PAID IN- -$300,000 ----- cent. 1st Iustead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all c asses of risks are equally profitable, this Compauy will hereafter make such the stockholders. This Company continues to Marine aud Inland Navigation $533,245 70 36,812 03 Liabilities Net Assets, $5'1,433 70 Jan. 1, IS 7 make Insurance on and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss jpayable in Gold or Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of pool. The the TRUSTEES. fol’owing Abstract, is from a statement mode to Stockholders of the business for the year ending December 31,1866 : / amounts received, deducting after , paid forRo-insnrancc, Return Premiums and Commissions $238,385 08 .. 32,661 74 Interest $271,046 82 Joseph Walker, James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Aaron L. Reid, Ellwood Walter, D. Colden Murray, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, E. Haydock White, Risks; nor upon nected with Marine Risks. Premiums marked off from 1st Janu- ary, 1865 to 31st December, 1865..... $6,764,146 38 Losses paid during the period $3,659,178 45 same Returns of Premiums and Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $4,828,585 secured by Stocks, and other¬ wise 3,330,350 Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages, 221,260 Dividends on Stocks, Interest on Bonds and Mortgages and other Loans, sundry notes, re-insurance and other claims due the Company, estimated at 144,964 Prqjnium Notes and Bills Receivable.. Cash in Security Insurance Co., No. 119 Capital, 137,411 70 $190,934 30 BROADWAY, Million Dollars, ($1,000,000.) €aih One FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. A. F. Earnings $80,' 12 52 . James 191. Frank W. HASTINGS, President. Ballard, Secretary. do Walton, • NO. 175 The Mutual Life Insu- CASH Co., BROADWAY, N. Y. $500,000 O CAPITAL, RANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00 WINSTON, President. R. A. McCURDY, Vice-President. Sectaries jreers-anes, j-J0HX SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866 205,989 83 # $705,989 83 TOTAL ASSETS RUDOLPH - i ISAAC ABBATT, 43 80,462 00 Treasury Note Cur¬ : :.... Total Amount of Assets , 310,561 78 $12,199,975 17 Six percent. Interest on the outstand¬ ing certificates of profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday the Sixth of February next. GARRIGUE, President. 1864, will be redeemed and paid to the holders thereof, or their legal repre sentatives, on and after Tuesday the Sixth of February next, from which date interest on the amount, so redeemable, will cease. The certifi cates to he produced at the time of payment, cancelled to the extent A dividend of declared of the on paid. Thirty-five Per Cen the net earned premiums Company, for the year ending 31st December* 18 65* for which certificates will be issued on and after Tuesday the Third of April next. By order the Board, • JOHN E. KAHL, Secretary. M STUART. 00 00 Fifty per cent of the outstanding certificates Germania Fire Ins. Secretary. FREDERICK S. U. S. of the issue of McLean, President. Edward A. 00 3,283,801 96 Bank, Coin rency Losses, including all unset¬ tled Losses $992,341 44 Expenses. Loans CIIAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest. C. J. Despard, Secretary. $53,522 60 $8,952,471 53 Life Fire Risks discon¬ United States and State of New York EXPENDITURES. Expenses, including Govern¬ 2,019,324 73 Total amount of Marine Premiums.. do ment and Local Taxes Policies not marked off The Company has the following As¬ sets, viz.: N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, Henry Eyre, L. Edgerton, Cornelius Grinnell, Henry R. Kunhardt. E. E. Morgan, John S. Williams, Her. A. Schleicher, William Nelson, Jr., Joseph Slagg, Charles Dimon, Jas. D.Fish, A. William Hoye, Geo. W. Hennings, Harold Dollners Fmncis Hathaway, Paul N. Spofl’ord. ELLWOOD WALTER, President INCOME. Premiums Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver-, on January. 1865 No Polices have been issued upon cash abatement-or discount from the current rates," when premiums are paid, as the general experience o underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬ maining at the close of the year, will be divided to Assets, Jan. 1, 1867 Premiums Hundred and Twenty-one and a One J. H. - CHAPMAN, Secretary. Actuary, SHEPPARD HO WANS. TRUSTEES: Niagara Fire Insurance Hope Fire Insurance COMPANY. NO. 12 WALL STREET. CASH CAPITAL, SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 Losses OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. $1,000,000 270,353 equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, Chartered 1850. 253 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, P. NOTMAN, Secretary. Company, President. Cash Capital- $200,000 00 252.55;i 22 26,850 00 ----- Assets, March 9, I860 Total Liabilities Losses Paid Li 1865 This Fire - - - - - - 201,588 14 Company Insures against Loss or Damage by on as Company. favorable terms ‘ as any other responsible OF LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. Authorized Capital Subscribed Capital - <£2,000,000 Stg. £1,885420 Stg. Ppid up Capital Sc Surplus ----- $1,392,115 GEORGE ADLARD, Manager. WILLIAM H. ROSS, Secretary. Board of Directors: HENRY M. TABER, JOSEPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, THEODORE W. RILEY, JACOB REESE, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, D. LYDIG SUYDAM, WILLIAM REMSEN THOS. P. CUMMINGS, ROBERT SCHELL, * WILLIAM H. TERRY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JOSEPH L. B GRAFTON, <VARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, AMOS ROBBINS, HENRY S. LEVERICH. JACOB Jones, Charles Dennis, Wm. W. H. H. Moore, Henry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, Royal Phelps, - Caleb Barstow A. P. Pillot ONLY FIRST: CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. Queen Fire Ins. Comp’y John D. REESE, President. CBAS. D. HARTSHORNE, Secretary. William E. Dodge Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, Joshua J. Hentry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gaillard, Jr. J. Henry Burgy, Cornelius Grinnell, C. A. Hand, B. j. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Fletcher Westray, Robt. B. Minturn, Jr. Gordon W, Burnham, Frederick Chauncey, Hobson, David Lane, f James Low James Georg Geo. G. Bryce, : Leroy M. Wiley, Stephenson, William H. Webb. Daniel S. Miller. JOHN D. JONES, President, CHARLES W.H. H. J. D. DENNIS, Vice-President MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres’t, HEWLETT, 3d Vice-Prea’t. ssBaasaBssi PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE American * *• . .- . Fire Insurance Commercial Cards. Steamship Companies. Insurance. ..i^V 95 THE CHRONICLE. January 19,1867.] • C Company A LIFO-R o’clock list of every month noon, on (except wnen the 48 NO. 4 WALL Blair, Densmore & Co., those dates fall on COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, Cash Capital 366,439 30 ... Net Assets Jan. 1, 1867 YEAR THE FOR Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for ^entral American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Manrnillo. Baggage checked through. lowed each adult. $566,439 30 .. WASHINGTON 165 One hundred pounds An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and ^tendance free. For passage tickets or further information, apply it the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of Canal street, North River, New York. S. K. HOLMAN, Agent. ■ ENDING DECEMBER 81, 1868: TO SHIPPERS,. MILLERS, GRAIN AND DISTILLERS. Manufacturing we are Richards9 Power Corn Shellers, Of all sizes and capacity, ranging from 50 to 1,000 bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the corn in Mill or Market. superior condition for Over 500 in Daily Use. Portable Engines, Small Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c. RICHARDS9 IRON WORKS, 190 & .92 WASHINGTON STREET, the Chicago,, Ill. Income. Miscellaneous. C. E. Thorburn, $197,304 23 Premiums received... Interest...^ STREET. Chicago, Ills. 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden Citt. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis 21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento. ..$200,000 00 Cash Surplus STATEMENT with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. JANUARY": STREET. SEEDS G R AIN, , 1st, 11th, and Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for OFFICE: R AND PROYISIONS. NI'A, And Carrying: the United States Mall* LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIVi ER, FOOT of Canal street, at 12 OF NEW YORK CITY. F L O U 32,904 38 - . $230,208 61 Holiday Goods AND SHIPPING NOW READY. COMMISSION MERCHANT, 109 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Consignments of Cotton and all other South¬ , Expenditures. Losses ... A. mi\ims.Re-i 35,269 53 ex¬ and .,...‘32,587 84 penses 118,997 11 * Profits for 1866 $111,211 50 SCRIP DIVIDEND JULY, 1866, 50 PER CENT. JAMES M. ANNUAL DISPLAY HALSTED, ST. GERMAIN be found in the city, at HINRICHS’S, Late WERCKMEISTER’S, 150 Broadway, (up stairs) New York. GILLOTT’S STEEL OF THE OLD STANDARD DAVID MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE THORNELL, JOSEPH TRADE MARK: PENS QUALITY. Or Descriptive GILLOTT, Name and Desig- WARRANTED. Dating Numbei ADFE, NEW SERIES, GOOD 700 to No. 761. ASSISTANT SECRETARY. AND CHEAP, from No TRADE MARK: TION i COMMUNICA¬ BETWEEN YORK. GILLOTT, BIRMINGHAM. For sale STEAM No. 91 John st., New-York STREET, NEW YORK. (of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.) Importer and Dealer in Hardware, and Commission Merchant, 45 CLIFF STREET, NEW YORK. All orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ tention. Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c., solicited. Best of references given if required. BEST ENGLISH CANNEL & ORRELL Coal Numbers. JOSEPH GILLOTT & SONS, USE, Jeremiah M. Ward well, Designating by NEW- AND AUSTRALA¬ 192 FRONT With JOSEPH Steamship and Express Co.’s. FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC as can JOSEPH SECRETARY. Henry Lawrence & Sons, STUDY LAMP. Also, Toys and Games, comprising all that is nov and suitable for Holiday Presents, and of as large variety Products Solicited. ern the PRESIDENT. THOS. L. OP Fancy Goods, Rich Bohemian Glass, China, Brons Clocks. Berlin Iron, Terra Cotta and Cabinetware, Smokers Requisites, Morocco Bags, Portemonnaies, Spa and Carved Wood Articles, Toilet Articles, $51,139 74 andporajnissions Taxes and all other office SIXTY"-SIXTH * FROM LIVERPOOL, Delivered from yards in New York For Grate Fires. and Brooklyn. H. J. PARMELE & BRO., 32 Pine Street, N.Y • HENRY OWEN, Sole Agent. SIA via PANAMA. The Panama* New-Zealand and Ausiralian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on ilie 21th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., and the Australian Colo ies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail SreamshiD 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 ports in New-Zealand, or to Sydney or Melbourne, $340 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $243 for second class. James A. Robinson, Special steamers region run to the newly-discovered of Hokitika, New Zealand. gold Children under three years, free; under eight years, quarter fare; under twelve years, half-fare; male servants, one-half fare: female do., three-quar¬ ters fare ; men servants berthed forward, women do. in ladies’ cabin. A limited quantity of merchandise will be con¬ * veyed under through bill of lading. For further information, application to be made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st, Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William-st., New-York. Bankers, Merchants, and Others should send by the HARNDEN EXPRESS. 65 Broadway, they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and safe forwarding of as Gold, Silver, Jewelry, and Merchandise of every description. Also for the collection of notes, drafts, and bills, bills accompanying goods, &c. Metals, THOS. J. POPE, 92 John Street. Anthracite and Charcoal Pig Irons, Ingot Copper, Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad on , Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, ENGINES FOR PORTABLE AND STATIONARY Steam rates: From New-Y"ork to The above rates include the transit, across the Isthmns of Panama, and the first class lares are for forward cabins of the Austral an steamer; after cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United States gold coin. CALORIC ERICSSON Railroad Iron, Mills, Pumps, Cotton Gins, Hoisters, Jobbing. 164 Duane Steam and Street Engines, and Geneva Son, STQCK COMMISSION HOUSE, NO. 17 WILLIAM S1REET. Government Securities, Railways Petroleum, Collections made in all the States Canadas. and For the more thorough protection of all—both Broker and “Principal”—our business will be con¬ ducted entirely on the basis of Certified Checks, given or received unless certified. To more fully enable us to carry out this principle, although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties giving orders for stocks, of whatever description or amount, will be required to Cover same with proba¬ ble amount at time of leaving order. Receipts for such deposits given until stocks are delivered. none purchased or sold on “Option.” Out-of-town orders solicited, and those complying with above requirements will receive special and prompt attention. * Quotations can be had daily upon application, ©i will be famished if desired. P. P. Broadway. Oldershaw, ACCOUNTANT, 62 Boards. No Stocks 69 & 71 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Accounts Adjusted. Books Examined. Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous shares of a 1 descriptions, bought and sold at the different Stock 8. W. HOPKINS & Co., St., Cor. Hudson, New York. B. C. Morris & Roads, FOR SALE BY References STEWART BROWN, DAVID WALLACE, C. H. nARNEY, YOUR : C. S. BODLEY, S. L. M. BARLOW, McANDRfcW & WANN. CUSTOM SOLICITED BY Francis & Loutrel, STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK Manufacturers. 45 Maiden Lane, New York. We supply everything in our line for Business, Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders receive prompt attention. Files of this Paper Bound to Order.# BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY, ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. &C., <&C Cooper & Sheridan, 26 EXCHANGE PLACE* Corner of William St - ■ No. 863 In full assortment for and Manufacturers of NEW YORK. Ex. Norton, Late of Paducah, . superior finish, and Norton, FLAXSAIL DUCK, &C. General Commission Merchants, Thompson & Co., Wm. Agents for the sale of the Patent Reversible Paper the most economical collar ever Collars, invented. George Pearce & 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, Co., NEW YORK, LINENS, HANDK’FS, AC. HAVE REMOVED FROM 36 TO No. 185 Church Street, New York. Smith, Anderson & & COMMISSION MERCHANT* PURCHASE FOR 1 HE SALE OF PRODUCE AND , OF MERCHANDISE GENERALLY. Street, New York. , No. 79 Front 33 PARK PLACE, Goods, NEW YORK. McIlwaine & Co., of Petersburg, Va. Martin & Tannahill, of Petersburg, Va. Agents for Emb’s, ■*** McIlwaine Co., Tannahill, Importers of Laces and STREET, NEW YORK. 40 BROAD Cash Advances made on consignments Importers of IRISH LIN KN CAWB’C White Slaughter & Co., COTTON 6c TOBACCO FACTORS AND BURLAPS, BAGGING, and durability. Ky. B. H. Wisdom, Late Caeh. Bk. Tenn. T. J. Slaughter, ' Late of St. Louis, Mo. 6c C LINENS, WHITE real silk, which it equals in costs but half as much as the WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ Imitation Oiled Silk. STREET, NO. 47 BROAD GOODS, Agents for the sale of Silk, Our “Imitation” has a very COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Jobbing and Clothing Trade.' SILK AND COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS, Oiled Merehaht2, IRISH 6c SCOTCH LINEN CHINA SILKS, EUROPEAN AND Sawyer, Wallace & Co., STREET. 65 MURRAY Importers ol Commercial Cards. Cards. Importers 6c Commission BROADWAY, m appearance 5agggr a Brand & Gihon, S.' H. Pearce & Co., < -■ Commercial Commercial Cards. ' [January 19, 1887. THE CHRONICLE. 96 WILLIAM KIRK 6c SON, Linen Handk’ft, BELFAST, J. M. Cummings & Co., British and Continental. DISTILLERS * Linen Manufacturers. AND Lindsay, Chittick & Co., * Staple, Importers 6c Commission And Fancy s' Dress NO. Good*, White Merchants, SAM’L January 1, to their new Warehouse Linens, Ac., Ac*, NEW YORK, Successors to-BREWE R & COTTON SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINES, DUCKS, DRILLS, LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, AGENTS FOR Sole MILTON CLARK, Jr. 6c CO’S. End, Glasgow. IS UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE JOHN CHICOPEE MANUF. CO., VICTORY MANUF. Banhrldere. Spool Cotton. BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO., Mile CO., SEWING. MILLS, THOS. Nos. 43 A 4* WHITE STREET. RUSSELL, Sole Agent, 88 CHAMBERS AND 20 OLD Late of Lynchburg, Va., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, For the sale of produce and purchase of merchandise genera*-y. « (Offices, lor the present, 63 EXCHANGE PLACE), BALTIMORE, MD. bypermission to Messrs. Refer Jacob Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore. Tannahill, McIiwaine & Co., New York. &TREET, N.Y. J. & P. Coats’ Manufacturers of UMBRELLAS AND BEST PARASOLS, €5 C ommerce DWIGHT, 6c SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK, W. H. Schieffelin & 49 MURRAY ST., NEW YORK. Co" SHOE Threads, SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS 6c CO., THREADS, IMPORTERS ANT) JOBBERS OF . DRUGS, BROTHERS, STREET, NEW YORK. . Mills, •> Lockport Hydraulic Mills, Sweepstakes Mills, Oriental . Chicago, Ill. LocKport. Ill. West Lockport. HI. supply of our well known brands of Flour always on hand. Eastern orders will have prompt attention at low¬ est market price. Our Chicago mills being situated on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flhur, Middlings, Bran, &c., to all points Kant, saving »'Xpense and dama?e from cartage. Orders lor pnrchas*» of Grain, Flour, or provisions in this market SEWING-MACPiNE THREADS, ETC. BARBOUR MILLERS A COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 138 LASALLE ST , CHICAGO, ILL., PROPRIETORS OF A full SUCCESSORS TO Linen Co., (Established 1848.) No. 108 Duane Street. Parasols, Norton & AUCHItCLOSS, HUGH MANUFACTURERS OF Umbrellas & Street, Mobile, Ala. 9 JOHN 95 CHAMBERS AND GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Alvah Hall. DOUBLED A V A England & Co., COTTON FACTORS CABLED SIX-CORD Thread. Nos, 12 & 14 WARREN ST., NEW YORK. Geobge J. Byrd. Merchants, SLIP, NEW YORK. Wilson, Son & Co., Wm. G. Byrd & Hall, CALDWELL, Agents for DICKSON, FERGUSON 6c CO., Belfast. And F. W. HAYES & CO,, WASHINGTON MILLS, Morris, FACTORS, General Commission PATENT LINEN THREAD. E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. B. C. MORRIS, JR. B. CALDWELL. Caldwell & 198 6c 200 CHURCH STREET, Irish and Scotch 160 & 152 DUANE STREET, sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Distilleries, Kentucky. # 134 CHURCH STREET, Will Remove on Goods, STREET, NEW YORK, 58 BROAD Offer for George Hughes & Co., MERCHANTS, British MERCHANTS, COMMISSION Cambric Handkerchief Manufacturers COMMISSION AND IMPORTERS CO., LURGAN, JAMES GLASS 6c will be INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES, FANCY GOODS, PERFUMERY, ETC., ETC., faithfully a tended to. . Mills at Patterson, N. J. Lane, Lam? COMMISSION & Co., jn MERCHANTS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, ’97 FRANKLIN STREET, PARIS, NEW YORK. 170 & 172 WILLIAM ST. New York. „ Joseph H Westerfield. William H. Schteffedn. Cotton Carrington, LAW, ATTORNEYS AT 11 3 MAIN STREET. RICHMOND, V A Manufacturers of William A. Gellatly. William N. Clark, Jr. ’ POLHEMUS 6c I. S. CO., Street, Corner of Beaver. Bush & HIDE MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS, 69 Broad CHICAGO, ILL. Weights, _ . LINSEED OIL AND OIL CAKE, . ▲ LARGE STOCK ALWAYS ON HAND. THEODORE ' LEAD PIPE AND SHEET LEAD, Duck, All Widths and Quid & E. W. Blatchford & Co., Co., BROKERS, 156 Kinzle Street, Chicago. Orders-will reccive£carefal and prompt, attention